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1983-08-17 - Orange Coast Pilot
--·----------= - New noise law may be worth the Md. move ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) - Yelling. hooting and singing loud enough to diaturb the neighbors soon will be illegal after 11 p.m. in Anne Arundel County. The County Council voted 5-1 to add "human noi.le" to an ordinance outlawing the play- ing of a radio, stereo or musical instrument between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m . if the sounds a.re audible ~ feet or more from the IOW'Ce. Residenta, upeet by loud late-night parties ln a beachfront area, petitioned for the noise controls. The legislation carries a penalty of a $100 fine and a 30-day jail sentence, and al- lows officers to Issue citations rather than filing criminal charges. Neighbors of C.OSta Mesa's new amphitheater, take note. THI DRANGf COAST Lyricist dies Ira Gershwin, 86, who collaborated with h is brother George on such favorite American son gs as "I've Got Rhythm" and 0 T he Man I Love," died today at h is Beverly Hills home. l:OUllTY IDITIDll WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1983 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS ~ .... ,...._, ...... c:..... Andrew and Matthew Monahan of New York found the best way for som e q u ick r e lief from the heat a nd humidity in Balboa was a h ealthy helping of ice crea m. Hardware stores are fans, hens aren't \. Of tke beat waye, that is, as businesses sweat out ups and downs of sizzling s ummer '. . By STEVE MITCHELL aM liBBN E. llEIN °' ............... Just how hot is it? Why. it's .o hot a hardware store in Costa Mesa .old 500 electric fans in the past two weeka alone. It's ao hot that Ralph Furra's two million hens are laying 10 to 15 percent fewer eggs. It's so hot that regular bar patrons at The Saloon in Laguna Beach are ordering cold beer instead of well drinks. That's how hot it is. The unrelenting heat and humidity, fueled by one tropical system after another, have forced Orange Coast residents to become inventive in their quest for cool. One beneficiary of the heat is F.ddie DiRuacio, group sales manager for Waterville, USA. a waterslide and arcade in Orange. ''This is an unusual type of heat," DiRuacio said. "It makes people very sticky and warm.'' Which is jus~ fine with him. He's seen many a hot cuatomer come through the turnstiles the past 10 days. "It's mi.!lerable to be outside, but as far as rm concerned, it's our kind of weather. I hope . lt stays this way." John Crosaon is another foul-weather friend. He's manager of th.e Ice Capades .... Others tt.re benefitting from the heat. Take Keith Riina. owner of ~rm Rima hardware ln c.o.ta M-. for example. '1t (the beet) really caught us by surpriae," Rima said "We've .old about 500 fans in the last two weeka. We had the fans in our inventory ao we were sitting good. But we've only got three left and I don't know when our next shipment is coming ln." Robert Garcia, assistant manager for Crown Hardware's Corona del Mar store said he .old his last electric fan Monday. He said the four-store chain has aold "well over 400" fans since t.hingl started heating up. "I have people at my door now asking for them," he said. "I have a lot of rain checka." Ice cream stores, as could be expected, are abo faring well in the heat. Mary Ellen Certo, who wocka at Baskin-Robbins' c.o.ta Mesa shop, said the • • air<0nditioning lures the people in and then • they pull out the money .• The most popular warm weather ltem by far, she says, is a milkshake -any flavor. Chalet in C.O.ta Mesa, and he says the ice rink has been a bit busier since the heat picked up. But, while business ls better, there is one drawback, he says . ''The heat has been running up the power bill and it's harder to keep the ice." And, of cqune, Brewster's ice houae in Huntington Beach is doing well, but Virgil Brewster says that's always the cue ln the swnmer. He fulures he sells about 15 tons of block 'See BOW IIO'I', Pqe A%) Huinid air keeps Coast • 1n a sweat By STEVE MARBLE Of ................ Fed by tropical stonns that weather watchers haven't even had time to . name yet, the hot, aoggy, sticky weather that has turned Southern California into Humidity Central ia expected to continue and continue. '1t's bloody horrible and it's going to stay that way," obeerved Bill Hoffer, National Weather Service meterologist. Hoffer said the hot, hwnid conditions will remain at least three more days. Intenae thunderstorms swept th.rough areas of Southern Cali- fom.l.a Tue.day dumping more than an inch of rain in places and causing flash floods. Palm Springs f'llOl:\v .. u.oe iqchee ~y, the moet ID Bout.hem C&llfomla. Oran,e County, though, got off eM'/ wtth most COMta) dtiel recetvtna only a trace of rain. The we.ther eervice predicta con- tinued thunclentonna ln the com- ing days. Hoffer aaid the unpleuant, unU8\&al weather now is being fed by a combination of offshore stonna, low pressure systems and funnela --all teaming together to direct Midwest-like humidity into Southern Califocllia. Alida, a tropical storm in the Gulf of Mexico that could whip it.elf lnto a hurricane, is picking up where now-dead Hurricane lamael left off. Hoffer said. a huge air mus hanging over the west.em states is funneli.ng the humid conditions from Alida to California. The air ma8I stretches fl'Ol'D Canada to M~xico and diverting, rerouting and buically mixing up weather conditions acroas moet western state.. Additionally, a funnel system hanging off the coast of Oregon and Washington alao is puah.ing wann, sticky weather 10Uthward. Alicia in Texas, Page AS Desert floods, Page A4 A tropical depression moving up- ward in Baja also is compounding theaoggy conditions, Hoffer said. "It's all moist as hell and all aimed our way," he said. ~ lt has beep, inland temperatures are expected to reach into the upper 90s with coastal daytime highs in the upper 70s. Lows --though there really has been no such thing in the last week --will be in the mid to low 70s. ~Jectr.icity goes off in lrvipearea '!be ~ta went out in Northw~ 'I'uMday niebt. •¥tnc about 100 Southern CaUf cimJa ~ customen without. the beneflta of elec- tridty fdr nelrly 12 houn. a ..,okeemen aaid. An underground trana- former ln the Irvine villap blew about 6 p.m., aa.id Jim Kennedy. Southern Cal.ifomja Edilon area manager. The trandonner ia neu-Hermma and the homes wh.lcb were affected were located nearby, heaaid. "We are euminina the transformer now to aee why lt failed," Kennedy uid. It '8 not yet known whether we.ther conditions cauaed or affected the blackout. Kennedy aid Edi9on CftWI made temporary repain and returned power to the bl8dt- ed-out cua1omen about 5 tbia morning. NB f ir01s gain sh~re of new jail contract Mom: "My son is innocent" By JEFF ADLER Of .. .., ........ Two Newport Beach finns 1Ue.ciay were awarded contracts totaling $2 million for portions of the most expensive construction project ever Wldertaken by Or- an&e County government -the $52 million jail intake-and-release center ln Santa Ana. ~ Board of Supervisors named Ficker & Ruf- tfna/H.O.K/Ornni Group to de- al 1 n the proposed 11&,ooo-.qua,.foot fadllty, to be located adjacent to the current jail. Named aa oonstruction manager for the project was Kitchell CEM. 'nae Ficker & Ruf~ organlr.a- tioo will be responsi. for concep- tual planning, design and de- velopment of plans for the jail addition. The construction management team will be responsible for integrating the design concepts during construction while ensur-inl the project is completed on time, at the most economical cost and with the highest quality. Tite 384-bed intake-and-release center ia envisioned by county offidala to meet the demands for jail apace through 1m. It will bcM...e men and women awaiting trial and maximum aecwity in- mates, u well as providing cen- tralized acce. to the jail and a central booking, record.a and re- (See CONTRACT, Pa1e A!) In 1923amennamedJoeBeekhadanldea ... a YllGht dub for klda. Hlamot!Y8tione.,. unot.' ~club prov9CI a great IUCC 111 Ind .. atlll In operation after e f ~ racieA8. Alice Benton .• *Convicte d slayer Bonin 's m other test ifies in penalty phase By JEFF ADLER °' ................ The mother of Freeway Killer William Bonin testified in an Orange County courtroom Tues- day that she believes her 80ll is l.nnooent of the murders for which he has been convicted and aentenced to die. Alice Benton told a Superior Court jury oonsi.derinB lmpoeing a le<lOnd death penalty on her 36-year-old IOI\ that Bonin Wiii a ''helpful" child who newr drank. mnok.ed nor IW<n ln her preeenoe. "U be had a bag of candy he pve It away and wouldn't eat any hlmleU," ahe said. Bonin'• mother and two brothen were the final wtme.e. called by defeme attorney WU- liam Charvet as the murder trial's penalty phue neared lta con- cluaion. Final arguments were acheduled to begin at 1:30 p.m . today. Juror's have been U.tenlng to evid~ concemlng Bonln'a life and &iminal put alnce hi.a convic- tion Aug. 2 of four fl.rat-degree murders. Becauae the jury'• guilty verdict included a finding of 1'*'81 drcumltances. the panel could recommend lmpolitlon of the deeth lelltence. Bmld.a the four Orange County m~. Bonin bal been con- victed and already sentenced to dJe for 10 h<lmoeexual torture alaytnaa in Los Angeles County. Benion, who remarried follow-tna the death of h...a.nd Robe.rt • \ Bonin Sr .. told the court ahe never has wime.ed her aon engaging in any acts of violence. "I believe he's innocent. He'• never lied to me," said Bonin'• mother, a woman with short-Cropped gray hair and wear- ing a pink dreaa. Asked by Charvet whether she would lie to save her 80ll'a life, Ben ton, at times wiping tMn from her eyea, replied. "No, I never lie." Paul Bonin cMecrlbed tu. o&der brother u the kind of penon who would "give you the shirt off him t>.ck." He Mid Bonin ... nicknamed "Goody-Two-Shoea" while they were growtnc up. The ')'OUnlet Bonin alao chanlc- t.eriRd tu. brother u more of a (See MoTHER.. Pap Al) l ) I • , ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednetdey, Aug. 17, 1983 Stabbed victim's identity known By GLENN SCOTT Ol ... Dellr .... •- Pol.ice investigators today know the identity of a man found stabbed to death in Costa Mesa last Thursday and they believe they have the car driven by the man who stabbed him. So far, though, they don't know who that driver was. Police Lt. Jack Calnon ident- ified the stabbing victim 88 Fran- cisco Martinez, 33, a Costa Mesa gardner and Mexican national who was living in the country illegally. Investigators last week were not optimistic about discovering Martinez' identity. He was carry- ing no identification and no one in the Hamilton Street neigh- borhood where his body was found recogniz.ed him. But Calnon said investigators got a good break when an Orange Cowity Sheriff's deputy thought he remembered Martinez and a worker in the Coroner's Office matched the dead man's finger- prints to thoee taken from Martinez when he was arrested in Costa Mesa two years ago on a grand theft charge for allegedly stealing a gun. The U.S. Immigration and Na- t ionalization Service sent Martinez back to Mexico at the time but he apparently returned, Calnan &aid. The stabbing took place early Thursday morning on the 500 block of Hamilton, just west of Harbor Boulevard. Investigators believe, baaed on statements from witnesses, that Martinez was a pesaenger in a large red car with a black vinyl top. The vehicle was seen parked on the street, where the driver and another man, believed to be Martinez, shared a 12-pack of beer. Twelve empty beer c.ans and a bag from a nearby supermarket were found where the car was parked. County cuts a channel Orange Count y crews use a bull- dozer to remove sand from the mouth .. o f Aliso Creek a fter nearb y South Laguna ho meowners com- pl~ned a berm formed by the sa nd HOW HOT IS IT? ... diverted the creek a lo ngside a cliff below their homes. T he project, now completed, ensures the creek will once aga in empty into the ocean adjacent to the Aliso pier. k • FV council kills renewal proposal By PHIL SNEIDERMAN otllleO..,,,_ ..... The Fountain Valley City Counc9 voted unanimoualy Tues.- day to acrap a Brook.hunt Street redevelopment out.line that had already been approved by the city's Planning Commi.mion. The council delayed for three weeks consideration of a second renewal plan prepared for the Recreation Circle area. Mayor Marvin Adler said he voted to 8CUttle. the Brook.hunt Street proposal in part because two major landowners in the area expreaed little interest in the project. The proposed redevlopment area would have been located along the west aide of Brook.hunt Street from Talbert Avenue to a drainage channel halfway be- tween P:llis and Garfield Avenues. The area includes an 18-acre farm owned by the Kawaguchi family and a 19-acre farm owned by Joseph P. Callens. Mayor Adler contended that The Planning Center, a Newport Beach company hired to pre~ the redevelopment plan, did not adequately consult with these property ownel"ll before pree-- enting the plan. "I talked to them (the Kawaguchi and Callens families), and neither of them was terribly excited about going into a re-- development project," the mayor said. He said the council is philosophically opposed to using eminent domain powers to con- demn properties and force a redevelopment project. Adler also noted that the Field- stone Co. is already proceeding with plans to build new Jwines on the Fountain Valley Drive-In Theatre property (also in the proposed renewal zone). He said that project will proceed even without a redevelopment zone. Councilwoman Barbara Brown also claimed The Planning Center had not adequately consulted with the affected property owners. "We've had aome of these families here for generations, and• you don't just try to shove aome- thing like this down their throats," she said. From Page A 1 Of the redevelopment plan, she and cube ice a week in the summer months, they'll come back in. When the heat gets too between 1.7 and 1.8 million eggs per day, said, ''The ti.ming was wrong, and and things have been a bit hectic the past two bad, maybe it helps," he said. The building is Furra said. "But when it's this hot, the food the best thing to do was just to weeks. air-conditioned. they eat is to battle the heat rather than acrap it." "I've been working myaeli to death on Local amusement parks aren't hitting produce eggs. Production i.s down 10 to 15 Council members also noted the weekends," he said, adding most of his blockbuster attendance rates, either. percent." that new state legislation may customers are travelers, picnickers or beach Sydne Huwaidi, a Disneyland Bartenders are noting a decline in prohibit the inclusion of agricul- conceaion stand operaton. spokeswoman, said business is pretty routine daytime business during this month's heat. tural land in future redevelop- But, aa in moat stories, there's a flip side. this summer. Michaeleen Crawford, manager at The ment projects. Some businesaee aren't benefitting at all "Thia time of year many of our guests Saloon on South Coe.st Highway ln Laguna The aeoond plan involves the from the heat. Places that offer vigorous come from out of the local area," she said. Beach, said things have been alow at the RecreationCircleareanearWarn- activity, for example, just aren't popular ''They have certain vacations all planned out" stand-up bar during the daylight hours. er Avenue and Magnolia Street. when it's hot and humid. and they don't let the heat force them to "We've turned the fans up high and the The proposal calls for a northern The manager of the Shapemaker ex-change their plans. beer box down low, and if that doesn't work aection, now occupied by a minia- erdse salon in Huntington Beach said attend-At Knott's Berry Fann, a spokesman said we give everyone enough to drink ao they ture golf oouree, to remain as a ance has dropped since the heat wave. ''There attendance ia up overall this summer because don't worry about it,'' ahe laughed. recreation area. But the remaining are definitely letB people coming in," ahe said. of C.amp Snoopy. a new attraction, and the She &aid regu1ara come ln when the .un area, now occupied by a skating "But the ones who do come in are sweatier." Beatlemania show currently booked at the goes down, "and they're ordering cold bee!'-center, a go-cart race track. a fast The summertime slump ia a regular park. the adjective cold is always in front." food restaurant and a gu station, phenomenon at the Shapemaker, she said. "'The people who are coming are here to Ted Lara, who holds forth in the back bar would be used for a res- ''Thia i.s pretty typical for the summertime. see Beatleman1a," he said, despite the heat. at Novak's Place in Corona del Mar, said taurant-hotel complex and office Our businels is really good after the fattening Chickens aren't big fans of the heat owner Robert Novak ju.at installed two new buildings. at Christmas time." either, says Ralph Furra, president of Fann fans in the bar. "But the heat and humidity Councilman Ben Nielsen said he King's Racquetball Court in Westminster Fresh Foods in Santa Ana. ''They produce less are keeping people away," he said. "People agreed the Brook.hunt Street area is feeling a similar summertime slump, said eggs and the eggs they do lay are smaller," he don't eat as much, but on the weekends we was not appropriate for re- Bill McClintock, manager of advertising and said. have good beer business. development but said he may look promotions. His two million hens, located on a 600 acre "Especially when the rugby team comes more favorably on .. ~tion "Of COW"9e, i1 it gets hot enough out.sine, farm near Simi Valley, normally produce · " Circle project when it is returned ------------------------------------------------"--:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~m~.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=-_::to:_:th:e~oouncil~ · nextmonth. CO N TR AC T AWARDED ••• $300,000 pay ment set b y mortuary From Page A 1 le.ase area. Extensive remodeling of the existing main jail a1ao-is planned. The addition -is intended to relieve overcrowded conditions in the main jail, which Sheriff Brad Gates contends are at the root of many problems now facing the facility. SupervilJors allocated the initial $2 million for· design from rev- enue-sharing funds. The boerd is hoping it will be able to procure state funding to pay a large portion of the full construction costs. Board members have been eye- ing a $280 million pool of state bond monies created last year with the passage of Proposition 2. The money is earmarked for jail construction and rehabilitation. The project already has been identified by the state Board of Corre.ctions, which allocates the funds, as one of the state's top priorities. Fausto Reyes, an aide to Super- viaor Roger Stanton, said plans for the project should be ready in four to five months. The entire facility could be completed in the next several years if funding is secured on a timely basis. One of the principal partners in the architectural firm selected to design the facility is William Ficker, a prominent Newport Beach yachtsman who once skip- pered an America's Cup entrant in aailing's most prestigious race. \ A Costa Mesa mortuary has agreed to pay a reported $300,000 to a 73-year-old widow who alleged her husband's ashes were mixed up by operators of a crematorium. Audrey Cooper had aought $1 million from the owners of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Memorial Park over the alleged mishandling of her husband's remains. Betty McMullen, Cooper's at- torney, today confinned that the caae had been settled and that papen to diamiss the cue were filed la.st Friday. MOTHER TESTIFIES ... McMullen would not confirm the amount ol. the settlement, which was reported in one county newspaper. Cooper, who presently lives in Camarillo, could not be reached for comment today. (From Page A 1) ''fibber'' than a liar. in answer to one question. Bonin's older brother, Robert, agreed with his mother's and brother's description of Bonin 88 a non-violent type with "a repu- tation for good acts.'' He also described for the court the troubled atmosphere SW'- roundlng the family's homeli.fe while the three boys were grow- ing up. Their father, Robert Bonin said, was prone to drinking, gambling and ta.king "actions against their mother." At one point, Bonin's father lost the We'Te Listening ••• 642·6086 D~ .. 0...enteed ..._,. ,,_,. .. >'°" 00 t>OI -l'°'H pepe< l>y 6 J011,m .,.,-.Tpm end 1ou• copy ••II be -90 family's hOUlle gambling, he said. Charvet a1ao asked family members if they noticed a change in Bonin after hia return from duty in Vietnam. The attorney had told jurors at the outset of the trial's penalty phue that he would be able to show how Bonin's Vietnam experience related to the murders he committed after his discharge. However, all three family mem- bers testified they detected no change in hia behavior upon hia return from Vietnam. The trial on the alleged mix-up was halted last month by Orange County Superior Court Judge Mark Robinaon, who ordered lawyers for both sides not to diacusa the caae. The trial apparently was halted when a settlement waa reached. Lawyers for the mortuary were not available for comment today. Though the arrangments for Cooper's ashes were handled by Smith Tuthill & Lamb, the widow sued Harbor Lawn becauae it had purchaled Smith Tuthill before she picked up "the bogus box of ashes" in 1979. What do you like about the Daily 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 answerin1 service may be used to record let· ters to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include their name and telephone number for verification. No circul•tlon rails, please. Tell us what's on your mind ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L lcMr..u HI Publisher CIMeffted ech .. tleh'I 7t4/Ml-M71 AM otMr ..,.,,!Mntl 141-4121 MA* OfftCI a30 w .. e.y II . Coete .,..._ CA Mall 9ddr-llo• IMO Coel8' ""-C4 92929 9elUICMy Ind 8vnOey II yOll dO not •-'r"'H OOf1f Ill' , • "' <Ill ~ IO e m .,,.,.,.ca.4'• ........ .0 ChuJ DoWellbJ Raymond MeoLMn Editor Md A9Ml•nl Controller MOii ""**' ..... T 1t1,fl 11111 ()f111C19 Co.""Y -...., ~ ""'11~on lleoedl ·~-... ~ ..... --- to the Publlehet ......... c- "=" . VOL Jlt NO.- lEA•ST GROUND BEEF (t4-t6• , .. e..-t) $1. '' bt. CALIFORllA BROWN ONIONS l.te s.. 19• b . J1•M ... SHRIMP #, ..... ...... tl r. ts Au. I *10"u. .... ttl.ft STEAK SALE *100 Off,., u. ••A et.... 1..-. Cwef .. T-IOIE STEAi OR PORTERMOUSE STEAi llllff toU.. BAY fllll SHRIMP JUMBO SHRIMP L,...& ..... c..t.I *6"u. * 12"u. .... •l.ftu. .... •t4.9' u. EITRA lEAI IROUMD BEEF (IO~ Ftt e..t.t) $1.6'f u. ClAIFOl•IA VAlEllCIA ORAllOES .... , ........ 19• l .. FRESll PACIFIC $1 68 RED SUPPER • -, L•. ORAllOE ROUOllY lllllt s be. BIO DEAL MUFF.INS $1. 1 ff,.,~ ........ ''·'' ...... ...... ... .,,. Pacific Ranch Market 334 7 E Coast Hwy . ~ ~· -.;. ~ . Corona del Mar 673~3510 <>o-Olllyt•rll ., .... .._.. ...... ,, .. ... ~= . :· • .. .•. .. ., :! .. •. !• .. .. •• ~ •• ~ •• .: ·-• .. .~ ~ .. . Rabies vaccination clinic Thurs day in Fountain Valley A low-cost anti-rabies vaccination clinic for dogs will be conducted from 7 to 8:30 p.m. ThW'1!1day, Aug. 18 at the Fountain Valley Recreation Center.Brook.hunt Street at Heil Avenue. StAte, county and city laws require that all dogs 4 months old or older be vaccinated against rabies. The shot ls effective for 30 months. Cost of the vaccination iB $3 per dog. The clinic is sponsored by Orange County County Animal Control, the Southern California Vetemiary Medical Association and the Fountain Valley Women's Club. Have a run at Huntii:igton Be ach The 29th Distant Runners Derby will be run on Saturday. Aug. 20,startingat the Huntington Beach City Pier. The event is a 5-mile race that begins at 7:30 a .m . Awards will be given to the top five finishers in each category for men and women competitors. Young people, age 19 and under, also will receive awards for the top five finishers in the 3-mile and 1-1/2-mile runs. Pre-registration fee is $3; with a T-shirt included, the fee is $8. From 6:30 to 7:30 a .m. on the day of the race, a $5 entry fee and $5 for late registration will be accepted. Entries wil be limited to 500 runners. For information on the race, contact the Huntington Beach Community Services Department. 536-5486. Classes offered in Laguana Beach Classes for older Laguna Beach residents will be offered beginning Aug. 22 through Saddleback College and will be held at the Veteran's Memorial Community C.enter at 394 Legion St. Classes in creative writing, exercise to music, beginning Spanlsh, calligraphy and career vocational exploration are being offered. For infonnation, call the Senior Citi7.ens Club of Laguna Beach at 497-2441. UCI engineering orientation meeting Prospective students and employers who are interested in learning about UC Irvine's new certificate program in biomedical engineering should attend an orientation meeting Tuesday, Aug. 23 from 5:30-7 p.m. at the University Club on the UCI Campus. Deadline for admission to the program is Aug. 25. For more infonnation and a brochure, call 856-5414. Try out for Saddleback choral groups . Saddleback College North, in Irvine, is holding auditions for three choral groups which are forming tor the fall semester. $80,000 OK'd (or coast plan The Orange County Board of Superviaors Tuesday agreed to spend $80,000 in Harbors, Beaches and Park District funds to identify beach access points along the unincorporated shoreline be- tween Laguna Beach and San Clemente. The study would ad~ con- cerns of cili7.ens in the area as well as how beach aooesa development could be accomplished and at what cost. It also would take into account the eventual C08t of maintaining beaches opened to greater public access. One reason cited for such a study is the grant already received for beach-access projects. These funds must be spent within a specified time period or they'll be lost. The board has taken a firm position that county staff mem- bers should take no steps to further public access to beaches beyond defending lawsuits in the South Laguna area until agree- ment with local residents is reached regarding thei~ concerns. Visits for seniors Older Lagunans who would appreciate a ''cheer-up" visit at home, or anyone who knows a senior who is alone and lonely, should contact the Senior Citi7.ens Club of Laguna Beach. Home visits are available through the Outreach and Stu- dent Nurses programs sponsored by the club and coordinated with Saddleback Community College. Phone 497-2441 for details. Rude 'goodnight' for FV woIDan A ,...ident of the 2300 blocit of Aylngftsh Clrcle to*d pollce • rock wu thrown through her dining room window Tu.day night as ahe wu pr9pAl'lng to QO to sleep. The rock ripped througfi the ecreen. broke the window and lallCMd three feet from the wtndOw ~ the d#Mng room taJM. DetNgewaeatlmai.d et "5. A burglary wu dltlcovered Monday at M<*>4a School, 9790 Flnctl AY9. ACCOfdlan-type doon on the admln- latratlon bulldlnQ were forced°'*' to enter. The io.. estimated at St50, Included an AM-FM cueett• 11ereo, stereo ~ and a mlcrOWllW oven Security officers at Zody'•. 16111 Harbor Blvd .. reported Tuelday thet 1<>meone uMd matches to Ignite the price tag• on three palrt of ladles Levi )eana The loss waa es11mated at S-43 A relldent of the 17500 block ol Walnut Street reported a vehicle burglary Tuetday morning. Someone entered the retldent'a unlocked white 1980 Audi 4000 and t6ok a Concord CUMtte atere radio valued et $250. Newport Beach A man clalmlng to have a gun held up Windjammer Liquor, 3537 E. Cou1 Highway and tied with $1,215 In ca.an. Wltneaee said the man took a can of soda to the counter and then made the robbery demand after the Cletk had opened the cuh reol1ter. The bandit rePorteaty aped otf In a two-door sedan. Burglars used • chlMt, e drlll and a hemmer to mract a noor Mfe from the master bedroom of a OoY9f Shof'M homee. The thlewa br<*• Into the home ttvougti a g111age door, ranmdced the ~ and toott the N ie, bellewd to contain money and Jewelry. The ..-ldenta wer. away on vacation at th• time of the brMk--ln. Vandals did S5,000 dam.;e to wood cabinet• and panellng In an under-construction realdenoe on the 2000 bk>dl of E. Ooeanlront. Huntington Beach A t>urglary was reported Tueeday at • home on the 800 block of Huntington Street. Entry wu ap- parently made through an unlocked beclrooomwtndow. Theloulncluded S-40 and a bottle ol llquor. A reeldent of the 7800 block or Ontario Drive reported the theh Tueaday morning of hie turquolM Ford pickup with whltt Aberglu camper shell. The loa wu .. umeted at S3.500. Two men were arrMted Tueeday ahemoon at the Ralph• at ore. 9901 Adams Ave .. after they allegedly tried to lhopllh cigerettee, llqu0< end vttamlna, all valued at about $30. A resident of the 3800 block of Montego Drive reported Tuesday that aomeone 1tole the bumper from the reeldent'a 1983 Deteun p+ckup. The loU was eetlmated at $250. A weekend t>urgi.ty WU dl&- C()Y9fed at a hofM on the 5100 block otOunberStl"Mt. A~ WM cut on a tide window to enter the home. The Intruder alllo br<*• Into the~•· TM IOM fncludee car 1tereo lf)Mk.,., tool1, ttectncai tuppllee, two videotape pl•Y9f'•. a vtdeo cam- era and SSO caah. , lnine The Great American Clothing Co was broken Into late Tue.day and ctothee were atoten. The boslneu. located on Sky Park, hu been burglarized frequently In the put . pollce Nld. Entry apparently wu medit through a~ window. Jewelry wu atolen from a homa on 1he •OOO block of Royce Road Tueeday afternoon. ThelvM entered through an open beck door Four 100-pound bag• of a hazard- ou1 chemic.I were dlacovered near a drainage dltcti on Unlver1lty Drive eut of· Cul~ Drlv9 about 5:30 p.m. Tueeday. The bags. two of which were leaking, were cleaned up around 8 p.m. by the Long Beach fl rm which 11 alurry-IMllng the city's atreet1, Fewer clouds, hut warID and hu01id Coastal Temperatures f l 18&..e 14 '° c: : .. ., 14 ,, 17 .. 11 G t7 74 11 ., .. ·~ ., 11 .... to .. 17 .. IOO 1t ., . 14 • to .. 79 ,, 11 .. .. . : ~ '° • Tides lie II ti 63 .. 81 " 75 17 70 93 13 1oe IO '5 ., r• '3 N 17 ., .. 111 63 Tl 52 17 56 .. " • && 17 71 92 74 IM 73 "' 75 17 .. M 44 104 80 t2 71 .. 1• IM IO 1M 71 t7 .. "' 74 17 82 to l'O " ., .. ,., to T1 .. .. 80 ., IOI .. IOI 76 '°' .. n 10 14 G IOI n ~ .. • l Na-w .. -htlllCe '00 NOAA.US I OI c-.r~ Snow Flurrlet Front1: Old .. Wll'm.,. Occluded..,.. Stationary•• .. ,. 75 .. n 11 es 11 93 .. .... 82 " IOI 1' 12 71 101 79 .. 11 IM 80 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesd8y, Aug. 17, 1983 A3 . ., ............ A pregnant Pat Tyler sits with her two children, Bre tt, 18 and Wendy, 14, in their El Toro home. Double surprise She thought sh e couldn't bave a baby By tbe A11oclated Pre11 EL TORO -Pat and John Tyler long ago accepted that they could not have children of their own. Both in their early 40s, they planned to put their four adopted children through college, then travel and retire. That was before Mrs. Tyler di.scovered she was pregnant - with twins. The sudden switch from anticipating an e mpty nest to getting ready for a double d06e of diapers came as a "total shock," said Tyler, 40, who like his wife pursues a busy real estate career. "It really hit us hard," said Mrs. Tyler, 43 .. "It was a combination of panic, fear. excitement and happiness all rolled up together." The Tylers, both previously married and divorced, had each adopted two children when they could not have their own and by the time they married six years ago, they were sure their days of l'aising children w ere ending. Her son Brett, 18, already is in college; her daughter Wendy. 14, will soon be gone from home; and his children , Mike, 13. and Missy, 10, live with their mother. Statistics tell their doubly improbable story: only one in a thousand women giving birth for the first time is over 40, and just one in 90 births is twins. They were looking forward to travel and retirement when Mrs. Tyler inexplicably started gaining weight. Her doctor ordered a sonogram, which creates a kind of X-ray with sound waves, allowing patients and physicians a glimpse inside the body. On the small dark screen in a laboratory, the couple ~w something move inside Mrs. Tyler. A8 they peered more closely, they saw a second moving object -twins. Then came "the most ~jor decision in our lives," Pat said. They had always dreamed of natural parenthood, but they worried about disrupting their plans Md that the adopted children nught feel threatened by the twins. They also feared Down's syndrome. a congenital disease that occurs more frequently in duldren born to women Mrs. Tyler's age . But after amniocentesis determined that Down's syndrome was not present in either fetus, they decided not to have an abortion. While waiting for the test results, Mrs. Tyler went to church every day. "I always lit two candles," she said. They decided to travel "up th e positive and happy road,'' Tyler said. Now Mrs. Tyler is staying off her feet to guard against a premature delivery before the expected arrival in November. Meanwhile, the whole family is readjusting . Tyler, embarrassed to be the oldest man in the obstetrician's office, warns: "The first time I get mistaken for their grandfather. it'll be trouble city." Brett, a freshman at Saddleback College, wonders What it will be Like attending Qis sisters' high school graduation when he is 36. Wendy, alwa~s the youngest child around the house, says she's trying to get used to the idea of soon being the oldest; Missy says she'd looking forward to having little sisters to pick on. Priests beaten, robbed SANT A AN A (AP) -Two Catholic priests were stompt:<l, beaten, bound and robbed by burglars who esca~ in a c.·ar belonging to the parish in Santa Ana, police said. The two men who awakent'<l and attacked Father Gerald Phelan and Father Donald Kolda in the parsonage beside their church also made off with a TV. a stereo, and $252 -including $25 in collection money, Lt Ja<.'k Nelson said. A dog barking outside OIU LadyofGuadaJupeChurchawak- ened Phelan about 2:30 a .n1. Tuesday, Officer Rich a rd Strandberg said. Phelan, 57, told officers he got up to check the noise and wa.-; confronted by one of the burglars in a hall, who struck hi:n m lhl- head with a gun and kn.xked him to the ground. The men then ued both priesl">' hands behind their backs and blindfolded them, Strandberg said. The thieves took the telt>· vision and stereo from the rest , dence, then moved the priests inw the church. where they for<.'e<l Phelan to open a safe containing cash. "During the incident, both W l'n · kicked numerous umes whtle they were bound," Santa Ana pohc.'t' station supervisor Ke nneth Tomlinson said. Kolda, 59, and Phelan wen· treated at Mercy Hospital in Sant.<i Ana and later released Tomlinson said poUC<' wer • searching for the priests' car, ;1 white 1979 Volkswagen Rabbit with a license plate ending PEP Newport De1nocrat event set By WILL ANDERSON 0.., ...... CW;oqalad9t1t The Newport Democrats havt.- come out of the closet agam -amJ they're cooking. Cooking barbecue, that is. Orginally known as the Harbo1 Democratic Club, the orgaruzatlm1 was created in 1948 by Clam Axatater and the late Marn.i Olson. Headquarters we re estab lished in Costa Mesa. In 1971, Lane Shennan and Fred Cunard expanded the 01 ganiz.ation, with the new faction becoming known as the Newport Beach Democratic Club Cunard president of the club, placed an advertisement stating: "Demo crats will meet in a large closet " The ad drew members fro1 11 Huntington Beach, Irvine, Cos1:1 Mesa and Newport Beach, so th•· name was again changed thic; time to the Newport Demucratit Club. The club held its first barbecul• in 1973. and it has become an annual event. This year's barbecue, the 10th, will be held from 3 to 7 p.m Sunday at thP Costa Mesa Corrununity Center. and will feature square dancing and other activities as well as good food. Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Crrtifitd Otmolo i1t. AOS We Proudly Display this Emblem CLEANING DIAMONDS Although diamonds laat fo~cr, they require care w keep brilliant Md beautiful; and clean diamonds ahouJd ~ver be touched by your flngers . they should be handled . by the edges. When atones are not cemented or glued, but 1et ln metal. the following cleaning methode are safe: 1. ••thing In detergent•: Uee an eyebrow bn.&lh to clean the piecet while submerged ln a amaJ.f bowl of warm auds .prepared with liquid det.ergenta oommonly uaed at home. Then ~ them ln a strainer and rime under wann running wet.er, patting them dry with llntl-8 cloth. 2. Ammoni.-weter Miik:: u .. hNf cold wet.er and hall ~ld ammonia ln a cup, aoek1na ln th.la 10lutJon for 30 mlnutee. Then uae an eyebrow brush to tap amtly around the ftont and back of the mouhtina. IWilh ln the .olut.lon apln .na draln on U.... papet' . s. Quloll·Olp ol11nen:: "E-z...t'' jew,.try clMn1nC klta are avall- ebi.. If you follow lnltnactiorw. It "..,. to \lie. ' • The oare you ISv• your d1amondl will maintain their brtWance &nd mer-your pride of own.nhlp; brine your jew•lry In ... w•'ll be b.ppy to dl«'it and clMn )'OW' II.Or* at no eh&rp whlle )'OU wait. Because 1t means we are knowledgeable. ethical 1ewelers dedicated to consumer protection and customer service We had 10 pass rigorous examinations 10 enter the Society and are re~xamined annually to make sure we·re up on !he 1a1es1 develapments The® symbol in our store is ~u1 assurance ot getting tine quallty 1ewelry and good value because we truly know what we're selling MEMBER AMEAICAN GEM SOCIETY f809 ~~EWPORT BLVD .. COSTA MESA ~ SINCE 1~8 BenkAmertcero-Malltr Chergt TOP OF THE NEWS STATE - Social Sec~rity ordered to pay medical expenses By tile A11odated Press LOS ANGELES -A judge has told the Social Security Adrnlnistration on Tueeday it must pay medical bills for 34,000 poor and disabled people who were dropped from disabili- ty rolla over the past three years. Social Security ofticials balked at restoring Medicare and benefits to dependents of the disabled after U.S. District Judge William P . Gray ordered them in June to restore benefits to people who remained disabled after being cut from the rolls. Five killed in collision ('.... Flash flood watch in Ismael's wake By Tbe A11oclaled Pren Although Tropical Storm Ismael has officially been laid to rest, it left a legacy of fierce and sporadic lightning storms packing torrential downpours and 60-mph winds that wreaked havoc on Southern California's highways and homes and isolated 50,000 people in the desert. And the National Weather Ser- vice, issuing a flash flood watch again today, said Ismael's nasty remnants may linger over the region through week's end. Today's flash flood watch cov- ered desert portions of Imperial, Riverside and San Bernardino counties, including adjacent mountains. downtown Loe Angeles and most of the dty'a west aide. The San Gabriel Valley, stretching east from Los Angeles, was "hit very hard" by the storm, said Los Angeles County Sherlff'a Deputy Mario &trada. Lightning knocked' out traffic signals, ca~ ing numerous traffic aocidenta. Sightless sailor missing in Pacific HONOLULU (AP) -A blind sailor who set out on a solo voyage to Hawaii hasn't been aeen since shortly after leaving San Fran- cisco three weeks ago, his contact in Hawaii said. GILROY -Five people, all riding in a van, were killed this morning in a four-vehicle colliaion on Calilorni.a 152 at Pacheco Pass about eight miles east of here, the Highway Patrol said. The wreckage forced cl08ure of the two-lane highway for several hours, said the California Highway Patrol. Smoking-ban fight looms SAN FRANCISCO -Opponents of San Franci9co's tough new smoking control ordinance have vowed to fight what they say is a measure "quite foreign to the spirit of San Francisco." "The law ia government intrusion, it's divisive, it'a diacrlminatory, it's intolerant and quite foreign to the spirit of San Francisco," said Jim Foster, a community leader who was joined Tueeday by about a half dozen civic and business leaders who want the ordinance repealed. Jim Flower's sandbagging efforts paid off Tuesday and saved his Palm Springs house from serious damage during flooding in surrounding desert areas. The threat of more rain and Oooding is I orecast through today. Tuesday's sudden storms doused the high desert of San Bernardino County, flooded the San Gabriel Valley and parts of the San Fernando Valley, and showered the mount.aim with up to two inches of rain, but rnis8ed Hank Dekker, 42, began the 2,376-mile voyage on July 27 aboard the 25-foot sloop "Dark Star," said Vern Rankin, who arranged to sail out and meet Dekker as soon as he geta cloae to the island of Oahu. Expanded jet service asked MODESTO -Rep. Tony Coelho, D-Merced, called for expanded jet service by Pacific Exprem in Modesto and Stockton and ~ the same airline begin flights to Merced. 1'.e San Joaquin Valley congressman propmed the Improved air llel'Vice Tueeday at the tint bearing of a Houae subcommittee examining the efittcta of airline deregulation in small cities. Tax hike, tuition favored LOS ANGELES -Three-fourths of all c.alifomia.na surveyed favor a one-cent sales tax hike to aid public schools. and most believe junior college students should pay a $50-a-semester fee, the Los Angeles Times Poll said today. Schubeck quits KNBC-TV LOS ANGELES -John Schubeck, news anchor for KNBC-TV in Los Angeles, has quit the station in a contract dispute and signecl up with rival KNXT, which he said lured him with more dollan. Schubeck will begin Sept. 5 on Channel 2, co-anchoring the 5 p.m. neW8C8Bt with Sandy Hill. Gunman fooled, hostages freed LOS ANGELES (AP) -A .. very intelligent" gunman who held Spain's consul general and three other people hostage for 9 ~ hounl swrendered when he wu tricked into thinking his family had been flown to Puerto Rico, police said. Carlos Martinez of Spain waa in custody today aft.er his surrender at the Spanish oonaulate about 20 minutes before midnight, said police Capt. Jack Smith. Martinez had been told his wife and two children were en route to Puerto Rico, he said. The four bostagea. including consul general Joaquin Munoz del Castillo, were released unbanned minutes before the su.rrender, Smith said. Martinez. a atocky man with dark, curly. collar-length hair and a handlebar rnouatache, was being held at Parker Center jail for questioning, Smith said. The Spaniah embaasy in Washington said Martinez held a Spani&h passport and was from Malaga, Spain. Authorities said Martinez demanded his family be flown to Puerto Rico, although the reaaon for that request waa unclear. . "He felt he was unable to make a living in the United States," Smith said. '"The demands appear to be the result of a domestic situation. The man is notan American dtiz.en and the demands are not political." Tourismo Internationale, a Spanish travel agency, provided three tickets on an F.astem Airlines flight acheduled to leave Los Angeles International Airport at 11:15 p.m . and the woman and two children boarded the plane, Smith said. An Easy First Stop ... From Any o· e tion!!I COMING SOON TO COSTA MESA · •• A SPARKLING NEW LONGS DRUG OFFERING YOU "DRUGS AND THO.USANDS OF THINGS" 1 aT. O_VON9 m ~ 11"' C08TA •aA 175 E. 17th COITA MEIA ..-- THEY'RE THE ONE! One simple application. One low annual fee for both cards. One monthly statement. One monthly payment. Pick up an application when you get your ... FREE Salad Book * 96 pages * Hardbound edition * Full color pictures COSTA MESA -1886 Harbor Bl., CA 92627 Telephone: 714/548-2291 NEWPORT BEACH -4590 MacArthur Bl .. CA 92660 Telephone: 7141955-0536 NEWPORT BEACH -2620 San Miguel Dr., CA 92660 Telephone: 7141759-0181 Supplies llmfted One ro a family Adu/rs only --------------- BRING THIS COUPON WHEN YOO PICK UP YOUA FREE IOOK •• Wt pan open or transfer an account er this time, • ff you wish. ' --------------------~---~------ -----__ !/ • ' '· TOP OF THE NEWS NATION National Guard alerted in Phelps coppe r strike By tbe A11oclated Preas PHOENIX, Ariz. -Seven National Guard units have been placed on alert for active duty in the Phelps Dodge Corp. copper strike, and some troops probably will be deployed in the next 11everal days, officials say. A 10-day shutdown of a Phelps Dodge mine and smelter. where more than 1,000 strikers had gathered in protest. is acheduled to end Friday. A irlines, union at odds HOUSTON -Negotiators for Continental Airlines and its striking machinists union met at the request of a federal mediator, but came away at odds over the future of workers hired to replace strikers, a company spokesman said today. Hawaii volcano erupting VOLCANO, Hawaij -Two rivers of molten rock coursed from the east rift wne of erupting Kilauea Volcano, but neither posed any immedi- ate property threat, officials said. The eruption was "still going steady and at a high rate" late Tuesday, said Will Tanigawa, a spokesman at the U.S . Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observatory. Sheridan mayor recalled SHERIDAN, Colo. -Less than a year after she sailed into office on a recall ballot emphasiz- ing reform, Mayor Ann Herring has been recalled herself. "I think the city is lost," she says. Out of 618 ballots cast Tuesday in this Denver suburb, 401 were for ousting Mrs. Herring and inltallin8 her opponent, Roger Rowland. WORLD Nine senators in Moscow MOSCOW -Nine Democratic senators from the United States arrived in Moscow today for a visit that is to include a meeting with Soviet President Yuri V. Andropov. The delegation. headed by Sen. Claiborne Pell of Rhode Island, was greeted at Sheremyetevo Airport by Georgi Arbatov, head of the Soviet Institute on the United States and Canada. Gemayel's ouster sought BEI.RlIT, Lebanon -Syria's state-run media today called for the overthrow of President Amin Gemayel's government because it allowed Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Arens to villit Beirut. In Tel Aviv and Damascus, meanwhile. the United St.ates continued~!,._~ for Iaraeli and Syrian withdrawal from LeT ·-·· French deployed in Chad N'DJAMENA. Chad -French forces deployed at more outposts in eastern Chad today to help block a possible Libyan push towards the capital to oust President H.issene Habre and reinstate his predecessor, rebel leader Goukouni Oueddei. Israel woos black Africa TEL A VIV. Israel -Bolstered by its reputation as an arms supplier and trainer of 80ldiers, Israel is working to renew relations with black African nations that broke diplomatic ties in a tilt toward the Arabs. SUMMER THURSDAYS, JULY Zl F A 5 H N w 0 ~. Nixon files checked by his lawyer WASHING TON (AP)-Richard M. Nixon's lawyer says he ia reviewing thousands of files, including 80me of the most sensitive politicial documents of the Nixon admin.iatration, to dedde whether the fonner preeldent wlll object to their release to the public next month. Unless Nixon and others file objec- tions, the National Archives and Re- cords Service plans to open 628 cubic feet of documents -1 ~ million pages -dealing mostly with political matters from the files of Nixon and 37 aides. Klaus Barbie The files were seized by the govern- ment, under a law pasaed by Congress not long after Nixon resigned as president in 1974. Nixon challenged the law and lost in the Supreme Court. U.S. rapped for protecting U.S. pressures Nazi official Libya over Chad PARIS (AP) -France today deplored the way U.S. intelligence officials protected "Butcher of Lyon'' Klaus Barbie and spirited him to safety in Bolivia, but said at least he now faces trial for his Nazi war crimes. SANTA~ (AP) -As President Reagan vacations in seclusion on his mountaintop ranch , his aides are continuing to press Libya to "get out" of Chad and recognize its boundaries. A senior Reagan administration of- ficial said Tuesday that the United States believes the Soviets are helping Libya "because the Soviets do hav~ a lot of equlp~nt there and their past history in dealing with the Libyan government is well-known. The Sov- iets are perfectly aware of our feelingJ! about Libyan involvement in Chad." Government spok esman Max Gallo's remarks w ere the first official French reaction to a U.S. Justice Department .report issued Tuesday that said the U .S . Army Counter-lntelligence Corps shielded Barbie from French officials who wanted him tried 34 years ago. Thousands flee Hurricane Alicia GAL VFSTON, Texas (AP) -Thousands of people fled inland today in Texas and Louisiana as Hurricane Alicia bore down on the Gulf Coast with sustained winds of 80 mph, torrential rains and pounding waves. But thousands more in the Galveston area, which the National Hwrlcane Center said was most likely to absorb the brunt of the storm later in the day, chose to ride out the hurricane and flocked to supennarkets for food. "We just hope they're out getting their canned food, their candles and their bottled water," Steve Harned, chiel meteorologiatof the National Weather Service in Galveston, said late Tue.day. Air Force reconnalmance reports indicated Alicia "continues to strengthen and ia moving slowly toward the west northwest," the weather 9Ct"Vice said. ''Increasing probabilities indicate that the greatest threat is along the upper Texas and w estern Louisiana coasta." At 6 a.m. today, Alicia was centered about 90 miles south-southeast of Galveston, near latitude 28.0 north, longitude 94.5 west. It was drifting to the west-northwest at 5 mph. Tides were up to 5 feet above normal along portions of the upper Texas coast and were expected to reach 6 feet above normal later in the day. The hurricane neared landfall exactly 14 years to the day after Hurricane Camille slammed into the Gulf Coast of Missi&<rippi, killing 255 people and leaving 68 missing. A hurricane which hit Galveston ).n 1900 with 77-mph winds killed 6,000 people, mostly as the result of storm tides which inundated the city. c -FESTIVAL Join us for another memorable music festival under the stars Celebrate music in concert with fashion Thursday evenings in Center Stage Court. Fashion pre- sentations begin at 8pm Con- certs begin at 9pm. • August 18-Tex Beneke And His Orchestra with Music In The Miller M ood • August 25-Finale-Brandon's Big Brass Band Sponsored by the Fashl<¥\ Island Merchants' Association and The Irvine Compa ny. 1n cooperation, 1n part with Musicians Trust Fund Local No 7 Ne1man-MarCU$. Bullocks Wiishire Robinsons. The IJr oadwar and Buffums 70 Ane Stores In /\1 Just otr Paci\ic Coast Hwy be- tween Mac.'\r~r and Jamboree Boulevards In Newport Beach s l A N D T f .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 45 mERLE OORfTRl' .... " .. UTH COAST PLAZA . h1 priz.e-$100 • 2nd pri7.e-$50 • 3rd prize-$25 Merle Norman Beauty Advisors can teach you your face free. Win SlOO. S50, or S25 worth of Merle Norman cosmetics for your new face. Help us celebrate our Win a fabulous shoppin~ spree fDr ""'' r ne"' face. " ifiit.e flORfTAl Tht-~ ....... c:::w.wm .._,. SOUTH COAST PLAZA Rob1nson'S 100 YEARS OF STYLE MAKE ENTERTAINING IN YOUR FIRST HOME AN ELEGANT SUCCESS. JOIN OUR DIRECTOR OF HOME FURNISHINGS, ED EDSON, FOR PROFESSIONAL CONSULTATION ON FURNITURE AND DECORATING: THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 7 P.M. IN NEWPORT. Learn how to plan the best use of space 1n your home With colors slyles and shapes you can crea1e the a1mosphere you want As a complete unit or room by room you'll discover the furnishing periOds and styles that work bes1 tor your personal l1tes1yle Be sure to ask about our Oomputerized Wedding Gift Registry We can record your gilt preferences in every store via the only computerized service tn Southern Calllornia ---· • J - ~· Orange Coast DAIL',' PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 , ' , MAILBOX Parents made the dill erence To the Editor: Last week, Governor Deu- kmejian signed an $800 million package that will help to restore quality to public schools. He has made quality education his first priority and has demonstrated his willingness to give it the ad- ditional financial support needed to ensure the necessary reforrtl4 supported by ne wly elected State Supenntendent oC Public Inst.ruc- tion , Bill Honig. Californians were kept in- formed daily, by the media of the politicking that occurred between the Democrats and the Re- publicans. However. at the same time, ther~ was another scenario being acted out behind the scenes throughout the state by a group of persuasive parents. which re- ceived less coverage. but was extremely influential in causing the governor to increase his financial commitment to public education. This m o v e m e nt was spearheaded by the Citizens Ac- tion to Save &lucation (CASE), of which many pa.rents in Laguna Beach were involved. They spent countless hours during the last three months sending telegrams and writing letters to their elected representativs. making personal telephone calls to the Governor's office and attending rallies in Sacramento. All of these activtties were completed at. their own personal expense. The list of parents is too long to mention each one individually, however, the overall leadership was provided by Mmes. Pat Kollenda, Linda Pack and Charlene Ragau. I wish. on behalf of the Board of Education of the Laguna Beach Unified School District, to express its sincere appreciation to these parents for their efforts in moving California towards restoring its schools to their former position of excellence. We congratulate their efforts and support of public education in Laguna Beach. HARRY L. BITHELL President, Board of &lucation Laguna Beach Newport police deserve thanks To the Editor: We wish to thank and commend the police department of Newport Beach for their wonderful, dedi- cated service in searching-for days and weeks-and finding those who keep entering our homes and robbing us! Calling 911 is wonderful. To receive such polite and positive answering service-then meeting and working with the young men who ace detectives and officers and see them so unobtrusive in their diligent search for these brazen offenders-has helped to re-establish our faith. We all care and want our homes and com- munity kept safe. So our most sincere thanks and appreciation--to all of you for this outstanding servace to us. MR. and MRS . C.W. and NEIGH- BORS Newport Beach W'here's the balance? To the Editor: Why does Orange Coast College have only six counselors f6r our student body of 30,000? Why has the Orange Coast College personnel been telling us since July, ''Our appointments are filled. Because of budget cuts, we only have six counselors?" Why do we have 263 Physical Education classes and 72 Pho- tography cl.Mses hsted in the fall catalog and only six counselors? Why do we only have 22 Psychology classes this fall? Why are we going t.o have students attendmg college for longer periods of time before graduating? Why does Orange Coast College have only six counselors for our student body of 30,000? BARBARA CHELETTE Huntington Beach Alternative offered To the Editor: r would like to propose an alternauve to Governor Deu- kmejlan, in lieu of calling a special election December 13 for the SebastJani Redistrictig Bill. In- stead of depending on the Re- publicans and Democrats to draw the hnes (to their advantage), I suggest California form a special committee made up of people who are active m Third Party in&erests. with no affiliation to either the Republican or Democratic party. We could ask people from the Peace and Freedom. Socialist Workers and Libertarian parties (etc.) tositon this committee. I feel thLS is a viable solution and perhaps one that would dismantle the gerrymandering system that occurs between the Democrats and Republicans. The cost of ttus spe<..ial election ($14 million) is absolutely ludi- crous. I feel this would be more cost effective lO the people of California. Prior to their appoint- ment, [also suggest that Sen. H.L. Richardson, R-Arcadia, with his gun in his holat.er (instead of Roy Cohn at his side) ask the holy question "Are you now or have you ever been a member of the Democratic or Republican party?" KAREN MCKEN - NA-JUERGENS C.OSta Mesa l.M. BDJd !Hands-on Classify the world's human eaters as (inger feeders, fork feeders and chopsticks feeders. And note, please, the fork feeders are outnumbered IJy two to one. Eureka! Here's something the early Chinese didn't invent. ~read. They had nonesuch. If the top isn't at least 500 feet from the river bottom, It's not a "high dam," rm told. Yes, the teenage girls who smoke now outnumber the t.ee~e boys who smoke. Half the people who drown are alone at the time. Q . What'• that l.ribe of people who get sick everytime they try to walk on dry land? A. The Bajaus' They live on boats, roclc.i.ng on the water from birth to death, ln the Malaya. A tltOU on shore makes them diz:iy. Q You &aid only one out of ~ven single w~n aged 40 ORANGE COAST lailyPilet eventually gets married. What about divorced women that age? A Two out of three marry again. Q How many Harvard drop- outs go back to get their degrees? A. Ninety percent go back. Less than 50 percent of those get degrees. Thoee birds known a.a condors. the rew left, eat mightily. Typical breakfast can be 150 m1tt at a cost of about '7~. When athletee NY a compatriot baa "rabbit e.ana," they mean he'• extrerooly .ensitive to criUdJm. The Lake Tahoe atone fly doesn't Cly. It live. and dies more than 200 feet underwater. Among ahopllfterw 1 who get cauaht. the women outnumber the men by almoet teVen to one. '}"he Btg-Eyed Wolf aptder of Kauai. HawaU. hall no eyes. HJ.. ec-.werta • ~ Military indulges in niceties WASHINGTON -Those gov- ernment spending figures, with all the goose eggs at the end, aren't easy to comprehend. As the late Sen. Everett Dirksen, R-IlL, once said, "A billion here, a billion there and pretty soon you're talking about real money." Sometimes the expenditures have to be reduced to simple digjts before the taxpayers fully rea.liz.e that they are being ripped off. For some examples of misdirected spending that could be brought down to a comprehensible level, my report.er Kathy McDonald turned to the Pentagon. Going lo pot She found, as expected. that the military brass spends the tax- payers' money on fripperies while essential equipment and services a.re allowed t.o deteriorate for lack of funds. For instance. -The Army spent $75,000 to repair a bowling alley floor at Fort Bragg, N.C. For the same amount of money, the base communica- tions center could have purchased a badly needed replacement for its emergency ~enerator -The Army spent $266,000 to repair the interiors of two unused, historical buildings at Fort Bliss, Texas. But $163,000 couldn't be scraped up to install a proper fire alarm system. Auditors found that the fire alanns weren't working in several barracks and the noncom- missioned officers' club. Not insignificant -At the Naval Training Center in Orlando, F1a., the Navy spent more than $2, 700 to re-carpet the living room, dining room and hall of the commanding officer's quar- G -J.-1:.-•• -.-1.-•• -. -~ ters. For $200 less, an emergency exit could have been installed in the base telephone room. On the same base, meanwhile, the Navy spent $303 to repaint a boathouse and dock th.at went tom down a few months later. -At the Naval Construction Battalion Center in Port Hueneme, Calif., the Navy re- fused to spend $314,200 to repair unusable railroad tracks that the auditors described as vital to the base's mission. Yet it cheerfully laid out $290,000 to repair the officers' club and $35,000 to re- surface the tennis courts. -Andrews Air Force Base out of business for as many as aix months. Last month, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Thayer called upon the services to get their act together. "We must take immedi- ate steps to fund the mo6t critical and highest priority work, and get the most value we can from the resources available," he wrote in an internal memo. Among the steps to be ta.ken, Thayer ordered, is "holding ac- count.able any individual respon- sible" for questionable expen- ditures. Dear Mr. Deputy Defense Sec- retary: You might begin with the examples cited above. Please let me know who was held accoun- t.able and what disciplinary action was ta.ken so that I may report It to the American people. outside Washington, D.C .. spent UPDATE: Back in October $72,000 to improve some aoftball 1981, I reported "a scandal of fields and $3,200 to install some extraordinary proportions" in· doors in the bowling alley. For volving top Egyptian political little more th.an the same amount, figures and fonner CIA and the Air Foroe could have installed Pentagon officiala. My columns smoke and heat detectors in 22 led to a federal grand jury building;s that were in violation of investigation, which I& now focua- s.a{ety regulations. ing on two retired Pentagon . • _,people, arms sales chief Erich Von Fitoe&& h nt Marbod and Air Foroe Maj. Gen. -The Army spent more than Richard Secord, and a high former $123,000 to repair basketball and CIA official, Thomas Clines. All volleyball courts at the Army Test three have denied any wrong- and Evaluation Command in doing. But a few days ago, an Aberdeen. Md. But itcould.n'tfind F.gyptian businessman, HU88ein $40,000 to overhaul a chiller unit Salem, pleaded guilty to filing $8 in a ballistics laboratory that million ln fa.tae shipping billa wtth housed more than $4 million in tbe Defense Department. He's computers and luer equipment. now cooperating with In- The chiller unit was leaking oil vesUgators. and making noise; engineers told -Last May, 1 wrote two the auditors that a breakdown columns describing an "orgy of could put the computers and l.aaers spending" by the U.S. Syn.fuels Corp., using the taxpayers' billions. Ttua was followed in July by a Senate hearing, which gener- ally confirmed the charges. Last week, the story hit the front pages when three of the seve.n Synf uela directors called for the di.smisaal of their president, Victor A. Schroeder. -I also reported last May that Ashland Oil had made "multi- million-dollar payments to of- ficials close to the Sultan of Oman in apparent violation of the law." The story precipitated investiga- tions by the Securities and Ex- change Commission and two House committees, which have now verified the charges. -I reported in February that President Reagan wanted to sell the government's land and weather satellites to private in· dustry. But I warned that it was "not at all clear" this would save the money that Reagan believed it would. The transfer of these satellites is now going ahead And officials of the National Oceanlc and Atmospheric Ad.mini.atration. which operates the satellites, have acknowledged that the transfer may not save any money. -Last March, I reported on the c are a n d coddling o f ex-presidents. The cost of their upkeep, I reported, was "stagger- ing.'' I noted that "the three current living ex-presidents are all either millionaires or cl08e to it. thanks largely to the op- portunI ties that arose directly from their years in the White Houae.'' The story subeequently was pk:ked up by news magazines and radio-TV networks. Members of Congress are now scrutinizing the.e expenditures more closely. A week's pay for nothing A lot of people know for sure whether they're on the side of management or labor, but l don't have a side . I vacillate. One day I'm angry at the high-handed, anything-for-a-profit corporation which is paying big dividends and small salaries, but t.he next I'm angry at employees who take money from the company without putting m a day's work. There's plenty to dislike on both sides. I'm not in a position where I hire or fire people but occaaionall y I get so far behind 9n mail and paper- work that Jane Bradford, who works wt th me regularly, and I decide to hire a temporary sec- retary for a few weeks to help us get caught up. Over the years we've had about ten. With a couple of exceptions, this is the way it goes: Bett fool forward L inda hears we're looking fo'r a ,~,, -.N-DY-RD-ON_IY _ ..... 4 typist 90 she come9 to my office to talk. She's brig.ht, young, atU"act- ive and she knowa how to type. She wants the job desperately, ahe says, so ahe can pay her part of the rent for the apartment ahe shares with a roommate. I don't ask about the roommate. Linda aeems like what we need 10 I tell her to show up Monday morning at 9 a.m . Monday morning at 9:22. Linda waltz.et in. The bus was late, she aaya. First Linda puts her pocketbook down at the desk she's going to use. She notices the IBM Selectric typewriter ahe'a going to uae and compla.lna chat it'• an old model which she may not be able to work on. Next she aaka Jane where the .. ," the book the Det.1roec>1a lmpeJltll1t Oreoon . ladles room is. l know where it is too but she doesn't ask me. Ten minutes later ahe reappears wtth a fresh makeup job. She wan\8 to make a good impremion on me, I guem. "ls it okay lf I go down to the c.afeterla and get a cup of coffee?" aheuka. Aneuymark i had assumed that by quarter of ten she'd already had breakfut, bu t I want to be Mr Nice Guy wt th Linda 80 I, of coune, aay sure. enough to have fresh 11quefted orange juice, pancakes and sausage and a third cup of coffee, but when she come9 beck ahe'a carrying a bag with coffee and a Danish ln it. She spreads her Utile breakfast out on the deak and proceeda to have it while the reads the new11paper. Th.la is not the kind of help J ane and l had ln. mind. I finally put 90me th.ingt on her desk that I want typed. She asks me a few questions about the material and then says ia it okay if she makes a phone call first Mr. Nice Guy says sure. Stretching patience I hear her ta1ki.hg to her mother. She'• been on the payroll for an hour and a half now and the hasn't done anyth!Qg at all for me yet but she's telling her mother bow good I am to work for. It turns out L1nda la a telephone junkJe. She 9penda more time making penonal pbooe calla than she does drinking coUee or going to the J.adles room. and by the end of the third day the'• getting more Lncom.ln& calla than Jane, Bob Forte, the editor, and I put together. Several days later Linda con- fides in Bob who tells me she really hates this kind of work. She wanta to be an actreal and only took the job ln hopeHhe'd eee Dan Rather In the hal.1.1. She'd like ao meet Den bem\.We tf she can't make I ton nro.dway. ahe wan ta to be the tint anchcrwoman on the network .venlna news I.how. On Friday of the first week, Linda c.lla in a\ 11 a.m. and says abe11 ~ to be a Utlle late beclUle a bM • dental appoint- ment the foraot to tell me about. All the i.mponry 8eCl'\!Wies rw ever bad have an awfuJ Jot of dmtal work done and \ht1r bl.-are lats than anyoM el.8e'a. 1 thouah\of &U thJlbemu.e rv. ft!Ad where .inc. unemployment tot., blgh, the at.enteeilm ,._._ £n lndustry are ~Y downA Workers aren't gooftna off • much u they Uled to. 1 hope l\'1 tl\IA' even thimch I know lt could man a-~#" den\il'!' • I I \ I --·,---.· ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug i7, 1983 ~7 I - - I You'll find all the essentials to send the kids back to class with style. Selection may vary by store. JUNIORS Special purchase: Sleek career separates ·from Tomboy including blouses, pants and skirts ...................... 18.99 each Special purchase: Sawy polyester georgette dresses in a selection of col- ors ............................. 39.99 Special purchase: Suit separates from Collegetown . Jackets, 59.99 Skirts, 29.99 Blouses, 24.99 Sweaters, 24.99 Save 251/o: Acrylic lined leather bomber jacket. Orig. 80 .00 ................ 59.99 Save 331/o: 5-pocket cord jeans in many .super colors. Orig. 30.00 ........... 19.99 FASHION ACCESSORIES Save 201/o: Bonnie Doon fashion socks. From argyles to knee-hi's. Reg. 2.75 to 5.5() ...................... 2.20 to 4.40 Special purchase: Clutches and small handbags of genuine leather, a selection of colors ........................... 17 .99 Save 25°/o: Princess Gardner compu-check calculator leather checkbook with mat- ching pen. Orig. 24.00 ............. 17.99 Special purchase: Snappy pewter and colored earrings, with surgical steel posts ............... 2n .00 or 3.99 each ' WOMEN'S SHOES Special purchaae: Nike~oggers in non- stretch nylon trimmed in suede ...... 18.99 Special purchaae: Leather boots from 9· West. Two stytes to choose ........ 58.99 • W EST COAST l<IDS save 2&'/e: Infants and toddler's playwear from Ca~er's. Reg. 6.00 to 22.00 ......................... 4.41 to 18.41 Save 27'/• to 281/1: Kida totes and lunch bags. Reg. 5.50 to 7 .00 ....... 3.• to 4.• Save 2D'/1 to 3D1/1: Knit gowns and dorm ~irts for girts 4 to 14 ....... i &.•to 13.• Save 2D'/1: Carter's panties and vests of pure cotton~girts 4 to 14. Reg. 4.35 to 5.5() ...................... 3.• to 4M S.Ve 211/1: Fashion ankl~ and sportsocks for girts 4 to 14. Reg. 1.90 to 3.95 ........................... 1..9 ii:> 2• . BOYS Save 26°/o to 301/o: Don Juan woven shirts for boys 4 to 7, orig. 12 .. 00 to 13.00 8.99 For boys 8 to 20, reg . 14.00 to 16.00 9.99 and 10.99 Save 2.00 to 3.00: Levi's cords for boys. Sizes 4 to 7, orig. 15.0011.99 For boys 8 to 14, slim and regular 26" -to 30", orig . 11 .99 and 13.99 9.99and11.99 Save 25°/o: Snappy new argyle sweater vests. Reg. 18.00 ................. 12.99 Save 25°/o: Farah chino pants in junior and prep sizes. Orig. 18.00 to 20.00 .. 12.99 and 14.99 Save 20°/o: Levi's 701 jeans for boys sizes 26" to 32" waist. Orig. 16.99 ........ 12.99 'Save 25°/o : Van Heusen jacket s for boys sizes 8 to 20. Orig. 30.00 ........... 21.99 Save 20°/o: Health-Tex for little boys 4 to 7. Cord and denim jeans, orig. 13.00 9.99 Long and short sleeve knits, orig. 7 .00 to 8.00 5.49 to 8.49 Save 20°/o: All Trimfit socks, boys 4 to 7. Orig. 2.00 to 5.00 ............ 1.80 to 4.00 Save 201/o: All boys' Jockey underwear. Reg . 4 .00 to 9.50 ............ 3.20 to 7.80 Save 26°/o: Tube socks in six-packs. Sizes 8 to 20. Reg . 14.00 ................. 9.99 Save 20°/o: All Carter's underwear for boys 4 to J.. Orig. 5.25 to 6 .00 ....... 4.20 to 4.80 Save 261/o: Boys' v-neck sweaters. Sizes 4 to 7, orig. 12.00 8.99 8 to 20, orig. 14.00 8.89 Save 20°/o: Knit tops for boys from Wonderknit and West Coast Ways. Sizes 8 to 20, reg. 10.00 each 2/18.00 For boys 4 to 7, reg. 8 .00 each 2/12.60 Save 251/1: Levi's pre-washed denims for boys 8 to 20. Reg . 20.00 to 22.00 .. 14.99 to 16.99 Save 261/1: Levi's pre-washed denims for boys4 to 7 . Orig. 16.00 ............ 11.99 LUGG A G E Save &01/1: Softside luggage: tote, carry- on, pullman bags, garment bag. Orig. 40.00 to 100.00 ............ 11.• to 41.• SpecW purcMM: Backpacks of ligh~htpolyester/nylon, I .. Nylon backpack with contrast trim, 13.• YOUNG MEN Save 261/o: 4/40 Jaguar wool and wool blend blazers. Reg . 95.00 to 120.00 ......... · ............... •·•to 84.99 Save 25°/o: Classic plaid woven shirts. Will be 16.00 on 9/6/83 ............... 11.• Save 251/o: RPM dress slacks of easy care polyester/acrylic/rayon. Reg. 27.00 . 19.99 Save 25°/o: Striped oxford shirts from Berkley. Will be 20.00 on 9/6/83 ..... 14_. Save 26°/o: Knit tops from OP in a collec- tion of great styles. Orig. 12.00 to 26.00 ..................... 9.00 to 19.50 Save 33°/o: Versatile sweater vests in a choice of solid colors. Reg. 15.00 .... 8.99 Save 250/o: Pure cotton, fully lined madras short~. Many colors. Orig. 20.00 .... 14.99 Save 25°/o: Argyle sweater vests of soft A acrylic . Reg. 24.00 ................ 16.99 Save 25°/o: Levi's straight leg or boot cut cords. Reg. 20.00 ................. 13.99 TYPEWRITERS, CALCULATORS Save 100.00: Brother electronic typewriter/printer. Orig. 599.00 .... 498.00 Save 100.00: Brother professional electric portable typewriter. Orig. 449.00 ... 349.00 Save 21°/o: Texas Instruments solar scien- tific calculator. Orig. 24.99 ......... 17 _. Save 25°/o: ,Canon palm printer calculator. Orig . ~.99 ...................... 21.- '8ve 231/e: Cangn flashcard calculator, credit card sized. Will be 25.99 on 10/1 /83 ......................... 11.• Save 261/1: Canon TP-8 pocket printing calculator. Orig. 35.99 ............. 21 .. D ES l<TOP Save 231/1: Ctlp on lamps in red, yellow, brown or black. Orig. 13.00 .......... I.• S.ve 221/1: Goose-neck lamp. Orig. 18.00 ..........................• 13.• Save 221/1: Swing-arm desk lamp. Orig. 22.00 ................... · ... 11 .. S.Ve &1•1t: 100-page photo album. In 3 colors. Orig. 20.00 ................. I.• Save 17'/1to111/1: Acrylic box frames in a 4 sizes. Reg . 3.60 to 12.00 .......... "2.• S.V. 21'!. to 13'11: Hammond and Replogle relief globes. Bonus antique map with purchase. Orig. 29.96 to 99.is ........ 11• to 74• THE BROADWAY· -'---- l "'. .. .. ,...., ., .... -. --. -·-·· ~ ... .. Aa Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 The Balboa Island Yacht Club has been around for 61 years for kids of all ages to enjoy. Chrissy Althouse (right) takes part in rowing races with Donny Wood, while Nancy Waters (below) packs up the oars alter the race. . -. ..._... ... ' A y_acht club for kids PAPARAZZI ~ ........ ..--... By STEVE MARBLE Ol ... o.llt. ......... In 1923, when Balboa Island was little rnoce than a summer place for wealthy Pasadena famil· ies, a man named Joe Beek had an idea. A yacht club for kids. Memories aeem to vary on whether Beek, a Balboa pioneer who had considerable influence in aha ping the town, fo~ the club out of genuine aUection for younptera or a feeling the or· . gani.zation would keep them off the streeta. Gene ·Baum, an ialand regular since childhood, was there the night Beek propoeed the yacht club. "I remember a bwlch of us kids were out on the porch. It was a party or 90l"Dethi.ng. Joe Beek came outside, sat down with us and asked how we'd like our own boating club. It started the next day." And 61 summme.rs later, the Balboa Island Yacht Club -a slightly misnamed organization that takes members in at age 4 and gently pushes them back out at 16 -goes on. The pier in front of the Beek house on the 80Uth side of the island is still the meeting place for daily diving, swimming, peddling and sailing races. Ribbon oer· emonies are held at the end of each week just as they've always been. The summer dues have gone from 25 centa to $5 and ,the membership has grown from 30 to 300 but the flavor of the club - including ita leaky padd.1eboarcU and lack of ready sailboata -bas aurvived the force of time that haa changed and rearranged the rest of the beach city. Auction 1 Bid for Gold' makes pot of gold for Olympics BJ VIDA DEAN OI ... 0.-, N.e .... What does black Angus bull, a 1922 model-T Ford speedster and a Bob Mackle red beaded gown once worn by Mitzi Gaynor have In common? They are all Items now owned by successful bidders Herb and Suzy Sutton, guests at the "Bid for Gold" Orange County Otymptc Celebrity auction held Sunday at the Newporter Reeort. Alan Ryplnekl paid $2,500 to do aomethlng that most ~le would pay $2,500 not to do - go to Jall. His bid gets him a gourmet dinner for four In a private ceU with squad car transpor- tation thrown In by1jonora Newport Beach Police Chief and Mn. Pete Oroee. Dennie LallltHIMft, OC co-chairman USOC, outbid the other almost 275 gueet1, ($8, 750) and now has a fabulous weekend for two, a lhopplng spree at South C.out Pina plus a Hawalaan vacation, one of the 88 ltema to go on the bfock. "It's all for a good cauae," auctioneer Bob Abel explained during the auction which followed a gourmet dinner (ulmon uutettd In glfJflfK and llrM, root tflet of ,,_, wfth wild mulhroom• 1111d OrMJge and gr.,,.frult chM/Ot· te). llob Cltffonl, OC USOC chairman, ex- plained that the money made (almo.t 1100,000) would go for training Olympic hopeful1. "We are the onty country tn the wor1d s-t~tlng In the Otymplca without government help. ' Earty gue1ts arriving for the cocktail hour tn the patio found the area cok>rfulty decorated In red, white and blue balloons -but then Mother Nature got Into a snit, (probably over complalnts of recent hot weather) and whipped up a wtnd and blew them away. Nearby palm trees got In on the fun and popped some that made sounds like Chinese New Years. Other balloons floated·away to color the sky. . · Inside, the decorations specially or- chestrated by Ch8r'IM Pup, tnc:tudlng Olymplc ftags cotumna of baloona and red, white and blue centerplecee remained In tac1. 8111 Toomey, Olympic decathlon wtnner, wu honorary chairman <Of the event wtth .._, Cotton, chairman, and 9ettJ ftoullton auction chairman, the latter two wer. preeented ptaq\189 by Clifford. LOOKING AHEAD: Fall dealgl"!I by Anne Ki.In, Richard Warren and Albert Nlpon wtll be ahown at the Aug. 25 "i!wmng of Elegance" being preeented by Nordstrom at South Cout Reper- tory ~tre to benefit Aulltance LMaue of Newport Beech phllanthroptee (Dent., lieatth Center and the Chlfd Day Cate Center). · Samplet from New York ranging from aportawear to evening wtll be pr....,ted In an entertaining manner. Also, fu,.. and fUhlOnt for men. (Men are being Invited not onty to ... men '• fuhlona, but to ... the f\tra for women.) Tick eta, S 12.50 per per90n, are atlll avallab'9 by catting 549-aoc>, m . 1M. Hott... for the. evenlnt wtM be league ~~t Dorothy Relohle. "Chalrm1n of the ........ It Merton Ptcken1. 'I remember a bunch of us kids were out on the porch. It was a party or something. Joe Beek came outside, sat down with us and asked how we'd like our own boating club. It started the next day.' friendly yet stern wife of the founder who believed -ap- parently above all elae -that it was important to "finish the race." Decade after decade, she was the pet80n who would sit on a step ladder, clipboard in hand, ar)d , watch as 'the boys and girls of summer would stroke and paddle Commodore J evon Hadley calls out the start of the race. "I don't think ita really changed much at all,'' says Barton Beek, the oldest of the Beek sons and commodore of the yacht club in 1940. His own children were members. Though the club traditionally haa been more summer camp than strict by.the-numbers organized yachting, the organimtion has given many youngJten their first taste of the ocean and the salty breeze that blows in from the harbor. "It was great. You'd be in the aun or ln the water or ln a boat - you know, a real rough life," jokes Robert Yardley, who was com· modoce of the club in 1945 and now owns a restaurant on Balboa Ialand. "Because it was just kids, it was very low·key. Boeting, as you get, older, changes. You go out and sail then go to the clwb and fight and argue," says Yardley, who has given up yachting as a hobby. "It provided a focus for the summer -gave all of us !IOOle- thing to do," says Allan Beek, a · past club oorrunodore like his brothers. "I have fond memories of tha.e summers." Baum, whoee grandaon marks the family's third generation in the club, remembers h1a member· ship years as "a chance to become part of a group, to be active t.oeether, to compete and t.o be friends." Most club graduates remember a woman named Carroll Beek. Qie in the lapping waters off the family pier. It didn't seem to matter much whether a child would win or lose. There were always more races. more chances. Finishing the race. that's what always seemed to matter. That was the Carroll Beek philoeophy. "She only got involved when her help was needed," remembers Michael Smith, who joined the club when he was 10 and went on to become a commodore. "She'd let the:,kids run the show until they got in .too much trouble - then she'd bail ua out." Yardley recalls her as a warm-hearted but strict person who would ask her husband to step outside if he was going t.o smoke and prohibited drinking in her houae. "She had just the right touch with the club," he adds. ''The way the whole thing was run 'was just incredibly unique." Joe Beek died in 1968. Carroll Beek died 13 years later. After her death a group of parents and grandparents got together to decide what to do. There was agreement that the woman'• death was going to leave , a far greater hole than imagined. ''Becau.e C.atToll had always been there when ahe was needed. CJ See Yacht. Page A9 ..................... a..... Glynda Seretti with Ed Sebek. .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 Al For rich only •• ~ Organs jlre not for sale, but transplant care is eXpensive DEAR ANN LANDERS: I read recently that a 20-year-old woman from Saudi Arabia had a liver transplant ln Boston. I think it is a disgTace that only the very rich can afford to buy organs for transplantation to keep their loved ones alive. A while back a ChJcago couple ln modest circwnstancee were given a lot of publicity when their infant daughter needed a liver transplant. The atoriea and photoe were ao moving the public came up with more than $300,000 in donatiQDS.. (The child died and the parents eet up a fund to belp similarly strfck.en children.) Dlbaol1 Department of Pabllc Heald! ud Dr. Robert Stein, Cook Couty medical eumlaer ID Clalcago, tile re 11 a pabUc policy a1a1D1t die aale of OflUS. Selling eye., kidneys, livers, etc., is clearly diacriminatocy asainst the poor. What can be done to stop thia ahameful practice? -Wl:r HEN IN WESTPORT I also cbecked wltb 8.J. Andenom. associate 1eneral coanael of die Americu Medical AHD. saie, too, aald It 11 contrary to pabllc poUcy ID Dllaoh to sell or parcba1e orgu1 ud bows of ao state wlaere It 11 le1al. DEAR HEN: Eacla state bandies die orgu donor program Its own way. According to tile ID Marylaacl, laowever, tbe federal 1overn- meat may pay coroaerw for pitaJtary 1lud1. Yacht club for kids ••• ...., From Page A8 we realized that the whole thing could fall apart if we weren't careful," says Baum. "She was the backbone." A small collection of club vet- erans and boosters was formed. 'Ibe Beek family survivors ar- ranged to keep the pier available for the club during summers. The family, which also owns the historic Balboa Wand Ferry, agreed to provide ,a supervisor for club activities. "The kids still do most of the work but we realized they needed aomething there, someone to hang onto," says Baum, who downplays his role in the club saying he just "stays around" and is useful because h e has a house where the paddleboards can be stored. Consistency is the Balboa Island Yacht Club password. Mondays are reserved for pad- dleboard races, Tuesdays for div- ing and swimming competition and Wednesdays for rowing races. When it's all over, the pad- dleboards are hauled away, the sidewalk rimming the beach iB swept and everyone heads home. The next morning it starts all over again. The pattern continues through July and August, ending in time for families to go on a brief holiday or for swruner resident.a to board up the house and drape sheets over the furniture before re- treating the inland. "It used to be that when sununer ended the island would be empty," says Baum, whose father built the island house he lives in. "But that's changed raw. M08t of the kids seem to live here all year." For many of the children, the yach t club routine is repeated sununer after summer until they reach the magical age of 16 when one teen-ager -only one -is named conunodore, a coveted position that includes leading meetings and picking out trophies. "The paddleboards were always leaky, the races were never quite fair but, oh God, it was super," recalls George Twist, the club commodore in 1962 and now a member of the New port Harbor Yacht Club. "I lived in Beacon Bay and I'd row or swim over to the island in the mornings," says Twist. "I remember all the moms would sit in their deck chairs and play canasta or aomething. "It's a club for kids," he adds."As you get older you help out the younger kids. It just always happens that way. It seems to just have a natural order to it." Baum suggests it's the blend of competition and instruction, of gTowing up and having fun that keeps the kids coming back to the club year after year. "lt'a a super training ground," he says. "You see the kids move up in the organiz.ation, take charge, learn to run the meetings -it's just a delight to see them mature." From the parent's perspective, Tile utroaomtcal coat of a Uver transplant (approximately $UO,tOO die first year) 11 due to tile ea:peue of patleat care uul llo1pltal11atloo. I'm llad yoa save me uotber opportanJty to pla1 tile lJDlform Aaatomlcal Glft Act. You caa offer any aaable orpn for donation apon yoar deatla. Jaat tla.l.all of being able to live 1lgbt to a tbl.1D4 penoa or a second cbuce at fife to one wbo needs a llJclney. a liver or a pancreas. Or1an donor cards will be sent free of cbar1e. Please eaclose a 1elf-addreS1ed, stamped eave lope. Tbe address: Tile LMn1 Bank, P .0 . 9ox 17%5, Houston, Tex. 77H5. Carry yoar donor card ID your wallet at all tlme1. I've carried one for 1ev~al years. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Would you print a pithy recap of the advice you've been handing out Gene Baum, one of the first members of the club, talks with (from left) Nancy Waters., Jevon Hadley, Tim for years regarding grandparenta as litters? More to the point: What should be said when our kids lean on us too often to baby-sit? We love our.grandchildren, but we don't want to be tied down anymore. Too bad we didn't cUp thOle great columns when they appeared, but they weren't pertinent at the time -ao who listened? Say lt asaln. Ann. -PRESSURE IN D.C. DEAR D.C.: Some ,rudparent1 love to baby-alt and cu 't walt to be asked. Otlaera, Ute yoa, aren't crazy aboat It and 1boaldn't feel guilty. Y oa do not owe yoar cblldren till• aervlce. lt'1 a lovely gesture now and tben (especially If a daugbter or daagbter-ID·law cu't afford a sitter), but It'• not written anyplace tbat yoo mast. Offer wben yoa feel yoa wut to and say, "Sorry, we bave plu•.'' wben yoa don't. Baby-1ltting a second generation does not go wltb tbe territory. Scanlon., Tracey Dana and Eric Vinje, all club officers. The week ends on Thursday with a club meeting and a ribbon ceremony. Three times a summer there is a picnic. "It's a position that teaches maturity and administration," says Barton Beek. "When you're commodore you run the club, you run the meetings. I was ~ teen-ager before I even realize there were any parents around." the general philosophy is not to ·-------------------..-------------------- Nobody seems ever to have questioned the order of things. It's just always been that way. Youngsters, dripping wet and eome with n06eS coated in zinc oxide, line up on the sand. They swim or paddle out to an im- aginary line at the end of the pier and back. Mothers sit on sand chairs or along the bulkhead sunning themaelves while reading maga- zines or playing cards. Some shout out an occassional word of en- couragement or get to their feet when a race get.a cloee. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSnaY, INC • ........... --4 .... 1922 HARBOR Bl VD. COSTA MESA -548· 1156 ln•ex•pen•elve • 'tin tk spen· stv) not h igh 1n price. r easonable , Cl811$thed ........... advert1s1ng -1 ~ Classified Advertising 642-567R In 61 years. there has not been a girl named commodore but that's a piece of club tradition that or- ganiz.ers are hoping will change. The club itself i.a amazing in i ta austerity. It operates on a $2.000 budget, most of which ii spent on trophies and ribbons. There are a collectJon of paddleboarda, a rowboat and a couple of sailboats that are "loaned" to older mem- bers during the coune of the SW'TUller. 8 TENNIS LESSONS '20°0 Costa .1 ... T111i1 Clull 557-o211 Klndgarten thru Ith Orede -AJI D•r c ...... tinker too much with the club. It's understood that the organiz.ation now practically runs itself and that any sudden changes would undercut one of the city's oldest and proudest traditions. Carroll Beek, cornered by a reporter one afternoon, said she was always amazed when chil- dren and teen-agers w ould show up for the yacht club's opening day each year. "I had no idea it would last this long," she commented five years ago. Her sons are convinced the club will last a long time longer, perhaps forever. Enroll Now FALL SEMESTER STARTS SEPT. 12th Enrollment Now Being Taken Reasonable Tuition Door to Door BUI s.nlc1 ..,,.,., '°"'* -lft/I sdrollltk 1tlnllanb -T11chftt the 4 R'1 -r11tfnt (wflh f/hot*I) ,,,.,,.,,, llfthmftk, rtllhn. A Private School of Distinction Founded In 1942 In Fountain Valley 16835 Brookhurst 714 963-7831 Your Silent Partner. When a death occurs In the family you need to mak9 a lot of right declalona. You need to understand what 18 beat for you and how much you can afford Call Pleroe BrolheB when you need us. WALLY McCONAHIY Maneger Pierce Brothers Smiths' 627 Main Street Huntington Beach. Calif. 92648 WlPie~~ -~·-$3auzz . ~~IJ<tQ CUT .. ,. ... mLlll-.-....... _,, ___ •1r BOYS HAIR CUT (under 12).-.................... •a.oo WOMEN'S HAIR STYLING .................. *10 to *15 PERMS.-.... _ .................................... -.... 135 to *45 "MOO IT AU" 170l6 MAOMO\IA AT WAIU•H IHUC1' TO 81'1Utl0$ PtUA) POUNTAIN ALLIY 142·9500 • MONEY Established restaurant equipment & supply company Is expanding Into Orange County. Have prime lease Established chain & lndependant customers. Seeking investor with strong financial abilities '~"" 813-4613 .. 845-1232 EVES. U.S. FOOD SERVICE CO. . . . . .... , .... ,. ,.,. . ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17 , 1983 IVY'S LEAGUE A FALL TRADITION ... Ruffle Blouses. Bow Ties. Cashmere Vests. Walking Shorts and Ivy's League. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • JE:~N RVAN C•mpu1 C••u•I• creates a sophisticated early Fall look with their double breasted taupe & grey striped suit In a lightweight nubbed fabric. The belted slim skirt & ivory . Georgette blouse are j ust two of many coordinating choices . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • LOOKING FORWARD TO FALL • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • from menswear. ' • • • • • • • Neiman Marcus. M Arthur B1vds .. 70 fine stores in all. tween Jamboree and ac • • • • Justo ff Pacific Coast • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • A 5 H 0 N s T N D I • A I A H w f " 0 A T c RAFF Jewelry- A menagerie of adorable animals crafted in 141( and I BK gold. Some set with precious stones. TUNE-UP YOUR BACK-TO-SCHOOL WARDROBE ... At Al's Garage with our very own sueded poplin pant. Put it with a long sleeved sportshirt from Woolrlch and one ot our 100% cotton Boston Trader sweaters. Complete the outfit with a wool belt _from Dooney & Bourke . BACK-TO-SCHOOL FROM BOYS. Our P<>IY-fOtton pant • Polo plaid shirt. sleeveless sweater and Polo windbreaker coordinate tor that back-to-school look every boy wants . ' cathy jean -The orlglnal now In I I colors. Tht perfect TaiiiTOn.1•or your tall and back-to-sch~ w ardrobe. .. • --• i.' • J .......... "".,,,.... , ... -4\ngels firing ~A~~1!~~ -The Angels came out hitting line driv- el! and went down grumbling ~ut Chris Codiroli, the hottest dt the hot Oakland A's pitchers. ,-COOiroli has a streak of 22 2-3 •utout innings going, and the A's ~f established a club record of ;t consecutive scoreless innings as Qodiroli and Dave Beard com- tined to blank the Angels, 4-0, Tuesday night. , "I would have to say Codiroli "'8S more fortunate than hot, some of the balls we hit that caught. They were hit hard they were line drives," els Manager John McNamara . '9'fhere was no argument from <1f>diroli, who was pitching de- tea bad cold and allowed just hits over 7 2-3 innings. "My fielders were right where y should be -where the balls ere hit," t he rookie ht-hander said. e A's backed him with 13 , the first 12 off Rick Steirer, . A throwing error by Steirer the fifth inning allowed the t two Oak.land runs to score. e Angels loaded the bases "th two out in the eighth on one by Codiroli and two by ard, but Bobby Grich lined out shortstop. Rob Wilfong lined to a double play with two on d none out in the sixth, and A's tfielders ran down several ll-hit drives. It's been that way the last three es, shutouts by Steve McCat- , Gorman Hei.mueller and · li. The last time the A's had straight shutouts was in 72 when Vida Blue, Ken lwnan and Catfish Hunter re the winners. Mike Warren, one of six roolOes the A's pitching staff, will try extend the streak tonight when faces the Angels. "I feel like a school teacher who all his students become val- Manager Steve ams cut 0 players; elow limi t om AP dl1patcbe1 The Rams went below the re- 69-player roster limit Tues- y by cutting 10 players and tting two others on the injured rve list. The roster limit originally 1et r the date was 60 players, but e National Football League ped that by 10 while changing e regular-season roster limit m 45 to 49 players Tuesday. The Rams put four-year vet- offenaJve t.ackJe Irv Pankey m left achilles tendon) and msive end Ray Coley (ankle) the injured llilflerve U.t. Pankey tore hit achille. tendon Monday night's 30-7 lo. to Among the playen cut wtte: Robin Andertan, a fint-year t end; Clete Caspar, rookJe rback from Washington; Gomeitrejo. a tint-year ety; Ken Haugabrook, a free t linebacker; Steve Martinez. free agent reeelver; David Pryor, e punter. Grady Richard8on, .,ent dpt end; Marvin Ith, flnt-year UnebllCker; wrence Taylor, firl~year de- ve end; Terrell Ward, free nt comerback. Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 17, 1983 COMICS 86 ENTERTAINMENT 87 TELEVISION 88 Columnist Bud Tucker says NFL preseason games are no bargain I or season ticket holders. B2. 0 D Pascoe tabbed as Oilers' football coach Ex-Fountain Valley High aide says Huntington Beach's style won't change By ROGER CARLSON OI ... 0.-, NM llafl George Pascoe, a 29-year-old with seven years of experience as an assisant roach on the high school and college level, has been named to take the reins at- Huntington Beach High. and Pascoe says the Oilers will continue in the same acheme of things. "We'll definitely stay with the Dela- 'Huntington Beach caused headaches r or every team they played last year. I'll have to learn more about it (the Dela- ware winged-t), but we 're going to stay with it.' more about it, but we're going to stay with It. "I hope everyone who was with C.oach Henry will work with Coach Pascoe. A primary importance is to carry over the stability, but they (the Oilers) are going to be good no matter who calla the shots. But I'd like to stay with what's been successful. coaches, then with Barry Watera at Westminster for a seuon and back to Fountain Valley in 1982. The Oilers open the campaign Sept. 9 against visiting Corona del Mar. Huntington Beach finished third in the Sunset League in 1982, qualifying for the CIF playoffs for the fl.rat time in 16 years. He replaces Greg Henry, the Sunset League Coach of the Year in 1982, who resigned recently to accept a job w ith the Long Beach Fire Department. "If we can keep everyone around, maybe even better." Pascoe, the son of Edison High's first principal, Ernest Pascoe, is a graduate of Fountain Valley High and LaVeme Col- lege, by way of Golden West College. Among the Oilers' squad returning are All-CIF runnning back Danny Thompaon (he was also the Sunset League's Back of the Year), first team all-league quar- t e rback Eric Lawton and tight-end-defensive end Billy Ray, also an all-league choice as a junior. "We're looking forward to a successful season with George and his staff," says ' Huntington Beach Principal Ann ChlebiclO. "It's our intention to keep continuity." ware-winged-T," says Pascoe. "Hunt- ington Beach caused headaches for every team they played last year. I'll have to learn Hew~ an assistant at Fountain Valley for three years, followed by two years at the University of Ariz.ona under two Conditioning week begins Monday TV-RADIO: See Page 02. Game winner Aggressive Star sail- ors crowd the marks at World Cham- pionship regatta Marina del Rey. Wea th er gods are frowning International Star sailors are still waiting for some wind By ALMON LOCKABEY Oelly !'ht _tine wrtt .. finish line l~ than a minute ahead. MARCNA DEL REY -The weather gods frowned on the International Star class for the third straight day Tuesday. John Dane ill of New Orleans proved to be the most consistent skipper of the series thus far. He finished second and, =pled with his sixth place finish on Monday, mov the top of the standings under the Olympic 9COring tem. On Sunday there wasn't even enough wind on Santa Monica Bay to start a race. Tuesday was only slightly better as the race committee was able to start the 77-boat fleet a fter more than an hour's delay waiting for the wind to fill in from somewhere - anywhere. Hopes of getting in two races Tuesday dissolved in the humid heat and one race was finally gotten under way by about 1:30 p.m. Even then the ocean was full of light air holes and windshifts that brought dark horses to the front and deep-sixed the favorites. Heartbreak skipper of Tuesday's race was defending champion Antonio Gorostegui of Spa.in. After a solid finish in the first race. he climbed from 18th at the flrst weather mark Tuesday to finally finish in fourth place. The heartbreak came whei:i the race committee ruled that he had been a premature starter and was not even in the race. Top 10 finishers in Tuesday's race: 1. Bill Parks. Chicago: 2. John Dane ill, New Orleans; 3. Dennis Clark, Puget Sound; 4. Allan Liebel, Canada; 5. Hubert ~uda.achl, E. Germany; 6. Tom Loft.stadt, Sweden; 7. Bill Buchan, Seattle; 8. Olle Johannson, Sweden: 9. Uwe von Below, W. Germany; 10. Stig Wennerstrom, Miami. Bill Parks of Chicago won the race handily by tacking to the right hand side of the course and staying out of wind.shifts. At the end of the triangle he was leading by 2 'h minutes. finally crossing the It's a Baron batallion It is the time of the year when most football staffs take a deep breath, maybe skipping out of town for a few days to hibernate, for a few moments to collect themselve. before it begins. "Conditioning" begins Monday -as if they · haven't been kept busy for the past eight months since the 1982 campaign concluded -and the 1111\ month eeuon re8WDeL Few would deny speed, skill, depth and strength are the prlmary components needed to field a winning team -but when tt comee to football, coaching has to be 70 percent of iL Thia lm'ta pme where you hand the ball to your f.aatball phenom and tell him. "Throw ltrikee." When the subject ii COllChing staffl In the prep ranks, one of the first lternl that cornea to mind ii the battalion at Fountain Valley Hiah. where bud coach Mike Milner la surely the envy ot many of hla peers. Milner haa no lea than EIGHT ullstanta. and SIX of them are ON CAMPUS tellche.ra. It aoee • lot deeper than that. Amona them are three ex-heed coeches and the A VXRAOE ex- perience on the Fountain Valley aiaff la 12.8 years. "Our aiaff la split With half on offeme and half on deferwe and no one C!l'c:mee over," Mys Milner. M.l.1ner hu, over the yean, been a student of the game and of coeching aiaffa on the colleae level and haa patterned hla operation much In the Mme way. How important are Ulistanta? PREP SPORTS ROGER CARLSON Cochrane (receivers), Bruce Pickford (nmnin& baclal) Dave Penhall (quarterbacks), Jlm Coen (defensive line), Guy Carrozzo (defensive enda and kickin8 pme), George Berg (linebackers) and Milner (leOOndary). Georp Pucoe was a member of the fraternity, t.oo, but that was until Tueeday when he took the reinl at Huntington Beach. "It's the best staff in Orange County," aays Milner. He won't get an argument here. * * * Corona del Mar ff1ih has filled the vacancy created by the ~tion of bueball COllCh Tom Trager ln the spring, picking up former Lacuna Beech C.O.Ch Joe Ronquillo, who restaned recently aft.er three yun with the Artlata. Ronquillo, a former player under lllltancla c.o.ch Ken Millard, says, "The beet thing about tt ts that I have a field to work with. And, there'• no tnck In the middle of my outfield.'' Milwaukee's Jim Gantner get& past Boston catcher Jeff Newman to score deciding run in 4-3 victory. Well, whenever Milner la-.ked to list hla co.ches for you, he'll rattle them off, but when he •ta to Tony EU....c.Jlet, not the molt common name around, he ALWAYS apelll it out, a matter of respect for valued help. • Fountain Valley'• at&fl lncludee Mike HenJpn (offensive line). J:liaa..Calle (offensive line), Hank The 27-year-old Ronquillo, a Laauna NtlUe1 rt!llklent. will be a walk-on COM:h, and •Y' it. Sea K1np will be l'UMinl· * * * Ronquillo'• spot at r...,un. Beach Hiab hlll beel) (lee BAJl()N, Pa .. '81) · , .. ------- U Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 SPORTS BRIAK Ricardo survives cu), but veteran Herrera released by Raiders l"Nm AP dtapa&clan SANTA ROSA -Nine-year Na-[!] tional Football League veteran Efren 4. t HA;rrera, battling for a spot as the Los At'lgeles Raiders' kicker with two othe.r veterans, Including Costa Mesa High and Orange Coast College product Benny Ricardo, was among six players cut by the team Tuesday. The Raiders reduced their roster to 63, seven below the 70-player limit decreed for the date by the NFL. Others released were £ree agents: quar- terbacks Grayson Rogers and Dwight Prudhom- me, offensive lineman Mark Bonner, wide receiver Curtis Henderson and defensive back Kelvin Middleton. The Raider roster currently includes 64 players. Among them is retired defensive end John Matuszak, who remains on the roster "in case something changes, either in his situation or ours," said Coach Tom Flores. Because they are within three moves of the next mandated cutdown (to 60 on Aug. 23), the Raiders feel they can consider players cut by other teams in the next week or so. "That's something we might do," said Flores, '"il it's somebody we're interested in.'' NFL owners, meeting in St. Louis Tuesday, raised regular-season roster limits to 49 (with four inactive each week). That precipitated the roster limit raise which meant cutdowns to 70 (Tuesday), 60 (one week later) and 49 on Monday, Aug. 29. Pirates take fifth straight Lee TanaeU and two relievers combined on a six-hitter and rookie ~ Doag FrobeJ homered as the Pit-... taburgh Pirates won their fifth straight by beating the New York Mets 3-1 Tuesday to highlight National League play ... In other games, Philadelphia and the Chicago Cubs split a double-header as the Cubs rolled to a 10-1 win in the opener while the Phillies took a 6-2 decision in the nightcap. Toay Perez and Garry Maddo:1 80Cked aeventh-inn.ing homers in the second game to spark Philadelphia. In the opener, Dick R•Gvea tossed a five-hitter for the Cubs ... Gary Templetoa'a sacrifice fly in the 10th inning gave San Diego a 3-2 victory over Atlanta. It was the Braves' third straight defeat. Templeton delivered his game-winning RBI off reliever Steve Bedroaiaa ... David Green doubled home the tying run in the ninth inning and scored on Floyd llaylord'a plnch single as St. Louis edged Montreal 4-3 ... John Mlzerock, batting only .195, hit a two-run double to carry Houston to an 8-5 win over Cincinnat.i. . Baines propels White Sox Harold .Ha!ae1' amgle snapped a Ii 2-2 Ue in the sixth inning and Floyd BannJater gained hl4 eighth victory in as many starts since the All-Star break as the Chicago WhJte Sox topped the New York Yankees 5-3 Tueeday nlght to highlight American League action ... Elsewhere, Ted Slmmoa1 hit a 14th inning sacrifice fly which carried Milwaukee to a 4-3 triumph over Boston. Jim Slaton pitched 7 lh innings of shutout relief for the Brewers. The second game of the double-header was rained out. . . John Butcher silenced Baltimore on one hit as Texas defeated Baltimore 2-0. Butcher, 4.2. retired the final 19 batters he faced . . . Barry Bonnell'• two-run single highlighted a four-run eighth inning that BAJMI carried Toronto to a 9-6 victory and a split of a twinbill with Cleveland. The Indians took the opener 3-2 on Mike Hargrove'• RBI single in the eighth inning ... Amoa Olla drove in five runs and former Costa Mesa High and Orange Coast College standout Dan Qu..iaenberry notched save No. 32 as Kansas City topped Detroit 18-7. Quote of th~ day Houston Oilers tight end Dave Casper, on the rigors of preseason training camp: ''You've got to force yourself to put your mind on automatic pilot. You make yourself as numb as you can. The more numb you are, the better you can deal with it." CM's Burkle qualifies John Burkle of Costa Mesa has qualified for the U.S . National Cham- pionships in Chicago after firing rounds of 75 and 61fora141 total in the Southern California Golf Association Tournament at Singing Hills Country Club in El Cajon ... The Golden State Warriors have acquired for- ward-<:enter Darrea TUUa from Cleveland in exchange for future considerations ... The San Diego Chargers have waived linebacker Dave Lewis, a six-year veteran who was obtained from Tampa Bay last year ... National Football League owners have moved to meet the challenge of two other pro football leagues by agreeing to expand team rosters from 45 to 49 players for the upcoming season. Four of the players, however, will be on an inactive roster and can replace those on the active roster on a week-by-week basis, but only until the day before each game. Televis ion, radio TV: .Baseball -Angels at Oakland, 7:30 p.m., Channel 5. RADIO: Baseball -Angels at Oakland. 7:30 p.m., KMPC (710); New York Mets at Dodgers, 7:35 p .m .. KA.BC (790). U.S. puts up a good fight Boxing contingent's medal hopes still alive CARACAS, Venezuela (AP)-The U.S. boxing team's dream of a meda1 for everyone in the Pan American games is still alive. While Cuban boxers were upset in two of their three bouts, Steve McCrory, the only American in action Tuesday, had to fight off both a hostile Venei:uelan crowd and a dogged Jorge Arcia of Panama Tuesday night to win his preliminary-round bout in the 112-pound division. That put the 19-year-old from Detroit into the quarterfinals on Saturday, one bout away from a medal that would be a start toward fulfilling the coaches' predictions of medals for all 11 of their boxers. It was a good day overall for Americans, who . won aix gold and four silver medals in shooting, and ·· three golds in judo. Michael Jordan led a aecond half rally that erued a 10-point deficit and gave the U.S. basketball &eama 72-69 win over Brazil. The U.S. baseball team won ita 8e00nd straight. downing Canada 10-5. The United States' nine gold medals gave it 13 golds and Z4 medals in all. Cuba, with 12 golds in weightlifting, atill had the overall lead with 15 golds and 30 total medals. More American gold may be on tap today with the start of swimming, in which the United States is heavily favored. Four swimming golds will be decided tonight. Among the outstanding individual achieve- ments on Tuesday was a no-hitter by Lori Stoll of Chillioothe, Mo., in the U.S women's softball team's 16-0 victory over Venezuela. And Cuba got the first world record of the games when weightlifter Daniel Nunez snatched 304 pounds on the way to three gold medals. But there were still problems for the games' orpnizers. PAN AM GAMES McCrory, the world amateur champion and the brother of newly crowned World Boxing Council welterweight champion Milt McCrory, danced and jabbed through the first two rounds, winning both on the judges' cards. But in the third, the Panamanian started boring in, continually pinning the American to the ropes and staggering him several times before the final bell. "I couldn't move away from him," McCrory complained after the 4-1 deciaion that left the overflow crowd of 6,000 at United Nations park hooting and whistling and chanting "Cuba, Cuba, Cuba" and "Pa-na-ma, Pa-na-ma, Pa-na-ma." "He's a very good fighter. He kept coming and coming at me and I couldn't move my anns or my legs." McCrory's only support came from his team· mates, who clustered on the open cement floor near the ring to cheer him on. NJ McCrory walked off to the jeers of the Venezuelans, the Americans waved and gestured at the crowd. "Just let them do all the yelling they want.'' Coach Pat Nappi told the team in the dressing room. "Don't egg them on.'' And super-heavyweight Tyrell Biggs, a veteran of international competition, said, "You just have to close your ears to it." Early entries for '84 Games Americans continued to talk about leaving the athletes village, where problems with cramped oonditions, low-water pressure and dirty floors have LOS ANGELES (AP) -The 36 oat.ions that are ......... .-a members of the Pan-American Sports Organiza-~nuw:u. High winds blew out the Pan Am Clame at tion-includlng Cuba and Niearagua-have voted Olympic stadium, which had to be relighted, and two unanimously to enter the 1984 Olympics in Los benkaof UghtaatPalo Verde Stadium went out for 17 Angeles, official& say. minutes during the U.S .-Canada baseball game. . Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee President Peter V. Ueberroth, who returned Monday from the Pan American Ga.mes in Caracas, Ven- ezuela, expreaed delight at the decision Tuesday, which heaaid had been taken without any prompting from Loe Angeles offldala. BARON ••• From Page 81 field by hia aasiatant of three years, Tom KlJ.ncenmeier, who handled the A.rtista' frosh-90ph teenw. Fonner Eatanc:l.a High uaiatant football coach Chrla Van Hook la now the head roach at Cypresa Hi&b· Hla umtanta: F•ther-in·law Don Lent and the latter'• right-hand man, Sid Shue. Leqt and Shue coached at Newport Harbor High tn the 1971-73 era. The Sea-Baton Buketball Cl.aaJlc of a year ago, a aomblnadon o( Ocean View and Fountain Valley h1lb IChoola, h.u returned to the original format of the Fountain VaJJey tnvhaUonal. Amona the .choola invt~ ln the eight-team 11etup are lfuntlngton Bc>och, Servtte, FAperanza, Loyola, Loe Alam.hoe. Fountain Volley and Ocean Vt~. The resolution adopted by the Pan-American Sports Organlmtion declared that "all the national Olympic cornmJttees of the Amerlcaa have the desire to participate" ln the Loe Angeles Games, and it added that they "commit to be preaent" not only in Loe Angeles in 1984 but at the 1988 Games in Seoul, South Korea. The resolution also declared that the Loe Angeles and Seoul Games "will be free of all political, racial or religious lnfluences," a position which has also been taken by both the Loe Angelt'll and Seoul orpnizing oommlttees. The decision came juat three weeks after the Soviet national Olympic committee chairman, Marat Gramov, had, ralted a question about Soviet participation In the 1984 Games by announcing that the Soviet.a would make no decialon on whether to attend until May 24, the last day for accepting Loe Angelet' formal invitation to partidpate. Y ct ln Caracas, \Jeberroth no~ Tuc!lday. on of the Soviet Union'• cloeesl allies, Cuba, voted for the commltm nt to comt' to Loe Angelee. ~ .. NFL has own version of a sting Season tick e t holders don't get money's worth in preseason Idly, you contemplate the deught PT. Barnum would have taken dealing with the professional football cwstomer of this day and age. Of those individuals anxious to be separated from their earnings. Barnum said, "there is a sucker born every minute," but even P . T . would have 1.acked the imagj.n.ation to envision the artistic con the National Football League promoters pull on clients. Season ticket holders are sold eight home games at a price consistent with inflation -$18 a ticket in the case of the Rams -but in order to purchase this package, the buyer is required to take exhibition games in whatever the number the team plays at home. These turkeys are meaningless and usually shabbily contested but they goat the same price as the regular season seats. Clearly, this is the most brazen ripoff in pro sports and quite superior to a license to steal. Baseball and basketball take their exhibitions to the sticks and sell them at face value. In other words, they play in Peoria before opening in the Big Apple. A check around the NFL shows a decrease in attendance at the preseason things this summer. For instance, the Los Angeles Raiders played the San Francisco 49ers at the Coliseum in an exhibition match which would have drawn SRO in the bay area. Less than 30,000 were intrigued here. It was some years ago that someone with visjon within the NFL began to wonder how long the general public would hold still for the box office rape of six preseason games for each team. His efforts resulted in the league reducing the number of exhibitions to four. Presumably, the next step will be to go to two which would be another improvement. Perefection will be reached when the preseason schedule is erased all together. AJJked about preparing for a championship season without preseason games. coaches tend to hem and haw. Some understand the predicament of the ticket buyer. Others could not care less. Former Rams Coach Ray Malavasi said, "What the hell, it is the same for all of us so let's give the fans a break." Malavasi has since taken his theory to the Jody Campbell of the U.S. (right) battles Canada's George Gross in Jean-Pierre LeCoz of Canada "re~ laxes" in Pan-Am Games athletes' quarters at the Olympic Village in Caraca1, Venezuela. Golf tourney set Monday The ninth annual March of Dimel Costa Mesa golf iounwnent la eet tor Monday on the Loe Lagoe COW'lle at the Costa Meu Golf and Country Oub. Membera of the city council, planning com- mlaalon, chamber of commerce and Llons ClubwW play toaupport the March of Dlmc.'9 llaht agalnlt blrth defect.. Phone 63 l ·8700 or ~53-0881 for more lnfor· mation Former H1111d Pro BIG CANYON O.C. .. ll&Ull'I .,_. 1m1.,,.. .. ..... ... 11 ... ni-1111 ' SPORTS COlUMNIST BUD TUCKER International Football League where it has not yet been detennioed whether there will be preseaaon games. Of course, neither has it been established for sure if there will be regular season games. The quarrel here is not with the NFL teams for selling tickets to practice games for whatever price the traffic will bear. The charge of larceny ari.les when the preseason things are mandatory to buying the legitimate games. P.T. Ba.mum would have drooled uncon- trollably. Of course, there are those who regard football games as strictly a social vehicle and are therefore hardly concerned with the quality of play on the greensward. The importance is being seen in a 50-yard line seat or m a luxury suite m the proper wardrobe. In other climates the late summer exhibitions are entirely vital to the above mentioned element. By October, the fashion angle has been reduced to parkas and snow boots. At one time, NFL teruru took their preseason events to the bushes. The Rams appeared in Portland in the early '60s and sold out because of the presence on the roster of Terry Baker who had been an All-American at Oregon State and a winner of the Reisman Trophy. The coach was Harland Svare who was told the importance of lavish use of Baker in deference to the people of Oregon. Whereupon Svare said, "(bleep) the people of Oregon." The publicity man w as Jack Teele who was give the assignment of approaching the promoters with the news that Baker would not start and would see limited, if any, playing time. Teele delivered the message and left the stadium and Portland, lest tar and feathers be mixed. ---- Pan Am Games water polo Tuesday. U.S. advanced with 1 7-5 win. Gault makes decision: NFL LAKE FOREST, DJ. (AP) -As he WM flying into Chicago on the last leg of a long journey, track star Willie Gault saw an omen that he had made the i right decision to play professional football instead of pursuing an Olympic dream. "We were still a mile or two above the clouds ... and I saw a rainbow with all the colors. 1 thought of it as an indication of God tel.ling me I made the right deci&ion," Gault said Tuesday a.ft.er his first practice with the Chicago Bears. Only hours earlier, he found the pot of gold at the end of that rainbow, signing a four-year contract reportedly worth S 1.3 million with a $WO,OOO signing bonus. It made him the highestrpaid rookie receiver in National Football League history. But the 22-year-old speedster, who starred in track and football at the University of Tennessee, e>eplained that he agonized over the decision to pass up a chance run !n the Olympics next summer in Los Angeles. "A lot of tears and a lot of emotion went into th.is decision," Gault said. "It was like losing part of my family.'' Last week, he ran the third leg of a world-record breaking 400-meter U.S. relay team at the World Track and Field Championships in Helsinki, Finland. And on Saturday, he ran his last race, the 110-meter high hurdles .• ''AB I stepped into the blocks, I said to myself th.at this could be my last r~ ever.'' Gault recalled. He ttniahed third. During practice Tueeday, he appeared to make a smooth tranaltion from the startlng blocks to the line of scrimmage. • "He looked good today. I WU impres9ed.'' said Bean' Coach Mike Oit.ka, who had earlier predicted Gault woµld not sign a pro football contract this , IMIOO. • ' . . FDR THE RECORD ~ t. I " . MA.IOA LEAGUE STANDINGS Arnenun LMtue Chic.go IC ef!Ml Ctl\• O.klal\d TexH Meltt Minne.Ola S..llle llalllmore MltweukM Oelroll Toronto New York Boston Cleveland WUT DIV1110N w " '4 SJ SJ S7 St 62 S7 60 S6 '3 Sl 10 .. 13 I! AST DIVISION 6S SO 66 SI 6S 52 66 SJ ... 52 SI S9 so 69 TllftCMV'I kw.a o. kl• no 4, Aft9lh o ChluDO S, N•w York l TH., 2, S.lllmore o IC•MH Cllv "· 0.lroll ] Clevelal'd l·6, Toronto 2·9 f'C'I. 541 soo .... .'87 01 421 3'1 !16S 56.j SS6 SSS SS2 .496 420 o• Sitt ] ] • u 19 1 I ,..., I 11 Mllw•ukM 4, Bolton 3, ht O•me ( 14 lnnlnoal Botton at Miiwaukee, 2nd oamt, oOd .. rain Mlnnetora s. Seattle 1 T-V'I 0."'" Anteb (Witt S·9l a t Oaklal\d (Warr•n 0-1). <n> Toronlo (Leal 10· IO> at Cle11t1•no (SulcttfM 13·1), (nl Cllluoo (HOVI 15· 10) al Ntw York IS/llrlev 4·61, (n) Boston (oi.oe S·S end Johnton 2·1) al MUwauk" ICaldwtll 9·1 and Candiolll 0·0), m ll•lllmort !Flanagan 6·1) at T .. as !Tanana 6·0. In) O.troll (P9try 12·7) a l K•nMI City (SP41norff 9·5), In> Minnesota (Wiiiiams 7·11) al S.alllt (Moor• l·l ), (nl Atlante ~ Houlton San Oltoo Natlenal LNvue WllST DIVISION W L 71 49 6S 52 62 SS San Francisco Cfoclnnatf 59 60 56 6l S4 66 Pfl118delohl• Plmt>vren Monlrtet St. Louis ChlcaOO New York . II.AST DIVISION 62 SJ 62 SS 59 51 56 61 SJ 66 " 10 T\lttdeV't Sarft Dedeef'I 5, San Franc:IKo 1 Pft11butgh 3, New York 1 PC'I. .5t2 S!l6 .SJO .496 .'71 450 S39 SJO .509 •19 445 407 Chk:aDO 10·2. PfllladelPhla 1·6 S.n Oleoo 3, Attanla 2 ( 10 lnnlnos> Hou11on I, Clnc:lnna11 S St Loult 4, Monlrtal 3 T9dllV'1~ GB ..... 111> """ 14'1> 11 1 lV. 1 11 IS'I> New Yorll (Tt rr.U 4·4) ti ~ (Wttcll 10-111, In) Houslon (Rv•n 12·51 at Cincinnati (Pulort •· 10), (n) Pflllade41>11la IHudM>n 1·41 •I San Diego IS/low 11·91, (n) MonlrMI (R09tn 14·7) ti San Franc:IKO (R. Marlin 1·3), In> ~Gt~ -vied AMERICAN LEAGUE A's 4, .,,..., 0 CAUl'OttNIA OAK LANO Carew II> Wltlono JO 84lnlclur rt LVMcf Grlcll lb Ra.Ito.an drl OownlnGW Lut)rtcnn Sc:onln on lloonec ........ 4 0 0 0 3 0 l 0 3 0, 0 ) 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 ) 0 1 0 ' 0 1 0 RHndsn" MOavlu f Mur1>11v cf L0e>et2b Lan1lrd 3o Hencck lb A lmon oh Grou II> Haalhc Pagecln OHIMu Jl 0 1 0 T-se.re.,.., ...... lb rlllll 4 0 2 0 4 0 2 0 4 0 I 0 4 I I 0 '0 ' 0 3 I 2 0 I 0 1 I 0 0 0 0 4 I I 0 1 I I 0 l 0 1 1 u • n 2 ~ ----· ~ ..... 010-• Gamt-WIMlnG RBI -~ E-Grkfl, Slt lrtt. OP--Oeto.18nd I LO&-<allfotnla t , O.lltand 6. Se-tlH-lOn (13). $-f>age If' H It a" 99 SO c;....,. Slelrer L, 1·1 Hauler Klaon ~ 7 1·) 12 ' 0 t 0 2·3 0 0 1 0 0 CodlrOll w, 10-• 11· 3 4 0 0 0 0 0 ISMrdS,9 11·1 1 0 0 1 Haatltr l>llct>tcl 10 one 1>e11er In llh WP--tlaard. T-1. ll A-16,560 A"'4ltlan LMeue l'•ST GAME lldeM >, Blue Ja'" 2 I 0 0 TOfonto 000 020 000-2 9 1 ~v......, 001 100 01•-3 s 0 Altxandll'. Moffilt (I), GtlMI (I ) •I'd Whitt. I Marline~ (I ); &an..,., E111ertv 17) and HeaMY. w-Eularlv, 7·1. L-MoHltt, t-1. saCOMO GAAW ...,. Jan ~. lndlana • Toronto OSO 000 ~ 9 2 Cltveland 040 100 100--. 12 I Wlllatm, Adler (2), ). McLaUllhgn (7) and Whitt, I r_,,, Elctlelber~ Ul, Andtr'ton (I), SolllMr (9) •nd E Ulatl, Hauev lll. -J. McLaUllhlll', 6·?. L-Ancltr"ton, 0-4 ll•-' 1. on.e. 0 llalllmor• 000 000 ~ 1 o Teu• 100 000 lb-2 I 0 Rttnlrtr, T Mtrttne1 171 and Nolan, 8utdler end ~wo w-8u1Clltr, •·3 L-4tamlrer, •·4 Hll-Tea11. 8tll 112> tt•ST GAMa ar-s 4, •.i S.x J llotton 000 OQ3 000 000 Ol>-l 12 1 MllwtukM 2'00 000 010 000 01-13 0 Bird, Stenltv (1), CIMr (12) al\d Geel· man, Newman (14), Pwltr. Augusllne It), Slaton l7l and Slmmona w-$1tlon, 10·5. L-Cltar, l ·4 s.c.... --"*'" .. tt ..... WM9 $ell s • ., .. _ J Chlea9o 000 021 20C>-S 11 o New York 000 110 IOC>-3 11 0 lleMllltf, Agoslo (6), 8arola1 (7), Hoff- rritn Ill. Lame> (9) end Fl•ll. Fontenot, Frultr (6), GOIMOt (7), Murr•v (t) and w.,,_ Wo-eannt•ler, 11·9 L- Fonl-1, 4·2 HR--fffw YOf'k, Griff .... (I ). ltf'\'M 11. Tl9tn 1 OetrOll 021 210 001-1 16 3 KtRMI Cltv 250 000 '2x-ll 19 1 ROl""8, Marlin ()), Guml>tf'I (21. kllev (7), Bair 17) end Panlall, Woclltfl· tvu 19), &tack, Armatr-(4), Hulsmenn (5), Q\11....0..rv (7) lftd Wallltn -ulsrntM, 1·0 L-4tortma. •·3 Hlt.-0.lroll, i._. (1'), Trammell ooi. Kanwa Cttv, McRM I 11), Oii• (4), Shtndan (7) T'a'lnl s. MtfWn 1 Mlnntaota 012 100 01~ 13 0 Stattlt 000 100 000-1 5 0 kflrom, Whllet>ousa (I), ll Davia Il l lllCI La-, Young, Stoddlf'd (5), Vanda llero (9) and J tfflton -Sc:ftrom, 11·4. L-Youno, 0• 1'. Hll.-Mlnnttota, B""""'k" 2 119) Stattlt, Putnam (17) NATIONAL L•AGUll ~S,G&alm I SAN ~AM LAn ANGl.I ~lru IEv•M lb CIW1! r1 a.-011 CO.vl•d Y"9tlidJCI .,f!ltv, W1411M2b ~f'l'P lle«IOINI Milltofl. "'""' ...... .,. 4 0 0 0 SS.• 2b 4 0 0 0 4 O O o lluu .. u • 1 2 2 4 0 I 0 hk9' II 4 1 1 0 4 0 2 0 T1'.ot'Mill 0 0 0 O 41 1 0 Ouerr«• JOit 4 0 I 0 L•ndslv Jel 0 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 L.lnclrll cf 4 0 1 0 3010 Merwlrt JOOO 1 0 I 1 tr«I! lb 3 1 2 I 1000 Flmole c 4100 0 0 0 0 R-1 11 1 0 I 0 IN/llwtvPft I 0 1 0 Hlednfur I 0 0 0 0 M I ' I T... n $ 10 4 SC....., ..... ..... ,.,..... -111 --1 Lie Melltt •1 ltl .. _ s 0--WIMllll ltBI -a roclt (4). 0~ ~ 1. Loa-s.tl Frtn• c'1co •· Lo. A/llNI 6. 2..-Cltrll, ltu• ... ' Hlt-.rodl 117> ~-(4), Ouwrwe 11'>. """"" m. 1"heml1 m. LMO· ,_.cm ur-o.-rar0- • M •I• aa IO .. ,.rMCIMit L.Mk"' "· tt.io • s J , 0 ) IWl'llOll 1 • ' , , 0 Lie.,.... •-.w.7·1f 1 1 0 ' "~ ' 0 0 0 , T-ttl. A-41,Ut Nallonel LNtue ~ 10, .. ., ... , l New Yori. 001 000 OOC>-1 ' 0 Pl11,11;;r1111 002 100 OOa~ 6 0 $wen, Sl'k (1), Gorman II) •I'd 0.llr, TUl\Mlt, S(urrv (7), Guante ct> alld Pe11t W-Tunnall, ,.. L-Sw•n. , •• Hlt-Plllll>Urllll, Fr~ m l'llUTGl\Mll C111K 10,,,,....1 Pnlla04lfl>llla 010 000 000-1 S 2 CllletDO OJ I lOO Ola-10 l3 0 llv"rom. McGra w 14), Anoanan <SI. H.,nandet II ) ano Vlr111t. Ruttivan and Davit w-Ruttwtn. J·9 L-llvalrom, S·I HR-Clllcego, Ctv 111) sacoND OAMll f'll9WI •• cw, 1 Pllllt"411Phia too 000 2~ 6 I Chlcego 000 001 001-2 I 0 K Gron . w. Hernander <•l. Hon.no (7) al\CI Olat, Letlerf\, PrOlv (6), CamPl>ell (I), &ruut•r (I) and L•-• w-w Harnandel, 5·• L-f>rOlv, 1·5 HRt-Pfllladell>llla, Peret 16). Maddo~ W ... .,,... ), ••• .,.. 2 San OitQO 000 001 000 1-3 12 I Allan!• 000 001 010 0-2 1 1 Thurmond, L Ot Lton (7), Monot (9), Luce• (10), Whll•on (10) and Kennaov. Pertr. 8t0ro1ten 19) •nd Pocwoo.. Owen (10) W-Monga, S·l L-Bedrosle", 8·• Astres t, Reds S HOUllon OQ3 202 Olo-t 14 0 Clnclnnell 200 000 030-5 11 0 !>colt, O smun (8), Oewtev Ill end Mlierock, Puleo, Htvtt IS>. Gata (6), Scherrer Il l et'ld Bflardello, Knlcetv Ul W-Scoll, 7·4 L-PuleO. 4·9 HR1-HOU•ton, Mluroclt (I), Knight <II Clnclnnall, Knlcetv (2) CardlnAls 4, E•POI 3 Montreat 001 001 000-l 9 o SI. Louil 100 000 012-t 10 I Guttlck1on, Reardon (9) and Certtr, Cox, Allen (I ) al\d Brummer, Porter Ill W-Allen, 1·12. L-Rttrdon. 5·7. MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS Amerl~n LHeue BATTING (210 ti De,.). 8ooot, 8o"on, 377; Carew, A'""1t, _,..., Grlttev, New York, .330; Bretl, KenHI Clly, 317; Tram· melt, Oetrofl, .325- RUNS· Murrav. Belllmore, 79; MOiitor, Mllweuk". 79, Ripll.tn, Belllmort, 71, Yount, Mllweukff, 11, c-, Mllweukff, ,. RBI Cooper, Mflwaukff, 101, WlnllelO. New York, 94; Parrll.h, Detroit, 11. Rica, Boston, IO; Slmmon1, Mllweukff, 00 HITS 8ogg1, Boston, 165; Whllt ktr. Otlroll, 141, Cooper, Mlfweuk", 147; McRH, ~ense• Clly, U l; Werd, Minne· ao••· 140. DOUBLES: 8ogg,, 8oalon. 3', McRH, KtnM• Cltv, 34; Hrbtk, Mlnnt>tota, 33, Rlt>lltn. 8tlllmort, 33, Perrish, OtlrOll, 31. Yount, MllWaukM, l2 TRIPLES. Grlttln, Toronto, 8, Wlnllt ld, Ntw Yori<, I; 800111, 8011on, 7, Gentner. Mllweukff, 7; Herndon. Oelrolf, 1, K GlbM>n, Otlrolf. 1; Younl, Mflweuk", 1 HOME RUNS. Armas, Bo"on. 25, c-. Mllwauk", 2S, Rice, ao,ron, 15, Wlnfleld, New York. 7S, Klllta, Chicago, 24 STOLEN BASES Hlndtr'son, 0.kland, 13, R Law, Chic.DO, 54, J Cru1, Chlcego, 41, Wiison. Kantu Cttv, 46, S.mpte, THet, 36. PITCHING ( 10 dtClt lOnt): Heal, Mii· w1uk", 11·2. 3.3', Gonaot, Ntw York, 10-3, 2.03; RIOhelll, Ntw York, 13•4, l 2'. McGrtQOr, Belllmort, 1S·S. l .10; Schrom, MlnnHO!e, 11·4, 3.19 STRIKEOUTS Morrl•. Detroit. 165, RIOllelll, Ntw York. 137, Stieb, Toronto, 131. Bennltltr', Chic.go, 125, 81vleven, Cleveland, 116. SAVES. Qulsanbtrrv. Ken .. , Cllv, 31, CtudlN. S..llta, 12, R Davis, Mlnne1ota, 21. Sltnlay, 8o1ton, 21. Lo1>e1, Detroit, 16. N1110NI LNeue llA TTING 1:100 el baltl' Madlock, Pit· lll>urllfl, lll. Hendrick, St. Louil, l?4. Harr. SI Louis, .m, Lo Smith. SI Louis, .m, OawM>n, Montreat. 311. Kn'9hl, Ho.a· ton, 311 RUNS: Mure>llV, Altanla, 102. lhlne•, Monlr .. I. 17; Evana, San FranclKO. 11, Garvey, San oi.go, 7'; Horner, Atlanta, 75 Riii: Oewson, Montreat, A; MurPhv. Altanlt, N ; Schmidt, Pflll8dtlt>f'lla, '3, ~. ~ 751 Htnclrldl, SI Louh, 70 HITS OawM>n, MontrN I. 146, Oliver, Montreat. 142. Thon, Hou•lon, 141. Bucio.· ntt. Chluoo, 131; Crua, Houston. 136, A Ramires, Allanla, 136. DOUBLES: Buckner, Chicago, l2, Knt11n1, Houston. 79, Hendrick, SI. Loula. 11, J. Rtv, Plltal>urgh, 17, Oliver, MonlrMI, 21, w allach, Montreal, 27 TRIPLES: Butter, AIMlnte, 11; Morano, Houston, 11. Cru1. Houaton, I; Dawson, MonlrNI, 1; Gratn, St Loula, 7; Reines, MonlrHI, 1 HOME RUNS: Schmid!, PfllladetPhlt, 27, OtwM>n, Monlrffl, 25, Muronv. Allanla, 25, Evena, SenFrencltco, 24; Glltn"We, o.oeen.~ STOLEN BASES Raine•. Montreat, SJ, Wlfton, New York, 40, S. Su, ~ J.51 LtMetltr', S.nFranclsco, 34, Radu1. Ctn· ctnnall, 32, Wloelna. San OltGO, n PITCHING (10 oactstonl) P Pertr. Allanla, 13·4, l .16, MonttfUICO, San Olago, 9·3, 3.Sl; Oannv, Plllltdell>llla, 13·5, 2.44, Rvan, Houtlon, n ·S, 2 11, S ert lied with 667 STRIKEOUTS. Carlton, Plliladetolllt, 203, Soto, Cincinnati, llO; McWlllltm•. P11taour1111, 146, vtMn1uei11, Oede9n, 1n1 Rnn, Houllon, 125. SAVES: Lt Smith, Chicago, 11, Rt· ardon. Montrtat, II, a.droslan, A11anla, 16, Ttllulvt , Pll11buroll. IS, HOl!ar><I, Pllltade4· Piiia, 14, Lavelle, S.n Frenc:lsco, 14 LITTLE LEAGUE ALL-STARS 11• 12·VN r ·akh WUTIERN llEGIONAL TOURNAMENT (at Sa11 teme,...l TuetdaV'a S-... Clltr'ol<M, COloredo 4, Nlerldla", ldahO 2 Tucson Amerlc1n, Arla va Ktarnt, Utah, OOd. rein Ktlsot, Wulltnoton vt. Rlver1lde, Mon· 1a11a. ood .. r•ln T9dllV'1 Oamea 10 a m -Tucl611 Amerlt1n. Arl1 vs KMrna, Utah Jo m -Ktlsot, Wn1tlno1on "' River · 110t, Montana S.JO pm -Pecllk (Sacramanlo) n . L.tramla, Wvomlno Io m -Green Vtlltv. Ntnde "' Ent Laa VtQas, New Mexico Tllvndev's Gt"'" 10 a.m -Cerrlll>'I va TucM>n Amert 'can·KMrns, Olah low r 2 pm -CherOk", COIOrado YI ICelsoe, Wt'1llno1on~R1v.,.1loa Montana 1o- S'.JO om T11caon Amerlcen, Arl1··1Curn1, Ulall winner YI Kelsoe. wnntr1111on·Rlvtt1loa Monllna winner • p.m -ll41ver100, OrtQOn •• Wtll \ Maul. H1wa11,l1dlv't GI,,_ 10 a m -LOMr'I bf'Kkel Dtrllt J o.m -Lo-·s bf'acktl oama 5.JO o m. -s.mlfln11 oama • Om -5-mlflnal Mmt S.M'NV, A~ • Gt,,_ 10 • m -Flflh Olact Hrna 4;30 p.m. -Third l>lact game I o.m. -CllamplonthlP peme (Winner 1dvance1 to L.ltlla La101.1t World :S.rlta tn wnnem•oort, Pa.I Al?~ (ttM9 ... ()Ne) ,..,,. lltllftlll ...... Jlnwnv COMOts <U S l dtf Tim WllkllOll (US.), 6·4, .. 1; S.ndv NI.av.,. (U S.l def. t rlk llk.,lllY (U.S.), 4·6.1. 6·2, 7·5, Vllat OWl/!lltli (U.S.) def. llllodnn Htrmon IU.$.l, 6·J, .. 4; Gent Mav4W (U.S.) dtof. Ouv ~oro.t (Frenc.), 6·4, J-6, 6·l; LlbOr Ptmett ICtldlotloYllklel clef Mell MftC,,.ii (US.). 6-), t-1/ Anders Jatryd (S'lftdenl def. (lvlil#flt ltooar V119"11 IFr-1, 6•), 6•2; ,.rMCJsc;o Oontlln IPartO\HIY) def. Mefan ~.on <SwtOtll), •·t, 6·7, 6·1i Kevin Cutrell (Soult\ Afrlul Otf, Tim Oulllkion (U.S.), •·l. ..3; Steve OttltOll (U.l.l def. ltOtoCOe Tlnlllf (U..S.), M , 1·4. 1••; Ftorlf'I Setartltlnu (ltomenla) oaf. lrlan TM<:llW IU.$ ), 6•4, t •1, 6•2 "-YW'•~ (lltT ...... ) ,lntll ...... ...... Mime J-YIC (YutOSllvla) def. C:•rl• 1111 .. u.11 CCeNdel ... 2 ... I, Mefll"8 Navr•tllova (U.$.) Cl9f Ttrry PIMlllt (U.S.) .,.), .,. ,; l'ltlMa luc1trov1 (C1ldlotlovalllel dlff. Jo DUf'le llrlll•nl ..... 6•l; Anclrff Jllllf IU.S.l •• lt•vko lllOUI IJ1Hnl, 6•1, 6·71 l(elhv JOro.n IU.S.) dtf Sllaron WaltJI (U a.J, 2-6, •·2, 6·l Loa A'-mltea TUUOAY'S ltlSULT1 1 l'INI nlthl *1 tUl'NTMr -~ mMI• INl l'lttST ltAC:IE .00. vafdl Sir Rambllft Man llarol 36 40 II 70 t 20 Plunder Roci.et (Ftor•>l 640 4 40 Strew Jellln (Oeloml>el J IO Atao raced Auured Juan, OI Hc>kt, Ju" Plain Bl'VCt. Atemlto• Strolt.e, Htelaeh Arure, FHI Tu, F8'1 Eutt r Time 200J n llXAC:"TA (S· 101 Otld '31160 Sl!COND ltAC:ll. 350 vard• R•mbOtaro (8erd) l 60 700 HO Kita Moon Man <Frev) S 40 4,40 Nutrlno <Kenlal S.IO Al10 recao. Rovell Juanllo, Wired lo Win, PaPOtl Valenllno, SurtilY' E8'v Jel, Sonic Kio, I Am Sure A1urt. Chaatno lhe Oregon Time 1119 '2 IX.ACTA (S·l ) Paid 11•40 THMllD RACE. 350 verd• Won Wev JOH ICrteOtf) 13 60 ] 60 a 111ln11•141Y Puncn <Treeaurt) 4 40 Puc• Ottering (Ad1lrl 4 IO l ,60 400 Atao raced Ea'V loro, preu, Ochenco. Contft• Tlmt 17" Marcu• Ex· FOURTH RACE. lSO varO• Btoutno 8amolno (C amPbelll 10 20 3.00 3.60 Eo v AIOllt ( TrtHUte) 4 00 l 00 s .. Tentt (Hartl •.60 Atao raced. OuPtt• 811•!>011, Drurn 801\d, v111oro1 8rldo11, Jonn Cat.In, Jtwet Twhter, Ahvthm Breaker, 51Mk and S.ui Time 17 97 S2 UC.ACTA (6·1) oel<I ~20 Fll'TH RACll . .00 vord• SN!ved Diet (AclalrJ 600 300 260 M .. t•r Summer <Trt8'ure) 3 60 :t30 Av• Dart ICrttoer l 3.20 Alto rec.a· Be Auured. Al8'Ctclero, SuPttrllars 8usner, Not Too Ea•v Time 19 96 n I X.ACTA (3·2) oeld 11•40 MXTH RACE. JSO verdl Wire Line (C141rlutl 23 60 9 40 UO Son of Ou•P•w I Creager l S 40 3.80 L•dv Oa Ov"aoo (Ltcktv) 14.40 Allo race<!: Btlore Re<iue•I. Spectacular Peu, Jtrtmle. Glnne Brfftt, Et Ber Raro, SI. Pickle. Tlmt 17.19 s2 IEXACTA 11·9) oeto \12160 SllVENTH RACE. JSO vardt R .. I Eotv Jtl Two (Hart) 5 80 l 60 Hol Stock (Adair) 7 IO Huml>ul Countv (8erdl uo 4.00 uo Also raced: ltockat>O, SI arch, The Armtnlen lo"atlus. Petri· Time 17 64 n EXACTA 12·61 oald SSI 00 EIGHTH llACE. 400 varc11 Time To Shu (Laclltvl 10 60 S 20 3 60 P .. a monttt 8unnv (Hart) 410 3 00 Hltaah Rtb (Mllclltll) 4.10 Also raced Shes A Wlndv G•I. Ftv Llcldv Split, Min Deep Snauv. Erina Luck, Rockn Time 19.14 Jl EXACT.A 17·5) oticl ~ 40 n l'tCK SOI (4·6·3· 1·2-1) oald sS.•91 20 wllh 15 wlnnlnO llClltll (llve hOrHS) $2 Consoletlon Pick Slit oald s 120 60 with 575 wlnnlno tickets (lour h0r"1). T"4ra were no six winners. NINTH RACE. 870 vercls Ctev SuoeralcMs IVeto..1) 6l 40 14.IO t.60 Mr Ka,ka (Herl) 3 40 2 IO Win Potlcv (Mllchelll 6,20 Alto rec.a HIPOltv. Jullts Ladv Law- ver, Catch• Oanc:tr, Romeo Lark. Oonaero Time: 45.13 S2 EX.ACTA !l -11paid 127020 TIENTH RACE. 400 vard• Sllawne Nellvt (Yelder) 17 60 960 6 20 Link a Mllo Coetomoa) t 60 9 60 Paoe Mu•lc I Ht rt) 5 IO Also rec.a Miio Kno ... n, LOI• OI SmoO!llv, Fut And Clanv. Saint 0. Sl"ner, OuoOcata Sita!, Cathler\ CMCI!. Jllltr BUii Band Ttme· 20.34 S2 IEXACTA (1·71 peld 1175.IO Allendanct 10,'37. °"" ... fllMne AltT'j LANDI~ (...._, ... di) -131 a nglers •1 cloredo, 111 ..,lolotck tuna, 1 vtllowlln lune, S vactowtaff, '70 maell.,.el. 467 bonito. '3 ban, 19 slleeP•he•d, l Kutotn, 1 trl09er flah, 3J rock 11•11. DAVIY'S LOCl(lll IN.-.-f ~) -1'2 tnQtan 1' vetlowfln lune, 16 dorado, 361 lklolotck lune, 44 ve1tow1an. 510 bonito, 19 Mnd btu. 14 calico ban, I rock fish. '42 mack er ti DANA WMAltl' -219 enoiers '2 119U, 14 bonito, 32 vtllowlall, •'2 mackerel, m skloleck lul'a . u vellowfln tuna, I clor11do. Tu.actaY's trans.ectlons aAUIALL A"*1Can ~ CALIFORNIA ANGELS-Aulon•d lo~v Clark, oulfl•-· to EdmonlOll of Ille P.clffc Coal! Ltaoue fOf lO·dav lnlurv rthtbllllallon CLEVELAND INOIANS-Placed Bak• McllrkM. outfltlcle<, on the !S·day dtuoblacl 11•1 Called UP Carmen Ceatltto, oulfla-. lrom Cllartaslon Of the lnttrnalional Leaeue aASfCllTaALL Nlltleftel .... .._. Attedt'*t ~OLDEN STATE WAIUttOllS-Acqul.-.O Oarrtn TIHI•, tef'l•r, lrom the Cleveland Cavaliers 111 t•C'htll99 lor tulurt conaldt<· tllons. SEATTLE SUPERSONICS-Cut Pate Oelllnchoo, ctnler, Frank Burnell. To"v Weshl119IOll end Tonv Brown, ouarda, and Tonv G1tt11, Oevld llnlon tnd Tonv W1Wlt , forwards. ,OO~Al.L NlllMNI ........ LMtut ATLANTA FALCON~ut Brian Clark, 1>1actklck4W, K1v111 Foster end Bot> Gentry, d<rf•ntlvt btcka, Jerrv Price, flehl lff'd, Mtrltl Ford and Jeff Kellar. wldt rt· c;elvtr'I, and Rici\ Htndtav, Punlt r CHICAGO llEAillS-Slontd Wl"le G1ult. •Ide r-1Y., Cut Larrv Dttwkht. Punier, """ McKlnnel'Y, Jerry Dotrlltf •I'd Dan J'9oel11, lad•let, St4 Or•ln, Mletv, One Flnrer •I'd Don Stumo, PUnler·klctlers. t rlan GtaaDOw. ttoht end, Arrlt4 Grn, deftn•lvt blck. Rick Htnsan, 11uarterback, Ron Jollnaon, Jtr'rV Jonet and Steve Parker, wide rKtlvers, Scott llt-rt, TtCI Sullon arid Garv Wotlhy, nmnlno l>adla. PIKtd Tim Clifford, -rterblck, nrrv MllCl<tnatUf'm, llnebtC'lltf, al'd Ollvtr Wll-nem1, wldt rtctlvtr', on ,,,. lnlurtCI ,...,.,., Hat. CLEVELAND lill0WN5-<ut Ml\.a NICClatrn, offtnalvt Q~, D•ve C0111n1, punttr', Fred Hauan, ciuar1tr'1Mlc:ll, Jtranto.lt L.Mkt, wide receiver, lllcll ,. ... _,,m, ouerd, lllch Prathtl', rut1nlne blelt, Alvin ltotltrtson, Cot~, tncl ·-illUHk, klctl.,.. Ptec.td lton Brown, wldt rtcelYW, on 111t r-·nfttd 111111oMd Nat. OIT-OIT LIOH5-Cut Ired Wr!OM, -'ltnNICk, Ken Naber, kfektr, Ille! Crato 01/M, llllhl end MIAMI OOLPHINS.-Ac<Nlrtd &..rtY IEv•nt, llnebtcker, tr om lht Denver Iron· coa for an undlKIOM<I 1115 ctr.it choice. Cut Ktltll Wo.4tt!, llMbadter, l(urt Pleret, Ollttd, al!d ll1v Loellllm, flll!Mek. f'lacff Joe Jenkins, llthl llld, tncl L.arrv 111\aM>n, runnlne IMICk, on lnllortd we1...,,, MINNUOTA Vll(IHO~ Mll'olfl lrown, (Of'ntrlMICk, 11111 Sllve Or91«lo1, llMOICll.,., on tilt lnlvr" ,_.,,, 1111 NIW ING LANO ft A, TlllOT$-Ptlcecl ~ JorOtn. ~'"'' I.Ult, on tilt dido-110t·r~1 r-Hsi. ftlacM Tom l'llclt, l\.l•rltr'M<.k, Oerrvl 1.twl" lltflt tlld, Tom Mul, wide rleltlvtf, Keith A. LM, llMMC1ler, on lht lnlurad r.ww Mil. Cut Ce1vt11 1 .. on. dtflnllV• IMCll, w.-..r ICiiy, Oout I.IN!, tfld Miila JtM.llln, rUIVllnt blclla, H.,ri. aurntlt, '91\IW, Jon Graver llnooeetttf', JOM HIHl!I\, Ofllftalve Deelt, t>;;, Howerf, otlttltlve tuerd, •llCI OoW ldwarda. Wldl ~vw. NIW Yottlt J•Tl-Plec.1td JOM Wtllltr, Otftntl.,.. I.alt, on 1111 lllkKed -ve Ntt Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 83 BUlllTIN BOARD Tour de Newpor• A round trip air ticket to Vancouver, Bnt111h Columbl1 awalte' the winner of the Tour de Newport blcycle race which le eel for Aug 28 beginning at 10 a .m . fhe tour, eponsorect by West Coast Travel Ceotte and Bobby McOea'a Newporl Beach, will follow a designated course through the 11tree11 of Newport. There will be six check- point• at various restaurant• along the route Entry tee la $5 Which Include• a 'T ·lhlrt, race cap and admission to an awards celebratlon wttletl followe the race More lnfOl'matlon Is avalleble by phoning Jett Goonewardana at Weal Coast Travel, 875-8330. Boo111e board contesl The largest cash purse In bodyboard history will be ottered at the fourth annual Mo rey Boogie Bodyboerd Pro-am Championships Sept 3 In Oceanside. A total of $6,000 wlll be awarded among the top 12 llnlahara of the pro division. Also competing wlll be amaleur riders who have quallfled tor a limited number of compe- tlon bertha In one of e ight events Hall the amateur field has already been selected The amateur competition Is divided Into six age group•: bOys 10 and under. 11-t3, 14· 17, 18-29, SO and older a nd women Amaceur contestanta wlll compete for prizes. For more Information, phone (6 t9) 439-0900. Tennis Legends tourney The 1983 Foster's Leger Tennis Legends Championship finals wlll be held Aug. 25-28 at the Forum In Inglewood. Among the participants scheduled to be on hand are Rod Laver. Ken Rosewall, Roy Emer- son, Owen Davidson. Fred Stolle. Clift Drysdale and Tom Okker Phone (213) 674-6000 for more Information Adult tennis t.f nals The Mlchelob light adult tennis league sec- tlonal finals are scheduled for Saturday and Sunday at the Racquet Centre In Universal City. Teems from Orange County. South Bay. San Gabriel Valley, San Fernando Valley and West Los Angeles wilt be on hand to battle tor spots In the reglonal playoffs. Teams from Orange County which will com- pete Include Huntington Beach Los Caballeroa and Harav8fd Park. FOi' more Information, In cluding match times. phone (2t3) 475-5302. Ground broken for site From AP dl•f•tcbu The final ground-breakjng cer- emony for the 1984 Olympics rompetition sites was held Tues- day as officials gathered at the Prado Recreation Area, venue for the Games' shooting competition. "The search for an Olympic shooting site was a most difficult one for all of us." said Charles Cale. vice-president in charge of sports for the Los Angeles Olym· pie Organizing Committee. "I'm really excited to see thlB work going on behind me." Cale said the shooting facaltty is projected to be completed by early next year, in time to host a world-class competition in April. • l'outh swim meet The Mc Donald's Olympie Youth S wim M .. t will be held Sunday al me Mc Donald'• Swim Stadium on tile USC campua. More 1han t .500 finalists, age s 5-17. from Southern California qualllylng meets , wlll com- pete Youngs1ers will be divided into five age groups In B and C cluslfleat1on1 and compete In 50-me1er events In bu11erfly, freeslyle, brea1111ro l<e and backstroke Tile meet will be conduc ted on a ttlale and flnal5 baela with the top elghl quallliert fr9m trials advancing to the flnals Prellms are set for 8 a m with the llnal11 scheduled 10 start at 2 p.m . For more lnformatton, phone (213) 376-8978 Gymnastics meet Top male a nd female gymnasts from the United Staces and at least t2 other countries w ill compete Aug 27-28 at UCLA's Pauley Pavlllo n In the 1983 International Gymnastics Championships The men's all-around championship com- petition wlll be held trom 1·4 pm. Saturday. Aug 27 The women's all-around competition Is set for 7 p m The 1op eight indrvtduals 1n each of lhe all-around events wlll compete In Individual evenl finals Sunday. Aug 28 The men's s lndlvldual events begin at 1 p m., women's al 7 pm. In addition, there wlll be demonslratlons of the new Olympic medal sport of rhythmic gymnastlC$ feetunng winners In the Rhythmic lnternallo nal lrwrtatlonal al Chapman College The demonstrations will be held durtng both Aug 28 sessions Tickets are prloed al S7. StO and $t5. All-event tickets for all four sessions ate priced at $35 and S55 Tlckels can be ordered by malllng order lorms (available at Sears and First Interstate bank branches) or by phoning (2t3) 741-6000 Marathon clinic The 1984 Long Beach Marathon ts sponsor- ing a series or free, weelcly training clinics for both beginners and experienced marath008fs beginning Sepl. 15 The series -which wlll conclude Feb. 9 - one week before the annual Long Beach Mara- thon, wlll be held each Thursday at 6 30 p '.m a l Rogers Junior High, 365 Monrovia, Long Beach, In lhe school gymnasium. Topics Include stretcl\lng. lndlvldua l training programs. running in1urte1, history of the mara- lhon and mental preparation lor racing. Phone 558-1052 lor more Information. The shooting site had been a thorn in the LAOOC's side for nearly a year since the contract with Coal Canyon was termin- ated. ·Since then, the LAOOC staff has examined dozens of sites in Southern California and Ne - vada before flnally settling on Prado. Another theft As membel'9 of the San Bernardino County Parks De- partment, the County Board of Superviaon, and the LAOOC took turns being photographed with shovels during a morning drizzle, the real ground work was taking place ln the background as heavy equipment gi-aded the site. Cale reiterated a hope that the fadllty. expected to OOIJt more than $2 million, could become a pennanent one since there pres- ently ia no lntemallonal shooting ftdllty ln North America. Sherman Kearl, LACXX:: com- mlMioner of ahootJng 1porta, pointed out that Tuetlday'1 cet· emony wu the lut officaJ 1T<>undbreakfna for next sum- mer's Games, and satd that the committee wu pleased Uuit work wu flnally beifnnlng on a venue for the •port. He l&ld &hooting has 60 million c:ompeUiors worldwide, la the third most popular Olympic 1port In athletic partidpeUon, and awards the flnt aotd medal of the Garnet!. ' Oakland's Rickey He nderson steals third base as the AngeJs• Roh Wilfong uwaits throw. Averill, 81, EVERETT. Wash (AP) Baseball Hall of Farner Earl Averill, a slugging outCielder who spent 13 years in the majors. has died alter an extended illness. He was 81. Averill died al 11:05 p.m. Tues-· day at Providence Hospital in Everett, where he had ~n ad- mitted JuJy 11 suffering from pneumonia, aaid nursing auper- vilor Orace Waltner. Averlll, nicknamed "Th e Rode," was inducted into the Hall of Fame In 1975 after being voted Into baaeball'a ahrine by the Vet· eran'1 Cornn1.ittee. An outfield r with three different teama from 1929 to 1941, Averill had a life- time .318 bettlfla avtrage. He led the American Leaaue ln hit.a with 232 and triplet wtth 15 ln 1936, when he be~ .378. A~rw played 10 yean for \he Cleveland lnd18n1, then was wi\h the Oct.roll Tigers and Bolton SUCCUinbS Braves. His 90n , F.arl Jr .. played seven seuons in the majors. Injured Clark sent to minors Angels outflelde~ Bobby Clark, who suffered a separated shoulder July 19. has been as· signed to the club's AAA affWat.c In 'Edmonton for lnjury rehabili- tation, it wu announced Tueaday. Clark, 28, WU pltoed on the disabled U.t after he sulfered the alight separation in his rlJhl shoulder u he went head-f:lnt Into the s\ands tl'}'ina to make 1 c.leh. He flnl1Md that mn&est, but wu pleced on th 21-day dlaabled U.t lhe tollowlna day. Clark WAI hittina .23Q with four ho~t1 and 17 rune betted ln prior to the lnjury. He wUJ be at F.dmonton no 101\ler than 20 days. lhe~IaMJd. l \ 94 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug 17, 1983 15th Anniversary From a humble beginning in 1968 with one restaurant in anta Fe prings, Grinder Gourmet Coffee S hoppes has grown into a c hain of I 4 outlets in Los Angeles and Orange counties. The Grinder is celebrating 15 years of service this week with s pecial promotions such as free a nniversary cake and coff et>, promotional Grinder travel coffee mugs and gift drawings for gold and s ilver . Be rt Ble nde r , above, is presid e nt of the com- pany. Grinder has r estaurants in Huntington Beach and Newport Beach . Budget deficit: Lost issue With all the recovery news, White House ignores the problem NEW YORK (AP) -What a wonderful recovery it would be if there weren't so many killjoys fU'OunQ with their long faces and agiJ,.ated consciences, nagging us with all their worries about deficits and aedit crunches. Why, even the White House folks are enjoying the party, as you can tell from the cheers that go up Crom there whenever unemployment falls or industrial production rises or Detroit announces another big week for sales. And if the White House can forget about about the big budget deficits and all the dangers deficits are supposed to hold, why should others worry and rudely poke their fingers under our noses while we try to partake of the punch? Lyndon J ohnson might have scorned them as ·Nervous Nellies, because they do have a way of disrupting the festivities, but Ronald Reagan may have an even more effective way of dealing with them: Of late, it seems, he ignores them. And, it sometimes seems, he may ignore the issue also, the very same deficit issue which he had done 'much to publicize as perhaps the biggest financial and economic issue of our lime. The issue of budget deficits, it seems, has vanished, for the summer at least. But not the budget deficit itself, which still lingers in the area of $200 billion a year and the financing of which, the worriers warn us, might just force business and consumers ou l of financia I markets and end the recovery. "Self-deception may work for a time in Washington," say the jittery folks at the Morgan Guaranty Survey, who just can't get the issue out of mind, maybe because they see each day what the · government's borrowing needs are doing. Such as, they say, reducing the pool of credit for the private sector and putting upward pressure on interest rates They maintain that self-deception "will not work -and is not working-in the nation's financial markets," as evidenced by the one-point rise over the past two months in the cost to the government of long-term borrowing. Paul Volcker, the Federal Reserve chairman, is worried. "Left unattended, the situation remains the most important single hazard to the sustained and baJanced recovery we want," he told the House Banking Committee in July A good sunirner project for kids Are there kida in your home who need a awnmertime project? One that will teach them a skill and and produce aomething you've always needed. Get them started on a photo inventpry of your house. Such an inventory is invaluable in settling insurance claims, says Robert Lord, Fnuntain Valley Dlviaion Claims Manager for SAFECO Insurance Co. "Photos are the easiest and the fastest way of starting an on-going inventory You can keep it up to date by saving the receipts of your next major p~huea.'' All you need is a camera and an ambltlous youngster. Valuable objecta should be photogri.phed aeparately and lta best to jot down details about the itenwon a notecard and paper. The lnventol"y should then be stored in a fire proof ploc-e -the refrigerator, a aa.fe deplt box, or your workplace. Mark the photos with the date they were taken L.M.Boyd informs in th e Daily Pilat An insurance adjuster will want to know when you purchruied it, where you purchased It, what It originally cost, the model style and identillcation number, he said NB doctor purchases Colorado Springs tract M. L. Propertiee, a Colorado corporation Involved an real estate development, headed by Newport Beach physician Martin Li.at, was the htgh bidder for a 464-acre tract ln the dty of Colorado Springs. The bidding WM concluded Monday in Orange County Superior Court In Santa Ana. The price for the property w q $9,225,000. Llat says that future plana Cor tht' newly acqulrtd property include• r gfon&l ahopping center simllar to South Coest Plua In COlt4 Mesa. The propo9ed shopping center will 1erve the aro.dmoor, Skyway, Cheyenne Mountaln and th airport area of Colorado S prin,gs. r, .. DRllGI CDllTY 11111111 Three hired by·CJE Systems Irvine.baaed CIE Syatema has announced the addition of three staff members. Mlcbael May1 has been named manager of penonal computer ayatems software. He cornea to CIE from Lear Sle1ler, Inc., where he served 88 senior design engineer. Robert Urelt has joined the fl.rm 88 instructor of corporate education. Previously, Urell W88 Chairman of the Department of Business Management and Computer Science at Laguna Hiiis Hlgb S<:bool. Barbara Hubert joined CIE as manager of corporate education. She will oversee the design, development and Implement&-HUBERT tion of all education courses. Prior to joining CIE, Hubert was a senior instructor for MAJ/Basic UAELL MAYS Four Information Dlvlaloa. • • • Mabaffey Macblne Co. of Huntington Beach is celebrating over 25 years in business at the same location. This job shop has been providing short-run production, machinery maintenance and prototype machining services since 1957. Mahaffey Machine has fully computerized its office and technical support functions over the past two years and has recently added com- puter-controlled machinery for high precision· production work. • • • Irvine-based Micro Five Corp., the U.S. manufacturer of multi-user, multi-tasking small business computer systems, has opened its first European marketing officer and has named an international marketing manager to head ac- tivities on the continent. Claus Hlage, formerly sales manager in France for the General Electric Co., has joined Micro Five to manage and direct the European operations. • • • American CompuSoft of Laguna Hills, pub- lishers of professional service software, has announced the acceptance of one of its "auper- friendly" aoftware packages by more th.an 5,000 law finns in 48 stat.es and 6 provinces in Canada. The software package is being marketed under the name "Legal Tender." i • • • SET AC, an Irvine-based systems engineering company, has announced the opening of a southeast regional office in Fort Walton Beach, Fla. SETAC is a high technology company specializ.ing in custom designed electronics systems and related systems engineering under classified Defense Department contracts. • • • Newport Beach-based Troy lnveatmeAt Fud has awarded the advertising and public relations programs for current real estate developments valued at $43 million to Engle Advertlalng, Inc., of West Loe Angeles, it was announced by R. Mlcbael Hall, chief executive officer and man.aging general partner of TIF. Joy Cormier, agency vice president, will supervise the account, with public relations director CVt Rogln1oa handing PR. David Locu is the art direct.or. MUTUAL FUND LISTINGS OYER THE COUNTER MAA STOCK USl'mGS \ l~ llolo ,. .... ,, ,, ""' .,,. ~ 21-. 21'• ,. , .... ,. 29•.ie , ..... 17\4 11 n•"' t2tYr 21~ 2114 ,,"' ,. ,. ~ f \4 "' 12 lf\4 ,, .... ,,_,. 17 .... , .... 1J'A IJ"- "141 '"' W141 S1 121.t ft .... It\\ 1.-"_. u I~ 11 1N20\io JS .... ,. ""' 11\4 11141 11"' ~. 9SAl9DOWMS 1 t ' '• Orange Coast DAI LY PILOT/Wednesday. Aug 17, 1983 Ba ,--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------STOCKS 1Vedne1k.lay'1 11 a .m . (POT) Prlrf'11 ~If'\ N•I .... t ..... t;_ ""' ( 1_, ...... \"'<I NY E COMPO ITE TRAN ACTIONS 0 \J< 11At1(\N'1 INLll Hl( I t<AllEI> UN ltll NtW Y011~ Mlll!N( , I PACtl I< 1'81N 8051 ON DI 111011 ANU C.IN(;INNA II 910<;11 l XCHAN0 C6 ...,_() Jl(l'ORll ll A1 IH( llA<.,(t INb!INI I ,,1,, "4•""' I t nil ~I' I hQ .... ("<I ,.,, .. , ,.,., \...... "4•t & • NJ\ h .• ., l "" fol f ft(h l IU'\,t' l. t't~ • • • ·•-•4 ... , • "q •110 lit 1JP41n llfvl not hl1h In prle•: re111on· able cnel; cl1ultlf'd 1dvan.i•lnc BUllNISS BRllfl New home construction dips 0.6 percent in July By tbe Associated Preu WASHlNt~'J'ON ·The rl'COVery ln home buildtng has been ('(Jol1.J by r~i.ng mortgage interest rates the governmc>nt ""'Yb Houiung starts fell 0.6 percent in July w an annu.LJ; t ale of l 74 nuUton, the Commerce Department sajd Tuesday Stans of single-family houses fl•ll 11 !.l percent from June, while multi-family s tarts rOSt· aho11t 21 percent. The jump in interest rate. since May has humped many potential home buyers and horn(' buildl'rs c•ut of the market, at least for now, a-onornt'il!-i 'ollY Amt~1·ic·u11 Express drops bid NEW YOHK -American Express C.0. has withdrawn 11~ $1 billion bid for Alleghany C.Orp.'s main assets "An1c 11t·3n Express advised Alleghany that it would Ix• w11lmg to proceed with the transaclion, but only <m th1· ba.1>1s of revised terms and conditions," American ~:xpr L'SS said Tuesday ll ne111plo_t·menl rate decreasing WASll l NGTON -For the first time since 1981, a major11y 1Jf '!t.uws arc reporting a year-long drop in unernplov111c·11t rates. Tuesday's report, wruc h also show('CJ rnorf:' than half the st.ates with June jobless rates unprovt:'<l or unchanged from May, appeared to be in lme wtth <1thPr re<.•<:nl Clgures showing the national unempluy111c 11t rut£· gradually decreasing since last Dec-em t)l r Bri 10/-Myt:)rs pushing Datri] Nf::W YORK Bristol-Myers C.o. is lau.nching Its largest pron 101ion1 vt-r in hopes of convincing consumers to use 1t5 non ,t'ip1rm pain reliever Datril instead of the leader, Tylt nul lnJustry analysts were not convinced that cunsunll'rS would switc h from Tyle nol. Bristol-Myt·rs tl11s week is spending $1.5 million on television and 1 <ld10 to push its placement of 43 million Datrll t'OUJ.>uri.-. m Sunday newspapers. lndu lri:il JJroduction rising Wl\S lllNC .T< >N Industrial production rose 1.8 percent ln July, th•• t1J.thth straight monthly gain since the end of th" l'l'\.'f>.ss11111 Thi· h1glil r t•UtpUl hy the nation's fac..1.0ries and mine; wa.-. v-1u1:~prl·ad among materials and products with "espt-c.·1.11lv sharp nses m automobiles and steel.'' Tuesday'" rqlf•r t from the Federal Reserve Board said. And 11 stwl uu11111 uf carpeting and furniture surpassed the record -.t t m 1979 Dollar (·a~es; gold holds firm LON CX)N The dollar eased against most world currencies LOC.1.-y. pushed lower by a combination of lower Eurodollar deposit rates and predictions that domestic U S m\.erest charges would drop. Gold was little changr<i The Eurodollar rates -interest on doUars ht:'ld m F:uropean banks -dropped by between ont>-e1ghth nnd ohe-quarter of a polnt, dealers said. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT .DOW JON£S AV£RAGES Nt:W VORIC IAPJ Sa .. , TU<t.Oav i>rlce •nd nel cne n9e ol •n~ IS mo'lt •t:tlvt New Vo<• S•o<:.-k E • cNnve l11u•t. rreo1no ria'1on•llv at rnor• ,,.." " T.nov EaaOll Eetl Koo.• Olem$nm HKleMn9 Natom.> Calero Tr Pan Am T1111.aco inc l&M ,Alllllcl\lld GTE C°'o GenMOI()(\ I U l 100 9111 100 YSI to0 •16, 100 •IJ too .. 1600 149,100 116().~ ISi ;>()O 116 600 -~1.000 ~,. "°° .. s •OCI WHAT NYSE OIU NEW YORll. 1AP1 Auo t WHAT AME X DID HEW YORK (APt Auo It METALS _,.,_ + .. -1111 t .. I Ill -11.o -'ltt I 'II ~ 1 I 1 • -, " .. Pa• (1 • ., llOT '71 "'' 19S9 u 1 Pre• oev 411 1S4 ,,. rn " • HEW YOllK (llPI •l"'' n nlttr°"• IMlll ""°""'Oder C:.,.,.. 7t•• t-I o • ti• I poun(l U :I -llNtlom ()-. 7) !Ml, ... ,,,,,,.. µO...•IJ NY eom.> tOOI """'lh dOMtl I 11* ....., ~23 QllW'lta _. uorn~d DftC • 4~ ~II ft N"t!hd tt...W"flU'iJ Tift U 4H9 ~ft'"'" w,..k .,,,,,_11. lb. ~ 76~1l••l'OVM NY lil8<cwy • SU& 00 l l80 00 l>f't 18 lb ntoil, -y-~ I•'° 00 S•lJ 00 OOmHllO ~11rovounc11 N Y SILV£R SYMBOLS JO Incl :IO rrn l~Ull ·~~·· lnclu• 11n" "" 10 11eo"' 11to 4r>.os 5.1241 ~Sf S2U1 531 -lll 12' OS ll't.17 121 S2 11'-62+ o.n .. , St 4n .o t647' ..e.n-1.16 Tr•n Ulll1 USI~ AM£RICAN L£AO£RS a~= '~ 12.211,000 NEW YortK (API -S... T...ay IN'Q •ncl ne1 c:Mnet <JA "'" It mo1t .cllve A"""IQn SIOd< Ea~ It• tuu. lredlno l\ellof\t llv e t mote,...., SI Wt"9Lto& • l et•Pflf•" '"'PC"°"' BAT Incl \ C~lltulCP GOfd11t ld CD OomeP1rl l tcl\l'Cm • Gelu v04t TIE Comm1 UP ~:;: 131,100 112,000 113.500 lGl,100 101.toO M.'CIO IJ,100 1'AOO .. • Orange Collt OAILY PILOT/Wldneeday, Aug. 17, 1983 f ~: I : r · r ~ . r •. MAPPV PtE~ ~FIELP. MERE 'S A MNANA FOR 6AfAKFA4!)T THE Ft\~llLl' CIRCt8 A.~11!1!~~~ by Bil Keane "My mottreu hod a flat!" ,..\R,..\Dl"kE by Brad Anderson "Since you're new here, we'll let you go this time ... but don't f1VfJ( call here again." by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VI P) "All your own wort, you Hy?" I WOHOER WMERE TMEY KEEP ALL TME CANOES ... . .. . . -.. """ ·~ .. · ~ GOif N ON lllDGf BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF Ntilht·r vulnt•r11hh·. Suulh d1•111'. NORTH +A 1072 "'s o K 98• • J 842 Wt:ST t:AST +KJ 83 +Q9S <:>JJ092 <:>76 0 73 0 A106S •Q75 +At063 SOUTH • 64 'V AKQ80 0 QJ 2 + K9 The bidding: Soulh Welt North E11t I 'V P111 I • Pan 3 ~ PH• 3 NT Pus • •:; PHs Pua Paa~ Opcntnl{ lt•ad: St'Vt.'n or 0 - Good 11•1·hn1que m11{hl ron sist or no mnn· I ha n tnking SHOE your lmk' in th1· ril(hl or1frr Con,ufrr th1' h.1n1I fr11m .1 r1· l"t·nl ruhlwr lmrll{•· i:anu• /\i. ~II or11·n hilf!Jll'O~. Sm1lh ovl·rhid :ind un1fnplay1·d h" hnnd. 111· wu~ a trill•· w1·11k for 11 JUlllJt n ·h1d ul ht' ~t·rond turn, und h1~ dl'r1.~ion to r1·mov1• lhrN' nc1 lrump 10 lour ht•url<o wa~ i.ht•l•r folly h1· had n hnl.1nrt•d h11nrl. wr~l h•d hi ... lop di~mnnd. E:isl won lh1• utt• unrl rt•lurn l'd lh1• wit I >t·t'h1rc·r won and pla yrd four rounds of trump~. ~luffinl{ lhrt•1• bh1tk cards from dummy. Wc•sl did not wa~ll· his rhuncr ht• won thr fourlh trump and shirtt·d to ;1 ~1111d1.·. l>eclnr<•r could not un111n1el1· his din mond trick~ nnd, 1ho11gh ht- led a rluh from th1• lobll' 111 his kin.:. ht• sttll 1•nd1•d up lo~ ~ ro VOU l<NOH -ra;-I ~'T SO~~~' ~ITAU... ~~MES,jL-,JG \2 /U<-, ;;,-~ ~ I< UJ ·~~ ~·rt\ DR.\BBLE W~i c~~ 1. MAI(£ iOtJ r$eQUK~~i. H)u(~? t'OR BETTER OR t 'OR "URSE YOJ've. GOl10 ee.. ASLE. To 1E.LL THE DIFFERE:NCE 6Ef"WE£N A uoKr. AND AN INSULT J in){ u tritk in 1•u1·h suit. II w.1~ ~UKl.t'''lt•rl I hul d1•dan•r ~houlrl dr.1"' only lhn•t• roundi< or lrumpi<, 1·1111h I ht• jnrk o( dia muncf11 u t1rl lh1•n rnM to 1h1• lnhh· with I h1• ilfl' ur 'l1,1cf1•' tu l~kl' U sp11d1· cf1m ir1J un I h1· k1111.: vr diamond;. llul lhul is nnl tt1J1lc• Kood 1•nouKh W1"•I 1·an foil d1•rlrm·r by rufhn,.: I h1• drnmond and 1•x1l1nl{ wilh a spade'. lkclnn•r hn~ no way to ,.:1•1 to lht· board, ,,nd will end up losing two duh lr1rk~ ror down ont•. Thi• eorr<·et piny 1s to rom b1ni· 1h1•M• two ltnrs Win lhl' st·rond dmmond. dr.1w thn•t• round~ or trump' .ind rush tht· j:1<·k or d1amonch It d111·s -not h1•Iµ \\'l·st lo rur<. so h1· rfol";trd~ Hui nnv. d1•1·l:tn ·r l1•:ids ,1noth1•r trump w,.,, wins und l'iln dn us he• . -.. ph .. 1M•11, hul rl1'rl1m •r will 1·nrl up 10 rl1m1111y wll h I h1• at1• of 'llltrlt·~ lo l11 k1• n &J1nd1· d1~r11 rrl on I h1· kinK of rl1a1111111rl1-und I h1·n l1•11d 11 rluh 111 hi\ h.1nrl ror lht• ron lr.11"1 Rubber brld1e th1b1 throuihout the couat.ry •• the four-deal brld1e f.,.at. Do they know eomethlq 7H don'l? Charin Gorn'• "Four-Dul Bridie" will teach you l~ 1trateJlea &11d Ul'tiU of thit faet·paeed K · lion game that provldea tlle cure for 1&11udbt1 r•~rt. for a copy, eud 11.75 '9 "Goren-Four Deal,ft care of thi1 newtpaper, P.O. BOI 259. Norwood, N.J. 076". Make checkl payable l4I Newspaperboolu. by Lynn Johnston .,, by Tom Bat1uk IT'6 AN "1'1"119 ! ) .. .. . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 - 'Father Knows Best' star 'incorrigible child' By WAYNE SLATER OlhAJ I ' Ill- DENVER -The little pigtailed daughter on TV's "Fa ther Knows Best" says she fell from grace in real Life -from celebrity to drugs, welfare. even prison -before she found faith and the courage to teach others by example. For 6 \.Ai years until 1960 Lauren Chapin played Kathy Anderson, the most innocent adolescent character on the series about American suburban life in the innocen t 1950s. "When 'Father Knows Best' finished, every- thing finished," she recalled recently. "I couldh't get a job. I'd been typecast as Kathy Anderson. The more 1 didn't work , the more my mother drank and the more belligerent I became. I started running away from home. I became an incorrigible child." Drugs followed, and casual lovers, Haight-Ashbury, fast company, eight miscarriages, welfare, declining health, a mental hospital, prison. She tells this s\()ry brightly, in detail, with fl HWhen "'Fa t her Knows Best" fin- ished, ever ything finished . I couldn't get a job. I'd been typecast as Kathy And e rson. preacher's lift of voice. Because at 38, Lauren Chapin is on the gospel circuit. "Millions of people grew up w ith Kathy Anderson. She represented something they didn't have in their own home. For men, I was a girlfriend. For women, I was their perfect little sister. And when they hear my story, when they hear a part of me went down to the bottom, they realize that Lauren Chapin is not Kathy Anderson." The pressure to live up to her character, she says, did its share of damage. "My mother always made me dress like Kathy Anderson. She would never let me look like Lauren Chapin," she said. "She'd always put those pigtails on and bobby socks. I'd take off my socks and roll up my jeans. I'd say I want to be me, but my mom would say, 'How could you shame me like that? You can't be you. You've got to be Kathy Anderson."' After "Father Knows Best," she said, her relations with her parents worsened. She ran away, quit high llChool and married a classmate. She withdrew several thousand dollars from a savings account "and blew it in eight months." The marriage ended. "I slept with many, many people trying to find love. to find self-worth," she said. "And the more people I slept with the less self-worth I had." Chapin worked a series of jobs, never for long. She began taking Benzedrine, then morphine, then heroin. "When things would become so ugly. so perverse, I made them into a movie in my mind," she said. NOw. THERE'S ANEW NAME FOR TERROR You• .... h your 9la1• .. off .. the tint ID-"°" ca .... lly. AIWtllM 8100i!lllJ•st m 6"6 lllU fl TOAO £cw1ros Sid<lleblel> S8t 5MO Eil'.iDl3 AMC 0Bnot M1I ~ 51.., 11 ow 631 03AO "' fOUNTAlll VAUEY 01W1$1 PiK>llc s FouolP1 Vllltty Eventually, after selling drugs in San Franc..'isco, she headed for Hollywood where she tried to forge a payroll check -and was arrested. "That was the beginning of several years in and out of jail," she said. On a recent night, the Lauren Chapin Ministries arrived at Faith T emple in a borrowed motor home with a bad muH1er. Her two children, aged 5 and 10, are traveling with her. The ministry began two years ago, some time after she was "born again" at a Pent.e<.'OStal service. "All my life I've wanted to be loved," sh e said. "God's love is the most complete love, and I think that's what I was looking for." Chapin invited Jane Wyatt, her TV mother, to her ordination, bu t she didn't come. Billy Gray, who played brother Bud, lives near Los Angeles and she still sees him from time to time. Elinor Donahue - sister Betty -is still acting. Chapin says she doesn't see Robert Young, the father, anymore. Chapin went down in front at Faith Temple with a br~ kettle. Many in the audience of 75 came forward. Some gave money , some asked for autographs. Among them was a very thin little man who handed her a $50 bill. "I want you to have this," he said. "I've been praying for your family ever since you were a little girl." NOW PLAYING I UEllA ,AlllC fOOlfTAHI VAU.fY lllllllOll VIEJO OIWIOf Px1f1( s l•ncOln llrvt 111 Eelw1!0s F°"""'1 Vit.y EOWltl!S V.,o I-c.n.oome a?I .aTO 839 ISO() 83().6990 6)4,.?SSJ COtlA MESA lllWlf IUWPOfll IEAal OIWIOf EdwJrOs Sout~ Co~t Eawuos Wooot><tel9' Eowws LICIO TheJtre Stldoum Onve In PIJn S46·l111 conema ss 1 0655 673 8350 639 ano fl TORO £0.,JrOs Sao<lieb1tk Sit 5880 10th SMASH WEEK OF AMERICA'S #1 COMEDY! DAN AYKROYD EDDIE MURPHY ~~ _}~1,IY~I) -~-, "''' u• Mo·,, 9~0 <017 COITAMIU •0•11:0 lf.o "' "4 , ..... , ... • ., 2 · t t ·~Ylllf ta .. .;ros woooD"OOt c.n-. ))1 00)) ll-AllACll l0•¥0">.a ,1hL.,. 401 l1U MtlSIOllWIUO I-di OllAlllll c-. U • 7))3 WU tMllll l UI lO•l'Cb~ ...... ,. Jt)) ""''"°"V'""'Mall •9!>6VO llfWl'OllT tUCll m::J lO.trOl-"1~ .... -11lllTOll IUOI 6U 01'1) £---'-"' &41(XJ88 l:mm1 Wf.IT MlalfOI ~Str 11fAr...o PM.t•c: , "' wiv 39 ....... ()11ff '" 19t l6t l '1c:Al<\A ......... .,....,..-<Ct ..... ()r • .,.,'" 119 900 ._, .... .._,... .... I "FUNNY, OFFBEAT AND ORIGIN~L •• " -A1Cl\fi'd ,.,flHtn•"• N[WHOUU~ hl"-\Pt. ... f e\ "'"*•~d\ lllU\TOl Cl"'t 1'f4 t.l¥v> 81ti Plw S2!H339 &AllOf• GllOVt EOwMOS W~ ~1 UACl!yc...tmi DrM In 962·2'81 634-)911 "'OIWl8l PIClflc s °'Jll9t . COtlA MESA f.,....OsHa'llo< '""'&:)I 3()01 llO .....0 ~ -0-,,_ OIGliOl•M °'"'"' 1134-9361 "';ii'MOf>""51~.,CN-~ "FAST, llUNNY SA11R•!' NEW YORI< TIMES WHAT'S COOKING? ' Fm . , ... ,~ ... ~ ..... Ull •••• ' ..... Al\ .. ---'Tf Lauren Chapin, left, was a popular figure on "Father Knows Best" where she p layed Kathy. Now at 38, right, shf preac hes on the go spel circuit. W1lk ·lns $2.75 1st 2 M1t1nee Showings Unless Noted ......... ~:...Jl~U!X U~R~Y~T~H~EA~T~R~E~S==~ ........ w-'--~~~--~------~~~~~~~~~~~~ "A BRILLIANT IMAGINATIVE PIECE OF MOVIEMAKING" s 113t,134.x .. 1161634 2ss31~~ .. ~. J s * FOR FUnt EXCITEffiEnTI V1s1tOur ... !<~ R 7-:l~ 5~1 J I 1:15 3 :20 5 :30 7:40&.9:50 .....l'rAR.WA~-RETURN 70 MM OF THE N~jt1:~~s JEDlm 7 :30 1o:u CITY cenTER ~ :·~:·g,f -.. Plus C SHOW Ill WMG1-1 L • --1!11 P1ut -.U£ TMUMOC• C•) .......... Sllow1 Al 12:15 2:45 5 :15 1 :00 0:30 TftfJlsO ~ SllOWI JI 1 :00 3:10 5 :25 7 :4 5 .. 9 :50 Plus IHQHT SMI FT (R) t:~~~ To&~ \ll~llf CR) PIUS CLASS (R) Ortve-ln1 O p en 1 •00 Wuknlglltt I 7:30 WHkends Cllold•en Undet 12 FR£E Uni•" N o1ed ~ * PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES * ~ fl r.08o . M t' I ar!tt1't'L•hhl41uoo.i'~ • rgo1n a 1nees. ':I'm'! • _ ~ J * MONDAY T'°"' SATURDAY FACUlTYot CANOlEWOOO All ...,.or.,.encn Befort i·ot PM lh S.-. f....,..,..,.ts I Hits) I lllQA61'1;e,-) lA M!RAQA AT !!DH CRANS "Ka\l.l" (PG) 12 30. 2S5. 5·20. 7 45, 10 15 "M STM CHAMID" (R) I :00, 3 25. S:50, 8: IS. I 0:40 "RISKY BUSIES" (R) 12 45. 2 50, 4 SS. 7·00, 9 O!>. 11 OS "M llM Wt«>- WASKT MF (I) "J.O _100 HO S&O 100 1010 "STATllO ALM" (PQ) 11JO.1 ~. UO, H S. US. It 00 ·~Of M Ell" (P'G) • lo-0.,Rtr• 11JO l 00 S JO 11JS 10 IO "STJYl'6 MM'' (PG) • IOtMi OGll1f SI•• 11.lO. t~. 4 40, 10 , ISO. 10~5 "M SUI Cl.l&J" (R) II DOI.II' STUI 0 100.110 S40.IOO 1010 "fWll>M C£" (l) 100 JOO SOO 100 900 1100 "lllW" (l'G) tt.lO, HS. HO. I IS. 10 10 "QDOf M pll( PMTID" (PG) tl :IO. 1 &O. I SO HS t OS 11 IS "WMWES" (l'G) I 00. 3 30. 600. I.JO. It 00 "M MM wt«> wASKT no r CR> "J.O I 00, J 10 S &O IOG 10 IV * PACIFIC DRIVE ·IN THEATRES * ·metll r· Cl> ..... "TWUlfl ZllE·M..,... (N) "TUIJllG f\ACD" (I) .... "M lllM Mn! TWO IWIS" (I) u~~!Y.~ (:Jf.lHj • .. ~ .,.,.;~"~~·~ ..... ......_ PLMIJ" (I) ..,..11 =-.. (I) ....,_,, .. (I) "9 "mff Hr' (a) ~<r> ... ''ClllPMJI ' (I) "Qti" (N) ""' "Jl•W (N) -ST'AR.WARS'- REfURN Qf -TIME ..... ~ lHE JEDI r-.ruc• • '"l• • 11111--....- l ~ .. 1 I " ~ . U Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 Ratings war ••• 'Newhart' helps CBS Sonawrlter weds 'princess· NEW YO~ (AP) -Movie princess Canie Fisher and ainger-10ngwrlter Paul Simon planned a "working honeymoon" following their star-studded marrillge Tuesday in Manhattan. By JERRY BUCK °' .... rtrts• ..... LOS ANGELES -"Newhart," com- edian Bob New hart's second venture into situation comedy, was the highest-rated television show for the week ended Aug.14 and helped keep CBS at the top. a macho football coach who becomes a house-husband dunng the sununer. Others in the Top 10: CBS' ''The Jef-fersons," 4th; NBC's "Hill Street Blues," "CBS' "Simon & Simon," and ABC's "9 to 5," a three-way tie for 5th place; NBC's "Cheers," 8th; ABC's "Hart to Hart" and "Three's Company," tied for 9th. 4. "The Jefferaons," CBS. 18.0 or 14.9 million. 5. "Hill Street Blues.'' NBC, 16.9 or 14.0 million. 5. Tie-"Simon & Simon," CBS, 16.9 or 14.0 million. 5. Tie-"9 to 5," A.BC, 16.9or 14.& million. 8. "Cheers," NBC. 16.5 or 13.7 million. 9. "Hart to Hart,'' A.BC, 16.4 or 13.6 million. Simon and Fisher were to fly to HoU)ton today for a "working honeymoon," where the singer and his musical partner Art Garfunkel were scheduled to perform. Among the 109 guests at the wedding werJ actor Robin Williams; singer Billy Joel; actress fenny Manhall; televiaion produoer Lome Michaels; movie producers and di.rectors George It was the second time "Newhart," which made it.s bow last fall, had been at the top of the A.C. Nielsen Co. ratings. The show was No. 1 for the first time for the week ended June 19. The highest-rated summer show was CBS' "On the Road with Charles Kuralt," which was tied for 19th. NBC's "Buffalo Bill" was No. 28, and ABC's "Eye on Hollywood" was 44th, "Reggie" 55th and "The Hamptons" 60th. 9. ''Three's Company,'' ABC, 16.4 or 13.6 million. Lucaa and Mlke Nichols; compoeer and singer h d Randy Newman; Garfunkel; and Fisher's parents, Carrie Fis er an 11. "Facts of Life.'' NBC, 16.3 or 15.5 million. actress Debbie Reynolds and ainger Eddie Fisher. Paul Simon. 12. Movie-"A Matter of Life and Death," CBS, 16.1or13.4 million. The show helped lead CBS to another ratings victory for the week -its second straight after regaining the lead from NBC -although the network had onJy four shows in the Top 10. NBC and ABC had three each. CBS won the week with a network average of 13.3. NBC was second with 12.8 and ABC was third with 11.4. The networks say this means that in an average prime-time minute 13.3 percent of the cowttry's TV homes were tuned to CBS. The lowest-rated show was "Kudzu," a CBS pilot based on the comic strip about a boy growing up in the rural South. The Cive bottom shows in descending order were ABC's NFL Pre-Season Football, New York Giants vs. Pittsburgh Steelers, NBC Reports "Bataan, the Forgotten Hell," the CBS special "Faeries," NBC's "Monitor" and CBS' "Kudzu." 13. "Magnum, P.I.," CBS, 15.9 or 13.2 million. 14. "60 Minutes," CBS 15.3 or 12.7 million. 14. Tie-"Knight Rider," NBC, 15.3 or 12. 7 million. 16. Movie-"Mark, I Love You," CBS, 15.2 or 12.6 million. It's a MUG& Here are the week's Top 20 programs: 1. "Newhart." CBS, a rating of 19.6 or 16.3 million households. 17. Movie-"A Bridge Too Far," NBC, 14.8 or 12.3 million. MEAL! The CBS comedy-drama ''Trapper John, M.D." was second and the NBC movie "Wait Till Your Mother Gets Home" was third. Paul Michael Glaser and Dee Wallace starred in the film, about 2. "Trapper John, M.0 .," CBS, 19.l or 15.9 million. 17. "20-20," A.BC, 14 .8 or 12.3 million. 19. "On the Road with Charles Kuralt," CBS, 14.6 or 12.1 million. 3. Movie-"Wait Till Your Mother Gets Home," NBC, 18.5 or 15.4 million. 19. "Fantasy Island," ABC, 14.6 or 12. l million. Tonight's TV EVENI«) -e:00-e ue NEWS e WONDffl WOMAN BJ/L080 S.W.A.T. HAWAI~ OYBIEASY QISNEWS A8CNEWSC;J NICNEWS DIQ( VAN DYKE MOVIE ***~ "Tlme After Tlme"' (1979) Mllcolln McDowell. ~ Wlf'lllf. (l)MOVIE H "The Goldwyn Follies" (1938) Adolphe Menjou, Ba Logan. f? ~Clrde Of Two" ( 1980) Rlch- •d Button. Tatum O'Neil. -1:30- • DICl<CAVETT(R) •:sel.laE a IAANEY ...uJI QI AU. .. THE FAM!. Y I~ -7:00- IENEW8 NllCNEWS lA~ & StlRlEY & YEARSlATER @ MOVIE **'h "Mommle Dearest" (19811 Faye Dunaway, Diana Scatwid. @MOVIE * "Sgt. Peppel'°s Lonely Hearts Club Band'' ( 1978) Peter Frampton, Bee Gees. -9:30- fl (J)MOVIE t t t 'h "The E.ltOfcist'" ( 1973) Ellen &ntyn. Linda Blair. '1i> TO DANCE FOR GOLD -9:00- • Q! THE FACTS Of UfE 8 0 THE HAMPTONS Q (!) 1WLIOHT ZONE I SNl*JRQ'S UNCOLH TOMNCE FOR GOLD (C)MOVIE * * "Ellter The N1nja"' (1981) Franco Nero, Susan George. ®MOVIE * • t 'h "Greoor{s Girt" (1982)GOf· don John Slnolu. Dee Hepl>urn (%)MOYIE * *.,. "Flrelox" (1982) Cllnl East· wood. Frtddle JoneS -t:30- D 3 BlffALO 8IU. (!)MOYIE • • • 'h "The Malcllmaker·· (1958) ShW1ey Booth, AllthOny Perkins. m THE VIRGIHIAH t * t "Moniy Py!llon Live At The Hollywood Bowl" ( 1982) John Cleese. MIChael Palin ($)MOVIE t t "Final E.itam .. ( 198 1) Cecile Bao- dad1. Joel s. Rice. -11:30- IJ (I) POUCE STORY D °'TIE BEST Of CARSON 0 ®) ABC NEWS NIGHTUHE 0 YOO ASl<ED FOfl IT •OODCOUPL£ ti) LOVE. AMER9CAH STYLE (~)MOVIE · t t "HeartllChes"' ( 1981) Margot Kidder. Annie Potts. (0) THE RIGHTEOUS BROntERS 21ST AHHMRSARY ca£8RATIOH 0MOVIE ••tin "Brmslone And TrMde'" ( 19821 Sttng. Oenbolm Ellott (~)MOVIE • • "All The Marbles" (1981) Peter F Ilk. Burt Y ouno. -12:00-0 ENTERTAINMENT TOtlGHT O MOVIE * t t "'Higher And Higher" ( 1943) Midlele MOfgen. Ffri Sinat11. CD N>EP9C)EHT NE1WOAK NEWS '8MOVIE • • * "Br<*en Anow" ( 1950) Jamee Stewart, Jeff Chandler, tl>SOCCESS -12:30- D (,ff! ~TE NIGHT Willi DAVID l ~NEW8~ I TlHt'S COMPANY a JOKEJfS WlD BUSINESS REPORT CHANNEL LISTINGS le ~~ORAl. PAINTING ENTERTAINMENT TOflGKT ORANGE COUNTY TOOAY 9CMBt LEGENDS •~ ey ~r· (19521 e.r. tin S~. Paul Dougla -7:30- • 2 OH Tl4UOWN 8 Q! FAMi.Y FE\JO G8ASEBALL •EYEOHLA. • ONE MY AT A l1ME t) K NXT IC BSI Q KNBC (NBCI fi:) KlLA (Ind I Q) KA8( (ABC I 0 it;FMB (CBS) 0 KHJ TV (Ind J ail 11.CSl IABCJ Q) l<TTV (Ind I G> KCOP TV (Ind I m KCE r (PBS> ml KOCE (PBS> 0 On TV l Z TV H HBO I! IC1nPmdl(l t (W0R) NY ,NY 11' IWTBSJ £ fESPNI $ IShowttmt'l 0 SP<lll19'1I 8 tCat>leNews N!!twork) • • • "Fm Monday In October'' ( 1981) Wiiier M11thau. .Iii Clay- burgh, -l:IO- (IDMOVIE * * * .. Jeltyll And Hyde ..• T ogeltlet Aoain"' ( 1982) Mlflt Bllnl(lleld, Blls Arms1tong. -1:30- D 3 N8C NEWS OYEfNGHT (l)UOVIE H "The Bltsy'" ( 1978) LAIKerice OIMer. Robert Duvall (%)MOVIE Ht .. The Seaet Of NIMH" (1982) Animated. Voicet of Elizabeth Hirt· man, Dom Oet.u19e, -2:t0- • (I) C8S NEWS NIGHTWATCH U NEWS • TOM COTT\£: UP Cl06E (C)MOVIE **'h ·~And Chona'• Nice er.ns·· ( 1981) Rlc:hlrd 'theecti" w.tn. Thomll Chong. (O)MOYIE t t t 'h .. Monty Python And The Holy Gn11r· ( 1m1 GrWllm Cllolp-man, John Cleele. -2-.30-.NEW8 -2:40- (IDMOYIE * * t '-' "Time Alter Time .. (1979) Malcolm Mc:Oowel. Dlvld Wtmer. 0 MOVIE * "'Sgt. ~· Lonely Heerta Qub Band'" (19711) Peter FrlfTIPlon, Bee Geel, -3:00- U MOYIE .. 'h "S!Mlr lode" (1954) John Payne. Din l»)'M. Cf) MORNltO STIIETCH • MOYIE • * ... Anni And The King Of Slam" ( 194&) lf911 Ounot. Rel Hllrrlton. (Z)M()VIE .. .... "'RrefoJc.. ( 1992) Clim e.t. wood, Fredell Janel, -S:30- (!)FNTH20 e MARY HARTMAN. MARY HARTMAN (C)MOYIE ••• "The Cowboy And The Lady" ( 1938) ~ COOi*. """'Oberon . I Cl) TIC T~ DOUGH MACNEIL / LEHREJI RE.PORT '-----------------------------------©)MOYIE • Of£4T RAil.WAY JOUflEYS Of THE WOfl.D di YOO~ FOfl IT P. ~ Of Lost Stllpe" l 1953) Jahn Derek. Wenda HencltlA {.c>MOVIE .. * "The Cowboy And The Lady" 11938) ~Cooper, "*" Ot>eron -U0- 1 AllatE BUl<EJfS Pl.ACE QI REAL PEOPl.E <II THE FAU. OOV t ~'The Man Who~ Was . (1958) Cllllon Webb, Glori• Qrlhlme. " NEWS SAHD8URG'S LINCOl.H ·~~··(PW12) (tt76) ~ Douglas. Chnstopher "'"""' ~TOW. GEOOAAPtlC (l)M'A'S'H (B)Nf~FNlllU fEWlfTB): THE LOUDS -10 (.OJMOVIE * * 'h ""Night Shift"" (1982) Henly Wnler. Mietllel Kea1on -10:00-D Q!ST.~ UtJ•g)NEWS II <II DYNASTY 0 MOVIE * * * "Jeltyt And Hyde ... T o09ther Aolin"" ( 1982) Marie Blanltfield. Beu Armstrong -10:30-., lllEP9llEHT H£TWOff( NEWS '1i) MATTEm Of Lff AHO DEA™ CID UTllE RIVER 11ANO IN AlSTRAUA (S)BIZAAAE -11:00-e DD (.I) tIDl a NEWS 8 SAT\JflDAY NGHT D .. SfAACH Of ... • THE JEfffRSONS ., 8BlfY tkL. SI BUSINESS AEJIORT '1i> l.FB.JNE m100 cwe (C)MOVIE Sperry Top-Sider. with registered anti-slip sole Put them with our ----....£r great selection of octivewe<Jr pants and shirts l£TTERMAH 0 A NEW 8EGIHHIHO D MOVIE t * t "Beadl Party" ( 1963) Dorothy Malone. Aober1 Cunmnot CI> lNfE <WY nEA TAE 0 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT (C)MOVIE * U "The Fog .. (1930) Adrienne Barbeau. Hal Holbrook. lO)MOVIE ** "Looldn" To Girt Ouf' 11982) Jon Voight. Ann-Margret. C Sl BEST Of TIE BIG lAff Off -12:35-m ORAHGE COUNTY TOOAY -1:00- OMOVIE * * 'h "Jet ()Vil( The Allantlc" ( 1959) Guy IAedlson. Virginia Mayo Cf) MOVIE * * * '-' ""Bittle Of The Bulge" (Plrl 2) ( 1966) .._,.Fonda, Robert Ryan. II) MOVIE t t 'h '"Pony Soldier"" (19521 Tyrone Power. Cameron Mitchell g:scoTT 8~~&@~ H 'A "Night Shift'" (1992) Hlnfy WWlll ler. Mietllel K111ton -~ CS)MOYIE *'n '"Body And Soll' (1981) Leon lsllc Kennedy, Jayna Kennedy. -i:Oll-C!> TOP O' TIE r.tOOHI«) -•:30-D ISPY Cf) BUUWHU..E -•:35-<ID UTTl.E RIVER 8AHD IH AUSTRAUA OMOVIE • • % "Tht Ameteur" (1982) Jom Savaoe. Clwtl1opher Ptwnmer. Classy Autos Advertised in the Dilly Pilat 56 FASHION ISLAND · NEWPORT BEACH · (714) 644-7030 '· . .. . ' ·- Epic 3-D adventure film opens UNIVERSAL CITY -"Metalstorm: The~ struction of J ared-Syn," a futuristic, epic 3-D adventure set on a desert planet where warlords and peacekeeping rangers are locked in a deadly battle for su- premacy. opens national- ly Friday, Universal City Studios reported. The Universal Pic- tures release l!t an Albert Band International Pro- ductions Inc. presen- tation of a Charles Band film. Every time you ·buy a meal, get a mug for onJy 49<: Right now at Long John Silver's, you can get a "Metalstorm: The ~ structioo of Jared-Syn" stani Jeffrey Byron, Mjke Preston, Tim Thpmerson and Kelly Preston as Dhyana. Alao starred is Richard Moll as Hw-ok. Charles Band and Alan J. Adler produced the film, which is directed by Chafles Band and writ- ten ~.Y Adler. ~:: beautiful crystal mug for only 49C with the purchase of any meal. Every time you buy a meal. you can gel another mug for 49C! The sooner you start. the more mugs you can collect! Hurry in. offer expires September 11 , 1983 or while supplies last! C:Wng<johnSi}ver~~ SEAFOOD SHOPPES 3095 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA Ju1t So. of San Diego Frwy. acl"OM from F~dco . Orive-lhru aenice available . At just $6.95 lOP SmLOIN STEA.I{ Gmcrouscut US.Choice, tmdu&julcy. nmmun STEAl{ US. Chol« top .titotn 8lowfy marinamS ror on e.- lOP SmLOIN Sl'MJt AND CHICON BllASI' TUIP01tA US. Choice top •lrtoln MJWd wtth bondc.N chJckm m.ut wfth ~and 10U1 NUCC. BBEF ltUOB TDl'YAIU US.Chotcc bttfwtth onlona. mmhroome. pen ~and chmy tocnatou on a bed o( rfc:c. DUP nIJ!J> PUWNS 1JChdy bruded and deep fHcd 10 a told«n browTI CBICDNTIMPUU 8onclus chklmt """*· Ttmpura ltyk. l«fWd wtth IWCCt and sour MUCl«. B,U.a.QUB BD.P lllBS IUbe aim.mered In UYOfY ~U« .. UC«. IDNDON U OIL Sheu of t«ndcr bat Mrwd with au ju.a and Cft&m«d hOl'Mftldlah .. ucc. AD entrec:s taW:d wtth atsp ~ Alad Of 90C4> du,Joul your chot~ olbaled poteto oc rice pUa£ ~ touted Ranch Brud. ~ cflgMn .. ,... $&95. "You're gonna feel good Inside ~~ ~ Q BLACK ANGUS RES IALIRANTS,. FOUNTAIN VALL!Y, 8ANTA ANA, GARDEN GROVE, TORRANCI, CIRRITOI, LAKBWOOD, ANAHllM ' .. I ... ~ . . -...... Daily Pilot WEDNESDAY AUGUST 17, 1983 MEAD ON WINE C2 SLIM GOURMET C5 •.. AND THE · EATING IS EASY Summertime brings to mind plenty of sunshine, fresh air and fun outdoors. And whether you are active In the sun or just sitting In the shade, a picnic basket packed with ready-to-eat fare js sure to add to a fun and carefree day. So, for a picnic that Is just a touch above the ordinary, try any of these portable posslbJlltles. Start your fantastic feast with Chicken Primo. Zesty Parmesan cheese and a blend of herbs give this tradltk>nal take along food an Italian twist. When baked toe crisp and tender perfection and chilled the day before, these succulent pieces of chicken wlll be a taste senstatlon. Pasta Primavera Salad Is the perfect partner for the chicken. This make-ahead salad combines fresh crisp vegetables wtth your choice of macaroni and convenient creamy bottled dressing. This colorful aide dish Is a welcome change from potato salad or cote slaw. For dessert, give the family a choice of two terrffic snacks -Super Snackln' Bars or Lively Lemon Squaree. Both get delightful crunch and dellcfoua flavor from eugar coated chocolate candy. Super SnackJn' Bara combine cereals for a special moist and ct'8W)' goodness that keitps everyone coming back for more. Llvely Lemon Squares are delicately flavored 8nd topped wtth a eprlnkllng of nuts, coconut and candy. Both go from the oven to the picnic bellcet In their baking pans. Don't forg9I to take a few munchies to keep the troopaeatllfledonyourall-dayoutlng. T088 'n' Tote1 8"9Ck Mlx 181 perfect eolutlon, combining popcorn, pretzell, ralllnland peanut chocolate candy. The sweet and eavory enack mix l8 a enap to put together, beforehand or on the spur of the moment. Keep the gang cool ~nd refrllhed all day with Iced CltM T-. Lemonade and llmeade concen- trate add tangy"Zlp to toe tea mix that's sure to be an lnetant •IOCell. iteate11poon...,._...._ ¥1tlllPDDll...-0 ...... " .... , ... ,.,,. 3¥1 .,.... balar.....,_, out• ¥.cup butter or........-. melMd Comblnecrumbe, cheese and eeuonlngs; mix weU. Dip chicken In butter: coat with crumb mbcture. Place chicken on two greaeed shaUow baking pans. Bake at 375 degrees for 50 to 60 mlnuteaor unttl tender and golden brown. Serve warm, or cool to room temperature: chill and serve cold. S«ves 6. • PASTA PRIMA VERA SALAD ' , sprinkle over batter. Bake at 350 degrees for 20 to 25 minutes or until golden brown. Cool thoroughly, cut Into squar86. ' SUPER SNACKIN' BARS 1 _, buttw or......- ~cup.,..._...., . ~ oup"""" ............. brown ..... ..... 1 .. llPIDftY ... 2oupe.., .. oup ... ...., unoooked 1 .. llllDDfteocl9 y, .. llPDDft b*"'8 powder y, .. 1111a•Nlt 1~._ ............ ,. ...... 1 oup .... GDltldWUlll 1oupalt1pp1llnut8.Wd11lrM Beat together butter and eugara t.lltM light and fluffy; blend In eggt and vanilla. Add combl'*' flour, oats, soda. baking pow_der and salt; mlx well. Stir in cereal, ~ cupcandMlsandnutt. Spread batter Into greased 13 x ~nchbaklngpt1n. Topwtthremalntngcandy. Bakeat 350 degrees for 35 to.40 mlnuteeor untM ~brown. Coot thoroughly; cut Into barl. TOSS 'N' TOTE SNACK MIX :: ~=-=·-=-··· ·~ .. ~· ··-~ .............. . 1¥." .. I:" ................ .. 1oupr .. u ,_ Combn•lt lngredlente. Sten lnttat*Ycowred container, Serve u1 enaCk. Mak••boUt 1boupe mix. ICED CITRUS TEA ------~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~--~------------------................... ._ .... ._. ....... ______ ....,. ........... .- .... C2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 Wine judging becoming important part of industry Wine competitions act! becoming a more import· ant part of the American wine industry every year, what with more and more consumers looking to the results as guidelines for their shopping expeditions, and wineries and re- tailers cap1 tallzing on the publicity generated for medal winning wines. Whatever you may feel about the credibility of wine judgings, the fact is a gold medal Crom one of the major oompetitions almost assuredly will re- sult in increased sales for the wine that receives it. Winning a medal or two can really make the difference for a small winery just starting out, and large wineries enhanre their image by winning medals and in effect demonstrating that they make as good a wine as the smaller, hand-craft wineries. There are those who argue that there are too many judgingsnow, that a proliferation of medals diminishes the meaning of all medals. I do not agree. It is my feeling that the additional competi- tions allow serious wine enthusiasts to compare results from one judging to the next. Wine tast- ings being the subjective events they are, it is possible for a wine to win a medal al a single com- petition without being all that special. In other words, a "fluke" can occur. But a wine that wins medals at a series of tastings, thereby having impressed a number of different panels of judges, is for sure a wine of special merit. Two of the newest events really came into their own in 1983, both celebrating their second year of existence. SAN FRANCISCO FAIR -The San Fran- cisco event is ch.a.ired by wine and food writer Harvey Steiman, and has a couple of unique factors going for it. The one I most admire is that wines produced anywhere in the United States were permitted to compete, something that hasn't happened at a California fair competi- tion in several decades. Great wines are made in states other than Cali- fom.ia, and they deserve to be recogniz.ed. Wines produced in Washington, Oregon, New York and Colorado all received recognition via high ranking medals. and a couple of thoee out-of-state wines were among the overall best in the judging. The second thing that San Franciaco does dif- ferently than the others is qualify the members of the judging panel via a 9eries of tests prior to the vent. Proepective judges must demonstrate their ability to judge the same wines in the same way consistently I and also show an ability to re- cognize the various com· ponents of wine and the ability to detect various technical flaws. San Francisco's ''Sweepstakes'' winner, or "Best of Show," if you will, was the outstanding Matan7.as Cl"eek 1981 "Sonoma" Chardonnay, a superb example or its variety that recently re- ceived high praiae in this column. The runner-up for ''Best of Show" 'was the beautifully lntenae yet restrained Monterey Peninsula 1980Cabemet Sauvignon, which also won a gold medal at Orange County this sum- mer. San Francbco also dif- fen from other judgings by offering "Double-Gold" medals, a eort of "Best of the Gold" category. All the double-eolda made up the 8.na1lsta for the 8weep1t.akea award. Otherdou~lda tn~ eluded: De 1981 Chardonnay, a fruitier, moce straightforward style than the Matan.ma; North Cout Cellars hmch Colomblrd, ~ one top rneda1Jai th.II t dkln't imp:'tlll me; San Puqua.I 1982 MWICat c.anew (there la ~t wloe made in San Diego), and Amity 1982 ''Oregon" Dry White Riesling, perhapt t he best dry Riesling I've ever tasted produced on American sou. a nd B eringer 1979 "State Lane" Cabernet Sauvignon. Mead on Wine credibwty in coming years due to the or- ganizational abilities of Berger . The well run event had credible judges and, more import- antly, credible results. Harvest, a mouthful of a name for a real mouthful of beautifully Botryti&ed dessert wine. high awards ln the past year. By J ERRY D. MEAD Onl y two other Cabemets won gold, HMR 1979 "Central Coast" and David Bruce 1980 "Vintner's Select." Also Ballard C-anyon 1981 Furne Blanc (t he "reserve" version won a t Orange County); Austin Cellars 1981 Sauvignon Blanc, an intensely var- ietal version; Hop Kiln 1981 "Marty Griffin's B~g Red," a $6 generic that will out-drink any number of $1 2 varietals; More double -gold s went to: Page Mill 1980 "El Dorado" Zinfandel; 1981 J ohn Culbertson "Natural," a dramatic debut from one of Cali- fornia's newest sparkl- ing wines producers, this wine also earned a gold at Orange County; and the s pectacular Quady 1982 Essencia, a unique dessert wine produced from Orange Muscat grapes and fortified wilh brandy at the earliest stages of fennentation to capture an incomparable fresh fruit flavor and aroma. Complete results of the San Franca.sco Fair may be obtained by send· ing $3 to S .F. Wine Winners, 540 Van Ness Ave. #301 , San Fran- cisco, 94102. RIVERSIDE FAIR - Pattemed 1006ely aft.er the Los Angeles County Fair, but refined con- siderably this year by chairman and noted wine writer Dan Berger, the Riverside competi- tion is bound to gain Riverside presented two "Swee pstakes" awards, one to a red, one to a white. The "best of show" red waa Devlin 1981 Merlot, with white wine honors golng to Chateau St. Jean 1981 Gewurztcaminer, "Belle Terre." Select Late Space will not permit a complete listing of even the gold meda.liats, but 1 can't resist mentioning the gold medal to Buena Vista 1979 "Special Selection" Cabernet Sauvignon, a sweepstakes winner at this year's Del Mar com- petition, a gold medalist at Orange County, and winner of aeveral other For complete resultaof the Riverside judging send $1.50 to: Riverside Fair Wines, P .O. Box 398, Hemet, 92343. Orange County Fair results are also still avail- able by sending $2.50 to:• O.C. Winners, P .O. Box• 397. Garden Grove, CA• FRYING CHICKEN Wnole BOOy SOutflern GI: llOf AU> .57 FRESH 99 ~~9l'.ND BEE~0 • ·. BLADE CUT 88 ~fd~SK ROAS~0 • GUARANTEED MEATS ROUND STEAK llONl\.I S\ llOIOO NII f\.U W I LONDON BROIL STEAK ·-1 .97 ._lfUt<llClfOIHJ- SIRLOIN TIP STEAK ,. 2 .09 -U~ l()HOf0 81H LOO. T·BONE STEAi< .-2.59 ICN:>I Otrtr •"""' WHOLE BEEF BRISKET .1 .29 IONl~H~ I QfCJ(O 1u r 'if ta\ ff U \ \h\f CROSS RIB ROAST •• 1 .98 l()Jlll(,fS\ ·~o I UI r~· WHOLE FRYER LEGS , •• 69 •"\lo' t' C>tHU Sift '••• BEEF BACK RIBS ••• 79 lt01' .. Of flO\" 0 CENTER CUT HAM SLICES,. 2 . 4 9 FRESH TURKEYS ARMOUR PATTIES Hi\.Kitw•c;.&rrt Jiff• •JIC) I ACOJtrf ow OU P••lfO rM<:•f--COO-I n ... 79 •• 1 .69 GROUND BEEF PATTIE S 3~~ 3 .98 •eon:" O()t' "°' faUIOIO'Ut LADY LEE BACON 11 1 11q \iCfO &AO"lf ...Otu•S '' 11'ti 1 h c,, .Lf-.. JIMMY DEAN SAUSACE -· OfO \WQ<IO OI 99 IQ.1~ ,AV\M'.I '" l" '1 01 ~I • WILSON BONELESS HAM "''l•l f eff fl,Al•C()OllfO 2 69 tiU\""""" ....... , ,. ,, • FRESH FISH ITEMS FRESH IDAHO TROUT II 1. 98 f~';ET Of BUTTERFISH 11 1 . 78 ~fl!ET Of DOVER SOLE 11 2 .48 r!';ET Of OCEAN PERCH11 1 .45 -----~ Thank.I to you ., ltworka ... ~-.-FOR ALL OF US 00~ Net ExCffq_ }()!( Fat Health and Grooming Aids at Discount Savings. r~~~~~NT TABLETS .os 1 .99 ro· TIPS SWABS • 99 !NOXZEMA SKIN CREA~,,, 1.69 I~~J~OLEUM JELLY ,.,.,1 .99 r~~e.~HOULOERs .. , 2 •99 r ~!~l SASSOON •101 2 .19 !VIDAL SASSOON RINSE"' 2 .19 ••JI .99 •••• 1.79 .. , 2 .39 I~~~~.~S,l;MTABLETS '" \ 2 .97 r~~~.fRESH I ~~SONAL TOt:KH !BABY FRESH WIPES !Oil Of OLAY LOTION • 1 3 . 99 !ORY IDEA ROLL-ON OIOOOllAll• "'~ffO 09 \INV t NJTO -)2 .19 .,~, 1.49 r~~.~J.~~AKEUP !~~~_;~~.~POWDER ,. "1 .89 I•<" 2 .59 •• "2 .59 !MOISTUREWEARBLU~~-2 .59 r SHAPE 'N BLUSH o~t•r;.i~ r~.~~~.~R BOTTLES P'RIOPAN ANTACID " '°'"° ,.," 2 .59 ' ••• 99 •HI 2 .19 I~9~!BANWATERPIL~c~• 2 .99 r~~E~LO BOTTLE S '\()" 1 . 99 rvlSINE AC EYE DROP~01 1 .99 !TOPOL TOOTHPASTE IOI 2 .49 !CLAIRESSE HAIR COL~" 3 .69 r BABY SHAMPOO l(Wo-.. 012 .69 JOHNSON SWABS ~,1.49 TEMPO ANTACID 10\ 1 .59 KRAZY NAIL TIPS "'" 1 .99 ,,,,, M t.l'\ SUAVE SHAMPOO ltOl 1 .49 ()f ( 00<)! 1 '°"'. c..,,..,_, 1MJ•r l""-•••.., ... ,... ••• ..,,., ..... " .. ,,_.. .................. c~ .. ..... Ou•,,.,,,. PttUf'fl ..n(lrrr)lc, 'u••itl'ltH1'i. fftf'\fl Ot·<n rt. C--•••~ 'iw• INMfW\01~ •••Vll•f '"'"•• fw'\Cth "ut>U\I 1f. 1 .. t rRUBBING ALCOHOL Medl·Guarcl CANNED & PACKAGED rHEINZ 119 ~~d!CHUP 17 Ol 8fl "OI "' 2 .39 r~~~.:~10STEDFL~~~;0.1.89 r~ ... ~~~~BERRY JAM11(11 .•• 1 .89 r~~~~'!~oo9 SAUCE ,.,,, "" .85 f'COKE OR DIET COKE '()I' (AHlM '""'' (()It( '""'""" nu 1 69 ()II( f COii \l'ltUf Ott 'VCA• h Pfi(I( nU SP•HI '101 C4NS • DELI DELIGHTS r~~;~~~~~oCHEES~101 ,.r. 1 .69 ! ~~9.,~~SH"~~~E •• 2 .99 r cUOAHY CANNED ~e~ .. 8. 99 HOUSEHOLD & PET r~~~~!OWELS -II 111(1 Ot '1UD* .,,,IOU .SS !BATHROOM TISSUE ~~~t:,:,:.: II« OI..,,.. 11\\< .. ~ • 75 r~ORox BLEACH •110, I I\ •89 r~~~.!!~,~~!,F000 110/CAH ,• 75 QUALITY PRODUCE COLDEN BANANAS l!ll» llUOV t O U I HONEYDEW MELONS LARGE NECTARINES C.0.<>CH \W(ft FRESH BROCCOLI •rr> GOOO l u ....c FRESH CAUUA.OWER r•\I\• •l"l.1t•110 ANANA SQUASH ()(\( .. , ll.AllC)e •• 39 ••• 39 ••• 49 ••• 25 LIQUOR, WINE & BEER !~~SCHMIDT V~~" 7 .69 I~~~~-LVETI '"" '" 10.39 I~~Y score~." .. '" 10.49 !BURGIE BEER »~~·::.., 1 .59 £HARVEST DAY WINES 2 49 vw•ow ~• , ...... ,°'-ll•t 1•1 • DAIRY & FROZEN !ORANGE JUtCE -!I MAO 'IOnl•COIClll!H ll 99 "QIMI °' ""'" O\&~ u 01 "" • P'COTTACE CHEESE '\AOH ll 1 59 UOA«CUllOOH O•"'•r 1t Dt "°' • r~~OLA MARGARl~,01 ,,., .89 I~!'!,LEE VOCURT t OI "' .35 r cOOL WHIP TOPPING =:!!~OI t•llA WM I OI IUI • 79 BAKERY ITEM S I~!.~S "'~ .79 The Discount Supermarket rFRENCH BREAD "loN\\AICl Ull"~OOOI~ "°''°"' .89 J I -:j Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1~83 Cl Lazy-day formula: Soups, salads Callfomiana enjoy plenty of outdoor eating-aa1ada and IOU pa eerved tosether 90lve many of theee "long-awmner" menu prob- lema. All of ua can take a hint or two from their "lazy-day" for- mula. It's alJ 90 euy ... great greens are in aeuon. plenty of vegetables and fruits such as avocad<> are in abundance. We've developed a Monterey Medley that wies the best of all .eaaona. Wlth ll, try a simple great new convenience soup .. Soup di Pasta (translated means "Soup with Pasta") with plenty of veg- etables and generous slices of cannelloni floating in it. MONTEREY MEDLEY 2 medium eeedleea oranges ~ medlwn Bermuda onion, sliced 1 small firm ripe avocado 2 large firm ripe bananas 1 head Iceberg lettuce, broken into bi~sized pieces Pare oranges, slice thin and cut each a1ioe ln half. Separate onion into rings. Cut avocado in half; peel, pit and slice length wile. Peel bananas and slice diagonally. Place lettuce in a large salad bowl; an-ange oranges, onion ri.ng.s, avocado and bananas in sections on top. Drizzle 1 cup of basil drelaing over all; toss llghUy to mix. Serves 6. BASIC VINAIGRETTE DRESS- ING 1 ~ cups of olive oil or 1 cup of salad oil and 'A cup olive oil W cup lemon juice ~ cup wine vinegar \4 teaspoon salt Pepper Combine all ingredients; stir well. Makes 2 ~ cups. Store in ~ covered jar. Add any of the following and serve over salads: Roeemary-lh teaspoon dried per cup Spicy Brown Muatard-'A tea- spoon per cup Baail-1 teaspoon dried or 2 tablespoons chopped fresh per cup Curry powder-lh teaspoon per cup Garlic powder-~ teaspoon per cup Oreg~ lh teaspoon dried or 2 tablespoons chopped fresh per cup CHIPFONADE SALAD Lettuce, romano, or chickory . . \ ' I 1ci200 1obab2 I;·. leaves 1 grapefruit, peeled, sectioned 1 orange, peeled, sectioned 4 slices Bermuda onion 1 green pepper, sliced Arrange lettuce leaves on 4 plates. Alternate grapefruit and orange sections, onion ahd pepper alices in circle on top of lettuce leaves. Drees with 1 cup ( ~ cup per plate) roeemary -vinaigrette dre88ing. Serves 4. Soup di Pasta varieties: Creamy tomato with meatba.l.IJI, beef ravioli wilh vegetables, mini beef cannelloni with vegetables, min- estrone with meatballs or chicken stock wilh meatballs and chicken'. t . L SardinesperkupA~erican ~vorite -~_m_c ~~-~~-----~-~-c ~~~~~~~ Looking for something new and different to perk up your picnics this summer? Here's a usty, summertime taste aenaation , Viking's Sardine Potato Salad. that's hearty enough to satisfy a Nordic Viking, yet pleasingly cool enough to be a simple summer dish. Potato salad, an American favorite, gets a wonderful new flavor variation from a topping of tiny Norway sardines and a tangy sardine-with-mustard sauce. Sardine Potato Salad i.a a cinch to prepare with a few simple ingredients from your refrigerator and pantry shell; thickly-sliced potatoes, ha.rd-rooked eggs, sweet red onion rings, fresh tomato wedges and savory Norway sardines. Better s1ill. this salad provides picnic-goers with plenty of good nutrition. Your guests will enjoy good amounts of vitamin C from the tomato wedges, while potatoes contribute important vitamins C and Bl, niacin and iron. VIKING'S SARDINE POTATO SALAD Sardine Mustard Sauce (recipe follows) Curly lettuce 1 pound small red potatoes, cooked, cooled and thickly aliced .4 ha.rd-cooked eggs, halved 2 medium tomatoes, cul into wedges 1 medium red onion, aliced and aeparated into rings 3 cans (3~ ounces~) Norway sardines in oil, drained Dill aprip (optional) Prepare Sardine Mustard Sauce; clilll Line large platter with lettuce. Arrange potatoes, eas. tomatoes, onion and the remaining 2 ~ cans aardinee on lettuce. Garnish with dill sprip. Serve with Sardine Mustard Sauoe. Makes 4 9el'Vingl. Sardllae Mutant Sa.ce: In bowl combine ~ cup mayonnaiae, ~ cup 80W' aeam, 2 tablespoons prepared yellow mustard, 1 tablespoon prepettd honeradiah, 1 tablespoon lemon juice and 1 teMpoon dill weed. Muh ~can of the.drained aardinea and mix into mustard mixture. Makes about 1 cup. JUICY SAVINGS! SAVE25¢ ON LEMONY AJAX® DISHWASIHNG LIQUID WITH REAL LEMON JUICE Nothing cleans dishes better than Lemony AJAX! Take the tough cleaning problem of spaghetti sauce dishes-Lemony AJAX washes more of these dishes than the leading . dishwashing liquid: And now you 'II save more, too. Use the coupon below toward your next purchase of Lemony AJAX DISH WASHING LIQUID with real lemon juice. It 'JI get your dishes so grease-free, they'll "squeak". 11IEBEST JUST GOT BEl"l'ER. SAVE$120 Today's the day lo cry Foster Farms.turkey products, the best in the West. Best because they're high in protein, low in fat. a better nutriti6nal value than ma;t red meat counter· parts and they taste te°mfic. Now. when you use the coupons. they're an even better buy FOSTER FARMS. ,.....-~--~~~ .................... _.__..,_.._.._ ____________ ,._._... _____ ----- C.f Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 New Orleans home of Creole cooking Mention San Fran-a.co and people think of trolley can and steep hilla. Mention Miami and people immediately conjure up visions of surf and aun. But mention the city of New Orleans, and the flnt thing people ~ think of ia food. It'a no Ii' wonder eithe.r, since £-, New Orleans ia the un- l disputed home of Creole cuisine, one of the most exotic food traditions ln American cooking. Creole cooking was evolved by a grab-bag combination of the city's French, Spaniah and African descent popu- lation and native Choc- taw Indians. The di. tinctive fare blends sub- tle French flavors and strong Spanish seuon- ings with a variety of spices favored by the city's other ethnic groups. Many Creole dis- hes alao make im- aginative use of the re- < gion's abundant seafood. ~ The seafood creole en- ' tree shown here features a seafood lover's mix of ' cod fillets and shrimp in a spicy tomato sauce, accented with white wine. The seafood is thawed in a microwave oven. while the 8"uce ia aimmered oo the conven- tional range top. The Creole sauce ia ladled over thick alicee of · French breed, which can · be toasted under the broiler. To round out the menu, serve creamy artichokes au gratin topped with a sprinkling of ParnleSa?l cheeee and a crisp Romaine salad for a cool contrast to the Verdict :still out ;on drugs ~ The verdict's still out ~when it comes to : amessing the efficacy of f the latest "Wonder 'I Drugs" -gluromannan ~ and pectin -in fighting • the battle of the bulge, ~ aa:ord.ing to the C.al.i- ~ fomia Dietetic Aasocia- ~ tion (CDA). ~ Both dietary fibers, r glucomannan is derived ~ from a Japanese root I plant, kcnjac. and pectin ~ ia found Ina wide variety • of fruita and root veg- etables. The two com- pound.a expand in vol- " wne in the stomach and , Intestinal tract, creating , a "full" feeling that sup- . poeedly cauaes the dieter I to eat leas. "AF with all trendy ~ "ic. ..i.ry '1.:S, the claima ! are extravapnt." says • Sharon Long, R.D., i president of the CDA. ! "Die1era are ...ured t they'll never have to feel i deprived again. They're I told they can eat all of whatever they want, whenever they want it and atill lo8e weight be- cauae they'll be satisfied with much te.. than nonnal. "Claims have abo have been made that glucomannan inhibits cholesterol at.orption and pectin blocb aagar at.>rption,'' Lone adda. "That's pttUy tantaliz- 1 Ing news to the deprived : dieter who longa for l aome deep fried onion l rtnp or a piece of cake." I • Actually, the few 1 atudiel that have been ! reported ahow only 80IDe I small deer!·-ln body I weight with the U8e of tbme bulking aaerita. ac-c:ordin41 to a recent article tn the Nutrition and the M.D. newUett.er. A balanced diet of daily low-calorie Rr- vtnp from all four food l"OUP9 -milk. meat, ~ and fn.dta, bread a and cereal8-coupled with conllllt.ent exerd8e atill appean to be the most ~~'1; only wftCbt 109 pro-aram remmmended by tbf CDA, •ya Lone. "Not only are the u - tnv.pnt daima for , bulldn1 .,enta un- aabstandated thu. far. the lor'8 wm dfecta for their we have not been ftUdJed. either,.. Lona .ddl. entree. For a real Louisi- ana-style dessert, rice pudding with whiskey sauce can be whipped up ln minute in the micro- wave oven. SEAFOOD CREOLE 1 package (16 ounces) frozen cod fillets 1 package (12 ounces) frozen peeled and de- velned shrimp ~cup butter ~cup flour l cup chopped onion 1 cup chopped green peppers l cup ch opped celery 2 c loves garlic (minc."ed) 1 can (28 ounces) tomatoes, cut up ~ cup white wine 2 bay leaves 1 tablespoon paprika ~teaspoon thyme ~ teaspoon salt ~ teaspoon pepper 1 cup water 4 to 6 slices of toasted French bread Defrost frozen cod fillets and peeled and deveined shrimp in microwave oven for 10 minutes. Tum seafood twice. Product will not be completely thawed. Meanwhile, melt butter in a heavy Dutch oven on surface unit of range; add flour. Cook and stir until flour browns. Re- move seafood from microwave and aet aside. Add chopped onion, celery and green peppers and minced garlic cloves to flour mixture; cook until soft and trans- parent. Add tomatoes, whlte wine, bay leaves, paprika, thyme, salt, pepper and water. Bring to a boil and simmer for 30 minutes. Cut fish lnto chunks. Add fiah and shrimp to sauce. Si.nuner an ad- ditional 5 minutes or until seafood is cooked. In individual bowla, spoon Creole over a slice of toasted French bread. U desired, use extra bread for dunking. Ser- vet' 4~6. LEG OF LAMB FRESH, GENUINE AMERICAN LAMB 67 LB. CENTER CUT CHUCK ROAST CENTER CUT CHUCK STEAK FRESHLY GROUND LAMB c~Ej~K LB. I . 19 Fom1ly Pock Soutt.ern Chocken Fre\~ WHOLE FRYER LEGS Horm.i Cure 8 I or Curemosle r BONELESS HAM . ____ ...... __ l8 .57 l8 2.99 KRAFT DIN NI RS 7 S OZ PKG MA( & CHEESE Del Monte 46 0 1 PINEAPPLE JUICE .29 .99 ............ _....._ ___ BEEF 1 39 La. e F1lle" of FRESH PACIFIC PERCH f roa n Eo•s l •" Holob.,1 lB I .98 WHITE TIP SHARK STEAKS ~ , __ KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP 1.39 J2 oz JAR La .• 99 \8 1.69 ~'~\h 51il 1nn~d ASTORIA REX SOLE 18 2 .79 JO 0 1 8o11lt HUGHES YOGURT 8 OUNCE VARIETIES .35 . Aunt Jemomo 4 lb 5 oz P~9 PANCAKE M IX 2.09 AUNT JEMIMA SYRUP 2 .49 HONEYDEWS SWEET I WHOLE MELONS c LB. 1 lb 1..e110 J2·01 FRESH LAMB SHOULDER CHOPS USDA :~~~~~~ I 69 CHOICE La. e l lb Voe Pock BAR M SLICED BACON fA I .49 &.el Pork 01 O"cke" ARMOUR BREADED PATTIES l8 I .79 :~ KLEENEX ""if .. FACIAL TISSUE ~ ?OO CT WHIT( 69 r l!. ASST D IA. e 6 6 5 0 1 Con PURINA CAT FOOD .2~ .----- 6 Inch Poi Bvtte•y Rich HASS AVOCADOS 3 FOR ' I FRESH CARROTS EA .2S HANSEN'S JUICES 1. 19 ASSORTED DIFFENBACHIAS 2 . 99 IQUOR SPECIAL BO· PROOF • t',fe! 699 ----aACK-TO-ICHOOL ·~•CIALI THERMOS OR ALADDIN LUNCH KIT WITH v ... cuuM 801Tlf 4!! FAMILY SOCK SALE 299 PACI< OF J PAIR -----FOODS OF THI ORIENT IN OUR PRODUCE DEPT FRESH GINGER 18 .98 JFC 16 o z Pkg In Tomato Souct 7 5 01 Con TOMOSHIRAGA SOMEN.49 WEL-PAC SARDINES .SS Mo•ukon Su 25 • 0 1 8olllt JFC 2 oz P"-9 RICE VINEGAR .89 DRIED SHRIMP I • 99 (JOPOV VODKA --::==:::;;:~~~;;;:;===iDILICA lllSIN T•IA Tl---.... ---FROllN FOOD IPICIALI ...-BOB'S BLIU CHEESE ~ DRllllNG 1.49, lo oz JAR p,,, .,;,.,\ .\,..,..,."'•ll"I STRING CHEESE l8 2.89 } 01 " ""'""' ,,. Po ,. ~o "oat o• fA 1.99 VI ENNA BEEF FRAN KS 'l• "~•w Sp•to1I KRAFT VELVEET A SLICES f b. i.39 ' lb l!~\l"'lo• o• (ll~••t HO RM EL WRANGLERS E-' 1.99 ~ BIRDSEYE ·-:~e, COOL WHIP eoz REG OR 78 '-/ E'lllRA (JU 6.MY ... -..,. TOPF'ING • 8 oz P~9 OH BOY G ARLI C BREAD 1~ 0 1 Ti..~, o• Wtd9t • ORE·IDA POTATOES /' .8S 1.29 VAN DI KAMP'I HALIBUT a OuNCE PACKAC( 2.49 LOWI• YOU• TOT AL FOOD BILLI W• .ct•l't c•111'•ft1 frent ALL ether l111'•"'"'•laet1t ." ...... ., .............. ._.. ............... , .......... , .................. c ........ . w o " 1• • ,.. •• ••o .... ·•• ~et'"'• ~.,.. o .. •flllfttt d ""•' ou•o••f 1 l •P·•to "' ..... , ••• ti ·~··~ ) • ., o•o...-o• 0 \ o•o ··IM•'• Otit•CJlllG\f <•1t100"' f\OI 'KUO~ 4 ("} •• -u ,tnr• •••, •o ... ov , o• \ 1 )() n• "'to" t>t cto"'e!tCI ~ Svb\•••v••tfll •• ''""' 01'1 f'\O,_ • 1c'w••• ' ft , • ., o•o"' o ,.,~ r., ,,..._ o ._ n1. • o• • ._.. ..,,.., 0"' '•'• "'' CChl&.tf)l"I\ dt•'"'·"4d by Ow' •• • out• 1 • •• " o• ''O<' ..... •t-'~'' f t d ... •t •o t•' co,,po" .. , •·" '"'."''""'' o• ,..,. •' ....,.,o .... • ..i... • l~ -...Cc• ' ..... , ,.....,.,. t1tlo.4t4 • ~b/M• ,. '"""' '"' ...... .-.. A t9f'lt ....... 10 Otf•• t "4 ...... It tllf• ...... ,, IH) T•IPU o• UllLIMITID DOUaLI fttUPOll OFR•I llOT ACCl•TID PltlCIS IFHTIVI 7 OAYS, I AM •TMUH . AUo 11 fHltU WIO AUG. 'JC ltU .. t ·•,•HO•U'<lo u -• .,.. • ,. u t • •• •••t•t "'1 .. Wif' ..... H ..... ••t ...... ,, .. •• • .. , •• ..,.., .. , tt •t ..... I _. [(' 1J~!~~ .. b~ l ~------ .......................... ~ .................................................................. ________ 11!!!!111111 ____________ .......,,~ ........ ..._ ...... .._...._ ......... __ .._.. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug 17, 1983 Cl Eating out can be ha zardous to health AND waistline A Manhattan friend with a tiny overpriced aparttnent has what he describes as an "eat-out kitchen." A nel&hbor in public relations tells me her job is one-tenth in- s pi r a lion and nine-tenths ind.lgestiOh; she spends most of her t.ime wining and dJn1ng clients. Others traWil in business; they're lucky to eat two meals in the SWW? time zone. All this adds up to lots of excess calories: eating out can be hazardous to your health aa well as your waisUine. U you rarely get to eat off your own dishes, here are some calorie-a>ping tips: BREAKFAST : Calorie-sale choices in- clude fresh fruit, un- sweetened cereals, bran muffins, English muf- fins, whole grain toast, or bagels. U you need a btg breakfast and can afford the cholesterol: poached or soft boiled eggs, lean ham or Canadian-style bacon. Avoid fried potatoes, fried egs, bacon, sausage, French toast, pancakes, syrup, jams, jellies, doughnuts, pastries, cofree cakes, pre-buttered toast, fruit juice, ca nned or syrup-packed frozen fruit. Personally, I find breakfasts in hotels or coffee shops the most difficult meal; most menu items are high in calories, fat, sugar, cholesterol and salt (or all five). My fa vorite unorthodox choice is to order the "cottage chee:M! fresh fruit plate'' from the lunch-time menu. Or, sometimes I break- fast on apples, oranges or bananas, carried from home. ROUTINE LUNCH- F.5: Good choices include sandwiches made with whole grain breed, pita pockets, lean roast ~f. . chicken, turkey or boiled ham, or sliced egp (not egg salad). Have pickle, tomato, or lettuce to pr- nish. Chooee a Chef'• Salad with dressing on the side, or coftage cheese and fresh fruit. Avoid French fries, sugary oole &law, lunch- eon meats, chee.e sand- wich es, grilled sand- wiches, hamburgers, hot dogs, mayonnaise-laden tuna, crabmeat or ea salad sandwiches. ci'eam cheese, peanut butter and jelly or sandwic~ with fried fillings. A . salad bar can be a good place to "graz.e" for lW\Ch if you keep your hands off such fatten.lni fare as sugary pick.Jed vegetables, mayon- naisey macaroni or potato salads. fried croutons. or thick gloppy salad dressings. My un- orthodox choices: order a shr imp or seafood cocktail, or other cold seafood appetizer and a small salad. DINNER OR BIG LUNCH; For the largest meal of the day, limit your menu to salad, main COW"9e and vegetable. , Forget the appetizer and soup. For your mAin · course, opt for broiled seafood, roast chicken or turkey, broiled lamb or veal chop, small tender - loin steak, steamed or stir-Cried fresh veg· etables, or baked potato (no butter or aout cream). In ethnic rest.au.rants, inquire about the ingre- dients and cooking methods to avoid diahel made with fat or fatty ingredients or sugary sweet-aour sauces. Sonte good foreign choices: ·Moo Goo Gai Pan (OU. ne8e), Pasta Primavera (Italian), Bduillabei9t (F rench ), T•ndoort Chicken (Indian), Shlsb Kebob (Turkish and · Middle 'Eutem). MORE COPING • TIPS: Keep ln mind that ' restaurant portiona .re always too blg. Don't eat For Ad Action ..; ~ Cal a Daiy Plot AD-VQ • 642-5671 ... r I everything. foods over and over Don't waste calories on rich, heavy food while you're negotiating business. Your attention will be focused on mat- te~ther than the food anryou won't enjoy what you 're eating. Order calorie-light broiled fish on business lunches. Slim Gourmet If you eat all or m06t of your meals out, you'll have lo make a special effort to find ways lo add fresh fruits and veg- etables lo your daily die\, especially thoee contain- ing vitamin A (can- taloupe, yellow equash, carrots). Be aure you're getting enough calcium (skim milk, cottage cheese, unsweete ned yogurt) and lron (broiled liver). drink: wine, beer. cocktails, sugary soft drin.ka, fruit jujc8, cider, coffee or tea~ with sugar and cream (or fatty creamers), can all con- tribute countlem un- counted calories to your day's total. Just because they're on the expense account or tax deductible, doesn't mean business meals are calorie-free. M ake tradeoff choices: wine or Sy BARBARA GIBBONS desse rt, bread or Don't repeat menus, Every calorie counts, including those you potatoes, not both. avoid eating the same Sweet t'-· \JPeaehes -~ BEEF LEAN & MEATY Short Ribs sI.S9u BEEF LARGE-ENO Rib Roast _•I.89 ... J LB. I FOSTER FARMS Fresh Game Hens -Wu • Purina · -.. MN1wMhr' ~55 Toanato 33c Pa-.te Nt•w B~ed '~.9 l)o.: F00t1 -~ Rhw ~ 9 Bonnet 1.2 P.aln~oUv~ ~I I 3 I aqmd • lknni'i-nn" SI 99 Chili • OUUI( .... tl'IC• ~ Maatard I ·•01 79• ......,.., '°"' ... ALL 0A LAllOJ !!l!lscults I ••.ooz ••.I 9 !Jt~ettl I ~>01 49° Detersent e ~·o, 3.•6 !J,~Cleanser e ••oz 4•0 Paralture Pollsh'8 .. z ••.99 iathTl .... et ... ••.43 kut _,to"' .OWL M~ne e ••0179' t.t~· SacblladaSauee Z ..o1 42' ...,-~-·. CoflM ,.°' • 4.35 ••• ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ --~ .=::.-=--=-;:_:--= ~----.... -------- r~ • Cluny i. La Cadena tBlac1i.,!elvet ~,.Seote. l G:ili' A Whbk ~ ·~ .... ~~· ..,. .....0 ._,,. , .. ~ ., ~.,,,... LCW't \.CIMlt ...... ~ "l1ia .-•. _. .. _____ ""' Teijiila ~~,_,.. ... ....-I . ~ SUlltz ... • .• '°'°" .. 5149 Gll~ys GI• • .. .•• '9.99 Wild Ttitiy Bol"'8 ..... :."s111 Httllbtl t.r.' I .. ,°'..,...u 5199 ROlrlco Rim ~-·· · 1 ..... '9.69 f:= ::..,.:" 9 ..... . CriUrt Wi• ;.::-.•;.: I ...... 5179 Sea rms Y.O .• :~:· I ...... '7.99 · :E-:. I ...... SUI STATER BROS 100•, PURE 8EEF" 12 OVA ATER LI! PATTIE$ Hamburaer ~~ Patties 93.99~ ~ • BEEF ROUND London Broll SI.891.9 Ol~irii~ - Cereal •I.69 • ~ ae.leetlOlll9! =.,.._= .. *I.89 ~=: .. •I.89 Al•kan Sliver Jl'M'lft FlWh Produoe .,,, ~( btra .,...,. .... ew.c I , ~ ~~~neydews ....... " .,. ~ --.. _,,.. ... Pineapple ·-......-~ ... ·~-Grapes._._ ... __ ... ..,. .. Papayas ........ .., .. ~ .... ,,,. Onions ........... r...,_ • ------'--~~---~----~---------------..._ ________ ..._ ...................................... ilillili ................ ~ ............................... -:-"'!Ill' ............................................. ______________ ..._ .... __ ...,..... ____ ........,...._..._..,...__._._,.. ........ _. ___ . __ ..,...__, ______ ~------ .· ( 8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Aug. H , 1983 Iced tea coolers beat heat While summer days can range Crom lazy to hazy to crazy, each has one thing in t.'Om.mon-.ununer heat. AB the season wears on, you may have decided you've had it with the heat and need some relief. But if a trip lo a cooler climate is beyond your grasp, reach instead for one of these new cool and quenching iced tea reel pes. Mystic Tea Spritzer is a misty coo] and colorful quencher made with orange and spice tea bags, cranberry juice cocktail, sugar and club soda. It brews up in just minutes, and, for special aduJtoccamons, can be made with the spirited addition of vodka. For thoee who like their drinks not only cold but creamy, Berries 'N Cream Cooler provides the perfect answer. It's made with blackberry tea, vanilla ice cream and orange juice concentrate, blended flavorful and frosty for a super summer sipper. For even quicker d~liverance from the summer beat, try a glass of orange and spice, blackberry or any of your favorite flavored teas served up tall and icy with a garnish of cool fresh mint or fruit. MYSTIC TEA SPRITZER 3 cups cranberry juice cocktail, heated to boiling 6 orange and spice tea bags 'h cup sugar th cup vodka (optional) 1 bottle (28-ounce) club soda, chilled ln t.eapol, pour hot JW('e over orange and sp1<.~ tea bags: cover and bre w 5 minutes. Remove tea bags. stir in sugar and cool. ln large pitcher, combine tea with vodka. J ust before serving, add soda. Serve wilh ice. Makes about 6 servings. BERRIES 'N' CREAM COOLER 1 \ll cups boiling water 6 blackberry tea bags 2 cups ( 1 pint) vanilla ice cream l can (6 ounces) frozen orange juice concentrate In teapot, pour boiling water over blackberry tea bags; cover and brew 5 minutes. Remove tea bags; cool In blender, combine tea, tee cream and orange juice concentrate; process at high speed unuJ blended. Garnish, if desired, with orange slices. Ma kes about 4 servings. FLAVORED ICED TEA In tea pot, pour 2 cups boiling water over 3 flavored tea bags; cover and brew 3 to 5 mmutes Remove tea bags. Pour over ace and garrush. 1f desired, with mint leaves and lemon s!Jces. Makes about 2 servings. .------------------------------ • "' James H . Pampaian grows and packs lovely Babcock peaches in Reedley. The unspoken rule on the packing line of his tiny home operation is clear: • handle the fruit gently, just as if they were eggs. Pampaian adds, "If they don't, they're fired. Uthe buyer sees one fingerprint on a Babrock, he sends the hi.id back ." The Babcock is a very delicate, light-skinned, ,.,.h11.(.•-Cleshed peach. Due to its low-acid, low-sugar •-ontent. at is one of the few fruits recomended for d1abct1('S Some doctors also prescribe it as part of a d1N thought to help arthritic patients. Pampa.ian learned how to handle the fragile il.1lx'OC'k through trial and error. Now his packers 1,1. t<ar Jersey gloves, the picking buckets are lined with fnam rubber. the tire pressure on the trucks used to lt.1ul the fruit from the orchard to the shed is lowered ti• 25 pounds and Pampaian constantly reminds the drivers lo s low down. Pampaian's family operations produce 15 per- cPnt of all the Babcock peaches in California. "It's the s111I that makes the quality of these peaches," he says. A summer dessert deserving of the fine C<l.lifom ia peach is Peach Champagne Ice. Naturally, I he· better the champagne you ch006e, the better the It' And although Pampaian would recommend a Babcock peach for the base. any ripe California peach \ .lriety currently available will make a delicious du;sert PEACH CHAMPAGNE ICE l l<•aspoon plam gelatin 1 • t·up water ti large fresh peaches, quartered I cup sugar 2 tablespoons fresh le mon juice 2 cups champagne Soften gelatm in water in saucepan. Stir over low heat until gelatin is dissolved. Combine peaches, 1.;ugar and lemon juice in a large ~wl. Mix well to f'fJmbrne . Place half the mixture into an electric l·lc·nder Blend smooth. Repeat with remaining half 1 ~ .. Ith mixture. Combine gelatin mixture, champagne ·rid au peach puree. Tum into a metal pan. Freeze unul mushy. overnight if necessary. Remove from freezer. beat smooth. Refreei.e until firm. Makes about 2 quarts Chinese Cream Soup a refreshing en tree Portable feasts, those easy-going sununer meals PTIJOYed outdoors, can be as creative and exciting as your imagination allows. Chinese Cream Soup, a delicately textured, savory combinauon of this cuisine's most popular ingredients, is a refreshing entree for hot weather menus. Chopped green onions, mush.rooms and ginger serve as the basis for the rou.x to which milk and a touch of soy sauce for flavor are added, fanning the baste soup. This mixture is then processed with shredded lettuce in a blender or food processor. creating a creamy stock with a hint of texture. CHINESE CREAM SOUP ~ cup chopped green onions 2 cups chopped mushrooms 2 teaspoons minced fresh ginger or l 'h teaspoons ground ginger 3 tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons flour 1h teaspoon dry mustard 1A teaspoon pepper 3 cups milk 2 tablespoons soy sauce 1 he ad iceberg lettuce, shredded (4 cups) Cucumber slices Cilantro Saute green onions, muahrooma and ginger in butter until tender; stir in flour, muatard and pepper. U reduaJJy add milk and "°Y aa\.K'le; cook until thickened Procetl8 with lettuce in blender or food pr"OC.le90r in small amouni.. Serve Immediately or cover and chlll. Gam11h each terving with cucumber and dlantro. If desired. MakE'!ll 8 ~rvinp. , ' FA. • LIMll 2 BEEF OR PORK SPARERIBS 5-LB. CAN WILSON CANNED HAM ALL ICE CRFAM & NOVELTIES REDUCED • 6 ·CT. KLONDIKE • 3-CT. CHIPWICH • 6 -CT. OLD FASHIONED ESKIMO PIE 1!~ rA?':.P~1 eJ: -/'. f~' .. ~~· --~ SNELGROVE GOURMET ICE CRFAM 3~G~ • Rf.GUlAR ,B FOREMOST ICE CREAM 1~ .,u•~ •Ml I 4fMA ttttWfl "llM •IJMO-. l lMi .,,""..,ftttol\ ·t~t.1 2-LITER BOTn.E •ALPHA BETA SODA POP BANQUET DINNERS lOO·CT. •PICNIC PAPER PlATES 12-0Z. •SOLO PAPER CUPS ~,::·~~~· ~:.!,~;:":"~:·r;::~:~~::1 •t0M• ,. .. .,, • ., w ............. "G"' 10 "'"''au•""''" Prices Effective at all Southern California Alpha Beta Marketa HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF· THE WINNERS IN , , Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 C7 Lighter menus appealing 12-PK. 12-0Z.CANS SCHLilZ • REGULAR • LIGHT 3sg 2as 12-PK. 12-PK. 12-0Z. CANS 12-0Z. CANS OLYMPIA & PABST OLYMPIA GOLD BLUE RIBBO N 96-0Z. BOTn.E • DOWNY FABRIC SOFTENER ' 15-0Z. CAN • HORMEL CHILI CON .CARNE W /BEANS Leisure entertaining has never been more popular in America. When appetites lighten-up during the active summer months, the trend is toward appetizing and lighter menus packed with flavor -not ex~ fat or calories. Busy families and smart cooks who want to spend lets time in preparing delicious foods will appreciate attractive one-dish suppers using simple, yet tasty ingredients. Pasta, the perennial American favorite, makes its summer debut ~n a variety of unusual recipes that are easy to prepare, cost only pennies per serving, and are enjoyed by all age groups. The pasi.. pesto and pimiento recipe featured here, for ex~le, first wies a blender ~make quick work of the spity pesto sauce. Served hot or cold, the recipe combines dried or fresh herbs with peanut oil, pepper, salt, gat\ic, Parmesan cheese and sunflower seeds in a blender until well-mixed. · For variation, try tossing freshlY. cooked pasta with blanched fresh vegetables such as broccoli, carrots and cauliflower; toss with pimientos, chopped scallions, parsley 01 chives for a colorful treat. PAST A, PESTO AND PIMIENTOS Y. cup peanut oil I bunch fresh panley \rs cup dried basil o~2 to 3 cups firmly packed fresh basil leaves ~ cup sunflower setds 6 peppercorns or I t.$spoon ground black pepper .. .:LB. lARGE CALIFORNIA ~ECTARINES GET YOUR ALPHA BETA BINGO GAME CARO-TODAY ANO A GA"E TICKET WITH EACH STORE VISIT. tf~lJ"°' "1\4! ,..,.....,, .. ,., r.• Jio•I· flp ...... 1 '•II"• @rt, • '••IJ ~ 1 '1•......, I t• ...,,. r 1 Jft\! \ f'fl re • v• f01"''fl' Ct'..,, 1•• 0 ~ ,.,.,, rr. fl••! fl~.~ ... · \fi! , ....... t lfl (+ .. \' ... r I t"' ia, r, .... ,.. ~ .. , .,,, ·-·f , ... t ,. ,,. , ,r~ "''",.f!' '~' rtt•1 f "'·(.ill ,_.., ol Cit"• •p•I '"~ ,,, ·••\ llrwJ f'l'\ftt'nt)ef \ ,,, ,,. "I """' "'" A!fl' '•"1•1~ I '"'* \tl<Jl'l\r)' 1\ •d>J9fl·\ no "'Jflll11 '' .,," v1me 'uoOl•ttt\ 11e no1 ·~,<)+t>•• H ..,." 1nv 0-111\ ODDI CHAR~ .. ol Au9nl a, 1M3 ... ,. .., .. 000\• .. ~\•!'lit t"'\1(1" ()ltil \fl)af ll\'/)lli 1'\HJ.,. 0 0 "' ... /'\ #1\fl "~'' "\11\ '~-· '"' .. •V\AD0•1 ! .. ... .."''•' ~Mta;tu• .. ""'"' . ..... " .. , ••• c,,, .. ,,. , ...... . ..... •"O\• ...... ,.,..w ..... ·-,, .,. .,. ' .. , ... t.\• ...... , ..... tM tt I .. H•Uv .... • .. .. . \t•t•I• ....... .. t '' IOU• , ..... t} .... ,, .. , S<.,,.ov+Ml•~·~..,,,,,.,.t f;J '-"'.,.,I l"'tt W1ff T"'Ht~t .tf«'.l"""""lif,eot 1 !tilt Mt .. l"'\~ilH• I°"' "'"'"' '" vOCM~9fJ f>dd\ n.Mltid +n 0•1H•o•t~ ~t\ ilM If'\ '*'t\f>ttD9' "44"+\•~'' COM,llTI OAMI RUlll AR! AYAILAall AT All Al"1A H TA ANO 'AlllTICl,ATINO IKAOOI Al,HA HTA ITOllllS. Sale Prices Effective 6:00 a.m. Thurs., Aug. 18 thru Midnight, Wed., Aug. 24, 1983 THE '2,500,000 ALPHA BETA BINGO GAME \ I It 1 teaspoon salt 11 clove garlic Y. cup flnely grated Parmesan cheete 1 (12-ounce) package fettuclne noodles 3 tablespoons margarine 1 (4-ounce) jar sliced pimientos In blender container, proce91!1 peanut oil, parsley and baail on medium speed for 1 minute. Through feeder cap, add sunflower aeeda, peppercorns, salt, garlic and Parmesan cheese; process until well blended. Meanwhile, cook pasta according to package directions; drain. Toss noodles with margarine. half the pesto sauce and undrained sliced pimient.os. Serve hot or cold. Refrigerate or free7.e remaining pesto sauce for later use. Makes 1 cup pesto sauce, 4 servings pasta. Enter recipes for cook series If you've been enjoying our Cook -of-the-Week series and would like to join in, the Daily Pilot wan ts to hear from you. Send us several of your favorite recipes so we can pick a oouple to share with our readers. The series also includes a photo and short profile of our special cook each week . Send your recipes to the Food E:d.ir.or, c/o the Daily Pilot, P. 0. Box 1560, Cast.a Mesa, Calif. 92626, and be sure to include your name, address and phone number. As sununer begins to draw to a close. one begins to run out of fresh ideas for al fre8co meals. There's nothing wrong with serving the barbecue basics -juicy fat hamburgers on crusty toasted rolls, or if you prefer. that other cookout classic, frankfurters on toasted buns. Tomato ketchup and/or mustard are the accepted go-withs but a zesty homemade pepper relish, combining green and red peppers, onions and various spices, makes an agreeable change. Another tried-and-true favorite for summer meals is iced tea. Ever since the early 20th century when it was "born" du.ring the St. Louis World's Fair, it has been quenching summertime thirsts. In addition to its cooling qualities, iced tea gives a gentle lift without a let.down, and because it ia 80 low on the calorie ecale, it can be quaffed glass after glass without fear of adding unwanted poundage . Today. iced tea can be made a number of ~fferent ways using looee or leaf tea, teabagil, instant l$ powder or the flavored and sweetened iced tea m\xes. WAYS WITH ICED TEA The Traditional Way (with boiling water): Bring 1 quart of freshly drawn cold water to a full rolling boil in a saucepan. Remove from heat and immedj. atelyadd ~cup looee tea or 15 teabaga. C.over and let stand 5 minutes. Stir again and strain into a pitcher hol~ another quart of cold water. Keep at room temperature until ready to serve, then pour into ice-filled glaslles. Tht Overnight Way (with cold water): Fill a quart jar or container with freshly drawn cold water. Add 8 to 10 teabags, removing the tags. C.over and refrigerate at least 6 hours or overnight. Remove bags. squeezing against side of container. Makes 1 quart. Recipe may be doubled. The Inatant Way (with instant tea or the iced tea mixes): Fonow directions on jar or envelope. In general, UM 2 rounded tablespoons of instant tea powder tor each quart of cold water. Or ~ cup (or 2 small envelopes) of lemon flavored ioe tea mix to a quart of cold water. BARBECUE BURGERS WITH PEPPER RELISH IO I ~ pounds ground beef I ~ teaspoons aalt ~ teaspoon pepper 1 teaspoon parsley flakes ~ cupcataup ~ cup 10ft bread crumbs Pepper relish 6 hamburger buns, apllt, touted and buttered T'* beef lightly with aalt, pepper, parsley. cat.sup and bread crumbs. Shape into 6 patUea. Grill over pre~ coa1a, about ~ minut., tuminc to brown both sides. Serve on hamburpr buna. topped with 1poonful of Pepper Rellah. Mak.ea 6 ter'Vinp. PEPPER RELISH 4 red I~Uan peppen 4 areen Italian peppers 2 medium oniona, chopped 2 teatpoom salt ~ teMpoc>n Tabuoo aa~ 2 teupoona muatard eeed ~ t.eupoon tumeric 1 cupaupr 1 cup vtnepr Wllllh and teed peppers. Slice in food pn>CWf or p1nd coenely. •vlnl th. JWce. Qoa\blne peppers. Julee and all other lngredienta ln •ucepen. Boil, uncovered, unUl peppers are tender, about 20 mlnutee. Cool and ~te. ~about 3 ciupa. . ~ Ca Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 Chicken sauced for grill When it comes to the flavor of summer, Americans know good food when they taste it. According to a reamt barbecue survey, con- sumers ranked chicken number one as the most popular meat to sauce on the grill. The all-American ham- burger came in second. But what happened to ribs? Everyone knows that drenched in a thick, rich tangy tomato sauce and grilled to spicy per- fection they're the ul- timate in lip-smacking good eating. Pork rib fanciers came in third and beef ribs fourth. Whether you chooee chicken, ribs or ham- burger the fact is when they are well sauced and grilled just right they're sensational. Dick Van Dyke solves the problem of time with his favorite version of barbecued chicken. It's quick to fix because it starts with his chunky style barbecue sauce which then has pineap- ple and honey added. The flavor combination tastes even better than Juices pack punch in lunch b ox The school lunch box is as much a part of growing up as the annual ) ritual of returning to school at summer's end. But this year, millions of school children will c.arry something very untraditional in therr unch boxes as they trek back to classes. Juices and fruit punches pack- ed in a revolutionary new paperboard carton are expected to be the hottest things in lunch boxes sinoe the apple. The cartons-250 ml block-shaped packages complete with therr own straw-have taken the beverage business by storm. Children es- pecially have been eager to purchase drinks produced by the new-to-American asep- tic packaging method. "Since January when we introduced Hawaiian Punch nationally in the paperboard carton, we've been operating our plants at capacity to meet demand," said Stephen G . Rothschild, vice president of market- ing, dry grocery and beverage products for Del Monte Corp. "We're selling some 6 million servings of punch a week in these new cartons." The paperbo ard cartons are considered ideal for lunch boxes. They require no re- frigeration, are light- weight. offer the right t\IDOW\t for a youngster's lunch, and the shape fits rectangular lunch boxes. Research shows that the largest purchasers of the new paperboard cartons are children, Rothachild said. The straw makes the package tun for them, yet the package also appeals to adults who are taking the aaeptic cartons to the bech, on picnics and to athletic events. The secret to aaeptic pack.aging is that the juice or juice drink is quickly heated to ster- iliz.e and sealed in a sterile carton in a sterile environment. Thia pro- ce. yields excellent taste, because the bev~rage I.a heated much Jaa than comparable ca.ns or bottles, yet ~ quln!s no refrigeration. Currently, do:r.ena of companies are producing beve!'ages in paperboard cartons. Most of the juice drlnb, fruit punches and juices are going into the 250 ml cartOna. How- ever, 90l'1le com~ are looking at ooe-liter cartons for in-home con- sumption, as oppoeed to the primarily out-of-home u.e fOf' the ana11er me. ln•ex•pen••lve• • (Ill * ..,_,,. 11¥) no• hlGll In price. r •••on1ble: ::=o ..., ... Cla11lfled Advert11lng 842·&678 the tantallz.ing spicy aroma. For more of his favorite recipes write for your free copy of "Barbecuing Dick Van Dyke Style-You Bet It's All American." Send 25 cents for postage and handling to: Dick Van ~ke Recipes, c/o Hunt's Ail' Natural Barbecue Sauce, P .O. Box 82647, St. Paul. MN. 55182. DICK VAN DYKE'S CHICKEN LUAU l (2 to 3 pound) chicke n, cut Into pieces 1 (18-ounce) bottle All Natural Barbecue Sauce 1 (8 'A -ounce) can crushed pineapple, drained 2 tablespoons h oney In a bowl combine barbecue sauce, pineap- ple and honey; mix well. Using a 2-foot piece of heavy duty foil, pla<.-e chicken pieces In cent.er and thoroughly coat with ~ of the sauce. Seal by fc!ding all edges se- curely. Place on grill, 6 inches from &ouree of heat, cook 40 minutes. Reu:ove chicken from heat, take out of foil and place back on grill. Cook 10 to 15 minutes longer, turning at.en and bast- ing with remaining sauce. Makes 4 tp 6 I STOCK -UP AT VONS WHILE BEEF PRICES ARE DOWN! c-----------------------~ I I I I I I I I I :. ,,.I I ""' p •• ._ .. , , .. ' .... o. • o .. 1 ... •• • • -• ···~· • ... ,. • "'>I I ~ ,,.,._ • a , •. ' ., •.. •: .• !'." 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"' ""-9"'vt.C.lwit9'f • ~°"''"" •nd tl'9'!1t • CNPO"• ~ I I ~ Ltmll on. Chl>Ol'I ...-MMililfK tw., • C9VP+f'I •f'lct ..,.... • c~ ~ I I ~ "' ,.,.,...•c!:;!,:'~"!.!.~t •::~~~= ::: ~~.·:~'J,"odvct• ~I I ~ ,.. '•m"~!:;!~~~ •:::: :: ;", d::J1iwMve-. e I : VONS VONS VONS VONS VONS VONS VONS VONS VONS I : VONS VONS VONS VONS VONS VONS VONS VONS VONS I --------------------------------------------~----- WHOLE OR HALF STEAKS ' 79 LB flllE TS 3 89 lB 880 STYLE UNTRIMMED IRVINE RANCH GROWN LB \'0'\" SA:'liOWIC ti ROLl.S " """""'" 13 9 GREAT FOR SALADS 6 SANOWICHESLIM1r 2 • ...... \ 0 '\S •. '\RICHFD BR t:A D AM ERICAN BEAUT~39 SPAGHETTI 12·0UNCE PACKAGE ~ IS GOING TO $A VE YO U ' l"NC«I Ul'IDTIYI THUl'llt. TMlllU lllllO .• Auca. 1e T.wl AUG.24, tta CAU. (till UCM403 FOfl LOCATION Of ITOl'll ~..UT YOl,I NOT Al l ITlMI AHO li'l'llOlt.,. THll AO ffnCT!Vl AT 'IOHI, 1MO W. HX> 81..YO .• •'71 W. •OfH IT .. 1.01 ANOUll, tAN 01100, rl'lllNO, ue YIOAI AWO TULAlll COU,_TV IALll IN lllTAIL OUA .. Tlflll O .. L'I'. MOeT ITOllll Ol'IN? AM TO II l'M 1 OA'l't A Wllll. MUMTMTOtf •AOM MUMTWteTOtl •aOM 1Mfl'MT6N •AOM .._VM '°""'Ml WM.UY • ~Allf VM.UY ... MlfltW • ........... .,. llelfl lt¥4f, •1 A..... tnl ....... M ~.._..,a,...., ,,_ ..... 6 ,.._. OOITA •IA I.Mil NAN OA,.l'TllANO ...V• CU!eTRMeO M ACM LMIUMA t&Le 1M I . 1'ttl It,_. _. OfMte Awe. ..., OIMIM 0_.,IM a Del ~ ._ trvtM 11\>f. M111 Olifleftr '""Dr. A Vlt1«M ... , ..... ,_..., a Heft ) !. a a =·a a SC a • . so J . \ . .:·. •:. - Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Aug. 17. 1983 Rice puts extra in ordinary d ishes The way to change in kitchen routine can be spelled r-i-c-e. This all-American product ls probably one of the moet versatile, appealing and low oost foods in the world. It is easy to prepare and serve. ruce can take the ever-popular but ordi- nary hot dog, for exam- ple, and twn It into a family -pleasing casaerole ... one that takes no time to make, provid- ing extra moments for summertime ·relaxation. In this special recipe, cooked rice is flavored with cheese, tomatoes and seasonings, to which hot dogs are added. Then, it's into the oven for 25 minutes ... and serve. ALL-AMERICAN HOT DOGS AND RICE ~ cup pasteurized process cheese spread ~cup milk 'A cup catsup ~ teaspoon saJ t IA teaspoon ground black pepper 3 cups cooked rice l package (12 ounces) frank.furthers, cut in 1-inch pieces 1 can (14~ to 16 ounces) tomatoes, crushed and drained ,_.. cup finely chopped onion 2 tablespoons snipped parsley Combine c heese spread, milk, catsup and seaaonings in a small saucepan. Heat on low until well blended. Com- bine cheese sauce with remaining ingredients except parsley. Turn into a buttered shallow 2-quart baking dish. Bake at 350 degrees for 25 to 30 minutes, or until heated through . Sprinkle with parsley. Makes 6 servings. Microwave method: Combine cheese spread, milk, catsup, and sea90n- inga in 1-quart micro- proof dish. Cook at 50 percent power 3 minutes, or until well blended. stirring every minute. Combine cheese sauce with remaining in- gredients except parsley. Turn into buttered shal- low 2-quart microproof K iwi adds festive tou ch Swrunertime is the season to celebrate good friends. sunny days and warm nights. It's also prime-time for the New Zealand kiwifruit, and what better way to jazz up a celebration than with the festive elegance of kiwifruit in summer's fine food. Serve New Zealand Kiwi Club Salad with croissants and sweet but- ter, and watch any oc- casion become a festive sum.mer celebration. NEW ZEALAND KIWI CLUB SALAD 111 cup vegetable oil V. cup white wine vinegar Vi teaspoon tarragon Salt and pepper to taste 1 cup sliced mush- rooms 1 tomato, sliced into half-rounds ~ pound asparagus, trimmed and cooked crisp-tender 4 skinned and boned chicken breast halves, cooked and chilled 3 New Zealand kiwifruit, peeled and ali~ 1A -inch thick Lettuce leaves Toasted sesame seeds, for garnish Combine oil, vinegar, tarragon, salt and pep- per; whisk to blend. Pour over mushrooms, tomato and asparagus in shallow dish; cover and refriger- ate to marinate, 30 minutes to an hour. With lharp knife, alice each chicken breast half on the diagonal Into 5 pieces. ,Jro assemble salads: ""1ternate 1llce1 of chkken and kiwifruit down one aide of let- tuce-lined plates, dJVid· IJ'I equally. Arrange tomato, muah.roomt and •1JaraP on oppomte lfde of plate; •poon IOlne of the marllllde owr u1ads .. • dreltlnc· Spinkle wl th M!l8ID8 .eec:i.. Makes 4 acrvtnp. dish. Cook on .HIGH 8 minutes, or until heated through, rotating dish 1.4 turnafter4minutes.Let stand 5 to 10 minutes before serving. Sprinkle with parsley. SAUSAGE RICE PIE 2 cups cooked rice 5 eggs, divided l ~ cups (5 ounces) grated Swiss cheese, divided ~ pound pork sausage meat 'h cup sliced green onions, including tops ~cup milk V. cup half-and-haJf 1h teaspoon salt Combine rice, 1 egg and ~ cup cheese. Press into bot tom and sides of a buttered 10-inch pse plate In a medium skil- let cook sausage unul well browned, stirring to crumble. Drain well. Ar- range meat and onions over crust. Combine milk, half-and-half, salt ·and remauung eggs Pour into prepared crust. Sprinkle wsth remaining cheese. Dust with paprika, if desired. Bake at 350 degrees for 35 to 40 minutes, or until set. Allow to stand 5 to 10 minutes before slicing. Makes 6 servings. Microwave method: Combine rice, 1 egg and ¥4 cup cheese. Press into bottom and sides of but- tered 10-inch mJcroproof pie plate. ln shallow microproof dish cook sausage on HIGH 3 minutes, or until well brownoo, sllrrmg evl•ry minute to crumblt> Drain well. Arrange meat and onions over crust. Combine mslk, half-and-half. saJt and remaining eggs. Pour into prepared crust Spnnk.le with remammg cheese. Dust with paprika, if desired. Cook at 70 percent power for 12 minutes or until set, rotating dish 1.14 turn every 5 minutes. Allow to stand 5 to 10 msnut.es before slici~ This week get the season's best peaches at Ral~hs Super Peach Sale ~ Double Coupon ~n•:•n~~~~~~:i~1on~.:!" ~:r C'Oupon ..inJ !JOI douNe Ult" ~QVU'\Ql when you PW('hru.@ the lfem Nut 10 UlCll.Kfe r•tml•1 uee QtO\: ••Y pu1c-ho~e ;:ooupon~ cou5)\>ru 3:~:~~~ ?~ .1!'~Qlt::.~~~ quor 1ooocco oni.t dauy p1CXSU<"U Lurut One Item Per Manufacturers Coupon and l.unll 6 Double Coupons Per Cwlomer Coupon eUecuve August 18 thru Augwt 24. 19&.l USDA Wbole· 'e\US. 6 Double Coupons! -~ ~ ~ fC!D ~ Double Coupon Double Double Double Double Coupon Coupon Coupon Coupon Pl•lttnl lhu coupan along Vlth any Pf•Mnt ll\11 C'>Upon \11ong W'Uh cmr ~~~ith~~~~~!~~:~,,"•'n~ .. ~:!h ~~:l ! \•Up.Ht _Tf1d IJOI \tr\Uhht tlw ~C1'Vln\ll when V•.,U pur• tv o., thtt 11 .. m N1,I to u\r.lut..1~ •~tu•I•' ""v \11,._ e·v pu1 .. ·thlse sp" II\ ,u~)n' CJt•'-"&t 1ti.in fju s II II I @l&l e!ttitd the •w ....... , •lltt 1tt1Q r • 1u.1~ h q~I Iola. ..11\.2 J JUV f'I '<du--U Lllrul One Item Per Monuto.cturers Coupon and Um1t 6 Double Coupons Per Customer Coupon eUecU•e August 18 thru Augu.st 24 198.3 FarmerJob.n on• ManuJo<1wou cent1 ott' an• MW'IW•JC'fw•o • ttnUi CJf COUl)('n Ol"ld Q6t JuUfJI• she ~n\11> coupan OJ\'1 o•I Jr.iu.bl• th., ~~LllQ'> wf\en vou PWC'hc::u.e lhft item No1 fo when you pw thu.e "'" 110111 Nut,, lf\("lude r"la\J•r ltM gioc.ery Lnch.td• 1e~uUttt ,.,,.; Uhlf",.tV pu1ch0)9 oupon' ·oupioru. p urchat• .• ur ,, -nu, .. ,,. ~~~~~~~ ?;:: 1~:!wt!~1~;.~ S:~:\!!:'!; ~n; 1•10~/~/1 ':~::~11 ~· lolKJcco and dauy w :xsucu quo1 tobOcet W hl Jouy vrwv•:u Lun11 One Item Per Llaut One Item Per Manutactwen· Coupon and M anutactuJera· Coupon and Umu 6 Double Coupons Per Umit 6 Double Coupons Per Cwlomer Coupon etfecii•e CU.somer Coupon ettecuve AUQUSt UI thlu Augual l4. 198J Augua118 lluu Auaust 24 1983 Dairy/Deli Hehlt'W N011ow1l s ..... 11\r>IC...;••ot ••J Beef Salami T1 11 ". l I • 1 Orange Jwce •1~~~;···~:;~:,.,~;~~:~,,ll· .,,~ .. ~!!'' ~:r ~;~.,';~-'~• ~,n;11~:~;, !\'.','~t~~I '.~::~,~~'.;.~ U1•4 } J !" 1t1hJU111 fttm 1Jf ~HY "JI I l°J)H IJJ I vc.-.,,, .JlM JtNI llo th ,,..,. I ii 11 I 1•& etf"'.1 Uu~ ., ~ cJe ..t "'" 11ttn1 I a i'J<'Jtf'\ h quot ! ·VJ r llfi 1 1f'JUV 1•1 ~\J'1l um11 One Item Per ManuJaclUJers Coupon and Um.It b Double Coupons Per Customer Coupon elleC11ve AUQUSt 18 thru August 24. 198J ~~:;u''U~,~~~~r~(j''~_,~!t. r~~l , '"'"'V n 'l11d oet dou.tJ1e tt1• VJVU\Qt. wt1tJh yr1u r•UJ' f'l(llft lhe H•Wi .Nr1t t<,, &J;' l·J'1,. rAttnJet lltM" 7f'IC.•t·y ~·.Jt't1 J'>.. r*"l.JPQnl f'')UVAU ?'f•.lh•f H1•JJ1 ••ftlW d r.1U01 •I e1r-•VJ Oi• ¥ JJ _.,f!! ·11 tt.o M~m Ca· Ju'l*' Ii l'J ,, ,,.,(lit) '»"•"' dauy f.i•OdUC'll Lllrul One Item Per ManutactuJers Coupon and Llm11 6 Double Couporu Per Customer Coupon ellect1ve August Ill Uuu Augua1 2"-198J Grocery Values ~~l.99 ~~ 1.49 Queen Size J ~or Regular L'eggs Pantyhose A11stoc1a1 Ralphs Cat Food )=3.38 ~~ 5/51 F~~sh Grade A 55 Shan) Por11on·pe1 lb .99 Smoked Fryers • Ham Tyson Wt1Llt' •u!C>-IY I.OSI> Chicken Franks T1.., San h I.• <J Jy T f'.1 Taco Shells i-•= .69 ,., 69 tlo • A)soned flavors Hi-C Drinks All Na1wal 01emng Newman's Own .. ~ .69 •o• 99 btl • Golden Pten:uu.m per lb Fryer Wings USDA ln.sp ·Golden P1em1um Ftosen Dehos1ed·per lb Beef Back Ribs USDA lnsp ·Golden P1emtum 7·9 lb Avg ·per lb Whole .Beef Brisket 1 lb 0112 oz Water Thin Amenca·, ravortte'tach Oscar Mayer Bacon Ralphs·.A.ppro• I or 2 lb Cbub Palr·pe1 lb Lean Ground Beef USDA tnap ·Golden Premium Beel Loln·per lb Top Sirloin Steak .59 J09 J39 J79 J89 299 Golden Prem1um-(Boneless rrye1 Breast lb 2 99)-per lb J09 Thighs or Drums Regular. Ho t 01 Sage 12 oz roll-each J19 Jimmy Dean Pork Sausage USDA Cboace{Shoulder L~'Sh~ulder J 29 Roast Eastern Milli Fed Shanu 1 99 lb ·per Lb Veal Shoulder Roast USDA lnsp ·Golden Premium Small End-per lb Beef Rib Steak USDA lnsp Golden Premium Beel Loln·per lb T·Bone Steak 219 289 299 Plmn WrrJr 00111 h s1y1 .. Sliced Ham Allred A uvr1•• 1 Fresh Pasta Rolph~ No11ua1 Longhorn Cheese ;.; 1.89 ~·· 1.69 ·~· 2.89 Liquor Values l6oz Cans Budweiser Beer Ra1rt ~ Montcl Ju 118"' ,, Lite Vodka M•: 2.69 l"\tl 618 bll • Frozen Food Ralphs Lemonade Ralphs Cut Lf'•lt Spinach "an df' Kamps Cheese Cti1ck,.11 •·r Beef Enchilada Rolph• Fish Sticks Plain Wrap Apple juice ·~:. 5/Sl l~·t 59 '·~ . .. ~ .79 ','..:; 1.49 ".;~ .69 Bakery Values Ralph$ Hambwge1 or Hot O..lQ pkg Ot e Egg & Honey Buns Rolph\ Apple N Sp1.-n ~nu1I· 1 Danish Horns · ··:,". .59 1.79 ~a!IJIU I l 0 7 l~k_<i 1 39 Maple walnut Danish . C-rumti "'t•Pl" N SplCf' ttl llollf\)' R1o111 99 Ralpns Donuts ",Q. • switch 8r save· more than a buck a bag* al Prices effective August 18 thru August 24, 1983 C..r'·'t"11ttt•t•..,.•~•ec.t"t C...,.•...,.t •"~'"'h•••••~ 't•thMtt"t\.,.0-...C~t, Mit.,._,.,.,~ ... ..,..\for•~• •••••.n.• ~"""' , ... ,.,,., ,. • .,,,. ••••• ,.,,~..,.•tf'••'lf•••••• n• • ._~••u ••" • 'l>•t+f_.,. •• ,....,.. A,..t4t•~• ,.....,.o.-~ 1\i•-.t""t\ ........... e t•l•tt .. f ...-b-flltt toftA ot •-'&; .. t nlf•I• (t),_.._..,~ tO'"'•' fte'-"t ................. fllit.,MvtlM (~•) ~ ...... Wlef •\ ~at1t ..... •I ••e"\4; ,,,......, ........ •••ttn.t• ............. ..,..,. ... '"' ........... ~ ...... ., • 1••·...c.•~ •·t.~•·" ............ ., ., ....... ~ ........ . •.tt•.,"••CI .,,,.., '" '"1' •" ~· '"'• '•~• .,,,. • ,., '"••• ,,. tH tljllff•• ftto •• etft•i '"•"' •d"•'t1\N "''t•• ,.,., • .,, ~'"t ~ ._.., t~,..111.,." , ••• 1,,. '"'',., 'lio'llV'"f"'" '"' •h"" Heinz H1c ko1y or With Onion Barbecue Sauce Old [I Paso Refried Beans Del M c-nit' Whole Sweet Pickles Fla-Vor-Ice 12 oz cons Regu.tm c-1 SuQar rree Shasta Cola tik~ncci~ ~~u7-uP 1•01 69 t>ll • ·601 39 '""' . n:, 1.29 1~:~1.09 ""<~ 2.69 po/: 3.49 Produce/Floral C~~Oba Melons Purple Prune Plums SwePI h11c-v .... lb .... lb Valencia Oranges 7..' I lt')h n.1v,,t1ul Red Grapefruit h11,·y T111n Skin Lemons l'1f'lh Cul "Holland" Roses ~V"'. r1esh Cut bunch "Holland" Bouquets .12 .39 .39 .33 .17 2.99 2.99 Appetite Shoppe" • • l.0 111• Rich 1 99 Twk ey Breast ~o,f'it.' • rfii:e:tre~"saiact .69 llO 11111 Sf . COSTA mA IMO llUl, 11:..allf taU ffOI AOMIS. tumlllfOll llACH l .... 71 • --. --10 llACM' QMf(lD PAS(O D( YWJllCIA. lMUIA tau lltt .... Mfll, lltl'Ollt ' .. •vo '"" LOMA, AIWOll -H42 ...... tumcTOll ••C.. ... .. -·· --IUffll8fOll IUC14 CIU O •• At •MM.... lf2tl ,,. Sf .• nar. llMIGIA & ....... nMnAM nun .,.. MOiai: t.lt ..... , ..., ------ z a a . -: ..... :. : --c 10 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 , . Make dressings distinctive People who are watching their salt intake have smiles on their Cacea th1s time of year. They can enjoy the fruita of their own garden labors or be happily tempted by the array of fresh produce in supermarkets or farm st.ands, knowing they are not breaking the rules of their life-sustaining diets. They aren't, that is, If they watch what they put on or over th06e delicious fruit.a and vegetables. The trick is to prepare homemade salad d.ressingi1 that are low in salt, yet distinctive in flavor. The dressingi1 here all have a seasoning and flavoring agent that makes one forget all about salt. It's bitters, a liquid blend of herbs and spices that is virtually sodium-free. One full teaspoon contains only 0.16 mg of sodium, making it lower in sodium than any spice on the market with the exception of garlic powder, mustard powder and sage. Anybody who has ever plucked a ripe tomato from the vine at the side of the house and run inside for the salt shaker m!ght think they'll never love that "love apple" unless it's sprinkled with salt. Wrong. They will not only love it they'll adore it, when the tomato comes to table marinated in the delicious concoction detailed below. Ever notice how most people approach a tossed green salad? Before they take a taste they attack it with the saltshaker. Remove the saltshaker from the table and ~ the salad with the dressing printed here. The salt is never missed. ~ teaapoon baa1J leaves 4 ripe medium tomatoes, sliced, (about l 'h pounds) Blend all ingredlentaex.cept tomatoes in shallow bowl. Add tomato alices; turn. until coated with marinade. Cover and chill at least l hour. Makes 4 aervingil. TOSSED GR EEN SALAD WITH FRENCH DRESS- ING 11\ cup olive oil 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1 small clove garlic, crushed 1 teaspoon bitters Dash of pepper Crisp chilled washed salad greens (lettuce, peppers, onions, cherry tomatoes) To prepare dresslng, place all ingredients except greens ln jar with tight fitting lid. Shake dressing until blended. Pour dressing over salad greens, allowing I to 2 tablespoons dressing per serving Allow about 1 cup salad greens, cut in bite-siz.e pieces, for each serving. Store any l~ftover dressing in reCrigera tor. F RUIT SALAD WITH APRICOT POPPY SEED DRESSING l cup canned apricot nectar 1 ~ teaspoons bitters 2 teaspoons lemon juice l teaspoon com.starch MARINATED TOMATO SLICES ~ teaspoon poppy seed 1A cup vegetable oil Fresh fruit, chilled 2 tablespoons cider vinegar Blend all ingredients except fruit in saucepan 1 clove garlic, crushed Bring mixture to a boil, stirring constantly; simmer 1 1 teaspoon sugar minute. Remove from heat; cool quickly by pl.acing in . Salad dressings with bitters are high in flavor and low in salt. 2 teaspoons bitters pan of cold water. Chill if desired. For 6 servings, 118 teaspoon pepper prepare about 3 cups fruit, cut into bite-siz.e pieces. . POOllC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATI:MENT Pt.ellC NOTICE The ro11ow1ng person• are doing t>utlness a1; FICTITIOUS 8USINE88 NAME STATEMENT The rollowlng PtlfSOn II dOlng bullness as ,_ EXECUTIVE HOUSE L TO, 881 • Dover Drive, Suite 15. Newpon • Beach. CaJll., 92663 ., ROBERT D SMITH, 881 Dover Drive, Sul1e 15, Newpon Seacn Calll, 92663 RAYMOND W DEMOTT. 881 f' Dover Drive. Sulle 15, Newport Beach, Calll., 92663 :. VANGUARD INVESTMENT CORP . 881 Dover Orlva. Sulla 15 : Newport Beech. C1m . 92663 .;.. Thlt butJness Is conducted by • llmlted plrtnerthlp Vanouerd Investment Corp Robert 0. Sm11h, Pres PACIFIC SEAFOOD SM OKEHOUSE. 2620 Newport Blvd , Cosu1 Mese. Ca . 92627 PAUL JAMES STRAYER, 165 Cec;ll Place. CoSlt Mesa. Cal, 92627 This ooslneu Is conducted l>y an lndtv1dua1 Paul James S1rayer Tf11s statemanl was llled with the County Clerk of Orange County on July 13. 1983 F2205l7 Published Ortnge Coast Delly Piiot JUiy 27, Aug 3, 10, 17. 1983 426-4-83 Thia 1111eme11t wea flied with tM Pt.ellC NOTICE County ~lefk of Orenge County or -----------· July 13, 1983 FICTITIOUS BU81HES8 ~ NAME STATI:MENT • PubllSl>e<I Otange Coast Oa•I\ The ro11ow1ng persons are doing! Piiot July 27. Aug 3 10, 17. 1983 I business as 4259·8~ LE FLEUR BOUTIOUE. 2400 W Coesl Hwy No 5 Newporl Beach MLIC NOTICE CaJo~6~3 BRANDL. 900 E BalbOa FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Blvd No D Newport Beacn Ce NAME STATEM£NT 19266 I The rollowlng person ui doing DENISE BEAULEIU. 900 E Balboe1 '. bUslness as. • Blvd No O Newport Beach Ca. ,• wENEOA ROOFING 874 west 192661 I 19th SI CoSI• Men Carol 92627 H us busmast os conducted by a FRANK BISSELL 8H west 191h gel'le<al partnenhlp St Costa Mesa C.ltr 92627 Jon H Br1ndl I This business.ls conducted by an Tnos stalement was filed wllh the .·~ lndlYIOuar· Counl) Clerk or Orenge Counly on • ·' Fr•nk Bia.ell July 13, 1983 F2206M Publlthed Orange Cou1 Dally P1101 July 27 Aug . 3 10. 17 1983 4281-83 TN• 1ta1ement wH flied with the ' Counly Cl«k of Orange County on ~' July 13 1983 <t F2205n ~ Publtlhed Or8fl9e Coast Oa11y 1----------- Pllol July 27 Aug 3 10, 17. 1983 I POOllC NOTICE 4270-83 -------------< YOU AAE IN DEFAULT UNDEA A DtlD•ic NOTICE 1 DEED oF T11uar DAn:D Apf11 1s. ___ r_UU\._. ______ 1192. UNLE88 YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUA PAOP£RTY, IT FICTITIOUS BUSINESS I MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. NAM£ BTAttMENT I If' YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION The !ollowlng person II doing OF THE NATUAE OF THE bu~l~~:L~ L KOZAI<. FINANCIAL PfllOCEEDINQ AOAINST YOU, YOU 8HOULD CONTACT A LAWYEA. r SERVICES 359 San Miguel Of Ste NOTICE OF TAUBTI:E'S SALE 1 !O. Newoort Beac;h. C1lll 926eo Ts No 0011222419 ~; GERALD L KOZAK. 2 lOO YIClll On Augu;t 3 l. 1983 et 10 00 a m _, Ml11enlef. Newporl BNch. Calli l SUNKIST SERVICE COMPANY et 92660 I " This business 11 conducted by an duly appointed Trualee under and •. tndlvlduel pursuan1 10 lhe deed o! tru1t Re- • G aid l Koze~ corded on April 27. 1982 as Oocu·j ~, Tnla 11,1.,!.,.,1 wu llled wnn the men• No 82 142986 ol Olflclal Re- .,.. Count Clerk 01 Orange Coun1y on cords In tne ottlce ol the Recorder of ' J "' 1~ 1983 Orange Counly Celllornle. uec1.1ted u., · F2205t0 by Gregor P RuHell & Kuulel Pal r C D 11 Russell. husband and wile Publltne<l Orange oasl 11 y Will SELL /'fl PUBLIC AUCTION • .-• Piiot Juty 27 Aug 3 10. H , 1963 TO THE HIGHEST BIOOER FOR 4254•83 CASH ( P•Y•l>le at time Of .... In • lew1ul money of lhe United S•atee r I descrlt:>ed 81 rollows .,.. POOllC NOTICE PARCEL I An undivided ti 18th •t· NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE 1ntetest fn and to Lot Of Tract 11228. Oo A 24 1983 1 9 30 AM In 1he C11y of Coate Mua, County of ' FORECUOUs'u' RE. CON.SULTANTS Orange. State of Celllornla, u per -LO! • map recorded In Book 486, PiaQea 45 -s INC • • Callforn1a corporauon u and 46 1n tne olfl<;e of lhe County e--TruttM. or Succeuor Tru1tee. orl Recorder of aald Counly • ,. thet cert.in Deed or Tru11 executed !•ceptlng thererrom Unll• 1 ., by VOSHIHIKO KODAMA, 8 llngle through 18 as ahown on the Con- man and recorded February 23 l domlnlum Pian recorded In Book 1983 u lnalrument No 83-082612 14199 Page 19~ and re-recorded m Otflc••' R9CO<da of sa•d Counry 1n Book 14268, Page 674 Ottlclal CeHrornt•. and purktant to thal oar-Record~ i• teJn Notloe of Oef•ull lhen1under r• Also ex&41Pllng therelrom all thoee •• corded April 29 1963 u lnstrumetn exclusive 11sements tor patio '\ • No 83-182341 of OHlcta11 Record• purpases as shown oo tf1e Con· -. ot s111d County. will under and domlnlum Plan 1bove referred to. , PIHIU&nt to said Deed ol Trust aell al PARCEL 2 unit u shown on the .,.., public auction ror cuf1. tawtut Condominium Plan rererred to In _ money of the United Slates of Percer 1 •Dove Ameflea. • c;ulltllf I ctleCk payable PARCEL 3 An e,.crusiva ..,._ _ to eald Trustee drawn on • stale or mefll ror patio purpo5111 over that natk>nal bank, 1 •late or rederal pot1fon of Iha reetrletttd common oredlt union. or a 11111 or leden1I are& d89Crlb90 98 P-F-3 on the savlng1 end loan 11soclallon doml above reftlfred to Condominium ·~ clled In thl1 stlle •t the courtyard Plan , -bet-the two stair~ of The streer address or othef com· -the ALLEN BUILDING. localed at mon deslgo•llon ol lhe real pre>per1y 1 140111 Yori>• Slraet. In the CUy of herelnabove dMCrlt:>ed Is purPQr1ed :.• Tustin. County of Ore.nge, Ca111ornla, 10 ti.· 350 Avoc~o Street, G-3. .. ~ 111 that rlOhl. tllle and Interest con-coal& Mesa, Ce 92827 • v~ to and now held by It under The undersloned hereby dlecralm1 I • Mid OMd of Trull In lht property all llabillly r°' any lneorrec1nest In o.;. ettualed In Mid County and Slit• aald street •ddr ... or 0111« com· •!, de5Cftt:>ed 11· mon dM!gnatton .,.. Lot 89 of Tract 2954. at !>Of mtp BENEFICIARY· State Sevlfl91 end ".,,/ recorded In Book 104, Pegee 2!>·27 Loen AMOClallon I"' , of Mlec.lloneous M1ps In Ille ottl<:e 222 N El Dorado Stocltton. Ca. of the Covnty Reco<dar of Hid 92S202 'r' COUf'lty Phone (2091948-1116 ~-The t1rM1 lddr ... or other com· Said aala wilt be made wittlOUt :." moo o.1g11e1ton of the eald raal conV9rnlnt or w•rr•nty. •1'1>'-or pr()98rty 250 LoVOI• Aoed. Cot1a Implied, rega.rdlng 111111. ~. ~: M .... Callfornl• or encumbranoaa, lnciudlng f-. ~ Said Nie w\A be mad• without charge•. and axpan••• of th werr anty. expr ... or Implied, reg1rd· T ru1tM and or Ille trull• created by .i• Ing tltll. poHIHIOt1. or ancum· Hid Deed of Trutt, to pay lhe r• branoee. to Htltly the unpaid ,bal· malnlng prlnc:Jpal sums of rhe no1e(t) ~ -due on lhe note Of 001111 ... Neut.CS by H IJ OMd Of Trutl 10 wit cured by Mid OMd or Tru1t. to wt1 $57 4e8 76 with lntereat th«eon ; $14,964 81. ptv• the fo11ow1no e111-tram Fab 1. 1983 @. 17.76% per "If' meted Cotti. ••Pllfl'" and td· annum as proYlded In aald note(•) va-at !he time of the lnltlel pvbll· plut 811 cotlt chef get ind any and ,,,. cation of tllla Notice ot Sela 911 ldvencea Ii 940 4t wttll lnt•Mt ., 115,877 90 NOTICE TO PROPERTY The beneflctMy under M1c1 o..d YOU AAE IN O=~~ T UNDER A of T rue1 heretofor. llllecuted Ind 0.-" llvwed 10 tM Ul\CMflllQned • Wfltlan DEED OF TRUST. t>ATEO FE8RU· Oeoferitlon Of ci.f•ull 1111<1 Oemlllld "1" ARY 17, 1983. UNLESS YOU TAl<E fC)f s ... and. WflUtn Nottoe ol 0... "" ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR laulteod Eleetlon 10 S~i The under· ,.. •• PROPERTY. IT MAV BE SOLO AT A tlOned cllUMd ealO Nollce ol o.ftult ..,. .. PUBLIC SALE II' VOU NEED AN and EllctlOn to Sell robe recorcHNI In ~ ~P~~ ~~:Ol~E A"'o":i~~ lhe covnty wn.te the,.., property 1e .,.. VT" • .._ loc;ateo OATlO July It, 1083 ~ Y°-':'L YOU SHOULO CONTACT A 8UNKl8T SERVICE COMPANY """ ~0;:~~= J~~~·u~9~iNTS • CQrPOl'atlon u Tru11 .. ..., "' • Oy· Darlene Bandar. C""' INC Truewe Sale Oftleet . r • 1~~-;0fba 8trMI, luli. i 10 ~~ ~.:;1 ~ldo St Tllt'tln, c.ittoolla '2880 arocllton CA 0$201 1:J. 11141131.ao•2 12091 o4a'..11 t8 MICllHI W Grlttltn Put>llll'led Or•not Coa•t Delly Piiot Publlthed OrlrlQt COHI 0111tt ,.llOI Auguet 10 17 24 1983 Augutl 3. 10, 17, 1083 4482·83 ' . . 45&0-83 ~~~---~~--~~--"'-...;;...~-~~~--'~~-~-~~~~~-~~ Liquor Barn Fine Wines, Champagnes, Beer & Spirits ____ \ou t,:t•I \\ h;Hl'H "r \Oil\\ ,llH ·---- and 'ou t,:t'I 11 to r k''· · Visa & Mastercard Gladly Accepted Award Winners at Liquor Batn Walker's Canadian ~ ~ ~ 19. 99 'Ultite ol de 'Ultd $ Amaretto di Saronno ~oo mt $999 SO Proof . 9~m9P"' ;:,~e~~:;~~:::m :::: :~9:: 198X!!!~o!;l/!~f~bard . 1ter al $11.99 G Ilia L s 9 99 M !bl" Th I a no iqueur ~ll\.I ml f r:nch (.':~~;.:h4tJ ;,,':,~I I 7 5 L Drambuie Liqueur ~l'l\I ml 1910 On nle<" CounC\ C.:1>IJ $ 3 5 9 Gold M.dal. S~ G 11 French Colom bard 7 50 ml ~~';.f.~9 a 0 C henin Bl•nc, or Rose' Dunlivet 1.,llltlh, Hf. Pnx•f $898 Th.c..'h~mnBl"n' "" $2 7 9 \\lh~'.~','.':'~'.·.~~-~:1·;··~.,~~i':'i.~h1 . ~;~~;~~:.:\~:.:for tl .. ,.1, 1h .. 1 r"°•'~, •h• 11..,11, • ··' 4 . ""o'"""'" I. 7 5 Liter L ' · Cof!lparc 1.5 1ter at $4.99 RrJ L ... hrt'·••hh $998 Johnnie Walker Talisker Scotch '°" p,..,f i~ll ml "·n~I· \I.lo kf\ p,, .. if Presidente Brandy ... r .... , Marc Roger , ... o 1° , r•"· h 11 .. nJ. Yukon Jack McGuires Tia Maria \. i11n.J1J1n l •'4u"u~ '"'t' r,, .. ,, l1•tf .. , I 1 ... uf'ur ;\,, ,.,, s 1466 Kamchatka Vodka$?J9 80 Proof Com ,.re 1. 7 5 Ltr. a1 s:f 49 Budwei er Light i: ... l •n· Miller 11 .. , NR i.r. ~ s21 s hPack $249 B d . "'M . r1 ... R•lul\d•hlr SJ 5 2 s u \Veaser 1>.,.. ..... s .. R•n••l l"har•• 1, 0 .. ,,1 M 'll i..r1 rim K•lunJ•M• s332s I er I)'"'''" ..... Rrnt•I t har... ,, l\arr<I C "•• l'lu• Rtfund•hlt $J4 25 OOrS 11•1'"''· N .. Rtnt•l l h•rr• 1, ll•rr•I (~'Pabst • ~~::. Cans $2 99 12 Pack ~~Sf.•9 8,nl982 Chateaux Bordeaux Futures :-.:u. Ch. Mouton Rothschild H1'ml SJJl6 Pauillac. I Qll2 Chateau du Tertre m'ml $7 89 /'I Mnpua. IQll2 Chateau Gloria i\ll ml $6 9 8 9 ~t. Juhrn. I YIU I 'i Ch. Pichon Longueville Baron Pauillal, 1982 i ~l'ml s927 l /'I Ch. Calon-Segur '>1 Eu~ph~, I Yll 2 Hllml $}241 "IYIH Vint•¥<' i• a• lint :u procl11mtJ!", r.•p.>rt winr mrr(han'- and tul~n who ,.rnt ro Bordrauit lo'~" for thrmulvr•. Bui· no,. al your nurut liquor Barn whilt prier• arr at cht lowru Minimum purchaS(' IS ) botrlt'\ o( ii rartacular Charnu. • U5t' your Viu o r Mastrrcard Taylor California ~~b~~~. $4 7 8 Rose' or Burgundy C • omparr 3 Liter at $5.99 Clos Du Bois ~ .,.,._ urrtrt"'tnf'r m1,,;1 $2 6 9 l..tf' "'"'''' 14'7'1 Sutter Home Mwt.6 .at AmahUf' 7\\) ml $ 348 19111 ~l Christian Bros. {t\,1uv t .. ,,1 .. 1~0 ... 1 s 2 79 "'11'\ V1nC•1" Christian Bros. fo~•n~uhittt R•nl1n1 Utt Har'\t•t I 9HC\ HO ml s 4 99 Buena Vista t ·"'·79~r·1"'' 7\t'ml $ 3 99 ~'' Joh•nn•tb.rt R1nl1na. 4011\o ~ ... ur11nmon., or Like Cola ~~::· $}59 6 Pack Compere et SZ.,9 San Martin ""'1'tu l"hrn1n 81•"• a~tU. 4"'•hrtt Ventana Vineyards l Iv·~:;::·.:"~ .. · Fetzer E &J GaUo N4"f'ih l ~._,, l turJ.*f'ln.H tVtU. t\1hir• ltf"' Url~"•'Y't1'4 9 ..._ • .,, \ '"•"¥:• Hu·1.t1 •• , 1s 4 s9 '"\"' ;".,,,,s999 •. sz99 1 "'1\'1111 • .... $269 Estrella River Winery ,, .... \ •n••ll' ;;, .,..1 S 2 79 Mirassou Conn Creek Haywood Rolling Hills __ 1 1SJ99 '"'' m ; ..... ,.,,5549 -·. 1s 5 99 •'' m (')~ ~ 1ltdat 111~~ Domaine Chandon s, . ., \ .n .. ~· Paw.Masson e"''· I""' Weibel Piper Sonoma fl.IAHI I), '1ur IVf'I\' •• , 1$898 •"\"' :, ...... 1s 5e9 ;\"m1 $699 ;,,1 •• 1 S989 LeDomaine Extra Dry or Brut I:n:M~?~1~ntrat $2 99 tht Onn~ County Fait 750 1 Compare m II $4.29 23 LOCATIONS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Million Vifjo. 8f'C'ntwood, G1rd~n Groyt, TOfnnct, Patolma Htmet, Analwim, P.i"' Spftfllll, ~nd OU~~na, l.ancatm, I.Ai Halln Cu1op P•tii, (;r1nade Hilla, (livt,,IM, Cole. Mtta, RAntho Cuumonp, Pomona, DowntY. Palm De.rt, Bel , Wtst Covina and 0....,. STORE HOURS: 9100 .am to 9ro0 pm, Sun.• at. 1726 Superior Ave., Costa Mesa · Phone: 645-1608 25876 Muirtands, Mission Viejo · Phone: 855·1437 10932 Westminster, Garden Grove · Phone: 638-4145 263 South Euclid Avenue, Anafl!lm • Phone: 991 -6892 hem~ and prices available at aoove 1tore(8) Thursday Auau1t 18, 1983 throuah Wedne.day Auau1t 24, 1983 Liquor Barn • '•'\I l'• I \\h.U1 \tr \11\I ''·'"' ,lt;,I "'II t.:1 I 11 1111 Ii'' ' I . ,, \ I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Aug. 17. 1983 C ll Fresh peaches and plums picked for fl avorful pie Ml.IC NOTICE NOTICE INVITING BIOS 'tem'IOUI .,_ .. Nolie. la h«eby gl\l911 IMl Ille Bo41rd Mm ITA~ ot Tru•I-Of tl'te Huntington BNcn Tiie following per-. .,. doing UnlOf• HIOh 8chOOI Ot1trlc1 wm r .. bull~ u <*ve-*'bld•fC>ftupj)lyinQTrllC-ON TAAOET VIDEO '"0· tor Loeder meeUng or equel 10 lllt OUCTION8, 279 W. Wlllon II. llPIClflGallon1 on file In Ille office Of CO.ta Mele. 92$27 teld Olt1rtc;t Beth Ellen 8ar011. 279 W. Wll9otl 8ld1 111111 bl clearly metllld "Tree-18, C0.11 Miu. CA t2t27 Did you know that peaches and plums are cloae cousins? They both come from the Prum.1.8 family, botanists tell us. G«>d cooka don't have to know that. however, to know that peaches and plums are good-tasting in a fruit pie. Whether for family or friends, you'll want to take advantage of this year's abundant crop of these fruits and buy plenty of peaches and plums at attract- ively low prices. In addition to having peaches and plums in the refrigerator for a juicy snack or low-<:alorie treat (just 30 calories for a medium peach -and 25 calories for a 2-inch plum), don't miss summer's best opportunity to combine these two fresh fruits in a very special pie. It's easy enough, too, when the pie filling is made with quick-cooking tapioca. When you shop for ingredients, pick out peaches that are round, plump and creamy to yellow in color. Plums range in color from yellow to purple depend- ing on the variety. Peaches and plums should be slightly soft to touch and free of decay. Store both fruits in the refrigerator and use within three to five days. PEACH-PLUM PIE 3 tablespoons quick-cooking tapioca ~ to l cup sugar Y4 teaspoon salt 2 cu P6 sliced fresh peaches 2 CUJ>6 sliced fresh red plwns 1 tablespoon lemon juice Pastry for two-<:rust 9-inch pie 1 tablespoon butter or margarine tor LOl<Slr Bid ,t633''. eddteuld to ()lie o. VOM, 120-2'td. ~ Allyn E Rowley, Purchulng Min· Beeeh. CA 92963 11ger, Huntington Bltoeh Union HIOh a...tly 8pattc1, 11100 w. llt\ICll &noo4 Olttrlct. 10261 Ye>t111own Av • I 208, Orange, CA. 92ee7 Huntlnglon &Mch, CA 92648, end Stephen Kautmen, 11114 I S.. ecelved II or before 2 00 pm . MIOll Wy, Sent• Ane. CA. 9270fl Wedneedey, AUQUll 3 I, 1"3, 11 Thie bullneM II oonduct9d by. mn lcfl lime and plac. bide wlN bl unlncorpor111d ~lion olftef bltcly Opened end reed. 111111 • pll'lnerlhlp. EICh bid lhall remain valid l0t 1 S.lh E <on fod of 45 d1y1 11ter 1t.. d111 Thia 1111-t w11 !lied wtlll the pectfled tor Ille recelpl ot bid•. County Clet1I of Orenoe Cowlty °" hi board ol Tru•I-llhlll bl ll>e July 27, 1983 ludoe of Ille quality of equip· ~ nent ottered and rMerVH Ille right Publllhld Orange COMC o..y o rtject any or •If bid• and 10 welve Piiot Aug. 17, 24, 31. sept. 7, 1113. ny lrregularlty ther,_jn. ~ Signed Allyn E. Rowley Purchulng M11111g1r Pt11UC NOTICE Co b. D111d 8114183 Publlllhld Orange m me tapioca, sugar , salt, t D111y PMo1 Aug 11. 22. 1983 NOTICI ""TMMTU'• a.u.. peaches, plums and lemon juice. Let 4627·83 Loen Ho. 10&2028 d 15 ' Roll half f 1-----------1T.S . Ho. 90397-Y stan mtnut.es. out o P\8.JC NOTICE BURLINGTON FINANCIAL SER· pastry very thin (less than "" inch VICES. INC. lhi k) L . 9 'nch . Trim NOTICE°" Al'PUCATIOH .. duly appololld TNlt• under IN c . me a ·I pie pal). T 0 • ELL A L c 0 H 0 L I c following delctlbed deed ol tN9I pastry at edge. Roll out remaining NYE""'°'' WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION pastry very thin· cut into 1h inch strips To Wnom II Mey Concern TO THE HIGHEST BIOOEA FOR ' • HUNOERBUHLER, HANS R & CASH (peyat>ll II lime of .. In for a lattice top crust. Fill bottom crust ROHR. u wrence L. 11 (are) apptytno 11wtul money ot the United 7' 1111 with peach-plum mixture. Dot with to lhe 0epar1menl OI AleohOllc rlghl, 11111 end tntereet OOt'I to b tte M · ed f bo Beverege Conlrol tor "48" ON SALE end now lltld by It under Deed u r. OISten ge 0 ttom crust. GENERAL (PUB. PREM I lo NII II· ol Trut1 In Ille P'°'*1Y ,,..__ Adjust pastry strips m lattice pattern cohollc 1>4Mwl0" •I (ln-1 lo-dfllCl'lbld TRUSTOA: YVOHH! I(. across top of filling. Press ends of strips cetton(•I 877 w. 19th s1. OAANT. • 11ng11 -11,..., .-c oe11 MIN, CA, 92627 end MPW•I• ptop9r1y against edge of bottom crust. Flute Publllhed OrarlQll Colll Dally PllOI BENEFICIARY: MIDWEST PAClflC edge. Bake at 425 degrees for 55 Aug 17, 1983. 4635-83 FINANCIAL, INC .. an '°""' Corpo(- 1-----------1 •lfon minutes. Recorded Seo•emt>er 2t. 1900 u 1 ___ .;...PtBJ;.;;;.;;;.;C;....;..;.NO.;..Tl~CE;;._ __ 11n11r. No. 399&4 In booll 13763 PIOI NOTICE Of' lllH TINOa 1458 ol Oflldal Recofde In t"8 office "' 1..,_... of ,,.,. Recorder of Ofenoe Coun1y; The Orange Counly Clllel' Allk Hid deed of tnlll detctlbel the fol. Manegemen1 Aulhorlly (OCCRMAJ ~;~~J'~ee~~:=T1=7 1n wlll hOld 111 mMtlnga eccordlng 10 the City of '1rv1ne. eounty o1 0renQ.. lhe IOllowlng IChldull S111e of Cllllomll. 11 I* rnec> re- Boerd of Dlrect0<1· CO<dld In booll 469 ~ 37 to 38 The lhlrd Thurtd1y In J1nu1ry, lnclullve M~ Mepe In March, June and September, al 1.30 lhe otb of Ille county -dlW of p m In Confe<enoe Room C, II 300 ... d counly E Ch1pm111 Avenue, OrarlQll. C1H· EXCEPT att 0.~u and llydr0c.rt>on lornle · _.__., .-0--1tton1 CommlltM aubltencee ot'* ""'-•.., ·-· """ without nowev.r. the rtght to ent• Th• lhlrd Thursct•y of MCh month 11 the surt-of Mid lend down to 1 12 00 noon. excepl for thOae month• dla1enoe of 500 feet from ttle-"- thll lhe Board of Olrect0<• mMll, 11 !hereof u rM«Ved In Ille died ,... 5275 Orange Avenue. Cypr-. Cell· corded' Oeclmber 14 1979 1n book lornl1. lll1c.hlrd" ,._ Clertl 13435, peoe 213, ~ Reoordl. Of--.. COWi.., ctt!M• ,...; Men-PARCEL 2· ~ti • wt for1tl In -.. -'' lhe Secltona entllled "c.teln e-. MIS60llS 0... .. .,..._ .. _ ....... ~ ..... .-........ -c;,.,._,.. .......... . ...-it met1t1 for Ownert" end "Suc>Port. AllttMNttJ Settlement and Eoc:roedvMrlt" ol 521f Ofenge A-lhe Artlcll entitled "e-la" of CYPRESSCrfWIM, Clllfomll tOaO lhe Oeclar11ton of Cownwlll. Con-dltlol\• llld Alltrfc;tloN deecribed In Devld 8arr11t (Preeldenl) "SUBJECT TO·" !*ow (the "Decler· Aulatant 10 lhe City Meneget lllon") · 5275 Orange AYenUe PARCEL J· e-u • ad\ ..... .... _ .. ~ .. ·-""-.............. __ .,. .... _ ..... _ ..... .....__ . ...._ -....... -o..·..-.c---· ....... -:-:.: ~...::: :-"--= Folger' s Coif ee All Orlndt _,., l<:"dl t.-.tt\ tC:••U\ +•U'1 •"'9 f•lt IH •-••)•It l ••t .. I ........... , .................. , .. _ ............ "-"·-·· \-•· ....... . _ ..... ,,..., __ ._ ........... ... .-. o.-.. ................ -. ~ ...... _._ ..... , __ .. ,-. "'-• ...... °""-..._._ ... , ...... '"' ... (-• .... -\-..••-'-··- IRVINE eypr .... CA 90630 ..-nentt ere pertlculltty wt tor1t1 <714> 829-2200 In Ille Artlcie entftlld "e-nenll" Rlclt Pllkott of Ille Oecl11'1tlol\ of Co¥tnentt. IARWAY LOW P•ICIS! -~!~$229 i.l ·-••••• -. ... ........... 11 .-. .......... .... c:..-.~ ..... ·--·-........... _ _.,._ "-· ·----· ·-~--.-··-.... ~ ........ _..,,,..._.,. .,,, . ., --.. c,.. .................... . SAFIWA Y SPECIALS! -M~~· Water p,, ,,,., 2~n°i!s'1" -Lucerne Yogurt 5~-~ '200 D:!)Salsa. ·, .:~1°' •s..in1<.1st J· ~t ~ 3~•vs 991 ·~· -Durkee Garltc Sa1t\,~' 99• -..,,,. ... ,.'Oill 79 Apple Sauce M<·~, ;., • row2n Hou~nr1•och•• lt>..1 Con• N f.tc~ E5QOf 11 0t ,2s, Dinner C•in• &urucu S11r N spam lull(.tiro11 ·~;~ '1" MUI N, Vegetable 011 ""•~t ~~~'F' Rich 'N Chocolate ~:;,,·1 ·• Potatoes ~~1~: ~11 2-14.:: • 100 Safeway Water 2c.1o0n1' 100 Rr••ld• Sohln~ ~59~ ~ Ice Cream lu<••n• 2 Holl s500 ~ Ov• Noturof Gollon1 M Star-Kist Tuna~~;.~·~;~·79c M Refried Beans .... ,,1102'f;~: s 1 Tomatoes Whol•, SwMI & Jwlcy ~h *149 mm> Mushrooms ...... ·~:· s 1•• llDt Lettuce •. c.:::~n. ' -Libby' S Tomoto Jvlc• S s111 .••. s100 IZDtB d .... Wl>Qhlt74-o1 7gc rea Wll .. , toi1 Cant N Rolls ""k~u ~~\ 59' •Blue Bonne~c!:.~n~~9c msatrw1rls 11"~"'s~ 79' ms> Apple Juice M.,. .• •~1.S 1•• DI) Mis Wr>Qhl s l~Ol S9' Bread Ewa 8ul!er t1111 She -c..i1f11<1Cn ""Y •tH Roll s suv 1 c.1 , ''" o1 o ms> Mayonnaise ~=.· ,, .... s 1•• mer>Bread ~ 7~ 11" J.r -•Rost V1vante • .._ li.•2• D31)Gall •ChoOl<s 0 •Rn111t l•~ .. '3" -R C~ptM.1 Morgan um SO<t ~·4• -cw. Scotch Md'.<• u;18" mm> Booth's Gin .,.:, ~.[!•got mm)c ·b · ·~ n ar1 •Clllbli• 2l"~.'700 Oly pla Beer 3·!!:~10·1o.l4 ,, ... C..n1 tl1top• ....... & ~ , l•u!I 46 oi sg ~ 8•uc11 99 -. H1·C 01111•s c... • .,,...,c1orox ~·()!! "•"on • Hen Turke S o.od• A Mon•• ~ loo Pant""'"' 2• 01 gn. ft'tr2ftl. Huvy0u1y 1H-a11J" Y HovM, ·,,.,.n ,,.,,.. Syrup p,.,t ta>t• s.,. :;,· ..,.,,,., Purex 0t• .. Ot<11 Bo• tb.69c , .. 89c mr.a>Rosari1a 1~-:a· 't::sgc lJDt co1dCups~ :1o '1" Sliced Beef Liver o.t .... ,ec1 """"" l1tr Swet> •6 01 79 ft'tr2ftl. Htl!)' fuom P\g s1>t .. Juice l••fl<'l•u•I Cll<I • ,.,,. Plates a • !nth of 50 s1· d B DOourkee !.t~~· 8~1~79' DogFoods~~2s:U·1~· ice aeon Sm"-U'""o ~----.-----------~ fD 89' Cure 81 Ham a':.':, Corned Beel .~"";.":, Skinless Franks i:h Fresh Fryers ~~ ~' Butterllsh Fiiiets '"'n Dover Sole Fillets r • .,, "''2" •o '1'' ~~99• IO 59' lb '1" 111 •2s• .......... Co11to1nt ·149 Cent., & f loin Ind Chop1 lb London Broil =~·~';::!i lb.s1" Loin Steak a....le11 ... ,, "N•w y.,~.. s4•• Strip ., Fit.1 Mlt,..n !It, Chuck Roast w.-ii~!"~~~y '"' ,_.99c Ground Beef ";:. ~-:::· Fresh Fryer 1b 99c ~---~~Breasts • J Condttk>M end AMtrlctlOM 0.-Admlnfllrelf..,. Aaalttent acrlbed In "SU8JECT TO:" ~ 17200 Jamboree Rold (the "Miii« Oeclarltlon")under the P.O. Box 19575 Section heldtnol In ad\ ArtJcit M-lrvlne. CA 92714 titled 18 followe· "Owner'• AIQhte <714> &eo-3923 end 0u11 .. u11111i.. end Clllle ,....,._ .krffr~ Niven (Tr~tr) vlllk>n". ..'Sldeylrd E.-nenta". Meneg« ol Fl8Cll ()per1t1on1 "Support and S..lllmlnt", "~ 17200 Jeml>Ot'M Rold etoechrnent" Ind "Community Fe-P 0. Box t9575 cllltles Euwii.nt" lrvlne. CA 92714 PARCEL 4. An ~I for Com- (714) 880-3620 mon 00-•y ~ .. • LAGUNA BEACH ecrlbld In 11>e Section entiu.ct Rlch1td A, ~ !Clerk) "Common Otl-•y e-t" of Director of FlnllllOI the Artlde entitled "e-te" of 505 Foret! A....--Ille Oeclltetlon L1oun1 Belch, CA 92851 "You ere In detlUll under 1 Deed of (714)497·3311 Trulldlled$eptemtler t8. IMO,l.Wl- LA PALMA leta you take ICtlon to ptowet )'OI" Admlnllt 11.!~0~':: proe-iy, It mey bl IOld II • pubic r tall. II you need en~ of 7822 Walktr Slreet the n1ture of the P'oceedlnO IOM* LA Pelma, CA 90823 you you thcKlld oontact 1 1ewyw " (714)523-7700 ' 2 W1Yf.,. WW. CA. • LOS ALAMITOS "(If 1 strMt ld(i,-0r QOmlftOfl Mitch Lantdlll Oeelgnallon 11 .,_ lb0\'9 no --Olrecl0< Admlnl11reuw S«Y1CM rllf'lty 11 g/Yln u 10 111 ~- ORANGE 3191 K11all1 Awnue ,___. ) .. The be1 1cM1 Loa A11mllos, CA 90720 0< ....,,_,neee ·* Y (7141827-M70 ~'!« .,,-::,, °:" :!,!;:'.;, ~ '-:: Ted Schoeft-. getlonl llCUfld thereby, hel .. OfOle ..-execvled end dlllwted to thl Oltector ol Anene. ~ 1 Mttten 0.-etlon of 300 E Chapmen A_..ue o.teurt end Oemlnd for SA end Ot1ng1, CA 92866 17141532-0305 wnlten notloe of brMCll end of*> SAN CLEMENTE tlon to CIUM lhe Uf\611 llgold to .... DMn Porter Mid P'Ol*tY to Mt'*'Y Mid oM-Olrec:tor of Flnanoe gettona. and 1'*-ller t"8 under· 100 AY9Nd1 Preeldlo ligned ~Mid notice of blWCfl p 0 Box 3368 end of -.cllon 10 bl Sen Ctemenie.' CA 92872 Reoorded Mey 4• t983 .. lnltr. Ho. (7t4)361 8311 83-189014 In book PIOI . of Mid • Official Aecotde. ST ANTON Seid .. 11 wlM be maoe, but wtthOu1 Jim Pllm covenant or werrenty ~-°' lm-Admlnl•lrellw Alll•tent plled, regerdlnQ 11111.'ci c 111111011, °' 7800 l<etllll A....--~brlnOM 10 pey the -Stenton. CA 90880 • ·-·-~ .. (714) 891 2521 ptlnclpll eum Of the nol9 <•> ~ TUSTIN • by Mid Died ol Trwt. with lnterwt It In Mid no11 prOYlded, ICMWlcel. " Aon N11.11t (Vice Pretidenl) eny. under the terme of Mid Deed of Olrector of Flnenoe Trusl. 1-. charQll end~ of 300 Cenl911nlll Wey lhe Trut1M llf'ld of lhl trUltl or.ted Tut11n, CA 92e80 by Mid Deed of Truet. S.id Mii .. (714) S«-attO bl held on WESTMINSTER Wednl9Cley September 7 1* It Ollnto Ried • • Director of Fln1nee 2:oo p.m., 11 thl 8200 Weatmlnller Avenue Chepman Avenue enttllf'ICI to the WNtmlntler, CA 92683 Civic Cenler Bulidlng, (7 14) 81l8·331 I 300 Eut ~Av .. Otwlge, CA. YORBA LINDA Nolloe: Al the time of ..... ~ fMY Bruce Chennlno bl made tn CMfl end/or the CWlllrw AQiatanl 10 'h• C~ Men.,_ °' oer11fled chide• llClldll4ld In Cll ...,..... Codi SIC11on 292411. 4845 1ln Street Al lhe time of 1,,. lnlUel publle9tlon Yorbe un:~Oc!°:2m ol lhls nolloe. Ille totll emount of the (7141 1n .5000 unpeld blillncl ol the obllQ9tlon .. cured by the •bow de9aibed deed Publlened Or1nge Cout Ody Pilot of lrutl end •ttm.led 009tl. n • Aug. 17, 1983. 4&53-83 p1n111. end 1dv1nc11 II ncm•tC unTIC[ SIOl,254.03. 1 ___ .;,r,,;;.;..uu..;;.;..;;....;."".;..;..;..;.;.;;.... __ ,To dltermll 11141 op«Wig bid, yOU ITATl•NT °' mey cen (819) 5&4-&333. ~ AaANOONMINT Of' US1 Of' 0.led: Augutl 5, 1N3 '1CTmOUI au-...u ..,... T Ru s TEE: 8 u R LI H 0 T 0 N Thi tOllowlng peraona M¥8 1t>en. FINANCIAL SERVICU, INC don«! Ille uM of Ille Flctttlout ~-By LORRIE WOMACK, A.llllttlM -Neme: THE MILK PALACE. s.cr.tery 840, w. 19th St .. Cotll M .... C111r • Publllhld Otenge Cout o..y "°' 92827 Aug 17, 24.31. 1993.464...a JEFF E. MACDONALD, t 1388 SI Plerr• Wey. Cypr-. Call! .• 90830 "8JC NOT1C( LYNNE W MACDONALD. 113881------.-..---------61. Pierre Wly, C)'Pr-. CAiif.. NOTICI ""~ aA&.a 90630 Of' N9'IOMAL HIOHRt W The FletltlOut 8u1IOM1 Neme re-2:1101k ferred to 1bove w•• hied In Otenge Notice 11 hereby gMln ttiet County on Sip, 1. t982 tuent 10 llCtlon 19N ol ttll Ollll Thia butlnMI wu condueted by Code, Stele of Celllornle, the under· en lndMdual: ligned w!ll ""et Plltl4lc .-l)y -Thll 1111-1 wU filed with Ille pellttve bidding on the 24\tl 09)' Clf County Cllrtl of Otange County on Augutl 1983, " IO:OOO'dodi A.M .. July 13, 1983 on ll>e Pfetnf-wtlere Mid~ ,,_. hll ~ ltored end "'*"'".,. Publlllhed Orenge Coett Delly IOCated 11 Public St0tl09, Ina. t011 Piiot July 27, Aug 3, 10, 17, 1043 PIKnetll Avenue. In the Olly of ·~ • Miu. Coun'Y "' Orlnfe, -----------S111e of~ the .0.ldolleCI l'ta.IC NOnct a. c:Nin1e10t '*--' ~ Ibid belOw. In thl mener. of: NOTICI OI' PUe&.IC IA.La Oouglu ~ti T~ 2 1N1111tt "" N RaoNA&. ~ OlmWll bQt, roll of roofng mMrt. .,. polltltW. 2 ltp ledOer. cNt, lwtd Hotlol II '*°*>' oi-i thll , bike, boet, ~ .... puflUMI to MCtton 1"8 of the CMI Charltt I~ • 2 "*"'9. eoo.. 8111-of Calllomle. the llllder· It ltf1Pt, 12 bu. 8 rolll of llnOllll. I llgned wlll Mii II pub41o Mle l)y COfn-~ mleo • .,_. pelltlve bidding on the 24th dtl)' Of NO-Go Marine • AMI nwtne cirta. Auguet, 1H3, ti 1!00 O'Oloc* P.M.. bxa. bcM11 lllerr1ng .._.., Aa.t. on the premlMe ~ Mid property pne, II wnd doorl, tolll ol hat b9et'I 91ored, end wt'60ll -• t 5 bu. tooat«I II P\lbllo ltoreo-, lno., ~ • CNl, ll'tdge. 8*, 1324 I ~ Aced, the Clly of bx eprg. men,., ' °'9 11*. I tllla lrvlMI County of Otenge, Sttie of m11C Item. Clllfomla. lhl lbMOonecl gooda, Lorrlllne ~ • ~ bCI, otllttlM Of l*'IOl'ttl propetly 0.-Chit, r.ak, 2 bd "'-· 1 ~ aortbld below In the INtwn of: bo.11. lOfNI $lnl!erton • Aound 8d, 8d, <keel w.tem lndumill ..._ - Mby oetrtdQe. 2 1>1111. brd cio-. beti,o eo1111 IQY9. UlndlorCI ,....,._... lhl rlQfM to bid ~lord,...,..,.. the right to bid ti the ..... ~ ~M ,,_.. 11 lhe NII. Pv~ mutt be made wlttl CMt1 only 9llCf peld fot M ttle wtlh Cllh only 111'4 peld for 9t thl t1mt of ~. Al pwoMled time of pu<mlle. AR pur~ I tre IOlcl M It., lnCI ,,... be goodt 11'1 IOld 11 II, end ll1'ltl be relnO¥ed 111 "-.._ o1 purdleia. remoY'8d ti the llm4I of ~ Salt IUllCt to Pflor C* DlllO I In .... IUjeC1 10 p<lor cenoell.tlon In the ..,.,.t of ........... ........ • the -· of ... ,..,,.,t ~ d end~ l*'Y·.,.... ~tord I nd Ol>liott~ J*lY· Oated t I 10ttl l 11111 My Of A11g1191. 1tll Ihle 10tll a t7th cf~ of~. 1~ Pul>llC 11GrO, No Uldord Pul>llO 81~ •• tno. Landlord ltvb""*S Orlnlll c.... Olly ,.,. PublllheCI Orwiot Coett o..y llllOI 10, 11, "· ,. Auguet 10, 17, 1"3 4'7o.t3 .. 11-el ( a a a , a a so a a 1 . - 1;"';;;..-••• --... caa Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 I-n(:nT'tOUe IUIMH NAMI llATl•NT The lolio,wtno pwtonl .,. doing l>Ulln.au. NORTH HILLS PLAZA. 18430 l 8toollhl/rtl 8tt•1. Sutt. 204, Foun• lalf'I VllllfY. CA 02700 LLL ,..,lner1h1p. 18430 •OOkhlH'lt St....ci. Suite 204, FOi.in· ,..n Valley, CA 112708 Vlcl*le J Plllenon, 0813 Old• Wldtwor1h Boui.vard, ""'ede, CO to002 J*"* l ObO<'I, ~ 115 Indian =-l4ne. ~ a..dl, CA Thie bu.U-II con<tuc:1ed t>y • ilmlted per1ner1hlp LLL P11'1narehlp. Peul Hurtt. p1rt- '* Thia a111emen1 wu llled wltll lhe COllnty Clerk of Orange Coun1y on July tO. 11183. IF220W7 Pul>lllhed Orange Coaat Ollly l"ltot Avg. 3, 10, 17, 24, 1983. 4305-83 rtBuc M>ncE I Ml.IC NOTlCE :r~~:"::t;n~~ Ml.IC NOTICE -· __ Ml. ___ , ... c_NO_TIC£ ____ , ____ MUC __ lll_TICE ____ -l ____ MUC ____ NO __ TI ... CE;;..._ __ I =====P\&=::ic::NO:=tlCE====== i-------------.•g4M\C'f TM Plennlng Commltelon ..... '1CTtnGUt IU ... H •IOTmOYI MllMll •ICTTTtOVI 9UIMll flCTITIOUI IW .... H ~~c:u...r, •ll•ll dtteimlne 1he epertment '1CTI110UI 1u .... 1a NAMI tTATl ... NT MAMI ITAT11•NT NA• ITAT11Mmff NAMI ITAftMl.NT I~ COURT v.cancy rete IQt the City b&M<!. on NA.Ml ITATIMINT Tiie IOllOwlf\9 pe1.ont .,. clOlno The IOlkMlno l*M>M .,.. dOlng The lollowtng l*M>nl ere doing The followtno pe1eo<11 11e doing 700 ~ c...1 Df w t Ille mo•t curr••11 d•t• •v•ll•ble. Tiie 1o11o~ng J*'.On• .,, dOlnc 1>u1M11.u •• bt.lllneee .. bullnee• u ouelnM• ., tanta AM :A eiro:9 SECTION 3 Thlt Ordinance lhlll bullneH u 0 C ELECTRIC/ORANGE SAOOLEBACK SELF 8ERVE & SPONSORS INTERNATIONAL, 14 VETERAN HOME STORE. 3 Plelntltt ORANGE ' TREE CON• like ettec;I end ti. In lull force thirty CORPORATE POINTE CULVEP COUNTY ELECTRIC, 3701 W. Mc CAR WASH. 23039 ~k• l'orMt Hlllgrth . IMnt. Celll., 827111 fl•meda. Jrvl'Wf, CA 92714 OOMINIUM HOMEOWNERS AS-130I d•r.• from llld eftet Int P•'"Gtl CITY l TO., 31111 Alrw1y Avenue F1dden, 81nt1 An1, 9:170. Drive. l egune Miiie, CA 92163 BARAY S TM AXTON. 328 01nlel J Elel1m•. •) Aemlde. SOCIATION thllfee> •end prior to the uplritl°" ot Sull• 6-1. Coate M•u, C•lll., 11282t L1n1Jnt1 Sllrm1mea. 2 HI E 22nd G & B E~gy, Inc., I Calllornl1 Sterflre, Anaheim, C1llf , 112807 lrvtne CA 1127 14 0.lend'111 WILLIAM c WESSEL :.·-:-~lll) b~l~trom 111' ~~r. BRAMALEA LIMITEO. Provine. 0 St. Cott• Miii, 112827 corpor1tlon, 23031 Llk• Fore1t HERBERT B. DOYLE. 9352. w11i1.m Whit•. 11) Raf1\ad1, lrlllne. C&M No U -1111·211 1 J>U once n • Onterlo, CeN<11. 3101 AltWer Av· Brian P SmerlOllO. 1113g3 Sen Ori.,., Laoun• Hiile, CA 92863 CulNl111 Or ~nllnglon 9Nch. CA. 92714 ~· ANOE COAST OAILY PILOT, • enue, Suite 8·1. Co111 M .... Callf Jeunto. Fo.mtatn Valley, CA g2700 Thie buelneM 11 conducttd by: a Cllll, 92e.411 Thie bu1IMt1 le condueted Oy • NOTICll Y041 llewe bMl'I wed MWIPJ*' of genetal clrcutatlon, 112828 Thi• ~ It conducted by • COl'p()tlllon ANTONIO N PINEDA, 2930 long lltnlled patlM<ahlp Tiie oOUft me llKtde .,...,,., ,CMI J)(lnled end publllhed In the Clly of Tllll lx.llMMM 11 GondUC:led by e ~al partnarlhlp Q • B En..11y. Inc , Donald A 8Mc:tt Blvd. Long hecll. Cllll , Denlel J Efeltnll lttlout 'a..tne llMfd 1'9M C:O.ll M ... , Of, In ll>e •ltemetl.,., Mml1ed Patlnllflhlp LenalM Stlrmlfl\U Brown. PrMidenl ll0903 1N1 tlll-t wat nled wtth ll'le ~ ,..,:::::: wltllln,., .,..,.._"",.._ tl>e City Cl«k miy CAUM lo.,. put>-Palllf B. PINln Tiii• ····-· w .. n1ec1 willl the Thi• .,.,_1 ... fllecl with Ille SAMMY PIA. 18540 Olen Lyn Or . County Ciatk or 01•noe County on 1.__ HI~ tlon............ nan.cs• aummary 01 lhla Ordinance v~PrMldenl ~rlt" Clllfll ot 0rlfl(l9 Counl'f on CountJ Cletll ot Oranoa County on Azw•. Callt , 111702 I Jul• 28, 111113 11.. '"' "'• ........ and 1 c~llled copy of the text ot thl• T 1 ~·~ h .... .. 2' "'.. J 2 •1193 ... ! ' II YOll With 10 _ .. Ille •dvlc. of 1111 Ordln~ lhlll be po11ed In the of-II. et•t-• ..... ._. Wll ,,,. .... y 4, ... u.. uly • • Thi• bu1ln.u I• CondUGl.u by I f'22170I •llomay in tlllt ,,,_lier, y0u thOl.lld lice ol1ha Cll Cle<k live 151 d County Cle<k or Orenge County Ol1 '217109 "21ee2 ~at plftnartl\lp Put>lllhld Or1nge eo .. 1 Del~ do'° promptly 90 tllll your wtlllen "'ior 10 the d:le or adoption or~ July 21, 11183 Publllhed Oran~ Coat! Dally Publllhed Orange Co .. 1 Dally B'1ry S Tna••oo Piiot Aug 17, 24 31. Sept 7. 11183 reaponH, 11 any. m•y be llled °" O,..dl d wtthl 11.. 115) m1• Piiot Aug 17. 24. 31. SA9t 7. 11183 Piiot Aug 3. 10, 17, 24, 11183 Thie 1l•t..nat1t w11 hied with 11H1 46-U-83 ume ' nence •n n """ Publllhed Otano• Coe1t OeJI) 41158-93 4440-83 (;()Unty Clark or 0111191 Couf\ly oo •v11oiu 1 ... 11 Id d d·" days alter •doptlon. the City Clark Pilol Jul" 27 Aun . 3 10 t7 11183 July 20, 11183 ------------.. 1 """ 81 0 eman ..... e. ehtll cause 10 be publllhed th• ' ' " ' ' ' ' 279 I~ 102111 Ml.IC NOTICE El trlbume, lede dKldlr c:onl,. Ud. llorementloned wmmary end •hall 4 -8 NlllC NOTICE "8llC NOTICE Publl1hed Orenge co..':22Jeily ___ .;..;;~.;.;;....;.;..;;....;..;..;;..;o,. __ _ •In •\ldlenci. ' menoe que Ud. '!:: poet In the olflc:e ot the City Clerk • 11111111IC ..,.TICE ,ICTITIOUI au•-ee Piiot Jul• 27, A•"'· 3, 1o, 11, 11183 ,ICTmOUt 8UllN•11 1ponde ci.ttlro de '° di••· LN .. c;erlllled c;py ot this Ordl111nce ruui.. nu "CTITIO\ll au11••• -I -· NAMI! ITATIMl!NT lnlwmKlon que elgue. together with lh• nemes ot Ille mem-NAME ITATl•NT NAMI ITATIMINT 429143 The followtng oe<ton• et• d91ng It l'Oll wleh lo MM the IMIYlce of t>er1 of the City Council vouno tor C•2nl Tne IOllowlng '*'°"' -dol119 The fOllowlng '*'°"' are dOI"' 111111111c ..,.TICE bullneM 111 111 attOtttey In llllt milter, J041 end egllnlt the aame I UPl!ltte>fl COUlllT l>UllrlMI ea lx.ialnet1 M: r~ nu EXOTIOUE, 1681 Meal Orlvt ehould do'° ptOfllptly '° IMI ,_ PAS SEO ANO ADOPTED thll lat OP CAl.WOflNIA VACATION RENTAL SYSTEMS (A)Ol8COVER PUBLICATIONS ,ICTITIOUt llUltNl!ll • 122 Santa Anl Hta CA 92707 '1CTIT10UI Mll*lll wrllten ,..po111e, " enr, m•t be dey of Augu11 1983 COUNTY Of' 5200 Werner Avenue, Sult• 1oe: <(cM~h~e~Rv ~~UT~ A g~~~e NANI tTATIMINT Rowlo N Bu11c:1~ 15&1 MIN ,.. .. tTATUllNT tlled on llrM. M1yor or the City ot Colle M... LOI ANOaLEI Huntington S.ectl, CA 11211411 COUNTY IO)DISCOVER ORANGE The rollowtno '*'°"' .,. dOlno Drive • 122. S1n11 An• Hte CA olng tlUetedcMeM IO&ll••elCOtl-ATTEST Eiieen p Phinney In lhl Miiier ot THE HARBOR CORPORATION, A COUNTY. E)DISCOVER SADOLE oualneel u 112707 .bu'TM .. .....!~ ... no pereone are d IO de un lbogedo en .... MUOIO, City Cllfk ol the City of Cot• Mue SEUNG JIN KIM C•llfoml• COfpoflllon, 6200 Wllnet 8ACK VA.LLEY (F)OISCOVER NEW·· AIR-REST DISTRIBUTOR. 17472 JOll A BulKllC. 1581 M ... Oflve ·-dabefla "-io lnmedi.temente, STATE OF CALIFORNIA Minor A pereon who lhould t>e de A e e S It 108 H ntlngton 122 S A Ht CA 92707 Olc:lt Church'• Aeeleuranl, 21198 de N ia m-•· 1u ree~I• COUNTY OF ORANGE ctared rree 11om 11\e cuttody and v nu ' u ' . u PORT BEACH (G)AOVERTISING .tO Oelry View, Huntington Baecll, " anll ne 1 • "Newpoc17 8/vd. Cotti Meu, C• It I II ....., ~,_.,,_ conlrol of hla perenle e..c:11, CA 926411 PRODUCTIONS INC (H)THIS 921147 T111s bu11nee• 11 conducted Dy ln-t2e~7 _, " • •4 -11M. ,..._.... .., CITY OF COST A MESA Thia t>uelneu 11 conduc;hld t>y • WEEK IN LAGUNA & SOOTH OR-Dentel L Devil. 869 w Wiiton St, dlv1dual1 (11u1b1nd & wile) King. CIM!-Nlen, 1152 N Orffd•n ri l•lrede •I mpo, I. EILEEN P PHINNEY , City Clark A 131185 corporell0!1 ANOE COUNTY (l)THIS WEEK IN Colll MIN. CA. 1121127 Rosario N Buleclac 81 .. Anah4tlm, CA 112804 ·TO THI! DllFl!NDANT: A elvll and ex-omcto Clerk or ll\e City Cltallon J•mea B Verl!Cll, Pretldenl ORANGE COUNTY J THIS WEEK O•vld p Thurm1n. 17472 Thia 1111ernen1 waa II~ with the King, Shau-Mal,ume u above complelnl hH .,._n tlled br. Ille Council ot the City of Coste Mese. Freedom From Parental C~Slod) Thia tlllement wu nled wllh the IN NEWPORT BElJH (K)THIS Oelryvl-#0 Huntington Blach, County Cieri\ 01 Orange County on Thie bullneuAI conducted by:en pelnlltt iti•lnet y~. If J~ well lo hereby certify thel the above and ena Cont10I County Cl.,k of 011nge County on WEEK IN SAOOLEBACK VALLEY CA. 92847 Aug 8 1983 lndMdull hu1band and wife. def.,.,d I 11 taweull, you mu1t, foregoing Ordinance No. 83-18 wu (ABANOONMENTj July 29. 1983. -1111 382 Third St., Suite A, Lanune Tiii• buelne .. 11 conducted by:• C IFma'JOal"' Cllun-Nten King within ao daya alter lhla aummona la Introduced ad conalde<ed section by D1t-71S 7t ..... Beech Calll 112851 -.. geMrel P•rlfl411'1hlp. Publlsnlld Orange oa11 ., Tiii• 1111-1 w .. II~ with the Nrved on you Ille with this court• aectlon et a regular meellno of Hid TO Oevld Lee-(ellaged netura Put>llaned Orange Coa11 Delly AOVERTISINQ PRODUCTIONS Oenlel L 011111 P1101 Aug t7, 24, 31, Sept 7. 1983. "'··· C of 0 C w11tten responH lo the complalnl. City Council Mid on the 191h dly Of lalhar)-wllereeboulS unknown PllOI Aug 17. 24. 31. Sapl 7, 11183. INC .. CALIFORNIA, 3•2 Third S1.', Thie elalttnenl wae llled wHll Ille 4837-83 ....,.,nty larll r~ ounty on Unltt11 you do, your default will b6 July 1983 end lllereafter puaed Sue Kyung Kim aka Sue Kim 41143 83 ., July 27, 111&3 entered on eppllcellon ot the pl1Jn. end 'adoptea., a whole at a regular (mothlf)-whereabouts unknown and -Sulle A. Ltoun• BNch. Cellf .. 112951 County Clerk of Orange County on IF221m Utt, 1nd 11111 court may enter a Judge· meetlllil of said Col.Inell held on Iha 10 ell pertona c:telmlng 10 be the Thie buliMN 11 c;onduc:1ed by 1 Aug. 3, 1983 NlllC NOTICE Pul>llthad Otange Cout Diiiy rnent agelnet you tor 1he rellel di· lSI day 01 Augull, 1983, by the fol-latner or molhllf ot said mln0< per Ml.IC NOTICE c0<poret10n P h' ...... Or C IF~~~ FIC ........... ,1 IUl*E•I Pltot A119u11 3, 10, 17. 24.111113 mended In tlle complaint, whleh lowt roll cell vote. aon abOv• n1me<1 Alb«1 B. Miii« u.,.1 .. -.. ~ out ....,,, """"' ----------4450-'-.;..-...;;8.;..3 could result In gam11hrnen1 ol A~S· COUNCIL MEMBERS Hell By order of lhl1 Court you are IFICTlTlOUI aultNlaa P1Mld9n1 PllOI Aog 17, 24. 31, 5-pt. 7, 11183 NAM£ ITAT'DKNT 111-'C ..,.TICE wages. taking of money or proOlf1y Johnson McFerlend Schefer · ' l\ertt>y ciled and (required tot ep-NAME ITAnMbfT Thie 1111-1 wu ftled with the 4533-83 Tile foll0wl119 j)9(9001 at• doing -----'"..-WM.J.-..._nu...;... __ ;._ ___ or other relief requested In the com· NOES. COUNCIL MEMBERS 1>111 before Ille Jud~ Presiding In Tiie rollowlno pe1aon1 are doing County Clari\ of Orange County on 1111-IC MnTJCE bualMU U 1 CHAPIN plelnl . Oe(>ertmant 234, Room 7-31 I of IM bullr\MI II July 13, 11183 r~ nu R ANO 0 ENTERPRISES, 1 n(:TTTIOUl IUllNlll Oeied. Fib. 25, 1983 None . ebove entllleel court, IOClled •I LEE & ASSOCIATES COM-n::ao. Plneatone. lrvtne, CA 112714 The lot= ·:::,-:e:: dOlng LEE A BRANCH, Clerk N~~SENT COUNCIL MEMBERS CrlmlnllCourt Bldg. 210W Temple, MERCIAL REAL ESTATE SER-Publllhed Otlllge Cou t Dlllly 'ICTITIOUI MllMll Roger Webller. 28701 Ouall lx.illnMI -By· J Y Hyall. DeptJty ABSTAINING· COUNCIL MEM· Loe Ang.+el, Ca. llOOl2 on Septem-VICES, 2200 Wll Ore~ood, Piiot July 27, Aug., 3, 10, 17, 11183 The lol~:.i~ •:,:::,..~:! dolng Cr~·77t·.~~~~· ~~la,p~~.:.~~~~ FRANCHISE BROKERAGE SYS-Publlalled Orange CoUI Dall'! Pilot BERS· Hertzog ber 28. 11183 el 8:30 A.M. ol lhll d•y. Sulla 150, Orang•. CA 92 4286-83 bualnftl u : Irvine. CA. 112714 TEMS OF ORANGE COUNTY, 18582 Aug. 17· 24• 31• Sept. 7· 1983 IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have lhen end lherl to allow caUM. II any JLV i°·• lno., 2JOO Weed Ot1"1:8 KYMCO AUTOMOTIVE, 1725 Thie bualneaa 11 conducted by· e 8Mch Blvd .. 2 t3 Huntlnoton Beach, 4655•83 hereby ee1 my hand and att.lxed the ~:;ou1~·~:i t!':iY.J::!, = ,,:~~ ~co~111~~.~2mT.e1 ~r~ NlllC NOTICE Monrovia o-4. Coete Me... CA gener11 pertnerahlp CA 11211411 DllDtlC MnflC[ Seal 01 lhe City 01 Cost• M911 lhl• control of hie peren1.1 ecc:ordlng to wood, Suite 150, Oren~. CA.112868 921127 Dan'I Leviton R. Dale Runyon. 1290 COllway I"~ nu 2nd day of Auguat, 1983 the petition on Ille herein. John c. Earnhlrt. Inc., 2200 W•t PtCTITIOUt aUIMla Jettrey c Kymll, 2629 Orenge Thie 1te1ement waa flied with the AY9 .. COiia Mella, CJ, 112626 ORDINANCE NO. U-l• Cit Cl k d 0~:-:int~h::;r:: For tellufe to ettend you may be Orengewood, Suite 160, Orange, N..._ ITATIMINT Ave. Apt. 5. Cotll M ... , CA 112627 County Clerk ot Orange COl.lnty on Oouglea Thompeon, 837 E Meln AN OltDINANCE OF THE CllY C y Cer en ex· cCo C dlMled guilty of I contempt of CA 112688 The lollowtng P«IOrl la dOlng Cert J. Kymla Jr • 1900 Sebrln1 Aug 2, 1993 St., Meal, AL 811203 COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COtTA lly ouncll ot the lty of 0111 court P1ul Eernhert, 50e NOr1h Butte bualneea H : Tllfr .. Corone Del Mer. CA 112825 F22202S Thlt bu"'-II conducted t>y. I MEI.A, CALIFORNIA, A•NOIHO M... You ate hllf'lby notified or the Couf'l. BrN. CA 112621 CLASSIC FASHIONS, 3822 Cem-Carl J Kymle Sr . 1236 t 4th SI , Put>llllhed Orenge Coul Dally ~el pat1netelllp. CAPTElt )(U, lt!QUL.ATION OIF Put>llshed 9~'"01 Cout Dally Piiot provtelona ol Clvll Code 237 5 wfllc:tl Oouglat A Him.-, Inc, 2200 WMI pua Of .No 134, Newpor1 Baech. Yuc;alpl, CA 923119 Pllol Aug 17. 24, 31, Sec>t 7, 11183 ~-:'1=:i .,., .. lllecl witll Ille CONC>OtMHIUMS, OF TTTU 13 OF Aug 17• I 4859 83 prO'ilde lhe judge lhall •dVIM the Or•.no-oo<!. Sult• 150, Orange, Ca..112eeo Thi• bueln.u ,, conducted t>y.. 4534-83 THI COITA MEIA MUNIClftAL -minor end 11\e perenta, If prMent, ol CA 112688 ll"°A MOSS REED, 450 GIYlol1, gene.II pertnetahlp • Coun~ Clet1I 01 Orenge County on CODE RELATING TO PRO· P\&IC NOTICE the right to h•v• counsel prMent Randy J. Vardtec:ll. 291121 Whit• NIWPO'I 8M<:h. Ce .1128&0 Jehrey C Kyml• PllllJC NOTICE JulY 2 • 11183. C•llUllQ MOUfltEMENTI ,Olt The court m1y eP90lnl counael 10 Oltat, Laouna NIQuel, CA 112ee8 Thia lx.illneea II c:ondue1ed by an Thi• 1111-1 w .. flied with the ------------ PuOllehed Or eoa.s'i221o:'~ NEW CONDOMINIUM CON· FICmlOUI aUllHEll rec>reMnl the min« whether or not Thomas W. llllmer, 111522 Old lndlvldual: County Clerk or Orange Count'/ on NOTICE OF TIIUanFI IAU •nge •• Yl!ltllONI ..... STAnM!'NT Ille ml,_ I• Ible 10 1tt0<d oouneer. R4nc:h Rold, YO<l>a Linde, CA. Lindi Mou R..o July 2'1, 11183 EIFC NO .... ,, Piiot Aug. 3• lO, 17• 24• 11183..,c 2-83 THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY The following l*IOn la dol~ and II they afl uneble 10 ett0<d coun-1121188 Thia lllllf'nltlt wu n~ With the F11MM YOU AM IN Dl.f'AUl T UNOe1t A " OF COSTA MESA DOES HEREBY bullnel8 ea· HI. 111111 eppolnt counset to rep-Chlrlee F Noble, 13211 Nelte, (;()Unty Clark Of Or1nge County on Pul>llahad Orenge Coul Dally DEED OF TMllT DATED NOY'DI· l __ l_l_l_H __ l_m ___ C_l_l_IOROAIN AS FOLLOWS. VACATION RENTAL SYSTEMS reeent lhe p1renta. . Sent• Ana. CA. 92705 July 14, 11183. Piiot Aug. 3, 10, 17. 24. 1983. Nit 11t. 111l. UNLl.ll YOU TAKE SECTION 1 Tiie City Council ot 16783 BelllCh Bl . Hunllnglon Beach The petition Ille<! herein le fCH Ille Roger Rho1d11. 85911 Pha.nht Av· '28174 4421-83 ACTION TO PltOTICT YOUA the City ol Cott• Mue hereby t1nd1 CA.112847 IMPOH ot lrMlng th• wbjecl child enu1, Founleln \lelley. CA.112708 Put>llehad Orenge Coatl Delly •-IC NOTICE ll'ttClt'S:R'TY, IT MAY• eou> AT A ------------and declerea H IOllOWI J1mM B. VtHllCh. 16581 Grlhln' for plaoement or adoption Oiied; ThomH 0 . Ewing. 221 VII Nl<:e, Piiot July 27. Avg. 3. 10, 17, 11183. r~ f'taJC IA.La, • YOU ...., AN 1 Tlllt the City Council edopled SI, Huntington Beach. CA 92647 July 15. 11183 Newport Bllch, CA. 112683 425M3 ,ICTtTIOUI IUatNEla l:~TION OF TlW NATU9W 01dlnanca No 77-41 to regul1te the Thi• bualnese 11 conducted by. an John C. Corcoren. Roneld Sheehan. 221149 Bridge NA• ITA'RMENT OF nw PfltOCUDINQ AOAIMIT .GRETA C. CHAPIN, a resi- dent af Newport Beach, CA for 11 years. Beloved mother of Mrs. Vera T Kelly of H.avertown, Penn- sylvania; aunt of Mrs. Betty W. Dahly of San Diego, CA; very cloee friend of Mrs. Alma Tohill of Costa Mesa. CA. Private services. lnurn- ment at M elrose Abby M.u..oleum, Anaheim, CA Pierce Brothers Bell Broad- way Mortuary, Costa Mesa. di.rectors. 642-9150 development ol new condominium• 1ndlvldu11 County Clark Route Orlva, El Toro, CA.112830 PUBLIC NOTIC( The IOllowtng '*'°" 11 doing YOU, YOU IHOUl..D CONTACT A end lhe convar-llon of exlallng epert· Jam" B Verltcll Mary Jann, Deputy MIChHI Mertln, 415 Yr Poppy, oulln.u u LAWY1'1t menl unlll to condominiums, Tiiis alltement wu llled With tht Jeht1 M. lMllOll, Coron1 Del Mar. CA 1121128 ,IC1TTIOUS IU ... 11 SOUTHLAND OESIGNS, 111189 NOTICE ti ........ ~ THAT 2 Thll llnoe lhe •dootlon ol Ordl· COi.iniy Cterk of Or•noe County on c-ty C--' Tiii• t>u..,_ .. conducted by. • ..... ITATl•NT OuatU Ave . Fountain Velley, Calif., ON PNDAY lM .......... (11) ~ n1noe No 77-4 1, 1111es 1>een demon· AJXll 20. 11163 Miwt~ I!. WMl!e, genarel partnerehlp. The follo'#lng j)9(9C)l1 1a dotno 112709 of ••••,,._, 1.a. • the "-... streled 11111 new condominiums can F214nt °"t'VtJ C-IJ CCMlllMI C 0 Olly. Att0<n.y bvtlnae 11: PAUL v OUBOf-1 118811 Ouartr 1HIO AM, .t tM 8ovth ,._. _. mike • positive contrlt>utlon to llHI P\.iblllhed 011nge co .. t Oalty Crknlnal Coun• Bulldl119 Tnlt 111111men1 wu n~ With lhe Meld-for-you 2020 N•wport Ave .. Founteln v~ CllU . 112708 i-to IM Of..,.. COWttJ OW Cny'a noualng stock end thll many Pllol Aug 11, 24. 31. Sept 7. t1183. 210 W Temple St (9·5201 County Ctent of Orlfl(l9 County on Blvd . eo.11 M.M,ca ,112827 Thi• tx.11Mnesa Is conducted by 111 ~. 211 w. a-ta Alla Of ,,.. 111llclpeted J)(Oblems ... •8~2-83 LOI Angelel. Ca 90012 Aug 2. 11183 Lind• c Lavina, 251151 VI• M-lndMdull 80lllieellf'd, Ctty ol ...... A-. ..... IOCllled wHh 1118 conversion ol (2f3)1174-5D91 P2220ll led•. Miiiion Viejo. Celll., 112691 Peul v, Dubon of C~ E~ ... ..,,,..... epef'lmenta 10 condominium• m•~ PUBLIC NOTICE Put>llen Orenge Coast Delly Pltol Published Orange Coul Delly Thi• lx.ielnffa 11 oonduc:1ed by 111 This 1111emanl wu flleel w1111 the 1M.,.,. Equity '°'iect11 ,,. C-· ba 1dequ1tely mttlgaled: July 27. August 3, 10, 17, 1983 Piiot Aug 17. 2•. 31. Sept 7, 11183. lndlvldual: COi.iniy Clerll 01 Orange County on '*''' .. luccnnr TN&._l._.. 3 Thal modification or the slrlet NOTlCI! OIF TltUITEE IAL.f 4275-83 453~-83 Lindi C Levine July 14. l983 Ml et puMle eudtoft, le the 1"9fl.. requirements fCH the development 01 Truetee Sere No. 15-8304-0035 Thi• ate iement WH tiled With the F220907 wt..._,, lot C-" In leWM _, new condominium• end lot tlle con· YOU ARE IN OE FAULT UNDER ,. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE County Clerk of Orenge (;()Unty on Publlahed Orange Coul Diiiy of IM UftHed ,, .... , Ill,_,..,.. llt varSlon of ellllllng apartments will OEEO OF TRUST OATEED JUNE 23 July 13, 11183 Piiot July 27, Aug 3. 10. 17. 11183 ttle time of ..... ltlet _...,, rMI Implement polleles In lhe Com· 11180 UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTIOI\ OftANGI COUNTY FICmlOOI M!SIM!tl f220lll 3096-83 rM1 r...,..,, lfNllted Ill ltle CltJ of pretlen11ve M9'Jllr>Q Strllegy Ol IM TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY. 11 MUNfC•AL COURT NAMI! ITATEMEHT Publlthed 011noe Co11t Dally COi ....... Ore111• Co111•~ Gener11 Plan by rllducJno regu. MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE etOl -'-tberee ~•d The IOllowillil '*'°" 11 doing Piiot July 27. Aug. 3, t0, 17. 11183 P\8.IC NOTICE ~ .NdleW 1 , ...... ~ Dt.tnec--....!......~t'J lat lone r01 new r .. ldent111 develop· IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION Of Newpclft 8eeeh CA 92'ID l>UlMllffl u · 4256-83 ,,.._,.... -··,.. -.-. ---. BRIGGS MARGARET BRIGGS, rest· dent of Huntington Beach. CA. PUiied away August 14, 1983. Bom January 4, 1883 in Scotland. She I.a SWV1ved by a iJ"Rnddaugbter Sandra McDonald or Fountain VaJ- ley, CA; grandson Donald Offensteln of Anaheim, CA; 10n-in-law Earl Otfenstein of Lake Arrowhead. CA Funeral aervioes were held at Parole View Memorial Park, Newpon Beach, CA P.clflc View Mortuary, di- rec10n. SMITH CB.ARLES EARL SMITH, JR, 11e tO, a resldeot of Dau Pol.at, CA. Puaed away Sat11rUy la MexJco. Be la .. rvlved by lalt pueatt, Mr.' Mn. Cbarln E . Sm lttl; ! .brotlaen, Mlclaael Alltboay & Brla.D SteplMJ• Smttla of Dua P•lat; 1raadmotlaer Aafelbu VaJntlDo of Dau Polat. FHeral tervlcu were laeld 19:30 AM Wedu1day, Capistrano Valley llaptlat Cllorcll1, SHH Del Obltpo St, San Jau C.pl1truo, CA, wllll Rev. Michael A. Carlisle, Pa1t0r, offtclatill&. Inter· mat followed In El Toro Cemeiery, El Toro, CA. 1'llote wfllo wl1b may make coatrlb•tlou to tile Capletruo Valley 81ptl1t Schol B•lldlDJ Fnd. LESNES~ MORTUARY, 14t S. El CamlDo Real, Su ~eate, CA, directors .. tt!-1'7 17. menlS and t>y lncreulng lhe poten· THE NATURE OF THE PROCEED PlalnllH SPEERS DANA TEAL & CONTEMPORARY ELECTRONIC FICTITIOUI Mil*£11 _.... • ~ 1111 lnvent<><y ol lo--<:0s1 housing INGS AOAINS T YOU. YOU SHOULC BALFOUR SYSTEMS, 15911 Suparlor Ave.. •-te ..,,.TIC[ NAME ITA n.NT l.of •1 of Tl"eCt Mo. 10011, Ill !tie City oppor1unltlff. CONTACT A LAWYER Oef•ndent NICHOLAS M Suite 88 Cotta M .... CA 112827 "~ nu The followtng peraon la dOlflii ol Coeta ...... c-ty ol <>ir-.. 4 That the following 1men<1rnent1 On Augusl 3 I 1983 II 1.00 P.M NICHOLSON Benjemitl T Strk:k, 20 Cfaet Cir-IFICTI110UI llU .... ll t>uslneat 11 ..... of C.....,......., • IM' ..... ,.._ are necessary end prOl)et lo K • CENTRAL CAPITAL CORPOR· C•M No 57734 cla. Corona Dal Mar, CA 92625 ...._ ITATla.NT C & S RAINSOFT. 303 Non~ O«ded Ill 8oetl US. ...... 4 complish ,,,. purpoae and the lntenl ATION H lhl duly •Poolntec IUMMONI Thi• bu••---II Conduc1ed by an The lolloWI I d Plec.ntl•. Fu1"'1on. c •.. 112831 ttwoueti 7, lllee1le1111ue ....... Ill 01 regulellng condominium Ind oon· TruslM under and pureu111t to 0eec NOTlCll YCMI "9n lleeft .-cl-Individual I ng l>lfM>n 1 Olng SUSAN BERTOLLINI. 2481~ U. offlee ol N C0WttJ ~ dom1n1um convenlon pro1ec11 f01 or Tru11 racorded on June 25, 1118C The~,, ..,.1 cMeWe ....,.., you B T Strk:I< bu~~ ~ARPET SERVICE 177.F Derden!•. Miiiion Vleto. Ce..1121191 elf ..W COUftfy. Iha g«1erel he1Jth, tafety, and Wei· u OoQiment No 07811 Book 136.tf wttttout JOUt belftt llMrd ...... Thi• llllament WU flied Wiii'! Iha Rl~dl N 24 N9wPOl'I .8eac:tl Thi• lx.lttnesa la oonducied by If Tiie ....... ...,_ Md -- tere of the public: Pege 299 01 Olflelel Rec:ofd• "1 lhc rou ,...ponct wtthtft ao .,._ ltMd County C*tt or Or.noe Couney °" ,.._ 1121163 o • • lndlvldull· -., .. ,.,."°'" W -"• ol Iha ACCORDINGLY. Ille City Cooncll ottroe of the Recordllf of 0rangf Iha lllfofmatloll be>low. Juty 21 . 11183 ..... A.OBERT K BLUE 101 Oahll• Suean 8el10illnl ,.., ,,..,..,.. dnc.-.ct ....... ol tlle City of Cotti Mese 11er9'1Vlth County, Calllornla ueculed by If wlah 10 Nik t,,. advice of 111 '121112 · • Tl)le 11eierne11I wu Iliad with the ~ to II« •m•nd• lhe C0111 Mesa Munlc:lpel CHRISTOPHER MARI( JANUSZ & ... ~ In Ihle malllt you lhould Put:>lllhed Orenge eo..i Dtllly co;.::;· ~.,I Mer. ,c •• 11~825.c, County Cl•rk of Orlnge County on 10M lt-atfooll Lane, Co••• COd• .. hll'eln•her Ml forth ASTRID BROUWER J AN USZ, HUS· do IO promr•ty IO 11111' yOUr written Piiot Aug 17. 24, 31, Sepe 7. 1983. I dlvl~ I~ -I con I.IC! by •n July 8 11183 ...... CA tlm'7 SECTION 2 BAND ANO WIFE AS JOINT TEN· retpOnH I any m•y M llled on 4538-83 n UI . Ro K B"-• F22Q22D ..... NO. 421>412.a:t 1 Amend Section 13·819.2 (•I a• ANTS · · Dart · ._ Publlahed Orenge Cout Diiiy Th•, und•nlen•d lucee11or follows Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION tlrne Thll ltaternent WH flied with Ille Pilot July 27, Aug . 3. 10.17. 11183 TrwtM ANililllme MJ ......, lot "(I I Cond0t11lnlum protecea ert TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR AYllOIUt=.h:delnend-:: P\8.JC N0TIC£ County Cler'k or Orenge County on 4257·83 MJ lncion..ctw ef tM llCfWI ed- oermltted In tpJXOprlately zoned CASH. (PIYlble 11 time ol .... In El lrlbume, oontre July 1~, 11183 ._ .... Gt'--d9eilg· dl1tr1C1t willlln the City, wbjecl ta lewtul money of Illa United Stll•! elf! ~le•-:. Ud.,.. ITATDmNT ~ ~WA.L P'DOlll PllllJC NOTICE Mtto.I,=, ~ ~ the luu1noe ol 11\e IOllowlng permlta THE NORTH FRONT ENTRANCE TO ~ Mntn> de IO Lat .. fllOM P~ .... ONRATINQ Publlll\ed OrlnQ• CO..t Oelly AU J'8 AM IU&aECT TO pur1Uant 10 Illa prolllslons of lhll THE COUNTY COURTHOUSE. 700 lftfomlacloll que...... ecMClll UMDC .. PlCTITIOUI Piiot July 27. Aug .. 3, 10, l7, 11183 PlCTTTIOUI MlteHfll OUAU,.CAT10N IY IHOWINO Cheptlt end the appr~I of ten· CIVIC CENTER DRIVE WEST. ",_"""......... of "'.......... 42e3-83 NAMI ITAT....-r ~ Ofll •Y DIPOSIT1NO 11ttveornneltrectCHpercelmepe11 SANTA ANA. CA 117701, !IM right, ::0::::0~~~,: Tiie fall11wln1 918tMn llH The foOowtng ~ 11 dOlng WITH THI! TltUaTEE OR m1y be requlred by l•w This •• lllle and lnlar .. t conveyed lo Ind " M wtttldnwn M • ..... ,.,trwr "8.IC NOTIC[ bualnaM u . TltUITIFI AODfT, THIE ~ qulr-1 la In 1ddltlon 10 other I*· now held by II under Mid o.d ot •rttt-,....,._.. .,..,, _, tr'Ofll IM pertMtltllp .,_....,.. CONSUMER'S OUIOE TO MEDI-OF THElll 811) IN CAIH Ofll lo mite Of <:erllflcalea required by lew. Trull In Ille properly lllueted In 1eld "':: .:'t!::... Nklt# II-11"6ef !tie ftc:tttteua ....,_!WM ~TTTIOUl llU ... 11 CAL SERVICES, 111912 Lolu1 Lane. CA ... lt'I C .. CI( DAAWN ON A (I) All new re1ldenll111 con· Couniy, C1111ornl1 dllcrtt>lng llWI to de un ..._....,. .... -to, 114 NANI ITATIMINT Hunllngton Beech, CA. 921148 ITATI! Olt NATIONAL aANK, domlnlum project• shall be pro-land thereto. deMN h-'«I lnmedlel-te, Pt..,-lwe Am ,...,....,~, The followtng '*'°"' are doing Wlltlem Ambrute BatM, 111912 ~•Dn' UMOM 0A IAVINGI AND ceaMd 1ccordlng to Iha prcx:edurn SEE EXHIBIT A' A TT ACHED de MU _., Ml ,...,_,8 1QO Cel1llna ltrMI, Leeune bullnetl e1: Lolua Lene, HunllngtOll Beech, CA. LOAM AlaOCIA TION DOMICIUED contained In Sec11on 13-145 ot Ihle HERETO ANO MADE A PART eec~ el heJ ... une. ....-de -8Nch, Cllltornll ._1 MULE MOUNTAIN OOLO MINING 1128"8 .. TMll ITAn. Title HEREOF Lot 72 of T,.cl No 11913, letreM • tfem TIM llGlfttow ~ ,_. 00 .. 34791 Cemlno Cec>l•lreno. Thie oulllneae le oondUC1ed by: an 1-'d ...,. ... Ille m.-~I 2 Amend Section 13-819.3 u fol· 11 l/iown on Map recorded In book "1-TO THI Dtl:;'NoAJfTi A GM! •tat• for Hie per1,.,..1Mp •• flleil Cep11t11110 e.acn. Ce., 112824 lndl\tlduet. • -• 8f Wlrl"llflly, •...-°' tows 425, P'-09• 37. 311. 311, and 40 ot oompWnl Me .,_ flled .., tM on ... , n. 11a In ltM C-ly of MELVIN LEE HUBBARD. 34781 WHllam A BalN lmpUed, ,...,dine 1111•, pee· "(I I An epphcatlon signed by the Mltoellaneou1 Map1. record• ol Or-j19111ttft .....,_., JOU. If 1~ wt.ti to Ot-... TIM flll --.I ~ Ce mlno C1p111reno , C1pl1treno Thi• 1t1tarnent w11 Iliad wtth the -i.... ., 111eumbra11c:ee to l1ndownlf1ll °' hll lulllOrlDd agenl enge County C1lllornl•, defend Ihle le-ult, .,_ -'. Mnce of tM ,._ w9'llOi ••"II Beec;h. Ca., 112824 County Cten< ol Orange County Ol'I MtWJ !tie I 1119 llone _._ "1 I« Pl(ml1s required by Sec11on EXCEPT THEREFROM en min· wttMn IO d•Y9 al11t tnia autnmone la M • ,.,.,_ II Thie bu._ le condue:lad by 1 Aug 15. 11183 end ,__, .. N ,._., of .... 13·9 Ill 21•) In f0<m •nd manner II llflll, petroleum, ui>ll•ltum. l>f ... MrYed on flla with "'11 court , '11ttic:ll lllahell&lld Umlted pertnenhtp: ~ _...., .. Ill dl.c _,..,. ~ CW rl(lulred by the De¥alopmenl Sar· oll, gu, end other hydrocert>on WY1nen f you ... 10 the COITIPlalm lG Ceu.na S"-1 Mllvln LN ttubt>atd Publllhed Orenoe Cout Deity TWU9T ..,._ Mu1u1.., ,.._ ~ vlc:ee OlrlciCH lhell Ii. eubmllled IC Wl>91'noel In, upon, under or lhel Uni.et ;:,To your def~ wlll oe L ..... ne ....... Cellf. -1 Thll 1111-1 wu filed With Ille PllOt Aug 17, 24, 31, Sept 7, 11183. Hecvtell ......_,Cenlf)'ft &..Mcf>. lhe Qevllopr11.r11 Serv1oee °'9art· mey ba procured lrom the lend• entered on eppOcallOn ol the plain-llglled; County Cllttl ot Orange (;()Unty on 4836-83 lldMft, an -1111c1 -Md ment Sema th•ll be accom04f1ted 11ar11n1bo~• dncrlb.a, i3:thar un andthlecounmayenter •~ aw.-.....,..._... July 13, 11193 T1motttt ~ ~ •-... by de11lted llta plens, allvlllona and With Iha eoi. and ••Clutlva r ht to · 1 eoelnll '°' Iha rlllllt ct.-liillirtl ~ ..,.... • ~ -• TNI..,.._ tia 8AMIC bf' floor plena or Ille JXO)ecl along With drlll alented -411 °" otller a Into ::::cs~ In 1'{!' complalnt Wllk;tt Pet11c11 ...._,... Put>lllhed Orenoe CoMt Delly PUBlJC NOTICC AlllNCA NATIONAL TMMT AND en required proc:esalng •-ft. ten-end through. end to conllrucl CH could ,...,.11 In ge,nleh"*1t of TN& .........,._fled __ IM Piiot July 27, Aug . 3, 10, 17, 11183 '1<:TrrlOUI 90 ... 11 SAV'ltOI UllOCIATlOM, • - tallve trllCl map 111a11 not be required de..-elop mlnee. tunnet1, eh•"• °' weo-• llklllil of money or JXC>PllfTY C~tr Ci.ti ef OfWle9 ~ -4282-a:J NA• IT~TWmMT llOtlel 1ten•ln9 euoc:Udeft H unlll etter 1 permit ee required by other wonc1 In end '"rough Ille t19r 81191 , led In the com c1ete ~by ... ~-.... T,,.._ lot KCt a • r 11 t' • N., S.Ctlon 13--111112(•) hes Ileen •P· eut>aurl-thereof. tCH '-.. purPOM ~.~~1 r equea • fllil No.1901*1 PUBLIC NOTICE The loltowfng pereone Ill dOlng a Celllornl1 Corporello11 u proved, but m1y ba pr<>CelMd con· ol recovering llld 1~ product• Oeteo Feb 8 11183 P~ Ofenee C...C Delly llttot bu•lnwe .. : ... leftoWJ te ~ tM -ol currently ' from Mid land end llmllar J)(oduc:te LEE A BRANCH Clark J"" 11, A..,.e 1.10. 11, 1ta PlCTTnOUa M!IMIS COMPUTERISLAND. P HONE 114,IOO..OO. wtttlln..,._. l'*-M 3 Amend Section 13-833(•) .. fol· lr0t11 other J)(opertles, J)(O'llded, By Keren Sc:h~hOIU. Deputy an.a NAME ITA Tl...,. SHACK, 23028 lak• ForMt Drive. proWled ti! Mid ...-(1), lldY- lowt h~. lhet 1118 eurf-of the lend Publllhed Or•noa Cout Delly Piiot TM lollowlng l*AOll It doing Sult• A, Lllgun• HIM•, CA. 112653 It ~· ....... ~ ....... Deed "(•)The City COi.ineii 01 Iha City of 11etatn11>ove dalCribeCI tl'llll n~ Aug 17 24 31 Sept 7 11183 rta.IC NOTICE buHtlO.-.ME"o' "YOEN SERVICES v~=~".,.'.n~T~~bt~~l<>~~,.,2 of "'*' ~ --....T _, ~ Coate MM& nnda and c1ec1.,.ea 1h11, ti. uMd f« the •itplotetton, .,... · ' ' · ' 494&-113 ... • 1128111 .,._ If -Trw\M Md .... when the vacancy r11te tor ec>ll1· velopmanl, extrac:llon CH removal of OflAMQI COUNTY 231M11 Celle De Le Magdalena Svlla erwt. GfMted bJ Mid 0... °' man111>e1ng ottered lor renl or,.... !Hid miner•••. or eubetencet from ~ CCXHIT 420; Laouna Hiiie, 92653 · Ayaet\I CMlne, 8042 Meryln Orlv9. Tniet and ,_.., Oft Mo eiMer tn lhe City ol C:O.te M ... 1, equel to!Nld land « olhllf Pfoperllee. u,.... PUBLIC NOTICE 100 Ctwto C:-tw Or. Waat Or &.njam!n Mllchlkllf. M O . Cypr-. A. llOe30 . 11, 1111 H tnelr•111•nt No. or .... 1111n Illa crlllc:BJ VICallC)' tilt lltVed by Chandter-9herman Cor-...... """' CA.1111t1 263111 800'1td Pony, Laoun• HIM•. Thia l>UMOMI " cooducted by • ~ Ill ............. Of- .... 111>1l1hed In tut>Mcilon (bl Pot&llon. 1 COfpQtlllon. In deed,.. O..ANQI COUNTY Plllnttll JILL DIETZ 112653 generel plt1nenlhlp fto6el ltMefdl of °""99 C-ty, hertof. 11111 1 noullno allOrltge 111-lc-e>rded Auguet 1. 1ile3 In boOll 0658, 1"'9.IUC>ft COUltT Oefen<llnl DAVE PORTER. DOES Thie bue1r>M1 le condUCftd by. an Humeyun lneyll Klt>rlye ..... ef CelNetftliL 1111 which II 1nconlltlent with lhf P•oe• 141, Official Recorda. 1'00 CMo Cetltw °'· ... , t through 50 lnetutlve lndMduel Thlt ., .. _,, ..... hied with the All ln•U•Mllll •ttb•UI•,!!!! decl•red goela Ind obtecelvel ot thf f11e '""' 1ddrea1 and otne corn· letlla Ana, CA. l2T01 c ... No. 37 111 29 Or e.il1em1n Mllchlker County Cletlt 01 Oranoe County on RftMft '"......,,,_.., N.. Ae 1..,_., City'• noullng etemenl ot Iha Oen· mon d .. 1gn1t1on. 11 eny, of the reel P111nt1ff. HUGH L. GIBBS 1ue•ON1 Thie 1111-11 wu n1ec1 With Iha July 27. 11183. 'orectoevr• COMP•"l'· u era1 Plan property ducrlb1d 1bov1 11 Defendant. MARIA F REED NOTICll YCMI Nlft llileef'I ........_ County Clarlc ol Of•nge County on '221M4 TMllTll. ... ~en..., I. r " Tiie City Council further nnd1 lh11 purported lo be: 24692 Prltoatla CaH No 1221·112·86 The_,,~ clectd8 ........ ,_ Aug 2 1983 Publllhed Oren~ Coall Diiiy fta, IMt.-t Mo. D-tfl1t1, tll McCOttMICl MOltTU.AallS tneconvere1onofe•l1tlngep1r1men1 Drive, Dane Potnt Area .. Ca 1128211 IUMMONI (,..._Y LAW) wllhoul ,_ bell'f llMr'd....... · P'lnCIM Piiot Aug 17, 24, 31, Sept 7, 11183. ao.ei , 11 ........ tM OfRcillll ,.._ . l>ulldlng1 Into condominium pr0Jec11 The undar1lgned Tru1tM di•-NOTIC•I YCMI Nlft bMft 9'1ed .. pov rwt*'ld wttfllll IO Mp. ,._. Publlehed Orenge Cont Delly 41141-83 -'* ol Of.,... c .... tr ...... ef Laguna Beacn m•y dlmlnllll the wppty of fenta clelm• 111y lleblllty tor any lncorrecl· The court,,..,. d8dd8....,..,1°" the l11torwwtton below. Pltot Aog. 17, 24. 31, Sept. 7. 11193. CeMomle. ~ 494.94 I 5 hov1ln11 and dlepleoes reeldlnt1 un· ,,. .. of tl>e 11rea1 eddrM• and other wlthwl ,_ ~ ...,.. unllee1 11 you With 10 INk the advice of 111 ™0-83 The ... ,......,_._.. DMd Laguna Hill~ rMtOntbly common detlgn1t1011, 11 eny, .nown rou ~ wtltllll IO Mp. "9M 111orney In thle m1uer. you ehould PUBLIC NOTICE ol Tniet, "1 -.. •.._.er 768 093J To 1vold 1119 IOfeoolng problemt herein. Seid 11i. will be made, Ix.it Iha lnfonneUon below. do ao promptly IO that your wrttten 111,....,, W\TIM' .....,.. ill lM ., .. M•• _.... SanJJanCap1striln1> =ed\IOll lhe d1tp1aoement o·'Nftnout cownent °' werr111ry, ••· lfyouwlahto lMlctnee<Mceofen r.aponN. If 111y. rney be ll4ed on nlUU\> ""'""' f'ICTnlOUI M.l ... aa ......, "-•••lltl•.....,... ...i 4% 1 776 I ·1arm reeldente. pertlcul1rl) f>rMI or Implied, regarding title, a11omey In this matter. you ehould time. PlCTTT10UI IUWS• NAMS ITATIMINT ..._... te a. • •• .... • \ ..,., e111ten1 Ind iow-and moder· poeMlelon, Of enwmbranoM. to do eo promr11y eo th•t your written AVllOtu11ed 11a llldo darnlf\dlldl. .. .... ITATl-..T The 1o11ow1ng pereon It dOlng ..,.._ 01 dar...,1 .. 0....-...i --ll•lnc:ome 1111111i.. end lemlllel pey 1"8 remllnlng J)(1nclpal wm of reepon ... I eny, mey be llled on El tr1bum1, leda ...., -we Ud. -bull,_.. D-41 ....... _. ...-.... ..... with ICN)Ol..flge ctllldre, the Cit) lhe nole(I) MC~ by NICI OMO of lime. .... .. ,.. • -.. Ud.,... The '~ Plll'tOtl .. dolnO Cl.OSE TA COSTA RECORDING ...... .,....... ........... ... M•llOI LAW.._ •• n OLIVE CounGM of Iha City ol Coel• Meet Tru11. wilfl lnt11•t lhWlon, .. AVllOIVeltdllUldOIMM•ndede ..... denlte ....... LAii .. but!W •: 1118-C Tulip~ C:O.te Mea&. ca.' ........ --...... DeM .. Mortua')I • Cerretery find• Ind dlcll1" It '**881)' lllC PfO'ilded In Nkl no11(1), edvencae," El trlbum• .... _.., ~"8 Ucl. lillf81-•hA........ PERM LUBE. l3W POt11mOUlh 921127 • • • Trwt. _, _........,.,,-. .. Cremaiory P<OI* 10 regut'1• IUCh con~; •ny, under the term• of .. ld OMO or el11 MiittwMI • -.,e Ud.,... If,,_ wtlilill • ..-r. ..,._ .. Cl~: "'!.•'w""""• 929&38 Ith 131148 OAVIO w DRAPER. 1118-C Tullp .._ .. _ .. ..., 1$-m1tl lll .._ 1625 Gisler Ave by tna JXIWlaionl herein ror IM Tr1111. ,_, chlfQ" end QPen'" of .....,. ._t,. de IO dle9.. Lee le an ....,_., lll tMI INICtef JM • •rn• m • Lane Coel• M ... Ce 112627 • hie ef OftleAel .._... ef °'" Costa ••e·, n.tnll, ulel'f, and wellere of tht the Trutt" and of the tru111 crNllCI lllfllfmMIOfl... ..... , ..._.. da •,,....., .. M,...., P11°!'.llmOU3 lh Cit. W_,mltlet•. CA. Thie bull!,_ 11' conducted by en ..... C-.,. "" "" gatlel'll public The Plennlng Com· by Mid OMcl Of Trutt. ti JOU wletl to ... Iha.,..._ ef -'"* ......-., M llllJ, _, M 2vv lndMduet: Dtluc ... l!f ..... ,..._,, iMf 54-0-5554 mlNIOn may clltapp<ova 1 Con• Said Hie wllt 1)8 mid. but wtthOul 1111 •H~ 111 tNe ~1 ,_ MM• ........ Tiiie bu"-le 00tldue1td by: en D•vld w. Ori!* M ...._. ~ • • ..._ --dlllOna UM Pwmt1 II the ec>•f'lJMnl C0""1M\lorwarrenty,••Preuorlm· allouldlloM~IO_.. 'f0/111 etu..M...-.............. ~.~· S Ith Thlt 1111.,,...,.,1 WU nlad wflh the req11Ht 111•11ttl•ed ta Ute rtllClllOTHU~ UL.I. llOADW.AY MotlTUAIT I 10 Bro adwav Cosra Mesa 6'19150 t.untMCHIOW SMITH a TVTHU.L r WUTCUff CHA'fi •27 E 17th St CO'JI~ MP'lll 8 46-Q;\71 VICll1G'f rel• Is equal to or leN thlt' plied, r~ardlno 1111•, PollMllOtl. or wf'ttteft ,...,_.., " an1, _,. M Jo • ......... • _.. ....._ • IYM m Oounty Cle!tt ol Orenot county on ..,., • ...,. • ._.. .. ._ ~ the «lt!Gal vaoanay rate M •llD-tncumbranoaa, lncludlng ltae. fie.ct ... fMte. ...... "-t11 1nm ··~ ,.._!!* •!,Al_~OftOru n1ec1~ CM Juty 13 1"3 ........ 1111111 ~....,. Hthtdlnaul>Mctlon(b)hereot,end1~11rgeeendt•1>10-0flheTru11uc 8'Ulled.._....,,. .. ,.,_ de .... --, • r1111un .. ~').'Y --:;.: anoe ., on ' ,,.,..., ._ ..,..,_ r..,.. II ••1ittan finding II mllGt that the lf>P'Olllll ol end Of tM 1rus11 c,...led t>y Mid Jo • vn -..... Mt .... ......, -tu. .. ~ ,_.. .., -• JI, l-.. Publllhtd Orange Coaet Dall) .. ~ T'NM!le._ ..... ' Mid Con<fltlOnal UM ,.,,.,..It WOUIO OWi of True•. to l)jty the remaining ....... .._.. ........ ..,.. .... ,.......... D .. bfl • ..._. Or ..... ~ Pltot Jul'f 27, Aug . 3, 10, 17, 1113. nm TOTAL AMOUNT °' THS be lnconetttenl with lht lfltanl of thll prlncipel eum• Of '"' notM MCVrM • .... -.. IMI ,....... l · TO ""' Alffl A ..... .... ,..,_ .. """'"'' ..._., 3090-e3 "'9'Am ML#JMCI 0# nm oeu- Mllon "'1em•ttvelyl, ,,.,. Plannlnci by H id Du d of Tr11t1 to MCrtta. .. r=--,.. -~ .... ""'fled "' .. l'fl01 Aug 17, 24, 31, Sept. 7• lla. U110ll McwmD rt TMI,.,.... Commlllk>n mey ll>9f'OYI • Con· wll·l 107 ,90,0ll With tntwt lher!IOll ,......,.. • . ,...._... ....,... ,_ I fM .... .. ~ an TO • 80l.D. 8C' ,..,_, dllONll u.. Permit" IN epertmenl from Otoetftbtt 1, 11112 4t 13.~ l-TO TM NDANT! A ................. ,... .......... PmlJC NOTICE "191ATIO coe'n. IJQl..J.11-a. ,~ 1111 It llQUef to°' 1w thlll> par~• ptOlllC*S In llld nol• ~ hail ....,_ flleil "" lfte IOdeyt llfltr 1t111a .,.,_,. 11-* "*-JC NQTIC( ---__ 11 AND /lll'tAMCea • m.-,,.. 111e cr111ea1 vacancy rate• 11110. plu1allc:oe19,~oaeand1111y and pMtt"' NMllMt ,_" ..-wWt .. on you 111"""11119 eou11 • wrtt1*I ...... ,,.,.._ -DATIOI A..-.-.,_ lllhe<I "1 IUtltletlOn (I>) lltf.of," Int •11 ldv-U .271194 wtth lnier•t daf8ltd he .......... ,_ _., ~ 10 tht COfl'lt:tlelnL "'*-ACTmOUa ..... I. The I~ tTAT'lm':' d""' l'NOCtl tdttZJflf .... 9IO., .. epplleant eubmll• 111 tc:1equ111 &n4 "*tofl wHMrl M clay• 11tar thlt IPUl"llmOfl8 II you do '°· ,our °"*"" wll be N.uM eTA~ --;-"' 1*90n "'llO IOUtTY 'OM.ClOeuM COM-llO"I binding p1en wNch mntoet• Thi '*"ftclary under NICI Deed ~ on ycu, rile With Chis aoun • enter.O on ~tton by the SMlln-The fo11owCf1o per.on 11 c1o1fto bualntla ae. HM'f ~he dllpl-t of toncH«m rMI· of Trull '*'10for. axecu1ed end de-Wflllen '"Poll" to the comptlln1. Utt end 11111 oour1 may ant••~ butlnell ae• T ·M· T ORANGE, 3021-11 Ste 171, IY1 INOCM DllDd'Wa, lilC., idan11, p1rtlc;ulll1y eenfor cltlient llvered lo lhl 111'14"8IONd a written Un'"' you do. your Otteult wltl be ment '8111'111 .,ou tor the ""8f 0.-'L.All.«Y TRANSLATION SI"-~!!~ llvd. CO.ti M-. CalH... ,...._0 ,01,_ C~ lllO IO.,.,_ •l'CI mOdlt•l•lncoma 11m-oac11,.t1on of o.ftulf and 08mtnd enwtd on •PC>llcetlon OI the pltll'l-manclad In the COf!IPlllnl, W1llOh oour VICI 1114 1ow1 1 A, COii• ~. '"" •aUtTY ...... .. ...... -!Ille 111d rem,_ with ec:hool·egt lor Sala, Ind 1 wrlttlf'I Notice Of 0.-on. end Ihle OOlll'l may enter• ludoe-r_,11 Jn gernienmtnt 01 weoea. tall• CA. tatff LOMAN A. Kf.E8Lllt. i2H ' PN!fY Chlldnin, end II the ~ Com· 11111111nd e;lllc!tlon to Slit. the under· ment egelt'ltl you IOf the r.llef a.. 1no f'l\Ot\t'r°' proper1J 0t °"*,..., Lind• 1"11119¥. 1t14 tow• IA, MlnMl<>I• Ave .. Coat• .,...., c.111.. ....,.. ......_ minion ttndl lhal the pr(lt)OMCI con· llgned C.UMd •aid Notice of o.tllUlt m•ncN>d In Int oomotetnt, whloh req-*I In the oomotelnl Cotti Meaa CA 12tff t:ze:ze IOUITV POA•ClOIUM COM- pro)ecll oonfonn• to lldopted and Clec1~ co 8tll to M reoorOad tn could ••wit In otrnltlltn«ll Of Detect. Aptll 12, tM3 rnia ~ ia conducted by: an This bu..,,_. II OOndueled by .,, PIM'f , •ClftC ... w II Plltl poltctee 10 Iner-the lhll ooun'Y .... ttle ,.., P'oC*tY 111 ..... I.eking ol money Of ptoptr1'f LEE A IAANCH. °""" lndMO\lal lndlvtdllel:L A I( ...... -~ ,. ..... MINOllAL PAii Of io.. COe4 houeinO In IN IOcated Ot Olhet rlllef requeeted In ttle oom-l'f C K ... ~IY Uncle "41"'1 omen .. .,.., ._ .... CA.._ C. I M I ry and/Of lh•I the P<ot>OMCI oon-0.ta. Juty U , 1"3 pltltlt . • ...... 'i. l..tt Thie Wl'-11 WM tll8d with tM Thia 1111-l wu flied wllll lhe (-~ Ch;:.T.tr•~a~ry ~Mon projlet Mftlll ott1er .,tied CIWTAAL CAPITAL COAPOfll· O.t!ICI: AOftl H , 1 .. '8 11t1 0... et., ..... m County awtc of Orange County on COunll c:; of Orenge County on ~ U '1f ~c.-1 ..,.., ....,.,_ p..-,1,c Vi-Or•vt' puOllc ooei., AT~ LE! A. IAANCli. Oltr1i ~ ...... C&. -Jiiiy it, 1113 JUiy 1 • I _ 441e-tl, k '1. 19L .-,,.., -~ 8l•lt lflel P<-t lo Che aa Nici TNll• l!y 0 .. Clerpen1•. 0eciuty .,..... ,.,_ .--•• ... --~ Newport Be.tell iPlet1nfnQ Commtu lot1 veaenc:.~ ly Olctl r~ vio. Pr..idttll Pvt>lllhtd Of.,. C-t Delly PllOl fl'ublleMd Onnge ~ Deity Piiot ~bllehed 0rlt!Q8 COUI Olly P\lbllllhed Orange CO..t Oeltw MMe ~ e111iw1oppw-... 111111 4 ... 644 2700 • 11•t1111aelfom ,.,. l'llOll ''°'"' d•ll Publlcetlon 0rllflga Coal 04llly Piiot Aug 17, 24, 31, Seipl 7. 1m. Juty 2?. AUQ >. 10, 17, IMS Piiot Aug 11. 24. , ,, Sept. 7. 1"3. PNOI ~ 27, Aug., :l, tO, 17, 1~ .. by uelng tN Delly ~ ,~ .... ._ _________ ,.,) comp1ec1 by at1w the U 8 OtPat1· Auguet 11, 11. 24, 11'3 4Pt-a3, 464843 , 42t~ ' 4W·'3 42"-13 • kM CiWlfled Adlt. ' ' \ POOLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE SUPERIOR C:OURT 1 , 11 •t1t t• OF CALIFORNIA, 1 ,.,t 1111., f H•1w "Y COUNTY OF ORANO( , • ,, 1• 1 Mtan1t,)•l' ht U1u Matter ot the A1J1•lltdlttln Of 1 , I IN()A ANN BUMELIS t 1 l;t•dnge of Name No A 119411 ~muw TO SHOW CAUSE f OR CHANGE OF NAME (Sec 60641 1 IN()A ANN BUMELIS hU Ille<! 1 .. 11t1on In 1111s court IOI en 01de1 .i11u,.111g pet11tone< 10 chenoe hl1/ht11 '"""" lrom LINDA ANN BUMELIS 1 l INOA ANN BLAIR IT IS HEREBY OROEREO thal all , ... , .o.,q 1111eresteel 1n the mallet '" •t'~ct•d appea1 beto1a 1hls court tr J ... ,.arlm•int No 3 at 700 CMc < ., I"' 011ve West, Sante Ana, Call turn•d on Sept 19 1983, al 10 OC u ""'•·~ *-M ana men lllld theft s1111,. 1 duse 11 ony they have • wh) , .... 1 petition for change of name Sh•101r1 not be 01 anted t IS FUR I HER ord&ted that f copy ot this o•der to show cauM bf 1 ' ·1 """"~'·ed in the Orange Coast Dell) •' It ' I ul Pilot e newspaper o f gener• 1•1 '" •di ctrw1,11111n published In thla counl) "• ' ' '""1 Al 1oos1 once e week for lour con • ' t '" ;t"' s;>r11t1ve weks p11or to Iha day of aalo ;__, ' IP h('artng .,., It • f Oaled Aug 3. 1983 .4ss1gned Judge B Tam Nomoto Judge of the t • <l!l Superior Court • 011ornevs name, etc 117 f'u~llshftd Otonge Coal! Oalty Piiot 1 A ~ 17 24 31 Sept 7, 1983 4640-8~ POOLIC NOTICE 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E . D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 I . -- ' C ll 842-5878 CLASSIFIED - INDEX THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOUR Telephone Service: ........ ,lalt ltUJal ... Dciebout : To l'bct Yu Ad, Cal Bay & Becx::h Red Est~ .• 642-5678 Monday.Frida y 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. lllAL ISIOtrt l•CG.U#CI e.c!( - REAL ESTATE ..-wral Analwlm Hlllo &Ji-Wand a.ii-P...inoula C.JMl.nnOs...h C-..cld Mat Cooia M ... DIN Punt EITO<v F'uunlloln Vali.y H"nUlljJIOn e. ... h tlUin\, tt.a.rt.our Jrv.,,.. ................. ~HtU. 1...ofuna H1,.....1 t..k• r ...... 1 M......nV~1> ~;t:'n!::n S.n J t.Un Capettr-.no Santa Ana SHl-h So.Ith ......... Su-· Bt>ldt Tuton Wnllnirwkr Mobli. Homn A<l'ftll• Ap&r\mnll• llt>e<'h l'ropf'n y a.... .... Prop1y C-1tty i..... Ccmml l'n>1,.,ny Condom.1n1uma llupl• .. •1 lJnna 11..._. tut>.. Movt'd 1,.......,.. Proprn y 1nc1 ... tna1 ""°"'' IA<a ,.., Sai. "'"°'"' Hon,.. Peta ~ounwn. Otwrt Orottll" Co Out of County Ou.1 al Sta\r tla1w hit.I r.,.,... ~~ 1'1.wShArinc RE.~ R It. WMIMI RENTALS H.,._. tUm"hrd H-Unl~ 1 i-""""°""" .,, Unt"nudwd C<>ndu P'Um Cundu Unf Town~fum Tuwnl-Unl 0.. ""'"" F'um c>up1 ..... un1 ApAl'\mOfll.I f'UrNlhod ,. __ ,.Uni Apo. P'Um or Unf -Rooma.Boud Holt'la. Molt'lo C-t H-i;...,.,._ Rmtala v.., .... Re.tat. •Rf.n\alo to s ...... 0 RHtt&lo Wantad Car-for R.nt O!ln llmtalo a...,_ 11<-nta.t. ComMI l\Ht\&la lnduot IWntab s.....,. MU. 111-nta.lo 1002 1004 100& 1007 tOll 10'1 1024 IOU 1032 1034 1040 100 1044 1048 Business Counter: Monday-Friday 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. DEADLINES: PUBLICAT ION Monday Tuesday Wednesday DEADLINE :~Thursday /~Friday :m Saturday :~Sunday Sat. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Fri. 11 :30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 1<114 :: CANCELLATION & ::: CORRECTIONS: 1100 11:13 ll!MI IU$ 1200 1m 1"4: 12'1! l:lOC 132. Cancellations and corrections may be made on same deadlines as above. Please ask for a cancellation number when cancelling your ad. 13)( :!~ERRORS: ::~Check your ad daily and report ::'.errors immediately. The DAILY :~~ PILOT assumes liability for the firM lE incorrect insertion cnly . llU CLASSIFIED 642-5678 l&DOll lllllUlll Immaculate thr•1 bedroom home. U/119 ltv; Ing room with brick fir .. place. Formal dining room <>v«10ok1ng 11..- c:overeel. tlled pallo. ecm. venlently located for IChOQll a n d 11- brary ... S 185,000 111·1100 IUOI OITTlll lllJ.. IHllH21,lll Pride of ownerahlp, ~ 1>toc:k 10 ocean. Juat adOl'able 2 bdrm + loft. 1 'n baths. g111age + panc- lng tor 3 cars. Own. wlll carry for qull~ buyer. 631· 1400. -WATLR•HONT HOMt~ teo REAL ESTATE 111-1400" ., *Cote Realty & lnveslmt>nt ~1........................................ , ....... 2300 Beas" fer lale , ...... I• 1Ut h~ Gtanal 1102.::;.._=-al~~---::llt~ll•E•.llll-•Oll-IT•l-llU-• m~ Lovely 3 Bf 2 Bii h,,_ h~ IOUI YIEW ••• l1H-Located on nice w/lamlly rm, 2 frf>lc*, RV ,...__ M S this lr 3 Bdr '"'--has ecc:eaa. Looa19d b;-~ ~ta esa t., g. •K>l•l'I:' 1WMnTu1t1n/lrvtne/S := unobstructed ocean & canyon view. Ju.st Aaklng 1 179,90 . : fell out of escrow & priced to aell. 831·7370 . -*' 2toG 2907 J908 ~ 2912 2111• 21111 2911 2920 21112 29U OISTI ms& FllD This home is on a cul-de-sac, 4 Bd.r & 2 Ba. It needs help! The home is spacious & has lrg assumable 8.5~ VA loan. $110,000. TRADITIO\AL RE.\LT' FIBI AflOJfCEWNTS --Ill l&l IWtll Beautiful spacious unita, both 2 Br with Brlog your ~ntbtuttl Ind aave. 4 Bdrm 2 Be. 2 car garage. Auume 8 .5% loen. OwntW IS motiv.1ee1 Atkl ng 1 110,000 831·7370 Annou.~"Wnta ._, .. J'ound p..._..... P•-1~ Schoob 4' '-""""""' T,..wl BUSKSS ' rlNMCIAl. e...i-tor& .. ·--Opp>nwwuoo a...,_w.,,o.i ·in--· ()pponww-1n--.1 W ... lod .... .,.., to I-.. •M...,.yWantad M..,._TD'• EMPt.OYMOfT ll•lp Wanwd •Jobe Want.a MERCHAPl>ISE AnttqUft Appliall<'N Auruon. Bl<l• .... ....,.It c-... F.q1 .. pmn ' C.ompu"" ,.,.... &O You l'\,rn.tutt' c.,... S.lft llouwhold Good& J•w•lry M..-huwry ...... 1-. M• Went«I M-..i tnnnun.n .. O!fn P'umotutT • Cilu•pnwnt ""'-"°"'""" ~~ ... ~- BOATS mANSPORTATION AJra .. •ft ~ Campon M°""lloka ·~s-wn "'°"""-HV't Troll<n. Tto.,..t TnNl<n. \Julny AUTOMOTIVE ,. ............. AUIO~Potlo Au"'9 W•nt.ed Sp0r1a. """9. Rocio • wi-1 °""" Tnon.. v ... AnlJ<l"" a--. AUTOS MPOltTID Allo~ Audt Autttft llMW cu,,_ Ott'""" o.r...o... .. r~• '"" llond• a.~n.• J-· "-~ 1-la Lot .. Ma-M-•11 M..-c...,.._ Mlllt\AAoN MO °""' ,_ ~ """""'' ~ 3004 JOIJ 3014 JOll JOll 4012 4014 4011 4011 402l t02• 402fl 4028 loft or den , front unit is approx. 1900 aq. ft. w/family room and frplc. Back unit nearly 1400 aq. ft. Priced to eell. $380,000. llWNIT 11&11 IWtll Steps to sand from thll spacious newer duplex. Upstairs feature 3 Br 2 Ba, balconies and ocean view_ Lower 2 Br 2 Ba. Both have frplcs and lrg assumable loan. $324,000 . REAPTWUI Located in quiet Costa Me.a area theee uni ta feature lrg 2 Br 1 ~ Ba and are cloee to all shopping facilities_ Get maximum write-offs and "they pencil!" Lrg as- sumable loan. $161,000. TlllmlUL IULn TR/\DI T 10\;\L RL\lTY un .. ••ss Thl9 hOme l\aa a 20 If 20 .,.. eepedely fOI' you, alOng with a den/omoe, 3 Bdrm1, 2•,; batl" and large pa11o and yatd. Come ... tNa P'Mlely loeateel hOme. $ 198,000 142~1200 PETE BARRITT ·•· REALTY CIOIO ,,.,,, ..... U1•Jlll, ....,,1 ,.._ _____ _ CIOll ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;::;::;:;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;; 1• CI012 CI014 111110 IOI eon 902~ fllOO 6212 6214 fl21fl 6211 fl f224 e fll:ll e230 flU2 7010 7011 7012 701• 701fl 7011 7020 7012 7024 701e 7011 8010 8011 8014 IOIO IOll ecno 8022 8024 11)28 JIOIO tol6 902U ti()» IO:IO IO>S 8040 1100 II~ 9107 8109 tlU t114 "" "" 1121 tlU tl:IO .. ,, .... 1111 1111 11• "" •••• llti •10 110 II .. .... tlN t lN ..., ti .. * HIRIOI RINE* 911TllUU 111SWDI ......... ,., ....... Come vi.sit the moet fabulous view. New custom home in Newport. Nothing to compare with this 4 bdnn, f.am nn, 5 bath, fonnal dining, 3 f.rpb, 6 car garage. Large pool & jacuzzi. Come to the gate and ask for 3 Yorkahlre, 759-1931. New Cus1om Horne Reduce from 1 1.100.000 to $795,000. 17Wll1 IPll 1&1.Y .1-1 HPtHITI •nu HELEI I. DOWD s.ci. win carry 111 ot 1he flnenc:tng on uq ....,.. with MW carpeting, MW draper!M end nf1W paint. IULTH, llC. 1111q.n. flllllY 11111-IDMO t1t1•1 Charming 4 Br 31/2 Bii cu1tom l'udOI' home with nloe COMtal vlewl. F ... tu,.. paneled den with flreplace. huge femlly room over entire 3rd noor. IOlld CMlk bultt-lne •nd flooring throughou1. En!OY your epa, aaune and 880 In MCtuded patlol Lovely femlly ll•lghborl\ood near ac hoolt, beachea. OWNER WILL ASSIST IN ARRANGING NEW F1NANCINOI Reduced to $395.000. AMc IOI' Hallie Strock. 844-7020 ~IU&.UTl11 ... IUlllll lrTIUllaL ........... RICK ALOERETf£. BKR CALL 731_.444 Have you rHd today'a ClaHlfl9d Ada? If not, yfN',. mlaelng the bea1 bergalne In town1 144-1114 wen laid out thf .. Bdrm two Bllth with a balcony off the muter tulle. ..al'llitD YllW LeaYe )'OlK elboW gr .... ..... .....,.... behind. Full price Secluded 15~ acra 199•900· 751-3191 Rancl\ette alte. Only -C:. 5ElECT mtnu1 .. from town wlttt a ...... PAOPER'f1ES view from Sad~ to · 1t1e ooean. tn ., .... ot IDTIU IYllUIU luxury tiom.. HC>rMe ok. Adorable Old Cof'ona del Priced below l'Mltc .. at Mer 11ou99 3 9dnne 2 MH,000 • terrna •v.,1-Ba.· S12o0/mo: OcMn able. Blvd. Corona del M8t, 17 I 4t 67J-4400 vtew. 3 8drme 2\4 Ba IJIJI UWIJI 12250/mo. Penlntula. & Bdrm home on Mn4 HARBOR Avlll. t i t, wtntw S1IOO/mo. Emefald B •tunning modefn • view. $2000/mo Plue many rriorel tOdayl -. .-_ L..'_. COLDWeLL BANl(C!R~ =:.:.11.o,.. .. . tit! ... " ..-.. ~ v-......, vo1 ... Mllr AUTOS, 00.STIC AMC ~ CM!llar °"""'"*' ~ =-· = =:tu. "~'" ..... liar .,.,. ,...._ tlU •1• '"' •1• 11'1 llfl ..,. tin .. ..., ·-11111 fllt Nlf •1• -· .., -= .. ·--...... Can you believe thia price tor a Deane condo!! Bordeaux Plan - priced below n:wket for a fut. .al• nowll! Auguat 31 the price cc-up!!! Buy at thia 1oW price now. IN.N•WPGRTC•NJWll 644-9060 2 9 2 ··- C l 4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 a ..... 111 lal• ...... 111 lal• ...... he lal• Leu fer 1a1t l ...... v~ ...... VaJaralaW bulen"· u . ~ ....... UaJ. ..... ntO om •• lntal• 2114 Caaal ltn ltMral lMI L!paa .... la lMI ~ Liii 4 Cetta •na~ l!!J!rt .... la Ult C:...U HI ... 1112 ftU.llla Walle to O.C.C UM of N!WPORT CEHTEA Fvll T::~~y1~ (:• Ee tltlde: Aadee. 2br, Hatbot View Hme 41k, llr, LAAOE 1 8R.z. view aeck Vallty 11)4 W/D. ~~Utile In· MtWlt E:ucuUw ~-Ull Ill.I ,. UU sec o•I• .,.e. (TannJ~ carpet, Clr•pH, new 3ba. Comm. pool, A\1911 ¥"'" axttu. •795 + ~· TlbJronCondo, 3 Br, 211. eluded ·l S&7Me26. 840-5470 IY IWIEll crtt, bHch clbhH), •~. f:T· no peta. Stf)t 1 11 S1000/mo Incl 19 M11lgo4d. 640-426 ba. lam rm. 2 c.t gat. Wotklng fem 26--40 non • $290/up, carpets, &yfrontsing.le 1tory38r 28&..beamc;eillnp, 3 Eu $1,100,000&11 . .coo,OOO. "450, 11 tul +MC gardener Agt8U·1181 l1t~Cl\Mff\lllbd.Otd4lf crp1/drp1. dehwr No amoll Npl Creal tennl1 Clrapee, a/o, rwtroome. ~OWi terrace. pJer & slip S l ,2W,OO() .. •, 8drmc~th hlg~~ 1 or bolh. CNh or eull• dep. 845-1213 Nwpt Crut GOl\do, 2 Br 2 Quiel Peraon I blk to pet~. Ca ll •II &pm pool '300 M0-1708 8PM 1730 I 8Mch Blvd, Hunt· l~I e.aoh'a "Toe> of •bit tenna. Coutttey to Eutll<M alytlah with 3 Br 2 den, yrly IN $1100/mo. beach & ahoS>I 1550 111-082 7470 lngton 8Mch. 142·2834. Hayiront G bA 7 ~ bdrm, Villa on wt~ lot, the World .. Metttt tult• Bkra. Ownrt Frt-Mon, ea deepplle crpte + &42-3073 agt cludlng gu. No garage. ut. IMc~ 1 laaatr UY NW pool, spa, ~k for l20' yacht. $4,850,000. tnctudM ffpiC~acurz.l llld 499·3070. UH · Thur• 19ac. age kll 2 garage 073-8472 lea lab ltOI BeaulllUI ''1: ~•viii-•--I'""" ' Call fA1 21317K·1159 mulll w/poot l•cuu l OoMn front S Br 3 Ba. 2 Br. 1 811, upet.ite, frplc, Remod led 3 bdrm 2 +tar v .... t., 1 ..... ""·,,. •• ·..,37,.a"'tt Ti L--la atl700 639-&lOO BEST Ouple11J.yrlyl18751moor Prof male ahr 2Br n,r gat1ge 1625/mo. ON THE SAND able. S..C2 844, Mon-Fri, e • balh tte rec rm., app . o ·""'"" " at ... '" wlnte<•1500tmo.Xlnlloc OCMn. S3401mo. ,., ... 842--7803 SUMMER RENTAL 9·5. bean\~. fum.iahed, pados. $420,000 5 pm. Wkdye 2l3/285-2281. 752·11777a111 154, 12 to 9 B 3 Br. 2 Ba. unll, _, bit. S blet em\ ba.,..onl offloe DUE TO ILLNESS Lu11ury 2 Br, 2 Ba Condo, pm. 720-1&57 hm. ach, wlk to bch, all utll1 f\lmlahed, wuher, dryet u ,.. . • llYSllE Pl.AGE llYFllllT BUILD YOUR HOME on • 2 Tlmnllarea. The Plua of FP. dbl g11. poo4. Jae. Off OCMl1 rront bell 2 Br pd, 1375/mo non·emkr, lncld. Summer encl.a ~Oo~ver1s.!:~·=-1ng. S"""tacular be..4-nl d~ 2 br, 2 b& up. 2 br, spectacular OCEAN Palm S--'nn1, Couotry le95/mo 842-5290 hM crplllhru out ,_ C..ta •na 1124 980-2688 garage, 5802 Seaahofl ..--~ , .. ., .,...... apple 1800 • 1.. N Ad a a.ten TSI, Mgmt 642-1803 Wllllfl..., __ 2 ba dn. 2 boel spaces. uced -$1,500,000. FRONT 3 Aten Bay. fM Club Dr .• P .. m S1><lng1. Meaa Verda 3 B< 2 Ba. 539-8190 BEST OTHERS Mr ame 'up-=----·-----_, ..,.r,_ ,E.1•1.Ll I.IE .on.F"llT ~':'(7'~!1 ~fo' ~ "~~:'::'!::~~173 den, blt-1n1. patio. CfPll, AVAILABLE 2Br, 1V.Ba, fem rm, new =r•P:~~ ':,~~ J:1j VuatlH ==~~. Tue 10 Thure (213) L .. _ '---drapes. le50. 963-9235 Shoreclltt1: lg 3 Br, 4 ba, ~l·~~a/~=1·1~:~~· pel 0 ok, 1 Br 1 81'. lndry lntall zt07 appro1110001qtt. Ocean & je\lY views. Manne room, 4 bdrm, 3 799-1159. ad_. t So C011al Plua ate 3 8r 2 lam rm, lrplc'e, grt ocean 2195 Mlr\tt ST $850 mo' lac. 1•50tmo. S300 a. BlO Llr cabin, 2 Br, 1 L . I 1250/mo. Sllp a.tao 1va11. bath, 3700 .q. f1. Xtra parking. $1,385,000. OPEN SUNDAY 370 acre n ngm1n, r Ba J9CUL/poo4 horM opt vu. walk to pvt bch. + d•p To · aee 011j po111. Agent no lea. nr lake, 111 wood Int. 71418..c&-7100 Mountain 2 Br. Wood Wllllradelor1979cator to buy S850 Info 12000/mo.5'48-7839 645HO.. 883-1600, 359-89321359·4080 FAJIWIS IUOI llLLTIP ahlngte, apotlelt hoUM newt< AllO dtamonda, 539-tl90 BEST Atty 1" Walk to beach, 4 Br Fam . IUWlll Lk Arrowhead e11qulalte Ct-trdal New 4 br, 4 ~ ba, custom French Normandy wlleg•I unit view, 1 blocil gold or el!Vef or wtlal Dua Ptlat UM Am, 3 Be.. I 1175/mo. 1 Br U1ll• pd • all 9 lit YILLAIE takefront home, 5bf/8b1, lntal1 2111 Estate 1.2 prune acre hilltop $1,250,000, to beech.1210,000. have you. 98M287 ye111y Drive by 309 S3i5. Adultt p~el, q~let: alpe 12, game rm, elag-:aoo IQ fi 61dg yard C-2 Newell, 497-5411 Have llOOK equity In Rare flndl 1350 abode Cedar. Ce lt Agent patio no peta. 64.C.e958 New I & 2 Bdrm lu11ury ant turn, dock. 842-7080 2400 ·blk N~por1 'stvd' OlllUH OAYI llYFlllT I t.. L lOll Hunt. Bctt former Carl• walk dlelflnOe to ocean 840-8208 ' •Pl• In 1.c plan1. 1 8drm $300/mo S..C6-3t92 l!J!I IC• drive thru, lelM and all lrH utlle avell 911 Walk 10 beact1 215 62nd 2 bd, 1 be, carpet, Drapes, from S&45, 2 Bdrm from lllll , ____ . ----- Coron.ado Island CUSl. bayCront lot. 85' boal 11'8 Fil UTI II n rHllurant •CUllP .. 539-6190 BEST Any,.. St. Drive by. Call tor bll ·ln1, 1465. 2272 1630. TownhOUM from Beau1trut Whaler Condo, 11&11 .. deck Plans avail. Now $370,000 w/trade. No In f-. no cioae coat. d o w n p m I I o r Appl. 2 bd, 2 be, den, Maple 831-2927 $695 t-poo41. tannta. on'i<unap1tl beech. 1 Br. generoue tenant lmPf'OYe- OllWIW lllE Btg Canyon Monaoe by $300K-l400K hOuH ftaatala dble gar. $875 mo/yrty. 2 bd. 1 bl, Coeta M.... waterfalle, ponda. Gu tor 2 Ba. fabulous view, menta, $650-<'000 1q. tt. owner G c view 3 car Rancho Mirage, Palm De-V 11 "'"'-.4 213-845-5'«>1 1475 540-3888 cooking & hMllng paid. special rates Book now Aleo omo,a. 2488 N9w-gat. 14 Aue VIiiar~. Open ter1, tndtan Wel:a ar111. I . ~ •-From San Dteoo Frwy Io r f •II & w Inter, port 81, c.M. S..C2-3490 Near new 4 bdrm, 4 balh, lake view. 3500 sq. Wknd• 1•5. 640_1538. Buyer mual hive ree-AobtFORRENT "'"' 2 Br 1112 Be. frplC. D/W, drive N0t1h on ewh 10 213-389-5578. ft. $440,000. Will trade for a local property. taura.nt e11per. & good fin. Fountain Valley 4 Bdrm, laa Cltatall -71 pvt patio. garage, no pe11 McFadden and west on Buey Npl Blvd, C.M · IOW FllllT llCllE llns Prime 2 Br, 2 Ba & 2 Br. 1 Ba. Duplex on x.lnt swimming beach good income. $725,000. 2Lhltlemtlfl••H 1tm1. 714848-304.c 1776.Fenc:edyard& Lux. OdMlii 61uRe condo, $54()/mo. 543-5478. 634 McFadden 10 SEAWINO vacatJon exchange 780-1164 aq f, llr cond, Lovely 6 Ar w/room for garage. l<lds & pet1 whitewater 11u, 2 Br 3 Ba, Hamlllon V t L L A G E Wotl(l·w•Or ~·{hing•• ...... 1.b1~ ottlce/retall. S..CS-9828 • 120'yacht.Cute3Br ...... ruaialaM welcome.883-1500 I 1500/mo Agt 2Br lBa on Back Bay (71 .. )893-5198 •t NOCOSl tromuu•m~mw"' CM/NB 17th & Newpor1. 135· slip M at aeel Aget'll no fee 492-8384 ' · ' -w"1• "' '•11 ~ •• 1 Olftpl••• "'~ 3300 f1 ..... w · U lalMa • · pool, $520 mo. 2455 Specious. quiet, 2 Br. 1 Be. •nlvrm•l•Oo 17u 1 "7~?098 ,....,..._ Ml • amp,. 673-7873 Ptaiaiala 2l07 lut. IMcla 2241 IH Jau Ca . 2l1I lrvlne Ave 646-8126 near beech S515/mo. lbe l&ftat ucape g~~~alr GOnd Owfl« Best view. tallest ocean front bldg trl-plex * .. , ,, ... 0.14-* , 2 Br 1 Be private yard 900-8656 INHINATIONM VACATION with S"""'iOUS 4 Br. 2 Ba. each level J l ,200,000. VIEWI VIEWI VIEWI 2 Br. yeerly, dectc, view, 2 8d dbl 5 blk belch Prelerred aree Kldalpeta with no common walla. •r,.v.rt ltacL 2769 U CHANCl ClUI ...-w/d, garage, partly tum. '· gar, · 5 rm pool hOme apple + 3 1 7 s510 • PO Bo• 7119 l••utrltl ~:·,,8~~,2.~~ ~v'!i~: 675-6829 No pet•. 1835. Allall Aug rormal dining 1475 ph 8~~-0~~;or II It . . 1~aYfront llPI. iUo "'•w1•0•t 11 ... II, C./\ 921#1 U~/\ leatah nu By Owner: 875-8637 OCEAN FRONT 17· 964•2283 539-6190 BEST Atty IM mo. yrty 873-11222 ett ---------1,....,;-.;;w.._ __ ....,.,_ BALBOA PENINSULA 2Br, 2Ba, trptc, Qround fir, 1916 Wallace II 103. 2 Br 2 5PM. 1200'.2500 aq. fi .(lli o#G) UYFIHT-llOI 7 BA 2 BA 9 Month L-S700mo.Avll15ept 1. No laata ha 2210 Ba TwnhM, no pet•. ,_1_B_r_V_er_sal __ lln_,-cou--rt-ya-r-d, l1atal1 te W•t lrvtne .,.._ From 3 bd, c;ustom home 18 ~ $950 MO: Mr M~onlld pet 714-898-9811 Flat 1316 2 Br bfown CtJ>1• $495/mo. 831-3671 guard, sec ayatem llaart zttt $504/mo. Tom l51-8928 old. Pier & Sllp for 50 1-714-851-1655/eve: 2 Br wlgar $535 crpll, appla •Ir• llrg rm 2 Br. on golf courae, new $835/mo. 493-8499 4 BEDROOM HOOSE 2.860 IQ tt. 3975 Birch, C.ltl •na --im boat, REDUCED FOR t-213-395-6825 rnc.d J.erd 838-4 !20 539-e190 BEST 1.. paint, etc. Only "475/mo, 2 Bed B N Partlally lvmllhed: Uvtng, Newport Beech 11330 . a67u3~C9K11 .SALE. Evea, Veryntc.,ctNn,2 bd,ger, 1-5P .2710Delaware Nopet1. 700-8862 pelar.oom14~·~,,:~hnth~ dlntng,recreetlonroom1, MIA zoning. Agent .11llOOG •II 211 .. •«< 5 It L t _ ;,111•' large kitchen. C.M 541-5032 2~.A~, • patio, laundry . ..,7 + Downtown HB cozy 2 Br at. ~·H w.. 2 Br w/gar, crpte, waler 648-2882 1300 , -------- B22 k A~~~'g Beaut. executive home3, dap. Avall Sept 10 thru unit w/crple thru-out lnc;;alQ; oc:e::n QieW paid. 838-4120 1-5PM. iiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiillll 850-17;1 r~'.k':n) ~Vll'~MLld3o250c~ ro er newly decorated . .c Br June 10.873-9018 OCMn brteee llld• 1435 2 bf 3 t:>a S 8 2176 "C .. Placenll• 1-480 ~lllli4iMN ··-·1 ...,... -· ..., ll1l,OOO Ba, poo4. very lrg yrd, nr ~ ll ) flS2 +fee 53M190 BEST ond FtplC ·2 ~. 2228 "C" Placenll1 S-470 ~ Beaut lrg 2-sty oondo. tt Ml or oommercial UMr, sc:hoola, ahopa. B•ycf•t au 1•• c 0 • .....,,. •499 6009 ' Bd 2 2400 S.F .. 2 llvtng rma, ground floor, Kira wide 4 Bdr 3 Ba. lowest priced ere e . By Owner. \Jnjified 2fir 26a oen HOME FOR RENT garage, .,.._,.. -3 rm, bath, carport. COUN U LI I pool, beaut. N.B. Bluff lo-door ptue 2 loldlng BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J~I Auy,,d,. Drov1· NS t>7S t>lt>l • ~!'~'. 5~?.°:~: 1t;t'~~ 1375,000. 642-41 le, N 1 g u e 1 s h 0 r e i Huntington BMch 3 & .c WntaJaitn IHI 1575/mo. 5.c0-3668. IN NEWPORT BEACH cation, nr all. 759-1842 dock1, ample on stree1 IT SPlllllEll "' 759--0884 Townhome, security 8drm.1776, Fenced ~ ~ 3 Br. 2 Bl. upper, near Slngle• 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart· ---------1 parking, u la. 1.50 a aq Beautlfully melntllned, 3 ILIFFS gated comm., ocean y111d1 & gar11gea. Kid• & 1315 hae r111e buttrue per-llChool•. ctoae to frwye, menta & Townhoulff. Bed Fellow• Inc. Llbefal fl. NNN. C .. 11 Slyvta, Bdrm. H. V Hiiia. Newly view. Club houM, poo4, pellwelcome.863--1500. lect alngle pad I/yd oar· $575/mo. + depoalt Some are a tegantty minded cllente, •II Peltcan Proptttlea Inc. landlceped with meny 3 Bdrm, alngle le11el. tennl1 & beectl prlv. no Agent, no fee. age 8" utua paid am IM 540-2245 furnished. From S680 screened. '25 each. 714/84H501 lm1><ovement1. Outstend· -========-$165,000. Danae Corp. pell. $1,000mo. Call Minim tlon 4 Br h 2 Ba 539-6190 BEST , On JamborM Rd at 972-2095 Ing 811279.000 2Br Condo nr S.C. Plaza 851-9135. 498-7«8 .._._en ,,....... • 1490/mo. 2 Br. w. Ba. cat San Joaquin Hiii• Ad. CdM· ah t>Mut 3 ... 2•L Plac:entl• St In Coat• 1 -¥"" CfPll ".,....gourmet -L.. port tower unit tndry rm ••• ltOO ' r · "'· ,. M-, Beclil lot lor rent l•~ICl I l iC ·~fS ~ ~7c)g! l~K or UM llU Gated/Comm .car Newly kllch 2 gar 1700 Aprtanta hral-cloH 10 ator•.' · -b• houM, frplc. $300/mo appro11 20 000' aJ1 ~ Aeattora, 876,6000 ~ ,;;0_ 55&°; ~eJ:. 3 br, 2 b• on one ol Lido'• turn. beach, tennl•, 539-6190 BEST fee lalMa lllA•• 2'M 527W. Wllaon ---.-co-N-DO~S~•---yrly. Sept. 15· 875-5015 part. 644-2Sa5 ' 77s..2580 11rgea1 1011. $5951<. Sell, uune. nr lciloolt, no Under S-400 all utff• pd TSl l1•t 142-llOI VIiia Balboa end Ver-Condo rm •v•ll for young-• $775 up. 2285 n lndu&- iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil i::miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim trade, IM/op1. 873-8315 pet1. 1 1500. 861-7712 charming Ill bungalow Winier Rental: 2 Br. aelllea, 831-5638 er prof peraon. loceted In 1 t 1 ff ....... 18101 ,.,...., __ 1• l"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim I •---L 'lit right nr OON11 fncd ..,. carport REFS Call 1-495/mo. 2 Br. 1 Ba. poo4, CM Full amenlllel. S280 dr • .. ~ .. :.:'.""•T H ';i'7'" I Fiii SIUOTlll PltL ..i I• !!J!r1 -• • 153M190 BEST Atty f_:.v 875-&435 wtcnde: week-laundry room, cloae to In C.M., lg, 2 Br 2 Ba, 2 mo. 845-7188 ~~2·2·~~ ng on I fi2Br•tr:h:'I~~~= Quiet locetlon 3 BR 2 Ba, UM llU • lllTll Vtty emalt 2 Br Beech days 525-7245 ..:'.°e 149.~·!BalylOStl. g~~~~: ~-~ avtl Fe, non-emllr. Furn mtlr t911tthml110,000 llreplace , AV ICCHI. JUST AEDUCED ... one of AVAILABLENOW... Shade, comp untum. No ...... ·----· -• Br.~ bl, kit pf1v. 1200 buu.nllnb M l 2b • .....-...l127,900 1148,000 financing by lhe loweat priced llomM ON THE GOLF COURSE ..-•. 7 bike to ocean. S586/ o 2 Br 2 Ba •nt Lovely 2Br 28• yrty, +'t\ u111. C.M. 54~77 2b. h•-=:1132,.,,,,, owner. on Udo. Own4lf WlfY •mt-Or tic view home Iv ~;.... ... 3•7..... PHluala 2107 m ' · · ..... · 114191/bch gar no peta ---------1 i sPIRITUAL ADVISOR; ""... ~ t 10 NII tl'll custom 3 am• : rn. ....,., " ,.. ....,.. enclad yard. car port, 775 8s0 170e tt/81) · Female mmta wanted to bepoo41 t35,950 R•1•tar ... I"'· ~ + f 1 11y lnci.plano&poo4table, OCEAN FRONT-VrtY3 Bt. lndryrm.ampetOk. mo -• m ... 2 ~ 2 8 1 1....,,.,.. Advlcelntove,marrlagel 38r&3palloel139.000 141-llH .....,room am room. 90to 120days«?S2600 lnlat Uff 2 Ba Opl11, gflf. no pell. 2195 Mapl9St. New evttY1hlng 1 Br. 2 &''{ndry.°HB. ::;, ~ bual-. ll75-2.C95• .CBr3t>ellomel148,900 ::::~tt,~11::'ao:. mo.720-17e2t1nyUme 2io5Bdrma.USO:S2000 S1200/mo 873-8&40 11lllmT 141-1111 block• off und. 1285/mo.841~3503 W.tir.... HM CONDOS 179,900& UP. $379,000. VIiia Balboe Condo, prof "-•· .... u24 u951 ; B 1~ Be 1-495/yrty 7eD-8852 i=.m. 10 thr hie on the AGJuin ;;;i; •"-mG loallMr 1"1. 2 llllU • -IULn decor, compl. fvm 2Br -" ..., mo. r. N9Wport Shor9e Duple 2 -..... •-&A-• w.. 2ba, lr/drllam rm. esan. 'R: f Br nu cpl POOi nr § c TownhOuM, ,_ carpet, 8 2 B .,.501 11• Blufl, C.M. No d419, no male. Balbofl Penlneula~ tlt-HlO EuhW• -·· ... 111-1100 Pool, 19•. beflut. VU' ocn, sor Pim ...00 551""3e' new drapH, laundry lyr A ~1&'.1e..c~· year-tut. 1250/mo. es 1-2578 Reward. 675-0428 OPEfHILL8 PM. R2Lol,only$142,500. bay, llghta . Lu ffy 5.ce-8791 ' room, et'ICIOMd garage. __ g_i. ______ Fem. to lhr 3 B< 2'A Ba, Agent cell &45-9161 I 1 5 O 0 I m o . 1923 Pomona UllE '111 2-aty Bal Panln. condo. •-•L--b'--..t 1.-•ST II MU 7141997-3000 HI 191 6 51·1177 lllWPllT Yll.Wl TSL Mgmt 842-1803 Hete 11 your oppty to ... vaulted oeotnga. frplc. fNld\ ADS ~ .... ... Ull FMEllllllE mlWRll dye. 7141771-0428 7 mtnutet from bch, 1Br, Bach. Apt. No. C.M. 1 BA, cure • completely r• gar 1290/mo Jim uunu 11'8 Fl.I UTI II YI Local bank hu foredc>Md HarbOf Ridge Forecloeure, ev/wlcnda. $530 mo • Jr 1Br 1480 1ba Avall now. $280/rno. lurbtahed 2Br, 1Be up-875-95111-ARE m£ No In 1 .... no c:Joee coet on 2 bellutllul condoe, ,_ CU9tom home. WI 1 Br n--mo Pool. jacuul, aand, 983-3000, 873·9392 stairs epf w/wood bum-Cape Cod renovated. t-3Br, 2112Ba and 1-.CBr. Reduced from ntd., ·.,..~~/age, llolleyb•H cn, tennl• tr1. Ing frplc & pvt ger. l.aguna ae.ch houM: PV1 h I 48 lh yar , no pe1a....,.,., mo. rec rm. S0<ry no pets. O..lreableEutelde2Br 1 CHOICE NB HGTS rm w/deck, bat1t l ·en1 CI ~ orebmoo: ng I r· • 84: 2112Ba. The unite &re 3 St,800,000 to Ut111 tnctd. 642-2097 Call 557-0075 ba, ger. dedt. Avall 8/31. •REA. 628 t~lne L~ $350. lmrned 497~391 a : o e '1 r on · "g years n-. spacious and 1795,000. 673-3051. $550/mo 642 9837 '"' • • -640-15311 fully appointed w /mod-Winier Rental 2 Br, E11ecut111• view home lniat 44 · -1750 mo. No peta. Agt. Non amoklng tem. rmmte. 142-Hll C • I •-lO"'"' ern teeturea Creative llWPtll•TI l\Jrnlllltd, wean., dryer ecroea from Tur11erocil, 631-5155 3Br 2ba, Balboa llland Orta& t -r w. llnllllClng avall. Submit all Secluded ruellc 4 Bdr 1800/mo. 873-3039 tennla & poo4, 3 Br 2112 ...... Sal ,je~1l1 Eutltda 1 Br Apt In --------Quiet. nNt. Avlll lmmed l•--------111•• •EU otters. Agent 842~823 houae w/M911f111• QUMt Ba. I 1800/mo. Av all Vitia 21k. 2Ba. 2 Cit get-4-pleK w/g11tage. no P411• 5frc:':i• be:; G•~11 t :'1 1j 1252/mo. 72<Hi848 Of -------- 2 bd ...__ 1 ml 10 ....... unit. Bell tocattont Juel a.u. UaJani&W 5ept. 3. 752~ ege. 1950 mo. Agt. S400/mo 548-1865 •• 2 2357 675-4133 Found Aug l3. Men·• com·,.,;:;,°iy llf'lnts cou"°;~: MLUU Miii llated et $240,000. RM Gatral Ull F~ L .... 2200 eq. tt. 3 Br 631-7800 V• Stinton E.utllde 1 Br small but .,.. -Rmmt• ent 2br 2b• condo, '::nc:'.._, :;~7 •:.1111: pooll, 24 hr security. Owner 2 br, l'h be, poo4. Aodgerl, ~1·1286 3 Ba condO t pie lcr t: lea L m l cczy w/wood ceillnge & SPECTACULAR ocean NB M/F 30 S350 "' Many eJ1trll 1289,000 beaut. tge yard. Slepa to Big Canyon. To18JIY r• patquet. i)0:,1, ·1~nnt~: ~U Ca .., cabinet•. 1-405, 851-9523 view, 2 Br, 1'14 ba, lu11ury utll ' Chrl• ;i,..c,.f/l39+ ~ FOUND Cochttel vtc of Fee. Open Sun 12 -4. 6 market. ldeel for eldel'ly modeled home. Ablolut• Turtteroclc Vista. PON cor;. Furn. 2 bf Mobl' Ea1tlld• 2 Br. 1 Ba. In penthOUM Condo at VIII• (213)863-9712 Pacific vi-Of CdM. Maritime, CdM By couple Low uaumable ly beautllulll Four IN opl 833-2227 Home. Sept 5 . Nov 21 4.ple11:, lrg private patio. Balboa. Min 8 mo IN, Wiii 840·1410 owner . R Foeter loan 1 135,000. 642-8609 apac:loua bdrm•. form.. · 1·2 peraona. no amk" or i:r•ge. no pall conelde r lie, o pt Rmmte to thr 3 br, 2 be --------- 71._975-0060, 760-1733 Daaa PtUI' t I Ou dining, huge llvlng and Poulble option to buy 2 Br pate. seoo1mo &40-4999 50/mo 75,.9194 I 1200/mo. 548-3239 apt, ocean view, blk lrom Pou_~ Doge . OldetPbll k/lan -lemlly rmt. $4000/mo 2 Ba ~t•I lacvzzl poo4 "" bMch, N.8. 1250 mo + m .. e. or~ acen-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 2 8( B ••NIT llMI yrfy Call ror lnOfe a.tall•. daluH xtrN seoo + ,.. ........ ..... 2Hi USTlllE 1•11. Att. e. S..CS-2137 ~1.~ /7V2~~ I 0 r I.. c M JUST LISTED!'• 8~~~j''Y f-"'~ 1:g· YAUITTIWllll w .. 1ct1tt home: Lovely 2 539~190 BEST ~™ fO BEACH-Yrty .,...,.. "" I tng '.,....tr 21 11 llaa.. I bdrm + den win~ yard, $650/mo. 2 8t 1~ Ba Roommate to ah< 38' hM, Gorgeoua 38A 3b• In kllcllerl. aundry rm, on1 ,. t, -t bar, ~c 112001mo Prime tocatlon. Univ Pt<. 1.2.3 8drm11p11. Wiii TwnhM, yard/balcony, Balboa, W/D, gar. Avail FOUND 19male blk LAB quaint Old C~• del & rear yard. 1129,000. 4 8edroom1, lrptc, patio, yrty 1mmac.~dec2Br,2 unf\im.Nopel1.873·0&40 smpetok,carport,lndry Sep11275mo.S..at911 8·14 nr H B pier. Mar Some ocean view. Term1. 40..-1107 ger. FrMI\, IOvety and WATERFRONT HOMES Ba. $950. 875-5393 2 & 3 Br lum yrfy & wlnt9f rm, all bit-Ina. A. E. Balboa Blvd, ,_980-__ 1e_9_2 ____ _ Onty 2 yrs new Walk 'h l..t. INtl 1 apacloUI. On C!41t.-de-Mc. 631-1400 Woodbridge Condo: 2Br r9f'ltlll from S800 Blk to 2538 Sant• ~na Ave. wa·n look f« youll Foond: Golden R9tra!Yer. block to be8Cf1 Minimum MOVE IN TODAY A._ T I f II h 2ba. dbl Oflf no peta ~ bHch. prkng 1p1ce. TSL MGMT &42-t803 H~•l•/Unlimlttd f'e, t7tflllrvtne 842-91117 down paym•nt 20%. 3 bdnn houM, nice home sume 11'/. let TD. Tenna. -;:;,: ~ •r; ir 2 ~ $825. Dave, att. Spm. 875-1642 Agt. E&alelde 0up1e11. 2 story. 3 Ett11blletled 12 >""· Found· Orey and white 1395,000 I• land. For "for 111 time buyer•. St75,000,prlctdtoMll. lrpt , p11t' eundeck 551-0875 *2Brocn1ront,$600mo. Br 2 Ba. enclad y.,d. Spado~single,oM fl11nOC 832~134 lttnalekltten,vlc.'l'IHton detllll• end appt to -i'l.~ eomptetely r• Ila """"" Lt•. 1700 & two btdroom apts. contact: mi69et d, n•w :rt•" IU-H10 1950/yrly. La1au IW1 Hsi 3Br seoo winl41f rental• Avall 9-1-83. /mo. lulal• Wu ... Bil & Bear, C.M. 875-4799 ~AU Ill-MM ... .600. ag1 S4 1& 1 Br condo oh the bayfronl HOME FOR RENT 850-24931" _840 __ -099 __ 1_____ Ma1Ur• fem. m p:;t Found: greylwhl/bm amall 3 bf 2 ba t11)1c Need• IOUI YllW1U se95tmo yrfy. Laguna Hiiia 3-4 Bdrm 3BR 2BA vtty nice. Bloctt E/lide duple-. 2 Br, 1 Ba, ~ 8 .. ___ M ahaggy dog, ~d OAmll& PIWllllll TLC. 11o9.soo 'or t>Mt Br1ght 2Br, 2B• corner unit 2 ~::;11 wtg11-oe 1)75. F'enC.cs yardal' from ocean, winter rental git, ~· w/d hkup. f/'i ~~. ~0·~. ;/&.;· & Sliter. HB a.4&.2820 --------• oner. (213)530-5159 on top llOof. Lu11ury am-•-----a·........__ gwegee. Kida& pet• 1750 mo. 875-3604 pref. 95/mo. 050-20 7 1 .. " ltr F~N'L_~"s-:.:..._1>411~1 -•••1 •rm B d I b menttles own.. anxloul -.,....,. ~.883-1500 .c ,.,_ 2 .. -nr beflctl, •viii •••---a·-_,, .,., ...... ·-----• .CBr, t\I', 11• ei re la BYCO . S..CS.226l • _ _._._ a..-. t9e ""' .,... _. .,., _.,. le t -1• 200blk . .CO'lot,3b<+Clan, cul-d•aecbyC.ntrllPtl, -....,,_ ... no • Sept151hNJune16.calt $4a5 t lk. 1 e. Apt.l.Miili.W .. lltlllllllW .. iil "'"""'""•--..,.....---... ..,•,1...:84:....:6-8...:::.:..7.::..5_1 ____ _ 3be.yard,compl.refurt> S137.900 ueumebl•PORULAA P LAN tv .,._.IULn Lataul'9allftS2 850--0303 1585-$595 2 81, 2 Ba fURNISHEOor NrAMCfi&Xa.,,,.,A.8 .. Found: Mlle Blk at-c> $575,000. 217 Jasmine 191,000 hl et 12%% CONDO PllP 11AU11911T 2=!rm f t: condO on Llk• ,_ dtlluKe, 3 Br Townhouae. Frplc, lky-UNFURNISHED. agl. gar lor 1tor1ge. dog type. 6 mo. BIG Owner/agl 673-5551 fixed OWnel' Mg...4()25 Newpor1 Cr•I, 381 +den, l 14/tlM na ...-oOut... Comm. Pool. w/g11, Feoae Wit• Alllll llghll. PlllO, Ill bullt-1n1. All UTILITIE.S $06/ITIO. (2 t3)493-1855 DOG, lrlendly. Bil Penn, lnia 1 owner wlll help finance or W/o and ~ lndudtd Sept to June From 1900. 388 Avocedo P'•IO, HEALTH Off•--lutal1 a 1.a 36th st. 875-0048 C:..ta .... 1124 I wHI exchange down In SO C.rtU .. J Jbr Ul2 1725 ,,.2 ';"700• 'V 632-8000 TSL Mg ml 842-9412 " mr -,. .... ...,. ...... .....,.__ ...... -..-.1 or Orange County. ... -v CLUBS. T£NNIS. ii17w .. 1CJ1H N 8 275 10 FOUND man'• w111e1, CHARMING 28r, 1Ba houae, Co111 Me••, 183,()00 Term• 548.-6880 MTIAIE 2BR , 1'1o8A , trg lot. $95,000 SM at 243 E. 22nd. C M Own/agt 7 14-9 79--8330 UST41M 11111WI W•l 12'-LIU N LUll/"11111 ~ 3 bdrm, highly up- graded town, dbte g•. pvt petlo comm epa and pool C1nly S t25,000 Ownr/brkr Biii Duggin• 833-29001759~121 &stlfde 3 Br 2 Ba. poo4. 1140,000 Devin Reel Ee- llte, 642~ lllnlll PIU 1185,000, Call Ag1 A11 3 Br 2 Ba I. trple, SO. of Newly decorated ~ OCEANFRONT Nell 2 SWIMMING. plus 3800 aq. tt. 2 . .c35 1q. tt. IOd5..,. ~1 C1172 d .Craig O.vti ..... R-751-1473 PCH, nr P•~. Avlll now. arM 3 Br avail now. BR. 1875 winter Gwage much mort' Sorry, Sultabte lor mtdlcel or .._.. l l050/mo, e7s-2b00 S900. es1..a'555 · · No pela. e1~7eee ~...,,B.AU ""-ts. Models dan1a1. A,_,t. 541-5032 -Foun--d:_M_Goldel ___ n-.. -... -. -M Sharp 2 8drm 1112 Bath. Seavt-. low dwn. trg lot, ---------,~----.-=----~ =--.,-.,..--,....-~-=---~u "" .. ~ ·-·· .,.. aarttt tonee lhru-out. g re a I fl n. n c Ing. lrvlne Ten hm, 5 Br, 3 Ba. ii i Vi~ IH7 Preatlglou• bachelor' arutmiT• open dally 9 10 6 . 250 aq "· Suite. 1200/mo. Choe; Lab, F b* & bm Covered patio. Atklng $379,000. Darrell Pun d • n ' d In Ing rm IS ea -' water lront, private a .. ullfully l1ndaoaped 779 "L" W. 19th. St. mt11ed Sh419 pu1>9Y, F blk 1101,900 Prop. 851-3787 11300/mo. mo/mo or IS HOMES RRENT buch. pool, full y Oakwood Cott• Mau. 85l-8928. Lab ml" puppy,~ ml11ed '"-" .,.,.11,.1 mo only. 851-eee5 MIM6on Viejo 3 8drm. 3 equipped kitchen, aecur-garden apt, poo4 & IP9-Chihuahua -o.atillhund • .....,,,._.. " lleMlt l .. n ' tlii Styflah 3 Br 2~ Ba ClplX Ba, 1760/mo. Fen09d lty, private parking. ,Pi:~· deck•. No pe~:05 <i•fden A~rttHnts 500 sq tt upatalrl ofc brown & bled!. NuMer- BXck 8XY 18r, 115.806 akytlt•. ape tub, trpl I~ yard, klda/pela welcome. $1100/mo. 842-1802 2250 vanguardWay w /bath & 1howar. oua e.ta l lclt1en1 IVllll. • HERITAGE REALTORS comm pool, IJI•. bell, Meir aulte, many other Agent, no .... 883-1600 Wlnttt, 3 Br, llltw & Cl«:k 540-9626 Newport St.ch So. ::~goo S.COO mo. ror adoplton. N.B. Anlmel boet11tppoaatble.Own4tf 1men1ti...21001q,11.111 l~rt llltla ftit Watt Nwpt. '825. 1700 l6t1'1 Streel Shelter, l2'5 Meaa Dr .. wtll oonlleler IM option. time_ to leue. at.COO/mo. * TcurtTE * JBR IS73--0241 or es 1-4582. Large 1 I 2 Br. ceillng fen, (al Oovtr) BALBOA PENINSULA C.M. 644-3858 875-4010 Bkr, 557 5476 "BLUFFs CONDO"~ ::::· e:.:r·b:·· ~: 642-5'.ll 4'00 IQ ,,, ~ bath. Re-Found: Photo album. RARE UllU •W telta .... Ul4 Gr.enbelt. 11350 Mo lJ!!laftb, UaJ. bllllarel room Cell Bay dona. '300 mo. e..c2~823 Balboa '"-11n. lnlllele KB. Plan 0 In, Pane Cf•I. 4 Bellutlful 241180 2Br. 2Ba ICE 16 .. _ 111 lut Sec AvaN/Sept ~ I -... M •• Cl 0 w. A p I.. Newport Buell No. Beyfront Otrtcee. pettoa, ,_8_73_-_934_9 ____ _ 8drm. 2~ ba. Marble home.Comertot.lll•nd "''" .... -.frplc,DW,,,..1st.'751-T82&:1110-8738 _.era •• • S..Ce--0073. 387 Bay St. 8801rvintAvenue parking, J•nltorlal. Found raOIO. Newport flreplace micro wav• drpt, ganige. MW no wax 12506 mo. FabJoua 25. btwn H•• ...... & ......_.. ( 16... 873-1003 ,.____.,, ~ .. 970. ""70 • -kitchen. Fam rm, tight In-~. $585. 846-8066 ev 2~, 2&. 2B•. 1~ bit!• 10 2,....... P-i"'-·• '"'"" .. """ ,....,._,..... • at m) _., -~ oven 2-<1tory lovlng It 11• tertor enciOMd p<>feh ,.._ .... ,.,,.. oJV'IV Blvd 645 1104 beat. Priced for quick air oOnd. Young edull~ 2 Br, 1 Ba, ow. bllln renge . S725 mo. 914-8549 IQ tt. MW cpla. utll1 pd, -------..,,---.,..--mOmYI llfTll Nie. 1205,000. welcome. 134,500. Agt. & oven, ,.._., bMIYl Olill, 4 br 2112 Ba, Blutta, c10M Valet patlllng, 24 hr .... Lrg 2 Br 1 Ba 4 PleK. Ldry. ftWPtlf .... .....,... . .., I W I d Rm, Nu Carpet. Rent· 640-5937. trig, gard. Cat OK . ..,25 to aohool, park a poo4, cur ty. ee woo 1525,W,llda&-45-6826 •·a Cl .. ntt l7?I Lu11Mow f\.llleervlo9offtoeia Found red mixed R•- trelver, 1'~ Yf Clld ltmale. Vic. H.,bor 81vd, Sen Diego Frwy 97o.338&. + S500 dap, Avllt Sept 1. patio dbl gar 11100. Tow.a. 10717 WINahlre -130·29hq rt. Some2 WTllll otnlll sor Skytlne 12 x 55, U~ue 1982 A Meyer, 549-348-4. 494-1429 -· Blvd., (213) 474-3675 2Br, 2Ba. lrplc, end gar. 2 8( UH. POOi. yMr off~tult•. . Found: Set of keyw on"~· Charrnklg & ~ I 14Jr-ffy ~ n~~~1U~~ 2Br, 18a. lllnole garage, 5 Br. 3 Ba. 2 trJ)lc'e, view, L1'N 1111.. ftii ;:t ~~ 'm~3 111• round. nr bw::tl, bu.... ::! ~IG.,':1~ ;=~:C:.·~0 i!!:!,: rounded by towering 543-&837 no pet1. S370 mo. gardentt. s tlSOO/mo Art iUO y;t;: CUte 2 6( hOUM ---------No pel•. 49M2n. wfr c.117, .f.40, _ .... , lhtde t,..... Comptet .. y 651·1177 ~ I I 54M530 ep~ 5611-9539 oaraoei>nio. 876-30e3of Lge 2 br, 2 b1 lulcury apt. Lita Aaa flli ndowa. ' 52 "· Found: Smt tan F-em. Ooo pflllate fl'ont & rtar )'8rd1 _ ... re I 2 Br enclld "'artlge, quiet •••-_.. 876--4000 l(RMionil 2448 Elden Av. MJ'5/mo. 1 .... _____ .. _ ..... ., N9WPQrt 8Mch LI® Can-(Gllvlt), &42~ 111, OetacMd gar909. Pt9nty Prerr!y J 250 ott atretrt P,1v1l1 y11d ---151-tm 2 Br 1 811 near McFadden nerytt ,~,~~~a12~~ FOUlld: St, e.mard "*-in ~n~Ti"ie'.:xi ~~1 dr .. 1 comm1rct1l lo-no pell. Ha5. 548-8251° w::.,.,,~im~:=• MESA PINES 2'50 Hula t~~:~ Joyce Wlttal ~r~nd ;•-.ctr, ';i;; I h 1 v I c I n 11 y o I or 152-7373 -WCMll ltOlt _,,. ~ cation, Balbofl ~at the 3 Br, 2 Be. MonteoellO home lrg 2 Br aee Pftluala 2717 BEAUTIFUL t 8t 1525/up 1--------d oor plul ·2 toadlng Etdan/Sente INbel, CM ...,.. fun ion. (207 Palm). T l\M 2 pool lacuui.'Wott '*:many 2 I • G&m ;;;.., ™· PAV patio, pool, IPI ..... 2111 doc:ka, ample off elrMi 142..eoel IH.& I 1rnD • I ~ Good ~ lc9 ,.. #fl ' :'el.,'si.tr ' arnenttlta. L.ooldng tor Could be !\Kn $eOO I TOP lfM. qui.., no pets parking I S 50 1-F---Y--M-e-.--~ ~ Untv. Pk Terrac. 3 Br duceel to I.COOK . ~g:-U1.•..;1.132.c'. • maturelprofeltlonal 1900 Jdntlor:..146-3434 549-2447 ~ bite from bt1ch. h. NNNuc!1, s.!.:i. c~: n ':', · H • 1: n-t .,_ I 873 2943 '" · 127!1/mo + utll, evllt ., • ..-a mi. I Dover modal, 2 Be, lllnt -t9Mll11. Cell &42-5767. 3 Br 2 Bl. ~ up Meta Verde 2 br, 1 ba, lmmed. Sue aft a:30 Pe41can Proc>artltl lllC. u r Cl I B rook h u r 11, AW---locallon. wallltng di .. c.......... Im a 1111& .. __ .. , ex-.. ~ ......... tt...... unit"' bile from crpl, d,..,.., flnCI. Oii'· 850-6...... 714/MM501 Hl-2Mt lance to oomm. pool. F• Yard, lrple, w..,_ldryer .._ ' -,..,.,_, ·~·, ... ' 11125 mo + d4l9 Waler nv. --------~ •Ind 1139,600. JHn ..UYllWIU hook-up. NoPMt. cteoor•ted 4 lk 3 be, bMctl. AQt 875-4912 pd No~ .. 2.ci-oeoe -Fu_rn_rm-~--.,-,-lndy--olt-g Fumlthtd otflca, Bank of I.Ml 813: M wNt9/~ Llttn752-1414 Br1gt1t2•,n.comeruntt 723CenMir8t, poo4, verytro y11tel, nr Nloalbdnn,ger.nrOOMn · -n1neeternpln-1mkm. Coit• M•u Plue. GermenSNCl.inhc. 11t1 ------...,...-!,=:=;::=;;:;:====--°"' 1~ !toot' LulCUf'( am-$176/mo. 111 +MO. D1rys acho04e, lt'°9I ~ end bay No pett. POOL, frplc, ~ ptllo, 12251d419 NB~ S 175/mo, no lee I. Tultln, C.M. &464021S. C.~~ "'"' f) C be:. -rMnltl-. owi-ltudoul. 497~87. ., ... By Owner. tee. l!!OO/mo. 873--7638 dthWlhr. EMttlde, •lg 2 . 5116-3900 540-7&M ~~~· v\!,p P."U l."4~ -<la IJ((" ~:t .... BYCO 846-2251 u 100. 84 2 -4 1 "'' B< gerden apl. 1595/mo. Npl 8Ch room to ,.., NMd ll'f\4lfl office Of llhot> L-oat-8-,-.-... -... --~--------_..,CIA•, •011A11-----t • .-----...-----r.~ '895tmo. neer n.w 2 769.0814 Nlc9 1 Br, part. turn, frple, 651-2841 nHt non-emln M/F. = 10010 200 IQ n In cet &Jthts..nor.. w .•-·-;.,..,, ., .... =--:= (J~ atory, 2 Br. 2'4 a., gar. BIO C'"NYON 1580, 1.i " 1100 dep. 1350/mo, l(tt. prlvll90et 1.. ::-u .. 12 .. 1 N · ..... -..... · ._ -_..i,.,. !,!!! e09,fncdy11rel,b.ioonlel, " l&0-82&4 Avall.9/1. *11r . ...a.W.!lfl MM93011ft8PM tecnltM,,._-'" NPI ....... ..,.,,,.....,. Of '-"' ..,,., '-........, _,.. ~ OCHn froni crpta. C111>1 bll-lnl OW-FOR l.EASE patio gtircMn lrt~ NEWPORT BEACH omoa 83 I• t 53S duplex & trtolex. St*>-Clener, chttdlp•t' ok. Prof. Cltcoreted home Seourtty Cof\del. SIR 28A Cf'pl,dr.pee,1316/mo,' OoMnfronl N. Laouna. 1,000 1q. ft. Attrect!Ye, L-0-S-T-~--=--wtltte--fa9r-. R 0 [ Q I " tacuelf. en-tm. 842-7381 w/meonlflcent QOlfOOur9e OOMl\/bey vlft IMO mo 731-M2t. &42-7812. Shere 2 Of SBA 28A. M Ot Wal .. _,.;..._ .... ~ ·~ _......._ ,,_. w:'~:= 11 I I J' I ' view. C a ti Lind• yr1y.53e-2990 ' FprOf.Avall 9-1.MOOmo _n_._,__...., _.._ _ - . . _ IWIO mll Attordebta i300·, rent• Ma.oe32, 478-1234 . StunnlnO tttge 1 8'. ger. 1nc1 uttt 414-7t4e Bulldlng on~ 81,..... .,.._ AEWAfm 1 1 •••1 lhla owuel NI poollide Smell unfllr IPI on den apl poo4 l rte.,.., . Alllgned Plftltng. Gar· Loll· Ml/'#M Ooo. "*'1 H 1 G y L I •' _. bungetow newer too Eu1b4uff 38r, 2 lrl)lee, '"" 25,h. 8 ulll1 pd, 14251m0. 710 w. !Ith. '*'t pr~. room a bath. •a. e • .. Av a II ab I•. ~ lonQ Mir. t'.-l&-a I Ii I r Wllltelletowdown 4-1*• epplll00639 .. 1908!8T rm, lor m•I dining. U25/mo. round. prtv antr. Miit UllO mo l'MI00/845-332' ,,, de~ '"-d '* I c.M. "Otft'l4a'.-9 tet • Atty,.. 11200,'mo. 72CM>739 l40-2038 2 lk. 1~ Ba. w/~QtPt~ +S26 cleaning s•6-e908 bfi1et apac»IOt teue: 747 .,....111c Md·....,...-..: ... _Y,.....O_G ...... A_N..--41.--·' My •1•1 .. lnlaw II -"" Lett....... 1411 c .. n home primo a"" EA8TBL.UFF8 ... 8r, 2"7 :,:::;,:.o::pd. Y• Am wllcltoheMtl•, beth, ft,S8t9/moutttepd.A/0, "M ".17MUO Ii I I" I · _ "'"uci .i111 "Oft• 1,,.1 r-l CfPll fr$ bft1nt QI!' not Arbutu1. A'Vllll (et1y a.pt, 83M 120 1·6PM ~Wltt•noe. utlt pd. ground llr. TOH &I Lot1 beOnd "*'•Lab lftbl . . . . H-Ct»\.o .,....,, s,.. 15 unit conoo P'Oteol far to oc .. n UOO'• Cont~ OWMt bef"'• ft$ I SHO/ • 881"L"Vlc1orle 15215 le '*"°"· no pela. CllmlnCI Dr,~ MeM. ..,,-. CllhchcNan\,IW- -------. H•t1Nl ~••thOIM11t1,.. ~ Mela. ~ ~190 8!8T IM 1-19 or aft 8·22. • J>001.,. ·,..2.,. mo, 2t1t"0 "8ant•AM W mo. 831·926t 3 111(11 -41. Of FelMew I ._,..,.• ~IA.AA.....alllt I"-•"41 '"" '""'' -. plane & mtte1. t2llO.OOO 9:)3-47t& Cl)1. 844-2224 7 1 4 1 v ~ • •"' ~ o' l640 n~ c......, .,,,... Ad.,,._ -· -· ,_,..,.._....,_ ._-p-c ... 1 G-?TI\-~ ... , •~,~-0 ('-...... , ...... _ net. AQ1 t11_.HO DRAMATIC 3br tt12be. ...,... 21anto-"21 """"'"~ ";i A~ 1&i.;· 7M-1040, Mr Ttecy lrt~Milft·:i. 60058ii::.1!,.;8La;"';;1o;;ea;;;;r . ._._-.._.. _ __. _ __._ ............ ~:=t.:.::;~:'"I;:! Foroi-tfledAd ~6~~35~ ~:c,2: :-~ 2~~v9.~ :! ~·,~~~Pool. =112 , 781-9131 , o:~:}>W~~ ~:..:.~IA:•~•~ tH~B~ i •t1Nl tjl,jlo4l"O r r r ,. r r I' r I ACTION lalltlde28',1 ... 9n0ild thrllout bftc*llpelnlfv.. peta.tea0.UWN3 IP'oenio-well,launOry 01111IH•d Adi •r• t"• lq" ev911~ 11.25 ••••. l tOO .... .,Cl. tlllll~ I!• IQ\/~'11 Oii • Gfl'llOt,patlo,~vwd.no '"'""' rnetr eutt•. 11111( 2 qulM, ""·-~·~L 1111..., to a auooeaafl.ll BAllMINT lt.00 aq" ...... HM. .... 1 ... e @C:;::;uhml I I I I I I J J ~ ~ tmrmo. + 1 mo to tlCll\ 11271/mo. yny mion. poo1 a. OO'llr9d 21f. '~~ ~ot oer..-orywd....,11'•• 11500 aq n Cell: Mon-l'rl loat Doo: ii. IWftird Jl -· · -· · · · · -Ml:NI! llO. depoelt. ...... .!'or No dOgtl. ao8 ..... Aw. pltklnO. 17M441 °' 18'. 1 -betW wy to ttfl INlf'fl 9-8. lrllfl W.. "lrw.ty'' IO •''t.m ...... ••11'1111111111 -f70.M2t WflfM9'M818. 175-2~.STOQlmo.. TIL..., 114-1111 peop.! ... 2 ..... 4 lbe84W1ts Orange Coe•t DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 Cl $ . 11y ler l•e llre•l•r Th!.~·~~ r!' ~ya! • A•ttattf n Cutntrz IC•atractera, XOfo bftXILINd· c;;;, m.'9'Mllr. Onkiue I leaeral Gara•~ ladl!ia •111 Cl!ulat sng .. Ai~ l-l-IP-AJl--1-*-,-.. -m-.. -JOAN'S CLEANING PaJatJ.1 Pl11111/a.~h ''" hmce f2 vM EXP· Nwpterea Eb's Ptl tEMJG 1 Low RATES 1 30 d•y •d In the truck• & comm'I Yelllclft. Unul\llll WOf'tl • epeclalty. l:~~~~ .. 1"'1'111!/~~~Jrs~. ~c~o~m~m~. Wat/1, wax, Int. 241-075t 20 yra lie , bonded. & rMld. Llc'd, bonded, ll~llti• Palombo Con1t 982-831.C Ina. For etl, 552.e t.c2. alrl. LOWMI rat•I Etc Gary 545-5277 PTL Cooking -Errand• -& All Llc'd. Tom 1557-'4'460 . Hllhld Dut .. 1. 5'40-t287 ..--.,..--.-~~~~-Ba1Jta1 I'm ama.11, my pt~ are lnl/ext Patclllng/1e1nures Tree trim and removttl, 1m1111 050·&471 Ron A .. tucc:o1 8'415-32156 gen'I cte1nup1 554-70 11 DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY _I Repalr·AlterlllO<ll O CRETE ABY§iTTING Doofl·Wlndow..cablnata FRAMING • C N &ar•11ta11 DUMP JOBS l Pacific Coul Cleaning -"WE DO IT RIGHTI" T EEi SMALL MOVING JOBS e..1. Brochure 768-769 .. Piii PAllTlll Plaula1 Tnl•1 S.rYtot oy Richard Sinor. Lio. J4 •r Hf l4t-ll21 ryplngMord Prooeu l"g In my home near Vlctorta, Panal-Patlol·F«lCel 35 SPA INSTALLATION Colla MM&. 842-8482 yra exp. Jetry 54e,..U 13 MASONRY 675-6690 Topped/ramowd. Clean up, new lawn1. 751-3476 MIKE 845-1391 ~· .. ~~·.of happy WATER HEATER Special Quick, H •Y r•vlllOOS Thank you, 983..C l l,. POO! ~ten•Furnaoea RelUorlable 851-104 t •Faueete•Dlapoeall* Wi .. n CJtaai•l--IUl P1J!11 hmct Repelr/amallJob•. Fenc:ee, Crt41lt Ctaa1tli•1 PERsorftl & BOsiNESS thelvee, p1nltlon1. Low BAD vMC.UI I , . Clear up CLEAN-UP MASTERS GEORGE'S CLEAN UPS hffe41Me/T•trt11• & HAULING. No Job too Refs.-Becky 8'41 ·2261 •mau. 895-6008 Bta1t••I• S.mc11 p r !~'!:" ~~~~~ 0 • l1tt1~f111 PleaM11 wAlfE WIZXR6 Biii paying. Nora Hlggln1. retea. Steve 731-3311 neg. TRW profile. Money eee-7t 15 499-1601 Cu 1 hmct b11ek guar. 845-58.CO All Sil••-Prof .. reaa. Alk about our 25.000 lawn 1peclal. Call any11me. 846-e684 (Mlchull HAULING: SMALL JOBS stRVlcE§ dNCIUlf Eb leallonei1, 835-7149 BIG OR SMALL. . WINDOW w ASHING OOITNOWll &llFllUIHA Your Dally Piiot Service Directory Repreaentallve l•liH11 S.mct ttlf iNsfXCL cXRPET !ti Grttala1 For Sl.75 aq yd. Call a=.Y dogal Grooming Clean--1Jp1, lhr'ub & tree trim, mo melnt. Prompt & raaa. Chuck 842-2873 Tr11h & Furniture Merkellng, •rr•nda, Or'1 MATT 645-5089 appt1, church. etc R• LT HAULING . MOVING liable drl,,er, active, at· WE DO IT ALLI 549-9770 "The only magic I• CUSTOM EXTERIORS QUALITY" 631-2028 & INTER. R .... ratea. Free Drain• cleared from 15 & eat Steve 547-'4281 $25 any11me. Repalfl "Let the Sunshine In · End p18erwork night· Met or Pete, 772-1722 echl. 110 any 12. TNCher ~=.a ~:~~~ r:;,~: C••••t Ctacrete 2 t vr-• exp. 54e-2M8 R41nl•I Cleanupe & win-tractive older woman. dO'#a. Jon 845-8192 own car e.ce-9734 851·960.CM&M-432-0500 SUNSHINE WINDOW 111 l :I.tr Pallff•~ Full Service. All Work CLEANING ~2-1 549 & bullneaa. 760-1988 c;m;;;t-Maaon•ry-Biock Drywall 1.u.... Wall1-Cu11. work. Llc. ,,MWJMl!ft"'X"'L""D•xP"lclP!olP!10l'l!§llfllj'!llc"!'X.,.t 142-Hll td. IJJ Lie #4259 4 9&4-2 17 Guarantee. 13 Yrs Exper. State L1w Interior • Exterior •95·6114 S1ate law requires that all #381057 Rob 673-8094 Smalt tobe & Aepalra _ _ Remodel• or any Invest· BUD 552-9582 Courtesty a1tlmat111 Smith & Son Plumbing contractors who perform Don 644-'4798 Plumbing repairs & drain• work over $200 '"cludlnQ Al~ menl, qlty Improvements. Concrete, muonry, net-•=--------, .. I I E "-..,. "-work, foundation•. BlocJc. ll"lrlCll ay-Park•~ Lot • • • • -••• -· brick Llc'd 536-5013 ,.,,....,f9'1.,,~~-t~~ Aepal,..Sea~lng (It's Not Just •Name) · · 'HECTRICJAN: Priced INT/EXT CALL JIM cleared. Lie. 6'45-3-426 labor and matellal1 mu11 •II 1110 ... li•I be llcensed Unlloensed • contractors ehould so S&S Aaphll e3 1-'4199Llc 645-3305 Lie #320735 C~il· Cart right, free e1tlmate on Lawn/garden malnl. reald, CalllHI •1kia1 UcenMd Dey care by large or email lobe. Lie. com1T1I, lndue. Vd ctn up. *PAINTING• HuberRoollng-all type• state In theor advertising EJtterlor ·Interior N-·Recover-Decke Contractors and con· Alttra171 Christian mother, any 3981121 . 673-0359 Low rates. 8-411-4947 eva ••Yi11 ___ ._.._ .... ___ ,._._-•N-ca1:>1nat1, cat:>lnet II ...... c•82 1----------- Reeldenl • Commerlcal Lie 11,.11802 5,.8-973 4 1umers, contact Mary Free ell. 535-9801 •·· I·' Grondle a1 558-,.088 with ..,.retar ai any questlon1. Contrec-1r8M lrhfll hftf fKJng, bar9 & lormlca age Mar yn .,....,..,.. LIC'O ELECTRICIAN •A· 1 llYlll* Don't Pteal Free analysis countenops. 842-0881 My home, lull or PIT, Top quality. reaa. rates I•••~•• House, carpel, window Best quality 25 yr exp P 1rd11 S.mc11 1or·s State License of your ceM over phone. OFFICE/LIBRARY /OEN reason ab 1 • r • t e •. 646-7602 NEEDHECP? CALL JEFFI ~~r~~~~ °wo,.k W ~etl•gl~ Competitive ratea. ltfettt•I ~at:>lne11. desk•. pan-•~6_so_-.c_os_5 ______ Farailart ltfiaia~i•t Jack ot all trades· ca.rpen-and REFS. With complete Uc. T • 116,428 730-1353 Fanhlng Interior Dellon lYPINGIBOOKKEEPING Board. 28 CMc Center HANGING/STRIPPING For lndlv /amt buslnea Plau, Room 890, Santa VISA-MC Scoll 845-9325 Hr/day/wk'. 6'40-0888 Ana, CA 92701 ·:~::r. btet WIR rtlt elllog. Vour needs • our CealrlCltrl, try. painting, gerdenlng, carpel and houee-STARVING COLLEGE clean UPI. etc. No Job 100 STUDENTS MOVING co rllttJ lar hl•I craft1manshlp. 548-2858 Ctaeral Antfque furniture restored, large or small. 5'40-0354 cleaning, window• done Lie. T 124-'438. Insured. Blgblll1TForecloturet'1 C .... 111 t G·,.. 1---------tree p ick-up & del. free. CALL TODA YI Expert Wallcoverlng In-T •· -1 llallatlon. Reaa. Consult-'" -h•CI More lamlllel ate getting Ille camplng "bug" this year. ti you have a cwnper 1hat's not (lflttlng UMCI, Mii II now with a Cluslfled Ad '·-eulta?JuA...-.-ts? ... aca o .,...an1 ••c 3 ft 6 73 9173 540·5854. 841-8427 ....,~ -w-·~· Whit-Ille Fad Construction 'R' U1 .,...,.fM 4 • 1· All phaaea of con1tr. & re-1--.,.-,,-7==c'"="',..,..,,-,.,..,,,-WATCH US GROWi FREECONSULATION Roll 'em off the mai1cet Repatr-a•Remo<1•Add'n1 pair. Xlnl work, com· HOUSECLEANING --------- an• Asslgnmt. 581-8590 J.c . TREE SERVICE Trimming. removal, yard Hive something you want cleen-upe, 1tc. 6-42-2914 to Mil? Clue/fled ad1 do Scott Geritllly With a Ct8SlttMld Ad 2-4 hr emetgency MrVloe Have .om.thing lo ... I? petltlve prk:a. Jobt 1ge GOOD REFS. EXP'O. Find whit you want In llO-l14J Cell Howl &42-5878 Lie. 33-471'4. 855-0860 Clallltled ads do II W911. or amall. 751-0870 Jon Gl1dy1 5'49-0759 Dally PUot Cl&Nlfleds. 11 well. 642-5878. Ciualfled Adi 642-7fle7 • HOIOSCOl'f BY SIDNEY OMARA THURSDAY, August 18, 1983 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Focus on lJcense requirements, transactions with governmental agen- cies and finally a removal of mahy restrictions. Spotllght on travel. education, dealings with lively individuals who encourage you to pursue special talent. TAUR US (April 20-May 20): Good lunar aspect coincides with value judgment, morality, long-range plans related to education and travel. Success comes through utilization of unorthodox procedures. You could be carrying a "hot potato.'' Scorpio and another Taurus figure prominently. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Exchange ideas with individual who travels, writes, advises others concerning financial trends. Key changes are imminent; member of opposite sex does have your best interests a t heart and now you'll be aware of it. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Spotlight on domesticity, establishment of home base, family relationships and marital status. Gain indlcated through diplomacy -· means don't attempt to force issues. Taurus, Libra. Scorpio peraons figure promi- nently. LE O (July 23-Aug. 22): Accent on job, assign- ment, details connected with security. dependents and people who rely upon your JUdgment. Define temlS, perfect techniques, steer clear o( one who broods, complains and draws energy from you without giving anything in return. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Favorable moon aspect coincides with speculative venture. intensified romantic involvement, strength of convictions, sweeping changes leading to greater freedom of thought, action Cancer, Capricorn persons play "dramatic" roles. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. ~): Deal is completed -- know that it is finished and you should get "offstage". Relationship has probably run its course. Know it, act accordingly. Move forward, not backward. Don't attempt to kindle spark that has long ago been e · · hed. ~RPlO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): New contact or assignment rel.ates to short tripe, numerous calls, meaages and rules associated with contests. You could have fun and make money, too. Highlight versatility, hwnor. willingness to be flexible and to laugh at your own foibles. SAGITIARruS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): IntUition is on target and, if followed, could lead to profit.able venture. Focus on learning process, teaching and a deeper undent.anding of psychology. Cancer, Capricom, Aquarius natives play paramount roles CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You'll be at right place ~t right time --restrictions suddenly are removed, green light flashes for progress, travel and freedom. Social life acceleralel, popularity increases and your timing is excellent. Sagitt.arian plays unportant role. AQU ARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 18): Look behind acenes, check details connected wt th story previously suppre99ed. Focua on revisions, reviews and process of rebuilding in order to establish solid base. You'll be d~aling with secretive individuals who may know more than you care to know. PlSCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Circumstances tum ln your favor, you'll have rea.90n to celebrate, member of opposite 9e-x says, "I love you!" Be ready for change, travel, variety and chance to imprint your own style. Get thought.II on paper, articulate views. Slot Btlt ...... 5100 Btlt w..... 5100 •••• w..... 5100 •••• w..... 5100 Heir Wutn IEllUL ESCORTS Mele & female. PISTE IP UTIIT llHTUUIT Exp. Beet! ottloe PIT AMa Neal ~pear & prof. et-Experienced. Full or DOOR HOST & llLE.PltOll 1 ... 1 .... 1 ... 1_.W....,• ... •-• .. __ s_11_01111 Wut .. Auto uet11llng, Steve'• De-IEUYllY telllng needs reaponllble, & GENERAL HELP 5100 or FIT II type. Nr Hoeg. tltude. tor dining, th .. ter. p/tlme. Call 493-7846 BOOKKEEPER IOUCITOllS 646-507'4 social, charitable lune-Fll•ay ICll Red Onion 01 N.B Work evening• tn Costa Ilona. For appt call Plllll -I 875•2244 (bet. 2_..1 Mesa Las I week our top •lllOAL 213-'494-5275 Gen Oft dutlea. 10-key by person pu1 In 24 hOurs clean cut lncjlvidual tor Apply 1tt. t 1am· w.s car wunlng & auto detelt-Ctrwlla, 1281 Logan, Ing, full time. 831-6900. Unit J, Cot1a Mesa. Benklnpg/T Tlllll IEUYHT FllOIT /1101 IFO llOllW IEOllET&llY touch. must type 65 wpm, Restaurant end brought hOme S445 I••• btf1 l1tea11 B Ob Gyn In Npl Bell heavy acct'g exper req, Call 751·4222 efler 1 Excellent opportunlly tor a. an l~denl carrier ~•Y 1 · Corona def Mir location. 2 Full time. Immediate WllTEl/WlfTIEIS p.m. experienced person In 11-xpar ence neeeeHry. yrs exper. Excellent op-onanlng, Starting 11tary with car for wicker basket ----- lracllve Saving• & Loen. lot the later. Must Call 5•5·3'4• 1 ponunlty Beneflll Call sioo-s 1000/mo. Call be-lunch MrVlce. 9 em • 1 RUPHOlf WOllll Immediate opening offet'I ::'; c:~=~~P~: MEDICAL/Front Office. Lynn 547-5e25 tween 10 am . 2 pm. All< pm, Mon-Fri. E.arn •P-No selling. setting up Inter-~~~::! d~'::o~:i~:~r93 corona del M11. can ~:~~k~·"!x:~"~.~ WOITIYE llOllOUY tor Mr-a. Foyer. 835-5555 ~;'~·~::ybes~;~t~s~~ ~::1~1-,5?1~';'ri,8"J0 ~~·~ day1/wk and elternale ~~c1~~ 1 ~~fora 11 a.m. area, N.B. 6411-8838 Ground floor oppty with PllTOIUPllO WT. sonable and energetic. pertence neceuary Saturdays untll 1 P.M. rapidly aupanlng Mort· for echool picture co. Call after 10 em. Lori's Sa111ry PIT evenings Call Lind• Dacu1, Oetlvery/pan1, lull time, Memorial CounHlora, gage banking company In Exper. not nee. Seuonal Kitchen, 3077 South Call Mr Wilson 662·5843 75'4-180t. OCSL, 1700 good hours. benefits, ff· exp preferred. Har~or Ir-vine. Need mulll tal-work. $28/dey. Start Harbor, Senta An• (at ---Adami Ave, Cotta M.... tabllthed Co. Davis Lawn M 0 r 1 u 8 r Y enled tell-starer with Sept 19. Thi• 11 1111 Ideal Carriage). 979-0747 TOP ISi Callloml• E.O.E. Brown Co. 848-168'4 s.co-555• good communication & Job tor a homemaker Who 1---------Females Pref Model• & ---------------------Need Babysit!« tor 13 mo organization al akllla, would llke to eern extra Retail 18191 Fabric store Eacorts (2131866·l 98-4 IUm lnLllT HllllEI otd girt. Mon, 7:30-5pm: have lnlllll1t1ve. xtnt •t· money. It you ere need• lull time help TOPLESS MODELS W/lollowlng. Top Pay. Trade ahow designer & If. Friday. 9-e. 642-8853 tltude, be able to work Interested In working 3 to lmmed opening f or S75 DAY PAID DAIL y Beaut NB Salon. lustretor. Exper Drafting under preaaure. & prl· 8 mos a year, call mature Hlee person NoExp Nec.826-2583 844-0661 req. 831-5115 llWS OAlllllUS ortlze work reoetved from 545. 1775 Apply In person, Horpe •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Good Income opponunlty u"er11 executives. ----,...-~=---fabric Center, 2121 BOOKKEEPER/TYPIST DletllfY Id d C b II Knowi.dna ol Mortgage PLUMBER Weslclltl Dr. NB. tor•~-• contractor, nay-Kitchen aide, flexi ble prov e • an au m .-... .. ..,..., ..--parental w1ver for min· bank I ng bus I n e 11 Drains/repairs, own tr .... -... Tllll lllS llWTOllLL roll, typing, ana pllonaa. hOurs, p/I NEWPORT ors Potential Income. prererred Type esWPM 432-0500 or 851-9604 Roofer. Or Coast Roofing 873-7393 VILLA, 542-5861 1200_11000 mo nthly. r eq Salary com-Co aeeks axp. hol-llr Help give them a t>ead 11 Pre-School teacher for roofera. Relerencea star1 Earn top SSS par1 CABINET MAKER.'FINISH WI mUST <•H'I) Call Noll, Virgil, Terry, mensurate with abl ly H.B. school. Exper pref. req'd. 831•4006 time evenings Onl~ CARPENTER wanted. N-Por1 S..ch. ~914°!) Fr1nkle, and Cr •lg. (714) 851-6266 Gary or Over 18. Call 960·8788 positive, dependable. E 11 per n e c C 111 -:--:---:--:--=-::-:;;;---714-966-0874 Frank Sales Clerk. (Cuh reg111er d 1 855-0224 HarOwara/aalel. Full Time. ---------p f S.trtfl~ d 11 I Co t Mau outgoing a u 11 need · c.v .... •~-..... pref. Crown 1--(L-) Experienced Operator. ft an oor •a apply. Phone 646-7021. OUPET OLWlll ~';'r;,"" 1024 lrvtna. Pa111t1~ortc w~ medl· awing lhltt, for answering w~ll J~';!·,g6~ri~nce. ~:au~':~i 27:J.ee.!at 1;~~ 2:30 to 6 p.m Monday llOllHMAll Newport Beactl cal clinic ol large Irvine service Call 5'40· 1777 Time Apply In P41'10n thru Friday. C PI Cor ,,_ 1 rll11remeot lac::lllty Some Feela! ualetant wanted to P/T HLIYEIY TRUCK D ... R-IV_E.,.R,,--. ---E-,.-. p. • ....... -0 111-..L .... I eaiirlOUlll Seara, Roebuck & Co. •-••11 back olflee experience eMlal head laclallst In L A. Times, 7 d•YI· 3:00 -perlenced. tor office hu Mvef•I Immediate Part tlme/fUll time. lntertor helpful. Regent• Point. Laguna Skin Care Salon. am Must 111ve cir and Prestige Drug Store, Npt furnllure deliveries opening• for carpet & 11Cter. main I. E:Jcprd 851-1655 (Mrs. Prloe) License required. Please phone. Lagunl Beach. Bch. J:ull time permanent Knowledge 01 Orenge cleaning technician• at onty. Need own traniapor-OFC ASSISTANT cell Keretln. '497--4888 tor 494-8-496 Benetlt1. Mr Elwood. and LA Counties Good our Huntington bMCh to-tatlon. 780-1488 T ledd ttea appointment ---------875-0150 driving record Cati ::---:-:-:,---::----,--emp. var u • recc>t. p /T m11111 .,..__,,..,,_______ 114--642-5788 cation. Hourly rate lo lm"*'lobopenlngw/gen type50WPM,pnoneis NB Fk.rft & fold, mature per-Immediate opening•. Ex· SALE.S-Mlcl'o computer•., ••••••••• sllrt, advane9rn«lt to h1ec te1nlng 1arv. Ofc 675~110 son. nerd work«, ex· cetlent ror eludenla and matu r e p e r 1 on1, llOUfly plu1 bonus Muat Mon-Fn 8am-2pm V• pertenc., part time. Pay-houaewlves, worklnn In w/bullneaa & computet PART-TIME. V•rlea hours have valid dr1vaf'1 lleenM hlcl• req. Percentage lfflll Plllll 1e11 CIHnere Apply ... exper 754-6363 10 Include aarl)t-A.M and be bond•b... We lll•ry In acco<danca with Mull know Chlroprac:11c 8am-t2pm. ~u:,, le:: :~"1~1:~: -=s'""a:-::lc-:E:cS=-:c/=p -=-a-:cll:-:-T=-:D:'.":E::-:P::-:T=--le.ends Mull h1ve d• train and provldt equip-exper. C.M. relldanee procedure1. Salary ---------S.c-S7/hrly. No ax-" " pendable vehicle (small men1 and vehicle. For pref.1157-8431 Negotlable. 850-2278 fill n11rpu ., .. /-£.I .......... , truck , v an. station I_._ 1 ... , .... call " oerlenoe nece.aary. wUI • .r ••· ••• - -I con• ....... on, ... ..... .......,,.....,,..,,....-,,,--:=-.---:-..,-, •• , n•-· wagon) lo aulll news-891-U23 or apply In per-LIQUOR CLERK need9d. lfflOI -• ,,..... train. 5'49-9950 ft • .,. S1t/IH. paper dealer In Ir-vine aon II 15180-82 'rr1111lls-mual be ••pen.iiced. Bal Sharp alert peraon good OpportunltlH av1ll.1ble 1,p=-1""'T,._1-•-ln__,.h-e.,..lp--w-a-nl,..e...,.d. lttttr ltffrt t. M Ill• trH Mull be depen· tor Ln. Hatt>or Uquor 875-e8&4 w I t h n u m b 'e r • -~th t~I L~• ti Ang~•• knowledge of 1ntlquee t4 =re p f dable Con1ac;1 Greg E.O.E M /F L..., -·--MecGreoor Yacht Corp. mu, rclu •1 on •· .._..ua1. 63 t-3332 flll• • r rt • H...-Monday thru Friday •• '"""_.. 1631 Pl1cenll• Co11a par man n our =-.,...,,.....,...,.----::::---.,-1111 II• 1111-iv-Cashier for Health Food for car rental egency. Cell M · door-to-door newapaper PUblllhlng c o. need• between 9·30 and 10 30 Store In Hunt Beh. N .. t. Janet. 650-1160 ... salH program. Guarin· full-time aulallnl for WUI, 2HI II"" 11a.1m•.lio•n•ly•· llil6'4•2il-'4•32il1•• good pereonallty, HIM LOT PEF"SON-Pan-tlme, Orange Cout Roofing II teed hourly wage plu1 clrculatlori dapl. Mu11 be lh•, 0.1t1 ••11 experience de91red but look Ing a ,_ 0000 commlallon. Hours: 9AM m o t 1 v a 1 e d • n d ---------Wllll PllHir•••• not neceeaary PIT honest hard worker. xlnt roofera. 5yrs ex~ . 2PM, or 4PM • 9PM. aetf-starterwho wtlhel to Salespefaon wanted for s;.-n 840-00'47 lor 11u<1ent1. Nwpl. CM In composition. 831-'4008 Training la provided. adv1nce. Min 1 yr office retell itore, Lagun1 Work In publlcatlO<ls de· erea Appfy In penon ---------Potenll•I 10 eern S300 Good l""lng/flllng Beach 494-5315 partmont Input 1echnlcal O&llllll Newport Vnpa, 2606 W. Part-time po9illon open In exp '" • ------,-,.,..,,...,,---data 1n10 NBI equipment Cal Hwy NB 1ddre11lng. Mond1y, plus per WMI<.. For an In· prof. phone manner, IAlllWIOI SllP Excellent opportunity re- P/T ' · 4:30 pm to llntlh; TUN-~5j"~;;; ~811~041714) ability to write builnen need• p /t l me 10·2 quires 1 year word pro- Speclalty drugator• I• UJmUICI day 8:30 pm to llnllh. • ·ex tellers, date entry exp. Mon-Frt. Stan $3.75. Air-cesslng nperlenca ori ueklng a mature Maintenance, on-Fri. u · Apply PENNVSAVER, Gen'I offic e clerk, helpful, good working pon arN. Call 660-0312 NBl orequlvalent Strong calhler/HIH clerk to P«lence required end 168CJ Placentl1 Ave. non-profit organization. condition• & excetl. ben-aft 5, 845-6887 apelllng/gramm1r 1kllls work on• permtn«ll PIT Reeume required. NEW-COl1a Mesa Outlet lnc;I lite typing, re-eflts Ouallffed appllcanl• required. Good wege llld 01111. 30 hrl wtc PORT VILLA. 842-5861 ceptlonlal, reprodue11on l«ld reMJme & lllary r• Secretary. Admlnlatratlve lull benefit• Included TIE lllU NH prooeselng 979.7900 qulremen11 to: Judllh A .. l1ten1 typing, filing. Please apply Del Mar l a10 Sao ............. "-, NB IUIE ... n.un ,.. lt111111TH UUI Parker, Clrc. Dept .. Plaza call Mon-Fri. Don • Ion•-1601 •tton •ve " "''V'"" ..,.. Ill, lf0/I011Y Publl1lllng Co 4300 Cam-751-6111 1 -.v "'"'· " " • •-=-.,,..,----,----Trntl-ftllt Wtttlact Experienced ln11de MIM (al Red Hiii Avenue), Chlld care, mat peraon, nr There mutt be • catch! people, 2 (Integrated Part time, 8am to noon, P\-11 Dr. #209, NB, Ca llOllETUT frvtne. 714-549-1500 Harbor Vu School. Thera 111 Our NallO<lwlde clrcuila). Curr1nt di•-Mori lhru Fri. Lite typlng, 92660 Irvine Restaurant 0.1lgn EqualOpp1yEmployer bef/att Kndrgtn, Donne fir 1 onl toolclng for trlbutor or broker ex· pl'lonea and bulk malllno. --W.--0-1-.-.,.-.-ai 1-1- 8.30 10 5•30 54l-400-4 ....:,...; wt\~ rMI"' tnl"" perlenoerequlred. for t09 Mull be able 10 work In-II "~ -firm hat opening for aec· IJtlll W1at.. 9105 ,.......,.. '' _, 1 anchlMd di t lbul d8'*ldenlly $5 hr to Now hiring experienced retary with good typing, -........ '!"'!"'"""""'~ .... --OllOIUTlll meeting and lallllng with un r Ir or. ...rt Call btwn "·--12 real ..... te .. ~ figure •Plllude and com-10111 ornn• E 17"-• 00 d the public II th•t'• you, occ Alrpor1 area 2 out •• _,., lea I kl I 3ar~., .~.•F/;yil~ and you're willing to of 3 lllelc>e091e earning noon 641-8838 for polltlori with well.... mun I on I Ila n con· WllTAIT 5 8 3••2.._.. make lhH• outgoing eommllllon1 In 5 llgur• • . tabllshed Realty & lnve11-genlal amall olflee. Word PIT houaehold upkeep 4 • -nualltleapayotf,call... monthly. Cell Art IUHlllllllll mentCo. prooeNOr and resl•uranl gr00erles and tranapor: .. 556-0512 Leesa apaea. Cllentel• CALL 873-8700 equipment experience a 1 11 ' c 11 w 11 Olll 141-0IN •---------neoeeaary. STUDIO 5. + Call 714-641-5735. 5!8.~~12 • ma Flex hours, experience re-Orlvera. Crou country. A k f J d 840-3'4'43 q u I r ad -MEW P 0 RT IUUIU 1111111 Cllllfornta LlcenM R.-s ~ u y, RECEPTIONIST /TYPIST llOllnUf /Ltlllt SERVICES UNLIMITED VILLA, 842-5881 '400-SllOO per week quired Mec:Gregor Yad'll WI mun PART-TIME waalttnd r• Small Pr•llglou• Fathlon Marketing. errand•. Dr I ,.__ Leam fut .. t rowing In-Corp. t63 t Ptacenlla, •&llllllllT oepllonlst + pan-time lll1nd Npt Center Law applt, church etc Re- -du11ry In U. . NatfonaJ Costa M .... Ca. typing during Ille weak. llrm. Legal experlenoe r• llable driver. active. Ii· Lunc h lhlfl. ElllO Organization expandlno Regis Halfltyllati In the xlnt part·llme work tor quired IBM dl1pl1y trectlve oldtr woman, French -Co nt. 1e1t NoExper ~ry.We IUOTllllO Mlulon Viejo Mall an-college 1ludent Call wrlter.M1agcardll.S•l•ry own car ll-46-9734 Laguna. Recent or our-train. Ctll Mr t1errl1. · nounc.1 out1tandlng Job weekdYI only 9-5 Clarie commenaurate with ex· - rent work hlat. Full 662-5790 TE•lllAll opp for experienced, Jolln1on 844-9060. perlence. Call Pam Call SS_OS 3-5pm, Wed, Thurs. Sun. -----------Component 1ew1 !Mt Ind qualllled full MfVtee hair-COLDWELL BANKER 644·9190 g mo old kitten, pt only. 497-821 t llAlln.I trouble 1110011ng ot 1tyll11 & mantcurlat. II you Newport Center RE Ole Have tl'lfee operi1ng1 1o DO-NOVA compallbl• 1teOU1to maket09dollar llORnUY Stimese. hovHbroken. Ollll •LPEI tall• ordetl In rnat1cetlng equipment Send Re-end don't mind WOl'tllng . Mature. ..i1 organl:red, = •~en~3 ::,oood Mu11 lpeek end read Eng-department. No ex· s u m• Io S T AR hard wlth e great •ltltud• Receptlonlel/Sec y, full dependable 40 hr1 =---·-----:::r-::-:: lleh, have tranaponetlon ~ naaeuary. M~t TECHNOLOGIES INC, come with u1. Ouaran· time. for buay church Of· Typing 50wpm, OkkPQ. ~1 5510 •nd be flexible. or old-, ha~ A•r, 3180 Pullman, Coate teed salary, commllalon, flce. Typing 50wpm, good "i"-862a "" •• -phone 1klll1 church _.,. " uatrallan Shep pupa, Country Club Conv and ab .. to at~I· Mesa CA 926211 Allan· paid vacation• and other • 5'49-30e1 •lely. XLNT I If llon: Jay tncentlvt bonua point ~x~r p~e~e;rb•d, .• r:~ SEDllnARY s' r751 :,c1h15.1!14P9.3~~!1 ea Can Mon-Fri. 10am -&pm quallfled. Mr. Jonea, 1·,,,_-.r.--... -P-eraon--.-20-4-0-h-re program• Call Charlotte rv na r Y r Mature Mlf starter tor ,,..---..,,--"--"--------==----------------:-:-----:---,..,-~ 682 se« ~ .. .., Clarti 4115-2005. Church. 857"9023 small bu""' Real Ettate In-Blchon FrtN, ctlta lovabl9 •--..a.,.... 11-.a p l 3012 ... ;! It I.Ma .aa-w.a Ottll . ..,,.._, $3.75 hr. Reepon-R II I t/S t _, 0 b • _, • ~ tfMll I --lbl lea ant mu11 T .. -fattffl dr•-In the acep on' ecre ary. va1menl of'floa C Alf· 5 mo old, hM roll.en .. ...,....,...., ........ ..__ .... ...., How hiring fJlperi.nee 1 •· P 1 • ,,. -PIT, nextblehour•. typing ....... , .....,... hO $350 831-0231 LOST· MaJa SHky Tan-I«. SPIRITUAL READINGS 111, nd & 3rd1 E·Z qual. Pr91 WagM and houu SELL Idle llem1 with a MV'I relaloble 1ran'90'· Weat .•. a Dally Piiot required, COlll Mna, por1 area ,._.,v , .. """"" I II . gold/grey, abt 4 yr1 Old Advloaln a11mattera. Lov.. ~7au-37117i90~7·9~2rnonav17 · negotiable. THE GRIND-Delly Piiot Cl4ll8ffled Ad. tatlO<l. 650·1336 Cl8llllfled Ad. 642.&e78. 645•1920 lyplng tl<lll. ~Ii":~ Golden Retralver pupl)lel, anatonameof "Wllt>ert''. marriage & bualnaH. ;;,-. ·• ..., ER, 1400 Pacific CONt ii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.miliiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiiliMiiiilliillllliililiiil •xper .. •bit ty 10 •• AKC M/F 1h0t1 l150 ~ d 645-615-4 1n 11-. HI h N t Racaptlonl11, full time, w/publk:, no thorth•nd. 6'45-2139 ' ' ,..__..•Pt 0 • Aleo eounaallng. 18t5 -rt1un, g way~~wpor N-•P8'*' Harbor L•wn MOr'CUary A.E II<:. Ole. but not r• -~-.,...,,..,------ ._... . # 1 1. So £1 c a;m1no Real. San T.D.'i 4UI Beach. 642 IPS AND PRIZES' 540-5554 quired. 5 day weak. Flex-LABRADOR. Yellow male. Lost: nylon motor~~ Clem. Lied. 492-7299· Colt• Mau'• flna9t '*'111 KIDS-EARN GREAT TR . Ible houri. Allracllve Of· e moe Old, AKC. Petllatry patlll, Ylc 22nd a .......... u. um.a food ••or• .. ...-1ng • IDTAL &lllf !lee. CaM 979-8533 any· trained l75. 647--0707 Btvd, C.M. 846-1208 ltr laJ.e •tli ......... It, IH, quallflad CASHIEA to • tor w r.ntal agency. Cell time. POODLES Sllndard I.OST· Small White S~iiJ'ilngln 11t &2nd work approx 20 hra P« --Janet 850·1180 . S.Oretary, pen time for White, AKC. M/f. $350 MALTESE· No TMth Profltabtl Lod!anilth bull-TO'ulnoe 1949 week, lnauranoe, bonue. ]/~ ~ raa1aurant m1g11lna publl•h•r up. 1540-•815& Vee; Anlt•' a Gtennayra' Mobile unit lo•d•d. A.E. Brotc8f Bd Realtor• vecatloo pay, 11ook op-rLJr."16 1 ~-...._ Catering workere, ax· located In trvtne to...,., , 1 i.e. on 811183 home; &nool 11V911. OwMt MOY· 6424 t71 1545-061 t tton J room lor adv~ ro pertanoed only. 7 AM NIM & edltorlll ateff, lllnt Sherry • Pood • puppy 4 9 7 • 4 3 6 1 • 0 r " . Ing. m .ooo. 7eo-ott9 WIDOW HAS ... tor merit -full .... of our ~ _JI ~D until 3:30 PM. Mon-Fri. typlflO & !)hon. 11<1111 -Ille, i;:up-l~e-m~;e 131-<>3&1 =• AO:A ~~4 T.D'•. t 10,000 up Ho ~1•-· ~~~ ~ • r..ii.!11.. , ·} i: V . II Ca,>able Of pet1y tray9. • • n I I • I . C • I I •tur•. up 2 . -~ ,___ crectltctl8dc _..,.,. -· .,. ~--nV Food arrangement Md 714/981-8550. YORKSHIRE Tarrier, Loet: TOt'lolllhall ,. cat. °"*.... . . no penalty. Q891ed Mon-Fri. 2-.CPM. • ' ~ '" ... ...;.;,. ~ hot.......,. .. H ......... 'M•"'lt mllM 1350 8 mo Ch F-'M>lk ~ Otg, Vin du9l'f'9 W'OOd a "14lllll Aleo buy jumbo TD PLMM call $<4t-7U8 tor ·~ •\I '""" ·-"''""' ..... S~lng/RecaMng C1ert1 •thlAvac:aOo, CdM. RE· ~-. 186.000 tek.. l300K ~· @ Denleon 1Vr1het detalla. '"" b9 nMt. CiliMll and ct. Sm mfgr tooated In F.V. II Sire & Dam. 5-4~2 WAAOt 67~ en. Term•. "8-41181 A.Noc. II 3--7311· -· -'" ~:0r ~~~1.:l·; aH klng an todlv to1re11 1ul LOST YlllOW ..... .......... ... • .. ..... HMUTll UUI l<ltcMn. 3071 So Harbor, Pf'*fonn IM dutlM rele· <r.llO L 81 a t:nd : ,.., ...--Harclwar9 8t0f'e, For .. t r aat t1CHMmlk...-.. t841Ch9r• _ tlV9 to lhlpplng a r.oalv-w ove r • llMl. 'Archie', atao 1 Av, UQ Betl. 2400 alt, 15yr g day ;;;;, m tl"W'a, Mm axtre Income. Flair Santa Ana (Harbor 11 Ing.. Thia poettton r9(l r.d, hand lrll*· 5 ITI09. WMll gr.-i peruMt. IM. Clill Ject 487-15451 meell & TLC. t"' yri on lor deOOf•t•nn nee. l'Mx CarrltlQe). 911M)747 valld Celt! dr!V9ra llc. For 175. "3·9235 "8wwd. 500 bite Wllaon. E Id c M.. !TIO'• Info call btWn •~.1 a.1.~IJ" .. ,. 1314123. bnt9-J u~ 1111 • .M hu. Witt train 4811-1461 r .. teur111t H 2-aa77. •-·!--·• a:::::=:t: .. II ~..a-tlll 8 273 ~ Otlver wanted for Cet8fl"Pc nrm 1181 ~ ~ A Lt tdv §Alf ......_ --L Aetoble 81udlo It loQlllng euto pan mtora. Mu1t lno• or PIT worker•. Sm FUlllon I• Law umoe WlnchHtar Collactlon llMfi/WI 1 ll1m IOI' ln11tructon Md ~ have valid Ollltornla drlv· light preparation end need• pi t otc ... , tor Ill-1ee&· t894 mod .. • ll'ICI. °""*90Hl.Yl3M1tt .... ?CTllFD c•pt1on11t Top _pay. er1t1oenauNt goodOrlY· ~!!f~. 1~is0'.1 U0 ~':J~lon.~~· rera1813mod•l.l27&to ~.., BMut club. Cllll Cindy, Ing r90ord and know 8 .. 12 ng, Mlf an • UOO Antique Colt 44-.40 Dini Mllm wttll ttrong i .. __ .,.... 182°7737 or Aobert Colt• Meaa. AtJ9tt at pm. ""· v am · noon. Rell hra H . Own Irene model 1873. •rao. An- .. ___._ _ __...__ IMnl Wiii Padg9 IOld 831~ Hub Auto ............ 2120 Appty b9twNn 10 ern 720-0608 hth tlqu. ~·· !Mk/ -,~.. oo1atar.i Only ~ ..._...,, end 12 noon, Of 2·4 pm. • .. 350 Offtoe&9ir1tldiii-'* ~-~t ·-·-.... Harbor Blvd. Coi t• Lori'• l<ltetlen, 3077 So 8tatlonery8torelnCofona brMI ... .... WT UI -·-• M-. S.. Cleuct. H·...... Santa •• 1 at dal Mer neec1t FIT ex-tl90 Vlntaoa MlllafoOunn •-. 'uttv-etlONlleucutMI P/tllM t to S:10. 8tlwp .. .,.,., ''" • .... ,19n ........ .__.an hard hat dlv\nQ pump fN-1631, 161 H it ~;.";' Npt 8cf\/alrport P«80fl wttll btc"kpg '*2tl• Peopta ~ t..o People Clt'flegit. 978--0747 e7a-10W ._....... • oompl. wfa" ftfll;:r. & -,-OMMY--.-CW--H-lWPO--AT-1 :a~~1cJ~' ula. Cell ~.~~ r::;~Y~O~ CompaN belot9 you buy. h aoh•r. Pra-8ct1001. ~:::. ~·=r.~.·~t It b-* 6 crlrlktng «II otfloa 9llP9' Call 11-.~ DIMCTOftY Otu :lft9cl ll\lk .. 11 Ml'f. IM!Md !VII lime employ· l!d Aloh1rd1on d1ys. "upl MM2t2 Ct..,,.., Ada ... 2-Mi• 71-41142""805 ta al IOOutl 142-M11 tMnt, bey area. 949..&17 I 075-1111 ' J . --- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Aug. 17, 1983 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE •acklaery Ul Ptnr ltatt 2011 r7' F'lti.rgta11. 65 hp, trtller. VHF, Bimini top, 12850 6•5-3171 n.na uw'.belt 31.c .. na. tr. jQlnttt. ITl91al lathe, vertloal mlll, 1urltc:e grinder, tutttl lathe, c:ompreaaor. gea pwrd 181 Oulfleld dty boat. nu welder, mlllCi. 547·2411 ball & motor Aug. '83. Nr •ttrtyt 11 Aptn, l•J!!tt4 A•IH, .... rt .. ScNltn 1011 Vaa1 9040 lau• '74 HARLEY 0Av10SON •73 Dodo• 0 al ball $pon1ter 1000, new eng. u Kint aha~. $2000 Cell eyttn1. panlal conver1, 988·2100 111 7pm tm/lm auutlf. run1 Qd. $1750 Ob0. &-45-8485 IH7 '7t Toy.. •Int cond. I 1300/0BO. 6-48-HM Ming ftnilh, lltltloroof, di• ,78 ,._,1 "T Llf1a.-.... In & OUJ, 111110, loeded. lo .... ca .., .,......, mt.83195.841-8303 •=s---w---~ .. flrx nu cond $7300 let H~•I 645-7673 I ••tt, f58 yrd1 ii blut pfuth 20 It llberglue boat and ClaHIH totl '77 Yamaha 250, OT, c:her· ry cond $7001080 DI•: 5 119d, en rf. ale, --------- am/Im 1tereo + tape, C..W... Hit 841-387 t 1na<1ow Well main·. ACROSS 58 Super1or 60 Insect PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED crpUng $3/~d ~5·9•9• tandem aul trlr '78 Honda CB750K, 129 Jlo&li X, 2 bO&Town 1961 Orko Texturelzer, SGOO/oOO Wiil Mii lrtllet 3•.000 ml. $1300/0lr Sedan. rfftOl'ed $9,995. Miii 11'1 ttlned 14095/ofler .•• 1174 CAO FORMAL 770.812-4 LIMO Triple bladl Good 1 A Reiner 5 Container 9 Pac1f1c sea 6 1 tndtana nver 63 W ine city Incl 2'1\HP c:ompr .. IO<, MC>lftlel~ -495-6649 a Fairing. oll cooler, plpn SOUTH carrier. 70' hOM, watt •9•·15203 Phil 6.il-4-222• '46 Ford Woodlfl. navy cond Mu11 NII Call '79 Cellca GT. ~~. air. a35-MM A M I F M • I 5 0 0 0 --.7-3-C~O-V_S2_l~50,,-- 14 Agalloch 15 "II welgl'ls 64 Aromatic plant d ••oo -----.,.. blue. fffl()(ed. 112,9915 cou11n bo~r hope;; gun, .... '74 22' Searay. Mt<c 110 '8 t GS 450S, black, SK P.P 816-e 181 " 30 Exten1 laddtr·new w/20hp Mt<c: O/B kk!ket m II ea. mu It 't 11 lllZI 497-3189 979-G4M Iv mtg 65 Oarhflg 66 Evil took 67 Hurried S40 631·8543 VHF, depth finder, hea<i $850/0BO 6«-1238 '53 Ford f • 100 Plek·up. 2 Regulation Air Hockey & fully galley, w/trtr NB orig. eno . V-8 t1200 un WIU ltT ·eo Celtca ST 8unr1, air. ,-::, ,,,_.,,....~--=-....,..-,•It p/1 p/b am/Im 78 S.Vllle. R .. I nlca 11«.o. H-i1r .. /brk1 70,000 ml, $8000. __ ,. 16 Vestment 17 Papal name 18 Toti on a tables. $100/both call allp $9500. 631 -7772 '8t HONDA MOPED Low 644-5585 11 lllllllLI •tier s pm. 9•"-"9•3 Mt s200 963· 1165 --..,,......,,....,,c=E-=o"E,,_,___,, 15200, 673-71553 842.0796,.., 5o48-6t23 68 WW-II cralt 69 Appendages u ""' " 24' Wood, 250 horao In-'155 CAO p VILLE Volumesai.a.~ Albacore, Yellow tall, ooerd. V-berth, flying '83 Yamaha Scooter Rive 151.000 orig. ml. all orig & And Leulng '80 Supra. tm~. cond., '78 Sevllle, lCJtlt cond, full -48K ml, loaded. AIC. PO-. nu tlrea, 2·tone PIS, tit whl, crulN, tthr gry/blk, w/bfk vlnyt top Int, below retell $4500. S5000. 631-7772 pro1e<:t Bon11a pol ea, reele, bridge. loaded with 160, brand n-. trwy safe lmq;iec. l-4800. 873-~18 18711 Bea® Blvd. S 12-$25. 5-46-9632 equipment. pertect c:on-Cell alt 8PM. 6-4•·81159 85 -J 3 8 S d Huntington BMch 20 Bera1es 21 Derby. e g DOWN --dltlon Muet Sell, 1•250. '81 Honda XL500S En-. cher~~~~~ & ettver,•eu~~: (7H) 142-2000 Brau Cemng Fan, neve< 675--4326 duro. like 1111w, -4K ml. perfect $6500. &-42·7500 J I Dy• 558-89•0, 8V81 '78 Eldo Blantz, 52K ml, 720-1855 full pwr, nu tlr• & rad, 22 Gets edgy 1 Director used w/olltt. blades & -s 14oo/obo. 642-372.il •t•U tulip tights Cost $299. 25' Formula '78 Liberator. ------Auto Storage, 5-8 oara, 1 '80 Supra. tmmac:. bond., tnlrl. 17496, 754-1850 -46K ml, loaded, A/C, '82 FteetwOOd Brougham, PIS, Ill wl'll, COllM, lthr tthr Int, fully equfpped, Int. Beat offer. Oy1 19K ml. 1 13,900. 556-8MO, evee 720·1855 8-46-0188 wlll take $99 552-0796 Low prollle, racy lmron Vnpa P200E • .clnt ahape, enc:loeed clean Hie 83 Jaguar Mark II, paint job. twn 305 Chevs. lo ml Incl reek & box. any acceta. Colla Meaa Clenlc. 78,000 orig. 23 Fire residue Frank - flee. golf kar1 ~I ahape Tonneeu cvr \/hi stereo S 9 5 o 5 4 6 . 1 8 9 7 . $225/mo M 2·2390 mllet, 3 8 L, -4 door $250 14 Kt gold bended wet bar. Cuddy V bunk' S36-0973 u d en , automatic; 25 Clo~s 2 Norn de 27 Soaks crime whtch$1na.57~pc +8ae<· Npt sllp S19,500 Mtttrltan IO 'IOFlll2H Borg-Warner trtn1. watt-41 Lib Aris deg Ying• 19 · pc l/r Ible 875-2172 ,,._,.,._."'"'.,.,"-i-w""'"i9 Brend n-Int, runa ....., am/Im marine band set. antique 1920 S 175. •· ·-· i Bl kt t b 29 Cagey 3 Ollaw a 30 Cosset footballer '81 Corolla, SR5. 6 lpd, --T-llE-.-a•l_E_S_T_ 16.000 mltea. pie, am/Im ~ 26 E:11treme 46 Pear more 963•7410 ·71 Clesslc, 18' Tri-hull. -4 ·75 Titan. 2111, 18,000 ml, good, n-Urea. $1500. aupun • ereo. rorue 28 Noah 's son 48 Entertain cy1Volvo110. open bow nlu $6500. 642-0795, conalder trade. 969-t221 with bucke1t Mita. wire 34 French chum 4 Renter 36 Recalibrate 5 Specie 11ereo. S5500. 159-0393 SELEOTIOI 38 Pure 6 Earth sup-Flute. good c:ond. s120 13000/0BO. 850•0_.35. eves 5-46-8623 wheels. 3500/0BO. Trlaarli 171 of late model. tow mllMge var 49 Kind Sklls & ski boots S75. Traa'ltrl~ Aaltl, la,.rt.. 963-3751. ''w""""!t"!t-·:t-"!h-"'d_t __,I Cadlllaca In Southern 39 Sal soda porter 30 M C h 50 Beal II 552 785• 74 t1 Alden Luxury ••otor - -an o m ... e ea • urn Calllomlal See ua 1-.. -yl r aney • .. "" A •i 1107 '65 Juguer 3.8 Sedan. ClaHlc '7-4 Spitfire Con· •AIEllS """ 3 1 Indian Ocean 52 Manana MAGIC ISLAND gold ~8;~~ w/~;F,1 ~~a~t;r TrHt 10%4 • cherry, blk & sliver, auto, vert. Xlnt. Mull '"· 42 Slothful 7 Oceania ann 53 Bustles membership, Incl. full yrs live/aboard, all Ironic: '71 Traveleze, 26 ft, '12 &11110001 perfect 18500. 8-42-7$00 S2950. 676-8866 OAllLUO 32 Companion 54 Hummingbird fea·S750. 631-3611 eves twin 12V71 's etc tandem a11les. twin beda. • dr, blue metalllc, deluxe ·79 XJ8. sliver, black Vtlb•=• tlU 2eoo Hart>Or Blvd. 43 Iran coins 8 Lang 44 Litter 9 Wlghl town 33 Overtaxed 55 ' - -rose Must Sell. Emglo air com-S585.000. Trade tor TD's, 1,ullyll sell! ckonlb. ,,a,tr, tact optldon•2!nKcl. •,unTrook I, Kint leather. iclnl cone!. i.!2 r!!l, ~ cond. $1250. COSTA MESA I 00 real estate or? 6-4-4 4806 eve ng ec 1 , n an -con . .. m · e • over S 14,500. PIP 646-7641 v "" 34 Unchanged on me· pressor w 1 ti tioae -tenee, many aKtraa. Exit 32 mo leue at $312.22 840-78 4 640-1180 35 Single 56 Heroic S450. Ramset Mdl 4160 r Sport Yak II. yacht ten· cond In & out Sharp. or buy for 112.950 Call ,.,.... Ilia II 45 Inflamed 10 Algerian port 46 Egyptian god 11 Beams 47 Gas pref 12 Wings 49 Stadia 13 Leases 37 F 57 Church Part Mark 11. Gun wl 1000 der w/oers & motor 14450 obo Mu11 seu. Cell Bob at 752-1877 astener shots and pins. $250, bracket new cond S95. 38 L e 59 Elvers 546 4320 anytime 213-668· 79~3 A , 'M Van. 1500 eng, good cond $2200 obo. Cliffttltt 1213 831-10« '89 Uellbll. am1#m tape '86 vw BUG. Reblt eng. dec:tc, tow mttee.11200 or awgiv r • 673•2795 WANTED PV1 Pty wants to -•-•.ta.•-------40 Venemen..,c_e~_6..,.2.....,....S_u_fl .. e_r,...,.........-~ Nearly new baby change '82 Hoble-3""3,.....__,.$3.,.--1.~900. by reuonableTravelTrlr, 'HHITllgUIOA •=-...-----...,.,,-rT 51 Pinmpeds 19 Lawyer abbr 54 Weapons 24 Pompous ~, --y-.,,...2--r-=-3---.""'""....., 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 tbl S50. wind-up swing reoe cruise 552-7992, will pay cash (213) w/rebulltmotor,'350. $35, dlx strollef $40 On 213/436-1727 925-6940 Biil 969-1221 Mag wheels. $1800 OBO. make offer 67r>-5365 840-9831 '76 Caprlct clutlc. mint sz sleep&< sol1 1250. -------•a7 VW B 640-067-4 Elac Bay Boal. like nu. full Aatt tliCll II I" v ug. nu trana. cond, nu Urea. lo&Oed, 2-tone blue. PP $3500. 840--4979 side curtain& $5500. 1.-..,,....,~.,..,.,.,"'...,. .... -. ir. good c:ond. $2700/terma. --+--+---+------i Oak Glen Mountain Re-650-5097 Ive mess IMPORTANT l•,9177•3•2PloPl'1.""N"'ew-t·re·ne-/o"'i""u·tc:"'"h. 154-7998 treat Membership, camp NOTICE TO READERS Stereo. lmmac. 90M ml.•---------=-=-....,...,.,,..,..,..,=----:-:--,-::•7"'"9""c=-a-m-~-0-=Z2="8=-.-au-1-0-• ...,al~r. Coast to Coast. sell dwn Must eel! 19 It Corolla fish· AND 16750, 5 .. 4•4063 '62 Mazda RX7. a/c, sun rf, '88 Red VW 8ug, re-bit en· elec lock• & wlndOW9, pymnt $1350. 552-6127 Ing boai Gd cond., gd ADVERTISERS cstm wheete. 11ereo, ilne. AM/FM c:ua. •n r1, crulM coot. tllt wneet. mpg w/Votvo 4 cyt end The price ot Iiams '783201.Maroon,loadad, goodcond.Auumeteue 1650obo.875·1161 magwheela,am/tmcaa, v o Iv o ou t d r Ive. advertleed by vehicle great cond. $7200 for 28 mo. et 1284 or re-''·9.,,..9,...,..,vw"'"""B""U,....,,,G-gd_,...ru-n-oond-..,.... iclnt c:ond. $&800. obo. Retrlg. counter top $50. Metal clothes reek $-40 Bookcase $30. 662.3764 5-Bpm wildya. S 1500/obo 850·<1270 deelera In the vehicle 851-8063 H 833-3231 W. negotiate. Call 478-2600 new Int. am/fm cu. reblt 642•6316. clusllled advertlalng Pete 1 days. 714/648-8092 eng. hH rust. Need• ba1t. ,..,,.,,.--,,.,...---..,-..,----,- SUTAU TIOIETI --+--+---+---11 Sat. Oct 8 c:oncerl. Pacific INll, Sail 7014 columns does notlnclude '78 BMW 5301, loaded, '82 RX7, 17,000 ml, blk, 5 $800 OBOCall: 751-82•3 '80 Chevefte. 4 dr, ale:. 16' Hobie Cat, great cond.. eny eppllcabl• rexes, 93K. ml, enth. gry, auto. apd stk. sn/rf, air, am/Im 1f9 VW eu.. reblt eng, ~~~'na '~.u~a!~ 3 yrs old-uaed for 8 mot. llunse, trenaler lee•. S6950 751--4330 cus. eKI warn, bra, cue-run a II Int. $ 2 100. Nit S 1995. 533--8811 Amp. 2 reserved seeta 140 both. 969-12211111. 6 $1800/0BO 675-3876 finance charges. fees for ---------tom meta, Ilka new 575.731• air pollution control de-Conveniently Located s 10 500 a13 l l87 d " Greg vice certlflc:atlona or & Comn.a1tt1vety Priced · · • ya, ---------'81-'82 Citations, an have "y eves 64-4-1197 '69 VW. Klru cin, AM/FM va. auto, 1t«eo, air. SCRAM LETS 2111 Clipper yacht. Trallrlte C!eeter documentary § ~-~~---~= ca ... nu paint, rt>lt eng. crulie, etc:. Low 11 • treller.por1apo11yS2000. preparation c:hargee un-llltrC .. 11 Ital 49 12750/olr. 720·029t, 14500. 553-9833 . ANSWERS Dove 631-5153 less olherwlae specified 1981 Mercedes 386 SLC. 751·2911 559-5958 , by 1he edY9f11aer Saies-Serv c.Leealng Ltd edit. mdl. Midnight Ignore-Lying 2~ut~~~~~ ~=a'e::~:. A.to mc11/ blue, only 21.000 ml. •1~:.:-:.-:~~~:.'\1d~ SEE IS FllSTI Agony -Gamble Slip avall . $9800. Putt 9015 fO'CAR\fER Supe<bcon<l.1ofaklnd. obo.873-9015morn1 WehaveagoodMiec:tlon BRAGGING 64-4-6087 ~"ll.5 f\.1l('E • lll\.1W $35,995. Call 6'40·2530 of NEW a uNC1 Chev· My slster-1n.1ew 11 not Im· , --,,.----,,..---3 2 7 G M Eng In e . ,..,,..,,._,...,,.,,..,,....,..-,.-.....,.,....,...-.,.. '72 VW • clean, new rolet1t Sea ut today! preued with llgna that 27 Erickson, t/B, xlnt $500/0BO 969-2040 ~~';:'.."' .. ~~~~·· '58 220S -4 dr •tick, rblt tlrea/bfak•. r•blt eo- reed "Home Cooked cone!. 5 sails, nu main, Aak IOI' Mike ~nu tlree. Int. t1C. tine· am/Im cue, l>fa. Meals." She says Iha RDFIVHF. 118 500t0BO. ,81 MBZ 220 hood. trunk. ~ -"'-"•R /bat. 875-1277 u1t aell. 12450. CONNELL CHEVROLET cool<• at hOme all the PP 49•·7927 otnerp8111 $75ea.VW ~YIL '82MBZt90,-4dr,nupa.lnt 7 1-4-851·2222 day1, time and she Isn't BRAG· '73 HOBIE 1• w/1rtr. & ex-e u 1 r a a r b • n ch Selfl1-Servtc::e-L...sng + tlr•. cleen, orig o.nr. 5-49-0628 -& wknde '"' 11 If r •• r I' . ' ·~1\\1~-· GING tras $700, 559-82« hm. 661·2220 681-2220 WIEST 633--0697 $5lOO obo PP '72 VW Sqbk, reblt eng, 833· 1361 wk 'II 2•0 •• $2850/ofr 494-7875 9YI S46-I 200 Singe< Touchtronlc In oek cabinet S800I OBO Oll 20 W/IWPT SLIP =8.-4_8_·50_9-=2--=-.,...-...,..,,..,,..... Extra clean. -4 sails, VHF, _ ...... _ __._ _ _._ _ _,,STUNNING(NEWJ 1.05Ct Compau. 12V W/run RUBY RING. (Cert. of ap. llghts, 6 hp Evlnrude praiHI) Value $4500. S5800 8•2·2898 dys: Aatlt•n IOlO faraitut 6025 Fuailut 6025 SAC s2soo TODA YI 675-9010 evs Antique bar wlt>evelled 2 R • d wood Pat Io Stereo Credenza c11m 640-404 l . ERICSON 35 Par1nerahlp, gt ... mirror. $1950. Loe Lounge• $45 ea decorated frultwood TANNING MACHINE Top Cond. Equipped tor Cnlry French desk, $295. 759-1552 Orig. prloe $2800, asking "Sun Bed" $2500/obo RACEtCRUSE, Avon. 8«-2078 or 859-5092 3 Pc Haitian couon couch, $700 Conn Organ Ser· 675-3664 639-1256 Auto Pilot, Ere. Only ·~ iil 1 oatmeal cir $299 5 pc enade Mdl. walnut $500 VIDEO GAMES. For ALL S8500 Best Stlp In N-· maple bdrm set $399 Lg Exec: walnut dask Home Systems & Com· port Call Leslle 979-7843 2 lg.: U-defrost. 135, Vatlous housellOIC! Items w/chrs & telephone cabl· putors. Lowe< Coat Than Froet Ir wht 2 dr St25, $5 to $10 Hurry cell netSSOO 673-4642 Any Stores. Russell LASERSAILBOAT $700 both run pert. 494-5419 Susann 631· 736-4 Tredltlonel FUrni'iure 894-6947/895-3616 673-61171(213)790-8137 HARBOR AREA S550-N-covc;h won. Sell Sideboard S 149. mehog Video games, on location Lehman 12. xlnt c:ond, APPLIANCE SEFIVICE tor $375 176 cec11 St. dresse< $169. Colonl1I 719 W. lGth St. C.M. wltreller $550 6A0-1992 We tell recond .. guar. sofa S 110, dropleef table 642 2973 apptenc:ee. 54g..30n 8' Coucll. Tweed, earth & chairs s 199, arm c;haJr • Lido 14, race rigged Amana F/F refrlgecator ~op~~si~~.·~~~3~2 new S 120. Smell refrlg. $99 M .. ic1l l1tt. 224 S;~~'.'~;4.s"1~17:nd. w/klemalter $200. CdM 19'' color TV S 189. 505 &40-7688 Bar-3 stools $150, lamps Galleon Way Seal Beech. Gibson Lea Paul Oeluice, Cittle red Sabot reedy to • S25. end t•b'--S20. 3X5 Set 9-4 (21S"'66-8724 Cullom flnlshe, case, I d h ...,,...-.....,._.-----=7.,._...51..,..---,b-1 a ""' r good cond. $450. Fender II I, gd con • U ~·one 1 . de Y cotfM lbl S15. <4 hl-n ZENITH 17" color TV xtnt Princeton Reverb centerboard $350 OBO. ::: ~~~rlgetalOI' spkrs $20, DR Ml S125. cond $150 Teak dining Amplifier. small, good Lv mesa 5<16-2'165 5 BR Mt St30, elec:tr bed table 52" round • letf prec1lce or beginner w 1111ere130, gn llveaboerd ~. Kerimore. Heavy $t25, L.A. chn 115. lea $75 499-5756 emp $150. Roe Com· 187,500. reduced to Duty. for Sale $150. Or car1S20,962·2638 it-.r preaaorS50 Alllor$800 $55.500 540-1077 e.t. Mu11Se11 751-6850 Couch ,75 Hlde-e·bed Cttta Mna .1.4 Rob 631·0505 eec range 1 yr old S275 s 100 2 ChB $30 .. C.M. 2 F'amlly Sale ,,,. TRUMPETSI ...... Trun coms,, s 100: Small Portable TV B/W $30 cllner Couch. Antique Excellent cond. Benge CG. 1'"4 I Sid 701& trv S 100. ~5848 Single bed $-40. Dbl bed Gas 3 Burner Stove, flee· S350, Olds $SO Rob 1 7 17[ 1 r 1 a n 1 n • 140 8-40·7188 trlc car. 1940'• Mega· Frigidaire gaa dryer. I & I zlnes. 6-49 Beach St 673-2795 bo11C!/outboard w/xtraa, t09-°"the tine, like new Danlah mod. <lb ag flict hrall•H/ v5~ry5·78c71a8an. $2700/olr $150. 8-42-7500 chetlte, bookcue. end Set only. Furniture, Baby .. table,$125.957-8317 llama. m isc. 2016 :a••r.•••I '226 .77 Formula 20. 302 Frlgldare elec: 11ove. gd Phalarope Courl. Meaa -s I II cond. 1100. Coldepot Olnet1e table & 2 c:helra Ve<de 2 I elecir c • correc:l· V 8 $ 6 O O O I O B O . "1g l80 873-3558 S 100. Recllner s 100. Ing typwrltera w/allencer 496--0798 ' . Lamp 1 $ 2 O Cd M Y ARO SALE·N-furn. IP· hood. Good c:ond, Se<>o ==--.--=--=---=~ Ho19<Mnl c:oppertone apt 640-7688 pllancea & g oodlu. ea. 752-25-40, Shelly MariH ls•lr. 7011 IZ retrlg .. I too. Must P U. Sat/Sun 9·• 472 Coate File Cabinet: 4 drawers. 121 lnl111able lfu1t USO, 720-1644. CdM Double Sole bed, green Mesa St. CM. 1..,,.1 .,, lock, ne•rtu ~~ MK 11 Sexton $395, 15HP and ten pltld, Kint cond •=---·--.--....,...,:-= ..,.u --·• ·-" I llY UfUAIOEI $125 0r-. Kint cond. lt~rt luck 1 t $125/otr 5-48-2-445 N-M~~= Engine L• 957-8133 S50 Oeell. good con-EXillCOFF' GARAGE IBM EleclronlC ea T~ MOVING· MUSI NII QE dltlon, $25 Butcher SALE 8AM·3PM Sat. w riter w /memory 35 Johnt0n Electrtc: Out· 23 5 · n SIS efrlg block table w/4 ctlelrs, Dozen• 01 Item• from 3 $800/ofr Mlnolle Copy board. long 111111. har· w/~ller. $3~/obo: Klnl c:ondlllon $70 femlllu 81 give-away Machine w/collllor nan & control• Call 9-44-2078 Of 859-5092 494•80"'4 prices New penonal TV. 11200/otr 979-1650 642 __ -_saoo __ ·_,....,..---- ESTATE SALE. 5 piece brua hdbrda, lugoage. L;j eKea. desk 3x8 $195. Uaed WASHER/DRYER king u bdrm Ml, 2 pair clolhes, men's bualneu h I $85 L 1150 Cell 873-847-4 lamp1, tell curio/book suits 40L. Unena. houee-M~~~9; i!.r 5-4M55~ve Wattt« ciMo, work1 good ca.ae divider. pictures, hold gooda. fabrics & no-~--z-..--.---.cr.i:; $85. Dryer g• work• latge men• clothing. ec· t1on1, lremed plcturee. Nu IBM Selec1rlc: Correcl l;.i~;.,;;;0'!9p;,;,;~-~;;;; good 17$ 5<18-4485 ceNOrlet & amell IP· pot1 & buJlet1. 1rrt alee. 2-ptch S799 1-533-8115 --------,,'2"T-r pll1ncea, mlac:. Mull Mii etc Pr'* for 1 sellout. Aettleu H l2 1hts w1<nd 540-4-464 460 Viste Rome (Ac:ro111 OPAldHt 16'.l CU. Ft FOR SALE· Complete from Eestbluff Elemen-28'dock. 1150/mo .• aide SEARS Froetlete Fremer Bedroom Ser, Including tary Sehl) tie S60/mo. •OOO River XlHT Cond. 1225. 8 yra Or-. 2 Boolclhtllvn., Y...,a-m-eh_e_G-=-ul-tat-, -eq_u_ar-,-lu-m, Ave, Bal Pen 850-828<1 old. Cd: 720-1-480 Desk, Night Stand, Trun-Honda Moped, printing I~~~"'""!~~~'!'!'!~ --------- ...... t __._,_ n14 die Bed wltWo# Matrns catculetora. 11ereo, travel Center Of aide lie. -40' plut, _. ,...... -IP 894-89-47 bar. tum, book•, cloth .. , on tum batln. 842-3850 Snap-On I Crafteman shoea, oddl & end•. Frig· LAROE CENTER Bl.IP 10011. From S 1-$50. Girts wht prov Bdrm Set ldalre top of lhe tine gu Up to •9· 233 19th. St fl 83 t-3399 w/c.nope bed 6 pea s g..5 o 2 Cebl• lllelaon Spinet. .. S 175 M·F dayt S51·2929 dryer Sat/ un · 1 -4 walnut. Ilka new. Just C. Newport Beech, ~I". S S 540-825• San 11ag0 Dr·' CM tuned. $500. 673-5616 875-0236 • 6-42·7500 • r B . p c 2 6 6 ' I UY flllnwll -------Shaffer & Son• walnut Sllp• Available. 25', 30'. ~or-graphtc card grn "' ..a I! • contole, with ' bench. 35', and !Ive •board Cell monttor$2-495. 7~7304 Les 957•8133 HtUt•tl• wtt 1 good finish. $960/oller 9·5. Mon-Fri, 6-42--46« •IBM PC Apple llE Eagle Lge UIC dHk wlflte '212 643.()4 71 lallllHr•• 7011 PC Compaq Grand drawer, b3 It. Teak Must §811. Sofa and lov.. Upright Plano, Great Con· Ellcell. brand new c:omPI. °'*"""Sale 786-7304 wood. Orig $700, Mii for -1· 1550• alto q~n dltlon. $800. 875-8886 1tllbo1rd, $475, lnter-$250, 5-48-4 14 7 1leeper tole, $27 S XLNT .--,,--.-,..---..cr::ir'% •Hew Apple llE. Diec: Matctllng eofa/loveMat. Cond. 963-1791 btrtill ~I 1230 nationally recognized OrM. DC. CRT. 80COL ty & I k t S _ _._ -brand. Muat Mii. Mtg, a13ts 786-7304 c:om oo • grea . 1mmon1 b ...... care queen Semi-auto 30-08 Rem· 213/393-8932 $250 Call 780-12~ size mattreu Stoo tnoton 7-400. It.Int cond. ---------COmmodore VIG-20 Ilka 5-45-1094 Ctlpa amo a 111ng 1275. L.Utt Sall Board to mot • Antique Oak Roll Top 9e0.7194 new, 1111 $1200 Aaklng ""· lndde ~· unit. ~ In grMt cond. c:lrc. S8415/0BO with i.eaone booll• & oame. •150· 19 0 0 . S8 0 0 I 0 B 0 Jtftlry 1214 Stuuy IUrfboard. tgl nn 839-2973 M:H)4~ 875-2578 i13.280Dlamond i.i&t X 1120. 875-2188 -N=ew----aecs-__,s=7~eo-teJn !!!! Pink & White Prov. bdrm Wedding Aln~, Brllllanl. Sur1boarda 7'0 Swallow 559: 1~15'2.111'8 · moe. Ola m;;;;t:;r;rmrx: aet, dbl d,.....,, detlc, Pu1~fh:r"usr'ee3L·t1M':'i:•" Winger, Aowt Auou•t1D'-:--.nr·---"Z'llrrJI good w/kld• & petl. hutch. twin bed frtlT\9, gd ap · 1200 5'0 ultra llghl oom· tttt n ~ cond .. $150. 962-5339 otfef 552•7832 petetion Thru11er H•Wk '7A Ot8PX 125 aooa ~ _,, _.. 3 On _.__ 1 ......., i3500 diamond & tMIPPhlr• s 176, full O' Nelli lrg b...,.·y, rune ........ ;. • ......... lfl'l.Wll'· --.......,, moe. -· to a ....... reo. rt • new, coral tlno Mt'" wetault S 125. IM&--4730 ""' .._ _..... ~ to good home. met . HO. upholttttad 1~ OOld tntq gllnet 831-38&3 0t ~eooe 48 02t :.:-:'c:=~:~i:!'. neclitaoa;. Nrrtng1. Wiii n 1 Idle, '81 Vampa Piagg1o Grande ~ ISl'iep mix pupe, 8 se5• woO<I trH etab wrlflc:e. 7159-1842 lttrM 5112 mOl*I. loot<• new, Mll ~ 84&-5llM. oockta1t tabte, l60: twtn OiamoMI °"'''.1/ectOtY· itXOtrFuL 55" RBX l..~io:~a..~t'-· • e .;:. S:::· = C:::: ;';~'.1~1::: W::~~ B~~~b.!:!: di~~ Color TV. 2 tr wrnty 09ptindabte 1979 Puctl l nffd• tovlng family. buOGY "Kumtyt<abCo". AllSHAPE8 &81lES 11•~.F"e:~'?'cfHO~ MoPtd. S350 obo. I ~ 12.25: Call t70-t9G3 Engagement Alng1; ear· e..'6.1788 Btrb.,a, 984· t87a. "•icleofM M ... Beeota 8 Queen az wttttl>ed xlnt ring•: l.ooM Olamonde. MOPE!" rune and look• I moe. 1111 eh0t1, ~ oond, mwt MH. 11751otr 71•·887-2958 RCA Stereo conaole great Alklflg 1190, broMn to ~ home Stephanie 720-4170 days ESTATE SALE Men1 1+ct AM/FM turntable, PA .il99-6-04e Pr . •y•ttm, AMI to AMI ---------~ IOI 'ard Of1 • 91. leM...,..... let Dl•~d Piing & Tiger $16-0/obo 845-37-45 Puc:h Moped, '8 1, Kini ~. ~ S..t• 10.~I ~taint ~air• 0.1' Eye In ootd mntng1 -cond.. 11tra !equipment To td twn, Coon Hound. 8 & 50 tn.' Hutotl. A· t oond. ~64 __ ftftr ... ti 1111 1415. 6"45·2419 ~. hMflly ..... die-857--4831 10.,,,..epm. Aolell watch n• uri'.ib ..... Poeft.::. ~. Wlllpey 14K. E t tcw " . e•t·UU ctyt, 8olld wood. exec:. aoC; ofc a..•-50-48 i.e. motOI', ... tt 4"-S74t 91199 & •ncft deeil, Kint. WOltl't t 1200, 788-1809 or S..t•2288 .... ans. u~ TUNNINO (HEW) 1.08 Ct G.e OMlH omfl RUBY RING. (Cert. Of .,._ The faltHI drew In ti!• '°" WHfTI ~ &ell wttti l!ASEI pralMI). Value 14500. Wt1t .a Dally Piiot 1'9P..,IT-Tr.0:"r.:0~,~o~y~c~e .-. 1 cein"'*1 Ad lt'u 8MEB SAC $1995 For qulclt Cl .. alfled Ad Call TO<lay st&00/080 wMkday1 c.. ~~• C1ar 1lf'leel Adi 8-42~18 ..,., ~ t d.ya only ... 2.se11. 145.7031 cond. .. II PAINT & LITE BODY llVEITOIJ • --=----~-~---VETT '82 Collector• ~~~:,t. 'tfit1~9~1 off ·c~~~. (~~~J~) lpd .. air 2 t':::; =~~~uC:.:~~· '7! ~~k1~C:~ ::~':. ~.s'i1 ~ Parting out '68 Chevelle, po•I. elr ahocks, front end, etc. 548-8894 VW Bug mlec, body, mech. rubber & trim Items $S-$40 Deva 497· 1112. eve's -497-1597 Aat11 Waat.. 9020 A1gheS1 CUtl lmmed for your vehicle, domettlc or f0<elgn 551·6285 WEllY CLWCllS lllTlllGIS COHN ELL CHEVROLET . .._,.II •' l•·I 111. : • •"-I \ ,, I ' I S46-I 200 WIHY USED CARS & TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL FOR Falt &nUllAL Cormler-0.Ullo 01m1UT 18211 8EACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH 141-101l1141-1111 WI PH TIP llLUI FHllDOlll AWIUI ... "'11&0/lllUI 2-480 Hatbor Blvd. 8 3 0 5 $10 900 vary ctu n. s 2og5, 1714~4-4, •( 1·C~J 1~~i apd, •n rl, Muaue11149~828-4 8-45-3120. 673-8588 • '61 3201: 5 apd, A/C '70 280SL. Both topt. Thia '7-4 Super Beetle Sunroof. DMtt Hl'l ( 1CUU444) 1oy treated wltender lov· Rb11 motor. N9w lntt<. 1&COfonet 500 c:onv, 3 t8 • ·79 3201; 4 tl)d .. aunrool Ing care. Muri Ml to ap-radial•. 12800, 6-42-8555 V6, 2 bbl, buclleta. c:en1.,. (889 XMK) • preclete. Jutt comp. 800 .74 Buo Muet eell Moving con.ale. pert. Ot'lglnal, • '80 3201; auto., A/C ml service. $28,999 Call 12596•0 bo 67~·3589 • Alklng '2300 8~130 ( t~HY239) 213187•·65-44 . · · ·79 Coll. runa great. • 60 3201: Auto. Sun 74 MBZ 260 babied 74 VW Sunbug. new Int, S2995 539.1799 or Roof (7-48 Z>CR) · 1• paint. runs JClnt, $2500. 96-4--4890 • '80 633cal; 4 apd, Lo Ml elltra clean, 931< m · -494-<1802 keec> trying. ...--....-----.~-x 5555493 S6300. Days 057-1135 fen • '81 3201; 5 spd, Sun '75 450SE. 84,000 ml, 111rf, '78 Red Buo. S3.000 mllee, --------- Roof, (1CRS207) cassette, good tlre1. fuel lnJ. MW paint, runs '85 Falcon, Mull s.111 • '82 7331; 5 •""" , loaded S t2.750. Su,,_ Sharp! g r• 11 S 2 8 O O 10 b 0 $800/0BO 9e0-8907 "" ...... 640-89&9 ()( 6-42..-059 (7355637) 857-1598 '85 Falcon, MUST SELL! IH·I n 1 ·=75.,....-4-=-50=s:-L=c-. -gol_,,.d...,./,....led-.,...,dle:-•77 OUher lltbck, auto. $800/0BO ~907 208 w. 11t, Santa Ana Int, solid car Make offe<. trnt whl drive, fuel lnJ. nu Closed Sunday 5_.0•0737. 646•5885. tires, 31,000 ml. $2800. LARGE SELECTION OF .. 5..-4-8-· 1-4.-0-4--,--..,,...-,- NEW & USED BMW'SI '11 II I.I • llltl '79 VW Dll Rabbit, dlK, air, '85 Muatang. r.lnt c:ond .. 40K ml on rblt eng. tutty reetored 13500 8-42-0915 an 5. Mark .76 300 co Coupe, AIC, 2-4K ml. S4700, 85 t-31122 'ti mTUI Mn. ri $28.500. 1-533--42-42 .41pd, 4dr, etlfeo, .clnl. Liii II l•W AM/FM, Sn RI, P/W, *"' .... ~bl:n. ~~;,;, ~ VOLUME SALES $l-4,800 Arm. 6-46-9232 108e. comple'lety orig Incl conc1 thruout. '5500. Ph SERVICE & L~SING '78 4SOSL. Mull Ml Exit paint 1 owner. xlnt c:ond. Ed Alc:tlatdlOll dtys, 3670 N. Cherry Ave. cond $26,500 87s-e815 $2476/olr. 553-9833. 875--8711 LONG BEACH Of 673-4817 559-5958 (No. Cherry extt--405) ---------·se Muetang Conv. mt l114) IH·llto ·a;.~ge3~~~iie~~~.~:: 1979 ~~Uc lm5'."'e:.~ff·000 mi 1'rade-ln1 Welcome $38,500. 6-42-2825. 687 XHS. ID D I 117 1793809971 to be IOld 'M Muttang. ~1 eome a ••• Alk about the money -10 AM. Auguet 30 ti wort!. Run• good, $1800 '74 2Aoz. v_.., gOOd c:ond. can save you thru our t t725 Kirwin Clrcle. obo. 845-74615 -' purchaae & tea .. plana. ::f~g7 m I. l-4 t 00. "'II ILUlllll Fountain Valley. ·77 200SX. 5 •pd. am/Im stlfto, new tlrH, well cared tor, IOW malnlen· ence S2300. 840-6128 llPHn 13010ua11 s1r .. t NEWPORT BEACH 111·1100 '87 F0td L TO, .. dr, needt eng.Wftl.1350.951-1583 COSTA MESA Ml·CHO Ut-1Ql '78 2eoz, am11m c:aaa. air, IQ t14t 4spd, •P<>ked whl1. mint ; (fp '73 Pinto Squl,., run• a loolc1 greet. 11100. Pion-eer KP-8500 c .... 8 mo. old. wont nt new car $100. 78<Ml161 '74 PINTO Wegn, Air, Nu Clutc:tl, $1,000 E-. & WMkendl "2·7621 WlllTE.I cond Mutt Miii $5900 83 Mlg4't. blk/red rn1, orig. 675-8857 wires, atereo. Kint Good, ctean used cars, obo $2000-wllt fin pert prefer 1976-1983 8uk:tl1, '78 Datsun B210 GX 559-5958 Jaguar 1 , TR 71 & 5-apeed. Air, AM/FM ,,,,7-=-8-=-M""G""B=--con--ven-.-.-w-,-lre PC>r'IChes bul any mO<let Casa. XLNT COND whls. AM/FM ca ... lo ml, considered Top prtoee S2.000 673-9098 13800/0BO. 5-46-3689 p1ldl Call Ciiva ti Bauer '78 z 2+2. Xlnt cond. 1 M otore at 17 Hl owner, S70001obo, Ptrackt IU7 979-2500 494-n35, 83&-4700 168 912 Cpe. 1 qwnr, '80 Llflback, 25,000 orig. miles . Muat 11el $4800/0BO 5•3· 7053 Comp Orange w/blk Int. chrome Whla. Blauplunkt, 1~ orto cond. thruout. $6850/bat. 67~ 1271 '82 280Z>C. T-109, 5 apd, -.7-0-9-1-4-1-.7-11-r.-5-• ..,.-.-n-u loaded. Extended~ .,,.. warr. new 111cker. Atklng beige. rune Kln1, extru. ltllWllU'I SOUTH cau11n VILISW&IEI "WIWIUllT ............ Volume Salee, ServlOe AndL .. llng 16711 e.ach Blvd. Huntl"iton 9eecfl (714) 142-2000 VOLKSWAGEN · 76 T ortno Squu. Wagon, Like new, 1 ownr.11295. ph aso-8130 '78 Muetang. new Urea, p/1, p/b, gr .. t c:ond. '1790. 6-42-3109 '78 Must. ale:, pit. ltereo, no paint. xtra a-n, runa great. $2800 982-1752 ...,..,. I Brand MW Int, Nl'l8 vety good. new llr•. S 1500, conaldef trMM. ~ 1221 $11,900/obo. muit ae11. _S_3_500_._4_9_2_-&a~69-0ude~--= 151( ml 499•2922 '71 1111 CPE SPORT LB UL.I Seal•. AM/FM, M•s· ~"'·lWllTWAGIN ® 196e Ford Saden. Uc • ) Save 100't of dollar1, XLNT COND. 18.0 0 '. WHH 002 (Artz). 10 " tel graa1 mlleage•Dtllun OBO Private Ptrty A Plf'IOl\&I end proud••· 9R07T1-43912. to ~ 166 blU1ary Q1ghiy Mlofit l 9 2 1 O II x er S7 915 S.-2·8177 /83 t--4721 cluat~ vw agency dedl· aold Seotembtaf 1, 1983 wheel drive Jeec> w7xtra S36-1785 •78 912E new P/6 tlrM, cited to quality MMce. at 3230Weamlntter A-.., Ht off roed tlr" & wheela I 1 1 sunroof. reblt eng .. chef. epare p1r11. anll • com· Santa Ana 4 tow bar. new top & Ilda • 1 000 bo 7eo 8582 iat1t1ve 1llle1 PreMn• .,,.--------............ c:urtalna $2500 or trade 173 128. New tlr", amllm ry 18· 0 · • tatlon of the unique Mtrnry HU Pu leave meatage. • _ tor am c:ar or . c eu 1700 obo. Volkawaoen quality ~ '68 Wflfl, "9btl. ~ 646-735• 8-4 1-0398 '78 9t1 SC Brn/Tan, Snrt. hlelel. ti* teOO/obo 631·1"1 ;;;;:----.,--------..:r.z:wl, PW. AC ALPINE Atn/Fm BOBCHALLMAN'S Trtc I 78 Flat 124 Spyder. Con· c .... Nu Tlrff, 53K Ml. ' . CONWRT18L.E 73 internatW TraWGll. vert. 5 tpd, ~tow/blk $18,800. XLNT COHO. ~ '72 Couoet XA1 14too • dr. 2 tnk1. utrac;'~ ~rs:.r,12' Mil. 2600obo 6-42-8177/831--4721 @WllTWAGIN~.., ~,...t0f9d 5S3-4a42 ror rec pu~ '82 911 sc Snrf/Coe Blue Ecur1eSh1rteeCofi>. ONIMWlt UH obo. 764-02~1 dYt. evea, '78 Spider. run1 grNt, red 81( M.I PW AC AM/FM 7800Weetmln,tlf BIYd ""*nda720-1237 wlthlant09.$3000/080. CMS. CASE' LTHR. Ptlone714fVW1·WEST '11 Olde cutteaa ~ '75 CheVy luv and lhell. 873-9689 P/7'•' XLNT . COND: Toltl ~~vw·. ~c,;=."'i•c':iri~ Lo ml, Qd cond. S2000, ·77 Spider, lo mt, lmmeo., '25.too/08 0 H "" • .. ... • .,.. Stf5 llO-e130 call 8-40-5958 $3750. -495·2•97. 842-81171631-4121 a~.n """r .. nr ... ,-~·~--.,...--- '75 Otltufl truck. i900. ·eo-'81 convert .. lo, to mt. l1~1 llre 1111 Vil" 1 1111 1 :~.:.., C:::-~ 883-e 119 ~~~~o. ~~:.afar 'ii R tiiii'.ii II 1!!~ ,,'J}000A w!fj:101·""' 'ld· .i 11 Noe>. eeo- ·19 O.ttun trucil. ~. Xlnt.S\t.!500. t-533-4242 ....,.,.., -· ·....... 16 ·eo OUttMa 8('gflm. VI. mega. ca.. No dings. n•• 1l1t. llH Compeny c.r ootno oft SOK ml. 93150. 982·8101 'f!i CIVIC, eml#m oua. iO com; in i -™'4 IM. Loao.ci.F"ull -pwt'. •71 Randlero, xlnl cond.. ml, orig ownr, IOOkl J 9eech'a llneat Mlectton $49", 7ae-t21t -48t< ml, nu 11rM. aH run • Qr1 . $1600 . ~~ of prevlou1ly owned (Mda •1i~1uprw. l)OWef, $4800 84&-018' "2-7•7• 10...l.S-fOCE Poracm.e, Audi• •nd T• OOMd. .... -. ·at Toyota Plettup. AC. '74 Civic, new P*nt. bait, _. • .,,."""°"'~ Volk~. b!Ue. pvt pty. Aalllng AM/FM ca1Htte. n.-c:arb, radlat1. brak11. ""'°~~1, .. 1..,_. ..... ~·~~1:C, .. tlree 6 whelft-. roll bar, 4 Aeblt eng, trana, alutc:h. ClOSCO SUNDAY$ --· ' ~· '6900/belt oNtt, 11800/obo. 4H·4119 . ""ffi'll"..---1-. .. ..--~-__,...,,.,.. oell«ll cond. !Mt-847-4 ..,. ~I -458 I . CoMt Hwy. ..-.:;a:~ 182 ~250XL. xtnt oond .. ' '77 .Accofd Hatcflb.ok. IS 'YIC&OG &Ai iihbld. HftP«t 8wol\ nlnQ oond. MIO. 1 5 K m I . A M I FM , apcl. great oond. Htoo. MIW radlall am/Im c:Mt t 73-ot00 tMf'-MH (0.. ot beclflner, A.IC. nu llrea,, 988-8184 *3000 ' en 1tfi $HOO. 84&-0188 '7ilAooord,AIC,5-tpd.nu '7t 8A~ llflbd .. tpCI 41 .... !!&!!t!e ·e:.~~~~= HI brOUI nu tlru. per19C1·~ oond' AllC !!! o.t\, .. 7 '811 Fd ame>r. 15111 mpo. 1350010 o. &41-011I new ur u . •too: ;11 mr w '11=L. ~ l1t50. 569-1133 ·11 CMc 1500DX •Int 8*7171. ,_.,._. egon, ..,.,.,lt-itiiiiiii-~~1111'!"~!"-~P . cond, muet .... '3500.. Od eno. fide ..... fbft, ™ 10 VW lut/Van, Double 15t-02tO Ot JM-8025 11 TOYOTA Oaf-8ltwr M001o0o . ...a-clt21 ~ iiOO: --ICMO ~.P:...=. 183HoncM4dOotAOGOfd ::;~::,Ml Uno. 'ti..... ..._,,..... ~tcfl LOOKI t500 mt Auto trw. .it Auf\I l'M'· Moving, ""* 'fi caliN ICif\, 1111( mt 0000, RUNS QOOD. arnlfml~•. IX1rMf llU Idle 1tem1 with • aelll l I II• "I w I lot 7• U?t51090 737.otea St&OO. L*enew. 146-7641 Delly Ptlot C••lfted Mt 17001""41,.....,.15t 1'2.0TM....., 141 tin .. -~ l ~--~~-~~~-----~~---~-------~-~--~----------------------~----.-.--... ........ ..-... .-..-..------'"-....... ""-~~~~ New noise law may be worth the Md. move ANNA.POLIS, Md. (AP) - Yelling, hooting and singing loud enough to disturb the neighbors aoon will be illegal after 11 p.m. in Anne Arundel County. The C.Ounty C.Ouncil voted 5-1 to add "human noiae" to an ordinance outlawing the play- ing of a radio, stereo or muaical lnatrument between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. if the 90unds are audible 150 feet or more from the IOW"Ce. Residents, upeet by loud late-night parties In a beachfront area, petitioned for the noiae controls. The legislation carries a penalty of a $100 fine and a 30-day jail sentence, and al- lows officers to issue citations rather than filing criminal charges. Neighbors of Calta Mesa's new amphitheater, take note. THI DRANGf· COAST Lyricist dies Ira Gershwin, 86, who collaborated with his brother George on such favorite American songs as 0 l've Got Rhythm" and "The Man I Love," died today at his Beverly Hills home. .. ClllT 1011101 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1983 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Dlllf .................. c.... Andrew and Matthew Monahan of New York found the best way for some quick relief from the heat and humidity in Balboa was a healthy helping of ice cream. Hardware ste>res are fans, hens aren't Of tbe beat wave, tbat is, as businesses sweat out ups and downs of sizzling summer BJ STEVE MlTCBELL ... LUlEN E. &LEIN Of .. Dlllf ........ Just how hot i.s it? Why, It's eo hdt a hardware store In Calta Mesa 10ld 500 electric fans in the past two weeks alone. It's ao hot that Ralph Furra's two million hens are laying 10 to 15 percent fewer eggs. It's 90 hot that regular bar patrons at The Saloon in Laguna Beach are ordering cold beer instead of well drlnka. That's how hot it ia. The unrelenting heat and humidity, fueled by one tropical system after another, have forced Orange Coast residents to become inventive in their quest for cool. One beneficiary of the heat ia F.ddie Di.Ru8do, group sales manager for Waterville. USA, a watenlide and arcade in Orange. "This is an unusual type of heat," DiRuado said. "It makes people very sticky and warm.'' Which i.s just fine with him. He's seen many a hot customer come through the turnstiles the put 10 days. "It's mi8erable to be outside, but as far as rm conoemed, it's our kind of weather. I hope it stays this way." John Crosson is another foul-weather friend. He's manager of the Ice Capades ~are benefitting from the heeL Take Keith Rima, owner of Kenn Rima · hardware in Costa Mesa, for example. "It (the heat) really caught ua by surprile," Rima said. "We've eold about ~ fans In the last two weeks. We had the fans in our Inventory 10 we were sitting good. But we've only got three left and I don't know when our next shipment is comin3 in.•• Robert Garcia, aaaistant manager for Crown Hardware's C.Orona del Mar store aid he eold hit last electric fan Monday. He said the four-ctore chain baa 10ld .. well over 400" fans since thinga started beating up. "I have people at my door now asking for them," he said. "I have a lot of rain checb." Ice cream stores, u could be expected, are al80 faring well in the heaL Mary Ellen Certo, who works at Baskin-Robbins' Costa Mesa shop, said the • • air-<X>nditioning lures the people in and then ' they pull °'it the money. The IJl08t popular wann weather item by far. aheaaya, ia a milkshake -any Oavor. Chalet In Carta Mesa, and he says the ice rink h.aa been a bit busier since the heat picked up. But, while business i.s better, there i.s one drawback, he says. "The heat has been running up the power bill and it's harder to keep the ice." And. of coune, Brewster's ice houae in Huntington Beach is doing well. but Virgil Brewster says that's always the cue in the awnmer. He fiJlures he sells about 15 tons of block (8" BOW flO'I', Pace .U) The signs, th~y are a-changin' By GLENN SCOTI' Of ... .,.., ....... Of the estimated 3,600 busi- oeaes in Costa Mesa, dty planners say at least 1,362 -or 38 percent -have changed their commercial signaainceApril 1974, when anew sign ordinance was paaaed by the City Council. 1bat percentage is probably higher but planners quit keeping statistics in August 1981 when the city SU1pended enforcement of the ord1nanoe and shifted to a pro- gram of helping owners adjust thelr illegal signs to make them legal, dty planners aay. The ordinance eet standards for the size and 8COpe of signs with the intention of reducing the viaual. clutter that then confronted people traveling on main .treeta. It gave aign owners from one to 10 yean to lmtall qm con.fanning to the law. The more expensive the sign, the longer owners were given to amortize their investment. Ideal- ly, according to the ordinance, all of the city' a signs were to meet the law's guidelines by next Ma.rcb 18. On Monday night, though, the City c.ouncil made a key change in the law. On a 3-2 vote, the001ancil ruled that oversized signs that were in place befoiie the 1974 law wu palled may stay up indefinite- ly unless substantial cha.nges are made to the sign or itB oont.enL They added a ao-ailled ''grand- father claw.e'' to the ordinance. Mike Robinlon. a aeniol' plan- ner for the city, explained Tua- day no one knows prea.ely bow many signs qualify to remain in place due to the grandfather claw.e. He aaid the city llmply doesn't have the staff to count all the signs -everything from free-standing signs next to atreeia, to the llDall. portable ''A-frame'' ligDI that adwrtiR ,_,itne prices. (See SIGNS, Pate AJ) No break expected f rorn humid weather BJ STEVE MARBLE °' ........... Fed by tropical atonna that weather watchers haven't even had time to name yet, the hot, soggy, sticky weather that has turned Southern California into Humidity Central ia expected to continue and continue. "It'• bloody homble and it's going to stay that way," obaerved Bill Hoffer, National Weather Service meterologiat. Hoffer said the hot, hwnid conditions will remain at least three more days. Intenae thunderatonna swept through areas of Southern Cali- fornia Tueeday dwnping more than an inch of rain in plaoea and Alicia in Texas, Page AS Deeert flooda, Page A4 causing flash fiooda. Palm Sprtnp received 1.156 inches Tuaday, the most in Southern California. Orange County, though. got off euy with mast C08ltal cities receiving only a trace of rain. Tbe weather 9el'Vice predicla con- tinued thundentonna in the com- ing days. Hoffer said the unp.leua0 t., unusual weather now ia bema fed by a combination of ou.bore storms, low preimure systema and funnels --all teamina toeether to direct Midwest-like humktity into (See WEATllEll, Pace .U) NB f irrns gain share of new jail contract Mom: 'My son is innocent' BJ JEFF ADLER ot .. n-. .... - Two Newport Beach firms Tue.day were awarded oontrada totaling $2 million for portions of the most expensive construction project ever undertaken by Or- ange County government -the ~2 million jail intake-and-release cent.et' in Santa Ana. The Board of Supervt.on named Ficker & Ruf- flnc/H.O.K/Omni Group to de- 1l1 n the proposed 115,()()().aquare-foot fac:U.ity, to be located adjacent to the CWTent jail. Named as construction ~ for the project WU Kitchell CJ!M. The Ficker & R~ organlf.a- tlon will be raponsl9 for concep- tual planning, design and de- velopment of plans for the jail addition. The construction management team will be responsible for integrating the design concepta during cobstruction while ensur- ing the project ia completed on time, at the most economical OOBt and with the highest quality. The 384-bed intake-and-releaae cent.er la envisioned by county ottJda1a to meet the demanda for Ja11 1pece through 1990. It will hot...e men and women awaitina trial and maximum lteC\lrlty in- mates, •well as providing oen- traliz.ed eooem to the JaU and a oentral book.tJ\8, nioorda and re- (See CONTRAC'f. Pa1e AZ) In i923amennamed JQe Beek had an ldee ..• a yechtolub for kldl. Hll motlvatlona are undw' ... theolubprowd• GfMllUOOMI and la ltlll In operation after e f }'Ml'I. P1geA8. Alice Benton Convicted slayer Bonin 'smother testifies in penalty phase By JEFF ADLER °' ........... The mother of Freeway Killer Willlam Bonin testified in an Oranae County courtroom '1\Ms- day that ahe believes her 80ll la innocent of the murders for which he has been convicted and eenienced to die. Alice Benton told a Superior Court jury oonmdering lmpoe:lng a RClOlld death penalty on her 36-year-oJd IOI\ that Bonin WM a 1'belpful" child who never dranll, mnoked nor1Wore ln her PftllleDC9. "U be had a t>.g of candy he pve it away and. wouldn't eat any hinwelf," abe said. Bonin'• mother and two brothers were the flnal wiii- called by defeme attorney WU- liarn Charvet as the murder trial's penalty phue neared ita con- clusion. Final arguments were dleduled to begin at 1:30 p.m. today. Juror's have been 1.Lttenina to. evidence concerning Bonin'• life and c:rtminal put lince hia convic- tion Aq. 2 of four flnt-degree mwden. Because the jlry'• guilty verdJct included a ftndinc of apedal drcwmtancel. the panel could recommend lmpolltion of the death aentel¥l'e. Belides the four Orqe County murden, eomn· -baa been con- victed and alrMdy aentenced to cUe for 10 bomolexual torture l1aytno in Los Anaelel County. • Benton. who remarried tollow-lnl the death of bu.band Robert Bonin Sr., told the court she never hu witnemed her aon enNDI in any act. of violence. "I believe he'• innocent. He'a never lied to me," aakl Bonin'• mother, a woman with ahorkropped gray hair and wear- ing a pink dre9. AMed by Charvet whether lhe would lie to uve her aon'1 life, Benton, at ti.mm wipiJWtmn trom her eyes. replied, "No_ I D8WI' lie." Paul Bonin deKribed bill older brother• the kind ol person who would "llw you the lhlrt off hil mck. •• He aid Bonin Wiii nk:lmamed 'l()oody-Two-Shoes'' while they were powtnc up. '11'8 yow\l9f Bonin Do c:har8c- terbed hla broUMr • man ol a (S.. MOTllD, Pap Al)- -.. . . t . . . . ~ . . I I: l ·~ .. I .. • •:: . .. .. I., ! :' ... . ... A.a * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesd~. Aug. 17, 1983 SIGNS ... From PageA1 But the plannen did count 1i8JV in 11 oommerd.al blodu and then estimated from thoee the per- oenia,e of signs in the city. Tbey concluded that 21.4 percent of the llerw would be covered by the grand.father clau.e. Another 27.2 percent already meet the law's guidelines and 51.4 penwlt a.re illegal. be said. Thia last group, he added, is made up primarily ofmna.11 signs for which owners never obtained city per- mits. The exact nwnber of signs in the city also is unknown, but RoblNon said the cloaest guess planners can make -using the same projection method -I.a 5,308. Heaaid the city issued l ,810sign pennita under the new ordinance between April 1974 and August 1981. The pennita, issued to 1,362 busine91es, covered 2,081 signs. Mayor Donn Hall and council members Arlene Schafer and Eric Johnson favored the grand.father clauae, while Norma Hert.wg and .Ed McFarland oppoeed it. Tbe council still must hold a aecond public hearing on the issue when it comes up for final approval on Monday, Sept. 5. WEATHER From PageA1 Southern California. ••• Alida, a tropical storm in the Gulf of Mexico that could whip itaelf into a hurricane, iB picking up where now-dead Hurricane Ismael left off. Hoffer said a huge air mass hanging over the western states is funneling the humid oondltions from Alicia to California. The air mus stretches from Canada to Mexico and diverting, rerouting and buically mixing up weather conditions across 1'D08t western st.ates. Additionally, a funnel system hanging off the coast of Oregon and Waahington alao is pushing wann, sticky weather southward. A. it baa been, inland temperatures are expected to reach into the upper 90s with coutal daytime highs in the upper 70.. Lowa -though there really has been no such thing in the last week --will be in the mid to low 70s. _-"!'!' ........ --- Stabbed man's identity revealed County cuts a channel Police investigators today know the identity of a man found stabbed to death in Costa Me.a last Thunday and they believe they have the car driven by the man who stabbed him. So Car, though, they don't know who that driver was. Police Lt. Jack Cal.non ident- ified the stabbing victim as Fran- ciaco Martinez, 33, a Costa Mesa gard.ner and Mexican national who was living in the country illegally. Investigators last week were not optimistic about diacovering Martinez' identity. He was carry- ing no ldentification and no one in the Hamilton Street neigh- borhood where his body was foWld recognized him. Orange County crews use a bull- dozer to remove sand from the mouth .of Aliso Creek after nearby South Laguna homeowners com - pla~ned a berm formed by the sand diverted the creek alongside a cliff h~low their homes. The project, now completed, ensures the creek will once again empty into the ocean adjacent to the Aliso pier. But Cal.non said investigatora got a good break when an Orange County Sheriff's deputy thought he remembered Martinez and a worker in the Coroner's Office matched the dead man's finger- prints to thoee taken from Martinez when he was arrested in Costa Mesa two years ago on a HOW HOT· IS IT? ... From Page A 1 and cube ice a week in the summer months, and things have been a bit hectic the past two weeks. "I've been working myself to death on the weekends," he said, adding most of his customers are travelers, picnickers or beach concession stand operators. But, as in tn06t stories, there's a flip side. Some businesses aren't benefitting at all from the heat. Places that offer vigorous activity, for example, just aren't popular when it's hot and humid. The manager of the Shapemaker ex- erdae salon in Huntington Beach said attend- ance has dropped since the heat wave. ''There are definitely lesa people coming in," she said. "But the ones who do oonie in are sweatier." The summertime alwnp ia a regular phenomenon at the Shapemaker, she said. "This is pretty typical for the summertime. Our business is really good after the fattening at Christmas time.'' King's Racquetball Court in Westminster is feeling a similar swnmerti.me slwnp, said Bill McClintock, manager of advertising and promotions. "Of coune, if it gets hot enough out.side, they'll come back in. When the heat gets too bad, maybe it helps," he said. The building is air-conditioned. Local amwiement parks aren't hitting blockbuster attendance rates, either. Sydne Huwaidi, a Disneyland spokeswoman, said business is pretty routine thla summer. "This time of year many of our guests come from out of the local area," she said. ''They have certain vacations all planned out" and they don't let the heat force them to change their plans. At Knott's Berry Fann, a spokesman said attendance i.a up overall this summer because of Camp Snoopy, a new attraction, and the Beatlemania show currently booked at the park. "The people who are coming are here to aee Beatlemania." he said, despite the heat. Chickens aren't big fans of the heat either , says Ralph Furra, president of Fann Fresh Foods in Santa Ana. ''They produce less eggs and the eggs they do lay are smaller," he said. His two million hens, located on a 600 acre fann near Simi Valley, nonnally produce between 1.7 and 1.8 million eggs per day, Furra said. "But when it's this hot, the food they eat is to battle the heat rather than produce eggs. Production is down ·10 to 15 percent." Bartenders are noting a decline in daytime buainess during this month's heat. Michaeleen Crawford, manage.r at The Saloon on South Coast Highway in Laguna Beach, said thingJI have been slow at the stand-up bar during the daylight hours. "We've turned the fans up high and the beer box down low, and if that doesn't work we give everyone enough to drink so they don't worry about it," she laughed. She said regu1an oome in when the sun goes down, "and they're ordering cold beer - the adjective cold is always in front." Ted Lara, who holds forth in the back bar at Novak's Place in Corona del Mar, said owner Robert Novak just installed two new Cans in the bar. "But the heat and humidity are keeping people away," he said. "People don't eat as much, but on the weekends we have good beer business. "Especially when the rugby team comes in.'' grand theft charge for allegedly stealing a gun. The U.S. Immigration and Na- tionalization Service aen t Martinez back to Mexico at the time but he apparently returned, Cal.non said. The stabbing took place early Thursday morning on lhe 500 block of Hamilton. just west of Harbor Boulevard. Investigators believe, based on statements from witnesaes, that Martinez was a pasaenger in a large red car with a black vinyl top. The vehicle was seen parked on the street, where the driver and another man, believed to be Martinez, shared a 12-pack of beer. Twelve empty beer cans and a bag from a nearby supennarket were found where the car was parked. The two men were later seen fighting ou taide the car. and police received a report that the driver had pulled a knife and stabbed the other man several times in the chest and back, Calnon said. NB woman killed in coast highway crash A 20-year-old Newport Beach woman was killed early today when she lost control of her convertible and it flipped over on Pacific Coast Highway south of Crown Valley. Driver Cathy Rose, of 735 Saint James St., was pronounced dead at the 9Cene by paramedics, said California Highway Patrolman Bud Rooks. A passenger, Paige Gilbert of Vista, was injured in the crash and was listed in fair condition in Mission Hospital's intensive care unit. A little before 2 a.m . today, Rose was driving her 1969 Datsun northboWld on PCH when the vehicle went off the road, hit a raised asphalt curb, and flipped 360 degrees, landing on its wheels. Both passengers were ejected from the vehicle, Rooks said. Roee was discovered under· neath the automobile, Rooks said. CONTRACT AWARDED ••• $300,000 payment set by mortuary From PageA1 leue area. Extensive remodeling of the existing main jail alao is planned. The addition is intended to relieve overcrowded conditions in the main jail, which Sheriff Brad Gates contendl a.re at the root of many problems now facing the fadllty. Superviaon allocated the initial $2 million for design from rev- enue-sharing funds. The board is hoping it will be able to procure state funding to pay a large portion of the full construction oosta. Board members have been ey~ ing a $280 million pool of at.ate bond monies created last year with the passage of Propoaition 2. The money is eannarked for jail construction and rehabilitation. The project al.ready baa been identified by the state Board of Corrections, which allocates the funds, as one of the state's top priorities. Fausto Reyes, an aide to Super- vi8or Roger Stanton, said plans for the project should be ready in four to five months. The entire facility could be completed in the next .everal years if funding la aecured on a timely ham. One of the principal partners in the architectural firm .elected to design the facility is William Ficker, a prominent Newport Beach yachtmnan who once skip- pered an America's Cup entrant in aailing's moat prestigious race. A Costa Mesa mortuary has agreed to pay a reported $300,000 to a 73-year-old widow who alleged her husband's ashes were mixed up by operators of a crematorium. Audrey Cooper had sought $1 million from the owners of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Memorial Park over the alleged mishandling of her husband's remain.a. Betty McMullen, Cooper's at- torney, today confirmed that the cue had been settled and that papers to dlsm.im the cue were filed last Friday. MOTHER TESTIFIES ... McMullen would not confirm the amount of the settlement, which waa reported in one COWlty newspaper. Cooper, who pre.ently lives in C.amarillo, could not be reached for comment today. (From Page A 1) ''fibber" than a liar, in answer w one question. Bonin'• older brother, Robert, agreed with his mother's and brother's de9Cription of Bonin as a non-violent type with "a repu- tation for good acts.'' He ala> de9crlbed for the court the troubled atmoephere sur- rounding th.e family's homellfe while the three boys were grow- ing up. Their father, Robert Bonin said, was prone to drinking, gambling and taking "actions aphwt their mother." At one point, Bonin'• father lost the We're Listening ••• 642•6086 .. :=r. .. ~~rio., " ,_ Oo -~ )'Oii• ~ °" •ao111111 m1~1p m 11u1 ,our tOllJ w1t1 u --ed ktut~J Incl l<H\OeJ Ii yov 0o "OI ,....,,_ r- family's houae gambling, he said. Charvet alao asked family members if they noticed a change in Bonin after his re~ from duty in Vietnam. The attorney had told jurors at the out.et of the trial'• penalty phaae that he would be able to show how Bonin's Vietnam experience related to the murders he committed after his diacharge. However, all three family mem- bers testified they detected no change in his behavior upon his return from Vietnam. The trial on the alleged mix-up was halted last month by Orange County Superior Court Judge Mark Robin80n, who ordered lawyers for both sides not to d.l9cuaa the cue. The trial apparently was halted when a settlement was reached. Lawyers for the mortuary were not available for conunent today. Though the arrangmenta for Cooper's ashes were handled by Smith TuthW & Lamb, the widow sued Harbor Lawn becaU8e lt had purchased Smith Tuthill before she picked up "the bogus box of ashes" in 1979. · What do you like about lhe Daily Pilot? Whal don't you like" Call the number at left and your message will be recorded, tranacribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24·hour answering 1ervtce may be uaed lo record let· lers to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must include their name and telephone number for verirication. No circulation calls, please Tell us what"!! on your mind. ORANGE COAST Dally Pilat H. L lohw.m lff PublWI« Cl111en.d Mfw ........ 114/ta·tsn Aft M'* ... bwn la-4111 MAIN Of'PIC• »a w..i a., 81 . C.• .._ CA MM ~ 11o1t 15'0. Coll' -CA t2Gt ~ • ..., Otlflge Cceel ~ ~ Ho n••• t1011n . lllut ltl llOl'lt . adlrorlel mall•• 01 __ ,,.,..,,_ylMt~~-- ~Of ~-· ~ 111' '• "'· --'° .... 9"CI ~ _., .. ........ ed CMQ Dow..,, "8JmOnd II.al Mn Edtor Md Altllttanf ContrOller "'°" ~ .... TJIJJIMO• OrlllOI CWll'f -...._., --~~ &W••*'*' ....._ .......,_...,.... ..... to the~ ._...,.c.- ~ ~ VOL 11, NO. m " ' • ..... LEA•ST GROUND BEEF lt4--t6•r.te.....tl $1.'f'f u •. CALIFOllllA BROWN ONIONS lartt .. 1•· u. .... i.e ... SHRIMP #t ..... ....... tltt tSAU. $10"u. .... ttt.ft STEAK SALE *100 Off,. u. ....... a......e.n.... T-1011 STEAi OR PORTERllOUSI STEAK a....ttu.. FREii CAllFORIU CANTALOUPE , ... Of, ....... ,., ...... 1•• u. FREii PACIFIC $1 68 RED SNAPPER • -, L• • LWtSU.. 810 DEAL MUFFINS $ t . t ' ,., ~ ............ . I BAY FllSI JUMBO SHRIMP SHRIMP lntt& ..... e...t9I $6" .... $12"u. ..... 1 ....... .... tt4.ftU. EXTRA LEAi OROU• BEEF (tO J Fet c:..t.t} • $1.6'1 .... CLAIFORllA VALEllCIA ORMES ... J.w.e .. ...... ...,,,.. • lit" • ....... o-t PARKtNG AVAILAaLa Pacific Ranch Market 3347 E Coast Hwy ~ x· -"" ~ . AT lllAll or STOlll Prtcee En.c11W Thru 8123183 Corona del Mar 67S·3510 0.-. 0., ' • "' ...... llMMy ..... • ·: .. · •, .. . .. .. .. . := :· :: ,• . . .. •• ~ .. •' .. .. •• "'! ., •• ~ ~ ,. ~ ~ ~ ·-~·::-~·.··' ~ ' I I • k I; I .. . ; ' • .a .. I ~ l &&.J 6i . • ::.o \ ._ \ ~ f . • .t·· Rabies vaccination clinic Thursday in Fountain Valley A low-cost anti-rabies vaccination chnk for dogs will be conducted from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Thunday, Aug. 18 at the Fountain Valley Recreation Center,Brook.hunt Street at Hell Avenue. State, county and city laws require that all dogs 4 months old or older be vaccinated against rabies. The shot ls effective for 30 months. Cost of the vaccination is $3 per dog. The clinic is sponsored by Orange County County Animal Control, the Southern California Vetemiary Medical Association and the Fountain Valley Women's Club. Have a run at Huntington Beach The 29th Distant Runners Derby will be run on Saturday, Aug. 20, starting at the Huntington Beach City Pier. The event is a 5-mile race that begins at 7:30 a.m. Awards will be given to the top five finishers in each category for men and women competitors. Young people, age 19 and under, also will receive awards for the top five finishers in the 3-mile and 1-1/2-mile runs. Pre-registration fee is $3: with a T-shirt included, the fee is $8 . From 6:30 to 7:30 a.m. on the day of the race, a $5 entry fee and $5 for late registration will be accepted. Entries wil be limited to 500 runners. For information on the race, contact the Huntington Beach Community Services Department, 536-5486. Classes offered in Laguana Beac h Classes for older Laguna Beach residents will be offered beginning Aug. 22 through Saddleback College and will be held at the Veteran's Memorial Community Center at 394 Legion St. Classes in creative writing, exercise to music, beginning Spanish, calligraphy anti career vocational exploration are being offered. For information, call the Senior Citizens Club of Laguna Beach at 497-2441. UCI engineering orientation m eeting Prospective students and employers who are interested in learning about UC Irvine's new certificate program in biomedical engineering should attend an orientation meeting Tuesday, Aug. 23 from 5:30-7 p.m. at the University Club on the UCI Campus. Deadline for a~on to the program is Aug. 25. For more information and a brochure, call 856-5414. Try out for Saddleback choral groups Saddleback College North, in Irvine, is holding auditions for three choral groups which are forming for the fall semester. $80,000 OK'd for coast plan The Orange County Board of Supervisors Tuesday agreed to spend $80,000 in Harbors, Beaches and Park District funds to identify beach access point.a along the unincorporated shoreline be- tween Laguna Beach and San Clemente. The study would ad~ con- cerns of citizens in the area as well as how beach access development could be accomplished and at what cost. It also would take into account the eventual cost of maintaining beaches opened to greater public access. One reason cited for such a study is the grant already received for beach-access projects. These funds must be spent within a specified time period or they'll be lost. The board has taken a firm position that county staff mem- bers should take no step.s to further public access to beaches beyond defending lawsuits in the South Laguna area until agree- ment with local residents is reached regarding their concerns. Visits for seniors Older Lagunans who would appreciate a "cheer-up" visit at home, or anyone who knows a senior who is alone and lonely, should contact the Senior Citizens Club of Laguna Beach. Home visits are available through the Outreach and Stu- dent Nurses programs sponsored by the club and coordinated with Saddleback Conununity College. Phone 497-2441 for details. Newport Beach liquor store robbed A man claiming 10 haye a gun held up Windjammer UqUOI', 3537 E. Coat Highway and tied with S1.215 In cash. WltneaMS Uld the man lool< a can of soda to tile counter and lhttn mede the robbefy demand atter the cler1t had opened the cuh reg111er. The bandit reportedly tped off In • two-door Mdan. Burglars uMd a chi•. a drill end a hammer to extrlCt a floor aate from the master bedroom of a Dov9f Shores h<>mea-The thieves broke Into the home through a garage door, ransaotted the rMldence and look the sate, beUeYed to contain money and Jewelry. The residents were n1ry on vacation at the time ot the break-In. Vandals did $5,000 damage to wood cabinets and paneling In an under-construction residence on the 2000 block of e. Oceanfront. . . ' A diamond ring worth more lhan S 10,000 wu taken by a burglar who crawled Into a residence on the 1900 block of E. Balboa BouleVard through an unlocked bat.hroom window. Costa Mesa Two people were treated for pota- lble necit lnluries Tueeday anernoon after a thre.<:ar rear-end accident on southbound Brtatol Street north or Bear Street. Roberta Irene Hare. 30, of Huntington Beech and Ronald Rlctlard Jankowski, 31, of Corona del Mar were treated at Costa Mesa Medical Center •"er the accident. ln1191Ugator1 aald Hare told them the wu l()()t(lng fora freewey on-ramp and falled to stop at the corner, striking Jankowski'• car. Which In tum hit a third car drt\19n by Marla INbel Martine, 30, of Coeta Meaa. She wan't hurt, police Mid. A 22-year-old laborer from Coata Meaa wu arreeted T\leeday tor drMng his motorcyde on the aide- wait< on Harbor BoulYMrd nMr GllMlr Avenue. Three people -• arreeted on eusplclon of lhopllhlng Tueeday at South Cout Plaza department stores: A 27-year-old woman from Santa Ana Who reportedly tald she stole three dr ..... to glVe as gltta; a 65-yeer-old Placentla man Who said he la p.y1ng too much alimony but saw two pairs of "Polo" short• he wanted; and a 32-year-okS Laguna Hlllt woman Who, ln.....tlgatort clalm, first Mlec1ed a dress ancf then plc;ked out matcf11ng earrings betore trying 10 amuggle them out the door. Laguna Beach A brown canvu purse left In a IOCked car parked In the 800 block of Cliff Drive wu removed by burglars Tueeday, police Mid. The puree and It• content• were valued al a total of S175. A South Gata man was arretted In \ Laguna Beach Tuesday on auap1c1on of raaldenllal burglary Scott Quercia, 2 1, wu being held on S25,000 ball for a burglary he alleged- ly committed In the 1400 blOCk of Tel'raoe Way. A woman who WU...., walking Into teiephc)M Polel at Legion and South Cout Highway app...,..tty 1ett the .,.. beofora otflcen could arrive. lrYine The Great Amerlcall Clothing Co. waa broken Into late Tueedey and clothel were ttolen. The bualnesa, located on Sky Pattc. has been t>urglarlzed frequently In the put, pollce tald, Entry apparently wu made through a amuhed wtndow. Jewelry was atolert lrom a home on the 4000 block of Royce Road Tueaday afternoon. Thelvet entered through an open bac:Jt door. Huntington Beach A burglary was reported Tuesday at a home on the 800 block of Huntington Street. Entry wu ap- parently made through an unlocked bedrooom window. The loat Included S40 and a bottle of liquor A resident ot the 7600 block of Ontario Drive reported Ille theft Tuesday morning ot hla turquolae Ford pickup with White Flt>etglaa camp« lhell. The IOU WU eatlmaled at S3.500. Fewer clouds, but warm and humid Coastal =-Thundry Some Cloud9 llUI ,.., Coftllnued -m -humid. ..,,, lllGI"' 71 lo ... -lowl In Ille eci.10 ... 70. P(JOnl ~ to !he - --..,,., °"'to -0... Ille -__ .,, -wlnelt15to 22k-...,,.,4 1011-comb4ned -""OUGI" Thur90ey ~ UOM vet\. ... -dutitlo .....,, -~ loOur-. ~ -IO ..... I lo 1 -'""""""'-wwi-2 I031eec ~-1I0 3 .... Y•-oo.ICll"""'•--.end• "'*-ol ...,..lad ---=.=. .... ~-~ Extended FM...Sl'Ol•,_9wOUQll= ....... In 7o. .... ~ •MO""O toe In .... -~ lo. In Ille ---ro. Temperatures ti'-- AlllWry ... 80 =--... 70 .. .,, Md«• .. ., ~ ... 11 MllrM 11 .. Atlm'lllC Olly 17 ~ lwlf/l/tt t7 74 ....._.. 11 11 :r. ... .. t.2 ti ., ----II oe .... IO .. .,.,., 17 .. ....... 100 71 ...... ., .. =-... 80 IO .. ~.•c 11 n ~.wv " .. ~N C .. 16 il!~ .. ti .. .. to • ~ .. ee ~c ti 83 c--19 M o.i..rr won11 " 75 OWylon 87 70 0.-93 83 o.~ IOI IO 0.CrOll 95 II OuMfl 71 83 EIP-96 97 hlrbfWIU •• 411 Fwgo 76 63 ~1111 11 52 °'--'7 5e ~d .. ,. -.. N HonoMu 17 71 -on ., 74 lhdlal..,... .. 73 ~ ..... ., 76 .lee*~ " .. -'-M 44 ~Olly 104 IO L81Y .... 112 71 Ut1lle llodt " 74 t::r-.. to .. 11 L.-odl 17 .. ........... ., 74 -17 82 --'° 70 Mpi.81 P811 " 11 ~ .. 70 .... Or-. to 77 .... Ven .. .. ..... IO I I ~......,. 103 .. ~Olly IOI 78 0.-IOI .. 0!1mndO ta 76 ,.. ..... ... 12 ..._... 101 n "'"_.,. 0 .. Tides TOC>AY 9-ldNOll ~pm TMUMOAY u "'""-tiatam o~ :::r .. l.tta_m 31 1l.4SllHll " '-"'""" IN pm .. ""' -:::-r; ill! '!!. "' . .... Wecli11t;etl l•m _..., M 7'7pll' -,.. ...... p"' toclll)', -.. 1'47 • ,,. ~.,., ,... ...... &I 4,Mpm ,. NellONI w ...... s.-t 00 HOM US OI C-c. I Frontt . Cold ..., Warm .,.. Occluded w.o StattOnary •• '2 M .... '*9o 12 at ...... ........... 16 IS 8eet11t 1111~ 97 .. &iOlkfl'lillt tt 63 ..__ .. 11 lyr- .. 12 T QPlldUI It 74 T-11 .. TulM II .. WilllltlnglOll Jt1 11 WlclNI• .. 11 76 .. n 11 .. 71 IO II .. M t2 .. 106 1t ., 71 101 1t " 17 109 '° fPOR Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, Aug. 17, 1983 * AJ uwir....- A pregnant Pat Tyler sits with her two children, Brett, 18 and Wendy, 14, in their El Toro home. Double surprise She thought she couldn't have a baby By tbe A11oclated PreH EL TORO -Pat and John Tyler long ago accepted that they could not have children of their own. Both in their early 40s, they planned to put their four adopted children through college, then travel and retire. That was before Mrs. Tyler discovered she was pregnant - with twins. The sudden switch from anticipating an empty nest to getting ready for a double doae of diapers came as a "total shock," said Tyler, 40, who like his wife pursues a busy real estate career. "It really hit us hard," said Mrs. Tyler, 43. "It was a combination of panic, fear, excitement and happiness all rolled up together." The Tylers, both previously married and divorced, had each adopted two children when they could not have their own and by the time they married six yea.rs ago, they were sure their days of r'aising children were ending. Her son Brett, 18, already is in college; her daughter Wendy, 14, will soon be gone from home; and his children, Mike. 13, and Miasy, 10, live with their mother. Statistia tell their doubly improbable story: only one in a thousand women giving birth for the first time is over 40, and just one in 90 births is twins. They were looking forward to travel and retirement when Mrs. Tyler lnexplic.ably started gainiJl& welght. Her doctor ordered a 90nogram. which creates a kind of X-ray with sound wayes, allowing patients and physicians a gllmpee inside the body. On the small dark screen in a laboratory, the couple saw &0mething move inside Mn. Tyler. As they peered more closely. they saw a second moving object -twins. Then came "the most major decision in our lives," Pat said. They had always dreamed of natural parenthood, but they worried about disrupting their plans and that the adopted children might feel threatened by the twins. They also feared Down's syndrome, a congenital disease that occurs more frequently in children born to women Mn. Tyler's age. But after amniocentesis determined that Down's syndrome was not present ln either fetus, they decided not to have an abortion. While waiting for the test resulta, Mn. Tyler went to church every day. "l always lit two candles," she said. They decided to travel "up the positive and happy road," Tyler said. Now Mrs. Tyler Is staying off her feet to guard against a premature delivery before the expected arrival in November. Meanwhile, the whole family is readjusting. Tyler, embarrasaed to be the oldest man in the obstetrician's office, warns: "The first time I get mistaken for their grand.father, it'll be trouble city." Brett, a freshman at Saddleback College, wonders what it will be like attending his sisters' high achool graduation when he is 36. Wendy, always the youngest child around the house, says she's trying to get uaed to the idea of 900n being the oldest; Missy says she'd looking forward to having little sisters to pick on. NB firm denies fraud By L.P . BENET °' .. .,..,,.... ...... The owner of a Newport Beach gem company, named in a Federal Trade Commiaaion suit charging a Beverly Hills firm with invest- ment fraud, has denied hia firm waa involved in any wrongdoing. The FTC suit, filed in U.S. District Court, said that Kimberly International Gem Corp. of Bever- ly Hills allegedly persuaded indi- viduals to glve up their diamonds in exchange for gems that Kimberly claimed were much stronger in the investment mar- ket. The suit charged that Kimberly led customers into believing they would reap big returns from investing in sapphires and gar- nets, even though some of the rocks were worthles,,. The com- plaint named International Gemological Society, Inc., 3471 Via Lido, Nerwport Beach, as being involved. "Nobody collaborates with me," said Harvey Levin, owner of the Newport firm. "I run an indepen- dent apprai.sal firm and Kimberly ls one of my customers, but there is no connection between them and us." The suit alleges that Kimberly had teamed up with with Inter- national Gemological Society to back up claims that customers could pull in as much as a 25 percent return within months of the purchase, the suit said. "l have no idea what the suit i.s talking about," Levitt said. According to the swt, the New- port Beach firm allegedly iailued appraisals stating the stones were worth many times their true value. In some cases, the suit charged, customers discovered when they tried to resell their jewels that Kimberly had sold them stones for 99 ti.mes their wholesale value DeDlocrat event set By WILL ANDERSON o.., ..... c.. .... -· The Newport Democrats have come out of the closet agam -and they're cooking. Cooking barbecue, that is. Orgina1ly known as the Harbor Denvx:ratic Club, the organization was created in 1948 by Clara Axatater and the late Mama Olaon. Headquarters were estab- lished in Costa Mesa. ln 1971, Lane Sherman and Fred Cunard expanded the or- ganization, with tht' new faction becoming known as the Newport Beach Democratic Club. Cunard, president of the club, placed an advertisement stating: "Demo-• crats will meet in a large cloeet." The ad drew members from Huntington Beach. Irvine, eomr Mesa and Newport Bettf h . The club held its first barbecue in 1973, and it has become an annual event. This year's barbecue, the 10th, will be held from 3 to 7 p.m. Sunday at the Costa Mesa Community Center, ~==============================~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~-an~d_will~~fe_a_t_ure~sq~uare~~da.nd.ng~-·~· Gem Talk By J.C. H UMPHRIES Cut1fi.ld Gtmolo iet, AGS CLEANING DIAMONDS Although diamonda 1ut forever, they requitt care to keep brilliant and beautiful; and clean dWnonda should never be touched by your fingert . . they lhou.ld be handled by the edges. When stonea are not ciemented or glued, but aet ln metal. the foUowlna cle&l\ini methoda are sale: 1. Bathing In clet.,._te: Uw an eyebrow brush t.o clec the pf ecee whUe aubmerried ln • mnall bowl of warm .ua. prepared wtth u9uid detergent.I commonly UMd at home. 1laen place them ln a ttralner and riNe under warm rwvdng water, patUna them dry with \Inti.. cloth. 2. Ammona.-w• toek: u. half cold water arid half houlehokl ammonia ln • C:UP, aoAk.lna tn &hla aolutlon for 30 minut.M. 11wn U8e an eyebrow bn.aah t.o iap .,ntly around the front and bM:lk of the mounUna. twtah ln the dudon apln .na drain on U.... J19per. s. Qulotr.olp ah..,.. "&-Z..." jr#my dea.n1nl lldta are avail- able. ll you foUow bwtnlctiona, It la Nfe to I.lie. 'Ill• care you liw your diarDond9 wW maintain their bri.lllard and tncreue your pride of ownerthip; bt1ftC your jewelry In ... we'll be hippy t.o c~ and clean your •t.onet et no eharp wb09 ~ welt. We Proudly Display this Emblem Because 1t means we ere knowledgeable, ethical iewelers dedicated 10 consumer protection and customer service We had to pass rigorous e1tam1nat1ons 10 enter the Society and are re-examined annually to make sure we're up on the latest developments rhe ®. symbol In our store 1s your assurance o~~e quality jewelry and good value bec ause we truly ><now what we're selhng .. Bank~mtrloard-Mutar Charo• PHONE 54&-3401 WEDNESDAY'S CLOSING PRICE \•I•" N•t (• t no\ t.•t>\or ("Q I 11 ~ It ;' ------·---- NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 0U0141t0...S INClUDf TAADH ON H~E NEW VOAK, Mt0Wl8T P4Ct,tC, PIW 80810N DfTllOtl 4HO CtHCINNAtl ITOCK fJICH4H0£8 ,.HO llEPOATfD ev THE NASO INSTIN[I \...... .. .. ~.,, .. , H•I ~.... .. .. <> t hO• fl<>"' ( "O fl ( ,,.,. 'lo-. t l\Q P l r>O• (10-. Cl'IQ -l2 Jr-\~ ~ Jf ~ 1 .1.i +~ +\ill I f 0 -,I ~1 i loll 14 ti ii i -· -~ Dow Jones Final Up 15.14 Cloelng 1,205M 1•1111111111 New home construction dips 0.6 percent in July By tbe Ataocla&ed Presa WASHINGTON -The recovery ln home buildina has been cooled by rising mortgage interest rates the government aa)'ll. Housing starts fell 0.6 percent ln July to an annual rate of 1.7'4 mllllon. \he Commerce Department said Tue&day. St.arta of single-family houses !ell 11.9 percent from June, while multi-family starts roee about 21 percent. The jump in interest rat.ea 8inoe May has bumped many potential home bu yen and home builders out of the market, at least for now, economists a.ay. American Express drops bid NEW YORK -American Express Co. haa withdrawn its $1 billion bid for Alleghany Co11>.'s main assets. "American Express adviaed Alleghany that it would be willing to proceed with the transaction, but only on the basis of revised terms and conditions," American Express said Tueeday. Vnemployment rate decreasing WASHINGTON -For the first time since 1981, a majority of st.ates are reporting a year-long drop in unemployment rates. Tuesday's report, which at.> showed more than half the states with June joblem rates improved or unchanged from May, appeared to be in line with other recent figures showing the natiooal unemploymenl rate gradually decreasing since last December. Bristol-Myers pushing Datril NEW YORK -Bristol-Myers Co. is launching Ha largest promotion ever in hopes of convincing conaumen to uae its non-aspirin pain reliever Datril instead of the leader, Tylenol. Industry analysts were not convinced that consumers would switch from Tylenol. Bristol-Myers this week is spending $1.5 million on television and radio to push its placement of 43 million Datril coupons in Sunday newspapers. Industrial production rising WASHINGTON -Industrial production roR l.8 percent in July, the eighth straight monthly pin since the end of the recession. The higher output by the nation's !actoriea and mines was widespread among materials and products with "especially sharp rises in automobiles and st.eel." Tuesday's report from the Federal Reserve BoArd said. And it said ouput of carpeting and fumitutt surpiamed the record set in 1979. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW YOltK (AP) -$alet, Wednftdlt~ HEW YCMtK IAPI -F ..... Dow·~ = 11e1W::. .:!. =-stO: E~ ~ wees.. AUO 17. tu uu . lrtellnt n•llon•llV •• C 17 SI..,,,...,_ =-' ..... 11 1,ns.-•"' + "' IOlncl lln.17U11M118'.ll lliOSJ"+l'-1• Arcl\OnM 1,m,400 19\lo --20TNI m .a Sl1M sue SM.JI+ U 1 MoOll 1.l06,000 JJ\4 ·U~ uun UUI 131,07 11'.,, l»JI+ 1.16 WalCoHA 1,1J2,500 1Wt +I &S Stk ....... '14.tt tM.a 474.04+ W :=..,~ :~n:: 3~ .. :!.1~ ~ ;H AICWIAlum '°7-~ +2 Ullb 1.-1,1'0 ~I ttS.900 -t 116 '5 Siil l5,J1'.-~~:: 5:! ·~: t'~ AMERICAN LEADERS Duk• Pow n2,100 n AMlt Corp 7'4,400 2:11' t _, Ml• YCMtK IA') -...._ • t *;¥ c;en~ n:uoo •~ -. .,-. --..._ 111 .. WHAT NYSE DID ~.~.~ ~ •• ~ ~ _.._,L NEW YCMtlC (AP) Aue 17 WHAT AMEX DID NEW YC>tlK IAPI Aue. 17 SYMIOLS ~QM! ....... ·~ ......... --~ -" Prev ~ IM.••+- on T...,..11 --""' +1~ 616 CillllM' 11 dUit M m =• ~ •" •'" -_... 'te ,,.,, 1'70 ,.......... I ~+-ll O...Nt 1 ,. ,,.. 12 ~ llaMI )1' + \Os Pm. elev 2'7 .. m '" , s ..