HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-08-30 - Orange Coast PilotTHI ORANGf COAST COUNTY IDITIDN
TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1983 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Showing their colors and excitement
Kim Kupratis, Mic~, Michelle Tarlos,
Kerry Finnegan, Kelly Noonan, Erin Finnegan,
Jennifer Lunquist, J ennifer Kucher, Karen
Kupratis and Cindy Kamps, (left to right) all of
'
Chambers push
freeway work
By GLENN SCOTT building another along the San °' _ _,,__ I Joaquin Hills Transportation Cor-
A coalition of three local ridor.
chambers of commerce.met today The proposed freeway ad-
to call for the compleuon of two ditions, they said. are keys to the
key freeway proposals for the area's economic health.
Orange Coast. The coalition, which calls itself
Officials for the Newport the Tri-Cities Chamber of Com-
Harbor, Costa Mesa and Irvine meroe. includes more than 3,000
chambers called a press con-members. Carol South, president
ference at the Westin South ~t of the Newport Harbor chamber,
Plaza Hot.el to annoW\Ce their said she is excited by the prospect
support for finishing the New-of the three business-oriented
port-Costa Mesa Freeway and groups combining in a unified
Burglars get
$7,000 from
Harbor boats
By STEVE MARBLE
OI ... °""J Net tlaft
Who's plundering the great
boats of Newport Harbor?
Police are searching for some
modem-day pirates who broke
into four boats moored off the
posh Balboa Bay Club, then came
ashore to loot the dockmast.er's
office at the Newport Beach club.
ln all, more than $7,000 in booty
-ranging from a $200 brass ice
bucket to a well-used bullhorn -
was taken. police said.
Hardest hit was the
"Margarita," a vessel owned by
Duffy Hot.els of Irvine. ln-
vestigators said the looters crept
into the cabin th.rough an un-
locked window and took an assort-
ment of video recording equip-
ment and a television.
The burglars also took a $2,000
eoda dispenser from the "BP John
II" and an expensive
made-ln-Spain sterling silver boat
(See BOATS, Pa1e AZ)
position.
So was Orange County Super-
visor Thomas Riley, whose fifth
district includes all three areas.
Riley also is chairman of the
county's Transportation Com-
mission and a strong proponent of
the San Joaquin Hills freeway.
"The officials you've elected are
pleased to have this kind of
unified support," he told the
audience of about 30 people,
mostly chamber officials, local
government representatives and
executives from big land-owning
finns such as the Irvine Co. and
C .J. Segerstrom & Sons.
Riley noted both projects have a
key link in common -a one-mile
strip of the Corona del Mar
Freeway from Irvine Avenue to
MacArthur Boulevard.
That segment hasn't been com-
pleted; the ditch.excavated for the
freeway is empty. But Riley
proudly noted the California
Transportation Commission an-
nounced last week it has agreed to
spend $13.6 million for the project.
Riley said a contract for con-
struction should be awarded by
October.
The Tri-Cities Chamber is sup-
porting the so-called east.em
(See FREEWAY, Page A!)
Irvine, practice getting into that old school spirit.
Their cheerleading class for 8-to I I-year-olds
was conducted by Trina Richardson at North -
wood Community Park.
Huntington circulation good
Arterial traffic flow surfaces in beach-oriented zoning plan
BJ ROBERT BARUR
OI IM a.i, ,_ IWI
For an area that's been called
blighted. decaying, dying and
even worae, the circulation of
downtown Huntington Beach ia
believed to be pretty good.
But that'• drculaUon as it
applies to street travel -how
people can get from one place to
another with the least bother and
without overrunning neigh-
bor-hood streeta.
The zoning plan has been
approved by the city's planning
commiasion and Is heading for
final City Council diacuas.iona on
Sept. 19.
It la expected 1to apur
long-awaited redevelopment for
the area anchored by five miles of
coutllne from Golden West Street
to Beach Boulevard.
seemingly out of the way, atten-
tion is focusing on how much
traffic the new projects will
generate and what effect It will
have on people living in the
development area.
Several proposals offer cause
for optimism that the tratlic
concemlt' .. can be worked out,
accordJng to Planning Corn-
milalon Vice Chainnan Tom
Llvengood.
The traffic plan, part of it
approved and part under study, is
baaed on a grid system designed to
bring vtaltort to the area along
Crime dip
sharply in
Huntingto
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of IM Dellr ~ tlall
Criminal activity is on the
decline in Huntington Beach.
At least, that's the indication of
crime statistics just released for
the first six months of 1963.
Index crimes, the major of-
fenses reported to the FBI and the
California Attorney General's of-
fice, have all decreased compared
to the same months in 1962, with
one exception. The lone increase
was in thefts, which were up just
1.6 percent.
The other index crimes -
homicide, rape, aggravated as-
sault, robbery, burglary, auto
theft and arson -were all down
for the first half of 1963.
Jim Moore, the city's police
crime analyst, said it may be too
early to celebrate. He acknowl-
edged that some of the decreases
have been rather dramatic, such as
homicide, which is down 63 per-
cent.
But he pointed out that the
numbers are very small -six
homicides in the first of half of
1962, compared to one homicide in
1963. The steep decrease could
change radically if just a few
homicides occur during the com-
ing months. he said.
HB's crime
trends
Here are the Huntington
Beach Index crime statistics
for the first six months of
1983, compared to the same
period In 1982:
Dltter-
OffenM 1MS 1112 enc.
Homicide 1 6 -83.CWo
Rape 14 21 -33.oe;.
Aggravated
assault 107 123' -13.0%
Robbery 81 122 -33.6%
Burglary 1, 171 1,406 -Hf.7•t.
Theft 2,379 2,3-41 + 1.6•/o
Auto theft 296 416 -28.Er/o
Moore said the overall nurril "'
of index crime incidents is do\• ri
just 6.4 percent. While pl1· ,~•'<I
with the decrease. he said 1 t w1 II h•
more significant if it holds trui f.ir
the entire year.
Huntington Beach Polit't' ( ·111•
(See HB CRIME, Page AZ)
Orange County
·Jews working to
preserve identity
This is the last of three articles in a
series on the growth of the Jewish
community in Orange County.
By L.P. BENET
OllM°""J,... .....
Tum-of-the-century author
Henry James once wrote that the
Yiddish quarter of Manhattan
"bristled, at every step, with the
signs and sounds ... ofa J ewry that
had burst all bounds."
That part of New York was the
new frontier for thousands of
European Jewish immigrants
fleeing the ramifications of an
overpopulated society and cen-
turies of religious oppression.
Decades lat.er. their grandchildren
and great-grandchildren continue
to trickle west, but to different
destinations -Los Angeles and
San Francisco, and in more recent
years, Orange County and San
Diego.
Contemporary Jews moving to
Orange County a.re taking roots in
a community far different from
the cloistered world their prede-
cessors settled during the latter
part of the 19th century. They
come for better jobs and to bask in
the warm, dry climate. But the
estimated 7U,OOO t.o 100,000 Jews
_,,..._.......,
JIWI
••• Oraa1•
C...ty
.
' .. . -.
Antl-Semltlam no worse In
Orange County than any-
where elae. Page C 1.
living here face many t.o11»h
questions, som e of them simil;,ir t.i
those their forefathersconfro11•t I
long ago.
How do Orange County J< ""
create a sense of togetherness in 111
area with no identifiable Jcv. ish
community? To what dcgrN• d.•
they assimilate in a predomin.1111-
ly Christian setting without 10);1111:
touch with their 5,000-yc><H old
heritage? What does it mean to
give up part of your identity 111
order to fit in? Do Jews battl<' ''•'Ii
these issues any differently th'''
other religious and e thnic nil
tures?
Some questions aJrcady ;t1 ,
(See CONTEMPORARY, Page C'I I
Robin Einstein, wife of R a bbi Stephen
Einstein of Fountain Valley, poured wine for
their family's observance of a J ewish holiday
celebration last March.
'nte lmpect of tnffk:, which hu
taken a beck le8t to the con-
troveny over how high build.inga
can jab lnto the akyllne, II surfac-m, ln a f.Ol'l1nl plan for the I beadl~ area.
>.. approved by the planning
cOrnmimlon, the plan allowa a mix
of commercial, residential and
office development with hef&hta
generally no greater than eight
stortee. It's been called a good
comproml.e between residential
and development lnter91'8.
But with~ the hl&h-rile 188ue
~:ard~r:~.!~r:~ti:;~~~ Call 842-4321 with news tip• 18eeTRAPPIC
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U Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug. 30, 1983
CONTINUED STORIES
From PageA1
SPON said spoiler in suit dismissal
Newport cit izen group 'key character' in John Wayne Airport commercial jet flap
HB CRIME DOWN ... By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... o.llr"" ·-F.arle Robitaille is equally cautious
about explaining the reaaon for
the decrease in crime.
"fd be reluctant to take credit
for it becauae then I'd have to take
the blame 11 it went the other
way," he quipped. "It's a
double-edged sword."
But the police chief said the
latest statistics fit in with a
continuing decline in Huntington
Beach crime.
"We're tickled by the figures,"
Robitaille said. ''Our crime ra t.e
now is lower than It was a decade
ago. That's the part we're most
p1eued with.''
The chief pointed to several
trends in trying to explain the
decreue in crime:
• The youth population, ages
15-22, the group most likely to be
involved in crime, is declining in
Huntington Beach.
BOATS ...
ornament and a television set from
the "Allswell."
The skipper of the "Invader,"
another vessel moored near the
club, told police someone broke
into his boat but appeared not to
have taken anythina. A $50 bull-
horn was • taken from the
doclanaa1er's quarters at the club,
which the crooks entered by
removing six panes of glass from a
louvered window.
•A strong Neighborhood~ . . .
organization has helped fe(juce---:_ A CJUi.en group 111 Newport
home burglaries and other neigh-Beach could emerge as the key
borhood crimes. character in an attempt to limit
• More citizen involvement in commercial jet departures out of
general is an aid to police. Resi-John Wayne Airport for the next
dents are ta.king down license 75 years.
numbers of offenders, banding U the proposed limit on daily
together to fight vandalism and takeoffs is to be successful, mem-
letting police know about trouble bera of Stop Polluting Our New-
spots. port, a group that has vigorously
"This way," Robitaille said, "we fought airport expansion, might
can put extra patrols in an area have to remove itself from an
before things get out of hand. Our
patrol cars don't spend that much
time within the walled residential TRAFFIC conununities, so we need that • • •
early notification." F p A • Beach offenses have been kept rom age 1
to a minimum, than.ks to highly
visible police patrols at the ocean-
front since early this spring. This
year, officers have been patrolling
the sands on special three-wheel
vehicles. The same vehicles can be
used for patrolling large parka.
• The Huntington Beach
Chamber of Commerce has
worked with the police depart-
ment to inform mercllants how to
prevent burglaries and robberies.
Although the recent figures
cover only the.. first six months of
1983, Robitaille said he believes
the crime decrease will hold true
for the entire year. If a surge in
crime were to occur in the city, it
would have shown up in the
summer months, the police chief
said.
•
way, while limiting traffic on local
streets to local residents.
Towards that end, the ex-
tension of Atlanta Avenue to
Pacific Coast Highway is under
study. The portion of Lake Street
between Atlanta and PCH w ould
become Atlanta and the rest of
Lake would be restricted to resi-
dents.
Orange Street also would be
restricted to local traffic in the
residential area between Golden
West and Sixth streets.
Walnut Street, which now ends
at Lake Street, would be extended
to Beach Boulevard. This is de-
signed to ease traffic along Pacific
Coast Highway, which is slated
for widening in the next year or
two.
FREEWAY PROPOSALS PUSHED ...
alignment for the extension of
Route 55, which would swing
aoutheaat of th.e commercial strip
along Newport Boulevard.
The San Joaquin Hills Trans-
portation C-orridor would begin at
MacArthur, where the extended
Corona del Mar freeway will stop,
and then run through the foothills
parallel to the coast until merging
with the San Diego Freeway just
900th of the Crown Valley
Parkway.
Riley said a Congressional bill
sponsored by Glenn Anderson,
D-Long Beach, would make the
freeway eligible for federal fund-
ing through this year's five-<:ent
guoline tax increase.
A aeparate bill in Sacramento.
carrted by Assemblyman Bruce
Young, D-Norwalk, would desig-
nate the San Joaquin Hills free-
way oo the state'• highway master
plan and would change the course
of Route 73 to continue on the new
freeway. Currently, the route
Cops identify
men involved
in SA shootout-
Police have identified the four
men involved in a Santa Ana
shootout late Sunday that left one
man dead and two otheni seriously
wounded, police said.
extends from the Corona del Mar
Freeway to Bristol Street and
then turn.9 on MacArthur to the
Pacific Coast Highway.
Young's bill would place the
San J oaquin Hills freeway in the
running for state funding, some-
thing the Newport-C.osta Mesa
Freeway already is scheduled to
receive.
The ere has budgeted $40
million to extend the freeway
from Bristol to Bay Street in
1987-88 and has committed itself
to completing the project at a lat.er
date.
Irvine cop justified
in shooting incident
A team of investigators from
Santa Ana has detennined that an
Irvine police officer was justified
when he shot a suspect in the
stomach last week after the
suspect opened fire on offioers.
The incident occurred Aug. 23
at 11:30 a.m. when six Irvine
officers and two Santa Ana of-
ficers went to 1114 W. Cubbon St.,
in Santa Ana, to serve a search
warrant in connection with an
ongoing narcotics investigation,
police said.
Officers Craig Smith, R.J.
Hansen and Mark Hoffman burst
into the front room of the home
after identifying themselves as
police officers. They were alleged-
ly fired upon by one suspect,
Roberto Torres, said Irvine Police
Lt. Robert Lennert.
within 10 minutes.
Torres was taken to UC Irvine
Medical Center where he under-
went surgery to extract a
fragmented bullet that was lodged
in his stomach.
The Santa Ana Shooting In-
vestigations Team determined it
was Craig Smith who fired the
shot which wounded Torres. said
Santa Ana Sgt. John McClain.
The team of nine robbery and
homldde investigators routinely
Investigates every o f -
ficer-involved shooting in the city.
McClain said. The matter will now
go before Santa Ana's Shooting
Review Board.
McClain said he is confident the
review board will also determine
the shooting was justified.
Torres has been charged with
asaault with a deadly weapon
existing lawsuit and vow not lO
take further legal acwon .
To date, members of SPON
have not thrown support behind
the plan for hrrutmg takeoffs.
The plan calls for putung a Lid
on departures, but only aft.er daily
takeoffs are increased from the
present 41 to 55.
Negotiators for the city and
Orange County, which owns and
operates the airport, have drafted
a tentative agreement that would
V\rtually make the county and the
beach city partners in future
airport operations
If county supervisors and city
council members approve tenns of
the pact, it could end years of
fighting and legal battling.
But under tenns of the agree-
ment, the city must d.ismlss an
eXlBung lawsuit aga.iNt the coun-
ty. The lawsuit was filed two
years ago when the county was
attempung to expand the airport.
SPON, which has a member-
ship of about 400 families, is a
party to the lawsuit and could
prove to be the spoiler in dia:miss-
ing the suit.
Quixotic crusade crumbling
Long-distance h iker discouraged b y lack o f support
By GLENN SCOTT
Of IM Diiiy ,,_ II.ti
HJ.s 1,600-nule JOurney on foot from
Olympia, Wash , to Escondido is almost
over now, and a discouraged Steve Blehm
says he'll be glad to call it quits.
Blehm, 25. is a walking crusade r -one
of the curious breed of Amencans who,
pushed by a mixture of curiosity and
concern, strap messages on their
backpacks and set out on lonely trips
down country highways and over strange
city streets.
They are billboards with human
messages and they like to talk about their
causes. The better organized hikers often
will stop to call the newspapers and radio
stations in just about any town in hopes of
planting their messages a little deeper into
the American heart.
Most of the time, these crusaders seem
to be carrying a backpack full of hope.
Smile lines mark their taut faces.
But it hasn't worJ<ed that way for..
Blehm, who called Monday to announce
he is walkmg under the weight of a
heavier burden. Since May 11, he has
been displaying on lus back the sign:
"1,600 Mile Walk for the Needy," along
with a white cross sewn above it.
He is asking people he meets to give to
the Salvauon Army's Emergency Relief
Fund for people out of work or down on
their luck. They need. he said, a bit of
Christian charity.
ChlJ it despair, or a media strategy, or
poor judgment. or the truth, but Brehm
says he isn't finding in ~ple the attitude
he sought.
"Basically, they lock their doors and
their hearts." he said
The idea for his waJk was spawned two
years ago when he was 11\ need and found
Linle help from established circles, Blehm
said. He has just about given up stopping
on his journey at churches, he said,
because he's tired of the "negauvtty" he
meets.
"I fmd more love from junkies than l do
from Christians," he said.
Blehm saJd he set off to encourage
people to refer to "the source," which is
the Bible. But after about 1.500 miles and
three months, he tSn't sure 1f people are
listening.
"I'm really lumJ of dLS1COuraged and
confused," he said.
Blehm said he has several speaking
engagements llned up m local churches
when the long journey ends at his home in
Escondido. By then. maybe> he'U be able to
organize lus though ts and more people
will listen, he said
Just the n, the other pay telephone at
the gas stauon rang. It was for him.
~other interview. Time to go.
o.llr"" ...... .., '--...,...
Steve Blehm treks a long Pac ific Coast
H ighway in search of compassio n.
Guillermo Hernandez, 26, of
South Gate died at the aoene of
multiple gunshot wounds, police
said.
The officers returned the fire
and backed out of the house,
Lennert said. Three suspects,
including Torres, surrendered
against a police officer, McClain ,---
said. Two other suspects involved lll••••••••••••••••••••• ... 1111111!1!1!11••••111!!11!1!11!~1!1m~~!l!l!!I----~ ..
Felix Lopez Albino, who lived
in the complex at 811 South
Fairview whett the gunfight took
place, waa listed in critical con-
di&n early today at UCI Medical
Center. Jesus Paredes, tenatively
identified as being from Los
Angeles. was listed in serious
condition at Fountain Valley H08-.tal
pa A fourth suspect, Miguel
Beltran, 52, is being held on a
murder charge at Orange County
Jail. Police believe a fifth suspect
iutill at large.
Police said the gunfight may
have been started during an
argument conceming narcotics.
Pol.ice oonfiacated four guns and
$1,400 in cash at the ecene, but no dnJ8ll were found. The suspects
are believed to be illegal aliena,
police aaid.
1lle gunfight began several
minute. before midnight at the
South Fairview complex.
We're
Listening •••
642·6086
~ .. QuerllfttMd ...,,..,.,.,,.,., " '°" 00 not lie•• youo P•l>9• Oy
5 JO p m * Delo-t 7 p m •"O your copy w111 b• ..... ..,
in the caae w ere not charged.
Doctor gets probation
in hospital kickbacks
Dr. Mark Hopp of Huntington
Beach has been sentenced to five
years' probation and a $10,000 fine
after being found guilty of aolid-
ti.ng kickbacks in exchange for
referring work to a Fountain
Valley laboratory.
In a separate but related matter,
the 68-year-old_ Hopp faces a
preliminary hearing in Orange
County Superior Court Sept. 19
on charges of involuntary man-
slaughter in connection with the
drug overdoee deaths of 11 pa-
tients treated at his Huntington
Beach detoxification clinic.
Hopp pleaded guilty in June to
charges that he solicited a kic.k-
back from Warner Village Lab-
oratory in exchange for giving it
work from his Medi-Cal patients.
Assistant U.S. Atty. Robert
Pallernon said today that lab
officials cooperated with the FBI
in the investigation.
U.S . District Judge Malcolm M.
Lucaa also prohibited Hopp from
billing Medi-Cal for at least a year
should he be:perm.itted to return
to his practice.
Sources said the court
aentenced Hopp to probation after
taking his age and the fact that it
was his first conviction under
consideration.
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Pubffsher
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug 30. 1983 -\3
~ • l • r f •• -1e._ < ! '
I •I t • • ff . -.
~ • I ~ '. . . . -.. · .. _ . . . ' Psychology of world peace puzzling
'Vegas Night' benefits
Fairview volunteers
Doctors probe global issues at Anaheim convention, find few remedies For conflic t
A Las Vegas night fund-raising party benefitting Fairview
St.ate Hospital's Volunteer Services will be held Sept. 16 in Costa
Mesa.
The event will run from 7 p.m. to midnight at the Coeta Mesa
Neighborhood Community Cent.er, 1845 Park Ave., Costa Mesa.
Tickets are $7.50 each, which includes $200 in play money for
enatz gambling, door priz.es, and refreshments. Proceeds go to the
Fairview Client-Patient Benefit Fund, which supports monthly
dances, holiday programs, swimming pool and park maintenance
and the Special Olympics program.
More information on the event can be obtained by calling the
hospital's Volunteer Services at 957-5188.
Laguna tennis tournament slated
The 26th annual Laguna Beach Tennis Tournament begins
Saturday and is open to players who live within the local school
district.
The tourney is co-sponsored by the city and by the Laguna
Beach Tennis Association and runs Saturday, Sunday, Monday and
Sept. 10-11.
Entry fee is $14 for singles, $18 for doubles. For information,
call the city's recreation department at 497-3311.
Valley Center plans grand opening
A dunk tank, stagecoach rides and live entertainment are
planned Labor Day Weekend at a grand opening celebration
ICheduled at the Fountain Valley Center, a shopping plaza located
at Magnolia Street and Warner Avenue . .
Major renovation has just been completed flt the cent.er, which ta the oldest in Fountain Valley .
Most of the festivities will take place Saturday. Proceeds will
IO to the J erry Lewis Telethon for Muscular Dystrophy and to the
l.Jon's Club Sight and Hearing Fund .
Model U.N. benefit run planned
-------
A five-mile run is scheduled to start at 7:30 a.m. Sept. 11 at the
Huntington Beach Pier.
Proceeds will go to Model United Nations chapter at
Huntington Beach High School.
Participants may register if) advance and get a Model United
Nations T-shirt for $9. It costs $4 to enter without a T-shirt.
Registration on the day of the race will be $6. There will be no
T..ahirts offered at that time. For more information, contact Gisela
Campagne at 962-1445.
By JEFF ADLER
OflM0..,"9t ....
Psychologists have no better
answers than anyone else when
aaked how best to promote world
peace and reduce the threat of
nuclear war.
That was a pparent Monday as
some of the nation's leading social
acientillts grappled with the issue
at the American Psychological
Aaaoclation's 9lst annual conven-
tion, being held in Anaheim.
Harvard psychologist B.F .
Skinner told thoee attending a
symposium on ~hat psychologists
can do to promote world peace
that he is pessimistic that they can
do anything.
"You would have to make
changes in the three estates that
are reluctant to change," Skinner
said. "We can suggest remed.ies for
the problems of today, but can
anyone in power put them into
effect?"
County teen
dies in Mesa
scooter crash
A 19-year-old Anaheim man
was killed early today after his
Vespa motor acoot.er went out of
control and crashed into a cent.er
divider on the 55 freeway aouth of
the San Diego Freeway in Costa
Mesa . ...P9lk:e said ..
ltc>ger Dimond was pronounced
dead at the acene at 1:15 p.m ..
police said.
Dimond was proceeding north-
bound on the Costa Mesa Freeway
when his bike struck the divider.
Dimond was thrown from the
vehicle and died of a broken neck,
police said.
~ • • · ~ · . -. r 11 • " • ._ -.. ,. • r • WF --. -, : ;
'
.... !"'\ :-' . ' ' • -4 It . ~~ .. ! ~ : ' I~ -.
• ~ • '·' ... .... .., _l._ -· • ,,··.· -l . . . . . . . .. -.. .
Burglars keep Huntington cops busy
A burg&aty wu report9d Monday
•ft«n<>on at a home on the 200 !loci!
of 11th Street In Huntington Beach.
Entry waa made through an open rear
window. The ION lnduded jewelry
valued at $200 and $15 In cuh.
A ~window was brotten to
entel" a mar()()("t 1982 Volkawagen
parked In a lot on the 8700 blodc ot
War~ Avenue In Huntington Beach.
The loaa lnctuded $400 In cast\ and a
S 170 portable ateteo.
Two Honda motorcyclea were r•
ported stolen aver the weekend from
a Huntington 8eect'I garage on the
17 400 bloc;I( of Mat1ten L.aM. An
9'ectrlc garage door ~ was
apparentl)WMd to br.ek In. The loea
wae 911tmated at $800.
A hOfne burglary wu reported
Monday on the 2000 block of Hunt-
ington Street. Entry wu apparently
made through •n unlocked door. The
loM, .. tlm•ted at $600. lnduded a
video macttlne 1nd • cable teleVlalon
box.
Irvine
A gold ring wu reported atolen
from • hOme on Nutwood Mond•y
about 8:50 p.m
Two eutot p*11ed near lndu11rlal
building. were atrlpPed of their
hubcepa Monday. The nrat theft
occ:urr9d on the 2000 bloc;I( of Du
Bt1dge Awooe about 3:30 p.m. and
the MCOnd on the 1000 block of Alton
Avenue about '4:.CO p.m. It 11 not
known whether the Incident• ara
related.
Fountain Valley
Someone removed a wtndow
acrean In the 10000 blocl< of El Paso
Avenue and toott a bfown bag from a
lhelf In the baby' a bedroom contain·
Ing Items of )ewelry valued at S 1,024
Thieves stole four silver Mustang
hut>capa valued at "400 from a car
parked In the 11000 block of
Twlnspan Avenue.
Burglars 11ole a tool box valued at
$5 from a garage In the 10000 blocil.
of Pike Avenue but left tools behind.
Newport Beach
Police are Investigating th41 disap-
pearance of $22, 15.4 worth of gold
rings from Wiiiiam Robert Jewelert,
3'42'4 Via Oporto. Shop employeea
said 23 rings, In different ahapee and
atzea. wtWe taJ<en from a tray In •
locited display case. No auapec11
were seen 11\d the ION WU dis-
covered when employees atar19d
returning tew*Y to a store safe.
A chain saw 11\d other tool• were
taken from • construction llte at
1525 Superior Ave. The crootta had
to get put a locked chain gate to gain
enlry to a tool shed owned by lagun•
Conatructlon Co. The ION WU aetl·
mated at S2.000.
A lllV9t Mttlng worth 1'4,450 waa
tallen from a reald«lce on Rue
Cannea In the Big Cenyon communi-
ty.
Laguna Beach ' Ml9Cell•neoua Items valued at
$3,525 by the owner wete reported
llolen from a car pw1{ed In lhe 1600
blodl of S<Ntlo eu...1 Hiwlow-.y,
Lagun1 Beacti pollcereported.
A neighbor called police wtler\
am<*• WU IMO coming from a
houM In the 800 block of Quiwta
Street Mrty thl9 morning. Reecuera
dlecowred the smoke came from a
amolderlng log left In • nreplaoe.
Laguna 8Nch potlce aaalated Im·
migration official• In apprehending
two undocumented aliens lpOtted
near Creaoent Bav.
Costa Mesa
A 13-yeat-old Costa Meea boy told
potloe Monday two other teenager•
awtped hla S700 cnrom.trame
motocroaa blcyele after ha left It
Wllocked In front of a liquor 1tor• on
Falrvtew Road.
Otflcerl arreated a 39-)'Mf-old mat\ •ta aupermart(et on 17th St.-.et
Monday after he wu caught W91klng
out with• 1'4.29 bOttte of vodka under
hie belt. Tha 8U1P8Ct repor1edty Mid,
"I'm an alcohollc Ind I need It."
,. , . .
~. ' . ..,:. \ . . . . . ' . . -::
Patchy clouds won't stop heat
=: 81 M Aalft CJ '"°" 0 Coastal 114 72 lunday.~30
FlurriM •• .. 13 e T MNe A ~ 93 112
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He did suggest that hi.a fellow
adentillta might design a w ay of
Ute that was unaggressive by
nature and would be emulated by
other cultures. But Skinner, aft.er
listening to his colleagues' sugges-
tions, said he hadn't been
"cheered" by their recommen-
dations.
research psychologists could do to
head off a nuclear conftict, UCLA
Professor Seymour Feshbach
poeed a series of questions that he
believes should be answered by
the profession.
"What is the relationship be·
tween individual aggressive im-
pulses and national conflict, and
how do values influence our
judgment," he asked.
Carpenter, a Cypre& Democrat
and retarl'd U S Navy admiral,
expJajned how the current anns
race is charal'teriz.ed by a mahg·
nant pathological proc~ leading
the world closer to the brink of a
nuclear holocaust.
He said the c.'Oncepl of mutual
security, rather than national
security, mlght be a more realistic
concept since any attempt to
increase national security by
either the U.S or the USSR, at the
expehse of the other, only
escalates the arms race.
UC Santa Cruz profeseor M .
Brewster Smith recommended
that psychologists begin to re-
define the arms rooe by rethinking
concepts such as aecurity and the
risks of nuclear war.
Psychologist Morton Deutsch,
of Columbia University, said he
would like to know how people
learn about war and how other
people and other nations might be
influenced ·concerning nuclear
war.
Smith added that the Reagan
administration's "macho, bad
guy-good guy approach to nuclear
strategy does not allow for con-
structive consideration of the
problem."
At a second seminar -explor-
ing how the threat o( World War m might be avoided -Deutsch,
joined by state Sen. Paul
A mutual security arrange-
ment, accordang to Deutsch, nught
include regular meetings and con·
sultations between top military
officials or both COWltnes, and the
creation of a mixed nulitary unit,
one serving an each country
-
Agreeing that there is much
Bob Sloan (right )
prepare 48-f oot
and crew
sportfisher
D...,,,__pM4o
Zopilote for 2,500-mile de livery
trip from Newport to Honolulu.
Here's a real fish story
Boat deliveryspans 2,500milesfrom Newport lo Hawaii
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
~""4 ............
A 2,500-mile fishing tnp in a 48-foot
eportfiaher?
Well, not exactly. But maybe a few Junkers
will be boated en route from Newport Beach to
Hawaii.
That was the thinking m the back of Bob
Sloan's mind Monday night when he shoved off
from the Ancient Mariner Restaurant dock with a
crew of three -destination Honolulu. Sloan is a
professional boat deliverer who has been plying
the Pacific and Caribbean in sail and power boats
for more than two decades.
In 90me respects, the Pacemaker-48 -
dubbed Zopilot.e -resembled a 1930s "Okie"
expedition to California as it eased out of the
harbor with skipper Sloan at the helm, laden with
2,000 gallons of diesel fuel. The windows were
boarded up to guard against possible high seas in
the trans-Pacific croaing.
Yacht delivery is not uncommon to Sloan,
who has made it his profession for more than 20
years. But 2,500 miles in a 48-foot sportfisher
which cofiaumes five gallom of fuel an hour?
"It won't be much different than sailing to
Hono," said Sloan. as he and his crew puttered
around the boat making last minute inspections
and adjustments.
"When you get put Catalina Island just bear
off the wind, tet a SU?adying sail and hope for the
best," added tbe 48-year old Sloan. He is taking
along bne of the aails from his famed schooner,
Spike Africa, to use as both a steadying sail and to
add a mite more speed.
Where is he carrymg aU that fuel?
"We converted the bait tank for ruel, loaded
10 55-gallon drums and put a large rubber bladder
in the cockpit, all filled w ith fuel
Sloan said he expects to complete the crossing
in 12 or 13 days. The twin Curnrnms-409 engines
consume about five gallons an hour -120 gallons
a day . Figuring a maximum o r 14 days. Sloan
calculates he will arrive at his destmatwn with a
fe w hundred gallons to spare ,
And, o( course, as the consumption of fuel and
food continues the boat gets light.er
The boat is being delivered for Kevm A .
Muench, president of Island Science m Honolulu.
He is an ardent game fisherman and plans to use
the boat for working the island fishing tour-
naments and for chartering to other fishermen.
Muench said he recently purchased the boat
in San Diego, where it was a well-known
sportfisher owned by movie director Bruce Kesler.
In addition to delivering both power and sail
boats for new owners, or owners returning from
long distance races to Honolulu or Mexico, Sloan
also hauls cargo in his schooner Spike Africa
(named aft.er the self-proclaimed "king of the
Pacific").
Sloan's crew aboard the Zopilote for the
trans-Pacific crossing are Phul Burbo, San
Francisco; Gibson Laws, Houston, and Ann
Henderson, Port Townsend, Wash
Sloan said he has made five previous
deliveries of power boats to the islands with no
problems.
"Just ge t out the old sextant and charts and
point her bow the way you want to go," he
quipped.
(~
CiEM WllE Havtl a couple of ee1ent1at1 In extraordinary In every society All Iha tam ly can be 119ry helpful et of the great empires ol the tlmea. ~tty wMr'I mt d•ugh· ancient world used golden ob· ter, GIM~, and her u1band teeta. malnly In their religious rlt· Jotin, (bot c:heml9t1) were home uals and also as coins . vtlltlng me, w. got Into a di•· Over centurlea ot growtng QUNlon abOUt tha metalt uaed :tnlatleallon ind technology. for mountt~onea. Gold le g nas auumed many •d· the favorite CourM IO our di• dltlonal roles Not only la II 11111 c:uulOn centwed on It. prized for jewelry, It now haa Thay told me t?\et -"lie gold many addltlonal applications In tt..n dOM not temlatl or corrode, contemporary llfe. the aloy9 oonwnooly uaed In hlb-Gold ea.re Into ipaoe with the
rtolttng gold :::.= Mtl u utron•uta. Ila refleetlw ability la copper and ztnc, oen demao-
ed by NPNted upoeure to con-uMd on the heat atilelda that are
crttlUI to Ille. Thia aame ability to oentrated eotutlone of ohlorln.. ref'leet the aun lnerMMS the Meroury hes e.,,,,..., eff9ct but 11 "'thetlo end practical beauty of bind only In apedellzed .,... .. today's gtaaa 1ky.cr1pers. as • UIUelly dental lebt or maybe a sold In tinted windows malt• the bfoken thermometer at home. lfferenoe ~ obltructlve The met• la penlculerfy Wlnef-glare •nd glamorou•tm . abte where It .. thin and under In medlelne and t11try, In
etr ... IUqf'l~Mlt= Industry, In a hundred 1ppll-CflolrtM .. In Mm cation• fOf T\I aeta, to tei. poola, blMotlea and IOOUring Chon.. comr.:tera and calcu· dMnMra. Repeated lmmertlon, atora, thlt e ernal metal II an ~~·..:u:~ lml:.'!ant component. ut above all. gold hu enloy.ct •voided. Our ~m.,,d•d It• nn .. t glitter lhroughout the rectpe tor home II 1 oup M11ry Barr Certified Gemo1001s'I ~· In Ila ultimate form -,....,.. of wenn water (not hot. certainty ry. In laot, the wearing of gold not bolling tNet • ft81M) Ind 1 CHARLES ff. BARR on the body m1y Ktualty be tapn detef~t (tuch u Mr. men'• old .. t eurvMng tr.ctltlon Ctaen) Ind ,.., houaanOtd .,,.. E119ry day. MCtl one of ua con· mont&. Let IOek tor t& mlnut• or tlnutt tha a.nturi...otd ritual of IO, bndfl -'th I aoft bfuah & ewJe,,tA gold .ctomment. Men, woman. rtnM. children ••• of all c:ultur.. . • are The ..,,. °' gold • . and the .......... caught up In gold'• allur• ttitough dealf'8 to own It ... «Sat• bedl aa ·~----i.tr Au ....... .._ • ring, ••rrl:&•· ""kl•~•. tw • the h11tory of mankind &. ...... , bfaoelet. W• undoubtedly ltMH. 17th & Irvine, Westcliff Ploaa, conllnue 10 ohaflati It tono Into The ptaca of gold '* bean tha Mure. • Newport hoch 't 642·3310
l j
•
I
.. •
A-t Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug. 30. 191t3 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------,
I
TOP OF THE NEWS
NATION
The sky burns again
One killed , 23 injured
in Oklahoma prison riot
S huttle Challenger aloft after first night-time launch
By the Associated Press
HOMINY, Okla -National Guard troops
helped round up prisoners today at an
over-crowded Oklahoma prison where a dispute
over food erupted in to a "spontaneous" uprising
that left one inmate dead, 23 injured and four
buildings burned. Gov. George Nigh declared a
state of emergency early today at the me-
dium-security Conner Correctional C.enter .
f"cephalitis reported .
BOSTON Gov Michael S. Dukakis says
he is recemmendmg an extra $150,000 for
insecticide spraying in southeastern Massachu-
setts to fight F.astern equine encephalitis. The
mosquito-borne disease has stricken five state
residents. one fatally
$100,000 bond recovered
HOLLYWOOD, Fla -A retiree who
offered $25,000 for the return of a $100,000
redeemable U.S . governme nt bond representing
his life savings says the finder "nearly fell over"
upon learning of the reward. Bob Weinberg, 70,
of Hollywood, got the bond back Monday. The
finde r, Vincent Panaro, 73, of Hallandale, had
been adve rtising in local new spapers to try to
locate the rightful owner.
STATE
Clothing store lire probed
LOS ANGELES -Arson investigators
today are probing a fire of unknown origin which
gutted the mteriorof J ona, an exclusive women's
clothrng store m Pacific Palisades.
Trust ees slash budget
LOS ANGELES -A budget calling for
elimination of approximately 2,400 classes,
layofCs of nearly one-third of non-teaching
employees, and across-the-board salary cuts was
presented to the Los Angeles Community
College District Board of Trustees Monday night.
Thf' cuts are expected to be approved today or
Wednesday.
Battered bodies identified
ONT ARIO -Two women whose battered
bodies were found m the trunk of a car have been
identified as a mother a nd daughter whose
farruly reported them missing one day earlier.
The bodies of G race Jamandunsingh , 41, and her
17-year-old daughter , Daphne, were discovered
by polk-e Sunday afternoon m the family car
parked m an ~mpty lot in Los Angeles, said
Ontano Detecu ve Wayne Simmons.
WORLD
I sraeli pullback delayed
TEL AVIV, Israel -Act ing on a request by
P resident Reagan. Pnme Minister Menachem
Begm agreed today to delay Israer s partial
puUback in Lebanon by three or four days, Israeli
television said
Marines in h eavy fighting
BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -U.S. Marines
locked in heavy fighting with Moslem mili-
tiamen around Beirut airport today, 24 hours
after two Man nes were killed by mortar fire.
Witnesses said Marine he licopter gunships
rocketed a Shiite Moslem stronghold near the
airport. There were no immediate reports of
Marine casualties. The US. aircraft carrier
Dwight D Ei3enhower moved closer to the
Beirut coast to ·•support" the Marines.
Hijackers to leave Tehran
lRAN -Four hi,ackers hold.mg 17 ho6tages
aboard an Air France jetliner got permission
today to takeoff Crom Tehran'sairport, but when
the plane would leave and where it would go
were not known. Iran's news agency said. Three
Americans were reported among those held by
the hijackers, who demand that France
withdraw its forces from Chad and Lebanon, halt
aid to Iraq and release an unspecified number of
Arab prisoners { rom French jails.
---
RUFFELL'S
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COSTA MESA -548 1156
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policy tting the
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)-The s pace
shuttle Challenger, a manmade comet trailing a
500-foot geyser of fire, aet the sky ablaze in a
brilliant show of stght and sound as itie,ft Earth in
the wee hours today. Aboard was a five-lnan crew,
including America's first black astronaut.
Only hours before liftoff there was another
celestial spectacle: thunder boomed across the
Kennedy Space C.enter, lightning danced around
the spaceship and rain drenched the launch pad
and thousands of spectators drawn to the area for
the first night launch of a shuttle. The remnants of
that stonn delayed the launch by 17 minutes, until
2:32 a.m. EDT (11:32 PIYI' Monday), and almost
resulted in a scrub.
"You should have seen it from here!"
spacecraft commander Richard Truly said of the
launch as the s hip neared orbit. "It was daylight
almost all the way up."
He described the liftoff as "like driving
through a fog bank, except there was an exlernal
orange light source within the fog bank."
Truly added: "You couldn't see anything
because of the light ... it got brighter and brighter"
until the two solid rocket boosters burned out and
fell off. Then, Truly said, "the light from the solid
rocket motors was about 500 times more than I
remember on STS-2.
Truly was aboard the second shuttle flight in
November 1981.
Fellow astronaut Daniel Brandenstein said
the separation of the boosters "was the inside of a
bonfire. That was a real experience."
It was quite an experience as well for those
watching from below. Flame billowed from the
base of the shuttle, fanned across the pad with
white-hot light and steam.
And then Challenger, illwninated at the birth
of flight by 800 million-candlepower floodlights,
roee swiftly off the pad, the flame from its solid
rocket boosters building to a tower of fire that
could be seen from the launch area for 2 minutes
and 42 seconds.
UWlt ........
Hardy photographers were among
the thousands who braved the rain to
watch space shuttle Challenger's
a scent early this morning.
Hitman called
Aquino's killer
MANILA, Philippines (AP) -The government
today identified the man it said killed opposition
leader Benigno Aquino and said he was a notorious
"gun-for-hire'' employed previously by crime syndi-
cates or subversives.
Chief military investigator Maj. Gen. Prospero
Olivas said the man, who was gunned down by
security forces immediately after Aquino was shot
Aug. 21, was named Rolando Galman y Daw~.
The presldenttaJ p&lace said he was a member of
a gang of robbers and car thieves and had been
suspected of at least two murders last year.
Olivas said laboratory tests pointed to Callnan as
the man who fired the .357 Magnum allegedly used to
assassinate Aquino at Manila International Airport.
"The assailant is a notorious killer, a gun for hire
and has reportedly been wed by various elements
including organized or syndlca\ed crime or by
subversive elements possibly for individual ven-
ge.ance, or possibly for armed robber, car-napping.
hijacking, bank holdup or kidnapping for ransom,"
said Olivas, the police chief of Manila.
Olivas gave no motive for the killing, but his
statements were in line with President Ferdinand E.
Marcos' comments shortly after the shooting. Marcos
said he suspected the gunman was a contract killer
hired by groups aeeking to embarra. the govern-
ment.
NY gets Paris Treaty
NEW YORK (AP) -England's copy of the
Treaty of Paris, the 1783 document which ended the
Revolutionary War, has been loaned to the Museum
of the City of New York, officials said today.
Joeeph Veach Noble, director of the muaewn,
said this was the first time a Brit.iah treaty had ever
left British 80il.
"This is without precedent," said Noble. The
British keeper of public records brought the
document here last. week amid heavy security.
The United States' copy of the document
remains in the National Archives. It was signed and
sealed after the British version.
The treaty, along with portraits of George
Washington and George m and memorabilia from
the 119 yeani of British rule in New York, will be on
view from Sept. 1 to Oct. 30, Noble said.
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You're In ~ handA
The sky grew ever brighter as the fl ame
bounced off the clouds. H looked like a murky,
gray dawn created by a white-gold sun. It was
bright enough at the press site three males from tht:'
pad to read a newspaper.
First the hght, then the sound: loud, louder
and still louder until it shook the ground and
rattled windows, Still the s huttle climbed, its
boosters pumping hellfire for more than two
minutes before they flamed out.
There was a moon, but it was pale and weak.
lit ii The launch , a magnUicent sight in daylight, was
awe-inspiring at night. ""' -,,.. PJll fCI' '""to Cnec' Owl •wnct10t'I of '"" 111\dw.o '" 0•111-•P-O••l>f'IQ
SOURCE HAS.A
ln downtown Miami, 200 miles to the south,
people on the roof of a five-story building saw the
shuttle as a small red-orange glow. Others on the
street below cheered.
• • "f't 'tt' ,,.,10•0 'DASS
....... ~, t ,., ..
Begin rejects pleas.,
insists he will resign
Menachem Begin
JERUSALEM (AP) -Prime
Minister Menachem Begin wrote
his letter of resignation Tuesday
after telling his polHical col-
leagues, "I cannot go on any
longer."
However, it was still not cleQf
when he would submit 1t to
President Chaim Herzog.
Cabinet ministers who called on
the 70-year-old prime minister tn
a last-ditch attempt to change his
decision said they found h1m m hL'i
office writing his let ter of resig-
nation.
T hey asked him to delay send
mg ll to Henog fo~ a few days,
until lht:y could choose a suc-
cessor , and Begin promised to let
tl"lem know by Wednesday.
The eight Cabinet ministers
from Begin's Henn (Liberty)
Cacuon of the Likud bloc were to
meet later Tuesday to try to pick a
SUcoes90r
The li keliest candidates aP..
peared to be Foreign Minister
Yitzha k Sliamtr, 68. and Deputy
P rime M inister David Levy. 45,
with former Defense Mirust.er
Ariel Sharon an outside possi-
b1hty
Soviets label Begin niove 'ploy'
MOSCOW (AP) -T he Soviet
Union said today that Israeli
Prime Ministe r Me n achem
Begin's offer to resign w as a ploy
designed to boost his political
strength.
The Communist Party daily
Pravda said that even if Begin
steps down, the move would likely
do nothing to change what it
termed Israel's "aggressive, ex-
pansionist'' policies.
ln the first Soviet reactJon to
Begin's announcement tha t he
planned to resign office, Pravda
reiterated past Soviet denuncta-
SALES • SERVICE
LEASING • TRAINING
tions of the Israeli pnme minister
and his policies.
"This is merely a ploy," Pravda
said of Begin's announcement.
"It is quite pofi&ble that Begin.
who has become a notorious figure
who has discredited himself even
in the eyes of Washington poli-
ticians, has embarked on a political
gamble when he talks about
resigning," the paper added.
Pravda said "Begin was and
remains a terrorist."
"The tragedy of Lebanon , the
death of scores of Lebanese and
Palestinians. the Sabra and
Chatila Palest.me refugee camp
massacres -all this is on his
consclen~." it said
P ravda said Begin's military
policies had boosted Is..·ael's infla-
'.ion rate. and caused suffering
amon~ Israelis
"But the problem is not only
ham:· it said. "It is the bankruptcy
of Tel Aviv's aggressive ex-
pansionist policy fraught with
disastrous conseque nces for the
peoples or the Middle East. and
Washington fully su pports such a
policy "
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• ... 3....
'Lassie'
actress
Clayton
i dies
LOS ANGELF.S (AP)
-Jan Clayton, who
played Julie J ordan in
the original Broadway
producti o n o f
"Carousel" and starred
as the mother on the
original "Lassie" TV
series, hasdied at the age
of 66.
M~ Clayton had suf-
fered cancer of the colon
and related problems.
including k id n ey
trouble, but the ex.act
cause of death was not
immediately known ,
said her son, Joseph
Clayton Lerner. S he
died Sunday at her home
in West Hollywood. he
said.
She was probably best
known f o r h e r
three-year stint as Ellen
Miller, Jeff Miller's
widowed mother, on
"Lassie" from its first
episode in 1954 to 1957,
when the Millers left the
aeries by selling their
fann. The series was
syndicated worldwide
and earned• three
Elnmys. M~ Clayton
was also nominated for
an Enuny.
Edible auto
Steve Hamilton, center, is having a doggone tough time
getting people to believe his story about how his car got
that big hole in it. It seems a dog was chasing a cat, and
the cat hid on the wheel of his Corvette. T he dog, in an
a ll-out e ffort to get at the cat, c hewed off part of the
qua rterpanel from the wheel well of his car. Hamilton
estimate d the damage at S l,800, and figures his story is
sure to make the insurance adjustor's list of bizarre
claims.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday. Aug 30, 1983
Coastal panel OKs oil leases
Strong environmental safeguards prompt reluctant approval
LOS ANGELES (AP)-After rejecting the idea
in May, Coastal commissioners say strongf'r en-
vironmental safeguards persuaded them t.o approve
the lease sale of 40,000 acres ore the California coast
for oil exploration.
But weighing the welfare of the public and
marine life with the need for oil was a tough
balancing act, some of the commissioners said
Monday.
"You can't meet them (environmental concerns)
all,'' said Commissioner Roger Slates of Huntington
Beach. "Anything you do creates an environmental
impact.
''I don't think Interior Secretary (James) Watt is
the bad guy everybody thinks he is. He's not going to
rape and pillage the coast, and I don't think the State
Lands Commission is either," S lates said.
"I reel rotten about It," said Comrn1SSIOn
Chairman Mel Nutt.er, who ('a.st a yes vote in the 6-4
decision to allow leas<."5 an the waters 125 w 150 miles
northwest or Los Angeles
"I had to st ruggle with it," Nutter said, adding ht·
does not really feel that the r(>Slrll·twns agre<.-d upon
for the leases will providt• full environmental
protection.
However, he said he had to weigh other
conside ra tions in the state's Coastal Act, such as
whe ther aJtcrnative sites for the drilling were
available, and whether or not the leases would
adversely affect the public welfare
"I ret:ognize when I make decisions, I'm working
in the real world. And in the real world, we've got to
do some balancing And somellmE.-S it's not ver y
comfortable," Nutter said
Yosemite drug 'breakthrough'
17 arraigned in crackdown against dealers in n a tional park
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK (AP) -The
narcotics arrests of 18 people in Yosemite National
Park -including the son of the park's U.S.
magistrate -may represent ''our first major
breakthrough" against drug dealers in one of the
nation'smost popular national parks, Superintendent
Robert 0 . Binnewies said.
Sixteen men and one woman named in federal
indictments were arraigned Monday in Fresno before
U.S . Magistrate Alan D. Christensen. Also indicted
was a youngster who was not identified.
The indictments alleged cocaine, psilocybin
mushrooms, methamphetamine and marijuana viol-
ations.
Rumors of drug-dealing in the park, which
attracts between 2 million and 3 m illion visitors
annually, have circulated for more than three years
and sparked the year-lonR investigation and alleged
"buys" by unden'Over agents that led to the
pre-dawn arrests Sunday.
Neither the mushrooms nor the marijuana is
alleged to have been grown in the 760,9 I 7-acre park
200 miles east of San FranciS('O.
Thirteen of the defendants work for the park's
concession-holder, Yosemite Park & Curry Co ..
which employs 1,700 people t.o operate its hotels,
restaurants and other facilities in the park.
&lward C. Hardy, president o r Y.P.&C., said, "I
wholeheartedly endorse the law enforcement ef for ts
of the N~tiona1 Park Serviet> in identifying and
arresting" the Curry employees charged with drug
violations.
The park has its own U.S . magistrate, Donald
Pitts, but Binnew1es said the fact that Pitts' son.
Donald Patrick Pitts, 25, a Fresno student, was one of
those arrested "had a bearing" on plans t.o move the
arraignment 75 m1les away to Fresno.
Introducing
Taste that delivers
.,..,.,......
Grant Coif ax will leave his goats
behind when he heads for Harvard
this falJ.
Brainy 'hick'
Self-taught teen off to Harvard
BCX>NEVILLE (AP)-Grant Colfax skipped
school for the past 11 years, raising goats and
studying at home with h tS folks. He didn't even
watch television; there wasn't any electricity.
But next week he's headed for Harvard -a
university that yearly rejects thousands of the
nation's brightest high school seniors. Only 2,200
of the 12,500 applicants were accepted this year.
''They didn't take me because of my high
1COres on the tests," he said, although those
admissions test scores were in the top 5 percent,
"and they didn't take me because I may or may not
be intelligent. They took me because I'm unique ."
"Most students come in w ith a very struc-
tured, academic background,'' said Harvard
admissions officer Robert Cashion. "Here comes a
kid who was completely self-taught."
The 18-year-old had some advantages that
most high school students don't have. His father is
a former sociology teacher at the University of
Connecticut and Washington University. His
mother is a high school English teacher.
The family moved to the Mendocino area 11
years ago and decided to teach their children at
home, gaining state approval of the plan. Grant's
brothers-Drew, 15; Reed, 13, and Garth 8 -are
a1ao learning at home.
Home in this case is four miles Crom the little
town of Booneville, some 100 miles north of San
Frandaco, and a mile from the nearest neighbor.
"I've never felt really isolated," said Grant.
He said his social skills were developed by
raising and showing goats, hlS involvement in a
foreign film group and his pro-nuclear-freeze
activities.
Cashion, who interviewed Grant, said th~ boy
"struck me as someone who really enjoyed the
learning process. It was refreshing to see. It was
really a remark.able thing.
"We talked about goat farming. We talked
about construction. We talked about electricity,
about politics, living on a homestead, just about
everything. He had a really different perspective
on things, given his background."
Grant said he had to oonvince the Harvard
admi.laioNI staff that he could handle formal
academic work. So early this year. he took a
eemetter of courset1 a t Santa Rosa Junior College.
He wound up with 1traight ~ In hl.s 18 unlt.1 of
clueet.
"Harvard won't be like that," he said, "but I
did have to deal with other kids. classrooma,
'fonnal class times and thoee thin~ "
..... ~ ..... --
pack
LIGHTS to mo "lar". 0 9 mo mcohne. FILTER 16 mo "lar" 11 mg mcotme av Jlilr cigarette by nc melhod
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Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Tuesday, Aug. 30, 1983
D
..
OTHER VIEWS
Special favors flaw
plans for progress
American businessmen and consumers have greeted signs
of economic recovery like parched wayfarers sighting an oasis in
the desert -hoping it doesn't tum out to be a mirage.
The major concern expressed in this regard is that Federal
deficits may abort the recovery by hogging available credit and
driving up interest rates. This would keep en trepreneurs from
getting funds for expansion, make financing difficult for
consumers, and hit hard at interest-sensitive industries like
automobiles and housing. Hence the continuing outcry for
another hike in taxes to prevent the Federal government from
"crowding out" the private sector.
While the effort to prevent "crowding oul· is commen-
dable, this tax-hike litany ignores one simple fact of life: You
can crowd out just as much through higher taxes as you can
through Federal borrowing. At best, this formula amounts to
taking away with one hand what is being granted with the other
-and flies in the face of all experience, which tel.ls us that you
don't spur expansion by raising taxes.
The bottom line-ignored in most of the current discussion
-is that Federal spending has to be paid for one way or the
other. If taxes are raised to pay the bill.a, we pay directly. If taxes
aren't raised and deficits occur, we pay indirectly. Either way,
there are negative effects for the economy.
From all of this it should be apparent that the only way to
protect the private sector from the rising costs of government is
to get the spending under control. It is the aggregate burden of
Federal outlays. not the particular way they are financed, that is
the problem. Unfortunately, this is the very point that tends to
get ignored in the current debate about raising taxes.
Contrary to what we have been told by the political sages,
the Federal budget has not been cut. In fact, the rate of increase
has not been slowed. The Federal budget continues to grow at a
rate of $70-$80 billion a year, with cost overruns in the
neighborhood of $50 billion annually. The real rate of increase,
after correcting for inflation, is higher now than it was under
Jimmy Carter, and Federal spending has accordingly reached
an all-time high as a percent of the G~ National Product.
This has not occurred, as sometimes alleged, because of
spending for defeme. None of this year•s $50 billion Federal cost
overrun, for instance, is for the Pentagon. In fact, military
spending for fiscal '83 is about $7 billion less than the original
estimates. The real source of the increase is runaway spending
for "entitlement"programs geared to economic indicators -
food stamps, unemployment compensation, Social Security,
fa.rm supports and countless others.
The budget is going to continue its runaway growth until
the entitlements are brought under control. Neither the
administration nor the Congress. however, has had the courage
to dive into this thicket. The techical problems involved are
great, but the politial ones are even more so, as affected interest
groups battle to protect their favorite benefits.
Only an omnibus entitlement reform, going after special
privileges. coot-of-living hikes and other perks acr~ the board,
can possibly bring the budget back toward balance. Until we get
some solid progress in this direction, the negative economic
impact of Federal policies is going to continue.
-American News Service
.MAllBDK
(rhere 's something missing
To the Editor:
I refer to Steve Marble's article
in Sunday's Pilot entitled "Air·
pon. plan has supporters and
detractors" m which he quotes our
esteemed mayor as saying that
"experts have advised her that
there are no jets now being made
that could meet the noise stan-
dards and th.at such a quiet jet is
still something of the future."
It seems to me th.at just within
the wt two weeks you printed a
letter from O>ngressman Badham
in which he pointed out that not
only were really quiet jets now
being made but also that many
were in use with perfect success.
I am also reminded that the late
Golden West Airlines used quiet
jets -so quiet that people were
m-06tly unaware of their over-
flying. True these jets are turbo
and prop jets but jets none the l~.
It would appear that Mayor Hart
should find some more informed
experts and/or read the Daily
Pilot..
ALANL.BLUM
Balboa Lsland
l. M. BDJd I Operatic drama
• Enrico Caruso was quite spe<:ial
ln at least. two ways. He was
known for generations as the
world's greatest tenor. And as the
18th of 21 Caruso children, he was
the first. to live past infancy. The
story of what his parents went
through as they lost their finlt 17
children has been told. But not
completely. How could 1t?
A magazine for cat fanciers
reports that half the cats that sleep
In houses more specifically sleep
in beds with their owners .
More men than women come
away Crom class reunions with
that "where did I go wrong?''
feeling.
Q. On the wall in a New York
City McDonald's restaurant is a
ligJl that aays· ''20-minute limit."
What'• that mean?
A. Order, pay, eat and get out.
No l.olmtn.a. Move it. Hurry up.
Q , Ia it U'U<' that the Soviet
OAANGE COAST
lailyPilll
Dictator Josef Stalin slept in an
armor-plated bedroom?
A. At least one such. Stalin was
another of those world Dgures
who slept unpredictably in dif-
ferent bedroo~ purportedly to
thwart assassination attempts.
Shrug
Q. Does any state penitentiary
have a golf coune for lta inmatee?
A. Only one inaofar as I know.
The minimum aecurity unit at
Stillwater, Minn., haa a nine-hole
coune.
The English Poetry and Song
Society or Mel.laham, England,
gives free performances from ti.me
to ti.me for the benefit of the
Bntiah public. Attendance over
the lut decade has averaged aix
pt'OPle per show
~etdle during the day should
help you sleep. But exercl.ae at
night might keep you awake. Or
ao say the mecUoo..
CX>t<rGHME~! I UK£ 0f.Jtt1 <XJtbOORS, RUNNJH6 lXiE~£R,
5lAYJN6 IN S~PE ANDAl.L T~T-MY
~E~. Da?IS, 'Jl.lAl~ WWJ
MARRLA6[5 AAE FOR. ITS JlJST 1WJ
I WIS~ ')t)U'D LAV (jF 1HE STEQQIDS !
,,.11 \
• ~ ,
)
j
) • > • )
' ) •
. ..
Lazy appointees stall Synfuels ' ~ 1 ~
f WASHINGTON -1 have tried
to shine a light into the dark
comers of the U.S. Synfuels
Corp., which is suppo&ed to help
American industry develop
substitutes for oil. Congress gave
the quasi-public agency $15 billion
of the taxpayers' money to do the
job.
But after doling out millions,
paying them.selves lavish salaries,
ensconcing themselves in luxur-
ious offices and winging around
the world on an endl~ round of
"fact-finding" junkets, Synfuels
executives have yet to produce so
much as an erg of synthetically
based energy. The taxpayers now
seem to be stuck with an
enormously expensive white
elephant.
This sorry situation is acknowl-
edged even inside the oorporation,
to judge by internal documents
uncovered by my associates Corky
Johnson and John Dillon
No action
For example, a recent rom-
munica tions report, stamped
"Confidential,'' points out that
Synfuels is at a virtual standstill.
There isn't even a comprehensive
plan yet to develop synthetic
fuels. Both board members and
staffers were criticii.ed in the
report, which says:
"The Corporation IS not effec-
tive in project development be-
cause processes tend to break,
rather than make, deals. The
Corporation needs more
substance.... II (has) too many
people (and the wrong kind) and
should have a stronger staff."
Singled out for criticism is the
external relations staff, which
G ·
-Ja-1:1_1_11-11-11-1 -.fd
deals with Congress and the
administration. ''The external re-
lations staff is less than top
quality," the report states. "The
Hill doesn't understand the Cor-
poration (because of poor com-
munications) and therefore over-
reacts. Corporation people com-
municating with the Hill are not
the best people for the job."
Summarizing complaints from
severar Synfuels officials, the
report says blwltly: "The wrong
guy is at the top."
The ''wrong guy'' was P resi-
dent Victor Schroeder, who re-
cently resigned under pressure
but who is still a member of the
Synfuels board. He had been the
focal point of an internal squabble
ever since President Reagan ap-
pointed the present board.
Laq rriends
ln fact, 1t is Reagan's poli-
ticization of the Synfuels board
that is at the heart of the
corporation's troubles. Unlike
President Carter. who appointed
board members from various sec-
tors interested in energy matters,
Reagan named a raft of political
cronies -but apparently neglect-
ed to tell them to get along.
The inevitable result has been a
mighty clash of egos and the
disintegration of the Synfuels
board into a quarrelsome, fac-
tion-ridden body, its members
more interested in enhancing
their own influence than in doing
the job they are being pa.id so
handsomely to do. I
One side of a Jong-standing feud
includes Board Chamnan Edward
Noble, Schroeder and board mem-
ber Milton Masson Jr. Noble and
Schroeder are longtime business
associates, and have cl06e ties to
the conservative Heritage Foun-
dation -which opp<JBeS govern-
ment funding for synthetic fuels.
On the other side are board
members Robert Monks, Howard
Wilkins and John Carter. Monks is
a political ally of Sen. William
Cohen, R-Maine, who obligingly
held hearings at which Noble and
Schroeder were questioned at
le ngth about their Heritage Foun-
dation connection. Prior to the
hearings, the Monks faction sent a
letter to Noble threatening to air
the corporation's dirty laundry if
Noble did not fire Schroeder and
make other changes.
All of thlS bickering would be of
limited public interest if it in-
volved a private corporation. But
the taxpayers are the stockholders
m Synfuels, and the unseemly
infighting is keeping the corpor-
ation from achieving its mission.
The Synfuels inspe<:tor general
reported that there have been
"numerous situations where one
part of the Corporation did not
know what the other was doing."
And in the board's dealings with
private industry -the heart of its
job -the inspe<:tor general said
the outsiders "felt the board of
directors was taking action on
matters which it was insufficient-
ly briefed."
No wonder. The board has been
too busy with its Borgia-like
intrigue.
Footnote: A Synfuels spokes-
man said the oommunications
report accurately reflects the
opinions of the board members but
was not intended as a study of the
competence of the staff.
PRE-EMPTIVE STRIKE: Ten
years ago, I reported a acandal in
Haiti involving an American firm,
Hema-Caribbean, that was paying
hungry Haitians $3 and a bottle of
pop for a pint of blood, which was
then sold in this country. A& a
result of the stories, Haitian
President Jean-Claude Duvalier
canceled his governme nt's
10-year contract with
Hemo-Caribbean.
Investigation of the recent
epidemic of AIDS (Acquired Im-
mune Deficiency Syndrome) has
shown that homosexual males and
Haitians are particularly suscep-
tible to AIDS.
In fact, Dr Peter Protman, an
epidemiologist at the Centers for
Disease Control in ~Uanta, in-
vestigated Hemo-Cafibbean 'ff op-
erations as a member of the
government's AIDS task force. He
told my reporter Claudia Kahn
that although AIDS was first
diagnosed in this country in 1981,
some earlier deaths are now
believed to have been caused by
the disease, which is thou.ght to be
spread by blood or semen.
Although Protman said the
evidence on Hemo-Caribbean is
now too remote in tune for any
definite conclusion, one of the first
AIDS cases in Hai t1 was diagnosed
in 1976 -two years after my
columns prevented what could
ha\le been a massive import of
AIDS-contaminated blood into
th.is country by the company.
j
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The wheel off ortune is fixed
The gambling casinos in Atlan-
tic City took $193 million from
people visiting that city in the
month of July.
That Is one of the most dis-
graceful and sad figures I've ever
seen. For gambling casinos to be
legal is disgraceful; for people to
be dumb enough to go to them and
lose $193 million ma month is sad.
U it's mandatory for people to
wear seat belts in an automobile
for their own protection, how
come the government doesn't
protect its citizens from losing
their money by strapping it into
their wallets when they go to
Atlantic City?
The thing that bothers me m06l
about it is that when people
gamble away their money, they
don't spend it on an honest
product that someone has put
work into. There's only ao much
money, and ff it is 108t at a
gambling table1 it la taken out of
the productive part of our econ-
' ......
:: 1 ~ ANDY ROONIY
omy. Who would you rather see
employed, a blackjack dealer in a
casino in Las Vegas or a machinist
at an automobile B111embly plant in
Detroit? Which contributes most
to what's good about Amencan
life?
Big profil8
It's estimated that the casinos in
Atlantic City will take two billion
dollars in profit this year The
State of New Jersey takes 8
percent of the casinos' profit. This
amount is what govenunent ex-
acts in exchange for is.suing a
license to steal.
I was surpn.ed to read that
Atlantic Oty i.s now groaing more
than Lu Vegas. I didn't think
anything could be aa g:roes as Las
Veps. Lu Vegas estimates it WW
only take one billion seven hun-
dred and fifty million from cus-
tomers this year. (I've spelled that
out so there won't be any mistake
with zeroes.)
Thal means that between the
two cities they'U haul in three
billion seven hundred and fifty
million dollars from customers.
Make 1t an even four billion.
I've been doing some
arithmetic, figuring out what
could he bought for $4 billion
Big aheruatives
Here are some suggestions:
--It would buy 500,000
Chrysler Le Barons at $8,000 each
--Four years In an average
coUege costs roughly $30,000 for
tuition, room and board now. lt
would buy 133,000 young Amen-
cans a college education.
--People could buy 308.880,300
copies of my last book to give each
other for Christmas. This would
have made one wnter very happy .
--160,000,000 Americans coulcl
each buy a new pair of shoes for
$25.
--You could rent an apanrnent
at $350 a month for 952,380 yea.rs.
--It would build 66.666 new
homes for $60,000 eacb or 26,~
expensive homes at $150,000 each.
--Two million couples could
spend an all-expenae paid week~
Hawaii, including air fare
--It would feed a lot of hungry
Americans. That amount would
provide food stamps for 1,326,259
families of four during an entire
year.
The slot machines account for
about half of a casino's take The
dumbest money goes into tho9e
and into something called The Big
Six Wheel. It's refem!d to u The
Idiot Wheel because It takes about
45 cen\s of every dollar bet on it.
The blackjack tAblee take 15
percent to 18 percent from a
player and the crapa i.blee. 12
percent. The roulette tables tak:~
cloee to 25 percent.
The pl.ayers with the molt
money play baccarat. They're the
smart ones. They only loee 12
percent of their money on an
average evening.
No win
The cuinoe refer to the money
that they don't take from the
cu.'t.omen as "the dro :· Tbe
money they take la ::f~ "the
hold." ,
Some day I'd like to rent a tu.ace ~
blllboard on the oullkir1I of .,
Atlantic City with a simple
Danie.like an~t;
"Ab9ndon hope all ye who
enter here!"
The 1amb1in, CMlnoe take 1a I ~rcent of ~rythin1 bet. 10 •
there'• no chance what.oever ol: 1
anyone winnina ~r a pc!riod of •
ti.mt. It lan't a pmbJe, It'• a sure
Wng. You lme
' ..
• Daily Pilat
TUESDAY, AUG. 30, 1983
STOCKS 86
TELEVISION 87
COMICS 88
Oilers make tra~sition,
big season anticipated
By ROGER CARUON
Of ... Deir .... 8laft
New coach George Pascoe of Hunt-
ington Beach High agrees, the situation
calls for turmoil and confusion.
But, to the delight of the Oilers' new
football coach, the problems are very few,
in terms of players
and coaches.
As for changes In the ayatem, the only
wrinkle will be In the defeme, which will
penetrate, rather than read the play.
"And,'' continues Paacoe, "we're going
to coach the heck out of the kicld.na game
and make it a threat."
The Oilers' strengths are many and
obvious:
•Danny Thom peon, the Sun.eet League
Back of the Year aa a junior, ia biaer.
stronger and more effective, accordina to
Pascoe.
FOOTBALL PREVIEW
aeconaary coverage better and LI on coune
for an even more producUve year.
•In all, there are five offemlve atan
with all-league credentials, and that'• not
even comiderin8 Ocean View HJah tram-
fer Brian Bumaide, a 6-0, lf2-pound
.erUot who, according to Pucoe, LI goUia to
cau. ooechel to forget about the
all-)eegue halfback he replaces (Carl
Saterfield).
Mater Dei: Big in the line,
and big in the back! ield
... and that spells trouble
for football I oes. B3. 0
Paacoe took the
reins at Huntington
Beach exactly six days
before conditioning
began Aug. 22, at a
rival school from
where he came (Foun-
tain Valley) with a
foreign offense (Dela-
•Eric Lawton, the league's first team
quarterback a year ago, la _readinc IUa •The defeme ia led by Mr. Ray, u
linebKker BW Ray (6-4, 210 ar.) la
referred to by his coach. "He'a being
recruited by everyone on the W~t Cout, ''
.. hla coach.''
........ -.......
ware winged-T) and a staff situation
which begged for answers.
"You would think there would be
problems," says a relieved and happy
Pucoe. "But the kids have adjusted very,
.. very well and the staff is there, w orking
hard. Everything is coming together.
Greg Henry (the former coach), and all of
his aa&istanta did a great job. A real
IW'prile to me was just how aquared away thinca were when I arrived.
My only concern baa been how they
adjult to me. rm a lot more aggreaaive
tham Greg. But this group has a real
penooallty and is accepting what we're doma and doing it 120 percent."
P..:oe's staff situation bM turned Into a
• bonus with the fonner umatants for
Henry continuing with Pucoe, in addition
to a couple of additions.
~ Olle.n aurf.aced in 11Mt2 behind such
players u Thomp.on, Lawton and Ray,
rolllng to an 8-4 overall record, third place
in the Sumet 1.-,ue and a berth in th4!"
CIF playoffa foe the tint time in 16 years.
'Ibey do not fi8ure to wait 16 more yean
for another playoff appearance.
Here'• a rundown by position:
QUARTERBACK -Lawton (6-1, 185
1r.) completed 86 of 166 for 1,496 yards
and 11 TOt u a junior. with just 5
inten:eptiom. Backup lnclude9 juniors
David Once (5-11, 210) and F4 Lldyott
(6-3, 180).
RUNNING BACK -Thompeon (6-1,
195) bulldozed for 1,251yardaand13 TDI
on 205 carries aa a junior and a18o cauaht
17 ~for 145 yarda. Ken Hulett (S-1,
·(See 011.BRS, Pqe 81)
Quarterhaek Erie Lawton ( abo•e) and nann•• baek
Danny Thomr:• Iona the naeleu of HantiJalton
Beaeh'1 attae under new coaela ~ Pucoe.
Rowe hack in the saddle with Rustlers
Don Rowe
Long-time football assistant r eturning to Golden West after heart attack
Don Rowe, the Golden West College
assis tant football coach . has spent the past
year recuperating from a heart attack
suffe red last Sept. 18.
And, smce April, Rowe has been in the
Redwoods area of this state, and .the
furthest thing from his mind was football.
You can't blame him. Why on earth
would Rowe be thinking about football
when he's busy tossing batting practice for
a minor league baseball team?
Rowe, in fact, was hi.red by the Angels
as a pitching coach for the Redwood
Panthers of the California League.
"The head of player personnel, Larry
Himes, hired me and 1 just felt I needed a
change," explained Rowe, who returned
early Monday morning. "I've been here for
16 years and I enjoy being at Golden West
College. But when I had the heart attack, I
COMMUNITY COLLEGES
CURT
SEEDEN
felt I just needed to get away. I think it was
the best thing I could do."
Rowe. who already had to change his
lifestyle after suffering the heart attack,
said his health has benefitted from the
change of scenery.
As for the game of baseball, well,
Rowe has been there before.
Don Rowe spent 14 seasons in pro-
fessional baseball. He spent nine years in
the Pittsburgh organization and also had
stints with the New York Mets and
Cleveland Indians. In fact. Rowe was
pitching for the Indians during his first two
years at Golden West.
At any rate, Rowe did many things
while assisting Redwood Coach Jack Lind.
He pitched batting practice, he ran, he
walked. he lost weight -and generally
improved in the health department.
"My heart is fine, my health is good
and I know I can coach baseball," Rowe
pointed out. "Now, I want to see if l can
coach football.
"I don't know what they (head coach
Ray Shackleford and Co.) have in mind for
me. I know it's not going to be defensive
coordinator. !don't want that again," Rowe
said.
· "Who knows? Maybe. I'll be the water
boy.'' he added.
* It had been nearly 15 years since
baseball had played such an important role
in his Ute, but that didn't st.op Rowe from
coming away from the Redwood Pant.hen
with some interesting obeervationa:
•"Baseball life is different from the
college life. You have to produce. College
people talk about producing but we don't
have any pressure becaU8e we have
tenure," he notes.
•"I had been away from bueball foe
15 years, ao I asked them what it waa golnc
to be like. Had the players changed? Were
they harder to coach? Well, they're the
same today ... They just ask 'why' all the
time."
•"Baseb~ll players are artiata,
whethtr :.hey make a million dollan or 50
dollars. They want to perform and look
good."
A.ngels hoist flag
in mass surrender Warriors must fill some gaps
Skill positions appear solid, however, at Woodbridge High Indians take no prisoners in 6-4 win
By JORN SEV ANO °'_°""',.... .....
You can ho&St the white flag,
the Angels have surrendered.
After gamely scrapping and
clawing and trying to hold them-
itelves together despite an uncan-
·n y number of injunes, the club
was dealt its final crushing blow
Monday when it was learned that
second baseman Bobby Grich
would be sidelined anywhere
from three weeks to the re·
mainder of the season with a
broken left hand.
"(Manager John) McNamara
\Old us he went to mass at 8
o'clock yesterday (Sunday) morn-
ing because he didn't know what
he had done wrong and wanted to
find out why," mused pitcher
Tommy John.
"In all my years I've never seen
pnythi.ng like this. Never."
~ Grich,-who was in the midst of
one of his finest seasons (a .292
average, 16 home runa, 62 RBI).
~ h1a untimely break dur-lnl the aeventh inning of Sun-
day'• game with the New York
fankeea.
With the count 3-2, Yankee
reliever George Frazier hit Grich
with a pitch just below the ring
fi"ger on his left hand.
Prellmlnary X -rays taken Sun-
day were negative, but when
Orich reported to the ball park
with hla swoUen hand Monday
another let was taken and the
lnct.ure was dlacovered.
"Great 11euon. huh?" •~
Grich as he stood in front of hla
locker after Monday's game, a 6-4 An8ela 1<9 to Cleveland. with A
c:Mt extending halfway up his left
ann. "You know, the number 13 l i .
has been real unlucky for me. I
was hitting .313 for the month (of
August) when I got injured. And
the last time I got hurt before th&S
I had a 13-game h.ittmg streak."
By DENNIS BROSTERHOUS pro6pect of replacing players for the first
time. He'll have to fill the voids of
quarterback Kevin Burke. cent.er Eric
Nichols and tackle Greg Flynn.
FOOTBALL PREVIEW
It was also pointed out to Gnch
that 13 of his teammates had
made the disabled list in 1983. He
was No. 14 (technically 15 if you
count Rick Burleson twice).
In its third year of playing a varsity
slate. the Woodbridge High football team
hopes for continuing improvement in the
young program.
Even with some gaps, Noji believes his
team is strong in a number of areas.
Figueroa, a 5-10. 175-pound tailback, are
among the more experienced Warrion relldy
to begin the 1983 campaign.
"1 really would have liked to
finish the season," he said. "I was
feeling just super and swinging
the bat as good as any time in my
career."
The Warriors are coming off a 5-5 sea.son
in which they were in contention for a
playoff spot until the
final week. That came on
the heels of the first
varsity season when
Woodbridge was 1-8.
"We have some real good talent at the
skill positions," he noted. "The key. of
coune. will be the line."
A pair of wide receivers, Bill Russell and
Rick Lee, as weU as three-year st.arWr Rudy
There are the inevitable question
marks. As final preparations continue foe the
opening of the regular season, three playen
are vying for the starting quarterback alot.
(See WOODBRIDGE, Paae B3)
Grich, who admitted he was
optimistic his hand wasn't broken
Sunday. changed hi.s mind when
the pain woke him up in the
middle of the night Monday.
"I didn't sleep real well at all
after that. and then when it
stayed swollen the rest of the day
... " he said.
"We played some
pretty good teams that
first year," recalls Coach
Gene Noji who has been
with the Warriors since
the beginning. "Seven of
th0&e teams reached the aeoond round of the
playoffs."
Now that Woodbridge has graduated its
fl.rat varsity class, Noji is faced with the
Hooton warns Dodgers: Don't forget
NEW YORK (AP) -Nicknamed
"Happy" because he often looks like he's not,
Burt Hooton had a somber, if not aober
message for his Los Angeles Dodger team-
mates: Don't forget last year.
ln 1982, Joe Morgan's three-run homer
against Terry Forst.er on the last day of the
~ason deprived the Dodgers of the NaUonal
League West Oivi.aion Utle as the Atlanta
Braves took the half-pennant by a half-game.
"We've got to be aware of our put and
not fall into a similar pattern," said Hooton,
who combined with reliever Steve Howe for a
five-hitter Monday in the night.cap of the
Dodgers' 6-1, 6-3 double·~uder aweep of the
N~ York Mets Monday Right.
ln the first game, Bob Welch and reliever
Tom Niedenluer limited New York to four
hits ln beating Tom Seaver.
"We've gott.erthere in a hurry," said Los
Angeles manager Tom Luorda. "We're
clicking. Everybody's contributing. Every-
body's aggressive. We're finally playing iood
bueball.
"Two wee"-ago, we were at.ruallng.
People wrote us off. And here we are. It'• a
great feeling. It'• an accompliahment. rm
proud of my players. They've worked hard.
"A week aao. (ahortatop) BW Rua.ell
aummed It up beeutlfully. He aid, 'I knew we
oould, but l dkln't know If we would •Well, we
have."
Coupled with the Braves' 7.~ Iota to the
Chicago Cube. thf> Dodgen 1urged to the top of
'
the division by recording their llth and 12th
vicioriea in their last 13 games. They are now
one game in front of Atlanta and two ahead ln
the loa column.
"But," warned Laaorda, "as tough as it
was getting to the top, it'• that much tougher
to stay there."
On Aug. 10, ln Cinncinati, Luorda
blasted the team in a cloeed door meeting
following two straight lcaea to the Reda to
1tart a three-game 11eriM.
From that point on. Loa Ange lee has won
15 of 18 f&.rnee·
"He 1 always been a ~t motivator,"
said Howe, who notched hia 16th aave with
four lnn!np of one-hit reUef. "That really got
ua !lolnJ(. ''
... _ _....,. .
;
r ~~--------------------------~----~~~-~
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug. 30, 1983
•
SPORTS BREAK
Cal ,,feeling the h e at
a s Bears pre pare
for opener in Tex a s
From AP dttpatcllea
BERKELEY -Califomla foot-[!]
ball coach Joe Kapp said Monday the C • •
Texas heat could be as tough as the
Texas A&M defense when the two teams meet
Saturday i.n a non-conference opener.
A&M head coach Jackie Sherill noted during
a telephone conference call that it would probably '
be 100 degrees on the Astroturf when the Aggies
and the Bears meet in College
Station.
Kapp said he would pla-
toon his team h eavily in an
effort to keep them fresh
"'l'here is no way you <4lJl
get tn shape for 100-degree
heat," Kapp said. "Part of our
plan is to play as many players·
as posslble."
Kapp. in his second year
KAPP at Cal, opens the season foUow-
ing a 7-4 record, the best in several years for the
Bears.
Sherrill, well known for his multi-million
dollar contract with the Aggies, opens hLS second
year at Tex.as A&M. Last year, his team was 5-6.
Sherrill said he has much respect for Cal's
defense.
'I'm really impressed with their defense.
They have six or seven people back at linebacker
and in their secondary. (Cal linebacker) Ron
Rivera is a great football player . There's no
question about that.
(Cal safe ty Richard) Rodgers ts a very tough
player who causes a lot to happen. They are very
physical and jump around and make things
happen. They have been together for a long time
I think Cal is an excellent defensive team."
Qu o te of th e day
Pierre Qalnon of France, following his
world record pole vault e ffort of 19-1, "l
meant to prove I could still jump high."
Dodgers recall three playe~
LOS ANGELES -The Los
Angeles Dodgers announced Monday ~
that they are adding three players from ...
their San Antonio farm club of the
Class AA Texas League for the final month of the
National League aeason.
The team is recalling outfielder Cecil F.spy
and has purchased the contracts of pitcher Sid
Fernandez and outfielder Robert Reynolds from
San Antonio. The players will join the Dodgers on
Thursday in Montreal.
Fernandez. a 20-year-old left-hander, was
13-4 with a 2.82 earned run average at San
Antonio. He also struck out 209 batters in 153
innings.
Winners
Jim Otis (above) of
Alamitos Bay YC won
the recent Sabot Junior
National tille, while
J u lie Norman (left},
Bahia Corin t hian YC,
accepts trophy for first
to fi nish from chairman
Jerry T hompson.
Rice gets hat t rick
Jim Rice slugged three two-run
homers -the final one in the top of the Ii
ninth inning -to lead Boston to an 8-7
victory and a split of its doubleheader
with Toronto. Rice's effort, combined with a
2-for-4 performance in Toronto's 5-1 first-game
victory, gave him a major league leading 33 home
runs, along with a .302 batting average and 100
RBI. Elsewhere in American League action
Monday, ... Scott McGregor, 16-5, allowed eight
hits in his 11th complete game of the season as
Baltimore w,on for the sixth straight time, dowing
Kansas City, 9-2. . Richard Dotson retired the
first 12 TexruJ batters and firushed with a
three-hitter as the Chicago White Sox edged the
Rangers, 2-1. The White Sox now own an 91;,
game bulge over KC in the AL West. Don
Sutton tossed a three-hatter, yet Jost for the sixth
straight ume as Seattle shaved Milwaukee, 2-1.
Sutton is now winless m his last eight starts, dating
back to July 14 .... John Castlno doubled home
Tom Bruna.nsky with two outs in the top of the
11th inning to lead Minnesota past Detroit, 5-4.
Braves knocked out of first
Mel Hall knocked in fi ve runs with
two homers, including a gr.and slam, Ii
a nd Keltb Moreland lashed a
tie-breaking, two-run shot in the
seventh inning to lead the Chicago Cubs to a 7-5
victory over Atlanta to highlight Na tional League
action Monday. Coupled with the Dodgers'
doubleheader sweep of the New York Mets, the
Braves dropped out of first place (they now trail by
one game) for the first time
since July 4. Elsewhere, . .
Wlllle McGee knocked in four
runs with a double and a single
to pace St. Louis to a 6-1
victory over Houston .. Rick
R boden scattered six hits over
seven innings and singled
home a run in the fifth to help
Pittsburgh edge Cincinnati,
2-1. ... Recently acquired
MaDDy Trillo had three hits
and drove in two runs and Bryn Smltb patched a
six-hitter aa Montreal blanked San Francisco, 5 -0.
. . . Sl.xto Lezcano tripled home the tie-breaking
run and Luis Salaxar followed with a two-run
homer in the eighth to carry San Diego to a 6-5
victory in the opener of a rain-delayed
doubleheader with Philadelphia. In the nightcap,
Mike Scbmldt's first of two home runs and a
bases-loaded double by Onie Virgil high!Jghted a
four-run sixth as the Phillies bounced back to win,
8-6. The opening game was held 1,1p ln the sixth
lnning for nearly two hours because of rain.
Donahue is ready
Will Georgia see a dill erenl UCLA?
LOS ANGELES (AP)
UCLA Coach Terry Donahue be-
lieves that hia Bruins will present
Georgia with • few things the
Bulldop aren't accustomed to
dealing with when the teams
-iuare off Saturday night. He
hopes lt hel.-hia team.
"We play a litUe different style
of ball than they're Wied to 1ee-
ing," uld Donahue Monday at his
weekly meeting with reporters.
"Hopefully. that will be of 90me
um.tance to us.
"I'd •Y we play a little bit more
Uke Vanderbilt down there (in
the .auth) than anybody ebe. So
many teama down there. the
Auburn1, Alabamas. play
hard-noee, tough football featur-
lu. the l'U.Mina game.
'1'1We're lt11vtng to be a bala.nced
footb&ll t.Mm, on lhe ground and
tn the air. We did that laat yc..r.
h'• a Utile dJfforent style than
Georgia has IM'll week In and
week Ol•t"
Georgia will bring a 20-game
winning streak at Sanford
Stadium into the naUonally tele-
vised (ABC. 6 p.m., PST)
season-opening affair. However,
the Bulldogs will be beginning a
new era, since Her.chel Walker ls
gone.
Nevertheless, Donahue doesn't
believe that the running back's
abeenoe will mean an end to the
~experienced by the Bull-
dop.
"Henchel Walker was. certain-
ly one of the great.est players ln
the h18tory of Oeorgia ... one of the
greatest football players of all
time," said Donahue. "(But)
Georgia WH good before
He1"9Chel Walker and they'U be
trood ~r him. I know that.
"We've got pat retpecl for
Georgia. I ha~ tremendoua re·
apect for (Georgia C.0.Ch) Vlnoe
Dooley. I've admired him and hil
program from •far for a long
time." Terry ~nahue
Will the niadness end?·~ •
Grich (brok en h and) is A ngel s' latest cas ualty~
By JOHN SEV ANO
Olhl>ellr ...... ...,
In light of the Angela' most
recent casualty, meani"8 Bobby
Grich'• broken left hand, the ob-
vious question is what are they
going to do now?
used aa a pinch hHter for catcher
Bob Boone m the bottom of the
ninth Monday after Boone com-
plained of headaches after being
hit ln the throat earlier in the
game.
bring anybody up if they're~
to sit and only swtng a bat. a
couple of times a week-''
At least one player will
nltely join the team today
speculation is it. will be ei
Rick Adams, who was with
club earlier this year and
formed admirably at short,
In Monday night's game, in
which the Angels lost, dropping
13 ~ back of Chicago in the
American League West, Manager
John McNamara, handcuffed by
alack of healthy bodies, was
forced to u.ee this infield: Ron
Jack.son at first base, Rob Wilfong
at second, Steve Lubratich at
short and Doug DeCincee, making
his first fielding appearance since
the middle of July, at third.
When will the madness end?
OC COUl"lle, the obvious answer
to the Angels' woes ia to bring up
some players, but even that
simple maneuver ls compounded
by the fact Edmonton, the club's
triple-A affiliate, is ln the Pacific
Coast League playoffs.
and second, or Dick Schofield .ft-,
who is currently the best sho.,,_
stop in the Angels' minor 1~
organization. I
The severity of McNamara's
frustrations might have a clearer
focus when you realize he had
only two players at his disposal on
the bench. That's right, with Rod
Carew acting as the designated
hitter, and injuries reducing Tim
Foli (bruised rotator cuff), Reggie
Jack.son (back spasms) and Fred
Lynn (severely sprained wrist) to
mere spectators, all McNamara
had left were catcher Mike
O'Berry and first baseman Daryl
Sconiers who, incidentally, was
In other words, according to
Mike Port, the team's vice presi-
dent and chief administrative of-
ficer, the Angels don't want to
bring up one of their kids if he's
going to sit on the bench. Thus, a
quick evaluation has to be made
based on need and amount of
playing time available.
"What we have to do is find otJf
the con di ti on of some of our play·
ers," said Port.
* tU•G•L NOl'U -S.ld AM-~ ~. of hb etlllude lhne Oeyt: "'I alWll\lt
lrY lo come lo the l>al e>ark •llh en oe>tlml'11c
ettllude llul latetv, lt't -•erv dltltcutl ·• .
Oeue DeC"-t celebrelea l>trtllde• No. o33 Mo<ldav Salo O.Clnc": "I oon•1 know w""I II)•.
t>ut lo< tllt ltte of ,.,,. I c.en·1 oet e ftlt on CJIV
l>tr111dev. tn e• mv veer• I lhlnll l'Y• oot-• totet of two 1111-.·· Monon, O.Clncet wen1
0-fo<·•. Sc>Mktno of 0-lon , Mier IOlllO
0-lor-s. A9d C.NW '8• Ills eYereoe dip ..._
.lSO, to .lO CHI end crew of "'9 .... .,..,
Devi" TV 1110w ~•led IN ....,II·
wr1ten1c .. 1era, 7-S, In preeeme tnlMtln No.oft-
Oey. ~ ''Tiie ftena" ~ WH Ille '#i.w.lM
Pllcilef". • Cla•efend lndleM Chelrmen of ,,..
lloerd and /Mlorllv Ow,_ ,..J. "S-"' O' ....
1uffered an _,.,,, Mlrl allac:k ano dltd at
Ille -ol Q Monda't. O'Halll Md b9M "'9 , .. ,.,., malorlrv ow-11na 1m . . Tonlllfl1'1
(7:l01 Pllchlno malClluo. Illa SUtdlllt ( t•-91 •• Temmv JtM lt-111
At the moment, the Angels des-
perately need an infielder. But
who? And what about Foll amnd
Rick Burleson, who is eligible to
come of the DL Sept. 3.
''Ultimately, this is the purpose
we must direct ourselves to," said
Port as he pointed down to the
playing field at Anaheim
Stadium. "But we don't want to
Bulldogs are hurtin g
A THENS, Ga. (AP) -Quar-
terback John Lastinger still wore 5l
verbal, annor but roverback Terry 4 •
Hoage returned to full contact practice
with the University of Georgia football team.
Hoage missed more than a week of practice
with a severely bruised calf but is expected to be
ready when the Bulldogs open their season against
UCLA in a nationally televiaed game at Sanford
Stadium Saturday night.
He "showed his lack of conditioning in the
wind sprints," Coach Vince Dooley said. Other
players who missed practice because of injuries
included offensive tackle Jimmy Harper, back
injury; offensive tackle Guy Mcintyre, foot, and
roverback John Little, eye.
Lastinger works out facing a defense which
has orders from Dooley not to him him because he
is recovering from knee surgery. Last year's
starter, Lastinger lnjured the knee in the spring
intraaquad game and still isn't 100 percent.
The team physician examined the knee after
Monday's practice, but no decision was made
whether to allow Lastinaer to go to full contact
workouts, said Georgia spokesman Claude Felton.
Fresno State sla pped again
FRFSNO-Fresno State, already
under probati<?n :-Vith the. Pacific <;oast """
A thleuc Asaociation for violations m its -
football and basketball programs, has
been pen.a.liz.ed by the NCAA for the same
infractions.
The National Collegiate Athletic Association
announced its action against the achoo! Monday.
The NCAA cited, among other violations, a loan to
a player from the 9Chool's football coach and
actions by an assistant coach.
The NCAA probation, which does not affect
post-seaaon play or television appearances, will
last until June l, 1984, running concurrent with
penalties already imposed by the PCAA.
Neither coach was mentioned by name in the
NCAA announcement, but Fresno State sports
information dlrector Scott Johnson confinned that
the action referred to football coach Jim Sweeney.
who led the Bulldop to a California Bowl
championship last year.
Doryl wins De l Mar feature
DEL MAR -Dory! took com-
mand in the upper stretch and pulled ~
away to win the $28,000 Social Service
Auxiliary of San Diego Purse by l ~
lengths over Nola Bird on Monday before a crowd
of 14.376 at Del Mar.
Dory!, the 21-10 favorite ridden by Martin
Pedroza and carrying ll6 pounds, covered one
mile on Del Mar's turf coune in 1:36 2-5 and paid
$6.20. $3.80 and $3.40. The victory was worth
$15,400.
Nola Bird, ridden by Sandy Hawley and
carrying 112 pounds, crossed the finish line 1 'h
lengths in front of Kippy and returned $5 and $4 .
Kippy, ridden by Ronald Warren, Jr., and
carrying 111 pounds, was two lengths ahead of
Western Starlet at the wire and paid $3.60 to ahow.
Television, rad io
TV: No events 9Cheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Dodgers at New York
Mets, 2:30 p.m . (doubleheader), KABC (790);
Cleveland at Angels, 7:25 p.m., KM.PC (710).
Rams waive
three rookies,
three veterans
Rams Coach John Robin.Bon pa.red hls roster to
the legal limit of 49 players Tue9day. waiving three
rookies and three vets and placing two players on the
injured reserve list.
Biggest surprise is the preaenoe of rookie tree
agent James McDonald, who earned a shot at tight
end over nine-year veteran John Thompson.
Along with Thompeon, the Rams waived vet.a
David Lewis and Duke Ferger90n and rookies Jeff
Simmons, Troy We.t and Rich Burtness.
Rookie tackle Bob Speight and rookie defensive
end Doug Reed were placed on the injured reserve
list. •
Simmons and Fergerson. a pair of wide
receivers, were waived Sunday. The others received
the news Monday.
Simmons. the Rams' No. 7 draft pick this year.
played for Robinson for four years at USC. Likewise,
West, a 5-10, 205-pound safety. also played for
Robinson at USC and was the Rams' No. 8 draft pick
this season.
Burtness is a rookie guard out of Montana. •
McDonald, meanwhile, never played coll~te
football -although he did play basket.ball for use
-and still impressed Ram coaches enough to ~e
th~ final cut.
The Rams open the NFL season Sunday in the
Meadowlands against the New York Giants.
Rookie wide receiver Henry Ellard, who
suffered a hyperextended right knee against San
Diego Friday night, and guard Dennis Harrah
(hamstring) and comerback LeRoy Irvin (hamstring)
are expected to be healthy for the opener.
Robinson, Hu01~
cut b y Raiders
EL SEGUNDO (AP) -The Los Angdes
Raiders placed nine players on waivers and put
another three on their injured reserve list Mond.Q'to
~~:::n to the NFL regular eeaaon roster~limit otf9
Placed on waivers were quarterbacks
Robi.Non and Dave Humm, wide receiver
Courville, running beck Rick Berns,
Darryl Byrd and Mike Hawkins, offensive
Henry Sheppard and Randy Van Divier
defensive tackle Ruben Vaughan. •
Placed on the injured reeerve list were defe~ve
end John Matuazak, linebacker Stanley Adams lind
safety Victor Simmons.
The Raiders are actually carrying ~ playere on
their roster. Offe.nsive lineman Don Moeebar, the
team's first-round draft choice, has been gi~ aa
special two-week exemption because he didn't silt' a
contract until last weekend.
A spokesman for the Raiders said Moeebar ~t
expected to play Sunday when t,he club opena'the
regular season at Cind.nnati against the Bengals.:'
It wasn 't exactly a breeze
Still, Lib er ty wins d espite some b izza re wind conditions
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP)-Liber-
ty had to come from behind in
feeble, erratic winds Monday to
take an abbreviated one minute,
22 eecond aail.lng victory over
Courageous In America'• Cup
trials.
In the challenge camp, the
fickle winds of Rhode Ialand
Sound ooet the Australian sailors
a headatart. Time ran ou\ before
they could fln1ah the race.
Auatralla D led Britain'• Vic-
tory '83 through five leg, of • 24 .4
mile ooune, but there wun't
enough wind to flniah the last
beat within the five hour. 15
minute time Umlt, and the race W• dia:arded.
That forced the Ila.rt of the
t>mt-of-eeven lll!'r'iet between the
Aussie yach~ aalled by John
Ben.rand.. and the Brilllh entry,
aldxpered by RodMy Pattiial
and Lewrie Smith po.\poned
until Tue9day.
The two Amttican boeta and
the two foretgl\ t-ntrles are radn41
11eparately to determine which
two will meet ln the cham-
pionship cup finals beginning
Sept. 13.
The races Monday were held ln
glum, overcast, rain-spattered
Rhode Ialand Sound in winds that
laz1ed around from IOUth to eat·
erly and ranged from 11 knota to
virtually zero.
Courageoua, the 1enior citizen amonc 12-metera being aalled by
John Kollua, took a ~
ed8e at the ata.rt. and expanded It
to :23 at the first mark and :39 a\
the eecond.
But then the 1974 and 1977.c;up
winner ran out of wind ~
Liberty, aklppered by :.l1
Conner, sailed by on a lee t
took one hour to complete.
race oommlttee decided to~
competition for the day. ~
The dedalon made Uberty~ for the final triala,
Courageous la 9-9. •
Auotnllla D, the ~ 1peedater which hu ·
the toretan radnc here, •
dead ne.t •tart with Vlct«y . I
but by the finrt mark a
lopsided 3:46 advantqe.
NHYC's Schock win s Santana-20 title;
Jan~ Schock of Newport from Texas. ·,i• .. Harbor Yacht Club wu the win-Runner~up WM Doua
ner of the Sant.a.na-20 Clue Bahia Cottnthian Yacht '
Championahlp in a four-day title Third w.. Harry Patt.a.on. ~
~atta out of Coronado Yacht port Hatbor YC.
Club ln South San Dlcao Bay tut The Santana-20 11 oni& of\1ht,
weekend. more popular snail off.ahore lllJ-
Schock defeated • f~ld of 32 l"8 yachts In Southem Ca.Ut~.
entrt• lncluclln(. five from Mex-It ii produced by the W .O. Schock
lco, three from e>regon and two Co. of Santa Am. ..
Orange Coast DAILY PI LOT /Tuesday, Aug.-10. 1983 B3
On his way A,.Wlt ....... to
BULLETIN BOARD
S•mmy Lee roast
"Who lhe Heck le Sammy Lee .. la the quea-
tlon that wlll be asked Thursday. Sept 22 al a
rout and toaal for the lorme. Olympic gold
medal-winning diver.
The festlvltlea wlll take place In the Grand
Ballroom at the Anaheim Marriott Hotel. 700
West Convention Way. A reception la aet for
6•30 p.m. and dinner wlll follow at 7:30.
Lee won gold medals In lhe 1948 and 1952
Olympic Games In 10-meter platform diving.
He also earned a bronze medal In lhe
three-meter aprlngboard competition at lhe
'48 Games.
The Newport Beach resident Is a diving
consultant to the Mission Viejo Nadadores
Proceeds from the evening will be donated
In Lee'a name 10 the U.S. diving team.
Falrr•cln•
Sale of Los Angeles County Fair adult ad-
mlulon tickets, ottering 40 percent dlacounta
to racing fans, wlll close Sept 14, one day
before the fair begins.
The Racer's 1pecla1 book ot 10 sdml11111on
tickets 111 on sale at the fairgrounds tor $30
each (an average ot $3 per adml11lon)
The thoroughbred meeting at the fair-
grounds In Pomona ktcka off Sept. 15 and runs
through Oct 2.
Dally Double and Pick Six wagering will be
reinstated
Coed .. olleyball
The Ctty of Costa Mesa has acheduled a
coed volleyball league which will begin the
week of Sepl. 19. Deadline for entry Is Friday
Cost ts $60 per team plus ottlclals' tees.
which wlll be determined by the number or
teams In the league
Teams wlll play on Monday and Wednesday
evening&
Nebraska's S hane Swan son picks
up yardage in a 44-6 rout of P enn
State Monday night.
Reservations can be made by phoning the
Sports Depot, 641-0610. Roster and entry lee should be brought to
the Downtown Community Center, 1860
Anaheim St, Coata Mesa. or malled to P 0
Box 1200, Costa Mesa, 92626
;Monarch running game ready
Mater Dei figures to have all the horses needed, and more
By ROGER CARLSON
Ol_O..,.f'llot It.II
When you like to drive the ball down the
opponent's throat, as much as the Mater De1
High Monarchs, and you have a battering
ram by the name of 220-pound AJ Pola in the
backfield and a big, veteran front line, you
have to feel good about your situation.
Mater Dei football coach Wayne
Cochrun isn't just happy with that type of
situation, he thrives on it.
"We ran two drives that consumed 6:58
and 5:31 against St. Paul almost enurely with
the blast," says Cochron. "That's how we
beat 'em.
"We'll throw as the quarterback de-
velops, but yes, we're a running team."
Pola. a three-year starter with excep-
tional strength (he lifts 505 pounds in the
squat, benches 365 pounds and power cleans
275 pounds), is the focal point in the
Monarchs' isolation blast, a tactic remines·
cent of Ohio State football.
"Al's oostrong inside and blocks so darn
w ell," continues Cochrun. who begins his
eighth year with Mater Dei.
where there is no varsity experience, but
solid candidates.
First, there is Steve Montano. a 5-9.
150-pound junior who has sh own vast
improvement during the summer.
And, Pat Dubar, the Monarchs'
AU-Orange County defensive back, was a
freshman quarterback and can be used here,
if needed.
Considering Mater Dei's love affair with
the running game, there isn't an over-
whelming requirement that the quarterback
be able to fire bullets, just keep it respectable,
and that much seems assured whether it's
Montano, Dubar or 6-5 basketball star Mike
Mitchell.
Here's a rundown by position:
QUARTERBACK -"We moved Dubar
and Mitchell to quarterback because we
weren't sure," says Cochrun. "But Montano
has met every challenge and has the
advantage. Dubar, he wants to do whatever
helps the team. As a qb, he has the same kind
of skills as Joe Kapp."
(6-0, 170) and junior Toan Cao(5-7,'155) offer
backup at tailback.
RECEIVERS -Jeff Dela Cruz (5-8,
150 sr.) and Chris Gill (5-9. 150 jr.) are the
wideouts with Matt Flati (5-10, 160 sr.)
offering de pth and starting ability. Jay
Wilkerson (6·1, 175) and basketball star
Mike Fielder (6-3 1h, 205 sr.) are the top
candidates at ught end.
OFFENSIVE LINE -Brown and
Niemiec are returning starters and both are
prospects. Brown was an all-league choice as
a junior and Niemiec IS a 16-year-old senior.
Also, Tom Motherway (6-3'h, 215 sr.) and
John Suggs (6·2, 235 jr.). AU-league returnee
Bob Page (5-11, 185 Sr.) and Jim Borza (6-1,
205 sr.) a.re at guard with Gil Coronado (180)
and Sean Fort (185) at backup. Ron Steuber
(6-l. 185) is at center. backed up by Fort.
DEFENSIVE LINE -Gary Ferrel
(5-9, 185) and Pat Telles (5-9. 175) give the
Monarchs quickness at tackle, with Borza
providing oohd backup Wes Holland (6-2 'h.
205) isa returning all-league selection at end.
with John Barich (6-0, 195) on the other side
of Mater Dei's four-man tront. Fielder is also
an end.
KICKING GAME Chris Young (6-0.
Suri ebamplonsblps
The 1983 OP Pro Champlon1hlp1 wlll lure
some of the top aurfera In the world to Hunt-
ington Beach beginning Wednesday and con-
tinuing through Sept. 4.
The aec::ond annual contest will IOllow a
48-aurfer format. A total of 28 trial quallllera
and tour apansora' exemptions wlll surf the 16
first-round man-on-man hMta. The 16 winners
will meet 16 seeded surfers In round two.
From there, the format will run on a
man-on-man baals through the two-man finale.
Scoring wlll be done on a 10-polnt ayatem
First-place llnlatier In the men'• competition
wtll take home $4, 125 while the women'a
champion wtll earn $2,500.
Competition wlll take place each day near
the Huntington Beach pier.
o..,,...._~
Prospects are even brighter due to the
fact up front are returnmg starters at tackle
-~rran Brown (235) and Brook Niemiec
(225).
The bi~ question is at quarterback.
RUNNING BACK -Pola, a 5-11, 220,
has lost 22 pounds and Cochrun's happy
about that. He has 4.8 speed in the 40 and will
operate at fullback for the most past, but will
switch to tailback, too. Mike Jones (5-8, 175)
returns at tailback. As a junior he ran for 285
yards on 64 carries and l TD. Jim lnRTam
175) is the team's place-kicker and kickoff
man, while Dan Josipov1ch (5-9. 180) wiU
handle the punting.
Al Pola forms the nucle us of Mater De i's running
gam e with his bull-like blocking and rushing.
Mater Del
Nickname· Monarchs
Colors: Scarlett, gray
League Angelus
1982 Record League 4 · 1, Overall 6-4· 1
Type of Offense I
Type of Defense: Multiple
Head Coach: Wayne Cochrun
Staff: Russell Glass (ottenalve coordinator):
Terry Troup (defensive Coordinator); Charlie
Meyerett (offensive llneJ; Dan Dodd (running
backs and
Inside linebackers). Rick Amadio (tlgRt ends
and outside linebackers); Bruce Corbell (de-* tensive line); Len Edwards (receivers).
1983 Schedule (replace)
Sept. 8-Fountaln Valley (at SA Bowl)
Sept. 16-Doa Pueblos (at San Marcos High)
Sept. 23-Santa Ana (at Santa Ana Bowl)
Oct. 1-Crespl (al Santa Ana Bowl)
Oct, 7-Edlson (at Orange Coast)
Oct 14-at Serra•
Oct 20-Plus x· (at Santa Ana Bow1)
Oct 28-at St. Paul'
Nov. 3-Blshop Amat' (at Santa Ana Bowl)
Nov. 10-Servlle' (at Santa Ana Bowl)
.,... ,,... Pllllle
· Gene Noji i8 calling the 8hol8 for Wood-
, ~ridge High's Warrior8 in 1983. . ,
( ---~------
WOODBRIDGE ...
From Page 81
as four two-way starters, dependmg on how
practice develops.
''Naturally, we'd Like to have as many
players on one side of the ball as possible,"
said Noji. "Last year. we were able to do it
except for one position until some injunes hit
us."
Here's a look by pos1uon:
QUARTERBACK-Three players are
still competing to replace Burke -
sophomore Mat Cornwell (6-0, 175), junior
David Andrew (5-9, 160) and senior Bill
Russell (5-11 , 175). Noji would prefer to use
Russell asa wide receiver, however. "Russell
has the most varsity experience, he started
about half the season last year," said Noji.
"All throw the ball well, and though we
don't run the quarterback much , they are alJ
capable runners."
RUNNING BACK-Rudy Figueroa
, (5-10, 175), the tailback, has been the
Warriors' leading grour\d-gain~r the last
three years. Senior Sean Sieler (5-6, 160) and
junior Don Saeger (5-8. 165) will each see
duty at fullback.
WIDE RECEIVER-George Kydd
(6-2. 170). who was injured for much of last
year, hopes to rebound this season. Senior
Rick Lee (5-10, 160) seems assured of a spot,
as well.
OFFENSIVE LINE-Tight end re-
mains up in the air. according to Noji,
although David Barber, a 6-2. 195-pound
senior has the most experience. Ed Keefe
(6-2, 195), a junior, is another candidate for
tight end. "Both can catch the ball," said Noji.
Two returning starters man the interior line
with Tim Codde (5-10, 205) able to play
either guard, center or tackle. "He's played
all three and it depends on where we need
him," said Noji. Pat McGrody (5-11, 195) is a
three-year letterman and has started the last
two at guard and Chris Kamps (6-2, 205)
appears a good bet to earn one of the tackle
slots.
DEFENSIVE LINE-Codde and
Kamps will more than likely be two of the
down linemen with the other slots up for
grabs. Barber will either double up at
defensive end or linebacker. Tim Blaylock
(5-11, 180) is a defenaive end.
LINEBACKERS-Three-year starter
Greg Ruffer (5-10, 185), along with Saeger
are the primary candidates.
SECONDARY-Figueroa will double at
one of the comers. Andrew. one of the
quarterback candidatet is another cor -
nerback, along with tenior Jeff Heringer
(5-11, 165). The free safety will probably be
Matt Seymour, a 5-10, 160-pound junior,
while Ru.ell al8o is capable of playing in the
aeoondary 10mewhere.
KICKING GAME-Figueroa w ill
handle the punting ch ores. Place-kicking
dutiet will fall to one of three playere~atl
Preaey, Enc Boswell or S.epr, who ki&ed
for the 1<>phomore team tut year. Preaey
and Boswell are both 90CXer playert
Monte Clark Joe Gibbs
Playbooks returned-
as NFL teams
make final cuts
from AP dl1patclle1
Ask any National Football League head coach.
The toughest part of the job is taking back the
playbook. They all received a break this year when
the league increased the rosters from 45 to .j9, but that
did not make this year's final cuts any easier to
~min~~. ·
"The last thing l needed today "'...s a news
conference," said the Houston Oilers' Ed Biles, who
Monday axed nose guard Daryle Skaugstad and
guard Ralph Williams -two of last year's starters -
and tight end Walt Arnold . "l'm more concerned
about the lives of the young men we'll have to cut."
Coach Joe Gibbs, who cut 10 Washington
~kins players to reduce his roster to the required
opening-day limit, agonized over his dismissal of
running back Clarence Harmon.
"It was a hard decision," Gibbs said. "It's the one
thing you don't like about this job. The coaches have
been Uving with him day after day for three years.
It's just a hard thing to do."
It would have been a lot more diCficult had
Harmon, the Redskins' third-leading rusher last
se81JOn, not been arrested this spring and charged
with possession of cocaine. He continued to work w ith
the team pending reeolution of the case, carrying the
ball just four times in preseason games.
Another coach wrestling with names Monday
was Monte Clark, who was dismayed about letting
punter Ray Stachowia go In favor of rookJe Mike
Black. The three-year veteran from Michigan State
was picked up by the Detroit Lions late last week
after being cut by t•e Green Bay Packen.
"We didn't have a lot of time to make a decision.
We just had the game Saturday to look at him," said
Clark, who also troded wide receiver Tracy Porter to
the BalUmore C.Olta for a 1984 draft choice.
OILERS ...
From Page 81
175 sr.) and Eric Chavez (6-0. 185 jr.) are
backup personnel. Burnside is backed by
letterman Dean Tomasick (5-10, 155 sr.)
and Hessam Mahdani (5-6, 155 jr.). A back
injury, however, has e nded sophomore
sprint champion Tony Eden's football
career. He'll stick with track. according to
Pascoe. Rick Stout (5-10, 160 sr.), Andy
Pascoe (no relation) at 5-8. 160 sr.) and
J eff Cribbs(5-11, 160 sr.) a.re at wingback.
R ECEIVERS -Don Fishel (6-1. 175
sr.), another Ocean View transfer, starts
at wide receiver, as well as in the
secondary. Backing him up a.re Paul
Bryant (5-10, 160 jr.) and Albert Garcia
(5-8, 160 sr.). Larry Curran (6-1, 190 sr.) is
at tight e nd, backed by Denny Alonzo
(6-2, 210 sr.). Ray is here, too, but;<Pascoe
hopes to maintain the concentration at
linebacker as much as possible.
OFFENSIVE LINE Roger
Masangkay (6-2. 200 sr.) and Mike
F.Bcobedo (5-11, 210 sr.) form lhe nucleus
of the line and will operate along side each
other at tackle and guard respectively on
the "quick side" of a flip-flop line. Both
boast all-league credentials. Bill Zinn (6-1.
205 sr.) and David Mosham (5-11, 202 sr.)
are the strongside tackle and guard, with
Corey Walker (6-2, 190 sr.) a t center.
Others in the front line include tackles
Todd Keithan (6-1, 195 jr.), Steve Grun-
ballm (6-0, 185 sr .). Tim Wherfel (6-1,190
jr.) and Frank Weyant (5-11 , 200 sr.),
guards Matt Krcelic (6-1, 185 jr.), M_lke
Woodard (6·1. 205 jr.) and John Wiilt-
erman (5-9, 170 sr.). Paul Hanna (5-9, 175
sr.) and Mike Taylor (5-9, 180 jr.) a.re also
strong candidates at center.
DEFENSIVE LINE -Westerman ia
the nose, backed by F.scobedo. Jim Elmore
(6-2, 210) and Mosham are at tackle,
backed by Grace, the backup quarterback,
Robert Epley (5-1, 190 sr.). Keithan.
Grumba.llm and Weyant. Chavez, the
running back, and Ja.aon Herring (6-0, 170
sr.) are the ends, backed by Hanna and
Armond Caprio (5-8, 162 jr.).
LINEBACKERS-Ray and Alonmare
the backers, with Woodard and
Masangkay providing the depth.
SECONDARY -Burnside and Fisi\~.
Ocean View's contributions to the Oilers,
are the star1ers and appear to be the onJy
two-way starters, although Ray may be
wed on offentt, too, if the occasion
warrants. Backing up Burnside and Fishel
at the comers 8{'e Garcia and Tomaskk.
Ken Hulett (5-11 , 175) Is at atrongaafety,
backed by Randy Fries (6-2, 165) and
Pascoe. Bob Rehling (5-11, 165 ar.) ia the
free safety with Paul Bryant (5-10, 160 Jr.)
behind him.
KICKING GAME -Lawton givs the
Oilers an added weapon u the teem'•
punter, and will abo handle the
place-kicking and klckoffa. He haa good
&CC\Jrac)> as a placc-kkker, but not qulw
the same ranae .. four-year 1\&M('r Zoran
Katz. Another poeaiblllty u a punwr la
M\.138 Madaln (5-10. 165 sr.) .
• ----1
L
--··
·114 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday. Aug 30. 1983
Cornhuskers that good? Penn State that bad?
EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J (AP) -For one
·game at least, Penn St.ate has gone from the
penlhouse to the Oophouse
Fresh from their fint-evt·r nauonaJ college
football championship. achieved last Jan 1 in a 27-23
Sugar Bowl triumph over Georgla, the Nittany Lions
wore lheir crown for the first time on the field of
battle Monday night. Embarrassmg is putung it
nuJdly Devastating is more like It
The final score of the inaugural Kickoff Classic
was Nebraska 44, Penn St.ate 6. It wasn't that close,
not until the final 20 seconds when Penn State SICOred
t.o avert what would have been its fint reg-
ular-season shutout in 17 years.
The 38-point whipping matched the worst 1068
ever suffered by a Joe Paterno-coached squad -a
49-11 rout by UCLA in 1966 -and left everyone
wondering whether Nebraska, the No. 1-ranked
team heac.ling into the season, ia tha t good or
fourth -ranked Penn State is that bad. The answer
probably Ues somewhere in between.
"I was kind of amazed at the way it went," sald
NebrBBka Coach Tom Osborne. ''l don't think you can
say the game was a tnle indication of the strength of
Penn State or lhe strength of Nebraska. I think the
thing snowballed. I'm still concerned because I'm not
sure what the final score really means.
"I don't know if we're very good or not. We're
good, but I don't think we're that good. J thought if
we played well and they played well it would be a
five-or seven-pomt game. I thought we <.'Oulu win
strictly on Turner Gill's experlent.-e."
Gall, a &erllorquarterback, ia the ringl~ader of the
dynamite Nebraska offense which led the nation a
year ago with 518.6 yards a game. The Comhuskers
settled for 500 on the nose this Ume, with 298 coming
in the first hair when they built a 21 -0 lead and
allowed Penn State out or its own territory juat once.
''I thought we'd beat them by two or three
t.ouchdowns," said Gill, who completed 11 of 14
passes for 158. scored the game's first touchdown on a
I-yard sneak and Ured a 19-yard acoring pass to
Monte Engebritson on the final play of the opening
period to make it 14-0. "When we got a 21-0 lead, I
knew then all we had to do was score one more
touchdown A.ft.er we got 21 points I knew deep down
we had the pine."
Gill. who returned for hll ten.tor year rather
than atgn a baaeball oonU'act with the New York
Yankees, directed acoring drives of 78 and 86 yards ln
the first period and teamed with backup Nate Maaon
on a 66-yard march in the lleCOnd quarter. capped by
M830n's 20-yard touchdown paas to Todd Frain.
The Nebraska defense chipped in with a acore of
its own early in the third quarter when linebacker
Mike Knox made a juggling one-handed interception
of a Doug Strang pass and returned it 27 yards for a
touchdown. Dave Schnelder kicked a 34-yard field
goal later in the period, Mason darted 21 yards for a
touchdown early in the final quarter .
FDR THE RECORD -~ Angel, Dodger Schedules /,~ .. . ta,
~ • • .. ..
MA.>OA LEAGUE STANDINGS
Americ.aft League
Chlcaoo
Kanu1 City
O.klMld
AIW• Ttllal
MIMHO!a
Seallle
Belllmore
MllwaukM
.P•lroll
Hew York
Toroo10
Bol!on
Cteve!tlld
WEsT DIVISION
W L
Tl 51
"4 •S
65 6t
60 11
60 71
57 75
so " EAST OIVISION 15 S?
14 S4
13 56
71 S1
12 60 62 69
S1 7S
M9flde'l'I Scwft CleVelaNI 6, ......,. 4
Toronlo 5·1, ~Ion 1·8
f'ct.
.AZ 496
.419
45'
.45'
'32
312
Stt
569
S66 .SSS
S4S .4n
432
Ml~t• s. O.troll 4 (11 tnnln1n l
Chboo 2, TeHI 1
Battlmor• t, K•ns.u CllY 2
S.allle 2, MllwaukM 1 °""'~~~ T .. '1'1CO-
Ge
..... ,,,,
13'11
1311>
17
?3111
2'1'J l
4\'t
Sl't
15
20\l'J
CleYelaNI (Suldm. 14·9) el ........ (JOhn
9·11), n
Bo\loo (Hu"l 10-101 •I Tor0ttlo (Stieb IJ·ll), n
Mln...sola (Schrom 11·5) •I O.troll
1"'-lrt 13·11, n THU (Slewarl 1·0) al Cnlcaoo (Burns 7·1), n
&•ttlmore (Oevt1 10-S) al ltanu• Clly (Rnmuuan 7·2), n
New Yon. (Gul«v IS·I) at OOltnd
IMcClllV S-6), n
Mltw-" (CanOlont 7-01 al S..111e (814ottl• I · 11), n
-~'l'•co.m.. ClevNtld el """'8. n
k ttl..-e 11 Toronto, n
Ml~ll el Booton, n
Taaes at Detroit, n
Kan.a• Cltv at Chic-. n
C...,..•nd al Caltfornla, n New York al 0.kl.lncl, n
Mllwauk" •I SH ltle. n
NeftoNI Lea~
WEST OtVISIOH
Oedew'I AtlaMa
HOU> Ion
!>an DleiJo
S.n Francl>eo C1nc1nna11
W L
76 SJ
76 s~
68 .,
6S 67
62 ..
60 n
EAST OtVISlC>ff Plllll>u<llh
MOnlrMI
PllllaOl!Oht• SI LOUii
Chic.ago
New Yor~
67 62 o e
6S '3 ..... sa n
SJ n
MaoldeY't Sant
Otd9wl 6·7, New Yori. I 3
S1 Louis 6. Houston I Chleaoo 1, .t.11a111a s
MOnlrH I S, !>an Francisco 0 Plt111>vro11 2. Clnclnna11 t
S.n Oleoo 6·6, Pl\lladelPl>lo S·I Ttcle't'•~
GI
1 .....
12''> IS .,,.,
~ Ip.,,. 10-6 and Za<fVY 4 0) II
New Yon (LVncl'I •·• •NI HOimen l·S), (lwl·nlgflll
!>an DleOO IWl!ltson 2·1) •NI H•w1<1nl l·S) al Pl\t.._Ollla (Grou J ·4 ell<I
McGraw l·Ol !twl·n'9/lt) s.n Francisco IDevll 2·31 •• Montr111 (Burri• 4·S), n
Plll\l>uron (DeL-. S·ll •I Cincinnati
IRun ell 7·01. n Chk.aoo IRalnev ll· 10) 01 Anania
(Mc.Murtrv 12·11. n
SI Loul• !Co~ 1·21 al Hou1too (Rul!le
7 ll, n
WNneMl!t'l'I ~ ~al New VO<k, 11
!>I Loul• •• Atl.ln••. " S.n Frencll<CO al MontrMI, n Chk.aOO al Cincinnati, n S.n Dlello er Ptltlaf .. n
Plll&burllh el Hou11on, n
.AMERICAN LEAGUE
Incl.ens 6, ~ 4
CLEVELAND CAUl'()lllNIA
M r lllll a.ll r llbl
Harrah 3t>
Harorv lb
Franco u
Ttwntn Clh
TeDll( If
GTt>om•ci Vuk¥dl r1 Eu lant
FIKNln'.lb
J I 0 O Oowntnv H S 0 1 1
4 0 1 0 Carew Oh S 0 0 0 5 0 1 1 Btnlour C1 4 0 I 0
2 l l O O.Cnc1 lb 4 o O o
• 0 1 1 ROJCktn lb • 1 1 1 1 O o I Valentin r1 • 1 1 O
4 121 Boonec 3110 4 112 Sconlr•Ph 0000
4 0 0 0 Lu0r1C11 u 4 0 1 I
Wlff-1b 3 I 0 I
JI 6 9 • T-)6 4 t 4 5arWO...llll*'-
0.-llll Ito 1a 010-6 ~ -000 Jll-4 Gtme Wlnnltlll R81 -Franco (I) E-Frenco OP-California 2 L06-
Clevellnd 6. Callfornl• 7 2B-Harorove. Franco, TaOte< 2. Downing HR-Enten
171, RoJ.UMl!I <•> S&-Frenco 121)
SF -<i Thornl 1. Wlllonll ~ K R.•R 1a IO
~ HH IGll W.t0-4
BAnderJOtt S,S
6 1·3 • J
72-l 1 '
0
1
I ,
C8lfWllla
WlllL.7·10
SBrown
• s 1
1
0
I I·) 1
S.Ml'ler
WPo-8AllOenon
1 2·J 0 0 0 T-1-52 A-?2,l:M
.,,... a.,.....
ajlTTilfG
A• • H ... ltlM f'ct.
Cerew * S4 141 1 ~ )41
O.Clncei 211 41 .. IS ,, m
Bun..Dn '°' " n 0 11 ,,.
e.ni-t 24' JS n J 24 m Grk:ll ., U 1U " " m
LYl!fl .OS S7 '°' 21 " 267 ~· 243 • '3 I • ?st a-W7 3' " 1 ., .25'
Ito.~'°" m lS 11 6 )I .2S2 Foti UC> 29 13 2 2' JU
Lutlrallcll IOI 10 ,. 0 6 ,4$
Oownlno )17 J7 n ,, 4S .243
Wiii-" 10 23 I 11 m v...,.t1,.. m ,. S1 ' )I m
Clarl< 17' 14 4) 4 11 no
•• JaeklOll :M4 4J 1S 14 47 1°'
O'Barrv • s • 0 ' 167
Total& 4,$46 '"'·'"
.,, 5'4 .w
'1TCHMG • " .. SO W·LIRA
l.aM "' ''° 41 40 I· IO l..>6
lenc:l'91 • ,. Jl 41 ... U I Fouch 111 , .. ., " 11-t HI
Curll• ~ " lS I) l-1 .,,,
Kl-1,~ 121 0 a ll·S 4 °'
JONI ,.,.,., m )1 • •·11 ..,,
Stelter .. .0 II .. 1-1 4.70
Wiii Ill •• Sit ts 7-10 us
H111W ~ • ·~ 10 0•4 SOI
~-" " •• s ' 1-1 600
McL..auolllln 40''1 s:J " JJ M 603
Tota" 1, 1901,JIS fin ~ 60·11 ,,.,.
SllfM $9ncher 4, Wiii 4, Hauler J,
Cuflh l , KltOll 2.
AmMcMI~
.... JaY1 '· ·--In ' Pntca-
9o1ton 000 000 100-1 , 0
Tatel!IO 100 011 ~ I I
Tudor, Moma ltl ll>d Gffnwl, C!Mnl
8"d Mlrtflne1 W-<:tllW:Y, 14·7 L-TWll<.
10 t HR-Ton1110, Bllrlltld t (1•),
Ma111ne1 If)
Red S.• I, Blue Jay• 1
S«eftd Game
Bo11on 700 002 111-t 1 O
Toronto 004 200 20C>-7 e 2 Brown, John10n l t), Clear (4), Slanlev
(9) and Allenson, G.oman Cll. Adler. R. L JacklOll (1), Gel,.i (7), MOfflll It) I ncl Wl>lll. W-<leer, 4·S L-Molilll. ~·2
HR1-Bo11on, RI« l ()3). Arma1 (30)
Twtfta 5, Tieen 4 MlnneM>la 040 000 000 01-i I 2
O.!roll l«J 000 000 OC>-4 1 O en ...._>
Viola, L ¥Minder (6), R Devis ( 11) and
Engle, Smllh (ti); e.r-...r, Bair (3),
~r (9) and Wockenfuu. W-LVMno.f.
4·10. L-Lt>Ml, 1·7. Hlh-MlnneM>la,
GH ttl (21), R. Wasnlngloo (4) O.troU,
Trammell (13)
WNtot s .. 1, R-' I Tues 000 OCl1 000-1 l 0
Chk:aeo 100 010 OOa-2 7 0
$11\llllson, TOblk (5) ano JOMM>n, Sundl:l9fg (I), Doi.on and Fl1k W-DollOll,
IS-7 L-SmllllMl!I. 7· 13
~t, Rft'eh 1
e.111more no ooo oos-t u o Kensa• Cltv 000 100 01~ I 0
McGregor and Oeml>w y, Per'rv, Creat m •NI SleUQfll. w-McGr-. 16·5. L..!.
Pwrv •·ll. HR....e.111more. Rl'*"1 no>. ~ ... (S) l(ansH City, Rot>ertl (I)
MartMn t. anw.n 1
MflWaul<.. 100 000 OOC>-1 7 0 Seallle 010 010 OOX-2 ) t !>ulton encl Simmons, Ciarlo. aNI s w .. t,
W-<latl\, 6·6. L-Sull0t1, 7·11. HR-Sele!·
lie, S. Hender.on 111.
NATtONAL L.EAGUE
~6,Metl l
l'lrl1 G6lnt
LOS AHGEL•S M•W YOllK
S.S.a 21>
BltutMIU
e.ker" T~scf
Guerrw )I>
Und<•cf Mariftllrf
8roc:k lb
FltT\llllc
Welcflp
Nlednlu< P
.. rlllll ....... 111
S 0 t 0 Wlisoncf 4 0 0 0
4 0 I 0 Brook& )I> ' 1 2 0
l 2 t O IC Hrndr I b ' 0 0 0
0 I 0 0 Foster If 4 0 I I
S 1 3 1 COiar P o 0 0 o
S O 2 2 Slrwt>rv r1 4 0 0 0
J I I 1 GNti '1b 2 0 0 0
4 110 ()quendu 2010
-4 02 I HteoOll 1000
4 0 0 0 Beltor u I 0 0 0 0 0 0 O Or11r c 2 0 0 0
Staub Ph I 0 0 0 Ho6ol\c 0000 Siever p 2 0 0 0
Breotev If I 0 0 0
T->6 6 12 5 T..... >O I 4 1
ker• by --Lt\,,,...... 012 001 IOI-6
_.,.,. 100 000 --1 Game·Wl11nlr111 RBI -Lend<H ua ( 14)
E-Seover, Hodlln DP-Haw Yor~ I
LO&-Lo• A~ I . New Yortc 6
2B-f'ollw, Guerrero S&-Oauando (7)
MerU\81 (S), SS.a 2 (411 SF-Marll>aN
If' H R ER ee IO
LM~
Welch W, 11• ll 11·3 4 ' ' • • N~S.I I l·J 0 0 0 0 0 ..... Yen s. .. 1r L,7·13 10 J 0 COiar I 2 1 I W~aver T-7·47
Dodeer1 1, Mets l
S.C-Geme
LOS ANGELES NllW YOAIC
u.~ 211
Andtt\11 U
Bak• II
Mldndoll Guerre< lb
LMwlrl cf Tholna& C1
Menllat r1
Brocll lb
Y-c HOOIOO P
SHowep
arlllll lllrlllll
• 0 ' 0 Wlllon Cf 4 0 0 0 S 2 I 0 Br_, 31> ) I I 0
4 I 2 I KHrndr lb 4 2 2 I
0 0 0 0 Fosllf " l 0 0 1 S I 2 I Slrwtlf'f r1 l 0 0 I
3 I 1 0 H~c I 0 I 0
l 0 0 0 8r•OIY Oh I 0 0 0
l 0 1 I Sisk o 0 0 0 O
3 2 I 2 Giie\ Ph I 0 0 0
l 0 2 1 Bollor 21> 4 0 0 0
2010 Oclutndu 3000
1 0 0 0 Terr ell P 2 0 1 0
0!'111 c I 0 0 0
T-l5 1 12 7 T..... JO J $ J kw'IW-.... LA~ ... 402 Oii-1
New Yef11 -111 •-J Ga,.,..Wlnnlno RB I -Baklf ti).
E-erooln. LO&-Lot Anoelel 7, Hew
Yori\ 4 16-AnOeoon, l.andfMua, VH-
ttHrllander HR-6ro0. (19), KKarnander 110) SB-Guerrero (20), Anderlorl (2)
s--+tooton, SS.c SF-MariN•. FOii«, Str 11 wlltf'rv
t .. HRlaaaso
LA~ >iOOlon W.9·7 S l 3 1 SHowaS,16 4 O O 0
New Yen
T ... rtl4 L,S-6 6 6 6 4
$11k l 4 1010
Hooton Pllehed lo •wo l>eJltn In 6th. HBP.-Brook• by Hooton. T-2'19. A-
22,.52.
N1'*'9! LMwe
l!XJIM s. G4lrrh •
San Frar>e.IKO 000 000 000-0 ' l Montreot 200 011 10...-i 1J 0 KfukOW. Martl11 (I) and Brentv, Smith
and Ra~ W-5tnllh, 4•7 L-t(rukOw,
t-t liR-MonlfMI, Trillo (I)
,,,....,,. 1, aach I
PllltOuriJll 001 010 000-? S 0
Clnclnna II 000 000 001-1 I 2
Rhoden. Te111.llve (t) aNI P-. SOto, ~ww (fl and Trevino. &llerde41o (9)
W-R,_, 10-11. !J-Solo, 14·11 HR-
PltltOurlltl. wvnna (6 ).
"-*'"'· ........ s f'lnl~
San Dleoo 000 120 0»-6 14 0
Pl\lladtlPhll '°° 001 ~ 7 J LOilar. L. O.L..in (6) •net Gwotdr. C.rllon, RMd (9) •'1<1 Ol.lr. Vlroll If)
W-1.. Deleon. 4•S L-<•rlloo, 1' 14
HR-San Dlello, L S.ttut If) ................
~o-s.n Dleilo 101 100 ~ 11 2
Pll4ladel0hla 100 OU :IOJr-4 I I
SOM, Monee (6) and Kll!fltdv; C-, w. Heniander (7), Holland (t) lltd Vlroll.
W-Comer, l·O. L--Monoe, S-2. HR-San
Olello. L. Sallrer ( 101. PflllacM!Oflla,
ScllmlOI 2 (30).
OllM 7 .......... s
Clllcaoo 000 !WO )00-7 IS 0
Alltnla 301 001 00!>-S J I
Jenllfna, Leffefh (5), C.MPMll (6), i.e.
Smllll (7) •nd J. OaYl1; Nlet.ro. Cemo ISi. Garw (7), Moore (I ) Md ~I
W-C•"'"*I. •·1. L-Oarw. , ... HR-Chlc.aeo. M. H.i1 2 tllJ, ~tltnd (10
c.w..11 .. ..,,... 1
St LOul\ 100 001 111>-4 I
Houston 000 001 OOl>-1 10 I
11~ •net B~. ~. i...cou
(6), D. Stnlttt m end Mlr ... oci., Alllllv m.
W-St~. H L--MHdtll. 6·1
MA.JOtt LIAOU• LEADl9tS
~ .........
BATTING 13U el l>et•I· 9000\, &o.lon, '*; c:.nw. Nlllh. .l471 McRH, Kan"' City, .l26, Trammell, Detro!!, .12S1 Whit
eller. Detroit ..110
ltUN•· f. ,,_,,,, .. , .. lllmere, t1,
ltlell111, &altlmora, 11. MoMtw. Toron•o,
151 Molltor, Mltwaull .. , "· Ill Hendl<M>ll, Oellland ...
•II· c-, Mllwaull ... 107. Riot, lolton, 100. Wlnfleld, Hew Yori<, N,
"'-'rltll, DetrOll, tO, ~. Mllw•uk .. , ..
HIU. a-. .... ,.,., 17t1 G-. ftAA...
WeuiiM , 1'2, Whtitlttl, Oeftoll, 1'2,
McRH, ICeMaa Cflw, 15'. 4 -tied wffll IS1
'1.,Js f Angels on Radio KMPC (710) Angela on TV Channel 5
Dodgers on Radio KABC (790) Dodgers on TV Channel 11
'\-•0-IH nl Game
Sunday Monday TUHday Wedneaday Thursday Friday Saturday
Auguat 30 31 September 1 2 3
I Indian\ at Anetta, 7 35 lncl11n\ al Anetta, 7 35 Brewers ill Metts. 1 35 Brewets at Mc•. 7 !Y.I Dod1en al Mel~. 4 35 Dodcen at Meis 4 35 Dod1tn at f 1po~ 4 35 Ooclten al hpos. 4 35 •Dodrtn at C.oos. S O!i
4 5 e 7 8 9 10
Brewers •t Anctb. I 05 •Mc• al 1 or on lo 4 Mells al lo1on10. 4 30 Anctil al loronto. 4 JO •Anc• al Chiuco. ~ 30 •Dode•• al £1p0s, 10 35 Padres at Doclsen. S JS Padm al Ooclttn. 7 35 Reds al Dode"'· 7 35 Rws at Dod1en, 1 35 Mc• al Chicaco. 5 30
Bravu at Dodt"'· 7 JS Braves al Doclstn. 7 05
11 12 13 14 15 18 17
•An1• al Chica&o. 4 Royals at An&tb. 7 35 Royals al Anctb. 7 3~ fem at Anctb, / 35 lms ill Anc•. 1 05
Braves at Dode"'· I 05 Dodc•n at Astros. 5 35 Oodc•n at Aslros. S 35 Dodrers al ,_stros. 4 05 •Dode"' al Giants. 7 JS •Dodctn at G1ilnb I 05
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
I msal Ancril. I 05 Anc• at Royals. S 30 Anceb al Royals. 5 30 Anctil at Royals. 5 JO Ch1ugo al Anctb. 7 30 Chica&o at ~·· 7 30 Q1101011 ~•.1 •Ood(tn ill Giants. I OS Astros 11 Otdctn, 7 l5 Aslros al Oodctn. 1 35 Astros at Dodcen. 7 35 •Ooclten al Bmes. 9 40 •Oodcttut 811wtS. 11 10
25 29 XI 28 2V 30 October 1
ChlCiCO II ~·· I Toronto 1t Anc•. 7 JO lotonlo al ~els. I 35 101onto at Anc•. 7 35 Anc• at luas. 5 30 Anctls at leaas. 5 30
·~en 1l 81avu. 11 10 Oodctn ill Reds. 4 35 Dodt"' at Red~. ? Oodctn al Plclrts. 7 05 Dodcen at Pa<im 1 o~ G11nts at o.dcen. 1 35 Giants 11 Dodctn. I 05
2
Aftalh al lem. 12
G11nls al Dodcen. I 05 .
DOUBLES. Booo•. 8oal0<1, 40, Parrltll.
Detroit, 37; McRae, K•Ma• CllY, 37,
Hrl>eik, MlnnftOI•. 3', RIPllen. ••lllmor•. )6.
TRIPLES Griffin, Totonlo, 9, Gent...-, MJlwouto.w, I, Wln1lelo, Ntw York, I; 6 a1e
tied with 1 HOME RUNS Rica. ~Ion, ». Armas.
Bollon, lO, C-. MltYoaUllM. 26. l(fltle,
CMc.oo. 26. Lurln&kl, Chicago, 26
STOLEN BASES. R Henel«Ml!I, 0.•·
land, '1, R Law. Cltk•oo. 61, J Cru1.
Cnic-. ff, w u-., Kan .. , Clly, '1, Saml)le, r ..... 31
PITCHING 112 declllon&I' H•H. Mii·
waukM, 11·3. l .l7; Rlghtllll, New York, ·~ 4, l IS; McGregor, B•llfmore. 16-s. ).07.
Tellmann, MllwaUllM. 9·3. 2 9S. Hfflon, CleVNNI, llH, 354
STRIKEOUTS Mo<rl•, Delroll. 119, Stieb Toroo10, u•. Rkl.,.111. Hew York,
141. Ba nn1,1er. Chleaoo. 143, Sulcttffe
Cleveland, 121
SAVES Oulser11>«r.,.. Kanw' Clrv. :16.
it. De vi&, Mlnnesole 26, Slanle\I, &<»loo
76, C.euoll, Saa llle, 12, Looez. Oeirolt, 17
Neflonll LMllU9
llAnlNG ()IS el IMlhl MaOlock. Pll·
"bu<llh, .326, Htnorlc:.lt, St Louis. m . Daw-.. MonlrMI, .lit, Cruz, ~ton,
.J 17, Lo, Smllh, SI. Louis, 316
RUNS. MurPl>v. Allalllt . '°'· Rel~· MonlrMI, 100; Dews.on, Monlrtal, IS.
E•an•, San Frantlt.®, 13, SC/>mldl, P!\lla·
oe1e>nta, 7a RBI· OewM>n, Monlrea l, toe, MIJrptlv,
Allanle, 90, SclltnlOI, ~onla. 90, o.-nra, Let...,....._ "41 H~ldl. SI
LOUii, n.
HITS OawlOll, Monlrffl, 140, Thor\, Houston, 154, Olt...r. Monlr111. 1$2. Crur.
HOUlton,lSI, Rarnlre1. Allanla, lSO
OOUBLES· Budll*', Chlceoo. ll.
Kniohl, Houlton, JI. Oltvw. MontrMI, 19,
Cart..-, Montreal, 11, Htndrldo, SI. loul•,
2t. Wele<;h, MonlrN I, 21
TRIPLES Butter, Atlanla. n. Crur.
Houtlon. I, Thon1 Hou•lon, I, I are tied with 7.
t+OME RU NS Schmidt. Pflllldell)tlla, lO; Daw.on. MonlrMI, ?I, Even•, Sein Fren· Cl~. 17, MurOlly, Allanta. 26. ~. LM~JS. STOLEN BASES: aalnM, MorltrMI, 62,
Wl90ln1. Sein DleOO. 4A, S.S.it. La ......._
421 Wiison, New York, 41, LeMa11er, Sall
FrandM:O, )I PITCHI NG 112 decialon1) F•ic-, Al•
'-"'•· 9·3, l.65, Parer, All.Int•. 13·S, 3 "3 Oroaco, Hew York, 11·S, I 21; Oenny
PhfladelO/lla, 13·6, 2 SO, McW1lllam1, Pll·
l11JUrgh, 13·6, '07 STRIKEOUTS Canton, Pto~i...
719, S.Oto, Cincinnati, 100. M<Wl•llm•,
Ptll~iJll, IJI. V~. L• ..,._.._ 1411 Rvan, HOUllOO, IJS.
SAVES LI . $/\'\Ith, Cltlc:ago, 11,
lledrotlan. Atlanla, 11, RNrOon, MontrMI,
11; H041allCI, PflfladtlO/lla. 16. LAvelle. San
Francisco. 16. S. H-•· Leos .,......., 141
Tekut¥a, P1tt1l>urDfl, 16.
A"*1can L.-on NMbel
WllJTllRN R•GIONAL
Cat f'• -""> San Mall!O IG, Lt• v_, I t~n Meleo
win• Chemt>IOn•lllO)
Del Mar
MONDAY'S R•SULn
()Ollt .. 4.1-dla't ~ ,_..,..)
,NUT RAC•. 6 turlonos
Run tor Ta•la (McCarron) t 00 6 00 3 40
Mel's Whl-(Judice) 11 40 6.20
Pine tor Gold (PedroH I 4.10
Time: 1'11 II S.
Also rlCllO' Would You PIMM, F•lr
Arne, Cetdl Tiie Show, Petlle Patrice,
At>ovt lht Pt,,.., Ac.antlla, Steller'• Girl,
S.rl't Orl>ll, RUlll Oii Honev
t•COMD ltAC•· 1 1116 ,,,, ... Slcll Bou
S.k:t (FUllllM) UO UO UO
SllOOlh.tmehUc:ll IHawlavl YO 2IO
Tai<• Two WlYft (Pierciel 2.60
Time; 1:.4' t/J. Al\o rac»d: Bru Ha Ht • .Sir Hint, Gunny Gum, 'Trip Tlctlel, Ultre Ptffwra, Htll\o
EllYOV. Dlv!Mdot, V•IUe PKked. Nallve
Jectl.
U DAILY OOUaLe (7·7) paid U2.40.
nt•D RAC• 6 l\Hlonos ()IJld ltB
(McC9"'0ll) • '° uo uo
Yew WOOd (PlncaYI UO 1.IO
HOSFOS !Maul UO
Tltftt: '"11 )15.
AllO feced Patttf°n MAIO\ .JOllY "°"'·
St1ote e...... C"8"1 Oii In, ~lllldr""'· SNeFtl,
U ••ACTA IM\ oald '51.00. '°""™ Ill.AC•. 6 !Ur~• Su.-Slit· 11« (Mare) 1 '° ~40 .UO
...lrOUl!dlheOoolh IMllltl 12.40 l 40
SM't Gol Sivie ($lbltlal UO Tlmtl 1;11 215. • AltO rectd: OWrd\lroe, s-1 Carretu.
CrM m Poc:llet, Sllv• •-· Whlftwllld •omenw, i.-t, Katnec:tou AtnWb, Of
GOOd allCI • ""· llold StraWll«rY
,~ tllAC8. • luf10ntt E adllttye
llddar CSllWNlk•l 13.. YO UO Sotnellllotwood9'1UI IHawltv) 160 2.AO
C:lllef c.nstalll. (~IJ'll) uo
'rlmt: IM II L ,.,_. f9CICI• ..... Olollt , Hiii ol Tete,
OllllllM s..clel ~. W 's Rovet Df~J A.unite itOM, Aftf\111, Maarf'I. 9' •JlACTA (6•10) Mid "UO
Sl)CTM •ACE. 6 fUf'IOMIS Cnaln ot Gold
(McCarr0t1) 9 40 4 20 3 20
Golden Toi (Pier~) 3.40 UO
Jool U a.r (Olivo res I 4,00
Tim. I 11 AllO raced My Donna B , Pal~a
Prevell>, Plouenl1¥, Muv Jue1>11, c-Nllla. Nordk Lad¥. Uvetv Frame, ~y·, Venlly
SEV•NTK aACE. 1 1116 mllH
Mv H1bllon• (Plerul 1.IO 2.20 2 20
Concierge Iv elen1uele l 4.20 S,40
Secrel (Toro) 6.40
Also raceo Khal Dave. Halamoto, B.K.'s
Wlndv l•le. lntoMlcalor, New Broom, F'"I
Scrammer Time l 4J
"5 EXACT A (7 Sl 1>1110 JJ9 00
u PICK sot 0 · 1·4+l·7l i>ald ~.•n 40
wllh lS winning liekal> hi• hO<'>tt>) U Pie~
Sia ConM>lallon Paid t 117 IO with 311
wlllnlno 1k:i.111 lflve honesl
EIGHTH RACIE. One mile oo lurt
Dorvt 1'"-or•J 6 20 l IO
HOie Biro IHawlevl ~ 00
Kloe>Y IW•rrne)
HO •oo HO Also raced On Rt•urn.
Rlnue,,.. W11••rn Ster1e1.
Trusr U1.
Al•ngaOa,
~the, DKl1lve Dream
,.,,.,. 1.l6 215
NtNTit Rt\Cfl. I II 16 mllft
11ta1t1e Tiie Sebe r> I McCe tront
160 6.00 4 60
Snaktl>ltt MeOl<:tne (Vall<lruet.l 1.00 100
Pirate Man (Toro! 140
AhO receo Contr1¥or, Ba<lllOO, OutlV'l
Ol.INf. Prlmato. Pride. No TrUtftO\, LI Le
Tel. Fu/Iv VHltcl
Time I 4S 71 i
IJ UtACTA l?·ll 1>11!0 .,.,. SO Al'-ndance lf,376
,.,.,,.. .... ~
(ti 0...... W"t C41ie99l ,.. Me-.,. ...,._,_ aowl•
fllll.UI
OMfl 0..-..
•
Paul Olson (Wnlmlns1w)-Mark HardlnG
(Wn1mlnt1r l de! Oen Soulhern (Hunt·
1no1011 IHKh)·Jalme Bari<« (Hunllno1on
S.e<:h), 21-1, 21-7.
• OeullM GorOc>n Chaco (Buena Pari.)·kott Bird (Hunllngtoo &Mdll de!. Trev TaYtor (Hunl·
lnolon BMCh)·Mark Chrlslla11 (Lono
Beech), 21·20, 14·21, 11-9. c~ Frenl< Verlen (A,,.helm)·BIW Rivera
(A,,.hettnJ oat. Ranov S<Jfnmefs (Or·
11noel·&IM Raln1 (Tutllnl. 21· IS, 21-ll WOMEN
I o.ue...
~... McKM (Hunllngtoo 8MCh) Jiii Ftorn (Hunllnolon Beedl) oef Judv ...,.._v (GarOtn Grova)·Eve L.,..... (Gerdtn
Grove). 11-11. 11·1J c ~
L vnn Scalllon (G.rdell Grovel· Troy Hin·
,,.nl IG..-dtn Grovel oel. o.tores E1ol110r •
(Pico Rl•era)·Llw Domino~? IL•
Mfredo), tl· 11. 21·20
Miit ED
0.-Otulllet
J o lma Barker IHvnllnglo"
!Meehl ·Chlll<la Tevlor (Hunllnvlon 8Mch)
oat Peut Ol\oo (Wntmln•lll'l·Dat>bl• Olio
IHun1lng1on S..chl, 21 ·1. 21-12. • '**"' Butch 8 u11am1n11 1Hu1111nolon BMdl)·Trllll Steoo !Garden Grove) clef
Gwek:t J""°" (Wnltnln•l•l·Dlane Emero (Founlel11 '¥elltvl, fl· 10, ti· IS. c 0.-.. Mike Frilot (Hunllnolon Beach)·C.rOI
H«d (Wntmlnst•l def. Ruu Coir ..
(Huntlnoton Baldll·SM!le Malavasl (Hunl
lfloloo 8Md\), 11-11, 16 21, II·•
JUNIOlt s... Trev Tevtot (Huntln;11on 8Mcll) Clef
O..n Jones IHUfltlnoloo hachl. 21·7,
'MO.
N,L kMcMe
PllllJT WW•IC'S OAMtS ......
Pflllo>0940fll• at S.11 Francisco. (nl
""*" R-•I Hew Yori. Ola 1111 ICl'llllMI 2 11 10 atn ) tll.i.n 11 Clnclnnall IC,,_,... 4 at 10
•.m.l St L.oult •I ...._ on.an• o.-h Y 11 HO\l\ton Atteltla al ChiC:ffO
l all"'-• •I Hew IEtllle~
Oell'HI al ""~ Detroit t i T-l•Y Miami .,...,.....
~·••Oewlllld 149ttlt at 1(-1 City
,._ YOttl •• Ill SM DltM ......
0.l t i Wa"""91Dll ICl\aMel 7 •• • •m.l
0..., ..........
DAVEY'S LOCKElt (~ IMdll
-216 angle", 26' bonito, 1l sand t>es.s. 1S YetlOwlell, 711 lltlll)ul, 16 yetlowfln lune, 176
•klPlack, 30 dor•do. UT'S LANDING (N"'-' ... d>) -IOI anoter1. JI ll\lplactt lune, Is yellOwlall,
:>OS t>onllo, 21 t>eu, 14 t>erraeuda, ?21
mackerel, 10 rock tl•h
DANA WHAltl' -llS angler~ 69 .. 11<1
t>en, t t>errecuoa, 164 t>onllo, 9 vlllowlall.
429 macuret. 102 •ellowtln tune
SAN DIEGO (~ LANlll!otl -l31
envier• 14 vetiowloll, l,613 vltllo"'11n lune.
1, l:M 1tdolack tuna. 47 dorado. 36 l>lo eve
tuna
Wll"Mf' HededOn 200
(•tit~)
Thi 100 10 finishers In Sundtv's War,,...
Hodgdon 200 NASCAR Wln>IOll Wnt llodl ur race, with lvl>I of car. llPI comotelM
arMI wtnn.r'1 •ver•11e l"9d In """1.
I ~ McGrltf, Buick Aaoat, ...
97137 .. , Scoll Miiier. Pontiac GreNI PrlK, ..
J Bt• SchtnlOI. Chevrolel MOnle Cetlo.
4 Jim Bown. Buie!< R-1. •
S RandV Bee._ er, Buick R-1. 47
6. Herry Goularte, Buie" R-1, 47 1 8ol> KennedY. CheYroote C¥1o, 47
I Jim RObln.on, Otdsrnol>lla Cutlau, 47 t Dove Whwler, Buick Reoel, '7
10. Sumner McK11lo"'· Chlvroltt MOnl• Carlo, '4
Ba-. .. , ........... )
LIOlltweliJllll -Connie $wlft (Lynwood)
Cl« Kelvin Lamc*ln& (Lot Angele\), II.
Mlddlewelghl1 -Jeff $1ouclamlr• (Ven•
k:el KO Jeff McCred<tn (Lea V-l). 4
Mend9¥'• tnnwctteM
aAH•ALL
MWtaNI '---BOSTON RED SOX-tltulltd Chico
Walker lnflelder ·oulfleiO..-, •llO Jadlle Guu ... rea, 1110rmoe>, trom Pewt\Jdlel of the
1n1w11a11on11 L."oua.
NatleNll LMtlllt LOS ANGEL.ES DODGER$-lllec•llecl
Cecil E 1Pv. outflelder, lrom S.11 Anlooto OI
1111 Tun Lffoue, PurellaMd lhe coo1rect1
01 Sid F•rn•ndtr, IJllcher. 11nd Ro09f"t
Ravnold•, Ol.ltflalder. trom San AnlGlllo.
PITTSBURGH PIR.-. TES-Rtcelled
AllOOIO Pulklo, PllC!llf'. from Ma11lco Cllv Of
lhe Ma•k:an LH 11ue, RefM4 IM4tlard, 111·
lltlcler. trom LYM Of the E••l«n L-
and $1•¥• Sant--.., ollc,,..., Joa Qnui.~. outfielder, a nd Ron Wotu1, lnflltdaf. trom
Hawaii ot 11'11 PacHlc Cont L-,OOTaALL ................ ~
ATLANTA FALCONS-Cul Jim Leuofl·
lln, II~«, Milla Sl>l ... v, ~.
Dav• Scoll. -•d, ••Y sirono, n.tlllllno l>edl. Pt ul D•vla, llneo.ck..-. BlllY Ha,,,..
end .John Sdev, de1ent1Vt 1*:*1, l.M
North, cent•. Rl<tl Dl•Gll, llntbldlM, •nd
Pl\11 Ktn tll, quarl..-blcll."**I lllutt
MlklUIJI, !11th! e<IO, •nd to Roblft.on,
runnlno blCll, Oii 1111 lnlUred r-ve M•I. IAL TIMOftE COL TS.-Acqulrecl Reu4
A ... ra, leldlr , trom tht Delle& CowllOvt In
uellanoe lor • tu1uA nn dlokla. Ac· qulr.O Trecy Porter, Wide ,_i....,., fl'Oll'I
the Oetroll Lion• In • •Cl\Met fof • f\ltun ctran ~.Cul Dan Miter, llldlr 1.J-e-n anet f'l-"tori Brown, wiot ,...
c.lvera, Darrvt ~. "9ftt¥, J.m1t
Olltt. noM laet.te, Gin' Smith, ....,..,.. •nernen. Brian Wllletn1. tiellt lftd, "ltt<:lltf JelllllM, defenllvw eM, De..,. SlnwnoM,
llMbKhf, alld MMCUI Gllberl, r\llW\lllt t>eet<. BUFFALO atL~ Rollert Holl,
wide rtelelVtf, Gii IN lnjUrwd ,._,,. 1111.
CHICAGO llEAlt~ !tit r.-
tlr-1 o1 lllolalld Het'.-. rUOlllM Dedl. CINCINNATI •ENGAL5'-<:lll Miii• Fuller, deferl•IW beet., 0'"'41 lu~ll,
tuard, Miiie It. Clefr •ncl Artllur Kint,
defent/Vt eolldt, JoM SlmmoM ~.
1t o w..,.,.,,.. tack te, Jeff It*"' ene1 At>Ora Young, llneOtdlef'' Jll'll G\talthon,
wide ,_.,..,, eno Jtm ofbllr. 111111 tne1.
~ lmallull WHY«, lleflntl ... flld, on
IN llllured ,_..... 11•1.
CLIVEL.ANO IROWN~ut Miii•
• ..,._., ~ tlld, 0.11 Nloll. wlOe '*'81V«, I • MtltCMI. Slane Sn!IJll 1NI
Man K•Nnlrf1, Mf91i.., Mall MllW, ef·
lwlll•e •-11. Wim.tn Ml*r IN W... ~. tUMll!t beck•, Rav SUll.,.,.1 dt ,.._.,..,. encl, and Howard MCACIOO,
Une«>acker. Placecl Wiiiie Svonot, wide
rec»lver. oo the lnlured rftMve Mat •
OALLAS COWBOYS-Cul eenny
B•rnft end Mor11v Hunt.,, .alellft, Georve
~ aNI Je~ QulM, l\Abee:k&, Cleo 51,..,,._,, 1'9111 -· eri.n ltanMlm. -• l«bedl, Keith H-. wider~ • ...U..e
Lanotloo, defeml"" lacltl9, encl T•r-
Howaro e.NI Sieve .Jofwlson. de!..,tl,... end•.
DENVER BRONCOS-Cul Rll..,.
OOoml. lklhl -DETROIT LIONs.-Pla<.O EOClle Lee,
wide receiver. Oil ,.,. lnlur.o rftM'la 1111
Cut Rav StachowlCr, pun1.,-, Tim Marlin,
l\atllHKI<. e.n Tete, fulll>act.. AndY 8•r•ll•, llghl IOO, St4IC)tlan Jonn, wide r~lver,
WIHl•m St•e>i9IOO, de!enaJY• Dadl, Geo<ge
Moore aNI Maa GI•, ~Iva IK!<lft, and
T.,ry Taulolo, 11,_.cker
GREEN BAY PACKER5-<ul Mika Miiier aNI Byron Wllllam1. wide recelv..-,,
Tim SIOl<ft IKkle. Mike Jolly •nd 811 Whllaker. salellft, John Clemln• and E•rt
BucltlnQl\am, oef..,.I•• "'°'· end Fr-Melllace, noM tackle Placed Oel Roooen.
l\alftla<ll. Ron S.tn•, ouard, M>O A .. n
Cieri<. tutlOeek, on thl lnveo reMt"• "'' Acquired Charti. C..11¥, ollen\lve lacltle, h'om thl Kama• CllY Chleh In UCllanM tor
an undllCIOMCI tulure oretl Cholc»
HOUSTON OILEAS-Cut Oe rvle
Skaugslad, noM ouaro, lll•IOl'I WMtlam•.
oua•O. end Wall Arl'OIO. tlof\I eno. KANSAS CITY CHIEl's-<111 Jet!
Go\w tt, pUnler, J11~ c ..... wlOe re-
ceiver' Al Stelnftlcl. offerl\IVt "-"· .Iott! o.Grul!ola •NI WtMle At>rarm, ninnlno
bed<&. Allen Lvday, oefemlve ~. and
Bii Aekef', deMMI,.. llneman Plac.o Ron
W u hlnoton. wide rec»lver. on lhl lnlureo rewrw "''· LOS ANGELES ltAtDEltS-Cvt Mall
ltOOlftson •NI oa ... Humm, -rterbedl1,
Vince c_..111e, wide rec»lver, Rill 8¥nJ.
r11Mlne l>Kk, O.rrvl I v-rd end MIU
Hawkin•. lfneMC:k.,,, Hervv ~rd ano
lt•lldY Van Olvler, _,o., •nd RllCe<I
Veutl\an, deMMI.,.. I.Ole Placed .Hlfln Matuszak. -.,,.,,,. end, Stenlev AO.ms. M~-. •NI Victor Sk'rwnon•. Mletv. on
lhe lnlurecl rftMve "'' LOS ANGELES lt~ut O.vlO
Lewi&, l"-d<e<, Duke F9'°""41'1 and Jet!
Simons. wlda reQ91ven, JOfln nion-. llllhl 9"<1, Trov Wn t .... felY, and IUdl
eurtnes1. _,d Pllced &Ob Sc*olll,
led<le, alld 0oug RMd. deffftllYe 9"<1, on
,,... lnlur.O rft«V• 1111.
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Cut Ronnie Lw,
Qftwnalve !Kllle. VI,_ H9fltn, wide re-Gefy.,, '"'°"'81 Tutton, deNMI... ~. St.,,. Poller, llMbedr...-. Sle... Clan encl
Ken NICC~. ~ ... encb, and Joa Lullam. _,o ~ Dool M<NM4. de-
19ntlve bed<, and LMTY Evans,~-. on lht lnlur.O ,._ Utt T,.._ Torrt
OrOtt. punier, 10 lht San F~ .,_... In
eKcfwle9 for • "'' ••ft C11oica. NEW ENGL AN D PATRI• OT$-AMouftoacl Ille! ~ J~.
led<le. 11e1 ret\lmed lo IN 1.n'I Cut V-
FervUM>ll and Dennis 8'-1\. runnlno Cleek 1, Steve Clerk. ofttntl,,. 1.o;11, Ed
ltevnoldS end Jofln ZMNlerlln, llnallecMn.
Ken TOier, wlOe racel-. and -'-
Wiiiem•, ltohl encl PlacM A~ Ek.em, tackle, Oii Iha lnlur'ed ,.._ !hi.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Cut
ToutMlnl TYier end ~ ~'• rUMIM ti.ck•, Chudl SieUQ!ltet. ltd'.11. K..,ln Of'wy and llobOY Johnson. ~1 ... bed<•, Cua
O.BruUn. punt.,-, end Cllfl 11-11. klek·
er .Pieced Aundrl Thoml>lotl end Marvin
Ouo\81, wide cecet-1, on IN lftlurecs ,_,, ....
NEW YORK GIANT5-CU1 Joa o.n.eo,
kldt ... , Jamie Willaml, 1 .... 1 ....,, ~
RNd, -fftt1)K)o., RICI\ B~. ted\le, JOhn Nitti, llJlllNKI<, arlan C.-i.r, 0.-
len•lve back end Bl"y Catne)fleld, runn1nt bKI<. "'-ced Mike MAYOCll. Ml1tolv. C"'""' CwOk, Olfen1lve lineman, and Fr-
Mltrlon, llneo.dler on IM Injured -'"I. . NEW YORK JETS-Cut Oen Fiila,
ta<'ll.te. RalMI Cacwra, Roel Aellt« and
Fr.O 1toe111no1on, w1cle ~1. Maf1t
J..-ua, llnebec:k«. John Slurtvant1 ~.iv.
end, w.. How•, ltofll tlld, Roai. y K....,.,. rUMllll Mdl, and Clw'll Foole. Cl911 ... Pl9Cl9CI Jlmnw H1111ter, ~ .. , llftO 0-Floyd, dllftftll,.. INICk, on !tie
lnlured ,_.... "''· PHIL.A0£Lll'f'41A EA0Lf!$-OI! AIOI•
ard lleOlmore. COffltt1IKk, Met1l s.later,
center, Miit• Curcio, llMOec*.er. Tllome• ll<own. ~ end, C'*-JOIWM,
-lte*lt, Ft.,.. OlddlM, 19dllt, Mllfvlll HOOY«, wide Aeltlvr, l(.C. l(wllr, Mllltl'i,
Ktn ~. rUMllll Mc*, Md SOot1
NliOltdt, llttlf end. "'1lmd OM hilorlnl, ""'"'"'9cll· Md ..... "'""· ~, Oii Ille IMnd ,_.,,. lht. ~ LM ~
~-, from IN KIMM Cltv Chltft 11'1 ··~ tor • • ... drelt ClllOic.. SAN OIEO.O CHAROIR~ L._. I(.,_, _..,..,..,. ledl.~.L RIAi W•INllr
ton, offlrllM 11nemen. -Y4Ulllt. ,._ ...,., .... "'*"'811, Jiii\ ~t. NMllle ~
OOll Goode _, SMw Kre!MG. -tenleck.l, Aft ~ _, .... ,.,._,
wlOI ~ _, Oef'NI ~, ... , ......,,
IAH FRANCISCO -·~ T-Orou, IUlllW. Cul .llrfl M/IW, ..-.r, L.._.., MnOI\, tec:Wlt, C.., ._ ....
o.or.,. COlll!t, llNmen" Vlllc!I Wllerr4.
ruM1nt ING, LMTv "rldeY tM Mii.a °"'°'"• ~ btell•. _, Miit• ~. Hell! llld. "'9old ~· ~. ....,...,. """'*'· Oii "" lllturM -"'· .. ATT\.I! 18AHA~l-Cul JeM v-. --· OOll °""'· ...... = ,..-.~~.---." TNlltlM. fllteMdlw, ow. ..,.,,... .W ..... o.... "'"""'9 ...... o.tv
............ ~. Md Mltdl .,..., *"'' .... ll'll9cM Rttilrl ...,.., • ,.... ~. Oii ... llllurW ~ ....
WAIHINOTON ltlO,ICINl-Cwl
Clat"tlQ ...,_, ·~ WllefN ...
...... 1 .. -. rUMllle Mdlt. Tern°"""" ~. °'*""' L._.,, ......... ...tfltn ~. WI Kl*! 8111 ~I Olt1I\, ._,.,..
IL
DRANGI COUNTY BUSINISS
l.AIRD HURTY :f'ALBOTT ABOWD HANIEN
Fountain Valley man to lead
Society of Plastics Engineers .
During a recent banquet meeting of ihe
Society of Plastics Engineers, Southern Cali-
forrua section, Ed Laird of Foun tain Valley was
installed as president for the 1983-84 term. Laird is
president of the Chemical Resource Corp. oC
Whittier. a supplier of paints, chemials and related
equipment to plastic decoraung industries. He also
participates in the ownership of Computer
Finishing Corp., Irvine. and Concrete Sealing
Systems, Huntington Beach.
•••
Dan Maruna, president and chairman of
Irvine-based National Heallh Care Systems, Inc.
has announced the appointment of Dr. William H.
Hornbaker as the company's senior vice president
and director of marketing.
• • •
Craig W. Hurty has joined the executive
search department of the mtemational accounting
firm of Peat Marwick, announced John Telford,
principal in charge pf the western regional
executive search practice. In addition. the firm
announced the promotions of Stephan Hansen of
Long Beach to audit manager and James R.
Abowd, Huntington Beach and Gregory Talbott,
Irvine, to seruor managers.
•••
Jeffrey A. Cushing of Huntmgton Beach has
been named director of public relations for
Crowell McKay Advertising and Public Rela-
tions. The announcement was made by Ann Hult
Crowell, founder and president of the
Irvine-based agency. Cushing joins Crowell
McKay from Multl-Marke&ing, Inc., where be
served as management acco11nt supervisor.
•••
Michael Dickerson, Helen Green and Mark
See have been promoted to new management
positions in the Wyll' Laboratories electronics
marketing group. Charles M. Clough, group
president. made the announcements in Irvine.
Dickerson, a IO-year Wyle employee. has been
promoted to director of operatJons and is respon-
sible for inventory management, internal techni-
cal support for product marketing and com-
municauons and faciliues. Green, previously
manager of quality assurance for Wyle Data
Services, has been promoted to manager of
business systems. See, former manager of techni-
cal support, has been promoted to division
manager of Wyle Date Serv1t-es m Huntmgton
Beach.
• • •
EECO Computer, Inc. a supplier of hotel
computer systems, has introdut'ed its series 900,
the hrst product m its new System 1000 hne of
automaled property management systems. The
Santa Ana firm's new product wilJ be used by
smaller properties.
• • •
The National Associa&ion of Health Under-
writers has announced that Irving Guzik of
Newport Beach has qualif 1ed for the 1983 Leading
Producers Round Table platinum award. Guzik is
an agent for Mutual of Omaha Insurance Co.
NAHU 1s the professional association for licensed
diability mcome and health insurance agents.
• • •
The Newport/Irvine Professional Association
has announced the election of its 1983 officers.
Elected president was Dr. Michael Sptizer,
Marilyn Lagosz was elected vice president; Tim
Dobrenen was elected secretary and Lou
Magdaleno was elected treasurer. Board members
are John Alesi, Al Habib, Sally Hilliard, Dick
Kremer and Joanne Leatberby, past president.
N lP A is an organization com posed of local busines.s
people each representing a different type of
business. Meetings are held every Wednesday at 7
a.m , at the Airporter Inn Hotel, Cafe Ricard
Room. For more information. call Pearl White at
261 -5530.
• • •
American Metal Be~rtng Co., a Garden
Grove manufacturer of large manne and indus-
trial bearings, has retained Clay Publlcom, Inc., an
lrvme communications firm, to plan and imple-
ment a marketing communications program for its
recently acquired barge train division. Warren
Gay, vice president and general manager made the
announcement.
• • •
Linda Peace has JOLnt.'<i Irvine-based CIE
Systems as a markeung support analyst. She will
be responsible for evaluating and testing software
prior to release as weU as post-release customer
asss1stance She was previously employed by
Quocron Systems, Inc. of Los Angeles as a systems
programmer. CIE markets the CIFS 680 family of
multi-user business computers.
Carl's Jr. sponsors special canip
$187,200 raised a quarter at a time in 350 stores
More than 150 mentally retarded athletes
participated last week in the first Carl's Jr. Special
Olympics Sports Training Camp rn Ramona.
The camp was financed primarily by a $239,896
grant from Carl's Jr. restaurants, the largest single
donation fVer made to California Special Olympics.
Most of that grant. $187,200, was raised during a
recent fund-raising campaign on a three-day week-
end when 25 cents from every sandwich sold at the
chain's 350 outlets was saved for the camp
The training takes place at Oakbridge Camp in
Ramona. Most staff members are volunteers.
"Ttus camp wiU bring new enjoyment-as weU
as a chance to learn, expenenoe and grow -to our
mentally retarded special athletes who would not
have such an opportunity without the camp," said
Janyce L. Sarnoff. president of the California special
olymp1cs.
The camp will offer trammg in sports such as
basketball. softball, voUeybaU, soccer, tennJS, swim-
ming, ridmg and aerobics.
Orgaruzers boast that no other state provides
such a sports training camp.
Patricia Chavez of Image Makers QCC Seminars f OCUS
PR firm changes name on marketing., sales
Costa Mesa-based La Plume Public Relations is
changing its name to become West Coast Image
Makers.
The reason. according to pnncipal Patricia
Chavez, is because La Plume \Sm bloom. It's growing.
''lnitially, La Plume was a copy writing service,"
she said "We grew into a public relations firm and
now, because of client request, La Plume will become
a full se~ agency "
Continued Chavez: "Actually, we have been
doing collateral work, product brochures. logo design
and media advertising for the past two years. lt
wasn't until recently that I decided the name La
A series of 10 seminars focusing on sales and
marketing wiU be present this fall by Orange C-oast
CoUege's Business Management Program.
Tickets for six of the seminars are $10 while
three of the talks are $15 each and one l.s $35.
Successful compleUon of any four aemina.r&
earns students a certificate.
Admission slips are offered at the campus ticket
office, located in the college adminiatration building.
For information on a~on, call 556-5527.
The seminars begin in mid-September and run
through January. Talks include "Analysis of a
Territory,'' "Salesmanship," "Marketing for the
Small Manufacturer," and "How to Develop a
Complete Dlrect Mail Program." Plume Ls limiting." ~~~~~~~~~ -~~~~~~~~~~-!
(714) 979-1711 (ext. 5)
4 Locations To Serve You.
Call Today!
Pl11n•
o11t •f ,.,,..,
For ci-lflfd Ad
ACTION
Ceil
A DAM.Y NOT
AD•fltOll
MJ·MH
. .,
Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT /11jt:'JCI ' :\, I• }(I 1983 85
Builders may find success
in the super luxury market
By JOHN CUNNIFF ,. ............ ,.__,._,..,
NEW YORK -The betit bet tor
humebu1lders these days may be
m the super-luxury category,
where half-million-dollar prices
attract rather than frighten
would-be buyers.
Alvin Preiss, a consultant who is
paid big fees to analyze markets
and to design, develop and
merchandise concepts, contends
this is so because "the rich are
getung n cher and the middle c~
is getting poorer."
The super-luxury market,
which benefits greatly from
foreign money seeking a U.S.
haven, IS almost recession-proof.
Preiss contends. At any rate, he
says, "it's the last to feel the
impact of recession."
ln some areas, in fact, the
topmost tier of the market felt
little impact from the recession of
1981 and 1982, one of the worst
s1rice the Great Depression of the
1930s. The super-rich just
shrugged it off.
Other factors coincide with the
demand for super-luxury homes.
many of them condominiums and
cooperatives.
In today's uncertain environ-
ment. says Preiss, builders no
longer are wi.lling to speculate on
big tracts, which in the past took
them deep into the suburbs. They
have discovered the very de-
velopable "in-fill" sit.e
An in-fill, he explains, 1s a
relauvely smaU site near the: inner
city that was overlooked by de-
velopers, perhaps because 1t was
too expensive in comparison with
the vast empty spaces availablt.> tu
them in years gone by.
Such sites are perfect for thE'
super-nch, in part because they
offer accessiblity to the cultural,
social and business life of the city
Besides, only the rich can afford
them.
You can't just put up anything
and expect to get a super-luxury
price, however. "You want to be
different but be in touch with
reality," says Preiss. who has
designed bathrooms bigger than
living rooms.
As a professional marketer,
Preiss asks himself who would
Uve in the development being
proposed. "I have research people
to see what has been done Then I
decide how to do what nobody else
is tluu11:l " Y <>ll <'annol get by with
cosm1 ti• ~. fi, udVllW'i "No gim-
m11:k., lie \\ .. 111.., clwnt builders.
"You r11 • .i,, 1111· protlul·t itself the
JJIUOl11t 111H. I l•U·..id of trying to
111;1k1 !" • •11 • '1110 thl' product "
Y1111 11111ci , •·k uniqueness, says
Pn·1-;.' lh. "·the housing must
ol h·1 ,, "'"' 111 t 1v1 • hftostvle, such as
th.it ,,· F1~1o 1 11111 , J~St outside
Bihtvll ·""' \J th "' view of the
skyhru , wh• 11 JH apartments are
bc•ing Lu11t 011 .i 13-;icn• site, some
Ill a r<: .... 111rc J inans1on
Tht-poss1btl1ty of lt•armg down
tht maw.1•111 ,Jlld r<'buildmg a copy
01 it dt low1 ·rco<;tF~t'Onsidered.
but univ l1111·lly, ys Preiss. A
r~tore'd ::.trw·tur .. he says, has
grcit't.' ·copying 1s fake " Besides,
n:storauons an• "tn ·•
At F'1sht·r Hil l. the low-
t•st-pnt·ed ;.ip[1rtmc•nt IS $290,000;
but monry 1~ ncJ obJ(-<:t an sucb a
place, <K't't'orc.lang to Pretss. More
1mporl.d nt, hl· says, arC> such things
<1s the amh1:im·e the luxury.-
and the a('(·c·s.'.>1b11lty to communjty
fa('ihtlPS. .
OVER THE COUNTER
MAID ITOCll UITINGI
3 1 16 1
)6 3'
" 11
]! • j '.
n • 11
1)0'. 1)0 •
tel\ ,.
1) ) ,,
,. .. 19 '""' .. t1 • 12"'
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Name Volume Ilk! A•lleo C"~ MCI I l 6UAOO I~ IS , .., -Ovn mJiiii I 1·1' I'• I I " Mluror 77)~iQo l41-1\1 ; I ,.
ADOlllC 617,.00 l11'o 31"' t ..._
UnvHll • "2,200 UllO It', lnltl I SI0.000 ll'"' JI•, 0'9US • 4U,700 11'" 79 MCI •I 1 390,600 4 •;. 4'> PtlllGI )54,600 I S\oo IS'" StrfCpl l!l,JOO ll't• 13''>
UPS AND DOWMI
' . rr.e followlnv hi .. ·~ c-1 .. ........ , H \I f\e•t -uo ,., ... .... mo•• be MCI "" .. .•. ~· ''• ~ "" uit'l()w S1 OI 1000
•OH _,, .. ,., .... t ,,,.,_. .,. ttw
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\ ~ .. 10 . ,., Uo .i. I . y. , .. . ~ UP .15 0
1 + ~, • •• .. Uo "0 • , . \ .. , I • ' Uo •ll.J ,. .. , •• 1 10 • ... I • Uo .Ill ·o ~ II • I • Uo : 12 s
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14 ''·"' ' 7 l Uo 17
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1f P"lt• ... ) ... . . Uo : ,,
OOWl'fS ~ ' .,, Cr>o . .. .. Oii , .. ' . -... Olf "l 6 • -1 Olf ' Ill
5 • -.. Oft. lLl
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6 • -.. Oii 107 • -.. Oii: 10.J
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' -' Off' t} • -.. ~ t.) , -, ... ()It: t.J .. -,~, OI( 9.3 • Oii tl -'> ()I( t I • "' gs " • -.. ..
MUTUAL FUND LISTINGS
'
.. Orange Coas1 DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug. 30, 1983
STOCKS
\(fj"' ,.,,.,, ..... ,., Nt""t
..-~ "'t11 l'\t l ~" •• f fH1 h)l\t l .,.Q
f
NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTION
ouor,. llON~ IN~I \/Ul ll<AO(S ON '"' NI w Hiil!< l.llOW,I ~' PAI "H;. l'llW llOt.l(.IN ( .. lUOll ANI) t:INt.INNf.111$10<.>< 0(,~IANOt(I ANP
RCl!ORlrO 11¥ lH[ Nf.S() INbllNf I
\nlr\ N.-t
1 I t•tl'· t h1v · • nq
~ .. IWo\ NI I
SJ ( 'HJ' t 111'-• t hy "'"''"~ ""'"" f I ,,04-14). I f\y
.,_.,.,., N•'
•1 I no• t 10,, 1 n{J
, .. ,, ,..,,
t• f-net" l IO'• ( "O
I' -· -... .. -· -·~
, .,
lntetest rate increased
i on~ntarket certificates . ' Bytla~~Presa
WASHING TON -Beginning today, savinga
l.nltltUUON and commerdal banb may pay wi much as
9 78 peta!nt lntereet on lix-month money mark.et
certlficatem, up from 9.77 percent in the past week. They
may pay u muth u 9.28 percent on th.ree-monlh
certiftca1e*, up from 9.18 percent last week. The new
rates are '1l result of Monday's auction of Treasury
eecwitlet, 'in which the riae tor three-month bills -the
fifth in the'pUt nine weeks-put the rate at it.a highest
level ~ the 9.43 percent of Aug. 15.
Employment improving 'laster'
' N!:W YORK -Increased job advertising volwne
for the past three montha indicates th.at employment is
improviJll ""much faster than even the most optirrustic
projections of only a f ew months ago," an economist
says.
Kenneth Coldst.ein, aaaoc:iate economist ror the
C.Onfeftm<:e Board, made the comment Monday after the
board rele~ the results of its latest survey of
help-wanted adventiaing.
Sale of,new houses declines
WASHING TON -Anal}'llt.s say rising mortage
interest rates were a major reaaon for a 6.5 percent drop
in aalee of new single-family houses last month. The
C.Ommeroe Department and the Department of Housing
and Urban Development aid Monday that new houses
were eold at an uuuJ,al rate of 620,000 last month, down
from a revised 663,000 in June. It was the first monthly
decline a1nce February.
U.S. rr~de deficit expanded
WASHINGTON -The U.S . merchandise trade
defidtexpended to$6.4 billion last month, aaoil imports
roee 10.4 percent and non-oil lmporu hit a record high,
the aovemment uys. The c.ommerce Department
report Monday u.id exports declined 2.2 percent to
$16 .68 bil.liQn in J'\.aly while imports climbed 4. 7 percent
to $22.99 billion..
Americans put more in savings
W AS~GTON -Americans deposited $4 billion
more in -~and loan ueodationa in July than lhey
withdrew. ·'Jbe net pin waa twice that of June's, the
govemmeilt Mys. 'The Federal Home Loan Bank Board
a1ao eaid Monday the Institutions cloeed $12 billion in
home loana lut month. 181 th.an the record $13 9 billion
of the previ.oua month.
Steelworkers accept pay cut . .
CAN'ltlN, Ohio -Timken C.O. and the Uruted
Steelworkenof Nnerica have signed a three-year basic
labor ~nt that lncludes a temporary wage cut of
$1.25 an ht>Ur.
Untonmembers in Canton, Wooater and C.Olumbu.s
voted dufing the w~kend and overwhelmingly
approv~ tAeoontract Monday.
Utility denied rate increase
LAS VEGAS, Nev. -The Public Se~
Cbrhn:l1*ion \.8\mimoUaly rejected Monday a Sou lh west
Gaa ~· propoeal that would have increa8ed residen-
tial gaa ratea by 8.7 percent while slicing $5.3 million off
the gU ~...,.Ud by Nevada Power C.O.
t15 :,"' -lo'J --+ .... -"'
GOLD guptAUQNS .,.=..t:=::.m,_ ~
=~'II! , ........ 1 ... ~ii 11.10, ... 1.10 ,.,.. ......,_,.... uo .... 11. , •
................. , ... 101 ......... =::-"" ....... JO. .. ,...,, .. .. 'r.':&• ,.,....._.,.....,., .. ,o .
......... ~..., .-. .. 11.10, ..
11.ocr . ...................,,...,,..., ......
14»~1 ... 11.01 NY 0.... ........ _,.. .._ .. 17.IO,
ClflUOO • . I • ..
I "
SYMBOLS
I
• -• •• • I I t
NEW YOltK (AP> -Flnel Oow·Jonft ~-"·"'.,."
oa-Hll .. 18'ML .... ..a..o...ci-o. . ....,, 111U• lltLV 111'1 IS Ilk ll+l.04
JOT"' SJO.ll SU~ 5Hf1 511..»+ US IS un lllUI IJ1.J6 11' n 130 ,._ 0 ... u'" .,, 11 mtl ..s It nvn+ ...,, "'°"' S,lll,500 T,..,, 1.934.100
Utb SMAOO u '"' 1,'74,200
AMCRICAH LEAOCRS
., ... ~--'~""~" ~ ,, "*'"" .,.... t!OO< ~
,.,. .... "' lllOQll "' pr~ ,, 11\Qf'it ... ""
IMl.O Cetll ...... O'I •• O•••O•AO "' ........ '1f dllM ,(,....,.or '"'''OM' rl•---"'"" .... "'"" ~----.ilea .. -_...,
... ~ 9*1.nt• •• w"""°"' ••""''' -t·~ 'l ·-The-ol •t10Cl>•t~t4 ,,.. -. ...,,.........-0 .,., _,. !!-. ..... , ,,_,,.....,....,.1110 __ _
\
' -.
.. " ...
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday. Aug 30. 1983 8 -1
Tonight's TV
MHHG
-a.~-I UG NEWS WOHDER WOMAN
G BJ/LOIO
•&WAT. e HAWAM FIVE.()
9'0VEA EASY
(J)C88HEWS
Q N/l;NEWSD ~ Dia< VAH OM ~~OAAX llY DR SEUSS
D UOVIE ** * "love Al Flrst Bite" (1979)
Geofge Hamilton, Su1111 Saini
James
tt • t "The Cowboy Ano The lady"
t 1933! Gery Cooper, Met1e 00.on
t~l MOYIE * t "looktr" ( 194 I) Albert Amlly, "*"* Cot>urn.
-7:00-
& casNEWS
G NICNEWS I KUNG FU NICNEWS~ 2 ~8COMPAHY Ii at ~·s WllO
f£) BU8INES8 REPORT
Ui)NOVA
CJ) P.M. MAGAlJHE 9 ENT'ERTAtHMENT TOHIGHT
~=OH **'A "Things Are Tough All ON"
( 1982) Richwd "Clleech" Marin,
Tommy Chong.
-7:06-m OAAHGE COUNTY TODAY
-1:30-
• 2 ON THE TOWN
i 8 FAMll Y RUO mOHL.A.
:::SOAv AT A TIME
., CJ) TIC TAC OOOOH ID MACNa.11.EHAEA AEPOffT 9 YOO ASKED FOA IT m MOVIE
•• tt "Thi .. Slnef1 Glnt" ( 1937)
OelMt Durbin, Niii Gf1Y
CO>MSEIAU .--1.w-8 CJ) WALT Dt8HEY U Q) THE J.r TEAM
D MOVIE
t • "Slone Cold Deed'' ( 1979) Pail
WlllWms, Rlehlord Cfenot D QJJ HAP9'Y DAYS
U UOVIE • * t "Cfaah OIYe" ( 19431 TyrMe
Power, Miit BMter.
G) p .M. MAG.AZ:M
Cl) MOVIE • * t \.\ "Tell Me Tllat Yoo Love Me,
Junie Moon" ( 19701 Liz• Mlnnelll.
t<en Howatd
&i) NOVA
Cl)UF£UHE
(C)UOVIE
CHANNEL LISTINGS
1J KNX T 1 CBSJ Lo-. Angt'lt''>
D KNBC tNBCJ LO'> Anqe le.,;
O l\lLA 11nu I Lu-. A r1y1•1e:. 0 KAB<., fV tABCJ los Anye1,. ••
I]) l\FMB 1CBS1 S,111 U1t1<JQ
0 KHJ TV (tno 1 Lu:. Ar11~e1e:.
@) KCS T t ABCI San Cl1t•y o
G) I\ l fV t Ind I Lo:. ArllJelt>'>
II) l\COP rv ( tnit I l t•S An41 h", fD KCf I TV 1 PB~I Lo-. Any1•1.:-.
CD KOCE TV 1PBSt Hun11n1.1ton Be.iLh
JedllOn, MiCl)M OnlkMll
CZ>MOVIE
"Seti• Noire" ( 1979) Patrick Oeweer•. Mwlt r r1n11gn1n1
-HO-G 0IT06
(!) TOP°' M H1U 69 NIGHT OAU!R'f
-10:00-B B U :r fl) THEM BUT FOA FOAT\JNE
! KENHf.DV CENTlR TOHIOHT
THE VIAOINIAH :cJ UOVIE
• • "Ellter The ~Ja" (1981) F1aneo
Nero. Svun Geofge CID IN8tOE THE NA.
@ MOVIE •• •'h "BM\ltooe And Treacle"
( 1932) Sting, Denholm ElllOtt
-10:30-m M>E9ENOEHT HETWOAK
NEWS
(O)MOVIE * t 'h "T8'>8" (1981) Geotge C.
Scott, Tlmot~y Huttoo
-11:00-800 QJJ!D NEWS
Dialing 'The Godfather' 12th SMASH WEEK OF
AMERICA'S # 1 COMEDY!
NBC comes up with new promotional device DAN AYKRDYD EDDIE MURPHY
By FRED ROTHENBERG
Ofl:MAtted.._.,,_ NEW YORK -Maybe you're watching the
third part of "The Godfather'' on NBC tonight
because a raspy voice over the phone made you an
offer you couldn't refuse.
"So you finally found your Godfather, good .,"
begins the recorded message on a special 900 number.
''I would consider it a personal favor if you would
watch the film and then if you made enemies they
would become my enemies as well ...
"Now you must excuse me please. I'm late to
attend the funeral of a very close friend. It seems he
was watching another network and his television set
expl~ed. Very strange. Thank you for calling."
Hardly your no'rmal hard sell. But you can
expect the unexpected from NBC promotions boss
Steve Sohrner, whose spots often are better than the
programs he's pushing.
"There are two neat things about the Godfather
character," says Sohmer, now in charge of NBC's
daytime programming in addition to his promotional
responsibilites. "He's very polite, though powerful,
and he's got an unmistakable voice. This lent itself to
a creative approach."
NBC ran two TV segments identifying the
special phone number last Wednesday. and Sohmer
says 26,000 50-cent calls were made nationwide that
day. The telephone company reported overloads in
New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and Atlanta.
This week, NBC starts another phone gimmick.
Callers dialing l -900-400-SMITH can hear from a
talking orangutan who happens to be the star of
NBC's new comedy "Mr. Smith."
Since arriving from CBS last summer, Sohmer
has done more than arrange for phony phone calls.
His campaigns poking fun at the competition created
a big fuss a year ago, and similar promotional
messages are running now.
In one, a J .R. Ewing lookalike is lounging m his
pool. when he's attacked by a shark ''Just when you
thought it was safe to go into TV again," says the
announcer NBC's "Man.ima.l," about a man who
turns himself into all manner of fish and fowl, will be
on Fnday nights against CBS' ''Dallas."
COflA lfUA Eo~.,,, Nrt>o-'""'
631 "°'
~~~ ~ OlllllJ~Cll liii»A
NOW ~VJNG
At Thae Speda1Jy Selected ThulJa And Orfve..lns
AIW4(111
"~ , ... ,~to-"" "' e·g 98!>:
WA ~lltU P~J
S19~
#1
COfTA llHA
fgo..~11tt G~ ~"''' 979 ••••
fOUln Ml VAlLtl
Pat'll( 1fo..m~•~ol .... °""',,, 96l 1'4•
J .fashdana l!I
Mon -Fri. 6:30, 10:40
Sat /Sun. 2:15, 6:30, 10:45
"0CTOPU88Y" (PO)
. Mon.-Fn. 8:20
S /S 4 00 8:20
I •t.&. N EW I JllfS
Mon.-Frl. 6:45, 10:30
Sat/Sun 3: 10. 6:45. 10:30
r.ow. THEllE-s ~'11Y'"o ",,~~ ..... ~ 'f ~
Mon.-Frl. 8:
• • •• & '\t • 1.._1 • I
e dword ~ WESTBROOK CINEMA '
~:·::: .::~~: ........ •' 530-440 '
rm " -1th RECORD BREAKING WEEK -
• CDITA•U ,.,.,., .. ,_(_·
~t '1IM
• _l .. lOllllAQo
.... "IJD ,.,._ -H<lt""' ...,~
~NM>tm::I '",..''~r~, M•Olel'I
t ... ~..._,...,....""'l~MAnM
Another spot takes aim at ABC's Saturday night
leader, "The Love Boat." An ornery grandmother
from NBC's new series, "The Roi.isters," which is set
in a carnival, shoots the daylights out of model ships
in a carnival game called "Sink the Love Boat."
Sohmer says he only uses th.is approach "when a
new show is up against an incumbent that has a level 11.'!!'=~------------------...i
of vulnerability." He never tried a knock campaign IR.~
when he was promotions chief a l CBS. "It didn't fit 111u
there. CBS is the leader in prime ti.me. and we're the ,.:""":,;~, fOUNIAIN YAllfY
r'"'"'r '""''' 'Al •)()'
WllflllllJHll 10•41"' CN,..,
lmElll ~~~1.,,.,+ 'v WUUllliJrtll .,...,;, ..
Wt\•
H I J9l~ hungry, eager underdog." ~:.'::·(~.· ou•f CBS isn't amused by NBC's tactics, and officials ,, , .,. c..-. U•IMIM
P«.t, A.._.Ni
°'''' ·~
., ""''," !J ••
t•ft ., "
s1q ~•~o 1• •111 61' 1Hl ...., , there believe it might turn off audiences. Sohmer 1--· -· -----------'-' -· ·-· _ .. _ ... _ ... _._·~_·.,,.._-_ .. _ .. _. ---
contends that viewers know it's competitive fun, not
nasty attacks.
"We want to communicate that we're not dealing
with holy orders. This is an entertainment business,"
he says. "We also tip our hats to the success of th06e
shows. We have J .R. saying 'Friday night is sewed
up,' and 'Seven years and still afloat' for the 'Love
Boat."'
Kicking the competition in the shins had mixed
results last year. "Our two principal successes were
with 'Knight Rider' and 'The A-Team,"' says
Sohmer. ''But I was disappointed in the tune-ins for
'Cheers' and 'Taxi."'
Sohmer's current campaign for ''The A-Team"
capitalizes on the popularity of the show's Mr. T. In
one spot, Mr. T's Mohican hairdo is sported by a
poodle, businessman and blushing bride.
Sohmer's methods may be rubbing off on one
competitor. ABC has a promotion in which The Fonz
(Henry Winkler) of "Happy Days" appears with T .K .
Carter. who plays a genie on the new series, "Just Our
Luck." Carter transforms a Mr. T lookalike into a
midget.
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
PureGofd
'"""' \BC n
Zelig
ALL G ~ •"o Qi; rtLM!; "fct••C
f><E SCAl 0t IH[ MOT•ON PtC Tu"l
COO( OI SCl r ACCilJL•"'•0"
.. ~ .. ~_,,,. ...... ...__,._,.,O·-----<• -· ·-··-·-... ---
EXCLUSIVE ENAQAGEMENT
ltlON.-THURS. 1:20, 1:15. 10:00
EDWARDS CINEMA
HAUotlAT ADAMS
COSTA MESA 546-1102
~ ORANGE MAll
'-7 6 lHUTRES
Tw1tlfl S...tll el U"Cl4ft
o.-• '37·0MO
THE STRONGEST MAN ON EARTH
THE INCREDIBLE
LOU FERRIGNO
t.QW•-'--M1:MtUA oo aa-"', lit'il'JF00-"11
NOW PLAYING
At TheM lpedaly .... cted n...t... And~
COSTA lllUA 11M11t OM#IM. WUlWll'TUI
(Ow..ot ll<IMOI EOWllOS WooOOttOOI C.l\t Cen1t1 [°""Ot Cwm. ~1•« Vnttnll "' ~~ e.3' ~~ Wf1I •1 ~
ll TOllCl LA ~ OIWIOI WllTWMflll lOw~rdl ~k Ptct11c; t 1 1 Mor.Id.I Pltl1ii(. \ 0.~ P1t1lof ' ~ W'Y 11 581 S880 "4 l400 0.IVl! In ft\l 9;)6t O!tw lnl71'l !IOI >M3
I No ~ACCll'_:!ID ,011 IHll llOOAOIMllil J
--------
-Sf'AA.WAR.l'-
RETlJRN QF
"A BRILLIANT
IMAGINATIVE PIECE
OF MOVIEMAKING"
-TIME
1HE .......
JEDI
~ * PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES * ~
&7" ~Bo M . , •u:n'l·l·r.:.14 1. ;;::;;)~ • rgotn ot 1ne~ ':l'J!Ul • _ ''"'"'" •
MONDAY fhrw S.UU!!OAY FACULl'l'uoCANDLlWOOD.
All '"10""""" ...... ~ 00 ,.. "EASY MOIEY" {R)
(( 1 Sp.c: E ...... '"""I Hohl
~6J'i~J
LA lll!!!AOA AT !!OUCRA!!S
"tDCtllS" (PG)
12 30 3 00. s 30. 8 00. 10 30
"FIR[ Afl> ICE" (PG)
I 00. 3 00, S·OO. ]·OO 9 00, I I 00
"RMY BUSKSS" (R)
11 io no oo uo •~ 1044
''IEM.S'T<D: Tl« OCSTl\ICTIOfl or MD-SYX'' (PG)
11 10 1 1~ 100 HS llO ti~ II 00
"STAYING ALIVE" (PG)
17)0 ns. I 44 "s HS II 00
"RETUIN Of TI* m " (PG)
"'71111111 Diiiy St••
llJI JOO \JO I~ 1044
"STAYllG ALM" (PC)
In 70mm 0.J Sl•IO
I 00 JOO ~00 100. 900 II 00
"FLASH DANCE" (R)
ii J0.130 00 l JO t JO 10 IO
"tDCll.ES" (PG)
12 30. 3 00, 5-30. 8 00, 10 30
FIRE All> ICE" (PG)
I? JO. 22S '20. 6 20, 8 ?O, 10 20
"WAR GAMES" (PG)
11 .1C1 l 00 ~ lO t 00 10 JO
"STRANGE BREW" (PG)
l 00. 1 00, S 00. 1 00, 9 00. 11 00
* PACIFIC DRIVE -IN THEATRES *
"SllAIR mr (PC)
l'\US
"SPRING altllAK" (It)
'THE QOLDllN SEAL" (PQ
l'\US "M .. , IU'P{l C#O" (')
1. "Tl~ PU C(S" (I)
2. "Cll(Qt 6 at!* STU ...... ~)
" HIUS" (I)
·••n:~. ·•JIM. t.oon vwnmr· ca>
l\US
"YlaS P\ACD" (I)
... ,.-u-1•1
...,~"(I)
"CWO'' (I) t I'll.IS
.. lWUlfT lD(.M llMl" <N> - -"IOCWl" (N)
I'll.II
"IOCllY r (N)
FOlWTAIN VALLEY MWil
''1TIAME 81£W" (PG) ruts
"SfUG 81£AK" (I)
G SA TUROA Y NIOttT G IN 8EAACH Cl-...
CD THE J€FFEA80N8 ., eEHNYlfU
fD 8USISS REPORT CD MA8T£RPl£CE n.EATRE
($JMOVIE
• "Homewori.." ( 1982) Joan Collin•.
Mlcl\MI Morgan
(ZIMOVIE
t H •..t "Catna.t Knowledge" (1971)
Jldl NldlOISOO. AM-Margret
-11:30-e cu TEHHtS Cl Gt TONIGHT D @) AB(; N£W8 NICltfTUHf 0 YOO A8IC£D FOA IT
G)OOOcouPU
Q)HAMYO
~700CLU8
(l1JMOVIE
t * * "8arb11osa" ( 19821 Wltlle Nel· '°"· Gary Busey OMOVIE
• • 'h "Tanoo" \1981) Br~ Dern.
Maud Adams
-11:60-
ICIMOVIE
t * "lady Chatterley's lover"
( 1981) SyMa Kristel, Nd'lotas Clay
-12:00-
8 ()J UOVIE
t *'h "MY, UndetOCMr VMrt With
file KKI(. 11979) Oon IHrtdlttl.
Jarnes w.r-1g111
0 EHTERTAIHMENT TONIGHT
&MOVIE
H * "The Ow1t C«'*" (l~e)
Luelffe Ball. Marie $11Ye1'11.
(fJ INOEJl£M)EHT Hl1WOM
NEWS G)MOVIE
t * t "VIVI Mu" (19691 l'tltt USU.
J\OV, Jonlthln W1nten.
-12:30-
0 18 LA Tl HIOHT WfTli DA VI>
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Orange Cosst DAILY PILOlttuosday. Aug 30, 1983
by Gus Arriola
••.\n•·n :1.o
WHY IS IT I 'M CRAZY
AWUT YOU, GARFtCLl7?
YOU CL AW TH£ DRAPES,
SHED ON Tl-IE FURNITURE,
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by Bil Keane
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DEFINE lfiE FOU...CWING : (1.) DROP AND ADD
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TUESDAY, AUGUST 30. 1983
ANN LANDERS C2
OBITUARIES C3
LEGALS C4 THI c• 1110 THI coum ClASSlf 110 cs
•over the year1, It's gotten better and worse. Organized hate group1
have not found Orange County a good place to thrive .. .'
-Chelle Friedman .....
Anti-Semitism
No vvorse in 0. C . than anywhere else
By L.P. BENET
Of .. DellJ ....... ..,.
One of the first questions that enteni into the
minds df 'lnany Jews moving into a. new
community is whether there is a history of
anti-Semitism in the area.
Although Orange County, over the years, has
been labled as a sanctuary for reactionaries, most
Jews describe the area as a friendly community, its
positive aspects overshadowing the insensitivity
that does rear its head occasionally.
"My family has never encountered any
trouble here," said Margerie Shane, vice president
of the SoutheJWPacific C-oast Regjon of Ha~,
a women's organization concerned with medicine
and educational issues in Israel.
Shane, her husband, Leonard, chairman of
the board of Mercury Savings and Loan, and their
children have been living in Newport Beach for 18
years. "In the county's early days, this was an
extremely conservative community; it wasn't the
type of climate for anyone with a liberal
orientation," Shane said. But now, I love it here. I
find it a warm and welcoming place to live."
While officials from the Orange County
Jewish community agree that visible "hate" group
activity in the county ha. disappeared during the
past decade, there are incidences of what they
describe as "isolated and insensitive" acts directed
against Jews.
These acts include occasional public language
assaults and crank phone calls, charges of
discriminatory housing and employment practices
and claims that some police departments don't
respond vigorously enough to blatant acts of
vandalism with anti-Semitic overtones.
But, emphasizes Steven F.debnan, regional
director of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) of
B'nai B'rith, "these are the kinds of things that go
on in every Jewish community ...
Some fom'lS of "insensitivity," however,
bring to light the need for more communication
between the Jewish community and the communi-
ty-at-large. A year ago last spring. for in.stance, a
stir was created when five county school systems
considered scheduling the first day of classes on
Rosh Hashana, the Jewish new year.
After receiving a number of calls from
alarmed Jewish teachers and educators, the ADL,
the Jewish Federation of Orange County and a
number of other agencies sprang into action, and
quietly worked with school officiala and teachers'
unions to 9hange the date.
"Over the years, it's gotten better and worse,"
said Chelle Friedman, an Orange County resident
since 1965 and.spokeswoman for theJederation.
"Organized hate groups have not found
Orange County a good place to thrive. But today, it
seems people are making less of an effort to hide
their dislike for others -and not just Jews.
Vietnamese businessmen have had their establish-
ments vandalized. The gays started a community
center in Garden Grove and were victimized."
The county ADL set up shop only a year ago
last April, after the national office detennined that
Ot;ange ~unty contained an active and visible
Jewish community, F.delman said. In prior years,
the Los Angeles branch of the 70-year-old human
relations agency, which combats anti-Semitism
and all other forms of discrimination directed at
minorities, handled county cases.
Between April and Dec. 31, the county office
received a total of 76 complaints -20 of which the
ADL identified as racially motivated incidents -
or those directly aimed at minorities. However.
most of these were leveled against Southeast
Asians, F.delman said.
Jews, meanwhile, registered 15 of the less
serious complaints, ranging from anti-Semitic
notes left in mailboxes or school room desks to
claims of job discrimination.
''I wo uld venture to say that as far as these
types of complaints are concerned, we only get the
tip of the iceberg," F.delman said.
Several incidents were serious enough to be
classified as racially motivated, F.debnan said. For
the most part, these isolated cases involved the
defacing of synagogues and structures housing
Jewish organizations and businesses with
swastikas and anti-Semitic slurs.
While such incidents cause ala.rm. officials
said, they usually can be pegged to a bunch of
rowdy teen-agers with nothing else better to d o on
a Saturday night, or to a quack .
"ln areas of Huntington Beach -when the
weather warms up and around the time of Killer 's
birthday-you'll see an epidemic of swastikas on
fences and buildings," F.debnan said. "But these
aren't racial. Most of the time they're just kids
copy-catting what they eee on television or record
album covers. For example, some English punk
rock groups, like 'the Nastys,' espouse hatred in
their music. And the kids copy it. And when TV
PAPARAZZI
nuni-series. like 'The Winds of War' and 'The
Holocaust,' air, you'll see an increase m this kind of
thing."
director of the Orange County AJC.
In a report filed last January to the national
office of the American J ewish Committee (AJC). a
watchdog agency concerned with J ewish civil and
religious rights, the Orange County branch of the
AJC reported that anti-Semitic activities in the
county were very quiet.
Rabbi Stephen Einstein of Temple B'nai
Tzedek said that, last spring, the city of
Huntington Beach acted promptly to clean up
swastikas that had been painted on some walls and
buildings.
''There are more J ewish religious institutions,
more Jewish organiutions, and more J ewish
people. This all leads to more visibility and great.er
sensitivity in the community," said Hinda Beral,
"A couple of years ago -around the tjme of
Hiller's birthday -a whole tract was swaatik.aed
not far from my neighborhood," he said. ''Before
officials had a chance to move on it, 90ffie Cub
Scouts in the neighborhood we nt out and washed
down the walls. There's a great sensitivity to that
here: no one wants to see that in this community."
ContemP-orarJl Jews
They are creating new definitions of Judaism
V' F rom Page Al , ~' being answered. The rapid
growth in recent years of county
Jewlsh religious institutions and / .If 1 organiutions, the presence of
both liberal and traditional Jew-
ish congregations. and private
lifestyles and habits demonstrate
a strong desire for community.
eve n if it means driving miles to
B'n& B'rith meetings or Saturday
morning synagogue services.
Forging an alliance with the
Christian community was some-
what of a more arduous task.
After suffering an initial rebutr to
gain full membership status to the
now defunct Newport Harbor d is proportionate number of J ews
Council of Churches in 1970, the in the Democratic Party.
Jewish clergy went its own way "The other thing is that there
for several years. Near the end of are deep-seated pre judices in the
the decade, sheer numbers, cou -w orld -a belief that Jews killed
pied with the leadership of Robert J esus. But this anti-Semitism has
Shepard. minister of Ch rist served as a glue to hold Jews
Church by the Sea United together. Anti-Semitism never
Methodi.st, led to the formation of allowed us in. It is something w e
a unified clerical community that fear. For hundreds of years
rec:ognized religious pluralism in throughout Europe J ews had no
the county. rights; they could not own prop-
In this instance, religious bar-erty. The United States was the
riers were dropped in favor of the first country where w e weren't
need and desire for communica-restricted."
tion and understanding. Coupled with these cu)tural
But there are questions each characteristics is the realization
Jew can only answer for himseU. among J ewish leaders and
They deal with pel'80nal survival academicians that the Jewiah
at the expense of ethnic history, population in America ls a.lowly
Identity and responsibility. shrinking.
Although differences certainly In 1979, Levine and aociologtst
vary from individual to individ-NeU Sandberg conducted a behav-
ual; lt'aaafe to say that many Jews loraJ and attitudinal study of 413
feel the lmpUcationa of asaimlla-Jewish households and found that
tion have greater impact on them contemporary West Coast Jews
than mem ben of other minority are more Inclined to marry out of
poupe. their religion, tend to have fewer
Gene Levine, profeaor of aoci-children, and are lea likely to be
ology at UCLA, explains: "Two affiliated with a synagogue than
thinp make Jews different. Jews Jews of past generations.
who are ot.ervant feel they have "There is some queaUon as to
eomething 1pecial to offer the whether the Jewish people wtll
world. They believe they have a survive," Levine said.
miaion to promote .actal jl.&atice At tbe other end of the 1pec-
and to better the lot of the poor. trum. there are growilli n~mben
11\ele thinp an;_ lmbedded in the of Jewa. many of whom are
Old Testament. Thia inherent role moving to Sun ~It locales like
abo explaina w h y Qlere are a Orange County, who are less
concerned with the implications of
blending in with the rest of the
poplililce.
"I can't say that l worry about
assimilation," said Ruth Lott, a
member of the Harbor Reform
Temple in Newport Beach, who
moved with her family from a
Boston suburb to Mission Viejo
last January.
Far away from the tra-
ditionalism that permeates more
established Jewish societies back
East, many county Jew s are
creating new definitions of
Judaism that can best be described
in ethnic and cultural, rather than
religious, terms, leaders say. They
feel and act Jewish not by attend-
ing temple services regularly, but
by keeping kosher eating habits,
maintaining close friendships
with other Jews, and by demon-
strating strong support for Iara.el.
Others, meanwhile, have as-
similated completely.
"It's more difficult to maintain
(a Jewish) identity here than back
East." explained Rabbi Gershon
Schusterman. director of the
Hebrew Academy-Lubavitch in
Westminster. "Out here, people
seem to be better off. There's more
freedom. Families are le.a de-
manding. Schoola are lea de-
manding. Kids are .ettin& the
standards for the family: parenta
aren't taking a stand.
"Thank God there's litUe
anti-Semitism out here to bring
out the differences," he said. "But.
when I grew up in Brooklyn, the
others called me names and I pul
up my dukes and fought bide... I
knew something about being J ew-
ish. Here, it means nothing."
Many rabbis are concerned that
county Jews are affiliating with
synagogues less often than their
brethren in many other pert& of
the country. A swvey conducted
by Rabbi David Eliezrie, lelldtt of
Anaheim's 8~famlly Chat>.ct
(pronounced Hat>.d) ~
lion, showed that of the eetlmated
0 See Contemporary, ~· .. C2
\
j
~ '
..
--------·-
Cl Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug 30, 1983
The working stiff ••• Opportunities are still there for those who care enough
(a...t)DEAH ANN LANDERS. I havt> been
readmg your l'Olumn for years and alwuys thought
you were sympathe tw t.Oward the working das.!.,
even though you cannot be l'Onsidcred "om• of us "
Imagine my surprJ..Se tO read your views m supporl
of the starched-collar Protestanl work ethlL'
Don't you reaJiw that tht> world has cha11g<.'Cl
in the last 50 years? ln thl• good old days a persou
who wurkt>d overtime was loyal and smart, had a
chance to make 1t to the top. Today mo.~t of us art'
nameless. fal't!less nobodres. putting rn ou1 lime at
boring .)Obs in fact.on es or pushing penL'1ls and
shufflmg papers in office bwldings. True, we get a
paycheck, but the big bucks go to the top
executives who are making a fortwie and looking
every which way to protect their enormous
incomes against taxation.
The vast majority of workmg people ex-
-q ANN LANDERS
perience vcr,.. little fm:rn<'ial gain and no personal
satisfaction. O ur only 1 dwf romes when we get
two weeks' vacation m July or August. This is the
way the reaJ world works, Ann Landers, so why
don't YOU Wo:tke up and smell the coffee? -
THANK GOD IT'S FRIDAY IN YONKERS
DEAR FIUDAY: So you don't consider me a
member of the working class? Well, what do you
call a person who bas spent many 10-and 12-boor
days at a typewriter, makes dozens of speeches
and travel• tbou1and1 of mllea to attend meetings
10 I wlll be betlu informed on matters perlalnlog
to medicine, mental beallb, deot11try, P•Y·
chology, bulloe11, law, rellglon ud education?
True, I am well paid, bot I wa1 a pioneer in my
field and extremely fortaoate to bave been
trained by one of the aU-Ume great editors, Larry
Fanning. I've alto been at this job 28 years.
Anyone wbo says tbe days of opportunlly are
over la copping out. Tbe person who la motivated ,
energetic and dedicated ud enjoys his work Is
certain to do better tbu oae who desc ribes
blmaeU 11 a "oamele111, faceleH nobody -
putting lo time at a boring job."
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A word to the
woman who signed herself "Cranberry Face in
Arkansas." She had been married 15 years t.o a
mun she called "&:wer Mouth " Tht• µoor thmg
was worri1..-d aboul th1· k1d11 picking up their
Cather's filthy LUlk
A friend of mine had the• i;ame problem. One
day she bec-aml' so fed up with her husband's
terrible mouth ~he took a rtour sc."OOp of garbage
(<>ggshdls, c-offot.• grounds. potato peehngs. etc,),
heaped thc•1t1 on a platter and that's what he found
at his place whtm he sat down w supper.
He yelled. "What'!'. T HIS?" His wife re plied,
"S mee you don't seem lO mind the garbage that
comes OUT of your mouth, I thought you nught
enJOy putting a l.Jtlle garbage into 11."
That incident made such a profound impact
on "Sewer Mouth" that he cleanM up hlS act from
that day forward. -WTNNIPF.ci READER
DEAR WIN: Nothing succeeds like success.
Thanks for the offbeat evidence.
Contemporary Jews .•• T JOUI HIALTH
DR PETER J STEINCROHN
doesn't lessen your own grief. Neverth eless, every-
one should know that i:lbout 23 percent of all
accident.<JI deaths tn the United States occur among
persons aged 65 ur older They arl' one of the leading
causes of death, outranked only by cardiovascular
diseases. malJgnanl'Y and pneumonia.
v Fr om Page C l
32,000-plus Jt'WS liv111g north of th 1 San Diego
Freeway. fewl'r th an one quarter were affiliated.
The Jewish Federation estimated that 3,500
families are affthatt'd with the county's 16 syn-
agogues Multiply that figure by four (the number in
the average Amt>rican farruly) and 1t comes to 14,000.
If mdeed there are 70,000 to 100,000 Jews living in the
county, tha t would put the a Cfiliation rate between 14
and 20 pen.-ent, compared to a much higher national
rate of 40 to 60 percent.
"There are a couple of reasons for th1s," Eliezrie
said. "First, many of the people who want to be very
active in J uda.1Sm are inclined to move to Los Angeles.
Orange County has only been active for the past
couple of years. Second, many from back East are
coming intoacommuruty with no family ties. They're
just getting started, and really don't know how to
identify the community because there is no family
connection to guide them ."
Other rabbis say that some Jews moving into the
county have no interest in joining synagogues at all.
"Man y Jews are running away from Judaism,
and some have good reasons for doing so," explained
Rabbi Bernard King, president of the Orange County I
Board of Rabbrs and leader of the Harbor Reform
Temple in Newport .Beach "Some are running from
fund-raisers who are crass and insensitive. Others I
might be running away from a Jewish identity based
on guilt
"Some synagogues are unsp1ritudl in their
approach: they say you should be JewlSh because 6
million were k.iUed dunng the Holocaust, or because I
your father and grandfather were J ewish . Rather,
1 they should say you should be a Jew because of the
spirituality of the commuruty. the po51tive vaJues.
''The Jewish community IS still emerging from a
period of mourning and grieving from the Holocaust
Of the 6 mi1J1on who died, 1 million were children. I
Many have a hard time say mg the word God: prayers
are said without any spirit. Today. I thmk those 1
numbers are wearing off.
"And I think Orange County, unlike other
settled t:ommunrues. provides the environment
where e xperimentation toward spntual ends can
take plac.'t' Perhaps we can create a good e nviron-
ment for those Jews whu are running away "
The Orange County Jewish community and
others like 1t across Amen(-a are tackJmg ass1milat1on
by developing programs geared toward young Jews
Several Orange County singles clubs have
cropped up 111 recent years, while synagogues have
reduced dues and added programs spe<>1fically for
young men and women, many of whom choose not to
affiliate because of prohibitive membership costs and
the accurate perception that synagogues are primar-
ily fanuly 11\StJtuuons
The Chabad community rs funneling its re-
sources into a wide van ety of community service
programs and events, rangmg from a concert series to
a new local cable television progcam called "Jew1Sh
Califorrua," wh ich airs this fall It also sponsors an
outreach program where rabbts go door to door to
educate Jews on the religious opportunities and
programs avatlable to them.
"This IS unique," sajd Eliezrie, w ho wiU host
"Jewish California." "Usually, people only h ear from J
the JeW\Sh commuruty ma fund-raising capacity W e
are gomg around asking people what we can do for
the commuruty -not what they can do for us."
While rclJgious organizations and 1nst1tut1ons
are figuring out ways lD battle what they perceive as I
the dangers of assimilat1on, Sandberg stresses that
there are a number of reasons to mamtam opturusm
For one. hesa1d. the Uruversityof Judai.smstudy
showed that increasing numbers of Jews m the 18 to
30 age range are showm~ ~~e ~terest ~their I
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Daily Pilat
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religion and hl·riLoge t.·u111pan>d lo Jews of a
generation ago r or another. as long as J t•ws continue
to express their identity, whelht>r it be ma religious
or personal w ay. total assim1lat1un into the
Anglo-Saxon c:ulture can be avoided
There 1s some indication that Orange County
J ews are concerned about 9¥1milation a nd ar e doing
something about 1t. For the past six years. enrollment
at Westrrunster's Hebrew Academ y has ste~dily
increased a t an annual rate of 10 to 15 percent,
Schusterman said. '
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I feel so guilty. With
proper care. I could have prevented my mother from
dying. She was 81. Everyone agreed she was the most
youthful octoge narian they had ever seen. He r mind
was clear and she could carry on an interesting
conversation about the international situation.
Seventy p<'rl'C'nl of all deaths from falls m
JY77 -78 occurr<·d amCJng th(• C'ld£>rly r appreciate
your Jett.er. Mr... O .. as a timely warning to others
rl'Spons1ble for the l'are of olds ters m their fanuly. We
shuuld take all k1mJs of prcc·autJons to prevent
accidents.
"I think part of the increase can be attributable
to the fact that there are more Jews today in Orange
County than six years ago." he explained. "But I
think what's really happening is that there has been
a raising of consciousness. I hate to use the term
religious revival, but many people today seem to be
getting back to the basics. Parents are realizing that
public schools, television , the streets and the beaches
aren't doing anything for the Je wish identity of their
childre n and they want to do something about it. If a1J
else fails, they try the Jewis h academy -and they
are doing it "
Here's when I failed. One day she told me tha t
she had slipped in the bathtub. Fortunately, all she
had suffered was a slight back sprain. l told m y
husband I'd better buy a special non-skin bath mat.
Also. I wanted to have someone come in to put up a
handrail for support. I procrastinated. About a month
ago, she fell again, but this time, sustained a bad hip
fracture. My guilt and sorrow persist because she
died of pneumonia a week after the operation. I'm
e xpressing my feelings publicly for the good of your
other readers responsible for elderly patients. -
MRS.O.
. . .
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I've been reading
about the use of lasc.·rs as an instrument m war. But I
understand that th<'Y also have some use m medicine
I'm cunous. -MR £
DEAR MR. E.: There's good reason for your
interest. Until re<:cntly, many have been aware that
lasers have been useful in ophthamulogical problems:
welding detachl'<i retinas and also helpful m sealing
leaking blood vessels in the eye. But there are new
u~
With more• expt!rienc~ in their use, I'm sure that
lasers wiU have even more Lo contribute 111 the
treatment of medicaJ problems.
DEAR MRS. 0 .: What can I say except that I'm
sorry? The fact that it happens so often with others
at •
xourc
hetal<ing
in school
this year?
(_ ~
)rntn· ('Cll I\ i rin·d
ht·~ ... u:--i ng drug~. ,\ nd
dri11ki11g , too.
I lc·l-i had
t mu hit· in
'
~c hool a nd ~
~<'ra pt·~ :I' -
witlt tl w la~. •
\o pan·rit \\allb to admit that hi ' child
i:-. i 11 ~1 J<'h ~•·rio1 1 ~ trouhlP.
But yotfrr at thc ('fl d of your rope.
);,11·, t' dorw ''"''n-thing you can think of,
a11d 11othinµ·~ \-\ork•·d.
\\hat yo11r child nt•c-d~ i ~ lwlp. Profos-
-,iur1al lwlp.
\nd tlw he:--t plc.H't· to gt•t h<·lp is al tJw
Adolc·:.;,·c-11t ( :an'l n it.
'l'lw Adol'·~(Tlll Can·l nit i~ a short-term,
i11patit ·nt tn·atnwnt program dt•signcd to
help ~o ung 1wo plc idc-11tify th•' .ounT of
tlwi r prohl<'m!-i. lier<' a t a lo('al community
lic1:.;pital l lw~ 1,•ar11 ho" to ltauclle life on
an <'ff<'cl iv<', da y-by-day hasi!-i wit hout the
u~t· of drug~ or d1cmi l'a l ~ of any kind.
!'.o orn· t'V('r said growing up was easy.
<·~tll tl1e
ADOLESCENT
CAREUNIY.
A 'wrvic•• of Compr.·h('n11ivt• Cart• C.orpontion.
(714) 633-9582
CAlllilJNIT 110 PITAL OF ORANGE
(AHllCf & A[)()l.K~;NT PROGRAMS)
WI sotr111 TllSTIN AVE .. ORANGE, CALIFORNIA 92''66
DIRECT DEPOSIT.
YOU'VE GOT IT
COMING
JUSTASMUCH
ASA WALK
SAFELY DOWN
THE BLOCK.
Some people think they deserve your
money as much as you do And if some o f
these types ore hanging our or the end of
your block, Direct Deposit will help get rid of
their reason to bother with you.
With Direct Deposit your Social Secu rity-or
other Government payments-go s1ro1ghr ro
your account. so you never have lo walk
down the block carrying a tempting check.
Just ask for Direct Deposit wherever you
have a checking or savings account. It's free.
and It's something you deserve just as much
as a breath o f fresh air and a nice. safe walk .
AFTER ALL,YOU'VE GOT IT COMING.
•
Weddings
Soto-Hubert
Making their home an San Clemente are Tony C
Soto and his bride, the former Kobm Alicia Hubert,
who were married July 30 an the Newport-Mesa
Christian Center in Costa Mesa.
The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Hubert of Cost.a Mesa, graduated from Costa Mesa
High School and Orange Coast College.
Her husband graduated from Brawley High
School and Southern California College, Costa Mesa.
The son of Mr . and Mrs. Tony Soto of Brawley is
employed by the city of Costa Mesa.
I ..
Cadw alader-Spickard
The Walnut Creek Presbyterian Church was the
sett.mg for the July 24 wedding ceremony link.in~
Amy Sp1l·kard of Huntington Beach and John
Cadwalader of Lincoln.
The newlyweds, who honeymooned on Maui.
are living in Walnut Creek where he i.s an assistant
VlCe president at Bank of America.
The bnde, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Gail Green
of Huntington Beach. IS a senior auditor for American
President Lines m Menlo Park She is a graduate of
E.dison High School. Huntmgton Beach. and Ca1
State San Francasco.
The bridegroom is a graduate of Menlo Atherton
High School and Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo. His
parents are Mr and Mrs. Loyd Cadwalader of
Lincoln
Amy Cadwa lad er
Karp-Belgen
John CharlC'S Karp Ill and his bride, the fonner
Marianne Frances Belgen, are making their homt· in
San Jose wherl' the bridegroom attends California
State College They were married Aug. 6 m the Kang
of Glory Lutheran Church, Fountain Valley.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs Roger
W. Belgen of Fountain Valley. She graduated from
Foutain Valley High School where she was namro
Student of the Year in 1981. She also attended Cal
State San Jose.
Her husband 1s the son of Mr. and Mrs. John C.
Karp Jr. of San Francisco and Germany. He was
chosen the most outstanding cadet an ROTC at Cal
State
They newlyweds honC'ymooned m Mazatlan.
M cGeough-M iller
GaJI Ann Maller and Darnel Joseph McGeough,
both of Costa Mesa, exchanged wedding vows Aug
27 in ceremonies conducted in St. Joachim's Church.
Costa Mesa Following a honeymoon at Yosemite.
they will hve m Costa Mesa.
The bnde is the daughter of Mav1s M11Jer of
Costa Mesa and William Miller of Stockton. She
graduated from Estancia High School, Costa Mesa,
and Orange Coast College, and is employed by C. J.
Segerstrom & Sons.
The bridegroom graduated from Costa Mesa
High School, Cal State Fullerton with a B.A. degree,
and Ca1 State Long Beach with his M.B.A. degree. He
is employed by Coastline Community College. His
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Bernard McGeough.
Gail McGeough
Peace Corps aids Honduras
Despite cuts, volunteers up in Central American democracy
JUTICALPA. Honduras (AP)
-Don Hanson !Jves ma tranquil
green valley m Honduras, his
work as an American Peace Corps
volunteer untouched by the guer-
rilla wars wracking Central
Amenca
Hanson. a 25-y(.>ar-old agricul-
tural t'ngineer from Garfi eld,
Wash .. ts on<' of 250 Peal-e Corps
volunteers and trainees m Hon-
duras, Central America's most
said 1n an 1nterv1ew an
Tegucigalpa, the Honduran capi-
tal
"They justdespc'rately need the
kmd of help we can gJVe them at
the village level."
towns throughout the Guayape
Valley Hl' usually reaches thrm
on aging buses and by hitching
rides. The final leg of the tnp to El
Agua Fna, a mountain v1llage
eight hours away. is by horseback
• imp()venshed country The pro-
gram as the largest m the turbu-
lent region and Latin America's
se<:ond biggest. after Ecuador's
President Roberto Suaw Cor-
dova, whose eledion in November
1981 restored civilian government
after two de<:ades of almost un-
interrupted military rule, has
asked for more volunteers. Allen
said.
Working with self-help projects
in rural mountain communities
100 miles northeast of the capital,
Hanson, a strapping six-footer
with a flaxen beard, is typical o{
the volunteers found in the Peace
Corps in its early days.
Most of his work involves small
irrigation projects. In the trad1t1on
of the Peace Corps. villag<'S and
individuals benefiting from the
projects are l'XJX-cted to provide
part of the money and all thl·
labor.
The matching funds come from
the U.S . Agency for International
Development and the Peace Corps
Partnership Program. under
which local commuruties in the
United States donate money t.o
projects supervlsed by volunteers.
• con tangent of 285 volunteers
The number of Peace Corps
volunteers worldwide has drop-
ped from more than 16,000 in the
late 1960s to 5,200 today because
of funding cuts and the closing of
programs in more than a doien
countnes
ln Central Amcnca, the Peace
• Corps has pulled out of El
• Salvador and Nicaragua because
• of guerrilla warfare and has
• reduced 1 ts program in
Guatemala. withdrawing from
.~.. thC' western highlands where a
leftist insurgency is t'Oncentrated.
But Honduras, largely spared
;• the political violence its neighbors ~ suffer, has seen an increase from
• around 150 volunteers in the early
1970s to the prC!lent level
"One has to recognize the
• importanct> of Honduras and the
fact that you have a democratic r, government trying t.o do Its best to
solve the problems of this coun-
• try," Don Allen, direct.or of the
Honduran Pea<'t> CorJ>8 program,
I '
"I'd never seen poverty Like th LS
where I'm from in the Northwest.
Pictures tell a lot, but they're not
thesamethingaslivingit," he said
as he showed a visit.or around
Juticalpa, capital of heaVlly for-
ested Olancho province.
Away from the main square,
Jutlcalpa is a town of dusty,
unpaved streets. Saddled horses
stand hitched in front of houS(?S
with red-tile roofs and
white-washed walls, and ox carts
carry grinning little boys to the
fields.
Like many Peace Corps volun-
teers, Hanson often finds his work
frustrating because of the slow
pace of progress.
"It's a big challenge. That'll the
way they promote the Peace
Corps and it's true," he said
Hanson works out of an agricul-
tural extension office here, help-
m$t a half -dozen villuges and
On a recent day he visited La
Puzunca, a village of 600 people
that has been trying for more than
five years to build a new six-room
school.
The Peal'e Corps Partnership
Program has alloted $2, l 00 for the
project. but Hanson is holding
back half the money until the
community collects $350 as its
share to finish the school, which
now has waJls and a galvanized
zinc roof in place. He says the
villagers also need to show more
initiative in providing voluntary
labor for the project.
"I'm going to the school projt."<.'t
wondering what to say," he Mid.
as he drove a borrowed Jeep down
a dusty road t.o La Puzunca. "I
don't want to be negative. But I've
got t.o say, 'Hey, you guys aren't
working hard enough.'
"l want them to organize them-
!K'lv~"
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug 30, 1983 C3
Whaling Wall realized
Like Laguna's, Santa Monica mural triumph over City Hall
SANTA MONICA (AP)
Eight full grown whc.1lt-s, six
whtill.' calve-:. 1111cJ dcJl!>I.• lo :.WO
dolphins mark tht• spot wl'u>re
Da111l·l Alon:r.o Lnumpht-d ovt'r
City Hall
Alonw's <:ulorful hfl'l>li'A' p<lmt
1ngs the adult wha l<'i. streu:h 45
to 52 r l't'l are splusht'<.1 across an
underpass wull al Fourth Str~·t
und Oc~an Park Boulevard, four
blocks from ttw bcal'h
Alonzo, W, born in Sant.Ct
Monka anti raised 13 bloc·ks from
the mammoth mural, said, "The
ocean plays an important part in
the hfe of a youth here The oc-ean
1s an import.<tnt pcirt uf the
community."
Maylx· so, thl' 1·1ty fatht•rs and
rnothc:rs n·al>OnL'<.l whL·n hl• sug-
gested the mural in 1978
But 8.12ti square fr'<•t of gray
whales, ptlol whales, Pa<:1ftt:
white-s11Jl'tl dolphins, c:ommon
dolphins and bottlenOSl· dolphins?
On a publ1l· stn'Ct'!
Alonzo's whaling wall prOJe<.'l is
not unlike Laguna Beach airbrush
artist Robert Wyland, who
(Teated a s1m1 lar massavf' mammal
mural along a t'Oncretc.· waU ad,a-
t·cnt to the lfotl'I Laguna.
Wyland has also paintL><l a
life-size whaling wall at the Dana
Point Marine Tnstitut'°' in Dana
Harbor
••
And, like his Santa Barbara
counterpart, Wyland also had his
problems with politicians and a
lack of funding.
Artist Danie l Alonzo adds color to whale's eye on
massive mural.
Alonzo has solved his problems
m Santa Moml'a
"There were three to four years
of problems with City Hall,"
Alonw said. "I received the rights
to paml m April 1982 "
What he didn't r{'(-eavc was
pubhl' funds. But where there's a
whale. there's a way.
And for tht.> past 14 months,
with three or four months off to
earn a living, he's been painting
the wall, never using any brush
larger than an mch. Passersby
often stop, stare, and chip in $1 ,
$10. even $100, AJonw said.
noting, "I've had an awful Lot of
help from an awful lot of people."
t.o celebrate t'Omplellon of the
mural with a street party beneath
the "•hales R~rdings of whale
"songs" w1U be played, bands will
perform and he'U seU his own
whale posters, T -shl.rtS, and small
pamtmgs
He said he never became dis-
couraged during the years of
delay and work. A pro-whale comm1ttN· raLsed
$25,000 m three months Alonro.
who gc~ paid for painlmg houses,
hanging wallpaper and teaching.
chipped m $3,000 of his own
He said he did some research
and sketched a few whales before
beginning, but is creating the
mural "as I go along. whatever fits
compositionally and flows"
"For a while 1t was an obsession
with it," Alonw said "I just had a
dream that came true, and now
here I am an the hnal stage." money ln about a month, Alonw hopes
Whale mural
underpa s m
ta ke
Santa
shape
Monica
on
as
Alonzo adds d e tail to
8 , 126-square-f oot project.
the
All things aren't possible
l'vl' had a rt•ql bad WN•k
My $28 Boston f<•rn d1C'd al thl' age· of thret.'
days Thea1rcond1uonmg wentoul in my car And
aft.t>r reading Lmcia Evans' new beauty S<."Crels
book. l had to fat'<' up to thl· n•ahty that I wall never
look hke Landa Evans
l don't want to go into 1t Our pnont1es are JUSt
too far apart
It's nnl thl' farsl llmt• I've plowed through
th(.'S(.• how-to pull youfS(•lf-togf'lhc•r books and
been d1sappo111ted. I've been lulled down th('
yellow brick road m books by Jane Fonda, Chl•ryl
Tiegs. Arlt•ne Dahl, Victoria Prml'ipal and L'hnstae
Brmklcy
The fi rst thmg th;it grabs ml' 1s thf' cover
Some women look at thOSC' boches and say. ''Why
her. God?" l look at thC'm and say, ''Why not me?"
That's the diffcn•nct' I always think cv<:>rything is
poss·ble through th<' library
Nuclear test slated
for Nevada desert
LAS VEGAS (AP) A weapons-related
underground nuclear test with a yield range of 20 to
150 kJlotons of TNT has been scheduled for 8 a.m .
Thursday at the Nevada Test Sll.c, the Department of
Energy said Tuesday
The test, codc•-named Chancellor, will be
conducted 2,050 feet beneath the surface of Pahut.t>
Mesa. about 75 miles northwest of Las Vegas.
OOE spokesman Jim Boyer said it is possible
people outside the test si t<:> may feel a slight earth
tremor following dt>tonatlon, esµttially If they are on
the upper l<.'vels of high structures where earth
motion is magnified.
Managers or high-rise structures in Las Vegas
have been adviS<'d riot to have workers in precario~
positions at the lime of detonation.
Chunrellor will be the 12th announced test
conduC'ted at the Nevada site this y<:>ar and the 6 l3th
9n11ounc«i test t.o take place at NTS since the
beginning of tt•stlng in Nevada In January of 1951.
'
ERMA
BOMBECK
But inside, the advice lS always the same: eat
le>ss, exercise mon• and spend more hme on
yourself. l don't want to take away from the habits
of the stars, but l SUSJX"('t most of them started
pretty early being aware of themselves. I should
imaginl' Linda Evans' first words to her mother
when she was being bathed and swabbed in oil
were. "You missed a spot!"
A staple of these books is always
1-was-fat-once-and -una t tractive-before-I -had-a-
turning-poin t-m -my life. Again, there is a dif-
ference in interpretation Fat to these people
means a "snug 6." Fat to me is when you walk
across the floor and someone says, "It's a good
sound. Have you ever thought of recording it?"
What you're dealing with here are women who
have never bought a blouse unless they can but1on
1l all the way t.o the bottom.
The problem is I want t.o believe. For years. I
used to get a clothing catalogue from a store in the
East. They used a model who was one of the most
stunning creatures I have ever seen. t ordered
everything she wore I sent everything back
within a week.
It never occurred to me until someone pointed
it out that she was 8 inches taller than I was,
weighed 20 pounds less, had long black hair that
was puUed into a bun, legs that started under her
diaphragm, was black and looked smashing in reds
and yellows and was a good 30 years younger. h 's
funny. 1 never figured out wh y I didn't look the
same in th~ clothes.
Does that mean 1 will st.op buying beauty
books? Never. It just means I'm going through my
usual period of d~p deprecsion.
You 111hould have seen m«' after I read Mias
Piggy's beauty secrets. It wM three mont~ before
I l'Ould f'vt-n look at a mudpack
' .
I
I
t
1
-t Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug. 30. 1983
M h , d )(JO Wilhum C1tu•ti.t11 c Muon nots Fa11 •-ir MftTIC[ nun1 IC NOTICE nun•ic """TICE •m• IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOflCE , H 1~un, un .,_ •O e. Sante Arie. CA Q'70~ ,._,.. "" ... .._ nm" nv r~
F. NMh n( IJowrwy. Cl Sht• Thi• bullMH I• \.O<\dvc;te4) Oy .,, NOTICI Of TRUIJTill'S •AL.E YOU AM '" OlrAUl T UNOl l'I A M N -81100 '1CTITIOUS IUtlNH S -~'f.1 ::'=n
v. ui. 11('1 IV\' with the Nt'W • Individual I i..-.... OW1LU All 0£1.D 0# lllUIT DATID Juty M, MAIM STATI WUIT '" '""'-DllTH llDTICIS
>rt &>och Art M u:wum, the Ehzati.th C Mat0n T ... ..._ ~10on l•t. UNLIH YOU TAKI ACtlON NOTICE OF DEATH OF lr~ loUOwtnQ pert0n• -dOl/IO AT NIVATI t A.LI
WIKLE ARY B WIKLE P'-Sc-h I for r ls T11ia •1tteman1 w•• 111.a with Ille UNIT COO« w TO "'OT'ICT YOU.. l'flONllTY, IT George Fred erick Fortier bulllnM• a. "°·A tGIUO •••• • Wt~ll~~Oi ':"c tvg~I.' County Ctet~ Of Or•no-Counry on CRESS ESCROW CORPORATION MAYM I OlD AT Af'Uel.te IAU!. AND OF P ETITION TO AD · !HE FINANCIAL PLANNING r'c:.0rsr.: ~c!n~';'o~ O.·
rl'Sldt-11t ur Nt!wpo1 t V11l.1 .int t • jfl8l .QThl,ln ., Aug 9 11193 ,ttMtt .. duly appolntllel Tni••-unoet the ., YOU NH D AN H ll'\.ANATION MINISTER ESTATE NO COMPANY INTERNATIONAL. 3900 ° I m• n\an .. ot lhll .. lata ol H f.ir rTWny yt-.u~. sht' p!CISloU .ih11n. ~11H1vn (' am-lollowlna deacr1b4MI d..o of INll 0, THI NA TUlll OF THI • w .. 1erty Ptaot 100 N9WP0<I 8"oh. al'g8 n tielV /\ ?-t 191!3 t I • uests 111 llt•u of Publiitieo Orange Coul Dally Will Sl:LL AT PUBLIC AUCTION P"OCl lOIHO AQAIMtT YOU YOU A·l 1944$ CA 926ll0 Payne l l\ey., elllO known Np 1
jW<I)' on U~U!>I -J I y rt q d ..... ~H... Pllol Auo 2:1 30 Sept II. l3 ig83 TO THE HIGHEST BIOOEA roR SHOU\.D COMTACl A uWYi llL To .u heirs beneficiaries B•y Group [)ey~t C0rf)Of· P•vne Tl\a-r:'.:'.°.: Henry 8'yne
the ugt> of 101 She Wah horn rloWl.'l'l! onattutl:S UC h...vf' '707 93 CASH ANO/OR THE CASHIERS OR NOTICl °' 1llUIT'll 't I ALS d. • tlton 3990 w .. 1 .. 1y Pl-sun• Tll8yet Jr
in Fayt-lll' Cuunty Ohm tu" 1·hartt)' of your t!:huit•e !CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIED IN T.•. No. 40808 C'r~ditora an conllngenl 100. Ntwpott Beach, CA 928eo NOllU " l\«eby oiven that 1"-
Survivt-d by 2 som Carl D F IR PUBllC NOTICE CIVIL CODE SECTION 292411 (P•Y· NOTICE tS HEREBY GtVEN. 11111 creditors of Gt:0rg~ Frederick Th•• bu•lnet• '" conducted bf • ~·~n;:'.~!:"t!.!\ ~~:; :::
Wiklr of F'n .-dl'ncktown, e , _ , CTITIOUa e uelNEtS abta 11 11141 Um• or Mle in taw1vt on we<1n1111d•y •• 10 oo am ol MIO Foruer a nd peniOru who may ~POf•Hon ° 11 c0fllltrr1•tton 01 ..io suP-tor HI(.' 11AR0 c ll AR LES I money Ol 11\e Unllllel Stalea) lllt rlghl, day In ltle 1oom .. , UIO. !or QOll• be otherwuse interested in Wattan K Hc>pl)U , Ptntdant r rto •• ,,,. otl~ ol VIRTUE & I
Ohio. N Jvn(-S of L.igurUJ IA•.F'IH, passeJ away on flltt ,:,~=gBT:.~!o~'~•T dotng 1111118 ill\d tn1eres1 con~ 10 and ducting TruatM'1 Sil ... within the the wlU a nd /or est.ate· Thia •talen>enl wet ltlad with Ille S~ECK INC 17 C0tpou•t• Pte.zt
l11lb. Ca and daughkr Augu1it 28 1983 '" Costa ow ll(.IO by 11 un<* Hid OeeO of ofl"es ot REAL ESTA IE SECURI· h ~ r led County Clark 01 Otano• Count~ on Ori 8 ~1 Beach Cl.tttoml-
Mary T~gard11l llf Cost.a Ca Lvv h ba d bu:~~IC~L INTERNATIONAL, UI !_!Ul l In I,,. pr~IY IWlfalnaller oe-TIES SERVICE, loc.19d e l 2020 A peUllOn 8.8 n I Aug 12, 1993 92&eo County ol 01anQ. Slate of
Mesa. Ca Crave~Jdt.> m1.•t1) M~'lk•. mg us n St b I Cl N o ' B &ch CA ~rtb4KI· N0<th Broadw1y. Sulla 206. In the by Chet1ter 0 HoUBton, Jr In F222MS C1tllorn11 alt lhl i1gh1 lltle and .
on al !>t'rvll't'!> will be h t!ld 011 nf Douu1l' A De Fir of Cost.a 92~6Jura "wp ' 11 • TRUST OR· PAULINE GWtLLIAM coy 01 San1a Ana, Countl 01 Ora~. the Superior Court of O range Publ1At1Mi 01ano11 CoH t Dally int""' 1~11 1,_. .. tale 01 Mid ~ Mesa C.a bruther of Haw I Shu Sun Chin, 19 Slatbursl Ct • ZIBENEFICIAAY JOHN R C-OR-118111 ot Calllornta, RE L ESTA E Co ll th.al C h es Piiot Aug 2•. 31, Sept 7, t4, 1983 ued hau cqulrld by Ol*•ll<HI o• Sunday, August :lll, l!lli:J at ' .. Ca H NE SECURITIES SERVICE • Calll0tnla urn y reques ng -•734·83 '41 di Ion •·.OOPM Jt Pact fa• Vww Bishop of Torranc'<', • . e Newport euoh, CA 926113 (CORZINE TRUCK & AUTO corporation, " duly eppolntad ter 0 . HciuslOn, Jr be ap-•,•w,hOfl ot,~Md_!~!".:::. :i:!, 11me .. k l 1 f had hvl.od in the Cost.a Mesa hiJi~:~~:istMu 11 conduat&d by all PENSION) Tru11ee under and pur1uan1 10 1he pointed u personal represen -PUBl.IC NOTICE 0~ d:.t~ 1;8~0 ~ll llwt cel'tatn rMI
Memorial Pur n tf·u o arl·a for 38 years, and was Shu Sun Cnan RE CORDED Oct II, 1982 u lnalr. powe1 ol sate conferred In lhll ce1-ta live to administer t h e est.ate ,,_...out IUt lNEts P operty Situated In tne City of New-• flowers lhl• family prtofers I -·• W ld f(I NO 112·351436 ol Ot11clal Reco1d1 In taln Deed ol Tru1l ax1teuteC by LOUii "'"" r 0 S I ' d ti Hol ston cmp vy"" a:. 8 e er r This slutement w1t1 moe wnh the the o"'ce ol the Recotde< ol Orange Blallck an unm1rrlad man recordl<I or Geor ge Frederick F o rtie r NAME STATEMENT port Beach, Countyol ia•· 11 8
onattons to H:' l Southt'rn California Ech son County Clerk ot Orange County oo Coonty Oclo~r 9 1981 tn Book 14252 ol (u nder l h e Independent Ad-The lottowlng parton ts doing ot c111lornl1 pal rtlcwt1r1y dete•llMld M ethodist Chun.:h Women ':. h p Aug 12 1983 • d tbe he · · .. tot1ow1, lo w 1
Cln:I". 130.. East "'-lorado bdon· t!> rt•Hrement. fl· • F222M7 1&ld deed or lruat eact • 1 0 111e1a1 Records of said County, at mlmsttallon o f Estates A ct) oustne .. u L 1 2 In Block "K" of Tra.ct 518 u , ., ...., . t . , aveside services are following page 597 Recorder s 1n11rumtn1 No h . A FEW SYSTEMS MORE. 2959 ° ded 8ooll 17 p Blvd, Pasadena, Co 91106 v:lhl:edgr1_,, f W-"" ··--'· y Puousht!O Orange CoHI Dally PARCEL I An undlVldeCI I/14th 14 62 by raaaor1 ol •breach ol de-T he petition IS set for eann.g Mindanao Or Costa Men. CA P41'33 me3P61~~ II• tn t Mlscella:.
SO.: U "" or L'UOC>Ua ' Pllol Aug 23. JO, Sepl 6, 13· \983 lntttNI In and 10 Lot 1 ol Traci No 1autt tn p1ymen1 ol perlo1mance ol 1n Dept No. 3 a l 700 Civic 92628 10 nc u 8 0 f he Coont
TARR August 31, 198:i a t 11 OOAM 4732·83 9483, In Ille County ot Orange, Stale Ille obilgallona aecured thereby. In· Cen ter Dr ., W est, Santa Ana, f rank Earneal Wooda. 2959 Mind-~!:!~~' '::;' g :icee 0eo!.,nt Mor~
EDNA MAY TARH. resident at Padfic View Memon al nun•ic """TICE o!Catllorola, 8'per maprec0<de<I In eluding 1ha1 breach or daleull. No· CA 92701 A g 31 l983 at anao Dr. Colla Meaa. CA 92628 mm 1 known~• 1706 l.1,8m11 of Laguna Bea(·h , Ca p k Vtsit.auun will be held rUU'-nv boo1! 430, pagea 27 and 28, Mis-uce ol which was recordld May 18, on u • M11tanne Rinaldo Wood•. 2959 ~ ':;' rbOa Ceill0tnla ar, 30 1983 ceUaneout Mapa, 1n Ille olltce ol t,,. 1983 a.s Rec0<der s 1n111umen1 No 9.30 A M Mindanao Of Costa MeH. CA ~va. • 1 1 cet/'l tn lawful money Passed awlly on Au~usl 2tl. on 1 uesday. August , FICTITIOUI IU81HE8S counl}' rec:otc!e< ol 11810 counly 83·2 t 1116. Will SELL AT PUBLIC 1 F YOU OBJECT to the 92828 ott::U~?t~a ~ates on contltmlll0<1
l9tl3 Born Januarv 18. 1902 from 2 OOPM lo 9·00PM. al NAME STATEMENT EXCEPTING therefrom the follow· AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BID· gran ting o f the •><>lllton you ThtS buslneaa It cono11c1ao by an f I pert cash and balence
h K 1 I · ( So th p B thers Bell Broad Tile lollowlng person 11 dotng 1no DER FOR CASH lawful money ol ti\• r-' h 1no1vidual 0 "e. 0' b M m t e l'PU ' ll' u u 11:~r~e ro busm.,ss as (•) Uni!• 1 rllroogh 14 as shown United s1a1as or a ct1n1e1's c1111ek should either appear al l e Frank E Woods evidenced by nol• securl<I Y Oft·
Africa Surv1vt•d by her soru. "'ay Mortuary P1er CI.' IMAGE SYSTEMS ASSOCIATES upon t"9 Condominium Plan re-drawn on 8 s1a1e or neuonal bank. e hellrtng and stale you ob,JeC· Thll 1111ament wu l11e<1 wtlll the gaoe or Trull Oe80 on,".,. I>'~ Ent G Tarr of Laguna Ca Brothers Bell Broadway. 2048 Paloma, Costa Mesa CA CO<ded M•y 3, 1979 In bOOk 12659, state or federal creo11 untoo. 01 1 lions or hie wrillen objec-County Cletk ot Orange County on ~ :'~~= :;:'t!, amoun
and John Dl-smund Flovo <•f L'osl<t Mesa directors 92~,27Cra•ft Ritter, 2048 PelOma page 920. Otl"lal Records ol aeld state O< federal savings and •oen l s with the rourl before Aug 12, 19113 Bids Of otters 10 oe In writing end
Ca u h • " 9150 "" "" County assocration domiciled In lhll 1111e. ion F222M3 esald 1 Pasadena • a ro t l'r t>-1,.. Costa Mesa CA 9i62T (b) me a.ctutlve right 10 poa· ell payable at lhe 11me 01 tale, all the hearing Your appear -Pubhstied Orange Coast Dally will be rnce•~80 ·~ ·~i::~,.91 ~~
John T lJav1£'l> of the Ht•· CROSS This buslneu is conduct Id by an aeulon of all tl'lOM areu d"lgnated ughl, utle ano interest held by 11, u anle may be 10 ~rson or b y P1101 Aug 24. 3 t Sap1 7 1' 1993 loee at •,,ny 1 7e~ er t>elore d~ 01 public of South Africa, and REDERIC K R CROSS lndMduat as PallOs, as Shown UPol\ lhe Con· Trustee In 11111 reel properly 111ua111 your al tom ey 4736-83 :::n ereo
3 grandl'h1ldren M••mori.il resident of Cost.a Mesa, Ca CTh,.1s'gsA1a''1a'c::ien1 was filed wllll the domtntum Plan a bove reterrld lo In said County ano S111a detcribed lF YOU ARE A CHEDI· D11m1 •c """T.ICE Dated 1n16 8th d•Y o1 Aug. 1983 g PARCEL 2 Unll 14 as Sllown upon 8!1 follows ~~ nu E I the Estate 5C'fVll't!S will be held on Passed away on August 2 , County Clerk ot Orange County on the Condominium Plan 1bove re· PARCEL 1 Uml No 39 ol 1h11t TOR or a conungent creditor ·~~~op Tl\eyet 11j
Wednesday. August 31, 1983 at the age of 77. Aug 12, 1983 ferrld 10 certain Condominium Project de· o f the deceased. you m ust file llESOUITIOtUO..S At10< 1 IOt • l983 at l.OOPM at Paufll Beloved husband o f Isabel F222Ml PARCEL J The exctustve right 10 scrtbed tn that ceMaln Amended eta m w ith the cour t or MSOLUTIOM OF THIE OflANOe VllnUE ~CHEC«
V M I P k N 1' C f Cos M Ca Published Orange Coast 01111y poSM6llon and occupancy of thote Condominium Plan 1oco1dad In your 1 COUNTY 80AN> OF 1.DUCATION IMC •
1ew emor1a ar • ew-ross o ta esa. . ·· Piiot Aug 24, 31. Sep1 7, 14, •983 ponl0t1S ot Lot 1 deac:rlbed tn Parcel book t079 t, page 1 of Otllelal Re-p resen t it to l he personal rep-WtiEREAS, the Oranoe County ;, t .Ir
port Beach, Ca Pac1f1c View loVU\g father of F reden ck <4738-83 1 above. o..ionaled aa P-14 u ap-coros, 1n the of11ce ot tile counly resent.alive appoin ted by the Board 01 Education I• the owner ot By "re;'~~ ;i:' ·
M ortuary directors R Cross of Turlock . Ca. and 1111101IC """TICE porten11n1 to Parcel• 1 and 2 above recorder ot Orange C~n1y (sucti cour l within four months Ollf'laln 11181 ptopeny located In t~ ,...por1 hac:ll, CA. 92MO
NASLI of Susan Dunn also o( l'"UU'-nv described. plan being heialnettar relered lo •• r h d ff. l :ac a~"" City 01 Tuelln. Stele of Cal110tnl1, Publl•he<l 01anoe Coa.I Delly Piiot .. vou ARE IN DEFAULT UNOEA A "Tile Condominium Plan") ano IJ rom l e ate 0 Ir.I ..-u ·-~ and 24 ..
V IRG INIA L . NASH . rest Turlock , Ca., 2 bro thers Ed· FICTITIOUI BUtlNHS DEED OF TRUST OATEO SEPTEM· dellned tn lhal certain Oectaratlon ol of letters as p rovided in Sec-WHEREAS. Mid reel ptopeny II Aug 23· 2 · 30· 1983· •939·83
dent of Newport Be:u:h, Ca. w ard of Heme t, Ca. and NAME STATEMENT BER 20. 1982 UNLESS YOU TAl(E covenants, condition• and raetrlc-Uon 700 of the Probate Code notandwlllnotbeneed9d10<d&P•r· 1------------
1~
H arold o r C.Oloma Mich -The lollowtng person " doing ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR 110115 ot Newport Crest Homeowna1• f Cal'f 'a The time for men• purpo-by lhe Board: PUBllC NOTICE for many years Passed h •td • d I busmess as. PROPERTY. IT MAY BE SOLD AT A Assoclalion recorded In book 0 I omi . . NOW. THEREFORE, BE IT RE· 1---....;...;;.,;... ______ _
awa on T hursday. August 1gan, 9 grandc '· ren, an TECl1-TRON ASSOCIATES. 151 PUBLIC SALE IF YOU NEED AN 10348. page 893 ot olllclal record• filing claims w ill n ot expire SOLVEDll\alltieBoarddoeshereby flCTITIOUS 8USINE8S
25 1~83 in Royal Oak Mich-ttreat-grandch1ld. He a Kalmus Drlve·Bldg M·I. Costa EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE end amended 10 0ec1ar11lon ol Re-prior to four m onths from th e ill\nounce 111 1n1ent1on to Mii Mid NAME STATEMEWT
• S d b • h m e mbe r o f the Wood Mesa, CA 92626 OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST Slrlctlona recorded October 20, d ot.e of the h earing noticed reel property and notlol 11 further The 1011owlng pe<llOll ts dolrlo 1gan urv1ve Y er ,.. __ . Cl b f Santa Ana Rodger H Abercrombie, 13892 La YOU, 'l'OU SHOULD CONTACT A 1972 tn book 103•8. page 461 ol gl""1 that tn betlall ot the Orange bu11ness aa d a u g h l e r J e a n 1 e ..... .-vers u 0 ' Jolla Plaza. Garden Grove, CA. LAWYER 2 184 Canyon Or.. •0. o "tclal Record• and Amendment re· a bove. County Boetd 01 Education, at the ALPHATRONtlC, 402.11 Westerly
C h amberlaln of Roval Oak I and the Foresters IO F , and 92644 Coeta Meea. CA cordlld July 10, 1973 tn bOOk 10793, YO U MAY EXAMINE the Orange County Oepartm•nl ot Pt, Newwt Beech. CA 92~ • ' , th e Carerreee Rovers Court This bus1nest Is conduc;led by en "(II a street 1<1dr11$11 or common page 518 ot Olllclat Recotd• ot Or· hie kepl b y the cour t H you Education, 200 Kllmu• Drive. COit• Norman Wyman, 414 AlllO Ave
I # 887 San Gabrie l Ca ind1vlduat designation ol property la lh01im enge County ("the ODClarallOn") . ted th est.ate MllM. c.lll0<nta on September 2t, Newport Beech. CA 92623 o-~~.' ill be -ted' on R~ge• H Aoercromble above, no warranty ta gl""1as10 Ila PARCEL 2 An undlvld80 111401h are mteres m e h • 1983 •I Ille hOuf ot 9.00 1.m In Thia buSlness 11 condUCllCS by en
Tuesday, August 30. 1983 al County Cieri! ol Orange County on t>enellcWY under Mid Deed ol as defined tn the o.ciar11lon ol ec.·utor or administrator, or Intendant or Ille AUl9181'11 Super-N0<man Wyman r °" , • ..,..... I w rect This statement was med wllh the complet-or c:om 1C1nese)" The Interest In end 10 the common ., .. you may serve upon l e ex-Room A· 1010. 1"-County Super· nOlvldual
7 :30PM a l the P ierce Aug 12 1983 Tru•t. by reason ot • l>rHCh or a.-Amendment 1rieta10. being 101 1 of u pon the a ttorney for the e x-tntendenl, Admlnlstrellve SefVICe8 Thi• s1a1-• was fllec:I with tl'tfl
HARBOR LAWN-MT. OUYE Brot hers Bell Broadway Pubtlsh•A Orange C·oa·F222*f.11 Dell• 11autl In the obllglllona MCUrld tract No 79S2, u per map recorded to admi·ni·strato~ and wilt open alt bid• tor purdlaNF~ County Clerk or Orange County on Mor1uary • Cemetery , '"""' ~ , hefaby, heretofore executed end tn bool< 302 pegee 7 thfough 9 In· ecu r or · • r ca1110t oral bid• on Mid mallet ..... ug g 1993
Crematory C h.apel F\J.neral services on Piiot Aug 23 30. Sept 6 13. 1993 dellvered 10 the undflt9loned • wrtt· cius1va 01 Mlsceuaneou• Mapa. tn h ie with the court with proof acceptance ol a bid. or 1ejeetlof\ of F222Sn
1625 Gisler Ave Wednesday, Augus t 3 1 4730-83 11n Dedarallon of Default and 0.. the ofllce or the Coonty Recordet 01 of service 8 written request all bid•. ehalt b8 made by lhe eo.t'd Pub11at'l80 Orenge Co&11 08Jly
Costa Mesa I 983 al l OOPM also al 11'\end tor Sale. and WY11tan notice ol 01anga County ta\. ng th~t you desire special at It• regularly acMdoled mwttng on P1101 Aug 23 30. Sept 6. 13. 19113
B th. Bell B d PtmllC NOTICE O<Neh 8l'ld ol elac:llon to cauM Ille EXCEPT THEREFROM lhll por-S 1 . Septambet 29. 1983, Of at ill\Y 80· '724-83 540-5554 Pierce ro ers l"Oa. • un0er.ione0 10 Mii Mid property 10 non ot tend included within Paroet 1 notice of the Cihng o f an in-journed ~ of Mid m..tlng 1------------
way C hapel. lntennent will FICTITIOUS eus tNISI N ll•ly Nkl obllgatlon•. and there-u shown on a m1p rec0<d80 in bOOlt ventory and appra1sem en l o f wllhln ttle Um• permlned by law PUBllC NOTICE
PIERCE BROTHERS
BELL BROA.OWAY
MORTUARY
1 10 Broadway
Cosla Mesa
642-9150
BAL Tl BERGERON
SMITH I TUTHILL
WESTCLIFF CHAPEL
427 E. 171h St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery Mortuary
Chai>41l-Crematory
3500 Pacthc View Drive
Newport Bea ch
6-44-2700
McCORMICK MORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyon Ad
1.a9una Beach Ca 92651
494-94 t5 .,
\...
foUow al Roee Hills M em-NAME STA~MENT attar Ille Uf'dertlOnad ceuMCI aeJd 45. page 26 ol P•roel maps In the estate u.set.s or o( the pell· Said ptoperty tnten<led 10 ba llOld 11 1---....;...;;.;;..;..,_ _____ _
nal P k Whittier Ca The toltowtng per,on 11 d0tng notlc41 of breectt and ol eleell<HI lo ofllOe ot the Coun1y Recorder ol Or-• · ed • pare.I of ~eloped ltnd con-'1CTTTIOUI WMNEH 0 . ar • ' b 1 s be racorded May 19, 1983 u tnalr ange county. Cetlt0<nt1 lions o r att'OUnts mention talnlng approxl.mately 5.967 ea• MAflllt: STAT£111EN'T
Pierce Brothers Bell Broad -u~~~A~ LAO'I', 16040 Harbor No 113-2127115 ot Olllelal Records In PARCEL 3 Eactullve euemenl m Sectton 1200 and 1200 5 of net. 1oc:a1.o on Bell A...,_ and te n1e iottowtng perM>n 11 doing
way Mo rtuary directors. Blvd , Suite N. Fountain Valley CA the otlloe ot lhe Aecofdet ol Orange appurtenant to MIO Unll 39, all " t he Cahfomia Probate Code . ldentttled u Pare.I 2, In the City ol bullnen u
642-9150 92708 County, more speclttcally dein&O In 111• Con· C ad 0 0 Tr e l b e w ay Tuttln, Oounty of O<anoe. Stal• ot TE.ARI s GALLEY. 4SOO Campu•
Joyce E Plllman. 193S Tan111 Or . Sald aele wlll bemade,bulWlttloul dom1n1um Plan end Oectaratton • 'California. ta tnown on a map llled Dove Stt •3•11 Newporl Betictl. 1------------Costa Mesa, CA g26i6 covenant or warranty, ••press °' Im· PARCEL 4 A non-exclualve ..... McGlnn & Ser e na In 8ootl 52, Page J9 ol Pare.I Mapa CA 926ll0 POOLIC NOTICE This bullneas 11 conducted by •n plied, regarding title posanalon, or ment 10 use lh• common area end 4~10 So. Admlrally W y. In lhll omc. ol Ille Coonty Aecx>tder Tarrt H Ann Salinger. 1 t2'" Sap·
FICTITIOUS llUBINES& 1nd1vldua1 encumt>r-lnQ99, to pay the 1eemlnlng tacillllH of 1ne project Whlcil have Salle 110 Marina del Rey, ot Mid Coonty.I pllne, BalbO• 111and CA 92662 Joyce E Pittman l>flncipal tum o! 11141 note(•) eecured Ileen or wtll be devel<>Ped on 11141 ' The property I• being sold tubjlet Tllll bullness ,, conduc:l9d by an NAME 8TAT£MEHT This statement was llled wllh the by aeJd deed ol Tru•I. wtlh lnler-esl following oescrlbed ru l property CA. 90%9! to all covenante, rlghtt, tlghl-ol-way lndivldu•l
The lollowing persons are dol~1Counly Clark ol Or11noe County on u tn 1ald note provld4KI, advances. 11 Lots 1 10 4 1notu1lve ol tract No P ubllshed Orange Coast and -™1111• ol 1ecord T&<iasa A. Selinger bu~~~~ a~ POINT l"fTERtOAS Aug 12 1983 any, under the term• ol Mid Deed ol 7817, as per map recorde<l In bOOk Daily Pilot Aug. 23, 24 , 30, Said property will be eold 11 the Thll a1a1amen1 was 11180 w111l the
2515 Anoover Pi Coste Mesa. CA· F222'7U lfu1t. •-· cilarges, and axpen-ol 308. peges33 ano 34 ol Ml•· 1983 4877 -83 minimum accept ala CHh price County Clerk 01 Orange Counly on
92626 Publlsned Orange Coast Dally the Truetee and ollhe tru•la CfMted cellanaous Maps.recordt of Orange · $2,274,322.0!i Aug 12 1983
5 Pilot Aug 23 30, Sepl 6, 13, 1993 by aatd Deed ol Tni11. County Catttornla 11i1m•ic """TICE All tum• ara dOe 11 clOM OI F222all Diane Marie Fr1eoer$dort, 25l6 4809·83 Sald Nie wit be held on: Friday. Tile $1reel 1ddrHs or other r VV'-nv eecrow. Piibllsl\ed Oranoe Coast Dally
Andover Pl . Costa Mesa, CA 92J62a Sept 23, 1983, 111 2:00 p,m. at the comon deStgne11on ol the real prop· FICTITIOUt IUSINEIS The Boatd w111 P•Y a c:ommtlllon Pilot Auo 23, 30. SeQI 6, 13, 1943 Dori• I her~• Flerile<, 2953 av Ch•pman Ave entrance 10 11141 CMc ertv lla•einaoove described 1s NAME STATEMENT 10 1 lloenMd reel Mlata bf()l(et In the 4731-83 IR0Teno15Cbous511aneMsseu15. ,c0And9u2c~:! by a l POOLIC NOTICE Center BulldlllQ. 300 Ellll Chapman purported 10 be 18 Goodwill Coor I. Tne tollowlnn ,...,sons 811 dO!nn amount ol 41h% ol lhe llnal porch~ -------------.,.. Ave . Orange, CA Newport Beacl\. Calllornla • "" • price, The n~ ot the I~ ·-
lllm,180 partnllfsh1p FICTITIOUS BUSINES9 Al lhll time ol the Initial publl· Tile undersigned l\ereby dltclalml b11s1nesa ea Ml&la brotcar 8/'ld the amount ar"1 P'\llllC NOTlC(
Orane Marte Frieoersoorl NAME 8TAT1EMENT callOn ol lhla nollol, the lolal all liablhly tor any lncorreclneu In BUILDING MAINTENANCE SEA· 1118 ol the commlulon to b8 paid
I This st8tement >Has hle<l w1111 ine The 1011ow1ng person I• doing tlmOUlll 01 the unpaid balance ol t"9 said street aodress or other com-VICE, 31S7 Birch SI. Sulle 120, shalt b8 •lated on the bid ptopoul llOTICI ~ TRUSTEE"S &Ali County C1e1k ot Orange County on business as obltoatlon aecored by Ille above de-mon deslj1nauon Newport Beaoll, CA 92660 In Ille .,..,,1 ol a sale on an oral bid Loen No 3 12578-8
Aug 10 1983 TRAVEL NETWORK OF LAGUNA ecrlbed oeed ol trUa I ano esllmlled Sa•d sate will l>4f maO. Wtlho\ll Mlrk Robin Edellell 1278 Glen-the c:ommtaalon lhall b8 ti...s uPof1 T.S No-0-0290' F~l HILLS 25'01 Allc1a Perkw•y COiii, ••pen-. and advancee 19 wt rrenty, eKpreu or imphecl. regud-ne<ye. "198, Laguna Be&Ctl. CA the purctlaM Pf'loe but the b<oa• UNIT CODE 0 Publ1sneo Orange Coast Dally Laguna Hlllt. CA 92653 $33 13s 91 1 tllle poueu •on or ancum· g285 t tUbmltllng the lllghMt Wl'lllan bid T D SERVICE CO...PANV
P1lo1 Aug 23 30, Sept 6 13, 1983 Ronald F Raridon. 24041 Calle The total lndebtecsr-being an ~anus ' 10 Nltsty the' principal b•I· Mail!. R EOalletl thllll receive ~ of IN com· u dUly llOC)Olnle<I T~ .. ut'6er ltre •808-113 Estllo, Mtuion V1111o CA 92891 "tlmata on """!ch the opening bid 19 ance 01 lhe Note 0< 01,,., obl19&t1on Th11 slltement was llted W11h the mllMon on Ille hlghM1 wrtttan bid lollowincl OIKribad deed of I"""
.-------------Tnls butlnns 11 conductao by an compute<! may be obtained by call· MC\J•e<l oy said Deed ol Trull, whll County C>er~ ol Orange Collnty on and the~ ol the commlMlon WILL Sl:Ll AT PUBLIC AUCTK>tl PtlJl.IC NOTICE tndlvlduel Ing (714) 9J7-0968 the d•Y ~oce interest and 011\ef' suml 89 p1ov1ded Aug •2. 19113 F'2ZZM2 on the PIJ'~ p<ICll 1111811 b8 paid CTOSTHH .EN0H1I00~~TE t!~~g~ ------------Ronald F Rttldon the Nie tl>etetn plus adv•noM II any uno., 10 UM b<Olcet procuring the aC1ual A "' This statement was !lied wllh the Dated August 22 1983 Ille terms tnereol and lnlMMl on Publislled Orange COH I Oalty porcn-••c.c>I that no com· CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIF\EO IN FICTITIOUS SUSIN£8S NAME STAn MENT
Tile lollow1ng person is doing
buS•~AS ECM TYPING SERVICE. 2701 S
F111v1ew "O 8, Santa Ana, CA
92704
County Clerk of Oranoe County on CRESS ESCROW CORPORATION such aOvancel, and plul laet. Piiot Aug 23. 30. Sep1. II, '!·1~~~ mlu lon allall ba palO ti th• CIVIL CODE SECTION 3824h (pay--
Aug 12 1983 u Mid Trust• charges end expen1H ol th• l>'l'c:na-11 not r~tlCS by • a ble •1 tile time ol ule In lllwM
F222957 By T 0 SERVICE COMPANY Trustee and of the 11u111 eteal.O by ICE brok• m<>n9'Y °' tf>ll United Stalea) .. rtgtti. Published Orange Cout Oalty Ao-nt said Deed 01 Trull The total amount P\Bt.IC NOT · •. Lawy«• Tiiie of "'-POf1 Beecll 11118 and lnleret\ ~ to and
P1lo1 Aug 24, 31, Sept 7, 1' 1ge3 By· Cont J Capiu 01 said ob•IO•llOn. tncludlng reason· wlll ect u MCfO'W ollloer. and the now held by n under uld Deed ot
47'J-93 As111tan1 Secretory ably"1tmaled lees cllaron and eM· NOTICE OF DEATH escrow coet 1111811 be bome by Iha Truat In Iha P'°'*'Y herelt\8"" a.-
OM City Blvd , Wett. penses ol IM! Trutlee. al Ille lime ol MARY JANE M U R P H purdlaMr A pottcyof lllle lnauranoe llOllbed.
Or1ng1. CA 92668 1n111a1 pubt1Ca11on ol thl• Notice. la AND OF PETITION TO AD will b8 Pf'ovlded by the &o.td Tha ~~~~o: N~::: A NADLER.
------------------------------------, (7 14) 935·828.'l SJ• 757 65 TE NO eeo1ow 911811 b8 opened within tan Publl•hed O.ange Coast Diiiy D~led. August 2!>, 1993 MINIST E R EST A d•Y8 Aller ac:ceplaooe by Ille &o.rd BENEFICIARY· SEAFIRST COR· ~---------------------------------~~~Aug.R~l-~1~1983. ~M~T~EHC~ITl~~R·A·llHZl ~lhe~Mbld. ~AAT~N.S~FIRST MORTGA~
..----------•9_2_8-_83_ v1CE 89 Tru111111 To alJ heirs, beneficiaries 5. Alt bid•. whether written or oral, ~F CALi::,o~~•A,~IS~t=c:'
U se Answer /It/ se rvice
when placi ng your ad ... a
D a ily Pilot ad number will
appear in your classified ad
. we take your m essages
24 hours a day ... you call
in at your c onve ni en ce
during office hours and g et
the r esponses to your ad ...
th is service i s only $5 .00
week. For more informa-
t ion and to place your ad
ca II 642-5678.
Daily Pilat
phone 642-5678
MLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINEH NAME s r&nlftNT
The lollowtng person Is doing
business H SWANSON-BERG PRINTIG, 124
Broadway Costo Meta. CA 92627 Beryl Eugene Maloney, J 1411 Yet·
lowetone Ortve, Costa Mesa. CA
2626 Th11 bustnus is conducted by an
lndlvtdual
Beryl Euge!WI M aJoney This stalen>enl wu flied with the
County Clerk ol Orange County on
By o J Moroe• d d · .na11 b8 ec:oompanlecl by • oenlfled OYetn • IS al) 0 J Moroer 11, Presideni er e u ors a n con ting en Of cunter'• ctl9CI< In the amount of 28709 In 8(1()1( 14302 ~ 178 ol 20~ Nonh Broad~ay, Sull• 2oe. creditors o f MARY JA S50,000 made payable 10 the order Olllc:itlll R«:ords In the~ 01.::
Senta An•. Ce 927De MURPHY and persons wh ot the Board. The depoalt of the euc-::':;' 0: ~91:. the ~ng
PublisheO Or•no• Coa1t Delly m ay be othe rwise in teres oeeal\ll bidder wlll b8 retained by the ---~ Piiot Aug 30 Seot 6, t3, 1983. . Boerd and applied lo lhe purch-Pf ....... '" · 4943.93 m the w ill a nd/or estate: ptlce 111 ottlerS wtll b9 retUTned. Lot 12 of Tract No. 11858, aa per
A petition has been fil 11 E..c:row 111\all b9 oompleled no map recotded In bootl 257. Pagel
by CASSIE M URPHY in th tata't than t1111y (SOI d8Y8 trom lhe ~~· 38 ... a~~~ ~i::·=-ty ,.._ f "-d•I• aecrow I• operi.d F~e 10 ..,ape, '" 1 ... .,.,_ "' FICTITlOUt IWSINl.St Su pen or ......,un. o v ian g comp1111a MC<ow within 11141 llO-day Aecoro« of aa1c1 County
NAME ITAftMl!NT County r equesting tha llrM llmlt wtll b8 cauN 10 tort.ii 10 EXCEPT THEREFROM all oM. gaa
The totlowino ~eon• are doing C ASSIE M URPHY be a the Boerd the cnedl dep0alt9d with m1,_.ie and othet h~ bustnets u the bid ••cepe 1,,.1 alth« party may below 1 dep1ti ofSOO feel. without lhe SOLAR POWER COMPANY 1133 pointed as pe~nal represen withdraw trom •7 Wrnten bid• for tight of eur1-entry, .. ~ Ill
Dover DI Newport Beacl'I. CA t.ative to administer the esta the purohaM pr1oe ot Mid Pf'operfy lnttrumenl• of recotd,
92663 of MARY JANE MURPH a.11811b8 reoeiv.d 11 the at>ove lldo EXCEPT THEREFllOM all weter
Mt.IC NOTICE
G J.,..nuesCon11ruc;llOn t5Tll d Ind d Ad d '"'Iha SupetYilendent or hit andau~•llerrigtlta,below• F223730 Ri.;~.-;;. coe11 Ma .. : CA (un e r the epen en t ,.... ,..;:. on °' b.lore 111e urn. Mt depth of 500 ... ,. wttl\OUI the right Of
Publ•she<I Orar1oe Coasl Dally 92627 rrumstrah on of Est.ates Act) :::Copening of Mid bid• aurl-enlry, aa dedicated or ,....
Auo 25, 1911J
Piiot Aug 30, Sept 6. IJ. 20. 1993 Robert Jahn Ll<l-IQ, 1578 River· The pell lion is set for he.arin 9 Al the ume NI tor IN opening Mt"9d 1n 1n11rumantt of ,,_d.
•954·83 tide Pl. Coal• Mesa, CA 921127 In Dept No 3 a t 700 Civi of bid .. Iha Meled bkl• thall b8 '(OU ARE IN DEFAULT UNOEA ,.
------------Tnts bullness It con<IUCle<I by a Dr W San Ana opened eJ1amlned and declared by 0£ED OF TRUST DATED t1ftlllll1 l'tml.IC NOTICE general partnent11p Center • est, ta the suP.,.,,1enaent °' ltie .Ulltl81'11 UNLESS YOU TAl(E ACTION TO ___ ..;....;..;....;.;...;...--"-----Greg JacQu91 Con1truc11on CA 92701 on Sepl 14, 1983 a Super1ntand91"11 of Admlnl1trallve PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT
FICTITIOUS 8U81N£.88 Presr<lenl 9·30 A M SerVIOM The Supertnlendanl or the MAY BE SOLO Al A PUBLIC SAL£.
NAME STAn MENT Thie stalemenl .... llled Wllh ,,,. 1F YOU OBJEJCT tD th Aitlat81'1i Sup«lnlandenl of Admln-IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION Of bu~~~o~~w1no person Is dolr!Q County Cletll ol 0.1nge County on or antmg of the ""lilion. yo IOfst~~~.SeMcaa lhall 11>411"1 cell lor ;NHJ ~~ rou~~O~~~ Aug 11, 1983 o r-., .,... Jl CUSTOM WOODWORK 6 OE· ,22291 should either appear a l th " UpOO ltle call tor oral bidding. CONTACT A LAWYER .
StON I t3"'t 29th SI.. Newpo•I Published Ofange Coast Oetty h earing an d state you o bjee-any' reapontlble .,..._ otter• to t535t M~tpelllet Avenue. IMM. BeJaoc:11h,R~Aym9;,~new"". 113•.., 29th Pilot •ug 23 · 30· Seo• 6· 13· 19113 uons or file w ritten obW.-purcll-the propet1y upon the Calltomta ~ t!~..,.of ~ ~ -, 4720-83 . r---lem>• and condition• JPeC!f\ed IOf •common .._,.a'""' ,....._., "' St. Newport Beach, OA 926112 t1on.s with the court befor price (anet deducting any com· .,_ above. no WllfTW!ty la gi...,,
Thll bu1tnen 11 conducted by •n ----PUBl.--IC_NO_TI_C_E ____ the hearing Your appear-mlHk>n 10 be paid) t •CMdlng the u to .!ll ~ ~
lndMdu11. ___ ...:....;:~.;.;...;..;..;....;...;..;.. ___ anre may be in person or by hlOhMI wrtllen bid (alter deducting ;:l·-~1 ...., ,~oh brNCri
Jon R Lewt'y FICTITIOUS ......... S any commlNlon to l>e paldl by at "' · vr Thia s1atamen1 Wat llled ""llh Iha ME tT nM.m you r a ttorney leall 5% lhen Ille Ofal bid wllk!h fl or de!ault In lha obllgatlona aec:ure<i ~~~·r~ Ci;<8\ ol Orange County on The 10~:.ing pe~aon• 118 doing tF YOU ARE A C REDI· Ille ~h9.1 1111111 be tentaUvflly 1e-:i':..:!Y.:o ~r:1::.8.io8:!,~ ~
l'm.IM bu11nass.. TOR or 11 contingent credlto oeg1 eel 11'1 tan O.Cl1tallon of Default and 0.
Publl1he<I Ortnge COH I Dally SWEDISH MARINE, INC 2703 W of th e d e«'a.sed, you must nJ ' ~ Hie ":!~ ~1141con.'!,':ilcabl& mend tor Sale, and wrttlen notice 01
Piiot Aug 2•. 31, S.pe 7, 14, 1983. P11ellk: Coast Hwy, N-port Betcll, your claim w ith the court o a~t1!':8oi 'S.cuona 393e0 tllfu breactl and of aleclton to c.-ttllt 4735-8.l CA 92683 . h 1 pr Ion coo underllQMd 10 ..,1 Mid P'0911"Y r0 Per LJungt>ergh 2•7 Mornl!lO C•· p rnent 11 lo l e persona rep· 39392 of the Educat •· 11 ry Mid obl!Qellont end ,~
nyon Rd C0<on°a det M11, CA resentat1ve a ppointed b y lh •0;1
11 no wnll:'t!:d~:-.:*.=l :~ the 1HK'81t~ied ;;.,_, e.id PUBllC NOTICE g2625 :ourt within four m onl 1~111:,:::1hemlnlmut'llaooec>-nottoa of brMClfl and of eiectlon to
FICTITIOU• •Ut lNEH Al =·c1~:e:o-palllr•. N--(rum the date of firtl issu :':b'.: C:Hll pt1Ce Mt lorth abOft. be r~~ M:r ~ ~
NA• ITAT'l•NT por1Benat JOhan1son, 19251 Sl8'ra f letters as provided in Sec-The Seem~ ol_,!,hl~~~ 1~: ~ =. A9cotder of anin:
The loltowlflg '*'°" Is Oolng Capli, Irvin•, CA 92715 Uon 700 of the P robate Cod 1'4ntby aulhOf 11 .... ting tr. Seid s. w411 1>9 mede. t>trt
buslneH.. s fhll ~tlnelS 11 cOndUC:lllCI by • f c.autom la . The time ror ~~~~tonln~pYb lhout oo¥8n8fl1 °' ""'"*''Y· .... LINING GREETINGS, 432 c0tf)Of8ll0t1 i , .....,._ th °'Implied,~ tttte ~ Hatbor '11. Sant• Ana. CA. 92704 Per Wungl>efgh filing claims w 11 no t exp llG pleoee In the County 001 teaa an °' enci.nbr-. lo ~
N•nGY Ann Gervall. 432 S Harbol" Thia 11a1emar11 .., .. med w1111 tlwt prior to four month9 from th llltMn ( ~ d;~• otbt~~i:o• rttNtnino ~ aum °' tlli
1111 Sant• Ana, CA 02704 County Clet1t 01 Of8/'I08 County on ale of the hNJ'ing n oticed •l'Orllm«lt ............ 1 •NotlOe of Int~ •> aeo.rrr9d b)' ..., 6eed Of Tlllt butlness le conducted by tn Aug 12. 1083 bo 8l'ld by puim-...:.'!.! onoe 8 rvet whfl In--.. lfl NNS NMf 1no1v1ou11 n:nsu Vie uon to W 1 .... ._. Pfopert)' ~ ~ If Ufldfr
Nancy A OetValt Publltrwtd O.ange Coeat Dally YOU MAY EXAMfNE th _. for ttw-. ,...., ~or• tile temwiotMld o.9d of~ . .._
Thia 1111emen1 wt a lli.d with lht PllOl Aug 24, 31.Seol 7, 1', 1"3 file ke pt by the court. If you openinQof~r::=ofgtn-ge1andu;perwoltheT,;,... C~n11~ ~:'~ ol Orenoe C0untv on 414 t-93 lnteres~ In th e esi.te. :'~o='. SIGNED ,.Jo Al'· of Ille 1l\llta C>rMled by Mia
Ju Y ' nllGif7't you may sel"\le upon the ex-PROVED nous 25th day of AUQUtl. of Trua1. 5.-o .... •be helO
D IC( d l"3 : T~.81C>'9fllber 13, tMS,at Publltlle<I Oranoe Cout etty P\8.IC NOT tor or • miniStrator, or · IFOANIA oo pm at Ille ~ A--...
P11o1 Aug 2J. JO. Ste>•. 8, t!·e~~~ FlCTITIOUt .,....... upon the t1tlom('y ro r the ex-~~~~~RANOE · rr...C1eto ttKt CMc c.n. ~
NA• BTATl•NT tor o r administrator, a nd 1. Roberl ~. &ecr-tlttY of • aoo E.Mt CMpinen A ... • Qt.
The IOllOwl"O '*"°"' are OOlf\O (Ile With the rou.n w ith proof ttKt Orange County Boerd of E~ t :;.: lllM Of IM lnlltal pubf-
•m1 IC NOTlC£ t>ullnna .. f l rttt ,....,ucst llon,=°"1l'Y that Iha at>OW , ___ ...;.r.=VIJ\.;;;.;,..;.;.;;_______ NEWPORT BAl.LeT A.CAOEMY. 0 .erv ce, a w e n • -.. end Aelolutlon -du'Y "' !Na lllotloa, tM total
,ICTITIOUS IUtlNHI 505 SI And-8 Ad • NtrW-porl ii.ting lhal you detlre ape.cl&! tnd ~ by Mid lk>lfd I of .,.,. llll'C)lld bellrnOa of::
NAM• ITATIMINT Be.Oh, CA 92863 no tice of the filing of an In -•l • reQUllf rn.tlrio theftlOf held on ~~mi:.::=--~
The fot1owlng perton I• dOlog Ttity S•ndau. •2& Rlveratde ventory and ttpp railement of the U lll Clay of AuQue!, 19'$, = ~ and adY~ •
bu11nn1 ea Avt . Ntwpotl Beacih. CA 9aoe3 Cllt.ale &SSeLI or of th e pt'll· pa...cl bV • m.iorltY ¥Ota of oee 50 KATHLEEN H.A-RAINGTON. 1J57 Lynde f.ltal. 171Sa Mornlngllde C>r , Board. · bellll ; N Pl•C*'111a "102. Fulltflon. CA t.egun• o.acn. CA 11288t tlor\ll or account.a m~ntlonC'd IN WITNESS WHf!AEOf'. I llaYW f ha '°'at =·ad~
92831 f hla buttneea 11 onnduc1ed t>r •In Section 1200 and 1200.6 ot l\ereUnto eet my flaod tnCI 8Ml th11 llma.~:;" 11e':. ~ Pl~o·~~11~! ~ 10~~·}~11\;.r1~~~7 c~ ~:~ &::0"::"1P the CaJUomle Probat~ Code. ~~:~~~~~8~~.o ltlO 4tll) :'a!M,. tNI c1ey
0263 t Tht• •lltarn.n1 waa nte0 with ,,,. OARY O. FIDLER County tuoenntenctent 01 tllt IM.
flll• butlneH II conducl9d by lfl County Olerll OI Orange Courtly Of!\ zsoo Veatu• 81\'d., S•lte Sotloll lnci s.ctelaty Diiie: ""°T'~ '~·(~~E cowAH!r
lndlYIOIJ•I Aug 12.1983 HO ~E~COMI Ody Pllol • ....,~ ~::~la~•=.!' .. lllld wttn ma Pubtlehad °'llll04' c:o..':1': Weocllud Hlll1, CA. t lSH Z )(I ...,1. t; ts. tM3. 1y NIM ,
C0un1y Cltlrk ot Otange Coonty on Piiot Alolll 2•, 31, a.pt 7. 1', IMS Ctll) ttl·l90l ...St~ lteO ~c:::·a
Aug 9, 1t83 4731-13 Publiahed Ors.n,. Cout Wehll Cr.-CA. .....Sf . "--~t ,,,_.. Dally Pilot Aul 29, 30, ~pt. Th• l••t••I draw In lht ' ' 41.....,...so
Publl•hlCS Otlll\04I ~ .,...yl 8 Ell Idle llt tna wllh • !983 W•ll .a Dally Piiot tllleMd 0nnge eo.t ~ PI04 ~------------------------------~~~A~n·~~~~ ~~~A~ • 4~9·~ ~~~~Ma A~n ~~~tM3 4™~
~
...
. -. -------· ------------
Nil.IC NOTICE
., ......
NOTICE Of' TftUITH 't I AU
No. f·1•"
YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNDER A OEEO OF TRUST OA TEO NOVEM-
BER 16. 1981 UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR
PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLO AT A
PUBLIC SALE IF YOU NEED AN
EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE
OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST
YOU. YOU SHOULD CONTACT A
LAWYER On SEPTEMBER 13 1983 al 9 00
MLIC NOTICE Pllll.IC NOTICE
,. M. LUCINDA t< TAYLOR db• DUD•ic NOTICE
BENEFACT u duly appointed ------------~---r-~-------i Trullee unoer and purauan1 10 Deed n11n1 IC NOTICE FICTTTIOUI aualNHI
of Trust recorded NOVEMBER 20, r ~ NAME I TATU•NT
11181 Aa lnSlr No 23216 boolt FlCllTIOUI aUllNESa Tho tollowlng pereon la doing
14297. page 384 of Olflclal Ra-NAME 8TATEMENT b1.11lne1t IS'
cords, execoled by PETER J Th41 tOllOw1nQ '*'°" Is doing (A) SMOKE OUT SEMINARS. !Bl McANENA ANO LENORE M IOu9'neas as SMOKE OUT SEMINARS. (CJ
McANENA as trualof1t ) tn Ille oltlce CAI LAGUNATIC CREATIONS (Bl SMOKE OUT SEMINARS. 810 New-
ol the Counly Recoro. ol ORANGE LAGUNA TICS. 31241 Monterey ~rt Cenle< Drive, Suite 1530, New-
County. Stale of Calllornla, Wil l IS1reet. South [sgune. CA 92677 ~rt Buch. CA. 92660
3Ell AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO Geye Honeycull, 31241 Monterey Clerk W. Ha~. 1106 GOidenrod
HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH (PI Y· lsi Soulh Laguna, CA 92877 !Ave., Corona det Mer, CA 92825
8ble al lime of Hie In law!VI money Thts buslneas 11 conducled by an This business la conducted by· en 6f tlla United S1a1es1 a1 FRONT EN· ~r>dtvldual lndlvtduel.
mANCE TO BENEFACT Al 22691 Gaye Honeycu11 Cieri\ W HIYM
LAMBERT ST STE 520 EL TORO. Thll statement wit llled with the T'11a 1t11ament WH flied wllh the
CALI FORNI-' all rlghl. · tltlo. and Counl'( Clerk ot ore"9fl County on Counl'( Clerk of Orange Coun1y on
Jnle<81t con~ 10 811' now held AUQ 24 1983 Aug 26, 1983 by 11 unde< aald Deed cl Trust In the f 223121 ~
property 11i1ualed In .. ld0~oun1~ ·~ Published Orange Coaal Dally Published Orar>ge Cout Deity
Stale dete;rlbed SllPE\, ••~P RE Pllol Aug 30. Sepl 8. 13, 20. 1983 Pllol Aug 30. Sept 6. 13. 20, IH3. TRACT 7466. A n """ • 4956-83 4960-83 CORDED IN BOOK 288. PAGES 27 1 'tO 30 INCLUSIVE OF MIS· -----------CELLANEOUS MAPS, IN THE OF-MllC NOTICE ---... -... -,C-NO_TI_C_E __ _
i:ICE OF THE COUNTY RECORDER ---..;..;~;.;....-...---------'"-~--------OF SAID COUNT'!' 1'1Cm tOUI au..-.. flCTITIOUI auatH«H
The 11ree1 addreH and othet MAMIE aTATI~ NAMll ITATIMINT eommon <Jet!Qnallon. n any, ol 11141 The fOllOwlng '*'°"' are doing The lollowlng Pflf'90'll era doing
rMI ptope<ly d.-cribed abO,,.. la bl.lalneu n : buslnes• 81. purporlld lo be 14492 LARCH AV-ST CLAIR ANO COMPANY. 429 NAGEL . AND NELSON AS·
£NUE. IRVINE. CALIFORNIA 92714 e.lvue Ln , BalbOI, CA 92861 SOCIATES 1300 Adema *29E,
The un0eu19ned T1u11ee die· S1 Ctalr Ventur:92~"'; . 429 Belvue Cotti M •. CA 92826 ' c:talml any lllbl~ty for 111y lnCOf'rect· Ln 8alt>oe. CA ,. Jamea H Naoel. 1300 Ad1m1. neet of lhe ttrMI lddr-end other Thia bu"""9 It oonducled by 1 1 2llE COtll M .... CA 92826 ~ dellQnallon," any, Mown corporation Sll~ley w Nef90n, 1300 Ad1m1, ~n. Jt11lc1 SI Clal r. Sec· •2llE Co.llMeta CA 92828
Said MltWI" bl medt. but wlthOU1 111ary1T111111.1re< Thli bUllnes• l•'conducted by: 1 ~venant or w1rrenty. expr-or Im· Thi• 11e1ement waa filed with the ~rel partnerlhlp ~led. regarding mle, polMMIOn, or County Clet1I of Or1nge Counly on Jama H Nagel ~mbr-. 10 P•Y the remaining Aug 26. 1983 _ Thll 11819men1 w11 llled wl1h the "4,lnCIP91 1111m ot Ille no11(1) eecured .. ._, -C Cletk t Or•..,.. County on ~ Mid Oe.d Oi Trutt. wl1h lnt-t PubllllMMI Orange Cou1 Deity O\lr>ly o -..,-:i)weon. u pr~ In 984<1 noltCll. PllOt AUQ 30, s.c>t 6, 13, 20, 1983 Aug 25. t91!3 1"2n114
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug. 30, 1983 CS
To l'lltt Yow Ad. Cal Ctatral IOOZ ... .,. far bl• ltun ftt la.le
642• 56 78 ;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil=Gntt=aJ....._ __ 1 .... to.....,l ltatral
IHMI fer lale ltut1 hr laJ. ................................ ~~-1
REAL CSUTC
, • .-nvt•I
""""""" llJll• 0.1"°" IAW\d 8.tlbl;;w. l'f'nln.Ulil
t"a~t1 .. n11 Ar• h Wrun.~I M.i c.. .. M ... °"""' ""'"' £1 Ton> Poun1a1n Vali.>
HunW'\fUlf\ S... h
Hw"· Horbuur lrv1M
lAIC"n.-h
1..o,..n. Hollo
~,..N,,...I
Lakf' '°'"* M-Vwp
Nt,.pun e....h
S..n C"lt'tnitnu-S.n Ju.an C•P4•"•nu
S-nta AJ\M s...J a. .. h
S.JUlh '-""'' .. Su-• Do> .. h
l'Uo"n W ... UnlNWr M00.1"11.-
Arry~
"i-1t1,..nt.a e. .. h l'~ny a.. .. -Proply l't<mtlf'r~ Lou
('umrl'\I i'M pirtly
l'..lf.dfifl1llUUJ"J\a
l.Ju'-'t~-.~ Uru'4
UOUllll"8 \.0 bl-MV\."1
Jnt.un. Pt•Ji>l"ft)
lnchMtrt•I .,_R)JI\\
&...tl.11 fur S.h Moou lion ... l'•rlu
M°'ml.ilf\ JJ,.own 0r .. ntev C<•
Ou1of t'.uUM'1
Ou1 u' Su.t.,. ~ni. he. f'arm• II-rt Pn>ptny
"""'Shorint Rlt~ Rlt Won<H
RENTALS
lt·~~rn~ HuU_.... Unfum .. hfd
tt~•wn~htd tff
Unf~ t.~rurn \..,. ..... ,Uni
Town~ lum Town~\!nl
0..pln" rum Uuvi.•-. Unt 1\...., 1nwnl.o f'Um..i.....J
Ap.,\lt'WnU Unf
Apw furn ur UnJ -Koc....&lltlolnl
tlOl#b M.,...la c;_, llomt< s......,,,_ R...nlAh
v-uan~ .. i.
' 1\#nlAb lo Shorr
•R.-n .. b Wan....i c.,.,... '"' 1\#n• OftlCf> Rmu.lo a....,,.. 11.-nlAlo
Qwnml "-"'h
Indus• R...nlAlo S111<...-
M1• ~It.ab
ANHOl.lfCEME"TS
f\n~-..n\A
1..ao< a. Pwnd
p~,_la
P.-~l 91trvw.....
S. ,.....,i. 4o lnolN<...,.,
T.-.w-t
BUSlfUS &
FINANCIAL __ , .... s.i,.
• &.inem ()ppunun1°""
&&M,... W•nW'd
• lnvt'9ltTW'nl Oppwtun•U.. '""°"Lmrttt Wan~ •MO<Wy<o .......,,
•MunJy Wenwid
Mutte•,.... TD•
EMPlOYMEHT
U·lp W•ntN
J1.n. w .. "'"'
Al91ALS
KRCHAfC>ISC
Arn.qurs , Avtl'••,.._.,..
""'"""" llldll Moll'r,.lt Can...-..~ r'4"'-' I Computm f,....._ Vl You
f"urnatuA' G.rMC«' S.~
Uuru,..Mld c~ .. '.h.
J .. witlty
MM'hUWt)
M1•-.lbn.ou.t
M•• Wan\HI M~•ll,..~...,
Ofh-....-f\lm1wn-6t
l'.qu1pm"11 p,.,,.. a. Or1•no
W'~ ... c'S.!'...,
BOATS
tu.r\#r' Rrn1 .. """'•' p.,,..,
S.11
SP""' S~• M•nnr [qv•Jf
M•int i.f' "..,. s11,,." ~·u s .......
Suppt!M. INll'ut uon
S.1lt.....rd•
TWtSl'OR TA TION
Aim•U
&)" ....
wmpt'n
Mawr S..k"
'MnU>f'l'Y"i.,.1S.v00in
Mu&i'f Honwa
RV'•
Tr..11*"" T1av .. I Tr••""" llol11v
AUTOMOTIVE
Aulu l.rM6n,;i
"uW &4-rv111'" t'•rw Ao-'• WAnhd
Sp wta ft..-., Huch
• w~'"' r,..'"'~ nu.tu
AlJTOS M'OIUED
lttul1
l\U!tllf\
lltl C..ta ••ta llM l!WJll! lw•
Nice 381.w huge fenc.d
.... A Fiil llLEOTIU -
yard $99,000 Huge Neat. clean 2 Br + d.n M u R c H I N s 0 N
.,THTIAIU 28r atarler hm $79,900
3Br 1'Aba hm S97.000 LIH ISLE \:! 3Br 1ter1er hm $110.000
1006 3Br 2ba home S124,900 Open 1-5 124 Via Lido Nord 100T 3Br 2be home $132.500 ll
Mme, qule1 at Incl RV ENTERPRISES 752-8731 &CGell S 145,000. Chuck
Spll19t. 831-1266 HW YlEWUt 101• 3Br 2ba pool S 135,950 Bayfront 11.ngle 1tory 3 Br 2 Ba. beam eel nga, ::~ 3Br 3 palloa S139.000 spacious t.eruce, pier & slip $1.250,000 Brighi 2Br. 2S. eotnef unit
on top llOOf Luxury em•
menltlM, O'*'* aniclout.
BYCO 645·2251
'°" •Br 3ba home $148.900
::: CONDOS $79,900 & UP &yf ront 6 bl.I 7 y, bdrm, Villa on w ide lot,
HMo loalll•er lltty. pool. spa. dock,, ror 120· yacht $4,850,000 haer W/flHaot 12,.. :~! oP!i~~~~!~M Ope.n 1-5. 101 Via Lido Soud Beaut. 4Br 2be, living rm.
10.a ---------•I den & playrm Corner lot.
•ltATILIP* Lrg 3 Br 2'h Ba BEAUTI.
$50,000 below mkl et
$249,900 w/lerme Cell
PATRICK TENORE
760-8702. 631-1268 Agt
::: _ Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large rec. nn.. E'alde nr 17th Lota of
1e»' Sl,000 beam ceil.lngs, furnished, pauos. $420,000. redwOOd decking & hol
ioe7 p ID y SELLER lub Too many extras to := A I UYlllE PUCE llYFllOIT merillon $225,000. Ctatltry Lt11 Super sharp Condo with 642-7577 :~ huge living area with cozy Spectacular bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br,
10t1• kitchen over looking 2 ba dn . 2 boat spaces. Reduced -$1,!>00,000. C~1 1221
10M patio 3 huge Bdrms, 2·~ := beins. large garage wlln I0911 laundry area Only
1100 $129,950 Also 2 Bdrms.
112) 2'h bllhS. $125.950
: :~ Seller wlll pay $5,000 of
i» buyer cos1s or reduce
122) Pflce C all to see me 546-2313 127!
l:IOC 1$l.
ll)( tJ7!
1401 142)
t4)(!
THE REAL
ESTATERS
·~· Ill OUYll
PEii.SiU MOllE OCWFllOO
Ocean & jelly views. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3
bath, 3700 sq ft. Xtra parking. $1,385,000
FllllllllS UICI HILLTOP
New 4 br. 4 'l'I ba, custom French Nonnandy
Estate 1.2 prime acre hilltop. Now $995,000.
COlllUDO CHS UYFIDIT
Coronado Island cust. bayCront lot. 85' boat
deck . Plans avail. Now $370,000 w/trade.
lllllOWMUI NOME
.C Plaza condo 2Br l'A
ba. pool, spa Own for
cost of renu S tOK or leu
dn By ownr $86,900,
556-1626 or 775·2560
YA Tlllll
LOWIOWI
Great family home featur-
ing 4 Bdrms plus family
room. 2 llreplaoes. l11ge
yard with beautiful spa
and decking OWNER
NEEDS FAST SALE.
MAKE OFFER. Asking
$137,900. Call 5'40·1151.
for 7 lot 18l. IPeol
C&B. Blue Spruce No. 2,
section Harbor Reel
Memorial Parll 1500
OBO (805) 964·7581
Ceaatrcial
'"re'tr 1291
Great commercial lo·
cation. Balboa Pen at tile
fun zone (207 Palm)
Good lncom&-prloe r•
duced to $'4 00K.
673-2943
1,Z~ TIWllO•E "' Near new 4 bdrm. 4 bath, lake view. 3500 sq. :: Tttally ll•••4tlt4 ft. $440,000 Will trade for a local property.
I* 3 Bdrms. 3 baths. pool and
• -HERITAGE c .... 111aJ .. , ifls
IOWVlrwtn . REALTORS
1eoo spa Elegant. $350.000 OOW FllOIT llOIME lllTS 10
" ~rlc~S~~.~~ctng. Full Prime 2 Be, 2 Ba & 2 Be. l Ba. Duplex on xlnt lmat 1044
Brighi 28', 2Sa corner unit
on tcx> floor Luxury am·
menlllet. owner an•lou•.
BYCO 645-2251
tli.10 swimming beach good income. $725,000. GREENTREE
i~oc *Cote Realty Best view, tallest ocean front bldg tri-plex Fantastic family home. 4 hpl1.1n,Vait1 l
GIANT DU LEX: 7 bdrma,
6 garages. Npt Hghl&.
$2801( or 7975-01•2
t~. & lnv~stmt'nl 1 with apedoua 4 Br. 2 Ba. each level $1,200,000. Bdrm. 2'A be. Brookfield •M Model Excellent locallon ~~ 1M-1IOO • near school, park and
2,2, pool. -'11 for onl y BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR lac••• Pr9 l l)JO s 155,000 Ntwport ocean front
1rt-plex, prime locatlon.
673-7873
34 1 !\oy \•tl" Dr•v1 N II b 7S blb l ~" uoo
)700 2800 2900 2to1
2904
~
IT PHCILI
Triplex w/2 Bdr 1'n units.I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Income $18,600 pr yr. Ltt1 f 11 Salt 14 Loan paymeote S 17 .'400 IEW UUIA IPU
Pf yr Price S 18 I ,000. Immaculate 2-aty with 3
631·7370 Bdrms 2 Ba on each
Cerea1 •el Mar 1022 sale or 1r:ae. Of ~
value, IOI at Lake Eliz.a..
belh, $3200. 99().51154
ett 5. -2907
29()8 -'1912 '1914
1918 '.lllll
WlO
2922
TR,\DI T 10\AI.
RL\LTY
?tm-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia
3902 3004
)()12
)()14
:!016 3011
•Ull
•01• •Ota IOll
40Z2
4111•
4®6
.0./.1
111)10
0011 e<lll
0014
~··· 6019 8(122
&/2)
8100 .,,,
it\~h ~Real Es1ote
HAllOll VIEW
MOIES
he popular "Carmel"
model Three bedrooms.
Spacious patio. Luxur·
lent garden Property In
lop condition You own
lhe land S268,SOO
131-1300
LOWDOWN
FIXER!!
II you're handy. you can
save! S1ep up en1ry to a
hardwood floor 3 Bdrm.
1'(, ball'I home Co:ry
kllctlen and eat1n9 area over loolls "Huge' pool.
E•cellent lln&nclng Price
drily 1114.900 Call to see
546-23t3
TKE REAL
ESTATERS
m: PllllE \'tlW
em .l&llllE CIEH :;r. A rare unobstructed ooean
V\8W In gate guarded
si.29 Jaamlne Creell Highly
8228 upgraded and beeutlfully
~ decorated 5 Plan with 3
sZJ2 bdrms .. 211\ baths. tamlly
7010
7011
101'
7014 701•
701t
7070
1022
102•
10le
7011
rm . large vie'* aide
aundeck end PRIVATE
ape Otfer9d at $475.000
17141 673°4400
floor Ou1atandlng Invest·
ment wtth great potenllel
tor appreciation. Full
prlceS455.000 751-3191
Harbor View duplex.
Owner. $385,000 Best
buy In Cdm. 846-0096
llYHTlll'I
Condo-will le•••
b1Ck ·1bt ·brlght·lrg -~--
patio-orig price
lalMl lalaa• l on Ruby st. s;;u,uuu;
decorated 3 Bt 2 Ba.
upper duplex S 1200/mo
~ ulll Winter eppt 760.0375 1un1v Pk Terrace 3 Br
Dover model, 2 Be, xlnt
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;.1 IOUI I .IE1T'Y VIEW location walking dis· 200 blk. 40' lot, 3br +den,, tence 10 ~mm. pool Fee
•
3ba. yard. compl. refurb. alnd $139,500. Jean
On Opal St. super winter
rental 3 Br 2 Be,
$1000/mo + utH. Lora
Vance Rttr 873-4C>e2 $539,000 217 Jasmine. Leten 752-1414
Owner/agt 673·5551 WATERFRT. Dock Capt
Cod 4Br 2b Kit. bltlnt,
W/D, 2 car gar 11100
673-7713 or 859-7173
TAIHYH t'A"l. w aaa· ltac• I 04
loan on thlt terrific 3 bdrm, ~ ~:toi;r:·do:!•
2'A bllh prlvlle end unit. Frpl, ikyllle, Jacuu1:
••• EL ... E LllE In xlnt tocatlon neat So.I brick & tile deck and lalMI • coaat Plaza With p I -• 1117 Turtlerock. 2 Bdrm 2 Ba. tubatantlel down. pymta drive. $208.000. A•· ta ala.I
Den, Townhome. de· ere only $790/mo PITI' aumable loan 499•1604 Large 2 Br furnltQ.
llghllul ape, brick patios, 759·1501 or 752-7373 IBUILOYOUR HOME on a washer/dryer No pets
views S239.000 spectacular OCEAN 500 W Oceanfront u~H?Ut t1~ts WALKER&LEE :1~~T10~ ~~~~a!:;. •r,: ::~j~d:ya7/~~ir&
Realtor•. 875· Real P.f:Catlt to Mon (714) 499-3070 or eve1/w'lnd1
VICllT-PRICED
UIDER IARIET!
ExclusJve prosperous area
where each home rellect1
pride of ownership 4
bdrm. 2•,., bath. huge
mule• 11.1lle, formal din·
Ing, and separate family
room wllh welber & flr•-
p I a ca. A 11ea1 at
$1119.0001 &48-7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
YIEWOF
HY I PACIFIC!
Glorious view extends
peat Calellna Island Thia
lu11urlou1 4 Bdrm tlome
Includes separate quar·
ters for maid or mom.
Soller asslatance ottered
In financing. You must
aeethlt for
150.000. &48-7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
l u e I 0 T h u r I ~---., ........ -., ........, .... ,;-;;,::;i;
··--··-(213i799·1159 L., ... '£' ~. OPEN SUNDAY 370 Furnlttled 2 2ba. o;;,
--Mountain 2 Br Wood N 1 g u • 1 S h o r • • C.1la lltaa 1024 shingle. apolleas hOUM lownhom•. 111curlty •-bl k gated comm oc•a11 S10,000 .... I ~~=~~·1vo".00o' oc view Club hOuM, pool,
New911, 497-54 11 tennl1 & beectl prtv. no 2 Br 1'.-\ Ba. spa, ctoMd pe11 $1,000mo Call
garage, short Hcrow. l!!f!rl ltac• I 498-7448
Only $99.500. Agenl * lar Frt1t Ota4t *G =-.,,...ec1...,.1""'c,...om-m--=4-=&--:~.,...,--=-.ty ~5·9 161. VIE~l VIEWI VIEWI lurn. beech, t•nnl•.
1101,0001111 Tll•I Sec. Bid . 2 Br 2 Ba. sauna. nr tehOola. 8 mo
3 bdrm, 1'A ba, t>eautlfully Poot, t>oet sllp avail. or more Sl400 &e 1-n12
upgraded: giant yard. By Owne<: 875-&637 l~rt leac•
Open house Sun. 2005 •B,\YSHORES• $1i50/mo.Yer)'iaroe28f.
Arnold. Owner, 645-3'440 PRISTINE 3Bdrm 3B8, 2\4 Be. Newport CrMt
.110 000 J 11121& $'475,000 fee. 2561 Circle Condo, compttly rurn. 2
l' Dr. Onan Sal/Sun 12·8 car gar.,,.. w/d .......,
2223AVALON. (805) .. 6.82-5541, (714) ape. ten~.-·eou,u ;:.;;t
Broker640-90l9 646-3325 ... Cml for eppt.
PHLHME Ovlet locatlon 3 BR 2 Be,
fireplace, RV accen .
$ H8.000 financing by
ow,,.,
l•r •oOartll• IHr.
Ul-7121
Ill OUYI• IT IWIEI TSL lc9t U2-11H
1 1% nxed rete 30 years.
No loan feet. no closlng
COlll. Monaco with GC
vi-. 14 Rut Vlllars
Open wllndt 1·5.
640-1538
IAllHllME
LIDO ISLE 4 BA. 3'A Ba.
Sep1. thru June S,200/
mo No pets. 875-7687
Beech H ... 38', 28a.. dbl
gar. gu BBO, winier,
St100 mo. 650-1225
---------Lowest priced Lautremont LMISU
.. 11.. •• I I • lw 4 Br 2 Ba. attached gar •Br. 3 Ba. -I H _. l!Oi1120 tot. RV prkng, Ocean & city llghl vlewt.
2 Br 2 Ba. trplc, garage,
Winter $1000. 875-2105
11-X. Fii UT! ao YR e1c. S98,soo &48·8386. 0tvo~~-·;~~ 1S~~:ooo. Lido l•le bayfr0ttt: 3 br. 2
be winter rental, gw1Qt
$2000/mo 87S-4&48 No loan fees, no close CHARMING 2Br. 18•1-Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii cMt Cape Cod reno-house. Coate Men.fl v111ed, shore mooring 183,000 Terms S.48-6880 llHI llU Oc =-:e-a-n.,.fr_on_I -:2:--:Bt:---:1:--:BL,.-
4Br·1 hae to So. INCREDIBLE Below Mk1 Spectacular view of N-· Bay1ronl Agl 640-1538 B port Harbor & the blue RmUT terms & low dwn on 2 r, Pacific from Dana Point Hoeg Hoapltal & beach Bungalow. 319 Coral, 2Ba quallty twnhae 10 Palos Ver .. --4 bed
patio, qarlQt. no fMll,
utile paid, av.it till JuM
'8'4. $625/mo. 831-Met.
11()10
111)1~
ll010
1"1" 1 9«)f) t1m
9040
QO<)
81~
lil07 lifflV
•112 •1u ti 17
Balboa. Submit offer $129,900 ..... • wllhlnwalklngdlllanoe.3 7, •• 754_1008 wkdya. Golden Prop. 752•1589 rooms. 4 ba1h1, 3 'N8t
Bdrm. 2'.\ Ba end uni! bars, 3 flraplac.s. 3 car
OCEANFRONT 5 Br 3 Ba.
DupleJI, yr1y $1875/mo Of
winter S 14SO/mo Xlnt loc
Wkdya 213/28$-2281 cono lor protesaionel at trtaa ••I Mar I 022 Nloe 3Br w/huge fncd yd garsg• Elloellenl flnanc·
Hosg Community pool •n•Et s•-EI $ 9 9 . o o o H u g e Ing avallab ... $1,050,000.
fUll olf large llYMY patio ---M u R c H I N s 0 N LIM IUL n ~sonebly priced for PUll&lllO HI YI ENTERPRISES 752-8731 l'U lHO OCEAN FRONT WINTER
RENTALS • FURNISHED.
3 bd, $900: 4 bd. $ 1000.
650-7368
quick sale Dorothy Hard· lrom 1hl1 beautllul single NO QUALIFYING •
castle lor 1ppolntm.n1. 1 story 4 Br, 3 Ba formal low down. 3 bdrm + fem· I~~~~~~~~~~ GE 159.9100
----
dining rm home Se· Uy room. Near beach IEWHIT llT1 -v.,..111-1-B"'a""l-t>oe-...,Condo=---.'"'P=-r-=of
ctud9d pa1lo w/epar~llng .$980/mo Agt 873-8550 Lo·-'" r-ocl-'-' 3 Br 2 dee compl IUrn. 2Br 2ti., pool & prof landscaped ""'' .... "'""' 1 , .. _ dlnl f yerd 3 private beeches & Ba w/loada of charm end r "'"'• ng rm. Ml rm.
hool d AMT9Ta•ttll R/llH a gr t II Io c a II on poollec>a 8Mut w · ocn, close to K • an -•••-" Am-lt'•t Include """'· bay 111e1. Le••• she>pping $649,000 Incl warm and appeeuno 2 -· "' ,,....... S1'"""1 1 997 3000 land. Donna Godshall Bdrm h---. 1re1hly• dee-epa, Malibu lights and """" mo • • 200 ""~ wetber Thia home 11 a e11t 191 dy. Of' ev/wtmd• &44·6 orateCS and lmpecably muit aeel. Full prlc.• 1-771-0426.
groomed. Open b•tm S 2 000 ... 1310 .,----------oelllngs throughout See 25 • · ..., l · ...... hfvahW
It and you'll want II. ltatral IJll llMW
C."nrt1i1n
ll.tu.un
f),1.1.•w-•·•n .-~'-'"
• tllt
~ ~~cnab -Irvin~
$147,500. Call Dorothy *·----...... TR\DITIO\,\l.
J ··~ lfon<M
l•UtU
Jaauat J,......n
Umtlt)fah1n1
1..a ........
Lcllw
Matd• M--.u
.. ...-.. .. N
Mll••llW>l MO ()pool
Pwt4"r• .........,, ,.._ ...
IWMufl
R.olllo"")'C'P ,.,_
"""" 8vbofv
;m lftOAIYtl BurtOl'I ror appointment. -·I"""'-
l 1H SU4,ooo MUST IE SOLD ••2-1200 .,... .. ,.. ....
Anaheim 2br, 2tie $5~
B Pllk 2br, yd. pete 1475
Cypr. 2bf'. gar. petl 1426
F.V11y 2br. g.,, yd '510
Fulrtn tbr.utllpd$370
Futnn 2br. patio l400
Rl .,\I T\ ::~ Large 2/story Versailles THIS WEEll om Model with add'I bonu•
01~ room & bath. Views of ::~ oeean & qlty light• from UIMI llME A PETE
BARRE Tr
tUI Ihle CO<,_ end unit Thie '"" .......
tto dramatic lloor plan h.. N-Cuetom Home • -T &IUlll
t 10 every amenity for pr-Reducetroml l .800,000 ---------•I Wr-
.. REALTY
tm t"'IOl.la IMng. 1017 .... 000 Lrg ctupi.x. 2br. 2b9. •I 9141 "' .... · l•undry hook up, both
m1 1'4·IOl0 111-Jff 1 Want Ad Help'1 unite. Uvt1 In OM..i_!Wlltha :m1---------842.&678 Olhef.8yOWMf~74,to0
fl&T liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii --=======:.!------...,-~--~--~--------------) 8Y 826-0247 dyt 694a24'42 :m 1'1111 IMMID'T '::~~.~· S~ ~4') ~-/.I, £.trs· ::: ... ) "",.. uu ... -----·-............. ...
G.G. 2br,gtir. pet1'41&
H.Bch 2br,gar, p«t 1415
St111112br, wl~. 14to
$.A. Hurry, 3bf. S350
SUCll 1OMI5br, tlSOO
Wettnnttr 2bf, gw, taOO 1oo·e nowl nt-MH ...
.,..,_,If any. under the termt of 4115l.a3 PubllllM<I O.ano-Coal Delly
$9ld o-l of Trull . '-· otlargee Pllol Aug 30, Set>I 8, 13. 20, 1983 Toy.,.. •1 ..
and t•I*'-Oi the Trutl" and of PUBLIC NOTICE •1159-83 n.umpli m1 lllffl YllW
'11' MT llD Tl lllL
111e tr11111 c1 .. 11d 0y 181d Deed of ___ ..;..:=;;..;...=;..;.;..;.;;...___ vr.111.ow.,.n :m •llT SILL 11 G A Y c A s
Truwt, •or tM tm<>unl r...on•bly-FICTTTIOUI aultHI•• ~-----------VollM I I I It I .\lm•ted to bl' H 7.220 99 NAm ITATlflllJfT Plllt.IC NOTIC( M•• t m Now (•duced to only
The beMflctar; ll'lder Mid 0-" TM fooo-lnQ person• .,.. dOlng ~-----------i S2:l9,.600, thlt "" 3 bed bf TNl1 ...., .. 04ore executed Md cs.. bull,_. .. ,ICTITIOUI au..... AUTOS. DOMESTIC 2·~ b• la In "~n T H A 8 c I
11¥tred to the \lftOeftigned I wrlnen JO MAR INTERIORS. 808 VII LldO NA• 8TATl.•fln AMl •• cond" Sl*)!Out 2·ttOtY I I I r I 'Oeclat1ti0n ol Ot4...il and Demand Nord ~1 e..ero CA 92663 lne IOllowlnQ perton 11 doing 8uo<11 QOl with many upgredea . . . _ . I 'tor Sall. and 1 wrtnen NOiie. 04 0.-John Mllflln zin.,.,:.Y.,. 608 v11 butlnett u . C~li.r :~ Walk by 324 Otero & can
,fJ.IUl1 •nd Election 10 s.11 TM under· LldO Nord, lffwpor1 Belch. CA PAYNE SMALL APPLl-'NCE flE· ~1 m • to ... Seti« 11 lleiclble & l T U G I * 01u111e11.a dlnttr •w111
)!Oneel cfll.IMCI Mid NOikle ol Otfllllll 92863 PAIR, 298 Broedwey, Coeta MM.a. ~ ' em Will nego1,.te. CALL I I' I' .-.· ••tt. 1h•• mtt1 111101 tunny .. flrldEleellOnlOSelltoMreeo<deelln Vtc1or1• JOMM ZlnllMyer, 608 A 112827 ,.....,, !?!', 831·t•OO . -. . . W1llr•11 'Wh•• dO yO.. ••
Jti. QC>Unty .,..,. IN rell prooeny le 'Via UdO HO<d. ~1 Stach. CA Mlk• M•rqu•1. 111511 P1cltla, !~~, bU ..-------... IMCI The Cflof • ~·PIO " •
loc;ated t2M3 ne,.,..m. CA 112804 ........,... IUfJUftl £ l V A C £ 1-
0ete Augu•I 12. l913 Thi• ~ II c;ondue1ed by • Tf'lll blteloeu le condvctld ey· •n =:i,.,. = YllW. -..... .......rl -;,..1--.1' ....... l........,lr-i . ,_ ....... '""'1 • _ ... l.UCINO,\ K TAYLOI\ db• llEN _,_., pannwlflle> al h tlll ,._ ,__... _ __._._..__ -·-'·'--"· ,-. :: ,'t;'-,.,.."' ,,.._..._,.. :.::.!._
fFACT .,....vi1on1 J ZIMtMytr Miil• MarqueJ =· ~ ........ ~ .... I ... J ~
~~~~N3:1!~l T:,Yl~:.: &20 County Clat\ of Orano-County on Int)' c~~ ot Oran0t COUlllY on HOMl' .... ""ii IQW,W ---" - . ~L TORO. CALIFORNIA 92830 uo :15• '983 nD72I Ilg. 12· 1• ,_ Malf• YOUf ~ .... "'"" 18fAT[ .. U\§19:;-i}N!*t ,,,,,., I I I I I I
..... Hit
VILU llLIOl
Profeatonal decorated. fumiahed &
unfumlahed unit.a are now beinc
offered for ale. Prices ranee from
i t49,000 to •2'7,000. 11 ln~.
pleue call 64~a64~9
JllL PllDPEITIEI
• Mid Trvat.-i fhll •latemen\ we• llleo with 11\t Thlt •llttMeflt *" fllecl wllh the ·1'1-o ...... ode -Wl\Tl.HI HONT ••llNI Nl.• ... nrp (l llfll IN r r r r r I
,, l4) uw7aa PubllllMMI O.enoe COett Diiiy Pllbl"'*I Or•noe COMI Oelly llr by uelng the o.My ,.. 111·1400
..... ublitlle<I Of~ Coe•I Dally Pltot Pl401 Aug 30 Sept 11 13, 20. 1983 llOt Aug 24, )1, hot 1, 14, 1"3 _j_~lot~c:IMelfted~~~~Ada.~==~~~~~~~~~1-..uMJTl!!!!!:!:!!~ ... ~!! .. ~·~~·~-!!!"'!! .... ~~-~!-!!t~"=======~=======::t. ,\ug 23, 30. Sepl f 1983 4983 13 4744·t3 -4935 Ill
'· -. . '
I
'i,
'
~ -. ------------------
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug 30, 1983
~"b ler 11111 llre111ar1 m~n
Fuaitare l11iai1laia1
$1.84 per day
Advertising ll~tes hildeu Co11tracton,
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:;:;;:;;iiiiiiiim1"R-e-,n·od-t1•1,-,--an-y-1n-.·e·s-t· General
mt!nl qlly 11n1>rOvt'ments 1·R·e-m·o·d•e·11.,R""e·p·a-1r·s-. _c_o_m_m_ Antique lurnlture restored.
G1rdtaia1 R1111ia1 Hooaellold Servicea Moving
L_a_w_n_1_o_a_1<1 .. en-,-n-a1_n_1 _r_e_sl-d. HAULING 5MAll JOBS SERVICES UNLIMITfO -.,-f-A_A .. V_l_N_G_C_' 0-l -, r_G_F_ i;;~~~-~~~~...-
comml ln<Jus Y<J ctn up Tra&h & Fu11111u1u Mukeling 1•11ands Dr s 5TU(>FN 1 s MOVINlo c;o
Secrttaual
Serv icu
lYPINC./BOOKKEEPfNG
Tlloit • All )OU",, '"'
lt) .1 .. 1 "''
l ow r&ias 846-4947 evs MA l l 6•S S089 aµµ\) church !:'It fl" Lie T ,,.4 43b 111su,.•O l1ehl0' tl11v1Jr dl.liv<' Ill 64 I 84:11
H d Hout Clt1ainJ uactM· 010111 woma11 WA 1 c,11 us l>HOW•
<..ons1ruc11on A Ua All 1ypes 01 Finishes your 1~•1fl•l'JP'zl\oa_.a.a!'ll"'!l!'P!~"!9'l-. ROBIN'S CLEANING own ca• 646 97J4
,,11,l.D.E. Const Co. A resrd uc·d bonded rree pick-up & det
111 s N1•t Ju5t 11 Name) 111:. For est 559·4139 64S-6434 alt 6 731-9173
\14 1111'• Ire-3}0735
I r..r 1nu111 '~"'' busrnel>~
111 <., PLASTfRINu lir ddy .... ~ 640 OH8o
lrtt "'' l>atc.hong•te•lu•t!~ fl!'~tuLCCIS b45 8~'511 Tree Service
" ' '" l.~ DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CabiHI Makinp Heparrl>1tRt1mo<1 11 Add ns Home or my Snop Steve NEED Hed i' CALL JEFF• SERVICE .i thoroughly Paintin
l·.-N·e·w-c·8-b-,n·e-ts ... -ca·b·1-n8-1 24 nr emergency service 494·8937 Free ESI Jack ot all 1r11des carpen-cte.m house 540 08s7 Landscaping i-----------Plumbing
recmg bars & lormtca Lie 334714 8SS·0860 C Do Rt at' try, patnllng gardening, ----------Fl•E PAIHIH 1;..;.;;.;;-.....,.~---~~-
REMOYE/PRUIE/lllUl
Freevst Aon64~·2'J7
u>u111er10µ~ 642 0881 FRAMING CONCRETE araae . or P 1 clean ups. elC No Job too Clflll HOUSEi HRDHIH by Rrcllard Sinor L•~ 24 hr ED• 141-1125
SPA INSTALLATION Springs-Hinges-Openers large or small 540-03S4 Rose Hsek1>9 973•0564 IHl•THHCf, 280644 14 yr~ ul 11uµµy WA 1 fR HEA TEA Spec.1at Typing Service
Car .. enlry MASONRY 675 8690 Repa11s Lowest rates! tucat cus1omu1~ Pout 11e11tt:•~•rurnate~ !. -L1c·d Tom S57 ·4480 All pheses ot conslt & re-Dt~t•..1aLlt/Th. ort&1~h Ll•DSClPllll l hunk you. 963 4 I 14 11' r e1rc els• 01sposats * Re"•odellrep.ior Unique & D G • pair Xtnt work. com· ••• 11 1 an<lscape remodellnu.
fYp1ng/Wo1d Processing
Ourc~ eciSy rev1S1ons
1111u~11t11 wo1k a specialty og roomanL Gardenint pe111l11e prices Jobs lge R rs Becl\y 84 •-226 cteuri up Spronkler QUALITY PAl•TERS or.i1ns t leareo lrom $5 &
20 yrs l 1t d bonded Messy dogs! Grooming TR-EES Or small 7S 1·0870 Jon EXP'O HOUSECLEANING sysltims. compuler or p 1 o 111p 1 n ea 1 p 1 0 $;.>'j a11y11m .. Repairs
neasonaole 651-1041
Window Cleanin1
001f NUW11 µ,1to11•brr Cll11St 9GJ 631 4 scht $ 10 any sz Teacher Home Repairs-Carpentry CALL MABEL rnanua• ressionals 6J6 7 t49 8S I 9&04M&M432·0~00
n.,µJ11 Aller.illOllS 21 yrs e•p 546·2848 Topped/removed Clean Cebiners-Elec-Plumblng 894· 1421 Or S36 8332 11 yr~ ., • .,.,,, .. 111..t•
WHITE WIZARD
WIN()(JW WASHING
rr1., only magrt rs &Sit FOR S&llDRl
Yo''' D;i1ly P1IOI
5t'• ••~P Ont!CICHy
A<'Vrt'C\ll11tall•t!
Uunrs Wtndo ... s c .. uinets Drywall up, new lawns 751-3476 Fencing DON 966-0149 HOUSECLEANING h<.ented insured Lloyd i.
l"dllt'I P11•11>'> I f'lll "S 3S -CLEAN UP ··ASTERS -GOOD REFS EXP 0 Lan<Jcsape
cus fOM EXTEAro ns Sm1111 & Son Ptuml111•11
INT En Reas rate~ f"1eeo PlurntJ1ny reµarrs & drains
es1 Steve 54 7 428 1 1.lttart!d L•c 64~·342b QUAii r ( 63 1·20:/t DRYWALL/ACOUSTICAL • "" ON( CALL DOES IT All 7 14/597 7622 ~r~ t1•P Jt!trY S46 44 13 Small iobs & Aepa11s All sizes Prof . reas Ask we hx 11. break 11. buy 11 Gladys S49 0759 collect Psycllolo9ical
Counseling
let lht' Sunshine In
SUNStUNE WINDOW INTERIOR EXT CRIOA Re1JJ1,,!,t11<1ll 1obs fences BUD SS2·9S82 about our 2S.000 lawn or haul tt S48·5009
st el•es 1 lll1t1ons Low special Call anyllme, '""i~ Stt'v•· 1 J t 83 11 Electrical 646-6684 (M1chae11
HOUSCCLEANING -oni, TlJes & rnuts open Renovatmg • notottlhng
REPAIRS * Pll•Tillll TAMMY 548.38 11 5pr 111lo.IPr!. <..lean uµ'
142-5671 HI. 322 Cow testy es11r11a1es
)ON 644 4 79H Aeof111ttJnsh1p rec.o\lery Ae-
v11•w RP11ew Aev11al1ze
n(ltal1urish1ps 640 6454
LL CANING 642· 1'54<;i
S ELECTRIClAN P11ced Clean Ups -landscaping
Carptl ervice rrgh1 tree estimate on Hauling . l ree Trim
Etc Gery 64S·5277 PTL 0d•U 642 48SJ it PAINltNG *
JOAN'S CLEANING Bull 549-S26S E<terror lntert(JI
State Law
State taw requires that dll
contr3tlors who perform
weir k Ov1$1 $200 rnc.lud1119
1abo1 arid ma1erials mu$I
oe 11tensed un11censeo
COll!ldl.l(JrS should SCI
slate 1r1 !heir aover11s1nq
Contr11c.iors end con
:.umers conrac.t Mar,
Grond•e .it 5S8 4086 "'If
any riue~1ron~ Contrat
!cir s 5tdtE' Lrcense
Board 28 C•V•( Cente•
Plaza Room 690 Sau!a
Ana CA 92701
A11llalt
Driveway Pa1k111g Lot
nt!IJf\11 s 5ealcl)atlng
S&S Asµ1111631 4 t99Llc
•WE INST All CARPET large or small 101>s Lie Free estimates 642·9907 HaaliDI Cooking Errands & All Rei.roent C111nmf:r1ca1 --0Pu!"!-~M~P-J'!'!JOl"!B!"'ISP"!"&--1 Hshld Duties 540·1287 Masonrr_ rree est 53G 9801 Ruume Service For $ 1 7'-> sq yd Call 39662 I 673·03S9 Mtil ur Pt>I" ;,-; 1722 E~p Gardner . Ma1nt. UC 0 ELECTRICIAN cleanups, tree trim, Free SMALL MOVING JOBS Pacific Coast Cleaning ""B""R'"'ic""K""w~b~R~K--S!"m-,1l'l"'l -1o""!b-S 12 YRS EXP Nwµt ared
MIKE 646-1391 WE 00 IT RIGHT•' Newµort. Cosld Mt1~.r I'm srr111ll my p11te!> <1re Cus1om resumes/GO\/Pr
1e11e1s11ob sear1,h
11µs <..all L05 673 I 107
Ctmenl Concrelt Ouat11y work/Reas rates est Call Pete, 641-1096
Cemt>rll Mt1s1>nary Block TOM 631 '5072 Est Brochure 768-7694 Irvine Rel~ 67!:1 3 17'> ~mall' 650 6~ 77 Ro11 HAUL-MOVE-REMOVE Babysillinl
BAB~ ITTtNG
111 nrv hv111e near V1c1or1a
Cl•Sl(I ~tPS8 64?~82
W.ills Cust work Lrc llard11i•1 WHttd •Et~ctrrc1an New/Repair Mowtng, EdgTng Twice a Furnllure, Trash, Trees
963-54 lS NOAM
Oualrty 11ousec1eaning. Moving R I'
thnrough. re1tab1e Pal ABC MOVING Papering .;..,;,0_0_1_n,.1!!-"'!'"'-~~-J81057 Rot 673 8094
<..on~•t>IP ma~u11ry flat-
""'" lountJ .. 11on~ Btoci.. b11c.k Lie,, '>36 so 13
All iypes Low prltes lie month $20 to $25
Free es11ma1es 6~ t 234S 546_9707 l T HAULING • MOVING
Rental Clean Ups, Jon
645·81921731-2916
494·0280 Ou1c.k-Carelul Low rates l~F,..a .. rt'!"h_in_.g~1-n~te_r1_o_r "!!O!"e-s-1g_n_ HubP• Aool1ng.all tyµes
L 1c. T 138046 '>52·04 10 HANGING IS TAIPPING l i( Ni>: I ~~~ver·;:>:~-~~34 tCless1J1ed Alls ;ire 1ne
answer 10 " successful garage or yard sate• Its a
better way 10 tell more
peop1e1
•
Sell Idle rtems f>42·S678 Want Ads Call &42-5678
LIC 0 ELECTRICIAN JESSIE'S GARDENING
Top quality reas rates Comp! clean ups & gen 1
646· 7602 me1n1 Free est S40·803S Have something 10 sell?
Ctas~ohad ads <10 11 well
HOROSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA
Wednesday, August 31
~isor
·R ea lty
651·1177 ARIES (March 21 -Apa 11 19) Cht.'<'k directions, 1nstrucuons.
Som<."Olle might thank 1t hthmous to send you o n wild goose
chasl'. Be aware, alert and ask qut"St1ons. Mamtajn integrity ,
d on't L'omprom15<.' whl'rt• quality rs ('(lll<.'t'rned. Pisces plays lUO MICHEl l ON 0111111 lllVINIE sigmfkant role
TAURUS (Apnl iu M a) 20) M oney Leansacuon will be A/C luxury 3 Br 2 Ba
settled you are due t•J t·mt'P.1<' V1l'lor1ous. SpotHght o n debts, s7oo's gourmel kll plush r-. crpts lntd 4 k ids
payme n ts. culle<·uons<ind thl' 1111t1ation o f a pro fitable enterprise. gartshop at 539-6190
Y o u 'll have more rt'Spo11s1b1lrtv • .idd<'<l authority and c hance to BEST Ally tee
inc.Tea.st> rewards EAetutlve 2 story 4 Bdrm 2
GEMIN I (May 21 Ju1w 20). M aJOr projt..-ct will be ~~1~8~,~~~~;e~1~'! r~
completed. cycle ts high .rnd yuu are due for r ec.:ogmt1on above supern1 ce S39·6190
GEORGE S CLEAN UPS
& HAULING No jOb too
small 89S-6006
Spacious furn or unlurn
t800 SQ II cul-de-sac
home. close to beckbay
S 1200/mo E>42-3S72
Saa Clt•eale W6
2 Level 2br. 2ba, duplex.
trplc. encl gar., nr beech
& school, 1mmac . norlh
S C $600 mo. 831-6841
S11tla La1Ha -2216
Incredible Ocean View
2 br. 3 ba S Laguna
condo Frptc. 2 decks.
garage. pool 499-6009
~ar1MHh ftlr1l1 .. 1d
lalM•
PeaiaHla 2607 and IJc>yoncJ milial l'XfX''Wttons Y ou'll be rrd of a burden, you'll BEST Ally lee
h ave a w1dr r audience. you'll.,,., atlentton from the media Anes LAKES . ~pac1ous 1 Br end 2 br 1 ba. pool. nr Balboa "' Pier WINTER ONLY plays k ey rule. unit. frplc dining, 1'0 $450tmo 675· 1871
C ANCER J ? 1 J ) ''" ) • hi h d d deck, par1 furn S6SO/mo · _ _ ( UIW ~ • U ~ ~'l 1.lg I~ t rn e pen em."e, Call Martha. Barrell Ally OCEAN FAONT-Yrty 3 Br wiUangiw~ tu tread wh1•rc• 111lwn. h<tve taken alternate routes 642-5200 2 Ba Opl~ gar no pets
M eans !.>I• cJ1ret·1 aml d1splciy l'ourag<.• of mnv1l't1ons. C l andestine Woodbrrdge Estates "Lin-$1 200/mo 673-6640
m eeting prnves roman tit. eonstrut t1vt• and will help you get to cotn 3Br 2', ba, tam rm, Coala Mtaa 2624
h <'art o f m.-ttt<'f'> lndry rm. $lOOO/mo. Great tbr Iba. lrpl . O/W. 640-2021 Owner/egt LEO (J uly 2:i -Aug_ ~:.!I L1 •,m1 by lCachmg. agr ee to trg back yard. gar . $500
p;1rtrl·1µatc in ~l(.'tdl "l t1\'1Ly 111,1k1· n1"<.•essar y ('hanges and be-gm Lapna ltacla 2241 Agt 673-1282
r ebutlclmg progr<irn •in -;11hd h ,L-.. Wish l'Ol1WS trUl', rumanuc I er Cottege. lrplc lrg yd La .... leacla 2641
''fantasy" t11uld tl(• tr.11\.,.(111111•<tl 1 rt.•cility Cam.'t'r , Aquarius ~!'.1 ~:~~~~~9J.~~°cj~0 281 2Ba 81ue Lagoon
p('rsm\S µla~ 11npor t...-m t nolt·" Condo beauulully turn
C1ass1fled Ads ere the
answer 10 a successful
ga1age or yard selel It's a
better way to lell more
people I
'-Br w/gar. crpls water
pard 636-4120 1·5PM
2176 C Placenlla $460
2228 · c· Plecenlla $470
$350/$425 2Br (downl
Lge quiet ap1s
Cptsldrps. no pets 3 I I w Wiison 631-2177
3 Br totally remodeled,
brand new. 1 •~ Ba
townhouse opts D/W,
patios, kids OK. no pets.
Sep I occupancy
$695/mo For rental BP·
phcollon 64S-6646
$4 15 clean? Br nr Harbor
Shpg no ~ts 642-1603
Or 642-3 IS3
$4 l S/mo 2 Br t Ba tower
unn close to stores no
pets llr
22S7 Mapte
TSL llc•t 142· 1803
$49Slmo 2 Br 1 Ba pool.
laundry room close 10
shopping 149 E Bey SI
TSL 1111111. 142-1803
SS7Slmo 2 Br I 1 Be
Townhouse new carpet
new <Jrapes laundry
room enclosed garage
1923 Pomona
TSL Mgmt 642 t603 "IRGO r --~ 2 Br f'lse. 2 yrs old trplc Pvr b<:h tennis pool
y (Aug .!.l S.·pl .!:!I .. r.IV( mdll'att'u tn ronnC'<.'llOO <lblgar view Kati Rentals avail Sep! lhfu June $900 5 MllUTfS FROll
With hus1nr...S. l'<l.fl'('I 1'11plll.111l I 'fC•a.<wS, S()l•1al C:ICtlVltll'S 497-4801 mo 499 3266 OCEl•
C'll'll•lnatt· and \ 11u'll ltJVt• tl'11dt•m . u It y being ever y whe re at 3Br 2·.,Ba. new cpl. greal lt~rl leacla 2669 :i' Br Condo lrgtdeck
CJIH'\' Confuswncuuldp!Jy111a.Jorrult.•l11~·t•nario Know1t,str1ve view s $1350 mo •,iit6cK TOBEACH 2 er S6~04 ~~~84•36i
(qr grc•a tt'r sc•lf d tS(:tplim• 643"2289 yrly garage. !urn or un-
LIBRA (St•pt lJ·lA.·t 2'..!> Up<•n lrnl's of l 'Ommunication, do La1aa1 Billa !250 turn no pets 673-~o s~:~us~ B~re~;be~~
111111'(' 1C'adm1ot. att<.•nd 11'<.'tur,....,, add to knowledge r egarding Even a belier p11ce1 Right 2Br !Se, & •Br. 2Be. wrn-l/r carport balcony
international law". c ui>lums It tnJY l>t.> m'CCS...,,a,ry to begin again here 3 Br 2 Be r.-.01 nm 2 l er only S6SO & $850 2078 Thu11n
gar mod kif S67S 12131848 2232 TS II 9.12 1103 whe>re lung -range• pr<•Jt'l l '" t·o m·t•rned &orp1u, Leo persons S39-6190 BEST tee l &•I .. • ( I • Br 2 Ba ocean tronr upr igurl' prommf'nt ,. HOME FOR RENT dup•x turn1shed winter Collage 1)191! I Br ulll pd
SCOR P I O ({.Xt 2J Nov ~I) Mt·mber of oppostle !)t!)( IS LaguneHllls3Bdrm $775 S800mo 9112 nr 51st pV1patro&tndryim S450
111lt·rt><;lt'CI 1n \OU as md1v1du.1I .ind also as a "talent." C hance Fenced yard & garage 64S·2117 • S450 sec dep Refs K & 1 1 req d no pels 6A2·0350 t>XISts for travl'l. t·r1·at1 v1t\ .111tl 111t•rpa.<;tcod earnings. By d 1ggmg 861<13~ ISOOpeA!., w, ~00~ Aurecuvety turn 2 Br pvi ,..._ .-·· ~ Collage type 1 Br utrl pd dt'<.'", lx•111g '""rststent v1111 c·:ln -;tnkt• pay dtr1 ""'1:m1ru plays -dee"-11ps 10 bell winter ,.. ,..-L Jll 1 2252 650 7684 pvt PlhO Ind') rm gar unporL;.ml role a1aaa fH · S4S01mo $450 sec
SA G ITT ARIUS <N11v .!.! 1 )\'t. 21) Jltghlighl diplomacy Winter Beach Rentals ~lux I Br qulel, p\11 gar dep Aers req d no pets 6 10 months Unlurn and Property front bay blks 6•2 03'° yuu gl't \.\.hat you want 1f y11u t.lun't attempt to force issues Be comp1e1e1y rurn o A 10 bch S525 673-6336
grat·111us. understanding l"SfX'<'ti.llly rn t•onnt>et1on w i th possible Thompson Allr. 493·S8SS Extra lge 3 br, 2 ba Steps E:~~~=~ 2~~11 11~~n;d~~
farruly rt•un1on Locat*' "1rnport;1nl" papers. Taurus, L ibr a NewJOrtBffC~ -2269 10 1>each Ocean & bay pets $47S/mo 833-7890
pet sons play sigmfice1nt rol1-.; t<IBA 3•nBA. •X block view trom sundeck S6SO or 6•6-1947
CAPRICOR N ILX'<' '1.2 Jan U.IJ. A void self-deception , see lrom beach t tamlly ;;~~~r2o',9~ y;I~ wknds HSTSIDE
plar<'s an t.I peoplP rn rN1lr'>llC 1u~ht 1Auc ntrunp also cen ters odsn ~;'6~~~~~ 1J.~~o mo Ocntrnt 1~ lBr winter s600 $650/mo 2 Br 1 ·~ Be u£•m•ra• health. cart> of fX•t..<. ..int t•mp oymen t. isc.'t'S native a1 iBt 0 & bch lB TwnhSe yard/balcony " 4Br 2Be. Npl -His-. all n~ mo ay ' 1 U I a"ll1no Stt)ry bt•hind c;torv F.mphasis on sell -discovery and v-1 ~435 mo 650 2493 sm Pel ok carport n<Jry """ "' Fncd bltns, relrtg • 2 car Y' Y • _· __ rm all bll rns
evaluau un uf pussess11ms gar wtr/grdnr Incl Like new deluxe 3 Br 2536 Santa Ana f!we
AQ ARUS (Jan 20 ~c·h 1111 What begms as a mer (' $11SO Refs (2131 w/ger Face1 wa1er Avail TSLMGMT 64~·16-0J
f h r tatum l'oulc1 d1•vr·lop 111111 -.nm1•thmg ·•senous " Focus On 663•6374 Sepi to June From S900 E/srde duplell 2 Br I Ba 832-6000 mtens1h<'d rrlallon.;htp. rom.inC'C', r ~pons1b1lily, c hange a nd " Br 3ba Canel front gar yd wld hkup Cpl
d d d I I k I k Ocean t ''> blks Deck, OCEANFRONT Sharp 2 prel SS9S/mo 6S0 ·2077 (XlSSlblf' prur11olmn 01 t•r Ill 1v1 Uc1 I t•s your sty «-. m a es n o garage $ !300/mo. 237 BA S67S winter Ger1ge
<.t'<'rE>t of tl rind you 'll l.>l t•rn·ouragc'<I as r Psult Canal 67S-7450 No pets 673-7666 E·Slde iwnhse 2Br 1'>D11
PISCES (Ft>b I ~-Mat l'h 20) Know when to g el "o ffstage." BAYFRONT Mobile 3 Br. 2 w1n1er. 3 Br. view & deck ~~~~,~~a~~~.2~~0 pets
M ean.s don't uvt ·rst;1y w1·kom1-. rraliw when Leansaction has ba,bch,pool.spe $1000, West Nwpt. $825
tx-en !'ompleted f'o('UI> 11n -;. ... untv. propNty. saf ety m easure>s vrly 673-6022 673·0241 or631·4562 HHH YIST l lPTS and w1llini.:m">S to bn•ak from pasl and Lake steps towards BEAUTIFUL Saa Cle•eate 2176
greater in••"pendt>nct• frl't't'l om l N~~; cra~Tr~ONs~e 2 Br duple ... close to bell &
$48S t Br 1 Ba Apt
$585-$595 2 Br 2 Ba
Townhou&e FrplC sky·
lights p1110 all Dullt-:ns
366 Avocado
TSL Mgml 642·94 12
-. ' ' I ~een view Aeni or lte t o w n S S 0 0 I m o e ..... Uafu11iabd Hoau1 U11fua11lae4 I Ho111t1 Uafuaaslatd . option Agt 6•6-0686 492·6810
lieneral 2202 I Co1t1 Mua 2224 Coat• Men 2224 Charming Eastbtutt home. Ararl•eab, Oaf.
2 Br ocaa1•tron1 ,. qaraq"
$8S01mo yr:y
S11•111tr I Wi nter .... ,.,,
JACOIS REAL TY
PROP MllfAHMHT
114/175-1173
• Br 1 H;; 0111 bllln range
>\ 1""' '•1 ·Pn bP..im cerl '"'l 'J Hd ca1 OK S62S ~501) dPI A11a11 <;epl I t<i~jl A M"yPr '>49 1464
Eastsrde2 Br t Ba. encls<I
garage pa110 lrg yard no
pets S53Simo • 1 mo
sec deposrl S46-SU2 or
770-5629
l;>Bn Tr. 1 ~•el I 1wr1nouse. Lea~e or •ease op1oon nrce
1 1.d1t1<ir l pool t\ spa $795 3 Br 2 Ba wtdrnlng rm.
Ile 1 ., 2' <•• nr:, 24:16 dbl c.ar gar lrg lenc yard I 01111e by 2 I 76 Puente lalha hland 2206 1 1 br 2 8 11. Mon1ecello Ave. CM $795 Curt
On S Bawtronl 3 Br 2 Ba TwrrMP 2 ~6r80gar Spool Her berts II 63 1 1266 Agl , no P"tS ~ 1err a lower duple> \ t400'mo MgrT>I 6• I 1324 MESA VERDE 4br, 2ba,
yearly utrl dining room S 1200
On N Bavlront •Ar 2 Ba J 6• ?ba no pelS kids Ok 979-2890 or S40·0St8
S l~OOtmo yearly ulrl 806 Joann SI S72S/mo
On AbAIOnP ') Sr I Ba gar .alt 64<1 1836 Mesa Verde 4 Br. 3 Ba plus
family rm $1100/mo 4BR 2BA t•ouse.trg ten<.ed Call S•O· 1158 Ask for llf•t SliSOtrur) veartv
ulll
Lora ven1.e n11rs 673·•062
Coroaa del Mar 2222
Call IHI unique bungalow
w/bllrns & ullls pd $425
hurry 539-6190 BEST fee
Nenrly new 3Br 3Ba 2
trpl&c wel bar. uatcnny 2
CAI QArAQol yrclnr l~f>
S 1400 mo SS 1-4693 ev"I
OLICIM LEASES So ~lwy house beam<!
call frpl 2 Br 2 ba 2 car
gt11 Sn001mo
0<.flllfl RI '11•1 I VIJS1 3 br
') Ba S2250 rnu CJ• • Br 1
Ba S2500rnu A!)I M Hill
759 9100
Coata Men 2224
\ 1?001mo p11n lurn11hlKI
!> Br 3 B• pool pool
house (,all M11ry Ano
631 7l70 'i45· 7636 ,.,
2 6r 1 '~ 8 Conde; GIO~
Qlf101' spu W d
hoo~ u11 C.all Belly
p111to ,\ ySrO We~I 19th l p S1 S800 SPC 548 5598 arry or am
Mesa Verde lovely 3 Br 2
SS7S Cute Cepe Cod 2 Br Be temlly room, 2 car
Tile be wood fits new garage. gardener lncld
cplldrpa Used brick Le 8 s e s 1 1 o o / mo
Grdnr 9er 8•S-2S66 770-0347
Beam celling accer1" 2 D p • ""r~
Ail"" 1111.He hr+9dPrw/gor lr!a'!'"a"la!'P.'!"o,.aa'"'ll!'I ""'!'--"""'!'"~""-•
ei1S1!>1de cMrmer S•95 • 011 OCH 3 Eir hm w/\liew
Im IM S39-6190 B!:ST Incl den 2 Bs lrplc Oii• USO also 2 Br 2 Ba 4 lam
Charming Ill bu.noelow wldeck S52S delells c11ll wtepplnc.~ S300 s pool 539-6190 BEST Ally fff '\odP & ri>ady for BPPI Cell
s111 lltQO BESf Rily ree Hant. leacla 2240
ComlurlUbl" t'iOO SQ It 3 4 Br lba. 2UO IQ It POOi
Br') Flo 4/f&m lnr.d yd gar S 1 •OO/mo Cell Mrl
lo.1d'lllpeh $f;OO 1 & lee Genz el Tobin Really
C,.}11 6 190 BEST fllty 846-137 t
LHILORH Awesome beech 11rea tncd
1 Br hme upper $300'•
p 11ys rant & btllt
539·6190 BEST Rily lee
~1rcle thl1--Call taa11 Wall
kopl 3Br 2B• pool petlo 2
11ory hm kid• ok $800
539·6190 BEST 191
1mmac 3 Bi 2' , ba. 2
lrplcs Avail now Agt lalMa
7S9-1J41 PeaiaHlt 2707
Condo Adult bldg w/2 br Lge ;i br duplex. winter
• 2'" ba . eerthtonea. ren1al. :> hse• from bch.
conventenl location S850 can lurn S600 645-3•34 Seashore 2Br . t house
from beach. corner lo· Coroaa ••1 Mar 2722 ~l~~~A s7:~~"{~LS now 2Br wlfp SGSO, 2Br SSf s
available Call tor del alls Bltlns, pool, carport. lse
WA TEAFAONT HOMES Agl 760 1199· 9 lo 6
631-1400 LARGE I BR. view deck
Cure. convenient 1 Br. g••· gar ex1ras s79s ' dep
808 1 bill beach, furn 719 Marlgolo 640·4255
evall SS50/mo 760-1962 Prof mate sh• 26r nr
Eastblu1t3'iif.2 lrplt1. lam
rm formal dining Avell
no w $1 350/mo
7S9-13•'
ocean S3•0tmo Isreal
7S2·8777exl 154. 12 to 9
pm 720-16S7 llm
Studio 8Dt. nr beach. a118ll
Great 1 br 1 oa lrpl OIW
trg bBCk yard gar SSOO
Agl 673 1282
Large I Br newly Cle<:or
ated pool no pets S:l90
673 0884
Large 1 Br POOi ln<lry tac.
car ports S404tmo utols
pd 548-0336
MESA PINES 2850 Harla
BEAUTIFUL I Br SS2Slup
PAV P8110, POOi spa
TOP aree qu1el no pets
S49 2•47
New Bree<J Apsninents
Ou1e1 ·unique landscape
No Pets I bdrm. t be.
$495 Bachetor11011 .
S•95 393 Hamilton,
Costa Mesa 64S·4411 Sepl t $2 40 mo.
Eastblull 3Br. 2 lrp~e. tam 675· 1102 Newly petnted 2 Bdrm, t
rm. tormal dining. --~~ Bo SS3S/mo & 1 Bdrrn
St350/mo. 720·0739 C111a tll 2724 5435.$455 Ullla paid,
ExciU1111e Peninsula Pt. 1856 sq It Of qul;t luxury, garage. pool. no pe11
modern 2 Br $Oen. 2 Ba. 2 Br. 211t Ba. w/every 301 A•ocedo 642·9850
2 blocks bay & ocean xtra, tncd yard $750 s 1 o o O / 1 e e s e 873·113311. 1142-9666 POOL lrplc, pV1 patio,
213/378·3119 dahw1hr Eastatde. K lg 2
Newpor11 finer 3 Br 2 Ba
hme w/chefa galley wet·
bar gar & more $700'1 at
539-6190 BEST Rily tae
I Br model. lrplc. micro. Br gt'•den ept $S9S/mo
garege pool & SPA 557·284 t
s590tmo 545•3l lS Poolside condo 3 Br 2 81
2 b<I. dnatrs ger. nice c 11po11 jet . saune.
ere• v1c:1or1a/C1nyon INN $875 6•2-3689
No dogs Avatl 9-4
$550/mo 631·6812
Shoracllllt lg 3 Br. 4 be,
lam rm, trple's, grt ocean
vu. walk to pvt bCh $2000/mo. S48-7639 2 Br college lyl)e. gar. pvl _ _ _ Sml yr<I 3 ln<lry $550 1
Sparkling upper unll
MHI Vt!fdl ' plfl• New
earthrone cpt ~ closed
gar $525/mo, 11111111 •
aec wkdays 496-19311 Sm 2bd, 1 ba Mobile sec d•p A11fa racfd, no
hOrr'\8. Prlv Dell. Clbf\H, p11t1 6•2·0350
2Br drp1/cpt, lreah pt1ln1
180 E Roc~attt $450.
548·0104. 875·6527
S1unnlng lerge 1 & 2 Br 2
Be gsrden 11p1, PoQI. $42~ & up 710 w 18th
Welk 10 b4tech, I Br crpte
dr1pa1 llOvt & rllrlge
$450 5364637
ll•'i 9 161
I 1110.1<111 qun1111e<1 people
10 r'lnl your proptlrty
I AW repOrl • Ap(lllCAllOn
rorn1 pro1u11onally
<Ir ~lf•Cl 11111w rorm orter·
ing 'fOU m11,1mu111 ptOIK·
l•on C.ell Pnt• Johnson
631 1'00
RVM*
Off 8otti Chtca mint 2 Br
ell crpl<I newaf b1tln1
1•25 11111 enlly yovr1
539·11190 OEST Rlry fff
retirement comm et·
mosphert S650 Incl ullla
S 150 non-refund dep
A111ll 9· 10 Call for al)pl
wkdaya al1t1 7 pm.
wk nd s any t ime .
1-874-9'445
SELL Idle 1t1m1 with a
Deity Piiot Cl ... lfltd Ad
842-5671.
Walk to ~h 8•Cflll0f
Thi 1 .. t .. t draw In the crptt drAPH •tove.
Wnl. a Delly Pilot r41frtg1. all ut111 paid
2 13~ EHf 18th St C M
$460/mo AYl ll 9. t Cell
540 4431
Have 1om111111nu 111 tell?
C111ttl1~ 1101 00 II ....,,
' , I
I
Clutlfltd Ad. 842-5671 $400 !1311·4831
* l · 1 llOYIH * VISA M(, Scott 673·1512
Besl Ql•alrly 2S yr e,µ F .. pert Walltovering 111-Have something you want
stallatron Reas Consult to sell? Class1he<J ads do Compe111tv1> 1 ate~
lie T -1 t6.428 730 l:.15J ;inl Ass1gnmt 581·8S90 11 well 642-5678
,aueatiB!'U
TOWllHOllES
Condos fer re11t Frptc. vaulle<I cethngs di.II
garage pool & spa 2
B<lrm Oen 2'' Ba $770
I Bdrm I'. Ba $630
666 W. 18th SI
645-2739
$850/mo 3 Br 2 Ba
upper unit gar age w/<I
hk-up. 3 blocl\s to beach
all bit ins
208 lugon1tl
TSL Mcmt 842-1803
WOODLAllD VILUQE A~;1~~~,a~::m2 B~e~~~.
1 &. 2 Br Apts avell Pool, patio S77S 968 8263 spa, garage evell laundry '
rm. gas paid No pets Gorgeous 1 br condo WI
2 Br 1'. Bo $S95 $610 mnrored wardrobes. Ow
t Br I BA S5 IS relrlg, new c.rpts lull se·
TSL MllMT 7154-0081 turity Pool & clubhouse wtv1ew ol ocean 'r mr YOU DESERVE Ill away 8S9 7866 wkdys
NEW gale<! 20 Townhomo New e11ery1hmg t Br 2
VILLAGE COMMUNITY bloc k s o ll sand
3 Bdrm 2 ' Be 1800 SQ S4SO/yrly 760·8862
It of pure lu•ury Gar
ages spas 1n every home
master suite d1111ng
roorns. wood bu11111111
t11eplaces m1c10-wav"
ovens. prrya\e polios &
ydrtl s garoe11Pr
PfOv111ed El!lt)tllll 1111111\l
Penthouse set bid!) 2 Br
2 Ba. den or 3rd Br rem
1ly rm <11n111g rrn 2 deCl\S
w 1w1t1 ttJwe1er view
$9501mo y11y lease nets
No pets Own11Agl
fi7S O 108 or 673 8844
only 1c; minutes from SPACIOUS
Fashion Island 1 m111utPs L.ompletflly rPlurtii~hAtl
to s r Pl.u.i 01 0 (, A11 :>Br 1Br U\,l!>ldU!> apt
"'"" Just e.ist ol N~w w wooa burnmg lrpl( & port Blvd II so or t.an ).'VI 9ar<1ge 528 Irvine
0.1egr rrwy J.1200 mu Ave Lse $700 mo NO
63 I 5~39 24' J 0 1 ~"lll' iet~ Aql 6:11 5 155 Ave Costd Mesa I
Rentals to
Sil are 2908
LIVE AT THE IElCHI
Balboa lsl11nd family
horne P11vale balh Ullls
pd SJOO/mo 675· 9142
art S
LIVE IY THE BEACH
M r rmm!e wanted 21 -25
resp prof n/smkr ro shr
b!!au1 aµt wllnd1y on
Balboa Pen 1 1touse
lrom otean Supi!r deal
Al SJOO Call Allan ot Rob
at 675 0132 f8·5µrn1 m
675 5035 all 5prn
Miiie Arnmt 26 • flooded
on beach $350 1st tast &
dep 650 .. 0207
MIF 2S·3S to shr great 2
br 2 b8 at Promontor>
Pt 11 neat resp & love
Nwp1 Alison 675-6204
MIF 3 B• 2 be house
$300 mo Ava•• 9 t
760·1•33or 720 tt3t
M F 10 shr e•ec c.onoo
Ct>rna Coves C.OM tst
lasl S450tmo 2 stry pvt
gar lrpt~ 2 patros A11a1l
10 ' 1 673-85 HI h•"'l
'l7H 1781e•l57
Prol male unoer 30 10
Share lrg NB nc••Tie • ''"~ '~mr '111va1e S400 rnt
''H os rn.1111~ se . 6J I 6. 1j
Stor 1 '" t ba ( M t•ous,. u .,,,,~ ,., lge ya•d ~1')1)
utrl5 64'> 1466
Slt'PS ,,, beath M F to
Sltr JBr 2Ba 34th St
N B $265 mo C;i11 Ans
All :3J 64? 4100
Commercial
Rt11tab
lftlMD HW
2918
Gunerous tenant improve
ments 650 to 4000 sq !I
"""es s 90/lt 2488
Newport Bl C M
642 1490
C2 400 ,q fl blog yaro
tear 01 24 70 Ne,,.,porr
BlvO S2751mo 646·3 •9,;;
CM NB 171'1 & Newpori
Newt!I 3'.JOO sq It am.,1e
fldl"l19 ao• c.ond o ... rier
67S 69CIO
St10p1S101e10t11ce Soac.e
350 sq II or 1ess reas
CCJ!.18 M C 2 548· 7249
Wanted buy rent
lease or•I dPP'O' 800 sq
fl wilr8t\Ou~e Shtl>fJ"•~
5PdCl' 2 ottrce s~ a ~~
n Newpnr I 11l M rr
675 0,( 12
Industrial
Rent ah 2920
1"00 sq II West tr .. ·~
arPa fr m S504 ...,..
Torr 8' 1 8928
;,I 660 .. Q " 'j~7~ &· '"
NP A lit ti BtHJ(,h ~ t.JJ
M 1.A t n1n9 .A QP 'I
'd 'ill,,.
~ <..tH~ lorr11Pr man1c;..rr 1s1
(11... \it...-• 55~ E C.sr
Hw, S'>7'mo 6°S 6~00
* S~'-I up 226~ It orod.J5
•• ,, ,11 ce 18 10 1 Reoon
Ot t.·tLJt' l Hur.111191 >
R!'a•,, ll4~ 2834
2726 Villa Balboa 2 Br. 2 Ba Dana Point condo oceantbey y1ew
•g·p-ac·,-o-us_b_r_rg_h_l.-2 .... B-,-, -, SPC bldg pool/spa 1 yr
ba S625 493 0467 lease We II took tor you"
HaDI. Btacb 2740 JRL PROPERTIES Housemates1un11m11ee1
..VMllfD srop soate ur
ta•ge go1age tor m1110•
a•Jlc> l•O<Jy repa11 will !·dv
"' to $200 mo Costn M1>sa rir Huntington Ben
INI 969 1221
845-1451 E&tabhshed 12 yrs :> Br 1 Ba 11pS11llf5 lrplr. r 11n OC 832-41 34 Misc. Rutab 2925
garage s 6 2 s, ,,, o San Clemente 2776 Rentals Wanted 2909
642 7803 2 Br $485 Furrt $5;io
OOEHFRDIT
WINTCR RENTAL
'2 Br 2 Ba $600 1st last & Pool year round. nr
$200 sec Nr M.i1n A b1rnc11 buses No pets
Adams 960 4431! 498-6277
2Br on sano w ()('n v•-Santa Ana 2780
24 hr securrty guard l'!iS~o--~<..-0-8•5-1 -'!"!V~tll~o-~t ~B-r Pool sauna llWShr •dryr racrl S950 mo ISA 5~ S500t mo Joyce Waltze.
dep 536 8093 63 1 •266
SU WIND
VILLAGE
Room' 2900
Furnished room In Cos111
Mesa home S2301mo
6~5-2435 aft 4pm
Goll course vu Poot. hOI
Female Wrtr S4!ei<S tozy I
bdrm (Oen opt tSalboe
ts or Penn hse or gar
apt Pref Sept rnove·.n
MAtla 540-4246 M-F <lys
WANTED 2br 1n CdM or
Balboa Island Good
rtilt11 & Quiel 536-5850
Wanted room by Sept 7
.,, exchange for II hskpg
NB, ernpl fem 494 3079
Garag11 lor
Rtnl 2912
JBr , 0a rem11y preter .. <!
SQOO me 675-7"05
Annoancemen11 300i
•SPIRITUAL ADVISOR•
Adv•te "' IOvl' marr1agt> • ousiness 6 7 5· <'4951t
Lost I Found 300'
IOY'S MDIEY LOST
New 1 & 2 Bdrm luxury
apls •n t4 plans 1 Borm
lrom S545 2 Bdtm lrom
$630 Townhouse from
$695 paols tenn1~
waterfall' ponds Gas for
cooking t. heaf"'O PAl!1
From San Orego Frwy
drive North on Bt>ach 10
McFadden end NeSI un
Mt Fadden 10 SEAWINU
V ILL A GE
17141$93 S198
iuh Non-smkr Chrls11on Batboe Island Lg ovrsze
morals Pvt entr w1s1or11ge Ht-dry New
saved to buy e b11>.e e route Huntington Beac
to Costa Mesa t 1155'
12)$'20 11)$10. 131$, vv
Frt(lay pte11se help
969-12?1 Toda
L11un1 leacll 2748
2 Br 1112 ea lrplt. wall\ to
town & beach S800i mO
incl utrl 493 8S38
Newiort leacll 2769
10 •Breathtaking View•
I Br dlx ilPI lots ol
closets 2 balconies lrplc
& DOOi S69Stmo
979 889 Or 660·014•
'1RI MEWPORT
APARTMENTS
COUNTRY CllJB LIVING
IN NEWPORT Bf-ACH
Singles 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart
menls & Townhouses
Some are elegantly
furnished From $660
On J11mbo•ee Au at
San Joaquin Hill~ Ad
144-1100
Spcl( 1ou~ \1n11lt' one
b two bedroorn <1pt\
BEST
VALUE IN
NEWPORT!
fURNISH[O t>r
UNfU~NISH£0
All UllllTlr~
PAIO HI Al I II
(I URS Tl NNI\
SWIMMINC, 11lu'
muth rnor~· ~orrv
no pt>t~ Modl'h
opt'n daily 9 to h
Oakwood
G~rdtn Apartmt nb
N~wport Buch So
\ 7110 ltith \t1l'1'I
(tlt Onvt1)
64l·5'll
N~wport Buch No.
8110 h111nt Avtnu'
(31 lf)lh)
645 1104
$235/mo 8S1 -1910 roof srsi mo 646 6333
Mrd dge working woman
hes lurn room for same
rn large condo "' So
Coast Pleztt Full rt!te priv
Pool•1ac S2251mo
'i45 I 110
WANTED sllop spate Or
l(l•lje oarage lor minor
auto b O<I) repair will pay
up to S200/mo Costa
Mesa or Hunlrnglon Bet>
Btll 969· 1221
Office ltentala 2914 Over 21 M, walk lo be.II
Pool 1ac. lertnrs Avail
now 548-4260 993·4888 16 17 Westclltr , N B 278 to
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Call:
142-Hll
Ro o rn 4 n en 1
non smol\er lemale nr ocr $250 mo 662 1 156
Room ror rent neat bch &
twy $250 mo '163 4954
ShAre Fountain V11lt1>y
11ome resp prof male
over .IS 842-29 17
Unturn Room & 13'11h fie<
y .ir.19e W /0 Own
phone S350 646 o 162
Holels,Molels 2904
Motel rms tor rent bl wkly
S 120·up w/k1lchene1111
avnll 67S-6740
Rentals lo
Sllare 2908
2 Br wtcorport 1n SC
Plaza $275 • •., ulll
549·8289 call eves
$350 mo Share NB Condo
w/Pool JACUZZI, Tenrus
Gar. FP very large place
M I F, Avail N CI W
642·S978
Balboa Island House 2 hr.
I be, lrplc $2SO. 1st &
last Nick 673-21•6
Femele 10 shr HB 2Br.
2 Bo. $287 50 m o
9&9-2007. 645-3466
Fem 10 sf'lr hae on lhO
61uls C M No dep no
1as1 $250/mo 631·2576
r shr NB lovely 3 Slory
twn hse. ocean "'' all amenities trg gar ne11I &
1;011geni11I $500 645·99 19
r to allr w/s 22 •. n/1mk,
2br 'Jba. S C lree $256
Oay 979-3700 eve
S•0-0626
I Ilk• Mission Viejo Me to
s!tr, omen111es. 'P8 te
non· smkr pre I $300
770.6636
~Of Cllltlfled Ael
ACTION
Cati a
Oalty PllOI
AO-VISOR
842°61178
136S sq ft Su•leble for
medical or dental Agent
1\41 5032
•EXECUTIVE
SUITES* I MO FREE RENT
W•lh 5horl term tease tull
~"r•1<e suites Keep your
ocvert•ead •ow &
prnless10111<l rmage hrgh
881 Dover Dr SullP 14
Ne.,.port Btiech
6J1 Jl;SI
BALBOA PENINSUl A
400 ,q JI Pvt baH1 Re
ao11c $300 mn 67~·7904
round brown retre111er
m1A wrtn COllllr Vrc 20th
Costa Mesa 548-3967
Foun<J 00g Olde• bll\ltan
met!' Corner Plat en
t •a Vittoroa C M
64!> 72'.'16
FOUND I Beagle m1~ ten
vor Balboil Blvd 10111 St
Balt:>na Sun 8-22
rOUNO Grey cat "'' HarDor A Hert r v
~4 6 828•
r 011r1lt me IP car youn\)
bhl<.k Voe Culv11r Or
EXECUTIVE SUITES titwn Oeer t1e111 & Baran.
lfEWPORT IHCH Ct> Irvine 7141523-462'
Lu~ now lull servrcP olllC't'.S err 966 53 t t
130 29SsQ It Some 2 FOUND Mele c11ocolate
ot11ce suttes Liiii re<J collar rem m1A
Aec:epl & Ansg serv Goloer1 Aetr1evt>r reel col· gardencour1yaro lrg 1 1 h windows Coll 7S2-6408 or em 5 ep ml1< PVP t>lk •wilt male shep
NEWPORT BEACH office Husky mix gr8y brown
1 000 SQ I\ Attractive Numerous ells & kittens
WAii M11nta1ned Modern ev111I Newporl Beach
Building on Quiel S11eet Anlmel Sheltar 125 Mesa
Aaslgned Perking Ger-Or C M 6••·36S6
II g e s A 11 a 1 I a b 1 e Found Mother Cet & 2 tut
64S·4800/645-3323 fens sml gry wht Mothf<.
BAYFAONT BLOG BASE· vie H B 96•·6'139
MENT • 2SOO sq 11 Found Parakeet C•ll 10
SO'/S 1 00/sQ 11 Cell ldllnllly '20· 1508 e•es Mon-Fri 9.5 •
6•2 4644 FOUND T e11lt1r mix dog
NEWPORT CEN TER Full Fairview ,\ A<J•ma 637 932 t dy1 979 1916 \ervtce E•ecut1ve Svnes lllt 6PM
$S7S-S825 640 5470
0 I le 70 Lott S111mese M C81. Ilic. apace or ase L egunn Bt'IACh r•w11rd
It $695/mo u11ls pd AIC. 494·64S7t•9•-311?i ground llr t0S5 El
Ci!mlnO Or Costa Mosn l OST Smell Whil e
3 Blks I: of rt111¥19W & MALTESE No Taelh
Atloms Vac Antta & Oleoneyre
75"·1040, Mr lr11cy LB on 617183 home
•97 4 36 7 w or k • $:'90/up c arpets. 831 0368 d1 opns, 11/c restroom•.
17301 8e&Gh Blvd ~tunt Lost Tort01Sh111I r e Cat
mo1on Boch 842·283• rnc• ''blk '' org Vin 41f\/A111c1do CdM RE·
llY YlEW WAROI 1175 $095
Beeulllul l•roe olftc• 1vall eblll 64? 'G44 Mon rrt l OST Yellow pet para
" 5 I kMI Archte 1110 t ,.. am1111 grM n parekHI
WANf ACTION? 11 Rewtrd S00 blk WilllOn
C1aulfed Adi 842·~78 631·3 123
...
~~~~~~------------------------------------------------------..... ~~==~:::::::=-~~~~~---~---\
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug 30, 1963 ('1
•• '
Schools & Instructions 642-5678
Louise Griffith
ext.324
att1 ipre -1chool
FOR YOUR CHILD'S IEST ST.4Rl
CHOOSE OUR DEf'IENDAILE
DAY CARE CENTER
OPEN 6:30 A.M.·6 P.M.
815 KNOXVILLE STREET
(On Beach Blvd between Ad•ms & lnd1anapol1s)
NllffillCTDIC wat · !&Mlll
"LOVE YOURSELF THIN"
COURSES
Mon lOAM
Tue 4PM & 6PM
Parker Center, CM.
148 E. 22nd St.
645-0911
Behavior Education
Program. ....... ,.,, ,..
Forfurther information
regarding adverti8ing
placement in the
School8 & ln8truction8
Directory -call
Loui8e Griffith
642-5678 A
ext 324 ----•1e0:>., • •
Pacific
Travel
School
610 E 17rh Sr .. Sanoa Ana,
Ca. 92701
r=tJ 9iii!
ORANGE COUNTY1 ONLY PRIVATE
ACCREDrrED TRAVEL AGENCY SCHOOL
American Airline Sabre ComPtiter Tralntno
MORNING, AFTERNOON, EVENING CLASSES ,
Call (714) 543-9495
..... ,.......--.--.--.i-...-......
14Afh 11
1101 TD SCllOIL SPECIAL
Enroll for 2 months guitar
lessons at regular price ($40.00
mo.)
IET liUITIR FllEE
Enrollment starts Sept. 6. 1983
Offer l.imjtecf to new enrollments
& quantity on hand.
lllllrll
A. Fred Gfflett Studios
2052 Newport Blvd .
Co1ta Me1a, CA
851-8633
Let tne Matoan C...11t o~ you •r>O you• cl>lld llO!YtiOlle
10 orOC>lem• IOI ome><.,._, In
• rt"11111 ,mt111g ind math
• (o/lolltlfll dltte/IOnS
• controllmg tmol10ns
• m1Arf11 ind /l.ttf>lf'll l11tnds
MAAOAN I• a Ptlvalo nonprolll acflOOl IOI cnudr..., llom 3
tlllQYOh ta yea11 p1ovto1ng
• tduca/ional ind psych<l/oi!Cll testing
• dfrtlopmtnlll prt-school
• comp/tit day school p10f11m
• tduulional tutormg
• 1ndmdu1l lnd ~m1ly counsrirrg cw OI fllWfTt TK llWtD~ cum:a
-
,
School Opens
September 12th
~ .
FAIRMONT
PRIVATE
SCHOOL
Orange County's
Oldest & Finest
RE~EDIAL & ACCELERA TEO
CLASSES
• Small Classes
•Individual Attention
•Sound Study Habits
SUMMER CAMP
GRADES K-8
THE llRDll
DEYELOPIEITIL
PRE-SCHOOL
D PROCESSltl
SCllJOC
Learn How to use
Wang , IBM OS6 & 01splaywr1ter
Xerox 660
Coll
014) 556-6604
Transportation -Cafeteria -Extended Day C1 du&M Traiilr. ~ AssistMte
D.ys • h..,. • Sclhrdoy• 1557 W. Mable Street • Anaheim. Ca. 92802 • 774-1052 EUN MOH MONEY
USC College of Conllnulno Education otters
"THE CERTIFICATE IN
MANAGEMENT EFFECTIVENESS"
. . a practlcal alternaUve to ttie MBA
for professional business women.
The 8 month program wlll meet every
other Saturday, at South Coast
Plaza Hotel, beginning Oc1 8.
• Busmess communication
• ftnanc1al analysis & planning
• Business math • Or11ani1ahonal behavior
• Marketing decisions • Busmess law
• Use of computer 1nlormahon
systems & data
Informational SeiUoll: Sat., Stpl. 10, 2-Jpm
2361 C1111M Drive, Ste 103
nine 752-5505
1;;B;.;.•~l•~W;,;,.;1;;.:•;.;.;tt4;.:.__S:.::l:.:OO Belt Waatt4 5100
Full tr me e1<p Sec-Housekeeper. mature
I ························~ : Parents ... :
• YOU C..-CIN!e moro Mb5!y"'9 moro ptOCluC'lt... • e , ... 1onslltpswolflyoytct>11d<""tlvougl\STEP-e
• SyJlemll<C Tr..,,.rtfJIOI lit.cu .. Peret1r""J • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Become a Word Processing Specialist
Excellent Career Opportuni11es
WORD PROCESSING AND INFORMATION
22.32 S.E Bristol-S~~~1St1~ta Ana, l:t 92701
"'A~ of E®ut-°"° ---E-.. <It llo<"
ltl• Waat.. Sloe ltlp Wutt4 5100
Receptton111 wanted lull llLH CLERl
time. heavy phones. light Newport S1at1oner5 has a
typing & employee bel'l·1 tull t ime pos111ori eflt s Cell C athy ava1able Wiii tr81n Mr
845-7053. Emmons 863-1200
• STEP1,•01tcuU.O'IP'09'•m1'or0.tJ•Ml\wf'\o'fl!.,,,t0 • • """'""""""""""'.,..,,,,.,,n,,,.. .. ....,,..., • .,,..,.,..., • REOEmtltsT 1Setes • ••• ..,.,,...,..,"'ocr<a1_._,,1o,,_.ono..,. • 2 yra exl)e(ienGe tor large 111lll& FOR DOLURS • ~,.,,.,""Q.,_..,....,., • 11oc,k brolterage firm In Yes. we do ano ~ov ell
: ,.,-• .-.--........, 17141 ~uoso : Santa Ana S-47-7272 M• tool Join our entneusoar•c Johnaon team selllng the We~t s . r-= .. _. "-.. .,~ w ... : ...,... •tw•o"' .... 10• cou•<11••' cr .. 1• • REOEPTilllST the Los Angeles Times
j .r "'~ ,,..,.,, ''"'" "'"' ·••~ Wanted tor plu1h Newporl Hourly waoe · cc '
• \:; ~ '0"• .... " .,,,. • Beach ott(ce, to answer mission Hours 4 pr,, -'l
• STE' be1(ns SeptOTOer • telephortel and do light pm D1a1 us now at
: ~~~~~'/.TEEN bea in l : typing Good growth OP· S40-0301
• • portunrty 644~350
'• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • .. RECEPTIONIST HUS 11:30·1 30 M-F light Do you en1oy ma~ g
Btl• Waatt4 5100 Btl• Waatt4 5100 typing, $~ hr Newport people lau9n? Ca,. 1 ' -Blvd, c M loc. 531.5021 sell? Will you r11mtl :< Pharmacy clerk ror CM =-,,-----thghts ot stairs e~e y
Marine Hardwire sales pharmacy. exit hrs. exl)e( Reliable l)e(SOn needed morn1n9? Inside sa•,.~
person Experience r• nee Call 12-5 for appt. tor sandWICh Shop Irv pos111on "'"h ,.,..,,... ~1
quired 645-1711 6'2·0108. asll lor She41y area 971-1739, 955-12<17 Crackers Enterlair.rrf><.t
Mature person tor lull time Plastics IEHll HEH
Lett I FHd 3004 Btl~Waatt4 5100 Btlp Waatt4 5100 Htlr Waatt4 5100
SCRAM LETS 10 S TAY/Regional Sates Banking COMPANION HELPER for
•etary/Bookkeeper women, live-In, 6 dy wk,
needed 101 smt lest grow-full cllrg ol My pool home
mg manufacturing firm & 2 yr old boy S550tmo
Excellent spelling gram· Rm & Boero , auto
mar gen·1 business & of· 642-0350, 760-9396
flee prot1c1ency required
Good phone & organize-H 0 -U S E •
t1ona1 ,._Ills assenrtal KEEPERS-Resldentlal &
Non-sml\1 p1eterred Call comm exper perl. must
Corinne 6'45·9552 have car & phone gOO<I
laboratory pickup and delivery Health care ben· llAClllE IPEllATIRS for car rental agency Call
elite. ~6-0216 Ricl</Jlm Immediate opening• on all Janel 6S0-1 t80
shifts for trainee• or
Requires personal•ly "' 1
and a great phone •C•'"
$800 per mo guarante<>rJ
Incentive prograrri Milt' r
me<11ce1 Seno r,,~ur-p
de1a1ltng your c •
tess1onal eMlll!roenre •
• Need sell-starter who likes p /T TELLE• elderly lady Love 1n Love·
to work 1n busy regional n ly Lagune B ch h ANSWERS sales otc phones E•cenent opportunity tor 1 1 ea m typln9 monthly reporu ' experienced person 1n at· at>u ous ocean view, P"1
Savage · Balch dist otl1ce 1nterlec1ng' tractive Savings & Loan rm/beth 499-1904
Mogul . Cleave Musi be et>le to work Immediate opening otters OOOl (lllOILER )
LAUGH w/llttle supervision. meet vaned duties Position re-Days & some evenings
D 1 s sat Is f 1 e d o 1 n er deadlines & nave prof 111-quires approximately 3 Apply 2-4pm. Dove St
Waitress. 1h1s meat 111ude & appearance days/wk end alternale Restaurant . ....J660 Dove
tastes twnny · Waitress Salary commensurate Satuldays until 1 P.M SI Newport~ech
"What do you expect w l exper Benefits Call Linde Dacus.
The chef's cooking is a Pleasant working en· 7S4· 1801 OCSL, 1700 LAUGH ' vlron Ask tor Dawn Adams Ave. Costa Mesa. p I 3012 553-0711 RAPICOM California E 0 E •n••• • INC 1400 Bristol St No * FAITASY r•t1E * ste 130 Npt Bch E o E. 1u1n snuST
Guys/Girls/Couples: Call _!!IFIH ___ w~~o~·~~lngN B To~ a t0•X
Joy 840-'4710 (24 hrs) r AA" A A A A A A 644-0661
MC -Visa -Amer E.lrpress ARE Yll llHIH -IOAT SlllW
ESCORT /MODELS Wll1T Hl'I£
OV1cell ONL V .835-9199
EHTIC lllCHS Bechetor tBachetorette
Offlce & Birthday Parties
TllE UST HURRAH
738-:8538. 558-8538
SPIRITUAL READINGS
WHTl1 Housewives. stuoents,
PI T. temp help, cashiers,
tkt tkrs. perkg attn etc
Apply In peraon M·F btwn
3-6PM a1 1760 Monrovia
Ave, Ste C2. Coste Mesa
for Info. Call btwn 3·6PM
6.46-3966
Bookkeeper/Sec'y 20-30
hrs wi\. lle~lbte. 1oca1 Call
Jen or Craig 545-5271
coon
Now hiring. E•perlence
Pret Wages end hours
negotiable THE GRIND-
ER, 1400 Pacific Coast
Highway, Newpori
Beech 642-888 t
COlmR PEHt• Reliable Apply In person
The Tummy Stuller, 270
S Brtstol, Costa Mese
751-3566
COURIER
for Newport Beech Area
Clean cut. must have own
motorcycle. non-smkr.
Call Ardis. 850-I t 11
CHTOIEll SHYIOE
MEllO&l ASST.
Eng111h, several poaltlons Fill TIME PH avail Call 641-4446 dys
Beck oMlce, 2 years exper
necessary. In Npt Beach
Cell Mon-Frt 10· 12 2-4.
644-1025 PART. TllE WOii or 960-697, evs Atk tor MEDICAL OFFICE· I pet· Opportunities avellable llYEHORY ISIT son olllce easlatent
with the Los Angeles Assisting In operation ol needed, exper perferred
Times Circulation De· co1porate mall/stock but wlll conslOer training
P 8 rt men t in ° u r room Deliveries. ope<· someone with general ol-
door-to-door newspaper a lion of machines, ship. I Ic e background
salt.S program Gu a ran· ping. rec;e1vlng Heavy lift· 498·5520
teed hourly wage plus Ing Involved E.itperlence ----
commission Hours 9AM preferred. Newport Me 'N Ed'a now hiring.
• 2PM, or 4PM -9PM Beecll Investment firm Cooks and Drivers with
Training 1s provided Own cer required for er· good driving record.
Potential to earn $300 rands Call 5s3•0940 Must be 2 t t PIT. Apply
plus per week For an In-In person, 15632 Beach
tervtew. Call (71 4) UquorCterkneeded Must Blvd, Huntington Beach.
957-2361, ext 1204 be e•per Part time Job and 12736 Beach Blvd.
HSSTlTIOI
ltt1dt1ts
Full time. Shell Station,
NB Need lmmed
644--2410
ho u r a neg o ti ab I e Stanton
67s-6866 -.-EE-.-mu--o,-u-,-
LOT PHIH $350 a week plus poulbte.
lor car rental agency. Call Work from home. For
Jane1. 650-1180 $1695 digest call (312)
LIT PEllH 931·5337 Ext 2239H.
IUPlllC lllTIST Late night or early morn· Ad/PR Agency Mek1 u-
xper tor typesetting Ing Must have reliable slstant and AE PIT-FIT
business 642·9678 trans & be dependable 873-4899 or 921·2235
""" snuST
$3 75/hr 650-1386 A0..,1ce 1n ell m•tlers love.
marrfage & business.
Also 'counaehng 1815
So El Camino Real. San
Clem Llc'd 492-7296
am 31 years Old, In my
first year Into Health and
Nutrition Industry • I
made $60.0001 The sec·
ond year doubled• I Orlve
a new Mercedes, t nave
two beautiful home.s In
Callforn1a and one In
Hawaii We nave a
grouno floor opportunity
backed by company
training Call Gerl
Booth Attendant (Perking
lot). Accepting eppll·
callons. Call 8'42·4644,
Mon-Fri, 9-5pm
Plea.sent voice. Insurance
Background helpful 15·
JS hrstwk. flex hrs S4 15 MAllOHIST MAIDS-Resldenllal &
comm exper req, must
have cer & phone. gOOCI
English, several postlont
avail call a.c 1 ~446 dys
or 960-6971 evt Ask tor
Carole
•tHT HPIRYISll
Ptrt·TI•• Spec.lally drugstore Is
seeking a reaponslble
peraon with retell ntes
and Supervteory •~·
perlence to work eve-
nlnga and Sundays. AP·
prox 25 hrs/wk
714-891 · 1372
******** Sd1Mb l
la1tractioa 3016 *TtLE'1111E*
Mature lady needs to learn *SILICITHS* how to type Please cell 11 you ere a sweet talker
241-9479 c M with• silver ton9ue-·"We ___ have thee tob tor U"-No
laaiatll On. 4014 setting--Excellent 1nd professional EJCcit1og locksmlth bust. working conditions
Bus Person Experience
necessary Apply 1n per-
son, 2·4 pm, Mon-Wed.
LA BIARRITZ, 414 No
Newport Blvd. Npt Bch
645-6700 E 0 E ---CAllllfT HIP
hr 10 start 963· 7457 Regis Halrstyllsts In the
Dell Mission vi.10 Mall en-
P /T Sandwich helper nounces ou1s1andlng job
11.30 AM • 2.30 PM 18 opp tor experienced
and over Bud's Sub· qualified lull aervloe hair·
marine. 546-5237 stylist & manicurist II you
Delivery
HH EXTRA lllCOIU
1111mu101 TIE lllLI HllSTHE
t61~iy;::1ve
exper injection molding R.E SAUi HEIT
machine operators Work tor career poslllon wtsmell
1•1, hrs/paid tor 8 hrs. but teedlng commerc1a1
Benefits lncluda. paid brokerage firm Degree
major medical. dental . ., pref. exper no1 ,.._.,.
sllllt bonus premium ary Income. training,
Must be able to speak benellte. Submit resume
and understand Engllsh. to Sales Manager. 3500
Apply at: E. Coul Hwy, Sulle I OIMot Corona Ciel Mar. cem
265 ~loo• Ave 9262_5 ____ _
Cosla Mesa HITAIWT
Preacnoot teacher needed N-French bakery Is look-
lor September Mull be Ing for a mature, depen-
cerlllled. Temple Bal deble person to fill a
Vahm In Newpor1 Beach. lull/time permanent
Call 713· 644-1999 counter aales position Experience & aupervlsory PtUmll SALES c apsbt1111u hetptut
Well Ml commercial print· Young. growing com·
Ing & bu1tne11 form pany Good benefits
manufacturer la seeking U IAllETTE
qualified 1ale1 represen-Call to apply, 75l·1266. tatlves. related exp d• ____ ...;_ ___ _
1lred. Send resume or In-IMFHI
qulrles to: Sates Mgr, Slate, W ood. Comp
Formprlnt Co, PO Box Journeymlfl Only N-·
14 72. Riverside, Ca port Roofing 645-0104
92S02
Pref looretary sa.tes
with bkk'g experrence
Call Janet 650-1180 *
PIT Cashier wanted, mom·
Inga only Call Barbara
tor appt 540-3280
* DIALING
FOR
DOLLARS
*
PIT help for ettte hOUM-
cleanlng aervlce. Call for an eppt. 966-1300 Etirn big money for all<>rt
PIT help In & Out Photo.
lrvtne Car Required.
Cemeta knowledge pref
Houri, 10-4 857-0161
houre. 30 hr work W96k
with potential to earn
$500 1 per wee!\
Owner moving Bu11 xlnt. Salary and bonus' Call
Mobile unit loaOed gen Mon thru Fri 11 30 AM
2 way radio. school avail to 5 30 PM
Reduced to $24 900 Mr Cesh 714-951-2777 760-0998
No experience ~essary
$4/hOUr to 11tar1 GoOd
driving record required
850-1755 c.,, .. ,., ,,,, .. 110t
Must have own tools Cell
aft 6, 646-3433
ore out to make top dollar
and don't mlnO working
hard wllh a greet attitude
come with u1 Gueran·
tee<! salary. commission
paid vecetlons and other
Incentive bonu1 point
programs Call Charlotte
Clark 495-2005
Be an lndopendent carrier
tor The Register Must
have dependable econ·
omy car Irvine, Newport
Beach, Corona Oel Mar
Cell Vicky, 951.1113
before I 1 AM 1H--a-lr-,-,.,,-llst wanted that ts
All around maintenance
man for large apt
comple~ Must be
knowtedgeble In 111
building trades Xlnt
salary & benefits Please
do not reply unless fully
qualified. Answer In own
llHI PUOTIOlllH
Or PA needed PIT for fam-
ily practice & Industrial
Clinic. (714) 887-1971
handwriting Ad # 1014. •tHlll
PIT office peraonnel, good
phone voice. neat 8.P·
pearance . Some
_ eves/wk('lds. Call Mon-Fri
•6AM·NOON
•NO EXPER NECESS
•WEEKLY PAV GUAR
•HIGHEST COMM t
BONUSES
•PLEASANT WORKING
CONDITIONS -Walk to beach. 1 Br crpts.
Illness forces sale or Ex· drapes, stove & relrlge elusive wood & metal $450 536-4637
business $85,000 takes ---all Terms ~ 187 Accounting cler1t for NB ad agency Biiiing e .. per
Miracle Happy P111 req typing, 10 key by
amlno8Gld, all natural, to 1ouch , Sf!ll sterter
help "1llliona l o beat Non-smkr pref t-tr s 9.5
anxiety & stress $25.39 833-8435 f~r appt
\Ilsa & Muter Charge -Call alt S 552-4122 AEROBIC INSTRUCTORS
Danny 0t11rlbvtors wet-Weigh! llf11ng Instructors
eorne. for new business Call
Mrs Counney 832-49 t8
Carpenter Helper /labor
Custom Home $4 50 hr
640-4359
CASHIER PIT Parking
struclure. Npt Beach
$4 00 hr 675·2790
Cashier wanted 40 hrs.
Must be organlled, lots
of allentlon 10 detail.
Apply 4625 Wesl Paclflc
Cst Hwy. Newport Beach.
Dentel Receptlomat. ex· e9gresslve and wants to
perienced In pegboard. take charge ot their own
bllling Insurance 411 day car9"1f Sub-leasing at a
wk . Coat a M 8 s a well estabhthed salon In
63 t-1420 New P o r 1 Be a ch 675-2046 or 552°0245
IOOl IAIHEll High school 11udent or
tor Sell Boat ch8r1er Or· older, 6 hrs pr week
genlzatlon Experience 754·0370 Aequlred Boating e•p. __
Good with people, some High school atuClent. PIT
mechanical exp, Mane· w o r k p r e p a r I n g
gerlal e~pertence pref but brochures Call 548·984 t
not required. Job refer·
ences a must. 875-9060 llOP-llHS
DallyPltot,PO Box Cert Nurse Aides. 1650. Costa Mesa, Ca 92627 3:30-7'30 .• 3·11·30. 11·7. Pen-time Country Club
Manegement· Conv S49·3061 Call M11q1•t1f 011•lt Mon-Fri. 10 am-4 pm.
Apll·60 units Costa ~eaa Secfy R.E Management.
Unique Lanelecepe-qutet, pan time, leading to lull
well kept Mature couple, time. rental, clerlc1I,
well groomed, hones1. bookkeeping. RE lie
hard working, ex-preferred some salea
pe11enced tn malnten-posalble AfSlll Apt Mgr
ence and book work Mell dutlet lnCl\Xfed. 2 br apt
work history to· 393 Ham-& salary
11ton. C·2. Cost8 Mesa. TIL Ism IU· llOI CA 92627, Attention·
7S1·8822
RECEPTIOllST
PIT, evening and wt1nd1.
Newport Beech
Mercedes-Benz De11-
ershlp Apply In pe<ton
only Jim Slemmon• Im·
port•. 1301 Ou1ll StrMt, Npt Bch.
SELL Idle ll•m• with a
Delly Piiot Cl..m.d Ad.
Newspaper
II you're bright and pos-
aeu a pl.aunt voice can
Mr Thomas at
613-0118
To pl-your mesuge
before 1he
reading publtc,
phone
Delly Piiot
ClUllfled, 842-5e78
ROBERT D BILLS
ANIMAL CRAO'ERS
215 RIVERSIDE AVE
NWPT BCH, CA 9?66~
Sates
MIOH COMPUTERS
Mature person wl t-us1 'l
compvter exp 754 6JC'
seleaperson tor Pill• I
Store Experienced or•I)
Must w orl< wknd•
6-45·3392. Cell 10 6P"1
lllHJtnH/l111&tt
Mature Fullt ttme l•J•
Balboa Island s1or1>
Apply in person outv
10-6pm 226 MarrM IW
Salesperson werited for
retail store on Lnq " ii
Beach 494.5315
Retail--
SALES POSITION
Exclualve womens 510•" ~
look Ing for emb•t•o11~
fasn1on conac1enc"
1no1v1dual with extenso.e
retell background on I no>
womens clothlno
competitive salary 6
benefits For 1nterv1 .. "'
call 640-09t>O or
640-0991
SEORfTlllY tor smell office VariP 1
dulles Must h8ve d•IVf" ~
lie . non smoi.i>•
960-6591
IEOHTlllY /IEI OFC
lmmed18te opening In cu•
pvrchaslng and dist• tou
tlon Oeparlment tor ''"
e~perteoced ~·son wllti
excellent typing skills nnol
11 pleasing pnone per
sonallty llarrely or """, gener el ottlOe ou11es (
cellenl benefits and ""C'" tng cono111ons w1tt1 ,
growing companv Af'i y
in person at THE JOLLY ROG(R IN<
17042 0Ulel1e Ave
1rv1ne 7 14-546--0331
Have 1omethlng to Sf'll
Claulfled edl do It -II
PlllE Ll~lff ITHE Ans Serv • N B . ptsnt ofc.
I exper opr, PI T shift or sate In range County 3_ 1 lPM Call Mon alt locetlon Shown by appt 8AM 831•5640 only
OIROIUTOH
Earn $75-S 100 a day. pey
3 A's a week, F/P time
548-3642
Now hiring pressers for Driver /lilt Tr1l11t hand Ironing. Must be
Mual be 18 yrs old Vallo me1lculou1 1000 No KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! David Stephens IFPIOI
MWIH Sharp Sien petton. gopel
OAlllll& PllPlllTill BABYSITTER (mature). my .-.. SIU II" •.o1a.o1 home NB. live in ~ $60 ,,_ ..,_,. week Atk tor Stacy
548-1023 •••!J tt I.Na 4 Bebyaltter. mature. my -home, Mon-Fri from F"1mlly money for 111 & 7·30AM .. PM. 840-6045
2nd1 Aleo will purch die----------oount ~ 404-8937 Ba.nklng
4021
1.1.umu ............ , ... sP9CtJ'zino 1n 111 & 2no
TI>"• elrlC4I I 04 9
R E Broiler Bd RN1tor1
1-42.2111 545.oe 11
WE an n11T 11ns
FOR IN FORMATION CALL
Tll USIOl.&Tlt
UJ-I010
INTERMEDI& TE
CLERK /
LOIN DEPT.
N-PO<I Center • We •re
loolclng f or a
peopi.-o..1•nted per1on
with good phone man-
nefl to rm a 1J:MPOR-
ARY poaltlon lype 50
wpm and !1ood oro11n1r1-
t1ona1 1klll1 required
ThOM qu11111e<1. eont1ct
Yvette Moreflo (2131
WIOOW HAS US tor 1-41-2 I 14
Tera, St0.000 up No IUD[Rlll S & l credit oheett. no penllty lt'flr n
MfH Aleo buy jumbo TO EOC
'3001< up " o.n111on Auo<:. 873-7311 The lutea1 draw In lh•
-----WHI I Dally Pilot
Cluelflld Adi 642-5e78 Cl...ifled Ad ~~-5e18
ctLLHTIH SALES
Pre-set la.cl• to Bu1teness
ow~rs. No debtor con·
1act Earn to 12500/mo.
Cnll Joe, 1·792-1637
C8111 lie Good driving rtt Coast Hwy, Lag Sch
cord Neat appearanQ6ll 494·404'
Freeway Stores. Call for Host/Hoai'en days &
appointment. 556--0383 eome evea Nr oc Air·
UORIW port Call bet 2-4pm
Receptionist. Secretary 752·2538 '
and Jr Eecrow Olltcer Hotel ---OILH PUil S1111r1n comman1urate Newpor1 Beech Front ot-IESlll I IUJH. wltll ••1>1rlence Mull tlce clerk. maneger
Harelworlclng lndlvlelual have proleulonal IP· M11ture. allrKtlve, honett
wt pl1nl knowledge pearance Call 640·6040, hard work Ing
needed tor full lime pos· 11sk for Jackie 7 1•·6•5·4411. 10 am • 5
Ilion In Coron• del Mar Etn•ow-IEO"fTAllY pm A1k for David Step· Design planting & main-T" hens
tenance of annual and Corona del Mar ofllce. ------pefrenllll bedt & con-hrlght mature peraon Houseeleanera wantad
1.iners wlll be prtnclple needed tor Or•nr Coun· Need ci r S5thr L v
re1pon1lbll1tlea Cell ties 2od oldest friend Message, GJl-8222
873-2268 Mon-Fr i lot company. type HouMkMPer. 4 hrs per
8 30-.CPM lcr 11n eppt 50WPM end have dt1lre wl\ S5.00 per nr H B ~,.,8 resume & reteron· to advance l(lnt benefit• Mull read Eng. 9&2-3257
ves avallable Ring 547-5625 881\ lor
To P'aoe your m..age
before IM
r..Olng publlc,
phone
Dally Pilot
Ctaaatfled, M 2·5e78
=
Lynn .. llllllPll
fnrM supervisory Q"p.n Live In lovely Npt. Bctl
Ing• for He•llh Orlen-home nr ocean. Lit•
t9d/Mll motivated lndl· lllkkPQ Ind Iller IChoot
vldual• High \'&rnlng ~Yif!On of 13 'ff «*I
potantlal No IXP«~ d1u~1r tor worklni
required.· Wt Train In NPt =d• M~ha~cer
Ollc 550•2148 StuMnt prel Smt talary
Sell Idle Item• &42·Ml78 875-2120 ...,,,
Mature, responi lble per. w I t h n u m b e r 1 .
h"'h .~• MacGregor Yacht Corp, eon to menage 'V vuo· 1031 Placentia, Co•t• ume nndwictt shop
Apply In pereon The iiMi ... ii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l1,1mmy Stuff«. 270 S.
Brl1to1, Coet1 Mesa
751-3586
MAIA I ER (MITEL)
tfftM Wtr .. r/lmtr
BalbOI 1111nc1 to Buena
Paril • <111~. Mon
tllru fhura. M50 mo
111-HOI
M oul expa rt ence ~~~~~~~~~ preferred but not r•· = Qt•lred Wiii tr tin Cov-P a I n I• r , a x p . o r
PIH only, no d9pendent wallp1ptrer. 548-583 I
cnlldran Of pate Elloel· Wage ~ot11ble
i.nt benefits • bonv9 In· ---------aentlve Wiiiing to r• PARTIFVLL TIME. 8 days,
loelte Call for appt ~ will train, Bergstrom
I we e n 9 A M · 3 P M Clee<*t. CdM
Mon-Fri, PART· TIME, Counter help,
Miki Piro• , 1·3 Oary'• Dtlll, N.8. 2 13/~9•8' 752-5401 OAL I ltTILS P?a-rt--11-me-, _e_x_pe_ri._n_ced-,
•••••-TUl-.-1-genwal offloe pereon for
-" ltl'ltll ~t e.e.ch of· M oo-sec>O t* weell no--verted dull•. llght
Letrn INtMt grOWlng In· ·~ping, 2~ Clays/wk,
Clu•try In U S National 15.50 llr 6'4ti-3908
Orgentzatlon expandlnl:I. No [)per neceNtry Wt Piir1.11me
trsln· Cell Mr li•rrlt Exper LEOAL SEC· ~2·5789 RETAIW, 675--0200
AGES 11-14
EARN lf> TO S75.00 PER WEEK
Wt now hnt IS optnll'P tor ,ou11 eapr
btlftr1 to MCUft radef& for The Or•r..,co1st DlrlJ Nol Giii CAWS &IMI •t 3 30 p 111 Ind ..,,, .m11130 p,111 . ..tdayi On Sat~y. "'
wor~ • ltw lllO!t howrs You Witt wn 1111111 ltlf!S
lfld Pfllt1. •nc with Wllffll JOI!' own '"°"" . ltltrt 11 no dtli"""C 01 colltctron invotYtd
" you art lnterttted, please c.n Mr hrl
(714) 548-7058
..
' •
'
C'I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Aug 30, 1983
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Tread
6 Flah
10 Weigh! unU t• Fast
meuage
15 All through
18 Hlghrollera
town
17 --costs
18 Mexican coin
19 Shakespeare
vlllaln
20 Import taxes
22 Weapon
24 Fastener
28 Rudder parts
27 Confronted
31 Letter
32 Radium
pioneer
33 Ultra -
35 Garden 1001
38 Elevator man
39 Czech
president
40 Make sm ooth
41 tnSYrgent
colloq
42 Mushroom
43 Stacked
44 Color
45 Fierceness
47 Clouts
2 3
51 Narrative
52 Chicago
team
54 Hoofed
animals
58 USSR lake
59 French rl\ler
6 1 Recipient
82 Man's
nickname
63 Ruulan king
64 S tearate, e.g.
65 Bering and
Beaufort
66 Speake
67 Garment
DOWN
1 Saurel
2 Armadillo
3 Bllnd
as - -
4 State
5 Acquit
6 Mountie or
G-man
7 Profess
B Adjust
9 Furnishes
10 Network
11 Plunder·
arch.
12 Wrath
13 Heaths
21 Incubate
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
23 Spanish
shouts
25 Peavey
27 Acidity
28 Dainty
29 Bed
30 Feasts
34 Kmd of race
35 Healthy
36 Unique lhlng
37 Current
39 Medicinal
herbs
40 Indicator
42 Create
43 July 1 and 4
e\lents
44 Captions
46 Contalrier
4 7 Trades
48 Number
49 Lariat
50 The March
King
53 Diagnostic
photo
55 Preposition
56 Virg inia -
57 Withered
60 Bitter \lelch
11 12
Far1lt1n MH C.•t•ttu ff11 1_ ... _,,...,,_S._J_l _ _...l.-01..,4 1 s;m;;;:;9fl; lo~IY tor• I Oo\lbl• bO• te)r1no , m11 • loveMal, ntvef HI on lrMI, Ilk• nt'*, u nltlled 2 Hobie t4'1, c:u1tom trlr, Sac. S 160 eec;h sea 5IH·7130 lt .. hlypelnled & r-lred
(2•31 927·4&11 S1500101r 240-8093
7'0Kor I II EV81')'thtng !Ot beby Play· 73 HOBIE 14 -wi trlr l
IOI• 1:00"' :"ch':' ~: pen, •wino etc 752·2820 •tr•• 1700 580-8244
U75 pr Antique Penn EXPECTING??? Complete nOIM, 833-1381 WOik
Outen •HI 1300 Fr 1•11 maternity wardrobe HOBIE 16 trailer w/eat
Flowet Cert 1260 Ru11 llie 8· to I Page Boy. •le:) bOic. rainbow .aJ11. many
chr $150 Mite 846-4474 15·12~·3465 •~ 11:1ru , rarely uMd Sacrl
BHutllul Oak wall unit Femlly IMl'l'tber1hlp. JOhn llC;e Sl ,950 673-3600
Perl.ct condllton. 1400. Wayne Club, 1800 SABOT iii New pelnt Call 548 7593 Pleue call 545.7997 s175 963•6272 ·
BeauUtul Pecan wood lln-Frplc 1ereen wltoole 125 Sabot, comPie1e w/Hll• &
lsh Lamp teble w/ahell & Doo houaeSl5 983·8206 cover. In 11lnt cond S•OO
drawer $115. 859-1652 648-9588 or ... 11 370
Baeut wrought tron rm lt41 .. lear S.ll llll Santa IHbei.
divider. 6'A .)( 8', 1360. Xlnl cond. Mu1t tee to •P· §lb01-:-complel•. good
Lemp, 115 3 pee MC precl•t•I 548--0910 c:ond, $275 962·8~8
couct:i. I 176, ~Opie ~~~~~~~~~ 1 ..,,,-,,.-.~--,..-roc:l(g chr, S30. 10091 er ,.. Vlklng20,woodhull,ready
Capitan, H.B .. 982-0802 Lo Dog HouM. lnaulated, to aall. Alomt101 Bay 111p
BEDS CORNEA GROUP removable rool lot euy 12000. 875-7091
$100. 548-9878 c:leantno 150 861-0702 Wlndaurter comp, used 3
LOI Cabellero• Tennl1 tlmea $860 552·0881
BUNK BEDS neullcal de-Femlly Memberahlp. Low ~----
•Ion. mattre11 lnc:I .. xlnl price at $700 984-3033 ... II,
cond. $200 640·00411 I~ A SLi 7011 Meglc ltland·Gold mem-•
Cabinet ber w/reltlg 1200 berahlp, velue S 1,450, f enlF Boat, 181, wt 115
Stereo tape deck $300 MUST SALE wlll accept hp Mete 018. 11lnt cond.
lg collee tbl $200. $950. Doug Ammerman new pelnt & uphol, Incl
Baken rac:k $75. CHh. 851-2000 trallef & Lk Elsinore l>Oll
556-0998 Magic r1rand Gold ellp.$4500.497·2637AM
hrs. 2 Contemp 1w1ve1, Mbmihlp. seso. Sell & eves; 493-5243 wkdy•
cemel c:ord vetv" I 125 trade or o I I e' I •ariat !!•i~ 7 J ea Oak-glu• CONM tbl 714 998-0462 s too All I~ new 551·0278 • 12' lnlla1li1e at, 1450
.-A-.•t-.•.;.•.;.W;.;•.;;.•.;;;lt~tl-..:ff.:.:::20 A1te1 la rte4 Aat .. , lapriM
wt llY DllaH 1117 elb le 11 1111 USED CARS & TRUCKS COME IN OA CALL FOA '8 I Dat1un 310, lo ml, 111n1 .. I II llmff 11 PIH •-att•• <:Ond lhruoul, air, $1000 ltlnl $ 18.500 1-533-4242
...... ..., -below Blue Bk Mull ... Cormlet-0.Llllo '3860 848-6633
HIUllET
18211 BEACH BLVD
HUNTINGTON BEACH
147-10111•••·•••1
wt PAY TtP NU.U
fHllHOUI
WIMAIH•
PHTIA0/111111
2480 HllbOI' Blvd
COST,\ MESA
141·4100 141-1417
WAllTEDI
ood, clean uled car1;
prefer 1978-1983 Bulcl\1.
Jaouare . TA71 &
Poraches bul any model
coneldered Top prices
paid! Cell Clive at Bauer
Motors 11 (71 4 1
979-2500.
WEWHTYOlll
OLU• llH OAJll
'82 280ZX 1-tO(). Ii •P<J.
loaded Eatend&d .. rvice
Wirt, new llfCket Aalclng
S 11,900/obo. mull M!f.
15K ml 499·2922
Fi1t tltl 'U s1at1on wagon. a dr •
$500 Obo 673·5• 16 1.... -llls r 50,000 ml !> spd, new 76 Civic. 3 dr, muet M ii radl11a, brl\a & 1nock1,
$2000. 7141859-1000 many xtru Xlnt cond
days, 673·0'435 eve1 S•OOO 759-1206
'78 Civic CVVCWon. o-'81 e1rn c:ond, 18,000 ml. 2
brksl trana, 801<, good dr, air. atereo $4200
cond S 1500 544-406• 833·8917 or 553-0619
'79 HONDA ACCOAOTI '81 GL Htc:hbk, 4 wtil dr.
Alt, PIS , PIS, 1adlo, tape desperate S5000 obo
cus , new tires, 1 owner 557·5040 561< miles, •Int cond. -
14695 FIRM. 6•8-6435
'79 HONDA ACCORD LX
A.uto, Air. A.m/Fm $4400
64 1-3080 or 675-3584
'82 4dr Honda Accord,
auto. air. AM/FM stereo '"""~,..,~~~..;,.;~
onvtn Oven $90 Wood 15 HP Yenmar Marine Dre.·~ ,50 673 ... 253 Meglc lalend Gold mem-Oleser. $2000 645-9849 4 ftHl Dti"I 0 ~ ,, bershlp. Beal Ottef. MOii· -,---,.........,.-.,..----11w ... ift".-_,.-..,_. ...
ble bed. I 100. Cottllf Ing out ol Stele. Evening• 35 HP JOHNSON w/comp 183 cJ7, red w/btac:k .
casa. cruise control.
$8300 640·738g
..... 91 7 ~~~--...,...-9.;.17;.;;3
tabla, 130 Oak wel 851-0244 acces 875-7396 loaded, perlect $8500
divider, $95. 848-3478 !~~~~~~~~~ 35 JOhnson E16Ctrlc Out-obo. 644·5366, 851-1525
181 isOzO 4 dr Auto. Xlr.
AMIFM $4800 641·3080
or 675·3584 Dtnelle Set· butcner block Men'• 10 IPd Bike $50. board, long 111111• her-Tracks I 5
S I S 0 ness & controls Cell ---------w/chrome, 8 chelre $125 tepp no stones 4 642·5800 '67 Ranchero, runs oOOd. ~~
1976 Musting lasi'Dack.
low mlles, 4 epeed, air,
sun·IOOI, V8. PIS, P/8.
Flawless tan Interior, rune
and drives greet $2,995.
970·0548
Crib $50. 963-8296 each, Pienta $2 up, Bug ---------very depend. p/1, 11ereo. light $55. Drawing Table Avon, Rede:'"' Oars, aeat, $ For Sale -Six foot S~O. 840•6807 motor bracket Xlnt _•_l_r •_h_k_a_8_oo __ 64_2_·_9_18_5
nlde-1-bed. Brown plaid. c $600 ,,, ·73 F d c 1 p u d llke new. $75 850· 1710 MeN Verde Country Club ond. . ~5-6776 or our er . " ra Goll Membenhlp, price s llres. am/Im "ereo. tool Glrl1 Bedroom Set, wtllle eegull 3'A hp mtr Ueed bo• compl, needa eno w/green & yellow trim, negotiable. 645-2203 twice, under warn. $350 work s5oo. 548• 1463
•Int c:ond . 10 plec: ... Oek Glen Mountain Re-(n-s4751. 673•8017 ·77 Ford Courier w/c:mpr 111111 lllolEIU'I
$500. 644-0561 treat Memt>enhlp, camp SH~I hckl 7 2 atiell. S2290 494-6955. SOUTH Coast to Coaat, sell dwn _ Hld•·•·bed couch 1125. pymnt $1350. 552-8127 50' oat slip. shore power 85l·0878
Recliner chair wlelec & waler lnc:I. Npt Bch y111 &Ail COUNTY heater $70. 19" Color TV Odysaey II Micro pro· 644-4505 1..,_,.,_ _____ m-..;.;
S90 Antique end table, oeuor. exit cond, Incl 17 ---------167 VW VA.N nu trans, re-ISUZU
dbl dec:k 01111 $30. games, S 175 546-3026 LarJt 0.1ttr 11111 cent new eng good cond 11w1 WILL •tT 850-flllO 23 19th. SI. "C", $2700/lerms 754·7998
ISUZU 1919 Rabbit, so.ooom 1
Pettec1 orlglnal brown
body. t111wleH tan In-
terior 4 speed, runs fan-
tastic. S3, 150 970-0548.
1980 Rabbit diesel delux.
low mlle1, son·rOOI, lookl
and drives great $3,675.
970·0548
...... laprt ..
Vtlff 1175 'ri VoCVo 244bl auto.
•IC, gooo cond 56,000
ml S3toO 846-6748
455 E Cout Hwy
N-port Beach
673·0900
'75 codfit DE VILLE
611< ml. fully lo1<1ed. like new 52395 &.45-0057
'79 Sevllle OelMI, bllCk,
wire w11ee11. mo11 xtres,
48,000 miles S8500.
493-1812
'82 Coupe De Vlll•G6.
Liken-. orig owner, lull
pwr, cab root, velvet Int •
c1ulse, amllm atereo
Vogue wire .... heels,
reduc 10 S12,950
546-43 70 or 1-498· 1481
'83 Eldo Cabro rt, ""r wnls,
Flrem111 paint, 1111. crulN ,
teathr Int., 6 wey 111 Incl
peas. am/Im, lllum tw'ltry;
opera Illes, mats. dr lka,
lull warr. 7400 ml. PP
( llup 189) $ t8,995, ph
840·6627
THE UlllEST
SELECTIOI
or late model, low mileage
Cadillac• In Southern
Calll0tnl1I See ua todayl
ll&IERI
CAllLUC Port.Jac:uzzJ aefl contalned IElllEllllLI '63 VW. 12V. rear and 1 ltY FHllTHE 1400. 811 coucn $70. Roll-~--6_7_5·_0_23_8--:=clr.: '72 Ford Van, Chateau Volume Sales, Servi<:e damege $600 Firm Mu1t 2600 Harbor Bl~d
Lea 957•8133 er type jogging machine Ste1111 7 4 Club Wagon. orig owner. And Leasing eell by 6·30 534-7070 COSTA MESA
$10. 754-1850 600 .q It ltOfage apace, b•lntkc:ond. "-,, llre,•,.eneweo 1871 t Beach Blvo 6'4' Bug, N-~· en rl, 540-1860
lnformel loem turnltura. Red Wino •leel toed work S ra es, am m r . Huntington Beach $1050 ot>o. •• 1'" • ~------~~ sole. to11111e1. 2 upallllta, 250 mo 11tc:k shtlt. $2600 (11") 1"2 200 ~ ~ " huaoclu, $200/o lr boola. new. a 70A. ~5-6'42-4826 548-6426 ,. ,. • 0 '67 VW Bug. nu trans. bneltt 9313
640·8274 a118PM 1=-7..,,5.,...2._2_8_20_-=---=--= Boat & AV 11orage. up to . J t good cond S2700/tMm• •U Monza convert . P9rl
Kint .lze b.d. $too Selling •Ill Cheap! 19' 50' 7P3SOodPr 82, .. ~· wlvand. I UIO, .... , 1 754·7998 ~l""""w/lrglr-~er not 642-4904 Ooltyour· . . 1 .,.,. owa. 183• J ., L 11 1,..,,-,.--------body/eng/transluphol/to 5-4 40t9 • ..,,,... -· M4f ares chrome wtlls, rear ... 1. aguar .... ar~ · '88, good paint. nu raOlal1 p. No denll Ot rust. preny but work• perlect clean needs motor work Classic, 78,000 orig $ l600 ot>o 873•6416 S 1700 536-3932
King tin wttbed. w/hrtr. 175 Self·1upport1no llc~ln l · miles 3 6 L • door -V91eff mall, tall hdbrd porch awing, xlnt for CANS CRUISER blcycle, $ l500 545•9 '59 se d a 11 . • a u'L om a tic ·10 vw Bus $1500 Al>lt '8~ Nova ,,2,dr • 6 c:yl, auto,
w/2 c:eblneta & mlrrot, 1marraruS50.Complete xlnt cond , $100 080. '80 Dodge Van Con-Borg-Warner 1ran1, eno. new brakes/lire• ruoagd ... 95 645-7578
padded 1lde1 $550 rwtn bed 111 w/dr-& 080-9668 V8f1lon, sink, Icebox. TV. am/Im marine band Web1r,Bll11eln, Jack-·53 Cnevelle, 3~ eng, 957-t753orM5·7~ mlrr01 S100.01nermtac. aola seet S9500 Blaupunk1stereo.brome man1, many e111ru turbo 4 00 1t11n1,
Matching couch and =s_ee_•_t_1_1_4_2_2....,n_d_.s_1_._N_.e. 5if:;";;/,e1J~~i!'a:,da 962-0206 with bucket Mita, wtra 873·3013,037-2132 $500/080 81 11.
lveeat.1160 Mtacrablel Two re1erved seating BMXllS0.673-3600 Aati••t1, :~~;~~'· s3500/0 BO '71 VW Convert, nMd1 _530_·_72_7_1 __ • ___ _
675-4648. tlckell to aee: Cl I 9045 tome wotk, 12500/blt '69 Nova. 307 V6, otlg
Matching couch & lov. llEIU WTll ••ter likff 11"~ C! '81 Jaguar XJ6, black, tan olr 8'12· 114 t owne<. tmmect $2850
Hat. $250 Beautlful Sept. 17th at the Pacific 156 oil New Mo P•d• '29 Model A. 4 000< Town 171( ml. Xlnl condition '73 Karmann Ghia Convert 875-9250 or 788-93S3
water bed, complete, Ampllneater. Reg. S27 through Sept 30 Miners. Sedan, restored. s9.995. $21 ·900· 54o-o459 $4000/ol>O 675·1287 '83 Cnev Caveller, 4-d-r.
$400.557-5-475 lorboth Wlll Mtlfor S20. Ward/Ellis, F Vlw '6 F d w di I QLl 1132 c II s 846-4184 ' " or oo e, navy ara111 a I '74 Conv nu top/tlret A/ . 5 IQd. lie nu. 950
Mull Mii quilted aola & 962·1922 blue, restored. $12,995. * '70 Convert1ble n-amlfm cw, 4 tpd, lo mi: lakes over IN or nu ==~~===~~~===~~=~~~;::~=~~~~=:::J love1ea1 . $500, worth ••lic1l l11t. &2.24 ·7e VESPA 125 Good ~ 675-8161 _ paint, very clean, n-xlnt. $6000 642-7866 1erm1 39 mpg hwy
$900. Also hide-a-bed. Bundy ffute. Nu P•ds l body, runt well $500, * OAI •H 011¥. OPE tires, orig. 461( ml ·74 SUPER BUG New 846-7171·------ltlt WutM 5101 Belt Wutt4 Peta 5535 1275. All II only • mo Old. cork•. $150. 545-1479 831•3853 or 544•8006 Compl rllrd Mint $3500 08 0964·1393 p11nt1tlree Snrt. gd cono SEE US FIRST!
S.OrtlltJ/lff 11111 2 lga Boa Con11r1Ctora & Exit c:ond 963" 1791111 5 For sale. 300 watt Sunn '78 Honda Express, $200 $251( PP 714/~0-0491 '61. new brakes & lnterlo1 $2500, 545-0630
For Comm·! Artl~t F'lr;,, TUYEL AIEIT cage. $200. 651-0702 Oak game teble w/cn11r1 Beta Le1d Amp end Low miles. Eva.. 644-0452 '65 Coronet 500 c:onv, 3 16 Runs great $2000 obo '76 VW BUG Sunroof,
Temp 1111 Feb '84 Pou-1Newporl Beach Travel S 4 5 0 Amer I c 1 n o 673 77.22 660 1440 lblylonger PITmorn 9•1 Agency Non·smkr MICE-for pets or leeder1. Mar1lnsv1lle Armolre & oya "Ted Neugent" New Ve1pa P200 . V8,2bbl,buckets,c;enter • · or • · needs p aint 12250
Mon·Frt, exp only. Type, Sabre, 1-2 yrs u -sm 50c, 10 75c. 651-0702 triple dresaer 1425 each guitar wlloys. All In xlnt wine/bl~. 130 ml St 100 console. perl orll'nal W Buo~une gOOd. In 751·2967 Jay
Ille phones 642·2221 petlenc:e Call Ardis, ht~' ltl & 1 963·4~8. 546-8077 ~2~:S11 !,;3;~ ~-bo . ~~35•C e ll Renee Asking 11750 650· 130 GOO<l condnlon, $1500 '78 Rabbit, rune like n-
• 850· 1111 A••i 9107 obo, 55 1-3732 orig paint, 35MPG. air
Sec1e1ary/Aeceplion1s1 . -------18 ntury Enollsh Pub Queen Waterti.d wd lrm, Marlin Tenor Uke Xlnt Pucn Moped 1 yr old. fll • 9141 H ryl S2900 846-6533
strong b ookkeepplng TYPIST Plano. walnut t>urt, xlnt new heater/liner only end 35yr• old Mull NII xlnt. 1 owner. 3200 ml, '77 Audi Fox S11tlon II I ur ~·--
eMnllal. typtng & sl'lorl· Secretariat Serv , XLNT cond $1,000 731-4479 $I 2 5 6'hld•· •-bed $395/ol>O 066-4990 ev 1325, 556-l9 l9 Weoon lmmac run 17• Mazda AX3 'lllA(lon. '79 Sclrocc-0 full pwr. air,
hllt'ld. Satery open $end S k 111 s . F • m 111 • t 4'nllque Stefeo H~ neugh I 125 876-7306 =--=-=------=--~ 1uperb. 35mPO. depend comp!, nCls eng worl\ stereo, nu red mel paint,
rMUme P 0 Box 2990, w/elementa.ry w0td pro-aoleXJnl cond. Mu!ll -t SolaS125.Lo-.tStOO STUDIO piano 1350 Two Honda Express trans S1950 848-1164 $300 548-1463 veryclean&clependable, Nwpl 8<:ll ~"ii Mature. exper M E d 1 ...... .,,. ,..,. 1 CONN Organ 1350 Moped• $200 ... 10 mt .. 77 F lo -----grt g11 mileage $4500 ---------' appllcanll only pleue. ..,so. 493-8077 Jerry n ,.,,. ~ """ ng rm 5<45-3518 ...,. ~-" 752-87"• 011. mt. ruf),•8-g060reat3 'll ILO IUTHIAOI _6•5·5374"' s-42-6189 UDIETUf tmmed openiny. M-F. llble w/4 chalt'9 S140. In· .,... ...,."' "" $1800/0l>o ~ _
S Beautllully rellnlehed fant c:er IHI S30 flee Fanltut/ ••ter,...lH/.,.._ ___ . -----Deluxe. sunroof, 48,000 '79 VW Dal Rabbit. dl11, air,
northl.nd required. type Costa Mesa. 9 9-2161, brua double headbolrd, 751-0269 •--• •z•• .,. 80 5000S, lmmac, 1 ownr ml. am/Im c:ess S2395 41Pd 4dr ll8feo lllnt 60 wpm Newport Centef Vi<;kl $250 845-8999 .. ~tit -lcMllfl 1011 15,000 ml. lully loaded 6'42-5051 /497-6816 241( ,'.ni ~·700 95;.3922
ottlce Salary negotiable ''I•••••••• --,:c=--------SOFABED. dble. ~Int EJCec OMii' f , .... , $8400 obo 657-6810 CeH Kelty 64•·2507 II GERRIE'S ANTIQUES c:ond. 1 115 552-t495 .. m• .... no '74 HARLEY DAVIDSON ---=~,.., •trce4n .... 145 '80 dal ~bblt 4-ap 4-dr
PAAT-TIME,Varledhoura ISBACK c:r eden z• s55o Spon1t« 1000 neweng Aattla 91 1167 2sosl. 83 Fuhlon air, stereo.· 65K m1', knlee ltat. Atte1L ro Include eerly A.M 3500Sq11 of American An· Sofa, grn & wt'lt Yelour 752 t569 xlnt lll'lape, s'2000 C•li P/tlme evee/wllnda NMt weekends.Mu11havede-tlques. alao department SlOO 846-3478 lprtlafJ;Wt lf3i 9M.21oe att 7pm 'llAllTIIUIHIOA laland Show CAr Pro-~•olulely llawlu1
A(>peeranoe and hand-pendable vehicle (1mall ~l usedfurnllure &cooec-Solid Pine bdrm 111 __ w/rebulllmotot S275Jol>O leulonally r e1tor1d. 750 83l-30115
WTitlng only need apply truck, van. llallon tlbles. Wiii buy &tales, w/wtlnutllnlah 12 draw· Hano G • uMd twk: '78 HONOACX500 8111069-;221 S20,000. 7141638·592• '81 Rabbit. 4 IQd. ale,
2590 Newi><>rt 81 CM .... agon) to aSSlll newa-C-Onslgn or what heve er dr_,, lrg mlrrot. wl cue. Be11 offer 1750/obO 875-1287 '10 280SL, auto. A/C, 2 am/Im c:eu. rool rack,
paper Oeeler In lrvtne you? so 1 No El Camino ChNI of 5 d•aW9rl & 957-0500 Sacrifice ·79 Suz. AM 125 Xtnl &1.tts, l•J•rtetl 1op1, mini cond S 16,500 werrenty, $4700 obo,
SlatlonetyStoce In Corona 8181 Mull be depen-Real, San Clemente, night 1tend ,500 Lee Mui• golf crubl, cond Mull "" ~25/bo •W 9112 obO. 631·0257 6•2-8953 or 662·1128
del Mar needs FIT ei· deble. Contec:t Greg 492-0638 or 492-4554 .... 1•7626 . 1·2-PW, "L. XS $25 759-t 166 JOhn '1~ 2002 BMW Rbll 1 -perlenceo tale1peraon Hyde Monday thru Friday A li O l =----vv-,-----" " · . exce '70 280SL auto, AM/FM. '81 Rabbit Convt, wtlt, 675-10 to between 9·30 and 10:30 ~· 11ct1 I l Swedllh Modefn couch eectl 875-3391_ '82 Honda Exprns, 400 con d S 4 0 00 I o b o . low ml , new tires AM/FM caN, only 21,000
Stock Delivery Person. a.m. on1x. 842-4321 1f cu fi. Coldspot. oOOd w/att. ~d tablet, iclnt Surf board Stuasy, twtn ml. mini. allver. 2 evall 534-5l5t S12.ooo 645-7559 ml. $7550. 548-8451
eves. 19 yral ov8f Apply • cond, S150. 982-3119 cond, $75/obo. 6'46-2530 fin, 6' O" S120. 675-7091 1275 ••·PIP 840·043<4 '77 3201 Rklnpln 1leerlng '70 280SL. very clean. lo '81 Rabbit Conv, 51,000
In peraon 495 E 17th S1 Waltreu/Waller PIT --H.RBOR •Rr• Teall Sltfeo a--_.. •<>50, TV lt:Ti1 Honda Oreem Cla11lc. Snrt, am/Im lier cau. ml, $16,900. 631-1105 ml, axil. $81150. 673·2658 S Ou ,.. " """ ...,.,.,, ,.... J. ~ ' •250 333 e 8 c 951< ml, •U Mf'll rc:ds 91 ane Daya. Owr 18. Wiii treln APPLIANCE SERVICE teek & Ille end llbte S80 lttlM 1232 • · 1 lh. Oii• Aun• Kint. $5500 llrm '71 220, snrf, orig owner. '81 Rabbit 011 LS, lmmac
Teacher MontealOf"'ieert Shirai · 546-7948 We Mii recond .. ou81. eecn, t>eto• C-Omer MO. 12" rect&llnear '""krt l l50 MN& M 2-33711 780_91 tO. 9 10 5 M·F & $3800. 640·8161 thruout, 50 MPG, air,
FfT, Sep1 t, Salerv ""-<>-X-R•y 1~.h tor --"t~·t 01. appliances 549-3077 couch. 1595. 084-3033 ..... ••ter leaet 1020 ~·· 20•0 "5 crulH control 4 dr
1 ·' . ...., ""' .,......, -e9Ct\, Pioneer trnteble -0 -0 a · ·75 450SE, 84,000 ml, s3850/olr 949.i533 ' t able, Montessori School lice. Exp nee. PIT Dbl oven OH stove 1250. Triple tnlatd drw, Kawai s 100. Technlc. amp S 125. iiiiiiiiiiiiiii=iiiiiiiiii=;;; '80 320!. 351< ml .. 5 • ..._.., sunroof, cassette. good ,_--------
Ftr4 9 19
65 Mustang .conver1. lulty
equipped. en.try cond,
auto, ale, pa $8500
648-8-429/645-60•3
'85 Mullang Convertible
bright red w/wt11 tap,
rebll V-8, euto. Great cer
$6200 875-7773
'65 Mu1tang, xrnt cond ,
•OK ml. on rbll eng.
everything hu been ra-
1loted, great depondal>le
car 842·0915 alt 5,
Mark $3200/080 ~ 1191~~7~91D 1 e 0 ° 548-9319 Portable dlthwuher hBlby10re1nd11Pl•no. l>Mut llM-30·33 1977 Dodge Explorer Mini alt, 11.,80, eonroo~ tires $12,750. Super 81 Rabbll, lmmac cond
J.a..1 Waat·i 5105 $150. 650-5155 anong I •lures. drp1. motochOme. 34K Mllee, trana gold BBS wheels Sherpt 857·1598 Run1 perfect AM/FM , "88 Musting, 11lnl cond
• ft etc:. 752-873 I. 1 Settlement 1983 100 ' ' I $3550 846-118-4 RLIPlllE
lll.IOfTHI
CONSTRUCltON bXFJ Deluxe lreeier. ref rig. 2 dr wal1 tpkrs. n8Vef uMd, xlnl cond · Ol'lg. owner iclnr. S 1 l,000, prlv party '16 450SLC. nu pelnl. MC. a r _ 52000 675-8828
•Much resld/comm up GE wl cold water WalMti.d, qn dlx, all K -worth 1700 Sae $99. 20'Mlf-contalned,sleepi 559-9140 AM/FM CHI , snrt, pwr '81 VW Rabbit Con·
•Conllr co'• & pvt situ· crushed & cul>ft on lroni c • • • o' I e • S 2 8 5 (2131927-8511. 6· ~S~ Si,.\t1:J:00 '80 BMW 3201 Sunrf 5 window•. the work• Call vert1ble, sliver 13K ml Work evening• tn Colla
Mase. Lu1 ...-our 100
perton put In 24 hour•
lf\d brought hOme $350
Call 751-4222 Iller 1
p.m
111on1 con• (you ...,111 be door, 4yr old $500. 261·2022, 875-11206 SDd. am/Im c:Us. s95oo bet 10AM, 644·4014 X-cond $8,900 640-0459
tmpresaed). Merk Nelton, 662· 1081 elll ltsa 4 11......U • r daye 752·8200, evlwlmd 'll Ml I.I . ILm 642-8088 C.M F SAE oomponenl1 w/AA 90 '79 Mlrege Toyota, dual1, -rlgldalre wllce maker. OcHn Ft1htng f ackle 1 p n k e,. S er Io u 1 4 tpd, "'' cont. boat Convenlently Loceted $28,500 t-S33-4242
Refined Fem., exp ~ly whtte l l50. O'Keele & P~. ~. 25 lo $251 In -lota only $3500. rlCk, CB, 16 mpg $7950 & Compellllvel)' Priced
care. live-In. 831-6590. Merritt •love. JIH, 548-9832 Call 546-7593 obo. 642-215'1 9'Yl/wltnd Q ·75 MBZ 450 SL 41,000
ml )(Int c:ond S26,500
7 14 /675 -661 5 o r
673·•617
TemlX)ftry office position,
••P«lence required. 10
key, typing, good In math
Cry11a1 Creetlon1. 711 w
17th S1. Cotta Mete
THIUOIHIU
la now ecoeptlng appll·
c:et1on1 fot the follOWlng
po1Jtions Food HtVICe,
c:oc:kll ll service .
hosl/MMS, bua peraona
Apply In person. 819
Sleepy Hollow lane.
Ltguna Beach
TlllMIWTI
IEITAHUT .. .,.rt .... ~
now ~ting lor tile lol·
lowing po90tlon•
*Line Coote '* P1ep Cook1 * BulMrl ._, 01an-..uhet1 * Host/HOii .. * A.M Server1
Appty In petson. 2-" Pfl'I
XLNT Pay & e.ntt111
1l 10 Newport Cent• Drive Newport~
EOE M/FIV/H
TOP&SS
Femelet Pt.i. Moo.I• &
&cort1 (213) SM· 1118.4
TOPLESS MODELS
175 0 ,\ Y PAID DAILY
No EAp Nee 826-2543
eict t12 Localrere w/grlddle, btown $130 •----....,.-------=-------•~---------646-9589 Wheelcllalr $200 Mowef, BEAUTIFUL 25" AC,\ Trailtra
Ref Lady wishes llv&-ln G d 11 d S80 2moold.i125 5<46-0321 Color TV, 2 yr wmty Utill~' IOU empi·eld -comp1nlon ;: .. ;y,er
6
. ex con · B • 14 S 148. Free delivery. Open, ___ .., _____ __
Xlnt NB ,.,. 543-2871 "'"" 4 .... IC sun T v J 0 H N . s 5x8 Ford ruck Bed Trallef
SER°VICES UNLIMITED I Ill AmWIOU Voutll s;a wldrwra i man. 646-1786 S275 845-0104
Marketing, Mrand1, Or't Lu 95 7-8133 IOdl C:hll, games, book a, JSL MARK X SPEAKERS. Small u1111ty trailer, brand
1ppt1. church. etc Re-costumee. mite. 17552 S60 11 ""8 n979 I bl d Aelrlg, c:oppertone, gd De Long Cir Thure-Frl, P r. ~ ... new •91em • • un liable driver, Kllve. II· cond. 185 962•2912 evi 7_5 M-n•vo• Ster.o-Phono, licensed $200. 752-6788 tr11otlva Older woman, ..,
own cer 6•6-9734 Aetrlge S200. wuner & l~rl ltac• l AM/FM ll25. 545-35!8 Aate l1tlct1 5 c,,, ssos e~·;~~.-:~5~~h-'8Tg,'iy 2 dr. 15765 llrm ... ,., Cbrt•r/ IMPORTANT
PerSlan Rl11an1, P9d1oree, 16,000 ml, nit cond. CeN Int 7010 NOTICE TO READERS
red male, cream female. Washer clean. worka good •t1 5 644-2380 Ptwtl Lit1 TOH ADVtR~?sEAS 1350 5 $85. Dryer gu work•=---,--..-.-..,....-..-.,..,_.,...,,......, __ ....,...,_ 36"1892 good S75. 5•8-4485 ........ • •• 181 shlriine V-Auh wltitr The price ol ll•m• ~I SSl ...,hlrl""""' g111 d"""' /iood 1212 60 hp Jhn1n, eng gd, huti adverll180 by vehicle " .,,,..... · ,_., nd• wr11. Trade for 1mlr dealers In 1he ventere C To "O ha Ired cond. $100 640-59 8 Beautiful Oak Pleyer Pleno l>Olt. trtr, 9'10 In gd cond. clanllled 1dv11t11lng
Chlhu1hu1. mate, 5 mo. Aictie 1 IOll $ 150 0 . 0 o r o e o u I OR t'1 $2000. s.48_2335 column• does not Include 1hot1. houeebroken, very • blue/brown pr1nt king u any appllc:eble 1ne1.
loving $175 548-0471 Giant 2 day "1ale I an. Hide-A-Bed 1400. Cute 18' Outtleld Bay bOat, nu license, trenater leea.
tlque auc11on. Sept 0-10 12 2 cubic It yellow/gOld bell. & molor Auv '83. Nr finance charges, ''" lot BUMtt Hound pups, AKC, ltW ·-•m• relrtoe 1200. 884-0807 nu c: on d . S 7 3 o o air pollutlon control d.-t>orn 7/14 552-3643. -8 OH111 .. ITI eves. M S-7 73 vice certlllc:atlona or
Boxer pup1. $ t75-1200
Fewn AKC Champ lines.
M/F 831-688e
J 1 25' C•.l'Wf. lmmec . will deale r documentary 846-6t64 nt 17 NII or lrede. 114.ooo. preperellon chergee un·
11•1. ••tnlila IOU c;;:ton S•pphiraa 116. 87s-5"1 1e11 ott1etW111 191Cllled -Gernetl $5 H Btu• by the advenlw C-Ollle, AKC. Mall. 1'A yrs, 2 ,.. 6 redwood decillng. Tapu •50 .. 8-40-8888 ·7 t Clualc, 11J' Trt-null, 4 • .... / lov•bll 1200. 534.5151 Only 55CW1t•per11 r.nc. cy1 votvo 110 ~ bOw 11••• en Fiii.. Ing •I• o H • r b or Olemond Cutlle'OfV: $3000/0BO t50.o435 · Putl IO l S
2 ~MALE 0 HEELERS Redwood 7141531" 13 t7. ~:~:: dl1m0n'r.' ·79 Zodiac Mar11 II, 25 hp, '11 Dez 90 hOOd. IT\lnk.
(Auetr9llan) n"d OOOd tlll All SHAPES & SllH trall«. 12200. 832·5128 other pent 176 H VW
homee HouMbf<*en, Ill lca!pt1I ffll Engagement Ainge: Mr· SACRIFICE 2411 M e· Bui rur b ench
111<>11. tPtyed. Cell -= ~ ring• LOOM Olamol'ldl. r9Ud., Freeh 165 twin 981-2220 981·2220
& wkndl, :J5l-106G. ~ttmron lef\3;(:~8~f. '714.ee7.~68 Mero. crul11re. Fully PAINT ANO LIGHT BODY
GOiden Aelr~. AKC. 4 Minolta llllh, llltera, Olemond Cutting Factory: equipped IOt Cetallne WORK· Sa~ SS J In-
mo, Male, AN 11111o11. Lroe cue. a '" extru. Pd Big Nie, tent buyt. IOw Tr•ll4W a. Mt cover. Make er .... your We vatue ..__. .. 1_ dghM Incl. I 150. Daugh-$67$. ~~1 Mii _ 1278. prlQM, t>etut di.tnonda onr 1179-&e 18 tv ~ by SS Biii 981· 122 t
•--1.,•lletglc: 038-2e74 WlllMllaep M8-58t2 AllSHAPES&SIZES II.I ltM HI ... Tl UU S~rw·1 Poodle puppy 14:= Hll Engagement Rlng1· ..,. ZlllAI a Hetp gl~ tnem • hetd .... IHCUP•tOy_ min---t•t•n rlnOI; Looe9 Diamond•. 18"p, loeOed. xtru, iclnt HJol-1 caan lmmed. for
1lar1 Earn lop us pan ltUI. 1250 up. 546-28.48 *I Bu . PC 2 6 B. 714.f67·2o&8 ueoo. 876-0668 your vehicle. dOMMllC or
time a111ntng1 Only COIOf gr•~ card, grn ti, 7 14 foreign 651-828& ~~~~~:,,•o :;~,~=d~:':d s,:it'~.~!n:~':ct~ ~ monitor 12405 786-7304 Ir Venture, tipe a. tAr I WE llY
apply. Phone a.&.702t. c:n •mp br•d suo •tBM PC. Apc>M ttE. Etgle ictrH. 11800. 75t-7164 GLUI Ull
2.30 10 8 pm ~ondey 841-0378 PC. Compaq Grand 28• C()(on9do Sloop UI ,..IKI
1nru Friday liiiiiii-:====:--•11,~~~lng~S~e~le~.~7:!8!:9-7304 Good ••• 11, oe. , .......... 11 '" r :l'D;t Celling fen. bresa motor -.... ... '"•tNif IM tt ta nu w/olk bled .. a tulip Cu1tom lntet!Of VHF :m•4NELI.
FOf CtuaffleO Ad
ACTIOH
Celt a
Delly Piiot
AD-VISOR
&42-M78
f
knock• often wt1en you • • Ughta, 3 lc>d & r-alble, 18800 AYS.,..6-9000
uee i.utt._tlnG Dally ttlM blKk f'•Y end ,_ uaed. Coat 1290. 27' ltlct0n, Atomle 4, 118,
Pilot Ct11ellled Ada to .t!ltt 841-Ma Take ltt. 552-0798 etp1 6, alnl cond. Nft
I • •
' \•I
: .. t ... Orenge Coat Fr .. bl11 Lab l)UPf>Y, 3 mo OeiLtOPl rdlen11cJcelltOf meln Hli, ROF/VHF. PlloN .,.2-NTa Old 11711-2288 Nie et the Forum, 111. f11,000/oft. •~7927 1 ______ ....;.;--..-.i
allow & 2nd lhow. Call ~ Adi!, yo411 ~ Fino wft•tyou want
65 t-8683 ltop lflOP9lnt oeMarr· _ o.ity ""°' Clur'fledll
C HfVRO LE T I
I ')4t> 1100
Clamlfted &42·7M7
''.& .MM "Wll .,, .,..,..., ...,. ._,.., -.,w._,,,,. .... w 1f'lo9 ""41
s1ie.-s .. ~tce-Leu1no
URI EST
lllVEITORY
• '81 3201; 5 1pd. an rl.
( 1CHJ t34)
• "8 t 3201; 5 1pd, MC
(1CUU444)
• '711320!. 4 spd , aunroot
(8811 XMK)
• '80 320!: auto . MC
(tAHY2311)
• '80 320!; Auto, Sun Roof
(748lXAI
• '80 833Ctl: 4 apd, Lo Ml
55564113
• '8 I 320t; 5 apd. Sun
Roof. (1CAS207)
•'82 7331, 6apd .. loaded
(73S"37)
'79 MBZ 240D. lease ha•
expired. IVOf'}' w/bemboo
Interior. 651< ml $10,850
673-3504
'80 3000, lvoryllvory Int,
.unrool, alloys. 118,000
497-5654
80' 300 D. whl w/t>etoe.
xlnl cond, n-tlrea, a/o,
amflm can, 1n rt,
$19,000 obo pp
955·2341
'83 360SEC, Champagne
ext, brwn lthr Int, anrt,
3.000 ml. llawlell Mull
11crlllc:e at $45,000
900-5190 att 5PM
r*.•k et>out the money -Ctln save you thru our
1>Yrc:ha11 & leue plans.
JlllUlllll
IMPllTI 130 t Quell Street
NEWPORT BEACH
111-HIO u ... an1 • 203 W I 11. Senta Ana CIOMd Sunday '711 MG Mlgel convertl6'.
-LA_R_O_E_S_E_L_E_C_T_IO_N_O_F_ 1 ~:~ S"~:~~t eond.
NEW & USED BMW'S!
Q
69 Mach I New llrel.
btkl. lhocll•. lront end.
ethull 1y11m, ball.
clutch Need ,_ throw-
out t>Nrlng S 1 tOO/b1t
ofr 5<4~110
·72 Pinto Runat>out, air
exll con<S, 1 ownr SllOO.
644-6788 •" 5
·73 Oran Torino stat. wgn,
orto ownr. per1 cond
$95-01080 875-228&
·77 Mu11ang II, rune good,
Sharp. $1800 obO Ollt'I
551-9695
'18 Fairmont, xtnt oond,
tow ml $3090 844·2564
'18 Fiesta, 0tlngt. AM
radio, sunroof, gd cond
12195 49•· 7078
'llLTIWA ..
Fully equlpl>ed, nHd•
body work. 12500. Call
Mike 644-9550
'82 MUSTANG GT
7000 ml, lo~. T tap.
$10,200/obo 761·11115
172 ¥1 2000. minor !>Ody &
work. •• It 8-48-0?H
s ;;;;as
engltlf
l•OO.
'73 CAPRI • XLHT COHO
Seer $1800. ~
'76 Mercury COfTlet V(
Automatic. I 1300 °' bit
Ofr 65&-1239
f
THE ORANGE COAST COAST IDITIDN
-TUEliDAV I AUGUST 30, 1183 ORANGE COUNTY , CALIFORNIA 25 CENl S
Showing their colors and ex citem ent
Kim Kupratis, Mich elle Lo pez, Michelle Tarlos,
Kerry Finnegan, Kelly Noonan, Erin Finnegan,
Jenn ife r Lunquist, Jennifer Kucher , K a ren
Kupratis and Cindy Ka mps, (left to right) all of
SPON holds key
in airport flap
By STEVE MARBLE °' ... .,.., .........
A citium group in Newport
Beach could emerge as the key
character in an attempt to limit
commercial jet departures out of
John Wayne Airport for the next
75 years.
If the proposed limit on daily
takeoffs is to be successful, mem-
bers of Stop Polluting Our New -
port, a group that has vigorously
fought airport expansion, might
Burglars get
$7,000 from
Harbor boats
By STEVE MARBLE
OI .. .,.., .... """
Who's plundering the great
boats of Newport Harbor?
Police are searching for some
modem-day pirates who broke
into four boats moored off the
posh Balboa Bay aub, then came
ashore to loot the dockmaster's
office at the Newport Beach club.
In all, more than $7,000 in booty
-ranging from a $200 brass ice
bucket to a well-used bullhorn -
was taken, police said.
Hardest hit was the
"Margarita," a vessel owned by
Duffy Hotels of Irvine. In-
vestigators said the looters crept
into the cabin through an un-
locked window and took an assort-
ment of video recording equip-
men t and a television.
The burglars also took a $2,000
90da dispenser from the "BP John
11" and an expensive
made-in-Spain sterling silver boat
(See BOATS, P ace A!)
have to remove itself from an
existing lawsuit and vow not to
take further legal action.
To date, members of SPON
have not thrown support behind
the plan for lirni ting takeoffs.
The plan calls for putting a lid
on departures, but only after daily
takeoffs are increased from the
present 41 to 55.
Negotiators for the city and
Orange County, which owns and
operates the airport, have drafted
a tentative agreement that would
virtually make the oounty and the
beach city partners in future
airport operations
If county supervisors and city
council members approve tenns of
the pact, it could end years of
fighting and legal battling.
But under tenns of the agree-
ment, the city must d.is:miss an
existing lawsuit against the coun-
ty. The lawsuit was filed two
years ago when the county was
attempting to expand the airport.
SPON, which has a member-
ship of about 400 families, is a
party to the lawsuit and could
prove to be the spd'tler in dismiss-
ing the suit.
City Attorney Robert Burnham
said the city is researching the
issue to detennine if the suit can be
dismiSsed without the blessing of
SPON. Members of the group,
however , say ~t can't be done.
The tentative agreement to
limit takeoffs has a second escape
clause. It would allow the county
to terminate the takeoff limit if
any group or person files a lawsuit
that holds up airport expansion
for 60 days or longer.
In Newport Beach, a majority of
the city oounctl appears to be
supportive of the agreement. A
(See AIRPORT, Page A!)
Irvine, practice getting into that old school spirit.
T heir cheerleading class for 8 - to 11 -yea r -olds
was conducted by Trina Richardson a t No rth-
wood Community Park.
False alarm? Don't try it
Laguna, plague d by the m , planning h ea vy fines in future
BJ STEVE MITCHELL °' .................
Ownen of a1ann systems in
1Agu.na Beach face stiff fines in
the future if police respond to
a1annt at homes or bualneMe8,
only to find no emergency exilta.
c.oundl memben agree that the
dty'acurrent ordinance relating to
alarm syw\em8 does little to reduce
the 1arp number of falae alarma
that plagued Laguna Beach police
dilpatchen an average three
tlmee a day last year.
So they're in the prcoe. of
amending the law, JeveUnc f1nea
they hope will recoup at JeMt part
of the expenee of eend1ni offloera
to faulty or mtsu.ed ~J.ar.
J
robbery and fire alarms.
Consider thetie statistics:
• According to a report
prepared by the police depart-
ment, a total of 1,439 alanns were
aet off in 1981, each requiring
reaponae by officen1. Of thoee
alanns. 1,433 were false alarms
and only six were valld. That's a
99.6 percen t fable-alarm rate.
• Last year police records ahow
1,201 a1arma J.oaed, of which only
11 were valid. That workaout toa
99.1 percent fa1ee..alann rate,
which, police admit, Isn't exactly a
startl1ng improvement.
'nM! citycurrentll~psownen ~after a third alarm in a
month, $ 15 for a fourth fal9e
alarm and $25 for a fifth.
Hypothetically, that means
police could be summoned to a
home with a faulty burglar alarm
a total of 24 times during a year
without being fined.
Not ao under the amended
ordinance which comes up for a
second council look-see next
week.
Under that schedule, owners of
alarms will get hit rtght off the bat
with a fee, whether their alarma
are working or not. The proposal
calla for residental alarm owners
to fork over $25 every two yeara
for an alarm permit. Commercial
alarm owners will pay twice that.
(See ALARMS, Pqe AZ)
-·-'
Chambers
push for
freeways
By GLENN SCOTI'
Of -Delly ...... llatf
A coalition of three local
chambers of commerce met today
to call for the oompletion of two
key freeway proposals for the
Orange Coast.
Officials for the Newport
Harbor, Costa Mesa and Irvine
chambers called a press con-
ference at the Westin South Coast
P laza Hotel to announce their
support for finishing the New-
port-Costa Mesa Freeway and
building another along the San
Joaquin Hills Transportation Cor-
ridor.
The proposed freeway ad-
ditions, they said, are keys to the
area's economic health.
The coalition, which calls itself
the Tri-Cities Chamber of Com-
merce, includes more than 3,000
members. Carol South, president
of the Newport Harbor chamber,
said she is excited by the p1'08pect
of the three business-oriented
grou ps combining in a unified
position.
So was Orange County Super-
visor Thomas Riley, whose Fifth
District includes all three areas.
Riley also is chairman of the
county's Transportation Com-
mission and a strong proponent of
1-5 north to
close tonight
the San J oaquin Hills freeway.
"The officials you've elected are
pleased to have this kind of
unified support," he told the
audience of about 30 people,
mostly chamber officials, local
government representatives and
ex~1es from big land-owning
(See FREEWAY, Page A!)
Orange County
Jews working to
preserve identity
This is the last of three articles in a
series on the growth of the Jewish
community in Orange County.
By L.P. BENET '
OllMDellJ .... •-
Turn-of-the-century author
Henry James once wrote that the
Yiddish quarter of Manhattan
"bristled. at every step, with the
signs and sounds ... of a Jewry that
had burst all bounds."
That part of New York was the
new frontier for thousands of
European Jewish immigrants
fleeing the ramifications of an
overpopulated society and cen-
turies of religious oppression.
Decades later, their grandchildren
and great-grandchildren continue
to trickle west, but to different
destinations -Los Angeles and
San Francisco, and in more recent
years, Orange County and San
Diego.
Contemporary Jews moving to
Orange County are taking roots in
a community far different from
the cloistered world their prede-
cessors settled during the latter
part of the 19th century. They
come for better jobs and to bask in
the warm, dry climate. But the
estimated 70,000 to 100,000 Jews
.,.., .... "911 .......
Jn1
ia ••••• c. •• .,
' • I\ r ' \ .. _,... -\ \-. . // '/;._ '«\./ \ \ ~ .. I. . '
Antl-Semltl•m no worM In
Orange County then any-
where elM. Page C1.
living here face many tough
questions, some of them similar to
thoee their forefathers oonfronted
long ago.
How do Orange County Jews
create a sense of togetherness in an
area with no identifiable Jewish
community? To what degree do
they assimilate in a predominant-
ly Christian selling without loaing
touch with their 5,000-year-old
heritage? What does it mean to
give up part of your identity in
order to fit in? Do Jews battle with
these issues any differently than
other religious and ethnic cul-
tures?
Some questions already are
(See CONTEMPORARY, Pace Cl)
Robin Einstein, wife o f Rabbi Stephen
E inste in of Fo untain Valley, poured wine for
their family's observance of a J ewish holiday
celebration last March.
Call 842·4321 with new• tip•
. .. &
\'"
"a * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug. 30, 1983
Berserk Mesa man subdued CONTINU,ID STORIES
Suspect shouts 'Shoot q_te, shoot me' while swinging chain From PegeA1
Colt.a Mesa police subdued a empty one-acre field. He grabbed Finally, as Smith swung lhe
man Monday who wanted to kill a ruaty bicycle frame from a pile of frame at one officer, who blocked
himaelf and then violently baited junk and t>epn·swi.nging it at lhe it wilh his billy club, others FREEWAY PROPOSALS ...
Dr. Mark Hopp
Doctor
fined
in fee
scheme
Dr. Mark Hopp of Huntington
Beach has been sentenced to five
years' probation and a $10.000fine
after being found guilty of solici-
ting kickbacks in exchange for
referring work to a Fountain
Valley laboratory.
In a separate but related matter.
the 68-year--0ld Hopp faces a
preliminary hearing in Orange
County Superior Court Sept. 19
on charges of involuntary man-
slaughter in connection with the
drug overdoae deaths of 11 pa-
tients treated at his Huntington
Beach detoxification clinic.
Hopp pleaded guilty in June to
charges that he solicited a kiclc-
back from Warner Village Lab-
oratory in exchange for giving it
work from his Medi-Cal patients.
Assistant U.S. Atty. Robert
Pallemon said today that lab
officials cooperated with the FBI
in the investigation.
U.S. District Judge Malcolm M.
Lucas also prohibited Hopp from
billing Medi-Cal for at least a year
should he be pennitted to return
to his practice.
Sources said the court
sentenced Hopp to probation after
taking his age and the fact th.at it
was his first conviction under
consideration.
Cops identify
men involved
in SA shootout
Police have identified the four
men involved in a Santa Ana
shootout late Sunday th.at left one
man dead and two others seriously
wounded, police said.
Guillenno Hemand~ 26, of
South Gate died at the scene of
multiple gunshot wounds, police
said.
Felix Lope2 Albino, who lived
in the complex at •11 South
Fairview where the guhfight took
place, was listed in ctitical con-
dition early today at UCI Medical
Center. Jesus Paredes, tenatively
identified as being from Los
Angeles, was listed in serious
condition at Fountain Valley Hos-
pital.
A fourth suspect, Miguel
Beltran, 52, is being held on a
murder charge at Orange County
Jail. Police believe a fifth suspect
is still at large.
Police said the gunfight may
have been started during an
argument conoern.ing narootics.
Police confiac.ated four guns and
$1 ,400 in cash at the scene, but no
dru8$ were found. The suspects
are believed to be illegal aliens,
police said.
The gunfight began several
minutes before midnight at the
South Fairview complex.
We're
Listening •••
642·6086
~ la GuefMteed
oUicers to help. officers a.a u?ey approached. handcuffed h.im, Baeckel said.
Officers Scott Baeckel and Baeck.el, in his written report, Smith was arrested on suspicion
Bruce Ross said they first found said he drew his service revolver of assault with a deadly weapon
Harry E. Smith, 36, standing in his · at various times to protect against against a police officer.
yardat 1026WilaonSt. witharope lhe J>(*ibility that Smith would Samuel West, a neighbor who
around his neck. Tile rope was aerioualy injure people by hitting lives on Canyon Drive, oom-
attached to a nearby tree. them with the sharp edges of the mended the officers.
Officers said that after they rusty frame. "I was really impresaed," he
removed the rope, Smith climbed He said Smith was yelling, said. ''The officers did a really
his back fence and dashed into an "Shoot me, shoot me." good job not to hurt h.im."
Quixotic crusade crumbling
Long-distance hiker discourage(l by lack of support
By GLENN SCO'IT Of_°'""' ........
His 1,600-mile journey on foot from
Olympia, Wash., to Fscondido is almost
over now, and a discouraged Steve Blehm
says he'll be glad to call it quits.
Blehm. 25, is a walking crusader -one
of the curious breed of Americans who,
pushed by a mixture of curiosity and
concern, strap messages on their
backpacks and set out on lonely trips
down country highways and over strange
city streets.
They are billboards with human
messages and they like to talk about their
causes. The better organiz.ed hikers often
will stop to call the newspapers and radio
stations in just about any town in hopes of
planting their messages a little deeper into
the American heart.
Most of the time, these crusaders seem
to be carrying a backpack full of hope.
Smile lines mark their taut faces.
But it hasn't worked that way for
Blehm, who called Monday to announce
he is walking under the weight of a
heaviec burden. Since May 11, he baa
been displaying on his back the sign:
"1,600 Mile Walk for the Needy," along
with a white cross sewn above iL
He ia asking people he meets to give to
the Salvation Anny's Emergency Relief
Fund for people out of work or down on
their luck. They need, he said, a bit of
Christian charity.
Call it despair, or a media strategy, or
poor judgment, or the truth, but Brehm
says he isn't finding in people the attitude
he sought.
"Basically, they lock their doors and
their hearts," he said.
The idea for his walk was spawned two
years ago when he was in need and found
little help from established circles, Blehm
said. He has just about given up stopping
on his journey at churches, he said,
because he's tired of the "negativity" he
meets.
"I find more love from junkies than I do
from Christians," he said.
Blehm said he .et off to encourage
people to refer to "the aource," which ia
the Bible. But after about 1,500 miles and
three months, he isn't sure if peopl.; are
listening.
"I'm really kind of discouraged and
confused," he said.
Blehm said he has several speaking
engagements lined up in local churches
when the long journey ends at his home in
Fscondido. By then, maybe he'll be able to
organiz.e his thoughts and more people
will listen, he said. °'""' ... ,.,_., '-,..,,.. Just then, the other pay telephone at
the gas station rang. It waa for him.
Another interview. Time to go. Steve Blehm· treks along Pacific Coast
Highway in search of compassion.
Testing started on
San On of re reactor
Operational testing is under
way on the third reactor at the San
Onofre Nuclear Generating Sta-
tion for the first time since fuel
loading was completed on the
1,100 megawatt reactor last No-
vember.
A sustained chain reaction
known as "criticality" was in-
itiated Monday in the uraniwn
core of Unit 3, signaling the start
of low-level operations, said Jerry
Haynes, manager of nuclear oper-
ations for the Southern California
F.d.i.9on Co., major owner of the
nuclear plant just 90uth of San
Clemente.
being put into full operation
sometime next year, he said.
Unit 2, a twin to the third unit, is
presently operating at full power,
generating 1,087 megawatts of
power.
When all three reactors are
operating, F.di.son officials say
they will produce enough power
to serve the needs of 1.5 million
houaeholds. The combined oper-
ation will save an equivalent of 25
million to 30 million barrels of oil a
year, according to a fact sheet
prepared by F.c:li.son.
finns such as the Irvine Co. and CJ
Segerstrom & Sona.
Riley noted both projects have a
key link in common -a one-mile
st.rip of the Corona del Mar
Freeway from Irvine Avenue to
MacArthur Boulevard.
TIUlt segment hun't been com-
pleted; the ditch excavated for the
freeway ia empty. But Riley
proudly noted the California
Transportation Commiaaion an-
nowlOed last week it has agreed to
spend $13.6 million for the project.
Riley said a contract for con-
struction should be awarded by
October.
The Tri-Cities Chamber is sup-
porting the ao-called eastern
alignment for the extension of
Route 55, which would swing
aoutheut of the commercial strip
along Newport Boulevard.
The San Joaquin Hills Trans-
portation Corridor would begin at
MacArthur where the extended
Corona del Mar freeway will stop
and then run through the foothills
parallel to the coast until merging
with the San Diego Freeway just
80Uth of the Crown Valley
Parkway.
Riley said a congressional bill
sponsored by Rep. Glenn
Cop shooting
of SA man
ruled justified
A team of investigators from
Santa Ana has determined that an
Irvine police officer was ju.stified
when he shot a suspect in the
stomach last week after lhe
suspect opened fire on officers.
The Aug. 23 incident occurred
when aix Irvine officers and two
Santa Ana officers went to 1114
W. Cubbon St., in Santa Ana, to
serve a search warrant in connec-
tion with an ongoing narcotics
investigation, police said.
Officers Craig Smith, R.J.
Hansen and Mark Hoffman bunt
into the front room of the home
after identifying themselves as
police officers. They were alleged-
ly fired upon by one suspect,
Roberto Torres, said Irvine Police
Lt. Robert Lennert.
The officers returned the fire
and backed out of the house,
Lennert said. Three suspects,
including Torres, surrendered
within 10 minutes.
Torres was taken to UC Irvine
Medical Center where he under-
went surgery to extract a
fragmented bullet that was lodged
in his stomach.
The Sant.a Ana Shooting In-
vestigations Team determined it
was Craig Smith who fired the
shot which wounded Torres, said
Santa Ana Sgt. John McClain.
The team of nine robbery and
homicide investigators routinely
investigates every of -
ficer-involved shooting in the city,
McClain said. The matter will now
go before Santa Ana's Shooting
Review Board.
The third unit has been tested
without operating the nuclear
reactor, Haynee said. It will be
tested at low-power levela before
F.diaon owns more than 75
percent of the power plant. San
Diego Gas and Electric owns 20
percent and the cities of Riverside
and Anaheim own nearly 5 per-
cent.
OFF ENTIRE STOCK
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ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
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'
VOL 79, NO. 2G
( • •
Anderson, D-Long Beach, would
make the freeway eligible for
federal funding through this
year's five-cent gasoline tax in-
creue.
A .eparate bill in Sacramento
carried by A81emblyman Bruce
Young. D-Norwalk, would desig-
nate the San Joaquin ·Hilla free-
way on the state's highway master
plan and would change the OOU1'9e
of Route 73 to continue on the new
freeway. Currently, the route
extends from the Corona def Mar
Freeway to Bristol Street and
then turns on MacArthur to the
Pacific Coast Highway.
Young's bill would pl.ace the
San Joaquin Hilla freeway in the
running for state funding, aome-
thing the Newport-Costa Mesa
Freeway already is acheduled to
receive.
The CTC has budgeted $40
million to extend the freeway
from Bristol to Bay Street in
1987-88 and has committed itself
to completing the project at a later
date.
AIRPORT ...
public hearing is to be held Sept. 7
at City Hall.
Pinning down the mood of
county supervisors, though. is
harder to do. Several have reg:is--
tered skepticism and are expected
to reveal their positions by the end
of the week.
Supervisor Thomas Riley,
whoae district includes the airport
and Newport Beach, helped de-
velop the propoeed agreement and
ia lobbying his board colleagues.
At a talk today in Cc:ista Mesa,
Riley predicted the agreement
will be approved in the next 60
days.
ALARMS ...
It doesn't stop there.
Each false alarm indicating a
robbery will cost the owner $100.
F.ach false alarm over three dur-
ing any 12-month period will cost
the owner $50, and alarms totaling
more than six during the same
period will oost $100.
Police Chief Neil Purcell de-
fends the permit fee and steep
fines, saying a false alarm incident
costs the city almost $4-0. Th.at
figure takes into account the
salary of two officers, a watch
commander, the dispatcher and
maintenance and fuel for three
patrol cars.
BOATS •••
ornament and a television aet from
the "Allswell."
The skipper of the "Invader,"
another vessel moored near the
club, told police someone broke
into his boat but appeared not to
have taken anything. A $50 bull-
horn was taken from the
dockmaster's quarters at the club,
which the crooks entered by
removing six panes of glass from a
louvered window.
•
. ,,.
......
~ .. ... : .. • .. '• ::: ~ • :: .• ..
t:· •.
~ 7. ~· ~ c; ~ ~ ~ ~ :; .
•• t.! ••
0:. ~ 'lo
i ••• ~ ~ •• ~ >: ~ .,
~ •• ~ ~ .'<I ~ ~ •
~
------
Orange Coaat O,AILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aug. 30, 1983 * AS ...
'"" : .. ik. • . Psychology of world peace puzzling
'Vegas Night' benefits
Fairview volunteers
Doctors probe global issues at Anaheim convention, find few remedies {or conflict
A Laa Vegas night fund-raising party benefitting Fairview
State Hospital'• Volunteer Services will be held Sept. 16 in Carta
Meea.
The event will run from 7 p.m. to midnight at the C.O.ta Mesa
Neighborhood Community Center, 1845 Parle Ave., Costa Meu.
Ticlceta are $7.50 each, whJch includes $200 in play money for
erutz gambling, door prizes, and retre.hmenta. Proceeds go to the
Falrvlew Client-Patient Benefit Fund, which supports monthly
clances, holiday programa. swimming pool and park maintenance
and the Special Olympics program.
More information on the event can be obtained by calling the
hospital's Volunteer Services at 957-5188.
Laguna tennis tournament slated
The 26th annual Laguna Beach Tennia Tournament begins
Satw-day and is open to players who live within the local lllChool
diltrict.
The tourney is oo-sponaored by the city and by the Laguna
Beech Tennis Aaaociation and runs Saturday. Sunday, Monday and
Sept. 10-11.
Entry fee ia $14 for singles, $18 for doubles. For information,
call the city's recreation department at 497-3311.
Valley Center plans grand opening
A dunk tank, atageooech rides and live entertainment are
planned Labor Day Weekend at a grand opening celebration
ICheduled at the Fountain Valley Center, a shopping plaza loc:ated
at ~Ua Street and Warner Avenue.
Majer renovation bas just been completed at the center, which
la the oldest in Fountain Valley.
Most of the festivities will take place Saturday. Proceeds will
ao to the Jerry Lewis Telethon foe MU9CUlar Dystrophy and to the
Lioo'a Cub Sight and Hearing Fund.
Model U.N. benefit run planned
A five-mile run is scheduled to start at 7:30 a.m . Sept. 11 at the
Huntington Beach Pier.
Proceeds will go to Model United Nations chapter at
Huntington Beach High School.
Participanta may register in advance and get a Model United
Nations T-ehirt for $9. It eo1ta $4 to enter without a T-shirt.
Registration on the day of the race will be $6. There will be no
T-ahitU ottered at that time. For more infonnation, contact Gillela
Campagne at 962-1445.
.. -. . . . . .......
BJ JEFF ADLER °' ................
Psycholo&i.lta have no better
answers than anyone el.le when
uked How best to promote world
peace and reduce the threat of
nuclear war.
11uat WU apparent M~ 81
10me of the nation'a lM<Hng eocia1
8dentiata grappled with the iaaue
at the American Psychological
A..ociation'• 9lat annual conven-
tion, being held in Anaheim.
Harvard peycholopt B.F .
Skinner told th.me attending a
symposium on what peychologllta
can do to promote wotld peace
that he ta pemi.miatic that they can
do anything. .
"You would have to make
changes in the three estates that
are reluctant to chanie.'' Skinner
said. ''We can suggest remedies for
the problema of today, but can
anyone in power put them into
effect?"
County teen
dies in Mesa
scooter crash
A 19-yeer-old ~lm man
waa killed early today after hia
Vespa motor acooter went out of
control and c:ruhed into a oenter
divider on the 55 freeway eouth of
the San Diego Freeway in Costa
Mesa, police laid.
Rogel' Dimond WU pronounced
dead at the scene at 1:15 p.m.,
police aaid.
Dlmond WU prooeedina north-
bound on the CoSta Meea Freeway
when hla bike struck the divider.
Dimond WU thrown from the
vehicle and died of a broken neck,
police laid.
Mesan's green thumb courts trouble
A 13-year-old Coete M ... boy told
pot'°9 Monday two Other teen.gen
MpeCS hl9 $700 ctwon-.frame
motocroee Ncyde •ft• he left " unk>cked In front of • Hquor ator. on
Fairview Road.
[,..• ..-.
. ' . ' .
Conltt\lctlon Co. The Ion WU •ti·
m11ted •t 12.000.
A lllYW ..Ulng worth $4,4!50 WU
teken from • reeldenee on Rue
Cannee In the Big Canyon communi-
ty.
Laguna Beach
Ml9cehneou• Item• vlllued at
$3,525 by the owner were ~ed
ltolen from a car periled In the 1600
'*>Ck of South Coal H!vhway.
Laguna 8Mc:tl pollcefeported.
A neighbor celled polloe when
amok• wu ...,, coming from •
houM In the 800 bl<><* of Quiver•
Street eerty thla morning. Reecuer9
dlaooY91 ed the amok• came from •
emokt«lng log left In • flreplece.
Lagune 8Mc:tl polloe ...i.ted lm-
mtgretlon offlcleJa In epprehelldtng
two undocumented aNena epotted
near Creeoent Bev.
Huntington Beach
A burglary wu reported Mondey
ettemoon at •home on the 200 bl<><*
of 11th Street In Huntington Beech.
Entry waa mAde through en open ,..,
window. The io.. lnCluded jeMlfy
val\ied et S200 end $15 In cuh.
~tty ueed to brMk In. The io.
... ..umated •t saoo. . . .
A p 111 a igef'wtndow WM twoUnto
enter a maroon 1882 v~
PWked In a lot on the 8700 blodl of Werner Awnue In Huntington Beech.
The loee Included '400 In CMtt end •
1170 portabte lt.-.0.
Fountain Valley
aom.one remcwed • wtndow ecreen 1n the 10000 bl<><* of a PMO
Awnue end took a brown bllQ from • at.et In the beby'• bedfoom ~
Ing It.me of j9welry veNad .. S 1.024.
lk.lrolera 11o1e • tool box v8'uad et
S6 from • oarage In the 10000 blodl
of Pike AYllnue but left tOOle betllnd.
Irvine
A gold ring w• reported etotan
from • home on Hutwood Monday about 8:!50 p.m.
Two eutoe pettled neer lnduet"8I
buMdlnge ...,.,.. lt11ooad of their hu~ Mondey. the flrlt theft
OCQUrl'ed on the 2000 blodl of Du
Bt1dge Awnw ebout 3:30 p.m. end
the eacond on the 1000 blodl of Alton
Avenue about 4:40 p.m. It .. not known wMthel" IN lnddentm .,.
""9tad .
Patchy clouds won't stop heat
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11 • .... IN le It a.M. li ~ "'9r ·---= .. ,. ........ t'.11 IU'I\• =-""'~ . ,. ........ "~ ..... .........., ... .. •• ...... :ti.. 1 :t.:· ........ = ' M -., . ,,,. 1' :• &A ............. M -L :; ~ 111•,,.. ~ .... ..
"· ~ ..... •tt:Jt'"" ...... ·-· :c.~ .... .... •• tHt.-. .. ....... ff .............
_,_
He did •UQeSt that hla fellow
acientiata rnlght de9i1n a way of
Ute that wu ~ve by
nature and would be emulated by
other cultures. But Skinner, after
liatenlng to hla oollff8Uee' suggee-
tiona, laid he hadn't been
"cheered" by their recommen-
dationa.
reeearch peychologiata oould do to
head off a nuclear conflict, UCLA
Profeaor Seymour Feshbach
poeed a eeries of questions that he
believes should be answered by
the profession.
Carpenter, a Cypress Democrat
and retired U.S. Navy admiral,
explained how the current arms
race is characterized by a malig-
nant pathological process ludlng
the world closer to the brink of a
nuclear holocaust.
UC Santa Cruz profe90r M.
Brewater Smith recommended
that peychologiata begin to re-
define the anna race by rethinking
~pta such aa aecurity and the
riab of nuclear war.
"What is the relationship be-
tween individual aggreasive im-
pulles and national conflict, and
how do values influence our
judgment," he asked.
He said the concept of mutual
security, rather than national
security, might be a more realistic
concept since any attempt to
increase national aecurlty by
either the U.S. or the USSR, at the
expense of the other, only
escalates the anns race.
Smith added that the Reagan
adminiatration'a "macho, bad
guy-good guy approach to nuclear
strategy does not allow for oon-
atructive oonaideration of the
problem."
Psychologist Morton Deutach,
of Columbia University, said he
would like to know how people
learn about war and how other
people and other nations might be
influenced concerning nuclear
war.
A mutual aecurity arrange-
ment, according to Deutsch, might
include regular meetings and con-
sultations between top military
officials of both oountries, and the
creation of a mixed military unit,
one serving in each oountry. Agreeing that there is much
At a 8e<X>nd seminar -explor-
ing how the threat of World War m might be avoided -Deutsch,
joined by state Sen. Paul
Bob Sloan (right)
prepare 48-f oot
and crew
sportfisher
o.-r-
Zopilote for 2,500-mile delivery
trip from Newport to Honolulu.
Here's a real fish story
Boat delivery spans 2,500 miles from Newport to Hawaii
By ALMON ~EY
.,.., ......... WW..
A 2,500-mile fishing trip in a 46-foot
aportfiaher?
Well, not exactly. But maybe a few lunkers
will be boated en route from Newport Beach to
Hawaii.
'lbat was the thlnklng in the back of Bob
Sloan'• mind Monday night when he shoved off
from the Ancient Mariner Restaurant dock with a
crew of three -destination Honolulu. Sloan is a
profemional boat deliverer who has been plying
the Pld.fic and Caribbean in sail and power boats
for more than two decades.
In IOfne respects. the Pacemaker-48 -
dubbed Zopilote -reeembled a 1930s "Okie"
expedlUoo to California aa It eaaed out of the
harbor with skipper Sloan at the helm, laden with
2,000 pl.lons of dieeel fuel. 'The windows were
boarded up to guard against pomible high seas in
the tram-Pacific cromi.ng.
Yacht delivery ia not uncommon to Sloan.
who baa made it hla profemion for more th.an 20
years. But 2,500 miles in a 48-foot aportfiaher
which oonsumes five gallons of fuel an hour?
"It won't be much different th.an aalling to
Hooo," aa.ld Sloan, aa he and hi.a crew puttered
around the boat making last minute inspections
and adjustmenta.
"When you get put Catalina Island just bear
ott the wind, .et a lteadying"sail and hope for the
belt," added the 48-year old Sloan. He ia taking
aloog one of the aaila from hi.a famed schooner,
Spike Africa, to \.Ille aa both a ateadying sail and to
add a mite more 1peed .
H•vl~• couple Of aclentlst• In
the fem can be VftJf'I helpM et
Umea. Raoently when my deugh-
tar. G~, 9'10 her huabend
John, ( chemist•)...,.,.. home
vleltlng me, • got Into a di.-CUMtofl about the ,,,.. ... u..cl
for mountl~onee. Gold la the fevorlte OOUl'M IO our di ..
Cll9l6on centered on It.
They totd me thet wtlle gold
ltMH doee not ternlltl Of corrode,
IN llloy9 oomm<lnty UIMd In fat>-
ttcetlng go6d :::= wctl -OOA*' end llno, can detnlO-ed by ,..,....cs~ to oon-
oentretect eoeuttone of ctlloMe.
Mercury"-......... en.ct but ..
band Of'lt1 In IS*'rh Id .,_ .. . '**'Y dlntel ...,. Of ~ •
bre*en ~at tiorM.
Themeitat -~wMer·
... ..... It .. "*' end under
..,.. IUdl -prono-= CMlrtne .. oommOfi In pooflt. .,...._ end ICOUtfng
... .... ~--lmmellion • ~-=.tinge In ltrong .. lhoUkS be Our reoommended ,...'°' hon'9 dMrq~ of .....n .... (not hot.
Where is he carrying all that fuel?
"We oonverted the bait tank for fuel, loaded
10 55-gallon drums and put a large rubber bladder
in the cockpit, all filled with fuel.
Sloan said he expects to oomplet.e the crossing
in 12 or 13 days. The twin Cummins-409 engines
consume about five gallons an hour -120 gallons
a day. Figuring a maximum of 14 days, Sloan
calculates he will arrive at his destination with a
few hundred gallons to spare.
And, of courae, as theoonsumption of fuel and
food continues the boat gets lighter.
The boat is being delivered for Kevin A.
Muench, president of Ia1and Science in Honolulu.
He is an ardent game fisherman and plans to use
the boat for working the island fishing tour-
naments and for chartering to Qther fishermen.
Muench said he recently purchased the boat
in San Diego, where it was a well-known
aportfiaher owned by movie director Bruce Kesler.
In addition to delivering both power and sail
boata for new owners, or owners returning from
long distance races to Honolulu or Mexico, Sloan
also hauls cargo in his schooner Spike Africa
(named after the self-proclaimed "king of the
Pacific") .
Sloan's crew aboard the Zopilote for the
t.rans.-Pacific crossing are Phul Burbo, San
Francisco; G ibson Laws. Houston, and Ann
Henderson, Port Townaend. Wash.
Sloan said he has made five previous
deliveries of power boats to the islands with no
problems.
"Just get out the old sextant and charts and
point her bow the way you want to go," he
quipped.
extraordinary In every aoclety. All
of the great emplr• of the
ancient world uMd golden ob-
Jeet•. mainly In their rellglOua rlt·
ual1 and •*> u eolna. Over oenturlet of growing
aophl111cetlon end technology,
gold haa uaumed meny ec:t-
dltlonel rolea. Not only Ir It etlll
prized for jewelry. It now hu
meny eddttlonel apptlcatlona In
oontempol'ety Hfe .
Gold aoara Into IP9Ce wtth the
utroneuta, ltt ,.rtecttve ebMy le
used on the heat et;eldt that .,..
ar1tlcal to life. Thie ean. ability to ren.at the IUti ~ the
... thetlo and prectlcel bMuty Of
tod•y'• g1aea ekyllCt..,.,., -
Qotd In tinted wtndows !TIM• the
iilftel9n<le between ob9tNC1"'9
glare and glamot'OUI glMm •
In medicine and dentlatry, In
lnduatry. In • hundred appll-
cettone tor TV Mta. to ..,...
phonee, comput.,.. 9fld oalcu-
letort. thl1 eternal metal • en
tmportent component .
not bollr'O CMr • ftame) end 1 :n deeelr:'t (euch -Mf. CHARLES II. BARR
But above .... gold hM en~
ltl ftneat glltter thrOughoUt the eoee In lie uttlmete form -)9w-efry. In r.ct, the Maring of Ootd on the bOdy mey llCtualfy be
men's otdeet eur.+ttng trec:tltlon . )and-~~
monla. Let .,. '°' 16 mllMla Of ao. bt'Ulfl Wfttl • .,.. bNetl " ~ Tiie ..... of gold ••• 9'10 .__
daalr9 to own It ••. ...._beak,,: ,., • .... .-ory of l'Nri: ...... The .,..,. Of go6d ,,.. t.t\
Ac~-...... ,
17th & Irvine, We1tdtff Plaza,
Newpert leach M2-3310
.,
EVftif'I dey, MCI\ one of ue OOl'I·
tlnuee the oen~ rltUal Of
Ootd *'«nment. Men. "°"*'· otlldren ... of al oulturw .•• .,..
ceugtlt up In .......... ttvougtl
a r1no. ••rr'lnga, Mekl.c., brtoei.I. We wtll undoubtedfy
oontlnwe to ClhlfWi It '°"I Into
the future.
,
2
C2 * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tueaday, Aug. 30, 1983 ..
The working stiff ... Opportunities are still there for those who care enough
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have been reading
your oolwnn for years and always thought you
we.re sympathetic toward the working class, even
though you cannot be considered "one of us."
Imagine my surprise to read your vie ws in support
of the st.arched-<:0llar Protestant work ethic.
Don't you realli.e that the world h.aa changed
in the last W years? In the good old days a person
who worked overtime waa loyal and smart, had a
chance to make it to the top. Today most of us are
nameless, faceless nobodies, putting ln our time at
boring jobs in factoriai or pushing pencils and
shuffling papers in office bui.ldinga. True, we get a
paycheck, but the big bucks go to the top
executives who are making a fortune and looking
every which way to protect their enonnoua
incomes agaiNt taxation.
The vast majority of working people ex-
. q AllN LANDERS
perience vef)lt-little tinancia.I gain and no personal
aatiaf.action. Our only relief comes when we get
two weeka' vacation in July or August. This is the
way the real world works, Ann Landers, so why
don't YOU wake up and smell the coffee? -
THANK GOD ITS FRIDAY IN YONKERS
DEAR FRIDAY: So you don't consider me•
member of tile workillg cla11? Well, wbat do you
call a penoo wlao ha11peat many 10· and 1%-boar
d.ay1 at a typewriter, ma.tea do1en1 of 1peecbes
Contemporary Jews ...
V' From Page Cl religion and heritage compared to J ews of a
32,000-plus Jews living north of the San Diego generation ago. For another, as long as Jews continue
Freeway, fewer than one-quarter were affiliated. to express their identity, whether it~ in a religious
The Jewish Federation estimated that 3,500 or pel80nal way, total assimilation into the
families are affiliated with the county's 16 syn-Anglo-Saxon culture can be avoided.
agogues. Multiply that figure by four (the number in There i.s aome indication that Orange County
the average American family) and it comes to 14,000. Jews are concerned about aasimilation and are doing
U indeed there are 70,000 to 100,000 Jews living in the something about it. For the past six years, enrollment
county, that would put the affiliation rate between 14 at Westminster's Hebrew Academy has steadily
and 20 percent, compared to a mu.ch higher national increased at an annual rate of 10 to 15 percent,
rate of 40 to 60 percent. Schuaterman said.
''There are a couple of reasons for this," Eliezrie "I think part of the increase can be attributable
said. "First, many of the people who want to be very to the fact that there are more Jews today in Orange
activeinJudaismareinclinedtomovetoLosAngeles. County than six years ago.'' he explained. "But I
Orange County has only been active for the past think what's really happening is that there has been
couple of years. Second, many from back East are a raising of consciousness. I hate to use the tenn
coming into a community with no family ties. They're religious revival, but many people today seem to be
just getting started., and really don't know bow to getting back to the basics. Parents are realizing that
identify the community because there is no family public schools, television, the streets and the beaches
connection to guide them.'' aren't doing anything for the Jewish identity of their
Other rabbis say that some Jews moving into the children and they want to do something about it. U all
county have no interest in joining synagogues at all. else fails, they try the Jewish academy -and they
"Many Jews are running away from Judaism, are doing it."
and some have good reaaons wr doing ao," explained r----------------
ud travel• t.laoaaand1 of mUea to attend meetlng1
10 I wlll be better lllformed on matte.rs pertalniDg
to mecllclne, meD&a.I bealt.la, dnd1try, P•Y·
cbology, bulne11, law, rellaton ud ed•catlon? Trae, I am well pa.Id, bat I wu a pioneer ln my
fleld and e:stremely fortaa.ate to bave been
trained by one of tile all-lime great ecUtora, Larey
Fa.na1D1. I've a110 been at t.lal1 Job Z8 years.
Altyoae wllo aay1 tile day1 of opportu.nHy are
over it copping oat. Tlae penon wbo l1 motivated,
energetic ud dedicated and enjoys llJ1 work l1
certalD to do better tit.a.a one wbo describe•
blmseU aa a "oamele11, faceless nobody -
potting ln time at a borln& Job."
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A word to the
woman who signed herself "Ccanberry Face in
Arkansas." She had been married 15 years to a
T rou1 HEAL1H
OR PETER J STEINCROHN
DEAR DR.STEINCROBN: I feel so guilty. With
proper care, I could have prevented my mother from
dying. She was 81. Everyone agreed she was the m06t
youthful octogenarian they had ever seen. Her mind
was clear and she could carry on an interesting
conversation about the international situation.
Here's when I failed. One day she told me that
she had slipped in the bathtub. Fortunately, all she
had suffered was a slight back sprain. I told my
husband I'd better buy a special non-skin bath mat.
Also, I w~ted to have someone come in to put up a
handrail for ~upport. I procrastinated. About a month
ago. she fell again, but this time, sustained a bad hip
fracture. My guilt and sorrow persist because she
died of pnewnonia a week after the operation. I'm
expressing my feelings publicly for the good of your
other readers responsible for elderly patients. -
MRS.O.
DEAR MRS. 0 .; What can I say except that I'm
sorry? The fact that it happens so often with others
•
man she caUed "Sewer Mouth." The poor thing
was worried about the kada picking up their
fnther's !ilthy talk.
A friend of mlne had the same problem. One
day she became so fed up with her husband's
ternble mouth she t.ook a flour scoop of garbage
(eggshells, coffee grounds, poUlto peelings, etc,),
heaped them on a platter and that's what he found
at his plat.-e whe n he sat down to supper.
He yeUed, "What's THIS?" His wile replied,
"Since you don't seem to rrund the garbage that
comes OUT of your mouth, I thought you nught
enjoy putting a litOe garbage mto it."
That incident made such a profound impact
on "Sewer Mouth" that he cleaned up his act from
that day forward. -WINNIPEG READER
DEAR WIN: Notbiog succeeds like 1acces~.
Tbankl for tbe offbeat evidence.
doesn't lessen your own grief Nevertheless, every-
one should know that about 23 percent of all
accidental deaths rn the Uruted States oocur among
persons aged 65 or older. They are on e of the leading
causes of death, outranked only by cardiovascular
diseases, malignancy and pnewnorua.
Seventy percent of all deaths from falls in
1977-78 occurred among the elderly. l appreciate
your letter, Mrs. 0 ., as a timely warning to others
responsible for the care of oldsters an their family. We
should take all kinds of precautions to prevent
acodents.
• • •
Rabbi Bernard King. president of the Orange County
Board of Rabbis and leader of the Harbor Reform
Temple in Newport Beach. "Some are running from
fund-raisers who are crass and insensitive. Others
might be running away from a Jewish identity based
on guilt.
"Some synagogues are unspiritual in their
approach; they say you should be Jewish becauae 6
million were killed during the Holocaust, or because
your father and grandfather were Jewish. Rather,
they should say you should be a Jew because of the
spirituality of the community. the positive values. d xourc
hetaliing
DIRECT DEPOSIT.
''The Jewish community is still emerging from a
period of mourning and grieving from the Holocaust.
Of the 61million who died, 1 million were children.
Many have a hard time saying the word God~ prayers
are said without any spirit. Today, I think thoee
numbers are wearing off.
"And I think Orange County, unlike other
aettled communities, provides the environment
where experimentation toward spritual ends can
take place. Perhaps w e can create a-good environ-
ment for those Jews who a.re running away."
The Orange County Jewish community and
othera like it across America are tackling assimilation
by developing programs geared toward young Jews.
Several Orange County singles clubs have
cropped up in recent years, while synagogues have
reduced dues and added programs specifically for
young men and women, many of whom chooee not to
affiliate because of prohibitive membership oosts and
the accurate perception that synagogues are primar-
ily family institutions.
The Chabad community is tunneling its re-
sources into a wide variety of community service
programs and events, ranging from a concert series to
a new local cable television program called "Jewish
California," which airs this fall It alao sponsors an
outreach program where rabbis go door to door to
educate Jews on the religious opportunities and
programs available to them.
"This is unique," said Eliezrie, who will host
"Jewish California." "Usually, people only hear from
the Jewish community in a fund-raW.ng capacity. We
are going around asking people what we can do for
the community -not what they can do for us.''
While religious organizations and institutions
are figuring out ways to battle what they perceive as
the dangers of assimilation. Sandberg stresses that
there are a number of reasons to maintain optimism.
For one, he said, the University of Judaism study
showed that increasing numbers of Jews in the 18 to
30 age range are showing more interest in their
Art Show
At Hvntington Center.
Arts & crofts for home
decorators & collectors
rhru Sept. 5
Dally Pilat
ClaNlfled Adv•rtl1lng
842-5678
f .111111·1, ( "" r.tlt·,
1111 .1 11111 111,111.lllC ,.
1111 drt\ '.,,
lwh\1·1·11
UI .11ul i.11
We have rare\ J0% under
\tandard rat«>~ for driver\
b~rwt•en th<' .igr\ rif 30
and60
TherP\ .i good re.i~on for
rht\ f.1rmt'" !(now\ rhal
rhe\!" drtv('r\ lt'11d II) bi-
,af1>r dnd mor.-(Mrful on
1h.-htf1hway
You're the driver\ who
h.tvt' fewer anodenl\
1 h;11·~ whv Far men ere.ired
our J0/60 J>'<k.lge auro
l)Oll('y If you qualtfy. you
rould ~ve w~tanri.illy
t>n your l)femlum\.
r •rrr-iet\ lnwrancr C1oop
I\ woO.tng mn\lanrly 10 keep
th<' <"O\I\ of onwr~ncr
down .in<l 1"4:-.imounr of
rwnt~K'>n up An<l rhK
.l0/60 pdck•flC' .11110 pollly
I\ one way we tin 11 Why 1101
<'II mrl
HENRY EKIZIAN
10221 Sl•t~ Ave:.
#217
Fountain Valley
Calif .• 92708
PH 963-7825
~ -
in school
·syear?
cC... ,_.j
You're convinced
he's using drugs. And
drinking, too.
He's had
trouble in
\
school and ~
scrapes ~ ._,. -
with the law. •
o parent wants lo admit that his child
io in such serious trouble'.
But you're at the end of your rope.
You've done evrrything you ca n think of,
and nothing· worked.
What your child nf'~<l. is help. Profe -
sional help.
And the best place Lo get help is al the
Adolesc.ent CareUniL
The Adolescent CareUnit is a ·hort-term,
inpatient treatment program cl igned to
help young people identify the source of
their problems. Herc at a loc.al community
hospital they learn how to handle life on
an effective, day-by-day ha is without the
use of drugs or chemical of any kind.
No one ever said growing up was e.a y.
call the
ADOLESCENT
CAREUNrr
A -erviu ol Comp~h~n&ive Care Corporation.
(714) 6 33-9582
CAREUNIT HOSPITAL OF ORANG£
(ADlJll' A ADOl.ESCENT PROGRAMS)
401 sotrm TUSTIN AVE .• ORANGE. CAUFORNlA 92666
YOU'VE GOT IT
COMING
JUSTASMUCH
ASA WALK
SAFELY DOWN
THE BLOCK.
Some peo ple think they deserve your
money as much as you do. And if some of
these types ore hanging out at the end of
your block, Direct Deposit will help get rid of
their reason to bother with you.
With Direct Deposit your Social Securlry-or
other Government payments -go straight to
your account, so you never hove to walk
down the block carrying a tempting check
Just ask for Direct Deposit wherever you
hove a checking or savings account. It's free.
and It's something you deserve j ust as much
as a breath of fresh air and a nice. safe walk.
POSIT
AFTER ALL, YOU'VE GOT IT COMING.
fM NB Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday. Aug. 30, 1983
STOCKS
.... "Mtl"' Nf'f
r I ••t I I • t r'l(t\ iH\# ' "'Q
NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTIONS
()V(JlAllONS INClUOE 1RAOES ON IHl NEW YORI\ UIOWElll PAl.:11 K. t•ow Ill)' HJN Ol IACl•I ANO c;1Nt.INNATI ~IOI.I\ (AC,HM40£, ANO
REPORIEO av 1HE ..... so INSHNEl
'-••t'\ "4•·1 ..,., .. , "'"' P ( ~d\ L IUV t ";)
•14,,-, Nr• .... ,,., .,. ....
•"t fUh \IO'W ("'Q •· f "d' c •u" l ,...., I l ~tJ' ~If;.... I
' '
-. --... .._.....,.._ __ _
Dow Jones Final
Up 1.93
Clo1lng 1,198.04
BUSINISS BRllfl
Interest rate increased
on market certificates
By tbe Associated Presa
WASHINGTON -Begmnmg today, savings
tnstitutions and commercial banks may pay as much as
9.78 percent interest on six-month money market
certificates, up from 9.77 pe~-enl in the past week They
may pay as much as 9.28 perc.-ent on three-month
certificates, up from 9.18 percent last Wt!ek. The new
rates are a result of Monday's aucuon of Treasury
securities, in which the rise for three-month bills -the
fifth in the past rune weeks put the rate a t its highest
level since the 9 43 pereent of Aug. 15.
Employment improvi11g '{aster'
NEW YORK -Increased JOb advertising volume
for the past three months indicates that employment is
improving "much faster than even the most optimistic
projections of only a few months ago," an economist
says.
Kenneth Goldstein, associate e<:onomist for the
Conference Board, made the comment Monday after the
board released the results of its lat.est survey of
help-wanted adverstising.
Sale of n ew houses d eclines
WASHINGTON -Analysts say nsing mortage
tnterest rates were a major reason for a 6.5 percent drop
in sales of new single-family houses last month. The
Commerce Department and the Department of Housing
and Urban Development said Monday I.hat ne w houses
were sold at an annual rate of 620,000 last month, down
Crom a revised 663,000 lil June It was the h.rst monthly
decline since February.
U.S. trade deficit expanded
WASHINGTON -The US merchandlse trade
deficit expanded to $6.4 billion last month, as oil imports
r06e 10.4 percent and non -oil imports lut a record high,
the government says. The Commerce Department
report Monday said exports declined 2 2 percent to
$16.63 billion in July while imports climbed 4.7 percent
to $22.99 billion.
American put more in savings
WASHINGTON Americans deposited $4 billion
more in savings and loan assoc1a1..1ons in July than they
withdrew. The net gain was 1w1ce that of June's, the
government says. The Federal Horne Loan Bank Board
also said Monday the institutlons closed $1 2 billion in
home loans last month. less than the record $13 9 billion
of the previous month.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JO N£S AV£RAG£S
NEW V()RK (API -S.tei. futt&v !>fie. and net <:1\a,_ OI IN 15 "'°" .Clive New Yorll SloU. E •C-h t U I,, tredlftO n•Hone ltv a t
more 11\en SI OlemSl!m Ct>rvller AmerT~T
llM G""'EIKI' Tn UI~ l(m.rt N1ts.tnl Cet.,oH OlollalEQ
...... MOIOt\ S..rJRoet> N11St"4
Elf'1wtCo
.,5,700 .. ,.000
1ff,100 .. l,tOO .,..000 ... 1,900 '73,700 ffl,100 562,lOO s:n.900 .,, ,700
OS.GOO •n . .oo "'·* WHAT NYSE DID
NEW YORK (AP) AUO lO
AOV.nctd Decllnecl Unclle~ To1a11uoet New lllOM
N..., IOWt
WHAT AMEX DID
lo!EW VORIC IAPI Auo ~
METALS
TOdev m 215
101 to? u
3
-.,.
+ "" -"' -1\o + . ., -\;,
t "-+ 1111 -"" +l
I "'
''""
Prev
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