HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-09-07 - Orange Coast Pilot;----
THI ORANlil COAST
County
builders
.double
pace
By ANDREA ADELSON °' .. .,..,,_ ....
Orange County's building rate
in the first seven months of the
year is nearly double year-ago
figures and cloaely matches climb-
ing statewide building activity, a
building trade group reports.
Buoyed in the year's first hall
by lower interest rates and rising
conswner confidence, statewide
housing production roee by 86
percent to 158,400, says the state
Building Industry Aseociation.
Last year's abysmal rate of 85,000
was the worst since World War II.
Orange County has issued more
th.aJ\ 7,300 permits so far in 1983,
twice 1982's pace of 3,194, the
trade 8880Ciation says.
Despite the surge in building,
the pace of sales remains t.airly
slow, largely because of inte.rest
rates.
True, Tueiday's post-holiday
stock market buying spree was
triggtved in part by downward
pressure on thoee rates because of
a lower than expected national
money supply, but borrowing
rates still aren't low enough,
building authorities contend.
"Today's interest rates are too
high to sustain the recovery
figures aeen in the first hall," said
Ben Bartolotto, director of the Los
Angeles-based Construction In-
dustry Relearch Board.
However, the coming year
could be better for builden and
homebuyen since rates histori-
cally decline in an election year, he
said.
Sk.eJetal framing on housing in
Orange County ia still numing
behind housing activity in the ...i
of the state, according to John
Erskine head of the local BIA
office. Five other areas. including
San Diego and Ventura, recorded Rolling along
higher building activity.
InOrangeCounty, Erskine said John Adamoli shows his stuff at the Huntin8ton
thethree-monthcarpenterastrike Beach Septemberfest over the weekend. For
-despite interim agreements more of Adamoli's artisti:y, see Page A3.
(See BUD..DING, Pase A%) ~ -----------------------
COUNTY IDITION
ORANGE COUNTY. C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Whopper surf
pou~ds Coast
By STEVE MITCHELL
Ot ... 0.-,,....... . •
Surfers along the Orange C'.qast
awoke to near-perfect waves this
morning, the last will and testa-
ment of a dying tropical storm off
the Baja coast.
South facing beaches from
Huntington to Newport were
recipients of-six to 12-foot waves,
with lifeguards reporting eeta of
up to 15 feet at the notorious
Balboa Wedge.
''They're getting some really
good rides off of Tower 19 (near .
the Newport pier) said lifeguard
Capt. Bud Belshe, adding about 70
surfers were bobbing in the heavy
swells early today.
"They're not all catching
FVOKs
drive-in
• pro1ect
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Ot .. 0.-,Netewl
Fountain Valley City Council
has approved r.oning changes that
will permit the construction of
garden townhouses and a medi-
cal-professional building on the
Fountain Valley Drive-In Theater
property.
The r.oning change was re-
quested by the Fieldstone Co., a
developer planning to build the
homes and office building on the
drive-in site near Talbert Avenue •
and Brookhunt Street. Fielmtone
la in the Jlll'OOl!9 of purdiuina the
28-acreate. -
The drive-in theater and the
Boys and Girls Club of Hunt-
lngton Valley are currently
located on the property, which ia
now zoned for general agricul-
tural u.e. The new Zbning la for
garden homes. local busine9es
(See DEVELOPMENT, Pase At)
waves, put they're out there," he
said. .
Lifeguards in Huntington
Beach reported waves in the five-
to seven-foot range, and Laguna
Beach guards said the tropical
storm generated waves of only
three to five feet on city beaches
there.
Despite the combination of
large waves and high tides today,
the weather service sees no
danger to coastal homes.
"It doesn't look like anything
drastic,'' Bill Hoffer, of the Na-
tional Weather Service, said.
However, while Tropical Storm
Kiko is expected to hit cold water
off Baja and die tonight, another
storm is following in ita wake.
Hoffer said Tropical Storm
Lorena is forming about 150 miles·
off the coast ot Acapulco, generat-
ing winds of 55 knots and guata of
up to 65 knots.
How that storm will affect the
surf along the Orange C.OUt is
impossible to tell at this juncture,
the weather specialist said.
"At any rate, we won't feel the
effects for at least several days,"
he said.
• "'She's way down off Acapulco,
ilnd tropical storms follow warm
water. That's where they're born
and bred and that's what they
feed on. At this time, it's just
formed, but all indications are, it
will probably move westerly for a
(See SURF'S UP, Pase At)
Hospital flap goes to UC president
Health West, Aldrich to take simmering facility feud to Berkeley meeting Thursday
By KAREN E. ltLEIN
Ot ... 0.-,,... ...
Representatives from the UC
Irvine College of Medicine, along
with HealthWest officiala and
Chancellor Daniel G . Aldrich, are
ta.king the Irvine campus hospital
propoaal -undoubtedly the most
aeverely disputed issue in UCl's
nearly 20-year history -to UC
President David Gardner.
Gardner agreed to a request for
the meeting by officials from
HealthWest , the
Chatsworth-baaed hospital chain
which proposes to build a hospital
on the UCI campus, la.id Judith
Woodard, a UC spokeswoman.
The college trustees, who sup-
port HealthWest's proposal, a1ao
asked to meet with Gardner,
Woodard said.
The meeting will take place in
Berkeley Thursday. pitting both
sides of a campus feud which has
erupted over a hospital which the
college of medicine has been vying
for since UCI waa founded.
The latest twist i.n the civil war
between the chancellor and the
medical achool came Tueeday,
when _a subcommittee of the
college board of trustee. sup-
ported a faculty censure of
Aldrich and voted unanimously to
condemn the chancellor for what
they eee aa his attempt to gain
control of an $8 million medical
echool foundation-fund.
Aldrich, who initially sup-
ported Health West's campus hos-
pital plan, withdrew support for it
last month, saying he feared
divisiveness in the community
would crush the chances both for
the campus h0&pital propoaal and
for a private hospital plan which is
supported by a cadre of businesa
and community leaders.
Medical College Dean Stanley
van den Noort and the College
Board of Trustees have voted to
stick with the Health West plan.
Last week, the medical achool
faculty voted to censure Aldrich
for his withdrawal of support. The
censure, largely a symbolic act, ia
rare in the UC system.
Marshal.I Houts, a member of
the subcommittee for develop-
ment, said the seven trustee
committee members Tuesday re-
acted to a letter from Aldrich to
van den Noort dated Aug. 29
which said the foundation'• fund
would come under the control of
(See HOSPITAL, Paie :\I)
Is this industrial-strength religion?
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. 0.-, ........
Can the _ _pcayen of Calvary
Chapel of .Jluntington Beach be
heard over the IUJ)lhot bluta
from an, Indoor Sboottna range
next door?
Can the "° memben of the
1 interdenominational oongioegation
profit by their move into a
heretofatt rigidly protected in-
\
dustrial area of the city?
Will God's work put a damper
on the work of private enterpriae?
We may toon find out the
answen to \heee questionl be-
caUM Huntingt.on Beach dty of-
fidala Tue9day nlaht pve their blemlnet for the church to move
into two vacant industrial build-
lnp on Talbert Avenue and
Jamestown Lane, eut of the
Central Library.
Before officials reached the
dedaion to override the planning
commillion'• denial of the move,
Pastor Steven H. Purdue told
council pliembers that the oon-
l"!Ption prayed foe them and
would rejoice no matter how the
decillon went becaUR "it would
be God'• will ...
"Of ooune, we'll rejok:ie a little
bit more if you grant our appeal,"
Purdue added.
Purdue IOOn oould be heard
exclaiming "Hallelujah," becau.e
offidala unanimoully gave the
chureh penni.Mion to occupy the
buildinp for five years and an
option to extend the le.e few five
yean after that.
Michael Dekofaky, a co-owner
(See CHURCH Pqe At)
lllDEI
Bridie BU National News A4 ....,_ C4 PollceLoc A3
BuJJeUn Board A3 Public Noticea C4cs.1 Clamified C7-l0 Sporil 1.3
Comb BU State New-A• a..word C10 Dr.Stetncrohn ,..
D..ahNOUC. ca 8l4>Ck Marketa ca :W~t Ae Televtl6on ~ AlO
AJ 'lbeaten AJ ....,. C9 W•ther Al
MO¥lel AJ WcrldN..,. A4
rwi1 .......... ., .............
A 21-f oot tapestry will be unveiled in the sanctuary
at Temple Bat Yahm in Newport Beach tonight.
Jews note beginning
of another new year
By ANDREA ADELSON
Ot .. 0.-, .........
Jews worldwide mark the be-
ginning of the new year 5744
tonlaht at nightfall with the start
of Aoah H.aahanah. A 10-day
period of IOUl-leU'Chinl follows,
ending with Yom.Kippur-aday
of atonement and the most IOlemn
of the Jewish Holy Daya-a week
from Saturday. -
"In compart.on to the aecular
New Year'• Eve on Dec. 31, where
~, ,
everyone goes out and partiea, the
Jewiah New Year ii a very SllCred
time and is treated very
seriously," explained Rabbi Step-
hen Einstein, of the Fountain
~. Congregation B 'n ai
At the outllet of Rosh Haahanah
1ervioes, a ram's horn, or ahofar, ia
aou.nded, • "call to corwcience,"
Einatein said.
The holiday begina with a Rosh
(See HIGH HOLY DAYS. Pase AJ)
Orange Coa•t DAIL V PILOT /Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983 . •
CONTINUED STORIES
From PegeA1
SURF'S UP
period, then follow the coast.
"We might feel some effectB late
in the week, If at all."
Meanwhile, Kiko'a departure
will most likely mean some high
WAY UP ...
clouds above Orange C-ounty for
the next few days, with inland
temperatures expected to reach 87
and beach high.a of about 76. Lowa
tonight are expected to be ln the
mid-608.
DEVELOPMENT ...
and commercial-professional o1-
fices.
Fieldstone's Phase I plan calls
for construction of an office build-
ing on Talbert Avenue and 93
garden townhouses, priced at
$150,000 to $200,000, west of the
theater, according to Fieldstone
Vice President Dave Langlois.
ln addition, 2.3 acres are to be
sold to Fi,uni.ly Health Program for
expansion of its h06pital and
parking facilities.
During the Phase I construction
period, the drive-in will continue
to operate with reduced parking
capacity, Langlois said. ln the
future, the company expects to
return for a zoning change that
will permit construction of 99
additional garden homes, plus
some commercial buildingB on
Brookhurst, on the 13 acres oc-
cupled by the drlve-ln.
Langlois said his company plana
to spend up to $4 mlllion to correct
soil and drainage problems on the
property before a single building
is constructed.
He said 250,000 cubic yards of
earth must be irucked in \o raiae
the property to meet federal flood
plain standards. An additional
80,000 cubic yards must be moved
in to compress the land so that It
will support structures.
City officials had exp.remed
interest in devoting a larger
portion of the property to com-
mercial developmeht. But a mar-
ket analyst determined that major
retailers have little interest in the
drive-in property becauae it ii not
a corner location and becauae It is
cloee to existing major shopping
centers.
An unidentified surfer takes advantage of
monster waves off West Balboa Boulevard and
HOSPITAL ...
I. °"""""' .................. "-
l 8C}I Street in Newport Beach today. Sets were
, reported a 8 high 88 15 ( eet.
HIGH HOLY DAYS ... From PageA1
Vice Chancellor John Miltner.
FV seeks reserve firefighters
Trainees can gain experience in exchange I or volunteer labor Hashanah feast that traditionally
includes sweet foods and a round-
ed loaf of bread called challah
(pronounced ha-la), meaning ~t
the year should be sweet and
bereft of jagged edges.
"It's a time for contemplating
and giving some serious thought tD
improving oneself," said Einstein.
Services include readino of
ancient Hebrew prayers dating
from 70 A.O., when scholars
copied down ancient rites after the
central Jewish temple in Jerusa-
lem was destroyed, explained
Rabbi Sol Teitelbaum of Temple
Isaiah in Newport Beach.
Penitence, prayer and charity
are the central motifs of the High
Holy Days. as the 10 days flanked
by the two holidays are called,
Teitelbaum said.
In his own service, the rabbi
said he uses the imagery of a high
court to induce believers to take
spiritual stock of the past year and
reeolve to do better in the year
ahead.
The equivalent in Christian
theology, pointed out Rabbi Eins-
tein, are the days of Lent, preced-
ing F.aater.
Those attending Rosh
Hashanah services at Temple Bat
Y ahm in Newport will aee the
unveiling of a long-awaited,
21-foot woven tapestry in the
sanctuary .•
The multi-colored fabric, done
by Los Angeles aru.t Joeeph
Pelzig, covers theoeillng-high ark,
containing the acroU.. of the Torah.
It depicts the miracle of the
burning bush.
"The idea behind it," Rabbi
Mark S. Miller said, "ia that
anytime we are receptive to the
miraculous in life we can receive a
on, even though we're not
and not standing before
particular burning buah at
Mt. Sinai."
The fund, which was more than
$3 million when the California
C.Ollege of Medicine joined UCI,
has been used for special researeh
projects over and above the yearly
appropriations given the medical.
college from the UC Board of
Regenta, Houts said.
"Our goal is to raise $100 million
to be used for research and
teaching projects to upgrade
medicine in <;>range C.Ounty and
throughout the world,"· Houts
said.
Up until the Aug. 29 letter, he
said, the fund was strictly under
the control of the board of
trustees. Now, it appears the
chancellor is trying to "punish"
the board by bringing control of
the fund under Miltner, Houts
said.
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. Dlllr ........
A reeerve firefighter program
foe F~ Valley has been
approved una:nimously by the
City Council.
Working without pay, the re-
aerves will 888iat regular flre-
figbten in a varlety' of duties
while learning fire department
procedures. 1
The reeerve program. propoled
by Fountain Valley Fire Chief
Richard Jorgenaen, was con-
sidered ·by the council Tueeday
night.
Drowned CM
man 'afraid
of the water Independent control of foun-
dation funds such as this is
"routine across the country," Houts said. "The chancellor never Friends ol a 24-year-old Costa
In an interview, Jorgensen aaid
both the local department and the
reserves will benefit from this
program.
"We are stretched pretty thin,
and this will help relieve aome of
that," he said. "And, in the event
of a majo~diaaster, we will have a
~p of trained people reedy to
help out."
Jorgenaen said the reeerves will
conaiat mainly of fire academy
graduates who have not yet found
firefighting jobs. By working u
~ the graduates will be
a'1e to continuetheir training and
.accwnulate vahi.!ble _experience
for: their re8\.IJ1JieS.
The fire chief 'aid llmilar
reeerve progama are operated by
the fire departments in nearby
Huntington Beach and Santa Ana.
for meals and some equipment.
Operation of the reeerve pro-
gram during the first year will cost
$6,652.
"We have a low budset for the
program but expect to get a lot out
of {t,'' Jorgenaen said.
Reeerve firefigh~ will be able •
to help keep fire stations clean and
equipment in good w orking order,
he aaid. They will ah.are in chore9
such u cooking but will abo be
allowed to usist in ~ call.a.
(Reeerves must be qualified aa
emergency medical technicians.)
Jorgemen said the Fountain
Valley department will begin
accepting applications now that
City C.Ouncil approval has been
obtained.
CHURCH APPROVED •••
Mesa man who was found before said it had to be approved drowned Tue.day in a murky
by (his) office." motel swimming pool said he
Fundina for the first year of the
Fountain \Talley re.erve program
was approved earlier by the City
Council. Jorgensen said 001ta are
minimal becauae the retierVes
receive no pay. The only ooata are
lntially. reserves will assist only
at Fountain Valley Fire Station
No. 2 (across from Los Amigos
High School). The volunteers will
not work at Station No. 1 (across
from Fountain Valley High
School) until that facility is ex-
panded, the fire chief said.
The council declined to act
Tuesday night on a plan to expand
Fire Station No. 1, referring it
back to the dty staff for sugges-
tions on ways to reduce construc-
tion costs.
of the Firing-Line, the indoor
shooting range, had warned that
having the church placed in the
induatrial park "would violate our
rights and could have a disastrous
effect on property owners."
Dekofsky said the Firing-Line
operates until 10 p.m. seven days a
week and church activities might
harm business and infringe on
customer parking.
He said after the decision,
however, that be mostly wanted
to get all hiaargumenta "out on the
table" and expected to work out
areas of conflict with the Rev.
Purdue.
Purdue told officials the church
had outgrown facilities at the
Dwyer Intermediate School
Auditorium and a smaller church
building on 11th Street.
The subcommittee's resolutions normally shied away from water.
will go to the executive committee However, several people told
of the trustees the next time it investigators they saw Eric La-
meets, Houts added. mont. Myen splashing in the
Meanwhile, Thunday's meet-Tahiti Inn's kidney-shaped pool at
ing with Gar~er is designed aa an 450 Victoria St., police said. Myers
arena for Health West and the lived at the motel.
board of trustees to plead their Acquaintances also told officers
case before the UC President, Myers was extremely drunk. The
whose recommendation to the victim's roommate said Myers had
Huntington
blaze loss
at $40,000
BUILDING DOUBLES ... (
Board of Regenta next week is consumed several bee~ during a A fire of suspicious origin
expected to strongly influence the Labor Day barbecue at the motel caused $40,000 damage Tuesday
final decision on the future of the Monday night. Another resident night at a Huntington Beach
hospital proposal. said Myers had a beer when he company that manufactures
jumped into the pool at midnight, motorcycle sidecars.
Gardner will report to a special investigators said. Huntington Beach Fire Capt.
Bandit robs
Viejo bank
of $2,000
A man outfitted in a white shirt
and trown gloves robbed a Bank
of America branch in Miaaion
Viejo yesterday of an estimated
$2,000 in cash, according to an
Orange C.Ounty Sheriff's spokes-
man.
with some developers -"has had
a serious impact, particularly on
those builders caugh t
mid-stream.''
''Builders had sold homes to
people, hoping they could get
them built in 60 or 90 days. Then
there's a strike and interest
rates ... ," Erskine said. The result,
he said, has been canceled
escrows, though he couldn't say
how many prospective buyers
Principals named
The assignment of two Hunt-
ington Beach City (elementary)
School District principals has been
announced.
Joyce Roebuck, who has been
principal at Gisler Middie School,
was appointed principal at Eader
Elementary School. She replaces
Dolores Lawler, who is on sick
leave following a back operation.
Ian C.OUins, who was assistant
principal at Gisler, will become
principal there.
We're
Listening •••
642•6086
o==:
leQuerenteect
"'-Y foOt• II you 00
not "••• rou' pap.et by
!t '° P "' ca• -· 7 P"' end you, copy ••ti O• _..,
have pulled out becauae of higher
borrowing oosta.
The year's first-half f!gun!sare
al80 diatorted by aa much u 15
percent becauae of a before-.June
surge when builden puahed pro-
ject.a through to avoid meeting
revbed state energy atanda.rda,
Bartolotto added.
In Newport Beach, an "on-rush
of plana wanted to come in Wlder
the old standar<I.'' aaid Raimar
Schuller, dty bu.ildlJl8 official.
hospital committee Sept. 15 and His friends said tbey were Tom Poe said the blaze broke out
make a recommendation for the surpri8ed Myen waa in \he pool at shortly after 10 p.m. at California
action it should take to the full all becauae they didn't believe he Sidecar, 15678 Graham St. The
Board of Regents Friday, said could swim. They told officers he plant was cloeed, but the fire was
Yori Wada, chairman of the aeemed afraid of the water, ac-reported by a nearby resident, he
regents. cording to a police report. aald.
Dean van den Noort, who has Youngsters swimming in the Poe said a sprinkler system pool at 10 a.m. Tuesday spotted confined the fire to the interior of
led the campus hospital battle, the body in the nine-foot deep end the plant. He said 28 firefighters
said he did not plan ~ attend p d h the blue und l Thursday's meetina ... 111 ... ht now, of pool. aramedics sai he had broug t er contro .
rm just doina w~ ih;(colh-ae) been in the water at least six Richard Rylander, the com-
--o -a houn. pany's administrative vice preal-
board (of trustees) tella me and Police aald visibility in the pool dent,aaidthecompany'utockand
what the chancellor tella me.'' he waa four feet, meaning the body materiala, uaed to build the
said. baldbeen outofsightatthebottom fl~ lidecan, were~-
The SUfpect. deecribed as
having a medium build and a dark
complexion, entered the bank at
26821 Trabuco Rd. about 1:40
p.m ., displayed a silver revolver,
and ordered the teller to tum over
aomecaah.
The total io. will not be known
until after an a udit, the spokes-
man said.
8hltiW•offidala are lnvesdpt..
t.aaid.
Building permit valuations in
Newport jumped ln May and
April, going above $2.4 mlllion
both months, then fell to $1. 75
million in June.
Builders flee the coast for the
summer and return in the fall,
Schuller said.
He said lf the campus hospital of the pool. ~· ,
proposal does not go through. he r'•••!il!!ii~!!!!!!ii~iiii!ii!i!i!!!!ii!ii~'. and many other faculty members
"might consider other (job) op-
tions," but said he has no CWTent
plans to resign.
"We expect the rest of the
month to be very heavy,'' he said.
The BIA forecast is for about
15,000 homes to go up in the
county this year, although the
Construction Industry Reeearch
Board is less optimistic, predicting
only 11,000 new homes on the
market in 1983.
'Tm not asking for results, I'm
asking for eUorts. The best 15
hospitals in the United States are
next door to universities," he said.
UCI absolutely has the potential
to be among those top institutions
if it is allowed a chance for a
campus hospital, he added.
What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like?
Call the number at left and your message will be recorded,
tral'l3Cribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24·hour answering servil'e may be used to record let·
ters to the editor on any topic. lbilbox contributors must Include
their name and telephone num~r tor verification. No circulation
calls . please.
Tell us what"s on your mind .
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
H. L khw..U Ill
PublletMW
Cl111m.d edv-'letne 714/M2•1171 All 9'Mf depertlMftte ~ ..... ~.
~ :,::r,:; = =~ CA tMle
~ tM.lOrengeC. ~~HO
"••• 1tor1ea Ulu1tr•Tlona. eclltonet m11tef 01 eo.1--fl--y .,.---~ .,..........,., ol COO)'f'QN -
MEATS
Stuffed
1. CHICKEN BREAST
OR
PORK CHOPS ...
2. Foster Farm $3ll
Fully Cooked
TlltKEY BREAST • • . t1.
3. Tri-TIP
ROAST ••• r cout»ON"·couPc>N-couPoN l
I LEAN I
U.8. #1 SWMt Vine Ripe
1. CANTALOlft ••••...•••.•.....•........ 1 r 1..1.
Extra Fancy Sweet Mtn. 2. BARTLETT PEARS ....•....•.•.••..•.. 31• ll.
U.S. # 1 Jumbo Hau
3. AVOCAOOS •••••••••••••••••.•••.••••.••
1. Rm SNAPPER ..................... '1.ll t1.
2. FILET OF SOLE ............•....... '4.41 t1.
(10·12 Oz. Ea.) 3. LOBSTER TAILS ................. '12.ll t1.
BAKERY
•FRENCH STICKS .••.....••. Reg. 1.39 a II~
• Tit APPlE CAKE ...... AeQ. S.25 -'4.11
6otu•oar eno Sunoay 11 "'°" <to not 'lteetvt '""' <~ OY 7 o m cat o.loft
'0 • "" ""° yout coo., ... .,._.., Chazy DowellbY Raymond MML.Mn
EdllOf end ANlttenT ContrOller ! ::U~. ~ ··~ ! ----------~-----~ Clnluledoft
Telephon ..
...... 1
Or-County
Al-~
NOtl-1 -"'U'Otl ~ • w .. 1__,., .. ,.. ............ ---
10 the Publlehef ..._._,.c...
li'rocluc-~
VOL 11, NO. 2IO
• •
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, Sept. 7, 1983 Al
.. ' I ' -------.,.,. ~--•·• . . .. ' ~ .
J
l l.f.--a.....---.u -• ~-.a~ ..• -Next for the inn crowd: Irvine Hilton
'Plenty of classes' free
at Golden West College
Groundwork laid for 15-story, 550-room hotel after new Marriott opens
Students who come to Golden West College's open enrollment
eessions Thursday, Friday and Sept. 12-16 will find plenty of c.lUle8
to chooee from, according to college officials.
"And they al9o don't have to worry about paying tuition," said
Fred Garcia, dean of admiasions, records and guidance.
Students intending to attend school in the fall semester that
begins Monday should be prepared to pucchase a $10 parking
permit if they plan to drive to achool, plus a mandatory health
service fee of $7 and a general materials fee of $2 per class.
Open registration without an appointment will be held.from
8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Thursday and Sept. 12-15, and between 8:30
a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Friday and Sept. 16. Registration cloees Sept. 16
at 1.30 p.m.
Ballet claeses set in Huntington
Ballet dance techniques, theory, history and compo6ition will
be f:8U~ht in a Coastline College ballet class scheduled Tuesdays,
beguuung next Tuesday at the Peterson Learning center in
Huntington Beach. The class meets from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Students may register by mail or in person at any Coastline
College office. Jn-class registration will be accepted through the
second week on a space-available basis. A $2 per class fee must be
paid at the time of registration.
For more information, call the college admissions office at
241-6176.
Remedial spe lling program available
Spelling with Sound, a course for students with severe spelling
problems, will be offered for nine weeks at Golden West College in
Huntington Beach.
Day classes will begin Monday and evening classes will begin
Wednesday.
Emphasis in the course is on remembering the sounds of letter
sequences.
Registration for the fall semester at Golden West continues
through Sept. 18 in the admissions office. For registration
infonpation, call 891-0660.
City of Hope planning luncheon
The Stanley Mitnick Chapter for the City of Hope will hold a
membership luncheon Monday at 11:30 a .m. at Mercury' Savings
and Loan, 8955 Valley View Ave., Bue.na Park. _
Chapter members receive regular updates on medical center
and research institute projects involving health care, treatment,
research, education and di.seaae prevention.
For further infonnation. contact activity chairman Mickey
Sheftel at 772-9909 or chapter president Claire Rubin at 635-8307.
_Admission to Monday's luncheon is $3.
By UREN E. I.LEIN
Of .. !Wlr .........
The groundwor~ of the
~50-room Irvine Hilton Hotel will
be laid this afternoon, barely a
month after the ne9fbY 500-room
Irvine Marriot Hotel opened ita
doors.
The $70 million Hilton will be
owned by the Irvine Co. and
operated by Hlltpn Hotels Corp.
on Jamboree Road and Main
Street in Irvine -directly across
the San Diego Freeway from the
Fluor Corp. headquarters.
The Hilton is one of six hotels
Some good
Samaritan;
he helped
himself
A 20-year-old Fountain Val-
ley woman didn't get the help
she expected when her car
broke down· on Ellis A venue
near Magnolia Street.
She told police a man drove
up, stopped at her stalled car
and asked, "Do you need
help?"
"I have help on the way,"
she repUed (she had called her
father.)
"Let me sit here and try it,"
the man said.
He got in the car, tried to
turn over the motor and then
left.
The driver didn't realize
until later that her wallet -
containing $135 -was~
ing. It turned out that her
would-be benefactor had help-
ed somebody all right -
himself.
P air nabbed in I rvine tire thefts
lrvlne police errMted two men
Tueeday morning, auipeeted of •t"'~
Ing eight tlr• vaiu.d over 1700 from
• "day Tn Stora on Annetrong
Avenue a week ego. Bool<ed et the
Orange County Jall on charges of
grand theft were Jeffrey W. Crumley.
25, of Laguna Nigel and Donald 0 .
8efg. 31, ol Buena Park.
A thief stole a puree containing
about $425 In c:aah from under the
desk of • recepllonllt, et w()rt( In a
building 1n the 17900 blocil of Sky
Park Boulevard In Irvine sometime
Tuesday morning. Police have no
clue who the culprit wae.
A woman who ll11es on Campanaro
Eut lo8t a garage door opener to•
thief, who enatched the $50 Item from
the open window of her car. parked
outaide her home. Police report no
other burglarlel In the area.
Huntington Beach
Three wheel• end Urea wete r•
ported ltolen Tueaday from three
venlclel parked et the Exxon Mr'llce
1tatlon at 17222 Pacific Cout High-
way. The lose wu eetlmeted at 1350.
A weekend break-In wu reported
at a card and gift lhop at 9049 Atlante
Ave. The front door wu pried open to
enter. The Iola Included $300 caltl
and $500 In jeWelry.
A S6 brown ~o wellet contain-
ing S80 wu reported 1tolen Tueeday
trom a white 1967 Volkewegen
partced at Golden W•t Str_, and
Pacific Cout Highway. EnW was
made through the right wind wing.
A woman returned from a weekend
trip Tueeday to find her home on the
300 block of 5th Street ranaacked.
Entry waa apparently made through a
locked rear window. The loaa In-
cluded $94~ worth ol jewelry and an
$800 1tare6.
A light blue Ford Courier pickup
truck belonging to • Fullerton coupi.
wu burglarlzed while parked near
the lntarMCtlon of Main Street and
Olive Avenue. Entry wu apparently
made through a rear camper window.
The Iola Included $10 In cuh and 25
cueette tapes.
Founta in Valley
A man who gave the lmprnalon
that he had a gun In his waletband
eecaped Tuesday with "480 from
Fullerton Savings & Lollh, 18020
Broolchurlt St. The man dlaplayed •
note demanding money In • vfnyl
notebOok.
Someone ullng • coat hanger to pry open a window, stole two bow11ng
ball• end a bow11ng blla from a cat
partced at Fountain Sowl, 17110
Brool<huret St.
ThleveS •tole two front eeate from a
1963 Volkswagen Bug When It was
parl<ed In the 11000 bloctc ol Liiac
Avenue.
Laguna Beach
A man reported to be Intoxicated
and bothering pu...t>y at the
corner ot Creu and Glenneyre
1trM1• Tueactey afternoon wu ques-
tioned by Laguna Beach police who
Mid he wu not drunk, but advlMd
him to ceaM being a disturbance.
•
Polloe mada a late night arrest
Tuesday In the 300 block of Ocean
Av.nue, apprehending Frederick Lee
Vaughn, 23, a Huntlvflle, Texu, man
wanted lot vlolatlon of hie parole fOf
aggraY11ted robbery. Vaughn wu
taken to Orange County Jell wn.e he
wa• being held without ball.
A resident of the 1900 block ol
Cortez A11enue reported finding a
ecorplon In the garage. A police
officer wu dlepetched to klll the
arachnid.
Cloudy and cooler along the Coast
Coastal C-'ld .. 15 The Z~ F0t I p8m. EDT "81n r-Columb4a.8 c. 83 n
ColvmbW " ee Thur . ten-o.t
0..-,I Wonll " 77 •H hT eturn ~
F• Thutldey I.ow -Ir>-09ylon " ee
a -.g -~more •.cl-o.n-13 M
lon4gl!t -Tl•u•9dllY mornlnt· C-O.MOIMt 81 62 Thunday.!1': Tl>Und8)'70to 74 •ttlle Oetroll " M
~ 18 to t5 In Ille lnlencl Oulutll ee 47
v~. ~ 1:::,_eo 10 ee tlPMO " 74
Ugl!t ..,,... duttnO ,., -F~a 60 43
"'°"*'Cl hour9 from Paint eon-tlon to Fwoo 82 «
IM ~ tonier. -....,. _,,... =:r ... 91 " -· '° ,,._. ~ fJfWnoon -
77 IM = .._. . llou1hwly Hetttorel .. 71 104-Thur_,..,, __ -79 4t ::'!...''°'_°"_= Honolulu ee 76
I.ow doud9 -ortty _, Houoton .. H
~ Clurtne --~ lnCllenlc>alla 11 14 ...,.,,._ ,,.,._, ...... 13 71 ,,__...... 13 73 ....._., ,,..,_ 12 • ~City .. .. ,,,I
Extended LMll-O-!01 18 N•'°'* W...,_.. s.r-
Uttla llocll N 74 NOAA.US ofeon-u
t:.:z-.. .. Front1: Cold .. werm .,.. ~ Stationery •• 11 71 .=_,,_.,..._., !09-IOw l"*** .. 70
-~""""' ..... -. ~ 12 71 "°'*'°·--.. .. a..,,.,.. 11 • ="" ....... :::--to law lo. -.., a
..._~ ---........... 74 " ,..,...en. 71 ............ T7 .. ................. n 12 ~ " ,,._.. .. ., -.. 76 ="City .. :: ::::= .. ..
.... a.-11 70 71 17 41 .... y°"' tM n Aw>O " 41 ljlOll-'° ..
Temperatures Nortoll t7 7& Nc:M>OflCI " n 9w<-.. .., ..,..,.,. 71 41 81.L.°"9 .. II Toptlla .. 56
~City 17 11 8t,,...._TM'P9 11 T1 ,_ 17 74 .... ~ .. tlT-101 79 19Le OrNN 71 67 S-AMCINo .. 71 WMl*lg1on .. 11
~ •1 70 0...... .. 11
n 11 ,_...,,. 101 n ... oe.oo ., 72 Wlohlla • '1
.. 72 "' , .. .. 71
MGIW ... .. 17 ....... 104 .,
~ .... ............ .. • ,._ .. " ,._City ., 19 Tides SURF llPIRT -" 77 ....-.. .. 71 =-9' IO tOOAY .. 7! ..._al< 10 ~ 8-MI IOw 4~p "'· Q.t ... ., 4f 8-MI Noll IO' ' p "'· " "°"""' tM ~= THUMOAT .. _..._ " rltM"llfl ,.47 .. "'. 0.4 LOCAl'tOll 9'lflllO .. '° '"''°" 11:01 .. "'. u .. IMAN .,...on .. 74 8eclorMI Noll 4• .. pm Q.• =:i::•:::.. .-iy
M -c...-.... ~-11 .. p ... ,. ... ....
C1w1Mon.•e ., 74 .,,.. .... IOdl¥ .. 7:11 '"'. -40lll tlH ...,.,, M = ~.wv ., 71 Tiu9dlr. ••ti • "' ..,. -......... ==•1 •10
awtlifte,M.C '° .. J.IOllA • ....-=: ~r:.: ,, .. MOerl -... °' p "' !Odey. rlele 91 M
11 N • ll•m w~ Md_....,. .. •a..-.. 2-4 ....
17 72 ... ,,, ... w-·-............ ..... dlrecllOll -
planned for the Orange Cout
area, e.ch with more than 200
rooma. Many of them are inte~
to 8erve the expected horde ot
touriBta who will be in the area
next aummer for the 1984 Olym-
pics.
But the Hilton will not be
completed in time for the Olym-
pics, said SWNUl Burns, Hilton'•
manager of public relatiom.
Buma aald the 15-story hotel
will be designed for the bu8ineea
traveler, just right for its location
about a mile from John Wayne
Airport.
The hotel wU1 feature conven-
tion and meeting room facilities, a
20,000-9quare-foot ballroom, two
restaurani., a lobby bar and a
lounge and concierge suites, with
private check-in, breakfast and
lounae. available, Bums said.
It la expected to open in the
spring of 1985.
The Irvine site is Hilton's third
venture into Orange County. The
company alao operates the Hilton
at the Park in Anaheim and will
operate the Anaheim Hilton and
Towers, scheduled to open In
spring 1984, Bums said.
The 3,000 hotel and motel rooms
currently housing tourists and
buaine88 travelers in Newport
Beach, Irvine, Costa ~esa and
Laguna Beach will 8000 be joined
by nearly that many more, lf
optimistic planners and de-
velopera have thelr way.
While city officials trumpet
in<.-reased bed tax revenues aa
ample justification for the new
hotels, eome community groups
are afraid the hotels will disrupt
their low-density residential
areas.
lncrease d traffic, more
high-density housing needed for
hotel employees and increased
burden on city services -such as
police protection and physical
improvements -are among the
residents' concerns.
Big wheels in Huntington
Roller -skater John Adamoli and
bicyclist Woody Itson maneuver
toge ther inside a curved ramp as
they d e monstra te the ir talents a t
the annual Septemberfest on the
Huntington Beach sands.
Kids get b a ck-to-school shots
A back-to-school immunization
and health test clinic will be held
today through Saturday at the
Huntington Center Mall in Hunt-
ington Beach.
The free acreeni.ng tests and
immunizations are being provided
as a community service through
the support and services of the
Orange County Public Health
Department, the Southern Cali-
fornia Collejte of Medical and
Health Planning Council
names Badger director
Richard E. Badger, director of a
health systems agency in Sacra-
mento, has been appointed the
new executive director of the
Orange County Health Planning
Council.
Badger succeeds Stanley J .
Matek,whod.irectedtheOrange
County agency the past 10 years
and resigned in June.
Badger has been director of the
Golden Empire Health Systems
Agency in Sacramento since 1979.
He has worked there since 1975,
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Ctrtified Gemolo i1t, AGS
DIAMOND CUTTING
comes to SouthH•t Alla
a1ao serving two years as planning
director.
He holds a master's degree in
social work from Sacramento
State Univenity and is working
on a master's degree in health care
administration from the Univer-
sity of Southern California.
The health planning council
receives both federal and state
funds to compile data and make
recommendations aimed at en-
couraging quality while holding
down heallh care costs.
Dental Careers of Anaheim. the
Newport/Mesa Audiology Center,
the Kimberly Nurses Home
Health Agency, the Memorial
Hospital MedjcaJ Center of Long
Beach and olherqualifled medical
volunteers.
The space and coordination for
the clinic, which also is open to
adults, is provided by Huntington
Center and the Huntington
Center Merchants Association.
Immunizations include DPT
, (diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis),
measles. mumps, rubella and
polio. In addition, eye tests, hear-
ing tests, dental hygiene, scoliosis
checks (curvature of the spine),
blood pressure, height and weight
checks will be available.
Children's id en ti fica ti on finger -
printing also will be available at
the clinic. It is a cooperative
volunteer effort involving the
Golden West College Police
Academy, the Huntington Beach
Police Department and students
from the Dorothy Shreve
Modeling School.
Diamond cutting, en enclent craft
that has been concentrated In Juat a
few of the wortd'a trlM:tltlonel gem
centert, I• a growing trade In
Southeast Alta. There are ..wrel
good things that lhould emerge
from thl• feci. For one, It enab*
the people of that troubled pert of
the globe to get lnvotYed In 1 high·
ty-lkllted prot.ulon. The dlemonel cutt• ... eought..aft• artlMn who
Wiii alWaya be able to find wont.
Another plul It the effect th9t the
SouthMlt Attant cen haw on the
wortd diamond martcet. Untll now,
larael and India haY9 been the
wond'• two foremc>9t diamond cut-
ting cent••· but polttlcal end tabor troub* there .,. ~t oaUMt
of dllrvl>tlon In the world mark.-.
Now, wfth diamond• betna cut In
Bangkok, Thailand and Tn Kota
Bheru, Mllayala, among other
pleeel, the wortd 11 ueurect of a
more dlverM aupply of cut
dlalnonda.V/hatdoeethatrne.nto
you? It "*"' that the eupply of dtamondt wtll not be botti.n.cked
by • lhortage of outtert -thul ' prlcel are Nkefy to be more •table.
That't good newt fOt ell of UI, ltn't
It?
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
t800 NEWPORT BLVO., COSTA MESA
SINCE t948
BankAmene1rd-M1ater Ch1~g• PHONE 54tl·3401
..
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Sept. 7, 1983
TOP OF IHI NIWS
NATION
Child prostitution ring
broken up by Vermont cops
By dte Aaaoclated Preti
MONTPELIER, Vt. -Police say they have
broken up a child proetitution ring apparently
run by the younpten themaelves. The 10
Battleboro children, aged 8 to 13, acted indepen-
dently, police said today. ''There's no adults in
clw'ge of thia ring. There's no male pimp. It's
children and children. I think it is structured
within thepeer group," said Lt. Richard Guthrie.
"The kida are aeeking out their own clientele."
'Ibe children have been offering sexual favors in
exchange for money for nearly a year, according
to Guthrie.
McCarthy has h eart attack
CULPEPER, Va. -Fonner Sen. Eugene
McCarthy, who challenged President Lyndon
Joh.n8on for the 1968 Democratic presidential
nomination at the height of the Vietnam War, has
been hospitaliz.ed after a heart attack. McCarthy
wu listed in fair condition today, said Arlene
Kilby, night supervi.aor at Culpeper Memorial
Hospital, who would not releaae other details. He
wu to be transferred today to Georgetown
University Hospital for further tests. .
Stay of execution granted
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -Less than 14
hours before he was to be strapped into the
electric chair, convicted killer James David
Raulenon won a temporary stay of execution
while a federal judge decided whether to
overturn hia aentence. Rauleraon, 33, had been
ICheduled to die at 7 a.m. today for the 1975
shooting death of a Jac.kaonville policeman
during a restaurant robbery.
Astronaut gets new post
SPACE CENTER, Houston -Richard H.
Truly, a Navy captain whoee tint command was
aboard the lat.est flight
of apace shuttle
<;hallenger, ia leaving
the astronaut corps to
take charge of the
newly organized Naval
Spece Command. In a
joint announcem ent
Tuesday, the Navy and ~
the National Aero-
nautics and Space Ad-
ministration said the Tnly
45-year-old former test pilot will take over the
Naval Space Command on Oct. 1 when the
organization formally starts operations in
Dahlgren, Va.
He will become the first astronaut to return
to naval service in the 25-year history of NASA.
STATE
Major cocaine ring broken
SAN FRANCISCO -The break-up of a
major cocaine distribution ring will have a
"far-reaching impact" on drug trafficking in the
Pacific Northwest and poasibly the supply
pipeline from Florida, the U.S. Attorney has
predicted. Eleven people face arraignment today
following their arrests over the Labor Day
weekend.
Speeders, drunks lace rap
SACRAMENTO -Legislation to crack
down on speeden and drunken teen-age drivers
has won at.ate Senate approval. A 21-6 vote
Tuesday pueed a measure to require a driver's
lioenae SW1pension and a $500 fine for driving
over 86 miles per hour. A 37-0 vote paaeed a bill to
require the auapenaion of a minor's driver's
Ucen8e for a year on conviction of drunken
driving.
Space shuitle in good shape
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE -The
apace shuttle Challenger will return to Kennedy
Sp11ee Center in Florida with very little damage
from it.a lat.eet flight, a NASA offidal uys. "Each
time it leel'1l8 to be geUing better," Herman K.
Widick, apoketanan for the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration, said at a Tuesday
neww conference. Widick said Challenger may
head back to Florida as early aa Friday -bolted
atop a specially modified Boeing 747 -after a
four-day turnaround..
WORLD
Beirut shelling kills 3
BEIRUT, Lebanon -Shelling killed three
French peacekeepers and wounded four in west
Beirut today, informed IOW'Ce9 said. French war
jet.a .::rambled from the aircraft carrier Foch to
aearc:h out the llOW'Ce of flre in the
Druae-a>ntrolled central mountains.
Pilots seek Moscow ban
LONOON -British, We.t German, French
and Scandlnavian pilot.a met with thelr govern-
ment.I today to try to convince them to implement
a ~y ban on flights to Ma.:ow to protest the
Soviet downing of a South Korean jumbo
jetliner.
Weinberger visiting troops
PANAMA CITY, Panama -Defenae
Secretary C.par Weinberger, visiting U.S. trooea tra1n1n8 in • muddy rain forest, 8iCCllled
the Soviet Unton of "enfOl"C'i.na the law of the
Jun&le" in ahooUna down • South K«ean Airlifter: Welnberpr WM to leave for El ~vadoc
today, contlnulna hi.a Central .American tour with
a villi to San Vfcent.e provt.nce, a .Ste of heavy
ftaht!nl in the 47-month~ld c:Ml war there.
Later in the day he WM to 80 to Honduru to vt.lt
U.S. troop1 there for military exerdles.
------·~-----
Search
may have
found
wreakage
W AK.KANAI, Japan (AP)
-The number of Soviet ..
ve98els operating where a
South Korean airliner was
shot down last w eek nearly
doubled today, the Maritime
Safety Agency said, raising
speculation they may have
found wreckage or bodies.
The deputy direct.or of the
agency office in Wakkanai,
Hiroshi Kishima, said 13 Sov-
iet boats -nearly two times
the n~ber aeen in the area
before today -were observed
aearching waten northeast of
Moneron laland., west of
Sakhalin Wand. He said an
Ilyushin reoonnaisaance plane
al.so was observed.
"They may have found
something, but we have no
way of knowing," Kishima
said. The Soviets have banned
outsiders from searching the
area.
A Korean Air Lines :8Qeing
747 cr08Sed Soviet territory in
the area Sept. 1 and was shot
down with 269 people aboard,
all presumed dead. On Tues-
day the Sovieta for the first
time admitted their fighter
planes downed the jumbo jet. . ~
The waters in the area are
too deep for divers to operate,
Kiahimaaaid, though the exact
depth of the water is unknown
Duk H. Cho burns a Soviet flag near Los Angeles
harbor where a Russian freighter docked Tuesday.
Soviet freighter met
by boycott, protest
LOS ANGELFS (AP) -
Dock.side demonstrators chanted
"Nyet, nyet, Soviet" and long-
shoremen refuaed to unload a
Soviet cargo freighter at Loe
Angeles Harbor to protest the
Soviet Union's downing of a
South Korean jet.liner.
"It's to make known to the
Soviets and the Soviet shipping
organization that the ... United
States people will not tolerate the
ma•acre of innocent civillana, ..
said Bob Zirgulis, whoee ad hoc
Anti-Soviet League coordinating
committee orga.ni.zed the Tuesday
protest.
strat.ors, including Korean church
members, picketed the docks
without incident, said Port of Los
Angeles spokesman Mike Levitt.
The protest was spurred. by the
deaths of 269 people aboard a
Korean Air Lines 7 4 7 jet shot
down last week over the Sea of
Japan.
Carrying signs and chanting
slogans such as "Stop Russian
Trade!" and "Nyet, Nyet, Soviet,"
the demonstrators marched for
about 30 minutes on the sidewalk
along Ocean Boulevard, shaking
their fists and placard.a at the
Soviet crew members."
· becau.e it is in Soviet terri t.ory.
Other safety agency officials
speculated the Soviets may be
using nets or underwater ves-
aela in their 8eal'Ch for frag-
ments of the plane.
" ... We want the Soviet aeamen
to see this and take it back to their
people."
"I don't like Russians," said one
elderly Korean woman. ''They are
murderers. They should go
home." An estimated 250 to 300 demon-
100,000jam
Seoul arena
I or m .einorial
By Tbe A11oclated Pre11
More than 100,000 mourners januned a Seoul
stadium today to denounce the Soviet Union for
downing a South Korean jumbo jetliner, and the
Kremlin tried to deflect world outrage by
launching a press campaign comparing President
Reagan to a Nazi.
Australian pilots, meanwhile, agreed to heed
a call by an international organization of com-
mercial pilots to ban flights to Moeoow, but there
was little inunediate respc;mse from pilota' associa-
tions in other nations.
"God wUJ not forgive this deed," South
Korean Prime Minister Kim Sang-hyup told
mourners, many screaming with grief, during the
mass rally in Seoul. "Retribution and curse will
fall upon them for the crime they have com-
mitted."
A statement read to the crowd said: ''It is
difficult to control our tears and keep from
gnashing our teeth when we think of the last
terrifying moments of the passengers and
crew ... An inhuman attack by Soviet planes using
sophisticated weaponry ... An attack during a time
of peace and not war."
In Moscow, one day after the Soviets
acknowledged shooting down the airliner with 269
people aboard, the government-run press un-
leashed a savage attack on the United States,
comparing U.S. officials to Nazis and accusing
Reagan of stirring up anti-Soviet hysteria.
Russ coillplaint
GLEN COVE, N.Y. (AP) -The Soviet
government wants $29,000 for damage alleged.ly
caused by demonstrators who broke through
police lines and stormed its compound here after
the downing of a Korean plane, police aay.
Gerald Giordano, police commiaaioner in this
New York Oty suburb, said Tuelday that the
Soviets notified him they would file a damage
report asking money for repairs to a surveillance
camera, fences and the lawn surrounding the
36-acre estate. called Killenworth.
Giordano said he does not know who the
Ruaaians expect will pay for the alleged damage.
Mayor Alan Parente said, "U they're asking us for
the money, I can assure you we will not pay it."
'!'hanks for giving your appliances
the afternoon off.
The electricity supply in ou r town is
like that which runs a model electri c
train. When the electric load is even ly dis-
tributed throughout the day, there's
usually enough power to go around. But
on hot afternoons, office and home air
conditioners are added . And dryers. And
ovens. And other appliances. And the tot al
electric load could get too heavy. So use
your air conditioner sparingly .•
When you're home ,
please set it no lower than 7'if. When you
go out, turn it to 85° or higher. And
please give your appliances the afternoon
off, too. That way you can help lighten
the peak l~ad and help provide enough
electricity to go around all day long.
And we can defer the building of new
power plants ... and help keep electric bills
down . You really do have the power. So
please give yo ur appliances
the afternoon off.
Southern California Edison see.
J
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Sept. 7, 1883 Aa
Falwell asks protection from gays and AIDS
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Moral
Majority leader Jerry Falwell,
teek.ing to protect "innocent
people" from the disease AIDS.
wants the federal government to
cloee all homosexual bathhouses
and make it iUegal Cor gay men to
donate blood.
Accusing homosexuals of "viol-
ating the laws of deceny and
morality," Falwe ll said Tuesday
that gays spread AIDS -Ac-
quired Immune Deficiency Syn-
drome -while "the lnnocent
people are paying the price."
"Thousands would die," he told
a Los Angeles Hilton news con-
fere nce, unless the government'
Slain .Marine's father
asks president 'Why?'
By Tiie A11oclated Pre11
'Fhe pregnant wife of one
Marine killed in Lebanon watch-
ed stoically at his burial while the
father of another asked President
Reagan why the United States has
troops in the war-divided country
and whether his son had "given
his life for nothing."
Staff Sgt. Alexander M. Ortega,
25, killed along with another
member of the American peace-
keeping contingent on Aug. 29,
was buried Tuesday in Home-
town, Pa.
Two deaths earlier Tuesday
bought to four the number of
Marines killed in the latest flareup
of Lebanese factional strife.
"If somebody could tell me why
they should be there. then I might
change my mind. But right now, I
can see no reason why those boys
should be there so they can be
picked off one at a time," said
James· L. Clark of Minong, Wis.,
father of Lance Cpl. Randy W.
Clark, 19.
He ;nd Cpl. Pedro J . Valle, 25,
of San Juan, Puerto Rico. were
killed by shelling Tuesday as
fighting erupted between Chris-
tian and Druse militia in the hills
overlooking Beirut.
When Reagan t.elephon~ to
express condolences, the elder
Clark told him his son's "letters
and his whole outfit over there
said the same thing. They were in
a state of confusion. They said
they were sent over there on
police duty. but it wasn't police
duty when they started shelling
them."
immediately closed down bath-
houses where "every possible
type of vulgar, bloody, sadistic
thinl aoes on."
AIDS Is an of ten fatal disease
that weakens the body's ability to
fight infection. It has affected
mainly homosexuals, Haitian
refugees, hemophiliacs and users
Lance Cpl. Randy Clark
Teachers strike in six states
By Tiie A11oclated Pren
A teachers strike threate ned to disrupt a
desegregation plan for 56,000 St. Louis students
while walkouts in six states ke pt 196.000 pupils out of
classes today, but Pittsburgh, Boston and Detroit all
averted job actions at the start of the school year.
Strikes by teache11 were reported in Missouri.
Illinois, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Washington and
Michigan, but union officials said Tuesday said they
did not expect as many teacher strikes this year as in
1982, when there were 125.
Albert Shanker, president of the American
Federation of Teachers, and Howard Carroll, a
National Education Association spokesman, cited the
easing of inflation and the a tten lion now being paid to
IN THE SERVICE
Cllrlattoe MacMUUan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Rod MacMillian of Costa Mesa, has been offered an
ap.J?Ointment as a cadet at the U.S. Coast Guard
N!ademy in New London. Conn. She is a graduate of
F.Btancia High School in Costa Mesa and wiU
bewcome one of 250 members oC the class of 1987 at
the academy
Cadet David P . James, son of Ned L . James of
Fountain Valley, received practical work in military
leadership at the U.S. Anny ROTC advanced camp at
Fort Riley, Kan. He e ve ntually will be commissioned
a second lieutenant in the Anny. the Reserve or the
National Guard
Mary S. Hall, daughter of Edward and Nonna
Hall of Fountain Valley , has completed training in
fundamental military skills at the Anny ROTC basic
camp in Fort Knox, Ky. Hall plans to enter the ROTC
program at Cal State Long Beach .
reform.
A staff of adrninistraoors, substitutes and
volunteers were prepared to conduct classes'on the
first day of school in St. Louis today as officials said
they may seek a court order to force the district's
3,500 teachers back to work. As public employees,
they are forbidden to s trike.
of injected drugs, and la believed
to be spread through blood and
other body fluids. The cauae of the
cillorder is not known, byt medical
officials believe it is probably a yet
unidentified virus.
Falwell's proposals were de-
nounced by gay organizations and
health care officials aa both un-
workable and a violation of indi-
vidual rights.
"He's venting hia homophobia
under the guise of concern about
health," said St.eve Schulte, direc-
tor of the Gay and Lesbian
Community Center in Hollywood.
Shirley Fannin, deputy director
of Los Angeles County Health
Department's communicable dis-
eue dlviaion, aaid closing gay
bethhouaes wouldn't prevent the
tranamiaaion of AIDS and would
be "virtually lmpoeaible to en-
force."
Requiring blood donors to dia·
cloee their homo8exuality not only
would be illegal but a1.ao offensive
to gays and non-gays, and would
"have the effect of rapidly de-
creasing blood donations," Ms.
Fannin said.
Falwell said that the govern-
ment should require all individ-
uals wishing to donate blood to fill
out extensive questionnaires on
their health and sexual habits "on
penalty of perjury." Rev. J erry Falwell
Pot p3trol pronipts prOtests
Citizens charge agents turning mountain town into 'war zone'
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Marijuana-hunting lawmen have
turned a tiny mountain town into
a "war zone" where mothers
looking for their children are
stopped at gunpoint by suspicious
officers, say residents complaining
about the agents' tactics.
But state and federal agents
trying to halt northern Cali-
fornia's multi-billion dollar pot
trade say their methods are both
legal and professional. They say
marijuanagrowersareu.singsoph-
isticated defenses, sometimes
booby-trapping their plantations
with grenades, bear traps,
dynamite and laser alanns.
"We are going to win and they
are going to stop growing it," said
Bill Ruzzamenti, a chief planner
for Operation CAMP -Cam-
paign Against Marijuana Planting
-which authorities say will be
carried on in other states if it
succeeds in California.
U.S. District Judge Robert
Aguilar, in San Francisco, was
expected to rule today on a request
for a preliminary injunction
against the operation by the
National Organization for Reform
of Marijuana Laws, which works
to legalize marijuana.
The group sued the federal
Drug Enforcement Adminis-
tration, the U.S. Deferwe and
Justice departments and the state
attorney general Friday -con-
tending the agents have violated
constitutional protections against
illegal search and seizure.
Sen. Jackson extolled
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
late Sen. Henry M. Jackson was
remembered at a memorial service
a.s a "defender of freedom" in a
dangerous era whose portrait
should be placed in the Senate's
"Hall of Fame."
Jackson was "a defender of
freedom in a generation of na-
tional danger," Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass., told about
1,000 mourners at Tuesday's ser-
vice at the National Presbyterian
Church for the Washington
Democrat.
A member of Congrem for 42
years, Jack80n d.Jed last Thursday
at his home in E!verett, Waah.,
where funeral aervicefl were
scheduled to be held today. An
autopsy performed Tueeday re-
vealed Jackson died of a burst
blood vessel instead of a heart
attack as had been reported.
'TPAY
ENT
Pvt. Roxanne Ryntles, daughter of Al and
Coleen Rynties of Huntington Beach, has completed
basic training at Fort McClellan, Ala. She is a 1981
graduate of Ocean View High School in Huntington
Beach.
Anny Reserve Pvt. Michael D. Avery, whose
wife, Linda, is the daughter of Jack Shafer of Costa
Mesa, has completed the UH-1 helicopter repair
course at the U.S. Anny Avtation School in Fort ------
Rucker, Ala.
PRIC
Airman 1st Class David C. Gunderman, son of
Franklin and Yeako Gunderman of Huntington
Beach, has arrived for duty at Misawa Air Base,
Japan. He is a 1978 graduate of Marina 8.igh School
in Huntington Beach.
PFC Stephen D. Perry, son of Marilyn Arellano
of Huntington Beach, has completed one station unit
training at the U.S . Anny Infantry School in Fort
Benning, Ga. Perry Is a 1982 graduate of Orange
Coast Colleee.
s
& THE SYMPHONY
Starring Miss Sarah Vaughan
and th1..• Orang<' County Pacific Symphony
September 10, 1983, 8 PM at
The Irvine Bowl, Lagu na Beach
Ticket~: $2ZSO, $25.00, $1 5.00, available at
The Laguna Beach Museum of Art
307 Cliff Dnw , /..ai..runct CkdCh, (7 14) 494-6531
TtCktu /\/fl> Av.,f1blt At~ r>oor
SAVE 20% TO 60%
EVERYDAY
on brand name apparel
+ H
I
aL~
Rockfleld Blvd.
& El Toro Rd.
(714) 855-0084
10fHtANC•
Pacific CQ111t Hwy. at Anza AV9.
(213) 373.0784
IHWRSIDll
Madington 9QU81'9
4080 MecfteOft et M lngton
(714)987~
TMOUIAMD OAKS
Vlll999 8QU81'9 Shop. Ctr.
(805) 49&-33e3
DilESS FOil LCSS STORa MOUAle MOM -l'IH 'O All• e N.
UTe All-I Na MIM '"All•• Pll
VI ... M..e•re.nl, a .._.rt.ft 1..,.._. .......... ,.
•
~· Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7. 1983
D
MAllBOX
'!Jisregard for public's rights
To the F.ditor:
' Th.is l.s in regard to your article
of August 26, concerning the
passage of AB537. This blatant
•pecial inU!rest legislation, spon-
sored by Orange County, would
deprive citizens affected by pub-
licly-owned airports of their right
to sue for damages in small claims
court.
Though your article was fairly
complete in its detailing of the
events surrounding the bill's pas.s-
age. it failed to mention one very
Jrnportant point -the strength
~d U!nacity of the citizens and
~nators who oppo6ed the bill. A
(.'Oalition of six senators from both
parties worked tirel~y to defeat
the legislation, and, failing that, to
amend it into a state of relative
palatability. Their failure to do so
teflects the strength and resources
pf the airline lobby, and the depth
pf misinformation about the issue,
not a lack in the strength or tuality of their own efforts.
Principal among these six sena-
rs was our senator from the 3 lst
District, Ollie Speraw. His oppo8i-
tion to the bill began long before it
appeared on the floor of the
SenaU!, and will continue into the
next session where he inU!ndB to
submit legislation containing
provisiQns that will begin to
restore some of the rights that
have been lost. His office and staff
have provided a focal point in the
battle against the bill.
His familiarity with the
substance of the bill: his willing-
ness to take the lead in the lengthy
floor fight; his spirit of bi-partisan
cooperation in this issue continue
to give hope to those of us who
refuse to see heavy-handed legis-
lative manipulation deprive
citizens of their .constitutional
right to legal redr~. ll is for these
reasons and in this spirit that
Senator Speraw·s contribution
should be recognized.
-nARBARA L ICHMAN
Coordinator, Airport
Working Group
of Orange County
Newport Beach
r!mphitheater a disgrace
'
To the Editor:
The intrusions of the Pacific
Arnpl).itheatre on neighboring
feSidents of C.OSta Mesa are an
outrage. and imply a threat to all
residents of C<ista Mesa. SU!ps
must be taken by the Fair Board to
fully and completely remedy the
situation as soon as possible, with
or without a revised environmen-
tal impact report. • •• \...
CHARLES B. HAMILTON
Chairman, C.OSta Mesa
CiVic Association
Who profits from freeways?
To the Editor:
So a coalition of chambers of
commerce announced its support
for the San Joaquin Hills Trai!!>-
portation Corridor (Daily Pilot,
Aug. 30), Not surprising at all .. .I
would have guessed it. After all,
when you spend half a billion
dollars for a freeway you put a lot
more money m the local economy,
and quiU! a lot of it will find its
way into merchants' and other
chamber members' pocketa.
But the building of the new
freeway is nothing compared to its
r~ults The San Joaquin Freeway
is the key required to unlock the
South County for d evelopment.
Imagine U!ns of thousands of new
homes and hundreds of thousan~
of new residents. Everybody will
benefit from the boom. New jobs,
more sales. More restaurants.
More Mercedes.
Have you noticed the particu-
larly obnoxious bumper sticker
"Welcome to California. Now Go
Home?" It's rude, but it al.so
accurately reveals an underlying
dissatisfaction that county resi-
dents have with the direction
things are going in this county.
Polls have shown that residents
don't wam more freeways. they'd
prefer existing freeways be im-
proved. Polls have shown that
Orange County residents feel the
ruality of their lives here is
getting worse. Air quality is
deU!riorating. Congestion is in-
creasing. Levels of governmental
services are declining.
What does half a billion buy us?
A 17 -mile freeway, six lanes wide
at each end, 12 in the middle, as it
traverses scenic Laguna Canyon
40 feet above the ground. (Can
you think. off hand, of any other
12-lane freeway in Southern Cali-
fornia Can you imagine it in
midair?) Everybody gets to work a
lmle fasU!r, for a while.
Put a few hundred thousand
people along the freeway. Now
imagine the congestion where its
three nor\hbound lanes join 405
near South Coast Plaza. Imagine
the effect on the quality of the air
we breathe. Imagine trying to go
to the beach. or for that matU!r,
trying to go anywhere.
Years ago. before our current
environmental enlighU!nment, a
paint manufacturer had a logo
which portrayed F..arth being cov-
ered by pa.int poured from a
company can. I'd suggest a similar
symbol, with houses and freeways
insread of pa.int, would be ap-
propriaU! for the county Board of
Supervisors. And l wonder, who
really will benefit in the end.
MICHAEL JONES
President, Vlllage Laguna
Laguna Beach
. M. BDJd!Vntrustworthy lot
A recent study among robbers
the nation's pnsons show them
enerally to be of the male
hauvinist pig variety That is,
ost say they don't want women
volved in their criminal activity.
use they think wome n simply
on't have the savvy to pull off the
ig crimes without getting caught.
you know, in the peni-
ntiaries, the men far outnumber
he women.
Note •n the New York City
ant ads that those who like to
ess around with the language
ave chosen to designaU! as an
'access controller" what you and I
all a "doorman." Mercy.
Soviet women generally be -
· eve that abortion Ls safer than
e pill. correspondents say.
Q . Has there every been mow
n the ground at the same time in
very one of the UnJted States?
A. In every one of ·the 48
ntlnguous s tates, there has. And
otso lonaago, e ither. On Jan. 31,
1977. Finrt time.
A . Tanzania. In the
5,700-square-mile Serengeti Na-
tional Park there.
Q. You said the widower who
remarries waits three years before
doing so? How about the widow
who remarries?
A. Seven years.
When a British -American Inde-
pendent Association for the Blind
banqueted in London recen tly, a
man without sight delivered this
champagne toast to the delegates:
"Here's looking at you, kid!''
Chloracne is a skin condition
caused by expo8ure to dioxins. A
ch emical company in its liU!rature
says it.'s "not usually disabling but
may be fatal."
A gamemaker in Norwt~
C'onn., markets -yes, It's getUng
orders -one particular jigsaw
puzzle with 52,000 pieces for
$60,000.
Q. Where's the largest concen-Headquarters of "The CommJt·
tration of wUd &lllmals left in the U!e to Make El Salvador t.he
world? Fifty-First StaU!" is in Davfe, Fla.
ORANGE COAST.
Daily Pilat
H.L. Schwar11 Ill
Pu-
ChUJ Dowallby
(dllof_A_.,.
IOIM-
WASHINGTON -How a re-
porU!r gets the news can be more
dramatic than the news ltaeli. It
sometimes takes raw guts and
daring enrerprise.
For example. 1 asked my roving
reporter, Jon Lee Anderson, to
investigaU! the covert military
manipulations in Central Ameri-
ca. He went deep into the
Nicaraguan bush to observe the
guen1lla war where it is happen-
ing.
He traveled by jeep, by foot. by
d ugout canoe. He is the only
correspondent who visited all the
warring factions. He marched and
bivouacked with the combat
troops.
Al camp sit.es in the rugged
northern mountains and marshy
coastal plains -sometimes
against a backdrop of thatched
villages full of the rural noises of
squealing pigs. bawling babies,
squawking hens -Anderson
wrote stones that later made
worldwide headlines.
The most colorful of the rebel
commanders is F.den Pastora. a
Nicaraguan folk hero, who
stormed dictator Anastasio
SomoUl's palace and captured it
for the Sandinistas in 1979. But
when the Sandinista regime failed
to grant the promised freedoms
and adopted the same oppressive
practices Pastora had fought
against, he returned to the bush.
Rebel leader
Today, Pastora leads a small
band of indepen(ient rebels
against the Sa.ndinistas he onced
served. Hia is a lonely fight. for he
refuaes to ally himself with the
CIA-backed Nicaraguan Demo-
cratic Force which, he says, bears
00.V, ~~ ONE.
OF '1tXJ GUYS IS OOIN6
TO llil~IM THIS tSN'T
cn.1BAT?
Pastora rigged up a telephone
patch through his military field
radio so Anderson could alert me
in Washington. The news made
front-page headlines. The result:
Supplies were rushed to Com-
mander Zero so he could stay in the taint of SomoUl. He still goes the war.
by his revolutionary name, Comr
rnander Zero.
Anderson sought out Pastora in Tropical sojourn
Costa Rica, south ol the LaU!r, Anderson joined the
Nicaraguan border. After an Miskito Indian guerrilla force,
eight-day wait, the rebel's emiss-MISURA, upon the Rio Coco delta
ari~ picked. Anderson . up . and -Oat, marshy country bedeviled
delivered him by a CIJ'CWtous by oppressive humidity and pelt-
route to a.suburban home where ing rains.
exiles were making flags and On a swelU!ring journey de-
writing propaganda messages. layed by a tropical storm. he
Not long afterward. two jeeps traveled in '-leaky dugout canoe,
pulled up, and Pastora's top aide loaded above the gunwales with
jumped out. He was called "The supplies and ammunition, and
Dwarf." navigated by a 22-year-old rebel
He took Anderson on a 20-hour known as "The Zebra."
journey that began in a jeep and AfU!r two days of paddling
ended in a dugout canoe, powered through endles.s channels and
by an outboard motor. Pastora's bayous and sleeping in the huts of
camp was located In the jungle destitute Mlskitos, Anderson
near the Rio San Juan, the river reached the base camp of "The
separating Costa Rica from F.agle," a 21-year-old rebel com-
Nicaragua. pany commander. It turned out
Anderson found Pastora out of that "The F.agle" was in flight
money and short of supplies because his guerrillas had run out
There were barely enough mu.ni-of ammunition. They h.id in the
uons left for one last battle. "Get rain forest while a Sandinista
ready," Pastora told my reporU!r. reconnaissance plane overflew
"You're coming along on a big the camp twice.
offensive." Commander Zero. in-My reporter intended to
tended to go out in style. "We'll be proceed down the coast another
at the target in 70 hours walking 100 miles, but the rebel com-
time," he said. mander at the destination radioed
But he re-evaluated the pros-that his forces were surrounded
pects and decided it would be and under heavy fire. It would be
futile to throw his reported 2,000 futile, perhaps suicidal, to try to
guerrillas against a Sandinista reach them, he reported U!rsely.
military camp. Instead, he radioed For most Miskitos, life is harsh
his combat units that he was and death comes early. ex all the
giving up the Cight. people who inhabit this tragic
Anderson was at his side as he piece of earth called Nicaragua,
broadcast the message. Then the Miskitos have been the most
I
abused by man and nature.
ln the moutainous northern
region, Anderson visited both
sides of the guerrilla war. Once he
came under Sandinista sniper fire
as he walked along a road with a
column of CIA-backed contras.
Two months later, he visited the
same spot with the Sandinistaa.
Sandin istas
The Sandinista troops detailed
to defend the border near the
strategic town of Jalapa admitted
to my associaU! that the peasants
and townspeople along the Hon-
duran border were "pro-contras."
"Some of the local boys have
run off and joined the counter-
revolullonar1es," an officer con-
ceded.
This has deepened the tragedy.
The contras who ambush Sand-
inista troop ronvoys and the
snipers who fire upon contra
patrols may be shooung at their
own brothers and cousins.
SECOND CHOICE: Although
Paul Volcke r was recently reap-
pointed as cha1nnan of the Feder-
al Reserve Board, he was not
President Reagan's first choice.
The president favored economist
Alan Greenspan. who served as
the chairman of the Council of
Econdmic Advisers in the Ford
administration. But Greenspan
wanted the job only 1f he would be
permitted to resign after one year.
Reagan found that condition un-
acceptable. So the president took
note of the improving economy
and the strong support for Volcker
from Wall Street and Co~
and grudgingly decided to appoint
the Fed chalrman to another U!nn.
State is Mecca for needy pols
By THOMAS D. ELIAS
A youthful Tennessee con-
greaman spent all of one Satur-
day last month bedridden in his
Loe Angeles hoU!l room, the result
of an unsuccessful encounU!r with
a taco in a Mexican restaurant
known as a favoriU! haunt of a
recent California governor.
Why would Albert Gore Jr .. 35,
endure such unpleasantness in a
slaU! 2,000 mlles from home?
The answer lies in the new
natu11e of campaigns for t he U.S.
SenaU!. San Francisco and Los
Angeles have become almost as
important among campaign stops
for a Tennessee candidaU! as
Murfreesboro or Madisonville.
Raising bucks
Gore was in Southern Cali-
fornia to raise money. First he
atU!nded a Democratic National
Committee dinner that netted a
qulck $285,000 tor the party. Then
CAllfORllA FOCUS
he climbed out of his sickbed for
social gatherings arranged by
California Democratic con -
gressmen with their own tinancial
angels.
This sort ot activity is heaviest
in California during the year
before any national election , as
prospective candidates must con -
centraU! on their home states
during election years.
The fund raising assures that
even though California has no
race for governor or the U.S.
Sen.ate next year, some Call-
fomfans will play key roles none-
theless. And that's lrue even
where Californians Ronald Re-
agan and Alan Cranston -one
expected to seek re-election and
the other trying for the nod to
oppoee him -are not involved.
•
Millions to spend
On the Democratic side, Na-
tional Chairman Charles Manatt is
a Southern California lawyer who
rose through the party hierarchy
largely because of his fund-raising
talents.
He will decide which candidates
around the nation get the millions
of dollars the party will dole out.
Meanwhile, California's Re-
publican former lieuwnant gov-
ernor, Mike Curb, has become his
party's national finance chairman.
So both parties consciously ac-
knowledge California's new role
as the fund-raising capital of the
nation.
"You're going to have a lot of
candidates coming out here," said
Gore. a three-term congressman
heavily Cavored to win the SenaU!
seat now held by RepubUcan
Howard Baker. "That's because
both parties are •lron8 here and
It's an extremely wealthy at.ate."
Gore estimates it will take $2.3
million to win d'Sena te seat in his
state, despite his being heavily
favored as the campaign begins.
Similar estimates come from other
candidates in states like Iowa,
North Carolina and Mississjppi,
with the anU! even higher in
places like Texas and ntinois.
Familiar faces
Candidates from all those states
ha:ve campaigned here in the last
few months and they'll all be
back, even 1f they have digestive
problems. They may have prob-
lems with 90me food, but they
have no trouble at all digesting the
money Californians give them.
And they have to come because
they can't raise the millions they
need entirely from within their
own stat.es.
"Moat of my money will come
Crom Tennestee.'' Gore said. "But
no one will hold it against me that
I'm railing aome here, too. People
tn Tenne.ee and other at.ates
realize campaigns for the Senate
ate now national in many aenae9."
That's a change from even ...
recently as 1980, when South
Dakota's Sen. George Mt'Goverb
was defeated by a rival whoee
main umpatgn theme was that
McGo~m wu the creature o(
liberals in California w ho
provided the bulk of hlt campaian
funds.
~ute of its siie and weal\~.
that change ln naUoMJ per·
aped.Ive make.a California the
nallon'• prime political bankrol14r
-I k y ti.te even whc.-n no one
here 1:11 n.mning.
Thom&t Eliu Lt • Sant.. Monl~·bucd columnist on abi~
llJllU("I,
' .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/WednMday, Sept. 7, 1083 "'
Orange
-" ---
Warren Holland (right ) has created a jigsaw· puzzle that off en a
prize, but n ot without some digging.
Pazz~e ••• A big prize f.or the winner
By L.P. BENET
Of .... Dellr-.....
There's a 150-piece jigsaw puzzle out
there that can win you $100,000.
On the suface, it seems like a simple
puzzle. Its creator, Warren Holland of
Virginia, says it only takes a couple of hours
to piece together.
But that's only the first part. Next comes
the dectecUve work. Digging through texts,
maybe hours of fooling with a computer.
Match the numbers on the puzzle with the
unknown letters, crack the secret code, or
cipher, and you win the money.
For those who don't spend their idle
time hunting treasures, ciphers actually
have a long and distinguished history,
Holland said. For instance, Thomas Jef-
ferson, the inventor of an encoding wheel
that was even used at the start of World War
II, is called "The Father of American
Cryptology." Julius Caesar used a Caesarian
code when signing his letters. It went
something like this: "Oryh Mxolxv" instead
of "Love, Julius." And any cipher buff can
tell you that the first secret message known
to man was scrawled on a 4000-year-old
tomb.
So in a society quick to jump on such
novelties as the Rubick's Cube and the CB
radio, this game called "Decipher" seems to
be the perfect gimmick.
At least that's what Holland hopes. He's
already sold about 30,000 of the $12 puzzles.
And the boyish-looking 30-year-old en-
trepreneur figures to sell a few more of the
treasure hunt games before Christmas.
No stones, er markets, have been left
unturned. Holland, with a little help from
Pente Games, Inc., is touring 32 cities
nationwide and spending $100,000 promot-
ing the puzzle.
He got the idea for it 2 Vi years ago a fter
reading an article in 8imthsonian magazine.
The story told of folks who've been trying to
solve a three-part cipher created by Thomas
Jefferson Beale, who, legend bas it, buried a
treasure somewhere in Virginia's Blue Ridge
Mountains during the 1820s. Treasure
hunters solved one part of the cipher in the
1860s, but have been stymied by the other
two, particularly the code giving thtr'
treasure's location.
While most authorities feel the,Beale's
fortune is a hoax, Holland found it interest-
ing e nough to spend two-years building his
product around the idea.
Initially, Holland figured a $1 million
prize would sell some puzzles. But he needed
insurance to finance that sum if sales fell
short. Lloyds of London considered backing
Holland's game, but when the insurance
company was unable to classify Decipher in a
risk category, it sent the puzzle to Scotland
Yard to see if the cipher could be broken.
When the Yard reported back that it could,
Lloyds told Holland to go elsewhere. ·
Meanwhile, Holland dropped the prize
to a reasonable $100,000 -as far as
insurance companies were concerned -and
found an American firm to insure his
product. "Once I had the insurance," said
Holland, who looks as though he walked off
an eastern prep school campus days ago, "I
got the logo and the manufacturer together
and began marketing l)c(:apher m V1rgm1a
and Seattle."
In developing the product, Holland
spent several months researching codes and
ciphers. "I'm no math whiz," he said. "ln fact
the key to transpose the numbers to le tters
are m a text available in the public domain."
T he V oegelins, left, with Ieenia and Consul Genera) Ivan
Charles de Jongh of The Netherland&.
There are a few other murky hints. "The
first place to start may not be the first," he
said. "300 is closer to A than Z," and "One
source will do but what will you do with it?"
Puu.le solvers take it from there.
Holland's cipher is what is known as a
multiple substitution cipher -a Jetter can
have more than one replacement. Holland
created his code by numbering each letter of
the key -1,2,3,4, etc., into the thousands. He
then took the message he wanted to encipher
and found replacements for each letter based
on the key. For example, say the first letter in
his message D. Holland looked on the key
and saw the number for that particular letter
was 909. That was the first number of the
ci pner
But the next time D could have a
different number replacing it. To make
things even more complicated, Holland took
out spaces between words and eliminated
punctuation.
Holland, who expects to announce the
winner or winners (they split the prize) ot
the puu.le contest next March, has under-
gone lie dectector tests to establish four facts:
The cipher is real, the answer is Jocked in a
safe deposit box, the key is in the public
domain, and that he hasn't disclosed the
answer to anyone.
The puzzle should be on sale in major
department stores and Christmas shops this
fall. InBtructions are enclosed on how to
submit entries.
And what if no one breaks the cipher~
"I'll release some more clues in March,"
Holland said. Answers will be evaluated
annually year-by-year until 1989. U by then
nobody has cracked the code, Holland will
announce the true code. ·
If it is broken next spring?
"People are already kidding me about
making a sequel," Holland said. "Maybe I'll
des.ign Decipher II and then ID. But this fad
-if it goes -will probably only last a couple
of years."
Lawn party ... It looked like the u .N.
By VIDA DEAN
OflM0..,".'19'118'1
U the flags of all the nations represented had
been flying the Voegelln home ln Newport Beach
would have reternbled the United Nations.
The Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce board chairman Harold (Pete) and Wlnnle
welcomed 170 Sunday to their annual lawn party
and harbor cruise honoring the Los Angeles
conaular eorps.
Red. white and blue bunting draped the
hoUM and guests (representillll more than 24
counin.) were given the red carpel treatment (It
~ ~·
ext.ended from the stn!et to the 68"den front).
"Thia is our .even th party," Wlnnie said. "We
used to have this on the Fourth of July and then
we switched to Labor Day. But, finally due to the
holiday traffic decided on the Sunday before
Labor Day."
Many of the gueeta had attended previous
affairs, but firt timers lncluded Consul General
lvu Cbrlet de Joap and hia wife l1eaia from the
Netherlands.
They had a perfect daY. for the cuua1 party-
luncheon wu eerved on it\e lawn overlooldni a
boet-fWed bay. Later mmt of the suesta boarded
the "Tiki" for a cloeer look at the.,..,
A8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
Weddings&
__ 1_·~: =-En;..;.g~ements
The Daily Pilot want9 your wedding and
~mentnews.
To h,Blp you submit the required inormll-
tion, fo}"tnS are available st the Daily Pilot
offlce, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mess.
For weddmgs, only s biack and white
photo of the bride is.acceptable. Snapshot9,
l'ol.aroid and color photos can't be used.
The photo must be aubmitted no later
than three weeks after the wedding, other-
wise it wW not be published.
Engagement information is to be sub-
mitted at least seven weeks before the
wedding.
Forms and photos can be dropped off at
the office or mailed to the Wedding Depart-
ment, Daily Pilot, P.' 0. Box 1560, ~ta Mesa,
Calif. 92626.
I Weddings
Michnick-Moser
Deborah L . Moser and Robert Michnick
selected the El Adobe de Capistrano Restaurant
and Gardens as the setting for their Aug. 28
wedding. Both are sworn police officers working
for different Orange County police departments
and say they chose the location because it was once
was a jail and frontier courthouse.
The bride, who is with the UCI Police
Department, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David
F. Moser of Santa Ana. She is a graduate of Tustin
High School and UCI.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Olshan of Mission Viejo
are parents of the bridegroom, who has been on
the Costa Mesa police force for one year after
attending the police academy for the city. He ia also
a graduate of Mission Viejo High School and has
attended Saddleback and Golden West colleges.
The newlyweds will reside in Mission Viejo.
Grams-Ohfhaver
Betsey Ann Ohlhaver and Seven Grams
l!Xhanged wedding vows Aug_,, 20 during cer-
•?mOnies conducted in St. Joaachim's Church,
•Jost.a Mesa. The newlyweds, who honeymoomed
;.n Oregon, Nevada and Ariz.ona, are residents of
•Costa Mesa and are employed by the Grams
;~edical Co.
The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William
·Jeorge Ohlhaver of Costa Mesa, is a graduate of
~ewport Harbor High School and attended
)range C.oast College.
Her husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
::;uenter Grams of Calta Mesa. He attended Costa
Mesa High School.
Escalle-Walton
In an evening ceremony in the Huntingt(>o
Beach home of Mr. and Mrs. George Walton, their
!aught.er Paige . Ann Walton married James
Ulcalle.
The bridegroom is the son of Mildred Curler
uid F.dward Eecalle of Whittier.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLIRIY, INC:. ....................
1922 HAiBOR Bl. VO.
COSTA MESA -5•8· 1156 ~======~ ·T~FWI· •fr-.ft•
Classy Autos
Advertised
in the
Daily Pilat
•Merlne•
··~ ......... INCIAL RPT.1, 1.......-r. 11. 1•
Bolle MKrec:anlha: 411
1 come Ir-lotneo -""' !kind• -. Tha _, bMlilllul OI my
~.an or~ecl bodyambisecl wltl'I IN.a l>ladt -11Ca1 bencle, fine
~~.-endcenbe
-el AquellC Tr~ ........ I Im on -Ul>der ""'name "Clown Loech'" '°' only ..... 111ow • ..-.,
eoet.~ ... ,., ...... ~
Surrogate Pareu ting Services
Confidential I nquiries
Call (71 4) 6 4 6 -9603
ln•ex•pen•slve*
"(In lk spen' slv) not high In price;
reasonable; classified advertising _____________ ,
'$ , ... ~,
I 2 00 .~'"'l-i I OFF .-. ,~ \ I
I l )N /\NY Pl/I(( H/\\I ()I S7 00 OK Ml/Kl I I I XC l lJUINL ~/\ll lllM\ ~ l\L IA ()[N/\ l'RODlf( f<, I
I~ •(()Mf'llllNUflUllO°'!CINllN I I • ( OMl'l I lf I H I(, t. ( I\ f llNI ! • NATUKl\1 <I 1\\111 II( \
I • 11()()1(~
• llf RR\ II. II I\\
I \.\Tl'R.\l J'OOD B.\Sllll I
I ··1111\Wl!Oltl!lll/ 111'11\W\\ 540-4571 I
• M·SAT. 9;30 AM.a PM I
\ Expires 9-13-83 ·41111-------------
A Flctltloua Bualneaa Name
Sl•t•ment flied with the County
Clerk la v•lld for five Y••r• after
which time continuing
bualn••••• muat retlle .
Publlc•tlon I• nec••••ry only If
there are ch•ngea. Call the
Leg•l .Dep•rtment at the DAILY
PILOT for Information •nd
nec••••ry tonne.
646-4321 lirt. N2
Camera capers ••• Hostess,guestdon'tclick
DEAR ANN l..A.NDERS: Can you stand one
more Jetter about stupid cloda and their cameras?
Why do theee jerka inaitt on taking your picture when
you tell them ln plain Engl.I.ah that you don) wiah to
have your picture taken?
Thaecrees-have followed me around hoping to
catch me oU-guard, yawning, sleeping or talk.IJ18
with food In my ~th -in the most awkward and
unflatt.ering poees imal.inable.
\ Allll l.AalS
generation of YOWlC people who are llUCC'Wnblnc to
peer J>te9IUnt to try boor.e and drup. Thia mean. you
mu.st make f1YerJ effort tp keep the line9 ot
oonununlcaaon open. .t • aoocl example f« ~
child.nm and lhow them bow to "have a aood dine"
without Pttlna involved with alcohol oc druaa. Thia
, a110 meana you mu.t 8pend ~time with your ldda,
know what they are doinc In their 1eiaure time-and
with whom.
I have even had my picture taken by a fellow
houaeguest as he was pa.sal.ng me in the hall on my
way to the bathroom -hair In rollers, barefoot. The
pictures ended uplnhiaalbum for all the world toeee.
• • • among young children wu the desire to "feel older." Got fh09e wedd.Jng bell blues over cart .•. lfl'#f ~~ thoee ln the middle grades it wu a desire to llat .•. what to WMr •.• and other detal.la? Ann
.. fit in with peen. ~ng hish 8Choot lltudenta it wu. Lllnders' "New Bride's Gulde" will help. F« a copy,
This crummy behavior burna me up and I don't
know what to do •bout it. Please, Ann, give me 90me
suggestions. I would like to pass your reply along to
several people. -SEETHING IN SHAMOKIN
to have a good time. Mmd $2p1ua•101ll, ~-add.re.ed. •tlunped envelope
I am pJ.eadins with you parent.a to take thia (37 oenta ~)to Ann Landen. P.O. Box IJH$,
survey seriously. It tel.la ua we are producing a Chicago, m. 60611.
T rou1 111A1 TH
DR. PETER J . STEINCROHN
bEAR S.S.: UDfort1111ately tllere laa't a danaed
tbJ.ag yoa cu do aboat tbese clods. Yoar only defeaae
I• &o be alert &o tile leas bouda and kee.P yoar back &o
tbem wbeJ!!Ver po11lble. (P .S. Saatcbln' a horrible
photo ud rllfplag It ap 11 ao aolatloa. Tile jerk baa the
negative.) . ~ .
DEAR READERS: I want to share with you
excerpts from a piece that appeared in the American
Medical News recently. Every parent should read it
carefully. Your children, starting In the fourth gi-ade,
are the kids under diacusaioit. You don't believe it?
Well, let me assure you the facts are correct.
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: When you consider
that one out of three marriages ends in divorce, I have
a suggestion for a diet book: Hints on eating for new
singles.
upon yeur own "home-cooking." F.at out two or three
times a week. Other nigh ta, be sure your pizza and hot
dop are supplemented by essential vitamins and
minerala In your diet. Have a salad every night, fruits
and vegetables daily, whole grains, eggs, milk
products. You'll find that a full and varied diet will do
much to enable you to withstand the daily physical
and emotional 8t.rel8es following a divorce.
About 25 percent of all fourth-grade children in
the United States say they feel pressured by their
friends to try drugs and alcohol.
By the time children reach the seventh gi-ade, 60
percent say they feel pressure to try liquor and 50
percent say they feel pressure to try marijuana.
Take my problem for instance. For years, I used
to come home to a;aicely prepared dinner. Never any
problem about what to eat and when to eat. Now,
after six years of marriage, I find myself living alone
in an apartment, without even a kitchenette. So my
diet consists of nothing but pizzas, hotdoga and beans,
and oocasional delicate.en product.a. I've been
feeling tired, losing weight, and depreeaed. I think it's
all due to a bad diet. What to do? MR. L.
• • •
FOR MR. Q.: Of course, the best "!ay to avoid a
hangover is not to drink at all. Next, to stop short of
your experienced ability to hold your liquor. But hel'e
are some tips. Don't take your liquor straight. Dilute
your drinks. Never drink on an empty stomach. Haw
a substantial meal before the evening'• festivities.
And after you arrive, continue to take aome macka.
Theee efforts will increaae your girth but le.en the
likelihood of the morning-after reaction.
The survey, conducted by the claasroom publi-
cation Weekly Reader, owned by the .Xerox Corp.,
measured attitudes and perceptions of drug and
alcohol uae among some 100,000 children nationwide.
The study also revealed that many children,
even as earJy as the fourth grade, believe some
children their age have used ·hard drup such as
cocaine, LSD or "angel dust" (PCP).
DEAR MR. L.: Not knowing exactly, and how
much, you eat, I can't be sure that your fatigue and
depression are entirely due to a deficient diet. You
might alao blame theee symptoms on shock of
aeparation and living through the adjustment period.
But poor diet can contribute to your lack of pep
and good spirit. Until you find good adjustment to
your divorce, I think you ahoulcf meet the problem
head on as you would any other problem.
The motivation lor trying dn1(ll and alcohol PlaJl your meals a few daya ahead. Don't rely
What to do if a hangover can't be avoided? I
know of no specific cure except some antacids for the
stomach upeet and aspirin for the body aches. And
saying .. th.is too shall paaa."
Hawthorne Christian School
"For The Right Start In Life"
Klndg•rt•n thru Ith Grade -All D•J CIMH•
Enroll Now
FALL SEMESTER
ST ARTS SEPT. 12th
Enrollment Now Being· Taken
Reasonable Tuition
Ooot to Door &n Strvic1 Wl1tr1 PosslJll -lftll schollstic st1nd1rds
-T11chln1 the 4 R's -rea<Jint (with phonics) rrriMit, 1rlthmftic, ""lntss. I
A Private School of Distinction Founded in 1942
In Fountain Valley
16835 Brookhurst
714 963-7831
...
.INTERIOR
DESIGN
SHOW'83
Here is your opportunity to see actual
rooms designed and decorated by
leading interior designers. It's a
chance to discuss your needs with
designers on a one on one basis. It's
also a great opportunity to m.eet
craftsmen and get a glimpse at their
latest products and accessories.
Attend free seminars on color,
design and new products.
FOUR DAY SHOW OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
SEPTEMBER 8, 9, 10, & 11
THURS. Spm-9pm St\T. I I am-9pm
FRI. I lam-9pm SUN. I lam-Spm
The Orange County Building
Orange County Fair Grounds
88 Fair Dr .. Costa Mesa
\ FREE PARKING fENTEli ON AllLINGTONJ
Tickets S2.75
s~nlor Cltlz~ns
(65 & Ov~r)
Admit 0~ '200
Chlldr~n Und~r I 2
• Adr.n!J Fret •
For further information
714-540-1210
..
Mothers
little helpers.
Alcohol and cl.rugs.
You depend on them to get through the day.
Because you feel all alone and think
you're quietly going crazy inside.
You can't imagine livi ng without them.
But little by little,_day by day, they're destroy-
ing your life. And you 're· losing everything
you've lived for and loved. Your career, your
husband, your children.
You need help. Professional medical help.
One place to find that help is at CareUniL
The medical professionals at CareUnit have
created a wann, supportive atmosphere where
women can conquer their ilJness.
CareUnit is the medically supervised pro-
gram that successfully treats m<;>re people for
alcoholism and drug problems than any other
private program available. And it's only avail-
able at select community hospitals.
If you have any kind of problem with alcohol
or drugs, call CareUnit. And get the kind of -.
help you need.
To talk personally with a CareUnit counselor,
phone your local Car.eUnit or call us t.ol£.free at8004'Call
AEUNIT
A eemce of Comprehentive c....e Corporation.
(714)-633-9582
CAREUNIT HOSPD'AL OF ORANGE
ulaAOOLT A ADOLDCENT ~
401 so ~-~<!~~--~~~°""-
...
I
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/W~neaday, Sept. 7. 1983 4•
Sybille Pearson ••• An actress who changed her mfnd aAd wrote a musical
By JAY IRAJlBU1T Of... 1' ,,.,_
NEW YORK -Several years ago, Sybille
Peanon, once an actress and now a playwright, gol a
call from her agent. "She said, 'Sybille, two
eehtlemen jus& called and asked if you'd Uke to write
a musical.'
"I said, 'Absolutely not, Audrey, rm just
1-rning. I don't know anything about musicals,"'
Pearson recalls. She was revising her first play then,
"Sally and Marsha," a comedy about two Manhatlan
housewives.
Three months later, the same agent posed the
same question. It got the same answer from this
veritable beginner, who's written only one other
stage plece, a drama titled "A Little Going Away
Party."
A theater friend seemed stunned at her
behavior. "He said, 'Why'd you say no to Maltby and
Shire? And twice?' I said, 'Who?' I was a little stunned
myaelf."
The Maltby was Richard Maltby Jr.,
Tony-winning director of Broadway's "Ain't Mis-
behavin.'" The Shire was David Shire, Hollywood
compaier and Oscar-winner for the theme song of
"Nonna Rae."
. Things have since been sorted out. And all three
now are putting final touches on that new musical,
now in rehearsal. It's scheduled to start previews Oct.
l~and to premiere Nov. 6. On Broadway, no less.
"Baby" is the show, a production budgeted at
$2.7 million. She wrote its book, with Shire
oontributing the music and Maltby the lyrics and
direction.
trying to have a baby, and another married couple in
their late 40., with three ldda grown and gone, who
thought they were all through having children.
"lt'a not a dJape~and-ploa touaical," emphaalzes
Pearson. a ahort. plain-epokm woman wtth
clo&e-eropped brown hair. "lt'U be a theatrical
experience that's gJ'OW\ded ln momenta we all know.
"But hopefully It'll eoar above them, because life
does aoar. It'll examine the fear and exhilaration of
change."
Married and the mother of two sons, she's been
through more than her share of change, starting 46
years ago w hen she waa born in Czechoslovakia, the
daughter of a physician fleeing Hitler's Germany.
Lean t.i.me9. But her father persevered and
became a moderately successful psychiatrist in New
York. And she decided to become a ballerina, at least
until "I found out at 12 I had knock-knees." She
decided to be an actress.
She studied at New York's High School of the
Performing Arts. After graduation, an adOr friend
urged her to audition fo~ the first Broadway
production of Arthur Miller's "A View From the
Bridge."
She was a bit naive then, she concedes. "I just
walked in and read. I didn't know anything, I didn't
know you gave the stage manager your phone
number and your resume. The stage manager said
'Thank you' and I ran out,
hun, I decided to have the baby."
She became a mother at 20. Her marriage ended,
and she went back to theater. h didn't last long.
She was in a play'• out-of-town tryouta -her
baby stayed in New York, tended by her mother -
and all seemed well until one night at dinner. A c.ast.
member told he{' she was crying. She hadn't realized
it.
Next night, same thing happened and "all of a
sudden it hit me .L.-I didn't remember what my baby
looks like," she says. Then and there, she vowed
never to leave him. She started a new career, in TV
soap operas ln New York.
She constantly was offered ingenue parts
because of her youthful looks, she says. A lot of
actresses might envy that. She hated it. "Even when
I was nearly 30, my face would not grow up. I couldn't
take it any more, so I quit cold. Didn't even call my
agent."
Six months later, she met her current husband,
Anthony fearson, then in advertising. "I made him
promise never to let anybody know L'd been in
theater. It was kind of strange, a real death in a way.
"It was painful to leave aC'ting, but I knew I could
not stay doing those kinds of roles anymore."
They had a son and settled down. She entered
college, intending to start anew as a librarian. That
might have ended her story. Instead, college started a
new career for her in theater.
• She learned she had a knack for writing. She
began with short stories. Then a teacher urged her to
LUXURY THEATRES
lit lwo Mitl1tt Shew i1uOllUS2.llllftlm0tlltr•iwMeted "Baby," she says, concerns the impact of
impending parenthoood on three couples -;:---a pair of
unmarried college kids who didn't plan on having a
baby, a married couple in thei.r 30s who've been
"Three weeks lat.er I bumped into my friend and
he said, 'Where the hell have you been?"' She called
the producer. He'd been trying to find her to inform
her she'd won a role as an understudy. Thus began
her acting career.
She appeared in various other plays, married an $
actor, got pregnant, and "even though the marriage
was failing and I knew I was not going to stay with
tll3ril3r1•lutl6)61~2ss11~~~y ) s,
FOR FUOl EXCITEmEnTl V1s1tOur... *~
1 Albatross' good spy tale
ALBATROSS. By Evelyn Anthony. Putnam.
239 Pages. $14.95.
We dislike more international spy novels than
we like, but we liked "Albatross." The characters
have more to think about and do at home in London
than fool around with worldwide airplane time-
tables.
They get right down to a John Le Carre-type
basic. A mole, code named Albatross by his R~ian
bosses, is high in the British Intelligence service.
There are only three suspects, James White, the
chief, and his two top assistants, John Kidson and
Humphrey Grant. Davina Graham used to be a
hotshot top &s!rist.ant but she. qwt and went into
advertising. ,
The mole got her Soviet defector husband killed.
So Grant recruits her-her motive, revenge-todig
for Albatross from the outside. Grant's motive might
be covering himself, she reasons. So she starts the
hunt, then tells him she's giving up and goes on alone.
K.idson is married to Graham's sister, so they
have more than lhe usual access to spying on each
other.
But did either Grant or Kidson know as much as
the chi~f, surely the most effective spot for this
long-time effective mole? "
Graham's best shot at diacovery is a Russian
agent named Pet.er Harrington who was caught and is
in a British prison. He wanta to tell her enough to do
a trade, getting himself out of pn.on, but not so much
the Russians will retaliate.
An amusing contrast can be made between the
9Cenes with the British spy boaes and the R~an spy
bo6aes. The Russian hard liners and soft liners are at
war. The British are harmonious about policy. The
Russians don't turn a hair when somebody is killed.
The British are distressed.
The reader thinks he or she knows who
Albatross is on page 139 and then spends 100 pages
wondering if the answer is right.
The mole may be brought blinking up to the
light. But hold the cheers. If he is, the Russians have
another one already in Britain's backyard. ready to
burrow.
Mary Campbell
Associated Press
Murdoch novel has joyful energy
THE PHJLOSOPHER'S PUPIL. By Iris
Murdoch. Viking. 576 Pages. $1 7.1f>.
"And how is EnnislOne. and how is everybody?
Isn't it funny to think that you've all been leading
your quiet little lives here while we've been having
the most amazing time, we must tell you all about it."
So gushes Judy Usmore. back from a month in
Florida. In an Iris Murdoch novel any such
assumption about quiet little lives is liable to be.a _sly
joke -as is the case in this rich and entert.auung
work.
For during the Osmores' absence ~tone, ~
English spa town .. has bee~ ~thing "."'th .~haotlc
passion, caught up m one of .•ts f\Ull\y umes, when
grave spiritual hazards, bewtt.chmentand demons are
rife.
Before the "funny time" reaches its climax and
the turmoil subsides, there will have been a brush
with drowning, a small riot, attempted murder and
suicide.
The setting and characters are described in
piquant detail and the action is related by a narrator,
N, of whom we know little except that he's enough of
an insider to know virtually everything, yet is
detached enough to perceive the wonderful irony of
events.
Several old Quaker families play a central role in
Ennistone's life. Among them are the McCaffreys, of
whom "there areqwte a large number in the story,"
as N puts it mildly.
George McCaffrey, who is the noisiest and most
violently unhappy of them, is nonetheless much
loved and seemingly capable of making most women
believe they can save him from hlm5elf. Bui George.
the philoeopher's pupil of the title, wants to be saved
by his former teacher, the philosopher John Robert
Rozanov, who still obsesses him.
Roumov causes a stir by coming to visit
Ennistone and becomes a focus for the fascinated
adOration of many other residents. But the old man is
preoccupied by philoeophical self-doubts and cares
little for most of them.
In orbit around this mesmerizing pair are other
various, barely compatible McCaffreys, George's
mistress. a "perfectly rotten priest," and the
philosopher's waif-like granddaughter.
As the novel progresses. its characters are caught
up in an increasingly complex web of overlap~ing
interrelationships -mostly involving unreqwted
love. The relationships, true to life, are ambiguous,
shifting and illogical. Some characters strUggle
through to happy soluUons, others do not. But for
most of them. It seems, "love, even without hope, was
a joyful energy." The book is r ull of this joyful -and
thoughtful -energy.
Joan Brunskill
Associated Press
all cotton ch1no ...
elway.s 8 LradtLtona\
favont<i; plwL<ZCi or
pl.om Prent
~ 9niot with
sporta:aL~ OT
knit eihirli.-5
pz.rhaps OJ1<2. or thcz.
most cornrort.ablcz.
tx~r-' you'll
~r 'l>JtZ.a r
@J~c{~@)§@
44 Fot)slon ltlotld • Nauporr &och · 7141644·5010
1001 ~•twood Blud. • &4Utwood VIila~ • 213/208-3273
Zelig ll3! woooy
Allen'•
Show• 11 12:00 2 :00 4 100
6:00 1:00 10100
WAllGM•m
ShOWl At 12:15 2 :4$
5•15 1:00 10:10
---n'AILWAU:--RETURN OF ntE JEDI l!!lll
Phu First 8 1000 (R)
Wrm
Plul Fire .. Ice (PG)
B~~ .. m
$hOWlal l :U 3 :20 S:30 7140 .. 9:50
TRADUtO m PS.ACU ~
Show• ~t I :OO 3:10 5:25 7:45 .. 1:50
* Drlw•tn1 Open l tOO Wknl1hlt I 7:JO Wkendl
ClllWrt11 Uttder12 fret Unless Nottd
~ * PACI FIC WALK-IN THEATRES * ~ f rso:goin Mot1ne~! ff:i~{h~•h'.tf 4 J -'i!::J;
•OlllOAY lhtwSATUROAY fACUlTYooCANOl(WOOO
AN ,.,,.,,..,ncn ltiott ~ 00 l'M "WY tllOiiY" (R) .
Ila S..C. t,,....mtn1\& H•hl llJO, Z». I tO. •U,l~. I~
Sia °""I IS, UO. S4~ 10CIS
"-U/!! IQRf161'2::4)
LA MlllAPA AT llOSlCRANS
"IOClllS" (PG)
1·00. 3:20, 5:40, 8:00. 10:20
"MORTUAltY" (R)
12:30. 2:30. 4:30. 6·30. 8·30. 10•30
"RISKY BUSKSS" (R)
12'45, 2:45, 4:45, 6:45. 8:50. lO·~S
"fW NII ICE" (P)
llJO. uo. 110
"SllMll 11£W'' (P'Q)
l ZS, 61S, IOOS
"STAYltG ALM" (PG)
11 JO 1 » U O i I~ H) II 00
''R£Nttc OF M IOI" (PG)
Ill 70-Dll>y SI•"
11 JO )00 \JO 10!> 1040
"STUllG Al.M" (PG)
~ 70.-DlllJ St•N
100 100 )OO 100 too 1100
"FLASH OAHC£" (R)
11J0,1JO 110,'10 lJO 1010
"tDCllES" (PG)
12:30, 100. s 30. a·oo. 10 30
"FIRE 00 ICE" (PG)
1no. 2.3!>. 4:15. 6:10. s·os. 10:00
"SID(ff NII M
8AIOl PMT 3" (PG)
11 JO 110 I JO U> I JO 10 JO
"STltANGE BREW" (PG)
I 00. 3 00. S 00, 100, 9 00. I l·OO
* PACIFIC DRIVE 0 IN THEATRES *
All OPEN 7 PM )tons Dusi
"tlAYllG MM°' (P'Q)
"" ...... tr lam" <->
"M QOUQ U " (PG)
""' "$TWiii mw'' (P'Q)
1. "TlMIM l'UCO" <l) z. "CllICH ' CHOM STU .,. .... cu
" llOUl'" <•>
* Ch•ld•en Unde<FRffl 12 ALWAYS... •
fOONTAIN VALLEY -
"SMOKCY MIO M INllJT PMT 3"
""' lrli) "Smlm ACC" (PG)
'WPt b' ,.. 871 J .• Jlt.' 1861
take a playwrighUng course taught by Arthur Kopi\,
author of Broadway's "lnd1ans," "Wmga," and the hll
musical, "Nine." After graduation, she says, ahe got a
job teaching English
The family was having hard times and needed
her income. But one day, she says, "I came home In
tears. Tony, who's been very supportive throughout,
asked me, 'What's the rnatter?'
"I told him I wanted to wnt.e. And he said,
'You're not going to teach next year, dpn'l worr'J.
about the money.' So I quit teaching and finished
'Sally and Marsha' in two months. Then it aU
started."
First. there was a staged reading of her play in
1980 at the O'NeiU Theater Center's prestigious
national playwright's conference in Waterford,
Conn. Then came a production of it at Yale Rep.
Aft.er that, an off-Broadway production in early
1982 at the Manhattan Theater Club. this one
co-starring Christine Baranski and Bernadette
Peters. It got mixed-to-good notices.
• And then, out of t~. came the calls from
Maltby and Shire who had the idea for "Baby.'' She
says they hired her to write it long before "Sally anq
Marsha" played off-Broadway, simply on the basis ol
having read th~i play and liked it.
"Four yeaN(as a writer) in theater, well. f'm a
very young baby. But with each production ( go
through, the more l learn. I think, boy, I'm getting
higher up in skill than I was before. And that's the
brass ring you get." ,
Tues .. Fri. 6: 1S, 10:50
Sat0 Mon. 1:30, 6:H1, 10:50
#1
"MORTUARY" <">
Tues-Fri. 9:00
Sa\0 Mon. 2:00. 5:25, 9:00
"STRYKER"<">
Tues.·Frl. 7: 15, 10:45 ·
SBl0 MOf\. 3:•5, 7:15, 10:50
Tue1.°Frl. 6:30 (PG)
Sat·Mon. 3;45, 8:30
2.001 #2
l~~-L-L N-E-w-1 Jd 3-0 m
Tues °Frl. 6:45, 10:30 Set·Mon 3: 10, 6:4S, 10:30
l'i~,:,~f~ ~f/u-'0 rOfl rTRROll 'f (!I Tuea.-Frl. :
Sa\0 Mon 1'20 5·00 6·40
edwardi. WESTBROOK CINEMA
~=:~:~·~:::: ft '°~"u'•' 530-440 I
·== 6611 IJO 1010 , ...... ,
-1\aa:r ~·
• 1 •
~ ......... jll at\ 'f.,.. ..... "'l 100 •••
ln•ex•pen•alve*
•(In lk epen' elv) not high In prlc•;
reHonab .. : clesslfl•d adver11alng
Diiiy Pllal Ct 11":'2~~;Tltlng
-'le Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
Tonight's TV
GMOYI!
• ·~ "Wtlet'• So Bid About F..ilng Good?" 11eea1 o.oroe Ptppwd. ~-liMNWN
T.--:::..WAYllUN
IOl9UClt LR* M ...,w.aa ~M"A•a•H 'n~ .. (1t7t) Tony Lo
i:--=-~Y·
U\i "So Ant" (1tl1) Rylfl O'Nell.
JDWwden. eMCMI *** ''Ctllrtola °' Rrt" (1881) Ben CtOll, lln CNrtelon.
IGf..OIM ---QWlft~
AU.lt1"1FN&Y .... "°"' INCML EDmON (() M•A•a•H
-t:OO-e Cll MOVE
••• "Johnny ........ (1912) Rldl-
lrd Thomll, AoelfWll Alqultte.
I !THI FACTI 01 Lii ~
PIQW II CHM.I Mllf ITORYINCIAL
EDmON
®MOVIE ** "Wiitz Ac:toa Tua" (1982) Anni~. Terry Jal1row. (Q)MOVIE .
• .. "Rrlt Monday In October"
( 1981) Wiiier Matthau, .M Clly-
~ "Scun" (1880) Aly Wlnltone, Midi
Ford.
-10:00-D GI ST. a.w!EN:
l lUn ....
MIJllTORY 8'!EOAI. EDmON !~WONIAN *** ''The Jlc*pot" (1950)"""" ~·Hall.
* * ''Clryy °" ~ .. (1971) Sumnne • ~ K..-..ltl M-
11111'11. DMCMI Ht "Rldl" (1981) Wwr.1 a.tty, '*"' Kiiton. -10::IO-• tarBW .. ..,, .. WONC...,,_
'81
• MATTEM 01 LR NGOIATH
CHANNEL LISTINGS
fJ l<NXT ICBSl
D KNBG"INBCl e KTLA (Ind.)
• KABC (ABC>
0 KFMB ICBS)
I) KHJ-TV (Ina )
D KCST (ABC)
• KTTV (Ind.) e KCOP-TV find.)
• KCET <PBS>
e ICOCE (PBS>
8MOWE
t \i ''WlfNlg From Spa" (19el)
BlnUro Miiiet, T~ Ktrt1a. eMCMI
... ·~Of Art" (1911) Ben
Cra., lln a.i.on.. ---~:::-ITMTQt
.. • ''Fll1t Mondey In October"
(1981) w .... Mlt!Nu, .. a.y..
~ Ht "A Song II Born" (1948) Dln-
"'1 K8ye. Vlrglnll W..
tO) On·TV
<ZJ Z·TV
ChJ HBO
re1 (Cine~1t)
(JJ IWOR) NV , N.V
IJl) (WTBS)
rr1 CESPNl
II ) IShowtime)
• Spotlli!hl
e (Cable News Nelworkl J ennifer (Tina Yothers) is fed up
with being ignored during her
brother's poker game and decides to
disappear for a few hours, in "The
Fifth Wheel," on tonight's episode of
"Family Ties" at 9:30 on Cb. 4 .
Lack of style Looking for stars
MacNeil-Lehrer offers exchange of ideas Arkansas movie office seeks all types
By FRED J\OTHENBERG
Ol IM A•M<Mloed "'-
of the broadcast should make theie 11Cenes unn~
a.ry. On Monday, viewers got a glimpse of a river and By LINDA GIBSON race, talent, and every other feature of in terest. °'.... 1, d"-"This guy wears a pat.ch; this person can ride a
NEW YORK Public television 's LI'ITLE ROCK, Ark. -One-legged men, horw. You never know what you're looking for,"
"MacNeU-Lehrer News Hour," the first non-cable, grandmother types, twin teen-age girla and World Buck said.
of romping buffalo.
hour-Jong nightly network newscast, remain~ The funniest moment on the first installment of War Il salta: William Buck need.a them all. For the TV mini-series "The Blue and the Gray,"
stylish among network news broadcasts for 1ts "Thicke of the Night" on Monday night came five Buck, manager of the state Motion Picture Buck said, "It was a big deal ... to find a guy with one
distinct lack of style. minutes from the end. It was a parody of movie Office, ia trying to register every Arkansan with a leg. It would be nice if we could say, 'Oh yeah. here
Monday night's opening broadcast brought to reviewers Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel, but that's a talent, an unusuaJ ability or odd physical feature, are six people in the Fort Smith area that fit that
mind a town meeting, where all manner of ideas and long time to wait for laughs when the show started at experience in front of or behind a movie camera, or a category' instead of going on TV and asking if there's
opinions could be heard. Like its predecessor, the 11:30 EDT. simple yen to play a part in movies filmed in anybody out there with one leg.''
30-minute "MacNeiJ-Lehrer Report," this new This new syndicated talk-variety show stars Arkansas. About 250 people have registered so far. "We've
program still emphasized dialogue and diversity of comedian Alan Thicke, a successful CAnadl.an talk His job is to attract to Arkansas as much motion had little girls come tap dancing through the office,"
viewpoints. show host who showed 8 quick, wry wit. & a picture business as poaaible. And when Hollywood he said.
To illuminate the latest developments in the comedian and singer, he's better than thia show'• knocks, he aims to be ready. Buck also scouts locations, sometimes setting out
Korean Air Lines tragedy that left 269 people dead, format, 8 frantic kitchen-sink program that "Yesterday, aomeone called us looking for a on 1,200-mile, two-day hunts for the town with just
Washington anchor Jim Lehrer interviewed Richard emph.asiz.es racy sketches geared to the younger, campus with an Ivy League look. They said they had the right look. That job, he said, am be hazardous.
Burt. an as&stant secretary of state. Burt's responses stay-up-late audience. to have the pictures in L.A. tomorrow," Buck said in "Yougocruisingthrough10meof the backareu,
fleshed out the day's developments leading toward a recent interview. people get real suspicious about what you're doing.
President Reagan's speech to the nation later As an interviewer, Thicke is 1tll~ and ''This is very typical. One of the first things they They tend to be a little +eptical of these blue-jeaned,
Monday night. uncertain whether to be serious or comical. He comes ask la, 'What's the talent pool in Brinkley, Arkan-bearded ones," he said.
Then, to find out how the story had played 8crolS as neither. aaa?"' Buck was almost arrested one Saturday after-
around the country, editors from newspapers in "Thicke of the Night," which has lured away a Uling the state Employment Security Division's noon several months ago when he pulled into a town
Sacramento, Calif .. Southbridge, Mass .. and Grin-handful of network affiliates and many independent computers, Buck ia trying to prepare printout& l.iating of about 6,000 in east.em Arkansas to take pictures-
nell, Iowa, were queried by New York anchor Robert stations, will compete in thia time slot against NBC's the potential movie materl.al in Brink.ll!y .-or front. aides and back -of the bank, a service station.
Mac Neil. With hook-ups like these, the broadcast will ''Tonight" show and ABC's "Nightline." an here ei.e in the state -according to 'e, aex, the police department and jail.
be making a conscious effort to move beyond the New i===================================================r-----=--=-'--'---...;.._---'---------------
York-Washington news axis.
The exchange of opinions and concerns on the
program was given direction by the guiding questions
from MacNeil and Lehrer, combining to raise moat of
the appropriate questions on the reported destruction
of the Korean Air Lines jet by a Soviet fighter.
This discussion lasted some 20 minutes-nearly
the entire length of the commercial networks'
newscasts after commercials and promotional
messages are subtracted.
Instead of news correspondents telling viewers
what happened, as the commercial newscasts tend to
do, the approach of the "MacNeil-Lehrer News
Hour" was to enlighten through interviews and
discussion. The old one-from-column-A ,
single-format concept has been expanded and on
Monday included a secondary story from Column B
about labor, a smattering of the day's other top
developments, and one mini-documentary on the
Theater for the Deaf.
NOTICE
• JOHN WAYNE AIRPORT
BINDING AGREEMENT
TO LIMIT AIRCRAFT FLIGHTS
The Mayor and City Attorney of the City of Newport Beach
will explain and discuss the draft agreement between the City and
the County of Orange to limit the number of noisy commerclal
aircraft flights to no more than 55 departures per day.
DATE: WEDNESDAY, SEPTMEBER 7, 1983
TIME: 7:30 P.M.
PLACE: CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS
3300 NEWPORT BOULEVARD
NEWPORT BEACH On Monday, Labor Day night, the secondary
story examined labor's potential impact on the 1984 f::;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;~;;;=;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;=i presidential election. Washington correspondent
Judy Woodruff, formerly of NBC News, interviewed
steel workers about the AFL-Cl0'1 decision to
endorse Democratic candidates before the primaries,
With that report as a backdrop, MacNeU and
Lehrer then intervie wed Secretary of Conunerce
Malcolm Baldrige and Sol Chaikin, vi.ce president of
the AFL·CIO.
The "MacNeU-Lehrer News Hour" is obviously
comfortable with this inter;view-Uluminat.ion ap-
proach to the newa. Both anchors have easy-golng
styles that stress light over heat.
The broadcast, however, needs to better organize
It.a other news stories. These additional reportl ~
deslgned to make the "MacNeil-Lehrer News Hour"
a substitute for the commercial networks' neWIC8Sta
and no longer just a supplement.
On Monday night. PBS' coverage of the
Lebanon story from a British Broadca.at.ing Corp.
reporter waa sketchy. Although the
"MacNeil-Lehrer News Hour" covered almost as
much hard·newa ground as the "CBS Evening
News," CBS anchor Dan Rather's coordination of
thoee stories was much easier to follow.
One break from tradition on MacNeU-Lehrer
wu the inclusion of two cxmnetk "video postcards"
-~ of nature designed to tteparate the 1how'1
eegmenta, which only 1erved to jar the vtewer. In the
future, better identiflcaUon of the different aectiont
Your Silent
Partner.
When I dNth OCCU'1 In the famlly you
nMd to hk• a lot of rtght Cleclslons. You
rlffd to unc»ratand what It belt tor you
and how much you can afford. Call Pierce
8rolh9rt ~you nMd UI.
WALLY MoCONAHEY
Meneger
Pleroe Brothet's Smiths'
627 Main Street
Huntington Beach, Calif. 92648
lmPie~~IS
~8
• CtW'ei.8
75 YEARS OF QUALITY
EDUCATION
........... ., ... , .........
.. .., •• 11116 9MI-... .......
CURllCULUI = ............... , ... r•na.. .... .... , ..... ..
PHYmCAt B>UCATION ..... ._ ...... ..... .._ ........... .-,.a, ..
PRNCHOOL .......................
........... 411 ......... .. ,.,.... ........... ..
INDIVIDUAL ATIENTION
by ..... who Cllll
STUDENT~
AGi I THAU ORADI I
COll'Um W I COIPUT!R ASSISTED IHSTAUCT10N
PAGE SCHOOL llNCI ,.
'GMDlfl 80W COITA •IA OMN01 .... ,,..... -...........-..... --· ............... ,........,O&_ ~·~~ ~~
(114) 111...-tne•...... (114).,.....
HANCOCK PAM AND UVIRL Y HILLS
---..-----.,....., .-
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1983
SLIM GOURMET
MEAD ON WINE
Country
·Kitchen
Canning
pickled favorites from
garden and orchard
86
89
"Countr) ·· j, a state of mind. a feeling. no t a plare on a map. Whrther }OU call home
a high-ri'l' l'ondo 111 a colonial 'altbox. country i' experiencing tl!e bl'\I ot the pa~l while
l..eep1ng ur the pre,cnt. Count r) i~ \.\a rm. lriendl} people. neighbor helping neighbor.
Countr~ "the charm of the littk thing~ that m<1kc a h ou~e a home. (\1un1ry is cooking
heart~ meal' and the pride and joy of a well-stocked pantry.
In the ,pint o l country the home economist~ a t Hall Corporation ha\e adapted
~e,eral do\\ll homr pickl ed "receipts'" of yesteryear into simple up-to-date recipl·, ,uch
a' ll ome-St)le Dill Pickle.;. Blue Ribbon Picl..lcd Peachc!>. and Count) t·air Pepper
and Onion Rcfi,h
Pidllng \\a, once a way of prcser\'ing food for the Ion~ wintcr month!> ahead.
l oda~. p1l·l..linf ·~ t.Jone. not out of nccesl.ity. but. for unmatc hed na,or. ccono'm). and
per~o naf 'a.t1~lac11on.· Almo~t.an)th1ng !)lat gro"' 1n a garden or orchard can be pic kled.
Besides curumhcr:>. there ar~ pepper~. bean~. rorn. 'qua~h . mdon'. peaches. pear!>.
and apple'. tn nanH· a fc \\.
The bc~t pickle!> begi n with the frc!>hest vegetable' or fruit. ju't pic l..ed from the
garden o r tree. if pns:.i ble. If fresh dill is available by all means use it. although dried dill
seed i) an acceptable atrernati\e. L!~c t\\o table,poom of dill i.ccd tor each head of fre~h
d ill. Be ~urc to pun:ha'ie 'picc' each pickling ~ea!>on. "' ~picc~ tend to de1cn ora1c and
lo:.c their lla\or during ltlorage. Select a high grade \\hite di,tilkd or cider \i1wgar of
four to ,i"< perccn1 acid it~. You'll also need to buy canning ~alt . It act\ a!> a prc)cnati\c.
add!> llaH>r. and eri .. pnc~' 10 the pickle!\. Do not u~c regular table ~alt. the additi'e' in it
can cau'c <J1,t·ol111cd pickle' and cloudy li4uid.
Toda)·, count •~ l..11ehen p1d.le!>. \\h1lc pre ... en1ng the nld-fa,h1oncd Ila\ 111 nl the
pa't. keep up-to-date\\ 1th the pre~enl. Ho me made pidlc~ arc no\.\ heat p111ce,:-.ed 111 a
\\ater-ba1h cannl'I T hi, IO\ure' a good 'eal. \\hilc de,tru~i ng thl· micworgan1"11' 1ha1
cau'c spoilage. [\CO though 11 might be tempting Ill pad p1dlcd hwd' 111 uld-'l)k
gla~~ top jar' \\ith \\ire baib. :.landard ho me canning 1a r' \\Ith t\\o-pil•c..: lid' gl\e thl'
safe~t . m~1\t reliable result:.. A ftc1 proce!-~ing the recommrnded time,. alh1\\ the 1;i 1 ~ 111
cool: IC!.1 for a ~cal b} pre,~i ng 1n the center of the lid If the dome" dO\\n. till" lid i~
scaled. Rcmln.C band~ and store pickle' in a dark. cool. dry plan:. P1dlnl fru11' ;ind
'egl·tablc~ taste 1heir be!>t if the fla,or' are a llm\ed to mellow for ,e,cral \.\eek'.
I
•
,. D I
Moroccan cooking
streamlined. Page B7.
BLUE RIBBON PICKLED PEACIJES
/IJ 111mntfl firm ripe pt'arhts .5 cup.1 "11111• 1·1111·xur I 111ru• itlllf(•'' root
(w10/I 111 medium sized) ! tahh•.11,.,1111.1 wh11ll' 1 /111•1•1. S 1111 J..1 1111na1111111
II· I / l < U/>1 .111xar rru,fhed (l inc hes Jnnx)
...
0
Wash and peel peaches. Pu1 in a solution of 2 1able•poon' 'ah. 21ablc~poon'1111cga r. and I gallon ~a1cr
l>i~'olve sugar in vinegar: add a spice bag made of clme,, ginger ro1.ll. and cinnamon '11cks Hrine lo a
boil Drain sail-vinegar solu1ion from peachc~. Carefull y add rcachc~ IO bolling '}rup and cook 1111111 ihe)
can be pierced ~ 11h a fork. hu1 no1 ~of1. Rcmo\C from heal and allo~ peach"' "'\land in" rup m ernigh1.
l'repare home cann111g J<lr' and lid~ acc1Hding to manutac111rer·, 1n,1r11c1111n'
Hring '~ rup ant.I peuchn ll• a boil Carefully pack peachc' 1n10 ho11ar,. lca\ ing I 4 tnl"h hl·ad 'pace Co\ er'
"1th ') rup lca\lng I 4 inch head ,pace. Rcmm c air bubhlc~ "11Tt a nun-rnc1all1c 'pal ula AdJU~t ca p'
1'1111:e" 20 m1n111c' in a boiling wat er halh canner. Yield about 4 4uur1 Jar'-
COUNTRY APPLE RELISH
! q11art ~ flt'l'l1•cl. < 11rt'd. I <"II/I f(t1lde11 rU1 .111" 4 lt'lll/1<•1111 11111/lll'R
Ul/tf ( htJfl/Wd U/1/1/t'.I I I l <'UP choflp<'d wa/111111 ./ tcl/1/1111111 ull11m <'
(ahu111 /() 111 /} mt•diu111 ) I I ! Cllfl reel II illl' \'llll'J(Of I /111111 " /1q111tl pe1 ""
-'·' 3 1111i. hr111111111xar(l pm1111/J I 11!01(1111111 ( 1111101111111
1'1 cp.11c home canning lilr' and lid\ according IC• m11nu lact11n·1\ 111'11uc11on'
( 11rnh1nc lhllppcd applc,. \Ugar. rai\1n\. ".ilnul\. and 'prcc' 111 ,, 1.ngc ,auccpul Hnng 111 a lull. 1<1lhng
hnil ll\Cr high hc;tl. s11rring con,tantly. Remo\<e from hcal: \llr In h41111.l rcc1111 ( .trclull~ I.idle lnltl hol
t.ir'. lea\ 111g I 4 inch head 'pace Adju'I cap,.
l'rnn·" (() minu1c' in a hmhng \\aler ba1h canner Yield abou1 wH·n !( ounn· t.ir'
OLD-FASHIONED WATERMELON RIND PICKLES
4 q11art1<11/lt•d 11atermt'l1111 rind I q11llrt 11 otn
,'( 111/11 \U/(tlf l uru11/(t'.~. wrcled u11</ site t•tl
J , 11p1 11 /111t' 1·im•f(ur l lem11n.1, .lt'Pdrd and .~lin•d
l'..rc "alcrmelnn rind. rcmO\rn!I green and pin~ punion' Cul in111
11,t1cr am! I 4 l"UP '""· .illo" 10 'tand mern1gh1 Draan and 11n'c
4 \Ill J.. \ f 1111101111111
I 1Uhlr111111111 11 '111/1• d<11 r1
I 1ah/c111111111 11 '111/t> a/11p11 l'
1nd1 p1Cl'l'' C1l\e1 \111h I 4uart 111
l'1l·parc hnmc canning 1•H' and lids at·cordrng 10 manulul'lurcr\ 1n,1ruct1llll'
1'111 lhl· 11a1crmdon rind 1n a large ~autcpan and nner "llh l:l•ld 11.11er '\1mmcr l11r aht,111 lO minute' or
1111111 i.·ndcr Drain and 'el a'idc ("nmb1nc ~ugar. \ineg.ir. and ":lier rn .1 l.irgc ,,nrccp.rn Heat. '11rring
u nt 11 ,ug:ir d""'" C\. Acid 1hc ~heed orange' a nJ lemon' 11 nd 'Pll'C' 11nl 1n u d1ec,l·d11t h ht1)! Rrrng m" 1111 c
to,, h111I Add 11nd and \lmmer unt1l tramparen1. and h4111d j, '''up~. l{cn1!1H" 'p1cc h••!! C'ardull\ pad,
nntl rnh• h111 ,...-,. le:I\ mg I 4 111eb head 'Pt1Ce. Remme air llubhle' "11h .1 111111-mc1.ilht· ,p.11ul.1. Ad tll'I c;ip,
1'111n·,, 10 m1n11lc\ in u boiling 11111er bath canner. Yield. aho11t lnur 12 ounl·c t·•''
a =c;::r: :u?•-
SPJCED SWEET PICKLES
4 111111111/1 11id.. /111/( c 11c11mhnv, 3 tahle.vpotnu c111111i11f( 10/1
oh11u1 J ind1rt Ion/( ] tt'OfJ1Uu11.1 mu.11ard sred
J I ti/II 11 hilt' 1•iflt'l(OT J l'llJ1S Hl/(Qf
I f ! 1 "fl .111xar J c·1111s ll'hitt' 1·111t•f(ar
! tah/1·1111111111 1111 f.. /111x 1111n•
.1 ci111u11111111 1/lc /.. 1
.' /1!111/llllllH I\ /J11/(' a/l•/111 <'
l'repare home canning jars and lids according 10 manufacturcr"i. iMtru1:1111n\
Wa\h cucumhcr,. cul cro,~wise in10 I 4 inch 'heei.. d i~cardin(l end' Rrrng 111 ht11I ·'cup' 1 anqza r. I "2 cup
,ugar. J table~poon~ l>ftll, and 2 tcaspoon' mustard ~eed: odd cucumber. cu\ er and -immcr:; m1nu1c' Drain
Comhinc ~ cup! sugar. :l cups vinegar. and 2 tablcspooni. pickling 'rice. l 1e cinnamon.and all,picc in
cheesecloth bag: add 10 ~ugar and vinegar mixture. Bnng to a boil. Pack cucumber ~hce' in10 ho1 jar'
lct111ng I 4 inch head space. Remove spice bag from 'yrup. C'a rcfull) ladlc hot ') rup 11,er cucumber'.
lea\ ing I 4 inch head space. Remove air bubblclo with u non-mctnllic loputula. Ad111,1 cap'
Proce'' 10 minutes in a boiling water ba1h canner Yield· about S pint 1ar'
HOME STYLE DILL PICKLES
JO IV 4() mt'di11111 curumbns
(ahm11 4 lnche5 /0 111()
I nip 1·a1rninx .wit
l l(llUT/.\ ll'Qll'r
I quart ll'ltit<' 1·i11ef(ur
j t'U(IS \t'Olt r
I/ 4 l'tlf' 111l.1:ed pit'/.. lm>t .111i1·1•.t
Fresh till/
Garlic c/111·"~
//vt rl'c/ /ll'flflN.\ (11pti11110/)
Wa~h cucumber~ carefully. Di~'olve I cup canning salt 111 2 quu rts ~ater Soa~ cucumber' in bnne for
24 houri-. Remove and dry.
Prepare home canning jar' and lids according to manufacturer's in~t ruction'
Combine I 11uart white distilled vinegar. S cups water. I /4 cup mixed pickling spices. and frei.h dill. Bring
w a boll. l'iicli whole cucumbers into hot j ars. leaving 1/4 inch head space. Add 2 cloHs garlic. a small
ho1 red pepper. if dcsirtd. and a small head o( dill in each jar. C11ref\1lly...pour hot liquid over cucumbcn .
lea\ing 1/4 inch head space. Remove air bubbles with a non-metallic spatula Adju~t caps.
Proccs~ IS minutes in a boiling water bath canner. Yield: about 4 quart J&rs.
COUNTY FAIR PEPPER-ONION RELISH
I] .111•t•f'/ htll />t'f'P"'"· IS lurf(t' q 111tm,, , 1 tohle:1pm11u :Jolt
rrd or J(rc•rn /. / /] 'cufM st1xar l r 1111.v d e/a 1•i11t•11ur
Prepare home cannlna Jars and lids accordin1 to l'(\Anufacturcr's instructions
Wash and seed peppers. Chop pe ppers and onions; place in a saucc pot. Add iugar. sail. and vinegar. 8011
.10 minutes. Carefully ladle into hot jars, lcavin1 I /4 Inch head space.
Proce s IS m4nutct in a boilina water bath canner. Yield· about ten 8 ounce Jlr'
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
Impress guests with stuffed pork roast
U your entertainlng plans call for an elegant
dinner party, include a stuffed pork loin rout on your
menu.
Pork Roast with Herb Stuffing ia bound to make
a luting impretaion on your gu.eetl. The herb
stuffing, subtly sweetened with horiey aQd flavored
with aromatic tarragon, perfectly complements the
delidoua Oavor of pork.
Sausilge-stuffed Pork Loin rout featuree a spicy
Italian sausage stuffing embellished with tiny cooked
pasta and diced zucchini.
A bit of careful attention mak.ell thae beautiful
entrees a cinch to prepare and aerve. When
purchasing a pork loin roast, ask your butcher to
looeen the backbone from the ribs. 'Thia makes it
easier to carve the roast. After the rout II cooked.
remove the backbone by cutting along the bone,
leaving as much meat on the rout as pcmible.
Le,tting your pork roast sit for 15 to 20 minutes
flfter you remov~ it from the oven will allow the jukes
to "set" and will make carving easier. While the pork
Is sitting, the internal temperature. especially in large
roasts, may rise about 5 degrees. Becauae of thla. you
may want to remove your roast from the oven when
your meat thermometer regjsters 165 degrees.
PORK ROAST WITH HERB STUFFIN«;
6 to 8 pound bone-in pork center loin roast
1 tablespoon lemon and pepper seasoning
1 teaspoon dried tarragon leaves
1 teaspoon salt
Herb Stuffing (recipe follows)
·Pour in schnapps
for hint of mint
Here's a special treat, Peppermint Cream Pie, a
,Jeliciously light, minty taa&e wi\h a subtle hint of
•chocolate flavoring. For the ice cream lo'lrers, try the
popular drink version -light and crisp and sure to
bring raves of delight.
PEPPERMINT CREAM PIE
1;. cup margarine or butter, melted
l lh cup cookie crumbs, chocolate
:Y. cup sugar
5 egg yolks
V. cup cold water
1 envelope unflavored gelatin
11. cup creme de cacao white
114 cup peppermint schnapps
l 1h cup heavy cream
Chocolate shavings
Blend cookie crumbs in the melted butter and
press firmly against bottom and side of 9-inch pie
plate. Bake for 10 minutes in 350-375 degree oven.
Cool.
Beat egg yolks till thick and light, and gradually
beat in the sugar. Soften the gelatin in theoold water,
and add the creme de cacao and peppermint
schnapps.
Heat in double boiler till gelatin I.a d.i.19olved,
then beat into the egg yolk mixture at low speed just
till blended. Chill. When mixture begins to mound,
whip cup of cream and fold into the gelatin
combination. Pour into cooled crust and chill until
firm.
Whip remaining 1h cupcreamanduaetogamisb
before serving; sprinkle with shaved chocolate.
PEPPERMINT CREAM PARFAIT
l lh ounces peppennint achnappe
1 ounce creme de cacao white
3 ounces vanilla ice cream
C.Ombine in blender, decorate with crushed
chocolate cookie crumbs. Serve in parfait glasaes.
Peach Bavarian
lac:ed with ginger
One of the inviting desserts you can make with
fresh peaches is a Bavarian Cream laced with
delightfully thin and almost translucent pieces of
syrup-preserved ginger.
FRESH PEACH AND GINGER BAVARIAN
2 envelopes unflavored gelatin
'h cup milk
6 large or 8 medium ripe peaches (about 2 pounds)
4 large egg yolks
1 cup light cream or half-and-half
:Y. cup sugar
1 cup heavy cream
~ cup thinly sliced and diced ( W inch)
syrup-preserved ginger
Peach garnish, If desired
In a small saucepan sprinkle gelatin over milk to
soften. Over low heat stir constantly until platin la
dlalolved; set aside at room temperature.
Peel. halve and pit peaches; puree in an electric
blender -there should be 4 cups; 1tet ulde at room
temperature.
ln a '3-quart saucepan beat egg yolka and cream
until blended; lightly beat in .ugar. C.ook over
medium-low heat, atirrlng conatantly, until
thickened and just boiling. Off heat, gradually and
vigorously stir in gelatin mixture, then J*Cb puree.
Chill until mixture mounds. WtliP cream until stiff;
fold into peach mixture with gineer. Tum tnto •
2 ~-quart eervtna bowl; refrigerate to have fitm.
Serve the demert from the bowl. Gamiah it, if
you like. with al.Ices of exva peechett or s-extra
sliced peaches aweeiened with light brown tupr.
The extra peaches may be peeled or not, u dellred.
Makes 8 aervinp. ·
W cupboney
l tablespoon lemon Juice
Freeh tarraaon sprip (optional)
Lemon alioee (opUonal)
Combine lemon and pepper lleallOOinp, tarragon
and ult; mix well and Nb into l'OIJt.
Cut alitl tbout 2 1nchea deep between ribs of
rout, wic.houtcuttlnethrouab the oppollte alde. Pack
stuffing into alitl.
Place rout on rack ln a shallow routing pan,
lnRrt meat thennometer in thickest part of rout, not touchina bone 'Of fat. Place a piece of aluminum foil
loolely over top of rout just to cover stuffing, making
a slit in foil to fit around meet t.henoometer.
Bake at 325 degree for 30 to 35 minutes per
pound or until meet thermometer register 165 to 170.
Ccmb1ne hooey and lemonjuioe; bnaah over rout and
stuffing 15 minutes befOl'e end of cooking time.
Let rout stand f« 15 to 20 minutes before
carving to allow juices to aet. G~ with fresh
tarragon sprlp and lemon alices, if desired. Makes 10
to 14 eervtnga.
HERB STUFFING
~ cup butter or margarine
l bunch green onions with tops, chopped
1 clove garlic, minced
Yi cup sliced fresh mushrooms
1 (8-ou.nce) package herb--seuoned atuffing
1 tablespoon fresh chopped parsley
1 teaspoon lemon and pepper aeuoning
IA teaspoon dried tarragon leavee
~ teupoon salt
1 esg, beaten
~ cup dry sherry
2 tabJespoona lemon juice •
Melt butter in a large akillet over low heat. Add
oniona and prlic; cook over medium-high heat f« 3
to 5 minutes. Add muahrooow; ClCIJtinue to cook fDr 2
to 3 minutes, stirring oocuionally.
Combine remaining fnlredienta in a large bowl.
Add cooked mixture and mix gently. Mak.et about 4 cups. .
SAUSAGE.STUFFED PORK LOIN ROAST
.f to 5 pound bone-in pork center loin rout
~ teupoon salt
Yi pound Italian sausage
1 cup cooked pasta at.an or bows
1 amall zucchini, diced
~ teaspoon fennel aeed, crushed
~ of a 6-ounce can tomato paste
Yi teaspoon Italian aeuoning
Cut deep alita between ribs of rout, without
cutting through the opposite side. Sprinkle each
pocket J..lchtly with salt.
Remove sausage from casing; di8card casing.
Cook sausage in skillet until brown; dr841 drippings.
Combine sausage, pasta, zucchini, fennel aeed and
tomato paste; mix well.
Pack stuffing into alita. Place roast on rack in a
shallow roasting pan. Sprinkle surface of roast with
Italian seasoning. Iwert meat thermometer in
thickest part of rout,~t touching bone Of' fat. .
Bake at 325 degrees for 30 to 35 minutes per
pound or until meat thennometer registen 165 to 170
degrees. Let roast atand for 15 to 20 minutes before
carving to allow juices to aet. Makes 6 to 10 aervingll.
DOUBLE
COUPON
DOUBLE
COUPON
--------------..... ~::;:.::.:::..:.=:..=;:: l --:. ~ ·"'°=' '::" .r:7 L !-..::r .::=-,..= I l ..,....,,........ ...,. __ ..,. ___ ._. ...... ,..-. .... .., .. "" ........ .........., ....... .::::: I :::--,...,. ... _._.-i ·-I ------.... ----· ---------------........................... -_....._. _,,.,. I ................ "" .......................... -I ----------............................... ':::: ....._ ::' .=:.::::: .. ~ = :-.. -=.... "':.... .. .::::::: ' ._,_.__._._ I
... -------~--!:.~., ---------------
SAFEWAY SPECIALS
10..1. ... . .....
She DOUBLE
COUPON
:::::;::..-:.~-==:...=:. I -~-;-::.-:;:-.r:7:::::: ..:r .::=-,..= I :-.=:.::::.: .. -: =~-~ ..... --:-.::::::: I
111> wattles Dc7wny!IM• ':: 89' Tomato Juice Llfl01'• 8 &~ •100
KtrM .. frtllt P• 32-0Z •1n """"" lip!On a,g, 9o• •1 • Preserves swa-ry Plewvn ,,. ,._,,,Tea Oranve ""°' °' 100
....... GrljW1'ult 46-M .._-. ~ kl 11M ,.,_, Treesweet .... ~WMec.n 79-..,_., Treesweet .w. 6 c-
111> Soup In A Cup~~ '1 II> Plante<t~c-BM~~ 99'
Lucerne Buttermllk d:n 98" Ill) Grape Jelly 111111 32s! •p•
Kt aft Mayonnaise Ru1
mm>Sun Lfght DI•",~~·"•
mm>Coffee '"~:~·
,, .... 99c Ill.
:;--•...,.. ....... •......, c........ ,_ --I ---------___ ...
SAFEWAY LOW PRICES
00~ Whele Wheal, Mn. Wrleht'
PaP,er* crwels
Cltunlo lleftt ,_ l lnM, ... Ywtt..vtMlty ~Mt.JumlM
:79° :99° 221 Buy One
Get One
f¥EI
~ Pot Pies Men .. " ........... " 3 ... ;.$100 ~ • T11rl•y • 0.icloeft • .... l'le•
mm> Corn Muffin °,;,: .. 4 u .... s 100 .....
ColdC ~79'
Casaba Melon
~~ 10t
Ila.
NOrangesc:!~-::: 10-:. '1 3'
NBartlett Pears l~:-.:, .... 39'
Mled Potatoes .;... .... 39'
•Avocados 'ti.';:-2 .., 89'
'*• Cartridges ~ • 1 H-.
Plastic Strips~
Sheer Slr1ps~
Plastic Strips!:.!:':
~ '2" !ZDl>La Pina Flour 25:0 '4"
~ •1•• Seasoning Salt INI\" ·~~ 79'
!';, •1 •• Garlic Salt o...u. '"S:: 99'
~'1,. Pink Salmon LllO'f1
'%'2" Kidney Beans 5f..i"'
Chicken Franks ::: , ..... ,,c
"'•·
Chuck Roast o.:E:? ... 99'
l1'--111.i1n1 =;;;;;;n
..
cope
~ •2~--59 ......
ryers ............. 590 C.llfetMI
0..Wfl
'1ylne
CMtloet1 =-....
Mushrooms= lb '1"
Fresh Garlic =' lb 79-
Fresh Limes Mey 20For '1'°
Frlllt& 5.,. '1'° Green Cabbage o.
Yellow Chilies °'c;~ • 4gc
rurbot Fillets t:.ia: • '1" Round Steak . ~ •. 1 I"
111 age Fllet Ml· . WheM .... ~" ,.,... t.... 1329
Sausage s.:.r.::.... • '1" gno9,..::~~w.1 ..=-~..... ,
Fried Chicken~=-2:.12,. Corned Beef"'"'"" .. _......, (M ..... 11" I""' C..t •· U .091 •· Bacon ~.._ 1:,•1se .L Rib SJ"
country Style Ribs r: io 11" Pork Ba~ _ I ~ ~ -:--r
Beef Liver o!:c'1tc1
• ,IOO..,.lcl• °'·· H•wpon ...... • ...... Coeet ........ y. Letuftl ...... • H Moftefc" •n ;. .... ~ &.e9u•'9
• ., ... .,....._ e.te --• 1&t'7 C41tfef Dt.'. et WalftUt, lt~ftl
..
Popularit y improves with cooking
,
Dan Bourdieu Mid he leuned to cook
becaUle he loves to eat. He'• Abo
dJa.-overed that beina • good cook im-
premee the women he datee.
"It'• definitely a plus with women
when you tell them you're a pretty good
cook," Mid Bourdieu, 29, of Costa Me9a.
He's al8o pretty popular ln hia neigh-
borhood. When he~ whips up a batch of
Cook of
the W eek
barbecued aparerit., most everyone who
tute9 them wanta his recipe. Ria Chill
Red, he cla1m8, is lesendacy.
"There'• nothing like my chili. I
developed the recipe m)'lelf. Try it, you'll
want to keep making it," he aaid.
BROILED MARINATED SHRIMP
1 pound llhrtmp
Juice of 2 lemona
W cup Mlad oil
Salt and pepper
DMb WoroMterahlre sauce
~ C\IP fine dry bread crwnbe
Shell' and devein ahrlmp (do not cook).
C.ornblne lemon juice, oil, salt and pepper,
Woroestenhlre and Tabuco aauce.
Marinate ahrimp in mixture 4 to 5 hours.
Roll in brelMt aumbe. ~ 5 minutee on
one llde and then tum and broil 3 to 5
minutee on the other llde, or until ahrlmp
tuma pUlk. Makes 2 or 3 eervlnga.
TEXAS RED CHILI
~ pound suet, finely chopped
6 pounds lean beef, coanely cubed
1 cup chill powder, about 4~ ounces
2 tableapoona cruahed cwqin aeeda or
ground cumin
He a1ao prides him8elf on hia Artichoke
Quiche. Dan Bourdieu
2 tableepoona ground oregano
2 table9p00na salt
l to 2 tablespoons cayenne pepper
4 cloves garlic, minced "Wait 'til you taste it. It'• my favorite
recipe. Everyone loves iL" said Bourdieu,
who works as a plasterer.
~ teaspoon each pepper, oregano,
tabaaco
2 quarta beef stock or canned beef broth
~ cup Masa Harina or oonuneal Bourdieu said he started cooking when
he was 18, and uses many old family
recipes updated to his tastes. In the
winter, he hunts wild game and cooks his
catch.
2 cups sharp cheddar cheese, grated
3 tablespoons parsley
~ cup cold water
ARTICHOKE QUICHE
Drain juice from 1 jar of artichokes and
put juice in skillet. Add onion and garlic.
Cook until aoft (about 5 minutes). Beet
eggs until light yellow. Add crwnt.,
aeasoning and cheese. Chop artichoke
hearts into small pieces. Do not use juioe
from other 2 jars.
Fry suet ln chili kettle until crisp. Then
add beef, about 1 pound at a time, and
brown, stirring aa it oooka. Remove each
pound after browning. When all meat is
browned, return it to the kettle and add
eeuoninga and beef atock or broth. Cover
and simmer 1 ~ to 2 houn. Skim off fat.
Combme Mu.a Harina or com meal with
cold water and stir throughly into chili.
Simmer 30 minutes. Makes about 3~
quarts.
3 jars marinated artichoke hearts
1 large onion, minced
l ~ cloves garlic, ~
6eggs
~ cup fine breadcrumbs
~ teaspoon salt
Add to egg mixture with onions, garlic
and juice. Mix well and pour into 7 x
11-inch baking dish. Bake at 325 degrees
until set. Serve warm or cold.
Summer delights
light. and cool
Looking for quick and
easy ideas for delicious
and different sum-
mertime meals? Then try
the Individual Jarlsberg
Puffs and the tangy
Gjetoat Fruited Bean
Salad.
The pastry puff oon-
tains a delicious blend of
ground round ham,
on ion, parsley and
J arlabere cheese.
Sesame aeeda become
the perfect accent when
sprinkled over the flaky
puff.
Gjetoat Fruited Salad
keeps the meal light, cool
and pecked with protein
and vitamins. The col-
orful mixture of green
beans, chick peas, orange
11ections, red peppen.
purple onion and Gjetost
cheese creates a variety
of savory flavons for a
refreshing aummertime
salad.
Perky Italian dressing
blended with naturally
sweet Gjetost cheese is a
delightful surprise to the
palate. For an extra
eye-appealing attrac-
tion, serve in chilled
pasta shella, lined with
lettuce.
F R UITED BEAN
1 cu~~ed green
bea.na
~ cup chdc peas
~ cup cut-up orange
sections
~ cup chopped red
pepper
~ cup chopped pur-
ple onion
~ cup cubed Gjetoat
cheese
'A cup bottled Italian
dresaini .
6 jumbo shell pasta,
cooked and chilled
Leaf Lettuce
In large bowl, combine
first 7 ingredients. T068
to blend. Cover and chill.
To aerve, line shells
with lettuce leaves and
fill with salad. Makes 6
servings.
I N DI V ID U A L
JARLSBE RG P UFFS
1 package ( 17 ~
ounces) frozen puff
pastry
~ pound ground
round
~ cup diced ham
'A cup minced onions
2 t a blespo o n s
chopped parsley
1 c up shredded
Jarlsberg cheese
1 egg, beaten
Sesame seeds
Thaw pastry accord-
ing to package direc-
tions. In skillet, brown
beef and ham until beef
is done. Remove from
heat. Cool slightly.
Blend in onion, parsley
and cheese. On lightly
floured board, roll each
sheet pastry to 10 ~ x
14-inch oblong. CUt each
into 12 3~-inch squares.
Place about 1 table·
spoon filling in center of
each square. Brush edges
with beaten egg. Fold in
half to make triangles.
Pinch edges with tines of
fork. Place on ungreaaed
baking sheets. Brush
with egg. Sprinkle with
aesame aeeck. Bake at
375 degrees for 12 to 15
minutes until golden and
puffed. Makes 24 puffs.
in •ex•pen•sive*
• (rn ik spen' siv) not high in price; reasonable;
classified advertising
D1llyPlat Classified Advertising
842-5878
:~ ~ny form Lilt, 1!Jou like it
~ get by mail a ~l .00 coupon
good on your next Lilt purchase,
if you don't, you still get a so~
refund by mail.
P\lASE N()TI THtSE AOOITIONAI. TlRMS: Offer aood only In U.S.A. This ~· lftlY not be IN!d\ln!Qllly ~oduced lrid must ~y ~r , .. uittt. Uffllf on• CO"P9fl or refund P4'' neme or llddrns. 'lbur Offef fil"lt 1m1y l'IOt be ..... or transferred. l'te•M allow W weeks for delivery. Offer tllfllrfl
()ttdber ~ 1913. ·
---~H~~~r!~~~~~l£n~~~~~~~~---
1
1 Enclowd 1' 1hl-bottom JNMl lrom OM bo• ol anv lilt fo;m .ind lhlo u)h rqitlt!I t•~ wi1h mv lilt putrllu~ pric~ c1rtl«I
I PLEASC CHECK ONE:
I
I
I
I
I
O I pr~ lilt Ple•w wnd ~a S l 00 coupon good on mv M•t
pvrcha'of' of any lill form
Ple.i~ ~nd my coupon or refund to
I Olstill~mybrand ~~ •
9ilt. S0t u'h ""und My ~td brand It------
I
I Nj\M( ------~-----------~
I
I j\t)QR!i\ ------------------' (l'llf'll~--......,....,..,.Oll._. ... COlllCl.,,... l
I
I I CIT\-------------------
1 I Sfj\Tf Zl'C()O( ___ _
I Pl•cl' In~ Liit Challen1e Refund °"""Pim
I. ''"'"P«I ~ P.O. Box PM. 142 Octobef l.S. 19111 I rnw-locito •nd .,. El Puo Tewa.a 79966 -~.;...;....;..._...._......;__L ---~'~ --- --'------ -- ---... --- ----.J
' ____ _j__. __ ----
•'
•
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, Sept. 7, 1983 ..
••40y_,
clP<OduC• l(/IOW--
.._...
~601 Newport Blv . ~·._
1-'-e-...;:.1 645-0032 •l°•lfntroll61h ~I ,._ """-"
r ----~r;1.r.1,-----., -----_.((•11r:ltl11--".'--., r ----{<•Imi•Itl------;•
I AT ••T NOW "THE GOOD KIND" t NEW CROP PiHH I:
1: ORANGES AVOCADOS t' CARROTS : ''I c~OMMA HAAI • cmuo I'
! 8 Lal. *1°0 4 aooo$1oo i 2 ••GI 29' U L~~!~~;~~.. --~~~;;;~!~.!!·!O_ ___ L----~~~~-----Ji ,,. .
• • r-----.f( t }fl;l 1Itl• ----,. --0 _: :«iPfi1Ti}_::: --,. ;---0 -f (I }I J ;,ltf t l• --: --.:
FLOwER I HOP IPECIAL t LARGIE 11ZE : •WCllOP
COACHEUA
GRAPEFRUIT
PINK
IHORT I TEM 1' ICEBERG I
ROSES I LE-r:r\JCE
8 '°" •100 *1'' : 2 3.9e DOZ. I FOft LIMIT 2 DOZ. IAVE 't.00 1 LIWT I a AVE tUID -----------------j·-----------------j·-----------------... I I r-----:~------.----;!i2'lt!!;----.------((11'J;ltl1l-----i.:
lmlDOTA STRAWBERRIES DEUCIOU9 ' l CANTELOUPE RASPBERRIES PEACHES : ---~2i.~---·--:~~;;;:___ ----~;~ ___ j
COUPONS EXPIRE SEPT. 13th, -I P.M. : • GRAND OPENING! i
. Of our newly remodeled
Produce ·& Flower Shop -
You 'll love our "New Store"
and you'll love these Coupon
Specials and every week, from
now on, In Wednesdays Daily
C>Pelf DAIU "Tll I _ ...
.__ _ ...
I • • • • •
•=:
L.:.!!~!~.9-~~~~~~=-~~~~~~~! ............. : .. .
Save cold cash
on new Sunkis'
Juice Cups.
Heres ZOC off on nc.:w Sunkist . Juice Cups-100% pure
Sunkist. juice you can drink in:-cold anywhere. .
Pack them frozen for lunches or snacks. and by the urne
you're thirsty, they're icc-rnld and rcady-to··drink . O r stock
them thawed in the fridge for everyones favorite snack .
Look for them in the frcci",cr section.
100% natural. 100% pure orange. apple, grape or
grapefruit.
Bay, laurel
leaves spice
baked fish
...
ii' The punaent flavor of bay and laurel leave1
eeasona a quickly cooked Fiah Mediterranean.
Relish preserves
summer flavors
Diced eggplant, tomatoes, zucchini and
provencale ~of garlic, thyme and bay leaves
are $1mmered together for a few minutes, then
apooned over fish ateaks in foil, with bay leave9 on
top. The foil packagea are sealed and either done on
the grill or baked in the oven. When opened, what a
w onderful aroma ariaea ... and the flavor meet. the
promiae of the scent.
FISH MEDITE RRANEAN
1 ~ cups peeled eggplant in ~-inch cubes
1 teaspoon salt
W cup instant onion flakes
~teaspoon instant miMed garlic
~cup water
2 tablespoons olive oil
~ cup white wine
4 bay leaves
2 cups tomatoes in ~-inch cubes
~ cup green pepper in ~-inch squares
~ cup zucchini in ~ -fnch cubes
~ teaspoon thyme leaves, crushed
Dash ground black pepper
~ cyp seasoned dry bread crumbs
4 fish steaks (8 ounces each ) ~-inch thick
Place eggplant in sieve or colander; toss with salt;
set aside for 30 minutes. Squeez.e out Liquid and
reserve eggplant. Combine onion and garlic with
water; le t stand for 10 minutes to soften.
In a saucepan heat oil until hot. Add onion and
.
and bay leaves. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat and
simmer, covered, for ~minutes. Add tomatoes, green
pepper, zucchini, thyme, black pepper and reserved
eggplant. Bring to a boil.
Reduce heat and simmer, covered, until veg-
etables are barely tender, about 4 minutes, adding
water if needed. Remove and reserve bay leaves.
Allow vegetable mixture to cool.
another tablespbon of bread crumbs, ~ cup of the
vegetable mixture and 1 of the reserved bay leaves;
aeal foil tightly.
Mexican Pickled Peaeh Relish off en a sweet and garlic; saute until .&ender, ~bout 5 minutes. Add wine
tasty way to save the flavors of late swruner for a -
On a 12-inch square of aluminum foil sprinkle 1
tablespoon bread crumbs; top with a fish steak,
Repeat with remaining bread crumbs, fish,
vegetables and bay leaves. Place on a rack over
medium-hot coals until fish turns opaque turning
occasionally, about 10 to 15 minutes. Or place packets
in a shallow pan and bake in a preheated 350 degree
oven until fish turns opaque, 30 to 40 minutes. Yield
4 portions.
winter day. The fresh vegetables and peaches are
boiled slow ly with pickling spice and vinegar and
poured into pint jars. This sweet and sour relish is
visually appealing, delicious and versatile.
ME XICAN PICKLED PEACH RE LISH
3 pounds ripe tomatoes (about 7 medium)
2 cups celery, sliced
2 cups onion , chopped
2 green peppers, seeded and chopped ( l lh cups)
3 fresh California peaches, sliced
l cup w hite vinegar
1 ~ teaspoons salt
l lh teaspoons mixed pickling spice, tied in a cloth
bag
1 cup sugar
Peel tomatoes, chop and measure to get 1 ~
quarts tomato pulp. Put into heavy large pan (at least
8-quart size) with remaining ingredients. Boil slowly.
stirring often, until thickened, about 2 houra. Remove
bag of spices and discard.
Pour reliah into hot sterillied pint jars, leaving
~-inch headspace. Adjust caps. ~ for 10
minutes in boiling water bath. Seal tightly; cool and
store. Makes about 5 pints.
Note: Recipe may be doubled but boiling ti.me
will need to be Increased to thicken relish.
How to determine
imitation fo ods
They may look Like the real thing, smell like the
real thing and sometimes even taste Like the real
thing. but imitation foods have triggered a growing
con.fusion aJDOOR·COnswners.
Debra Oyer, a clinical dietitian at Memorial
Hospital Medical C.enter in Long Beach, says,
"Imitation or substitute foods are frequently found
next to their natural, more nutritious counterparts.
It's no surprise then that consumers often mistakenly
grab products they don't want."
To ease the confusion and help consumers
distinguish between imitation and natural foods,
Dyer offers the following guidelines:
-Read labels carefully; product descriptions
can be misleading and names can be very similar to
the natural producta.
For example, orange juice drink ia not real
orange juice. Its ingredients might include water,
sugar, syrup, com syrup. orange pulp and citric acid.
Orange drink contains no juice but has vitamin C
added.
-Be conacious of product packaging; imitation
or substitute foods may be similar in size, shape and
color to the natural product, making it easy to mistake
them for the real thing.
-Be aware that imitation and substitute fooda
are often shelved alongside their natural counter-
part.a, again increasing the chance for confusion. In
\tie dairy caae you'll find half-and-half (containing
three grams of fat and 32 milligrams of creamer) next
to a non-dairy creamer, containing two grams of
polyunsaturated fat and no milk or calcium.
-Pay cloae attention to ingredient listing,,
particula.tly if you want to limit your intake of certain
substances such as salt and other additives. Federal
law requires that ingredients be listed in order-from
t,ll~ highest to the lowest amount in a product.
-When in doubt, ch008e the natural food.
Generally, a natural food from the four food groups
will be nutritionally superior overall and include
higher amounts of fiber and esaential trace minerals.
"People with specific health concerns should be
particularly cautious when selecting imitation or
substitute foods because they often contain higher
amounts of fat. sugar and salt," Dyer says.
MUSHROOM CHICKEN
21h -pound chicken, cut up
11' cup unbleached all .. purpoee flour
l teaspoon aalt
~ teaspoon pepper
lh teaspoon paprika
~cup butter
1 large onion. cut ln thin strips (about 1 cup)
~.pound muahrooms, aUced
Wash and dry chicken. Stir topther flour, aalt,
pepper and paprika; coat chicken with mixtw'e. In a
12-inch akillet melt butter; add chicken, akin aide
down, and over: mec:lium heat, brown -about 5
minutes; tum and brown other aide. -about 5
minutes. c.ovtJ' Ughtly and c:ook over low heat until
tender -about 20 minutes. Remove chiclcen and
keep warm. Add onion to dripplnp ln aklllet and, 1t1rrinC often, brown quickly and U1htly. Add
mushrQonw and c:OOk quickly, at1rrin8 often, unUl
wilted. Top rmilhr'oom and onion mixture with
chkiu!n. Mekee 4 aervtnga.
I
Fine Wines, Champagnes, Beer & Spirits
Visa & Mastercard Gladly Accepted
''All Aboard!'' Train Load Sale
~~
Hiram Walker
<OIJ . I ••r 1ht' J•rin11drinl..rr.1ry ii 1hr
Hano-rria.n ,.,., . Hold a uny icla•• or S<hna~ ilnd a la~r
onr or i.,,. .. , 10 your lip• "muham.-•~•ly. Oown 1htm '•'h"'
fnr a l"•Wt"tful hlrnJ.
C rown Russe Vi.JI.a,~ Proof 1 H turr
Stanto n's Gin 90 Proof I H Lnrr
Canada Dry Tonic N R
ri·----------------------1[·: Old Hickory
'; t;p:,f $989
l. 75 Liter
Walkers Canadian. Ii() Prour 1 H Lnrr $999
Seagram's V .O . CanaJ~n. 86 ProolL11rr SIQ99
C d . M' S7.t9 ana a.an lSt tlO PrO.•r Lurr
Lord Calve rt Canadian, llO p.,,.,, L••u $ 7 3 9
C anadian Hill m' r..,.,, t .... S569
~?Ha&~
G le ntiddic h Scou·h. 8" Proor 7~1 ml $17 44
J & B Knt"~P';:,.;,•>t<h 7\0 ..,1 $ }998
Laphro aig S'c<ltch, H6 Proof 7W ml $ 17 97
M Ua 12 v .. r .,.,,,.., S}998 a C3 n M p,.,.,f HO ml
Gle nlivet Sroi.·h. 8f> Pmuf HO ml s 1898
Hamms
Regular o r Lighc
12 oz. Cans
Kulmbacher .
Schwietze rhof $499
16 oz. N R 4 Pack
N av ip Slivovit~ 7~0MI
World'• i.,,.,1 1..no""n plum •pirit. A~ in wood fot lhrtt 10 (iwr
yurt. h 'tia• •fin~. icnldt'n color •nd a rich tpky, plum'~"''-
Laird's Applejack 1~ .. , S699
~'/I)~~ ey 7'e ~
Beaujolais 1981 French
Alexis Lichine
Pro&ably the best known $
19 9 French Red the world
over; the Be.ujolais
Region of Eas1ern France
produce~ 15 million 750 ml
gallons uf this fruity wini:
each year. Made from 1he Gamay Grape; a zes-
ty, fresh red tha1 many enthusiasts prefer well
chilled. Our Wine Buyer's special purchaM.'
passed a fin e wine and i:rcat value on to you.
Compare with any French Beaujolais a1 $4.99 a
bottle and up! (Al this price you can almost buy
three bottles for the prke of o ne.)
Vincelli White or R ed Table Wine
An exclusive liquor Barn $ 3 2 9 se'lt'ction. The Red won a
1st Award at the recent
L.A. County Fair. Com·
pare quali1y ;ind taste 1.5 Llr.
with any other Table I. 5
Liter priced $3.99 to $5.99 and you will
discover what a trut> value this one is.
are a great alcernative to mixed drinks and
lower in alcohol. Try these:
I . Bloody Mary:
2 oz. Vinct'lli W h it<" Table Wine
fill rilass with Bloody Mar)' Mix.
Carniih wi1h crlery stido.
11. Margarita:
I Put Maric;arita M i"
I Parr Vlno.·t lli Whi1..-iablr Wint'
~: 'k/u,u, °' 141r4d
Cabernet Sauvignon rn1m1 s419
Airnit in Old Oak CH~• ha• ... ,f1rnrJ 1hr ... 1nr
1 mal..lns it\'('') drinkahlr. b .-rllrn1 ,. ith rUll•I•·
Sauvignon Blanc 1~0 '"1 $579
An idul pknk w1nr; dr)' w11hou1 l>.-m1t rhruh·rl1 aciJ. An
11erttahlr wint wi1h fl•h in crtam ~UH, rnlJ mt'at•
and harJ ,h .........
Rose' of Carmel
A rrfrt•hinx &. llcht pink wlnt. c;.w,. wrll with Ch1MA<' fo,~.
and poM"h~ fiah (l'>pt"dally Salmunl.
~~~~ucci $ 2 99
Colomba rd
750 ml
Hartley & Gibson
Sherries $ J 99 Crum Sh,rry
Arnontillo Sh,ny
Fino Sherry 750 ml · .
Inglenook Varietals
fr.nch Colom~rd, $ 2 9 9 L'hrnin Bl.on,. RK'•lm1t.
Z1nfandt-I, or
Ruhv C•b..m.-1
1.5 Liter
~ U't«u ~fl. ~
Chenin Blanc 1981 ~ $J 99
A irur Chm in, full-bodlt'd •nd frull\. I SO ml
A !r"l'll p0cn1< and a Hf) 1cood CO( ~utl .. tnr; mu.h "'"'' na\(•f
rhan kfntric ··hahli• for univ pt"nn•<'• morr.
Cabernet Sauvignon $J 99
Non-Vinta~e 750 ml
Excdl,•n1 chu;o.-irr in a n<ln·vintal(•• • •hrrnrl. S..,1 ,. 1th "~'"•
st<'ak, pm.-bord• and hard ,·hrr'<'•.
Chardonnay 1981 $699
A f(l'HI CharJonnay and an rvrn lxlln 75l) ml
prier. A huvit'r whhr,. ,,,.. "' ..,r>r "11h ... ,f,,.,J 1nJ,. h11r m.-al
v.rith richrr. mott Ra\etn0ft\f' u.u\"r,.
Gallo L.A. County Fair
Generic $J 97 Ch1bli1 Blanc ls1 A,.arJ,
Rhinl', Row-, Burgundy
or Vin Roff· J L• 1ter
Riunite
Lam brusco $J 99 B ia n co or Rosato
1.5 Lite r
l.«k In 1981 &rduu• al Tndav'• Lc>w Prl.n.
Ch. Mouton Rothschild no ... 1 SJJ16
Ch. Talbot SI Julltft 7\0 Ml $960
Ch. Beychev.ell s •. , .. 1i.n 1w 1r11 $USO
Ch. Haut .. Bages uto. •• 1, r .... n,.. H'' ..,, S899
Ch. Gloria 81 J~llfn m1 "'' $6 98
Our Minimum PurchaK i• ) Bonita ~' t..bt-1.
We 11.~t thl' an•tHI o( the 8.1'• and wr 1:h1~ on yo•1t ti.nit ~...a.
. .
24 LOCATIONS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
'
M!Nioft Viejo, 8"MWooof, ~Glow, Tomt•,hcolMa. n.-t.~ P• ~. no-ndo.b,I'......_, i-c.n, t.. Helin
·c 1nop Par4', Ortl\llda H .. a 1vn.w., Cotu M-, RMICho Cuc1flk>t1p. P"-. t'>ow'-ey, P~ Oirwn. IWlflower, W1tt ~¥Ina, On-. ud Bek~
O\ltt S.000 domcscic and imported beets, wines, champqncs and spirits, all at che lowest discount prlcn. •
We'ltMttt Any Currect Southem Callfornla Advertised Price.
1726 Supertor Ave., Cosll Mesa · Pbo'91: 645·1608
25876 Muirtan41, Mission .Viejo· Phone: 855-1437
10932 Westminster, 81rden Grove·"*": 638-4145
263 South Euc-.:Avenue, An1htlm · Phone: 191 ·6192
..... . .. . ..
-• ... I ....
.
STORE HOURS:
9:00 am co 9r00 pm1 Sun .• Sar.
Q
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983 Ba
Italian seasonings boost meatloaf flavor
U you•ve ever"\is,lL'<i
Italia n-style bread
crumbs right out of the
container you know they
contain a whole L'Ountry
full of flavors ... not.ably
Romano cheese, onion,
garlic, parsley. fennel
and celery.
For this stuffed
meatloaf the ground
beef is combined in the
traditional method with
the Italian style bread
crumbs giving both body
and flavor. The mixture
is patted into a loaf with
~ slightly hollowed out
center, filled with an
Italian sausage and
bread crumb stuffing,
then the m eat is
smoothed over the top.
Spinach-Meat Balls
are moist, flavorful and
easy to prepare. You
don't have to st.and over
the stove turning them
whil e they
brown ... defrosted frozen
chopped spinach and
Italian-st yle bread
crumbs are mixed right
in with the meat, formed
into balls and browned in
the oven. They're placed
in a casserole, topped
with marinara sauce and
baked until hot.
STUFFED MEATLOAF
V. cup olive oil,
divided
4 ounces sweet Italian
sausage
1 cup chopped onion,
divided
~-S cup chopped celery
1 ''l cups ltalian Style
bread crumbs
l '12 pounds ground
beef
1 can (8 ounces)
tomato sauce
3 eggs, lightly beaten
In a large skillet heat 2
tablespoons of the oil
until hot. Add sausage
(removed from casing if
link variety); cook and
stir until browned and I
crumbled, about 2
minutes; remove with a
sJott.ed spoon I
Add V. cup of the
onion and the celery; I
saute until transparent,
about 5 minutes; com-/
bine with sausage and
reserve. Combine beef, 1
aup of the bread crumbs,
remaining ¥. cup onion .
tomato sauce and 2 of the
eggs.
Form meat mixture
into a 9 x 5-inch loaf.
Make a 6 x 2-inch well in
the cenJl:!r of the loaf. To
make staffing add re-
maining egg and 'A cup
remaining bread crumbs
to cooled celery-sausage
mixture; mix well.
Spoon into well fonned
in the meat. Bring sides
of the loaf over the
stuffing to cover; pal
firmly to seal.
Preheat oven to 350
degrees. Combine re·
maining 114 cup bread
crumbs with 2 table-
spoons olive oil. Sprinkle
over top of meatloaf; pal
gently into meat. Bake
until meatloaf is cooked
through. about 45
minutes. Remove from
oven and let stand 5
minutes before slicing.
Yield: 6 portions.
SPINACH-MEAT
BALLS
I package (10 ounces)
Try crackers
in stuffing
When s tuffing a
whole California turkey,
for an interesting
change, substitute soda
crackers for bread cubes.
Cook turkey giblets in
water until tende r .
Drain, reserving ¥. aup
broth, and chop. Brown l
pound pork sausage until
crumbly. Remove and
set aside.
In pan drippings, melt
'h cup butter and aaute 1
large diced onion and 4
diced celery stalka until
tender.
Add cooked turkey
gibleta, sausage. 10 cups
coanely broken soda
crackers. 'h cup milk, ·~
teaspoon each r08emary
and pepper. 3 eggs and
retierved broth. Mix well
and use to stuH
14·pound turkey.
Classy Autos
Advertised
in the
D1HyPHat
frozc•n 1:huppl'd
spina('h, thaw<'CI
I pound ground OO.•r
l t>gg, Lightly beat..:11
1 i l'UP ltaltan style
lirt>ad crum~
112 cup finely d1oµpt'<I
onion
• 2 w:.ispoon oreganu
lcav(~. <.-rushed
I jar (15'h ounce)
n1arinara spaghe tti
sau1.-e
Preheat oven to 425
degrees. Drain spinach
and squl>ere out as much
liquid as possible; place
in a medium bowl. Add
beef, egg, bread crumbs,
onion and oregano; mix
well. Shape into 1-inch
balls (makes about 35).
Place in a single layer
on a jelly roll pan. Bake
until browned on one
side, about 5 minutes.
Reduce oven to 350
degrees. Remove meat-
balls to a shallow 1-quart
casserole. Pour sau<..-e
over all.
Cover and bake until
meatballs are cooked
through and sauce is hot,
20 t.o 25 minutes. Serve
over pasta with grated
Parmesan cheese, if de-
sired. Yield: 4 portions.
No Gimmieks. •• No Games. •• Everybody Wins Wit
•
Cupcakes ·~:.~ ••. , ..... , !Ir
C C k ...... nne reme a es : ..... ~ .......... ,~
Frozen
Food
·-~.
BIC ERASABLE
INK PENS -~'
M:T I .' .
Ullll • r .... J -:::" ...
CUST<*(ll
UIU.OZCAHI
Kelloggs ... ······.. c Pop tarts i .... )
..... 75'
''°' .. .... 13'
...~'1.8 . ·-··
...
''• .,. '7.39
• N '-""' '119
. '2.49 . ... '2.M --'1• .,,.'U5
'··~ '. ~ -/.. ;~ ., '1 ,,.,., , ..
.lllfoocl Sea-lectlona!
Salmon 8 ._ ._...
Steak.a CllQmto .. ... • .,.,
Perch .• s• GA Fillets ~-... ~
:-c::~ ~lO .. 92.69
Extra Fanq SWeet Yellow
Peaches
Avocados WIGEFANCY!Mi~
Potatoes u.a NO , Pfe.4u.IBM£~
FAM°
l829°
Grapes FNCY~THCWeONSUDWS l8.ttr
Grapefruit RllOf .ucFJUYAED•UllW)IA 99'
-·II.a . 7"1Ll.1Mft -----... .. .... • • •• II IS l.S 14 .
•
----~~-~ --
M Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
Chilean treat
travels north
Rice pudding traditionally is served as a lightly
sweet accompaniment for late afternoon tea in Chile,
and adults and children alike look forward to the
sped.al days when mother it.
Creamy Chilean County Rice Pudding, known
as "Arroz con Leche y Canela" in Spanish,' readily
adapts to northern eating habits as a light summer
desaert. By using any instant rice, it's super eM)' to
prepare as well.
Instead of cooking the rice in water, prepare it in
dairy fresh milk, sweeten with a little sugar ~d spice
with whole cinnamon"3ticks. When the rice is done,
spoon into a 9-inch square pan or individual custard
cups and refrigerate until firm.
Garnished with ~ driZ21e of pure maple syrup
and a whole cinnamon stick in the Chilean fashion, or
served with thin buttery biscuits, Chilean County
Rice Pudding is a perfect ending to a warm day's
dinner.
CHILEAN COUNTRY RICE PUDDING
4 Yi cups milk
4 cups quick cooking rice
W cupaugar
6 small, whole cinnamon sticks
Maple syrup
In a pan over medium-high heat, bring milk just
toa boil. Stir in rice, sugar and whole cinnamon sticks.
Cover and remove from heat. Let stand about 25 to 30
minutes or until milk iB abeorbed, stirring once or
twice. Remove cinnamon sticks and set aside.
Transfer rice pudding to a 9 x 9 x 2-inch pan or 6
individual custard cups. Refrigerate until firm.
Unmold individual custard cups or cut pan mixture
into 6 squares. Insert 1 cinnamon stick into each
serving, if you wish. Serve on desaert plates and
driZ21e with maple syrup to taste. Makes 6 servings.
Fresh baked bars
plum delicious
This year's fresh California plum crop is 50
percent bigger than last year's. That means enough
plums for juicy out-of-hand eating and baking, too.
Crunchy Plum Ban are made with rolled oats
and chopped walnuts, filled with a pound of fresh
California plums, fresh from a Kem, Tulare or
Fresno County orchard for you.
PLUM BARS
1 pound fresh California plums, quartered and
pitted
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
I;\ cup sugar (to taste)
l I;\ cups rolled oats
11;\ cups flour
~cup brown sugar
Yi teaapoon baking aoda
1 cup butter (2 sticks). cut into l;\-lnch cubes and
chilled
Ya cup chopped walnuts
In~ large, heavy saucepan, bring pluma, lemon
juice and sugar to a boil. Reduoe heat 90 that mixtUre
boils very gently. C.ook about an hour or until very
\hick and well reduced. Stir occuionallY.. aa mix
thickens and reduces to approximately 1 cup.
Topplac; Mix all the dry ingredients together
except the walnuts. With two knives, cut the butter
into the oat mixture until the size of c.ioane cornmeal.
Add the walnuts.
# -
Gently preaa half of the prepared topping mix
into the bottom of a buttered 9-lnch aquare glasa
oven-proof pan. Spread the plum filling over the tint
layer of oat crumb crust.
Cover with remaining crust mix. Bake in
preheated 3~ degree oven for 2~ minutes or until
lightly browned on top. C.ool completely before
cutting into 2-inch aqua.res. Makes 16 aquares.
Most Americans like
chicken, survey says
Chicken ia served in 96 percent of adult
hOW1eholda in this country and in 69 percent It la
eerved at leutonce a week, according to a new Gallup
consumer survey,
Price and taste are two chief attractions o(
·chicken, wt th 40 percent of thoee Interviewed saying
the main reuon they buy chicken i.a becau.ee it ,la
ecionomlcal and 36 pea:ent no1ing "aood taste" u ·
their primary reuon for serving ch.lcken. The tuivey showed that conawnen are about
evenly 1pUt between buying fresh chicken whole oc
in~· Forty·nine percent purchue whole chickens
arid 47 buy just parts. ChJcken breuta are the most
frequently purchMed puU. Bek1na and frying are the f•vorite ways of
cooking chlckena. ConNmen who purchue chicken
primarily beau.11e It Lt nutritious or becau.ee It ia low in
calorietaremore likely to beke It. Thoee whoaay taste
la ~ main reMOn for buying chicken prefer to fry
it.
About l ,000 adults were interviewed durtng a
two-week period of June. Other flndlnp include:
-Y~ houeeholda tend to buy parts while
okler people IMn toward whole uncut chicken.
-Almolt a third (32 percent) eerve chkken two
or more uma per week and 4 percent 9el"Ve It at leut
four Umee a week.
Yesterday's cooking habits counter-productive
Are you hampered by hand-me-down cooking
habits that once eerved a purpoee, but no longer
apply?
l>oe. your cookbook waste your Ume with extra
stepe that aren't really neceeury?
Not only are extra steps a nulaanoe. aome cookina
chorea are actually anti-nutrition and
CIOW\t.er-productive.
Today'• taste favors food wtth crunch and
texture ... food that'• rich in flavor but calorie light.
But DWlY traditional cooking procedures are rooted
in opposite alma: to 90ften textures, tame flavors and
make fooda "rich" '(in calories).
Here are some steps you can skip:
PARBOILING VEGETAB~ -Do you
pre-cook peppers in bolllng water before you stuff
and bake them becauee your mother (or your
cookbook) IAid to do it that w,ay?
Your ltuffed peppers (or other vegetables) will
have better form, flavor, color and nutrition if you
skip that step and aim ply fill and bake the raw pepper
caaes.
U you prefer your pepper cases more tender, add
an extra 5 or 10 minutes to the baking time. Moet
"parboiling" of vegetables can be diapenaed with.
Here's a tip: freeze rather than cook cabbage
leaves for stuffing. The defrosted raw leaves will be
limp and pliable enough for rollinR.
PRE.COOKED FROZEN vegetables -U
you're adding fror.en vegetables to a cas8erole diah or
....... 1 a, Co'+«.ted M •• fa ....... ..,..
Slim Gourmet
By Barbara Gibbons
other combination that will be cooked or baked, it's
not really neoeee1ry to pre-cook the f.ro7.en vegetables
flnt, no matter what the recipe says.
When you atop to think about It, frozen
vegetables are already partially cooked (u part of the
peckagil\i procedure), 90 lt'• really pointless to cook
t.heee vegetables a aecon.d time before they are added
to 1 CUlel"Ole ln which they'll be cooked a third time.
SALTING EGGPLANT SLICES to draw out the
moUture before cooking not only wast.es time but
promotes the one thing you probably don't want: the
abeorption of fat and calorlee.
Salt dehydrates eggplant allces and turns the
vegetable into a fat sponge that sucks up grease and
oil.
Your eggplant'will have fresher texture, more
natural flavor (and fewer calories), if you simply slice
or dice lt and uee it immediately without pre-salti.ng.
SAUTEEING ONIONS TILL LIMP but not
browned: the purpose of this step is to impregnate the
onion with fat ao it won't seem ao sharp and onion-y.
The greaae coats the mouth and buffers the
flavor. A step-saving calorie-cutting alternative: uae
lea onions. Or uae sweeter, milder onions. But skip
the grease.
'~:.,
~Mi . !d'4 9 ..,.,,,,,. 2 1 (COLOR )
----EA. . COll.£CTION.
L 'EGGS SHf.ER ELEGANCE
PAN1VHOSE
PEELING POT A TOES, carrots, etc. la a wui. of
nutrients as well as time; a good ICJ'Ubblng wt th a .utf
brush is all that's needed.
The modem way to serve "trench trWI" la
unpeeled (and baked in the oven instead of fried).
The newest way to serve potato salad la made
from diced unpared potatoes. The edible pee1a and
aklns of fruits and vegetables are high in fiber.
U you really dislike the look of unpared carrots,
shred them.
SOAKING RAISINS, prunes or dried fruit la
rarely necessary. When the fruitcomesfromafreshly
opened package, it's generally aoft and motat.
Even hard, dried, neglected fruit will become
aoft and moist when cooked in "wet" recipes like
cuatarda, pudding and stuffings.
ADDING SALT to the cooking water for pasta is
done mainly for flavor and isn't mandatory. Yes,
salted water boils at a slightly higher temperature, 80
theoretically foods cook faster. But the m1.lliaeoond of
difference is 80 slight that it really doesn't count.
SQUEEZING out the seeds from tomatoes used
in sauces fsn•t really necessary. Seeds are hannless,
tasteleM and fiber-rich.
SCALDING MILK before you make cuatards,
puddings and sauces isn't necessary. This practice
dates back to the days of raw milk. It was done to kill
genns and enzymes.
However, this step has already been ac-
complished by modern pasteuriz.ation.
PfANUT BUTTE~
EA.
l ·P<>UNDCAN
HILLS BROS. COFFEE
Prices Effective at all Southern C1lltomta Atph• Beta Mertleta
DOUBLE · SAVINGS COUPONS
.
(
I
.·
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983 B'J
Moroccan foods not so rich
By BEA ANDERSON
Of .. CWlr ........
If you think Moroccan cuisine ls hlgh-caloried,
then dip into Jacqueline Hahn's cookbook and sample
her nouvelle recipes.
A two-year-labor of
love, the pubUcation fea-
tures traditional foods with
a twist-calories have been
pared down and cooking
methods streamlined.
The traditional cuisine,
Hahn said, ill like most
others rooted in the Medi-
terranean countries. It ls
rich, highly caloric and
time-consuming to prepare.
After all, the f'1tima had
nothing to do but spend all
day in the kitchen. She was
appreciated as much for her
ample figure as for her
culinary talents.
gourmet meal can be turned out in the time It 1.akes to
line u.p at a faat~!ood counter, a.he aaya.
She bu reduced calories and cholesterol by
cutting the amount of ahortening and flour, and by
baking 80me dJshee rather than deep-fryina them.
"Flavor and appearance are not affected."
The major diatinction of Moroccan foods, said the
native ol Marrakech, is the combination of spices,
herbe and natural products. Another featutt ia a
balance of sweet and aour flavors, the .Weet coming
mainly from honey. Other characterlatica are ~e
. abundant u.e of fruit and vegetables, and the methOd
of slow aimrnering to reduce sauces rather than
adding flour. .
Deecriptions of native dishes with fuanating
facts about the culture are liberally 1prinkled
throughout the book, available at aeveral book stores
in Laguna Hilla and by ordering from Hahn at
497-3973. They alao will be carried at Roblnaon's,
Newport Beach, where the author has been a
featured demonstrator at the store's annual food
festivals.
H ow e ver, today's L
Western woman, for good
reason , tends to avoid fat-Jacqaellne Hahn
Here ii a reprint of Couacous, Morocco's national
• dish. "For this country couscous is what s paghetti is
for Italy or rice for China," Hahn said. It ls a mixture
of semolina and flour that is rolled with a little water
Into pellet-like grains. tening and complicated recipes. So Hahn designed
her cookbook for these wary women.
The Laguna Beach caterer says by teaching and
cooking these dishes she has developed techniques
that make this exotic cuisine easier and more
In Morocco it is made in a double boiler, which is
an all-day process. Hahn saves time by using a
pressure cooker.
'---------------=======:.========-==============================::__..:.:..:.healthful. With modem time-saving kitchen aids, a TRADJTIONAL COUSCOUS
l ~ pounds lamb (shanks.or shoulder)
·'
Sale Prices Effective Thursday, September 8 thru Wednesday 14, 1983.
'2 500 000 IN PRIZES! 7~8,850 TOTAL PRIZES AVAILABLE
OET YOU" ALPHA I ETA
llHGO GAME CA"O TOOAY
OODS CHAllT M of Au9u11 l. 1Ml .. .. . ... ANO A GAME flCtc!TWITH .: '. ~.:\ -.i ..
EACH STO"E VISIT, t-,-. ,-. ,-i---1 ..;..--+-''--4--'~
.. ,. , ... f ft ,, ••••
t H '
t'W f ..,.• ·--· .. ·~. .... • t1 •
l"'l I •
...
tCHlOULIO TlllMlllATION DATI NOYHIHll I, llN.
c ........... -................. .. .. , .. , ........... , ...... , ..... . ..... Alpfl• .., •• ,., ••
HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE WINNERS IN THE '2,500,000 ALPHA BETA BINGO GAME
... -. -
S chicken drumsticks r ~
7 cups water(for pressure cooker) or 10 cups water
(for stockpot)
2 turnips
S carrota
3 onions
~ small cabbage
2 medium zucchini
S cilantro sprigs
l latge piece banana squash
~ cup garbanz.o beans aoaked
~cup green llma beans, optional
~teaspoon tumeric
1 teaspoon salt for stock
P epper to taste
3 cups COWICOUI•
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 teaspoon salt for COUSOOUB
Place lamb and chicken in bottom of pressure
cooker and brown them over high heal, stirring
constantly with a wooden spoon. (Thia helps meat
become tastier and better looking for the final stage.)
Add water. While lt is boiling, over same high heat,
peel, wash and cube vegetables. Put them in the pot
with garbanzo and llma beans. Add tumeric, salt and
pepper. Cover pressure cooker tightly. Place pre9U.re
regulator on vent pipe. Lower heat to medium. Cook
10 minutes. Cool, letting pressure drop of its own
accord.
In another saucepan with a tight lid, pour in
couacoua, sprinkled with salt and topped with butter
cut in small pieces. Uncover pressure cooker and
immediately pour 6 cups of clear bolling 1tock on
c:ouacoua. Cover pan at once and let COU900UI stand a
few minutes, until all liquid is abeorbed.
Now adjust 8eUOJl.inp of vegetables. meat and
remaining atoc.k, and aimrner until s10Ck I.I tp'le.
Pour COUICOUS in a large ah.allow planer.
preferably one that la ovenproof. With a fork, gently
stir the grains of couscous to coat them evenly with
salt and butter. Adjuat seasonings (always a
necessary step after ingredients cook). Top OOUllCOUS
with vegetables and meata. Warm in oven if
necessary. Serve hot. It can be accompanied by a hot
sauce. Makes 12 1ervings.
•eouacous is available in specialty at.ores and
most supermarkets.
Plums make fine
dessert sauce
Europeans are accustomed to serving fresh fruit
"as is" or poached for deseert. They alao often use
fresh fruit as a sauce for a mousse or aome other
sweet. Now Americans seem to be more interested
than ever in following suit.
We thought of this change recently when we
came on a recipe for a lovely Red Plum Sauce. When
we tried this recipe, we used Santa Rosa plums. They
a.re conical in shape, purpliah crim8on in color and the
flesh near the akin la yellow to dark red. They're very
juicy and on the tart aide.
Because Santa Rosas u-e cllngstone plums use a
sharp small knife and ,slice into the pit to cut away
fruit in fairly thin wehes. Although the recipe calls
for large plums, you may want to 1ubstitute thoee of
medium size. U so, here's a handy table: S to 6
medium-size plums equals one pound. From a pound
you should get 2 ~ cups sliced, 2 cups diced, 2 cups
pureed. 3 cups quartered or halved.
RED PLUM SAUCE
6 large fresh red plums (about l ~ pounds)
1 cup sugar
l cup dry red wine
~cup water
2 tablespoons cornstarch
Pit plums and slice fairly thin.
In a medium saucepan. 1tir together plums, sugar
and wine. Over medJt.un heat, stirring until ~gar
diaaolves, bring to a boll; simmer until plums are soft
-about 15 minutes.
Gradually stir water into cornstarch, keeping
smooth; stir into plum mixture. Cook over medium
heat, stirring cona~y. until clear, bubbling and
thickened. Chill
Makee about 3 ~ cups .
Serve u a de.ert sauce over steamed custard,
rice pudding, brelld pudding oc a compote of
necta.rinee and blueberriee; over m.n white
chocolate mc>u11e or peach upside--down cake: or UR
u a topping for butter-type sponae cake a la mode.
FRIEDRICE
3 tableepoons oil
1 Wp onion, chopped mediwn fine (about 1 cup)
1 larp rib celery, chopped medium fine (about ~
cup)
2 larp doves prUc, Cl'Ulhed
l ~ CUpl thlnly al.iced cooked pork 1trlpe
3 C'\.lpl cooked rice
~ cup .oy uuce
&-ounce can water chestnuts. drained and cut in
stripe
ln a 12·1nch aklllet, hMt the oil: over' medium
beet tdr ~ the onion, celery and prlic unUl
.uahtly wilted-about 3 mlnutee. Add the pork. rice and eoy •ucei stir undl rice la belted throuah. Sdr ln
t.M w•ter cheltnuta; cook, ttlrrina. just until they are
Wann. Mu. 4 eervtnp. J>l9 extra fll1Y lluct.
-.
Ba Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wedqesday, Sept. 7, 1983
No matter how it's cooked, corn's great
No matter how you
cook fre s h
corn-o n -the -cob, re -
member for maximum
enjoyment, it should not
be over·t'OOked Follow
these guidelines Cur
pr epar 1n iot
com-on-the-l'OU.
Roasted Corn: Turn
back the husks and re-
move the silk. Brush
kernels.with melted but-
ter or margarine and
sprinkle with unsalted
water. PuU husks back
over corn a nd twist at the
top to secure.
Place com around tht'
edge of hot coals and
tum ears frequently
with tongs, cooking
about 20 minutes. Or,
husks and silk can be
completely removed and
ears wrapped in heavy
foil. Cook ears over me-
dium hot coals for 5 to 7
minutes, turning often.
Kettle-Cooked Corn:
Remove husks and silk
FiU a large kettle half-
way with water and
bring to a boil. Add corn
and boil, covered, for 3 to
6 minutes.
Melted butter or mar-
garine is the universal
favorite topping for
fresh corn-on-the-cob.
Try spreading cooked
ears of corn with
flavored butters. Melt
either butter or margar-
ine and add snipped
c hi ves, c h o pp ed
scallions. fresh lemon or
lime juice, crumbled
fresh herbs or a pinch of
dry mustard, curry pow-
der or papnka Then
brush these flavorful
combinations over com
for savory taste.
Get more out of fresh
corn season by using corn
in other ways. It's easy to
remove kernels from the
cob for use in re<.'ipcs
such as fresh vegetable
soups, stews, cus tards
and casseroles.
To remove kernels
from the cob, husk the
corn and remove the silk.
Rinse com in cold water.
Hold each ear upright
over a deep bowl or
plate, th~n using a sharp
kife, cut downward to
remove kernels. One ear
of corn makes abou l 1 i
cup cut kernels.
F RESH CORN PAN-
CAKES
1h cup uns 1 fted
all-purpose flour
2 Y1 teaspoons baking
powder
114 teaspoons salt
l tablespoon sugar
•,. teaspoon pepper
3 medium ears fresh
corn
2 £'ggs, separa lro
¥. l "UP milk
3 tablespoons butter
or margarine. melted
In a m1xing bowl, com -
bine the flour, baking
powder, salt. sugar and
pepper Remove the
husks and silk from the
corn. Cut the kernels
from the ears with a
sharp knife; measure 1112
cu ps. Beat egg yolks and
l'Ombine the corn and
milk. Stir the corn mix-
ture into the dry ingre-
dients; add the melted
butter.
In a separate bowl,
beat the egg whit.es until
they stand in sofl peaks;
fold into the batter. Drop
from a tablespoon onto a
hot greased griddle or
skillet. Cook until golden
brown on one side, then
turn and cook the other
side, about 2 to :3
minutes. Serve with but-
ter if desired Makes 3
dOU>n 2 112 -inch pan
cakes.
FRE S H CO R N
VINA IGRETTE
8 ears fresh corn
Y.i cup salad oil
'A cup cider vinegar
l Y1 teaspoons fresh
lemon or lime juice
3 tabl es poo n s
chopped fresh parsley
2 teaspoons salt
l teaspoon sugar
Y1 teaspoon dried
basil
'i4 teaspoon cayenne
2 large tom&toes,
peeled and chopJX'd
'A cup chopped fresh
green pepper
~ cup c hopped
No matter
what you 're
doing, your
hometown
newspaper
nie Daily Pilat
fits in.
S(·nl lions
Salad green.:.
Hl•move husks amJ
silk from corn Fill a
large• kettlt• halfway
with wate r Place over
high heat and bring lf> a
boil. Add tht' corn, COVl'r
and re turn W a boil
Remove from ht>at and
let stand fur 5 ininulC'S
Dram and cool.
In a large bowl com-
bine 011, vinegar, lemon
or hme juice, parsley,
salt, sugar, basil and
cayenne. Cut corn off cob
Meats
and add to the bowl with
the tomatoes, green pep-
Jkr and scallions. Mix
well, cover and chill
several hours. Serve in a
bowl lined with salad
greens. Makes 6 to 8
servings.
F R ES H CO RN
CUSTARD
4 large ears fresh corn
4 eggs
l ~ cups evaporated
milk
3 tablespoons finely
chopped onion
Guaranteed
Bonded Quality
FRESH 89 ~~'?,l!,~D BEE~0 •
00\!s NOi £X<et'(I so rar
CROSS
RIB ROAST
eon~s eonoeo Bfff
{huc1r
Lb 189
BLADE CUT 88 ~~~f~~ ROAS\0 •
ZACKY FARMS 59 ~!;!!~a~~~ lOe
wno1e Body 1Cn1cke11 Dr umstlCkS out Clown Zackv r.ums LO 1 oq,
TOP SIRLOIN
STEAK
eone1~s Bof1deo Beet
Loin
LARGE ENO
RIB ROAST
2 29 I
l b \
/
l 'h tablespoons but-
ter or margarine,
meltro
2 teaspoons sugar
1 1h teaspoons salt
•,4 teaspoon nutmeg
Ye teaspoon pepper
To prepare corn, re-
move husks and silks.
Rinse with cold water.
Hold the ears upright in
a deep mixing bowl and
cul kernels from the cob
with a sharp knife.
Scrape off any ke rnels
and liquid remaining on
cob.
'
In a m<.'<iium bowl,
beat the eggs with the
evaporated milk. Add
the corn, onion, melted
butter or margarine,
sugar, salt, nutmeg and
pepper; mix well. Turn
into a greased shallow
1 112 -quarl casserole and
place in a larger pan with
l inch boiling water.
Bake in 350-degree oven
for 45 to 50 minutes or
until a knife inserted in
the center of the custard
comes out clean. Makes 4
to 6 servings.
......
/
eono~ Beet
ROUND STEAK
l0199
•• 1 .79
.. 1 .69
Groceries Name Brand Selection
.. f' .... "~''" '" •
QUARTER PORK LOI N
9~?~,.N~'~'~'~~ ~.~TT~~~3 .99
~.s~~~~o~~9.1.~n STEAK •• 1.99
WHOLE BEEF BRISKET
•• 1 .29
... 79
1 ll' It I t.t( 1...._f f \ .... '""''
WHOLE FRYER LEGS
!,~!!1~12:~N SAUSA~;., 0!"4J .99
~.?,.~~.~~?ULDER ROAST '".99
FRESH BEEF LIVER ••• 89
~~~.~l~; .~~CON 1 :!,, 1 .54
LADY LEE BOLOGNA ,,..,.., 1,ao ... uc w•
\All'\M.I ll l q<t, .. 1.19
t:~~:TER STYLE BACON La . 79
FRESH FISH ITEMS
f.!~~LET OF DOVER SOLE 11 2.59
~.!~.11~1IC RED SNAPPER ,, 1 .59
~.~STERN OYSTERS. I ••• 1 .99
f~~-L~.T~OF OCEAN PERC~• 2 .88
PACIFIC LING COD .. 1.99
GENERIC SAVINGS
GENERIC QUICK OAT,~,,.~ 1 .29
GRANOLA BARS
'0/10• 1 .29
~~! COCOA MIX .,., ,.n.1.09
STOCK UP ANO SAVE ON HUNDREDS OF KEY BUY ITEMS
pie LADY LEE 99 i £~arsuP u 01 at• •
rWESSON 99
OIL 24 oz Btl •
PILLSBURY R.OUR s ~~c .89 r ~'.';~~URY CAKE_ Ml~.~~ eo• .85
r ~~g.g~~ SPREA~~ '~". 79
r ~~~~~~~ET Juices. 01 O>t\ 1 .19
r ~!AMONO A GREEN B~~~.~.39
r !~.~~JO JUICE .. ,,1 ,.,. .69
r !v?.~,.~AMEN NOODlE~0, ,., .25
r ~~TEGA GREEN CHILI~~',.~ • 6 3
r2~TEGA TACO SAUCE.01811 .69
pie AMERICAN 179
i s~~~~ts ~29
r~~VEETA CHEESE110190• 3.05
!LADY LEE S~OKIE ~!~~~ 1 .59
r ~-~~~ MISS PUDOIN~.~ •r. • 99
r KRAFT HANOI-SNACKS
Pl.,_,, IUltl• l tt4C1tt•\ 09 99 04fM 'C9.ACO-I'\ \ t' AlC •
r OAK SL~CEO HAM 1 01 .. < 2. 09
r LADY LEE CHOPPE~~f._~ 1 . 5 9
r ~~f ... ~?WISS C~EE.~~ .. ~ 1 .39
~NERIC BOLOGNA uni .. , 1 .99
BAKERY ITEMS
f" HARVEST DAY 65
d> !~.~~n~tS2• oz 1o;i1 •
Of WhHI llound TOC> or SandWIC
r ~~~;~ VICTORIA ... 01 .,, .89 P' RENAISSANCE BREAD 89
• \41(10 lltUl(MOlt\(IUtOOUC,.. lfl\I t(l,V • rs .. ~.~~~A •10~~:~, 1 .19 r~!.!2~TILLA TORTILI;~~~G .39
£7·UP ~:::..:..·. ••o:::t~ 2.19 r~~~~EST OAY PIES HO/ ~c .• 29
r ORANGE
JUICE
l.Jdv Lee , ..... 249
pie ORANGE 75
d> ~~~~~av 12 o z can e
FfOZl'fl conCfri:rare
HOMOGENIZED 195 MILK
l lOy lff (;al Btl
r ~? .. Y.~~!_YOCURT 101 ,., .39
r ~!~~~~l!EVERAGE • 01 '" • 2 5 r GOLD 'N SOFT MARCA~~~~ ... 7 5
r ~~~~ET CHICKE~101 tt • 2.49
r~~s~~.?.I,~~~.~:... 1 89 C•.,..lllfHOlr~lVl'HOrtPll'f•\ H')O/ *"' •
r~~~1;,~~,~~~NERS ""' •o• .97
r ;~~c~;r:!.1,~!S •1 ,,, '°' 1 .39
!LADY LEE VEGETABLES nrOl(N(~f,..o\TON ('A.Ur~-""1(f'lfA.' 79
09 UAll"~ ~fl 01 fA •
~ROSH
~HASHANAH
Happy New Year to
our Jewish friends.
~!~TINE CRACKERS ''"'""' .59 r ~~::~~~~~;EPPER~~;: .99 OV~ "' lff" t•tOft" CIOn flrUMlv ~IJ<ti•.lnlfft\ CM\11 l)tK" tf\ b"
tfffl(f•Vt Wf"C1Nl'WUY \"'t 7 fr'NV h •VIAf \f"Ot t \ '"'
~.~~~~1~PLE JUIS~1 ~" 1 .49
Rose
Arce
SAVED
SS.41
I h-Lucl.y 10111 t•t., ,.,. totel 11
,,, .. nth•t
•u'1'1J'M•t••1 nn f~ft
••~ Ot (()mto•r•b•111 ll~m• sse )l
O•t 10~.r· AuQ II '~'
'"''"'"'••I -t••·•• •.,• The Discount Supermarket
Produce
Summer Fresh
Quality
COLDEN ... 27 BANANAS
Ripe llHOV to Ut
... 39 BARTLETT
PEARS
Urgf US No 1
CASABA ... 09 MELONS
()flKIOU\
SOLID ·~,.19 CUCUMBERS
largt Firm
LARGE BELL ".29 PEPPERS
Fresh Cmp
FRESH 39 ~~~,!! BEANS10 •
HOUSEHOLD & PET
f" SPILL-MATE 65 A !?e:WEL S 1s Sf ~011 e
f" NICE 'N SOFT 89
A r~~~E no Sf Pkg •
4 Pao •ssoneo Of 11ccf'ln
!LADY LEE LUNCH B!?.s .. , 1.19
!~eo SANDWICH BA.~~."' .89
! ~.~!.E KING D 1101.,.1.99
r~~W STAIN RE~~~1.67
IA7' P' Key Buys ~ i mean extra savings.
t<(''f' n •• ,~ ... 11• '""" ,.,.1, i h• '"""the•• Pv~,yo.r1.,.
I•" • &l•I f"'\' l f u~11ll ,11•,1r ft· I,, .. ,,
h•n'p~ t.Uy t tiff oh 1'tut' ,111 ''°"1th t u
t'• f•Jll1111tcll 11H11 l11t'•t'!, Vc.111 II f1n.J hu11t.Jrt·O~ •Jf
K•~v f.iuv •t•'•tt~ ''"•·•-. ''"''' vuu 'tit•J'
LIQUOR, BEER & WINE
!~,!OON'S GIN '""' '" 8.99
!8!,~~~T BOU~~~.~" 7.59
{~~.~~!\~'S V.~. '""'' 16.99
' r TAYLOR WINES
'*'"(WHllthi1U ~f '°''""'' 2 79 ,,. ....... , , , ', ... ,, .
r~?!!~~!E~ALKE~''"'" 12.99
r ~~ GEORGE SCO~~~'" 5 .89
I ~.~~~Y!,,ROOK B~.~ 8.~
r ~~~~VERT'1\•'" ••l 10.99
l~2!BEL BRANDY ,,.,. I I\ 5.99
· I~t~~~Us>.~~!o~" 12.79
£BURG!~ ~EER ..• ,0:',=2.99
r ~.~~~.l!!'.~~NHAR~,'! ~~~2 .49
' ," ·b
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept 7, 1983 -.
New wine regulation designed to guarantee quality
. . -
The Bureau of Al-
cohol, Tob6cco and Fire-
anns "(ATF) it the gov-
ernment agency respon-
lible for policing the
wine industry. designing
and enforcing regu-
lations, and generally
playing bureaucratic
regulator.
One of the newest
regulations went into ef-
fect Jan. 1, and requires
that all varietall y labeled
wines be a minimum of
75 percent the named
variety.
Sounds like a guaran-
1 tee of quality for con-
sumers, doesn't it? And
in most cases it is.
In a couple of instances
it ii not.
One category in par-
ticular, Cabernet
Sauvignon, is a case in
point. While many
Cabernet Sauvignon
wines are 100 percent
varietal, thereby making
the 75 percent rule a
moot point, other fine
Cabernet Sauvignons
produced over the years
in California have been
nowhere near the re-
quired percent.age.
Cabernet Suavignon,
you see, is a member of a
family of grapes grown
in the Bordeaux region
of France, which in-
cludes Merlot, Cabernet
Franc, Malbec and Petit
Verdot.
None of the most
famous and expensive
wines of Bordeaux are
anything like 100 per-
ce nt Cabern e t
Sauvignon. Most are
blends of at least three of
these grapes, a few all
five.
·.The idea of the 75
percent requirement
wu to insure the wine
would taste like the
named grape and to pre-
vent unscrupulous
producers from using
cheap blending grapes
under the name of an
expensive variety.
Well and good except
that no one ever accused
the French of "blending
down" by using the vari-
oua Bocdeaux grapes,
and in fact such is not the
<:Me. They use the vari-
.oua grapes to add dil-
fere nt flavors and
character to the wine.
Depending on the vin-
tage the producer will
actually change the per-
centage of the different
grapes in the blend.
Because of the n ew
regulation, California
producers no longer
have that freedom, un-
less they want to list all
three, four or five var-
Miies as the name of the
wine, and all the names,
by r~tion, would
have to be printed in the
same me type. It's a
marketing man's night-
mare, so most of the
wineries are changing
their blends rather than
confuse the label, and
therefore the conswner.
I have a simple solu-
tion. and lt should please
the truth in labeling
advocates, because it
calla for 100 percent var-
ietal content instead of
simply 75 pen:ent.
For yean Americana
halve referred to wines
made in the Bordeawc
atyle , Cabe rn et
' Sauvignon in othM
W.ords, aa simply ''C.abemet .••
1 ptop09e tha t the gov-
emmel\l ea'f bllah a new
Ctl of wtne to be e' .,, j (u\ ~\hat ~
Serve Brie warm
Set whole whttl of
Brie tn tha11ow pen and
w.rm throuah on Jow
1-t ln own. -serve wt th
aliaed fl"Mh C.Ufomia
nectarinet and bread or
cncken. •
•
·'
"Cabem~t,'' and that ll
be defined as a wine
produced entirely from
any of the five re-
cognized members of the
Bordeaux family of
grapes. the five men-
tioned earlier in this
column. Not even one
percent of any other
variety could go into the
blend.
Conceivably then, a
winemaker would have
the flexibility to create a
wine that would be equal
20 percent portiorui of
the named varieties, or
could m ore like l y
produce a wine that
would be 60 percent
Cabernet Sauvignon, 30
percent Merlot and 10
percent Cubem et Franc.
Caber n e t
S auvigno n -M e rl o t
blends outside the 75-25
parameter have given us
some of our finest claret
style wines in this coun-
try, but the regulators
have tied the hands of
M ead on Wine
By Jerry D. Mead
winemakers to where
such wines are no longer
possible.
There is no reason
based on quality to blend
more than 25 percent of
other grapes to such
varieties as Chenin
Blanc, Chardonnay, Zin-
fandel, Pinot Noir or
Petite Sirah, but it does
mak e sense f or
"Cabernet."
1 don't usually ask for
comments or opinions,
but I'd really like to hear
some on this proposal,
from both consumers
and wineries. Write to:
Mead on Wine, P.O . Box
7244, San Francisco,
94120.
WHITE ZIN WIN. It's
not easy for e White
Zinfandel to win a gold
medaJ. btc-cnuse 1 suspect
there is a bit of bias
againl't this s tyle of wine
on the part of most
judges. Folks who con-
sider themselves serious
about w ine somehow
have difficulty taking
serious a wine that ls
pink and slightly sw~t.
Never mind that it's a 1 consumer favorite.
Judges should not dis-
criminate, of course, and
a panel at the recent
Mendocino County Fair
saw It• duty and
awarded the gold to one
very de.erving White
Zinfandel.
Bel Arbret 118! ~te
Zlnfudel (about $25):
One of the best of ita
genre. The palest of pink
colors, a beautiful fruit
aroma and flavor, and
only enough sweetness
to balance the wine for
casual sipping. It iB dry
enough to go with fOOCl.
Great retre.hment.
MENDOCINO WIN·
NERS: Mendocino
County doem't offer an
official booklet aa does
aome of the other fain,
but if Y°'lt'll ~nd $1 to
cover oosta r u provide
the three pages of re--
sul ts, the envelope and
the first claae postage .
Send $1 to: Meed's Men-
docino, 3415 Alemany
Blvd., San Franci8co,
94132.
iscover RuJphs Complete SelectionolBack-to-Sc oo upp es
Ral~hs Back-to-School Sale
P\US..6 Double Coupons!
~-~ ~ ~ ~~
Double
Coupon
Double
Coupon
Double
Coupon
~n':en~~~~~1~Jong.~~h a~,
~"rn'~o~u~:~:~~: ~:m~ Lnc&ude retotl•r 11ee gtocery
purchase coupons COUPOM giea1er than one dolla1 or ezceed
the vQJue 01 lh• item t.ac:IU<let. II
quo1 tobor..;-o and dauy p1oduCU
Pl..enl lhll coupon aJon11 With any one ManWoctwe11 cenls ou
coupon and gel doubl• the tOTVIQl when you purchase the ttem Nol lo lnelud• · •e•aUer· ;1tH gtocety purcha1e coupcn1 c:oupgna
~;~nu~~~~~.~lon~.~~h u~
~"rn'~o~~~~: \~:msa;:::;y: UICIU<I• ... all•·-,,.. gi~ry
pu1cho1e rouponl, coupon& &:~:u~~ f:: ~~or~~1:~~ :I:~~~~°:. fr:: ~::" L1~1::d:"i? quo1 IObocc-J and d01r·y poO<IUCU quor loboCCO and dauy pooducts
U.mll OD• Item Per
Manutactwen· Coupon and
Lunlt 6 Double Coupons Per
Cu.rlomer Coup~n£ttec:tive
Sept 8 lluu Sepl I~ 1963
Umit OD• Item Per Manutac:twen· Coupon and
Umll 6 Double Caupom Per
C\uiom•r COUJIOD EttectlY• Sept a lhlu s.p1 1•. 196.l
Llmll One nem Per
Manutactwen· Coupon and
UJD!t 6 Double Co~o.a .. r
C\ll'lomer Coupon EUectlY(J s.pt .• &b.!u Sept. J.C. ll&3
':' .59
USDA lnsp ·Golden PT•mlm·F'IO&/Oel 99 Beef Back Ribs i:r •
Zaclly rann.s-<Thlghs lb IJ9) Fryer Drumsticks ~
USDA Cho1ce.Shoulder-(Chops lb 189) Lamb Roast ~
USDA lru\>·Golden P!em1um 7 9 lb Avg Who1e Beet Brisket i:r
1.29
1.29
1.49
Golden P!erruurn.(Boneless lb l W) Fryer Breast ~ 1.59
':' 1.89 USDA Cholce.rresh Leg Of Lamb
Ralphs·! or l lb Chub Pok Lean Ground Beef ':' 1.89
USDA lrup -Golden Plemlum Beef Stew M eat ~· 1.99
I lb Sliced Bar-MBacon ~· 1.99
Back to School
Pki ollO B c sttc Pens
lacb Blc Erasable Pen
l Pac:'ll.
Blc Erasable Pens
Eacb Erasermate Ball Pen
Sctlpto-baaa.bl•tacll Retractable Pen
'4 C1 bolt Crayola Crayons
.99
.49
J39
J29
J29
I"
i"~~0Themebook .69
sSUb.;d'Th•mebook 199
3~;;d Themebook 129
1
.. ---· G!D---.·45•5• San LOO plUI Tcm with Coupon
~....,,.. Any
natware Item
<b<IYdlne > ,,_,. ~
l.1m11 On• ll•m of\d One Coupon pet cua1ame1
Coupon t11ec;11 .. Sepiembe1t11'uu Sep!erl'.lber 14 IOIJ
Meat Values
rarm•r John-.Shanll Portion Smoked Ham ": .89
USDA I.nap-Golden Pramlum-Bae!Round 179 Beef Rump Roast i:r •
Wlllon-Smolted or 1 99 Polish Sausage ':' •
UspA Ch.olce-{Small lb l-W'J>-r lb 2 49 Sirloin Lamb cnops ~· •
USDA I.nap ·Golden PTamtum 2 59 Beef Cube Steaks ':.' •
Fisherman's Cove
Flown 0.trolled·FWets Mahi Malµ ':' 1.79
':' 2.69
':' 2.99
':' 3.99
Wide 01 Colleqe Rul....acb ptp 6 9 200 Count FWer aper e
Tr~per Notebook 169
Pf:echee Portfolio 5/Sl
£acb "nex 3" Binder
11.nd•,.tacb
''Trapper Keeper''
kbolar let·A.U>ln.on. Of
"Organizer" Binder
Sis8dt-Wb Poly Binder
~°dTti"=:~kOI
3"
3"
3"
.99
3"
Double
Coupon
Double
Coupon
:,-;-n~~~~.~o~~~ll ':1
:::'.S:~ancl~~: ~~
Double
Coupon
Inell.Id• ·1el0Uer·. "11M · ·<1'f009•Y pwcha••' coupon\. cQupon.a ~:~~~ c:::: =OJ~~~ quot loOOCCO and dolly pcod~
Llmlt Ou• ttem Per
Manutactwen' CO\&J)OD cmd
Umll 6 Double Co\&J)ODI .. r
C\ll'lomer Coupon taecU ..
Sept. • tbr\l Sept. 14. lM>
@
Cheerios
--llCrJWAHlllMUT•-f•
Dairy/Deli Grocery Values
"Natural Cho1ce-
Mild Cheddar ~ 1.99
12: 1.29 V1ostc-Whol• 01 Hau
Deli Dills Mol{f0rev00f a ck i:r 2. 99
Platn Wrap U 6 1 89 Sliced Ham =-~ .
Ralphs-Aged CheddOl 3 29 Extra Sharp Cheese i:r •
Vita Pa.k:t·ChWed 1 t\n, Orange Juice ·~ • ..,..,
Gciliieo Salami ~ 1.09
Liquor Values
eo Prool
PopovVodka
Ralptu Monlclau·ba Proof Lite Gin
int!: 7.88
ini: 6.18
Frozen Food
Ralphs-Old r cuhloned 1.59 Ice Cream "'C1QI da
Ralpta.Cut or l'tench .69 Green Beans ..... ..av
. Von de /amp'S·bifa Closalcs 1.79 Bee Enc · adas Uoa
... 9
TteeSwHt·l'Y019n .99 Orange Juice u ..
OCID
Chocolate Cl.am ~°: 1.09 Mrs. Smith's Pie
Bakery Values
Rolpta-Hambwoa1 or Kot Dog
Egg Honey Buns
Ral ph.a-Colfaac:OJl.e
Fruit Swill -....
~phi-Apple~ Spica, Crumb or Honey Bran Donut ':A
Ralpl\>Plcnn. Marble. Walnut or llGilln Pound Cake i:::
.59
.99
.99
129
Lowa Scudd•I'• 1.49 Variety Pak ..... pq
Comp~u·s .37 Pork&Beans ...
OCID
General Mills 1.79 Wheaties ... .....
ltaUogga .89 Pop Tarts ao ..... .....
Del M onte 1.29 Cats up llO& -Awitsua·s ": 2.39 Raw Honey
Elrtro crunY1: Nalle s Pickles »: 1.49
Fabrtc SOttener "= 2.29 Downy
.. t=ount = 1~09 Fla-Vor-Ice
Dlahwcnhl.no o.te1gent Cascade '°~ 2.29
Produce/Floral
Sa<Don'• .... .10 Casaba Melons peo
Ill
Swffl Juicy Valencia Oranges Hb 79 ~i.av •
FrelhGrMn .39 Spinach _,, ..
"Gloe.l's Choice--! 0 1. pkg .29 Fruit Snacks OQ('b
f'r••h 1.79 Mushrooms -ID
Fram Cut 1.49 Asters -HcmoinQ-6" Staa
Boston.Fems ... 2.99
Appetite Shoppe· · ·
'Prices effective September 8 thru September 14, 1983 ::~:=~====---~ ~,.,., ~0-., ~-""llitlll4' ....._.. ... _ .... ,...... .. """ .............. ~_..., ........ .;-...,.. ~·oil• .. I• t<•-...,.. t ....... lf'k• •lf'tl-..-lelrMlllljllllU 1"'°411ert _ ......... -.. ,............. ...... -·-•f'H 111.,t \41 lftlt N-"'° • .,""•er-leetK_ ............. ._._,....,jltlift Ny"') .................................... _ ...... , ---.... lleo\. ~ I • 1711 "~ COltA mA .. Wl.. ... -.u Ml w. ..,.,. IDOi • ~~ PUlO K 'M.DICIA. I.AW ltl.U llM .... na"' ~t:-ll• &ti I. LOMA. AMm -IMI ..... fUITISlCll llACM '. auo -., AT ~ • .,. --:.__ a111a tM "-• ~ a • ..._ rcun• WM11Y •
•
..
•1e Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
Canning tomatoes not always a money-saving process·
By DOROTHY WENCJ. In the oven, P""""';ng because freezing breaks QUESTIONS WE ARE downward) lid Indicates be "'"'°""""" In the Eith°' cook and """"' ,
.._.--....ucc11,1""" may be inadequate. down the structure of ASKED a .good seal. Or, press the samejan, uaingnew lids. • • • these tomatoes or cook 1
If you have to buy Microwave oven can-fresh tomatoes, making Ud with your fingers. The lids should be -Q. Because of the them using a recipe that
tomatoes for home can-ning is not recommended them mushy. -Q. I'm new at home The lid should not give. heat.ed in simmering rainy weather some of calls for added vine
rung, you're not likely to for the same reasons Frozen tomatoes are canning and am wonder-Or, lift the jar by the lid water for a few minutes my tomatoes got moldy and/or a long cooking~. ._.___
save money if you add Ln given for oven canning, fine for use in cooked ing how you test jars for alter the 9crew band I.a before being placed on and some are overripe. ls time before canning
the cost of the jars, lids, and uneven heat dis-diahes. For short storage a good seal. removed. H improperly the jars. The jars should it safe to can these? them. The long cooking
canning equipment, the tribution is even more of time, you can freez.e -A. Test the seal sealed, the lid will come be processed in a hot -A. Do not can moldy time (for ex.ample, that I
energy to preserve them, a problem in a micro-them raw .:..._ either after the jars are cool -off. water bath for the same or overripe tomatoes. used for making tomato
and your time. wave than it is in an whole or quartered. For not while they're still • • • time as that called for for Overripe tomatoes may sauce) will kill the mold 1
However, if you grow ordinary oven. longer storage time, cook warm u the vacuum cold pack tomatoes -30 be low in acid and subject and also concentrate the 1
your own or get free You may prefer to tomatoes briefly and that creates the aeal de--Q. Out of six jan of minutes per quart if 2 to spoilage. M oldy natural acid in the '
ones, then canning them freeze tomatoes'"'instead pack them in freezer velops during cooling. tomatoes that I canned, teaspoons vinegar or tomatoes may con -tomato. With a high.er :
is a money saving idea. of canning them, because containers, then cool To test the seal, look at three didn't seal. What lemon juice have been laminate the canned acid content, the mold ia
Since tomatoes are an it's easier. However, re-before freezing. the top of the jar: a can I do about them? added, 45 minutes il not tomatoes with mold that less likely to grow in the
acid food, they can be suits are diaappointing • • • concave (indented -A.Theywillneedto acidified. latercancausespoilage. tomato product. '
safely canned using the
water bath processing
method. In this method
the tomatoes are packed
(either cold or heat.ed) in
clean hot jars, and the
lids are adjust.ed. The
jars are placed on a rack
in a large kettle with
water covering the tops
of the jars. The water is
brought to a gentle boil.
Processing time is
counted from the time
the water starts to boil.
UC food technologist
recommend that all
home-canned tomatoes
be acidified. This simply
means adding 2 tea-
spoons of either vinegar
or lemon juice to each
quart of tomatoes. (If
Meyer lemons are used,
add 4 teaspoons juice per
quart as the juiceof these
lemons is less acid.)
Adding acid reduces
the likelihood of mold. U
mold does grow, it can
use up the acid that
protects tomatoes from
growth of food poisoning
bacteria (particularly
the botulism-causing
bacteria). Thus, moldy
canned tomatoes should
never be eaten.
Is it better to pack
tomatoes hot or cold?
Cold packing Is easier
since all you have to do is
pack the peeled tomatoes
into jars. However, cold
packed tomatoes must be
procewd longer -30
minutes per quart, com-
pared to 15 minutes for
hot packed tomatoes.
Hot packed tomatoes
are less likely to float to
the top of the jar.
Heating also stops
enzyme action quickly so
that there's less like-
lihood of the juice separ-
ating i.nto a watery layer
and a pulpy layer.
It's not necaaary to
use a preaau.re canner ~or
processing tomatoes, and
in fact. pn!SSUl'e canning
can cauae tomatoes to be
overcooked.
Canning methods not
recommended for
GALA
TOWELS
BIG ROll
WHITE
34.\)-01. Detergent, Incl. 50< Off
FRESH ST ART... . ........ .
.69
.... 3.49
Both Bor, lndudu 20< Off
2-PK. IRISH SPRING SOAP .............. 88
HUGHll CORNED
BllF BRllKIT
FLAT-CUT POINT • 1 6 9 .__..___1._9_9~ CUT UI. e
PREMIUM BREAD
I SKIPPY
PEANUT BUTTER
IB·OZ. CREAMY I 39 OR CHUNK •
1-4-0z Box
LU CKY CHARMS CEREAL.. .. 1.79
22-0 1 Dish 0.lergenl. Incl. 20' Off
PALMOLIVE LIQUID ................... 1.28
Monterey
FRllH FILLITI
BUTTIRFllH
South Poufic, F roien
MAHI MAHI FILLETS
lB 169
lB 1.59
HUGHES 24-0Z.
LOAF
EA.
3-PK.' HAWAIIAN
lj·t1fJ1l PUNCH .89 8.-45·0Z. BOX
ASSORTED
4-Pock, Anor1ed. Hunt's
SNACK PACK PUDDING ....... .. 1.09
16-Counl, 815·01.
BELL VARIETY PACK ................... 1.69
OR ROASTS
BONELESS BEEF RIB
47
LB.
LIMIT 6
Pon Ready
FRllH IKllllllD
CATFISH
Mr\ frtdoy1 lm1lol1on Crob Meor
SEAFOOD SECTIONS
LB 2 59
lB 3.29
12·0 1. Bo><
4-PK. &•ORA
TISS•
\ '
ASST'D. 89 BATHROOM
LIMIT 2 •
TRIX CEREAL ... , .. 1.79 -
Springf1•ld
4Q-CT. LUNCH BAGS
BONELESS
ROUND STEAK
,
.63
USDA OR RUMP 1 79 CHOICE R~~~T LB. •
tomatoes (or any food) Foller or Zocky Form•Colif. fre\h Family Pac~ folteror Zocky f-:>rm' Col.I Frelh fom1ly Pod1 9 Jimmy Deon All f lowo•l
are open kettle, oven and FRYING CHICKEN WINGS .. LB .89 FRYING CHICKEN DRUMS LB 1.1 SMOKED SAUSAGE LB 1.99 formet John'l, I LB
PORK SAUSAGE ROLLS • EA 1.19.
microwave canning.
The open kettle
method omits the pro-
cessing step. All you do is
pack hot tomatoes in jars
and put the lids on. Otten
the jars do seal, and
many "old timers" say
they've always canned
this way and have had no
problems. However.
others have not been so
lucky and they've had to
throw away open kettle
canned food that spoiled.
GOLDEN DELICIOUS
WASHINGTON
MEDIUM APPLES
LB. The method that has
been scientifically
proven to be safe iB water
bath processing. Pro-
cessing la needed to drive US No I Tender,To'ty
the air out of the jars so 3ROWN ONIONS................... lB .• 19 FRESH BROCCOLI .....
SwHI, Juicy
lB .• 39 CRENSHAW MELONS
9.(t Bog
RAISINUTS SNACK EA .t9 l8 .• 25
that a vacuum is created
as tile jar cools. This
vacuum then sucks the
lids down tightly on the
jars and aeala them.
Procelsing results in a
stronger, more reliable
seal. When jan are not
tightly sealed, micro-
organisms can get in and
cause spoilage. And re-
member, mold growth
can lead to growth of
other, more harmful or-
ganisms.
Oven canning is not
recommended because
there's a chance the jars
may explode, poaibly
lnjuring a penon lf the Jan explode when the
oven door la opened.
A19o, becau.e of the slow
rate of heat transfer and
uneven heat distribution
TH\MG9
TODO
FOODI OF THI ORllllT--------
WIT 011111
CHUBS
40·COUNT
THICK lrABY
WIPES 109
3·0r. Pkg. Domoe
RAM•N
NOODLIS
Dynoily 12·01 BoHle
S~SAME OIL ...
Kroh <>·or . Sliced
SWISS CHEESE
l2·0unce
2.35
1 .29
Wll SON VARIETY PACK 1.49 '
ANCllNT AGI
BOURBON
86-,_00f. 1.i'HITIR
.99•
81ock & Wf,11• lobtl Ro"d W1
LONGHORN CHEESE
family Pocli 4·0 1 Bvdd1g
CHIPPED MEATS
uctUOll .. ICIAU
lB 2.49
---.69
' GORDON'S PLAIN LABIL
GIN •••• 1.7.5 6·PK.. l 2·0Z. CANS
LITER REO. OA Lnf
899 1 -48
FRESH, DELICIOUS
JA.~11111
IGG•LAllT .... lB .39
MEMORIAL
l~ GLASS CANDUI
M .S.G 16·01 Bo•
AJINOMOTO ' ............... 2.19
STOUFFER'S
LASAGNA
21 ·0Z 2 19 PKGS •
10, l To 10.8.5·0 1. Vori•llH .1.19 TOTINO'S PARTY PIZZA
10 Ot. Peas, Corn or M1•.d V..;,•lablH
BIRDSEYE VE GET ABLES... ... .. .... 49
DOWNYFLAKI wanus
.-12·01 HOMEMADE 69 ~,l'~~ OR eunERMlllC •
LOWI• YOU• IOIAL fOOD •ILL!
We ... ..,, ........ fNM ALL ether .......... rttetat -...... -. ... -... __ ...... ..,._,._ • .._c.-w...
ROSH
HASHANAH
I Co..,.• c-b""'1io•t wlh(ll •11<Mtl f!te --"' .. Ille I-11•1rchet.4 ,.., o<t'tfltlilfl ? h11i,..,
C011po•• ,.., °''"'"" l Co•••"ftty pro,,.o•to•• o•cl '"".-Y """"°,. ce-N ..... .,ted 4 O!llV f!IOOWlott~,..,·, co11po..1 ti t 1 00 •• leu co• bt doubled S ivlnhMton of •-• 9'I "'•"
11lef••••r't C9Y"" prohlbl!H t.y f.w. 6 Vol.,. ol 11'9 llllM on _.,,, "°"'*'' ~Pl' °"' lllelf jWtn 1, If ,.. tie ,... 11tetk ... I-141«1f._ •• ,.....,,, ,._., -w1.I 11rllt11111i. e11
....... ~1..i..1 .. iw ••• ~. lebo<ce ' '-"' ,rodl>m tit......, ' ~' .. '""'''
.... ,..-.... ... ~ -10. °"" .......... tNll s.,t ''· '~
T•IPLI O• UNLllllllD DOU9LI COUlt~ll Onl•I .. , ACCl•tm ,
,RICIS lfflCTIVI 7 DAYS, I A.M. THURS., 51'1. I
THltU WID., Sin. 14, 1.fl3
fACH .39'
by Gus Arriola
Gi\Ht'U :l .U
GARFtl&..P! WMlft£ ARE 'IO<J ?
THE
t',\"ll \'
('IRCl'S
~
"Which is this, Mommy, a lasso, a lariat, a noose
or a rope?"
,_ \Rll.\Dl'Kt: by Brad Anderson
"Try the s1ren ... maybe that will wake
him up!"
~0. MAAM PATRICIA
lvON'T SE IN SCHOOL •
TODA'1 ...
\ f
/
SME1S AFRAID Of
'' 0 MINUSES'.'. SMf SAYS
TMEV'RE WAITIM6 OUTSIDE
TO LEAP ON MER ...
•
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
f .7
"Someone btet us to It."
HO, MAAM, THEV DON'T
FR16MTEN ME
Hank ·Ketcham
by Charles M .Schulz
I MUST A!7MIT, MOWEVER. i
TAAT .f'VE SEEN STARTLED ~A FEW ''C Pll>5E5 '' ,....._ ___ __, ---!
l
by Tom K ~yan
E111>t Wc:st vulnur11hl1•. t:nst
<l1·11lh.
NOKTll
+KS
·~A 1162
0 76•
+ K&•2 w•:sT 1-;AST
• 63 • QI!
•;.Vold •:i K ~JO
O KJIO!l3 OAQ852
+QJ9873 +s
SOUTH
+AJI09742
•:i t087S
0 Vold
+A 10
The hiddtnK:
EHt S°'9th We.t North
I 'i I + Obie Rdble
2 v 3 • f'aew 4 •
PH• P111M f'uw
Opentnl( ltad: Ja~k or 'J.
SHOt:
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedrwtlday. Sept. 7, 1983 l&t I
GOif N ON lllDGf
BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF
or lh1• m1111y l(m1I pl11y..ri1 dt•rlarc•r rufr1•d. Thi• kinl( 11n1I
thi· llnil1'fl Sl.111·~ hn' 1m1 a1·1· nf lrum11ic plrkt•d uµ lh1•
1l11n •1l, M1•y1·r S1·hh•1f1•r or • 11111·1·0. anti d1•rhir1•r ron
l.1" i\ ni:1·li·' 1~ 1wrh111•" lh•· Lin1ll'd w1lh l wo n111r1· r11und~
h·l"t known. i\llh1111,.:h nu or lrum1111. 1-:11111 rould llf1ar1·
l1111111·r 11 you nl(lll n, h1• 11n1• h1·11rl. hul hr h11tf io 111ir1
tl1·moniclrnll'fl nl lh1· r1·C'1·n1 wilh a dl111nond on lh1· fourth
Summn Nor!h i\nll'rll'nn lrum11. N1•a:t Srhh•1f1•r ra~h1·d
<:h11m111 un,hqu in N1•w lh1• ar1· kin!{ of rluhs. :ind
Orh•an' lhal h1' h·rhn i11111· 111 ~:11111 w118 for1·t•d lo dis1·ard u
still form11lahh•. Wall'h him lll'l'llnll diamond. l>1·1·lar1•r
111nk1· n vital nvnlrirk on lh1~ rurfl·d 11 diamond to 1m•par1·
hnml lo win 11 hoard for h111 for hi~ fir~t 1•nd piny, lh1•11
ll•am. ran th1· d1·v1·n or h1·11rl:c to
West •ll douhh• or one spade• 1-::ist ·~ JUC'k.
wn1, not for pcnall11·~. ll is ";alll xlill had :i d1:1mond lo
known in tht· · lrad1 • as a 1•stnp1· th1· 1•nd IJl;iy, hut 11
N1•gullvc I >ouhl1 .. and as a only d1·lay1·d hi~ fnll'. 1>1•
tak1•11ut for th un~11l ~u1t.... rl:m•r rurlt•d th1• diomond
North ~how1•d valUt'' und nnd ront1nu1•d with th1• L>ii:ht
lhl·n raised to l(llmt• wh1·n or h1·11rts Lil 1-:ast 's 11u1•1•n.
~frhl1•if1·r m11d1· an invita~ow t:nsl wa~. down lo
lWllill JUffiJl rdltd 0 n~hut (.! ,i or h1•.trt~. w,.,, lt·d J d1,1m11nd .inll • h1· h~ to l1•;id from th"
hol1h11,.: 111111 d11111111) \ A 11
h·n:11·1 ..
N11w 111 • ruhlwr hruli.:1•
play1•r' .111 11\ .. r1 ru k 1111.:hl
11111 1111':111 a 1111 11111 ~k ,1
d11pl11·ati· pla11·r "h:ft II
1111':1111-to 111:Tk1· 11111• I rh k
n111r1• I han 1•vc•ry11111· 1·h1'. ,11111
yuu will l1•;ir11 h11" \II.ti n
1111·r1· :111 p111111 ~ 1'.111 111·
[
r~ -nrn~KJ1c:, ('$-PVrnNG SQil.E
Cf UNO~ COSMOS Ol.P ~105 IN #4 "-~f'OR~~-IU ~~~~t()ST~. 1-
~ ....
'"--I '
1~'\u \ ~-1
DH.\HHl,t :
1 rtEL 5A0. ~ll.. 'f"IS
~ 1'~ f1RS1 ~E.ME.~1'£.R
THAf 1 AAVE.1{1 1-\AO A.
CL~~ IJl'H~ ~O'(
by Ke111n Fagan
-·~~~~~~----. .......-~~
'iOOR l00N%\..OR ~~01'AA1
'b.)\IE. etf.111 MOllll~~ 1'"E.
l.~N IN '{OUR 5L~E.f'
BUA~E. 'iOIJ'R~ upt;,f.l
Ae01)1 $CM€.· f3ut WI.IA(~
1'"1toU:,'. tJE.NCN 1Ht
MU$'\ ~'I\ C:ONN£.c.1ioN?
lJf @
1· \
MA'l&E. -.OU
"M5 %\t~Ct
lll1' ~U)N
t 'OR BETTl;;R OR t 'OR· "ORSt; by Lynn Johnston
H~'e, f\ NOTE. f~ MOM, OflO.
lHERE.'.S ALL KINDS Of' STUFF
SHE'S MADE FOR US IN 1FIE.
FRIDGE-F\N"THESE
ME. "THE. O'.X>KI NG
INSTRU<TIONS.
· Jl IHit: P .\HKt:R
so-HowCOME.
)bu'R~ MAKIN1
WIF-N~R~ AN.
BEAN~'?
-~ -·--
BEANS AND I
UNDER&mND
E:ACH OTtieR.
by George Lemont
'f"He NASA 6MPL.OYMeN1"'
OFFICe: WAS O N 'T'He SE::CONP Ff...OOR, AND WH~N ~'M 'fHAI HIGH OFF 1"He 6ROUNP, ."C
csei-NOSE:Bf...E:E:PS .'
by Harold Le Ooux
\
..... -·-~ -
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Sept. 7, 1983
BACKACHE?
To All Sections
of the
Head and Face
To Throat
To Upper Limbs
To Heart
To Lungs
To Stomach
To liver
To Gall Bladder
To Kidneys
To Ovaries
To Bowels
To Appendix
To Genitals
To Bladder
To Lower limbs
COSTA
MESA
HEADACHE?
Pinched Nerves Often Result In:
Ntmbness
Low Back Pain
ShUcltr Pain
L11 Pain
Dizmtss
Stiff Neck
tip Pain
Headaches
Wouldn't it be wonderful to
fell good again?
Find out if Chiropractic can
help you. If treatment is in-
dicated most Insurance is
accepted.
•
/
DON'T SUFFER
PAIN NEEDLESSLY ... . .
CHIR.OPRACTIC
CAN BE
YOUR ANSWER
THERE IS NEVER A CHARGE
FOR YOUR INITIAL EXAMINATION
WHICH INCLUDES A SPINAL
EXAMINATION AND CONSULTATION
llllURANa CAlll WILCOMll
INSURANCE COVIRAGI ACaPTID AS llAYlllllT IN FUl.L
AUTO • GROW • WOllllllAllS CO .... IATIOll
UlllOll • MIDICAn
$ANTA
ANA
SCOTT C. McCALL, D.C.
Two Locations . Call For Appointment
2000 Harbor Blvd.
642-4532
2720 Bristol Ste. 212
966-2653
_;
Newspapers.
When the name of tl1e game Is frequency
When you need higher advertising frequency, newspapers offer advantages
over less flextble media. It's easy to trade off ad size for more frequency in
newspapers. Smaller space can generate big impact if your creative Is gooa.
And your creative Is gOQd, right? For more, call Mac Morris, vice .pt~t,
f\JationQI Sales, NeYispaper Advertising Bureau, (212) 557-1865. O call your . ·
local nevJSpaper r$Pfesentattve. • • r
-\:IfaWSPAPER ~ER .. GO FoR ll 11111 Pilat
. .
Illy Plat
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7, 1983
BUSINESS C4
STOCKS C6 ClASSIFll D C6
Could it he the Australia Cup?
By ALMON LOCKABEY
o.llr ............... challengers determined to unbolt the "holy
grail" of yachting from its pedastal. Millions
more -some from personal fortunes and
some from syndicates -have been ex-
pended to tighten the acrews.
New York Yacht Club has reportedly
dropped its protest with the declaration:
After 24 successful defenses of the
America's Cup by U.S . sailors and U.S.
technology, will this be the year that an
American skipper's head replaces the hal-
lowed "auld mug" on the pedaatal at the
entrancetotheNewYork YachtClubtrophy
room?
"May the best boat win."
Several of trhe defenses and challenges
have been frought with bitterness and
acrimony-including one lawsuit-and the
25th defense, acheduled to start later this
month, appeared to be headed in that
direction with the controversy over the
"winged keel" on Australia ll, the Australian
12-meter that was alm06t unbeatable in the
challenger trials. ,
Following the days of the schooners, the
Cup races were sailed in the formidable
136-foot J-Boats in which the challenger or
challengers had to be sailed to this country on
their own bottoms.
A lot of veteran observers of the world's
oldest sports winning streak are allowing
that this could be the year that the Cup
migrates to a foreign shore for the first time
since the achooner America brought it here in
1851 after defeating a fleet of British yachts
in a race around the Isle of Wight.
Since the advent of the stately, high
development 12-meters in 1958, some
challengers, notably the determined Austral-
ians, have had American skippers looking
back over their tranaoms in more than one
defense.
Millions of dollars have been spent by
After several remeasurements -to
make sure the yacht was a true 12-meter
under the strict measurement rule -the
In three Cup finals -1962, 1970 and
1980 -the Aussies have won at least one
{See AUSTRALIA'S, Pase C!)
o.llr,... .........
Coaches to debut
as CdM, HB mee t .
George Paacoe gets hia bap-
tilmal u a head football coech
for Huntington &.ch High
and Dave Holland retunw to
the grid wan • Corona de1 Mar'•~ atter a awri-ner at.mice • tta.. two .,..._
tenders collide ln a non-Jeaaue
duel at H~ a..cb
Friday niaht (,:80).
~
solid contender in the SUJ11et
I.ague, while Corona del Mar,
although unranked, is con-
aklerecf to be a threat in the Sea
View Leque.
"We kind of believe what
.,,.,...ll•)'lnlaboutHunt-
iJ\ltOll Beach," saya Holland.
''Tb9)' run the Delaware
wm,ed-T'and it's difficult to
defeme became you don't Re
it a Jot. ~ ia a lot of
m.l8direction and ..... block-inl· You have to be very
dltdplined to play ap1mt It."
When Newport Harbor High plays host to
Santa Ana Friday night in the prep opener for
both teams, the Sailors will rely on all
CIF-running back Steve Brazas to power the
offense.
P..:ioe took the retna at
Hun.tinctoo lfMch after Gree
Henry a1eP.J*l down f« •
flreman'• job, and HoDand f:ilJa
the void left by Dick Morris,
who resigned hia poet after a
heart attack earlier ln the year.
Monia had replaced Holland
ln 1976 after Holland had
guided the Sea Kings for nine
years.
It'• a duel between two of Orance County's powers, the
Ol1el'JI are ranked No. 2 and a
Diadpllne ia ;at what
Holland bit hia teanw of the
))Mt have been known for and
he was the offensive coordi-
nat« for Corona del Mar ln
two of c.orona·a three viciorles
over the OUen in the PMt four
years.
(lee COACllES, P"9 Cl)
Newport, Santa Ana in 'classic' opener
Ma tch upsupreme: Tars' Brazas (6-3, 220 ) vs. Saints' Sh aw (6-1, 2 0 0)
By ROGER CARLSON °' .. _, .........
An early-season showdown between
two prep football teams who will prob-
ably carry the role of favorites in their
respective leagues ia 8Cheduled for Friday
night (7:30) at Newport Harbor when the
Saints of Santa Ana invade.
...,...d, it's a match up of two of the better
l&ck.s in Southern California with
All-CIF .election Steve Brazaa (6-3, 220)
the bol"le in the Sailors' backfield, while
Santa Ana boasts Steve Shaw, a 6-1,
200-pounder with exceptional proroiae.
Bnzaa ia a multiple threat as a runner
(23 TOI last year), receiver (34 catches for
an average gain of 13.4), punter (36.0 net)
and linebacker.
Shaw, a junior. ruahed for 6S4 yards on
102 carries and is also a two-way starter,
operating at linebacker on defel'\le.
"Th.ii is the best material I've had in six
years here," says Santa Ana Coach Tom
Meiss. It should be a classic game. They
like to advance the ball with the run and
so do we.
"Shaw has all the physical tools," says
Meiss. "And, we have Gerald Meyers,
another tailback at 197 pounds. The two of
them ran a dead heat 9.9 in the 100 in the
spring." Meyers is a transfer from the Los
Angeles aection.
Shaw comes from foot.ball stock. His
dad, is Charles Shaw, who played under
Dick Hill at Santa Ana Valley before a
college stint with OregOll State. Hill is
now an assistant with Meiss. An uncle is
Wilbur Shaw, a coach at Long Beach City
College.
Newport Harbor Coach Mike Giddings
says its the sheer talent of Santa Ana that
concerns him the most.
"U we're going to be good we have to
play with a team like this," saya Giddings.
"We'll see how well we can stack up
against Saddleback, or even El Toro.
"I've been concerned with our tempo
during two-a-days. To play a team with
the speed of Santa Ana we're going to
have to come out flying. I kind of expect a
track meet, and I don't like track meets.
Give me a 7-3 win. But 40-37? Oeez ...
Although it is Santa Ana which boasts
the more experienced quarterback (Cary
Conway), mo8l of the aerial oonoerna lie
with Met., who aaya: "Newport. probably
throws the screen pass as well u anybody.
They use lt much ln the aame way aome
teams would use the blast or sweep and it's
very effective.
"And, like us, they have a lot of
returning people."
Among the Saints' returners are tackle
Ron De La Riva (5-11, 215), one of the
qu.icketlt linemen for Santa Ana in years,
and guard Meld Mataiumu (5-11, 205).
Harbor's game will not be at full
strength with the absence of fullback
Fritz HOW9er, who may miis the entire
non-league schedule becau.e of a dis-
located elbow.
Rob Glem and Ronnie Power will be
trying to fill the~ left by Howser.
The rest of the on are in good shape,
according to Giddinp, and that means it's
a beak 20~-210 pound look with All-CIF
lineman BnttKacura (6-1, 212) the key to
the lnaide on both aides of the ball.
No.stadium blues for this coach
Nobody came ln on the 1lOOCl balloon
from Saskatoon and asked me, but ...
•It wu two daya before the Rama'
.euon opener against the New York Giants
that Coach John RobiNon aald: "When a
COllCh gets to the Ndium. he realizes be ia the
lucld.eft IUY ln the world."
•Buzzie Bevul ia talking about. h.irlng a
helper and he figu.ree to need consldenble
~ deciding where the Angela JO
from here. .
•You can bet me Pittsburgh Steeler
quarterbliek Terry Bradthaw won't become
a full-time country we.tern tlnaer.
•People who work for the Philadelphia
iAclel•Y vice (lftUderit S\.mn Fletcher ia a
barNCUda but the it the da\.llhter of owner
Leonard Tc.e and therefore hu the beat
contract of them all ... a blrth certWcate. •J'lnally. the u .s. Jlootball Leque hu a
franchlte and a ooech whoee narne9 are a
8PQR!8 COLUMNIST
BUD
TUCKER
perfect fit ... Pepper Rodaen and thE
Memphia Showboats.
•A publidty aheet on Geoqe Apja·
nlan, owner of the Southern California
franch.lte ln the International Football
League, aaya he la a member of the famous
spori. family ... weU. lf he'• mated to Agle
and Ben Apjanlan. you can bet neither of
thoee sharpies are Georae'• partners in the
IFL.
•The 81-year-old lad.y who pM:kt foot-
ball wtnnen for a Tampa TV station II called
"Grandma the Greek" and hu • far better
•
w1nn1n1 percenuce than her narneMke.
•U you like 80ft .chedulee u a factor for
forecutlna a national college football cham-
pion, take a cloee look at North c.arollna .
•It takes I~ houn to play a 60-mlnute
pro football pme but the wont ot lt ia there
are about 12 minute. of .::tual ection.
•Tlcltetll were aeWnc quite unlike
hotcak.ee to the New Bncland Patriots' home
opener 10 they ccnaldered br1lllinl ln the
Bwh Boyt for• pelt pme concert ••. The
Pata mlCM alto have 8laned the BMch Boyt
ln the ltartinC baddielc1.
•At a celebrity pme at Anaheim
Stadium Ja.i week. iiipOftlCMtet' Stu Naban
put on an Anlel uniform and wu a dMd f1ncer for coach Jimmy Reeee. •Stom11ehrturnlnl quote of the year ...
~ ~ Abdul-Jabber'• agent:
''Kareem can walk anytime. He doelr\ 't nMd ( ... ITADIUM,Pq.t'I) .
Dodgers
g lad t o see
Padres g o
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Los Angeles Dodgers are
thanklul they've aeen the last of
the San Diego Padres, at least at
Dodger Stadium.
The Padres, in fourth place in
the National League West, won
their seventh straight game at
Dodger Stadium Tuesday night,
breezing to an 8~3 victory over
Los Angeles.
And the Dodgers, who still
cling to a one-game lead over
Atlanta in the NL West race, and
have had their troubles all &e880n
against the non-<:entenders, get
no relief tonight.
On the heels of the Padres come
the lut-place Cincinnati Reds.
Between them, the Padres and
Reds have whipped the Dodgen
17 times ln 30 games.
"I have abeolutely no expla-
nation," aald 1..09 Angeles Man-
acet' Tom Luorda when premro
for a reuon the Dodgen do .,
well ap.l.rwt the Braves, Pbill.la
and Cardlnala, yet fall down
against the league'•
non-contenden.
And within the NL Weet, the
Dodaen are only 33-33. ·
On Monday nliht. San Dieao
cllnched the teaOll aerlet agalnat
the Dodaen for only the aeoond
time ln the 16 years of dJviJionat
play. And with 'l\aday nliht'•
lopeided win, they're 10·6 apinlt
theDodpn.
"lt'aalwaya nice bHtinc them."
aa1d s.n Dieao Manaaer D6ck
Williama, who then dredpd lap a
Pedro Guerrero quote that in-
fwiated the Padres earlier in the
IMIOI\.
(8" DODGEM, Pa1e Cl)
Ca Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, Sept. 7, 1983
SPORTS BREAK
Ueberroth, LAOCC
may be in hot water
with LA supervisors
From AP df1patclllte1
LOSANGELES-Countysuper-•
viaors Tuesday accused the president of
the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing
Committee and other committee officials of
maneuvering "behind cloeed doors" to undermine
promises that no taxpayer money will be spent on
the 1984 Games.
Members of the Board of Supervisors,
angered over what they claim was a covert attempt
to force taxpayers to pick up the tab for Olympics
security, unanimously demanded that LAOOC
President Peter Ueberroth and other officials meet
with them next week in a closed session to explain
their actions.
The move came after top county officials said
they uncovered an attempt to quietly slip language
in to proposed state legisl.a ti on requiring the sheriff
to provide escort and backup protection for
athletes going to and from events.
Although the language w~ later withdrawn,
reportedly at the request of both the county and
the organizing committee, the supervisors' harsh
statements illustrate the bitter feelings .
Quote of the day
Mike Weisman, executive producer of
the NBC telecasts at the World Track and
Field Championships in Helsinki, when the
monitor in the TV booth showed the U.S.
flag above the Soviet flag at the medal
ceremony after Mary Decker won the
women's 1,500 meters: "When the U.S. flag is
higher than the Rus&an flag, Soviet TV puts
on a slide that says: 'Due to technical
difficulties .. .' "
Trillo'& bat ignites Montreal
Mauy TrWo drove ln four~ with a eolo home l'W'\ and two doubt
and Carlie Lea tied a team record
h1a eeventh at.raJaht victory u on~
treal routed the Chicago Cube, 8-2 Tuetday night
to keep pace with .Pittsburgh ln the .red-ho\
NaUonal League Eut ... Plttaburgh, meanwhile,
got a J.hree..hitt.er from rookie Lee Ta.ueU ., the
Piratee l10pped St. Louis, 5-0. Kea Obertfell wu
the only Cardinal to 1alve
Tunnell, getting three aingles .
. . . Rookie Toay Ga.ew and
veteran relievers 'hi McGraw
and AJ Hollud annblned on a
meven-hiner as Philadelphia
downed the New York Mets,
2-0, to remain a half game
behind Montreal and Pit-
tsburgh ... D&D.D BUardello
and Paal Hoaaeholder each
TM.l.O drove ln three runs while a
pair of errors by San Francisco shortstop Darrell
Evua contributed to six unearned runs as
Cincinnati pounded the Giants, 11-1 ... Atlanta
pic~ed up a half game on the Dodgen without
swinging a bat as the Braves' game with Houston
was rained out.
Davila's dream very hollow
LOS ANGELES -Albert SI Davita's dream of winning the cham-
pionship turned into a nightmare.
"I just prayed for him, prayed for -
him all the time after it happened," Davila,
speaking almost in a whisper, said Tuesday in a
phone interview from his home in Pomona. "I feel
really bad. I'm in mourning with his family."
Davila won the vacant World Boxing Council
bantamwelght title last Thursday night with a
12th-round knockout of Kiko Bejines, who
sulfe.red severe head injuries in the bout and died
Sunday morning at Los Angeles County-USC
Medical Center.
"It's just about all I've been thinking about
since it happened Tbunday night," said Davila. a
29-year-old ring veteran. "I just can't get it out of
my mind."
AUSTRALIA'S CUP? • • •
From Page C1
race in the best four of seven series, and in
one instance, should have won the series
except for tactical errors.
The first Aussie skipper to shock the
sailing establishment was Jock Sturrock in
1962 when he and his boisterous lads surged
past Bus Mosbacher and his crew on
Weatherly near the finish of one race.
In 1970 an Aussie crew headed by Jim
Hardy won two races against Bill Ficker, but
was disqualified in one race because of a
starting line foul.
In 1980 the Aussies beat Dennis Conner
and his crew on Freedom in one race and
came close in another. That was the year of
the controversy over the "bendy ma.st"
which has since been banned. Even C.Onner
admitted later that the Australian yacht was
faster than Freedom, but the Aussies erred in
calling for laydays. hoping for light airs that
would favor their flexible mast. The weather
gods failed to cooperate and Conner and his
crew pulled all the strategy stops to hold off
the challenger.
This year could be a different story.
oorrunittee chooee the futeat yacht for the
1983 defense? To be sure, the Valen-
tijn-delligned Liberty sailed by C.Onner had a
slightly better won-1088 record over the
10-year old C.Ourageous. but many observers
feel that C.Ourageous is the fastest 12-meter.
The conjecture is that the NYYC does
not want to defend the Cup with a 10-year
old boat, despite the fact she is a two-Ume
winner -in 1973 under Ted Hood and in
1977 with Ted Turner. The committee is
apparently relying on the experience of
Conner and his crew who outwitted the
Aussies in 1980.
So the m6ment of truth is only days
away. Can Conner, known as an aggresive
starter in mat.ch racing, outmaneuver the
Aussies in the typical merry-go-round
starting maneuvers? And, if so, can he keep
Liberty ahead or cloae to Australia II on the
weather legs and outrun the Aussies off the
wind?
Kittle smacks No. 32 for Sox
Roa ltJtUe homered in hit fifth
auooe81lve pme, a towering shot onto ~
the left field roof. and LaMarr Hoyt -
became the major league's flnt
19-game winner Tueeday night aa the ~o
White Sox took a 7-6 American League victory
over Oak.land. 1t was Kittle's 32nd of the year and
he became only the 20th player ln the 73-year
history of Comiskey Park to hit a ball on or over
the roof . . Elaewhere, Ted Simmons rip~ a
two-out, two-run triplie ln the eighth inning to
break a S-3 tie and lead Milwaukee to a 6-3 win
over the New York Yankees ... Jim Palmer
allowed eight hits in 7 ~ innings and Eddie
Marray and Rick Dempsey rapped two-run
homers as Baltimore defeated Boston, 8-1 ...
Darell Brown delivered a run-800rlng single in the
10th inning to give Minnesota a 5-3 victory over
Texas ... Steve Henderaon drove ln a run with a
fifth-inning double, then scored on a wild pitch to
carry Seattle to a 3-1 win over Kansas City.
Gray, Runkle share lead
PEBBLE BEACH -Lyle Gray of n· Menlo Park and Dick Runkle of Los
Angeles were the leaders Tueaday in
California qualifying play for the U.S.
Senior Amateur Goll Championship scheduled
later this month at Carmel, Ind.
Gray had a 2-over-par 74 on the Monterey
Peninsula Country Club's Dunes Course. Runkle
posted a 75.
Five others qualified for the national event,
including Frank Ray of Milpitas and John Zoller of
Pebble Beach who had 76s.
Jordan join& R~iders
EL SEGUNDO -Alter PAlllna
the obliptory phytdcal ex.ain ana
ala:Nnl a new three-J:.n cont.ract, offensive~ Shelby went to
work for the Loe Angelee Raiden Tue9day.
It mattered not that the rest of the Raiders
had the day off. Jordan joined a private cla. being
conducted by former All·Pro tackle (and current
Raider a..i..t.ant coach) Art Shell
The only other student ta No.1 draft choice
Don Moeebar. Shell's -1on concentrated on
aooelerated conditioning and the Raider way to
play the offeNive line.
J ordan joined the Raiders after a 't.r~ waa
consummated with the Patriots. A five-year
1tarter at right offensive tackle for New England,
Jordan was a training camp holdout and had aaked
for a trade.
Officially, the. Raiden dealt a future draft
choice (believed to be a fourth-rounder ln 1985) ln
exchange for Jordan. But aouroes with the Patriots
said this deal is tied to the exchange of reserve
tight ends Don H.asselbeck and Derrick Ramsey.
NASL's Sounders go under
SEATTLE -The Seattle m
Sounders are going under after 10
years ln the North American Soccer
League, as majori\y owners Frank and
Vince C.Oluccio announced they wo\J.ld no longer
pump money into the ailing, debt-ridden club.
'.'To loee Seattle would really hurt us," NASL
President Howard Samuels said in a telephone
interview from New York Tuesday. "We would
try to find a new owner, but it would be tough.''
Once conaide.red an NASL stronghold, the
Sounders finished the 1983 season with $1 million
in debt, said Seattle General Manager Don Paul.
The team reportedly lost $2 million ln 1982.
The loss leavM the NASL with 11 franchises,
down from a high of 24 ln 1980.
Television, radio
TV: No events acheduled.
RADIO: Bueball -Angela at Toronto, 4:25
p.m., KMPC (710); Oncinnati at Dodgers, 7:35
p.m .• KABC (790).
STADIUM BLUES ..
From Page C1
the money."
•Do you really thlnk Vin Scully sounds
like Al Michaela?
•Another thing John Robinson said
before the Rams opener against the Giants:
"On Sunday morning, I will be scared to
death."
•Uthe Olympic s printer was right when
he said good nutrition will help an athlete
more than illegal drugs, take an NBA player
to lunch.
•Advertisement on a football tout sheet
out of Las Vegas .. "Would you take a line
from someone who has never had his door
kicked in?"
•Fore longshot to make it to the Super
Bowl-as Jong as Las Vegas was mentioned
-I like the Chicago Bean at 30-1.
•When Sixto Lezcano was dealt from
San Diego to pennant-contending Philadel-
phia last week, he did not even pause to pack
a bag.
•With the good teams on probabtion. ~
Pac-10 C.Onference may want to send an
all-star team to the Roee Bowl in 1984.
From all accounts, Alan Bond has fielded a
fast 12-meter in Australia II, designed by
Ben Lexcen, that has soundly defeated all
the other challengers.
And if the Aussies win? Will it mean the
end of America's Cup competition as it haa
been conducted over the past 132 years?
Would the Aussies (God forbid) rename the
"auld mug" the Australia's Cup. Would it
continue to be sailed in the expensive
12-meters?
Last go-around
•lf betting -and losing -on football
really builds character, this country . is
already a better place to live in.
The big question in the America camp at
this writing is: Did the NYYC selection
The answers to some or all of these
questions should be forthcoming .
The Reds' Johnny Bench, seen here in San Fran-
cisco.., will be honored tonight at Dodger Stadium.
•Add look alikes ... Ra.ms accountant
John Shaw and Pittsburgh pitcher John
Candelaria.
Puritz has cause
to be Optimistic
By JOHN SEV ANO
Ol tt..0.-,_ .....
UC lrvtne's women's volleyball
team fashioned a mediocre 21-16
record in 1982. It was the same
figure the Ant.eaters had in 1981.
Usually, thoae kind of numbers
don't produce a whole lot of en-
couragement. So why is head
coach Mike Puritz so confident?
Well, there are a couple of
reasons.
First, the Anteaters lost only
one starter from last year's team.
Second, after a disastrous start,
they came back to win 14 of their
last 18, including a win over na-
tional powerhouse Pepperdine.
"Based on what INe ac-
complished last year and who is
returning, I have to be optimistic
that we will improve on last
year." says Puritz, the former
boys coach at University High
COACHES ..
From Page C1
Bobby Hatfie ld, a
right-handed junior. will open
at quarterback for the Sea
Kings, and Holland has beefed
up the front llne by moving
fullbackl Tyler Johnaon from
running back to guard.
That means it'll be J eff
Brown (6\2, 205) and Bob
Tomichek (6·0, 190) doing
most of the rushing.
There are few changce ln
the Ollen attack, according to
Pucoe. Tackle Bill Zinn (6-l,
20~) sprained an ankle last
week, but 11hould be ready to
start at strong tackle.
The OUent l1art quart«beick
b1c Lawton and AlJ-CIF run-
ning beck Denny ThomS*Jl"l ln
the b.ckfield, with Ocean
View in.nafer Brian Bumatde
( 190) fill1na the vac.ncy left by
Carl Saterfltld.
who is now starting hia fourth
tenn with the Ant.eaten.
Puritz will rely heavily on the
squad's two senion -Chria Hen-
sley and Michelle Kelley -to
lead the Anteaten, on and off the
court.
Hensley, a three-year starter
from Huntington Beach High, has
been a co~ptain the put two
years. "Chris is a top setter and
outstanding defensive player,"
says Puritz. "We need her to play
consistently and also show leader-
ship on the floor.''
Kelley, also a three-year letter
winner out of Irvine High, is "one
of the moat explosive aplkers
around.a," claims her coach. Puritz
adds he is looking for Kelley to
play strong defensively and uae
her blocking abilities along with
her offensive punch.
Also returning for the Ant-
eaters are juniors _Nancy West-
brook and Gina Ekhuck. West-
brook ls an outalde hitter, but
Puritz says he will U8e her aa a
middle blocker as well. Elchuck ii
one of the team's atronaer eervera.
UCI opens lta achedule tonight
(7:30), hoe.Ung Chapman at
Crawford Hall.
UC '"9M ltestw Merle DeoMen (S·7, MNPI\.); Olne Elehuck
15·1. Ir>; CIW'I• HeM1rt U•S, w .)I MktM1119 Mutl* IH. 11'.)J UM JeMMn ($-10, fr,I; l'fnnde l( ... y ($-7, lr.)1 ~ 1(...., ($-10,
ar.); ltettlcle O'MMe ,.... Ir.). Kim ,._
(S· 10, Mltlfl.JI ClndV •otwtt ( .. I, ,...,); lflt9t
Wlllllt IS•IO, tOllft.)1 Nencv w .. ltlfOOk (H , Ir.I.
1fU-14~
Tonltllll -C1-ne111 TIM'MIY -use. Nvon.
-el Al Cel T°""*'*" (UCLA. el .. Y)/ s.t. 14 -Ul)lvenl!Y of UIM\1 a.t. 1'-17 -TUM T-~ (T9A)I s..t.1'7~?-4 -I YU Pr't'¥1ew Tournemenl (TIAI.
Oct, 1 -UC Seftte lel"W•I C)c1, 4 -et Lovote; Oc1. 1 -el Ne¥eelll•ltfll0; Oct. I -et
S9'\ JoM Sl.1 OC'. 12 -et USIUt OCt. 21 -t i UC Sent• let1iere; Oc1.,,. -II,._...,_, Oct. 2t
-USIU.
No'#. I -el C.I $1, lllJ/Wtotlf Nov. , -
file¥1ode•ll-I Ni0¥ •• -Ywolaj JiiOY •• -t i L.-hedl $1.; No¥. It -Ul'ltwnll• of hn
Oteto; ....... 1• -C.. llol¥ la.Ol1 No<f. tt -
~ .. . Ole t•J -NCAA l'lnl ltound (TIA)J Dec.
MO -NCAA ......... (TaAl1 Ole .._ .. -NCAA Cfle~ (TIA).
Chris Hensley
Dolphins lose
two players
MIAMI (AP) Miami
Dolphins receivers Jimmy Cefalo
and Tommy Vigorito are prob-
ably lost for the season with knee
injuries, leaving Coach Don Shula
with two hard spots to fill with
the National Football League
.ea.on bal;ely under way.
Cefalo, a ata.rter, and Vlgoiito, a
key aub, un<,terwent surgery
Tue.day. Eich tore Uprnenta ln
Sunday'• 12·0 victory over the
Buffalo Billi, Cefalo while block-
ing and Vigorito at the end of •
62-yard punt return.
"It'a touch to loee two key pl.a y-en llb Vigorito and c.talo, ... ,said
Shula, who al.to lOlt two de-
fensive regulara from lut year'•
Super Bo wl roster when
linebtie:ker LatrY Gordon died
and comerbeck Don McNeal toC"e
hla Achlllee' tendon.
A team apokeanan l&ld receiver
V~ Heflin, one of the lut play-
en cut ln the pn!91!UDD. w•
called *k and Shula WU look· ma at Lou Piccone, • ~teran Nf'L wide recelwr and k.Jck re-
t\U'MJ' .who reported Mond1y for.
a tryout.
'
Angels are simply-·
playing out season
TORONTO (AP) -Per-
severance is paying off for Doyle
Alexander.
The Blue Jays' hard-luck pitch-
er won his third consecutive game
Monday night, a 6-4 dedaion, to
lead Toronto to lta third con-
aecuuve victory and hand the
Angels their fourth straight loss.
"You have to be lucky," said
Alexander, who gave up six hits
before being relieved in the
eighth inning. "I've pitched much
bet\er than I have tonight this
aea10n and lost."
Alexander, 3-8, survived con·
secutive twe>-0ut homers by Doug
DeCinces and Fred Lynn in the
fourth and was aided by a
number of fine defensive plays.
In the third inning. Lloyd
Moeeby robbed Rick Adams with
a leaping catch agai.Mt the fence
ln center and shortatop Alfredo
Griffin went high in the air to
mare a rocket off Bob Boone'• bat
in the seventh.
"l don't feel I pitched quite as
good aa I have the last two starts,••
eaid .Alexander, who turned 33
lllt Sunday. "My control wasn't
u good but· I waa able to make
~ ptchea when I had to."
Alexander also wu aided with
a 3-0 flrlt·lnning lead.
"When your team 900re9 three
runs early, well, there's a big
asset right there,'' said Alex-
ander. "AUo, I only walked one
guy.
"I mixed up my pitches and
even threw a few breaking pitch-
es when I waa behind in the
count."
Je19e Barfield singled in the
first run and, with runners on
first and !leCOnd. 9eldom-u8ed
George Bell tri pled to
right-<:enter to give the Jays their
3-0 lead.
"It's different from being in
Triple A where you play every
day,·• said Bell. "Here I sit on the
bench and if they want to uae me
I'm ready.
"When you're ln the lineup you
have to play 100 percen\ because
it's the only chance you have to
play."
The homers by DeCinces (the
l ,OOOth hit of his career) and
Lynn brought the AngelJI within
range but Garth Iorg added a run
in the Ja)'I fourth with an RBI
uc.rifice fly and Cllll Johneon
made it 6-2 wt th a two-run double
ln the fifth.
DODGERS • •
From Page C1
"They're the ones who said we
aren't going anywhere," Wi.lliarm
said. "Well, we're not. We've
sputtered. But it's nice to be able
have a say in this thing."
The Dodaen didn't have much
of a say at 8l1 against Ed Whitaon.
4-7, who pitched his tint com-
plete g4me ainoe June 21.
Rookie R.J. Reynolds got his
first major league hit in the sixth
inning. a three-run pinch homer.
and that was the only~ the
Dodgers aaeesaed against Whit-
son.
But by then the Padres had
opened a 6-0 lead qalnat la.er
Rick Honeycun, 2-2, on LWa
Salaza.r's two-run homer ln the
second, an RBI single by Terry
Kennedy in the third and a
three-run homer by Kennedy in
the fifth.
"We always 8eem to play well
against the Dodgers," said Ken-
nedy, who a1ao homered on Mon-
day night. "I guess eome of our
guys get 'up' more for the
Dodgers. There's definitely a
rivalry. rm not from Southern
California. but 1 guess people ln
Loa Angeles consider San DleSo
to be a suburb of LA."
The Dodgen' lle&IOft at1end-
ance turaed over the three mlllion
mark ~ nlaht.
New Yorker leads Mallory
By ALMON LOCI.ABEY
""!Ir .............
Local knowledge la eaid to wln yacht
races. If IO, Peter Colemt.n of Lar-
chmoo&, N. Y. haa 1alved the wind and
.e• off Newport Beach ln a hurry. Or
maybe the only local lmowlfldfe he
~la to All fast.
In any event. the New Yorker lhu
built up what appean to be an
inlumloWltable lad ln the ftnt etx of
etaht ncee belnt Nlled here for the
Mallory Cup, aymbollc of tM UnltA!d
Stet.el Yacht Racing UnSon'a men'
•lllna camptonahip.
I .
Fomw Head Pro
BIG CANYON C.C.
•HIWIA-S .. -.
1'111 ........ ......;• l1Wl1·1111
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, ~pt. 7, 1983 (~
f DR Thi RICORD Prep football schedules
~ o I • •
MAJOft LEAGUll STANDINGS
Amencan LM8"
Cnlcevo
Kan1e1Cllv
Oakland Tuu
"'""'' MlnneM>t• S..llle
Banlmort MHweukM
Detroit
Ntw York Toronlo
Boston
Cta•elena
WHT DIVISION W L
79 Sf
•S n
" 7S 6S 7S
63 7S
§9 11
5J IS
EAST OfVISION
I I SA ,. 59
77 60
16 60 17 .. ., 12 ., 1•
TueM!oaV'I Scw.t
Toro"ro 6. A1191b' 8altlmore I, Botlon I
l"ct. .m
.471 ..... .444
451 .421
.3'4
.600
.S69
.S62
.559
.546 .,
'"
Oelrolf el Cleveland. PP<t.. rtln
Mllw•ull" 6, New York 3 Mlnne101e S, Taaaa l 110 Inning\)
S.allle l, Kanau Cltv I
Chie•vo 7, 0.k141nd 6 T-¥'1 Geme1
14
14...., IS
16 ,,
"
4
5 51,1)
1
" 201/t
AMII• IForacll I 1·9J at Toronto ll.eti 11-10), (n)
801ton IBoYd 4·0 al Belllmore IFlaneoen 9-31. (n)
Oalroh (Wlkox 1·9 end Ptlrv IS·I ) e t Clf•tland (Sofen~n 9·9 end B-nn• 0-0)
2 (l·nl
Oek141nd IHelmuetler J·ll at ChlC•llO
(Koosmen 10·7), (I'll
New York (Fontenot S-2) e t MllW•ull"
(Porter 6·61, (n)
Seallle (Young 10· IJ) el KenY• Cilv
IS91111orff 10·1), (n) MlnnetOI• (Wlffl•m• 10· 121 et T ... ,
IHOOJOh 12· 12), (n)
Tlwndett'I Gtmet .t.11911• al Chicago, (nl
New York et MilwaukH. (r)
Onlv game1 scheduled
~ Atltnla
Houston
Sen Diego
Nltltlnlll LMOU.
WEST DIVISION w l
7' S9 ,. 60
12 65
69 71
San Fr•nclKo
Cincinnati
66 73
.. 76
Montreal
Pill1Duron
Phllaclell>hl•
St. Louis ChlC8llO New York
llAST DIVISION
70 " 11 ,,
10 ,,
" 61 62 16 SI IO T~V'tkSen Olevol, ~3
Montrtal I, Chlcavo 2
Pllliaclell>hl• 2, New York O
l"c1. sn .S6S
.526
.•93
.47S
.451
SIS
.SU Sil
.504 ·'" .420
Hou"on at Allen!•. PPd., rain Plltaburgh S, 51. Loult O
Cincinnati 11, Sen Francl1co I
TN9V't G•~
GB
I
611)
" 13'h
16
v,
I ....
' 13
Clnclnnali (Paslort 7·121 at ~
(RNu 10-10), In)
Chlc41DO INot.1 S·I) •I Monlrt•I (Rogers
16·91. (nl
PhlladtlPlll• <Dennv 13·6) el New Yori.
(Terrel\ 6·6). (nl
PtlltburQh (Rlloc:len 10· 111 et St Louil (Cox 1-3). In) HOUilon (Scott &·4) •I s.,. Olevo ILOl•er
1-101, (nl
Allent• 1on·1ey •·Sl at Sen Fr.nctKo
IGerrelll 0·0). In)
TiwndaV's Gtmet
CinclMall •I Oed9tn, In) Hout ton et Sen Diego
Atltnt• et Sen FrenclKO, In)
Ontv Qemet K'-uled
AMERICAN LE AGUE
81u• Jns 6, Aneets 4
CALIFOtlNIA TC>ttONTO
Oownlnv H
C•ttw Oii Sconln lb RJdlui lb 0.C~lb
Lvnnd Boone c Valentin r1
Wi"ong 2b
Adami U
Bur1a111 on Lut>rleh n Rt Jktn Dh
Tthlt
HrlllM
'0 0 0
' ' 2 0 3 0 0 0 I 0 0 0
J I I I
• ' J 2 • 0 0 0 3 0 0 0
' 0 0 0 2 0 0 0
I I I 0 0 0 0 0
' 0 0 0
G•rcl• 211 MoMOy d
8"rlleid r1 CJMtn drt
GBt11 ll
lorv lb Mullnll.Slb
U"h41w ID
8Mert111 c
Griffin n
M 4 7) Tet'mh
Sew. bv IMMt
ab r II Ill
S I 1 0 4 I 0 0
J 2 I I
l ' ' , l I l 2
I 0 0 I
2 0 0 0
l 0 ' 0 • 0 0 0
'0 0 0
,, 6 ••
Calfemla 000 JOO 010-4
Ttr..... JOO 120 00-.-• Game-Winning RBI B•rfleid
171.E-eoone. Barflelcl LOB-<aillornl•
5,Toronto I 2B-Garcla. Lvnn. CJonnM>n
18-GBetl HR-0.Cfncft (ti), Lvnn (221.SB-GBett (1 ) SF-toru
'"' " 111 e111 ••so ClllMml4I Curllt L, 1·7
SBrown
Sttlrer
T-
'2·3 6 2 1·3 2 I 0
6
0
0
s
0 0
Aleundr W.3·1 7 l·l 6 ' 4
Gtl1411 l·l I 0 0
J ,
0
1
0 I
AcJ<arS,I 1 l·J 0 0 0 0 I
WP-<urt11. Gelle!. 1-2.n A-19, 176
A~n LflOU.
on.In •• Ill.cl $4l)f I Boston 000 100 Ol»-1 I O
Baltlmora 210 o::>O 20• ...... 11 0 Ec~tnltv. Johnaon (SI, Bird (6), Nipper
(I ) ana AllenW>n, Palmer, Stodd<lrd <I> eno
NOian, OtmDMY (6) w -P•lmtf", ,.,
L-Ect<tralav. 7· 12 HR1-tltlllmor1, E
Murrav (771, OemDS<IY (4)
WMt9 Su 7, A'I 6 o.1o.1eno 010 021 O?o-. 9 2
Clllcavo 1n IOI oox-7 11 I
Coc:tlrgjl, Smith (3), Bradl9y UJ, YOUll9
"" A11'9+'ton (7) and HHlh, Kovt, Hoff"'•"
(II, 8arola1 (I), AllOlto <ti. Lamo ltl and
F~k w-tlovt, 19·10 L-<oc:tlrOU, 12-10
Hlh--Oakltno. Grou 2 1171 Chkavo. Kiltie
(l7), R. L•w 13)
Cos ell
• issues
apology
NEW YORK (AP) -Sports-
cast.er Howard Coeell, acknowl-
edging that he referred on the air
to Washington Redskins wide re-
ceiver Alvin Garrett as "that little
monkey," bas apologi?.ed for it
and says the remark was "not
remotely connected to racism."
Moreover, Coeell said Tuesday
on his New York Radio ahow, "a
little monkey" is what he calla hls
own gran<:bon.
The Rev. J01eph Lowery,
president of the Southem Ch~
Uan Leadenhlp Conference, la.id
Tuetlday night that Coeell had
called h.im to apologiz.e for using
the term during ABC'• telecast
Monday night of the Jame be-
twem the R.edakina an the Dal-w C.OWboya.
Ou.ring a replay of a Garrett
pell reception in the aeoond quar-
ter, he ea.Id Washington C.oach
Joe "Glbt. wanted to get W. k.ld
and that Utt.le monkey geta looee,
doesn't he?''
Lowery, who aald at a Tue'Jlday
1\e'W'I conference Co.tll'• ~
ment "wu • 1Up that reflected a
thought" and Mid Coed1 "ought
to ~ man enough to bis enough
to say ·1 .. 1d It and I'm IOIT)' '"
arewen 6, YMlteet J
New York 001 100 010-J 4 I Mllw•uht 010 000 23•_. I ,
Rl11"9t11, Frailer 111 elld Cer-. Vuellovk:fl, Sle ton (6), LedO (t) and Yotl. W-Slaton, 12·S L-ftklhelll, 1'·6.
HR.-...w Vork, Bavlor (It) Mltweui. ...
Brountrd (4).
TWlm S, 111....-n > MtnnelOI• 000 030 000 ?-5 9 0
Tuu 000 100 101 0-3 12 O
< 10 1N1Mei1 I Vlola. R Devis 111, W•lltn llOl end Engle, T•n41ne, V Crur (10) ena Sundberg
W-« Davia, 4·1 L-Tenana. 7·7.
Mel"lften l, •av• I
$Miiia 000 020 01<>--J , 0 Kem.a City 000 001 000-1 I O
Stoddard, Stenton l'I, V•nde 8erg (7),
C•udlU (I) and J NelM>n, Bled<. Ar"'ttrono
(I) •nd Sl<lughl W-SIOOderd, 1·14
l-Bleck, I·'·
NATIONAL LllAGUE "-drHl,~J
SAN OllEGO LOS ANGLS
Brown If
RJOMtcf Wiggins Cl
B•vecQ lb TKenncty c
Tmptlnu
LS.lair lb
Gwvnn r1
8onllle 2b
WhllMlllO
ellrlllll a rlllll
5 0 2 0 SSa112b 4 I ' 0
0 0 0 0 BRutl411 u • I I 0 5 1 2 O OBaker" 4 O O o
5 2 I 0 Guerrer lb 4 0 1 O S I 3 4 L•ndrll cf 2 0 0 0
S 1 I 0 RNRYnl ct 2 1 I 3 3 I I 2 Mer1h4ll r1 4 0 0 0
4 I I 0 Brock lb 3 0 I 0
4 0 2 I FlmPlt c 4 0 2 0
4 O 0 o Honavcll P o o o O Bream pl\ t o o o
Hooton p O O O O
Rocltt p 0 0 0 0
E•PVPll 1000
Zacllryp 000 0
40 I ll 1 T .... 1 :13 l 7 l
Sew• llV ""*"" San OMet nt OJI 100-1
l .. ~ 000 003 000-l
G•me-Wlnnlllil RBI LSelartr
<Jl.E-TKenne<tv, Gutrraro. LOB-Sen
01-•· Los AnOelel 5. 2&-6evecqut1,
Bonita, Gwvnn HR-LSa141tar (11), TK•n·
MdY (U),RNRtynoklt (I). SB-Wlggln~ ,
(Sl). S-Honavcutt . ,,. H Ill ER aa SO
San~ WllllMlll W,4·7 9
Lft .......
Honeycutt L,2·2 5 Hooton I 1·3
Rodea 2·3 Zachry 2
BK-Honaycult,
A-.41,26'.
' 6 3 2
0 0
I 0
ROdet.
NlftoNI LHtue ... _ .. cw. 2
6 0 I 0
0 I 0 0 2
T-2:36 •
ChlCt llO 000 IOI 0<»-2 5 0
Montreal Jen 210 OOx ...... 13 0
Ruttwen, Bordi <•>. Bruuter (SI, Jann•
M>n (7) ana J. Davis; Lee, S.noenon m
end Carter W-LH , 14-1. L-Ruttwan, 11•11 HR1-MontrMI. Tritto (2), Dews.on
(29).
......., 2. M9ts 0
Pll118delphle 000 100 01()-1 S 0
New York 000 000 ~ 1 3
Ghelfi, McGrew ISi. Hollend (I) end B.
Oler; Oarlll'IQ. Stak (7), C. Dlu Ill •nd Orllr W-McGrew, 2-1. L-Oarllng, 0·1
l"lrnn s. C..NIMls 0 PlttlbUrgh 020 IOI 001-S a 0
St. Louis 000 000 ~ J 3 Tunntll •nd Pena; Stuc>er, Von Ohlen (1),
Ball.ff (I) eno Porter. W-Tunnetl, l ·S.
L-sr.-r, 9-10. HR-Plt1&1>uron, Morrlton
(S).
Reds II, GIMtl I
Cincinnati 040 002 311-11 I t
Sen Francisco 000 000 I~ 1 6 2 a.renvl, Gell 16) and Bl141rdelto; H•m
mall.ff, C•lvtrt (6), LArch (7), M41r11n 191
•nd Rabb. w-a.renvl, 7· u
L-+4ernmekar, 10-t Hll~tnclnnatl.
Blier-16).
MAJOR LE AGUE LEADERS
Amerkln LNtue
BATTING (:MO et behl. BOCKls, Bo1lon,
.36J, c.nw, .,,...._ .lSl1 lr•mmetl, De·
rri)lt, .m , NIOMl>v. Toronto, 320; Simmon•.
Mllwauk .. , ..Jl'-lllUNS· Rll>llen. Belltmora, 9t; Murrev,
B•ttlmore, 97, Moseby, TOfonto, 93, 8oggs,
Boston, "· Coooer, Mllw•u!IM, "· RBI, Coooer, Mllwe!.111 ... 109; Ric•,
Botton, 1091 Wlnlleld, New Yorlc, tt,
P•rrllh, Oerrolt, 91, Armes. Bolton, t7 HITS BOCKIS. Botton, 112, C-, Mii·
waullM, 1n, Wllll•ller. OetrOlt, 170,
Rtoken, lleltlmore, 1'4, MCRff, K•n1<11
Cllv. 1'1. DOUBLES· BOCKls, 801ton, '3; McRH ,
KenHI Cllv, 3'; Rll>ken, B•lllmor•. 31; Parrllh, Oetroll, 37; Breit, K•t\Hs Cllv, 36, H r1lek , MlllMSOle, 36.
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronro, f , Fr•nco, c1ev ... nc1. I; G•nt,,..., MttweukM, a, Win·
lleld. New York, I; Yount, Mllw•UkM, •.
HOME RUNS: Ric•. Botton, 34; Kittle,
Chl<Aoo, 32: Armes, Botton, 31. Murrev.
aenrmore, t7; c-. Mllwauk... 2•;
Luzinski, ChlcAloo. 26; Wlnlltld, New York,
26.
STOLEN BASES. R H~IOll, Oak·
lend, '3, R. l aw, Chtc.oo, '4; J. Cruz.
Cllicaoo. '9; WllMlll, K•nMS Cltv. 41;
SemPlt, Teu 1, 39.
PITCHING 113 decltlont): HHS. Mii·
••ukM, 12·3, 3.37; McGreoor, B•lllmore,
11-s, 2 ts, HH ton, Cltv ... no, 10-4, '·•2. Davis. ..111more, 12~5, l. .. ; si.ton. Mii· wau11 ... 12·5, l.n
STRIKEOUTS: Morrl1, Oelroll, 200.
StleO. Toronto, 166; RlgMlll, New York,
1'2; BeMl11er, Chlceoo, 15'9; Sutctllfe,
Cleveland 140.
SAVES: Qul141f\barrv, K•nH1 Cltv, 36,
Sl•'lltY, Botton, ?7, R O••ls, MlllMtota,
26, C8UCll!I. S..1119, ll, L•dd, MltWeukH,
19.
Nan.net lfftue
BATTING 1340 al bet\): Medlocll. Pit·
t1bur9h, 322; Crur. Hou11on, .J20; 01w1on, MonlrHI, .Jll; Hendrlek, SI Louis, .311.
Murllflv, Atltnte, 313,
RUNS: Murollv, Atlante. 114; Relnet, MontrH I. 101; Oewwn, Montreal, 94,
Ev•ris. Sen Francisco, I?, SC:llmlot, Ptill•· c1etpn1 •• n.
S4MMt L.M-.
•OttOH Sfft . ..._.,Damien
Sept, lS.-Vt•la (et OC:C, II
s.t>t. n-taMlnO (t i V•lt Sled.) s.Pt. »-t IMta Mar141 Oct 1-Mater Del Ill OCC) Oct 1.-Hnt. 8ffcll' lat OCCI
Oct. 21-Ftn VIV' (Anelltlm Stea.)
Oct »-W .. trntn"er' IOCCI Nov. ~n View' lat Hll)
Nov. tl-M4lrtn41• (•I DCC)
l'OUNTAIN VALLa'f'
Stt>t. t-Meler Del lat SA Bowl)
Seor. 1~00111111 let Hin. lldl)
Stt>t. n -Mlu lon Vitia (et Wm•trl
Sept, ~vii• lal $A Bowl) Oct. 7-L9 Polv 1•1 Vth Stea.)
Oct. 1......,.1 Wetlmln•l•r' Oct. 21--EdJa.on• (Ar1tlltlm Sl•d,I
Oct. 2t-Oce•n View' (el Wmsrr)
Nov. ~rlna' lat OCCI
Nov. 11-1 Huntll'IQlon Beech'
HUNTINGTON a•ACH S.Pt. ~Orone Oel Mair
S.PI. lS.-•I Fullerton
Sept. ~ewporl Harbor
S.01. ~I LB W"'°"
Oct 7-S.rra
Oct. le-EdlMlll' Ill OCCJ
Oct. 71~en View• (•I HB)
Ocl, »-Merine•
Nov. -.1 WHtmlnater• Nov 11-f'ounteln Valtev•
MAllllNA
Sec>I. t-EsPt<en11 let Wmttrl
S.pr. IS-Servlte (at SA Bowl)
Seot. 2?-f'oothllt 1wn1m1o"er)
Sept 30-Le Qulnla (t i BIH Grdl
Oct. 7-Mllllkan IWHtmln•ter)
Oct. 1..-.-0ct•n View• (at HBl
Oct. 21-t Wettmln•ter'
Oct. ,._, Huntlnoton aucn•
Nov. 4-•Ftn. V•t1tv• C•I OCCl
Nov. 1 l-£dllOll' lat DCCI
OCEAN Vl•W See>!. 1o-e1t•ncle (•I Hin. BtaCh)
5411>1. 17-L• Quinta (llolMI Grandel
SePt. 23-Cvl>'tu lat Hin. 8etclll
5411>1. 30--Sunn't HIMS (B'*lt Pk.)
Oct. 1-1 Wntarn OCI. 14-Merfna• (•I Hin. BHCh)
Oct, 21-1 Hin. BeKh' Oct. 2t-Ftn. V•ltev' (Wmstr)
Nov. 4-EdlMlll' lat Hin, Beach) Nov. H>-Wetlmlnater• lat HBI
WllSTMINSTllR
Sec>! ~ Quinta (llolMI Grnd)
Sept, IS-Pacific•
Oct. 21-Marlna' (kl, ~di.on' lat DCCI
Nov . .._..unllnuton atee11•
Nov. tO-OC..n View' l•t HBI
'dttlotH ~Ml L.41e-Qernt.
AM """" et 7;)0 Ulllttu noted. ... "'"'---'" COllONA HL MAa Sel>I . ....._, HllftllMIOll IMcll
Seo!. 16--Sall'Cltmente 1•1 DCC)
Seel!. 2>-et ~ttrano Valle<;
Sept, 30-SeddllOKll' lat NH) OCI. 7-EI Toro• (et MVl
Oct 15-lfYlnt' (at NHI
Oct. tl-COtta "'"'' (OCCJ Oct. 2t-Unlv•nlfy• (at lrvln.I
Nov. 4-Estanc11e• la t NHJ
Nov. 10-Newl>Orl Harl>Or' (DCCI
COSTA MSSA Sfft. ~ Grendl <OCCl
s.i>r 1s-s.n11eoo l•t Gl'I Grvel Sept, 2>-i..Ot Alemttos (•I NHI
SeC>t. ~I tr.Ina'
Del. 6-$addltbeck' (SA Bowl)
Oct. 1:>-EI Tor-o• (a t NewPOrll
Oct. 21-<dM' (et OCCl
Oct. n-.1 Ntwl>Of"I Herc...<•
Nov 3-\lntverslty• (•I NH) Nov. 1o-e.1enc1e• (at NH)
llL TOttO
Sept. t-<:vl>' .. t IWHtern)
S<lilt. 16-11 MJnlon Vltlo
Sell!. 13-V•lencle (et MV)
S4111t. »-Eatartela' (OCCJ
Oct. 7~dM· (t i MVI Oct. l>-Coate MtWI' let NH)
Fri, Oct. 21-Unlva"llv' (el MV ) Tllur .. j)CI. 27-irvlne' (et MVI Nov. )-Npf H1rbor' let MVI
Nov 11-SaddteOeck • (SA Bowl)
HTANCIA
SeC>I IC>--Ocean View (et HB)
Sept l.-t.a11une HIUs l•I NHI Sec>t. 22-Sen Clemente (et NH)
S.PI J<>-Et Toro• (•I OCC) Oct. 7-Universllv' let tr.lne>
Oct. 14-al Newport Ht rbor'
Oct, 21-1 lr.lne'
Oct. 2t-Saddlel>eck' ISA Bowl)
Nov. 4-<dM' (•I NH)
Nov IC>--<ost• Meu' Ill NHI
IRVIN• S.PI. ~•11une Hiiis let MV) Sept. 16-Wooelbrldi141
Set>!. 23-Tuatln
Set>t »-<o•I• Mew'
Oct. 7-1 Newl>Of"f Harbor"
Ocl. 15-CdM' (al NH)
Oct. 21-Estancla'
M•~T MAAllOtl \tot. ...-S.nt• An.
St!>t, 17~vPf•U (at Wotern)
S.01. ~I Huntll'IQIOll B .. <h
Seot. *9-0nlverattv• Oct, ,_.,...Int.
Oct. lt-Eatllft(Je' (el NHI
Oct 21-SdClllllKll' Oct. 29-<0tle Mfte'
Nov. >-Et TOt'O' (at MVI
Nov. 10-CdM' <•> OCC)
SADOL•UCk Sept . .-SA VlllaV i.A Bowl)
S<lilt. 16-i.nla Ana (SA llowl)
$t!>I. 22-lA Hain (SA hwl)
~. »-COM' lei NH)
Oct. t-<oet• MeM' ISA aown Oct. l>-U"'wrlltv' (81 lrvtrie)
Oct. 21-1 NewPOrt Hertior•
Oct ~•taMI•' (SA eowl)
NOY . .,_., lrvlne'
Nov. 11-£1 Toro' (SA lowll
UNtV•RSITY
Sec>!. t-Woodbtldlle let lrvlntl
Sept. 16-11 Tustin Sept. 21-L111une HIH• (at lrvlnel
S.PI. 29-et Newl>Ol'I Herbor'
Ocr. 7-EtlaM le' (t i trvlMI Del. l>-SeOd~· (el lrvlnel Oct 71-EI Toro• ,., MV)
Oct. 2t-<dM' let tr.Int)
Nov. >-Co1te MtWI' let NHI
Nov. 11-lrvlne' lat trvl"" l
'denotes s.. View LH gut
1141me. Alt o•me• et 7:30.
S.Uttl Ceast LM~
CAl'ISTllANO VALL8Y
S.ot . ._.,oothlN (at Tu•llnl Sept. 16'-E•Ptrenia
Sept. 73-Corona aet Mer
SaPI. 30-•I O•ne Hiii• •
Oct, 6'-Wooabrldi>t• let trvlnel
Oct. !+-Min ion Vltlo'
Oct. 21-L-"• Hiiia"
Oct. 2t-Sen GorooniO
NQY, 4-Lagune B .. c11•
Nov. 11-1 Sen Clt..-11'
DANA MILLS Sept. ~I Oerdlln Grove
Seot. 16'-SO Unlvarslrv
Sai>t. 23-Sen M<lrcos Sept »-<a1>11trano Vettev•
Oct. 7-1 Lagune 8ffcll' Dct 1..-Wooelbrldoe' 1•1 trvtne)
Oct. 21-Sen Clemente•
Oct. 2t-Leouna Hilla'
Nov._, Bonlle
Nov. 11-1 Minion Vlelo'
LAGUNA allACH
Sept. f-C•tlfornla
Seol. 16'-SaVaMa
Ocl 21-Mlt•lon v1e1o· Oct. ,._.San Clemente•
Nov 4-11 Capl•treno Vatlev• Nov 10-WOOdbrlOOt' (at lrvlMI
U.GUNA HILLS Sel>I. ,_.rvlne lat MV)
5"Pt 16-Ettenclt (at NH)
StPt n-cJnlvenllv lat lrvlnel
S.01. ~ IMch' (t t MVI Oct. .._., Minion Vtelo'
Oct. 1.-S.n Clemente• lat MVI Oct. 21-1 Cntatrt no V•ttev• Oc1. ,._., Oena HIM••
Nov. 4-Wooelbrldoe' (et MVI
Nov. lo-Moftldalr (at MVI
wssio.. v11UO S.Pt • ....._, Tustin
Sept, 16-Et Toro
S.Pt. 2)-Ftn. Vetlev lat Watmtrl
Sel>I. it-St. JOlln Boaco
Oct ~oune Hiii>" let MV)
Oct 1 ....... 1 Caolatreno V111tv•
Oct. 21-1 Levuna BMch'
Oct :zt-Wooat>rl~·
Nov. 4-•I S.n Clemente•
Nov. ll-0 •1'1• Htt11 •
SAN CLEMENTE
S.01. J-Nlegnoll•
Sept, lt-CdM (at OCCI S.01 2?-E•t•ncle (t i NH)
Sal>I. 30-Wooabrlove·
Oct. 7-S.ntl•oo Oc1. 14-l.eune Hll11• te l Mii)
Oct. 21-et Dena Hiiia •
Oct. 2t-el l teuna BHCll'
Nov 4-Mtulon Vltlo•
Nov 11-<aPlstrano Velitv•
woooa1uoal
Sai>I 9-U"lverslty (et Irvine}
Sept. lb-•I lrvlne
SIPI. n--Ortl'llM !El Moclenel
Seot. »-e t Sen Cla"'antt• Oct
6'--<•PO Veltev' (er lrvlne) Oct. 14-0ene Hiiia • (a t trvltWll
Oct. 20-Ellwend• let lrYlnel Oct 2t-•l Mlu lon Vlaio'
Nov 4-L.eun• Hill&' (el MIJ)
Nov. 10-Legune Beach• (lrvlntl
• denolel South Cou t League game. AH game• et 7•30,
AnoelUI l .. tue
MATER OEI
Sept, t-Fln Ve1141Y ISA Bowl)
S.pl, 16'-el Ool Pue«>tos
S.PI. 13-Senl• Ana (SA Bowl) Oct 1-<resPI ISi\ Bowll
Oct 7-Eolaon lat OCCJ
Ocr. 14-al Serra•
Del 20-Plu• X' ISA BOwl)CI
21--tt St Paul'
Sept. n-Servlle ICerrllot Coll.)
StPt. 29-00wneY
Ocl. 7-1 LB Wiiton
Oct. 27-EI Toro• (•I MV)
Nov. 4-SaOdleOeck'
S.Pt. n--.1 Eblnore
-.C.r. 30-Leuuna HUia• (at MVI --CC.. 7-0•n• Hilla'
Nov )-Bl&hOP Am•t• ISA Bowl) Nov. 11>-Se<vlle' (SA Bowl)
• denote• Anvelut Le•vue geme.
Oct. 14-FC>Ullleln V•llt'I'' No¥. 11-Unlvaralfy' l•t Irvine) Oct. 1 ...... , AIHC•Oero
RBI: OawM>n, Monfrfff, 100; MurPlly,
Atlante, 99; SctlmlOt, PlllleoetPhle, 9',
GuwYww, Oedetn. "' Tl(enneav, Sen Oleoo, N.
HITS: OewMlll, MonlrMI, 170; Cruz,
Houlton, 162; Ollvar, Montreel, 160, Tllon,
Hovston, 15'; Ramlrar, Atlanta, 157
DOUBLES: Bucllntf. ChkallO, 36, OewlOll, MontrHt, 32; Knlghl, Houaton, 32,
Olivar. MonlrHI, 32; R•v, Plllsburgh, 31. TRIPLES: Butter, Alltnte, 12; Thon,
Ho...ron, 9; Crui, Houaton, I; Green, St.
LOUii, I, Walhlngton, Allenta, •.
HOME RUNS: SC:llrnlOI, f>t>lledtll>hla, 33;
OawlOll, MonlrMI, 29; Even•, San Fren·
claco, 11; Mu<l>!lv, AILllllta, 21; G"'"""e, ~v. STOLEN BASES. R•lnes, Montrtel, ...
wrw1n1, S.n Oleoo, SJ. S. sax, ~ • .,.,
WllMlll, N•• York. Cl; L•Me•ltr, San
FreMIKO, 39. PITCHING (13 decltlonsl Ot"osco, New
Yori., ll·S, 1.30, Oennv, PlllleOetl>llle, 13·6.
2.lQ, McWllll•m1, PllllbUrDll. 13·6, J IS,
Perar, Atlante, 13·6. l 78; Rven, Houlton,
ll-6, 2.U.
STRIKEOUTS: Carlton. Pl\ll•oetl>llle, 234, Soto. Ctrtelnnall, 206; McWlnlems.
PtlllburDll, 164; Vae.nt~. ~ 1561
It ye n, HOUilon, 145
SAVES La. Smltll, ClllcMO. 24. Re· araon, Montreel, 20, 8"dros141n, Atr.nte, It
Minton, S.n Fr•ncl.co, 1', Holland. Pnlla· clell>hle, II.
U.S. °"911
C•t Mew Yertll M9Wt .. _. .... s-...
lv•n Lencll (ClactlltOtioVeklel 0et .IOMln
Krie.., •·2, 6·•, 6-1; Y•Mkil No.II
IFr•nc:al <let. Aeron Krldlateln (U.S.), 6·3, 7-6, 6·3; Jlmmv Aries (U.S.I <let. Joaklm
Nvatrorn (Sweoen), 3·6, 6-J. <>·•· •-O, 6·0, Melt Wllender (Sweden) def Anclrn
Gomer IECU41dor), 6·2, •· 1, 6·2.
• ..,.... ~ Sllllltl Martina Nevratllov• (U.S.) def. S'l'lvle
Hentka (Wnl Germany), 6-0, 6-l; l'llm
Sl'trlver CU.S.1 del, Andf'ee J-(U.S,),
7·6, 6-3.
Deep ......... ••rs LANDING ("-"'1 a.di) -66 angle". S9 bau, 1n bonito, 111
1T141Ckeret, 37 rod! 11111, a yellowrall, 1
Yetto.tin tuna. ll lhe.PlftMd. I tklolack
oAv•v•s LOCK•• (....._, ._di)
-JIJ t1191t<L 131 bonito, 14 c.llc;o bin.
214 meo ..-et, 15 rock 11th, 12 1<1nd ban. t vettowteH, 231 yellowfln tuna. 2• U.k>ieck
DANA WHAltl' -277 engten. 74 IMUI,
62 bonito. I lltllbul, 517 m•cl19f'el, •
Yeltowl•tl, S9 yeltowfln tuna. 5 tk lr:>IKti, 3
dOr•do, I martin.
SAN OlllCO, H&M LMele. l'lllM<·
,,_..., ,..... lAme) -180 enoien. 60
vellowtaH. 71 bloeve tuna, t dOredo. I" vellowlln tune, in 1kll>\llck tuna. I merlln,
I bulltl lune.
NFL atandMvl
NATIONAL COMl'ERllNCI Watt
W LT l"ct. ,.,. "'" llwn• ' 0 0 1.000 " 6
Atltole I 0 0 1.000 'IO 17
New Orleans I 0 0 1.000 11 17
San Frenctsco 0 I 0 .000 17 12 ... ,
Oellet I 0 0 1.000 31 30
Ptill•dell>tll• ' 0 0 I 000 22 11
NY Giants 0 I 0 .000 6 16
St. loull 0 I 0 .000 17 11 Wnlltngton 0 I 0 .000 lO JI
~ Detroit I 0 0 1.000 II 0
GrMn Bev ' 0 0 1,000 " 31
Mlnnnota I 0 0 1.000 27 ?I
Chlcaoo 0 I 0 000 " 20
T•moe Bav 0 1 0 .000 0 11
""-"Can~
W"I ........ I 0 0 1.000 20 10
Oenvtt" I 0 0 t.000 14 10
KaMHClfy I 0 0 1.000 17 ll
S.n Olt9o 0 I 0 000 t9 " Seattle 0 I 0 ODO I) 17 •••• ... in-. I 0 0 1.000 " n
Miami I 0 0 I 000 !~ 0
NY Jet& I 0 0 I 000 29 ButtalO 0 ' 0 .000 0 12
New E nol•ncl 0 I 0 000 13 t9
C-al
Cincinnati 0 I 0 000 10 20
Cltvelend 0 I 0 000 21 21
~Ion 0 I 0 000 • 41
Pllllbur9h 0 I 0 000 10 14
~Y't Ga!M S.n Frenclaco •I Ml,,,,.tOI• !Channel 7
., ~P.m.)
S..V't~
New OrlHI>$ al RMN ~ton •t lll.e..,...
OeMt at St Loult
PlllsOurllll '' Green Bev Tempe Be~ al Clllcaoo
W•lllll\Cllon al P!llle6ef P1116
Bulleto et ClnclnMtl
Cltvetencl et Oetroll
NY Giants at Attente
$4191"' •I NY J411S
New El\Qland •' Ml•ml o.nv..-et Belllmort MeMIY'&O-S.n Oleoo ,, l(ellMU Cltv (Chenne4 7 .,
'p.m)
c .... ......,.. sc:McMt
w•ST Florida Vt. USC •t LA Coltwum (I p.m.I
Lono 8tKll st. VI, C•I Sl•ll Fullerton •t Anellelrn Stadium (I p,rn.)
OlllehOma et St•lliord °'"°" St. a t Por11and St , h 8owllng Grean ar Fr•tno SI • n
Coloredo St. 81 H8W811, n
Callfomle at S.1'1 Olevo St.
Nevede·L<11 v_, •I San Jow St .. n
Cat Poly SLO at s.tcramento St., n
Sen FraMlllCIO St .• , c et Sl•I• North
rldM, II
~ SI. et Cal Stet• Hevwerd
HumDOlclt St.•• Southern Oreoon
Chico St et St M<lrv'l
All IMlmtl •I 7:30.
lllOCKlllS
Uteh St. •I Arllort• St .. n Utah •I Arlron<1, n
E. Waslllngton •' Bolte SI., n ltxH Tech at Air Force
SOUl!lt<n Cotort do et ta.ho, n
Loulslena Tech at Ntw Mexleo St .. n
Idaho State •I T101-Et Puo, n
Montane $1 .• , Nc>rlh D•kOI•
Soutlltrn Ul•h •I Northern Artrona , n
SOUTHWEST
TUM •I Ark•n•H
Grembllng et WU. n
Ml•ml. Flt, at Houston
Minne.ore •I Rice, n
1Can1<1s al TCU. n
BYU al BavlOr, n North T U H St. et Okltllotne St
WHlern Michloen et TellaS Arllnoton. n Abilene Christian et West TeKU SI .. n MIDWHT
Wulllngron SI. •t Mlchtgen
tHlnol• at MJ1M1Utl
COiorado et Mlchloan SI.
0"*• et rnotena Iowa al low• St Northern llllnoh er Wlscontlll
Wuhlnglon et Northwestern
Notre Dame et Purdut1
Oreoon ti Ohio St
Wichita St. et Ba" St
Akron 11 E••ltrn Mlchloan, n WHtarn Kentuckv at Loul•vllle, n
Sourh Dakota St. at Orek•
E. llllnols at s. lltlriolt
Meuachuaatti et Toteoo, " W'romlllCI et HeC>rnka
SOUTH FIOrlde 51 et LSU (Cn.nntt 7 et noortl Ee•• Cerollne at Nortll Cerollna SI , n
Mernp/llt St •' North Ceroflna N•vv •t Vlrolnl• New Mexico el Tenne1..,., n Soultl«n Mtn l1sl1>1>t et Aul>\Kn, n
Altbeme et Georol• T~n PacHk et Wn t Virginie
Tulene ., Mlu lu lPOI
Miami, OhiO 11 Soutn Cergjlne
Kan1<11 St. et Kentuckv
SE Loullltna e t NE Louisiana, n
OhiO U. •I Rlcllmona Wllllem & Merv ., VMI
Wtk• Forett et Virginie Tech
Jemt1 Medi.on et A1>1>al4ICl>l•n SI
Pretl>vterlen t i Cll-, n
M41rv141no e t V•nderblll. n
OevlOM>n et Wottord
McN-St. •I SE Loul•l•na, n
llAST CIMlnnall el P..,.. SI.
Ciema.on et Bo"on CotleQe. n
Botton U. •' Hotv Crou Conrlectlcul et Rut-• Temple ti Piii
K111t St. •I Syrecuae
NorlhHtlarn at Lehigh
Kow•rd al BU<!llnell
COICl•I• 81 Armv
Odeh
Hen ere ttw odd1 comc>Hed bv Harrah'•
Reno R•ce & Sc>orU Book lor !Ills wMk •
ena'' pro fOOtbaM D•mt• encl college 11ame1 Involving,..,,.., In the AP lop Twantv.
Nf'L
•Rems 3 over New Orteent Setnt1 •••*" 10 over Houston Olla" •Allen!• F•tcont l OYer NV Gl•nll
•CfnclMetl Beng•lt 6'h over BuffeiO Billa
•Detroit lion• 311) over ClavelenO llrown1
1Chlc•oo Bt•" 2.,.., over Tempe Bev
Bucceneers xPtitladelPlllt E•olff •nd Walhl1111ton
Rtchl<IM, EVEN
Delles Cowbo'f' • over xsr. Louts
Cardlnal•
D~te rmined
Ivan L ·ndl returns a
shot in U.S. 01•cn.
aGrH n Bav Peckers I OYtr Plll•bun1n
Steelers
aOenver Bronco' 3 over Baltimore COllt
•Miami Oolonln• 10 ovtr New En11l1nd Pelri011
aNY Jet\ 11'> o•er Seallte S•ehawkt c.-....
I •N•Dr••k• -. Wvo"'lnu, no oddt 2 Olllt homo 10 over xSlenlord 3 T UH I\ ldl•
4 aAuburn 1011'> over SoutMrn Mlu l1·
\IPDI
S Notre Dome I over aPurdue
6 aMlcnl11an IS over W11ro1n111on S•ete 1. xOhlo Stet• 2' over ~egon
I. aNorth Cerollne vi Memont1 Sr., no
O<ldl
9 XSoulhern Cel 6'h over Florida
10 Georol• 11 idle
11 xArlrona "' urah. no OOO•
12 FlorlOa Sl•lt 6 unoer •LSU
13 aLSU 6 over Floria• Sre1e
14. Alabama II ovtr •GtOfgla Tech
IS •So Methodlsr v• Grem btlno, no
Odd• 16 lowe S'I> over wlowe Stele
17 Maryland 3 over aVor>aerDlll
lt. FtorlOa 61,., under 1Soutt>ffn Cel
1t Wnhlngton IS o.er •Northwestern
10 aPtnn Stele vs Cll"l(innetl. no 000\
x -Denote• llome teem
COLLEGE RANKINGS
AP top 20
Tne loo 20 le.mt in Iha lir•t rev·
uler·Huon A1.ocio1~ Pre11 college tool·
ball ootl. with llrsi-ptace voth In perenlh·
""· sea•on records and total POlnll
I Nebratke ('4)
1.0kl•homt ())
3Tou m
4 Auburn (II
SNotre Dame
6.Mlcntvan
7.0hlo State t NOfth Caroline
9.USC
IOGeorvl• II.Arizona
U Flortoe Slate
13 LSU
14.Alabema
IS.SMU
16.lowe 17 Maryland
It Florida
19 We1hlng1on
20 Penn Stall
1-0-0 0·0·0
0·0 0 O·O 0
0 0 0
0-0-0
O·O 0 I ~ 0
0-0-0 1 0 0
1-0-0
I ·O·O 0 0 0
O·O·O
l·O 0
0-0 0 0·0·0
1·0 0 0-0-0
0 l·O
TueMSay's Tninwctl0t1s
8ASEaALL
Aln«1Can LM-
993 ...
165
1S1
6S' S93
SU
561 540
S21 4S9
408
400
340
2SO
21S
193
179
152 t41
ClE VELA NO INOIANS-C•lleO ull Karl
Pa11a1, Jack Perconte eno Kevin Rnomo.ru.
lnflela.<1. Rlcllerd BtrM\ •nd Ernie
Camact>o, oltcllt", lrom Ch41rlt\lon ol the tnternatlonal Lteoua ... _..__
CHICAGO CUBS-Recolleo Oave Owen
end Fritz CoMally. Infielders, ano Joe
Carter ena Tom Granr, ourllt10trl Oon
Schulze, Reoule Pafleraon ena Alen Har11t1hefnm9f, pitchers, trom low• ol 1ne
Amerkan Auocl•rlon and Biii JOhn•on Pitch«, trom MIOlena ol t111 T~an LH 11ue
8ASKETllALL Ntlfttnll .. lletlelel Aueclt.I'-'
SEATTLE SUPERSONICS-Slonea John
Grtlo and R•Y Smith, forwerd•, end Sieve Burtr.1, ouerd, to one-vur contr•cfl.
l'OOTllALL
N8llenlll f'Mftld LMVUe CINCINNATI BENGALS-Cut Biii
.._Acker. delenatve enO Sl11ned Chrit ~ln01trom, aetenalve tno
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS-Placeo
Mer it. CotMV, .. ,., .... on Iha ln1urtd re1eoe
1111 Re-signed OwevM O'Stten, oe1en1i-e
Deck.
HOCICE Y
Ne"-! Heckn L..,911• ST LOUIS BLUES-Aca ulred Guv
Cnoulnerd, cenle<. from 1~ Celilarv
Fltmet In aacna,..,e for future con,ld~•
atlont,
14th-seeded Durie gains U.S. Open semis
NEW YORK (AP) -Jo Durie of
Britain, seeded No. 14 in the field.
advanced to the semifinal round of the
U.S Open Tennis Championships today
with a 6-2, 6-2 victory over Ivanna
Madruga-Osses of Argentina.
Durie, who reached the 1emifinals of
the French Open earlier this year for her
best previous Grand Slam event finish,
next meets the winner of the Chris Evert
Lloyd-Hana Mandlikova match eched-
uled for later today. Durie defeated
Mandlikova for the Virginia Slims of New
Jeney dtle the week before the start of
the Open
Durie'• ~on of the tournament draw
was lignJfJcantly weakened when the No.
4 aeed, fonner champion Tracy Auatln,
withdrew from the Open er the eve of her
first match in the tournament. That left
just three aeeded players in that aection of
the draw and two of them -No. 6 Wendy
Turnbull of Australia and No. 12 Kathy
Rinaldi -were eliminated in early
rounds.
In the other half of the women's draw,
best friends and doubles ~rtners Martina
Navratilova and Pam Shriver are travel-
ing on the same Open road. -again.
One year ago, when Jlravratllova was
suppoeed to win the United St.at.ea Open
Tennis Champlonarup, her pal Pam
destroyed the dream ln the quarter-finals.
Now Martina ls 1Uppoeed co wln the
Open again and lhe'• advanced a ~p
cloeer thla time, re4k!hing Friday's aeml-
flnal round.
And the~. w aiting for her again, L1
Shriver .
Navratilova continued her straight seta
march through the tournament with a 6-0.
6-3 destruction of No. 7 Sylvia Hanika of
West Germany Tueaday. Meanwhile,
Shriver, seeded fifth, upset No. 3 Andrea
Jaeger 7-6, 6-3.
On the men's aide of the draw, No. 2
Ivan Lendl of CteehoalovakJa, No. 4
Yannick Noah of France, No. 5 Mata
Wilander of Sweden and No. 9 Jimmy
Arias completed the quarter-Clnal lineup.
Lendl defeated No. 12 Johan Kriek 6-2,
6--4, 6-1: Noah eliminated 16-year-old ~ Krtclat.eln 6-3, 7 "'6, 6-3; Wilander
finiahed Andree Gomet of F.cuador 6-2,
6-1, 6-2; and Ar1.aa won 12 at.rai~t game11
In the lut two .eta to dowrf Joachim
Ny1trom of Sweden 3-6. 6-3, 8-6, 6-0, 6·0.
ln the men'squarters, Arias plays Noah
and Willihder meets Lendl.
Shriver and Navratilova arc:> t>ntered in
the women's doubles tournamPnt at the
Open and reached the quart~r-Hnals o(
that competition with a 6-2, 6-2 V1Clory
over Carling Bassett o( Canada and
lvanna Madruga-Osses of Argentina
Tuesday night.
"You want to play weU In doubles
before you play her (m singles)," Shriver
said. "Maybe she'll think you're playir\8
great and be scared.''
Navratilova, who has lost just two
singles matches s\ncc Shriver beat her
he.tt last year, laughed at that. "You can't
think that you better not glv~ anything
away ln the doubles like 'God, l can't hJt
my forehand.'" she said.
Robinson to Rams: Let's not kid ourselves Seniors sought
for softball From AP dl1patclte1
The Rama opened their aeuon with an
impressive 16-6 upeet of the New York
Olanta, but Coach John Robinson mixed ln
tome low vades alonJ with the expected
post,..-pme pral.ae Tueeday.
"1 wu mott Im~ with bow hard
we played," he eaJd •t hla weekly meeting
with report.en. ''The Jonaer the pme went,
the more certain I wu that we would win.
Our defen.e took control ln the aecond half."
But, Robbwon wu quick to add: "l told
the team Monday In a ~ting. 'Let'• not ldd
oW"IMtlves u to what we are.' We a.ren't 1oblg
to get any victories handed to us. We MVe to
oonUnue to play u hard u we did ln New
J ereey t.o get another win."
Roblnlon wu matt pleuecl with the
defeme, put.lcululy the play of 13·year
veteran tmd Jack Vouncblood, who Md two
aacka and • fumble recovery.
"l know Jeck Y~lood hu hlld • lot
of 1f8 t garnet ln hi.a ca.rMr, bu\ thlt hid t.o be
one of hla best. Jt wun 't jufi the ucka, It wu
the way he wu always involved In the
act.Jon."
" I
The front .even, conaiden.-d a rNjor
qumUon mark, played well, Roblmon Mid.
"IWQ1e Dea (end), Orea Mei.ner (nclle
tackle) and Gary Jet.er (end) all played hard
and put a lot of pre11ure on the QB .. ' he aald.
"At Unebacker, Oeorae Andrew• wu
outatandlnat and 1 ~aht Carl Ebm
played very well."
lnanalysytna theoffen11e, &bl.Non had
more oomplalnta, even though quart«'beck
Vince hrrapmo oompli ted 17 of 28 pa.aes
for 279 yardt and two touchdoWN (and two
lnt.e~ptiona).
A senior clllfJCN team is being
font\ed In CQ8la Mesa with
tryouta scheduled for Saturday,
10 a.m .. at Tewinklc Park.
Partkjpants must be.-M yc:-ara ot •ae or older The team will have
lta flm clasaiflcaUon ~Sept.
l8 with league play ft11~ to 1&art
Sept. 2&.
For further Information, phone
Manager Pctt•r Stmlluk at
9~7-2~1~.
• C4 Orange Cou1 DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept 7, 1983
DllllE CIUITY 10111111
Carmen R. Berry promot ll by Huntington S&L
ButlD&toD S.v1D1• ud Lou has announced
the promotion of Carmen R. Berry of Milaion
Viejo to vice president-regional branch manager
from the po.Ilion of vice president-savings
~r. The announcement was made by Mark
L. Wricht, president of Huntington Savings.
Berry's respon.sibllities will include overeeeing the
recently opened branch in Newland Center in
Huntington Beach and the branch ln Fountain
Valley, which ia scheduled to open this fall.
• • •
Tom Y arker of LA8una Hills has become vice
president of technology at MuclfactariD1 &
CoataldDg Services Inc., an Irvine-hued supplier
of software and ayate11'5. The announcement was
made by Dr. Patrick J. Huratt)', president and
founder of the firm. Yarker joined MCS 1" Great
Britain in 1979.
• • •
EdgemontSalea,oneofSouthem~o ·a·s
largest authoriz.ed Sbarp/Panatoalc co deal-
ers, has announced the addition of John . Scott as
controller and financial adviser. Kerry ZlriD has
joined the firm as sales manager. He will be in
charge of the Southern California sales staff. In
addition, the firm announced the promotion of
Allee E. Kotloff U> vice president of human
resources. She will work with employees in the
areas of communications and employee relations.
• • •
Randall James Forgene has been appointed
an agent with the AU1tate lnturaace Co. He will
be working in the Allstate office located in the
Sears store in South Coast Plaza.
•••
Michael J . Brown has joined The Newporter
ICOTT
resort hotel as controller, according to
Manlulll, genec;~ manager. Brown
financial responsibilities for the 26-acre rt
hotel, under new ownership by the Los Ange
Biltmore Hotel. Prior to joining The Newporter,
Bryant was affiliated as controller for the
Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim. Brown resides in
Tustin.
• • •
Klyotokl Auoclatea, an Irvine-based
architectural and planning firm, has appointed the
E.J. Lohnes & Co., also of Irvine, to implement a
public relations program. F.ciward Lohnes, agency
president, will manage the account.
• • •
Home Computer Sales Corp. of America, the
national computer marketing company that
specializes in customizing personal computer
systems for home and small businesses, has named
Mike Dekle as regional manager of Its
newly-opened Santa Ana office. Prior to joining
the Sant.a Ana office of Home C.Omputer, Dekle
was a marketing manager for McDonnell Douglas.
Financial planning seminar scheduled Mon~ay
Personal Financial and Tax Planning In Today's
Economic Envirorunent is the title of a free seminar
being presented by the American Lung Association of
Orange.C.Ounty Monday.
The seminar will be held in the American City
Bank Tower at 611 AnU>n Blvd., near Bristol. Suite
1400 (conference room) in Cost.a Mesa.
Reservations are mandatory and can be made by
calling the American Lung Association of Orange
County at (714) 835-LUNG.
10.50% TAX-FREE
City of Industry, CA, Municipal Bonds
Call Michael Mele collect at (619) 457-0131.
--------------------------------------------------
I am interested in tax-free bonds.
AddrflS
Coty Zip
Ho""' Phone Bus J>bont>
Ml.IC NOT1C£ Ml.JC NOTICE
California Municipal
lnvestOis Inc.
The Municipal Bond Speciahsts
8950 Villa La Jolla Drive
Suilel245
La Jolla , Ca ltforma 92037
PICTmOUe .,_.. FtCTmOUI ....... l'ICTITIOUI ..._.. l'lCnTIOUI ....... NAm eTATl-.T ..._ ITAnmNT MAim ITAT'lmNT ..._ ITATDmfT
The fo11owtng '*"°"' -doln( The followlnQ 1*9CJn le doing The I~ penone .,.. doing The f~ ~ le doing ~ •. bu ..... •: 11ue1--buel.-a ... WEST cOAST WOOOWORKINO, PAUL'S RESTAUAAHT #2, &02 NEWPORT BALLET ACADEMY. PAYNE SMAW. APPLIANCE RE·
3248 W8ehington eo.te M.a CA 8eect1 8MI., ANIMlm. CA. 506 St. AnOr-Rd., NewpOn PAIR, 298 Broedwey, CO.le MeM. t2e2t ' . 92804 BMdl. CA. 92te3 CA. 92$27
Thomu Patrlctc F•JbO. 324e Ollfle O. l<Jm, 29191 Bennte T•~•· 425 Rlverelde Mike Merquez, 9155 Pecltlo,
W..nlngton. ~· ...... CA. 92t2t Streott. L.lgUna Hiiie. CA, 92963 ... .,... 9Mctl, CA. 92te3 Anaheim, CA. 928().4 Thill ~ le condueted by: e Thill~ le c.ondueted by:.,, Lynde Ellel, 12M MornlngtlcM Dr., Th .. buel,_ lti conducled by: an oaner• ~ i...auna BMch, CA. 92881 lndMclual.
Tom ~albo · · Olvte ci. Klm fhle ~ i. cond~ed b'(: a Mike Mw~
Thie lllMM*l'I ... flied wtth the Thie -~ wu Ned with the 011f*e1 pert'*9Np. Thie .ietement -tlled wfttl the County a.ti of ()range County on ty CW'k ot Ou1nge County on Terry 8ander9 Couniy Clef1I ot Oret\09 County on
Aug. 25 1983. . 25, 1"3. Thi• et•t-1 WM ftled with tile AlolQ. 12, 1983.
' ~ l'lllT1'll Coun!y Ci.nt of Orange County on ~
Publahad Orange CoMt Dally Publlahad 0rllllg9 Coast Dtllty AlolQ. 12, 1983. Pvbllthed Orange CoeM Dally
Piiot Aug 31, Sept. 7, 14, 21, 1"3. I Aug. 31, 54C>t. 7, 14. 21, 1983. ~ Piiot AlolQ. 24, 31. 999t. 7, 14, 1"8. 4973-33 <&971-83 Publlelled Orenge eo..t Dally 47"43
Piiot Aug. 24. 31, Sept. 7. 14, 1"3. NIUC N011C[ ~~~.~-~~-..,,.~'l'll'C~~~-~~~-.~-~~-Mft'TV'~~r~~-4139-831-~~ ............ ---.....,..-....~~
.. _ n111-. .. _ n111-. '1CiiiiOUl8U99911
PICitriOUIWll --P18.JCNOT1C( MAmeTAW MAim eTAT'llmNT l'1C1lT10UI 8U8Mll The followlng ~ -doing The followlnQ pereon 19 doing MAm ITATW...,,. ACTITlOUl llU-11 buelneM M! ~ M : TM followlflQ pet'ION .,. doing MAim ITA.,....,.,. THE FINANCIAL PLANNING
E:NACO COMMUNICATION COM· -. TM tollowlflQ l*'80fl la doing COMPANY INTERN-' TIONAL, 3890
PAHY, 25186 Trabueo Ad., Unit 74, (Al MEGUIAR'8 , (8 ) MIRROR bu"'-M! Weeterly Pl-100, ~ BMdl,
El Toro. CA. 92930 Rn'E. (C) MIRROR GLAZE Ind (0) CINov ·s CREATIVE SERVICE. CA. 92NO .
Chin C. Lee. 2581& Trabueo Rd., FAST FINISH. 17276 o.tmter, ll"Yln., 2541 S, Main at., Sllnll Ana, CA, Blly Grout> 0.Mvelopt....,,,,mno1e1.,nt eorr.r·
174, B Toro. CA. 92630 A. 92714 92707 •llon, 3990 Weeterly ~. -"· Yultn Wang Lea. 25885 Treuoo Minor 8'1ghl Polleh Co .. Inc.. C)'lllllia Lanor• Spero. 345 w. 1•t 100, IMwpor1 BMdl. CA. 92980
Ad., •74, El Toro, C.. 92930 17275 Dellnl«, lrvlM, CA. 92714 St .. #9. Tu.tin, Ca. Thie ~tlon It concM:Md by: a
Thie bu9lneM ltl oondvcted by; an Thlt ~ .. ~ by: • Thi• butlntM II conclUC1ed by: lln eorJ>Of• · p.....-...._1 lndMdu.11. etlon. lndlvldu•I. WWWI IC. Hopp!(•. ·--·
Chin c . Lea hrry Megular. Praaldent Cynthie L. Spero Thi• tl•tement WM ftled with the rw. .telement WM ftled wt1h the Thia ttA11emen1 -fllad "''" ,,,. Thie •t•lement •M n1ee1 wl1h tile County CWk of 0r-. Couniy on Couniy CWtl ot Orange County on Coun!y Cfertl of Orenge County on County Ctertc of Orenge County on Aug. 12. 1983.
Aug. f&, 1N3. ftUIOll Aug. 25, 1983. "2:1171 Aug. 2~. 1983. F'ID77I PublleMO Oriange eo..t Deity
Publlehed 0....,. Cout o.tly Publi.nec:t Or9n09 COMI Dally Publlehed Orange COM1 Olllfy Piiot AUi). 24, 31, Sept. 7, 14, 1"3.
Piiot Aug, 3 1. ~ 7, 14, 21, lNS. P1101 Aug,. 31, &apt. 7, 14, 21, 1983. Piiot Aue. 31. Sept. 7, 14, 21. 1983. 4734-13
'4HG-13 4"8-as 4"7-13 rta.JC NOTia
ICOTLOFP:
Ray Kovacs, general manager of the Newport
Beach Marriott Hotel & Tennis Club, has
announced several recent personnel changes
among the sales and catering staH. Chip
Stuckmeyer has been named director of market-
ing, John Rotbkopf joins the business as director of
sales and John Drahos has been appointed dir~tor
of catering.
• • •
Western Digital Corp. has appointed Wyle
Laboratories Electronlca Marketing Group as a
distributor for the 11 western st.ates served by
Wyle's 10 regional stocking locations. The an-
nouncement was made in Irvine by Charles M.
Clough, group president. Western Digjt.al's line
includes controller boards for floppy and
Winchester disks and data communications.
• • •
B.J . Stewart Advertltlog and Public Rela-
tloo1, loc ., of Newport Beach. has been selected to
direct advertising and public re lations
responsibilities for Flrat Reat.auraot Corp., al.so of
Newport Beach.
Irvine Co. sells
off holdings in
Imperial Valley
The Irvine C.O. has taken a step toward further
consolidating itseli and its holdings in Orange County
by selling its entire agriculture holdings in Imperial
Valley.
The New port Beach-based firm sold 3,500 acres
of farm.land It has owned since 1953.
The property. located outside Brawley and El
Centro, was sold to Abatti Produce, Inc., one of the
largest fanning operations in Imperial C.Ounty. The
purchase price was not dlsclosed.
The Irvine Co. still owns 12,000 acres in row
crops and orchards in Orange C.Ounty. Thomas
Nielsen. company president, said the firm sold the
Imperial Valley land in order LO cent.ralire its fanning
operation in Orange County and because "we
received a very good offer."
Saleswomen to meet tonight
James Rohn will be guest speaker at tonight's
meeting of the National Association of Professional
Saleswomen, scheduled for 5:30 p.m. at the Westin
South Coas1 Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa.
Rohn. founder and chairman of Jim Rohn
Productions in Orange C.Ounty, will speak on "The
Three Steps to Success in Sales.''
Registration fee is $10 for members, $15 for
non-members. For reservations, call Penny
Boydstum, 551-5454, or Orel Ann Stevens, 586-5779.
OVER THE COUNTER
NA• ITOCll Ulw.GI
Select OTC CoreSt "'"' ""' Kemaon He w YOltK tAP) CrotTr U 'A ,.._. K•vSv
NASDAQ -tetlon1 CU11Fd 1 2\.0) 2'-KtmoeM lhowtne 1119hftl Olds Ote01 1 IS\.') 15-.. Ktnvtnt
end IOwtll off«• bY Ot 'llM lt\lt >ll'a KloOfG m61'ket maoktn •• of 4 OS-KiliNV p m. Pr!U• oo llOI '17•:12 '21·:12 Krefo1
lnctucle r•teM metkutl o.lllbA 27 17~ ltulc:kl I
mertutown or cdmm· o.tCenT II 11\'J LAlnCt ·l111CW1 tor Tuottdey, O.W.., a 1214 12~ LendllH
Stotdr aw ;r 01.Crv1 45'"' 441'1 Lent<: • AEl.. Ind 40V• OIKnCr 3~ 37¥ L11nv1 AFAProt 371'1 Oow04 2011 U Llnllrd a AVM CP 1V. I OOWGn I It lt~ '--trn ACAtcllna ll~ :n OovtOll 2114 21~ MCI a Acurev 17"'1 17~ Orltfen 37~ ,,_ MGF Oil Ad<ll•ftW 2314 23~ O\inkO 1 23 23~ MedaGE AdvROH ~ 6'11 Ourlron 13 1311, NllP91PI A"ll•ll 23 231/• EelnVnc 44 41 Malltl Atlcotnc o tt Econ Lt> 27 '" 77"9 v\Mrlon
Amaora ti I-'"" EIPH 1•-14\'J ~ulLP
AFurn .... '"' E-•· 10 II NllYPI AGret a 26"' 17 EltNuct ""' 1'1'1 NleynOt AlnGP a 6' 6'111 EIModl 14.,., ISV. McCrm ANl!m 11 .. 11"-£noCon• 41 41"o McFerl AO\iear • 9~ 10 EnrMel ,.,. 2'-Mc:Quey
ARHNI 11 11111 19·16 EnRav ·~ 41'1 Mclte.O
Anadll• 10'" 10"' Entwl1ll 154 16"4 MldnW AnoSA ,,.,. ,._ EotOll I~ 10" MdtdCt P
AnoAGd 1)0 Ill FrmG 391' 40'4 Mldlll•• ApoteC 39"9 Jfl't Fldlcor l6~ )6111 Mldlll• AP4dMI 40'1t .... Fl811Sv SIV. SI .. MIHlpr
Ar.,.nGP 61ot 1'~ FtEmpS 32 .. )31» Mlu VIG AllG&L.1 1' lt'Jo FtWnFln 4'i\ 61111 Molex I
Allenll I 12 .. l3 Fletll 321'1 321111 MonlCOI A•nltll 2''11 21-. Fllcllt a 2~ 27 MonuC 11800 1 Jll'a )9V, Fle"FI 32 .. 33'1o ,.,._,.p
eelrdCP 111111 111» Fturoc:11 12~ 111111 ""°'c"r ller>OH 14'4 14111 Fotfft0 2tlllt 2t'-MOI lu
BeurF 1 4So,t. 4~ Frt,,..CP IS 16 Mueller llevllMA 171'> 1114 FrtnllEI 1711< 171111 NerrvC a..tlne 11111 II-F,...SG 491'> 50 NOele .. UL.ti JIV. 1' Fremnt IRll 11111t Hlwti.S • lllDOCo lt\lt 20 FUIHll 32"4 lJ NY,lllrl Birdine 14"" 15 G.ftl~ > u 'lo U V. Nld\00 lllt'lcllr 7'11 Ta. GnAut 11"4 12 Hlel1A. ' lll'tvoor ,._ 1.-GllO.VU 2"' )\.It Nltl•ll •
aon.n1 n. 71'> GnltlEll 1l 14 Nike II •
llrwTom '"' ~ GrePllS< I"" ...... NCtrGI llu11911 .. "°" GrtYAdY l'lwNG BurnUPS 71111 1~ 10 Sli'I 112 NwalPS
CNL. Fin 4 4"" Glflnl>I 111» l)V. NOxetl I CP'T 16\lo I~ Gvrocl\ln ~ 6V. 0cff-
Ce4Wt$v a ff H-'"' 1 0.ttvyM CenrtdH s S14 H•mlPI 17 ....... OlllOCH CAoEn I IS· 1' 2 Herclwti. lllt Ill OllFerro
CIPSWll IS I~ HarPGP 26~ 27\lo OlltrTP .
C91ul U~ 14'-H•rlfNI 37 l7V. PCA lnl CNr'~ O ~ Hc1111t • 71 2711) Ptbllll • C11r 1 1' ?t~ HenrclF ~ 411'> PcGelt
Clwf ~ lotllt -21 21"" '"9ulr(P Cllml.M 1611') 141'1 Horl11t1 21'> 3 "-Ml
Ctlt1U" 73•4 241'1 IMS lnl 2~ 21111t PeMEn1 CIKM t i 61'4 ISC IS'°" I P9nltlr
Clrltc:o 6"'1 7 ln!U lnd 11'-'I l7 Pe®E I CttSGt ,,_ 13\'l 1111.. a Ul't U"" Petrlte cuu A , :n 121'1 lnt~Enr 1-. > Pelllllon
Ct1U 11 a ~ 24~ ~ a Ollt """ Pitre.SS
Clerk a """ 24 kltmtG• 17 171' PIOnHI CtowCP 10 IC* lnllW&tl !llllt 11 llt PlelllM
CotrTlt 1) .. 13111 IW.SOUI lJIAo "" POH i& l Colo011 S·16 -J1m1tlv 2114 27 PrHGM
CornCIH S3 ,,....., Jerico • " "... ~tevn Cm1$11r !• 1'"6 vUlffv tS-16 l\.lt p,_.. C"""Tel 14'oli 2S Jottvtt a l l ll'At l'tl$vNC Con~ep u t;, '$ K•i.$1 Ill n 2' Purtllen Cordia , ,. 26"' Kel'ter 2'-' 21.i. Qu<lkrC
NEW YOllK IAPI -Moll Kllve ov .. • ·lfle·Counltr tloctc1 ~ tw NASO Hem. Votunw lllcl Allo.911 CllO
MCI 1 l,IXJO, '°° 16.. 16111 + "' Mcl.911 wl IU,lOO 2"' , .. A~ 111,100 ~ )t\I') +I'll> lntt4 1 W ,too U \'J 44 ... EntrTc S'3 000 I 1·16 1'-' Fe~ S>.!ti!OO 1 7· 16 11'1 -7· 14 FortnS nw.700 11' tl't -Ill
MCI WI I 41S 100 ·~ •1' + \4 MtdO~n 47'\iSOO 1 S· l6 11\ + "16 Conv11t • '6 ,100 71.. 11"-+ II>
WIAlmDO .. I
NEW YOllK (AP) -Tiie folowlftQ llll -... 1,,. °"" . r,,. •. c-lef'
ttod<t -werren. ~· 1 .... 1 ...... -U4I .,,. motl --n IN motl DIM<! on oerc:ent of Ctle,_ T-v NO teQ>rl-tr tltlow 12 or IClllO .,.., .. .,..~ ---oetll-0-. .,. , ... dlfl9(9n('A -............... do•lne tlld pr1C9 •nd ,_Ui:s lat! bid prlca.
N...,,. Le•I C"9 f>CI.
I Emerv "" •"' + ''"' UP Sl ' 2 NelhF•m ,... + .. UP )7 s J R-..co ,,, + 1'-UP JU
4 EmervEn 2 + 'II UP D.l S FldMd "" 1 + 111, Up ll 7
6 E•llnil ~ + I UP 21 I ~ ~ ,.. ! 1!'!: ~: ~H
9 G~I 2 .. +7·1t UP IU
10 Berri• ..... + " Up I S4 11 Soecl•d t + lo UD 14.l 17 S•mtc un 1 + ·~ Uo 1~
13 Vlrtffft • + '" Up 14.l 14 H....C un 1t + ) 1 uo ll 7 IS Hoitt SI 1 + 1 Uo I) 6 16 lnou wt h llot + lot UP 11 S 17 WlnllM ,.,.. + • Uo 17 S
11 Tll un 1 + >i, UP 17 0
19 US$uvr '7 + s UP ll f 20 AdvCtr 7•~ + \io Uo 111 11 H.....C:lr f '1 + I UP II I n NOvt P!I 1.. + • Uo 11 I
l.l Ole 10 t 17 + l.\o UP It S 2• CME SA l S + Iii Uo 11 I
25 HmeCI wt s + "' Uo 111
N•mo I SolvEa 1 ComG•o l SVl>ft • Ro.ch WI s c.ncor n
6 llurl l
7 AR.cr ' • l...fWNln
' EITl•MI 10 N""kSC wt
" 111Ulft0• 12 TcCom 13 AGrl\OFn 14 ... , .. p
IS C.Olbv
16 Comlln1 17 lnlrnd
1' APMA ~~ta'"' 21 FOl'tlln t n OltW•I
23 CACI • 2• ElronE •
2S Conceo1
DOWNS IA~:. _c~ , .... -.,,
• -1 7 .. -.. 13 -, 1 J-16 -S·lt
f '< -I • J ... -....
l -I. 1·~ -"'•
7 -'° , .... -, ... ,.. -.. , .. -..
2 l·lt -l ·I• 7 1·1• -)·It 14~ _,I'"' 4'" -.. 3 -.... . -.,, JI .... -, • ., ,_ -)·"
IJ -I 13 -I " .. -"
Pct Ott II t
Ott "1 Ott IU Ott 136 Olf 13..3 Off 11.S Ott II t OH It 4 Ott It I OH 10.0 Off t7 Ott 9.7 Ott 9 4
Olt u
Off l.l Olf l.l Off 71 Off 11
()It 71
Ott 11 Ott 1 •• Off 7.l Off 7.1
()It 7.1 Off ..,
MUTUAL FUND LISTINGS
•
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneedll)', Sept. 7. 1933 Cl
,-------------------------------------------~~----------~~~--~--------------------~~--------STOCKS
').itl.-\ Nt11 \4tr\ N,.t
PE h(.1\. -'"'-"' '-'-Q pf ""' c """ ( '><!
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
~' ATIONI INCLVOE Tl\A0t:8 OH lH( NEW ~ORK MIOWlS I PACl~IC PBW 80910N OETllOIT ANO CINCINNA n a roe .. rxCHANOH AHO
f;(P0111£0 8Y !HE NASO IN&!INEI
S•i•\ ~'"' p f h<h ( 10..... (""
··•h•\ ~,,
,. , '"" l'"" (llQ
\41... ,...., p. ,~, (ttJ\f ~ hQ \•If>\ N•I
P l M\ tlu\t' l '"'
~.
I:
.II' ·-• -
m1m11111
Money market interest
drops to 9.69 percent
By tbe AHoclated Pre"
WASMINGTON -Beginn.in& today, f1nanciaJ
institutJona and commetcial bAnka may pay., much u
9.69 percent interest on aix-month money market
certificates, down frQm 9.78 peroenl a week a,o. Tiley
may pay u much u 9.21 percent on three-month
certiflcatel, compared with 9.28 percent Lut week.
The new yields are a result of Tue.day'• auction of
Treasury aecurltlea. in which yields were just above the
Aug. 22 Jevela of 9.18 percent for th.ree·montb bllla and
9.29 percent for six-month bills.
Pay-television firms merge
NEW YORK -The announced merger of the
pay-television companies Showtirne and The Movie
Channel is the latest challenge to the industry leader,
Home Box Office. Showtime previoualy was owned
solely by Viacom International Inc .. while The Movie
Channel was operated by Warner Amex Cable
Communications, which is owned by Warner Com-
munications Inc. and American Express Co. As a result
of the merger announced Tuesday. the new venture will
be 50 percent owned by Viacom. Warner Communica-
tions owns 31 percent and Warner Amex Cable holds 19
percent.
Mortage rates rise.in August
WASHINGTON -Reflecting a national rl8e in
interest rates, mortgage rates roee ui August to an
average 13.63 percent from 13.25 percent in July, the
government says. The August increase was the aecond
straight monthly gain. The figures are for long-term,
fixed-rate mortgages for newly built homes, the Federal
Home Loan Bank Board said Tueaday.
Republic wins wage agreement
MINNEAPOLIS -Republic Airlines has ~ached
a wage concession agreement with the laat of its six
unions. The Association of Flight Attendants tentatively
agreed Tuesday to 15 percent pay cu ta and a wage freeze
through next May to help the stugg.ling carrier out of req
ink, the Minneapolis-~ airline said.
UAW endorses Chrysler pact
DETROIT -A panel of United Auto Work.en
members has overwhelmingly endoraed a two-year, $1
billion contract that would put Chrysler Corp. workers
cloeer to parity with their counterparts at General
Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. The new accord,
tentatively agreed to by union negotiators and the
automaker on Labor Day and endoraed Tuesday by a
170-member panel of UAW leaders, would give
Chrysler workers a $2.42-an-hour raise over the life of
the contract, the UAW said. That would put their bue
hourly pay, exclusive of regularly scheduled
cost-of-living allowances, at about $12.42 when the pact
expires in October 1985.
· U.S. automakers sales increase
DETROIT -The six major U.S. automaken say
their new-car sales were up 15.9 percent in late Auguat
compared with a weak perfonnance a year ago. U.S.
automakers said Tuesday they sold 191,170 can
between Aug. 21-31, compared with 164,916 in the
period last year.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
HEW YOltK (A~ S..., Tu.day wic. -Mt of .,,. 1 s ""°'' Kllve Hew Yortl SIOd< lb~ lu uu , tredln11 nellona 11v el mot• 11\&n ti. ""* T&T 1,1.tUOO '"' + '-~1 Pltl 1,111.100 ~ + ~ ~ l:l1':l: };" t ~
Fot'dMOt 1.-,oao '2 +1"
INCOLld 1,07,,000 .._ 11'9 MlclSouUI 1,067,lOO ISV. ~ E~ t f9S,200 22-. " Gel'l Molot• 97•.700 731' I USS-M7, 100 ~ 1\o\ IBM 1'1,400 121tlo 2111 4UPofll 6'7.lOO !Ml1t + 1\o\ Coleco I 6tl.SOO 0 ..., + 2
WHAT NYSE DID
HEW YOltK l"PI S.O. 6
WHAT AMEX DID
HEW YOtlK l "Pl S.O. 6
METALS
SYMBOLS
lO Ind
AMERICAN llAOERS
•
C9 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
PUBUC HOTICE PtalC M)TlC[ Nit.IC NOTICE Ml.JC NOTICE rtllt.IC HOTICC
~COURT"' OTICE OF DEATH OF NOTICI "'TMl8'RI'• IAU .,.....,.. ACTmOU8 IJU..... NOTICE Of PUILIC HEARING TO
Ofl C~A. C04MTY l E b DI I b L-No. Ml.LAMY NOTICI Of' '°""ITU"'8 8A~ NAMI ITAT ... NT BE HELD BY THE OMNOE COUH· "'OttANOI! areace p ram e&r c • T.• ..... , ... ,.. No. F·1~ A The IOllOw!l)O pettOI\ I• lY Pl.ANNINO COMMISSION FOR
100 CMo C.Olllf Oflve WMI aka Clareacc £. Dletrlcll, UNIT CODE F T D SERVICE COM· YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A l>Ull'*ll .. : AME.NDMENT8 TO THI! LAND USE
P.O. Box 134 ANO OF PETITION TO A])• PANY u duly appolnlld TNl1M DEED OF TRUST DATED APRIL 18, (Al SINGLES REFERRAL SEA ELEMENT ANO TRAHSPOATATION
61111' Alla, Ca. 82702~1$8 MINISTER ESTATE NO undllf 11\e lollOW!ng ~bed cl.a 1883 UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION VICE, (8) SINGLE PERSONS BUSI ELEMENTS OF THE ORANQE
HOTtc• Ofl llOTIC* A l ttao• . Ol lrUll WILL SELL Al PUBLIC AIJC. TO PR01'£CT YOUR PROPERTY. IT NESS l>IAECTORY' llARTEA SER COUNTY GENERAL PLAN AND ,Ofl MOOtPtCATIOM • " TION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE. VICE, LCVE, PRAiSERCISE. l FOR RELATED PROJECTS 0-1217• To all h.el.1'1, beneficiaries, FOR c ASH AN DI OR THE IFYOU NEEO AN EXPLANATION OF Cov.,,1fY Ln .. Huntington 8Mc:tl, NO~ICE tS HEREBY GIVEN 111•1 ti.
Order 10 Aj)pOlnl credito rs and contingent CASHIERS OR CERTIFIED CHECKS THE NATURE OF THE PROCEED· CA. 828'11 ginning on S~lembef 20. 1863, !Ti.
Clllf1I ol Court .. editors o( Clarence -\.-am SPECIFIED IN CNIL COOE SEC· INO AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD Maty Ann MO ..... 19909 Covent Orange COi.iniy Pl1nnlng Com-ColllmlMlonllf of OMOI ~..... TIOH 2t24h (pt1y9ble 11 tht time of CONTACT A LAWYER Ln, Hunllngton BMctl, CA 926411 m1M1on wlll hold pul>llc MwlnOl IC to aaecull dMd on Oletric b , aka Clarence E ..... In lawf\11 ~ ol 111e Unllld On SEPTEMBER 1'4, 18113, •1 8.00 Thi• bu~ .. conclUOltd by Ill conllder Pfop<>Nt• to -" 1114 ~"611 ol Pallllon., Dietrich and penona who St1t .. I •II right, lltle 100 lnltr .. 1 A.M .• LUCINDA K TAYLOR di>• lncllvldu•I. i L.and UM Eltme"1 (LU 113-2), ano
1. NOTICE TO ROBERT B SOM· ma~be otherwise int.eres~ conveyed 10 lllld now held by II BENEFACT .. duty 1ppolnt•d Miry A MOiiet Tran1pon11ton ~)I (l 113-2). MER undllf NICI Deed ot TtUll In the Tn41M under lllld pufMJlnl lo Deed Thie 9111-1 wu llled w11fl Ille and Olhtt rellled PfOj9ell TM ()r-
2 A hMflng on thlt motion IOI' the in e wlll and/or ettate: pt~ty htteln.11• CIMcfll>ed. of Trv11 recorded May 3, tH3. A1 County ci.r11 ol Of.nge Coun1y °"'I •• Couna1 Board of SupeMlon
rellel ltqUHl.0 In lht •llllC'*I ..,.. A petition has been filed TRUSTOR· JOHN BELLAMY. lnttr No. 113-186008. ol Otftctal Re--Juty 29, 181!3. wlll hold. publlo hMl1ng to conlldet
plleltlon wlll IN held N lollow1: 1 by Jamee E. Helm, Public SUZ,ANNE G. BELLAMY C)Ofd1, ••ec;ul.cl by· RICHARD A. 1"221 1heM metter• on October 18, 1M3.
•I•: Sepl. 23, 19113, II 1:30 p.m. In Adminiltrator ln the Su· BENEFICIARY: RI CHARD c CONNER .. lrUl1of1•l. In tht office Publl•'*I Or•nge Coul Dally I. Tht Public Ht•tlng tnetudtl 11\t
Dept. 10 Al 700 CMc c.o1 .. !><'Ive ,..._, ·-c ,...._ ,...~ ·-CALHOUN ol , .... County Record• of <><anoe Pllol Aug. 24, 31. Sept 7, 14. 18113. loOOwlno Lend UM Element wnend· "'· S.011 Ana, CA. perior ~· 0 vrange '-UUJI• RECORDED Augu11 14, 1880 .. County, Slat• of Call1ornle, Will 4., 19-83 rnent propoeala 3. Suppor1tno •ttll0hmenl1 (1) "P· ty requesting that James E. ln1tr. No. ICl835 In BOOll 1370' page SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO A. County Home Pr09Wt ... (6CIO :t
p11c111on IOI' Order and Supporting Helm Public Ad.miniatrator 823 of Oflk:lll Rteotd• In the otllc4l HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH (pay-.,~'IC NOTICE acrN) 1oca1.o along SantllJQO Ca·
Dectat1llon ' ot lhe Rec;order ol Ortn09 County: •bit 11 time ol .... In la'#f\jl money I"~ "YOfl Roed norl"-1-'Y of th4t In·
Oiled' Augu11 111. 1883 be appointed a.s pet'IOnal rep-IAld deed ot trutl deacttbel the ol the Unlled St1IM) It; FRONT EN· FICTfTIOU• .u..... 1 .. eectlon of u .... 01k Canyon Roed CARLOS A.. CUESTA resentative to ad.minlater the IOllowlng TRANCE TO BENEFACT AT 221191 llld El TO<O Roed (Coote'• Co<ntt)
ORDER SHORTENING TIME estate of Clarence Ephram Loi 3 ln Btoel< 7311, of Coron• del LAMBERT. SUITE 520. EL TORO, Th 1:r--ITA~'r" dot I nd .. t•ndlng nortflerly 10 ~ ........... '4. The 1ppllc1llon !Of 111 0<d1r Dietrich (under the lndepe:n· Mar, In the Clly of Newport Be6eh, CA. 82930 Ill rlghl, Ill .. ind lnlllfNI l>ull~ 11 Uowll\O Ptt 1 ng Ciev.ilnd N•llOnal For"t. enonenlng llmt 11 gr111ted arid lhll . u per M1p ftlCOfded In 8ook 3, convevec:t to 9nd now held by It 9 • B. Glenn Ranch ( 1009 :A: Kl'•) Kennelh Thygerson , l e ft, pre ident of Fre d-Ofd« and eupportlng 11tachmant1 dent Adrruniltratlon of Et· pagee 41 end 42 ot Mltelellant001 undarllldC>NdolTru111n1t1eprop-R. JANCHILO GRAPHICS, 11126 located weet•ly 01 111e 1n1•MCtlofl may~ Mrved on Of before. tat.es Act). The petition is aet M1pe, In the otnc. ol 1he c;ounty erty 1Uu11ed In Mid eoun:r, I/Id ~='" Dr · Newpon Beech, CA. of Sanll~ cab: Roed, EJ Toro
die M ac, s tands with Philip B rinkerhoff, g~::S~ ~'1.4!!.·,.!,883 for h earing In Dep\. No. 3 at '~~~~~ldo~°F'~~LT UNOE!i\"' ~'t'~Hm'~~:.~~~~f'RNEst~~ R.1ymond J Zartlll'. 13111 Bonni. ~~·:'C0t~.,: .. ~~1=
center, president o f FCA Mortgage Securities, Judge 01111e SllP«lor coun 700 Civic Cent.er Dr., West, DEED OF TRUST DATEO Ju~30 ANO TO THE REAL PROPER'N OE· Ooone. Corona dtl Mar. CA. 921125 1ng Rinch
and Robe rt M y lod. presidenl o r Fannie Mae, Publllhed Orangt County 01.lly PllOI Santa Ana. CA 92701 on Sept. 11180. UNLESS YOU TAKE AC ION SCRIBEO AS· LOT 31 OF TRACT 1nJih~ ~·tnee• 1• CO<ldUGled l>y: en c . LOI Aliso• R-rClh 11\d 0..
, Aug 31. Sept. 1. 14, 21, 181!3. 26, 1983 at 9:30 A.M. TO PROTECT YOUR PROPER • IT 10030 AS PER MAP RECORDED IN ~ ,:,,d J Zar1111' velopmenl Perk (3411 :i: IC'")
at announcement or $2.6 billion swap or 41171>-!3 IF YOU OBJECT to the MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE. BOOK 425. PAGES 411 TO 411 IN· Thr. llll4lmlnt u nled llh Ille localed directly N•I of the El TOfo IFYOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF CLUSIVE OF MISCELLANEOUS w w Marine Corp1 Atr Sl•llon and norttt-
m ortgages for an equal amount ur morl-PUBLIC NOTICE granting o{ the petJUon, you THE NATURE OF THE PROCEED· MAPS, RECORDS Of ORANGE ~ouly2~ ~~~ 01 Or1no• County on eaeterty ol lhe Liii• fOflll Planned ------------•should either appear al the ING AGAINST YOU. YOU SHOULD COUNTY u . . Communlly. gage-backed securities. ,ICTITIO\ll IU..... h · d state ....... u ob· • CONTACT A LAWYER. The 1traa1 adcir ... and othar '2211'7 o Lyon Pt°'*1f (113 :t act•l NA* ITAftMeNT .eanng an :T"' ~ 144 Jumlne, Corona del Mer, CA common daelgnatlon, II any, ol lhe Publlllled Orange Coal\ Dall)' toceted nonherly o the lnlerMCtlon fhe following pereon ;• doing uons or fl.le written objee· 92626 rael properly detcrtbed ebova le Piiot Aug 2~. 31· Sep! 7• 14• 111113 ot sanllago Canyon Road. El T0<0
Mortgage swap
will free funds
for home loans
l>ulln ... u : tions with the court before "(It • 1lrMI 1ddrM1 or common purported 10 ba: 6 HUDSON, 41132•113 Road and Live O•k Canyon ROid
(A) COUNTY APPLIANCE SER· the hearing. Your appear-dNlgnallon ol property I• enown IRVINE, CA. 92714. (Cook'• Corner) end •xtandlng
VICE (Bl CONSOLIDATED AP· ance may be in person or by lbovt, no werranl'y 11 gl\.tn u lo II• Tht undarllgned Tru11M die-aun•tc NOTICE nonharly 10 Clevel•nd Natlonll FOi'· PllANCE REPAIR, 5811 W. Wiiton, compte1en"a or c;0<reclnM1)." The clalm1 any ll•l>lllly lot 1ny lncorrecl· l"UUI.. nt
Coll• M111, CA. 821127' your attorney. beneficiary under 11ld DNd ol ne .. ot lhe llrMt 1ddr111 and 01hlr FICmlOUa IUltNEal E Holsleln lndu111111 PrQ9tt1Y
Juon WNI, 5811 W. Y'llton, Colt• lF YOU ARE A CREDI· Tru1t. by , .. son ot • breach or d•· common d11lgn1tlon, II 1ny, atiown NAME ITAftMINT (1.7 1craa) loclled at the eouth·
M .... CA. 821127 , TOR OT a contingent creditor fault In lhe obllg1t1on1 eecured herein. Tl> lollowt 1 d 1 westerly corn« ol Oreherd Ol1ve Thi• bulll'IMI •• CO<ldUC1ed by· •n f th deceased t fil lhll'eby, l'lll'llOIOfl IXtculed and Slld ,.,. wtll be m1de, b\11 wlthOUI 1>1111!.a.. no Pllflon • 0 ng Ind Acaci• StrMI In Ult Santi An•
lndlvldual. 0 e • you mus e dtllvered to the undttllgned • wrll· coven1nt Of w1rr1nty. expt ... or Im-IMAGE SYSTEMS ASSOCIATES HelQhll ., .. Juon West your claim with the court o len Oecl111t1on ol Default ind 0.-piled, reg1rdlng lllle. poMMllon, Of p c CA• 2_ TM Publlcl H .. rlng wlll tnclucM the
Thi• 111t•men1 wu filed wllh the present it to the penlOn.al rep mend tor Sale, Ind wr11111n notkle ol encumb11ncee, to p1y the remain! . ~;~1 atom•. oet• M.... · lollowlng prol)OMC1 Amendmtntt 10
C«mly Clark ol Orenge County on resentative appointed by th brnch end ol •lectlon to cauM lhe prlncipel eum ol the no11(1) MCUr.0 M Craig Riii., 20411 Palom• Iha Tr1n1por11tlon EJemeo1· Aug. 4, 18113. . undaraigned to Mil Mid propeny 10 by eakl o..d OI True!, with lnt••t eo.i M CA 1121121 . A Revl•ton• of the ..... ,., P1eA of 1'2221• court within four mon eat11ly Mid obllg11ton1. and lhtt• ii-eon. u provldecl In NICI no1e(1), Th~• bu9:,;... 18 condUC1ed b an Artan•l Hlghw1y1 (MPAH) eompo..
Pu1>ll1hld Or•~ Co111 Dally from the date of fint iss 11tar lhe und.,llgned c:auMd Mid 1dv.ncee, If •n'i. under the l•m• ot lndMdull Y nenl looudlog
Piiot Sept 7, 14, 2 • 211. 18113. of letters as provided ln Sec nollce of breach ind of eleclllon to aald DNd ol 'tru11, 1-. chatgem Craig Riner 1. Changee 10 11\e MPAH mod·
LOS ANGELF..S (AP) _ The mortgage sales _________ so_57_-83--1tf 700 f th Probate Cod t>e reco<ded Apfll 27. 18113 u ln1tr. Ind axpen-01 the Tru1tM and 01 Thi• 1111_1 wu llled wtlh the llytno lhe clrcu1111on ey11em 1n the NOTIC£ on o e No. 83· 177322 ot Otllc:lll Record• In Ille tru111 crNted by Mid Deed ol Cou Cfflrit 1 0 Cou City of S1n11 Ana. a.rm of Financial Corp . of America says it will swap Pl&.IC of California. The time fo lhe office ol the Recorder of Orange Trv1t. '°' lht amount , ... onably ... Aug n72 111113 ° r111ge nty on 2. Changee to lhe MPAH mod-
{ al f FICTmOUa llU9tNl:ll filing claims will not exp{ County: tlm•ttd to be: 122,7111.llCI. ' F12:811 ltytng the clrcul•llon 1V911m In the $2.6 billion in h ome mortgages or an equ amount o H.-ITATl•NT prior to four months Crom th S1ld 111ew111 be m1<1e, bu1 wl1hou1 The beneflcl•ry under Mid DNd Pul>llehed Or•no• CoA1t Diiiy Legun• Niguel Pl111nld Comrnunlly.
mortgage-backed securities issued by two federally The tollowfng per.on 11 O<Mno da f th h • . coven1nt °'warranty, 1xpre11 or Im-ol Tru1t heretol0<eexec;uted and d• Piiot Aug. 24 31 Sepl. 1 14 111113. 3. Ch•noM to ti~ MPAH mod· Ch~-~red enu·u·es. bu 1,,... u · · le o e eanng nou ptled, reg1rdlng 11111 l>OAMMlon. or llve<ed to lht und«llgnecS • written · · • 4•7311_83 ltytng 1he c;lrc;utatlon eywlem In the cu~ 1 · above. encuml>raooea. 10pay11\e rMmlnlng Oec::leratlon of Default I/Id Demand n0<1hefn portion ol the City of IMM.
"Th is will allow us t-0 t.'Ontinue a very aggressive OETCO MARINE, 2nd floor, 2701 YOU MA y EXAMINE th prlnciplll eum of the no•l(•l MCUred 10< Sile, and • written No11ce ot 0.-4. Changle to 11 .. MPAH mod-w. Co•11 Hwy, Newporl Beech, CA. by aald dMd of Tru1t, with lnlllfMI l1utt end Election to Sell. TM under· PtBl.IC NOTICE !tying IM ctrcul1t1on eyetem In th41 level of mortgage lending," FCA Mortgage Securi-ll2Cl63 file kept by the court. U yo u In Mid nol• provt<*I, actvancee, 11 llgned cauMd eald Notice ol o.11u11 northern Et TOl'o ., ...
ties President Philip R. Brinkerhoff said Tuesday. 0oug~~p1~ ~ C••y St., are interested ln the eetat.e any, under 1h4l tlfm1 ol Mid OMO ol and Elec11on 10 s.11 to be racotded In flCTtTIOUI IMJllNIH B. Revttlon• to the Mui., Pl111 of
"The bottom line is another (approximately) $2.5 ~ht bull • ,_ -~ ... .-.... ..... you may •rve upon the ex-1rust. ,..., chatgee. and •xptnMe 01 the county w11«e 1he real Pfoptr1Y 11 NAME •TATW•NT Scenic ~l,";IYI (MPSH) Comp<>-• ,,... ,.. ....,.,....,.,_, v,..,., _ _._,_,_ lhe Tru1IM and ol the 1ru111 C'Mltd loc1ted. The lollowtng pW90r1 la dOloO nam . billi~in money will be available for prospective lndMduil. ecutor or -.uiuu .... trator, 01 by Nkl C>Nd ol Tru1t. 011a. Augull 22. 1883 bual,_. u : 1 Oelt1ton of Coto de CU• on.... h . h u "ted s .. Oouglu Templtn upon the anomey for the ex· Said .... Wiii be held on: frldey. Tru1tM: LUCINDA K. TAYLOR DINO'S CUSTOM LANO· lorm Ille MPSH. omoowners m t e ru tates. Thie ll•temant w11 flied with lh41 ecutor or ad.mini.etrator, Stpt1mber 23. 11183, •• 2:00 p.m. 11 dba BENEFACT SCA.PINO. 414 Ponland. Hunt1no1on 3. The Public Heetlng w111 II.a In· FCA Mortgage Securities will trade the mort-County C*11 ol Orange County on fil "th th with 11'11 Chapman A--entranoe 10 2211111 LAMBERT ST. STE. 520 e..c;n, CA.112CIMI dude 11>e 1o11ow1ng rete1ed pro~
gages on behalf of American Savings and Loan Aug. 211. 18113. _ fe W1 . e co~ proo the CMc Center Bulkllng, 300 Eut EL TORO. CALIF. 82930 Rtcherd Dino M1h1ltr•. 414 A Zone ChlnOe 112·14 (Country
,._ 0 service, a wnUen reques Ch9i1m1n Av., Or••· CA. (714) 855-37811 Portland. Huntlnglon 8Ncll. CA. Home) pr~ 1 ctlange from A· 1 Association, FCA's major operating subsidiary and Pubtlahtd °'a;r: Cou1 Dally s uiting that you desire a Al 1he ume ol the Initial pul>ll· Publl•hld Or•nge Cou t Dally 11211411 (0enet11 Agncullurlll to RHE 10,000
the largest savings and loan institution in the country Pllol Sept 7. 14• 2 • 211• 111~7M3 noUce ol the f.i.llng of an in ca1ton 01 thll notice, the totat Pllo1 Aug. 24, 3 t, SepL 7, tta3. Thi• bull'*ll 11 conducied t>y: an (Reeldanllal Hlll.k!e &1111 10.000
h $20 b .lli · 1---------=---;.; and amoun1 ol lhe unpaid blW!ce of th41 47CIO-ll3 lndlvldull. aqutr• fool minimum) Md A4 (PO) with more t an ~ on Ill assets. •-1c 11nncc ventory appral.8ement 0 obllga.Uon eecured by lhe above ci.. RtcnMd Dino Meh•lfle Mult1·f11mlly R"IC1enll•I with •
FCA Chairman and Chief Executive Charles W. i----1"-~.__-"" ....... ----est.ate useta or of the peU tcrlbed dM<S ot 1ru11 •nd Mllmated Nit. C NOTICE Thll 1111aman1 wAI tlled wtth lhe Pl•nned o.-..k>pment OYlf'lly ..t11ct1
Knapp said Tuesday that in re tum for the mortgages, FICTIT104JI IUIMH lions OT accounta mentio co111. ••pen-. 1nd lldvlllCM 11 I County Cltrll ol Orangt County on would lllOW •maximum of 781 dweU-
FCA Mo11aages eo-un··•es will ....,.,....1·ve $l.6 billi.on in N.-8TATIMUIT in SectJon 1200 and 1200 5 0 135.780.12. STAft•NT °' Aug 12, 111113. Ing unite Community ~
• -& ~ u • ~"' The lotlOwlng perlOf\I ere doing Cali n......... ~ The lotal lndebt.O,_ being an AaANDOHMINT °' UH °' Amendmenl 82·11 wlll t>e Pf....-
M ortgage Participation Certificates from the Federal bulln111 u · the fomla c-.-u .... le e ... 111n•t• on wtllch th41 opening bid I• '1CTTTIOUl IU ... U NAME Publlltled Orange Coul Delly concurrent with n-.. zone el\el\Qe r•
Co Fedd. M d $1 SALT CREEK DESIGN. 33472 In-ADRIAN K UYPER , Co computed m•y be obtllnecS 1>y call-The IOltowlng peraone hi ve •ban· Pltot Aug. 24, 31. Sept 7, 14, 111113 q.-i Home Loan Mortgage rp .• or r ie ac. an tare, Dan• Point, CA. e21128 ty Couael, ud HOWAR Ing (7141 837--0!IM the day t>etore doned 1he uM of the Flctlll01.11 Bull· 4733·83 B. Zone Change 112·52 (Glenn
billion in mortgage-backed securities from the AndrN ll9Y v.u., aa.12 tnl•a. SERBIN Dep ty the.... ,_. Name· VACATION RENTAL Rench> PfOP<>9M • Pt111Md Com-
al M "~~· · F · Dena Potnt. CA 8211H • a Oiled Augu11 8, 1883 T. 0 SER· SYSTEMS lll7113 8Nctt Bl Hunl· munlty Dlatrlcl change trom "Open Federal Natio n ortgage ~1auon. o r aruue L1wrence AnlllonY ve11• 33472 10 Civic CeD&er Plau, P.O v1CE COMPANY t ton aMch CA 112647 • Pl&.IC HOTICE Spac;e·· to ··1ne1u11r111". along Wllh
Mae. 1n1., •. D•n• Point. CA. 9211211 Boll 1371 Pu1>ll1hed Or•no• Cow Delly '1!1141 F!Gtllloo• Bulln•H Namer• en lncr-ln.~he ext1t1ng approved
The securities will in tum "e ventually be sold Thie bull,,_ 11 conducttd by:• Sa.ot.a Aaa CA. H70Z-137t Piiot AUO 3I, Sepl 7· 14• 1883. tarred 10 1bove was ftled In Orenge T-.21m ··commerCl•I ., ... Communlly
through nego''ated transactions wi" th First Boston gener11 partnerlhlp. 171") 834.1333 41155-83 counly on April 20. 11183 NOTICf Of T"U8TEE'8 •ALE Prollle -~~endmeot 8_2~ 151 wtlf be .. Lawrenc. Vall., " . JimM e. Varllch, 16591 Grlll1m T.S. No 1100 prooes-.. concurrent w.lh he :rone
Corp. and Bear Stearns & Co. as the managing Thia .,.,_1 ..... flied with the Published Orange Coas SI • Hunllnglon BelCh. CA 92647 YOU ARE IN DEFAIJL T UNDER A ~request
underwriters.'' Brinkerhoff said. County Cltrk 01 Or•nge Counr; on Dally Pilot Sept. 7, 8, 14, f'ta.lC NOTICE Thie 1>uatn11• wH cooduc19d by• DEED OF TRUST C one Change 112·56 (Loe All-Aug 31, 1983 1983 en lndlvtduil. OAtEO October te, 18112. UNLESS R ... arc:n Ind 0......opmeot Perk)
''These transacuons, while o f hts toric propor-f'D11n . FICTmOUI IUIMH Jam .. B. V.,tlch YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT propo .... ch•ng• from A·I (Gen·
lio ns, do not represent a o ne-llme o nly evenl, but Pubtlelled Or•nr CONI OaHy 5075-83 ..... ITATfMINT Thi• 1111eman1 WU flied with the YOUR PROPERT'I', IT MAY BE ttll AgrlCIJllUfll) wllh •n FP-2 Pllol Sepl 7. 14'. 2 . 211, 11193 The lollOwlng perl0f1 11 doing County Clerk ol Orenge County Of! SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE. YOU (Aoodpfaln) overl1y zone lo the Loe
rather they are part of our ongoing commitme nt to be 5077.aa PUBLIC NOTICE c>USlnne u July 211. 11183. JoMpf'I Jt. oawt., atty NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE All-"-'en and 0ewtopmen1 . ll { rt . the secondary CONTEMPORARY ELECTRONIC 27tO ~ ...... •utt• ,11 NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING Ptrli. Pllt\ned Community Olatricl an a c uve se er 0 mo gages m NM.IC NOTICC NOTICE OF DEATH OF SYSTEMS. 1589 Superior Av• .. coet• ...... CA.'-AGAINST YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· .,.htch would allow 242 ac:rM ot In· market," Bnnkerhoff said. ------------Sult• Bii. Ooel• M .... CA 821127 Pul>lllhed Or111ge Coe.et Dally TACT A LAWYEA. dustrlaf •nd commerolal devetop-
Nearly all of the $2.6 billion will be used for c~~:,~1CM4 ufE~~ !!'~~~kJ~ c .. ~=~6..s.:C':c~;;:;~Clr-Ptto1Aug.17.24.31.Sec>I !~~~310~~~~~~~~~~~l~~~ ;::11~~~~1~1::.:;~~
mortgage lending. most of it in California, NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS USELMAN' AND OF PETI· Thi• b\11tnet• I• condUC1ed 1>y: an AND LOAN ASSOCIATION u duty curret111y wtlh the zone c111nge r•
Brinkerhoof said CALLING FOR BIOS ES-1ndtvklu11 I NOTICE 1ppolnted Tru1t1e undlf and qu.at · Sct>oot ~nct: NEWPORT-MESA ON TO ADMINISTER B. T S1r1G1t PUBL C purau111t to Deed of Trv1t racotded o Zone Cttange 112-511 (Lyonl
Theswapsshould be completed m the n e xt three UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT . ATE NO. A·llt7U Th•• 1111emen1 wu flied with the T·~ October 21. 18112. u 1n1t. No propc>Ma • ctlange tonn A·1 (Gen-
or four moo ths, he said. Bkl Deadline: 2:00 o'Clock pm of lh4t To all heirll, beneficiaries, County Cltrk 01 Orenge County 0t1 NOTICE 0, TillUlfttE'I •ALE 82-37023!1. ot Oftlcl1t Reco<d1 In the .,., Agrlallturel) 10 RHE 10.000
Fredd. M p "d K th J Th 22nd d•Y ol September. 1ge3. d I July 21 19113 • olt1ce ol the Counly Record• of Or· (Aesldenll•I Hllll!Oe e.t•t• 10,000 1e ac res! ent enne ygerson Pt-ol8kl Flecejpt: Purctlulng o.. redltora a n cont ngeni · F221112 TrullM 1 No.04102 ange co~m1y, C11if0tnl1. WILL SELL squire 1001 minimum) wtolch WOUid
andFannieMaePresidentRobertJ Mylodhailedthe pltlmtnt, 211116·B Bear StrMI. reditora o f GEORGE Pubttllhed 0••• Cout Dally ~~g~,! ... ~~:~1~~R~ ATPUBLICAUCTIONTOHIQHEST allow. mMlm.im ol 1111 dwelling
trade as a means of allowing Ame rican Savtngs to Co1t1Mela.,CA.8211211 FRANKLIN USELMAN, Piiot Aug 17. 24. 31, Sept. 7, 19113 TRUST DEEO SERVICES INC 11 BIDDER FOR CASH OR CASHIER'S unl11 Comrnunlly Pron .. AmtnO·
make low_,.,..,,t m ortgage loans to homebuye rs. Pr0Jac1 ldent111c1t1on N1m•: aka GIDRGE USELMAN 453M3 T"'''" or s·~-·-~ Truit.;; ~ CHECK. (pay•b .. 11 lime ot Nie In ment 112.22 w111 be proc:.Md con· -"""° ASPHALT Pl\VtNO, BLACKTOP & •Y • y~~ Y• t1wtutmonevollheUnhtdSt1t1A)at current with the 11.one dla.nge,.. SLURRY COAT AT VARIOUS 04s..iand peraona who may be Sublllhited TruetM. 01 that certain theNonhllon1en1r1noetolheCOUn· queal.
TRICT LOCATIONS Jolherwiae interested l1l the Nit.IC NOTIC£ o..d of Truaa a•eeul.O by SCOn E. t couJ1hooM 700 Civic Cerltllf E Zone Chanoe 112-4 PfOpoeM I
Pl-Plan•.,. on Ille: Purchutng will and/or estate: ~8LVo~~o HU~~~NDV~~~~,~-g,..111 Well, s.;,,. Ana. Celtloml• 1n ch.;. from A·I (SR) G-111 Agrl-
'fi d Oep111men1, 21111&-B 8Mr Str"1, .. __ fll-' '1CTTTIOUI .us••• · · rlgh1, 111 .. and ltll-1 oon\'9Y9d 10 cullurll (Sign Rellfk:ttonl ton .. PA E t f C091• M ... CA 11211211 A petition '""" been ""' NA• ITAftMIHT •nd reco<deCI DECEMBER 11• lllllO 1nd now held by It under lllld OMd (POI (SAY~ Proteutonll and Ad-n repreneurs 0 ere NOTICE tS HEREBY GIVEN 0111 by MARIE 8. USELMAN in The follow1!Jll pereon1 era doing ~e~t~men~ll~Ottl:t~r~~::c:i of TNSt In lhe prol*IY ll1u1t9d In mtn11r1Uve Otltce (Planned 0.-11'141 aOO.....-nlmed SCfloOI Dll1rtct of the Superior Court of Orange bu.U-u · · age C 1 eald County end St11a de.crll>ed u . vetopmenll (Sign Reetrtctlon) (30 • • b SBA Orange County Celtfomla acting by R ANO D ENTERPRISES 71 Orange Counly, alllorn 1• and LEGl\l DESCRIPTION· loot M1Jtlmum Bulldtng Helohfl Seminar Series y and lhrough It• Oove<nt,;g Boen:!, County requesttns that PlnMlone,lrMe,CA 112714 . pureuant to thll <*tlln NOllce 01 ACONOOMINIUMCOMPRISEDOF Commun11yProflleAmendman•~
hereln•l11f rtterred to .. "DIS· MARIE B. USELMAN be Roger W1b11er. 211101 Quell Def1Ult •nd E.lec110n 10 Sell '"".. PARCEL 1. unit 15, u lhown .ncs wlll be prOOMNO concurrent wl1h
TRICT". wlll r_..... up to, but no appointed u perwonal rep-Creek •72. Lagun1 Hiiie, CA.112853 unde< recorded MAY 12• 1883 11 d•llnad on lhll certain Con-the zone Change req.-t.
A series of free con-Mission Vien, SCORE lei., th111 tM lbow-st1ted time, 1'8ent.aUve to admini.at.er the Oan't L•vtlon, 71 PlnHtona, ~//!i.!'~~11Y5·!.~1= domlnlum Pt111 recorded Deoemt>et COMPLIANCE WIH CALIFORNIA . r-M&led bldl fOf lht -ltd of . eon-lrvlne CA 8271' • I 12 111711 Inbook1211Sll page 1821 ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ACT: ferences IS being offered counselor and former lrac:t IOf Ille~ prottct. estate of GIDRGE FRANK-Ttt~ bu.,_ 11 oone1uciec1 by , lllld pu.....,en1 to eald DNd ol Tru11 01 Omclal Recorde of o;ange eoun-'. The tollowlng •nvlronmen111
to small business en-owner of a food service Bid• .na11 be r-9ved In 1h4I p1eoe LIN USELMAN (under the ~ p1r1narw.1p ..,. 11 public •uc110n lot cuh. tawtut ty. California. aocumen1111on hu bMrl prepered Th d " Identified above Ind lhllll ~ oe>en· Cndependent Admin.l.atration Oen'I Levllon m=. 01 tht United Siii• 01 PARCEL 2 An unatvtdtd 1125 lor theM proi-et• pul'IUanl lo the trep~eneur:--ese 15-equipment company .c1 encl publlely' tMCt aloud a1 lhe f F.t.aies Act) The petition Th•• 11•1-1 wN flied wtlh the Amer ·•I the tron~:'c~~ C:,'1"-lnterNI In and 10 Lot t of Traci No. C11t10<nl1 Environmental Ouallty Act
cuss1ons will be held on Sept. 20 -"Tele· 11>0 ..... 111ed time .ncs pteoe ?_ f h .. .i..:n ln ..,._ • N 'County Clllf1I or Orenge Counay on ~~'WC::~:i9:An• Cllll0<nla: 10023. City of Coet• M .... 11 lhown wtilctl wttt be ~ by lhe Plan· Tuesday from 2 p m to 4 h y W T There wtll be 1 NIA e1epo111 r• .. let or e-w.. u.:p.. o . Aug 2 111113 • • on a map recorded In book 425 nlng Commluk>n and Boerd of . . : · P one our ay 0 qulr.cl '°' •lldl Mt of bid document• 3 at 700 Ctvtc Center Dr., · · nnarn thll rlQhi, 111 .. llld •n1..-.11 oonV9)1ed 111119 211 to 30 ol MltClellaneoui Sup«111eor1 prior 10 or ooncurren1
p .m ., Ln the Fidehty Fed-Inc reased Business ." to guar111tM 1helr rsturn In good West Santa Ana CA 92701 Put:>ltlhed Or•nge coaet Dally 10 and now Mid by 11 under Mid ~IP•· r1COrd1 of Or•• County. with Ille propc>Md G-11 Pltn
eral Bldg., 2700 N. Main Led b y Les Snyder o f condition within NIA d11Y1 1ner lht n Se'pt 28 1983 ~t 9.30 AM Pllo1 Aug 17, 24, 31, Sep1. 7. 181!3 = 1~f _!~·~~~:'9Y :~~. ·~~: Calltornla, IOQelhlf with •II tmpro~ Amendmenl• •nd rel•ted prolect1.
S S . S bid opening d•I•. · • · · · 45l4-el mant• lhllfeon, exoepllno 1herwlrom Envlronmental tmp1ct Report t ., Ulte 410, anta Mission Viejo, SCORE EflCtl bid mu11 C?OOlorm end be IF YOU OBJECT to the ~tbtdu: Condominium Unit• 1 through 25. •40Cl -CountryHom./L~IWldl
Ana. The programs are counselor and fonne r r11pon1l111 to the contrllCll docu-granting of the petition, you .,_IC NOTICE Colo1•t• t ... ot Tr::.::::i· C::: 1
1::: ~ lnctull ..... located thef'eon. Environment•t •mf~~port
ed b Se . mant• h uld Ith th l"UUL M • ... EXCEPTING THEREFROM • un-1420 -Loe AH-,_\ITT Ind sponsor y rvice president of a rent.al each bidder llhall eubmll on the• o e er appear at e lhareot recOfded In Book 117. PIQM dlVlded on.hall lnl•Mt In all otl Oe\lllopment Park
Corps Of Retired Ex-company . IOftl'I lumllhed with th41 aootrllC1 hearing and atate you objec:-~TmOUl IUelNIH 34 and 35 of Mltelellaneou• Mlf)l, In petroleum naturll gu and miner1i Envlronm1nt1t lmp1c1 Report
ecutives (SCORE) the Sept. 27 _ "Manaaing document•. • Met of the propoeed Uona or file written objec· HAm STA'RmNT lh41 otnce of Ille County Rec0<der of rlghll In. 0,, or une1e11he ~ ci.. •4211 -Glenn Ranc;tt ' o··' eul>ConlrlciOfl on th11 project u r• ti w1 h h belor'I TM lollowlng P«'tOn .. doing Nl(j oounty. ecrtl>ed land N rMWved by Richard Envlronmen1el lmptlci R•por1 Active Corps of Ex-The Owners/Managers quired by 1he Subtetllno and Sub-008 l t e court ore 1>u11t1M1 u : , Tht •tr"1 lldd•-01 other cocn: H. ChllCeY a04' Rulh M. Ct111CeY. tiue-#430(Supplemenlll to EIR •277)-
ecutives and the US Time," led by Millard con1rlC1tngFllrPrecttcea AC1.0ov1, lhe hearing. Your appear· CONSUMERS GUIDE TO MEDI· mon dtllgnatton ol Ilk! property. bind •nd wife by dMd rec)O(ded Hot1telnlndu11rtee
Small B . ..._,_·,_. Code Sec 410(>91 Nq ance may be in pe1'110n or by CAL SERVICES. 19912 Lotu1 Lene. 4311 Prlnoeton Oflve. Coll• M .... Ml)' 18 1950 In booll 2012 pmge Neg111Ve Oecf•r•llon #3PA!17 -usmess Auuw=-MacAdam of Corona Del Eacfl blddet muet eubmlt with hie our attome Huntlngt0t1 8Mctl, CA. 828411 CA 8211211. 523 01 Omciaf Aeclofda. · ScenJe HIQhqye
tration. The remainder Mar, ACE Counselor and bid c;ertlfled or cut1ter•• ch4ICll PIY· y lF YOU k A CREDI· w111111n AmbflJM B•IM. 181112 Nam• end •ddre11 ol th• PARCEL 3: An .. e1u11111 ..... City ol l;an1a An• Negative O.C·
f h Se be hed 11> .. lo the DISTRICT Of • bid bond Lotu1 Lane. Hurillnglon BNcn. CA benelk:lary 11 whoae requ•I 1 menl appurtenant to Heh unit tor lar11ton #IS 113·84 -City ot Sent• o l e ptem r sc • Presidenlo fa consulting ln tht lOfm Nllonhlnth9eontrac:ITOR oracontingent credltor 112Cl-411 uta 11 baln~ conducted: lheuMandoccupancyoflhOMPOf· An1/MPAH ule shapes up as follow s: age ncy. F or inCormation docum«ta 1n en amoun1 .... th111 bf the deceased, you must fUe Thi• bullnM1 t1 c:onduCled by: in SHEARSONIAME ICAN EXPRESS tton• 011he r•trtcted common., .. The EIR't lllled above are .,,.,..ble Se 13 "F h " ll 836 2709 SS 000 (Fl.,. Thoueand Dollllf'I) .. I cl.aim Ith th lndlvldu•t MORTGAGE CORPORATION, 1201 dellgn1ttd In Ille Oeclarltton of,.._ IOI' pul>tlc review~ 1119 !lours . pt. -ranc 18,: Ca -• guttentM 1h1t lht blddtf w111 en1., your w e court or w11111m A B•IN Eut HlohlanO AVW1ue, Sult• D.S.,, 11r1ct1<>111 recorded December 12. ol II 00 • m llnd 4·30 pm, If 1M
mg -ls It For You? tnlo lhe ptopoNd contract 11 th41 present it to the per90nal rep-Thi• allt-l wu flied wilh lh41 Bern•tdlno, CA 82404. 19711 In bOotl 129511 page 111e3 ol Environment•! An1tylla dl1ll1lon
Led by Sam Elsi.er of DlllH NOTICll eame 111werded to him. In 1he aven1 reeentativ~ •ppolnted by the County Clerk of 011nge County on Otrecilon• to the •t>ov1 propeny Ottlcl•I Record• 01 nkl County and Room 280, 400 CMc Cent• Dt1w of f1l1Ure to et!lllf Into Mid contract, court within four mon\ha Aug. 15. 1gll3. mey ::,-r~tat~ b.r. ~=ng lhown on the Condominium Pl•n lot w .. t. S1nl1 fin•. Calflomlll. The
----------' IUCh MCUflty w111 be lorlelt f I ,~ Nnlt wt I "ii rom I .....,.. ry Heh unit EIR'I lhe pul>llC oomment1 on the
I DISTRICT,_.... ,he nQhl tor• from the date of Int •uanoe Publlllhed Ormnoe C0..1 Dally within lO dl)'I from lhe nrll publt· EXCEPT THEREFROM •II Oii. gn EJR'a: Ind lhe •t•I ~ an the
PIERCE BROTHERS
BELL M OADWAY
MORTUARY
I 10 Broadway
Costa Mesa
6'42-9150
IAL TZ BEROIEAON
&llfTH I TUTiftlL
Wl8TCLI,, CHAf'el
'427 E. 17th SI.
Costa Mesa
6'46-937 1
PACN'IC VIEW
MEMOfUAL PAftK
Cemetery Mortuary
Ch1pel-Crematory
'1600 Pacific View Orlvo
Newpor1 Beech
&4•·2700
HAft80ft LAWN,-MT. O\.IVI
Mor1u1ry • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 QI..., Ave
Cott•M ...
6-40-5554'
t>
)«:I any or 111 bide Of to waive any of lett.en as provided In Sec· Pllol Aug. 17. 24• 31. Sep1. 7, 111113 cation otthl• nottce. mlneral1 and olhllf 1>y<1rocar1>on1. EJR'• wtll be kept on n1e111t1e abaft
PEARSON lrregul•rltt .. or lnlOt'mllltlel In any Uon 700 of the Probate Code 48311-83 Said 1111 wlll be made wltlloul co,,. bel°"' 11 deQth of 500 letl, without toc1tton
IEUGENE E. PEARSON,btd10<tn1heblddlng. f Calif m1a The time for n1t1tolw1rr1nty.il(pr ... orlmplled, lhe right ol 1ur1-entry, Al r• the toOOWlng projec1111eve rel 10
·d f , B .... ft .. .Beach Pureu111110 the provtlk>M ol See-0 0 · tMD1 ar Mnnl'r· " ia Ill ... p()NeHlon Of aocum-~ tn 1r111ruman11 ol rec;ord receive lln•I 1n111ron1T1en1et
Ca., died Auguat 30, 1983. St••• ol Ct ltloml• tt1e Ot8TRICT prior to four months from the 'ICT1T10UI -··-•• ance <Ive on Ille note MCUl'ed by WALL by th• Envtronmtf'lf•I An1ly111 I rem enl 0 -~-' tton 1773 ot 11'11 Labor Code ol lh41 filing clauna will not expire r-~ ""'•~ brl"°" to eallety the unpi ld bll· Tru11or or record owntt. DENNIS D document1tton pendtng lnltlel 11\ldy
Bo i T Jed Ohl in ' ~ of _.. --Hid D•td ol Trull 10 wit: ,....,._, . m n o o, o h11ob111nee11rom111e ectOf the date of the hearing noti<.-,,u NAIH ITAR•NT 1122 48130 plu• the tollowtno Mii· The '''"' Mid,... and other .,. .... 0t1 1903. He wu an electrical Oep9rtmant of INlutl al Ae11tlonll above The follOwlng P91'10f1• -doing mated c:O.ti, _...._,... .,,d lld-~mon c:Melgnatlon. It •ny, ol the tS 3PK -trvlne/MPAH . h 1 _ _._ d ltle eentfll prevelltflO 11te of per • bu"'-•· .... ~ rN I proC>tf1y deecrlbed at>Ovt I• IS 3PK 162 -L•o11n1 engineer Wit ~ an dlemwlQMandthegenttalprwllt-YOUMAYEXAMINEthe COMPUTERISLANO, PHONE v•no111•tth4lllmeollhelnlltal put>ll· purported 10 be: 1212 L• Ar$\N Nlguel/MPAH
Northrup Company of Ing r11t tor holiday 1nd ovtrtlmt fUe kept by the court. U you SHACK, 23028 Liiie FOfMI Drive, ctllor1 °1 thl• Nolie. 0! Site. Way, Coet1 Meta. Clllfomta 8~927 n-llMtlngt wlff be he6d If\ the
Philadelphia. Pennaylvani~ WOfklntlletocelltylnwhlohthl•work are lnt.eresl.ed in the stale, Suite A, L~1m1 HMll. CA. 921153 ~~1~1~ ~!!~!1 'm.:i~ Tllt undentgned TrutlM dl9Gl1lm1 Pl•nnlng Comm1uton H=g
for 35 years. He la survived 11 to be performtd tor Mllh cr-1,, or you may aerve upon the ex-Humeyun ln•y•t Klbr1)'•, 25832 plue lnttteel 11 13 8% C::~um"on eny ll•bKlly ror 1ny lncorrtcl'*ll ol Room on the nr11 ~ !IJ.':!... 1tv
l d typt ol wortl9' nMded lo u_ecute VMUVll Ave Mllllon Viejo CA · lhe elrMI edctr.I Wld 01hef oom-Hin of Admlnl1tr1hvu ~ .. M 10 by hi.a wife Ethe • aught.era the cont1.ot. TheM relel are on Ille ecutor or adm1nila-1tor, or 82881 ' · · th41 unpeld pMctf>lll from mon e1t91gn1tton, 11 any, .,_ CMc Cenl• Pl1111. Slnl• AM. C....
Loia Carr of San Francl.aco, at t~ DISTRICT otnct loellld at upon the attorney (or Ow ex· Ayeet11 Mirza. 0042 Mlr)'ln Dftve. ~!::. \,,!.8~':y ~Y ~ thef'eln. loml• •1 1:30 Pm AJ lntwlmled
Ca. and Barbara Metsger of 21186-8 Beer 81., ~· MIN. CA. ecutor or admln.istr•U>r and Cyp,..., CA. 90630 IUlhOl'l:red or 0~190 10 pay plu• 811C1 Nit will bt made, but wttllOUI plrlltl .,. lnYlled lo an~ be La"', .. ___ .. And .,..and llffH. Coplte may be ~..._, an I ..... th ' f Thi• t>uw-11 concluct..s by: a __ 1 t• Cher · covenant or wm1111y, •Pf-Of Im· hMrd. •-na ,_..,,, ... • req~ A~ or,,.._ rel• lfllll file w th the court w1 proo geMrll p#tntnl\lp .,,,. ............. 1 • gee. plied reprdlng 111 .. pot ••Ion or Wrt11en comrr-.ni. .,. lllO ln'Wlted.
c hildren Andrew Carr bt poe14.d at the Job llte. of llel'Vitt, • wrfttl!n request HurM)'\111 "'-Yltl Klt>nye YOU ARE IN DEFAUlT UNDEA A encumbrll109I, to p.y IN ~ Comm1nt1 may be Hnl to
John and Claire M etqer. 11 enlll be mtnd••OtY ,upon 1111 it.-tlnl that you deia&n apeclal Thi• 111iernent w .. ,_, Wllll '"-~~t OfO:~~~~o~~e bllltinCt ot the note<•> MCl.IAld by EMAJAdvenoe Pl~ DNlllOtl .,
Burial wu by the Neptun CONTRACTOR to wnom the oon· no~ of the fill"" o f an ln county Clerk of Otenga County on ACTldN TO ftROTECT YOUR Hid OHd ol Trull. to-wit: P.O. '.,O,.kd'404t. 8-nt• Ma. CA
Soci ttlCI 11ewarded.1nd UC)Oll any IUb-... • July :t? 11183. 0 0 T '31,874.09 (t•t), lnoludlno 11 82702-..-!>l'lof to Of •I com-ety; no services ar oontrKIOf Vndet him 10 pay not ... ventory and appraiaement of • '2:11 ... PROPERTY. IT MAY BE 8 L A A pl'Olllded In Mid natl(•). lldvll'ICM. It met-*t ot the IONduled publki
planned. thin th41 Mid epeotft.o ,. ... 10 11 eetaw a.eta or of the peU-Publtlhed 0ninge eoe.1 Delly ~:~~t ~ Y~~E N~~~~~ •ny, under 1119 tetme of Mid OMO Of Mlrlngl. fllf'IMr lnfonn111on rM1
WOfkllf• emp!Oytd by them In tflt u ta u-.... Piiot AUO. 11. 74, 31, &ec>t. 7, 1113. 0 0 NST Trve1 ...... ohlfo-and•llP9fl ... of bt obtained Oy Ctlllno the Adll9not LAMB t•ecutlOn of 1119 oontr.at. ON or IKlCOUI\ men un~ 48' 1~ OF THE PROCE'EDIN A Al the Tru•IM and oflht ll\1111 OfMtld Planning DMeion ti (7 t4) 134-6.110. KATHERINE LAMB, real No bidder~ wltlld,_ '*bid ln Section 1200 and 1200.6 of YOU, YOU SHOULD OONTfCl . by Mid DMcl of Trust. P\ibllthed Orange OOMt Delly Ptlol
dent of Coltl Meu ea '°' • l*10d of tortrnve (4&1 d9ye the Callfomia Prob.tte Code. ~~g"A, 11 1913 The befttllclaty un0tr Mid OMO Sept 7, 1183.
P·--' aw"y on Sep•..:...be after lhe dll• Ml tor tflt OP9fllnO of GLASSER 6 SMITH rta.IC HOTICC Truet• :RSONfAMEAICAN o!Truat ~oloreexeQlttd Ind ct. ~ _... .. ~" bide, ROBERT o• •ct••ft "'*eel to t11t ~a wttt1111 4 1983 She Iii 1urvtv~ b A 1>41ymtnl l>onO llld • I*· 87: ~"" ,tcTITIOUI.,..... l!)(PRHa l"U8T OEEO 0.Clll'l tlon or Defautf Ind Detnarld
h°er tu~b&nd F.H. Lam '°'menoe bond WM! bl required PflOr •100 Mac.lrthr BMI., SoJte TM ~•TATW•i:: d"'-~~";;~!.!:·~OWN A8alSTANT tor Sale, 1110 • wrltt«i Nolle» of Ot-
chlldren Kathleen Nlcho to ex«iullOn of lht oontrlClt MO HOO bll~,,...,...".. ptrtOn -'V VICE-PAESIDUIT • llUll Md Eleo11on 10 Sell TM unoer.
of Au.Un, Texaa, Scot :::r: ~let fonn In the Ne.rt B .. c~, CA . Hitt VACAT~N RENTAL SVITl!M8, t201 IEMI HIQfllelld A\IW9 ~~~=lr::=-~~
Schmid\ of Chino, Ca., Pur1U9111 to a.otlon 4690 ot the ('Ht) 71t·Ul7 18713 a..c:tl 81., H\lnttngton BMctl, San lernwdfilo, CA 112404 Ille oounty..,_. th4I rNI prOl)etty II
Christi J f Cea Government Code of IM 8111• of Published ~ Cout CA.92647 (H•l .... 796' Of IOC•led M f!9'ee 0 Ctllfoml .. IM 00t'llreo1 wlll c:onllln Dail Pilot Se l 6 7 13 Jlll'IM e. Vllfltctl, llN1 Grlltlwn "8-ll11 •t 371 & 3n P"~ Trutttei LONG HACH l~VINOI Mesa, C.. SM worked a pro111e1one permtt1ing !ht~ Y P · • • • It Hvnttngton IMGh. CA tH-47 Publlehed 0.-lllOll COM1 Diiiy ""' ANO LOAN AISOCIATON
Paper Unllmlted ln Ntw bidder 10 111t>eth1M 19CMhlel tor 11183. ~10-83 Thia~ llconOllCttd bt:"' 8tpl 1• 14· 21. 1113· NAftOHAL FOA!CLOIUAE HA· ----------ttn<IMdlltl 417a.f3 ICE port Bel.ch for many yura. anv mOM)'I wtthlleld Oy the DIS. --J i VerttCll v Prlvl~ lel'Vicn will be h TAIOT 10.,...,,. pertortn411\Ct uno.t __ ..._ •-" ~_.:__t ...... ,...1h 1.._ .,_ ce~_.., ..... Ad 1178 Century Ptrk £ut, It• 1180 tflt OOlllt'ICf knock.I Ofttfl Wf*\ yOu ,,_ --·-• wtl ,_, .., ,,. rv. _,_, LOI AnQAll9, CA. to0e7
by the Neptune Soelety. QcMirflint Board UM reeutt~ O.ity ~ cterll of 0rtntt CouMy on AOTION t211) UM116
lie\.l of f1owera the f ty. Dotothy H"°etMY Flilhll' Piiot Claulfi.o ~d• to APftl fO. 1183· ,.....,. Call • B)" Netlllt 1. MOnlOOft*Y
requettl donaUona be mltdie Publllhed~=='~ PllOf '-:.!' tlte 0r.,. CoMt Pu*Md Orange Ooaet DllllY Del~ PllOI ~~uo;;:.,::. t'!.t D•lly Pllol
IO the American Ca.ncer So-Sept. 7, "· 1tU n'I ~ "42.&e71 Piiot Auo. 1?, 24, Jl, 8tc>t .,, t"3. ~;.~~~: Aug. 2• • .11. hc)1 7, 1t83.
Cl('t)' IOM-83 4142-13 4118~83
For Ad Action
Cal a
Daiy Plot
AD·YIS(I
642-5§71
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, Sept. 7, 1983 C1
"8.JC llOTICL MUC NOTICl Ml.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTIC(
ITAW C» WITHDUWAL ,ICTmOUI llUIMN "°'"nout MllMll ,ICTmOUI ...... ,tCTITIOUt ...... ptQlYTlO(Ha-11
MOii •Mn••• MAlll l f ATl...,-Y NAM1 ITATl•NT NAm ITA1"111mn MAlll ITATll9WT MAlll ITATW
ONllAT1N8 ._... The fOlow'nO penont .,. doing The fOllowtnQ l*'tOf\ le d~ TM IOllO'oMg P«IOIW 1Te Th9 fOll<>Wlne pet'llOn~ dOlnf The ~ J*90nl .,. dOlrlO ...Cm'IOUI ....U Mm IM.telnelt u : tiu.ltw • bu.llnna ... bulllneet 11: bull,_ • Alf\.l,E8T DISTRIBUTOR, 17472 HOME OXYGEN 81!RVICl!IS. VACATION 9'.ENTAI. SYSTEMS TAFT-nCal.IR AND Al-POTIOUI, 1H1 ..... onv.
T"• lollowlno pt taon llu #D Delry Vi.w. Huntington Beedl. 23ff~C De I.a ,_.todaltne. 81111 &:x>O WITnet A~ue. lull• 1De SOCIATH. 2611 Elden Aw., Coeta 1122, SMle>Ana Hit,, CA. W707
.,..._, ... getMtllpeltlW from 12647 4i0. Hiii•, 12913 H..ntlnoton e.cm. CA 82648 M-CA. fft.21 floNt1o N. IYleoleC, 1H 1 .....
the P*WnhlP ~ linder IM Denlel L De~ Mt W Wlleon SI. Of n Mllchlke<, M 0 . THE li>.RIOA C~OIV.Tl()H, Timothy C. Tell. 2511 l!lden Ave .• 0rtw 11H, ~ti AN Ht1 .. CA.
llalllolll ~ IWne of OP-Coell ....... CA. 82t27 26391 8PO led Pony, Li19UNI Hille. Cellfoml• Cofl>ot'ellon. 5200 W111 CO.ta M-, CA. 02$27 82707
TIMUM FTTNEaa cecTEAI, 1toe6 0 111ld P . Tru.mntn. 17472 82853 Avenue. Sult• IOl. Hunting\ Devtd L. Mi...,, 24017 NarbonNI JOCZ A ~&81 ..... DfM l-.ofl llYd., HunttnGlon a..ctl. CA. ~ ID, Huntington BMch, Thi•~ i. COl\dll<!lld by. an Beech. CA. 92649 Ave .. LOMllA, CA. 80717 ,, t22, Sem• An• .... CA. 82707 ta.. OA. t2647 lndh110uel. Thi• 1>ualr1et1 11 conducned by; Thi• b\ltlntU 11 condue1ecl by, • Thi• butlneee i. COl\dUOted by· In· Tiie 'ftotlll0\11 bullneN neme Thlt t>u.in.. 11 condlXlle<I by: • Of. Benjamin Mllc/\I~., corpor1l10<1 general p111net1hlp. dlvldu.,. (hulbend I wife). e11fimen' '°' lhe ~ ... general partnettlllp. Thi. •t•lemenl WU flied with th• Jemet B, V•ltch, Pretli<Wlt Timothy c . Tell Rourk> N. l9uleclec ...... on Jen, 1t, 1"'3 In the County Denlel L a...... Counly Cletk ol Orenge County on Thi• ••• ,_, WM tli.d with t Thie tlll91Mnl wH lllld wtlh lhe Thi• llal-1 Wll llled with the
of Onnge. Thll 1t•l-t wu tlled With the Aug. 2. t883 County c.-or Ot1"09 County County Cletll ot Or~ County on County Cletk of Otenge COutlty on M Heme w1CI AO<I,... of the,..,. County Cieri\ ol O<ange County on P'2220al Jul)' ?II, 1983 Jul'.V 20, 1883 Aug O. 11183. _ "°" ~r..tng: Kun A. Kiii, 211 Aug s, 196' Publllhed Or•no• cout Dally nua11 ,2211• .. _. ~et., #3, Huntinoton 8-:h, FIDtM Piiot Aug 17. 24, 3 t, Sept. 7, 1883 Publl1hlld Oran;. Coall 091 Publlehld Oren~ COMI Dall) Pul>4i.n.G Otano-Cout Dally
CA. t2e4I Pul>411hed O!ange Cout Dally 4640-83 Piiot Aug 17, 24, 31. a.pi, 7. 19&3. Pilot Aug. 24, 31, sep1, 7. 14, 1883. Pilot Aug. 17. 24, :n. Sec>t. 7, 1083. ~ Orenge Coelt Otllly Pllol Aug. 17. 2•. 31. 5.pt. 7, 1883. 4&t3-8 •752-83 4837-83
PtlOC Auel· 31, Sept. 7, 14, 'l~ •533-83 ------------:-------------1
Ml.IC NOTICE P\&IC NOTICE I __ ..... rta..1---..C_NO.-,.T_IC-..E__ Ml.JC NOTICE
MUC NOTICl
ACTTnOUI .,... ..
NAm tT ATDllJIT The 'ollOwtnO ~ .,. doing
~-ON TARGET VIDEO PRO·
DUCT'°"8. :179 W. Wllaon •B,
Co.QMIM,92827
e.tn Ellen Beron, 2711 W. Wiiton •I. Coeta ....... CA. 82827
Dela 0. Voea. 120-23rd, NNpOf1 a..cn. CA. 92te3 ~ Spetti1, 1800 W. SINcll
•208,0renge,CA.92887
Stephen Kautmen. t8M1 SllV«
Maple Wy, Santa Ane. CA. 112706 Thie ~ 19 condU0111d by. 1111 U~atld lllOCllllOn Olhel' then • pattnetahtp.
19th E. Beron
Thie •t•te<nenl ... llted With 11141
County Clefll of Orlr>Q9 County on
July 27, 11183. ,221111
Ptlbllahed Orenge Cout Delly Piiot Aug. 17, 24, 31, Sept. 7, 1883.
4839-83
'ICTITIOUI aUl!Hell flCTTnOUI IWIMll ---.;..,;;;=..;;....;..;.;o.;;,;,;;,;.._ ___ ,
NA• ITATIMENT "cT1T1oua aYINH I ...-ITATIMINT ,ICTITIOUI __, ..... ~c~•=" The foUowlng 1*10n II Clolng NAMl ITATIMIHT J The l'ollowlng pef90fl ,, Clolng NA• ITATIMINT
..... -... bull,_••: The followlng ~IOM ere dolng1 Dulin ... u : The loUowlng peraon1 •• doing COUNTY Of' ~ PERM LUBE. 13548 Por11mouth 1>u1lneu ea • WAC ASSOCIATES, LANDSCAPE bualMU u :
In the Meller of the Cir, w .. 1mln1ler 92683 LEE 8 ASSOCIATES COMi ARCHITECTURE, 2434 I Glmarron 0 C ELECTRIC/ORANGE
Apj:>lio.!llorlOI "e " Wayne Smith, 13548MERCIAL REAL ESTATE SER· Cour1,Legun1Nlguel,CA.82877 COUNTY ELECTRIC, 3701 W. Mc Oorothy Ceilaw1y Heiden, 18etl Pornmouth Cir, We1tmln1111r. CA VICES, 2200 Wat Oreng••ood. Wllllarn Ayn Crooll. 243•1 Gimar-Flldden, Senta Ana. 92704
Viet• Ceud•I, N9wpOf1 ~CA. 92683 s~ 150, Orange, CA. 9209& ronCourt, Laguna Nlguel, CA. 92877 L.oelne Sllrmemee. 218 E 22nd
928eOC Thi• bu1lnea111 oonelucitec:I by; an JLV Co .. lno., 2200 WMt Oran;.-Thi• bu11n-It conducted by: an SI, Cotta M .... 82827 10< henge ol Name lndlvlelutl. woOd. Suite 150, Orenge, CA. 82888 lndf\ltdutl. Brian P. S<MtlQllO, 18393 Sin
No. A 11"" "e" W1yne Smith KCCO. Inc .. 2200 Weat Oran;. Wllllarn R. Cfooll J1unto, Fovntlln lfatley, CA. 92708
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE Thll 1t1tement wu !tied with the wOOd, Suite 150, Or~, CA. 92888 Thia llale"*'t WU tlllld with the Thie bullneN II conducllld by: e
FOR CHANGE OF NAME County Clerk or Orange County on JOhn C E1tr1hat1, lno., 2200 w .. 1 County Ct•k ol Orange County on oenerat pertnerlhlp.
.-.,.. h C(Secll · ll064Hjd h II'-' July 28. 1983 Orange•ood. Suite 150, Oren9e, Aug 6.. 1883. Lenalne SU~ uv.01 y • •••Y .. en •• ""' F221503 CA 92868 F222i10 Thia llatement WU llled with Ille
• petl11on In lhll court lor en Ofder Publltlled Orange Coaa1 Dally Paul Eernhart, 506 NOr1h Butte Publltheel Orange Coast Dally County Clerk of Orenge County on
lllowlng pelltlOMf 10 Ching. hl1/hef Pilot Aug 17 24, 31, Sept 7, 1983 Court. Brea, CA. 92621 Pilot Aug. 24. 31. Sept. 7, 1', 1883 May 24, 1983. name fr0<0 Dorothy Cllleway Heiden 4638·83 Douglas A Himes, lno , 2200 West •697-83 '21710I
to Dorothy Ann Callew1y. Orengewood Sulla 150 Orange DUD'IC ""'TIC£ Publllhed Orange cdut Diiiy IT IS HEAEBY OROERED that 111 CA 92668 . ' ' l"UUL nu Pllot Aug 17, 24, 31, Sept. 7, 1983
per1on1 lnter .. ttd In the mauer Pllll.IC NOTICE Ranely J Verellocll. 29821 White------------4858-83
e lO<Mlk! appear belort thlt court In Otter. Laguna Niguel. CA. g2868 Ftemioua aUllNE81
Department No. 3 II 700 Chilo FICTITIOUa •UtlNEll Thomas w Gilmer 19522 Old NAME ITATIMENT
Cent• Ol'I,,,. WMI. Santa An•, Cell· NAME STATEMENT Rench Aoeel. Yorba' Linda CA The following perlOn la doing PlB.JC NOTICE
lornl1, on Oct. 10, 1983. et 10:00 The lollo•lng perton Is doing 92686 • ·~ , business 11· 1------------o'Clodt AM., and then and there l>utJneas 11: Charles F Noble 132l I Nalla PROFESSIONAL SOFTWARE K.-.o7
llhow tauM. II any they ha,,,.. why FLATL.EY TRANSLATION SER· Santa Ana CA 92705 ' SERVICES. 3701 Birch 1el FIOot, ~COUNTY
llld petition fOf Chl/IQ9 ol name VICE. 1614 low1 11A, Costa Mesa. Roger Rhoades 8589 Phoenl• Av-Newpon a..ch, CA. 92660 ·~ CC>UftT
11\ould not beg.rented. CA. 92826 enue Fountain VtlJley CA 82708 Metvln J. Smo«e, 174• 1 BonnM 700 Ci.to eenw Of. W•t
Nil.IC MlTICE
IT IS FURTHER ordered thet 1 Linda Flalley. 1814 Iowa llA, Th~maa G. Ewing, '221 Vie Nice. Dr. Tustin, CA. 92880 lente Ana, CA. '2701
PM:TfTIC)Ua llU..... copy ol thl1 O<der 10 ahow UUM be Coate Mesa, CA 92628 Newport Beach CA 92663 Thi• bualness la conduclec:I by: an Plalntlfl: ORANGE TREE CON·
NAiii ITATDmWT publllhed In Ille Orenge Collt Dally Thie buslnna I• conducted by. an Aoneld Sheehan. 228•9 Bridge Individual. OOMINIUM HOMEOWNEAS AS-l"-followfflg !)«ION IT• dOlng Pilot. • n-•P•PI' ol ~ral Individual. Route 0.lve El Toro CA 92630 MelVln J. Smok• SOClATION ~ M: clrculltlon, publllhed In thll county Lindi Fl1tley Mletlaet Martin 415 \.\ Poppy Thl1 11•1-I wu ftllld .,.,nh the Delendent· WILLIAM C. WESSEL LIDO CLEANER, 81126 Allenta et leul once • weel< 10< lour con· Thia 1tatement wu n1ee1 With Ille C0<ono Del Mar CA. 92828 ' County Clerk ol 0ral'IQ9 County on Cue No. 39•89•25 Ave .• Huntington 8Mch, CA. 92648 MCUllve well• J>(iO< to the dey ot Mid County Cl«lt ot Oreng• County on This bulllnffl' 11 condUC1ed by. 1 Aug 5. 1983. IU'9MONI
Young C. Chol. 21&t2 Bellhlre hMflng. July 29, 1983 general partnerahlp. f'22230I NOTICll You lien ....,. ......._ Ave.. Apt IC, H......u.n GITdenl. Oiied Aug. 24, 1983 P'221IOI c D Daly Attorney Published Oflng• Coaet Dally TM .,_. INl1 cleolde ..... ,...
CA. 80718 B. Tern Nomoto Publllhed Orange Cont Dilly This Slll~enl Wts llled With,,,. Pilot Aug 24. 31, Sept. 7, 14, 1983. •lt'*lt ,_ ..,_. hMint ._...
Sun H. Chol, 2l~2 Belehlre A\19., Judge of Ille Piiot Aug. 17, 24 31, Sept, 7, 1883. ovnly Clerk ol Orange County on 4695·83 JOU~ wNllft IO..,.., "9ed ~. •C. Hawtillln Gerdenl, CA Supetlor Cour1 4535-83 Aug 2 1983 Dl-1c 111nncE ltM ..,,.,._.._ ...... 9071& Publllhld Orange Cou1 Diiiy Piiot . fmoel rUUL nu If you wteh to Me6I Ille advice of en
Thie buelneN ta condU01ed by: In-Aug. 31, Sept. 7• 14• 2 '· 1983. Dl .. 'JC NOTICE Publlahed Orange Coeat Delly ,ICTTTIOUI ...... -., aUOfney In Ihle "'*"9f. you lhould dMduell ~ & wife). 1 ____ ,.._UUL ________ Ptto1 Aug 17, 24, 31. Sept 7. 1983. ,.. .. aTAnMENr do ao pr0<npt1y eo 1he1 your .r111en
Young C. Chol ------------OflANOE COUNTY 4532·83 The lollowlng ptlf'IOnl are dolno retponM, If any, m1y be nled on
Thie .,.,.,.,.,,, wu flied With the Nil.IC NOTICE MUNICIPAL COURT bUllne1s u · lime.
County CWll ol Orenge County on !-------------*1 .Mme-.. ~Ylt"d GOLDEN. STATE LOANS 2700 AvtaotUeled hllldodemended9,
Aug. 25, 1"3. f'm774 NOMnc~: .:;:i:.rr.,::• Newi-t lleecft, CA t2llO ni .. 'IC NOTICE Harbor Blvd .. .r201. eo.11 . Meaa, Et lr1bume: lede dletdlr -tt• Ud.
Nol•-It ..__...y g"-IO ~-'lt~I Ptalntltt:SPEERS DANA TEAL & r UUL CA 92828 e&n IMdenoo&e • ---.. lM. ,... ~ Orenge Cout Delly ,... ,...,.., , • ..,, _ _. ~ BALFOUR Gue Defalco, 2700 HarbCK Blvd., =tfe • ... :. ..._ Laa 19
PllotAug.31.5.pl.7,14,21, 1883. of the within named lrenlltfor(I) Oelendant ·NI CHOLAS M T-2$79S ;201,CottaM ... ,CA.92626 lf-..wteht:Mell ti..IMMoeof
• 41H18-83 1h:,: bulk tran:er ~~oui,:.,i:;-NICHOLSON NOTICE OF TRUITl!E'I aA.L.I Marllyn Defalco, 2700 Harbor 111'1 ~~ lft thlll !Mtlw JOU
------------:. ~ y • ca .. No. 57734 IMPORTAN~·-...'t,~i~TO PROP-Blvd .. #201. Coet• MMI, CA. 92828 9"ouW ... ,,_...., ....... ,_ "8JC N0J1C[ f11e neme( ) ino bull,_ lddfeel aUMMONa ERTY OWNER Thll bu.ineaa 11 conducted by: • wrtt1et1 ,....,.., W _, _, M
------------ol the lnt.!seo I an1l.,""1) are• NOTICE! You "-" been iued. YOU ARE IN DEFAlJL T UN~ A O-ll PIT11l9fl/llp flied°" tlfM. ' ACTITIOUa Wal ' ~, . Tiie ~ MIJ dectde egel,,•1 JO<I 0 D OF TR ST DATED A 1 Gus Defalco •• .. ~ I TAT'lmNT MARK FISHER. 10377 Suneet Blvd .• wtttloul JOllf belrtt llMrd ""'"' EE u . ugu11 . Thi• 1111emen1 WU llllld '"'"'Ille .. U.leddeMll....... ...... The t~ ,._IOM are d"""' Loa Angele1, CA. 80024 S.S . r:: ~....-.. •ltfll" 30 day• Read 1980, UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION Countv Cieri< ol Orange County on to• Ull ebof9do et1 eete -90. ..._....,,.,, ,._. _.,. • 5 7 2 • 4 4 -1 8 1 3, A 0 BE AT ,........,.. ' TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT / debef&e Moerto .....,...._te,
bull-u ; POMERANTZ. 600 SOUlh La Brea lntormetlorl '*°"· MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE. Aug. 5· 1983· ..... IMMll, .., (WllUMll SWEDISH MARINE. INC .. 2103 W. ii""'• with lo leek Ille edlllce ol 1111 OF F2ZtaOI PecHlc COMt Hwy, NNpOf1 Beech. Bllld., Loe AnQellt. CA. 90038, S.S . 1110:;;y In thl1 meller you Should IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION Publllhed Orange Coul Dally 9Kftta, Iii E puedit -
CA.92te3 ·=~endbu..,_eddt-dOIO ptO<Oplly IO lhel0~our wrltlen ~~ l'G":.1~~~ ~~u~Hy~~~~JJto PllOI Aug 24,31. Sept. 7. 14, 1983. ~~ Alff: A ....
Per Uungbetgh. 247 M0<nlng Ce-of the lntend41d tr1n1le<M(I) are: reeponee. If any, may be llled on CONTACT A LAWYER. 4884-83 _.....,.. 1\91 beet1 fled 1tJ lhl ~5 Rd .. CO<ona def Mar, CA. RANDALL o. PECAUT, 34832 Catie "":vllOl\Jtted ha aldo demandaele. On September 28. t983, 11 10:00 PlB.IC NOTICE ,,..... t: ,_. • rw-"" to
At '-->n. 1000 Hampehlre. New-~~~~ .. S~S~PJ=~~~ch. CA, El tr1bum1: ... decldlr OOftlr• Ud. ~S~R0~~~1':i~1~11 ~~,~~:~~ OftAHOI COUNTY = ao deyt ~1 ::n=~
PCll1 8-:h, CA. 828e0 Th1t 1he property pef11nent hereto -'" eudllltde 1 -qve Ud. re-u duty appointed Tru1t" under and IUN'NOtM:OUR'T 9"ved on you. me with Ihle court •
lenal JoMneaon, 19251 Slerr• 11 dMCl'lbed 1n general u · AN of the ~ dlfttro de 30 dtea. Lea la pursuant to Deed of Trull recorellld -c......., --~ -. W•t written reeponM to the oomc>lelnt CepU. ININ, CA. 92715 • ln--!Ofl ... 91tve. A 5 980 In N 4828 I ,_ ,.,.. ..._._ .,. U ._.. .._._ .. wlll .....: ,,_ ~ le condue1ed by: • furniture, nxtur ... equipment. me-11 JOU _.... 10 _. the lldYloe of ug . 1 . ., II o. . ,, , CA. '2701 n-you do. ~ .... -t ...
COl'PO'•tion • cfltnee, 1Y9P'les, acc;oon1a. contr1e1 an llt1vmeJ In th.. l'Mltllf rou t>OOll 13690. p1~e 314, ol Official L. GIBBS entered on eppllcetlon of the plaln-,._ L.Jul19~ rlghtl. goodwill, lrtd• n1me. Mould do 90 ~omptlr 90 thei y«Mlr Record• In Ille o Joe o the ndant: RIA F. REED 1111. and Ihle court mey enter a judg6-T'hle ~1 wu nllld with 1119 IMM/\ol<l lnler .. 1 and IMMhold ltn· wrltteft '99pOflN If .,,,. mey be Recorder1 In Orange , Stale CIM·NQ._12 1·82-86 ment egllnll you 10< the relief 0.-
Coun"' Cieri\ of O< Cou ty prov-11 of thet oel'laln Arcac:t• ntect time ' ' ot C1lllorn11 executed N AMAN aUMMONt ('AMILY LAW) manded In the complaint, which
Aug '{2 IM3 ~ n on end 11 k>Qted at: 213 South Broad· 1t.:'tect .... eolklwef--SIDNEY GERSTEIN and LINDA NOTICEJ You hav. be9ft llUMI. could rffull In gamllhmenl ol
' ' ' ~ wey, Llgooa a..ctl, Celll0<nll Jo de ltfl ....... 9ft .... -lo DIANA MURPHY WILL SELL AT TM -1 m., decide aeelMt JOU wegea. taking ol money or property
Pvb411hed Or..nge COMt Delly The bu"'-t\l/M uaecr-by the debetta tleo«to INMdaelaffteftte' PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST tffthov1 ,_ ~ "-d IHI .... CK othef rellel req~led In the c.om-
Pllot Aug 24 3 I Sept 7 14 1883 Mid tranafrltor(a) et Mid loclllon 11: de "t• -1. 911 reepuee..: BIDDER FOR CASH (payable 11 llme JOii ~ wttNft IO ..., .. RMCI plelnt. · ' ' · · 4741.83 SPACE GALAXY eec:rlta. 11 hlJ lllgune puede -or sale In lawful money ol lhe United IM lnformetton '"'°"· Dated: Feb. 25. 1983
That Mid bulk tr anal• 11 Intended let,_. • Item ' Statea) et The Nonh front entrence 11 you wtllh to Mell lhe eelvloe of an LEE A. BRANCH. Cle(lc ------------110 be conllUll'lmlled 11 the ottlce of: "1-TO .,,_ Dlr.NoANT: A clYll lo the county courtnouM, 700 Civic attorM)' In lhll mell.,, you lhould By: J. Y. Hyatt. ~ty Pl&JC NOTICE 8et1a Eac:row Enlerpr1-Inc., 505 -ll&alM ..._ bMfl ftled br the Cent., Drive W111, Sent• An•. Cell· do to P<O<Oplly 80 that your w<lttan PubUlhlld 0rlll'IQ9 Coalt Dally Pllol
N. TUl!ln Ave,, Suite 180. s.nt1 Ana. ptllftitfl ...,_, '°"' W ,_ .Wt to IOml• 111rlghl,11tle and lnt-1 COf'o-reeponae If eny rney be tiled on Aug. 2•. 31, 5.pt. 7. 1883.
NOTICE 0#' Callfornll 92705 on CK •II• Septem-~ thte ~ JOU mual :r:: 10 and now held by II undet lime • · 4855-83
TRUeTIFa a.AL.E bet 23, 1983. ..ltllrl M d1y1 •lttf' this aommona Ii aa d Deed ol Tru1t In the property AYllOIUsted 111 lldo dem1nd1de On Sec>tembet 7, 1883, et 10.00 Thia bulk tr1n1I• la tubleci to Mtv.o on ou n1e W1lh thla couf1 1 altuated In llld County II/Id S111e El trlbume·.,.. dectdlf -era Ud. ------------!
A.M. Celltoml• Land Tiiie ComP111y. Calllornla Unllorm Comm1rclal rltten r~" to the complalnl delcrtbed u . a1f1 ~ 1 -que Ud. ,.. .,.., IC NOTICE Mdulyappoln111dTl'Ull .. uncs.<1nd Codes.ctlor18106. w PARCEL 1. An undlVldlld 1/101h aponGlt ... ,,0. ao .... L .... ____ ... _UUL ________ I ~' to OMd of Trut11 ••-.it.a The name"'° lldQr-of,,,. pet· ';::,'!::cl: ~,b.~·~r~~ w~lal~ 1nte<es1 In and 10 Loi 1 of Tract Noi ~ .,_ ...... ~ COUNTY
by Howerd A. Hammennen, an un-'°" with wt\OfT1 c:talrna may be nllld 11 1111 end lhl• court may enlM 1 Judge-10.31, In the City ol ll'Vlne. County o " J" .._.. to Meir the edvtoe of lw.NOR COUlfT mwrled man M Truator 10< lhe ben-a.tt1 Eactow Enterprllee Inc .• 505 ment egalnel you lor the reliel de-Orange, State ot Clllto<nle. u per et1 ell~ i,, IMe MMter, JOU 7'00 Ctwl C... Df. WMt
aM end aecurtty ol W• Fergo N. Tue11n Ave .. Sutt• 180, s.n1a AM, mended In the complaint. which map rllCOtded In BOOk 448 of Mi. eMYld do ao ,,_,., ao tlwt JOU' laiftta AM, CA. 117e1 = M°:rJ'~e:' ~ ~...'!0:::27by05. and ~11ui:.:r; ':! eould rMull In g1rnl1hmenl of ~1~1 o~.:'ot·~,:~:;. ~ wntton rwpOMe, " lflY, IMJ b9 Plllntlff; CROCKER NATIONAL • · ""' 1 9")' or wall" taklno of money or property '' "'9d °"time. BANK u lnatturnent No. 82-108882 on 5.p1embet ~2. 1983, which 11 the oro1~rellef reqUHledlnthecom. COfderol Oranf:County. llU.tecl .... eollolWef--Oelendant:OEWEYE.HENNESSV March 30, 11182, of OttlClal R«ord1 bull,_ day before the con1Umm1-plaint EXCEPTING HEREFROM Unttt 1 to de un ~ 9ft .... -to C... No 4().2$-88 ~~~~-the.., ~:'.7. ~c:' tlonSoda,te ~k abovel. ·-'d In Oet9d: Feb. 8 1983 :i'~°'i"'r 10 ~-~= ~~ ~ ..,.,.. "-to ._...._ •• : . ..._.ONI "' "'-.,...... -..uvn.,, • at u ,. nown o --LEE A BRANCH Clefk m n um de .. ta _.., .. ,.........te NOTICE 'rou Mft beeft wed. lomlL leneled TranelwM(•) eald lntend41d By·Kwen ~holtz. Deputy 13558 II Pege 1fl83 ot Otnclal ~ _ ........ M~l!N, .,... -TM -1 _, deotde ....... ,_ WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION Tr1n11etor(1) UMd the followlng Id· Publllhed Orange Cout Dolly PllOI cord1 ol Ofange County. ,...._IT_. e , wf1t1ou1 ,_ ~ '-d un1eM
TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR dl110ne1 bu'"-nemea Ind •d-A 17 24 31 Sepl 7 1883 Alto exc;epllng llMwefrom Ille,. 1-TO ntE DI NDANT: A otvM W'OU ~ ""'*' ao dip. ...... CASH, CASHIER'S CHECK OR dr-within 11141 lhr• yMre tut ug. ' • ' ' • 4548•83 atrlcted common ., ... It lhown on c;om..._.,,t "M bMf1 ft1M1 br ltM tf1e lfttomletlon Wow.
CERTIFIED CHECK (payable 11 time put: (II "none" 10 etall.) aald condominium plan above tnen· ptllfttlff ....... I YCMI· If JOU wr.tl to II you wlah lo leek the ed\lloe of en
of .... In lewful ITIOMY ot the United Oiled Auguat 22. 1883 Uonec:I defend ihte i.w.lt, JOii muet. 11t0<ney In Ihle m•tt• you lhould
Stalel). et In the lobby of Celltomla Randall D. P«*lt PlB..IC NOTICE PARCEL 2· Unit 5 .. ahown upon wttlllfl ao d1y1 lftllt thl11Umm<>n1 II do IO prompl)f IO that' your wrfflen
Lind Title~ -1010 N Main lnleneled Tran1ler81(1) the Condominium Plan r.terrlld lo In ~on you Ille wttti lhlt COUr1 • rellc>on"-If eny !NY be !tied on
Sttwt, Santa AN. Callfoml&. Pul>41ehed <>r.,. Coul Deity PllOt C""°5t1 PARCEL 1 above wrl11en r~ .. to lhe COtl'lplelt\I. time. . •
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A Sept. 7. 1983 NOTICE CW TIIUITl!E'I IAU PARCEL 3: An exctualV9 -Un .... you do, your default wtll be AVtlOIUited he etdo dernandede.
0££0 Of TRUST OR MORTGAGE 507M3 "°· 11039 ment lor perking 111d. garage enttfed on eppllullon ol the plain· El trlbuma· ... dlctdlf -"-Ud. DATED MARCH 22, 1982. UNLESS! 5.ptember 21. 1983 el 11:00 1.m. purpose over that portion ol llid Lo1 ml and Ihle court meyanter a )udQe· •lrl eudleflOte 1 meMe .. Ucl. ,._
VOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT FIRST AMERICAN TITLE IN· 1 designated II 5-C on Ille Con-men. t i;OeTntryou 10< the retie! cl. ~ defttro. 10 .... LM le YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE PU8UC N()TIC[ SURANCE COMPANY. 1 CalllOfnla domlnlum Plan relened to above. mana.d In the oornplelnt which In~~ ... .
SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU Cotporallorl .. Tru11ee. llCQ9llOf' Exc;epllng lherefrCKO au oil. Oii could reeull In g&rnllhrMnl or "'" ............ ti. ........
NEED AH EXPLANATION OF THEION>IR TO IHOW CAUH '°" Trvat" CK Subllltuted Tru11ee of rlght1. mlneralt, mlner11 right•. wegee lllklng of money Of property lift 8"ofM7 In tMI _.,. ,... NA TUA£ Of THE PROCEEDINGS CHANGE 0#' NAME lhal oer1aln Deed of Tru1t executed natural g11 rlghle. end other or otr* rellef req~tlld In the com-aMuM do 90 "'°'"""' .. M ,_
AOAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CON-JASON MITCHELL WERNER haa byJOHANNA L VENTRE, 1 wldo"' hydrocarb0n1 by wh1teoever name plalnl wrtt19fl ~. If "''' INl1 be TACT A LAWYER. n1e<1 1 lltlorl In lhl• court ICK an and recorded September 7, 1978 11 known. geothermal 1team and all Oiied: Aprll 25, l983 ftled 9ft tllM.
All right tltle and lnl., .. I con-'0<der aCng petlllonef to cnange ln11rvmen1 No. 8718, In BOOk 121152, P<oducte derived fr0<0 any of the LEE A. BRANCH. Cl4Hk ll u.tect ..._aolk!Matel-
"""'9d to end now hilld by H under hll name from JASON MITCHELL pege 1832, of Olflclal Recordl ol foregoing. that may be Within or By GeH C1Tpenter. Deputy te. un .-...0 en ... -to. Mid Deed of Trual In the property WERNER to JASON KANEALII Orange County. C111fomta. end under Ille peroetollend ~above Publlttled Orange Coul Deity Piiot ....... "-to IMleclle9-... allua1ed In Nld County end St••iw ERNEA purisuant 10 thll c.rteln Nolte. ot detcrlbed, together with 11'19 I*· Aug 17• 24• 31, Sept. 7• 1883. • •ta _., 111 ,..._ ..
6-:rlbed 11. 1 11 ..._:..... .... •• 1 Def1ull under rec0<ded September petu111 right ol dtllllng. mining, ex-4a.s-83 _....., el r=---_ __... -PARCEL I. Unit No 38, In the 1 ·--Y 0<der.,.. lhet ., P"· 29, 1982 " tn11rument No. plorlng, and Optlf'aUno thereto< and ...-unlncorP'veted area of Irvine City 1•oni lnl•rffled In th• m•ll•r 82-341845 thereunder of Oltlcl•I storing In end removing the lllTl9 .,..,IC ""'TICE ,.glfttM' e • ........ ,,.._ "•"'oml • efO<Mald apj)MI bef0<• lhl1 cour1 In • , __ ... ---....;'"..=UUL;.;;;.;.;;...;.nu;.;....;.;..;;.;;;...;.___ 1-tor-'r'HI °" NDANT: A .... oountyot. .... ~1eo1.,..... •. Oeper1ment No 3 11 700 CIVIC Reootd1 of II.Id County. wlll under lr0<0 11td land 0< any othef -"'· K~ _,......, hee Mefl ._ llJ lhl :.=:, ~ -= ~1'.;'9~T," Center Drive w.S.. Santa Anl. Call·:; :.U~':'.~~d,~of1!!:: :'.:,~-~ ~~1~1 ~'l'ltl:!OC::.O: ,,..,,.. ....... t J9'I. ti reu wfatl te ' fomla, on Oct. 3. 1983, at 10:00 """"" · ~., OflAHQI COUNTY deteftd tNt ........ ,_. lllWt, 1llO, In ~ 13885. Pevee 5 5 to o'clodl A M and then and thar• money of the United S111e1 of land• other than lhOM hereln11>ove HARaOft """"9C•Al. COURT wtttlln IO daya .,,., thle eumrnone It
64t. lnduaMI ol oflldal record• o1 allow C41UM .. If any they h...,. Wiiy Arnetlcl, • celh11t'1 check pl)'able dnc;rlbed, oll CK gu well1. tunnel• ..o1 ,,_..,.. '9"Ved on you Ille With lhla COUt1 1 M6d county. ..Id Ill~ tor eha ol name to 11ld Tru1I• drewn on e 11111 or end ehan1 Into, through CK ecroee .... port 9Ncf\, CA. t-.o written r~ 10 Ille oompl.int. PARCEL 2: An undlVldlld one ~lrnot be ;rented~ n1llon11 benk, 1 1111e or te<1ere1 tho eub1ur1aoe ot the land hefeln-Plalntlll: M.ARGARET MEYER UnleM you do, your defiult wlll be
lorty·IOUt1h (114-otth) lnllH'MI u I It l9 lul'lhet ordered lhl t e copy 01 credit union, or e 1t1l1 or hlder._i abo\11 detcrlbed. and 10 bOllCKO Defendant. SANDY BUNDY. RAY· enlMed on l ppllcl llon OI Ille plaln-
t-t In common In Ille IM lnltfltt thll dert l/\OWCIUMbe 1>4!11/\ .. vtng.1 and loen 1UOG11tlon doml-IUct1 whlpatocked or dlrecllonelly LENE MIRACLE, CAREY WARD. Utt andthlaGOUr1~yent••~
In end lo the common lfM of Lot 3 ed in°'DAIL~ PILOT (COSTA~ESAj ciled In lhla 11a1e, ot the tnlln .,.. drilled wells, tunnete and 1halt1 dbe SUNBOW REALTY rMnl i19elnll you lor Ille reltef c}e.. Of Trec:t 100.8. u pet map l1led In • MWllPlll* 01 oen-rat clrouletlorl: trence to Flrll Amertcan Tiiie In-under anel benHlh CK beyond the Croll Complalnentt· SANDY ended In lhe complelnl. wtllCh bOOlt .ae, Peel" 35 Ind 38 of mi. l>',lbllaM<I In lflllcounty at ..... once eurance C0<npeny l<>celed •• 114 uterlCK llmlll lh"90f, and to ,.,'111, BUNDY, CAREY WARD. dbl SUN· could , .. ult In Qllfnlllhrnenl 0
Olileneou• rnape, recOfdt of Mid 1 ....ic tor four conaecuttve _.1 E111 Flnh Str .. t, In the City ol Santa retunnel. equip, maintain, repair. BOW REAL TY WllQff t•lno 01 money Of property
oounty. u IUCh term 11 deflMd In the lor to the dey of .. Id hNfl Ana. C1llfornla, ell that, right. llU• deepen ond opereta t ny IUCh w.111 Cro11 O.l1nd1n11. RAYLENE CK othcir rellel requ.ated In the CCKO· artlde entltled "Oel1nlllon1" of the g'_,ed. A 19 19113 ng, and tnletHI conveyed to Ind now Ot mlnH without, however, the right MIRACLE. JOHN W JUTTNER platnl
dec:larllllOn of <l0vet\lllti:"condlllor11 · ug. B 'rem Notne>to Judge held by It under 111d OMd of Tru•I In to drill, mine. store. e11p1ore end Of>-CeM No. 6?.387 Dll~· May 9 1993 ~ rw1Uon. 1Pul>41ehed 0r.M,g. Cout o.iiy Piiot the P<operty .itu1tlld lo llld County er•t• through th• eurtaoe or the I U Ill Ill 0 N I O N LEE A. BRANCH Clelll PARCEL 4. e-11 u IUchl end State u Cle9Cr1bed es: upper 500 l•t ot the 1Ubl4H1-as CftO*...COW\.AJffT B MK ..,~· "-'•ty ~" •• penlculetty Ml forth Aug 24• 31• Sept. 7• 14• 1983· LOT t OF TRACT NO. 2310, AS re111tVed ln deed rec0<CledAugull 1. NOT1Cll You ..... ....., .-cl. y ·~-...........
In the ertlcte entllled "Eaa«nenl1" 4837•83 SHOWN ON A MAP RECORDED IN 1980. In Booll 13688, P• 878. Of· TIM_. MIJ dedde ...inet ,_ :"U:11~~.6'1.91fV' 1~ Piiot ::-=e~=r~=:,"~:sc:re: Ml.IC NOTICE ~~~~N~~u~A~~P~~ ~lco~~s llc~~eR':,<;'!~ addr"• end other ~!~...=' •= :-:',.. ": . · ' ' · 487e..93
JECT TO:" betow (Ille "Mllttf Dec-'1CTTnOUI MlltNlaa OF ORANGE COUNTY, CALI-c0<0mon dHlgn1Uon. II 1t1y, of the ltM lftfenfte"°'" ......
*ltlOn"), under the MCllOfl "-I· FORNIA real property OM«lbed ebove 11 II you with to...., the ldlllol of 1n PlalC NOTICE
Inge In eucll lf1k!le entitled M I<*-.. ._ ITATI....,. Nem• and addreu o l the puf1>()'1ed to be. 5218 Walnut Av-111omey In thla ~lier. you lhould ---------------1 i-: "o.r.. Rloht• and Ou11M. The l~ng P9fl0tll are dotng t>enellclaty 11 who. requeet the enue, lrvlM. CAllfomla. do eo P<O<nftty eo lh•I your written IU..NC>ft COURT
Utllttlw enCI C•f>le Tet.vlllon". ~A~· INDUSTRIES 380 w .... 1. belno conduoted: JOllenn• L. The undwtlGO.O Ttul tM di•-f"POl\M. I M'f, may be filed on °" CAL9'o.A, "Support end Settlement", "En· · ·Ventre. 27428 Mountain MNOo..... cl1lm1 any t11blilty for t oy lno0fr9Ct-time. COUNTY 0#' ~
orC*:l'melrt and Community Feclll-= SI• C108. Coet• Meel. CA. Eaoond. IOo. CA. 820211. Olreotlon• lo ,,... Ol lhe llteet edClrwt lnel othef AYllOtU1teel h• alCIO demanded•. In lhe Mitter of Ille
.... hHm•n1". EXCEPTING W"'lain T Henderehot 380 the •bove Pfoptfly mey be oblelned COIT'lmOn a..IQn•Uon. II eny, lhown El trlt)Uln•; ... deokllr _.,. Ud. APOftelllon of
THEREFROM .. Oii. gee. rnlnaral• W Wll9on S~I08 C Mw by requeetlng...,,. In writing fr0<n he<eln. • 1t11f1111C1111 -... UcL,. LiNOA ANN 8UMEL18
end ""* hyd(~ eubetancee. · 0 • 0911 • the benellc:llly within 10 dayt lr0<n Slld Nit 111111 ~ mede, but wtthOul ._.. ...,.... • • ..._ Laa le tor Chenoe of Neme '°"""*with I.he ttgtit 10 ·~tor CA. 112t27 ,,,. flret publlc111or1 of thl• notloe covenllltor we1ranl'f, .. .,,_or Im-"""'111111'1 n.,......, No. A 1 llM11
end 811dract ..,.,., below • depth of l<altllean Denlee ~. 380 SllCI Nie wlll be med9 ....tthout piled, regarding title. potMUlon, or " J11U wtM t. _.., the......_ ef OOOER TO SHOW CAUSE 900 ... from ,,. tut!-of Nici ~A.~~ 81• c I08. COet• ...... ~I or wan1nty, expr-or Im-•ncumbrencH . lncludlno , .... M ......., In .... ,,....,, '" FOR CHA NOE OF NAME
lllld, without the right of -1110e ·"'•v plllld, .. to 1111t. Po""9lon 0< en-clllfgeundexpen-otlhe Tt\llt .. .....,.. ... ..,_,.., M IMt ,_ (S.C. e<le41
llftlry. ~In 6Mdt of recotd. ~ .. ~ oondUClled by: • oumbr-to •U•fy the unpeld and of the trUlll Ol' ... ed by Nici ......... , I PIM, " ""' _, -LINDA ANN BVMEl.18 hN filed • Tiie.,.. edclr-encl Ottler -~ ,.._ ...... :-~ ... ~ bellncedueonthenot•teetKldb)I Oeeclotft\lt1,1o pey1Mreme1Mlg MM•....._ petition 1n 1t1111oourtfor111 "°"""°" ....,..eton, If.....,, of Ille =-:.:.::t"""°.!_.""" tMHld 0..d OI Trull, 10 wit: Pf1nc19e1111m1olttlenott(f)Malfed .u... ............. _ aflowlng~IOClNnQt,..,,_
,.. ~ dMr:ftbeCI ~ .. ..... • ._ I IN,'40.00, plu1 Ille loltowlnQ MtJ-by Hid Deed of Truel to Wit: .... llfl ........ 9ft ............ Mme"°"' LINDA A~ IUMILll IO
pwrponM to b« 80 H-IWOOO -County Ci.ti of Oranot COunty on met..S ooeta, .. ~ end ad-$4,912.28 With lnl«MI t~ ffom ............... ..,. , ............ LtNOA ~II.Al~. irvlM.. ca.. H11• Aug. tT, t983. 11enoe .. 11lletlmeoflheln1t11lpubll· July 1, 1981 Cii> 12.6% pet IM\lfft M • _. __.., M .......... IT 18 Hl!AEIY OADEAED ltlllt Ill
THE UHOERSIGNEO TRUSTEE Pvbllehed Or ,._~,_~ cetlon of lhlt Notice of 81le: provio.<t In llld note(I) plul ootll .......... ~llM. ...... -peflOlll lnt.,...led In the metier OtlelNMI ANY LIABILITY FOR IN-llll09 ....,_, ~, 112,222.&9. and eny edvtnCM of MH.60 wtttl ,..._.,_. e af0<eeald appear~ Ihle COUl'l In 0 0"" E c T INF 0 AM AT I 0 N PllOt Aug. 31. Sept. 7, l4, 21• 1983. NOTICa TO "'°""TY OWNlfll lnterM1. l -TO TMI ANT1 A .... Depet'tmenl No. 3 It 700 OMo ~. ' 4H 1-e3 YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A The beneflcltry V1'd4W Mid Deed ---llill ..._ 9M IW ttll e.ftt• OrlveW•, hnla Ana. C.._ TMI M6d Nie II rnlde wllllOul OEEO Of TRUST, DATED Novern-o!Tru1t~oloreuecvtldltldde-~ ..... ,_..,_ wfatl .. lomle, Ol'I Seof. 19, 1183, 11110'00 _,.,_Of ..,.,.,,ty reg«dlng lltle. "8.JC N()TIC( bet 2.2. 1878 UNLESS YOU TAl(E 11....,-ec1 10 the under9IQnld • written ...... .. ........ ,.. lllWt, o'ctodt AM., elWI men end "*•
Cl c lllllllMI or encumbranoee. Of.. ACTION TO PROTECT YOUA Dtc1111tlon of o.teuft and Oetnand ...... dey .. lt .. t~lt IUft\mont le allow-· "any 1My hew . why lo --~ Of title. '1CTmOUI ........ PROPl!RTY. IT MAV ee SOLO AT A f()f Seit. and a wrttten NOl!Oe Of De-llfVed on you, nte with ,,. 00\lft • M6d petttlOn '°' cNftge OI name
TM '°"' ~· of the unc>lld NAiii. tTATllmWT PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NllED AN leult .,,d Eleetlon to Sell. The under-wttnen reaponee to the oomplllnt, etlOuld not be Qflllted. '*"'-ol Mid OOllgatlOnol tooether The lollowlncl per-. .,. OOlng EJCPLANATION OF THE NATURI algnecl c.ueed Mid No41oe of o.ftult UnleM ~ •. 'f'N' o.tllUll Wiii be IT IS l'URTff~ ordered INt •
wfttl .,..,._, w1CI wtlmlt.0 coet1 "'*'-... OF THE PROCEEOING AGAINST and EleC11on to W to be reoouled In enl.,.cl on ec>PllCAllon ol the P4eln• r.ppy of ltlll Otdet to lhOw C911M
............ U0.000.00 (A) THE RI NA 11 &AH c E Y0.YJ.. YOU SHOULD CONT ACT A the COi.iOi)' wtllre 1he , ... ptoplf1y .. tiff. end thlt coun INiy enler • ludoe-publleNO In tflt ~ Ooelt ~
TMt Noe6oe ol ~eac:l'I of Mid of:>ll· HET'WOAK (8) THI RIN.Al88ANC! LAwTER IOCll.cl ment aglinlt yOU for the rellel c}e.. Piiot, e newt9~ OI .,.n«el fllllon end eleetlon to .... Mid r• ctHTEA, , tm •~a tt .. louttl Dll1ed: A\lgu91 12. 1983 80UTHE"N CO!i!NTIY HCAOW,. mlll'lded In the oompielnt. wtllCll Clfculllllon, putlillned '" ,,,.. oounty
property ... t.corded .. lna1ru-Laaun., OA. tH17 FIRST AMl:RICAN TITl.E Calllornl• COfporatlon COUid rwult In o•rnl'""*'t Of e1 IMlt onoe • --for '°"' cion.
rNllt No. Q .11oeeo on AprM :n. JoM Anclt9W I.Ml, 31356 ltOOk• INSURANCE COMPANY •• Ce.II· .. Mid Trv•tM .,.,agea, lllllng of '"OMV Of property MCUllwwtlleprlOft01Mdeyohlld 1tta, at OMo1e1 "9cofde In the Of-81., louttl t..aguna. CA tH77 fOMle CO<por1Uon 18127 ! Whlltl• 11\od , Of Ollltt rtlltfrequMled In 1M com• ~.
llceofthe County Aeooto.r on "Pf• John~ I.Ml in. L Lawrie WNtlltt, CA. 80800 pltilnt o.t.cl Auo. i 1113
It, 1Ma Thie ~111*\I WM fled wlttl the uttlOfUed OffloW (t13) e&1-3m Delee!' o.c. 27, 1"2 ~ .1vc1ge-a. t-Nomoto ltJ': ~ LAWI Tltte Cclmpeny Cieri\ of Ot"'Of County on 14 !Ml l'lfttl 8treel 9y lhlfter Fr-LEE A. IAAHai. C.11 ~of lfll
• T~ UV> ••• Illa. .,,,. Ana. CA. taro I AMl•l•nl 9tcf"t111Y • ty KAAIN M:HOINHOL n. o.pu. luper1or Oour1 ~. Tllamea. ~I 11,:a::,-32t1 011.a:AUilllll 13, lta ty eltorMPnerna..-0. M ~ Pllblefled Oninge C0Mt o.lly Orenge Coe11 Oelty PllOt Publllhed Orange Coe.I Otllly PtlOt PvOllafl.cl Otenge CoMt Delly Piiot PtlblltiMd OtlnOe CoMI OWiy flllot ~ 0ranoe eo.t Delly Piiot Piiot "uv a1.14ip1, 1, 14, tt, 1ea. uo. a1, 8'C>t. 1, "· t063. &1o1. 1 1•. 21. 1tu. ""Cl. u . 31, a.ot 1. "· 1"3'. AllO· 11. 211 11, ltc>t. 1..:: ~ 11. n . ao, 1N3 d?& 1J 4M7-ea 487&-u 10&1-as ,,,.....,
•
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
c
L
A
s s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
M£JtCHAM>IS£
AntNfW-
Appl .. ,,.,..
Aun.... Bld« N• ....... l• c:an--•• t'.qulP"'" I ('-pu~
FA"P \0 Yoo f'Um1ew. o .. .,..s.1 ... tt-hold~ Jf'Wf'lty .,._,.....,. M...,.u.,_
MIO<' Wan~ M-..!lno.,....,._ ..
ow .... "'""'"" .. tqu1.,,.,..n1
P1onoo & 0.1ano
~RJ'°~'-'
BOATS
Cl'\tir\f'•I FW-nt Uwtorrel
Puwt'r
S..I
S~•Slu
M•n~ Eqwp Ma1nl&~
Shi-& O...i.. s ........
Suppio""INtruct.on S..1lboerd•
TUNSPORT ATION
/UrtTeh &-.,...'" C.mpon
M..-8'kft
•MolOl'<)'<'IMIS.00"'"
Motor H""'" RV'•
TraJi.n. Trevpl ,.,..,"""-Uuhlr
AUT <Ml TIVE
Auw Lru tna
Amo S.rvN"ftfl*ana
Au''• Wlinh..rt
Spv ... R..• "'°"' 4 Wht .. t Ot'"~ TP\11 lu v • .,.
Antt<4un "'--:'"°"
AUTOS IWORTED
Alf• Homr•u
A~.rt1
/\u~un 8MW t.•th•.,." l)ltu.u"
lJr1lA.H'fl•t1 ,...,,,,, ... ......
"'"""' i...w
J .. -J.,_.,,
~lxlr•h•n• I.Anno
LA•uo M•MI• M...,.rau M.,,,......_,
Mlloutlehi MO
Op.I
ran"'"' ..........,. ,..,,.... ...
""'-'' twit~ ea... .... .......
~ vou, .... _ .........
Ma
A PETE
BARRE Tr
REALTY
COLOWeu.
BANl(C!RO
•
r.o11 DllUllT • llYm &011 Wlttl 2 mut., eullH.
:::; SNlrpl Cozy 8lld do.. 10
Wit lhope, pool, *"* end
8011 Woodbridge LM•. °"'>'
:; St57.900.
:~~ U"'l~ll f-i~fl 1121· Re9/tora, 87
8211 .. --------· ru! S ellin; enythlng with •
H2• o.ity Pltol a...lfted ACI
11 a elmple m•tt., . • m: "'" call 842-54178. :: .----------,
7010 7011 7Ull 7014 70111 7011 7020 7012 7024
7crle 7028
9010
IOI? IOl4
llOIG 9018 8020
8021 '
ll014 -
IOIO
801~
\0020 V</2)
VO>o VO»
9040
904>
110> tl07 9108 •112 •11• tlll 1118
tlll
llU "') t m lltt
1131
tlU "" 1117 9141
tlO tlO
910 •ut
•1$1 tl!l.1
110 ..~, .. .. ....
tlU
•1 .. llll
•1• em
'"' •1'• '"'
* ~ • ' • 00 • ~
Q)
~
• >< Q)
•
~ • I •
£8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wedneaday, Sept. 7, 1883
........................ •• ......... • .... __ ,.,_ e w. h , .... a . '?sen .. "" THE DAILY PILOT ... 111 1111 ::....,::= .. ~:..:=~11M111;;l:1n1=. .. :--:....::::=--ttt1t4~l·o.,...tiaii'1t,Dp1X.m .. iil!tully= .. = ~-.... dt4 I I C..11.... nit lut...... nte
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS Univ Pk Teneoe s Bt eumabll VA Loin, bOttl i1i86/mo. '*1~1 • "'oe»M. UI,, 1 IL"°"" at beok t\4 ... COnclo
Telephone Service:
Monday-Friday
8 :00 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
Business Counter:
Monday· Frida y
8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
DEADLINES:
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
Monda y
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Sat
Mon
Tues.
Wed.
Thur s.
Fri .
'Fri .
11 :30 a.m.
4:30 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
4:30 p.111
4:30 p.m.
3:00 p.rn.
3:00 p.m.
CANCELLATION &
CORRECTIONS:
Cancellations and cvrrections may
be made on same deadlines as
above. Please ask for a cancellation
number when cancelling you r ad.
ERRORS:
Check your ad daily and report
errors immediately. The DAILY
PILOT assumes liability for the fir&t
incorrect irlsertion cnly.
CLASSIFIED 642-5678
...... .. .... , ........ , Salt
..... al 1112 lntral 1M2
UM ISLE
lnl.nl1-1
111 Ylll.We hM
Remodeled 3 bdnn, 2· bath + large nr.. nn ..
beam ceWnga. furniahed, patios. $420,000.
1111111 PUii UYFlllT
SpectllCU}ar bi.ytront dplx 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br,
2 ba dn. 2 boat speces. Reduced -$1,500,000.
PllllllU 111111 IOUIFlllT
Ocean & jetty views. Marine room, 4 bdnn, 3
bath, 3700 mq. ft. Xtra park.Ing. $1 ,385,000.
Fllllllll IUOI llLL TIP
New 4 br. 4 ~ ba, custom French Nonnandy
FAtate 1.2 prime acre hilltop. Now $995,000.
OlllUIO OHS llYFIOIT
CoroNdo Ia1and cust. bayfront lot. 85' boat
deck. Plans avail. Now $370,000 w/trade.
llllWIW llllE
Near new 4 bdrm, 4 bath, lake view. 3500 sq.
ft. $440,000. Will trade for a local property.
ooY. model 2 a. mt untte ~ .,.inlld a ,.. a .,, a la. ~ ..-peea. '150Jmo. 146-7sto ot ~ Pf1Yete ywd new a 90ml. • I' LL SHOW YOU MINI, 1ooat1on, wa1k1no ' di•· ~'°· ttH.ooo. Aef. ~113• 70~ ... &-7.14: « 144-7tte ews. c.SIN' orapee a~· ~· t:r.':;."=o '::
IP YOU'LL SHOW Ml YOURSlll tanoetocomm. pool. F• 7~704 -• '.... • IUnlM fltle IB7 582 Vlctone '" -"· ...,.... .._1800 Agent
alnd 1138,500. JHn •• UA 2 er. get, tenc. Yfd, ~110. BOn1ml:ITIFiui H1·H~. =:;., · PENINSULA POINT uten 752-1414 --== kldl& Pit 0t<. aeao1mo. . • "'· 2 2 Iii 2·ety twn11e1. get,-------
LARGE BEAUTIFUL FAMILY HOME Latw ..... IMI ... 546-7aoe ::! ~ ~ ~· trp1c, pvt Pttlo. nu oelnt, OcMntront conoo on
Acrou from swlmml~ beach with tabvloua
boy view. The kids ar• grown ond goM. Will
trod• for smaller home or tell,
3 bdrms, den, family, formal llvlng and dining
rooms, 3 ~ baths, large rooms all. Top qvollty.
Comelffl
Open HouM Wed.-Sun. 10-4
2109 E. lolboa Blvd.
NIW,OIT'5 IHT IUY AT $575,000
-..... i314. 1 Bt. Trtilllr, Pf!Y9t• 53Mtto'e.t '-. ~.no~ '878Jmo. tend. 2 Ir. 1\4 k pool,
Duplex & tnplU. tovelV & Quiel gee & wter l*cf Elden Ave. 97 .. 1161 24 hr 11C Ol1ld projeat. P• Ill.I apte fOfowner"' renter, tat + Mo. only. 497-4287 HOME FOA AINT 2 Br oott , type pvt 1150/mo. n1 ......
., ..... Xlnt toe & tin. 17$-7873 Slit, 1'Mla dpbt. i.A. H1a, ~i;:,oa17~~ =~~ eml yrd T lndry'. t;'ad + IU-
4 Bdrm, s beth EUtopewl ...... r--1-L.J gw, Meo mo. MOO llC. getlgl. IOde' Pit• ..... MO. dip, Rift req d, no -I ... ·~ Clllllt lllQll atoS> .. _ 20201 A. llrcll St. oome. MS-1500. AQent, peta. 842-0350 .,...,...
L-ciune BMCtt'• "ToP of C•t:IM t3S-ttt1. no *· 2 Br. Townhoull WllY New 1 I 2 ldnft luxury
tlll World". Miiier eult• • ll l.I 38A/21MtA oondo. 110 i! ~ &1!' ~I quilt frplc 1ecuz:ii g#· aptt In 14 plaoa. 1 ldnft lnctuo.t frptc, )K4mt and • • _ ~-~-_ 1g1 'No o9te iiibtmo from IMI, 2 ldnft from vteww. a2e0.ooo. C.it f()f F\JY en. 2 &r. pvt m trplo, refrlg , wa1her. )'el 4 iAA Call.631_...... . aeeo. Townhowe from
1ppolntm1nt to 111. cott1g1 ttoO/mo + utN. d,.,., 2 car DWl89 w/ trom bMcfi 1 rim-a1zs + PoOll. ""'*'
Mtl-3375after5Pf!l. Avail t112-e11·u . ~~P~oovrosc-=:· Mydwllllng(otdbOerdl"9 2 Bt. wllk to lh09Pfncl, -tertalll,ponde.Gllltor
ff1-805e .. 1•1· 1-... · ~u:z' 11200 mo. patlO, etertlng et $6211. COOklnQ t. Mating oeld. -"mo. .,.,.. I t"---557-1430 From ~ Dlloo l'rwy BUILO YOUR HOME on • ctftu LI LI lift 3 Br 2 be Goldenrod Dr ..._.... drive North on 9-dl to
1p1ctacular OCEAN CCIU a:::tli FU#;·Gn 2 PoOt QdN Avall 1018· eeca bey.,.., Slit tamlly *Lis 1 Ir. I Ir. Mcflddln ene1 .-on frff & ct.or f.Z terma. Ownet financed.. FRONT 3 Arch Bay, ,_ br (dllhll tlnlnl, etO) a 1060 s ierre Mgmt ~. lM °' Ill CIC)ttOn, Aptt, lend~ pool McFlddln 10 SEAWIHO 644 1642 675-3772 llmple IOI. Call owner. Fri MCludld • tlo. rM aeeO 841-1324 t 1200. Avall 819t 15, enclolure, Cf •• drapee. v I L L A 0 I . " OI toMon(714)4'9-30100f mo .,_1 P~5o~ Bkr.144-7424. no Pitt. 85, 1475. (714)193-51N. Tu . I 0 T" u r. . ..._. . 3 Br, 2 .. LOflnZO. Odrv, 842-'7312, 731-e829
(213)791-1159. LU Ptlit 1111 avell 9/24. 1950/mo. ~ rou;:, 2 ~be k':" 3 Br tolllly rwnod9'ld Studio •Pt W/ltOVI • lt!J!!! .... , lilt oc:nvu.Winter,38',fa 81ert1Mgmtl41•132•· poo1:11etS4h.&3M1:; brand ne w, 1'Ao Ba =· :•t~eee13C:· * HllllOll llDIE * I •-It lllK ba, w/d, trptc, pool. REFS 4 bdrm, 2 be"°""· LltQI 8-t Rtty f• townh~ apll, 0/W, ....,. 70 . · M"rR• 1 1000/mo. 881-1832 yrd, dbll /at, olOM lo petlol, kid• 01<, no pelt. ,._,..11 Come# visit the most fabulous view. New 4 Bdrm. 2 b•. IP•. toe lot, I -=x lllt eolloole 1t1opptng. ~Gtr.11000• bett~_!bdrm, ~ S1p1. oooupenoy. -W-alk-to-b-.-.-0-11-. 1....,Bt,,_r--=-,.-·
h · N wport No•""""• to gd area. 11 .9% 111. =-'800/mo. Lv Meeeaoe at -w .... IP9 • '"5/mo. F0t rental ap-or-etO\fl 1 custom ome Ul e · ......... owcx. S234,900. PP, no 1 mo ...., i= 2 •• 567-2548"' &4M2fO cllefa kit. dbl ;er. pet•. ....... .......... M~ .... -:;;.-,;.,.. ..... 7 compare with th.is 4 bdrm, tam rm, 5 bkre Me-t<M3 · --1 -..... .... 53Mtll0 Belt Rtty,.. .,._,..,., ....................... ·
dini 3 frpl 6 · · 2'Ao a.. Newport CIMt W& Cutt eepe Cod 2 Br S496/mo. 2 It. 1 a.. pool, Watte to belldl '*'*°' bath, formal . ·ng, cs, car garage. * In Prelt OM4e * Condo, compltly furn, 2 Tiii be wood ftr1 MW Lvty Eatblfl lmmac brlghl, i.unctry room °'°" to crpt1 dra.,91 etove' Large pool & jacuzzi. Come to the gate Vt9'1 VIEWI VIEWI car g#agl, w/d, pool, q>t/drpe. UMCS brick. 38r 2'Ao81. 21rplC'I . ehopplng. 149'e. Bay 8t. retrio9 all utlt. p~'. and aak for 3 Yorkshire, 759-1931. Sec. Bid., 2 Br 2 Ba. apa. tennlt courte. Mutt Ordnt, get. 146-7111 or f1350. 751-1341 Agt. Y1L ..__• 141·1111 "40(j, ~7 IPll IAIU ·1_. Pool, ti0e1 ellp avall. "'·Call'°' appt. 646-6743 (Cftuc* or UI) Houeeem.r avallMlll. ~ _"'i"i...-liiiii,iiiiiiiMil-1~---...--.....---,..-. ...
By0wnet:81s.M31 Tlllcllt M1-11n Act F11t11100. It 1nc1 1treo couple, Wlty ..... ••nu,.. 5,.... IT_!!
HELE. B DOWD IAY .. D 1BR & din 1%8a attract· FIR etpt,dlcor gourmet From Jan to June. Aleo a.Al ~~ltUclO ;:;;r.
1 c... M6-M03 '°' appt tvety fu~. Pooi. petlo. kit.' kldl yd, ded g#. loYM Pit•. Call 875-3120 2 Br. Condo trg/dlek. lull k • frplc, S4to/mo
••• •1•• . 1tepe to bell. LM oPtlon 53M1to leet My'-t.g Sit, 2'ABa. jecuu!, 2 M50.t31~1. lnclutM.41?-1331, .. 5pm IULT•, IH, ..-. .. M l&lfll IY.... '650 mo. Avall now. Agt. AmalnQ but tNll i300'e fi'ptca, al new, I 1175 mo. 141-1884. .,,.wtl_d)'a_. ____ ....-__.:rr
----------·----• 11% flltld ret• 30 )'Mrt. e1a-e241 poo11Td1 becll pad e&o-1225 ii001mo. 2 Br. 11.4 Ba 1~1111· Ith ...... ...... lOM c.... ..... 1124 No loen ,_, no clollng LIDO ISLE. BR. 3'A ... w/appl provtdld. Info at Lido Moblll Home Park 2 TownllOUM, greenbelt, 2"lf"T'I:' op; °"'"" IW coete. Monaco with GC 8191. tllru June 11200/ 531~190 a.t Rlty ,_ Br mob 11 1 11om1 l/r, carport, balcony. beach 'yrtv' f700/mo 11~ PD UTE II YI CHARMING 2Br, 18a view. 14 Aue Vlllere. mo. No pete. 875-7887 lmmec Twnhll S Matt Br S750/mo, 87s-cl030 2078 Thurln ~1 ~2141 ·
No loan feel, no dOll t1ou11, Co111 M11a, Open wknde 1-5 . ~..._.., t 2, ..... ~ ~lo 2 w ,..__ .,..____ .. ~ .... Ta.... 141·1111 '
COit. Cape Cod t$lO-S83 000 Term8 5-48-8880 ~ 1538 ...., ga 1• ,._ • ,..., • ._.._ • ..,..,._ -... • -=---,"'--=-:,..--,,.....,......,....,,.,.... v1tld, 11\ore mooring. ' 2 br, lrg rm, bllmlCI g#°. 18 mo. MS-1714 2'Ao Ba. 2 block• lobledl, Ctwmlng 2 Br Apt bltJn
-~ -----
PARK NEWPORT
APART MENTS 4 e r-1 1111 1 o so. WUIY 1-ln cetllnge, lrpl, lrg patio, um,... clOll to pool a tennte. range, trptc, · n.w' ctpt,
Bayfront. Agt &40-1538 IUI II. MAST ft.W • UITILWf :~ ~o ~ O'ft• to 1 provtd9' ~ people te2~. prvt patio. H60/mo.
IDT MY Ctlarmlng home wltfl 4 Out1IMCllng • Br 2'1\ Ba 1 2 1 1 . 9 1 2 • 5 1 ~ r . to l'Wlt Yollf property. • Tll WllD 5-48-2830 IN NEWPO«T BU.CH
.'....
bdrm•, hl'l1' bonul rm, 111111 Ylllw hOml In Gf .. l 714-642-3315 ' TRW l'9PO't + apc>btlon 1250 aq fl 28t 2be moblll. Cott199 type 1 It, utll pd, 8ingllll t 1 2 Bdrm~ bllutltul covered petlo famlly ar11. Walking di• r0tm + profMelonally Bltlnl, teundf'y rm, BBQ, pvt petlo, lndfY rm, g#. mente I Townfloulll.
2 Br home + gUllt unit, with ldlolnlng '"· Mal-tlnCI 10 ac:hool1, lhop-Bia Canyon condO: beaut. drafted IMM fOfm on.-2 -ttoe .. tl200/mo~ M 50/mo + S450 "°· Some ere •••=ly remodllld.noqulltfylng. lbu llghte eurroundlng ping, recreation I cfecor. turn., on golf tngyoumulmumproteO-8n:3tot/t80-1IJS · d19.Alftreq'd,n0peta. tumtenld.Fnlfrl 20% down. 1255.000. manicured yard, Ideal tor ct"tUrchle. Frendl doora COUl'N, w/~tlo, 2 car tlOn. call ,._ Jollnlon 142~ On JembOrll Ad II
875-9058, -cit family fun. Totally re-IMd to a lerge entc:toMd ~ .. 3 br, 21.4 M. din. rm, 8'MMICll"8.: lg 3 It,• t>a. 8*' ~ ... Ad. •-I"-• modeled, on quilt cut di front courtyatd. Formal kit. Poot, epa, lennla. tern rm, trplo'e, grt OOMfl °"'•' ,,•,.C.-5 1. mCodo. 2E8t/ ,· 1108&.1 . Mt-1• - -uc.1149,000. dining rm 6 letge Metr 1800/mo. 780-t7t3 vu, w9lk to pvt bet\. ""' P1ala1al1 1117 .... IUl.n 1u1t1. Maxin• Propp. Oceantr t 3 Br 1 Ba 11100/mo. &48-7639 &45-te.28 1rCON0081r
e;;;tliUI _,,front t:0m; 11J.11M 8«-8200 evall S:t 12 lo JuN e;;: ... Jua Cl Bfl ..... ftl1l lf11 V~al~ ... v:.~
on BalbOI Pln6n, •Br. 11t, lut, MO ... 35. MESA VERDE 38r %1• rm A te 2 bi '4861Br,1 8a Apt. Frpto. 631.....0.
4Ba .. Byowner.$715,000. 850-1868, tJG-5030 ,_ pelnt, crptt & dtpe. ...,,111 level poo1' time 1kyllg t111, p etlo, 111 ---------.,,--
Wiii trldl IOf 11"'"8 of llke NO QUAL.IFYINO OCEAN FRONT WINTER $ 1100 lncld gardnr. ;:,..,.,1 w/ger & ktcte' bulll.fna. M501~:_,,.S It. 2 kid value. (305) 5e1-55e0 Low down. S bdrm + tam-71<1-0:M7 _., 1 • 388Avooldo upper "''"· g11r199, w
tereu •el llu lift ~=.°Ag~~· ~e:;~~~u;,~·:~~: M .. l/~:t>IM.3 br,2 .-~::to Blem. TSLMgmt 142-9412 :=~~~to beech,
H b VI d pte .... -• 850-7388 be.. CN6dren l Pill Of<. HYQI 0uptex 2 Br 2'~ 8a 208 Lugon1e " or IW u JI . s.c Plaz.a condo 28r t •t. --teH. no .... 75CMOG4 Sil .... , 3 &r. 2 s: i806'L Many xtrll, tnc:d yd, pet ---.... 1-0wnlr. S3e5,000. Biii ba, pool, 199. Own tor Beautiful cuetom Ce~ VIiia Balbol Condo. Prof Pool time coot ale, mome ok. S750. 873-0338, •-...--· ._ buy In Cdm. Mt-0098 co1t of rentl S tOK or 1111 Cod home, w/approx. dee. compl tum, 28' 2ba, Nu crptt eocent tllll 5 rm kit dldt gar, kld8 AOK 142-teff LIDO DELUXE 2 fr frplc
dn .. By ownr. '88.900. 3400 I.I. lltultld on Ir/din. dining rm, lam rm, hml w/mod kit, tnc:d • 53t-81llO a.9t"' . Ir ~ tlo i 1150' W.I.. 556-l828 or 775-2680 large lot w/lovely private pool/ec>a. 8Mu1. vu: ocn, kldt, pelt, dbl gw. Only Lrg 2Br 4-plex. 720• 8,5-8369 Pl · · uMCS brlcit petlo. P-c! & b • Y II I II. L •au leOO. 53M1llO 8111 ,_ Nf SC Ptaz.a. 2 Br, 2 Ba SJ\ellmlf, S495 no pet _____ ....,,......,,......_ llYlllTllUOI lllllEFllllLY Ql'OOV9 a brick floor• S1SOO/mo. 1-997-3000 , ··-Condo. 1450/mo. 846-3924,846-2913. Newevwytlllng 1 Br.SN-"IWllll 1111,000 thruout main living area, ext 1111 dy, or ev/wtmde Dau •t --213-893-4190 efl 8pm Lr baollelor on E/llde al dlo 2 btockl off tend.
10 Room Home w/pool. 3 bdrm, cuetom European cllm wood cabln1t1, 1-771--0421. Enchentlnll 2 Br. 2 Gt IQ5 Taatla ftto uYn pd, '3ll6. Allt '°'Amy $425/yrty 213/534-1885
Walklng dl111nc1 to ceblnetry , nu-tone C'own molding, chllr rall ...... Oafuai~ flat. Crptt thru-out 7eo-eet2 Nwpt 1blk 10 bdl S8r
Blach. Fa-'11on 11., Bal count• t09t, plul glua a bannlltert. Fr door•. w/bltlnl & gw/lhop. 4 Won't lllt tong 3 Br, 2 be 2ea, '800 mo. wen-2
11 .. nr by park. $.450.000. In back with 8kyllll. Back marble tr~. i.thl & ltatral IJIJ appt 53M1to a-Atty '500'1 "-t, ale. frplc, gar N9wt)' pelntld 2 Bdrm. 1 cal Cll'8QI M0-2493 . Xlnl fln1.nclng av1t1. Wiii yrd hat big grMnhOUM plllt9' thruoul, 4 Br, 4 ,_ & more. Kid, pet OK. Ba. S535/mo. 6 1 Bdrm ..,,._..,...,,..._,,,......,·,,.,,,..-=--:c-
cooper1t1 w/brokere. with thermo•tat a ,P;!::.~~di1y'nrm1ng.rm11.~llv-. W•~ • .,. .....,rt ,
1
....., lut ..... , 114i 539-e190 BlllfM :4.:!:!:4:!;,..~~':..~· <>;1=,~~~~yrty.
Avall by eppt. Cell hlatlrll Seiter padllng -. .., ,... • 11~1 J eltll --•-L.....a 30 ...,.. ........ 873-3745 °' ~2722 uyt "Bring oller"I Featured on Udo I · 28f. 281. frPIC, ground"'· Ap.rtell r...._ 1 Avooldo 842·"60 p., 2 Br 1 9e, 1 Oii to
or."T "' ' .,: I I ' . '.
759-1501°'852-7373 Horne Tour. Drop down If frt9I .. M 76mo.AV9118-t 1.No a.IMI ltl • 2'tl POOL. trptc, P"' pello, be.II , cerport, yrly AAW FlllT llOIME lllT• NII price set&,OOO. Of· ,... •• hr 1 letfr..t pet. 7l4-8"-te11'eny-u dettwltlr, Eaillt6dl. x lg 2 l&K/mo. 562-ot6.I ..., • MU11"'1YYllW 'IH.&'I VDD ._LEE ferld r°' NII by Owner ..... te .... ,... t1m1;11....a-1esaewe. Of untum 2 Br M50 utllt Br g#den apt. $595/mo, ,,,..-_....,.,,,.....---==--~
Prime 2 Br. 2 Ba & 2 Br. 1 Ba. Duplex on xlnt 200 blk. 40' lot, 3br +din. ~-~9b~ ~~~Ja •· ter 1 Ill ...,.. • bd, 2 t>a, btt-tne, rwtt peld. 200 Diamond. 551-2141 ~'m. ";"c:" ~
IWimming beach good income. $725,000. =9=.' r,ffMn,~~-Real f.lt* 9VWwtcnd1. ,......... :: .. ~:~~ e7&-21tlO. Pnvete 1 Br, frplc, pool, S'r50 yrty. 87M110
Best view, iallest ocean front bldg lri-plex Ownerl-cit tl7$-&651 •C--c-llWPll1' 1111 • ...,..._. .._. lalllM ~'°w ~·~ Stepe to beech 1 It=
with 1pllcioua 4 Br. 2 Ba. each level $1,200,000. Cetta.... 1024 ffi'!'li . LOY11y ~ 3 Br 2 • ...,. 111· 1• B='\2tt,Bt .=;1~ ':!:: Jftia'a!a Ml! Sl\ll'p ~ ~ 2 Br garden $450/ino · 21$-727•7
HA 1'%8X he.800 DUa Pelat ltti :'~:::'.·~=~ Lllill WUj 1111 S*!• hme. H11 g# a Beytront 2 er 2ea. pet1o, apt. No Pit•· .,.701mo. VIiia 8albOI 2 a... 2 a.. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 243 E. 22nd. C.M. oc"N VIEW r-t::=!. ..--!.......... ............... ......... men. Info 53M190 Belt ""·winter. no Pit• '875. &48-9150 ,condo. w /bey .,..., t-8S30 ""' .._ .. ,..,.._ ...,,_,,,_ ·-..-Ltg 111t 2t>a. "1>f, tum. fr1 r.. 17$-7538 . eec.bld(I. pool/apa. 1 yr 97 3br 2'Aobe. 1750 eq ft. IC)a, Mellbu llght1 end 11M '800 8adl furn.,._, loc Spettlllng 2bt uc>plf Ul'llt: llMe, 111 H 'Y' o1. [),.~, N B 67'> t.l6 o 4Br 2Ba. 80x120 lot, at-$1~.500. Xlnt ftnendng, wetblt. Thia homl le • 2br'ts00.' 213-71G-7302 HOME FOR RENT Ctlermlno bloh, conv. · MIM Verdi 4 pllx. New a PIMDJ111 tacMd ger, RV pkng, owner 714-240-3102 mu at Mii. Full prlc. Hunttnglon BllC:tl 6 Bdrm, 819. tuif kltcll, '400 yrty. 11rthtone opt & doled
198,500 cell &46-1386. I .... L lMI 1252,000. 631-7370 l.tO 3br 3~, ii60. 3 Ba. frplc, dthwltV, dbl Ind utll. dlllre ~ulll g# '525/mo 1et/1111 + ... Hll US11llE aat. • Call 21317 505 or gar199. tamlly rm. IOdt. mat\.nn-emkr. 87$-680 aec'. wtlde)'t 4ee-1ese.. wanted mature pro-
• IAIYM ~ Ddetxx.Jt L11ge38r.,2bahomlw/4 tltlJmTllW 21317tG-7302 = ==-·..r,1:; ~ ..... -· Stunning lerge 112 It. 2 ~ to '9nt newty TIW•ll Bay & Beach car garage. AV & alley ee-3 bdrme 1% beth•. latnlty c:!w a::=· :1~1~ Agent, no ._: AWRTPibt Xm"'! ~25 gardln710aptw.· 1 PQOl11. • =-~~ ':.:',~; ,..... ......... Real Estate CHI. S 159,500 and room + elC1rll. • 121•900· )'llt1y + ulll. Lg 2 lty UIO ~. 38t. Br. Y'fY, ""· turn Of un--& up *'"· Incl. aaoo mo. yrty. 111,
3 8dRM:!) b11ha pool a1'd owner wtn ft~. Call from 9'"' to tl9m f« On N. Beyfront, 4 Br 2 Ba. 2'A8a. wtk to bdl, Jtlnt tum. no pelt. e7~ 2 Br. 1'A Ba w/gw, Crpt1, llllt + eec dip. MUet ...
tipe. ~-0
'360,000 .,,."1"rt:oa:u •""....u• .. • .., ... ., ... , '"'· appt. 9te-715e. 1....... 11500/mo )'Mffl + uttl. toe. '875 mo, te2-e847 2 It, newfumlture, nut to °'Pll. bttlnl. tnc:d ywd lo eppreo.. 142-0117
1111Umat>M ftr\andng. Full llYllE Ml·lln lmat _.. -·---Lora Vance i:vtr e1~ or 536-7403 ocean winter rnll w/petto. weter pd. W1n AlntelL ~ price ssso.ooo. _. .. _, _._. aeaoinio .,.12 s.utiore '36-4120 c.11 1-5PM. "' TEIUOE PlllCE New Listing. S3to.ooo. a.tMa Oclll'I br ... et ,3 Br, 2 be Or e50-7073 M7 l/lct«ta "L" $525. ~ 2lr MOO. tr
*Cote Realty
& Investment , ... , ... Rare Ir.line Terr-lour FUTUTIO &11..UU Play• R.E. 873-1900 Pealuala m7 g:' hme, MOO• l'Wltt It. . 2437 Ofenge "F" '680 1750. Pteye Reel &tete
bedroom home. On '" 9'-4% VA loin: 3 If, 1f• ba. ' II EDUCED tPll TlllY 1·1 MUI PlllT ~..'f~io~-;: 4:$;L, 8:imo:ro:n': 97'3-t900
land ··· not IMMtlold. Extra large lol. Cllen a1'd fOf qutctt eall on thll 2 .... Ill.I .. ..__., Duplex, 3 br. comp tum, 2 . 9112 nr 61et, Famlly room with w.1 bar. neet. Allllng 1124,900 Bdrm, 1 t>a. 8unftowlf -• "'.J.•_,tw" 1--·, lrge peUol nr Balbol ~ dlllgtltl Poot 3 r!'" 14&-2117 S~s slnglt. OM
LArga kitchen wllh .. ung 1 Model tn WoodtwtdQI • "'"' -•• Pier 2 bl!• to bey and .. bung 11 o w ' Is 0 o • 9'e8tiBJIU & two bedroom lpb.
GE: 75Q-Q100
---
--------1 =n1t:U~~~ar1e:=: lllfY. Oln VIHIQI 0,..,.., Upper unit ,...... .......... etloPe. MOO/mo, 9 mo'e. w/~lne. :,\, ltepe to cr:,1an Couple.:::· '1-liU .,. --.__ Wiii coo81der any reuon-Super lharpl 3Br 2bl wtUI balcony. Terrlfle lo-n, I If~ la. ,..a 404 Eut Oclll'I Front tend. 53e-41 a-,.. w:'Win no 11001 ' ~ •bllofTer ... l300.000. =:;e:i:·:o:;:;eov: ;:~'.:00. alf ror only a.,..111-1111. 87$-15ee1 . luLLdiW Btl l:;-313, ler mo. Ffplo,':::c!::: ..
SICur1ty PecHlo will carry 111-llDO den wlwiterfall. ~y Two •tory, 2 meeter aul111, Studio. S450 ~ utll• wm tm: 2 i;;, Lg Sir, 28a, euno.c;t<. gar9, poOI & •. 2
11t T.0 . at 11.50% w/25'Y• 1xtr11, Only S 132,500. ~ view, rrplc . A11um1 Plld210 J':"s'!"'· 8 79&4. 38' dock, 2 car gw, pool, dltlwthf, 1150 mo. Bdrm Din 2'41 Ba &: down.~ 3 Bldrm JUI 1111 IULn Mt,000 11 10·~ .net •· rw. tlMll. blectl.14t-4165 wtn1er. 875-3504 1 Bdrm 1v. Ba
condo with I erg• Ill llll · I owner wlll C¥ry. Mklng W911rl. to bWfl from 3 rm lftlM 1144 Move aboerd bolt' ,2 ft eee W, 18111 St.
enc:loeed Pttlo. Lovely Jl•lllE OIEL':I OPEN 'T-ILL 8 p••. ty "24•900· Cell Bf<*• •1 bedl bungalOw •lappl, etw11 Craft ... "";mo + 14&-2731
grHnbelt. Immediate e 1; '"' 875-3859 $400'1 peyt '-'t & ulM 2 to 5 Bd,,,.. 1750-l2000 . -""'
po111111on.Submltallof-One of the""'" view to-651·1177 53M1llO a.t Rlty... . . . U. lnct. 551-0305 ''' IEIDYE m teret REDUC ED to catlone In exciutlve gale •Wit ... " llM Pier. NEW tld 20 Tow11:'l0ml
1 191,000.ClllSeltyShlp-guarded Jumlne Creek. 42 x 52 SkYline, nt;; Iii: Cl91attut lsor MUNITY.
1ey or Joyce Olbolt tor B11utlfully decorated Ill& ftlll rooma. wllk to matkltt. ..... Ull 3 Bdrm. 2~ Ba. eq,
furtllllr dltllllt. =~~-~:r~•~: ~.?",. !.~t. -l9Ctm.IOlt DNY'I s1a.300. 548•2453 Pailud11 eplit level ty Oceanlronllvllw, ••OIP-ft. of l>U'9 lwcutY.
lly room. Prtv•t• IP•· An '""mod:;d home IHlurlng ~ Baek Bay, Adh pk, 18r dupllll, 380 dig. moun-651 1177 Ilona! turn 2-38r, frptc, ~ea'f!' ':u~ =
axc1111nt value et 4 Bdrme plut famlly tky-tum, 115,000, ownr wlll taln & OCMn view. '-!U "' =· g#. Winter from roome, wood 'burning $475,000. Il g ht, naturel wood TWTLll* •w~ ... opt, Comm Poot, Spa, tux. 2br· 2~ba. w/appl •• mo. 840-<'JM flrtplecfl, micro-wave
171 41673·4400 tllrougnout. Ottered It Xlnt p r utlg• aru Bc:tt.Bkr.t75-4010 many xlrM. 1700 mo. OCEAN'FRONT wntr, OYlt\8, prtvllte petlOe &
IJ'JI '~l.JIJI only $1711,900. Cell wllant11llo view. Plante-cta.ml1l tt1·2l7' ~.exec, OOtn9 turn. ya rd 1 _9trd1ner
• 540-1151 for •n appoint· tlon •huller•. tropic•• , l ••• cenu ... LI llD -WLIOUllllVI suo l I 1000/mo provtded. Ellgant IMnO HARBOR menl patio. comm tennlt. POOi l!f!!ty -...,.. 87&-4188 only 115 mtnut11 from MITA Ill& ni41 UPIW OT & IC>•· TaklO\llf li•h% a.ytront a.ytidl PlaOI. 2 LO 18r 11!le Condo a1 ,..nion lllend 1 mtnutee AfflAHIU .. IW -•-•y 1 • toen. 75t-150l or Greet commerclal lo-., 2 Ba.+ bOet tip. Of~lr" T1,,ec1 In On2&tt18t.2 er. t'.4be, toS.C.Ptaz.a 0rO.C.Alr·
Or111 tocatlOn on :de .,.. __ ... 752-7373 callon,8albOePen1ltM l 1l50Jmo.17M181. lrvtne . Frplc, A/C, ~~ 1800/mo . pon. J\191 MM of...,...
aeo INY )ogglng die-tun zone (207 Pelm). Nearly MW 3Br. 38e, 2 '#ftlf/dryr, & other up-port Bf'ld. & eo. of San
1anC.toblectl. wgeiot WALKIRALEE Good tncome-prioe ,... 111*C,w.t1>er,1>11conY.2 gradll. Poot. JllGUDtl a WINTER. 3101 w11t DflCIO Frwy. •12001mo.
with 2 bdrm hOrnl and n-... t1'....._. duoed to l400K. cer o-noe. Ql'drw. LM tlMll ooun.. No pete. Oceanfront. 2Br . 631·M3t. 247' Orange
Iott of potentlal. Eaey to Nil.. ._.. ~ 873-2943 S1400 me), Nf_...,..,. MOO mo. C4ll 111-1024 MSO/mo. 834-3771 or Ave, Cotta MIM.
... ·!Ult call 631-1400. Thia 3 Bdrm 2 8a home II Af--~ --------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilL.wwryonebuel09t.S8r 2 ewe &4Mte)2. . .... hl8t ft8
BEST
VALU E IN
NEWPORT!
FURNISHED or
UHfURHtSHEO. All UTILITIES PAID, HEALTH
CLUBS. ITHHIS.
SWIMMING. 1>kas
,nuch mortl Sorry,
no ptb. fltodtls
Optn d11ily 9 lo 6,
Oakwood
G•MApatt..-
Nnrport IMdl So.
1700 16th Strttt
(Ill Oowf)
642·5~ll
Newport hMtll No..
880 IMM Awnut
(Ill 16th)
64S-llCM :.._ 11111.,... =~T~C ~ =· Have you read tod1y'1 ffi'!'li. Wh•t8 • WonderfUI Wot1d To~ )'CM"t~ ~w/poo1k....._a1o. 11~ WlntW eri 3 Nllt, vtewt &8dl0k821· 18' IL~ w/opnt ••w11• ..., _..~ •• ,:-of potenUal. Atklng CllHlllld Ada? II not, 1--------1 of hopping, right al ~ ,,. ,....., 4 k"-9111'• ... ._. •at wp • • neWtv deoorated trptc'
n. _, -$ 133.000. w111 conllder you·,. mlellng Ille bll1 Flnd"wllll 6ou went In l:r. ~r'c~ l'MdlnO pubic, &M-e1to e.t ""Y ._ 87S--Oa•1 « IS1,..M2. oon .,..__ •••* '1111••1!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 ~·.-v:~onl °""" 631·7370. bargelnl In townl Delly Piiot Wlllllnlds. A:..y To ~IOI ;:, ~. ~ A~~~A~ J~:.-........ .... lied\. ~ wtttl M "*" l .......... =r:.:~.== r::.=.· sca\\~lA-IJ,i.~s· :::: :i...:,sei:.~ '::..: Ctwlflld .... a..11111 ~~~~ m111~;! Ul:,m:.'~1tJ~~~-
........ -• Wden --.. Cl.A•. --you, L & ....._ :::::r "'"'"' ,........ ..-· IPPllnota. w pd. i min -• lQ Hit. 289 _,, ._,.
Alduoed agein--eo eubmlt ·~ln~-'"--•"'...,a. .. .,lt.._ __ .... !p kit to etlOpptnQ. "°" "'*' :::=. ~ · h corat•d, 1 ar•e• Yollf °""· T"'918 •tine r lM ptef.AWia1~1 ... 161ftO. ..... w/dooroS>9f*,fiptc,oonl.------._ila =..'~ ·:,;r=! l!!J!I! ..... 1•1 ... ,., ..... 1 115-0330 s 1r., ... f!J*i. vtewtromi,;*"'~·..:·~13-~1030~~.--~nirir-,l!'Pft,..."'llrw!li
ellp. 631-1400 for dltllle Woodbrtdgl Lt.-''Un-d • o k I It 6 I "' o · SoectoYe.tbf1Qtlt, 2 Br 116
anc1 a lhowtng. '-ooln": Mr 2\4 M.19m rm. 1714421, 11&-1331~seia. •~7 ' ~ ~ ~
-
WATI RI kONT YILU llllll ~'W~o.J..!r~.mo, Ciiia... DA lut..... IHI t1Mn1..,. 8pM •
HOMI !t hoc. ~ ~ I ' nwww Lrl room .,....,., '""· AEAl ESTATE ~ 130 I . 2"1. tt. .,.,....., 2 Ir. ~. orp1, drlpla,"' .... lal, ftr lo. l•Y
111•1400 ----Professional decorated, fumllhed& ~w.4 91 out• 1 •.'*"1 ~ In ltOY9' ~ ,.,.._ ttOO/Ntr?J.tOIOMI -------oere.e. ~ emo With hltl pelnt. -· No peea. .._.,, ME _... -~ lltmlT unfumlahe<I unlta are MW beilna t10001mo . ......,.,. 111-KU. 2 •· DUPiilC: ~ ,_,.,, ~..-.._
Litt11 Mill Mu"9t Ml on • 1111,111 offered for Nle. Prices range from MOOll "°'"' IO 1'I to 2 Nnn. d1UiliU wltfl oar· kldl, peca <*. 1436/mo. u /rM, 111119 IMtcl. ~· .:!,0~:_:·1~~h! Aocent on valuell LOW111 c R " E c o •149,000 to •247,000. U lntereet.ed, bell, 1 I <, r.•tlo, m:..:" after 4 pm. MMHI bfr l1tO kl 4at0, •it•
oatty Piiot c 1111t111d l>f'IOl In 8aycreet & owner I I' I* I I pleue call 645·6459. MOO/mo, •et~ 1 a e;. Townttou. tt.4 IL iliP' con;;: .,.. w i M.
llCtlon ~ Mlal Muf. motlvatld Frtendty home . . . . . OOiAH l CAHYON l/llW 2 if 1'14 k bttlne, P8llO. trptc. ... w, ~. tor-fftlOlowe.., ~ •• ~
._.., Tuf191 end ~t H with 3 Bre. t.n':l room. 21,, tea ... II mo. ~ "°..J.':; IMO, mal d lnl111, f"•t•. trom !Midi 11tO ,.., '°' •.H . You Mn ... ::':.C ~ r.= p::,',! •IL PllPllTIEI .......,11 1, ttl7 •11111M. uw 18 ..,.. now ..... noo ycxir tuttet end 1011 or " other 1111ng1 through ~ llvlng. TM fMtllt draw In IM ... """.tAUI Ntoe pttveta ~ IClt ~ ""' & le wlfttl. Vftr Dally Piiot Cl111lfl1d ....... W11t. , .a Deity Piiot ft'a a IMIZI dote to beMtl. uta pelcJ, UOOllM.111-Mtf\.Mle
Ma. Celt &42-11111 a "'8d M .... ~1111. Q•1"'8d_M114t...ete tMO. A642tt ... -..
.·
-Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednetday, Sept 7, 1883 <.'9
M"!!ld!t ..... . ---,. C:ntr1ct111, r...stan lattabWat ...,... ..... Cltnl•1 Lnbta.au •tri•L Pla1lt1/l~lr ,, .. ltnk• I
I f'Ull ..,_. my nomtl or, ___ ._ .. _._ .. ;;,;..----Tto;n;~penttY .. ••••• .),IC UovlRG'. PUlf mPXtcAING ·-1P1M1/•H1L
$1 84 d your ofllol Aetlr.ct • sa ''R.mod.l/D .... ..._, comm. c.blnet~Pklmblno M111•1•~ -.._,. -per a1o )"'I ~· ~ ,. __. .. , ~.· ..__.._.., Antique turnlturt r .. tored. ,_ l'VUf """"'".01~1" R£FS. lec*y -..1•229--,-11A1111J1a.. Oulek·CatlltUI. Low rat... R9ttuoc0t. Int/ext. 30 y,., Fr .. "t ROI' 64~2537
• .. ·-........... ...,.,.._. Ir•• plOk•UP & d•I. --.... .,.,... --• -·-Lia. T13804e 11&2-0410 NMt. Pavl 646-2977
Thal'• ALL you ~y or a edla1t lllllat Ins. For •t, 562•9142. 64~ aft e 731·917$ Hom.'.Aapel,.. C«penttY EXP'D HOUSECLEANING I l-'191 ~ms· ~ ltmff 30 ct.u ed -,.~. -·-bing • "Jtl* DJ. CALL MABEL, Landlcepe. ramodellng, faiatlat fl1aW1t , *New cabinet•, cabinet VYJ .. tructlon 'R' Ut A•~ of FlnWlaas syour ... CA .. LL FFJI ED0e22··:°'~~·· 894·1421or536-1332 caenup.Sprlftklar ng Word Proceaelng In the lacing, bW'I • tormkla Aaoalra•Remod•AOcS'na Home or "ft hoe> •. l.W . ,._. l)'llltnl, COIT'IP\lllf or .. P111191 24., n • 141-llH Al 1tlneu. IChOOI &. P«· DAl Y counlanQPt. 842~1181 24 hr~ MtVloe 4~7. Fr• EM. ONE CAL.L DOES IT A.LL --IUPIT menual. by. Rlctletd Sinor. Lie. WATERHEATERSpeclal 10nll proj.cta. 861-1041 --------•Uc. 334714. 855-0leO wa ftx It, l>tMlc It, buy It .......... -11yY'leapetlance, 280844. 14 Y'S ot ~ POOlhMllf••Furnac.a y I ·LW L
PILOT 11 ..... _,_ h I It 1548-5009 -lleanoad ~ I ""'d' IOCel cuttomlfl, •F~••Dlapoul•* .,. •• II•
cm;RY: EJtpert :ii ..... ~~1h1 !Grooming _ __..JIU ~;uU * PlllTlll wu:::t~;:,'\.y~ lMido·~v, 1
Thank you. M3-4114 Dflln1 clMrad from S5 &. HOME VARNISH WORK trDVICE plluaa. 20 YfS In.,... 0:., .,..., Tl oomplatt carpel ind 714/597-7822 tl&Lm PAllTlll S25 anytime. Rap11r1. 000.... Rall•. Bara. etc. ~ Char Aenov. 846-3749 achl, $10 eny az. TMC:Mf Topped/removed. Clean Etc. Qary845-!1277 PTL lloullcMllnlng, wtndow1 ooli.ot. Prompt, nHt pro· 851·9804M6M432-0500 * 20 yr .. xp. 875-8318 *
DIECTORY 21 yr• axp. 648-2848 up, new lawne. 7514478• L llli1 ~ rr ... OALL TODAYI ~al ltnltH flNlonall. 838-7148 •-c· .. •···· .. lcal w1 .... c1 ... 1., Remodel/rapaJr. Unique & ALOHA Prof GARDENER 640·6854 -'"'' '11
• DO IT NOWll unu14111 worll I IPICillty. =all HC>tM9 & Apt Clean-Up, DUMP JOBS & • ICTl6N -g YRS 0 c .. &UY'f Pllmll .... u., WHITE wiZXRo ••• fll •••-• 20 yn Uc'd bonded. y., .. Roto E""-M..... SMALL MOVING JOBS HO~EC,L.EANING Expl 160 +CC 646·e8l1 Prompt, n•at nro· B!lat1on!t1:, r-ov.,..,, a:: w .. INDOW WASHING ----PalomboConat982-1314 ALL/ACOUSTICAL .... • ...... ...... MIKE 648-1391 GOOO R& s. EJ(P'D. MOST IN' 16 DAYS .. ,_ ..... --., .,... The I le I YfNf o.Ny Piiot Small Jobe 1 Rapalra Weeding, TrMt trim, --------Gl•Oyt Mt~768 ~ 838-7149 view ~ Revitalize on Y ""I: 1
SeMoe OlrectOtY Rapalr-Altl(atlonl sub 552-9582 Traah haui-a--WIY· HAUL~MOVe.AEMOVE JO"N'S CLEANING ........ CUSTOM EXTERIORS Relailonat\lpe 840·6454 QUALITY" 31-2028
Doora-Wlndowt..C&blnetl F,.. •I. 964-8586 Furnltur•. TrMtl, Tr... ,.. •---·-----& INTER ..... F "Lat the~unat\lne In" ~ .... t.tlve DRYWALL TAPING 983-5415 NORM Cookl~ Errand• • ' All Ball Room Danot l aeeon1, ........ rltll. ree DIANETIC AUDITING .,. ..... 11 _. •22 Panel·Patl~Fenc... 35 CLEAN·UP MASTERS H ....... "•" 87 Mt. Steve 547-4281 1~r-"war-·. SUNSH E WINDOW _. .... • yY'l l)(p. .J«ry 54~13 All Taxturea & ACOU111c LT H"ULING MOVING lhld t.... ..-·12 110 Speclll. Harbor ----=-----·~ " ~-CLEANIN 842·1549 ~~~~~~~~~1 ---------1 Frae eet. Kevin 873-1603 All tlHI. Prof .. , .... Alk " • Center al Wllaon INT/EXT. CALL JIM, lnv911 In you 845-5133 :;; R9'>11r/emall loba. Fanoaa. about our 25,000 11wn Aentll Cleln Upa, Jon "-'labl• Cauce11an. gd 0 · L~t shelvee. par11tloni. Low 11 lri al 1peclal. Call anyllm•. 84Mt921731·2t18 REF'1, IMklng houM-1•1 PM. 650-3048. IH·lHO lttaa1 lemc1 Ital• Law .. r11n Steve 731-8311 IC C 64~ (Ml<:hMI) clMnlng Lido Ille .,... M c t · '°siiit,;,at;;;;e;.,.l1;.w;.;.raq-u""lr· .. -lh•••1 -ail •Parking Lot · E(ECTRJCiAN: Pdcad GEORGE'S CLEAN UPS 876-08f5 .... ..!I. RALPH'S PAINTING u1 om rnumea/cove< Aapel,...Sealcoatlng lgh f 1 c.n Up•. l.andacaplng & HAULING. Ho lob toowa Int/ext Rea&. UC'd. lett11<1/Job March contrector1 who perform
S&S Aaphll 831·4199Llc Ct .. al Cncretl r.,~ o:-:n:• ;:!• L:' Hauling. TrM Trim 1maJI. 89M006 Bt•H•IW ltmCH B~'ixm. R~c!::llu:~:: Free eat. 641-3538124 hr llp1-Call COS 673-1107 :~o~ ~~~ !~~,:~~u~~~
I l cernant-Muonary-BIOCIC 396821 873-0369 Free et1tmatae. 842•9907 I Cl ' IRONING JOBS WANTED, lrvlna. Rafi. 675-3176 12 YRS EXP: Nwpt .,.. I be llceneed. Unllcenaed ti •.I Wall1-Cu1t. work. Lie. · I • .. W • .a llH 118 !I E I'm small. my prices are Hlla1 contractora should so XevslfflNd #381057 Rob 873·8094 LIC'D ELECTRICIAN •r • 'fi •It-RbiiN's CCEXNIRd :'t,k 11~!~.n~·d~er~ Cu1tom Brick-Slone 1m1111 850·6477 Ron -A-ub4i""""r•R~oo-lin""g"".-a1i type--,-8111e 1n their advertising
In my home near Victoria, Concrete, muonry. nit· Ouallty work/A .... rataa Mow!~. Edi;"· Twice a SERVICE: a thoroughly quell. Phone 942.5470 Block-Concrete. Llc'd. New·Recover·Decka Contractors arid con-
Co11a Meta. 842-8482 work, loundalloni. Block, TOM 631-5072 ~~~7071 to 1215· dMr'I houM. 640--0867 an'/11me. Ref1. Free HI. 549-9492 fl)lllal Lie. 114t 1802. 546-9734 sumers, contact Mary
Bab)'llttlng In my home, brick. UC'd. 538-5013. •Elec1rlclan: N-/Rapalr •BARBARA'S QUALITY • f'llffiijng lntarlOf [);llgn ---------• Grondle at 5158-4088 wfth 405 Frwy & MtJgnollL A All types. Low prlcae. Lie. WAIUI IAllEIEI HOUSECLEANING Lu•1ea1l•1 ttl•• HANGING/STRIPPINO ltcrtlarlal any queetlonl Contrao-
lun pl-tO pllY &. IMm. C~• C•rt Fr .. est1ma1 ... 631·2345 839-5035 Callaft4pm.53&--0e94 """!"'----·-----*A·1UY111* VISA·MCScotl673-1512 ltnlcH t or'oS1at1 Llcenu ~ 648-5189. Chiid cara, my Q ... Ve<J: ELECTRICIAN: 20 YRS JESSIE'S GARDENING Qopt & Window CJMnlng ~.:::=I~~ Best quality. 25 yr. exp. "WE GALS SHOULD TYPING/BOOKKEEPING ~~· R~~·~. c:;~~
Have aomethlng lo tell? home, full/time. Prat. new EXP. REAS. RATES Compl. claan UPI & Olfl'I Prof. reeutt. at reu. rataa Dave 842·4853 Compe11tlverat•. HANG TOGETHER" For lndlv./aml business Ana. CA 9270t.
Clalelllad adl do It 111811. born. Rafi. 645-9231 846-7802 malnt. Free•t. 540-8035 CALL BOB 984-41215 Bud 6411-5285 Lio. T-1 t&,428 730-13153 639--0730 Anytl.rnet Hr/day/wtc 640-0888 t--------•
•
li'oom avail. g. 14 In 3br
duplex lo Bal Penn $257
Ind gar aoace 875-1«7
IUUll 91111. "',,, ........... ....
• 111.M/wt.I••
. ...., n. ""'' '' , .... 1114 ..... rt
............ 1 ...
HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
'•
•
I
I,
Aei:S 11·14
EARN a. TO $75.00 PB WEEK
wt llOlll lla•t 15 ~ IOI J041'W ACtf bmm lo MCWrt rtlden '°' Tiie 0r-. Cont
Deily Ptlol. Ouf mn slait et l :JO 11.111 lftd • woA u11lll I.JO ~nt .... dlys. On S.lurd1y, wt "°'~ 1 ltw l!IOlt houn You will 1¥n 1111ny tr.ps . •'
tnd pnrn, tlo .. ..tt1I Nlnlfll yovr own money ~~ . tlltrt It "° clthtfl"C ot eoli.ellon ln¥Olwtd
It you '" 1n1erntl4. !)Ila. eaft Mt. Earl . = (714) 548-7058 n i,;. cr-----J.\~
~ -., __ ... )
I '
Cle Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wedneld1y, Sept. 7, 1983 •1t ...,,. 119 &utltu II !lfeU1111a UI ,.. .. , WI W ~-· 11!1!!!!f
..,._ lro_ 6uvi. "•~•li11 Olr1'• on wM '°"" .... • ie> Mllt1I "111. Dll. &Ml tllT •n•• '-• 11•1 Y.tbw...-= 1111 IWiflcMftedt ........... .,. ~ • pc. -.00.. ..... ~ ...... Not li~"P!""!!~~~ • - -,_
....,.. ll<Mtwl) n;o. 111,000. KltcNI 11s1 °"*· td 1ot1 e11p. n1.ooo. 'JO fC>OO • ~ "' rf. '11 tee."""' ooncs. Wort! ...,,.. ..... C.0.C. ?61·710.a cond t70. MCM2t2 -.1137 Mij 9q"6pped. 17IOO OMW,tlfwntne1 112, TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Suepend
5 Small drops
10 Llfelea1
1 • Allan ruler
15 Summa ry
16 Aware of
17 "Ody.ssey"
character
19 Insect
20 Cavorts
21 Porters
23 Made
m elodic
25 Screw p ine
26 Give In
29 Wealth
source
34 Fish
35 Cereal
37 S tem
38 Title
3 9 Despots
41 Hostelry
42 Overact
44 Turkish
chamber.
var.
4 5 Fru11
46 P itch interval
48 Elevated
50 Scrub
2 3 ..
14
51 Muck
53 Headpiece
57 Flexlble
61 Leave o ut
6~ Tudor. e g.
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE 80l YEO
~w.t--ourtop ~-' obo.131-Ml4 142-7080 ,.,...,, ""' "' IA tlCQ't ..... H_H JOfift Werne CI06 POO. Lido H ... t oona .. wltrif. -------1VOL.K.8WAGEN end~ home 8514. f 11 ~int CllM 114/71CM031. Niii, H/0 llrac>, lifting ... 1111 '11. I.I• XlJTI EXCLUSIVEJ.Y
c.a 761-4W aft« 1 <>nlYMoenetPlfft.tn>-MAGIC tiLAHD. Jold bndtl, wtlltket pole etc. 'f51UW206i.4;3.lflff. 121·800• 1"533-4242 WWllTWAOIN@ P""" Ing alto, Harbot ~.Ind. . yra 1 1"°· 21~Mtu 13800/bet olr. 1424112 '80 iOOo. lvofy/lvory Int, A pert()Nl·ano proud,,.,
Redwood 714/631-1311. .....no. -.,1..ae11 ~ lllillL719niH fH1 ,76 2002 eunroor .--. MWOOI doya. 111,000. cluetve vw csea-
TQO Y(U«i btJii ;:g ~M·=lh~.,.~~ ~~; =·o~u/..~~ .. ~~ftd., 1~d :::~~urbo, 1/r, ::: ~~~~
S4 Wind ow part "'P-tr-~"=~llllll•
65 Aloe
66 $Ingle
F(I ~7 ••ev ~· t • -. MeO/bet otr A Booth". ~t In LP b lk/tllk, &eoo ml J>etlllve ui. ,,...._ .... Ail\~·, ... . M...:... 141·1-1. . . a ._.....; a:.u ........ .,. BMW 2002. wtlt, no air ..... ..,.,. l<U .......... tatlon Of th• uni ... ................ ·---.......... , __....., 14900. 031·5272 •V•"""'· .... .,.. .... .., VolklWIOlf\ quellty •
lrnmed. OC*'ll1GI tor 16 FrM Ynnnn TOf1oM 8heii Nlcel Sola, l.ov ... at, ~I ..... f~ , Alk tl>oul thl money -hldet.
67 Threespot
68Cut
69 Acrid
DOWN
1 Assist
2 Roman god
3 Ms Naldl
4 Snorted
5 Verdure
6 Rent
7 Calendar
abbr
8 Champ
Max -
9 Rad1a1e
10 Kid's vehicle
11 Sicily city
12 N1pa palm
13 Periods
18 Mpve swiftly
22 Ru bbish
24 Time periods
26 Burros
6
27 Be lls
28 Ricochet
30 USSR river
31 Melodies
32 llahan poet
33 Had title to
36 Press
39 Montana
river
40 Elated
43 Fodder g rass
45 Fades
47 Aida and
7 8 9
Faust
49 Nursemaid
52 Depart
53 Price
54 Persian poet
Khayyam
55 Eminence
56 Garment
58 Albacore
59 Danube
reeder
60 Irishman
63 Deviation
thatp O"Y'I ' g.ia to T b -... fthot . Chelf ' Ottoman, uMd 79 BMW 320• xtr• cteen. Cltl MVI you lllN our BOB CHALl.MA.N'8 tra...i US ,...!Of cltlel a by, ~ w •· Yll'Y Mttle reotntly p.ict , power l>Oe1, , t10,980. 54&-28N purchlll & ..... p1
with unique bu1lrnt11 648·9485• SPM. 1100 •. 'u 11 ooo. dOOll box, MCUrtlY, w .. t •83 3201. Wilt wtpranmnt M •na. @WllTWAOIN@
O'OUP· No •perlenOt To gd tloml .• mot mall 21314024221. Nwpt,1250/moSS0..12:25 lnl.. 13K ml, M:Y £4.lro.. su•• Ecur .. 8hlrtMCofp.
neo. Tr•n•portatlon dog. Mllcecl t>Ntd. Lowe . Stlptev....,.. 36~1111 peen nu Pe'tw/14" 888 1..,.111 ~~ BlltDMl·AllWa_v. fWnllhtd....,..be 110f peopie.Shcq. 7M-2 .. 7 Hu~...., & GM Call 1 •6 'Mon-Fri' wt111 ' H~ .i.rm .-_, ~•ou.... 7000Wlttmtn.-•......_ over, 1lngle, we ll T .......,. hOm9 _ _.._.. lwnrnwrt, Hl11m1n1 142.....,... ' · tem.' Blaupunkt 2010 NEWPORTBEACH NMt8MchfW~
ll'OOmtd & hi to It-' &.:;;,-.,_,,.,.;-17 umr,tH at coet. aound tyttem, t 1e.ooo. 111-IMO Pnont714/VWPN£9T
mlMd. fOf l*'10fWI In-wka. ~2tel pup 7at. 180. lllJtftt .Jtil Cit ttl'M'! by IJ>PI. only Totltl Petf()ml41r1C)9 Wft
11rvl1w, a.II Sharyl O'Nell Full Wet 8Uri Xlnt BfrtA .. LIOht ;;ghi 144-0282 "AreYou St1v1n~ e•0·4c: r::! hlilhln MB oond •uOobo. 84().0997 Ptuotot Alloy. Uk• new. eon-w.ntJyLocatld 'fl Ude conv. :;i,. wfiia. Htvln' Any Fun?" ~ J::" ~ f Qlc;naoi'IO:;;i; IOGi I P0011bi, 1100. O:t cona. t100, 86CMl82 &eomp.tltlvelyPriold am/Im cut, exit cond, lo IUae.
Cent•, 10arn-6pm, Wedi loveMet. ,_ .. , on. ttereo, 1100. MM&to In.,, cones. 20'' OT blk•. & ml. ~50· 54&-3899 pr •
Thurt/Ffl. only. Return Sac. 1180 Moh w/\Jlttl rime, OT bar. GT '79 MG Mlget convertlble, 1 m11 m 1 ape new
trantp0r11tlon guar. (213) 927-1611 SCRAM-LETS 11~. GTIOfkt, llmolt 20,000 ml. x:n1 cond, Mlchelln 11,... eo:Ooci ml.,
TOP iii 2.gqld uptlol llv rm chtl. 111newl*I•·1310 obo. Saltt-,Sltv\Ce-Leaalng $4000. 873-9020 whlle, 12900. 644-10M
Famllel Pret. Modlll & S20 IL 146-88015 ANSWERS 908-M 11 D'"""1V CARVER PnJMI tl SS Come In & -Newport
&corte.. (213) Me-1984 2 tllgtlbac* ~ chelrt MIMtatl 1hpd, i2'i5 l~I '76 ti 6tJ so:i 41PCJ air Beech'• llnel1 Mtlc1lor't
lll(e MW 142.60 ..cm. ::::.:'°•Grime 146-4157; 1¥99 499-4233 ft.ill ~ "'E. HMVV 11.,90 t nrf PS PB 'PW' ol prevlou1ly owned
TUii... 842-4397, 842-1171 NEE~ .... ..... Ali ... , ......... , ............ ·~···· 35mpg. Mini cond. Portehll, Audi• and ..,........,.,...,-----,-....,....~ M ._.. ... _ ..... , "'..,,..,,"'.,"''"'"""..... '3050.831-3016 Volkewegen1. .. Tl 111.L 4 pc llvlng rm 111, 1 wk old, ttr..., man to .._._or: ''° p~j moped xtnl
Help glYt ttltm 1 hied Mrthtonea ... ooet MOO, "Do you Ilk• being cond ,250. 551--07 19 f•"'• 1157 01i • •:111. Earn ~op "* t'[' llil '250. <213)402-9228 ~~~ e:::= · 1~:. '82 ~ Moped. ,_. .,,_ pu c:revlel' 'I• high logo 1611 Tttga. Xie, IMthef, 1'WA.
t mil 1v1ndng1. d n y Apt furnlttllng1, l'ltry· when I NEED Ml:." RIM )(Int condition '500 s a-.S.W::.Leulng ,_ P·7 I, 38,000 mllee. di< E r~·t ....... pot tlvt, ep1n able, thing mutt go: Mahogany · · ... 204~ · WIEST I 17 200 494 7997 """ · ...,___ '·-•· outgoing 1dull1 n11d end tbl1, 1 1so'11. Steteo, Youth bid w/3 dr11W1t1. rm. ""1• " ' · • Newporl Buen
apply. Phone 84&-7021, E:ectrlcptlonlc, rec, 155. 87M150 ltttrtytln/ llYEITDllY '63 356 S RENOVATION 873-0900
2:30 to 8 p.m. Mond1y trntbl, 8·1111 & tpkrt, • l al fa ..... lc•e.ra .. JI *'77 ~; 4 apd, A/C. tor thl dlte1rnlng col· thru Friday. 1125. S1ereo Panotonlc U t at. ~ (371VOA.) llQllll or olhlr devotee, la ... , Dtantlc
tu-·--& epkrt. $75. Ga BBQ, 2 uuA.,., MW mr 'd R:A:Y KR, factory *'78 3204; 4 apd, AIC. U500. 851·5999 AJIC ••
11 12 13 ·--• 175. Fu• ~h mirror, A.cou1tle •100 Crown recer, cuttom, 111 new. (991XEO) •ee 912 c 5 • ..,. Newport B .. ch Tr1v1I 135. 3 Ill plant•. Prof. El1c1rlc 175. 13200/obo. 548-4884 *'12 320I: 5 ec>d, lo ml. In or1Q :nd.$64~';:i 'U m Xbc. 81k =· --+-+--t---1 Agency. Non·1mkr . 1150, 1100 & a 5. BelOI 117M9&2 '72 Hond SL350 need (1FGEl48) olr. 55'3·9633 g ood cond., 010.
S1bre, 1·2 Y" Ill· lamp, 135. Oval blue flv bait '& IOrM TLC• *'13 ~. 51Pd. "S" Ptcg. . 631·2652 ~rltno1. Cal A.rd~·· rm chr, 1100. Exit cones. Brand ,_ Elecirlo e... 1100-Zbo 1182·2753 . (9003905) '75 914 PorlChe 2.0, wilt, C::ittl 1™ l50-1111 c.M fe&.<>428 0 u I II r I 7 5 / 0 B 0 . · * ·11 3204; 5 apd, 111 11, IOPMI grp. etereo. ~Int. aau IC .n I••••••••• e..utlfl.ll 1• eota. Gold 644-7598 '79 ~1 RM eo, Xlnt (1CHJ134).. $5000totr. 545-3045 "'8!'!'1~E1-oo·r-lld"""'o·. •m..-~oom~
_ _..._..__..._ .... PtAoRTln.TJc•~£ v .. ~ ~.M". print. xln1 cond. '400: 2 Office fambrt/ ~:,~:-"· '4e5 *<1.ec1uu34~l:, S IPd. AJC '78 930 Turbo, l30,000. ~s'•ooo•n. cl errlag11 t2~
..,._ "7 " gold v1lv1t chair. •-• 1211 · ._ 873-3337 .. • m ,IYlt)'X re., ... weeltende.. MU11 lllve de-1200/ 19" Blk & Wht .. ~ .... t •79 Suiulll RM 125: 1350. *'79 320I; 4 apd, eunroof. lnJ, 1v1tem. I 13,500.
pendabll vehldl (tmlll TV, s~;; 12 .. blk & will pifMY.IQ;;i IT\alilng ma· Mutt 1811. Gd cond. CeM (~9XMK) '11 92•. eutomalic, Judy 9·5. 714n 71·1*·
truck, van, etaUon TV 135 Coll t • chin e , Ilk• new 759-1158.JoM *ll0833c:ll;4apd,LoMI. iunroor. coco brown, '78 s-~1·-E._. ...... ) .--... • ; •c or •~"" 08 0 .,. .. •7a:• 5555493 29,000 mlles. Bell offer. ""',. ...,,ante, _.. WtlQOn to -,_.. magazlnel llfl Looi< ,,,..._/ · ... ....., .,.. · 11 •1""" •995, ver/blact<, lthr ... ta. We paper deallt 1n 1rv1ne Colrlers. 8 • E Poii. Malce .. ......._ ·eo Hu.qvwna 250, l960 *'82 7331; 5 IPd. io.ded. .. •• ·-f C: .,.., ~ be depen. offet 031-3650 SCM 142 photo ............ ~1; 1¥99 499-4233 (7355e37) wheel•, 1nroo .
debit. contact Oreg · l200. e7s-1339 Honda 350 get cones 1250 111-1111 ltlla ~· tlil =:a:!·000 ml.
Hyde MondaY ttlN Friday CoffM 1bl 125, ltmP tbl P"·--·/Or 1•" E>th P'9la ~S550 Suzuki 208 W. 111, Santa An• between t :30 and 10:30 $15, OM TV ceblMt U IS, --=2-::aw.,,. $180 obo. 642•8511 Cloeed Sundiy '82 RR . LHO, 1lr, rbll '78 Sevllle, grey/gray, vinyl t.m.0!1fr.142jf21 Uptlolc:l'lrU5,,8wedlllh r_n_r_ engltr1n1. 128.500, call roof, leather, 9'IC eta l lliiiiili-iliiiiil-iliill•I llrepleoee 135 & 125. lnct blnctl, normel de-.... ..... lffi LARGE SELECTION OF 875-4170. wlndowa. 1 ownr, 79,000
--+--+---i 3312 Marc ut. H.B. livery a. tunlng-'395. 'ri PXce ARROW, 2f' J NEW & USED BMW'S: 'II 11 IEITUY II ml, nu redlltCK, get oond. WW....... 873-4588 53&-1775, 10-ePM xtru. 37M mlt, top cond. ~ Xlnl. '18,500. 1·633-42•2 55995. 875-ee 1 f --+-+--... -4 Exp. "'°· Commlt1lon Country French furn, nr Spinet piano & benctl, xlnt I 14450 Clll 646-4548 NB \;ill ·eo Slvllle, mint cond,
eemlnga. 611-4031 new, deoor1ttd by Can· tone & cond. $500. FOR RENT 20ft Motor Liil IUOI ID hand detailed & • ...., -Pl•H• nllt & Cllllftn, cornp6et1 US-4579 tv meg. Home. c ompletely VOLU .. E SALES r:V""'W CARVER eVlfY month, FOl'•t em Newpot1 8eedl 19w office rm $4200. Colt of .,.. UIWtd 873-5133 '" I~ I w/taddle ithr Int. IMOO wtlt train on ovr equip-rug only wit 16,000. Upngtlt Pi.no, grM1 con-eq · SERVICE & LEASING rY'tl JC'.~ Firm. Emergenl:y .... -. _____ , -·-. m-0500tJy87M181rt dltlon.'500.875-8888. lattlttlctt iiR 3870N.ChlnyA.ve. N....JLL.J l~l\..C 780-1658-'wknde. .. ._.. ~ "''""'" LONG BEACH "'" -" ~ ''~ ~ ,.,. good benefit•. Salary Dix qn lllbf1tlng 1dJ. bid l""i.q .... , IUO IMPORTANT (No. Chlfry exlt-406) .,,.. , .... • ", ... '""' c :1111c·eo 011 Eldo
open. Joyce 640.5950 1275. S/S rtfrlg $275. awn RIP &a wet NOTICE TO READERS ll14) 111-llM CIOSIO SUND'-H Cpe.jLlllher). Lo ml,
Youth Leederl IOI' 518 846-8373 tulta. $40 to 1 100. Burl· A.NO l'r.o.1n1 Wlk:ome 11050/obo, 771·2390
grade, Jr. High, Sr. HI. Elhan Allen 80" Ubrary board, 5'10", trl·lln. ADVERTISERS T ta tllt TllE WIEST P/tlme. Cd Unfv. Umd. wlllunlt.ellltcond.1325. $190 541-«>47 The price 01 Item•"-"-1111 ~ M•ttlodl1t Church. Evet 559-7417 " .'::n ld'llr11Md by vlhlcl• _.... IELEmll 552-8233 by Sept u I. ..... , dealer• In thl Y'lhtci. '12 Uoz . xLNt COND. '8 gray 2 dr, 1576! rirm.
11
"
G o r g 1 o u 1 s o t 1 lltrtt 1232 claullled 1dvert111ng 13900. Brent 7~ 18,000 ml. e.1111 cond. Clli ol lele model, low mlleagl JeM Wut.. w/m1tchlng Lov1111t, column• doee not lndude . 1ft 5 844·23.e Cadlll•c• In Southern ~~=======::========:=:~~====== AoOSlkPR l OR CAILO: nur new. elegant 1 Settlement 1983 fOO any 1pp::c1b11 tuff. 74 2eOZ. cpood GOnd, Otlg Calllorri111 s.. ue today!
B I W 9 MI I W .. Slit SIM CARE. ltv.ln, Swedllh Herculon fabrlo, paid watt apk,., rwver Ulld, llcen11. trantler 1 .... ownr. newly p1lnt1cf, Ytlhwltt• tl73 IUElll e I utt4 l e I aat ltlt ...... girl 20, evrw wtoood reft 1900 lut mo. Mutt 1811 worth $700. Sac. $99. nnance ctlargel feel for belQe/bllc Int. $5000 obo. • 0••1WC omoe, lharp alert p1r9on. Aes~aurant llOlnllf & drtvere llC': 87~ 11 1500. 2131~408. (213) 927-8511. air po11ut1on ~trol de-ca1T Dale 762·2540 dyl. ·~u:8~.:r:i'lcel ...,
good with numbers . Lori• Kitchen Inc has the Corporate hlldquarteri 21 .. Color RCA Remote TV v1c1 certlllcatlont or 893-2220 91191. 2000 Harbor Blvd.
MecGregor Yacht Corp. lollowlng openings: !or atil•wld• inY91tment 0.,1 9910 I llf FallJWI I 135 494.29211496-2575 d11ler documentary •7g 280CX OL, teue hll '85 BUG • RUNS GOOD COSTA MESA
1631 Placentia, C.M. Biking 6 Food Prep· MMcel nrm. Newport REE 1111 L• 957-1133 BEAUTIFUL 25.. RCA ~aratlon chttgee un· expired. Wif1'1 car. one $1500/obo. 551-3732 540-1880
PAINTER, expe<, refs, call aretlon workers. 10 I m· Beach. E>toellent Cat-2 FEMALE O. HE.ELERS King t lZI Water bed Color TV, 2 yr wmly Ille Olherwlll epectllld brn/balge Int. 35K ml,
850-9065 111 5PM Lv 6pm.Mon·Thura.6em · Oppor1unlty, with di· (Auatra::an) need good wfhMlet. 8' hMdboafd, Sl48. Frll dll. Open bylheadver11M<. 5-apd, AIC, P/B, PIS. ·~t.~~u:l~x~::tCY..~~ C.tTrtltt I 1
message 11:30 em Sun. All •PPll· verslty ind chellenge. hornet. Houllbrotien, 111 cabinet & mlfrore. Wtve-Sun. TV John'tl4&-1788 Aatt Stmffl/ AM / FM -S 6 9 5 o · S2950. 963·8•05 '69 Concouree wgn. gooa
carita must be neat cl11n Mul1 po ..... top level ano11. 1p1yld. Call evee 1111 mattr1u. S325 Putt tol9 573-350• ' cond $900 All epm Pert-Time Cook. Ex· end depend1ble, Apply executive eecrettt181 Ill· & wtmdt. 351·1089. 751·3272 Sherp Video Recof<Mr ·eo 2eozx. 2+2. Grind lux '68 VW BUG pretty car · per:ene.ci. Npt Bch Cot-between 10 am . 12 noon perlenel. c 111 553-0940 · Model vcesoo. $300. ·Ai baz 220 hOOd. trunk, pkg s IPd 10 ml mid· $1400 OBO. ·MUST SEE _9_4_7_-18_3_6 ____ _ fll Shop. Cali &4&-6909 or 2-4 pm. 30n South Mon·Frl, 9-5:30. !Ab Retriever pupplel, Y91· Mitt. & frtm1: Twin, l30. F0< Info: 031·2853 othlt perte. 175 IL VW I hi bl ' SS600 650-ee94 '70 Orig Monte Cerio. VI
between 7 . 3 '°'Inter-Harbor, (Harbor It Ctr· SECRETARY/EXCl/TIVE low, AKC, ahol9, champ King, 175. 845-2177 . . Bu t re er benc h. ~g.2740 ~· 851·1803 '67 C All ood prime lr\Q. clean.11495,
view. rl• Drive) Sant• Ana Ex PfT L Hiii llnet. •97·1559 Moving: piano, IOf•. gu Ptnr II '1111 881·2220 881-2220 IYll & wtlnd•' con~.r,999 ~~67g86 Call 963-1405.
PART·TIME.,counterhelp, 979--0747 . • ::'Y.213-~~. Min Schnauure. AKC, 7 range, chllr•. antique 18 A Newport eleC1rk: PAINT A.NO LIGHT BODY •• , B210 wgn nu tlree . '71 hi pwrd Mali bu. bodY
11·3. Gary 1 Delll, N.B. restaurant evefwkndt. 71.._.92•1494 wk•. 11t lhott, paper dr1111r. mite. 845-M32 PICket. Surrey top, full WORK: Save as & In-am/Im, great cond '. 89 Bug, riu 11r11. nu p1lnt, need• work, extra ci..
752-5401 Loolclng for A«V'lr'eul'vl, 11-nw 1•••• trlllnld.1250. 49fi..1430 Olk dining rm tbl w/2 18" cover. ""'°· IMk blr, er-your cet't vakll '3800 obo 496-7754 nu motor, nu Int, am/Im pen d m Ir . 1700. P RT TIME FACTORY I -... f d ...., .. -M 1111 -~Id Ger 11111 & 4 Chrt S800 tlll! trim & muot1 more. by IS. 8111 ~1221 cau. $1450· 543-0802 759·1150 :SSeMBLY-C"""'-your !~!;,.e..:,11r~. ~~-Matu,. perwon for ~ utt ....,..... • 546-27119 · Pert cond. rmiat -· '81 Dateun 310GX, xlnl •It 4pm. --.------.,--hrs 11 Htt~~~d & t-a. 51..,.. '"rch St, NB. r•llon ., .. , (Weekend• man Shepherd pupe, xlnt S13,500. 845-M12 '"'· TllUI cond thn.t out. runt..-.. 70 C B need '13 B1rlin1tt1-lo1d1d,
MacArthur Btvd. Factory. No pho:; ~'' pteaee. only). Can 846·9142, ~°i'r,~· ~J'o.~· 17 Oek ttvtng rm llt·eofa, 19· Bolton Whaler, 1251\p AITl•ITm 4 •pd, •Ir. 14 195· mlnoron~. :!·k. mu! ~h1Sffve:tg~~ ~ Good place to wort<. Cali Apply Sii/Thurs., 3-5 pm days; 645-2439 evea. ' · loweeet, c:l'lr, lbl, ottmn Evlnrude, 19500/0BO. Specl1ll11d total-care 84H 533 oiler. Keri 631·2458 charcoal lnl, 4200 ml.
Jan 540-4777 '°' more 1n•N ITllE Ill llO'Y/IEllPT Pharaoh Hound pupe. New seer.>. 546-27119 87fj.1030am mllnt. for lhl E>tec & ·12 2eozx. T·top, 5 apd. '1111-•ir...1 111,260 obo. 966-042' Info an. T·" .... 1 AKC Breld. Top quality. Pr IWl"9I rockera, orange 1 .. ,. ,41 ,.. .... , Cr•ft "'·-Corp. Pickup & return. lolded. Extended. ~ r"" '"'.:;'" -Sport1w11r, lull lime, -e .... arge YP1 pereon wondertul ternperwnent. Y'llwt un ... 840-1141 •" ""'"' .......,,. 11• -•• ., ,_ tlldler Aaklng Am/fmcuaetll SEE IS FllllTI PHONE SALES for carpet Balboa, nr Pivi lllen. needed for buey real... Sire and Demi llllllabll · '""'f"' about ~ N9toratlon &-w r. · llCf. S2000 54&-9215 cleaners. 8 hre per d1y, 2 873•9299 1111 offlol In ~ 1 o r v I 1 w 1 n g . Solaffo1111111. Beaut. Concciun.. In NB ~ A W ... ~ 111•90010bo, mull Iii · We hive• good M6ldlOfl ahll1a. 9&0-2310, 9-3. Beach. Ideal working 714-035-3554 matching Mt 1175, wilt Dy wtcod, Nwpt OunM •* la _ _ 15K ml. 499•2922 '71 Super Beetle, n.t1t of NEW & uMd CMv-
Sllel Aaalt11111/Mark1tlng condltlont. Du11ff in· 10 ........... deliver. 1141241--03-43 Campground. 117 000 4gt;;ii CMti lmmed ftr ui 1121 color. bik int, Ilk• brand rollttl See u1 todayt Pho Io I ab Pr I ri t • r Coreec>ondlnl to work elude typing nung u11 of Pit Bull pupplel, ...... tlO ~ • ftt11ott ~tic I new $2595. 553.9033
wlNOl'lttu exper .. PIT, pr1marllyonlntldeutlt1· computer RMI 'e.iate ~~oliaper1, parent• Sofa: L llllped Sect .. it obo ' =;. 5S'f'..a21S °' 1U iSOdf 2+2. a hMd
apply M·F. Sn1pshol 1 Hr Ing Senior' Silel Re91, exp. preierrtd. Slliry .R. 11 /obo. 240-0131 :;"GI Trllltlan aar::J:· 2~~81er. :t~. tip~: TAAOE 20i owntl'ltllpi llGMl2 ,,.7~ eng. I 11,000. '7,,!s~ .!:· n~7·.::~
Photo. t49 Rlvert lde mull bl good with commenturate w/exp«. S"--'t Poodle . moet ..-. r. ._ IS2-4 &.v $1750 75 7 02
Ave, Npt Bch. 646-2424 number•. good with cut· Call Bruce BarMmlan. ;;'~.' teacup-toy pu,:i~~ 786-0133 11 t,875, 662•1728 28r 2be on 113 acn"" fil tlU . 1· 1
Plumber. muet be eble to lomer•, Ilka to be buay & &«-7020 atur..1250 up. 64&-2848 Sold~ mutt etll. Old 28' 8ear1IY ~ twtn newtdoofoer. t75-3022 I '72 Bu1/cmpr. 1700 eng.
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
'.>1..,.ll,1rl••r jl,,.
11 1'.l\\lll·'-\
S46-l 200 run work commerclal, heve 1olld work ••· QW< bu1f9t w/rrlrror '395. 470 ~ •• nu WI plf 11f .W 1618 id. Xtnt gu mn;: $2500 obo. 548·0272
resldenlial, 1.111>11 req. pertence. Thi• 11 • ctrllf lertlte ltlf, Attel4. Pttl 1131 Uk• nu IOlld fM11* bd PP t73-78n, t'n-7173 .. _... :C Look• nice. 11200 72 Camper Bue, atereo. ftd IHI
s 0 u 1 h o. c . ., 11. opportunity In lrvlne. P/tlme IYM/wkndt. Neel UXcXw-twne iD8 Mt, dbl bd. dbl Orw, 21g 40, Ctw1I Cr " ~ a.i ... I.Ill . 142·6101 cen't be told from ,_, ==-..,..,,----..,..---~
681-1482 °' 493-7327 ~~~:. •. c~~!~;!&-~~,1~ :ft\'a, = = Blue & gold 645-2963 :: ~ :..-= hull wtllt• w/~ '*o':i NiNiiiii'iH '71 ~ Conv, ttereo. S2995. 553-9633 ·~0;4u~l~ 111~ ~ P~!j~h~'Ji ,~:c,ci:;~· tNewportE 0 EPrlntlng Sys· 2590 Bl. CM. hil~· Ail plneeppll bldt seo. 2 :L ~oooWO:· terme l '80Hert>or1Nvd. :~~~~ .. ocs '72 ~tper Beetlel. ,1 ownerd. every1hlng hu been ,..
Chr11tl1n min:atry. Exp: lfTll . • . . Serv Station A.ttndt FIT., gg yr%id Bpanliii aai;on drop lell maple end 52f.MIO ;,, 4~101. . C08TAME8A ..... 11•1 , • ..,. eng, x n con . ltOl'ed, great depend ...
or ECE n eed e d IALEIOllll lll•nd 11111 only no MOdel Ship '550/olr tabll9 175pr.1 am~. ~.-.1a1 • 12196 842·8717 car, 642--0915 alt 5,
S3.75·S•.OO hr Co111 Pre1tloe drug ttOfe, .._. mech .. no tmkrt. sM Mr 87Mt&2 . ~ 116j1
2 r,': ':':' ·= ~ ~aft twin ....... 11\ 4 df ma: Air, Mlto '73 REO BUG Mirk.13200/080
M e I I 8 4 2 • 9 1 8 1 . porl lkech. Full ti.me per· Bott• 2490 FllMew, C.M. GERRIE'S ANTIQUES HUil na;,::m table aemP .... :.c, ~ :l. -· s.I Im&. 20.000 ml.:. Ilk• -· '1IOO (O< bllt ofter) ... RITAM .... 642· 1428 m1n1n1 l)OlltlOtl. e.n. Comet of Fair. IS BA.CK ~'1'2 antq ~,.., '71 =-· 8oe1 ... 158 w· Oood, dMr'I '*" ~ Mlt6. dyl r20-03'44, Good COndltlon Xi I cond wttt t ... P11mu IAUI ellll. t ome weekend•. Shipping ' Plci<eglng, lull 3500 aq "Of A.mertcan Aft. i150' pr. 3 king . d 11th s·... C.M. Oey9 ~ 1t7•ttts Bulcll.. 911/Wknd 644-1390 Call l'ltlllngl 875-5236 ; bat offer. 7~.'..eeso
Wlll"I commerc:i:print ~,*51~1~r .1 El wo~~ time, wtll train, Co111 tlq'*• lllO ,depar1ment 110, 125, S75. lhuf t. 031·9785;8"9814t-113e ~~'bu,'""~ tmi lllf '74 au,.r Bug. Snrl.
Ing ,· butlnen for,,; or ippo n • M .... 645-3350 oluMC1 fl.lmllur1&oollle>-only, 2972 Jecar.-nda, ,17 WELLCRAn 25W "llldel.S Tl/t'I prtoae em/Im OMI, 9d condtnu '72 Ranchefo351 cu.~
manufacturer la IMklng -menl. SHIPPINO & tlblel. Wiii buy &tatll, C.M. nr Herbor/8161•. l01 I equip ft llllt =-0.-Ctw op81 la&IW pnt. 12300. 545--0630 PS, PB, i tr, AM/PM
qullllledllle9 reprll4IO-SALES • RECEIVINGCLK conelg?n n,orNowha1EJ"•~ ltatthi4 ..... 118.~ ... w84~-4e76 Motor• ., (114) '75Aibt>i12dr red good tlll'IO, comp'-'liY ,..
11tlvee, rt11ted 111p. de-Earn S300 10 .eoo Full Time. Crown Hard-you?~ • ..,.."'"" llll 97 ... 2500 oond 11eoo 540 foeo ttOl'ed. lmrnac. '31'0&. sired. Send reaume or :n. part-time per w11 working we,., 1914 San Mtgull, A11I, San Cl1m1nt1, '71 23· Mwqull 1/0, 226 · · · • 631-3578, 84$.9242
qulrles to: Selee Mgr. 1n,,,comlor11ble .. d~ .. conbd Newport Beach. 4e2-ocl3t Of 492-4564 bOVIRd SXlt: s;;,. hp Mire. new rno::nup t,. WE wan Ra ·~9 •• ':' :~,~~ ~;~c;od: '73 Mulllng. Good OG11f. ~ormprlnt Co. PO Bolt o ce, aurroun ,... oy S PP NG & W RE IUl1 = froet/frM rtfrlg. 8200: camper coven. o llUI 1111 'T 1 . 65 000 ml. new ~ 1472, Rlvertlde, Ct beautiful glr11. Ripa 1111 ~6us~ A.SSISTA~ I • m&ft eolt&endltblel.S50ea; lhOtl rldlO, tandem trlr, &1~2M Jay. rune greet. 11400-
92602 edvertlllng llern• nitlon or buNI bide 1175· lblield lllnt GOnd, dodl svall. In Wm&'I '71 Albblt, perfect cond. otr. 675-4945
PIT "-'p. In & "'~Photo. wlde oV1Jcompanyw1tt1 ~~~!~n.,g fucno m, Pt~llYI Frldeys..>tt,5:30pmlnd iol1 e1e1p1r'. 150: N.B. l9900. 841-3213 SOUTH Mutt Mii. 12500/.obo. '73 nt & ........ ,~ ,.., ""' line. Company lumltl'lle .......,.., • 1"" Sat Sept 10 1:00 pm. wl""'l>ICk chelr 1 15 eao..1391834-41122 n.t """' Irvine. Car Required. lead• & dlttribut" Cllh montht. Some exper Ooll1, toys, oleeew111, 87M2.2e ' • · . 1950 obo. 646-15
Cemer1 knowledge !)fel. bonullt deity. Hlghelt w/UPS thlpplng IOtl'nl rare oolltQtOA lternt, In-CIUln '77 Rabell, enrf, 85K ml nu ,75 Squire wgn & •72 p._
Hourt, 10-4. 867--0161 comm paid In town. No helpful. 14.50 hr. Call dlan 111lfac11, furniture.. Jt!tbi ~114 btry bt111 cl11n cond ,1,, Plue •-
PIT Sllee. College llU· ctt11oe bacl<I. Chrlt 845-7181 137 N Atdlllon, Orenge, ~ . ----: IUD &8500 01y1 844·1350 Slbrng . Ilk• NI.
d 1 n 11 pre t e r r • d . no rllll'Vll Ship/Receiving cllfk tor 538-1218 8'o ..... lent. -·~ ... KL llT Ivel Ml·3289 1995 ea. &50-e 130
I e . 0 0 • S t 2 . 0 0 hr . Im TIJ electronlcl co. Fun time PRIMITIVE CNTRY PINE l)tlcte. ~. dlemood1. • ....... '71 Oi1111 R1bblt, 1Unrool. '78 Oranada, n.edl ~
645-5870 al1 1PM. Sieve A.ic tor Brien Doyle potltlon nr Or. Cty llr· Hutch, 1150; dough box, All 8HA.P£8 & SIZES Volume Salee, ServlQe air, caea .. 4 apd, .11tr1 t1nk ~;;!,'":...a~
RECEPTIONIST NEEDED (714) 630.-41•0 por1. 540·9284 1326; commode, POO. E"ll8Q84TllHlt Rtnge; W · AndLMllng 12850 060 &41-8451 •=~~:--.--;:-:--::--:~:ir:
for buly vet hoepltal. Ex· Miii StelloneryStoretn Corona Pvtperty720-1188 nnoa; l.ooM Olamonda. 117118"ot1Blvd. '7t Rabbit. runt Ilk• new, '77 Mu•1-,i Marl! Iii.
perlenol helpful. Pert/ Enthullutlc ulel pereon dll Mar nMdt FIT ••· T = HI I 714-tt7·2t6t 2,. Eric.on A.tomlO 4 118 y -.a.a Hunt1n9t4?1' Blec:h orlQ peJnt, 35MPO. 11r hlchbk, roof, ,.,.
time evet & weekend•. for childreri'• lurnlture petieno.d 11lllptr*>n. ~ llllHDauau 1111 ltlpl 5 icint cond ·~ UI .-w (11'), M2·2000 12000. 14H533 74.000 ml. 12.I;
Ap91y within: Ne.por1 1tor1 H.U.0.0 LE.· SC 875-1010 RA.REA paint/main ROF./VHF 'ii w indow Van, I '78 ~w P op Top • 553·1573
Harbor Animal Holf)lt11, PllU v1111g1. 556-7770 T• llU APPL~NCE SERVICE 14 ..,.,.__. cu:,;..: 1 11 OOOfcAi 4114-7927 ' cyallnder auto. tfane. Jf'¥. llB c ampmoblle , •love, 1=n=-=T=-·-=-B,..lrd..,..--=-L-ow--m"'"1.-I-. 126 M ... Of., C.M. We Mii recond., guar. WIOltl, LtnCNI t ' • '600 080 587·&127 --d 1 "800 __ ....,......,....=",--.,.......--Salee-Herdware. FfT Pol-We are looklng fOf fuff or appllano11. 649--3077 pattern, t,21. Arner. 2t'LMcer=ti -.,3..,.., ' 'II aguar Mark II, relrtg., 1/c. am/Im CUI., c on " • UOIPTilllllT ltlon In retell hardwerd PfT Individual• who c.n TCIUNW luOQeol. 2 po. ..... VHI' knot mecer '78 Ford, I/Ir, II, p/1, pit>, 01 ... 10, 78,000 orig. 41K IUPI' Clean, se.eoo &3HI027
PhonM. typing, Ute bllkpg 11 o re. S•• Steve, worti dtye. Pl• ~at A:;:~ ..... /F~bo, llk•..w1175:eat-11&4 telho.'nlcel. Tl')llt5M. aa: crpt, t nlrf. SHOO. m11ee, s.e L, 4 door OBO 840-1292 ::F:::-;IR;:-;S::..:T:-::P:::E:RS:o=N:-.,,-;.:;/ :-:led
Someexper. required. ~r H.W.Wrlghl Co u e 889 s. c o111 Hwy, • ...,, ru uc>-Merrit 1toop ·eo. t.atl M24al4 udan, auto metlc oet• lhll wry delni
H1rt>or/W1rn1r, S1nt1 Rocnetter.C.M. LaguneBMCh. %''bul~=4~2~ 2=~-~· Mutt.-Try l 12M. ·aaa-van 1..a ~ton'• Boro·Warner t r1n11 ·~::,.~'::.$~ Thundert>lrd.758-19
An•. c11: 5411. me s1111 97a-1633 • .. 1180. TcA. 11 ~ Awry a eo. '7MetO • ..... H.a. -..~ •• ;:~'*r.~;: := 131-3115 LI __
UIPT/111,.,0, •••-mtH nu.-1,P/T Brown 1e au" tiottom MW1cottt400, .. tt79. H'8W1c111t1ii0Cjp;~ • .,_ IOO ml., "MO wtth bucl(tl ... i •. ..,. '18VW0t1R1bblt,dtx.a1r, 'Kexhi .UINt o
Elecl.ronlc1 firm, C.M Ma.lure r:-on T~ Suppltmtn~.= "'c::: rr...115.131-o921 ~..,.:-.,..-=: 4,dllMlq~~ •4Mtpymt."2..ff7t "lllfflt. 131100/080. 41Pd, 4dr, tteteo. xlnt. 41Pd,11lr90,t 1'0f = !;"~ = cornpu up. ~on~ of lln APPLMml 1 y 1 t e "' i :T:gr,t;1 g:-,,j .. ,. -•• ISW781. • 24K ml. '4700. 161-3:22 84._...
c:;onallty ablllty 10 ~ _.___ national companl11. LAI 117.,.,sa W/tpkr .. attfM•l .. ttk, P-1y"tt..-.ant .... V:,~~ cit.Ty, 'IF';~;~ ~141 'IODllo.twrWgn.4apd, '74 ceptl ve1 rwbll,
114 !IM ... 1 --.-eon Newpor1 BleCtl Offlot AM!At+......,009t · ----·-· -air, tnrl. ttlt90 45mpg, oond. 11980/ot .... conim. with trell,r boat IC· !'la..,.,,.,_ and ..... M-~ ..... ;;;;-. '280 ... 11 • .,.._ .,. ,, .. ==ma. . I 2 opt, U750. IS140t6 l'f3.100S phone 1Y1tem & tom1 OlllOr'y Mi.u11per1eno1 . .,,.. 1.. .. -~· •, ...... ,.:.:;;[. • • ..... la Maroon/bile, em/Im caae, typing. Minimum 8 LMdlng 8outhlm c1111~ •nduv•ll•l>lt . ..i .. r duty, •new.-.,_... IHP 0utm_,1111o w 11111. ' nu pelnt, uptlol etc. ---------•·--c---N-VE-RT-llll-£,....,...,
monthllJIPlt 640-9284 lornla Wtloleult t . ~~-:.~. '"'hlcr·.= ~.:.:,-.. ~::·,':':; IMnNde. MIMll .. weed W11m11 • . . IM t10,I00.493-1284 ® '72COUQWXA7 u 111.U &IDT 714-140--H05 ~Ing YOlol a '"'*· ff. very 0 .... •1•1. too ,., top ... w: 17M1'1 117 2608 T.L.C . .vtdent, ~ rebftlreeiond W-4 ..
fOfC.eetpoaltlon Wftmall ltn<fwtCh Shop, C.M .. For lmtMeW, Cell Linda 161.0112 dfell'• ~ ~ 'tlit ~---.. =OW!* for ~ rtCOfde.memberoff9m. ·~ ~ OWlliiWJi ~ blJ1 ltldlng commeralel Clthlar 11·4, wkdy• at 545-8178 OLDER cHdf WI.-. ..... a.104I ts I .. --with .,.... ... tly, ~ taa80. 97&ii=
brok•aoe nrm. Deor.. $4.50 tlr, '45-t373 Aunt.-MO. llftiOiitwwld....,dlCNna Jllntoond top. Aa power. 840-8110 • Ql'tllt lrw 111001 pref. llf>«. nol ~ 8anclwlofl Shoe>. -Irv .,.. ma INUTll ~1 •tort ...... ,.,"co1l · '* •200• •10 2101L IU10 ate, 2 • ~99-4t2t .
ary Income, !reining. netdl rltlabhl i*eon. lmmld. ~an . 11000 ••II SHOO. •iO AOQ; il •""'·>ant, 21Mts-1111 ' t 11Jnt'oonc1.'t1t,780 • ::-=::::;.:-;is'.: t55-12470f971-1739 ::"~rldlnQ or/:-~·-=-.:...-;,,:. tn-tm lalll,21"712.0tM~ 181 MG ~~;&~fUllH :Mle othltMIZ+cMll ......... '10 CutlaH Supr91M
E.' Coeat Hwv. ~. 1. SANDWICH SHOP: Plf'I •tlon In ltvlfle, Dullel ,,_ .,..,_ ttoo. I• ••I W:a;iii: lfi&. •Md CAT 17. 117[ .,_., w = ~~ .. .._:: 131~11 11011 ::0::1~ =
Corona dll Mar. Calif time help wanted. Near lnel. "'alnt. oennl fifing h~ CIOOd wonting w . Orli I Iliff. It.lie A.tOf'l'IO 4.. 118.1 an.NO, Ne '10 L, dttc blu, a111n l\lly IOldecUetOO ... 92825. O.C Airport. Mon 1tlrv Fri. 1}'1114111l. Hn Mon-Fri '•1oo. Woa?M Mt.om Day1 tH-•H I or · t.Ez . lvOfY Int, 1 ownr cln & call o.te 782·"40 ._
lturt!\ttOel: nion WIH train c 111 before e:i oam-3:30pm. 811ary · · ~ f:J.MildelM ~ wknct/.vl4t.220t a..ic cnlililir. 'iiV flon1. eNny. t 1tk. 180-iM, w•IWllD •~·.,.. po• noon. 833-1919 Mika. open. Quallned llPPfl· IWrlG Ille• nu iramree, a mint ._ a loM. ~ .. new. 711-**> , ... avltliable. 2407 E Coetl c 1nt1. Pl11u 0111 dr.l 1M.iiii.-.O ~..:.:.""' bo~-· Hotlle14.11IO.t"PO/I, '4200toeio.Mt•tt4 1 ........... hltlat QR Hwv.COM. IUUTAll 714-663-01121111113 l 20Ch.•-..H.1. IT. ....~7/4tt-<&m 71M9UtOll ...... .,. 'ffY.tahna. wnr:
Mof• 1"""'81 .,, 91Ctlno 10 yr1 .. ~. hMvy ' WNrtpool q ...,_ OM Altll. ....,,. a.. """'*· mull ealt. -..--...., r.M-oeto •
tM camping "bug" tftll lhC.1hand requlr9d, •· Ct111llled A.di .,. "" rter,. ~·1,.,, new. OlaHlfl•d Ad• •r• the ftor Cb:wlflwd NJ ---~tobo-141-4111 Yol\lfMa.let.hNtol vame IOOU('tcy, Int t 1u1 lfOO, ea, -m enew to • IUOOl99flll ACTlOH W tllf lfi iiOIE to bl ~~ ·iO Oran Pf1i'. JOnt Oilfid. ~'JJ.~':ic::;:in: tng Ind veri9d :: ::;'o!0~'::. .. w;ttifti w ... ' G• ..,.ory,rdllll1tt It'll c... W.Gdi,o-. WWWaonw motor, ,;.,~.~ ~~ 11'111 leaohlllvd. loaded. 34,000 11111.
ueed, Mii ltrw:sw wtm 1 Newpor l 811 ~h ti.tlet ny to._ men Dryer, l80 eectl obO. btltttr -.·to .... more ~ *OB. HOO/obO, Call loected.Me00. 7 c•Hun1 .. ~)~ ~~-17400. 0.. aft t """ c 1eeatned Ad. u a.:a951 peop1e1 ..._.. ,..... 1U411I •n.atu 'P Jim, aro.11 eYee • 111l M6 • ,_eu_.-_,., ____ _
---
2 -South Coast Repertory/An Advertlalng Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
First up: 'Amadeus'
Production of Peter Shaffer play set for a Sept .. 1 3 -Oct. 1 6 run
South Coast Repertory's dazzJ-
ing new production of Peter Shaf-
fer's" Amadeus" wlll open SC R's
MaJnstage Season Sept. 13 and
run through Oct. 16, according to
David E.mmee and Martin Benson,
SC R's artistic directors.
Staged by guest director John
Allison, SCR'sproductlonofthe
Tony Award Best Play of 1981 will
'Orienta I
Fantasy'
gala due
Saturday
Sound the gong I South Coast
Repertory heralds the approaching
1983-8-4 theatrical eeuon wtth Its
fifth annual Gala Ball, "Oriental
Fantasy."
Saturday's whtt•tle affair Is
undertheleaderahlpof Mra. Wii-
iiam F. Wenkewhopromlae1 an
evening of Asian delights u the
fund-ralalng pec111ttar for SC R's
annuaJ fund drive.
'"Oriental Fantasy' heads up the
fall social seuon for Orange Coun-
ty with a new twtat and a lot of
sparkle," says Wenke. "Our aup-
porters know they can expect an
exciting evening.''
Upon arrival at the Imperial Bank
bulldlng In eo.ta Meea, eact\ of the
expected 500 Galaguesta wtll be
met by costumed gr98tera and
treated to OrterMI styte cocktaile
and hors d'oewree by
happl-coated watt.a.
Drum and Lion ct..... will ·
provtde entertannent to heighten
the Far Eut atmoephere. au.ta '
will then take part In the ·
"Emperor's Entourage" (complete
wtth "emperor'')thtough the part(,
culmlnatlng In agrllnd firework•
dlaplayln trueCNnatown ~·
Once lnaldetheSouth Coast
Plaza hotel ballroom, the
c:eeet>rant1 wll delaht In a
four-courM feMt, featurtnQ IUCh
dellcactee aa Yun Pieri Pal Jou
(broUed lhrtmp In an exotic uuce)
andTaung Pao Niu.Joy(~
of beef with ecellope).
Further entertainment wtll be
provided by SCR talent and hoeted
bySCRregular~Tambor.
Joe Moehay and hie OrcheWa wtfl
aupptythe dMOemuek:, returning
aft« a..t yew'• ''La Dolce Vita'' by
poputar-demmd.
"Plane for 'Ottental FantalY'
have been In the work• elnce Mt1y
this year," M1Y8 W.nke. "We plan ln
detaN to mak•certM1 MCt'I YfMI'•
ewrtt 18 b9tttr11W1 the one
before."
Dedicated SCR oommtttM
membet'8contdbutJna th*•· e::tlle ... lnoNdetlle Donalc1 Chrtlteeon, Jamee
, John Virtue, A.8. Hoyt, , ... uu.,...,
bring to life the dark story of envy
and Intrigue In the 18th Century
Vlenneee Court of JOMPh II.
''We are excited about produc-
ing 'Amadeus' at SCR, ''said
Emmet. "We staged 'Equua,' also
by Peter Shaffer,ln 1977 at the
Third Step Theatre. Hecreat• the
kind of plays to which SCR has
alWaye been attracted: playe blend-
Ing stimulating and provocative
Ideas wtth those elements of ex-
preeaion which unlquety UM the
reeources of the theater.''
Shaffer letl hla play In the
powerful center of Emperor Joeeph
11'1 Vienna at a ttmewhen one of the
more lnterwtlng and enigmatic
relatJonlhlpe In""'* took place.
Antonio Sallerl had establlahed
hlmeelf as a composer of great
merit, achieving a station In llfe that
was distinguished and eecure. He
saw hie preeminence become deH-
cate and then hollow, u he began
to fathom the extraordinary genius
of the young composer who arrived
onaday k>oklng for work and
, .. MtADIUS, ..... 11)
J
South Coast Repertory/An Advertl8'ng Supplement to the DAILY P.ILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983 -3
J~in the Mall ·
At South Coast Plaza
As We Salute
Costa Mesa Arts Month '83
September 2-12 Art of Rishion Display
Sep~mber 5-30 Swaziland Tapestry Art Exhibit
September 7 Debut '83 Rishion Show
Presented by fushion Institute
of Design Merchandising
Septembet 17-25 Costa Mesa Art league
Juried Show
September 24-30 Newpo~ Harbor Art Museum
Permanent ~llection Exhibit
~ ---.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
South Cout'PW., Cotta Mesa, CA 97626'(714) 54~
Valet Parki.na-Bear Street entrance to Mall at ~Masnln. Mall Houn-10 a.m.-9p.m., Sunday 12 noon-6 p.m.
Saka Fifth Avenue Nordltrom Bullock'• Sean May Comf)9nv LMasnln
4 -South Coast Repertory/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
It's 'Arts Month'
City's cultural organizations kick off gala celebration today
Costa Mesa Mayor Donn Hall has proclaimed
the month of September" Arts Month '83," the
first annual citywide celebration of fine arts by the
various major arts organizations In Costa Mesa,
which this year adopted as a name "The City of the
Arts.''
"This will be an annual event, "said Betty
Turnbull, co-chairman of the Arts Month '83
committee. ''It will evolve Into a fine arts
celebration of such stature that It will recleve
worldwide recognition."
Kicking off Arts Month today Is a week of
activities wfth a Fashion Show In the Jewel Court
of South Coast Plaza put on by the Fashion Design
Institute.
Also today will be an arts presentation at
Turnbull's TLK Gallery. _
Thursday Mayor Hall will host Civic Leaders
Night at South Coast Repertory, when more than
500 people will attend a preview performance of
"Amadeus" on SCR's mMalnstage, and a party
honoring civic leaders from all over Orange·
County, members of the local press, advertisers
who support SCA' s publications (the theater
program and subscriber newsletter) and the
company members of SCA.
The opening week of this Inaugural year of
Arts Month will be capped by SCA' s Gala Ball, with
this year's theme, an "Oriental Fantasy."
The fifth annual Gala Ball, kicking off the
theater's 1983-34 season as well as announcing
the opening of Orange County's soclal season, la a
white tie affair. and brings to09ther more than 500
of the most prominent of the county's business
leaders. political figures, and people from society
and the arts. After a cocktail reception, and the
grand arrival of guests at the Imperial Bank
building, guests will enjoy the Gala Ball In the
Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel Grand Ballroom.
Music will be provided by Joe Moshay and his
Orchestra.
Costa Mesa has had an active summer. Aside
from adopting the new title, "The City of the Arts,"
Costa Mesa celebrated Its 30th birthday In July.
The recent surge In arts activities In Costa
Mesa has ftlmulated the new name. Led by the 16
seasons of theatre at SCA, and the conststent
achlevementaat Orange Coast College, Costa
Mesa's arts profile has taken on a national status.
During the summer. the Nedertander Organli!Mlon
opened the Paclflc Ampitheater on the Orange
County alrgrounds In Costa Mesa. On July 7, the
first step In the construction of the Orange County
Performing Arts Center. due to open In late 1986,
was taken with a ceremonial groundbreaking.
South Coast Plaza will host the kickoff
celebration for Arts Month '83, which will take
place In the Mall's Jewel Court (In front of
Bullock's) at 7 o'clock tonight. Featuring the
"Debut '83" Fashion Show, which showcaaea
award-winning coUectlons by the Fashion Institute
of Design and Merchandising, the evening will
officially set In motion the first annual Costa Mesa
"Arts Month." Ticketa are $7 .50 per person,
heavy hors d' oeuvres will be served; the bar Is
no.host. For Information or reservations, contact
the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce.
''The Art of Fashion," a retroepectlve display
of both antique and high-fashion designer
garments, wlll be avallable for public viewing in
various South Coat PhwrMatl toca11ons through
Sept 12. Thia display, which will highlight fashion
trend• from 1885 to the preeent, wtll feature works
( ... ART8llONTH,Pegel)
....... _, .... ._
Guilds ready to serve
Janyce Hustwit, Joyce Justice, gen-
eral chairman, and Jackie Krupp
represent the five Friends of SCR
Guilds. Besides raising $95,000 for
the theater at their fifth annual
auction, members a ssisted in SCR's
adminlstrative offices, condu-cted
tours and provided hospitality for
First Nighter events.
SUNDAES FROM
HCiagen-Dazs ;-!ti\~~~
~<7lliltol.9f<tz~1.%tel
Hiiagen-Daz~
Tho Ice cream dea1cated to fHrfectlonl
South Coeat Plata 3333 BfletOI Strtet
Coet• *-· Ca. 92&2e
7t4 -154-nU
...
7:30 to 11 :30 PM /I/fl Dancing aval&lble
Tuesday thtu Saturctev
405 FY.tY a Brtatol
Coate Me•, CA 92828
714/557·3000
WORLD FAMOus·
GARY ELLIS v
South Coast Repertory/ An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOl/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983 -5
f
l
l
" . \
6 -South Coast Rep«tory/An Adverttling Supptement to the DAILY PILOT/Wedll89day, ~t. 7, 1983 ..
GALA ...
FromPage2
Alexander Bowie, Thomas Pecken-
paugh, Delane Thyen and Ms.
Kathryn Thompson. A high tea,
hosted by Mrs. Rodgers and Mrs.
Virtue In June, honored these and
other patronesses.
The design talents of
co-producer Dwight Richard Odle
have been recruited to give "Orien-
tal Fantasy" just the right amount
of Far Eastern spice. Floral Decor
and Interiors will transform the
Westin Ballroom Into "the sim-
p4istlc beauty of a formal Japanese
garden, featuring authentic floral
touches and giant 'weeping orchid'
trees.·· says decorator Gary
Schott.
Much of the success of this and
past galas has been the result of
generous underwriting by area
businesses and Individuals.
An Underwriters Luncheon,
hosted earlier this summer by Mr.
and Mrs. Wiiiiam Wenke, resulted
in the generous support of the
Pacific Scientific Co. and the Man-
darin Gourmet restaurant officials
who will pay for the fireworks
display and Oriental hors
d'ouevres. ThedancemuslcbyJoe
MoShay will be courtesy of Mr. and
Mra. Wllllam Roberts. Others de-
serving recognl11on Include: The
Wittenberg Corp .• Pacific Connec-
tions and Hawaiian Dlatlllers.
"Oriental Fantasy" -targeted to
raise $60,000 for the theater -Is
( ... FAHTA8Y,Pege12)
•
• ,
Gala chairman Jean Wenke and her husband Bill,
left, have great expectations for "Oriental Fan-
taay"on Sept IO. New SCR trustees president
Maury De Wald and wife Carolyn were entertained
by a juggler on their way to last year's banquet.
Proceeds from "La Dolce Vita" raised SS 1,000
~oward the support of SCR.
. S H 6 E S • lO • G 0
( ........ / Sovlll Co~lll '*i10 11• I ,if() Jl1.i ( ........ /~otot '9flr I
.. -·----_;;;~ ----_....-:....~;~
collect1dn
ine restaurants in one
GOOD EARTH RESTAURANT p· 1 /J /f p (' pffz(1/l~NT<?NELLO RISTORA~!E
··unequ;vocally the finest In natural 'lu (,/{/ ..J l/ ll' F l4 Classoc NMhern llahan cu1sme, a superb
cuisine:· Breakfast/LunchfOinner wine list. with a very cap.able staff to as~ure
8 A.M.-10 P.M. Sunday-Thursday:· your. dining a real experi ence. Reservations
8 A.M.·11 P.M. Friday aRd Saturday. and 1ackets suggested. (714) 751-7 t 53.
557·8433. MEYERHOF'S RESTAURANT
Meyerhof's Restaurant on the Green 1n
BELGIAN WAFFLE
A scrumptious selection o f waffles. Plain.
powdered, fruited, or fudged: all are equally
delightJul! Hamburgers, ~omemade
muffin a, soups, sandwiches. and omelets.
Patio dining. Weekdays and Saturdays:
8 A.M.·8 P.M. Sundays: 8 A.M.·S·P.M.
(714) 557-5186
RESTAURANT HORIKAWA
Operated by Horikawa of Tokyo, offers
gourmet Japanese cuisine in a serene set·
ting. Try our combination luncheons in the
Teppan Room. cooked right before your
eyes by showmen chefs. All major credit
cards. Open 7 days a week. (714) 557-2531
PINOCCHIO'S PIZZERIA
Authentic Neopolltan pizza, homemade pasta,
and ltaliaA Ice cream are among the reasons why
Pinocchio's ls a unique, fun place fOf lunch or
dinner. We offer a large Mlectlon of Italian and
French wines for your enjoyment. Food and Wine
to go. Come to PlnocchlO'a1(714)65&-3757
South Coast Plaza Village since 1976.
Orne in our turn-of-the-century country
kitchen and en1oy superb sandwiches.
thick soups. fresh salads. wine. beer. softer
beverages, desserts. and delectable ice
cream creations. (714) 540-8044
South .Coast Plaza
Village
Located at Sunflower & Bear Streets
Santa Ana, CA 92704 • (714) 751-6595
HUNGRY TIGER RESTAURANT
Famous for live Maine lobster and fresh
fish daily. The oyster bar has its own menu
of special seafood dishes. Lunch and ·
dinner. Entertainment and dancing.
(714) 979. 1181
VERDUGO'S-
RESTAURANTE Y CANTINA
Fantastlco! Tantalizing tradltionals
and exquisite especlaOdades. Strolling
mariachis and champagne brunch to
spice up your Sundays I Monday-Saturday;
Lunch 11 A.M.·3 P.M .. Dinner 3 P.M.-11 P.M ..
Sunday Brunch: 9:30 A.M.-2:30 P.M.
(714) 556-7990
UPSTART CROW AND COMPANY
A comptete bOOkatore and full service restaurant
are )olned together In this unique concept.
BrOWM for a book, enjoy tine putrln an<t gour·
met coflffl, or dine on a IMnU that Includes
10 hambutger1, Puta Pnta Salad and Chicken
Dijon. Dally from 10:00 AM to 10:00 PM.
WHktnd brunchet. (714) 882.0727
--------~~---~--~----........... • e -South Coast Repertory/ An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
SCR trusteee officers seat·ed·
The new officers of the South
Coast Repertory Board of Trustees
officially began their annual term at
the executive meeting Aug. 24.
They were announced in July at
the season-ending annual dinner
when outgoing president Eric A.
Wittenberg passed the gavel to
incoming board president Maurice
J . DeWald; Peter Ochs, vice presi-
dent.: David T Blankenhorn, vice
president/annual fund; Kathryn G.
Thompson, secretary; and Charles
Scribner, treasurer.
DeWald. the managing partner of
Peat Marwick of Newport Beach,
served last year on the board as vice
president, overseeing the first year
of the endowment campaign Phase •
I, the effort to raise $3 million by the
theater's 20th annive~ry cel-
ebration in 1984. ... ·
He is a long-time supporter of the
theater, a First Nighter and a past
Benefactors Committee chairman.
He is a Notre Dame alum and has
served as chairman of the Orange
County United Way Fund. He and his
wife. Carolyn. have three daughters,
Anne, Colleen and Michelle.
Officers of South Coast Repertory's
1983-84 board of trustees are (from left),
Peter Ochs, vice president, e ndowme nt
campaign; David Blanke nhorn, vice presi-
dent, annual fund;-Maury De Wald, presi-
dent, and Charles Scribner, treasurer.
Their terms began last month when Eric
Wittenberg passed the gavel.
Ochs is president of the Field-
stone Co .. a builder of homes In the
Orange County area. Ochs will
oversee the second year of the
anniversary campaign. Last year, he
chaired the annual fund drive to
raise the $710,000 to augment the
theater's earned income and meet
Its annual budget.
This year's annual fund Is chalred
by Blankenhorn. who has been a
benefactor at SCR and a member of
the SCR Sliver Circle. He also
belongs to the Hoag 552 Club.
Blankenhorn lives with his wife
Linda and daughter Hiiary in New-
port Beach. Hiiary has appeared in
the Young Conservatory Players.
the third-year producing class at
SCR.
Enjoy Shopping
&Dining
at Bristol Town & Country
,.
' F
MANY FINE RESTAURANTS
& SHOPS
Anthony Scilools • Arcapall Jewelers • Barclay Inn •
Bed'n Bath • Bontrev~Halr • 8ootl Vault • Bristol
Meat • Calif. Aoceaeory Lines • Cloeets R Ua • COYntry lane
• Dr. Wes Kohtz-Opt. • Elegant• Lighting • Frame Hallmark •
Fredericka of Hollywood • The o.tnatone Collector • Gin
Ung Restaurant • Great Ealtem EntWJ)41Zee • H.C.
TRADING • Hair Surgeona • Ham's COYnty CootletY •
Henneaaey & lngalla • HOiubar Mountaineering • Home
Savings of America • Jaciyn'1 Btldal • Juper'a • Jim's
Shoe S.v1C41 • Ken's Corner • Kida for L.eU • Macleod'• Petaonnef •Men. Honnen • Nautilus Travel
•Newport Fashion•• Numero Uno Pizza • Olan Miiis
Osteopathic • Phyalclana Weight Control • Photo Place •
Oulek Oulctc Copy Print • Ruby' a BoutlQue • Shapely
Sweet• • Sheer Metro Hair Art• • Sheet Muale • South
Cout Chiropractic • Swenaen'a loe Cream• The Siik
Factory • Tony's Nutrition • Uniform Place •Weight
Wateh«I • Winter S..Uty Supply . World'• LatQMt Pet Store
Thompson, a long-time supporter
and First Nlghter at SCR, is presi-
dent of A&C Properties In Irvine, a
real estate firm that specializes In
condominium conversions.
She has worked for Texas Instru-
ments. the Ford Motor Co. and was
real estate Rookie Sales-
person-of-the-Year In 1965. Her
daughter Kristen also has attended
SC'R's Young Conservatory.
Scribner. who Joined the board of
trustees prior to the 1982-83
season, Is senior vrce president of
Bank of America, a major con-
tributor to SCR's capital campaign.
He is a First Nlghter and has been a
member of SCR's Golden Circle
since SCR opened the Fourth Step
Theater Complex.
He has served as a director of the
(See OFFICERS, Pege 17)
With a Hickory Panns·~~ty tray,
you don't have to lift a finger
until it's time to eat.
We don't think ynu should on your next party.
have to spend lots of time prE'· Just lift one extra finger and
paring fancy appeti.zen;. call a nearby Hickory Farms:"'
That's why we make up our H • le ~ beautiful party trays, in various IC 0"' ~-
sizes and combinations, wi1h '' •"' ~10• only a day or two notice. We11 give you a taste
So give yourself a head start of old time o>Untry goodn s'."
Visit a neilrl>y Hickory Fanns of Ohio• store at:
SOUTH COAST PLAZA . . .
540-6991
... ... . -
ARTS MONTH ...
FromPage4
by Dior, Galanos, Gtvenchy, Latimer, and other
name designers.
The sampling of fashions preeerved by the
Fashion lrmttute of Design & Merchandising
contains gowns that have been donated to the
FIOM Foundation by such notables as Betsy
Bloomingdale and Nancy Reagan. A docent tour
of the dlaplay wtll be available each Friday from 4
-9p.m.andeachweekenddayfrom 12-Sp.m.
for the duration of the exhibit.
Information regarding the display or walking
tours Is avallable through the South Coast Plaza
concierge, locatectadjacent to the carousel.
Art of a more traditional nature will be
recognized by the Costa Mesa Art League's
annual Juried show and awards ceremony.
Award-winning submlsalons will be on display In
the Jewel Court from Sept 17-25; the ceremony
Itself will take place Sept 17, at 7 p.m. In the Jewel
Court.
For Information regarding the show or awards
ceremony, contact the Costa Mesa Art League.
The tiny nation of Swazi land also wlll be
making a unique contribution to South Coast
Plaza's "Arts Month" effort by supplying a
remarkable exhibit of hand-woven native
tapestries. These weavlngs depict the ancient
cave art of Southern Africa, and wtll be exhibited
at various locations throughout the Mall during the
month of September. Call South Coast Plaza for
more information.
At the Off-Broadway Theatre in
Long Beach, David Emmes checked
off the first of South Coast Reper-
tory's 231 artistic months.
South Coast Repertory/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983 -9
Wells Fargo
aid extends
stage thrills
As part of Its effort to make the
performing arts more accesslble to
Orange County residents, Wells Fargo
Bank has donated $25,000 to South
Coast Repertory to establish the Wells
Fargo Senior and Student Subscription
Program. The grant wtll underwrite the
theater's cost of offering reduced-price
subscriptions for seniors on fixed or
limited Incomes and full-time students.
Jack Grundhofer, Wells Fargo ex-
ecutive vice presfdent, expfaJns, "This
wlll pef'mlt more people to be stimulated
and enriched by the great plays in the
repertoire of modern theater."
In accepting the gift, SCA Board
President Maury DeWald Indicated It will
allow SCA to subsidize the low price
season tickets for more than 1,300 new
audience members. "We are proud to
continue the role we have played in
developing South Coast R8peftory,"
said Thomas E. Peterson, vice president
and regional manager for the bank. "We
are particularly happy with this program
to make theater a part of the fives of
people who might otherwise not be able
to experience It."
Wells Fargo was part of the original
consortium which financed construction
of the Fourth Step Theatre Complex In
Costa Mesa.
Some low-priced subscriptions stilt
remain and can be" purchased through
SC R's box office or bycalllng 957-SUBS.
.
10 -South Coas1 Repertory/An Advertlstng Supplement to the DAILY ptLOTIW&dtiesday, Sept. 7, 1983
~mmlgrants
focus of
SCR project
The experience of immigrants
and refugees in contemporary
Southern California is the topic for
South Coast Repertory's 1984
educational touring production,
entitled "Finding Home." The orig-
inal musical play will tour to schools
and community centers throughout
the southland from January to June
of 1984.
According to SCA Producing
Artistic Director David Emmes,
"Finding Home" ls to be a para~
about the dreams and struggles of
Immigrants and refugees In the
modern world.
''We are very excited about
focuSing the EducatlonaJT ourlng
Produc1ion on this important Issue
that reaches everyone In the south-
land community," he said. "Immi-
gration has been an Instrumental
force In shaping America's history
and we hope this new play wtll help
us di9c:oYer how contemporary
Immigration Is affecting the present
and influencing the future."
The topic for "Finding Home"
was setected by southland
educators In a survey condue1ed by
SCR following the 1982 educa-
tional touring production. The
survey revealed an overwhelming
desire among educators and
parents aJlke for a pfay dealing with
p 21
Last year's educational touring show about
computers, "Bi'8 and Bytes," entertained
=a!.~ ................ s49.9
·lhbreb
. Cocatoo ...................... s4491
=z~~~~··············· s299
Limited Supply
___ ( l~J-----....
MAJNTINANa
io •· s519
~s •. s1339
50 •· s2431
CnBy
The Case
s14•1
Brlltol Towa Ir
C.-&ry .............
.... Am ...
GltOWTH
10 ... s7•9
25 II. $1519
50 •• s2g11
Feh 4 It. $3I'
n lb. s1111
LllJHI Hiiia ....
"'''~'911 ~,.
and educated more than 70,000 children
in ita six-month tour of 246 campuses.
-·--··-. .-,,..,~·
South Cout Repertory/An Advertlaing Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983 -11
'AMADEUS' TO OPEitt:SCR'S SEASON ...
), FromPage2
adoration. The new arrlvaJ was
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
Shaffer hu hued the play on the
true story of SaJlert'e fanatic preoc-
cupation with Mozart, to a point
where. SaJleri hbneeff felt respon-
sible for the young genius' untlmety
death. It la an Intense thriller In the
grand proportion of theater.
SCR'e version of" Amadeus" will
be a major staging of this powerful
play. ''Thia completely ortglnaJ
production wlll be directed by
Alllldn and deelgned by Mlchael ,,.
Newport
firm aids
SCRshow
The firm of Peat Marwick of
Newport Beach hu donated a
leadership gift of S 10,000 to
South Coast Repertory's
1983-84 annuaJ fund campaign.
The money la earmarked for the
theater' a co--productlon efforts,
coordinated by the Producers
Circle.
According to John O'Donnell,
chaJrman of the Producers Cir·
cte, thta wlll go to underwrite part
of the coats of the first SCR
maJnetage production,
"Amadeus." The Producer• Cir·
cle Is charged with developlng
donations to underwrite each of
the productions on both the
malnatage and the Second Stage
during the eeuon.
Ae co.producer of
"Amadeus,'' Peat Marwick wllt
be honored wtttt an "honoracy
producer's" chair In theSCR
lounge. The chair wtll betn the
company of other SCA
co.produoeq: N«datrom,
Carter Hawley Ha'9, the Irvine
Co .• PKfflc Mutual and Fluor. I
TherewtM al80 be a ~tMeter
pW1y honoring Peet Marwtck on
Sept. 1e. Thatoelebratlon,
hOeted by the Benefactors Com-
mitt• and the!: Clrcle, wtH OOCur the . Ing aa
the Arat Night for ··~.·· M.ury DeW.ad, anag1ng
Par1ner for Peet Marwick o0ordl-
neted thecompeny'egttt. Peat
Marwick It a pubtlc ecc:ountlng
firm epeclallzlng In .udltlng,
small bualneeaadvteory, tax Md
conauttlng. Theftrm emPIOYI 150
peopleln 1t:::;;c1 BMch
offtoeon M BoueeYtird.
WOf'1(1ng ~h 0.W.ad .. 12
partnert: Howerd o. Bland;
Ch ...... F. ThomM; DMHoC.c-
ctamatta; Jamee T. Colburn; 0...
A. LeMat ... ; WttM.m M. GllbOw;
Wade F. Hampton; Jamee R.
Martin; Robert C. MC>C>My, Rob-
ert J. Shactdeton; Jotwl H. T ....
ford, and R. CaMn Wllllliee. ··we .,.ecofted about"* nm
und4wwrltlng IUOOHI," Mid
O'Donnell. "Thank.I to the s>Wt·
neraat Peet Matwtck, we have a
aucceeeful 1tart on the. 1983-M
Producere Cl role goal of under·
writing every production."
-
Devine," said Benson. '!Oevtne,
lncfdentaJty wu responsible for the
design work on 'Equue.' John
AllJaon directed 'Henry IV, Part I' In
the 1981-82 eeuon."
Alllaon Is a director, actor and
writer. Before coming to the United
States he worked with Royal Court
Theatre, the Bristo4 Old Vic, and as
a principal ector with the RoyaJ
Shakeepeare Company. He wrote
the acrlpt'for the fllm ''Catch the
Wind," and co.authored the
long-running farce ''Stand by Your '
BedeBoya."
Since coming to LOI Angetee he
hu appeared at the Ahmanson In
"Cyrano de Bergerac" with Rich·
ard Chambettain and In ''Mary
Stuart" with Mareha Muon. He
hu won two LoeAngtMe Drama
Crltlca Circle Awards.
"Amadeus" runs Sept. 13
through Oct. 18, Tueedaye through
Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at
7:30 p.m., and Saturdays and
Sundays at 2:30 p.m. Tickets are
S 13andS18, with dl8counta for
senior cltlzena, etudents and
groups. Low..prtce preview per-
formances are this Friday through
Sunday.
For ticket Information and credit
cant orders, call the SCR box
office, 957 ~-Subecrlptlons will
be on sale through the end of
"Amadeus" for the entire six-play
season. South Cout Repertory Is
located at 655 Town Center Drtve In
Costa Mesa, just off Bristol Avenue
north exit from the San &lego
Freeway.
One Of Many
Haute-Couture
Found
At
AFROFOS
#29 FASHION ISLAND
644-2652
I _Ji
12 -South Coast Repertory/An Ad~lalng Supptenwit to the DAILY PILOTivtedlJMday, 8ept~1aaa--
Best play yet to come?
Directors s~y 1983-84 seaso.o_'parricu/arly.fulfi/ls SC/J's goals'
"Amadeus" opens South Coast
Repertory's Malnstage season of six
plays that Artistic Directors David
Emmes and Martin Benson ~leve
particularly fulfill SCR's goals.
"These productions will help us
make an even greater contribution to
our audience community and the
national theater scene," said Emmes.
"We'll be premiering new work,
introducing Important plays to the
West Coast and staging works which
represent the great literary traditions
of the theater."
The suson -highlighted by "Be-
coming Memorr&.s;"-11 new play by
Arthur Giron, from Jan 10. to Feb. 12
and the West Coast premiere of
"Good," by C.P. Taytor from Feb. 21
to March 25 -also wlll Include
"Playboy of the Western World from
Oct. 25 through Dec. 1; "The Sea-
gull," from April 10 to May 13 and
"Angels Fall" from May 22 through
June 24.
"Playboy of the Western World" Is
ari Irish classic and the culmination of
playwright John Millington Synge's
years of experience and craft. It Is the
twisting story of Christy Mahon, a shy
lad who arrives at a countryside pub
and In a frightened moment blurts out
that he has murdered his terror of a
father.
He suddenly finds himself a local
hero and the object of desire for the
town's two most eflglble women. It Is a
Artistic Direetors David
Emmes and Martin
Benson
comedy spri{lglng from the heart of a
peasant people, and soaring high In
the lyrlclam of language.
In "Becoming Memories," rural
America of 1915 Is the starting point
for the polgnanr journey for four
elderly couples to reflect on thefr I Ives.
Using dream-like fragments and full
reenactments of past events, the plot
reveals the truth, both paJnful and
uplifting, of the generation that for-
RIVIERA
RE&TAURANt
Continental Cuisine
Suving Lunch and Dinner
Banquet Rooms Ava.i.labl~
Cloted Sundays
South Coast Plaza Costa Mesa
S40-J840
med contemporary America.
"We have a commitment to new
works," said Benson, who wlll direct
"Becoming Memories." "SCA feels
that Giron Is a stgnlflcant enough new
voice and this play la well-conceived
and Important enough to d8MfVe our
full commitment and a major pro-
duction on the Main Stage."
Emmes wlll direct the West Coast
premiere of "Goods," a riveting
drama showing a "good" man's
ability to ratlonaJtze the seductive
powers of evll. The play Is a brilliantly
theatrk:al montage of compelling
realism and nightmarish fantasy laced
with muslcal counterpoint of dance
music.
· It startled and Intrigued the au-
diences In London and New York who
eaw the RoyaJ Shakeepeere Com-
peiny's recent premJere of thfs In-
novative work.
"The Seagull" by Anton Chekhov
deale with love, paak>n and the urge
to find fUtflllment through art. It was a
unique experience for Chekhov be-
cause he brought an Incident Into the
play from his personal llfe u an effort
to purge hlmaelf of a tragic loss.
The 1983-84 season'• finale -
"Angels FaJI," a Tony Award nominee
for Best Play on Broadway -Is by
Lanford Wiison, who wrote the
Pulitzer Prize-winning ''Talley's
Folly."
( ... SEASON, hge 17)
FANTASY ...
FromPage6
virtually S(>ld out and promises to
be a glittering kick-off for the SCA
1983-84 eeason.
Last year's event. "La Dok:e
Vita," chaired by Mrs. Phlllp Retlty,
ralsed$51,000. The 1981-82Gala,
"Slmply Stertlng," coordinated by
Mrs. RaJph Clock, added OWK
$50,000 to the SCA fund, and the
1980-81 ball, "Broadway West,"
chaired by Mrs. Richard Allen
raJeed$40,000. TheflratGaJaBall,
which cefebrated the opening of
SCR'e Fourth Step Theatre, was
headed by Mrs. Kae Ewing.
FACES keep eye
on cast support
Finding time within a busy sched-
.111e to support South Coast Reper-
tory Is often challenging.
FACES, a dynamic support
group of the theater, Is speclflcaUy
~ned with this In-mind. The
more than 150 FACES member's
are career-oriented Individuals
who want to learn more about SCR
and support It yet their time
available la llmlted.
FACES subscription night Is the
second Friday of each MaJnatage
production anjt offers FACES
subscribers the chance to meet
one another as well as members of
the cast at post-performance re-
ceptions. FACES activities also
Include general membership meet-
ings and fund-raising events.
•
~ -------
SUBSCRIBER 8~
• 0tSCOUNT1D ncurs -
GBT UP TO 2 PLAYS PUB!
• EASY ncm llXCHANGB
• LOST ncm RBPLACBMENT
•"SUBSCRIBER NBWS"
MAG AZ I NB
• RPSrAUAANT IOHUS&Sl
• nm CHOICB ON. T1CX!TS
TO "A CHMTMM CAROi."
• A CHANCB TO MEBT
TlUI AC'roRS!
• SENlOR l STUDBN'T
OIS(X)UNTS
CALL FO« INFORMATION'
1WO THEATRES:
TWO SBRIBS! 'IWO DYNAMIC
THEATRE EXPERIENCES -AVAILABLE
NOW THROUGH SUBSCRIPTION ONLY!
1983·84 SUBSCRIPTION DISCOUNT PRICES
01U>P TODAY lor tht llttl Smell Ult lht lwicty ordtf liirftt. fl SAV! TIMI Ind ..
CALIJ 714
751-SUBs·
-------------·------------------------------...: OROER FORM (Pls!t' l'rftl.Ml1l 10 SCR Sublcripcu1ns. P 0 Bo~ 2197, CO&ll Mew. CA 92161.6
Or. u vt limt by calli" f71'1 751 SUBS Now! p • m • I NAMB ___ .:__~----------------
ADD~l!SS ---------------------
CITY ----------------ZIP ____ _
HOMS PHONll ------BUSIN BSS l'HONB ------
2 Ptdtrr<d MAINSTAOI perl0tm.ncc ---~-iSey Met or Bvt ,
I went __ t11ti.crlp4lon1 e I _ I wt.cflpl!Oft. Total hlo ----
3. Pttt.ntd S&COND STAGl ~rformenct I---....---Dey Mat Of Bve.
I want __ 1ut.c:rlpOons • s __ I 1uh1crlptlon Total Price ----
Send More 11\forrMhOfl 0 Girand Total ====
\llSAIMll!lltr<:Ardl ----------' , • lltdv.-.d ~hwrlpOOft rt1en f0t ~r.,oo ~ Shocle111• ort ~I-""" II)'• 11•m '"""Well• '••#I !left' 1..------------------------------·'-------------·------------·-..
-..
t -• ... -.
:-.•'• ........
DE .. AltT lil&HT STO it&
1111 NEWPORT BLVD.
HARBOR AND NEWPORT BLVDS.,
IN DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA.
Proudly presents
TALBOTT
KNITS
The most· respected name In
knits. American made -
using Dupont• fibers. See
our fine selection of lovely
colors and styles. For true
comfort ahd graceful
styling buy Talbott.
Priced "within your
pocketbooki"
Sizes: 8 to 18-
washable.
DAJl.Y
t:.JO TO e:OO
~S0111>AY
5i(J()()J) REASONS .
TOHAMITUP.
WE DO CA TEAING• GIFT CERTflCATES "!:".~-:.
, ..oROER8 NOT NECE88ARV BUT APPRECIATE>
14 -ao...th Cout Repertory/An Advertlalng Supplement
to the DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Sept. 7, 1983
Tickets 'tops' ·
Winners receive SF trip, nights at SCR
Winners have been announced for South Coast~
tory's two subscrtptlon contests conducted at the end of fut
season.
In the "San Francisco Theatr., Weekend Giveaway,"
Dwayne Mahl berg of Santa Ana won round-trip tickets for two
to San Francisco, hotel accommodations, transportation and
tickets to an upcoming American Coneervatory Theatre
production.
The San Fr~aco contest waa open to renewtl)g
subscrlbers who brought In friends aa additional sublcrlbers.
The responee waa encouraging, with approxlmat~ 200
qualifying for the trip. ·
1n appreciation of renewing patrons' efforts to lntrodµoe
thetr friends to the benefits of becoming a aubeerlber, SCA Is
dlatrlbutlng a complimentary copy of It• beautiful aeaeon
poster to all 1982-83 subscrtbera whoM names appeared on
the New Subecrlber Priority Forms for 1983-M.
The other conte1t Winner waa Joanne Masters of Harbor
Travel In Newport~. She received two free subscriptions
to the 1983-84 eeaaon In the "Bualnesa and SCA" contest.
Thia required only that thoee attending a Malnatege or .
SecomtSttSge production drop their bullnesa card In the entry
box In the SCA lobby.
Theconteatwaa an effort to atlmulatethe awarenea by
the bualneaa community of South COMt Repertory....on
tlCkets as a valuable amenity, bonua for employee9,
entertainment for out-of-town vtaltora or a relaxJngp lght off
for a harried executive.
"We thought th ta waa an Important outreach to ~he
b.usliiess community," said SCA General Manager Tim.. ·
Brennan, "but we were eurprlsed when we &tarted counting up
the cards. There waa a total of more than 1,0001 "
If you would like Information on SCA tickets, subecrlp-
tlons or group sates, call 957-2802. ·
Curie c.oa., ._., .w....... ..... c.a-, .... .., Mftlor
"-1 "-'We, 8..U. 0..... ~ .. ,....., ........ lllMtld•·
Merle Ncwmaa, die plaee for die e--feee, '9..,. ~ S. ..
Cw& Piasa olferiq total lkia eare aad mat,!'!t ~
laelwl'ac fael•ho wast .. , eyellrow ....w.a -~ ...
akhl care le•ou .. well u ear piereiq. ExelaUTely , .......
the comple1e1Merle Nonaaa proftet Uae.
111.V .. 'R!Bl·
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
PIJoae &45-4109
Located on the upper level
3 doon from Seen
South Coast Repertory/ An Adv~ Supp&ement to th4M>All V PlU)l:lWedneeday, Sept, 1., l~ -15 •
KIDscriptions up
Peers appreciate three YCP performances
The-1983-84 season marks the
second year of KIDscrlptlons, the
season subscription package to
Young Conservatory Players pro-
ductions. Last year the approach
was a complete success, selling out
all seats at all shows in advance.
KIDscribers will see Hal
LandonJr.asScroogein
"A Christmas Carol."
"
The KIDscrlptlon package in-
cludes guaranteed Second Stage
seats to three Young Conservatory
Players productions, plus ad-
mission to a special performance of
SC R's 1983-84 educational touring
show, "Anding Home," about the
contemporary Immigrant ex-
perience In Orange County.
"The Young Conservatory is
celebrating tts 11th r.ear." said
David Em mes, SCR s producing
artistic director. "Last season we
greatly expanded existing pro-
grams and added a new aspect to
the performance opportunity. The
ability of the student performers
has reached such a level of quatlty
that we welcomed the community
to enjoy theee entertaining. original
shows wtth a special KIDscrlptlon
offer."
Directed by Diane Doyte, the
Young Conservatory offers three
programs: a summer workshop for
beglnners(held this year between
Aug. 15 and 27), ending wtth a
recltat; a school-year sequence of
Saturday claaaes for first-and
second-year students, and a YCP
performance for students wtth
three or more years of experience.
"ldeatty, a chlld would begin the
summer workshop, then attend
two years of clusea In mime, voice,
Improvisation, singing and acting
and graduate Into the performance
( ... Yount,Pege 17)
,
Wonderful
Designs
From
The
Past •...
urv~ J.de & Diamond
Platinum Rina
~ 141< Diamond And Dem1ntold C.rnet Necklace With A
ul»chon Synthetic
Sapphire
Estate Jewelry
of
Excepti~nal Value
...
--------------------------------------------------------~~--~~~------~~~~-----
16 -South Coast Repertory/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
Talents
merged
for play
For the Malnstage season opener,
"Amadeus," guest director John Al-
lison has assembled a cast of talented
South Coast Repertory company
members, returning guest performers
and some actors who wlll be making
their SCR debut.
Portraying Sallerl Is Dan Kern, last
seen in "Betrayal." Dan was a leading
actor with the American Conservatory
Theatre In San Francisco for nine
years where he appeared In "The
Winter Tale," "Desire Under the
Elms," "The Circle," and "The Fifth of
July" and toured In Russia and Japan.
In Los Angeles, he has made guest
appearances on TV shows lncludlng
"Voyagers," "Today's FBI" and
"Code Red."
Cast as Mozart Is SCR founding
member Ron Boussom, who ap-
peared last season on Malnstage in
"Major Barbara, The Imaginary In-
valid" an~'Boy Meets Girl." He also
has been seen In "Da," "Henry IV,
Part I" and "Loose Ends."
He will be remembered for his
acclaimed performances as John
Merrick In "The Elephant Man" and as
Chevallere d'Eon In "Chevallere" on
the Second Stage. He also
co-authored and directed the Ex-
pedition Serles production of "The
Ron Boussom to portray
Mozart.
Oaring Oardolases (Or Love Flnos
Cosmo C. Cosmo)" and founded the
SCR Acting Conservatory.
Joanne Guldlcl Is making her SCA
debut In the role of Constanze. She
has appeared In productions of "The
Prime of Miss Jean Brodie," "You' re a
Good Man, Char11e Brown" and
"Hair." A graduate of the American
Academy of Dramatic Arts, she has
worked for video and cable pro-
ductions.
Tom Rosqul, who wlll play Emperor
Joseph II, made his SCR debut last
season In "All In Favour Said Nol" He
has appeared on Broadway In "The
(SM CAST, P1119 20)
Brighten up your Nightlife
with the "itty bitty" book liqht.
Clips to the back of any hard or
soft cover book. Pluqs into llOv
outlet or battery pack.
. . .
William Em.est Brown
lower left~ South Cout Plue
71'-!M0-~265
Teaching actors
SCR offers evening classes for adults
The Evening Acting Conservatory at SCA offers people 18 years
and ofder the opportunity to develop thetr talent and acting skills In
three nl,.week M98k>ns throughout the eeuon.
The fall aeask>n, which runs from Sept. 26 through Dec. 1,
Includes ci88898 In beginning acting, singing for tbe actor and scene
study In American drama.
Beginning acting gears students toward peformlng prepared
material pertaining to the bastes of the a~ng process. Students are
taught to stretch thetr performing capacity by utilizing the aenaea,
the nature of language, Improvisation, theater games and
characterization. Beginning Acting will be taught by James Wiison
on Mondays and Tuesdays from 7to 10p.m.Coursefeels$138for
the nine-week sessk>n.
The voice cl888 wlll concentrate on Increasing the students
vocal freedom whfle reducing physical tension In acting. The
emphasis wfll progress from basic vocal exercf98S to develop
resonance and artlculatlon, to the use of performed material
pertinent to the student's Interest. Voice cfasa will meet
Wednesdays from 7to10 p.m. and will be taught by Evening
Conservatory Director James Wiison. The fall session fee for voice Is
$138.
Singing for the actor Is designed to help the student use the
singing voice aa a component of good acting. Instruction wtll Include
attenUon to vocal freedom, breathing, placement, repertofre, pitch
accuracy, emotJonal content and movement. Taught by Ofane King
and meeting Wednesdays from 7 to 10 p.m., singing for the actor Is
by audition only. Fee ls$138.
The richness and diversity of American drama as reflected In Its
various moods, themes, and styles requlree.apeclal performing
diversity by the actor. Scene study In American drama offers
students the chance to develop this diversity by participating In
script analysls, characterization work and development of greater
emotional and physical freedom In front of an audience. Class will
meet Thursdays from 7to 10p.m . and oosts$138. lnstructorwill be
James Wiison.
All cl8S98S have limited enrollment to ensure lndlvtdual
attention to all students. To reserve a seat In any claas call 957-2602.
AIRLINES • HOTELS -CARS • TOURS
Sl'ICIALIZl~G IN CIUISIS
556-6311
,
South Coast Repertor y
trustees K a thryn T homp-'•
son and Olivia Johnson join
actor Richard Doyle at a
First Nighters event.
OFFICERS ...
FromPage8
Boy Scouts of America and the
Economic Development Corp. He
and his wife Gerry have a son, Mark.
Serving their first term are five
new trustees who reflect the continu-
ing significant interest that the
business and civic communities
take in SCA.
They are Robert Sheldon, vice
president and director of the Irvine
Co.: Stephen Toth, president of
Pacific Scientific In Anaheim; Mrs.
E.H. Clark, a civic leader from
Newport Beach; Bruce Conklin,
president of the Conklin Co. and
Charlotte Graham, a civic leader
from Whittler and Monarch Bay.
South coast Repertory/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7. 1983 -17
YOUTH ...
From Page 15
class In the third year.'' explained
Doyle.
"The development of KIDscrip-
tion is very exciting for the children
in YCP. The performances gave
first-and second-year students a
goal to work toward. The children
love to perform."
A KIDscription, priced at $10.
includes tickets to " A Christmas
Carol." December 16, 17. 18; "The
Last Orange in Orange County.''
April 7 and 8, and "Oz," June22.
23,and24.
SEASON UNFot:n1NG ...
"A Christmas Carol'· is a holiday
treat of carols and lesser known
stories of good will and spirit. "The
Last Orange In Orange County.·· is
a play about the changes in our
environment, community and
neighborhoods that we have to
understand and accept. "Oz" is a
fun-filled new musical about a far
away land. All the plays YCP
performs are original. including the
musical scores.
From Page 12
His latest provocative drama, in
which current events create a chilling
backdrop, exposes both the brittle
nature and the resilience of our faith.
Six people are swept up In what could
be called a "rehearsal for the end of
the world," and, trapped In a dusty
chapel In New Mexico, are faced with
their fears and strengths.
SCA also wlll produce Its popular
adaptation of "A Christmas Carol" in
December.
The theater also has a five-play
Second Stage season for the smaller
161-seat space. Last year's string of
world premieres there wlll be ex-
tended when the 1983-84 Second
Stage season opens with another and
continues with works from SCR 's
extensive new play commissioning
program.
For more Information on South
Coast Repertory, call (714) 957-2602.
There Is also a special bonus for
KIDscrlbers: a first look at "Finding
Home" on the SCA Malnstage
before this musical parable about
life In a new land tours school
campuses between January and
June of 1984.
from the, at-czac::a pr1vat<i
( 1 a ool col lczct ion ...
o ur mid w<iight
flannel blaz(lr.
rnadcz from Lhcz. f\n<Z-6t
mid W<Zi8ht wore~
flannczl for du.r abil.ity
and comfort.
ou-r b1a:z.arJ '>.frLb patch
and flap 1=0ck<z.t~ i~
a ncz.,c<i55ary basic
in O.'VO.TY man's
wardrob<Z..
@)~o(g@J~§
44 Fashion Island• Newport Beach • 714/644-5070
1001 Westwood Bl vd.· Westwood Vllloge • 213/208-3273
18 -South Coast Repertory/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
Thi"ee start new Honorary Board
South Coast Repertory recently
honored Henry Segerstrom. Watter
Gerken and Carl Karcher as the first
inductees Into SCR's Honorary
Board. the theater's newest role for Its
key supporters.
"We wanted to create an exclusive
way to honor Individuals who have
made· fundamental contributions to
the growth of SCA." said Eric Wit-
tenberg during the presentation
before the president's annual dinner
In the South Coast Plaza Hotel's
Parkside Suite on May 27.
Wittenberg. president of The Wit-
tenberg Corp. and of SCR's trustees.
explained that the board "Is Intended
as SCR's highest honor and ex-
presses the trustees' deepest grati-
tude to a few select peopJe who have
played a major role In the theater's
continued .development.·'
Henry Segerstrom Is managing
partner of C.J. Segerstiom & Sons.
His family made a crucial commitl'l'..lent
to SCA when It donated the land on
which the Fourth Step Theatre was
built. Segerstorm, and his wife Renee.
as well as Segerstrom-owned South
Coast Plaza and Its employees, have
been regular contributors to the SCA
Annual Fund drive.
Walter Gerken, Carl Karcher and Henry Segerstrom are chosen.
Henry Segerstrom was Instrumen-
tal in securing Carter Hawley Hale as
the first corporate underwriter for the
living Theatre Project, SCR's annual
production of a classic play.
Segerstrom has been honored with
the naming of SCR's 507-seat
Segerstrom Auditorium.
Karcher, chairman of Carl Karcher
Enterprises, founded SCR's Benefac-
tor's Committee to raise $600,000 of
the construction costs for the Fourth
Step Theatre Complex. Carl and
Margaret Karcher have also been
fervent supporters of the Anniversary
Campaign which will establish a $3
million endowment fund by the
theatre's 20th anniversary eel-
®ur atYpeckr/tp. ..
There are exciting alternatives, and ~ are
proud to show them to you. At Wyndham
Leigh, ~ design and handcraft the most
L11ique and exciting coll«tion of~
and l.Wdding rings you are going to see. ~
recognize that you are individuals and our
jewtlry reflects ttlat undmtanding.
For straight talk. exdtJng dtsigns. and guar-
anteed value, you will appreciate what ~
hM to ot'Jer: ~ Lelgtl Is tht Sten! that
spedaltzes In er tgaget11t1 It and ~ rings.
Wundharn . Li!igh a~rr:RT
127 F~ ls&and. Ne\Nport Beact\ CA 92660
~ 714/644·0501 • ~ar B<.lllOClcS \M~
ebratlon In 1984. Karcher also came
to the theatre's rescue by providing
bag lunches from his Carls Jr. res-
taurants for guests touring the con-
struction site In 1978.
Gerken, chairman of Pacific Mutual,
served on the Building Campaign and
Steering Committee to conatruci the
Fourth Step Theatre. His wife Dartene
has served aa a trustee. Under
Gerken's leadership, Pacific Mutual
was the first corporation to support
the annual fund by underwriting the
producilon of "A Christmas Carol."
David Emmes, producing artistic
director at SCA, said, "Because of the
caliber of these first Honorary Board
members, we feel we have created a
special distinction. No one has con-
tributed more to SCA than these three
men. Their support Is affirmation of
our commitment to bring great
theatr~ to Orange County."
Snuggle Up to
Down
at30%offl
Scoodo Down Shops .. Invites
you to enjoy surrner's end
sovilgsnow ttv~ Sept.
18th on 0\6 affordabte,
llg\tw~t "Elysia" goose
down comforter.
REG.
Twti ..... $230
F\J ...... $26.5
Queen ... s320
Kng ..... 9385
SALE
'161 .....
ttM
'269
.,
South Coast Repertory/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983 -19
BUY
ONE.
on th
t
GET ONE FREE.
From light now ttlrough Septe~r 30
LeSport.sac makes the transition from
Summer to Back-to-School and Back-t<>-
Work a little easier with New Products and
New Colors. And. to top it off, from right now
unti1Sep(ember30, 1983,we11giveyoua~
sac wallet with your purchase of a Travetbag, Han~
bag or Dress/Suitbag.
LelpoliAC
SouUl Coen 1'1•••
carousel Court
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
714667_12~ -
,
F!Om · N\erono 5polf' the octrve kXll< fof school
11 1 onos-ooucto VW1 m' cot1o0 c s...oe< .JMev ~ Collon 1n 8 cOIOI\
I! Conan cul on C>OM 0 Plus Collon caps Ol'fl we Ill\ all
~~~
56 FASHION ISLAND· NE'M'OR'T BEACH· (714) 644-5070
~scre¥erde &nter
Albertson's • &mk of Anwrlca • Bilf/Q &wciM • Dol,,hin Hair
Fathions • Edwards Cinema C1nt1r • Ftuh 'N ' Splash
Hamburger HamJ.1 •I~ Capat.la Chaln • M11m.selle Betiuty
Supply • Mesa Vtrd• Florist • MHa V1rde Travel• Mione ·~
Rtstaur1mt • Mu.sk Mark~t • Photography by l•ffrey •
~cmuiktrS .. Soulhtrn Califomill Optiall • SPQ Uuly
• Swmsen'.s Ice CMml • U,,,wr Cuts
•SOUTHWICK
•LADIES
SOUTHWICK
•POLO
•RALPH
LAUREN
FOR LADIES
•SAN
FRANCISCO
• FERRAGAMO
•COLE-
HAAN
•CUSTOM
TAILORED
SHIRTS
•CUSTOM
CLOTHING
BY
SOUTHWICK
# 119 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH 759-1622
AUTUMN'S HORIZONS
TI LE SPIJUf Of AUTUMN
RINGS TRUE Tl lROUGl I
TI IE LTVERY'S COLLECTIONS
FOR MEN AND WOMl~N.
South C'<lfl"' l'lon• • M0-4600
CAST FOR OPENER ...
From Page 16
Lincoln Mask," "Unllkely Heroes,"
and the Tony Award-winning "Sticks
and Bones." His feature film credits
Include performances i n
"MacArthur," "Airport 77,'' and "The
Godfather, Parts I and II."
Nathan Adler will portray Von
Strack. He made his SCA debut in
"Henry IV, Part I" and has worked
with Allison on numerous occasions.
He has been seen In Los Angeles In
such productions as •' Hedda Gabler,''
"Kind Lady," "The Chicago Con-
spiracy Trial," " Suicide In B Flat,''
"The Runner Stumbles," "The Birth-
day Party" and "Our Town" and in
New York in "The Inspector General"
and "Awake and Sing." His television
credits include "Little House on the
Prairie" and "Phoenix."
Resident actor and director
John-David Keller has been cast as
Rosenburg. His numerous SCA acting
credits include roles In "Major
Barbara," "The Imaginary Invalid,"
''Childe Byron," "The Merchant of
Venice," "The Elephant Man,"
"Jumpers," "Beyond the Fringe,"
"Peg 0' My Heart" and all the
Educational Touring Shows.
Kay E. Kuter, last seen In "Henry IV,
Part I, " returns to SCA in the role of
Van Swleten. His acting career In-
cludes roles In more than 100 plays
such as "King Lear," "A Doll's
House," "Richard II," "Taming of the
Shrew" and the "Hello Dollyl" pro-
duction which opened Anaheim's The
Grand Dinner theater In 1977.
Eleven-year veteran John Ellington
wlll appear as one of the play's two
Yentlcelll, the gossiping "llttle winds."
For the past three seasons Ellington
was seen In "A Christmas Carol,"
"The Imaginary lnvalld" and "Boy
Meets Girl."
Founding member Hal Landon Jr.,
who will perform the role of the other
Ventlcello, originated the role of
Ebenezer Scrooge In SCR's annual
production of "A Christmas Carol."
This past season he was seen in "All in
Favour Said Nol" and "Major
Barbara.''
Anni Long opens her ninth season
at SCA as Katherina. She appeared
last season In "A Christmas Carol"
and "All In Favour Said No!" A former
member of the National Shakespeare
Company, she toured in the U.S.
playing the title role In "Saint Joan"
and Cella In "As You Like It."
Founding member Martha
McFarland Is cast as Teresa Salieri.
She was seen this past season in
"Major Barbara," "A Christmas
Carol" and "The Diviners." This
summer she was a guest artist in the
Saddleback Summer Repertory pro-
duction of "The Music Man." She
appeared at the Kennedy Center in
Washington, D.C., In the world
premiere of "A Partridge In a Pear
Tree" with James Mason.
The ensemble cast, Involving some
graduates of SCR's 1983 8ummer
Conservatory, Includes Aaron
Charney, Steve Beazley, Tom Dunne,
Peter Flnlayson, Glen Jeannotte,
David Scott, Rick Miiier, Kevin
Skousen, Gary Squier, Kevin Suarez,
Terey Summers and Gary Welssbrot.
Get today's look. Today.
•
1M Copley Squcn Coflectton .. JodaV'• atytee In fine leothef.
The took ts rcw. The time Is now .to get.Into the Copley Square
Coflectlon. v.1th the kind d SfYllsh leather LIPP8fS ond the good looks
yo\J mcpect from Thom Me.An. Onty tlt.". Now at lhom McAn
~--~
SOUTH .COAST PLAZA
-------_..__
South Coast Repertory/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept:-7, 1983 -21
t,INDING HOME SCR PROJECT ... Subscriber
saves, gets
privileges
FromPage10
multi-ethnic and multi-<;Ultural is-
sues.
The background research from
which "Finding Home" will evolve
Is being provided by SCR's Cali-
fornia Council for the Humanities
project -"The Contemporary
Immigrant/Refugee Experience In
Orange County: The Shaping of a
Multi-Ethnic community." The
SCR/CCH project Is directed by
Valerie Sml\h and Michael Bigelow
Dixon and will culminate In a
publication, "Second Lives,'' com-
prised of articles by Humanities
scholars and Interviews with Immi-
grants. The 100-page publication
will be Introduced at a sympo!Num
in November.
The scholars' studies focus on
the experience of many different
ethnic and racial groups living In
Orange County. The publication
combines Interviews of Immigrants
with the scholars' artlcJes, which
explore the impact of Immigration
In Orange County on tam Illes,
education, business, religion and
various aspects of community,
such as media. archltecuture, and
literature.
"The enthusiasm of the partici-
pating scholars sugges1s that this
SCR/CCH project may make a real
contribution to the social aware-
ness of Immigrants and their !Ntu-
atlon In Orange County," said
project co-director Smith. The
volume will be Illustrated with
photographs contributed by
Professor Lauri MartJn's documen-
Westminster Mall
898-3331
tary photography claes at Orange
Coast College. Those photographs
were featured In an exhibit In the
OCC Ane Arts Build Ing between
June and August this summer.
Photographers who contributed
were Tereea Browne, Cindy
Chaves, Nellon Ferguson, Michelle
Hightower, Phi Ho, Mark Kirchner,
Tom La Duke, Ray Nichols,
Jonathon Nourok, Kim Shattuck
and Bruce Wright.
According to Smith. the dra-
matic Influx of Immigrants Into
Orange County In the past decade
la the first major suburban Immi-
gration experience In the history of
the United States. "We are examin-
ing through the project research
whether the contemporary Immi-
grant experience In Orange County
Is qualltatlvetyl different than past
urban and rural Immigration In
America," lheaald.
The title for the volume "Second
Lives,'' was suggested by a com-
ment In an tntervlew wtth a Ruaalan
Immigrant. "Second Lives" evokes
the tremendous changes that Im-
migrant.a must undergo to survive
In a new country. Immigration can
be as profound as any human
experience," said otxon.
Participating acholars from the
University of California, Irvine are:
Or. SpenoerOlln, Or. Karen
Leonard, Dr. MarlaSobek, Or.
Mark Poster, and Vice Chancellor
William Llllyman. Professors at
California State University, Full-
erton Involved In the project ln-
cludeJ)r. Isaac Cardenas, Or. Gao
Duong Pham, Dr. PriacHlaOaks, Or.
Art Hanaen. and Vy Trac Do.
"Finding Home," themulNcal
touring production beginning In
January. will be directed by SCR
resident director John.David
Keller .~ane King will compoae the
original musical score and Jerry
Patch and Dixon will wrtte the play.
This wtll be the 15th annual
educational touring program. The
15-year-old program Is a unique
synthesis of entertainment and
education that utlltzea the re-
sources of SC R's profeaslonal
company to present plays of
Interest to students and teachers.
"Finding Home" follows this year's
record-breaking tour of "Bits and
Bytes.·· on computers which wu
performed In 246 achoots before
more than 70,000 students.
Previous productions Include "The
Fitness Game," (physical fltneas)
and "Tomato Surprile"(nutrltlon).
For booking Information about
"Anding Home," contactSCR's
community service coordinator.
Kris Hagen, at SCR, 957-2802.
ANDIAMO MEANS~
1LET'SGO!
South Coast Repert ory
subscribers, who are guaranteed
seating for every production, save
substantially over slngle-tlcketbuyers
at SCR. Their discounts can amount
to the equlvalent of two free plays.
And there are more benefits.
They are the ·only SCA audience
members who can exchange tickets
for another performance of the same
production If they have a date conflict.
SCR subscribers also receive com-
plimentary Issues of the SubSCRlber,
an Illustrated tabloid that gives de-
tailed Information on plays, play--
wrights and players. Publlahed six
times a year, thi newsletter is
home-delivered before each pro-
duction.
Thl~year Copa de Oro, John Pohl's
Bistro. Pronto and Cafe Casino res-
taurant• wtll give SCR Subscribers a
complimentary wtne or deaaert with
their meals before a performance.
Subscribers benefit from exclusive
Invitations to special events and
discussion series plus priority reser-
vations for the l8880nal sell-out, "A
Christmas Carol." Last season's ex-
traordinary ticket demand meant few
people except SCR Subscrl~rs ~re
able to purchase tickets for the event.
Subscriptions to Malnstage and
Second Stage MUons are on sale
through the first production. Phone
(714) 957-SUBS for details.
SUPERB STYLE. UNCOMPROMISED QUALITY.
• I •
INGENIOUS FUNCTIONAL DESIGN. AND/AMO® LUGGAGE,
MADE IN AMERICA BY (\N:>il\MO NC
THE HIGH PERFORMANCE LUGGAGE MANUFACTURER.
~
South Coast Plaza
Upper Level Carousel Court
540-3110
I ~
••
22 -South Coast Repertory/An Advertising Supptemen' to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
.•
Company steps toward top billing
Eighteen years ago, the Fourth Step
Theatre Complex was Just a pipe
dream for artistic directors David
Emmes and Martin Benson, who In
1963 traveled to Orange County for
work after graduating from San Fran-
cisco State College's drama program.
One day. over a cup of coffee after a
summer produc11on of a play, the two
agreed to create their own theater.
Through fall and winter they
planned a resident "Theatre Work-
shop." Benson made repeated trips
north to recruit San Francisco State
classmates who shared thetr ex-
periences and Ideals.
By June 19&t, 12 of the alumni had
gathered at Long Beach's Off Broad-
way Playhouse, putting together a
summer season of plays. Although
that debut season was praised for Its
energy and Imagination, Emmes a_nd
Benson concluded that their company
would need Its own theater.
Singing star Toni Tenille was Toni Shearer when she
performed with Cam Young and Mike Douglass in South
Coast Repertory's "Mother Earth" in the 1970s.
It was decided that Orange County
would provide a better environment
than the commercial climate of HoUy-
wood or Los Angeles for such resident
theater goals.
Armed with only a youthful commit-
ment to their art and the Idea of a
resident professional company,
Emmes, Benaon and thetr 12 con-
federates founded South Coast Rep-
ertory.
SCA would bulld Its own resident
company of actors and other theater
artists commmed to a playblll of the
classlca, the avant-garde, original
works and the finest of contemporary
theater.
Anally, SCA would offer fresh and
Imaginative approaches to the plays It
preaented, atar11ng with "Tartuffe,"
which toured to various playhouees
throughout Orange County.
In January 1965, SCR found Its first
home amid the canneries on the
Newport Beech waterfront. A 23-by
58-foot marine ewap shop was con-
verted Into a 75-eeat playhouM and
119 tubacrtptlona were aotd at $7
each to that Inaugural four-play
season.
f/µ@]6antel!
Boutique, Inc .
Elegance in women's attire
•Top American & European
Designer Fashions.
• Specializing in Formal
& Cocktail Wear
•Fashion Consultants
Available
548-8365
Hours 10-8
Monday -Saturday
1803 Westcliff Or., Newport Beach
\
Plays done In the Second Step were
usually restricted to one-Mt Indoor
reallstlc sets which were constructed
outdoors on a weed-strewn lot behind
the building. The upstairs dresemg
room was connected to the stage via
an outside stalrcaae, preeentlng prob-
lems on rainy n~hts.
Oeeplte Its lnconvenM9nces, the
Second Step TheetN opened • on
March 12, 19&5, • wtth Samuel
Beckett's "Waiting for Godot."
The 1965-66 8M80t"I there eetab-
llshed SCA u a bright and Important
element on the Southern Californian
theater scene.
The Newport Beach-Costa Mesa
communtty began to respond to the
new company. Oun~ the winter of
1965, David Hiii, a h h-ranklng ex-
ecutive with Hughes A rcraft, worked
to aaeernble a board of trustees for
SCR, not an easy task In a company
unueed to having such an audacious
and adventurous group In Its midst.
When It closed In 1968, thf 'leond
Step Theatre had hou88d 2.., pro-
ductions. In It, the COfnP.any de-
vel()ped a strong artistic reputation as
well as a sense of Its own artistic
Identity. On the practical side, the
young company had shown that It
could operate a theater.
But growing audience support had
necessitated a need for more than 75
aeata.
A variety store at 1~27 Newport
Blvd .• In Costa Mesa, was converted
Into a 190-seat playhouae -the Third
Step Theatre -In time for opening In
October 1967.
Production, however, continued at
the Second Step Theatre, where a
season of five pr4knleres and ex-
pertmental works wu mounted.
Seven other productions made up the
Third Step's season.
The admlnlltrattve capactty of SCR
WU ov.1oeded by the 12-play eeaon. Burdened. by the costs of
refurbllhlng the Third Step Theatre
and the logllttca of operating two
theaters, the company struggled_ for
( ... UILY,,...a)
-
South Cout Repertory/An AdvertllMng Supptement to the DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983 -23
EARLY ST AGES TOLD ...
From Page 22
organlzatlonal balance.
For the 1968-69 ~. The Sec-
ond Step was clOMd, and all re-
sources were directed toward suc-
cessful operation of the Third Step.
SCA's progress during thoae flrat
five years was not wtthout Its costs.
Two significant losses to artlstk:
attrition were actors David Cfements
and co-director John Arthur ~vis,
both of whom were founding mem-
·bers of SCA. Other artists also were
unable to continue wtth the theater
after five years of consuming effort
with practlcalty no compensation.
Beginning In 1970, the company's
artistic capacity was expanded es
guest artists from other Amertcan
theaters occaslonelty were employed
as actors and directors.
Plus technical eupport capabflttlee,
which up to then had been below the
artlstle level ot the acting company,
Theater seating
OK for dlsabled
Easy acceu parking and Mating Is
available for the handicapped at both
the Malnstege and Second Stage at
South Cout Repertory.
The Four1h Step Theatre Complex
was d~ u a barrier-fr• struc-
ture to prOYtde acceea to the theater
for everyone. T<*nake arrangements
and reMrVatlons call the SCA Box
Office at 957--t033.
did you Y-y
Improved rNl'kedty wtth the compleJC
production of "Indiana" In 1970.
SCR's steady advance toward a
fulty profeak>nal art theater was
acknowledged not only. by growing
audience support but also by critics
and foundations.
In 1971, SCA recefved Ila flrat Loe
Angelea Drama CrttJca Cfrcle Award
(another came In 1974) for general
excellence.
The Offtce of Advanc:ed Orama
Reeearch, a phll8nthropk: arm of the
Rockefeller Foundation, helped fund
some production C09la. The National
Endowment for the Ma also made the
first of what hu become an .wmual
award In tus>PC>f1 or SCR ln 1971.
At Its 10th anntwnary In 1975, SCR
had an opetalq budget of a quar-1 ter-mlHlon doltln, Wllf being -.
ported by more than 4,000
sublcrlbers and llVefeged 92 percent
capacfty.
By now, the Third Step Theatre had
realized Its tuft potentlal and the
dream of a decade wu one step from
becoming a rMllty.
The story of the Fourth Step
bulldlng campaign demonstrates how
a collection of Independent com-
munities rallied around an Idea to
create a stunning profesalonal theater
complex.
Located In Cotta Mesa, the theater wu designed to be shared by all of
Orange County, and In only 28
months, a gleam In the eyes of SCR's
board of trustees wu developed Into
a cultural reality.
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... ... .. .. ... .. ..
RED WHITE and BLUE
Newport Beach, Callfomla
Unique and unusual gifts
To B.e Computer Literate
Get Thyself to Coastline
Fulty Equipped Computer Labs ...
Latest Software ... Low Cost
Whether you are conaktertng purchalMng a personal computer or are
Interested ln advanced ueea for word prooeeatng, financial modeling or
programming, Coeatttne Community Coflege has the Computer Classes
you need ... days, 9Y8ntnga, and weekends at convtenent locations.
COLLEGE COURSES
Intro to Computere
Problem IOMng, ~· dectaton making In ~ ldanca, and lnduetry with~ power! a.m.t•= deY9 end ........ '2 .... .
Baactl, Hunttngton a.ch, W'illll-.ti11111 ... lll .... -.
Call (714) 241-1178.
19orocomputer aonw ..
LAiim Home Aooouni.nt, State of the Art,
Word8ter'e, and l/lelcekie. Home and
~ llPPkatlon. Semeeter c:fMM9.
S 12 .... Deya and ewnlnga at Peter.on
Tacfl c.m.•.
... Progremmlng
o.ta proc 111tng and bMk: computer pro-t:::8 -~ and ~lon . ~ lnduMty. Semeat• ctwea,
112 .... ~and ev.nlnge, P9tereon Tech Center . EwnlnQ a..... In N9w·
por1 Beec191. (714) 781~740.
Intro to Mlcfoproceeeon
What'• on the mnet? Whet'• beat f«
you? e.. unb and peripheral•. oe>«·
atton and llPPICatJona. s.m.ter et--.
112 -. D11ya, P9ter90t"I Teen c.nter• . ev.•ige. Westml118t«. (714) 198-9871 .
And,,..... •• More.
P1oftulornel Word Proc.aing Training on lAldlrOn. IBM, Appte HI, Xerox equip-
ment ....... ,..., ... 1 ..... progrwna.
CM (714) ll0-1071 tot tntonnatlon .
COM.UNITY SERVICES CLASSES
CoftlllUIW Ular,.,-lleolronlo ...,_.....,: E~ yow ..... 100fl'IPUW needa. luperoelo8 ~ It cen 'do Md whllt • Clft'l Jeroon hMalM a ftMndel ~ that you tr~. ~ ~ l30 fee. don't hew to wortt at. Hencta-on ..,,.,., •
M p.m. Oct. 1 Md• p.m. Nov. 11. ~ PfOO'M'· llO .... 1;ao.6 p.in.
P ... eon Tedi ~ · Oot. 22. ,.._80r' Tech c.nter• .
Word PraHHlng: WOftDSTW
Henda-on _.,.., fof btgllw•• In word
SW' a 1 Ing on I* •lei oomputiara. ~ ,r::::· '80 .... l:acM p.m. 0ot. 21. Teoh o.nter•.
Compulef ..............
8M1o ~I. Herldl on lw'*'I with
9llllc. ~ prog;em. •o • l:.ao.a p.m. oat. I . ,_eon Teah OerMf•,
..
•
•
..
•
• • ta1 or1ng
and workmanship for those who demand the exceptional. Custom made suits offer fabrics by
Holland & Sherry of London, Dormevil, King Edward, with over 500 fabrics for custom shirts.
~pert alterations for men and women by 11 muter custom tailors with 40 years experience. The
House Of Tailering is the largest tailoring shop in Southern California .
LARGEST TAIL:ORING SHOP IN SO. CALIF-ORNIA.
SOUTI~ COAST PLAZkCAAOUSEL COURT, LOWER LEVEL 8ATM ~11
I
THI DRANlil COAST
Anew
• tennis
meet
OC? • Ill
By STEVE MARBLE
Ol .. DlllJ .........
Tennis promotor Bill Stamps,
still being trailed by busines.gnen
who claim he stiffed them for
more than $70.000 following an
extravagent tennis tournament in
Newport Beach last month, now i.s
planning an even more spectacu-
lar tournament in Orange County.
"It'll be colossal," he explained
today. "It'll be sort of a
Wimbledon west."
Stamps, who earned a fistful of
enemies with his High Stakes
tennis tournament at the Newport
Beach Tennis Club in early
August, cautioned that his latest
superstar match wU1 not be in
Newport.
"I'll never put on another
tournament in Newport again," he
said, "but it may be nearby."
The Newport tennis match,
billed as the richest in California
history, ended on a sour note with
a Newport city official claiming
Stamps had threatened to kill him
and business owners alleging the
promotor left town without pay-
ing his debts.
Stamps left Newport in a huff,
c.laiming some of the hired help
had done a lousy job and didn't
deserve to be paid.
A month later, the 34-year-old
promotor ia still very much on the
minds of some people who did
bushlem with him in Newport
Beach
Warren Ruaeell says Stamps
ltill owes him $60,000 for
bleachers his company, RUateU
and Russell Scaffolding Co.,
erected at the Newport Beach
Tennis Club, where the three-day
tournament was held.
Rusaell said Stamps has, so far.
broken every promiae of pajing
the money.
"The last time he promised he'd
pay me was by Thursday. That
was last week and I haven't heard
(See TENNIS, Pase AZ)
Rolling along
John Adamoli shows h is stuff a t the Huntington
Beach Septemberfest over the weekend. For
more of Adamoli's artistry, see Page A3.
l:llll IDITlll
•
ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Earmarked for op ening
Arts Center given; . .
$250,000 by Bren
By GLENN SCOTT
Of .. DlllJ ..........
Multi-millionaire Donald Bren
la donating $250,000 to the Orange
County Perfonning Arts Cent.er to
attract the world's best talent for
the center's opening week in 1986,
cente.r officials said today.
Bren, chairman of the Irvine
Co., said in a letter this week to
center President Henry T .
Segerstrom that his gift is to be
used "to assure that the creative
imagination of the center's leaders
ls not constrained in determining
inaul(Ural week activities."
Massive
surf hits
beaches
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of .. DlllJ .........
Surfers along the Orange Coast
awoke to near-perfect waves thia
morning, the last will and testa-
ment of a dying tropical storm off
the Baja coast.
South facing beaches from
Huntington to Newport were
recipients of six to 12-foot waves,
with lifeguards reporting eets of
up to 15 feet at the notorious
Balboa Wedge.
"They're getting aome really
good rides off of Tower 19 (near
the Newport pier) said lifeguard
Capt. Bud Belshe. adding about 70
surfers were bobbing in the heavy
swells early today.
"They're not all catching
waves. but they're out there," he
said.
Lifeguards in Huntington
Beach reported waves in the five-
to seven-foot range, and Laguna
(See SURF'S UP, Pase AZ)
Bren said he wants those ac-
tivities to be remembered as the
finest cultural experience in Or-
ange County history.
Although more than $40 million
of the center's estimated $57
million construction cost already
has been raised, Bren's gift is the
first specifically to underwrite
performance expenses, officials
said.
Irvine Co. President Thomas
Nielsen announced a $1 million
challenge grant for the center
during its July 7 groundbreaking
in the South Coast Town Center in
Costa Mesa.
Len Bedsow, the center's ex-
ecutive director, said today Bren'•
gift points out the faith Ora.nft .
County business leaders are in· :
vesting in the center. Hep~
the inaugural week, planned for
October 1986, will feature per-,: )• formances of "truly unequaled.lo'.
quality."
The Performing Arts Center if>
planned to include a four-tiered 1
3,000-aeat concert hall to houae I
world-class symphonic, opera,·
ballet and other musical pro-:
ductions. A second, 1,000-aeat
theater is acheduled for a lat.er
construction phase.
Hospital flap goes to UC president
H ealth West , Aldrich t o ta k e simmer in g facility feud to Berk eley m eeting Thursday
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of .. DlllJ ..... --
Representatives from the UC
Irvine College of Medicine, along
with HealthWest officials and
Chancellor Daniel G . Aldrich, are
taking the Irvine campus hospital
proposal -undoubtedly the most
severely disputed issue in UCl's
nearly 20-year history -to UC
President David Gardner.
Gardner agreed to a request for
the meeting by officials from
H e althWest 1 the
Chatsworth-bued hospital chain
which propoeea to build a hoepital
on the UCI campus, said Judith
Woodard, a UC spokeswoman.
The college trustees, who sup-
port HealthWest's proposal, a1ao
asked to meet with Gardner,
Woodard said.
The meeting will take pl.ace in
Berkeley Thuraday, pitting both
sides of a campus feud which has
erupted over a h08pltal which the
college of medicine has been vying
for since UCI was founded.
The lat.est twist in the civil war
between the chancellor and the
medical achool came 1\aeeday,
when 4l subcommittee of the
college board of trustees sup-
ported a faculty censure of
Aldrich and voted unanimoualy to
condemn the clwlcellor for what
they tee u his attempt to gain
control o( an $8 million medical
achool foundation fund.
Aldrich, who initially sup-
ported Health West's campus hos-
pital plan, withdrew support for it
last month, saying he feared
divisiveness in the community
would crush the chances both for
the campus hospital proposal and
for a private hospital plan which is
supported by a cadre of business
and community leaders.
Medical College Dean Stanley
van den Noort and the College
Board of Trustees have voted to
stick with the Health West plan.
Last week, the medical school
faculty voted to censure Aldrich
for his withdrawal of support. The
censutt, largely a symbolic act, is
rare in the UC system.
Marshall Houts. a member of
the subcommittee for develop-
ment, said the seven trustee
committee members Tuesday re-
acted to a letter from Aldrich to
van den Noort dated Aug. 29
which said the foundation's fund
would come under the control of
(See HOSPITAL, Pase AZ)
Fairview 'affordable' housin1rslated
By GLENN SC01T
Of .. 0.-, ........
Construction on the firat group
of 550 apartments intended lo
offer affordable houa:Ing for
worken at Fairview State Hospi-
tal in C:O.ta Mesa could begin by
November, hospital offldala say.
The apartments are planned by
Butler Housing Corp .. using up lo
$20 million in f:lnandng from aa.la
of tax-exempt bonds eecured
through the Orange County gov-
ernment.
The units will go up in three
~ on a aeeoent.-ahaped 60
acres bordering the northern edae
of the state-owned hoapi\al prop-
erty, u.id Dr. Ftand.t Crinella,
holpltal director. The~ phMe,
to IO up in two to three yeer1, 1a
planned to run alongside Harbor
Boulevard.
All of the units wW be rmerved
for families or individuals who
earn no more than 80 percent of
the median income in Orange
Coun&y. Thia month. the median
inoome la $34, 730, 10 qualifying
famlJJes couldn't make more than
$27,78-t.
Renta paJd by the t.enanta will
go toward payt.ng off the bonds,
with the county uawning no
liability.
Tue.day nieht the Costa Mesa
City Council gave its prelim.lnary
approval to a cooperative agree-
ment with Fairview, Butler and
the county penunent spelling
out eligibility and financing for
the project. Council memben
CS.. FAIRVIEW, Pa•e AZ)
A4
A3
Cl, 8-7
Cl-3
A4
A8 a
A.10
At A.a
A4
............. .., ...........
A 2 1-f oot tapestr y will be unve iled in the sanctuary
at Temple Bat Ya hm in Newport Beach ton ight. l .
Jews note beginning
of another new yea.ir
By ANDREA ADELSON
Ot•o.-, .... .-.
Jews worldwide mark the be-
ginn.ina of the new year ~744
tonight at nightfall with the start
of Ro.h Haahanah. A 10-day
period of IOUl-eearchlng follows.
ending with Yom K.ippur-a day
of atonement and the mOlt eolemn
oftheJewiah Holy Da}'l-a week
from ~turday.
"In compari.eon to the aecular
New Year'• Eve on Dec. 31, where
• everyone goes out and parties, ~
Jewish New Year la a very~
time and is treated ~ert
aerioualy,'' explained Rabbis~ hen EiNtetn., of the Foun
=~-Congregation B'
At the ou'8et of Rosh ffaah.aNl
eervicee, a ram'a horn, ot ahofar, •
IOUnded, a "call to CONdenoe,f
Elna1etn laid.
The holiday be8ina with a
(See HIGH ROLY 6 A YS, Pace Al)
p
~ *Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
CONTINUED STORIES
From Page A1
·HIGH HOLY DAYS ...
ituhanah feast that traditionally
includes sweet foods and a round-
ed loaf of bread called challah
(pronounced ha-la), meaning that
the year should be sweet and
bereft of jagged edges.
"lt'a a time for contemplating
and giving some serious thought to
improving oneself," said Einstein.
"''Services include readings of
Jt..ncient Hebrew prayers dating
from 70 A .O., when ~holars
copied down ancient rites after the
central Jewish temple in Jerusa-
iem was destroyed, explained
Rabbi Sol Teitelbaum of Temple
Isaiah in Newport Beach.
: Penitence, prayer and charity
!are the central motifs of the High
Holy Days, as the 10 days flanked
:tJy the two holidays are called,
~Teitelbaum said.
: In his own service, the rabbi
:faid he uses the imagery of a high
~urt to induce believers to take
!-s>iritual stock of the past year and .
reeolve to do better ln the year
ahead.
The equivalent in Christian
theology, pointed out Rabbi Eins-
tein, are the days of Lent, preced-
ing Easter.
Those attending Rosh
Haahanah serviees at Temple Bat
Yahm in Newport will aee the
unveiling of a long-awaited,
21 -foot woven tapestry in the
sanctuary.
The multi-colored fabric, done
by Los Angeles art.lat Joseph
Pel.zig, covers the celling-high ark,
containing the scrollB of the Torah.
It depicts the miracle of the
burni.ng bush.
''The idea behind it," Rabbi
Mark S. Miller said, "is that
anytime we are receptive to the
miraculous in life we can receive a
revelation , even though we're not
MO&eS and not standing before
that particular burning bush at
Mt. Sinai."
fF AIRVIEW HOUSING ... • '•
An unidentified surfer takes advantage of
monster waves off Wes t Balboa Boulevard and
0.-, -,.._.., ....,_ LliliM
l 8t.h Street in Newport Beach today. Sets were
reported as high as 15 feet .
: declined to help the hoepitaJ
:obtain the tax-exempt funding a
; few years ago but supported
; county participation Tuesday on a
: 4-0 vote with Eric John.son absent.
, Cou nci 1 members Ed
~cFarland and Norma Hertzog
th pointed out the need in Coeta
esa for more moderately priced
ntal housing.
• Crinella said Fairview workers
, will get first shot at moving into
' ~e apartments. The hospitaJ staff
• t,as agreed to a formula specifying
' which workers get top priority on
the basis of position and family
; status, he said.
· People who work in Coeta Mesa
will get second priority if hospitaJ
workers don't take up all the
. units, and third priority goes to
; any other applicants, he said.
! Between 50 and 60 units also j will be set aside as homes for
~ hospitaJ clients, or patients, mak-
ing the transition from institu-
tion.al to independent care, he said.
~ Rents will range from about
~'435 for one-bedroom units to
$675 for three bedrooms, said ( ....
John Watts, Butler vice president.
The Orange C.Ounty Housing
authority will administer the
apartments, he added.
Crinella explained the hospital
has been trying to secure housing
for its 1,800 full-time workers
since 1977, when C.O.ta Mesa city
officials first approved the concept
and an accompanying en-
vironmental impact report.
The housing is a critic8l way of
helping to retain registered nurs-
es, psychiatric technicians and
other people holding hard-to-fill
positions, he said.
Watts said more envirorunentaJ
studies will be completed after the
first phase, which will include 144
units.
ButJer, a private constn.lction
company, was awarded a state
contract to build the apartments
after competing against aeveral
other finns.
Watts assured the council Tues-
day all units will be reserved for
the so-called low-income families,
although he agreed $27,784 isn't
too low.
SURF'S UP ...
From Page A1
Beach guards said the tropical
storm generated waves of only
three to five feet on city beaches
there.
Despite the combination of
large waves and high tides today,
the weather service aees no
danger to coastaJ homes.
''It doesn't look like anything
drastic," Bill Hoffer, of the Na-
tional Weather Service, said.
However, while Tropical Storm
Kiko is expected to hit cold water
off Baja and die tonight, an other
storm is following in its wake.
Hoffer said Tropical Storm
Lorena is forming about 150 miles
off the coast of Acapulco, generat-
ing winds of 55 knots and gugts of
up to 65 knots.
How that storm will affect the
surf along the Orange Coast is
impossible to tell at this juncture,
the weather specialist said.
Mesa gives $30,000 HOSPITAL ...
From Page A1
• .·to proinote tourism
By GLENN SC01T Ot ... o.9f __
The new Costa Mesa Visitors
Bureau was given its first ins1all-
ment of $30,000 in city funds
Tuetday night by the City C.Ouncil
to 1JOlicit more tourism.
'Drowned CM
man 'afraid
of the water'
Friends of a 24-year-old Costa
Mesa man who was found
drowned Tuesday in a murky
motel swimming pool said h e
nonnally shied away from water.
However, several people told
investigators they aaw Eric La-
mont Myers splashing in the
Tahiti Inn's kidney-shaped pool at
C 4~ Victoria St., police said. Myers
, lived at the motel.
t Acquaintances alao told officers
t Myers was extremely drunk. The
, •victim's roommate said Myers had
; consumed several beers during a
· • Labor Day barbecue at the motel
(Monday night. Another resident
-;said Myers had a beer when h e
; ;jt.amped into the pool at midnight,
: investigators said.
: His friends said they were
surprised Myers was in the pool at
.. all because they didn't believe he
I : could swim. They told officers he
1 I aeemed afraid of the water, ac-
, : cording to a police report.
I
I
I
I We're
Listening •••
Council members agreed
previously to budget $60,000 a
year over three ·years from its
general fund for the bureau.
Bureau President Robert
Hawes said the $30,000 will go
toward developing promotional
materials, fund-raising programs,
aa.laries and moving expenses for
newly appointed Executive Direc-
tor Charles Johnson.
The bureau office is at 2960
Harbor Blvd., Suite D.
In other action Tueeday, the
council made the following de-
cisions:
• Postponed a final vote on
amendments to the sign ordinance
until the Sept. 27 meeting at City
Hall.
•Agreed to spend $245,000 on
the aeoond construction phaae for
Canyon Park and $41 ,371 for slope
renovation at E11tancia Park.
• Sent a letter to Newport
Beach asking for a dect.ion on
whether city officials there intend
to give up on plans to extend
University Drive along the edge of
the Back Bay.
• Granted a contract to Gordon
Bricken & Asaodatee to monitor
sound levels at the final nine 1983
concerts at the Pacific
Amphitheatre, at a cost not to
exceed $6,000.
• Extended the time limit for
another year for a pennit allowing
a federally financed, 36-unit
seniorciti.7.en housing project to be
built at the Protestant Episcopal
Church, 183 F.aat Bay St.
What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like"
Call the number at left and your message will be recorded,
transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24·hour answering service may be used to record let·
ters to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include
their name and telephone number for verification No circulation
calls. please.
Tell us what's on your mind. i ~ 642•6086
!tr-------------------------~~------------~---------------------------------'.! ORANGE COAST Cla..m.d ectferttetnt 114/142-M?I
• -: D~ D ·1 p·1 I ... °"* depenment9 ~'
::· .. 0"8fentMd II J I a MAIN omc1
• M9"0ey r iioey If you clo U0 Well lley II C:O..e ....... CA
"01 h••• you• J>-IM' ~y ..... --9o• l&eO, Colle ~ CA t?tM
' I It .. .. .. ,. •' '
'
& :JO o"' ~ t>t!Ot• r o"' H. L. Schw.na m ~1g111 , .. 3 °'MOe Coet1 ~ eomc-y Ho •"O 1011• coor ••II Ot P\lbliltlet n••• elorlu 111u111•110"'· ee111011e1 m11111 01
-IO e0¥9rt..._,t, -m•y 1>t ttl)<OdUCed W!lhelu4 ~ se1u1o.ty t llCI avno•y 11 119'-~ eop'rflllht owntr
you dO "°' 'K•rv• your
COPY by 7 • "' ~ -· 8lc:otlCI Glltt llC*eot l>"lcl 11 ~ "-, c.tllot-10 .... ""° ,°"' '°""..... ChaaJ 0owa111>r Rarmond MeoLeen (VI'S'~'°°• llWec•te>!'°" °' "'',..., ~ n .._,...., °' ......,'° EdltOt end ANll1en Controlllf °' ,,,.. Mao "'°"""Y
~
T1l191hoftee -o.~c-y ,.,_
"'°''-· Hiinf"'O!Oll Oe.cll 'w"'-'" ..,._ l"'Cl'fNNIOI'"' .....
'
10 lhe P\lbllltlef ""° OrlWIVI CoM1 Daly Pllol. WO!h -·-N ~ "'-. ~°' 111t0r-.c-Pl-.; ...,.... ,, ().... ~ TIOO tOo!-lfl puClllllWCI MOnOer llVou;f\ ,.,_., f'llOly lo .... ·~ ldl!IOll • ,,.__, S.!llrOtyt ~ -a-,. '"" pr~~ p11111 1t ., m W"t &et 8ttwt., 0 M IMO, ()Qlllt ....... Ca1J1orn1e mte
VOL. 71, NO. 210
Cable TV r8tes boosted
Laguna, San Juan Capistrano councils approve hike requests
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of ... .,..,,,... ....
Cable television customers in
Laguna Beach and San Juan
Capistrano will be paying more
for the service following city
council action ln both towns
Tuesday night, but Laguna's cable
TV watchers won't be hit as hard
-at least for the time being.
Storer C.able Communications,
of Laguna Nigu~l. currently col-
lecta $7 .:w> a month from cable
cu.at.omen in both 80Uth county
municipalities. Tuesday night,
both city councils met to consider
$2.50 increaaes sought by the cable
television firm.
C.able represt>ntativf>fl. Attend-
ing concurrent meetings, aought a
rate hike from $7.50 to $10 per
month. San Juan Capistrano
council members approved the
entire rate hike Tuesday, which
means customers ln that city will
pay $10 per month beginning Nov.
1.
But, after an hour-and-a-half
hearing in Laguna Beach, that
city's council agreed to a
two-phase increase, which will
see local customers paying $9 per
month beginning Oct. 1.
U the cable firm wishes to
pursue the remaining $1 in in-
creaaes, the council ruled, it will
have to complete several tasks.
First, it must have an oper-
OCC class to cover
U.S. ethnic groups
ational receiving dish ins1alled in
the city. Second, the additional $1
increase would become effective
only when 8.5 miles of new cable
line are ins1alled in the Mystic
Hills, Top of the World, Temple
Hills, Arch Beach Heiihta anq
Portafina communities.
George Fowler, driector of rec-
reation and the city's representa-
tive in matters relating to cable
television, said, "Storer is talking
in tenns of 1984 before the dish
can go in, and 1985 before the
(additional hillside) cable can be
A survey of America's ethnic ins1alled."
groups will be presented at Or-However, he said the cable
ange Coast C.Ollege this fall. • company may opt to seek de-
History 150, taught by OCC regulation, which means they
profesaor of history and American wouid no longer be controlled by
studies Nonnan C. Lumian, will the city and could "pretty much
focus on groups originating in charge what they want."
Europe, Aaia, the Americas, the To meet the requirements for
Pacific Ialands, Africa and the deregulation, Storer would have
Middle F.aat. The clasa meets to provide some additional aer-
Mondays, Wednesdays and vices, such as a 30..channel ca-
Fridays from 10 to 11 a .m. pacity, and would have to have a
Registration for all OCC classes subecriber base of at least 77
continues through Sept. 18. For percent of the local area, Fowler
information, phone 432-5772. said.
TENNIS TOURNEY PLANNED ...
From Page A1
MEATS
St.µff ed
1. CHICKO. BREAST -OR
PORK CHOPS .
2. Foster Fann $3ll Fully Cooked
TlltKEY BREAST • • . LI.
3. Tri·TIP
ROAST . $32!
r couioN'·coupoN•couPoN l
I LEAN I
! ~. ~ ··~· ! ----------------~
•
U.S. # 1 Sweet Vine Ripe
1. CANTALOlff .......................... 11• LB.
Extra Fancy Sweet Mtn. 2. 8ARRETT PEARS .................... II• LB.
U.S. # 1 Jumbo Haas
3. AVOCAOOS •••.••..•..•......•.••..•..•.
1. Rm SNAPPER ..................... '1.ll t1.
2. FlET OF SOLE ..•......•......•... '4.41 ll.
(10-12 Oz. Ea.) 3. LOBSTER TAILS ................. '12.11 La.
BAKERY
• FROtCH STICKS ••.•...•.•. Reg. 1.39 ..,.. Ir
• Tit APPLE CAKE •.•••• ~. 3.2& ..,.. '4.11
J
• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. Sept. 7, 1983 * .ti .
Next for the inn crowd: Irvine Hilton.l d
School board candidates
to speak at Mesa forum
Groundwork laid f ~r 15-story, 550-room hotel after new Marriott opens ·'
Candidates running for school board positions on the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District will be invited to speak
Tuesday at a morning meeting of the Costa Mesa Civic Association.
The group will assemble at 7 a.m. at the Costa Mesa Historical
Society, at the corner of Anaheim Avenue and Plumer Street. All
Costa Mesa residents are welcome to attend, said association
manager Chuck Hamilton.
For more information, call him at 645-8358.
Laguna chamber plans buff et mixer
A mini-buffet mixer is planned next Wednesday by the
Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce at Tuttle's Carpets and
Draperies in Laguna Canyon.
The social gathering runs from 5:30 to 7;30 p.m. at 837 Laguna
Canyon Road and includes no-host cocktails, entertainment, door
prizes and deluxe hors d'eovres. Mixer donation is $2. For
information call Tuttle's at 494-8051.
Seminar set on anger and alcoholism
Anger and alcoholism is the topic of a free seminar sponsored
by South Coast Medical Center Sept. 21 at7:30 p.m.
Lau Haaning. clinical coordinator for the South Laguna
hospital's dependency treatment program will discuss how alcohol
and drug use interfere with appropriate expression of anger
The seminar will be held in the hospital auditorium at 31872
Coast Highway. For information, call 499-2295.
Nigue l forum tick e ts available
Season tickets for ihe Community Forum Series in Laguna
Niguel are on sale through Sept. 28.
The series, which features speakers ranging from an assistant
secretary general of the United Nations to Olympic decathlon
medalist Ra fer Johnson, are on sale for $22 for preferred seating to
all five events.
Tickets at the door are $6 for each event.
The series is co-sponsored by Shepherd of the Hills United
Church of Christ and Temple Beth El.
To obtain season ticketscall495-1310 between 9a.m. and 2 p.m.
daily.
City of Hope planning luncheon
The Stanley Mitnick Chapter for the City of Hope will hold a
membership luncheon Monday at 11.30 a.m. at Mercury Savings
and Loan, 8955 Valley View Ave., Buena Park.
For further information, contact activity chairman Mickey
Sheftel at 772-9909 or chapter president Claire Rubin at 63a-8307.
Admission to Monday's luncheon is $3.
By KAREN E. KLEIN
OflNO..,.,... .....
The groundwork of the
550-room Irvine Hilton Hotel will
be laid this afternoon, barely a
month a(ter the nearby 500-room
Irvine Marriot Hotel opened its
doors.
The $70 million Hilton will be
owned by the Irvine Co. and
operated by Hilton Hotels Corp.
on Jamboree Road and Main
Street in Irvine -directly across
the San Diego Freeway from the
Fluor Corp. headquarters.
The Hilton is one of six hotels
Some good
Samaritan;
he helped
himself
A 20-year-old Fountain Val-
ley woman didn't get the help
she expected when he r car
broke down on Ellis Ave nue
near Magnolia Street.
She told police a man drove
up, stopped at her stalled car
and asked, "Do you need
h elp?"
"I h ave help on the way,"
she replied (she had called h er
father.)
"Let me sit here and try it,"
the man said.
H e got in the car, tried to
turn over the m otor and then
left.
The driver didn't realize
until later that her wallet -
con taining $135 -was m~
ing. It turned out that her
would-be benefactor had h elp-
ed somebody all right -himseli. .
Something fishy about that customer
Costa Meaa police arrested a
25-year-old Santa Ana man early
today when an ottlcer caught him
walking out the front door of the
Pacific SeatOOd and Fish Market,
2620 Newport Blvd., carrying two
bags ol shrimp and lobster. OHloer
Steve Rautus booked Matt James
Browning Into the city jall on suspi-
cion ol burglary. He Is the third
burglary suspect arrested at the
small fish market in the last two
months
A couple moving Into an apartment
on the 2300 block of Elden Avenue In
Costa Mesa said a $<l69 canoe
mounted on top of their car was
stolen Monday They left the canoe
on the car after discovering the
HI-loot boat didn't Ill Into their
garage. police were told.
A 50-year-old Costa Mesa man
driving a car on southbound NewPQf1
Boulevard got himself In trouble
Tuesday night because he acclden-
tally shirted hla car Into reverse rather
than drive when the atopllght
changed. After hitting the car behind
him, he drove ott only to be followed
Into a neatby bar parltlng lot. Police
arrested Clinton Baesman on suspi-
cion of drunl<en driving and misde-
meanor hit and run
Thieves stole four rims and tires, a
roll bar and a brush Quard from a
pickup truck parked Inside a fenced
yard behind a car dealerahlp at 196&
Harbor Blvd. Tuesday. Loss wu
estimated at $1,500.
A 21-year-old Costa Mesa woman
who said she had been baby sitting a
Huntington Beach couple's two chll·
dren told polloe Tuesday the hu ..
band assaulted her by repeatedly
picking her up by her neck. She
claimed he apparently was upset
because ahe had taken the children
to their aunt' a house after the coople
were five hours late returning home
Newport Beach
Thieves pried ott a "No Diving"
sign from the Lido Isle Bridge and
took a flag bearing the City of
Newport Beach seal from a flagpole
In front of City Hall. Both Items are
worth S25.
Crooks took a 10 horsepower
generator worth $1,200 from a con-
struction site at Spyglaaa Hiii Road
and San Miguel Drive. The burglare
aleo cau~2.620 In damage by pouring I wder In the fuel tanks
or a tract an a dump truck.
More than $2,300 worth of fishing
reels were stolen from a trawler
docked off the 900 block of VI a Lido
Nord. The flshlnQ equipment had
been hidden under a matreas In the
boat's statMoom.
Laguna Beach
A man reported to be Intoxicated
and bothering pauersby II the
com8t'" ot Crees and Glenneyre
streets Tuesday al1ernoon waa quea-
tloned by Laguna Beach police who
satd he was not drunk. but advised
him to cease being a disturbance.
Police made a late night arrest
Tuesday In the 300 block of Ocean
Avenue, apprehending Frederick Lee
Vaughn. 23, a Huntavllle, Texas, man
wanted for violation or his parole for
aggravated robbery. Vaughn was
taken to Orange County Jell where he
was being held without ball.
A resident of the 1900 block of
Canez Avenue reported finding a
scorpion In the garage. A police
officer was dispatched to klll the
arachnid.
Fountain Valley
A man Who gave the lmpreuton
that he had a gun In his waletband
escaped Tueeday with $480 from
Fullerton Savings & Loan, 18020
Brookhurat St. The man dleplayed a
note demanding money In a vinyl
notebook.
-
l .. ,· -:· ' ~. . ~ . ' -. J • ... • ••
\
• • , • ' I If • • "9' . . ·~ -. • I • ' • : • • ' I • Jf..., • . • I ' ., 'Ir' • ,·...: '.. ' I
Cloudy and cooler along the Coast
Coastal C-•·ld " &6
Columble.S C 03 n COllHnbut Ill ee
Oallu-FtWOf'ln .. 77
Felt Tl'>U~ L.,.. clOu.,._ II>-Oeyton 811 ee
et...ing end -.1ng more ._,.,...... o.n-113 se r
lonlQ/ll And Thvr9Cley morning C-.. O..""-1 1 52
l-eday ::::": T-ed<ly 70 to 7• el Ille 0..•001 811 se
-U to 115 In Ille lnllln<I OuMll ee 47
ve11ey9 LOWI ton1g1>1 60 to ee EIPuo M 7•
UVM ~ wind• 00.lnQ n1Q111 -F•l>entl• &a ~
morning hOl.n lrom Point Conc.ption to Fwgo 112 ..
-~lllew> '°''*· *°"'lnO toUt"· FllQ9toft 81 55
_, 8 to 16 kl1011 ~ enwnoon tnd Ot .. IF .... 77 ~ = ._,. ey 8ovther'ly Hlillo<d .. 71
lo4-T~wtlll bf-... ~ 79 41
1oee11y 6 to I -on -.u. r-.q >4onolulv .. 75
-Low -· wtlll only .,.,,.., HOUiton " 74 !::'!"° dut1nG .,..,,_ --*IV ~ 81 &4 J--..MIM 113 71 J--83 73
~ 82 311
~City ee 61
Extended L.MVeQM 101 78
Ullle AoGll 93 74
t~ " .. ., 71 O:::' Md ,,_nlnO __,log enel IOw lllbOoc* .. 70
--Jy """" eller -.. Memolllo ., 76 Ponlend, .... .. 16 SenFr-77 ea ~ 10. """O -~to IOw eo. Mleml 17 113
lnlend I.OWi -llOe --~ .. 74 68 ~.Or .. _, ~ 68 91 ....... 77 • Mplt-31 p..,, 73 52 ~: 7> 8eM1le &4 61 _....., .. 76. " :: ::..-:= .. .. -Or-.. 81 70 11 77 ..
-Yori< IM f1 96 4f &pot.-IO 61
Temperatures Nof1olll t 7 76 ~ 117 12 ,,,_ " 17
Hor1ll "'-"• 71 •• 9t LCIUM " et TOPI*• " JO
()l(W-Clty 17 71 8t ..... •T-ti n r-t7 74 .. ~ OMIM Tt t1 ""lei!• .. llT\AM 101 Tt
~ ., 10 OrlllMO " 11 lel'tMlonlO .. 78 W~on .. 78
~CM 17 11 ..... '9tWIOI IOI n IM°'"° 12 71 WICNl1 ., 17 .. 12 ,,... , , .... 116 71 --· H ST ..._... 104 .,
A-..e .. ... ""...,.,,_. .. I) ..
"'*'" 1111 17
41 ..... IC Ol!v ., 7t Tides SU Rf RIPIRT ~In " 77
tlllllmor• •• 71 ~ 12 eo .. 71 T004Y ...,_ell 70 41 8-tow •Olp,,.. o.• --" 41 lecOtwl lllQll IO ti PJl'I ••• ao.ton •• n ......,.., ·-t7 71 l'lr14111t" •.. ,."' 0 4
llllf!llO .. IO l'lrtl IOw 11'01."' .. LOCAnoet .... ...... ll\lflltlolon .. 74 8eeotlcl hlgll 4.Mp.M u =:r:.::. .i.ty
)..6 ,.
~ .. .. 9-ldlOw 11.Cla p.M. ••• ,.., = ~.a.c N 74 M -'""1 ti 7'11 pM., -40lll •i.. NNport M ei..-.w.v " 71 ,....,....,. ... ,,.,.. --0 .... ......, .. ='*=on .. ,0 = ~N C " .. 7 IO pm • g:;• 72 .. --••oa11111 !Odey.-• =-= t:• flllr'900d n al • •~ .,,. w_.., __ eefllllet fOOCI Cltle!Mett ., 11 .,,,,,. w...,..._.......-. .... ..,'°" ..,.,,,, .·
, -
planned for the Orange Coast
area, each with more than 200
rooms. Many of them are intended
to 1erve the expected horde of
tourists who will be ln the area
next summer for the 1984 Olym-
pics.
But the Hilton will not be
completed in time for the Olym-
pics, said Susan Bums, Hilton's
manager of public relations.
Burns said the 15-story hotel
will be designed for the business
traveler , just right for its location
about a mile from John Wayne
Airport.
The hotel will feature conven-
tion and meeting room facilities, a
20,000-equare-foot ballroom, two
reetauranta, a lobby bar and a
lounge and concierge suites, with
private check-in, breakfast and
lounges available, Burns said.
It is expected to open in the
spring of 1985.
The Irvine site is Hilton's third
venture into Orange County. The
company also operates the Hilton
at the Park in Anaheim and will
operate the Anaheim Hilton and
Towers, acheduled to open in
spring 1984, Bums said.
The 3,000 hotel and motel rooms
currently housing tourists and .
business travelers in Newport
Beach, Irvine, Cost.a Mesa and
Laguna Beach will aoon be jolntd
by nearly that many more, 1t
optimistic planners and ~
velopers have their way.
While city officiala trumpet
increased bed tax revenues p
ample justification for the rw!W
hotels, some community groups
are afraid the hotela will disrupt
their low-density residenti•.I
areas.
Increased traffic, more
high-density housing needed for
hotel employees and incttuec1
burden on city services -such as
police protection and physical
improvements -are among the
residents' concerns.
Big wheels in Huntington
Rolle r skater Jo hn Adamoli and
bicyclist Woody Itson maneuver
together inside a curved ramp as
they demonstrate their talents at
the annual Septemberfest on the
Huntington Beach sands.
County builders double pace
Lower interest rates bring construction back from a bad 1982
By ANDREA ADELSON °' _ _,,... .....
Orange County's building rate
in the first seven months of the
year is nearly double year-ago
figures and closely matches climb-
lng statewide building activity, a
building trade group reports.
Buoyed in the year's first half
by lower interest rates and rising
consumer confidence, statewide
housing production rose by 86
percent to 158,400, says the state
Building Industry Aaaociation.
Last year's abysmal ra~ of 85,000
was the worst since World War Il.
Orange County has issued more
than 7,300 permits so far in 1983,
twice 1982's pace of 3,194, the
trade association says.
Despite the surge ln building,
the pace of sales remains fairly
slow, largely because of interest
rates.
True, Tuesday's post-holiday
stock market buying spree was
triggered in part by downward
pressure on those rates because of
a lower than expected national
money supply, but borrowing
rates still aren't low enough,
building authorities contend.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Cntifi~d G~molo i1t, AGS
DIAMOND CUTTING
comes to Southeast A.Sia
Diamond cutting. an ancient craft
that has been concentrated In Juat a
few of the wOf'ld'a traditional gem
oenter1, 19 a growtng trade In
Southeast ~a. There are aeveral
good things that ahould emerge
from thlt fact. For one, It enab ...
the people of that troubled part of
the globe to get lnvotved In a high·
ly-lkllled proteaefon. The diamond
cutter la a aought-atter artisan who
wtll atways be able to find WC>ft(.
Anoth« plua I• the effect that the
Southeatt Allan• can haYe on the
world diamond market. Untll now,
ltrMI and lndla have ~ the
wortd't two foremoet diamond cut-
ting centere, but polltlcal and labor troubte. there .,.. hquent oau ...
of dlaruptlon In the wortd mltt<et.
Now, wfth diamond• being cut In
Bangkotc, Thalland and rn Kota
BhlN, Malayela. among other
plaoea. the WOfkl It UIUfed of a
more dlverM aupply of cut
dlamonda. What doea that meen to
you? tt meene tr,at the euppty of
diamond• wtff not be bott**l(ed
by a ahortege of C\lttera -thu•
prtoea are llkefy to be more ltable. Thal'• good n.we for all of ua, lan't
It?
"Today's interest rates are too
high to sustaln the recovery
figures ~n in the first half," said
Ben Bartolotto, director of the Loe
Angeles-bued Construction In-
dustry Research Boa.rd.
However. the coming year
could be better for builders and
homebuyers since rates histori-
calJy decline in an election year, he
said.
Skelet.a.l framing on housing in
Orange County is still running
behind housing activity in the rest
of the state, according to John
Erskine, head of the local BIA
office. Five other areas, including
San Diego and Ventura, recorded
higher building activity.
In Orange County, Erskine said
the three-month carpenters strike
-despite interim agreements
with some developers -"has had
a serious impact, particularly on
those bui lders caught
mid-stream."
"Builders had sold homes to
people. hoping they could get
them built in 60 or 90 days. Then
there's a strike and interest
rates ... ," Erskine said. The result,
he said, has been canceled
escrows, though he couldn't .. y
how many prospective buyers
have pulled out because of higher
borrowing C08ts.
The year.'1 first-half Cigures ~
also distorted by as much u 15
percent because of a before-June
surge when builders pushed pro-
jects through to avoid meeting
revised state energy standards,
Bartolottx> added.
In Newport Beach, an "on-rush
of plans wanted to come in under
the old standard," said Raimar
Schuller. city building official.
Building permit valuations in
Newport jumped in May and
April, going above $2.4 million
both months, then fell to $1 .75
million in June.
Builders flee the coast for the
sununer and return in the fall,
Schuller said.
"We expect the rest of the
month to be very heavy," he said.
The BIA forecast is for about
15.000 homes to go up in the
county th.is year, although the
Construction Industry Research
Board is less optimistic, predicting
only 11,000 new homes on the
market in 1983.
..
I
I
S600.00 & Up
!).
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
1809 NEWPORT BLVO . COSTA MESA
SINCE 1948
PHONE 648~401
J
1
•
A• * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1983
TOP OF THE NEWS
NATION
Child prostitution ring " ·broken up by Vermont cops
By ilae A11oc1arec1 Pre~•
MONTPELIER, Vt. -Police say they have
broken up a child prostitution ring apparently
run by the youngsters themaelves. The 10
Battleboro children, aged 8 to 13, acted indepen-
dently, police said today. "There's no adults in
charge of this ring. There's no male pimp. It's
children and children. I think it i.s structured
within the peer group," said Lt. Richard Guthrie.
''The kids are seeking out their own clientele."
The children have been offering sexual favors in
exchange for money for nearly a year, according
to Guthrie.
McCarthy has h eart attack
CULPEPER, Va. -Fonner Sen. Eugene
McCarthy, who challenged President Lyndon
J ohnaon for the 1968 Democratic presidential
nomination at the height of the Vietnam War, has
been hospitalized after a heart attack. McCarthy
was listed in fair condition today, said Arlene
Kilby, night supervisor at Culpeper Memorial
Hospital, who would not release other details. He
was to be transferred today to Georgetown
University Hospital for further tests.
Stay of execution granted
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -Less than 14
hours before he was to be strapped into the
electric chair, convicted killer James David
Raulenon w on a temporary stay of execution
while a federal judge decided whether to
overturn his sentence. Raulet90n, 33, had been
acheduled to die at 7 a.m. today for the 1975
shooting death of a Jackaonville policeman
during a restaurant robbery.
Astronaut gets new post
SPACE CENTER, Houston -Richard H .
Truly, a Navy captain whoee first command was
aboard the latest flight
o f space shuttle
Challenger, is leaving
the astronaut corps to
take c¥rge of the
newly organized Naval
Space Command. In a
joint announcement
Tuesday, the Navy and
the National Aero-
nautics and Space Ad-
ministration said the Truly
45-year-old former \est pilot will take over the
Naval Space Command on Oct. 1 when the
organization formally starts operations in
Dahlgren, Va.
He will become the first astronaut to return
to naval service in the 25-year history of NASA.
STATE
Major cocain e ring broken
SAN FRANCISCO -The break-up of a
major cocaine distribution ring will have a
"far-reaching impact" on drug trafficking in the
Pacific Northwest and possibly the supply
pipeline from Florida, the U.S. Attorney has
predicted. Eleven people face arraigrunent today
following their arrests over the Labor Day
weekend.
Speeders, drunks face rap
SACRAMENTO -Legislation to crack
down on speeders and drunken teen-age drivers
has won state Senate approval. A 21 -6 vote
Tuesday pasaed a meaaure to require a driver's
licenae suspension and a $500 fine for driving
over 85 miles per hour. A 37-0 vote passed a bill to
require the suapenaion of a minor's driver's
licenae for a year on conviction of drunken
driving.
Space shuttle in good shape
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE -The
space shuttle Challenger will return to Kennedy
Space Center in Florida with very little damage
from its latest flight, a NASA official says. "F.ach
time it seems to be getting better," Herman K.
Widick, spokesman for the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration, said at a Tuesday
news conference. Widick said Challenger may
head back to Florida u early as Friday -bolted
atop a specially modified Boeing 747 -after a
four-day turnaround.
WORLD
Beirut sh elling kills 3
BEIRUT, Lebanon -Shelling killed three
French peacekeepers and wounded four in west
Beirut today, informed aources said. French war
jet. 9C!'ambled from the aircraft carrier Foch to
tearcli out the source of fire in the
Druae-<X>ntrolled central mountains.
Pilots seek Moscow ban
LONOON -Brit.I.ah, West Gennan, French
and Scandinavian pilota met with their govern-
ment. today to try to convince them to Implement
a 80-day ban on fiighta to Moecow to protest the
~ downing of a South Korean jumbo
~tlineT.
Weinberger visiting troops
PANAMA CITY, Panama -Defense-
Secreta.ry Caspar Weinberger, viatting U.S .
troope trainlng In a muddy rain forest. aocwled
the Soviet Union of "enford.ng the law of the
jungle" in ahootlng down a South Korean
airliner. Weinberger waa to leave for El Salvador
today, oontlnulJ'\I t\11 C-entral American tour wt th
a vbdt to San Vicente province, a alte of heavy
(~htlfll in the 47-month-<>ld dvll war there.
Lettt In the day he was to ao to HondurM to vlllt
U.S. troop9 there for military eHl'Cl8es.
'
'
Search
may have
found
wreckage
WAK.KANAl, Japan (AP)
-The number of Soviet
vessels operating where a
South Korean airliner waa
shot down last week nearly
doubled today, the Maritime
Safety Agency said, raising
speculation they may have
found wreckage or bodies.
The deputy director of the
agency office in Wakkanai,
Hiroshi Kishima, said 13 Sov·
iet boats -nearly two times
the number seen in the area
before today-were observed
searching waters northeast of
Moneron Island, west of
Sakhalin Island. He said an
Ilyushin reconnaissance plane
also was observed.
"They may have found
something, but we have no
way of knowing," Kishima
said. The Soviets have banned
outsiders from searching the
area.
A Korean Air Lines Boeing
747 crossed Soviet territory in
the area Sept. 1 and was shot
down with 269 people aboard.
all presumed dead. On Tues-
day the Soviets for the first
time admitted their fighter
planes downed th~ jumbo jet.
The waters in the area are
too deep for divers to operate,
Kishima said, though the exact
depth of the water is unknown
because it is in Soviet territory.
Other safety agency officials
speculated the Soviets may be
using nets or underwater ves-
sela In their search for frag-
ments of the plane.
Duk ff. Cho burns a Sovie t flag near Los Angeles
harbor where a Russian freighter docked Tuesday.
Soviet freighter met
by ~boycott, protest
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Dockside demonstrators chanted
"Nyet, nyet, Soviet" and long-
shoremen refused to unload a
Soviet cargo freighter at Los
Angeles Harbor to protest the
Soviet Union's downing of a
South Korean jetliner.
"It's to make known to the
Soviets and the Soviet shipping
organization that the ... United
States people will not tolerate the
massacre of innocent civilians,"
said Bob Zirgulis, whoee ad hoc
Anti-Soviet League coordinating
committee organized the Tuesday
protest.
'' ... We want the Soviet seamen
to see lhi.s and take it back to their
people."
An estimated 250 to 300 demon-
strators, Including Korean church
members, picketed the docks
without incident, said Port of Los
Angeles spokesman Mike Levitt.
The protest was spurred by the
deaths of 269 people aboard a
Korean Air l:..ines 747 jet shot
down last week over the Sea of
Japan.
Carrying signs and chanting
slogans such as "Stop Russian
Trade!" and "Nyet, Nyet, Soviet,"
the demonstrators marched for
about 30 minutes on the sidewalk
along Ocean Boulevard, shaking
their fists and placards at the
Soviet crew members.
"I don't like Russians," said one
elderly Korean woman. "They are
murderers. They should gQ
home."
100,000jam
Seoul arena
for memorial
By Tbe A11oclated Pre11
More than 100,000 mourners jammed a Seoul
stadium today to denounce the Soviet Union for
downing a South Korean jumbo jetliner, and the
Kremlin tried to deflect world outrage by
launching a pr~ campaign comparing President
Reagan to a Nazi.
Australian pUots, meanwhile, agreed to heed
a call by an international organization of com-
mercial pilots to ban flights to Moecow, but there
was little immediate response from pilots' associa-
tions in other nations.
"God will not forgive this deed," South
Korean Prime Minister Kim Sang-hyup told
mourners, many screaming with grief, during the
mass rally in Seoul. "Retribution and curse will
fall upon them for the crime they have com-
mitted."
A s tatement read to the crowd said: "It is
difficult to control our tears and keep from
gnashing our teeth when we think of the last
terrifying moments of the passengers and
crew ... An inhuman attack by Soviet planes using
sophisticated wea~ ... An attack during a time
of peace and not war."
In Moscow, one day after the Soviets
acknowledged shooting down the airliner with 269
people aboard, the government-run press un-
leashed a savage attack on the United States,
comparing U.S. officials to Nazis and accusing
Reagan of stirring up anti-Soviet hysteria.
Russ coIDplain
GLEN COVE, N.Y . (AP) -The Soviet
government wants $29,000 for damage allegedly
caused by demonstrators who broke through
police lines and stormed its compound here after
the downing of a Korean plane, police say.
Gerald Giordano, police commisaioner in this
New York City suburb, said Tuesday that the
Soviets notified him they would file a damage
report asking money for repairs to a surveillance
camera, fences and the lawn surrounding the
36-acre estate, called Killenworth.
Giordano said he does not know· who the
Russians expect will pay for the alleged damage.
Mayor Alan Parente said, "U they're asking us for
the money, I can assure you we will not pay it."
'I'hanks for giving your appliances
the afternoon off.
The electricit y supply in our town is
like that which runs a modeLelectric
train . When the electric load is evenly dis-
tributed throughout the day, there 's
usually enough power to go around . But
on hot afternoons , office and home air
conditione rs are added. And dryers. And
ovens. And other appliances. And the total
electric load could get too heavy. So use
your air conditioner sparingly.,
When you're hom e,
please set it no lower than 7'<f. Wh en you
go 014t, turn it to 85° or higher. And
please give your appliances the afternoon
off, too . That way you can help lighten
the peak load and help provide enough
electricity to go around all day long.
And we can defer the building of new
power plants ... and help keep electric bill s
down. You really do hav e the power. So
please give your appliances
the afternoon off.
Southern Californla Edison
.s;CE
• '
.....
Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT /Wedneaday. ~t. 7. 1883 NB Cl)
,---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------STOCKS
YEDNESDA YlS C10SINC PRICES
!..ti,... N•t S••t\ N tt
P E '''" Clo.... C no P( 1\0\ (IO•• CllO
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OUOTAllONSINCWDE I AADH ~ IH[ NEW 'l'OAIC, MIOWtlT PACIFIC. P8W, 808T0H OETAOIT AHO CIHCINNAtlll<>Cfl VCC>U.NOES AHO REPORTED I V THE NASO IHS1tNE1
S•lf''\ ""1f't \•I•\ Nl't
" E "O• Clo"' C"ll P f l\O\ C•o-. C"IJ
S.t•\ N•I
P E ll<h C.IO" (.""
....:='~ -a !1 -" .... _ ~
>••M ,_,..,,
Pl l!O\ flo~ CllO
•
Dow Jones Final
Up 5.39
Cloelng 1.24'.11
' ••••111 l ...................................... ! I Money market interest
drops to 9.69 percent I
By tile A11ocla&ed Preti ~
WASHINGTON -Beginning today, finandaJ
institutions and commercial banks may pay aa mu.ch as
9.69 percent interest on six-month money market
certificates, down from 9.78 percent a week ago. They •
may pay as much as 9.21 percent on three-month f
certificates, compared with 9.28 percent last week. ·
The new yields are a result of Tuesday's auction of !
Treasury securities, in which yields were just above the !
Aug. 22 levels of 9.18 percent for three-month billa and ,
9.29 percent for six-month billa. I
• t VA W endorses Chrysler pact .
DETROIT -A panel oC Uruted Auto Workers
members has overwhelmingly endorsed a two-year, $1
billion contract that would put Chrysler Corp. workers
closer to parity with their counterparts at General
Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. The new accord,
tentatively agreed to by union negotiators and the
automaker on Labor Day and endorsed Tuesday by a
170-member panel of UAW leaders, would give
Chrysler workers a $2.42-an-hour raise over the life of
the contract, the UAW said. That would put their baae ;
hourly pay, exclusive of regularly echeduled I
cost-of-living allowances, at about $12.42 when the pacW
expires in October 1985.
·I
U.S. automakers sales increase
DETROIT -The six major U.S. automakers say."'
their new-car sales were up 15.9 percent in late August
compared with a weak performance a year ago. U.S ..
automakers said Tuesday they sold 191,170 cars
between Aug. 21 -31, compared with l&Ul6 in the
period last year.
Mortage rates rise in August
)
' WASHINGTON -Reflecti.ng a national§. ' interest rates, mortgage rates roee in August to
average 13.63 percent from 13.25 percent in July, th
government says. The August i.ncreaae was the
straight monthly gain. The figures are for long-te
fixed-rate mortgages for newly built homes, the Federal
Home Loan Bank Board said Tuesday. -;
' Republic wins wage agreemen')
MINNEAPOLIS -Republic Airlines h.u reach~
a wage concession agreement with the last of 1~ unions. The A.88ociation of Flight Attendants t.entativel
agreed Tuesday to 15 percent pay cuts and a wage
through next May to help the stuggling carrier out of r'4
ink, the Minneapolis-based airline said. •
' STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES .I'~
WHAT NYSE DID
NEW YORK IAP) Seo. 7
Ad•ene«I T-...
OtctlMcl 714 Unclleno-d U2 T olel IHUti lt71
f'l•whl9h• 71 New '°"'' 3
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW YORK IAPI Seo 7
Ad\lllnC»d o.dllled u~ Toleltuuea
Ntw hi9fit
N•w-t
METALS
Toon
:QI
* "' m 25 2
Pm oev ms "' 30S 1'79 74 ,
NEW YOllKIAPI FIMI Dow .i-. e~ ;"' t°" ~·· r"· ~ S I
o...tt•~ >O Incl 11l9.131253M lnt.17 126'.ll+UI 20 Trn S70.f1 snn 5Q., sn.a+ l.11 IS Utt l>OM 1314S 110 1' l>0..'7+ 0.14 65 SI~ 4'0.7' 4'6.7~ -.» ffUl+ 1.D lnclUt 10,412,IOO Tr•n 2,m,700 Ullll 1,19,000 6551~ 14.S 10,500
AM£RICAN LEADERS ,.