HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-09-13 - Orange Coast Pilot...
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THI ORANGE COAST COUNTY fDITION
TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 13, 1983 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
FV educator I
• •• • • • ••
• eo......., "=rt PICH member• uytheyhaveworkedfor 2 ~Y'*t to gathlf oraurooea aupportiOr t c. H..ithCltY AllOClatee, theyeay, •tarted on1y a wmontheego wtth
a handru1 Of peoptelntent tlmpty on kllllng the IMC proPOUf. •Control: PICHmemben want oommunttycontrol of the hoepftal, rather than unMntty
controf. Un:veratty hoepltale, they uy, ooet more becauM patlenta mutt pay for expenilw
teaching ,net ,....,oh awograma. HMlthW•t, furthermore, would control the campW hOepltal
u It doee otherl within lta chain. .
• Looelloft: The IMC lite II centrally loceted>wtthln lrvtne111Qhere of ll)ftuence Md wlll
provtde 10Ce11from mlfOr ptanned road• to alt of lrvfM. PICH m.mbera uy. The HMtthWeet
locatlon, ctoeer to Newport e..cn than to 10me r..adenUal area In lrvtne, wlll provide doetora
an ee8)'=o r.-p profits from theweetthy Newport cflentele, they uy.
• A don: IMC hu repeetedty auggested tt wanta UCt affiliation but not controf. UCI
aJr .. dy hat a tMChtng hoapltal, IMC aupportere say-In Orange at the flnanctalty troubled UCI
Medleal Center.
on national
scJ:iool panel
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of ... OOillJ,... 9Ull
A hospital dream fades
While attending a briefing in
Washington about 18 months ago,
Dr. Ruben Ingram questioned
U.S. Secretary of Education Ter-
rell Bell about why no elementary
educators had been appointed to
an important oommission explor-
ing national school issues. UCI Me dical Center plan may be dropped by special R egents committee Ingram, who is assistant super-
intendent of the Fountain Valley
School District, said Bell told him
the nation's most critical education
problems exist at the high school
level. But in retrospect, Bell told
him, elementary educators should
not have been slighted.
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of the Deity Pltot lt.n
For nearly 20 years, UC
Irvine has nurtured the dream
of building a hospital on its
campus.
The faculty and dean of the
California College of Medicine
at Irvine wanted more than a
hospital. They wanted a
world-class research center -
a J ohns Hopkins of the West, a
place which would make the
UCI Medical School synony-
mous with the latest break-
throughs in medical treatment
and research, with the best
that science could offer to
better the human condition.
It is a dream that has often
seemed close to becoming re-
ality over the past 15 years -
and one that has often seemed
pure fantasy.
This week, the dream may
effectively come to an end.
UCI's campus hospital,
prop ose d by
Chatsworth-based Health-
West Foundation, will be con-
sidered Thursday by a special
committee of the UC Board of
Regents meeting in San Fran-
cisco.
The committee, acting on a
0 a: z 0 > ~ lrvln• 0 Medlcel ~ Center
~ Site e
Map on left shows site for proposed UCI Medical
Center, map on right shows site for proposed
Irvine Medical Center.
recommendation by UC Presi-
dent David Gardner, may de-
cide to qWllJh the proposal
entirely. Or, it may agree to a
medical faculty compromise
plan and make no decision on
the campus proposal or on a
rival hospital proposal backed
by a powerful coalition of
Irvine's business and com-
munity leaders.
Irvine's 20-year hospital
race has attracted several
medical groups. Irvine, the
largestc.ity in the nation which
does not have a hospital, is a
lucrative marketplace for any
health facility.
With a 1983 population of
72,934 and estimates which
project the city's numbers will
swell to 208,115 by the year
Smith atta&s judges
for reaching too far
By JEFF ADLER
°' -°'""' ...... ·-Echoing a theme sounded by
.President Reagan during his 1980
election campaign, U.S. Attorney
General William French Smith
Monday told California att6meys
meeting in Anaheim that the
nation's federal judges frequently
are maklng new laws rather than
interpreting existing ones.
"The judiciary has turned in -
creasingly from deciding cases and
interpreting laws to making law,
supervising the manner in which
laws are executed and how ap-
propriated funds should be
spent," Smith told about 350
attorneys attending a luncheon
during the State Bar Association's
annual meeting.
"As the judiciary has moved
away from its more traditional
role, it meanwhile has handed
down badly divided and
fragmented decisions, creating
unstable precedents that invite
more litigation," said the attorney
general, a partner in a Loa Angeles
law firm before his Cabinet ap-
pointment.
Speaking on the subject of the
Constitution's provisions for the
separation of powers among the
legislative, executive and judicial
branches of government, Smith
also oommented that Con$tre98
(See ATroRNEY, Pase AZ) William French Smith
Call 842-4321 with new• tips
2020, Irvine is ripe for picking
by hospital planners.
The 1980 census showed
Irvine's median household in-
come was $31,300.
Out of five groups interested
in building an Irvine hospital
in 1981, two -HealthWest,
backed by the university and a
community support group, and
Hoag Memorial Hospital,
backed by a community group
called People for an Irvine
Community Hospital (PICH)
-emerged last year as the
prime oompetitors.
HealthWest has applied to
build a hospital on campus,
while Hoag would.build Irvine
Medical Center (IMC), a hospi-
tal on donated Irvine Co. land
north of the San Diego Free-
way between Sand Canyon
and the Laguna Freeway.
The current battle is not
unique. In fact, it plays almost
like a rerun of an earlier
hospital fi~ht in Irvine.
In 1975, two groups -the
UCI Medical School and West-
ern World, a group of Newport
Beach doctors and investors
joined by Hoag Hospital,
(Sff UCI HOSPITAL, Page At)
Federal officials are making up
for the oversight now by
co-sponsoring a 20-member panel
that will study elementary educa-
tion issues of the 1980s.
Ingram will now get a chance to
express his ooncerns in this area
because he has been appointed to
the national panel, which holds its
first meeting next week in Racine,
Wis.
"We're going to set an agenda
for studying the role of elemen-
tary education in the United
States," the local educator said.
Ingram said the group will
oonsi.st of teachers, administrators
and bualnesa leaders. He said the
panel will follow up on the work
done by the National Commission
on Excellence in Education , ap-
Dr. Rube n Ingram
pointed by the Reagan Adminis-
tration.
That commission released a
highly publicized report in April
calling for longer school days,
higher academic standards in high
school, more homework and high-
er teacher salaries to attract su-
perior educators.
Ingram said that report made
virtually no comments, however,
on elementary education.
He said improvements in
elementary education have been
(See SCHOOL, Pase AZ)
Modesty I atal for
victim of NB fire
By STEVE MAJlBLE
Of ... ..., .... ._
A woman who died in a New-
port Be.ch fire reportedly resisted
attempta to aave her life and rilfly
have delayed leaving the bumihg
structure becauae she didn't have
any clothes on.
Steven Craig Nicholson, a
24-year-old bartender, told of-
ficers he tried in vain to get
Tonnitta White to leave the New -
port Heights house which was
gutted in the Sunday evening fire.
White, a 21-year-old Santa Fe
Sprlngll resident, was found in the
living room of the 419 El Modena
Ave. residence, curled behind a
couch, firemen said. She died at
Hoag Memorial Hospital about 30
minute8 after paramedics wheel-
ed her in.
Tiwugh an a utopsy has not been
completed, investigators ten-
tatively listed the cause of death as
smoke inhalation. White suffered
third degree burns over 40 to 50
percent of her body.
Though it is believed the fire
was triggered by a cigarette that
was dropped and apparently al-
lowed to smolder, authorities said
they have yet to find evidence of
what started the blaz.e. The fire,
fully involved when firefighters
arrived, caused about $250,000
damage to the house, owned by
Nicholson's parents.
Nicholson, who suffered burns
(Sff FIRE, Pase AZ)
Camera crew finds body
Remains believed to be Tustin victim of Ne;rt plane crash
By GLENN SCO'M' Tustin was a passenger in the "M a One," when they said
ot 111e OOillJ,......,, single-engine plane spot1ed Sat-the saw the body bobbing in the
A television camera crew dis-urday on the ocean floor 35 feet water. They contacted the Harbor
covered a body floating near their under water. Patrol, which sent officers to pick
boat this morning as they waited Leffler's body had not been it up.
for salvage workers to begin found before today. On Saturday, Meanwhile, the salvaging crew
hoisting the wreckage of a private divers sent to the wreckage dis-was scheduled to tow the wreck-
airplane that plunged into the oovered the body of Marc West, age to shore today.
ocean off Newport Beach last 24, of Costa Mesa still strapped Workers from Aircraft Salvage
week. inside the battered fuselage. and Parts Inc. of Hawthorne were
The body of a man found just Little said the body found this expected to use air bags to lift the
before 10 a.m. today a quar-mom.lng was to be taken to the fuselage and wings of the
ter-mileoffshorewasnotimmedi-Orange County Sheriff's Harbor single-engine Cessna 172 Sky-
ately identified, sa1d Newport Patrol headquarters, where a hawk 35 feet to the ocean surface.
Beach police officer Thomas Lit-deputy coroner was to inspect it. The tug then was to pull the
tle. The two members of the empty aircraft through Newport
However, authorities have said KABC-TV camera crew, Jan Harbor tg a boat ramp at Newport
since the crash early laat Thunday Anderaon and Jay Schermerhorn, Dunes, where the wreckage was
they believe David Leffler, 28, of were waiting in Anderaon 's boat, (Sff BODY, Pa1e A!)
HB loses chance for award ...
.. . but city still intends to proceed with senior housing project
By ROBERT BARUR °' .. ~ .........
For awhile, it looked like the
City of Huntington Beach was
going to get a statewide pat on the
back while striving to eue a
housing shortage that can oft.en
mean tragedy to lta 1enior citizen.a.
Now, city offkiab will have to
be content with juat dotna the
good deed. But that will be credit
enough, offldall say, If it help1 the
elderly find a place to Uve that's
safe, corntoriable and tometh.lna
they can afford.
Word wu recetved from Secra-
mento last week that Hunttncton
&ach was belnl constdered for
the 1983 Le.,ue of Callfomia
Oties Award for Excellence.
The dty was cited for an
''unusual partnerahip'' with it.I
redevelopment agency al)d the
William Lyon Development Com-
pany of Newport Beach.
The aareement Will result In
212 nmtal apartment unita and 96
condominium unita for aale at
below market pricee.
To be called Ten-y Park Senior
Houam,, the project wW be
financed through a bond iaaue to
be repaid from income from rental
and ule of the condominium
unita. The site, partially owned by
the city, la west of Beach
Boulevard and eouth of Talbert
Avenue.
The ~uty of the agreemen t,
according to Tom Tlnscher, the
d ty'a di.rector of buslnea and
ind1.&1trial enterpriaes, ii that it
wW not require ongoing subsidies
from federal, atat.e and local
govenunentl. Apartment rent
will range from $1 60 to S260 per
month.
The plan la proceeding on
mchedule, acoord.lna to Tbucher,
and work la alatec:f to start next
month on street.I and pubUc
uUUtJee.
The project la expected to be
completed next summer.
But even aa work wu speedinc
ahead, lt wu revealed Monday by
CSee SENIOR HOUSING, Page At>
A
a
t
c
t\2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Sept. 13, 1983
SENIOR ...
From Page A1 Lawmen hunting escaped prisoner ·
a League of Califorrua Ciues
representative that the project
foaled to be included In the list of
five finaltSts for the award.
Accused Balboa lsl~nd rapist reportedly 'had help' fleeing Orange County Jail
Assistant Director Cla rk
Goecker was sketchy on reuona
but said the h ousing plan "was not
substanllve enough" when oom-
pereo<tto projects or other cities.
By STEVE MARBLE °' ... °""" ........ A manhunt throughout
Southern California continued
today for an accused rapist who
made a daring eecape early Mon-
day from the roof of Orange
County Jail.
Michael Eric Gonzales, 23, ac-
cused of rapin.g a Balboa Island
woman early thi.a year, is oon·
sidered dangerous and likely was
aided in hls escape by fellow
prisoners and accomplice1 outside
the jail, authorities said today.
Gonzales, who triggered a
mueive dragnet on Balboa Ialand
last June after escaping from a
mi.nimwn-eecuri1y f.a.l.lty oul.lide
Loe Angeles, lowt!n!d hi.maelf
from the roof of''the four-atory
county jail with bed sheets that
had been tied together.
Orange County Sheriff's Lt.
Wyatt Hart said it's believed
fellow priaoners helped Gonzales
collect the bed sheeta and lli<ely
covered up for the 23-year-<>ld bas
he ripped hia way through a wire
fence to gain acceaa to the roo~
But Vivian Borns, super-
intendent of recreation and ser-
vices, said today that the housing
shortage and high prices often
have tragic overt.ones for elderly
prople and that additional senior
housing is desperately needed.
Kraft charged i~ I 0 killings
Gonzales reportedly ~
the bed sheeta under hia )lil
clothing, whJch he left on the Q>Of
before lowering himself to ihe
ground. Hart said It ia· believed
friends in a getaway car 'Wjere
waiting for Gonz.ales. ·
''Many, many people are paying
higher and higher prices. They are
being forced from their homes by
the increases and there's no place
to live.
"They often have just a fe w
dollars left over each month.
"One elderly woman had all her
belongings in a cardboard box and
was staying in a laundromat when
someone contacted the senior's
outreach program. The people she
was staying with died and she
didn't have a place to stay. We
found a family for her to stay
with She helped out by doing
housework.
''It's really a sad situation,"
Borns declared.
To d irect mint?
Katherine Ortega, former
president of Sanla Ana
State Bank, bas been nomi-
nated as treasurer of the
United Slatea. President
Reagan announced bl1
choice Monday at a 811-
panlc Heritage Week con-
vocation in Wa1biDgton, o.c.
By JEFF ADLER
Ot ... 0.-,,_ .....
Randy Steven Kraft -the
Long Beach computer analyst
already charged with six
homosexual alayings -formally
was chargt:J Monday in Orange
County c.entral Municipal Court
with 10 more Southern California
murders.
Besides the 16 murder counts,
Kraft now faces 23 other related
felony charges and has been
indicted in Michigan for two
additional murders there.
The 38-year-old defendant was
arrested last May near Mission
Viejo when California Highway
Patrol officers observed h is car
driving erratically. When they
pulled his car over, they dis-
covered the strangled body of a
25-year-old Marine lying on the
passenger seat.
Since Kraft's arrest, a special
team of Orange County Sheriff's
Department investigators has in·
terviewed more than 350 wit-
nesses and examined material
collected from Kraft's home.
Sheriff Brad Gates contends
the evidence uncovered shows
that Kraft had a propensity for
sexually deviant behavior that
dates to the early 1970..
The slaying victims all were
young males in their late teens or
early 20.. Most had been strangled
an~ all had been sexually
mutilated, Gates said during a
news conference last week.
Kra!t, who has been held
without bail since hl8 arrest,
pleaded not guilty to the ad·
ditional murder charges during a
brief court appearance before
Municipal Court Judge Jack
Ryan. Last month, Kraft pleaded
innocent to the initial six murder
charges lodged against him.
Although Gonzales reportedly
returned to Balboa Ialand af1er he
escaped earlier thia swnmer, New-
port police said they'd be iur-
prised if the fonner Hunting\on
Park resident returned to Lhe
island again.
Police, though, have circulated
descriptions of the eacapee to
island Neighborhood Wai.ch
leaders and have aairigned a pa-
trolman to the populated island.
Authorities also have notified
the victim of the alleged rape that
Gonzales has eecaped again. Police I
said the woman no longer lives on
Balboa Island.
SCHOOL PANEL ... UCI HOS PIT AL DREAM FAD ING AW A Y ...
From Page A 1
viewed as a lower priority for
several reasons:
• Test score results have con-
tinued 'to climb for elementary
students, while high school test
scores have plummeted.
• Elementary schools have
fewer of the serious discipline and
drug abuse problems that have
plagued high schools.
Nevertheless, Ingram said the
transition from elementary level
s high school education
must e lored.
"l thi i ' absolutely critical,"
he said. "As w see improvements
at the elementary school level. I
think we'll see improvements in
high school scores following in a
few years."
Ingram said he believes the new
panel, which will meet three times
yearly, will suggest educational
reforms for elementary 8Chools
and propose standards for school
administrators.
The panel is sponsored by the
Carnegie Foundation, the John-
son Foundation, the National As-
sociation of Elementary School
Principals and the U.S . Depart-
ment of F.ducation.
Ingram was appointed to the
group t.1 the National Principals
Associatio n.
From PageA1
squared off for round one of
the hospital fight.
UCI won approval from the
Orange County Health Plan-
ning Council beck then. But
the medical school's plan lost in
the state Asllembly, when
funding was not allocated.
ln 1976, the UC Regents
voted to purchase the Orange
County Medical c.ent.er in
Orange and make it UCI
Medical Center.
And Irvine still did not have
a hospital.
FIRE VICTIM ...
UCI Medical c.enter officials
set off the current round of the
dispute in 1981, when they
applied to the regents to build
a clinic and ambulatory-care
center on campus.
The application spurred the
founding of PICH. which later
aligned itself with Hoag.
From Page A1
on his hands and feet, said he tried
several times to lead White t.o
safety. He said he grabbed her by
the arm and tried to pull her from
the bed she was sleeping in.
He said the house was filled
with smoke and that he eventu-
ally lost his grip on the woman. He
told police he ran for the front
door i.n hope someone could help
him rescue White.
Nicholson told authorities at the
scene that he believed White, a
Compton bank teller, wouldn't
leave the house because she was
naked
Fire department spokesman
Russ Cheek said it is believed a
tremendous amount of carbon
monoxide was trapped in the
house.
"One breath of that is enough to
make you delirious, confused.
Three of four breaths will knock
you out," Cheek said. "ln a
situation like this you have a
couple of minutes to react and
that's it."
The single-story house was
equipped with a smoke detector
that apparently alerted Nicholson
to the fire. A newly-installed
fire-retardent roof on the house
may have prevented the blaze
from spreading to neighboring
structures, authorities said.
The university last year
decided to drop the clinic in
favor of a full-scale campus
hospital After considering
several hospital groups, UCI
supported HealthWest's plan
BODY ...
From Page A1
to be brought ashore for inspec-
tion by a National Transportation
Safety Boa.rd investigator, said
Little.
ATTORNEY GENERAL ...
Harbor Patrol divers earlier
removed West's body from Lh.e
sunken fuaelage.
The wreckage was localed
about a quarter-mile off shore
from 60th Street in West Newport
Beach. Harbor Patrol officials said
the fuaelage apparently sank im-
mediately at the site of impact.
although debris from the wreck-
age later wuhed west with cur-
renta into water off Huntington
Beach.
From Page A1
seems to be more and more
concerned with overseeing the
enforcement of laws it has pas&ed
while failing to carry out its
legislative charge
He said this congressional
preoccupation has resulted in
legislation that was ill-considered
and often has lacked the "degree
of deliberation the framers of the
Constitution expected of the legis-
lative branch."
The upshot of Smith's argu-
ment is that the two branches of
government are upeettin.g the
"the fine balance of powers that
must exist ... if liberty ia to be
protected and if government ia to
be capable of effective action."
• He told the attorneys that both
the legisla\ive and judicial
branches of government have
infringed upon the chief responsi-
bility of the executive branch -
that of enforcing the laws of the
land. And he urged the two
branches of government to con-
centrate on their Constitutional
duties.
''An activist judiciary and an
oversight-minded Congress can
We1re
Listening •••
642·6086
Detty Pttot
o.ilYef'Y 11 Qu.,..,teecs
UOM•• I •oday It yw 00
not tt••• yov• P-ef)•• or ~ lO o"' to• t>ef<lte I p ,,,
•l'O yfJ·1I (nth wt1I! O•
~""
only weaken the executive branch
and thus d"ebilitate the entire
national government," the na-
tion's top law enforcement officer
said.
Smith said that the concern
over an all-powerluJ "imperial
presidency," often diacuaaed dur-
ing the 1960s and '70s, now has
given way to this new Constitu-
tional challenge from the judicial
and legislative branches.
But the attorney general ap-
plauded the recent Supreme
Court decision overturning Om-
gress' ability to lmpoee the
90-Called legislative veto on cer-
tain bills. He said the hJgh court's
decision was a "hopeful event" in
the quest to restore the constitu-
tionally mandated separation of
powers.
Smith's speech, whJch h e said
was intended to "stimulate ref1ec-
tion" on the fundamental law of
the land, is the third in a 1eries of
speeches on constitutional iasues
he has delivered since May. The
fint two speeches dealt with the
original Constitution and the con-
cept of federalism.
The cruh lite-about halfway
between the Santa Ana River
jetty and the atart of Balboa
Peninsula -is near a Coast Guard
buoy that bobs pemW\ently in the
water.
GOP unit to h ear
OC schools chief
Orange County Schools Super-
intendent Robert Petenon will
addrell the Balboa Bay Re-
publican Women luncheon
Wed.ne9day at the Irvine Coast
Country Club.
Peterson, who has been super-
intendent for 16 yean, will d.iscusa
his "Antidote to Mediocrity."
An 11 a.m. business meeting
will proceed the $8 luncheon at
noon. For reeervations, call Ruth
Nerney at 673-7263 or Goldie
Joeeph at 673-6729.
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ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
H. L. lchwertl Ht
Publlstiet
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to the Pul>llshef
VOL. 11, NO. 2M
I )
to build the facility.
Both groups filed appli-
cations with the Health Plan-
ning Council. After a long,
complicated process and
almost 21 hours of public
hearings this summer, the
council e ndorsed IMC over the
Health West plan.
In the weeks since the
council's decision, what has
traditionally been a town vs.
gown dispute has been trans-
formed into a gown vs. gown
dispute.
On Aug. 10, UCI Chancellor
Daniel G . Aldrich, Jr. met with
UC President Gardner and the
tw o decided to postpone a
regents conunittee hearing on
the hospital matter.
On Aug. 11, Aldrich sent a
letter to HealthWest rescind-
ing the university's support of
the.campus hospital proposal.
He cited community discord
and HealthWest's failure to
obtain approval from the
health planning council as his
,
mon.
Do1t
now.
reasons for doing eo.
The medical faculty and
Dean Stanley van den Noort
voted to continue to support
Health West.
Since then, Aldrich has
come under fire from the
medical school faculty, which
censured him, and from sup-
porters of HealthWest, who
have criticb:ed his reversal of
position.
Aldrich, who has held the
post of chancellor since the
campus was opened, said last
week he is considering making
the upcoming academic year at
UCI his last.
Though he was planning to
retire in two years, he said, he
may move up his retirement to
June.
M edical School Dean
Stanley van den Noort has said
if the campus does not get a
hospital he and other medical
faculty would consider leaving
UCI.
Aldrich has defended his
decision by saying he must
consider the needs of the entire
UCI community, not just the
medical school.
The business leaders sup-
porting IMC might contribute
much to the university's over-
all effort -including the
athletics, engineenna and arts
departments -lf friendly
relations are established be-
tween them and the univer-
sity, IMC President David
Baker has said.
The faculty and some com-
munity members charge
Aldrich with bowing top~
ure from the powerful indus-
trial leaders behind IMC.
"If, for the sake of the
fund-raising efforts, he's will-
ing to sacrifice a medical center
and the future of this com-
munity, then I call it
short-sighted," said UCI Dr.
Paul Sypherd, after the fac-
ulty censure.
"It's hospital time in Irvine,••
Sypherd said. "If the regents
decide against us. we're dead
in the water."
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far IVlan and VVarnan
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CEAAITOSILAKEWOOO 11881 Del Amo Blvd. at Pioneer, J blocks East of 605 Freeway. (213) ~ 15J4
MISSION VIEJO 24401 Alicia P1<wy at San Diego Freeway. (714) 7'/0-0822 ·
WESTMINSTFR 6757 ~minster Ave. at Gp/den ~st (714) 894-3387
COSTA MESA 2300 ~rbor Blvd .• (Bellind Thn'fty DrUSJ,1• (714) 549·3368
ORANGE 622 fast ~la Ave., ~ of 1tJstin Ave., (714) 639-~1
Mosr Holld.Jy Sp.J HN/lf1 C'lvbs •~ ~ to the moblltry ~ ""'°"" IMth ~ lflClvdng the bllnrl. ~ weblnlt
t l'ISJl,._tll'llA .... ,., l .. O \IA;t..,.,,
2
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Sept. 13 , 1983 .41
40,000 students in her 'class'
Goodwill to present
arts and crafts show
Irvine administrator takes over LA County's massive special education program
Goodwill lndust.riee of Orange County will hold its annual arts
and cralts show Sept. 22 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the main Goodwill
office at Fifth and Fairview streets in Santa Ana.
The event is a showcase for the talents of Goodwill employees,
rehabilitation patients and their families. An awards banquet will
be held at 6:30 p.m . after the judging of the entires, and trophies and
cash prizes will be awarded.
The show ls open to the public and tours of the Goodwill
facility will be conducted. For further information, call Goodwill at
547-6301.
Huntington readies surf contest
' The 13th annual Huntington Beach Sununer Surf Contest,
sponsored by the city's Community Services Department, is
scheduled Sept. 24-25 at the city pier.
People living in the Huntington Beach Union High School
District are eligible to compete. There are seven different divisions.
Cities in the district include Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley,
Sunset Beach, Seal Beach, Westminster and Midway City.
Entry fee is $13 per person and trophies will be awarded to top
finishers.
Dog show sch eduled at Irvine Park
The Orange Coast Rhodesian Ridgeback puppy fun match will
be held Saturday, Sept. 24, from 9:30 to 11 a.m. at Irvine Park, 21501
Chapman Ave., Orange.
Information about the event may be obtained by calling Joe
Berger at (213)985-8617.
Pain treatment to he d emonstrated
A demonstration of the electro-acu.scope for pain removal and
tissue rejuvenation will be given Thursday, Sept. 22. at 8 p.m. at the
Psynetics Foundation, 1212 E. Lincoln Ave., Anaheim.
Lecturer Victoria Sahaja Mogilner also will demonstrate the
cold laaer for regenerating skin tissue and will show acupressure
points to dissolve headaches and relieve sinus, neck and shoulder
tension.
The event is open to the public at a cost of $3. For further
infonnation, call the foundation at 533-2311.
By ANDl\EA ADELSON
Of .. 0.-, ..........
The first week of achool for
educator Harriet F. Danford
meant more than new lel80n
pla.na.
The 42-year-old Irvine retlident
is now charged with ad.minis-
tering Loa Angeles County's
special education and juvenile
NB fir01
aids Arts
Center
The Newport Beach accounting
firm of Peat Marwick has pledged
$100,000 tlO the Orange County
Performing Arts Center's con-
struction fund, officials an-
nounced Monday.
The gift brings the total con-
tributions to the fund to $40
million. The first phase of con-
struction on the $65 million center
is projected to cost $57.3 million.
The center, acheduled to open
<kt. 1, 1986, will include a
four-tiered, 3,000-seat theater for
staging opera, ballet, symphony
and theater. A 1,000-eeat theater
for smaller productions will be
erected during a later construction
phase.
The center is currently under
construction in Costa Mee.a south
of SunflowerAvenue next to the
South C.oast Plaza Town Center.
Groundbreaking ceremonies
were held in July.
War brewing at school in Irvine?
School maintenance workefl turn-
ed over to police an amateur-made
hand grenade found at an lt"lllne
echool Monday. The Orange County
lhetfffa bomb equad took the d&-
vkle, con1truc1ed from a shotgun
shell wrapped wf1h nalla, wtllch when
exploded 11 llmllar to shrapnel.
police said.
Thlevel atole S1,200 In CUh from
Anthony'• Dell, 17881 Sky Park
Btvd., lrvlne, aft., prying C>P«'I the
tront do«, pollce said. The theft of
hidden money bags wu dlacoverecl
utty Monday morning.
Young1ter9 dlacovel'ecl a missing
$700 ~cart owned by the lrvtne
IChoo4 district at a vac.nt houM In
the 4000 block of Mk:Mlaon Ori~
~ Monday. Po41ce betleve the
,,,_, cert wu 11olen ovwnlght trom
-by Randlo San Joequln School.
An 15-month-old Infant who
ewallowed lamp oll Monday wu
Hated In •table condition today at
Western Mecllcal Center. Paramedic
Rick VanAuken aald t~ llttle boy WU
In dlltr ... after drinking about an
ounce of k«OMne.
lrvlne police Officer Frank Johnson
wa1 Involved In a minor tra"lc
colllllon at Jamboree Boulevard and
Main Street about 5:30 p.m. Monday
wtllle enr0"1e to an lnJury accident
call. The police e&r hit the rear of a
vehlcle driven by Jeff Leal of
Monterey P1r11. Both drlVlfl eac:aped
ln)ury.
Huntington Beach
A vehicle burglary WU reported
Monday morning by a resident of the
5700 block of Bellfleld Lane. A vent
window wu broken to enter. The loaa
Included a $280 ln-dUh stereo, a
$225 1tereo equallZ«. a $130
portable caaaette player and two
boxes of home-made tapea.
A customer at the Hughes El
Rancho market, 16821 Algonquin
St.. reported that her purae wu
stolen from he< shopping cart Mon-
day afternoon. A man reportedly
grabbed the purae, ran from the atore
and fled In an Oki« cat drlY91'1 by a
woman. The ton wu estimated at
S196.
A woman reported the theft of her
1968 Vo4kawagen from a parttlng lot
at Golden WMt College Monday. The
loaa wu •tlmated at $3,500.
A 1978 Dataun 8210 pet11ed on the
9800 bloek of Hot Spring• Ori~ WU
the targe1 of a break-In Monday. The
left front window wu amuhed to
ent«. The loea Included $153 In CUh
and tools valued at $275.
Two tires were reported llolen
Monday mOl'nlng from a trac-
tor-trallor rig parked near the corner
of Talbeft Avenue and Gothard
Street. The loss wu eetlmated at
$600.
Fountain Valley
A man armed with an automatic
handgun ned with about S95 In CUh
end coin• from Luv-U e.auty &
Barber Supply, 16147 Brookhurat St.
The gunman. wtio aaunt«ed Into the
bullneaa at about 2:30 p.m. Monday,
told the clerk to loci< herMlf In the
restroom for thrM minutes following
the robbery.
Vandal• removed an engine cover
from a car parited In the 16000 blocic
of Mesquite Clrae Monday and cut
the coll wire, Ignition wtre and ripped
out the apartcpluge and then put back
the cover. Demage w• lllted at 145.
Costa Mesa
A locked 1978 Chevy WU stolen In
front of • home on the 2000 blocic of
lrl1 Place In Coat• Meaa aornetJme
Sunday night. The car la vMled at
S5.500.
A thief IWiped $150 worth of toots
trom a vw pet1<ed at an ~t eomplell on the 500 b4odt of WMlon
StrMt Sunday=· The cat'• r1ght wtnd wing WU open.
Laguna Beach
Jewelry valued by the owner at
S975 wu ltolen from a ~ In the
1300 blocic of Cetallna Street Mon-day, Laguna 8Mch polloe said.
A man found sleeping In a llde yard
of a houM In the 700 blocic of
Brownc:roft Road WU IW&kened by
police and told to leave.
M lac.llaM0\.11 tool• valued at 1500
were taken trom a raaldenca In the
200 blocic of Lower Clltt Drive.
ThrM or tour euapect• who banged
on dOOfl and urlneted In an 9'eY11tor
of the Suri and Sand Hotel, 1665
South C<>ut Highway, were ltoe>Ped .
by police, but raleaaed when omct.11
at the hotel aaJd they would not~
d'largee.
Dense fog rolling in along Coast
Cinclnnell ,, 93 Rain Snow Coas tal a...1-,, ... Wednesday. September 14 Colum ... 8.C. 9~ 70 •Hi h Temperatures Shower• Flurrle1
..,,,.. low Cloud• -fog g Columlluf ·~ M a.-log In ,,,. 10fligllt -o.ii-Fl Wortll 94 H
w~~-.,,.-· Deylon ... &C
-----.-ty ,..,, SllOn1lY -0.-79 ..
-a. -""' -llo4 In,,,. 0.Molnet et llO I < -~In the 70. IOlow lo. °"'°" 79 &C
-. .,. to ,_ 100 In the OuMI\ 59 40
-....,._ i..-... the eo. to EIPMO 116 ..
,....70.. ,...,l><lnll, 113 39
,,_ l'Qlm c:onc.ptlOfl -the --
,..,00 541 44
--to .... a.-... ~ Ugjll FlolQotafl 93 ..
-Wide~'*"-! IO o..-,.-., ..
to 20 ~ 10r11gM -w~ Hllt1tord 80 56
-· II I) -' lo I --
Hel9rwl 70 42
...... lcMfllO-Wldl. to,, _.... 90 79
lltie* 111111 _..,. -I IO 2-tooc W'll ltOl<elon .. 74 ---'*°"*" ..... wwlellle
........... II 541 = lfld ~ ,_.,,.,,. llld
,,__,, ........ 90 72 ~ ~·~ ... ,, 10 10 11 W-.-. ,.,_ ........... S.•-<• ., ....,_
"-C!lv n llO "IOA-" V !> 0.pt OI C~"'••<t
Extended i...v .... 103 71 Front• Cold .,.. warm .. Occluded .r Stetionary • • UllM ._. 12 72 t::z-.. 71 ,_, ~ "°' .,..,. --II 87 ,,,_,.. 104 N ==='°--12 n
~---=---"-...--t2 116 ==t" .... .. .. .. • ... .,,. -"--............ 12 72 1t .. .... _ ., u .... "° IOtln ... ....,. i-1n111e -17 12 POtftlnd.Ore. '° ., ..... 71 .. eo.w-..10... ....... .. 13
... _ .. IO ~= .. 71 .,....., .. *' .. 47 ::::r°"' .. .. • ~
Temperatures .......... 90 72 70 •47 == 71 • i..ClNMe 13 n IWIO 16 IO 11 ..
..... 'l'Otll 15 .. ~ 87 .. Toptlla 11 ., -.. 71 ltl.oull 11 .. ~ .. fl .. IA _....,.. 72 :M 11 ....... TMljle t7 13 TIAM .. • ,,..,.,, 71 ,, °'..,_..°"" IM 13 lell LAii• .. ~ WWMf'on .. .,.. ==.:Qwl ., .. °"'*" 10 46 .... ~ ., 11 ~ N .. .. 12 °""'" to 74 ~ ... .. 60 ..tlf!I~ 107 77
.'L I
-.. t7
2=Clty 17 If ...... , ,.,.,.. • ... ., 87
Mllllln IM ,, Tides ..,._,. .. 17 =z,.. .. 97 47 TOOAY •2 • ....... M 11 9eoond hlgtl 2·Mp.m. 4.1 ... " 54 leoondlow 10.67/""' Ot
9oMoll .. .. ...,.. .. '·-a .,__ to 1• '"'• t tn•m u LOOA,_ .. --= ~ 76 .. ""'-IN•111 u =:i::.::.-ty 14
E .. c
n ., '-'° hlgtl uo p.111. ... 2 .... ........ 7t • ...., -~"' 1"'!/,"'· -40lfl II .. ....,,.. 2 .... ....... .. 72 Wedri ... ., .. • • "' -..-in == ""' ()wtallofl, w v 17 17 -~Olp"' 1 4 .......,.
awtoltl.N C t1 10 .--ne.911..Mplfl -,.-.. ~c::..-1·2 ....
~~ .. 41 114' pm~ --..., .. 1·2 .... ,, .. w.....,.. .. t-;.,,,. w.. ...,..,_ t1•1'
t I
court achoola, a job with an
operating budget of f 77 million,
delivering education to 40,000
•tudenta at a 150 different sites.
The former special education
director for the sprawling d.18trlct,
Dan.ford now t.akea on expanded
duUes that will put her in touch
with the 3,000 county youth
incarcerated each year.
The oourt achool program, with
clal8ee held in each of the six
juvenile halla, nine probation
camps and six community day
cent.era, is the only accredited one
like it in the s1ate, Danford said.
enters a probation camp, tus
education "is geared to the level
he is at," Danford explained.
The court schools aren't all new
to her. Seven years ago when
educators were researching how
best to teach aphasic youngsters,
Danford analyzed the number of
incarcerated students with learn-
ing and language disabilltes ver-
sus the normal population at a
Malibu probation camp.
Danlord's special education
work led her to Madeleine Hill,
federal assistant secretary for
special education and rehabili-
tative services They exchanged
views last month in Washington,
D.C. over how to meld private
mdustry providing job place-
ment and vocational training -
into education for the physically
and mentally disabled.
''At 21, you just stop," Danford
pointed out.
She is the mothe r of two
University High students and
received her doctorate from Tem-
ple University in Philadelphia
after receiving two master's
degrees in educational psychology
and school administration.
"We are up for accreditation
this year, and will, at each and
every hall and camp, be doing a
self-evaluation," she said. "I know
they are overcrowded; there
hasn't been any building in
years."
Foe teachers, crowded holding
facilities tranalates into a tide oC
Six schools honored
for Olynipic project
new students, especially in the Six Orange Coast elementary
halls, and knowing very little achools have been presented with
about the academic perfonnance cash awards for student partici-
of each, she said. However,..., pation in the Levi's Olympic
teachers "know what they are Children's Art Project.
getting into." The student art is to become a
The average court school stu-part of 15 separate collages that
dent is a 16-year-old young man will be used to greet athletes and
whohascommittedafelonyandis Southern <;::alifornia visitors
well below average in reading and throughout the Olympic year.
math skills. When the jailed you th The largest cash prizes went
Costa Mesa cleanup
Courreges, Arevalos and Fulton
schools in the Fountain Valley
School Dts t.rict . Together the
schools were given about $1 ,400.
Also awarded cash prizes were
Spring View in the Ocean View
Eleme ntary School District,
Harbor View in the New-
port-Mesa Urufied School District
and Eastshore m the Irvine Uni-
fied School District.
Eighteen members and their fathers
from Scout Troop 80 filled 56
garbage bags Saturday with trash
strewn along southbound Newport
Boulevard. "Afterward, it looked
like a new city," said Tag Garver,
Scout leader. Filling their bags here
are Raymond Hubert, Mike Eimers,
George Waale, Marc Sleenhof,
Vince Russell and Garver, in cap.
Coast people on advisory panel
Several Orange Coast resldents
have been named members of the
advi8ory board for the South
C.oast Center for Personal Growth
and Development.
The Santa Ana center will offer
counaeling services, .drug and
alcohol addiction programs and
nutrition-health guidance.
Advi8ory board members in-
clude:
Brooke and Bo Bentley, Sandy
Berwick, Marion and Lula Half-
acre, Gregg Herbert, Jerry Re-
ynolds and Bud Warmington, all
of Newport Beach.
Sam and Mary Anderson,
George and Madge Rodda, Dave
and Jeanette Wells and Ellen
Ward, all of Corona del Mar.
Buck and Kitty Jones, Sheri
Hodge and Allen and Wini Smith.
(~)
~
[;EM WISE
Mery Barr. Cen1f1ed Gamo10~1s1
of Laguna Beach.
Ken and Paulette Curry, Den-
rus M. Green, Arthur and Suzy
Melin, Donna Schaik and Tim and
Pam Brown, of Irvine
Clint and Holly Bellows of
Huntington Beach also serve on
the board.
For more tnformation on the
group, call Paulette Curry at
972-2878
proven sapphire deposit In the
wofld ta located In our coun-
try ... In Montana? The mine In
Vogo Gulch extends tor five mites
and 11 becoming a major
produc.r. It wae flr•t dlacovared
by accident In the 1880'1. A
group of miners happened upon
It In their ... rctt for gold. The
mine wu aucceutully woncecl fOf'
thirty year1 and then lhut down.
S«lou• mining wa1 resumed In
1977 and about 70,000 tons ol
rocti hl¥9 been prOCMMd llnce
then but preeant output of gem
matenai 11 1tlll far behind Sri
Lanita.
~ARLES~R
.,,......,~e_wJc,t,,&
Al I've said before. the ftneat
aapptllr• coma fre>nl Kuhmtr,
hlgtl In the Hlmalayu, whla 811
l.anka (Ceylon) typpltee UI with
the gNetaat quantity. Whene\« t QO to Sri L&Ma I atw1y1 mike the
lrlp up to Ratnapura and the
llap9hlre mines there. On my ia.t
vtalt I witched them putt up a
belk9t with three nice atones In
It. Of courM I t()()I( plcturaa end
you can ... thole In our window
loo elong with our collec11on of
different colo,rad 11pphlre1 .
(T.,_.. 11 atao a enaplhot of me
loalng my etloaa In the heavy ctay
IOll at the mlnea.) The mlnea are
not whet we picture when M UN
that tlm'I. Theee .,.. more Ilk•
pita ... hotae dUG Memlngly et
random • , , thll one In the middle
or a rloe paddy wtth bamboo
acaffoldlng and bfacM. Whet comae out of thole llmPle hotel
In the Mrth ere beeutlful In·
deed ... grand enough to ~·
an anoeoement ring for • modern day P'rlnoeea. Meyba yout ptln-
oeee would lltie • aai>Phlre too,
4.-ric• ._ S.Cl.+y Au,....94 o-
LIMret.rt
17th & Irvine, We1tcltff Plaza,
Newport Beach 642-3310
'
"4 Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT /Tuesday' Sept. 13, 1983
TOP OF THE NEWS
NATION
St. Louis teachers return
but others continue strike
By the A.Hoclated Pre11
Teacher strikes in five states disrupted
classes for 109,000 students today, but the
nation's largest walkout came to an end in St.
Louis where instructors threatened with mass
firings agreed to return to their classrooms. More
than 6,400 teachers were on strike in 21 school
districts in Michigan, Illinois, Rhode Island,
Washington and Pennsylvania.
Gran d Hotel suit settled
PHILADELPHIA-A suit arising from the
fatal fire at the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas
has been settled, with 1,000 claimants to receive
shares of more than $134 million, U.S . District
Court Judge Louis Bechtle said Monday in
announcing the conclusion of the lengthy
litigation.
Man murdered over radio
NEW YORK-A 22-year-old man who was
once a March of Dimes poster child was shot to
death by two teen-age robbers when he refused
to hand over a borrowed portable radio, police
said.
After a chase by police and the victim's
brother and friends, two 16-year-olds were
arrested a few blocks from the shooting scene,
police said. The youths demanded the radio and
when Matthew Harasek refused, one pulled a
gun and fired a shot that struck him in the chest.
Siblin gs disinter lath er
SPOTSYLVANIA, Va. -A brother and
sister accused of digging up their slain father's
body to get his gold teeth have chosen to stay in
jail rather than post $5,000 bond apiece. John
Gavis, 28, and his sister Julia, 24, faced felony
charges of disinterring a corpse. Police said the
pair cut the steel lid off their father's coffin and
removed all but two of his teeth becal.bE! they
believed the gold crowns were etched with the
number of a Swiss bank account.
WORLD
Navy air strik es app roved
W ASlilNGTON -President Reagan has
decided to let Marine cofumanders in Lebanon
ask for air strikes from Navy fliers if the action is
needed to defend U.S. troops in Beirut, his
spokesman said today. Spokesman Larry Speak-
es said Marines in Beirut could request air strikes
from the carrier-based fighters off shore and the
request, if granted, would be approved locally
rather than in Washington.
Pop e eulogizes victims
MARIAZELL, Austria -Pope J ohn Paul II
paid tribute today to the 269 people killed when a
Soviet jet shot down a South Korean airliner and
to "the victims of violence" in Lebanon and
elsewhere. He spoke following an outdoor Mass
for members of religious orders.
U.S. blamed lor attacks
MANAGUA, Nicaragua -The leftist
Sandinista government says the United States
was behind rebel air attacks on Nicaragua last
week, and the U .N. Security Council scheduled a
meeting today to discuss those charges.
IRA 'bomb b li tz' I eared
BELFAST. Northern Ireland -Security
chief.a in Northern Ireland reportedly have \Old
their forces that the Irlah Republican Army may
be about to launch a major bombing blitz in the
province. Press AMociation, the British domestic
newa agency, said today that security chiefs fear
the IRA will attempt a major show of force to
ahow it can operate despite widespread arrests
resulting from tips from turncoat guerrillas who
became police informers.
Guard grabs $7 million
Wells Fargo work e r hunted after daring Connecticut robbery
WEST HARTFORD, Conn.
(AP) -An armored car guard
pulled a gun on his driver and a
manager at a Wells Fargo office,
bound them and injected them
with a drug before e8Caping with
$7 million in cash, police said
today.
The manager and driver told
police they were bound, had coats
thrown over their heads and were
injected with an unidentified
drug, police Capt. Oliver Pelton
said.
The theft, at about 9 p.m.
Monday, was the largest since
$11.1 million cash from taken
from a Sentry Armored Car
warehouse in New York City nine
months ago.
State and federal arrest war-
rants were issued this morning for
guard Victor M. Gerena, 25, who
has worked for Wells Fargo for
nearly a year and ,a half, police
Chief Francis Reynolds said.
After they were tied up, the
driver and manager heard a
pushcart going back and forth,
Reynolds said.
The heist occurred after the
truck was backed into the bay of
MASS.
..,.....,._.
Map locates site of S7
million robbery.
the West Hartford office and the
guard took the manager's gun
from his holster and put it to his
head and threatened to shoot h.im,
Reynolds said.
Driver Timothy Gerard, 2i,land
Manager James McKeown man-
aged to free themselves about 11
p.m. and called police.
"Gerena pulled McK.eown's re-
volver out of its holster and held it
to hia head, advising both men
that he was aerious and that if
neceaaary he would blow
McKeown'a head off," Reynold!
said.
"Both vicltms felt Gerena ad-
rnilniBter a needle to their arms.
However, the injection did not
affect them," be said. Police
earlier had said the drug made one
man drowsy.
"Both men could hear Gerena
pushing the carts around, which is
uled for moving the bags of money
and at one point could hear him
loading a shotgun," Reynolds said.
Reynolda. said another person
may have been involved in the
robbery, but he would not
elaborate.
Authorities believe the heist
amounted to $7 million in cash: but
Reynolds said Wells Fargo has not
completed its audit.
''The money is contained in
numerous bags and various con-
tainers for shipments," FBI agent
Daniel Mahan said. "Wells Fargo
will have to deterinine how much
money was supposed to be on
hand and find out how much
money there is now.''
Soviet planes alert Japan
Figh ters scramble as seven Russian bomb ers approach coast
By the A11oclated Pre11
Eight Japanese jet interceptorsacrambled today
when at least seven Soviet bombers appeared off the
northwest coast of Japan, in the general area where a
South Korean jetliner was shot down.
A Japan Defense Agency official said he did not
know whether the Soviet planes were part of a
live-fire exercise begun by Soviet warships today
Russian journalist
missing in Venice
near where a Soviet jet fighter shot down the jet with
269 people aboard two weeks ago.
The defenae offldal, who requested anonymjty,
told reporten in Tokyo that the Soviet Backfire and
Badger bomben were firat tracked 140 miles
west-northwest of Hokkaido, Japan's northernmost
ialand.
He said the Japanefle interceptors scrambled and
followed them for 370 miles, to a point about 100 miles
northwest of Japan's Sado Island before returning to
base. .
..,..._...
George McGovern catches up on
news before a nnouncing· his can-
didacy.
AnOther try
M cGovern announ ces plans
W ASlilNGTON (AP) -Fonner South
Dakota Sen. George S. McGovern launched
another longshot bid for another Democratic
presidential nomination today, laying out a liberal
course that includes arms control talks with the
Soviets, an end to U.S. military involvement in
Central America and a program of govern-
ment-backed education and other aid.
"I do not advocate unilateral disarmalnent,"
said McGovern, 61, who won the 1972 Democratic
presidential nomination on a platform of ending
the Vietnam War but then l08t a landslide election
to Richard M . Nixon.
"But I have no doubt that as preJ!ident I could
'York out a realistic agreement with the Ruaaian l~aden that would stop the arms race and safely
reduce arms spending.''
McGovern's announcement made him the
seventh Democrat to seek the nomination. and he ·
begins well behind the field in organizational
strength and financing. I
He haa other handicaps as well. His wife,
Eleanor, aays ahe won't campaign with him this
time. Many former aides are involved in other
campaigns; still ohters have urged him not to run.
"I'm not enthusiastic," said Eleanor McGov-
ern in a telephone inteiview. "I have said, 'No, I
won't campaign."' She added, however, that ahe
may change her mind.
VENICE, Italy (AP) -A Soviet joumaliat who
was in Venice for the film festival haa disappeared
and searches have turned up no trace, polloe said
today.
The official said there was no violation of
Japaneee airspace, no encounter between the
interceptors and the bombers, and that it was the
300th time this year that Japaneee jets scrambled
during a flight by Soviet warplanes. ------------------
Meanwhile, Lloyd's of London and other H J •
Oleg Bitov. 52, of Leningrad, representing the
Literary Gaz.ette, was last seen at his hotel on the
Lido on ThW'Sday night, police said. His luggage was
left in his room.
Officials declined to speculate on what may have
happened to Bitov, saying only that he failed to
return to the Soviet Union with other Soviet
journalists when the festival ended Sunday and that
they have turned up no clues.
"
inauren paid Korean Air Lines $26.8 million today J• C::. torica wrJ t er for the downed Boeing 747 -about three-quarters of ,;;::,
the insured value of the plane. The rest of the amount is~~~t~rlC)'oo;:;~inwakkanai. Norah Lofts dies
Japan's northernmost city, said the Soviet &helling
exerciae began in waters west of the tiny island of
Moneron, 55 miles to the north. The Korean Air Lines
plane is believed to have crashed nearby after being
stn.&ck with a miaaile Sept. 1, and the 269 people on
board are presumed dead.
BURY ST. EDMUNDS, England (AP) -Norah
Lofts, whoee historical novels sold more than 1
million copies in the United States and Britain, has
died al age 79, her family announced.
Glenn urges tax I or acid rain
Mrs. Lofts, who died Saturday at her home in
this Suffolk county town in eastern England, wrote
her first novel, "I Meta Gypsy," in 1935. Within a few
years she was sufficiently successful to quit her job as t
a high school history teacher.
She eventually published 50 books, with "Jasay"
in 1944 and "Bless This House" a decade later among
KEENE, N .H . (AP)-Presidential hopeful Sen. factories upwind in the Midwest. the best known.
John Glenn i.s proposing a surtax on electric utilities Glenn, of Ohio, estimated the surcharge in the 31 She once said that until fairly recently ahe was
that use fossil fuels in the eastern half of the nation to eastern states would increase average monthly more popular in the United States than in England,
pay for a program to reduce acid rain. electric bills between 25 cents and 75 cents. and much of her fan mail was from Americans -
But he did not give a total dollar figure for the both men and women.
Glenn told a crowd of about 350 people at Keene propoeed 12-year program. "Men like my books as well as women becauae
State College on Monday night that technology He said add rain could be reduced without they are free from nonsenee and not romantic," she
already exists to solve the problem of add rain, damaging industries in the Midwest. said in a 1981 newapaper interview, shortly after
created when sulfur oompounda released by the "I think this proposal would provide the people publication of "The Claw."
burning of oil and coal combine with moisture in the of New England and all the states east of the Mrs. Lofts spent five years writing "I Met a
air. Mi.asimippi with the benefits of a cleaner, healthier Gypsy. "But after that aheaveraged one book a year,
Most acid rain idfecting New England and parts environment without imposing unfair burdens on mainly historical novels interspenled with occasional
of Canada is believed to come from power planta and ....-=alread=..:.::.::.:Y:..:..de~p:..:..c~c•:..:..•_d_regi--=:::..:..o_na_o_f _th_e_ooun __ try-=....•:....."_h_e_eai_·_d_. _thrill __ en_wri __ tte_n_und __ er_th~e_name __ Pi_e_ter_Curtis_. _·_. __
R e be ls kill Soviet soldiers
NEW DELfil, India (AP) -Alghan rebels
killed drunken Soviet soldiers joy riding in a tank and
ambushed and kidnapped other Sovieta from an
ann.ored vehicle near the border with Iran, West.em
diplomats reported Tuetclay.
They al8o said there were rumors that the entire
government garrison at Kh08t, 100 miles 90Utheaat of
the capital of Kabul, had deeerted acroes the border to
Pakistan. The exact number of defect.on was not
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Sepl 13, 1983 ~5
TOP OF THE NEWS Five students hurt in Compton shooting
STATE
I·
--
Investors' group purchases
Pea Soup Andersen's chain
By t.lle A11oclated Pre11
SAN FRANCISOO -Andersen's, the
restaurant chain that grew from a small shop
selling pea soup to a conglomerate of restaurants
and highway centers, has been sold to a private
lnveston' group for more than $35 million, the
company announced. Pea Soup Andenten's, the
chain started in 1924 with a small shop on
Highway 101 in Buellton, has grown to four
restaurant.a and some centers that include hotels
and service stations.
Lucky bans Sol'i et l'odka
LOS ANGELES -Stollchnaya vodka will
no longer be carried by the 310 stores in the
Lucky supennarket chain in California in protest
of the Soviet downing of a South Korean all' liner.
Lucky Stores spokeswoman Judy Decker said
Monday the decision by the Northern Cali-
fornia-based. chain was made last week and was
not t~e result of any pressure from anti-Soviet
groups.
Battleship to Atlantic area
LONG BEACH -The battleship New
Jersey has crossed through the Panama Canal
headed for operations in the Atlantic Ocean, the
Navy has announced. The New Jersey, which
left Long Beach on June 9 for a tour of duty in the
Far East, was originally expected to return here
by Sept. 16, but Navy officials in Washington
declined Monday to say how long it would be
kept in the Atlantic.
Cop booked in wife's d eath
BELLFLOWER -A reserve La Palma
policeman was booked today for investigation of
murdering his estranged wife and wounding his
sister-in-law in a family dispute, sheriff's
deputies said. Mary Genera, 43, died early today
following surgery at Downey Community Hospi-
tal, and her spouae. James Genera, 43, was
booked later. Los Angeles County sheriff's
homicide Sgt. Jack Scully said.
Fil th '¥ictim' disco¥ered
LOS ANGELES -A 72-year-old woman
found dead in her burning house may be the fifth
Victim in an apparent string of Hollywood area
al"80n-murders mostly involving older women.
police said.
Police Cmdr. William Booth said the body
found early Monday is believed to be that of
Mary Paquette, who lived alone in the small
hou.ae in the 4000 block of Monroe Street, which
borders the Hollywood area.
COMPTON (AP) -Five h1gh echool student.a
were shot on their flrst day of claues and two youth.a
were arrested when rival gang members burst onto
campus during lunch hour and fired into a crowd at
random. officials and witneeees said.
The shootings Monday outside a classroom at the
1,200-atudent Manuel Dominguez High School
apparently stemmed from rival gang activity, police
said.
"There are shootings down here (in the district)
every week. This just happens to be on the first day of
SF launches
anti-nuke fight
SAN FRANCISOO (AP) -A booklet describing
the destruction of San FYancisco in a nuclear war and
urging a bilateral nuclear freeze is being prepared for
malling to households.
The 12-page pamphlet is "to educate and inform
the peopJe of San FYanci.&co that a nuclear bomb, a
nuclear attack. is not survivable," according to
Supervisor Nancy Walker.
"Almost every child, every woman and every
man would be killed" within a 1.5-mile r~dius of the
blast," the booklet says. "A deadly cloud of
radioactive soil would be thrown thousands of feet
into the air while the blast created winds up to 500
mph."
A passage in the booklet urges voters to, "Make
sure those persons for whom you vote will do all in
thetr power to promote peace and avoid nuclear war,
and actively oppose the nuclear anns race."
Some 280,000 copies were printed, at a coet of
about $36,000, including $9,000 from private foun-
dations and $16,000 in city money, Ms. Walker said.
The booklet was to be mailed at the end of
September.
3 raids net
I 0 tons of pot
EUREKA (AP) -A strike team of federal and
state authorities confiscated 1,800 marijuana plant.a
with a $10 million street value in three raids in
Southern Humboldt County.
The pot weighed about 20,406 pounds. aherifrs
Sgt. Forrest Schafer said Monday.
Schafer, who revealed few detaib, said the pot
was growing "at three separate locationa on major
plantations." He said plant.a were "growing out in the
meadows. beneath trees. in between rocb."
The raids were conducted in a remote area about
35 miles northwest of Garberville by 45 officers from
several state aad federal agencies and aheri!f's
deputies in a program dubbed Operation CAMP, for
Campaign Against Marijuana Planting.
'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--
It was the latest in a aeries of raids oppoeed in a
lawsuit by a civil liberties group and a pro-marijuana
organization, which have sought an injunction to halt
what they claim have been unconstitutional search
and seizure tactics by the raiders.
. +
Gas Company holds the li~e
Most customers will see no further increase in rates this winter
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Homeowners weary of annual
natural gas rate increases can
breathe a bit easier this winter. as
Southern California Gas Co. says
lt will seek no further change in
the rates for most customers.
While the 3. 7 million residential
customers will still have to pay
slightly more, due to rate hikes
approved by the Public Utilities
Commission in May. the company
10Ught no more increases in
SALES • SERVICE
LEASING • TRAINING
proposals submitted Monday to
the PUC.
The only customers who may
aee an additional hike will be
ammo nia producers and
co-generators under rate-setting
formulas established by the state
Legislature and utility regulators,
the company said.
"Our continuing efforts to keep
gas costs as low as pos&ble for the
people we serve are beginning to
pay off," company Chainnan
John Abram said Monday.
This will be the first time since
1978 that SoCaJ Gas will .eek no
change in rates for residential
consumers.
SoCal Gas spokeswoman
Laurie Kasper Gwyn said the
typical residential winter bill for
100 thenns of natural gas on Jan.
l , 1978 was $16.44, and the coet
five years later WU $49.06. With
the PUC's approval of a rate hike
in May, the same bW-today would
be $54.41, she said.
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.chool," said Roy Sykes, a security officer for the
1ehool dlltrict.
The most seriously hurt student was Adrian
Brailaford, a 15-year-old 10phomore shot through the
neck, said district spokesman Joee Lopez. She was
hoepitaliz.ed in aerioua but stable condition at Los
Angeles County-USC Medical Center. a hospital
spokesman aald.
Roulyn Kelly. 16. a junior, was shot in the back,
and Yemeni.a Perez, 17, aeenior. waaahot in the ankle,
Lopez said. Both were in stable condition at
Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, he said.
Artist's con ception of strange, slug-
gish shark with four-foot-wide
Heather Gardner ..nd Jeremy Wilson, both
15-year-old sophomores. suffered nu.nor w ounds and
were treated and released at Martin Luther Kmg Jr
Hospital, Lopez said.
Wilson, who was shot in the ankle, said the
shooting erupted shortly a fter a local gang caJJed the
Pirus entered the campus and tned to goad members
of another gang, the Crlps. into fighting.
After the Crips refused to fight, a black-clad Piru
stepped from a building, yelled "What's happening,
blood?" and fired an automatic rifle into the crowd,
WUaon said.
.,..,......
mouth a nd rubbery lips discovered
in Hawaiian waters .
Shark's llps missing link?
Scientists see evolutionary clue in discovery of sea creature
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Lips may be the
best clue to understanding "Jaws.'' say experts
who believe a sluggish shark with a 4-foot-wide
mouth, tiny teeth and huge, blubbery lips is an
important clue in understanding evolution.
Dubbed Megamouth, this slow-moving shark uses it.a gills to filter food from the water the way
many whales do -in sharp contrast with the
speed. aggression and raz.or-sharp teeth most
sharks U8e to feed.
J ohn McCosker, director of the Steinhart
Aquarium and an expert on shark.a, calls the
chance capture of the newly classified Mega-
chaama pelagioe near Hawaii one of the oddest
ocean finds ever.
"It's a demonstration of the remarkable
plasticity of evolution," McCa;ker said. "A lot of
different animals in the ocean have learned how to
get a square meal when they need it, even if they
can't swim fast enough to catch moving prey."
The 9cientists who discovered the beast caJJed
it Megamouth because of its giant, rubbery lips
which cover 236 rows of tiny. non-menacing teeth.
The discovery and likely lifestyle of the fish
are described in the most recent journal of the
California Academy of Sciences.
McCosker said that Megamouth offers in-
~ghts into the evolution of modem sharks, which
appeared some 150 million years ago. The
lumbering predecessor collects its food with
sieve-like protrusions on its Rills.
ACLUcanseeLAPDspy files
LOS ANGEL.ES (AP) -A
jud.ge says police must surrender
seven cartons of intelligence docu-
menta to the American Civil
Liberties Union for inspection in
connection with its lawsuits alleg-
ing illegal police spying.
Superior Court Judge Lester E.
Ot.on a18o ordered Monday that
Officer Thomas Scheidecker, at
whoee home the files were found
earlier thia year. undergo ques-
tioning by ACLU attorneys later
thia month. The ACLU sought
Scheidecker's documenta and de~
ix-ition as part of the pretrial
phase its six lawsuits alleging the
department illegally spied on
law-abiding ci vil.ians.
Scheidecker was the second
officer assigned to the Public
Disorder Intelligence Division
who was discovered keepins in-
telligence materials at his home. ------------
The first was his subordinate,
Detective Jay Paul, who had
stored about 180 boxes of ma-
terials.
Admirustrative and criminal in-
vestigations into the off-site
storage of files are being con-
ducted by police and the district
attorney's office.
Michael Stone. Scheidecker's
lawyer, argued Monday ~t
the release of any documents.
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A& Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Sept. 13, 1983
Crime prevention is
everyone's business
We've had our share of local heroes this summer.
They are citizens who think tragic accidents or crime aren't
spectator sports.
Several, like Mitchell Valencia and Brooks Hanson of
Laguna Beach, will get formal from the state's attorney
general for their pursuit of a armed jewel robber.
Others, like Huntington Beach student Brian Patone,
will get a local pat on the back from law enforcement for
pursuit of a sex offender which cost him a wrecked
motorcyle.
Still more citizens never are individually spotlighted
for their effort in the Neighborhood Watch programs
w hich keep local eyes open for potential crimes against
friends and neighbors.
There is no substitute for the acumen of pro-
fessionally trained and experienced law enfonnent
officers in preventing crime and pursuing criminals. But
police usually aren't at the scene of a crime as it happens.
Citizens are. They can help, as our local heroes did, by
actively pursuing suspectrs. But they can also assist by
remaining calm and observing carefully. Good descrip-
tions of criminals and their vehicles are invaluable aids to
police in solving crimes.
We all can and should be crime-fighting heroes.
Opinions expressed In the space above are those or the Dally Piiot. Other views
expressed on this page are those or their authors and artists. Readers comment
Is Invited. Address: The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Coats Mesa, CA 92626.
Phone (714) 6-42-4321.
MAILBOX
Longshorem en make a mark
To the Editor:
In rrudst of ha.rd Limes, and in
the wake of the 007 massacre, who
stands out with dignity, human-
ity, and absolute regal composure:
Our Longshoremen!
Let's give them a big hurrah.
They refused in these ha.rd times
and short money at least $130 per •
day to buckle down and unload a
Russian vodka and lumber vessel
on our West Coast of Los Angeles.
They are certainly showing a lot
more guts and affinnative action
than our government is doing
right now. God bless each and
everyone.
LILY DEACON
Corona del Mar
Latchkey prog r am h elps kids
To the Editor:
A program for latchkey chil-
dren is being started at the Boys
and Girls Club of Huntington
Valley. The pa.rents of these
children aren't workmg for
luxury. they are working for
survival. Fees will be in keeping
with the ability to pay. Some
won't be able to pay for this
service but the need is urgent that
no child be left alone
It would be nice if folks who
could, would donate a little to the
club to help cover the cost of those
who can't aUord to pay. This is
such a worthy program for the
club to take on. I'm sure they could
use all the help th~y can get.
These are hard times for many
people so let's show a little care
and interest in their kids. U thoee
kids are going to run our society
someday, let's give them a chance
at a secure, safe place surrounded
by caring people.
MERRY LENT
Huntington Beach
The ater traffic is horrendous
To the Editor:
Ever since the Pac ific
Amphitheater opened. I have
been reading about complaints
from nearby residents regarding
the loud and disturbing music. but
I have read no complaints about
the traffic.
I do not live near the
amphitheater; however, I do live
two houses off Fairview Road
near the 405 Freeway. The traffic
noise created by the bumper to
bumper traffic leaving the
amphitheater northbound on
Fairview Road is horrendous.
There is continual screeching of
brakes, honking of horns. and
young people hanging out of cars
shouting obecenities.
I used to think that the crowd
leaving the speedway races was
bad, but that is mild compared to
the crowds that attend and leave
the amphitheater "rock" concerts.
LES CHAPMAN
Costa Mesa
l. M. Boyd !Kill the k ids
Believe one or lhe most ex -
traordin.ary laws of all time was
written into the books of the
Massachusetts Bay Colony in the
1640s. It decreed that juveniles
over age 16 who cursed or physi-
cally abused their pa.rents could be
put to death.
A living breathing 8-pound
horse? You bet. "Fantasy," a
foot-tall filly merited that descrip·
tion when born recently at the
Hobby Horse Fann in Bedford
County, Va. World's smallest
horse.
Africa's Chad, the whereabouts
of this month's war, is helicopter
t'Ountry. Doesn't have any paved
roads.
Q. What's a "Flasher" doll?
A. A doll with a tittle trench coat
that rues open at e touch. How's
truat for exquisite taste in the toy
department?
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Q. How did the composer Step-
hen Foster die?
A,. Story is he accidentally
gashed his throat when he fell on a
broken whiskey bottle. Whatever
really happened did happen ln a
New York City Bowery
flophouse. At age 38, F08t.er died
in a pool of blood with a penny in
his pocket for every year of hi.a life
-38 cents.
Q. Who's "Silent Sam, the
Dancing Midget"?
A. That was the at.age name of
Sammy Davia, Jr., at age 2.
Man in Illinois has put totrelher
a robot that vacuuma carpeta. Doe.
good work. Bu t the man has to
take all the furniture out of the
room first. It has made carpet
vacuuming an extremely difficult
pb.
Nobody makes st.eel n.a.l.la ln thi.I
country anymore. They're all
imported.
H.L lchwerla HI
~
Lltrry D. 1,..,.
Men~fdltOf
·-~
LEFT HOLDING the ~
Reagan's visit to Marcos risky
WASHJNGTON -President
Reagan will be risking his Ute if he
insists on going ahead with his
acheduled November visit to the
Philippines, State Department in-
siders warn.
The U.S. Embassy in Manila has
received several death threats
against Reagan. Though many of
these threats have come in
anonymous telephone calls to the
embassy, top State Department
officials are not shrugging them
off as mere crank calls.
My associate Lucette Lagnado
has learned that the death threats
began filtering into the embassy
after the assassination of Philip-
pine opposition leader Benigno
Aquino on Aug. 21. In addition to
the anonymous phone calls, op-
position leaders have warned
privately that radic.al factions may
be Conning "suicide squads" to kill
Reagan if he visits the Philippines.
One State Department source,
noting the number of direct
threats against Reagan, said the
president may be in "grave
danger'' lf he sticks to his current
plans to visit the Philippines.
Besides the physical danger to
Reagan, several State Department
experts offer another reuon they
believe the president Should
cancel his November visit; They
Q
-JA-Cl-11-1-111_1_1 -~
;
are convinced that Philippine
President Ferdinand Marcos was
ultimately responsible for the
assassination of Aquino.
Bad politics
If this is indeed the case -and
the State Department has not
made public its judgment on the
matter yet -diplomats feel it
would be politically unwise for
Reagan to visit tbe Philippines.
The spectacle of Reagan literally
embracing Marco6 would outrage
thoae who blame the Philippine
dictator for the murder of his
foremost political rival.
Marcos is not only unpopular
but in poor health. they point out,
and sooner or later he will ~
from the acene. It's not at all
certain that his wife, Imelda. or
anyone else would be able to keep
the regime in power.
If the opposition eventually
succeeds in gaining power, Re-
agan's support for Marcos follow-
ing the Aquino assassination will
be likely to produce a backlash
against the United States. The
situation, some State Department
officials fear, would be like that in
Iran after the overthrow of the
shah, who was for years the
darling of Washington.
Even if the Marcos regime was
not directly responsible for the
Aquino murder, the incident
points up the risk of a Reagan visit.
lf the Marcos regime was unable
to safeguard Aquino, adviaers aak,
will it be any more effective in
protecting Reagan, particularly
from fanatical auidde squads?
WATCH ON THE PENTAGON
~ The Army is rushing develop-
ment of some amazing new
anti-aircraft weapons for its com-
bat troops in Europe. It already
has a man-carried, surface-to-air
missile system in operation that's
better than the heat-seeking Red-
eye. The Patriot and the Sergeant
York will be even more aophisti-
cated. The Patriot, which will be
deployed in Europe next year,
"can engage nine targets simul-
taneously," according to a secret
Pentagon report. The Sergeant
York will come on line in i ga5,
giving longer-range, higher-kill,
all-weather protection for ground
troops against enemy planes.
-Passing-the-buck is an old
military tradition, but the Navy
has given it a new twist: It passes
the buck down the chain of
command, instead of up. Consider
this recent explanation by the
director of Naval Weapons Engi-
neering Support Activity for how
the system should work: "Com-
pleted staff work ia the study of a
problem and the preeentation of a
aolution in such fonn that all that
remains to be done on the part of
the aupervillor, Division Head,
Department Head, Tech.nical Di-
rector and Director is to indicate
approval or disapproval of the
completed action. Higher
authority, except for exceptional
cases(!), should not be consulted in
detennining details, no matter
how perplexing they may be." So
whatever happens, it's the
subordinates' fault.
-Some Air Force brass ob-
viously don't have enough to do:
They're worrying about high
fashion instead of high flying.
Result: mandatory new dreM uni-
fomlS for all officers, including
swnmer whites and a snazzy
blue-and-whiteenaembleforwin-
ter. Some junior officen are
quietly griping, not only about the
$300 per uniform they have to
Bhell out, but about the shocking
break with wild-blue-yonder tra-
dition. A. on e put it, "If I wanted
to wear white unifonns, I would
have joined the Navy."
California's economy on a roll
By THOMAS D. ELIAS
Expect the California economy
to c ontinue its
faster-than-forecast recovery
well into next year -unle1111
there's a large and sudden in-
crease in bank interest rates.
That'• the word from the world's
largest bank and from leaders of
the houaing industry.
And even lf the interest riaea
alightly from today's levels, the
recovery will keep percolating.
Recovery in California will still
leave behind thou.sands bf re-
oeaion victims.
"Steel ls not going to recover,"
says Thomas Deane, vice chair-
man of the Bank of America. ··And
the auto industry will come back,
but not as it was before,"
In buman terms, that meana
almost all the California au to
aaaembly plants closed down by
Ford, Chrysler and General
Motors over th,.ast three years
ClllfDRlll FOCUS
will stay shuttered. And as long aa
thoee plan ta stay cloeed, there's no
chance for expansion by st.eel
companies like Kaiaer or Bethle-
hem. which cut their California
operations aeverely in the last two
yean.
"A lot of workera will have to be
rechanneled," said Deane.
"T hey'll have to go into aervice
industries. They might have to
take less pay than they were
getting in their old jobs."
But for moet Californians, the
happy days will last at least a year
or two.
"Housing is back, agriculture is
recovering from the 1088e5 of the
last two years and aerospace look!
good, although not u good u it
would if other states weren't
taking in the expanaion of aome
California companies," Deane
said.
Bot ltoasla1 ia the key to the
entire recovery, becauae when it is
strong. then deamnd for lumber
and other products al80 riaes. And
aa long aa mortgage interest rates
continue on today's 11 percent
range, the recovery will percolate.
"There's a lot of demand out
there for housing," said Deane,
noting that thou.sands of families
stymied for years by high interest
are suddenly back in the market.
But if interest goes .above 13
percent, look out for a new
recession, warn both Deane and
Harry Pryde, president of the
National As8ociation of Home
Builders.
"At 12 percent, we are at the
edge of affordability," said Pryde.
"At 14 percent, we are over the
edge and this housing recovery
would end."
Said Deane, "It aeema that 13
\ ... AN D ~K ~~IF we• IN cow" YJf -IF I GSf 1(11.Ul>. / '()
UKt 1t> KNOW MV SfATl!Sl ~
' •
percent is the tolerance limJt tor a
lot of people. But we don't .ee the
rates hitting that leovel in the next
two yean. We don't expect rat.es to
drop below 10 percent, either."
Interest at the l 0 to 12 pen::en t
level will keep houal.ng price!
stables, too, avoiding the rapid
inflation that accompanied the
low mort.gage rat.es of the
mld-1970..
And that's good news foe com-
panies in aerospace and elec-
tronk:a. says Deane. They've aot a
hard enouah time nicn.&iting
young talent to Calllomia with
today's home pric8; any wide-
spread increue would dictate
even more shifts ol new pJanta to
other states.
It'• also 1ood news for Re-
publican politicians. who hope to
ride Ronald Reagan's coettaila
again next fall.
''Republicans benefit more than
Democrats from the current re-
covery ," said Deane, noti.na that
the "out." party usually faret
better in hard-times elections.
"But we don't think we're 9eeing
deliberate political manipulation.
The Federal Reserve Bank J'wa
been punulng the same policies
for ~ral years."
But rnc»t C.alifomiana don't care
much about w hich party benefits.
jult u ~ u n!C.'OYer)' continua
And tl&htly-controlled lnt.t!nlt
rateure obvloualy the key to that,
regard.le. of which poUtidam are
at the controta.
CllllYm
With the lldoptfon of the
proix-ct lncreue ln fliChta at
JWA. the Newport Belch motto
hu become "Nolle and Allllutioo
from the nmway to the lail."
TAC
' ·-·--·--"'----.. ................ ,_ ....... _.........,._..,_ _ .. .-.-. .... -
. -
( , ~~~---~~-~~~~~~~..-~~~.~~-------~--~~-~~~~---·
t I I ' ' I
0 a•
Michelle Wojnaroski can get lots of
credit -at age 5.
Give her credit
Card companies h aunt girl, 5
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Sept. 13, 1983 A7
Monaco surviving Princess Grace's death
MONTE CARLO, Monaco (AP) -One year
after the death of Princess Grace, the tiny
Mediterranean principality of Monaco flourishes -
If sadly.
Her prince and three children will mark the fin>t
annivenary of Grace's death Wednesday by attend-
ing a memorial Maas in the cathedral where she was
married and 1aid to rest.
It was on Sept. 14, 1982, that the former
American movie star Grace Kelly died at the age of
62. Her car ran off a hairpin turn on a twisting,
Riviera mountain road and plunged 120 feet into a
vegetable garden, but doctors said the cause of death
-36 hours after the accident -was a stroke.
Within months, there was speculation that real
estate prices would plunge, conventions would
cancel, tourism would decline and economic troublea
would reign without the drawing power of Princess
Grace.
The predictions have not come true.
Monaco's commetclal turnover last year was a
record high $1.5 billion, bank depoaituet a 'new mark
at $1.9 billion , and hotel occupancy roee to 67 percent
from 50 percent 16 yean ago. 'Pheftflwt& for 1-983 are
expected to be at least as rosy.
There still is no personal income tax in Monaco,
no national debt and virtually no unemployment. Of
the prlncipality•s 28,000 residents, only about 100 are
listed as unemployed -a jobless rate of 0.3 peroent.
Although there baa been a slight drop in real
estate prices, it ha8 been far less than that
experienced in other resort areas, and its cause has
Crash survivor defied the odds
Navy pilot still can't walk hut says his progress 'miraculous'
SAN JOSE (AP) -Doctors told Bruce "Stuff like that just doesn't happen."
Mallibert's relatives that he wasn't expected to Carter also is surprised by Mallibert's lack of
been the genera.1 world recession rather than the
death of Grace.
The linking of Monaco's economic health to
Grace's death has shocked her husband Prince
Rainier m. The portly, 60-year-old prince, whose
Grimaldi tam.Uy has ruled since the 13th century. h&
denied such a link in the few interviews he has given
sinoe her death.
"She did a lot for the glamour and prestige of the
pripcipality, but I don't think her disappearance m~ans that people are not going to come," Rainier told
Life ~azine earlier this year. "Monaco has existed
for 800 years. It can go on for a long time."
The public's faacination with Grace, the daugh-
ter of a Philadelphia brick-layer turned millionaire,
also goes on.
survive a midair co.lijsion that killed 16 people. bitterness about an accident that paralyzed his legs :;,1~·
When he awoke from a 93-day coma, the· and confined him to a wheelchair. ,..._,
physicians predicted severe brain damage. "You don't hear anything negative from Bruce
But Mallibert confounded medical experts to Mallibert," Carter said. "No matter what you ask
become the sole survivor of the blazing crash of a him, nothing is ever negative."
space agency flying laboratory and a Navy Mallibert is a regular around nearby Moffett
surveillance plane ill Sunnyvale 10 years ago. Field and made a point of visiting new patients twice
The former Navy radar technician was thrown a week at a veterans hospital in Palo Alto.
free of the wreckage, causing a concussion, broken "I guess he's got flying in his blood," said Capt.
back, broken legs and burns. He is unable to walk but Bill Wietz, a civilian firefighter at Moffett who feels his progress so far is miraculous. ·
B .. A •-_.. n...... Golfers who witnessed the collision 300 leet over responded to the crash scene· ~ Y Cue uoc: .. c~ ""'..,.1 His w ife, Kathy, was a sophomore when the the 12th fairway at Sunnyvale Municipal Golf The plastic attaclc on Michelle Wojnarowski is Course found Mallibert and covered him with a planes crashed. She could see the smoke from her
understandable. What credit card company parachute because they thought he was dead. high school. They married four months after meeting
wouldn't want a customer with an A-1 rating? A firefighter who checked him later found a at a church where Mallibert was lecturing on his
Trouble is, Michelle is only 5 years old. pulse and had him rushed to a hospital. accident.
While some grownups find getting credit an "It was divine intervention thatl was alh1c.," said He w as flying in the rear of the four-engine
almost impossible task, a barrage of applications San J • y d • li thr h N bo 1 A ·1 12 1973 liste · to hasstuffedMichelle'sWestCovinamailboxforthe Mallibert, 32, of ose. ' ou on t ·ve oug avy tur prop pane pn , rung an that unless someone is on your side." AM radio.
last month. The Bakersfield native was nicknamed "Moose" Both the Navy and National Aeronautics and
The Diners Club, Sears, Montgomery Ward, in high school because of his 6-foot, 200-pound frame. Space Administration planes were instructed simul-
the Broadway and Shell Oil, among others, have J Carte ted us1 land h d h
vied for her favors. New requests arrive almost Boyhood friends such as ohn r never expec taneo y to on t e same runway an t en were ., ......,10 Mallibert to recover physically. waved off too late to avoid the collision.
daily. In three cases, the letters stated that Malliberthadtolearntospeakagainandstarted Mallibertheardacrewmember scream, ''Oh my Bruce Mallihert leads an active life 10
Michelle's credit card application had been God • all d d " d II b h h "pre-approved" becaU8e of her excellent credit driving with hand controls. • we re ea · years after mi air co ision in w ic e "I don't want to sound like a religious nut or He was right about all but one man who .
record. anything, but I think God healed him," Carter said. cherishes the life he leads. was the sole survivor. "There are a lot of dishonest people in the 1-==.,:,i~_=.:s::u..::::.::.:..=-::;:=.:::.=.....:=..::.:::....:.:==....::..:.:::;,::z,._..::;.=.;;.;;;.;..=='--"~~~-....:._--'----------------------------------
world," said Michelle's mother, Janie Wo-
jnarowski. "Some of them would just fill all these
(applications) out and send them back. I talked to
an attorney who said a company would have a hell
of a time collecting money from a 5-year-old."
Mrs. Wojnarowski said she has tried for days
to find out how her daughter got onto the mailing
lists.
A laughing employee at Montgomery Ward's
corporate headquarters told her, "Gee. we usually
wait until the applicant is 6."
Ellery Queen magazine alao wrote Michelle,
~ h er for renewing her subscription and
cautioning her to make prompt payment.
"Michelle never took that magazine in her
life!" said Mrs. Wojnarowski.
Michelle's mother said it has been a frustrat-
ing search to try to discover the jokester or
scrambled computer that gave her young daughter
a gold star credit rating ai;id a taste for m ystery
magazines.
Dodie Oxley, a new accounts representative
for Diner's Club corporate office in Denver, said
the "pre-approved" letters are derived from
different Diner's Club bureaus' lists of
"A-1"-rated customers.
"Sometimes we also U8e certain magazine
subecription lists, like the Wall Street Journal,"
she said.
Michelle, asked if she took the J ournal, only
giggled, displaying the gap from a newly lost
tooth.
With new credit applications arriving almost
daily, Mrs. Wojnarowski said she finally contacted
the post office and hopes they will eventually find
the answer.
"They said if anyone could find out how her
name was obtained, they could," she recalled.
"You know what's really bad about this?" she
added. "I've got this car out back I don't have the
money to fix, and here's my 5-year-old with A-1
credit."
USA loday adding
Ohio, New England
NORTH ANOOVER, Mass. (AP) -USA Today
has added New England and Ohio to its circulation
areas.
Editions of the national newspaper printed at the
Lawrence F.agle-Tribune plant here will be dis-
tributed in six New England at.ates and will be 80ld
through a wholesaler in Ottawa and Montreal, said
USA Today president Vincent Speu.ano.
Papers printed in Mansfield, Ohio, will be 80ld in
Cleveland and Colwnbua. he added.
The expansion of the Gannett Newspapen
publication cxmee almost e:actly one year aft.er the
Arlington. Va.-bwd paper WU launched in the
WMhington-Beltimore area.
ALL NEW ·a ING 0
Every Wed11119tl•y, 7 P.'M.
(Doon OPfH' UO P.11.)
.llCI NTS "'110"
Mtnlrnurn AdmlMlon • I
Parkweat Apartment Clubhouse
Culver & Mlehelson -lrvlne
FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION ~-.,
PHONE IRVINE P.A.W.a. Inc.
833·9649 ----:-. :i' •. !J
~ .. For th• ... ;
•1Promotlon of.!! ..
Animal 99"
Well Being"
Come
new c
At Black
our
menu.
®
you woiit j4steatlunch,"
you'll enjoy lunch.
You'll enjoy what's chan~cd: even fnore variety at
even better prices. Choose from crisp, fresh. bountiful
salads, tender chicken or delightful seafood lunches.
Or enjoy one of our famo us hccf selections ... from
thick, old-fashioned burgers to hearty, juicy prime rib.
You 'II enjoy what hmm't chan~c<l too: the trl!IY gen en nss
portions nn<l great food quality we're famous for ... the
relaxing privacy an<l <.!omfortahk: Blade Angus ntm< 1s·
phcrc ... and the qui<.:k. friendly full scrvicc Y< •u l1L1(.!d <ll
lunch time.
MOc the most
ol your lunch hour today.
$2.95
ROAST BEEF
SANDWICH
Thin sUoed on a fresh
French roll. Served
with soup.
RANCH BURGER
An old·fashloned l/J lh.
burger with all the
trimming& and frie11.
CHICKEN TERJYAKJ
A brolled boneless breast
With rice, ~les and
Ranch Bread.
LOW·CAL
PLATE
A V2 lb. ground b<..-ef
9teak. tomatoe8 and
cottage cheese.
$3.95
RANCHER
SANDWICH
A bl~. hearty daily
spe<..'ial with soup 11r ~al11J
TODAY'S
SEAFOOD
J\ sca.f no<l ll(ll.·ci al, sc mp
or salnd, ric.oe or powto and
Ranch Bread.
CHEF'S SPECIAL
A sp<..'Cial hut entrc.'C,
w mplctc with
soup or salad
tn'\JARTS·
SPECIALTY SALA,O
One of our large fresb,
jtencrous, spec.otal Rlllads
(.Teated daily.
FRENCH DIP
Roaat Beef on a lrcsh roll,
au Jus, fries, 80UP or salad.
llALf.POl'ND BACON
CHEESl-::BURGER
With cheddar and hac.~m.
nn a Kaiser roU. Fries.
soup or salad.
ClllCKENTEMPURA
Plump, boneless hrcnst,
tempura style. With rk-c.
vc~ctahlci;, ~JUP or salad.
TAC:OSAl..AD
Tm .. '(1 ll\:d, cheddar, oUvcs,
i,tu11c:l111<1lc and salsa. Ole!
SHRJMP LOl 11f:
Loads <1f shrimp, cAA.
tomato, asparai.tuH nnd
olives on n lx..J of lcUUl'\.'.
C:HEI'~ SALAD
Bountiful julienne of hnm.
turkey, swl& and cht.'tldar
on crisp, fresh ~ns.
$4.75
All served with !clOUp or
Mlad. potato or ric..: nod
toa.'lted Ranch Bread.
WESTERN SIRLOIN STEAK
< )ur favorite luncheon
cul. Broiled to 11rdcr.
U>NUON BROIL
1Cndcr; Im 1ik.-<l slk'\.:S. a11
ju..; & crcarnc.'tl he 1rscrac.lish.
TERJ\'AKJ
SIRLOIN STEAK
M,l ... at1.'C.I and hroilcd
.. · order with tcriynki
sauc.'C and pineapple.
OEIP FRJED PRAWNS
81x bi~ breaded prawns.
fried ~olden brown,
with '--ookroU saut.'C.
$6.25
All scn·cd with soup or
salad. potato or ri'-'e and
tOIL'ltcd Ranch Bread.
PRIMERJB
OF BEEF
R11as1cJ daily m1d C.'Ut
to order. J\u jus &
crcamc.-<l horacrndish.
TOP SIRJ..OIN
STEAK
Our (amous Ulpncr size
U.S. Choic.-e Sirloin •..
bmilt..J to order.
'fOP SIRLOIN STEAK
AND
ClllCKENTEMPURA
TWo of our fov(Jrlll'S to
~ether ... cooked tu order.
BROlLEO
HALIBUT FILET
Tundcr, hooc<l halibut.
with lemon huucr and
UUtJ.lr ~Ul~.
~ a BLACK ANGUS RES 11\UAANTSfM
FOUNTAIN VALLEY, SANTA ANA, GARDEN GROVE
TORRANCE, CERRITOS, LAKEWOOD, AN~HEIM
,, ' 11
,,
)
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\
~
J\8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Sept. 13, 1983
Memorial
starts for
2 Swedes
A memorial fund has
been established for the
families of two Swedish
women who were
murdered in August
while on the last leg of a
California vacation.
Gigi Lewert, who
heads a Swedish student
exchange program in
Laguna Beach, said
proceeds will go to de-
fray the expenses in-
curred by fathers of the
two women, when the
men traveled to the state
to seek their daughters.
Additional funds may go
to finance an investiga-
tion of the murders,
which have yet to be
solved.
The search for the
women ended when the
bodies of Marie
Lilienberg, 24, and
Maria Wahlen, 26, were
found near Santa
Barbara in mid-August.
Apart from the per-
sonal loss the families are
experiencing, they also
face a severe e<:onomic
burden, Lewert said.
She said contributions
may be sent to The Marie
and Maria Memorial and
Assistance Fund, c/o
Consulate General of
Sweden, P .O. Box 99159,
San Francisco, CA
94109, or delivered to
any World Savings of-
fice in California.
LB bus ride
still free
for seniors
Senior citizens will
conunue to ride free on
Laguna Beach's munici-
pal buses. after Orange
County supervisors
agreed to extend a
subsidy program with
the city for another fiscal
year.
Seniors have had a
free ride on the blue and
white vehicles for the
past six years, with more
than 50,000 older riders
taking advantage of the
program last year alone.
l
And now, supervisors
have increased the ooun-
ty's contribution to the wagram. providing 20
oenta for each senior
c.Jimbing aboard -up to
$10,000 during fiBcal
year 1983/84.
The city absorbs the 20
cent difference. Th08e
under65yearsofagestill
must pay 40 cents for city
bus rides.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLlftRY, INC • ...................
l922 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA -548-1156
. DOES YOUR
AUTO POLICY
NEED A
. TUNE-UP?
··call me.
I can check ur auto out . yo to make sure polt~Y tting the
You re ge t for your mos ,, ' money.
~ 9023
Adams alMlanola
962-3391
AiiSIBfe
You're In p>d band&
..x.
" '
•
Grose tor lecture
in Newport hall
Introducing
Taste that delivers
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking ls)langerous to Your Health.
• '1 J . ,,
pack
..
,
e. Ml
TUESDAY. September 13. 1983
ANN LANDERS
TELEVISION
BUSINESS
82
83
BS
Al Jarreau look Oranse County by storm
Saturday night at the Pacific Amphitheatre
leat1ing his audience dancing to the beat of "Does
Anyone Want To
Go Dancing on the Roof?" Page B3.
D
0
A haven for hated flea -..
;Pest thrives well in warm Califo rnia w eather ~ .
FLEA
l. Adult Oea -.
ly CATIE LOTT ....,,_c.._ .....
: ' Are fleas really a serious problem in Southern
c:allfomia? Aak any pet owner, pet store operator,
yeterinarian, or exterminator and you'U bE
p-eeted with a resounding YF.8!
The flea thrives in a hot and humi<i
fllvironment and California's ever abundant
8J,nahine and year round moderate temperaturE
fcmbine to create nothing short of a flea haven.
: Isabell Wright, owner of the Yee Wee Beastie
Pet Shoppe in Balboa. says, "Fleas are never gone
Becauae it takes a frost to kill them. Of course we never get a froat 80 the fleas are never killed.
People tend to ignore them during the winter, but
ihey're there and growing.•'
: While the majority of people are suffering
~r the recent and unusual 9Q degree humid
aunmer days of September, you can be sure the
Clea population is having a field day.
: With such ideal weather conditions, according cb .Oil Challet, manager of the Orange County
Veetor Control District, "fleas can go through the
~tire life cycle in as little as three weeks."
4 The first part of this cycle begins with the
adult female feeding by sucking blood off a
wann-blooded mammal and then laying her eggs -!--hundreds,in her lifetime -usually while still an the host. Because the eggs are unattached they
b>n fall off on to furniture, bedding, into
Q.rpeting, the yard or any place the host may
frequent.
• Depending on the moisture and temperature
ihe egg may hatch, in 10 days or l~. into the larva
which resembles a small centipede. This larva will
Olen molt twice and at the end of one to two weeks
~in a silken cocoon in which to pupate.
• The larva then matures and emerges as the
adult within as little as a week, or it may delay
imergence for up toa full year. The adult flea who
~off the host also has this same ability to exist
C>r long periods of time without food.
• • Says Wright. ''They (fleas) hybernate just
Dke bears. U they don't move around they don't
• oeed food."
• This tenacious ability of the flea to survive
r Without food for any number of days, weeks, or
~nths ia often a source of frustration and
confusion to vexed flea fighters.
A family taking an extended vacation for
example, takes along the pet feeling confident
PAPARAZZI
-. .
, ..
'Fleas are never gone because It
takes a frost to kill them. Of
course we never get a frost so the
fleas are never killed. People tend
to Ignore them during the winter.
but they're there and growing.'
they will return to a flealess house since no host
will be present to contract, carry, or feed the
insects.
Unfortunately, rather then simply dying or
traveling elsewhere, the aduJt flea will enter into
an almost dormant state, while any fleas in the
pupal stage will continue to develop only delaying
their emergence.
When the family returns home, the activity of
simply walking on the floor and the warmth of a
potential host stimulates the fleas' emergence. The
new adults now join with the once dormant ones
and greedily seek out the most readily available
host for a feeding binge.
Dr. Michael Rust, director of the Entomology
Department at UC Riverside, good naturedly
laughs, "I usually advise the family to send the pet
in first."
Nine times out of 10, the type of flea greeting
the returning vacationers -and most common to
Sou them California -is the cat !lea, named after
it's primary host the cat.
The reason for this flea's dominance, accord-
ing to Challet, stems from their flexibility in
finding an adequate host. He explains. "Their
requirements are wide enough where they can
feed oU humans and dogs. Most fleas are very
specific according to the host they developed on.
But the cat flea can develop on a variety of hosts."
The ability of the flea to feed off a human
presents no real danger to a person's health, but in
most instances results in an itching irritation.
There is, however, the exception of the
oriental rat flea which is known to carry Bubonlc
Plague.
Challet is quick to reassure that "there ls no
flea transmitted plague in Orange County. We just
don't have a rat population or flea population
which would sustain that type of disease."
2.
3.
can hw for 2 yt>ars
without ftedini;t
Fleaegs -
hatlh m I l day!>
•:. ~u
~
\,: "'16.,. ' """ " •....,'..,., ,..,,,,
"' .. it..
Flea larva -
f~eds HI day!>
4. larVa spins
.cocoon -
adult emerges m 5
"':
5. Adult nea -
cycle may !<Ike only
3 weeks
Battle lines drawn
Bew are I The w ar on f lea s now on
By RENEE DANSKER KARY
It's bad enough that the dog has
fleas, but now my SLIPPERS have
fleas.
For the past few nights, l noticed
that thoee pesky little critters with the
mean bites have been attacking my feet
and ankles. I thought that they were
coming up through the rug.
Last night, I reached down to squish
one of the little devils between my
fingers, and noticed that my favorite
fuzzy slippers were infested. My
champagne-colored cozies! Infested
with fleas!
Apparently the fleas thought my
.Uppers were a warm, fuzzy animal.
Th<>111e fleas must have been terribly
frustrated all day as they burrowed
deeper and deeper into the soft, downy
pile of my cozy 8CTUffies. In the
daylight hours, there is no warm blood
to suck up; no sweet liquid to revitalize
them. Al& they dig down in their search
for nouriahment, the fleas must think,
"This is an awfully long-haired dog
we've got here."
But come nightfall, after I take my
shower and slip my clean feet into the
champagne-colored, comfy alippera,
the fleas finallly hit paydirt.
Chomp! Yowl Are thoae lttle CUYI
ready for me! As I look down at them, J
• can only see dots. They are not bAa
enough to be anything except moutba.
The guy who invented Pac-Man m~
have had fleas in hia hou.e, too.
Pac-Man is all mouth -just like~
pesky little insects. There im't room fot
anything elae but a set of very Stz'Ol'IC
teeth. Talk about Jaws!
I can't believe the picture in tht"
dictionary. It shows a flea with a body,
a head, and long legs for jumping away
when I try to squish them. I still think
they are all mouth. All I know la that
this is the first summer that rve had to
dust my beloved slippers with flea
powder.
My sympathies to the clop of <>ranee
County. I can see it is time to waab the
dog. and the rug, and apray \he hou8e.
This ia WAR! And I'm putting a 0.
collar on my slippers.
Concert party ••• Laguna museum benefit 'thoroughly enjoyable' ev enin g
n elaborate buffet of poached salmon,
baron of beef, quiche. 8S80rted pates and
cheese with fruit a waited special guests
arriving Saturday evening for the
~Sarala VaaglaaD concert sponsored by the Laguna
Beach Museum of Art.
The honored ben·
e{actors (who under-
• wrote production costs at
a minimum of $250 a
seat) and concert patrons
(they contributed $125
each) parked in an area
reserved special for them
before proceeding to the
Tivoli Terrace above the
festival grounds at Irvine
Bowl.
As they dined at
dusty roee and cerile
colored tables centered
with flowers and can-
dles. Katby Cavenaap
provided musical enter-
tairunent.
Further niceties -
in their loge-section seats Marla Bird.
the patrons and benefac-
tors found a boutinere bag of Austrian chocolates
and a comfort cushion.
The guest list included Janet Eggers, ex-
ecutive producer and concert chairwoman, (she
presented Vaughan with a bouquet of yellow roses
at the end of her performance) , Kea and Marla
Bird, Ratll and Jack Boyle, Harry Moon, Mrs.
Levering Cartwrtlbt. the David Hlnclalen,
Eagae Levin. the Rlcbard Newqal1t1, Roger and
Eileen ObaDealu, the Tom Megonlgala, Ted and
SHaDDe Paalaon, Gep Darenberger, the Tbeodore
'Petenoaa and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Tomaao.
Janet Eggers. Leighton and Karen French, left, chat with Judy and
Chuck McKenna.
Also, Jack Llnkletter and wile Bobbi, (he was
honorary chairman of the evening). Barbara and
Greg MacGUUvray, Marilyn Rlcbardsoa and
Evie and Artbar Lewis.
Committee members who had worked
throughout the summer for the big evening
included Marllya Rlcbardaon, ticket chainnan,
Laart Pel111ero, Dianna Otton (at the party with
museum director Bill), Patty Coll111oa. Evie
Lewis, Pat Atba, Patsy Tartaglia (at tending with
husband Mario) Jeanne and Dawson Adams,
Charlene Croul (she was in charge of pre-concert
party attending with huaband James), Artllar
Lewis and Jacque Ba11ett and Photographer
Gejar.
Reflecting on the event on Monday morning,
F.ggers aaid ''The evening waa thoroughly en-
joyable. It was elegant and I think it put the
museum in a good light. And, we had such a nice
weather for the concert that was such a good
mixture of music.'' (Receipts are still being totaled
to find how much was made a t the benefit-funds
will go for the museums ongoing exhibitions and
educational programs.)
·A night with Sarah ••• Complemented by Pacific Symphony
By SUSAN FINGER
10.,'9MCen111u•1 el
nder the baton of Keith Clark Saturday
night, the Orange CountyPacific Sym-
phony was tint tranaformed into a pops
orehestra and then into a studio big band
thatcomplemented theartis1ryof Sarah Vaughan.
During the finlt half of this third annual
benefit for the r...guna Beach Mw.eum of Art. the
orcheltra pre9ellted a program obvioualy calcu-
lated for aocel8ibWty to the most untrained ear.
Following interm119ion, thoee members of the
orchettra with studio and club experience were in
their &1oey as Vaughan and her excellent trio took
center ataBe· In a decept.lvely mite ~I •peaking voioe, sh'
quipped with her adoring audience between wide
mood~ fol' aongs Uke "Fuctnatin' Rythmn"
. and, later, 'Someone to Watch Over Me."
Vaughan la a true pro~elllonal, perhape not
the most unique on the drailt, but always with a
conaiatency stemm.lna from awarene91 of the
vc*e'• lnltrumental pcmlblUtJee. Ble•ed wtth a
tremendow range, whkh w ..... from full
advant.aae, she will auddenJy eoar or plunge for
., effect. She knoWI Just how to antidpete the beat,
how 19 alna around the tune, bendJng and circling
I
pitches to emphasu.e notes, filling in leaps with EiYJ>t" was followed without interruption by the
improvised passage work. famous Long Ranger 8edion of Ro.ini'a William
In short, her performance proved what her Tell Overture, A. much fun aa thia overture is, it
fanshavealwaysknown -thatSarah Vaughan is make9 a jarring continuation for a delicate work,
a vocalist with uaurance and durable style. and could only be 80 URd under the ...umption
But earlier the symphony. playing the that one'• audience 1acka the tenaitlvlty to
overture to Wagner's Die M eilteral.nger began the appreciate the fleetingly beeutiful lmpre.iona of
evenina with an appealing amount of enthusiastic the Reepiahl. Elan and cymbala uide, lt'a at1l1 an
pomp. Thia image was created by a good round lnsulL
aound, lent by full brass underpinning and .. ---' f th contrasted to preclae mualc'\l work in the smaller The remainder of the "pope ~ ... on ° e concert included a shortened version of Ravel's ensemble aettingl of the piece'• center aectiona. Bolero, denegrated through a rlcilc:u1ow .-oda·
These managed to carry the work despite tion with the movie" 10," a auite from "Fiddler on
oocutonal .Jtrident violin tonee that ao often the Roof," .,,.1 .. "'"•"'ted by good, .:hmaltzy demoetrateiM!mi-profemJonal rank. • ..........
The Wagner overtUtt was followed by the BroedwaymUllcalttyleplaylng,andfilmmusicby
only tn.tly subtle orchestral work on the apnda, David Shire (S.turday Night Fever) and John
''The Fl.lg.ht into l'.Qypt" from Church Windows, Wtlllanw. 'lbeee were performed with entbuaium
Ot izhi~ "rhla la ln .-1 ..... __ and eome notlbM ~ ~. etpedally trumpet by torinoRe8plgh1. an troe~.._ .. ve~ player McNab'• "U I were a Rich Man" eolo ln
with ephemeral line. and luxurtow wu hes of Plddler, for whk:h he bent choice pUchee and held sound that be.peak the lnfluem-e of French th tmprellionlam on the It.allan ~mpoeer. Hinta of b.ck the prosr-of phruee wt ju.at the right
pentatonlc tealet lend further lmprealoniltlc touch of~·
mcotldmn. The aweU.. of harmony we~ handled lntennlllion wu ushered in with aorne
with hedoniltk joy, bu\ \he piece u a whole would all-American na1tal.lp, Soula'• "Stan and
Nve benelltted from more 1ubt.le... dynamtc, Stripes Fonvet." Clark tied hla poup at an
ahadlnga. 'lmpretlfwly btMt.hlw p1a, with all the showy
The laa\ tenuous note of "The F\.laht Into tANcba of Fiedler and the Bolton Pope Ord1.ettra.
....
Sarah Vau1han 1in31 at Irvine Bowl.
____ , __
112 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Sept. 13, 1983
lANDf IS
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Re. Battered wives.
What about battered husband.a? I was brought up
\o believe it was a terrible thing \o hit a woman. No
way could I do it. But my wife attacks me at least
once a week with a k:ni1e, a broom, a frying pan or
her fiaQ. She a.l8o kicks and alape.
I am a hard worker and have the respect of the
people l work with . I don't drink or gamble and
have never looked sideways at another woman. I
pick up alter myi.elf and spend as much time as
poaible at home. We have six lovely children and
no outstanding debta.
U I try to protect myself she calls me a coward.
What can I do \o get her to stop attacking me? -
NAMELF.SS IN WHITTIER
DEAR NAMELESS: You 1oand like a very
decent gay but a ptle11 one. I wialt yoa laad given
me aome aotiOD aa to wlLat provoke. you wife'•
oatra1eoaa coadact.
Wiien yoa allow Ile r to condaae to bell.ave ta
till• abaaive maDDer, yoa pve ber perml11loa to
keep It ap. The woman soud1 mentally W to me.
Have you dJ1ca11ed tkl• problem wltb yoar
doctor? U not, yoa 1boald. Immediately.
••• DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am not "Joe
Super-Patriot," have no idea who won the last
three World Series, am not crazy for apple pie and
l don't get along with my mother. What I am
concerned about, however, is something that goes
hand in hand with all of the above. I am talking
about displaying the nation's flag.
Everywhere I look I see flags that aren't clean
enough \o check the oil in your car. Flags in ruins,
dirty, wrinkled and \om by the wind and rain.
Too many institutions hang the flag on
opening day and then forget it is there. I've been
watching one flag disintegrate atop a nearby office
building.Yesterday the bottom stripe dropped off.
I hope everyone w ho ran up Old Glory in the
last two years will check it today. I predict there
will be a lot of red faces out there. -INDIGNANT
IN PROVIDENCE, R.I.
DEAR IN: Stace yoa wrote I've cllecked
aeveral flap la Cblcago ud tlley all appear to be
bl 1ooct coadJtion. U I 1ee oDe dlat l1n't, l1J call tile
HperiDteadeat of tile balldtag and complain. I
ltope otllen wW do tile aame. • • • Don't Dunk your chemistry test. Love is more
than one set of gli#.nds ca11iniI ro another. If you
have trouble msJcing a distinction you need Ann's
booklet. "Love or Sex and How to Tell the
Difference." Send a Jong, self-addressed, stamped
envelope with your request and 50 cents to Ann
. Landers, P .O. &x 11995, Chicago, ID. 60611.
Children's abilities
show up early in life
n.. 3 2 .,.,_
NEW YORK -An increasing number of
Americans are starting their own businesses,
according to the Gifted Children Newsletter.
which reporta that entrepreneurial tendencies a.re
evident in children aa early aa 5 yea.rs of age.
"Theee you.npten are goal-oriented and
independent in nature," says Arthur Lipper,
chainnan of the publication written for the
parent:I of gifted children. ''They are often
impetient with traditional means of accomplishing
task.I and irreverent and suspicious of authority
figures. They have the ability \o organize others
and the desire for personal power.''
Lipper suggests that the pa.rents of these
children encourage them to continually try new
experlencell and accept new challenges, re-
membering that failure i.a not a disgrace and that
there are many rewards of success.
C HILD'S PIANO STU D Y
CHICAGO -Adults may actually be better
equipped \o learn the piano than children,
according \o the National Plano Foundation,
which potnt:I out that adults have listened to more
music than children and thus are more eophiati-
cated about diff tteneeS in style, tone and pit.ch.
Unlike many 'Children. adults only study
piano becaUBe they are .elf-motivated \o do eo.
Adults aleo have greater inte.lkctual powers, and
their ability \o learn hardly alowa aa they age. In
fact, add.a the Foundttion. an 80-year-old learna at
about the same rate aa a 12-year-old.
"So You've Always Wanted \o Play the
Piano," a booklet for aspiring adult pianista. i.a
available by .ending a stamped, ee.11-addremed No.
10 envelope \o the National Piano Foundation,
Dept. A. 230 North Michigan Ave., Chicago, n.
60601.
BARDEN'& m;-557-2847
PEST CONTROL
t
Not an overachiever
In search of first woman president
You've probably heard women are
their own wont enemies. lt'a true .
Many openly oppoee a w oman for
president, a woman who plays football,
or a \op-level executive who just
happena to be female.
Although l don't have that kind of
.prejud.itt, I have never believed for a
minute that all thoee loeers jumping up
and down around a newly-crowned
M.ial America are happy for her. U it
weren't for Miss Congeniality (who is
anned and is a wimp) they'd tear her
apart.
My prejudice Is cloeer to home. U I
have to read another feature story on
women who, through organization, are
able to hold down full-time jobs and
run their home the "old-fashioned
way," ru acream.
Someone probably figured out that
that kind of story would inspire women
to new heights. That they were
creating role models for us \o emulate.
That they would make us feel in
control of our lives. All they make me
feel i.a sick.
I don't want \o know that I live in the
same city with a woman who is a
professor in physics. can diecuss school
issues and city finances while knitting a
sweater , bakes her own bread, serves a
hot break.fast \o her family every
morning, monitors w hat her children
watch on TV and exercises by riding
her bicycle everywhere.
J ust the other week l read where
Inez, a 46-year--0ld mother of two and
grandmother of four, makes all her
own clothes bec.au.e she'a a hard-to-fit
iJlj flMA IOMlfCI ~ AT WIT'S END
ait.e 3, is running for city council and in
her spa.re time put a new roof on her
houae. She knocked out a wall and
installed a new bathroom, makes all of
Dwayne's suits (her husband), made
dree8es for \he entire wedding party of
her daughter, bakes a whole day of
each week for the freezer and got a
power saw for Christmas.
It's not that I don't have goals. It's
just that I want \o ouUi':'e them.
I've had it with overachievers. I want
\o read about a woman who falls asleep
during a root canal. Women who have
owned a sewing machine for 18 years
and still don't know how \o thread it. I
want to hear about the mother who
reseated her toilet with Play-Doh and
staples name tagJ! in her kid.a' sweaters.
I want to read about the woman who
has \o serve her gelatin aa a beverage
and who cures stinking oooking odors
in her kitchen by not cooking.
Where are the women who plan
their meals around a doggy bag. have
never painted the woodwork behind
the piano and decora.te the lawn
furniture on the porch at Christmas
time?
you ~ an I
alcoholic?
Take time to answe r these questions as honestly as
you can. The results may surprise you.
YES NO
I. Ou you IOtle time from work due to drinking? D D
2. la drinking making your horn<'.' life unhappy? D D
3. Do you drink bec.auee you are ahy with
other people?
4. ls drinking affecting your reput.ation?
S. Have yo~r felt remone after drinking?
6. Have you gotten into financial difficulties as
a result of drinking?
DD DD D D
D D
7. Oo you tum to lower oompanioru and ~
inferior environment when drin~? D D
8. Does lour drinking make you careleee of D D
your amily's welfare?
9. Has your ambition decreued since drinking? D 0
10. Oo you c11ve a drink at a defioiu time daily? D 0
11. Oo you want a drink the next morning? D D
12. Doea drinking cauae you to have difficulty D D
in sleeping?
13. Hu your efficiency decrealled since drinking? D D
14. Is drinkingjeopardlling your job or busineu? 0 0
l S. Do you drink to eecape from worriee or
trouble?
16. Do you drink alone?
D D
DD
17. Have you ever had a oomplC'.'te lou of memory O O
u a reeuh of drinking?
18. Hu your physician ever treated you for
drinking?
19. Do you drink lo build up your self·
confidence?
D D
DD
20. Have you ever been to a hOflpital or inetitution O D
on account of drinking?
O~tttan• e .>of'lf'I ... °'"''"' u,,.~.,..,,, .... OMMt•l U'fd with rHltMllUMI
U you answered yes to any one of the questions,
take it as a warning. U you answered yes to two, you
may be an alcoholic. If you answered· yes to three
or more, you probably are an alC'..oholic.
What can you do? Call CareUnit
Care nit is the medically supervised alcohol i~m
and drug treatment program that successfully treats
more people than any other private program available.
But before treatment can begin , you have to call.
10 talk personally with one of our counselors. rail
your local C311or8004224143.
REUNIT ·
A M"rvice o f Compr-e.hen11ive C.rci Corporation.
(714) 633-9582
CAREUNIT AOSPITAL OF ORANGE
(ADULT & ADOl.mc'EN'r PROGRAMS)
401 SOUfH TIJS11N AVE., ORANG~ CALIFORNIA 92666
~ 19111 C•f9\Jnll• •a~_._,, ot e--.. c.rt Cooo
75 YEARS OF QUALITY
EDUCATION
INDIVIDUAL AnENTION
by te1dlerl who Cl"!
STUDENT LEADERSHIP
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PHYSICAL EDUCATION ............... ...._ ...... --. ......... -..1n ... 1 ...
PAE-SCHOOL ....,... ................. . ...., .. ._..,_.,rw1e1or<,weh ,....,..,. ..... .,, ......
AGE 2 THRU GRADE I
COMPUTER LAB l COMPUTER ASSISTED INSTRUCTION
PAGE SCHOOL SINCE 1808
GAIU>t!N GROW COST A ••A ORANGE
11111 -· .., ~... \Ito •. ._ O..Mfl 0.-, Ca. ltll40 c..w -., C&.-~ C -(714) 111-5533 (714) M2-o41S (714} '7i:201s
HANCOCK PARK AND BEYERL Y HILLS
YOUR CHOICE OF
HIGHER RATES!
PLANA
'4k've raised our rate on money market savings
to 9.05%:
• Minimum balance -$2.500
• Insured up to $100.000
• UnUmited number of in-person deposits and
withdrawals
OR
PLANB
Money Marled Savll1f18 when yot1 open a 9 1 ·Dav
T-8111 Account of equal or greater size!
We'U pay you 9.20% on your money market savings
account with a minimum opening deposit of $3,000.
Only you also open a 9l·day T-Bill account. at the current
U.S . Treasury BiU rate, for an equal or greater amount.
There are no restrictions other than those that normally
apply to money market savings and T-BIU accounts
For either Plan A or Plan B. if the amount in your
money market savings account drops below $2.500. the
rate you earn on that account drops to 51/4 % until you
bring the balance back to at least $2.500. There is also a
monthly service fee If your balance falls below the
minimum.
TAKE YOUR PICK. EARN AS
MUCH AS YOU CAN. NOWI
Dana Point 661-3356
Huntington Beach 963-2900
Mission Viejo 495-4082
Newport Beach 833-8383
Santa Ana 834-1551
Tu1tln 5'4--7040
FAR WEST SAVINGS
and Loan Association FSL'1 . --·--. . . ·--· .......
4
Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT /Tuesday, Sept. 13, 1983
Al Jarre.au sings
He left them dancing in aisles at the Pacific
By ROBIN OLNEY
Oelf "°'C••--
He had them dancing in the aisles Saturday
favorite of both Jarreau's and the audience was
"Nittaku," a Swahill ballad that fulfilJed the pop/jazz
definition of Jarreau's best work night at the Pacific Amphitheatre.
Making his first appearance was Al Jarreau who
delighted not only his dedicated followers but the
newromers who have only recently dtSCOvered
Jarreau jazz.
Passi bly the best and most prorn1Bing tunes of the
evening were "Save Me From No Love," a high
energy piece with strong horns, rem1mst:ent of the
force behind Earth, Wind and Fire. "Our Low"
combined classic piano with modern jau to provide an
almost Sinatra-like feeling. This tune will endure
and probably become a standard for other per-
formers.
He and his musical director and keyboardist
Bobby Lyle produced a show that showcased his
newest work with his best known commercial hits of
t¥ last three years.
There was no hiding the crowd's enthusiasm
each time he sang one o( his better known
compositions which included "We're in This Love
Together," dedicated by J arreau to a young couple
who met and fell in love at a Jarreau concert last year,
married, and were at Saturday's perfonnance to
observe the anniversary.
J arreau's vocal range is always an awsome
experience for any a udience and his sound effects
delighted all. It was one of the finer performances of
his current tour.
Jarreau kept an easy banter going with the
crowd throughout the performance with both the
singer and the audience benefitting from the
meeting. He was "on" and especially popular were
the moments when the jazz artist ventured into the
gospel arena w h ile improvising. His musical best was
with songs such as "I Will Be Here for You," and ''I
Want to Get Closer," in which he embellished the
tunes, vocally underlining certain lyrics. Another
Jarreau, who was a psychology major in L'Ollegc,
has, asa major theme of his music, an uplifting, "You
can be anything you want to be" message. Love of his
fellow man -and woman -is also evident in many
of h is songs including "I Need Somebody" and "Let
Your Love Break Out."
Jarreau's and L yle's musical direcuon included a
cross-cultural blend of music with a heavy emphasis
on Brazilian flair.
With the crowd begging for more, Jarreau and
his band returned to the stage to conclude the evening
with the rousing "Does Anyone Want To Go Dancing
on the Roof?" leaving the crowd dancing LO the aisles.
EVENING
-8:00-
IJ OU NEWS
I CHIPS PATROl
BJ /LOBO
THREE'S COMPANY
HAWAMFIVE~ m MACNEIL / LaiRER NEWS HOUR '1!> UHOERSTAHOING HUMAH
BEHAVIOR
(l.)C8SHEWS
@)ABC HEWSQ
~N9C NEWS m BOXING
ffil MOVIE • * • "On Golden Pond" (19811
Henry Fonda. Ka1hanne Hepburn.
l_$1MOVIE * • "Falling In Love Again" ( 1980)
Effiotl Gould, Susannah Y0<k.
0 MOVIE * * * 'Roer· 11980) Raymond
Cloulle<. Chrostopner Piummer
-8:30-
Q)ALICE
'1!) HIJMAHITIES TMAOUGH THE
ARTS
Cil HEWS
@) BARNEY MlllER
Qt ALL IN THE FAMILY
lOl 8ASEBAU PREVIEW '13:
BASEBALL A~D THE WORLD
-7:00-8 CBS NEWS
D HBC NEWS U HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
U ABC NEWSQ 0 POLICE WOMAN
Cf) NEWS
Q) TMREFS COMPANY
II) 18 JOt<f.R'S WILD
Sil BUSINESS REPORT
'1!)NOVA
(I) P.M. MAGAZINE ®J EHTERT AINMENT TONIGHT
(l)MOYIE * * '.t "'Barbary Coast" ( 1935) Joel
McCrea. Edward G Roblnson
-7:05-m OAANGE COUNTY TODAY
-7:30-
6 20NTMET~ D Qt FAMll Y FEUO 0 1.A't'EAAE & SHIRlEY &
COMPAHY
0 EYE ON LA
Q)M'A'S'H
a> TIC TAC DOUGH
Eii) FALL ANO RISE Of REG,...LD
PERRIN ®l YOU ASKED F~ rT m MOVIE • *'~ 0'T11ne Ovl Of Mind" (19H l
Phyllis Caf"9rl. Ella Ralnes rO BASEBALL
-8:00-
6 (J) MOVIE •••"'The Bunker" (1981) Anlhony
Hopltlns, Ricnard Jordan e a THE A· TEAM 0 MOVIE * * * * G•anl' (Pat1 11(19S6l Ela.a~
belh Taylor. James Dean
ll ~HAPPYDAYS 0 MOVIE
• t •i. "lone Star" (1952) Clark
Gable, Ava Gardner
(!) TWILIGHT ZONE
&> ENTERT AIHMEHT TONIGHT
a>MOV1E
t • • "'Town W11hou1 Pity"' (1961)
Kirk OOUQfas, E G Marsha~
Elil NOvA
'1!)1.JftUNE
(CJMOVIE • * •, Lost And Found·· I 1979)
Geofge Segal Glenda Jll(k son
l ff>MOVIE
• • • "Tickel To Heaven" t t981)
Ndi M1ncvt0, Saul Aubine!!
CSl LONE STAR BAA & GRILL
O MOVIE ••·~ ··True Confessions· (1981)
Robef'I De Niro, Robef1 Duvall
-1:30-u 9 JONIE LOVES CHA~I
(!) CHA~'S AHGE1.S
G) P.M. MAGA.ZJNE
-l:OO-
D Qt WOVIE * *\Ii ' Beulah Land"" (Plr1 3) ( 1980)
Lesley AM Wttrtn, Paul Rudd.
U 0 TlffE'S COMPANY
• THE WAlTONS
tiD UFWNE G EV9MO AT POPS
(}.)MOVIE
• • "Myt1er1es·· ( 1079) Rutger
Hlllllf, Sylvie Knttel
-t:30-
U 9 tT05
CJ) MOVIE ** t •.; "Advitt And Contenl"'
( 1M21 Hwy Fonda. Chlnel llugtl·
Ion
~~QAUEAY
-10:00-
1 IUro~
Tonight's TV
NEWS
(C)M0\11E •*'II "'Tile Pursuit Of 0.8. Cooper"'
( 1981) T real Williams. Rober1 Duvall.
(<»MOVIE **'II "Mad M~" (1980) Mel Gib-son, Joanne Samuel
-11:00-e Du (I) ®la NEWS
O TAXI 0 IN SEARCH Of._
Q) TMICKE Of TME NIGHT
a>BE.HNYHIU Eill BUSINESS REPORT
(Z)MOVIE • • * "The Atomic Cafe"' (1982)
Documentary
-11:30-e (]) MAGNUM, P.1.
0 Cit TOHIGHT
0 SATURDAY NIGHT
* • ·~ "Cannery Row· ( 1982) Nici\
Nolte. Debra W1ng8f
(Q)MOVIE * • t "The Road Warrior·· ( 1981)
Mel Gibson. Bruce Spence
-12:30-
D ~LATE NIGHT WITH OAVfD
LETTERMAN
0 lWll.IGHT ZONE 0 FOAT\JNE BUILDERS
(!) DENNIS TME MENACE
Q) All IN TME FAMILY
II) LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE
@) EHTERT AINMOO TONIGHT
fS)MOVIE
• t t 'h "Blade Runner"" (1982) Har-
rison Ford. Rulge< Heuer
Cl)MOVIE • *'h "Dracula Today" (1972)ChroS·
topher Lee, Peter Cushing
-12:40-
f) (]) MCClOUO
-1:00-
OMOVIE * *'" "'Man From Gods Counlry·
( 1958) G80fge Mon1gomery, Ranely
Stuart
(!)MOVIE * • • ··unconQuered" (Par1 I)
( 194 7 J Gary Coope<, BOiis Karloll I &>NEWS
a>MOVIE * • • "Bur Nol For Me ( 1959) Clark
Gable. Ullo Palmer
mGEHESCOn
-1:25-
IH)MOVIE • • * ··firsl Monday In October
(1961) Waller Maflhau. Jill Clay
burgh
-1:30-D 13 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT 0 QJ) ABC NEWS HIGHTUNE
0 YOU ASKED FOA rT
a>HAAAY O SI NIGHTTIMES: VAAl£TY '1!> THE GIUUNt CONCEATS m 1oo cwe
CHANNEL LISTINGS
-12:00-
&MOVIE * t * "~ "JtcQues Brei Is AHve And
Well And living In Parts"' ( 1975) Elly
Stone, Mor1 Sllu1111n.
(!) INOEPENOEHT NETWORK
HEWS
CS) LOVNJ FRIENDS & PERFECT
COUPLES
fJ KNKT lCBSI 0
Q KNBC (NBC.I 2
0 KTLA (Ind I " 0) KABC (ABC) c
0 KF-MO (C l3Sl •
0 KHJ TV (ln<J I ,,
C1i> 1<.C.S T (AOC l E
0) KTTV Hno I s OMOV1E • •'II "Fast Times At Ridgemonl High·• (1982) Sean Penn. Jtn111fer
J&SOll lelgh
II) KCOP TV (Ind I 0
fli) KCET IPBSI 9
-12-16-a;> KOCE (P8Sl
Now small businesses can own
the Com Ke:/*416 system, the ad-
vanced phone system designed
by Bell Labs and built by Western
Electric.
And AT&T lnfonnation
Systems is offering Bell busi-
ness phones at ~%off.
lMIKll fUTUllS
10llCllASI
lfflClllK1
The Com Key 416
system can set up
conferences instant-
ly, reach co-workers
by buttons with names
instead of extension
numbers, and let employ-
ees update each other without
leaving their offices.
There are also options that
let you keep a separate line for
special callers, contact employees
anywhere on the premises, and
~n ~on the phone without
U!ling yoor hands.
A S1STUI 'fllAT WIU llOW .... ,.,.
The system can start with one
line and grow to tour. and handle
up to sixteen extensions
efficiently.
:::::···· ::::::::: ::::::·:: :::::·::: ..... ::::
0o TV
l TV
HOO
CC1n<>m<1•I
(WOR1 NY NY
(WI 1151
I ESPN)
<Snow 1t11w1
SPOt1tor•t
((<Ible NP"'~ N f'lwor k 1
J
~---..;•:::...-.:.P..:...:.ACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES *
•t!i~~iloi4 l''li!~~~J ~ • Borgoir' Mot1ne~I
MONDAY l~~SAIUllOAY
AU PttlUrm•n(t\ Hthtot ~ 00 ,M
lfa Sp1< fn .. t frn1nh & Hoh)
1'1.MQ61'1::-4)
L OUllAQA A I 60Sf Cl!AIU
''l•AOING PUCU" 111)
I 00 '10 10 10
"l'A IOW. L.AWOOll'S VACATIOfl"
l:20. 1-00
00MCllllUAltT" (R)
ltJO •;QI)()
"DUDl T FORCC" (II)
l JO 'JO 10 10
"RISKY BUSINESS" (R)
12 45. 2 4!), 4 •~. s 4!), s ~o. 10·~~
"Fil AJliD ltl"' (!'I>)
12 10 I ~ I fO II IS ··sTRAllCC llR£W" (PG)
/II \'111 '1\
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I 10 fl) H v ~·~I~~ llllO
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~ 70lml Do111 s '"to
II ~I JOu ~JO &Cl'> IOtO
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"EASY MOfEY" (R)
11 lO I rt ·~··~ 1\0 10~\
"STAYllC N.M" (PG)
Iii 70!M DlllJ St1r10
100 JOO UO 100 too llQll
"FLASH DANCE" (R)
II JO I JO 1 JO •JO •JO IU 10
"IOCWS" (PG)
UO, ' JO. 10 JO "IOCl(Y I " (PG)
17 lO, I JO. I JO
NiiM3lj~~t4J
fACUll Y 0 1 0(l A "Fii£ AM> ICC" (PG)
17l0.•0 900
"KllW." (PG)
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"SMOICEY ' lit: IWOl 3" (PG)
17JO . JO llO "STRAIG &mr' (PG) no. •JO 10.JO
''DCADL Y FORCE" (R)
IH~ lf~ 6t\. 10 100
* PACIFIC DRIVE ·IN THEATRES *
"[)[ADI. T FORCE" (II)
i'tUS
"Tit: COl'ICR£T£ llM.E" (II)
"Tl£ GOLDCN srn•· (PG)
"""
"Mii. MOM" (l'G)
l'\US "re.KY'S I: Tit: IOT DAY" (II)
00STRAllGE BREW" (l'G) CJ.MM 2J :M, J 00lllA.DlftC Pl.ACCS" (II)
l'IUS "IUCllIS" (PG)
\cwo.•a Aftof.,."l ~01.(oHit~
"MClllTUMY" (a)
""' TK IWS£ Oii SOR<lmY llOW" (II)
"llGHTlWtCS" (II)
rt US "PSYCHO I" (II)
"[)[ADI. Y CY£S" (II)
r\US "nror· <•>
"Mii. MOM" (PG)
""' "POltlffS I: Tit: lil£X l OllT"' (R)
''MOllTUAltT" (II) ,.,.,
"HOlJS[ Oii SORORITY llOW" (RI
"RISK T llUSK'SS" (R)
""' "'1116Hl SHJT" (II)
"'NATIOllAl lAWOOfl'S VACATDI" (R)
""' "IUDllC PUCC"' (II)
SllOULD YOU IUY, Ol IKm
Our Small Business Special-
ists can help you deter-
mine if it's best for you to
buy, or pay monthly
equipment charges.
UWI $250-$1000
When you purchase the
basic Com Key 416 system
between July 25 and Octo-
ber 15. AT&T will give you
a 20% discount. This means
you'll save from $250-$1000,
depending on the size of your
system.
Contact AT&T today. After
all, who can resist 100% BeU at
20%off?
CAU m 11UU wss n••moee ... "
1800 282-4716 £xt 20
or return the coupon. r------------,
I ~t? I
I ~~-,.~;;~;. 'iwl• "rl•I I
I Ann 11.,. l~ecau~ I I VPS, romoM mt W\lh 1110r. lnl!lm1"1if.<l I •""'" ,,,. c:-... K?t '16 pllr\No ·~"~-•"'1 huw I
f :~~~~~:.~~ OOOollbur .,.tWHnnnwand I
'~-I I
I
I
I
MfUCTlONI nw>uOH A
IMZIUAH M GJAZZ.IN~ '1bTHI~
~=FU.SH • t • "Red•" ( 1911) W1rren Beelly,
Oienel<Mlon
GET A 20°/o DISCOUNT WHEN 10U BUY 1HE COM KEr416
SYSTEM BY OClmER 15, 1983.
($)MOY\l * • ··Malong LCM" (1981) Kate
JtclttOll, MitllMI Ontt_,
• MOVll •••• ,. "TltM Bandit•"" ( 1981) Crllg
Wwnooll, De'fld Wtmef
-10'ao-., INOEP£HDf.Nf N(TWOAI(
• .Am
No matter
what you re
doing , your
hornet own
newspaper
The Daily Piloi
fits 1n
r
Snow1 •I 12 00 2 00 4 00
6008001000
WAAGIMES 11'{;
Show• Al 12 t:. 2 ~~
S 1!i800 10JO
------"'•~•-IU'~~ Rf TURN or THI .JC DI ~
.'fu...ito,,,.., A ••N rt"Wf'lb
Gerard, Depardleu
Nmhnl/e Bnye ...
Tttt! R eturn Of
Martin
Guerre
• 'l I.< !f\ (.Woll( VCM
4,_-: .,_4 ---r ~,/ •• <.. ... _,, ., ;f.-t--
EXCLUSIVE
ENGAGEMENT
Mon.-Th. 6:00,
8:15, 10:30
Sl'IOWI •I I ts 3 20 s JO
7 :40 .. ' so
TJ\AtJtNG .., PLACES u::i
Show1.i l ·OOJ IDS 25 7.4S&950
Joh nTr•vuh • In
SlAYlnfi AllUE :;;1M 1:30 4 30 7 30 10 15 I 70MM No Panel I ,2 ?:. ht H I Only I 10 3 20 5 30 7 ~o tO 10
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Snown .i 9 I 5 plu\ Superman Ill (PC) •t 7 ,00 Show\ •I 7 t !>a. t : 15
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SUPlPCINf ''$¢vr100•H'' 1 to lourf.<V Qr,.,, Qt&1ri•:.,e,c,!tco f Port04.>1r
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011•0 I"' 0Dfll 8 00 Wk n19hh J 7: JO Wk end•
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IM Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Tuesday, Sept 13. 1983
GOROO
~WJK)
l!:::==4 .DREA4A 8'/ oAv ~
C06AJIZAAJT OF MM.N
IH/A/&5
WHICH
t:5CA~
"1UOSE ~
~ O>JLv Al
N!Gltr/
E.A.FO':
--·~=::...::1 9-/~
G\H•·1•:1.1t
WHY HAVEN'T f EVE.R &£EN
TALKING F00'7 0EFOR£?
9·t ~ ...
THE
t'A~lll'
CIRClS
"Not bod, but I'd advise you not to pion on o
career in the military ."
by Brad Anderson
"That's some line he's got...showing them
his hubcap collection!"
'l«H•' 'll 1.1.l'S
AIM -ro PLE,ASE ...
GOT ANY ,AJ.oTH &ALLS,
EMMY? THERE'S A
MOTH IN MY ~ooM.
9
13
PEA'.\l'TS
Tl' JIBLE" EEDH
I T~I NK YOU ~AVE
NA~COLEPSV. SIR, WHICH IS
~'( '<Oll FALL ASLEEP IN scim AMO GET ·o MINUSES"
AND ARE UHMAPf'Y. ..
. ............ , ... ,~.,., ...... ~ ... .
by Gus Arriola
"You call yourself 1 sculptor?"
by Han!< Ketcham
" ~ 1EP1 WE TAOOHT EACH OTHER EVERY™ING WE Ki¥:>W
I GET '1D MINUSES ''
8ECAVSE I HAVE A 616
NOSE AND Tl-IE TEACHER
DOESN'T LIKE ME, AND
WHO SAVS 1'M UNHAPPV?
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
.-~~,::.· t •• ...,.. ... -'
.. \ 11
/\.'
by Charles M. Schul z
WELL, l JUST WMO SAYS
DOM'T THINK I FALL
IT'S NATURAL ASLEEP
TO FALL ASLEEP ALL THE
ALL ™E TIME Z ?
HfMP1liE L.A15T,ACf?:INUIANS
Me MASSl/\K;' 10 A1f ACK US! ~ l'iAVE JUS1HOURS10
GE:"f RJ=Arr{ FOR 'I™.
) -_____ , __ _
' -----~
1
-.~
.' ~.
--4
•llolh vu lnnalll1• Norlh
d1:ah
NORTH
+ KQ76
~k 9~72
(I Q 6
+QJ
WESl' •:ASl'
• 985 • 104 2
'V J64 'V Al03
0 10 7 0 J 9832
+k9854 +72
SOUTH + AJ3
~Q 5
0 AK 54
+Al063
The b1dd1ng:
North EHl oulh We.t
2 0 Pan 2 NT l'aH
3 NT Pau 6 NT J'au
P11a PH•
Opening lead: F1v1: of +.
tr you ar€' going lo lry for a
SHCn:
Q IJ
uOHN?-CDME. f\ND
LOOK ffr Ff\RlEY I -
I CON'T THINK HE.13
FEELING VE.RY WELL I
DR .S~OCK
GOREN ON BllDGE
av CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF
!>ram al lh1• bridge labh.,
mak1· the· rrur111I 11h1y rarly
Thi.' It:!>!> lhr uwoncnh know
ahout th1· hand, th1· bt'llt'r
T11ke th1!> eumpll' from 11
~•de game al lht• rt'rcnl Suro
mer North Amt·rican Chllm
p1onsh1pi. In sunny N1:w
Orh:ans .
North's two diamond open
ing bid w11s the Flannery con
vent1011. ll s howed a
minimum opening bid with
rive heact!> and four spades
South's two no trump was
forcing and North's thret' no
trump !howcd a hanll with
l wo cards in earh minor wit
and honors in those suits.
South chose lo gambit-on
slam.
West's choice of a rluh
opening lead is oven to argu
ml!nt. The 4ueen won in dum
MAYBe WE$tlDJLDTAKE
HIS TEMPERAlURE. ~ -
-~cRE'S A
lHE~EfER
'
my and drrh1ro·r clitt not f1111
ry tu ... C'h.1111'1'' in r.11•t, th1·n·
w,1, no l1·.c1l1111.1t1• "·'> lh.11
lh1• runlr.11·l 1•11ulrl I"' n1.11l1·
So rl1·C'l11rt'r h.111 111 I.ill h.11 k
1111 \ublt-rfuK•'
At I rirk l wo, he· lt•d a low
ht•art from dummy lo hi~
c1u1•cn ";:i,t rnuld not rl'1'
with lhl' ac1• without giving
dt•<'larc·r hts contr11rt. so th1·
c1u1•1•n won. Now d1•cla n·r
c·xilc·d with 11 low rluh
wl' l won lh!' k1nl( ;ind he
had lo rl'lurn J hl'arl lo
dC'f1·11t lhc· rnnlr11rl ;is lht!
rdTd~ Ill' llut hc· v.a~ afr~1!1
lhal h1· would tit' hf'lping
dc<'lllrl'r b) h·ad1ng any rl'd
SUll , \0 he l'XllPd "<,af•·ly"
w11 h a rluh.
ll1·d11rt•r nN·dc·d no morc"
111· c-a~h1·d out .ill hi\ 11-in
nt•r)). t'cin11nic 1low11 Iv four
1. i.4A1E. 'fo 5011<\f.R ~OU
~1 \ilORK. 1. KNOW
\.\OW Bv-Si ~o\l ME..
&ll~ROt N& 'fH£ MAIN
&~JC A1 'flAE. RE.11Rf.ME~I
Vl\...\...~bE. ...
jt--~~~~~~~~
J
' Q
1l1.111wmh 111 hb h.11111 .11111 t h1
kinl( ;11111 .11wlh1 r ht•.trt .11111
(wo cJ1,ll)lOOll' 11n 1111· t.1 lol1
r:a,I h.ui 111hultl1111111 I ho .11·1
or h1-.1rl,, '" h1· "•'' l11r1 .. 1l l11
dM".trd J d1.111111nd llc·1·l.11 • r
now "'11r1·1i <111 ht' 1h.11110111ol,
lu hr1111< h111111 I h1• ,f.1111
ltubbt"r bridft' rlub11
throughout tht' rountry u~t'
tht four.cful bridgl' formal
Uo lhry know 110mt'thin11 you
don't? f harlu Goun'11
"t'our·Dul Uridgt " will
tuch you tht' 1tralt'fiH and
t.actiu of thi11 fut-patt'd ac
lloD gamr thal pnvido thr
curr for untndiog rubbrn
f<'or • copy, 1ud U .7S lu
"Goreo·four Ool," rare' ul
this nrw1papc-r. P 0 . Bn1
259. Norwood. N.J. 076411.
Makt chtc:lu payablt' lo
Nt'w1paptrbook8.
by Jeff Mac;Ne 11 -.
'it-''t-"ffli' .. '
Dy Lynn Johnsto"
I Sl.IGGE$T yoJ lRY
IHE. END IHRT OOE.St~
BIT~
•·I)
by George Lemont ------00 'YOU SHAY S YOUR
t..ecss o R use: 'T'HA-r CRf;.AM, .,-WINKIE: !'
COMIC S1"RIPS
RUN IN NE:; WS-
PAPE;RS IN SUC H AN l"fi'Y-e1-r-ry SfZe, A c:>E:1"A11..-1...1Ke 'T'HAi" JUS-r
CAN"'f e.e: see N ·'
by Wiley
by Harold Le DOUll -
SHEILA" THIS IS AB8EY' SAM
AND l ARE AT THE CLUB I
RAYMOND Ar ~o YOUR
MOTHER JUST TOLO US
41 4
How old is the new?
By JOHN CUNNIFF'
... -·· ..,, .. , ,..._ ..... .,_,...
So much that ls viewed as innovative today in
the world of business and Una.nee is really the
Business Mirror
rediscovery of old knowledge almost forgotten. the site of more momentous redhcovenes than
Such as the realization among automotive anywhere else. Such as the realization that workers
companies that you can't overcome poor quality and work best it they feel their efforts and skills are
service with adverl&Sing and promotion, or the appreciated. by management.
finding by labor unions that higher wages must be [n fact, The One Minute Manager, a manage-
tied to productivity gains. ment book built on concepts as simple as praising a
Belatedly. and reluctantly, such lessc;>ns were worker for doing well and criticit.ing him construc-
resurrected from the past under the pressures of tively when he did poorly, has remained on
realities, but they are as old as cogeneration. best-seller lists for almost a year.
Cogeneration, a term used in power production, Inherent in the book ls the notion that workers
was practked at the tum of the century, and give more If they feel appreciated, and one of the
probably long before, by industrial plant managers most obvious ways to do that is to seek their help and
who saw no sense in venting the heat of their provide them with a sense of participation.
machines out an open window. The concept of a participating worker being an
But that very thing happened of course, and on appreciative w orker has been repackaaed as a
a huge scale, so long as energy C06ts were low. As Japanese import under the extremely popular name
prices rose. however, the amazing rediscovery was of Quality Circles, although wise managers under-
made that you could heat the plant at no extra cost by stood it long before it had a name.
closing the window. h h The list of such rediscoveries is endless. It was In many companies, owever, sue concepts
known by ancient people that added services were shunned. Some unions and managements, in
inevitably produced higher taxes, that expenditures fact. felt more secure as adver.wies, arguing that it
could not long exceed revenues. and that government was best to keep the enemy at bay rather than invite
excesses could debase money. him into the den.
Nevertheless, generation aft.er generation has The productivity impact didn't show up for a
seemed compelled to experiment with the posfilbility few years, but when imports undersold American
that there was a way to skirt the inevitable, learning products it led to disastrous consequences -job losses and financial l068eS -and to the rediscovery ~nly through hard experience that there are that management and labor worked for the same immutable laws. tit
Nowhere, perhaps. is this more obvious than in .... en ~ah Arn 'Ciln . · ·all h ·
the stock market. where new trading concepts are Y. e'ri comparues, especi Y t ose m
discovered all the time some of them enjoying a the new high-technology areas, now seek to have
period of success th~t reinforces the anguish workers become sharehold~rs too, the better to keep
attending the eventual cdll.apee. the~ happy and ~roductive, ~d also to ensure
The arena of labor relations probably has been against them defecting .to compeu~rs. .
Women accountants
set Thursday meeting
The American Society of Women Accountants
will meet Thursday in Santa Ana at the Wine C.ellar
at the Saddleback Inn, 1660 E. 1st Street.
The meeting will begin with a social
get-together from 6 to 6:30 p.m.. which will be
followed by a business meeting with dinner and
program to begin at 7 p .m.
Ralph E. Phelan Jr., president of the Hunter
.Energy Corp., will discuss different types of oil and
gas exploration programs, general tax ramifications,
how political decisions affect the industry and what
the future holds for the energy industry.
Lessons are continually being relearned. 1t
seems, to the benefit of worker and employer. An
encouraging sign, of course -but history see~ to
suggest also that what is learned or relearned today
might be forgotten tomorrow.
OUllil CDUITY BUSINISS
Morgan heads ISOPEDIX sales
Jeffery J. Mor1an has been named director of
sales for lrvine-basedJSOPEDIX Corp., developer of
the Proset Support System.
Proset is a lightweight syn-
thetic cast that can be uaed
tosupportand protect limbs
and joints after mild
lrac turea, strains and aft.er
other casts have been re-
moved.
• • •
Bill Lon1ley'1 Quality
BuJldlng Sapply, 7502
Warner St,, Huntington Mor1u
Beach, has been named "Dealer of the Month" by the
Masonry Material Dealen A11oclatlon. Longley,
wh08e firm has operated ln Huntington Beach since
1967, was selected. bec.ause of the full service his
company provides to both contractors building a
commercial building and to homeowners building a
plant.er.
• • •
Joanne M. Singer, an employee of the Flaor
Corp. in Irvine, is one of 1.060 aec:retaries in the U.S.,
Canada, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, Jamaica,
Malaysia and Sou th Alric.a who earned the Certified
Professional Secretary (CPS) designation this year.
The CPS rating is achieved by passing a two-day,
six-part examination and by fultilllng work and
educational requirements
• • •
Fred Rlcbard1oa of Irvine has been promoted. to
vice president of the Marketing Services Group at
Cocbrane Cbaae, Llvln11toa and Co. In his new
position. Richardson will be responsible for manage-
ment of all Marketing Services Group activities
1ncluding present accounts and new development.
Also at CCL, Carolyn Jobn1oa of Newport Beach has
been promoted to senior vice presidenUcreative
director. She will be responsible for the creative
supervision of all CCL consumer accounts and the
execution of special projects .
• • •
Mlcro1erve1 lac. has opened a computer repair
facility at 2031 E. C.enitos Ave., in Anaheim. The
facility offers carry-in and on-ajt.e maintenance for
microcomputer and peripheral lines, including mM
and Apple.
• • •
beverage director fof" fte Newporter resort where
he will be responsible for food and beverage
functions at the hotel's three restaurants. Before
joining The Newport.er, Bryant eerved in the same
capacity at the United Nations Plaza Hotel in New
York City.
•••
FOll Ir Co., certified public accountants, has
expanded Ha Orange County office in Newport
Beach by adding seven staff professionals. Among
the new appointments are: ~rlea I. Corp, CPA, as a
consultant for Busi.ne'M Advisory Services; Job.DD.
Wllllam11 CPA, as manager for Business Advisory
Services; Kenneth R . Ribb, CPA, supervisor of the
Audit Department; Marsha Nall, CPA, senior
acoountant with the Tax Department; Cbrll Kappo1
ID and Colleen McDermott, both CP A's, as staff
accountants in the Audit Department, and Clarine
SmUb as an accounting technician for Business
Adviaory Se~.
• • •
Dan Carter of Costa Mesa has joined Data
Sy1tem1 for Jnda1try of Los Alamitos as a senior
systems programmer. In his new position, Carter will
be responsible for software tool development and
application programming support.
PORTLAND
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tueaday, Sept. 13, 1983 ..
MUTUAL FUND LllllllGS
OVER THE COUNTER
MAID STOCll USTIMGS
N•W YOllK IU I Cordia 1 u .. 2' 1(9fN1ft
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ORANGE COUNTY
.. "' --t ~
--
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HEW 'VOllK IAP) -Tiie _.,. bl
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Moore Developme11t Co,. of Denver bu opened
a regional office in Irvine, to be managed by Jolua
Grlg1. Moore 1peciali%.es in turn-key operations for
TeStaurant chains and in development and construc-
tion of neighborhood shopptng centers.
• • •
Rockwell 1-tenaatloaal Corp.'1 J!:lectronic De-
vioe1 Divilton has announced teVeral management
appolntmenta, u well aa a name change to
SemJcoad•clOr Prod•C1• Olvlsloa. Amon& the
pert0nnel chan8es. Dale W. Williama hu been
named v1.ce president for temlconductor marketlJ\41
and aales. Howard W. Couermaa la the new
president for eemlconductor development ~neer
ing. He wu formerly vloe president of the
Mlcrocomputer Product. Dtviaion, a poet that no
lonaer exiata. Aho, Fruk 8 . MlcHleul i. the actina
dltecior of tdvanced raeuch and e,l'\ltnffrlna.
33 BUSINESS CONNECTIONS
FROM ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT.
Step~ea R. TreUa Jr., formerly with Peat,
Marwick, MUc~ell ud Co.. hJS joined the W.D.
Rater Ftauclal Plau1111 GfffP lit an ..odat.e
finanda.l planner ln their Newport Beech office.
• • •
fta'"ll Bryut tw bft!n named food and
Western Airlines offers Orange County
business travelers the only nonstop service
to Salt Lake City. Through Salt Lake we
give you easier connections to 33 cities In
the U.S. and Canada. Including New York.
Chicago. and Washington. O.Cs Dulles and
National Airports.
Better Service North.
Western brings you more of Montana than
any other major airline. fly twice every day
to Billings. Bozeman. Butte. Kalispell. Great
falls. Helena and Missoula.
for reservations. call your Travel A.gent
or Western Airlines. ::
MO"STOPTO
.5.Al.T LAIU'. CITY
()q)art
7:10AM
8:00 AM 3:~PM
Arrlve
CM.S AM'
l(}~Al"\"
6:00 PM
AKI>
BAClt
Depart Arrive
11:0!5 AM 11:50 AM
C>-.3!5 PM 7:20 PM
'Except Sunda)t .. Sund11y only.
Westem ·Alrllnes
WB'VB GOT A NAME ro IJVB UP TO
WU'na1t rues rao1t OltAMOt COUKJ'Y. LOS AftGEUS AKD ONTAIUO 1Q OVU" cmes lff THE U.$ •• CAMADa\ AKO JllllJCO. for reservations. sec your
Ttavel Agent or call us rrom these ~l'C3): OraftllC County at 5J4-0H1; Los AQpla at 176-2311: Welt Lot AoFlc• at 646-4311: Sall Fernando Valley at '7N-6020i ~
Oatarto/IUYenldc at 913·1&1L Western Airline~ tlcne pcrwndl de reservocloocs quc habla espaOol: (lll) n6,487l. Ask about tlckct•by•mall convenience orvtslt our loc.tl
~ city ucllet ornces for Air CJrso. coll (213) 776 2222
•
ae Orange Coast DAILY Ptl OT/Tuesday Sept 13, 1983
STOCKS
Tueaday'i. I l 0 .111. (Pin ) Pnrr,.
• ~
.... .. .., . '
NYSE COMPO ITE TRANSACTIONS
OU014Tt0HS tNClUOE TAAOfS ON THC NEW YOUK MllJWf SI l'At.:tft(. t'llW llCl~I~ OETll()ll ANOCllfCIHNATI eTOC:K &Xc>tAHOU AHO AEPORIEO av 111( NA80 INSTIN(t
~ ~ Mh I IOV
... ..
t. hQ
},
.. ..
I• t •Hiio t 11.J\I'
~.... ...,
PI 110, Cto .. Cllt
-·
I
I
·•IEll•BI
Pacific Telephone Co.,
union re.ach agreement
L08 ANGl:LJ:S -PldtSc Te .. phone Co. and the
union repneentint Yellow J>..-workerl haw rMChed
a tentatiw ~boostlnc pay by 8 perc.nt, offidall
eay.
1be company public relationa department ln San
J'randlco Mid Monday the Mttlement would end the
1ut of the 1trlkee ap.lnat the phone company. The 8
percent pey bike for Yellow Paaet aa1ea reprewntaUvee
would bring Mlarle. from about $30,000 to about
$32,.00, the union laid.
Lockheed to advance women
LOS ANGELF.s -Lockheed California Co. hu
agreed to put aeveral hundred women in
middJ.e..~t jobe du.rina the next five yean ln
aettlement of • ~ tex-diacrlmination suit,
lawyers uy. "The moat significant thing about thia acreement ii that theee are management positions for
women in the ael"Cl9pece industry, an area that the public
perceives u a male lnduatry,'' attorney A. Thomu Hunt
uid Monday. The oompany, which manufactures
military aircraft. and part.a, employa l 7 ,300 people at ita
planta ln Burbank, Palmdale, Valencia and Watta.
Money market cites new rates
WASHINGTON -Commercial banka and aavtnp
and loan aMOdatlona will be able to pay u much • 9.59
percent on li.x-month money market oertificalel and
9.04 percent on three-month certificates •tattina today.
The new rates were establlahed In Monday'• auctiona of
Treuury aecwities at which yields fell for the fourth
time ln five weeb. -
U.S. hourly pay said highest
NEW YORK-Labor emu ln U.S. manuhctwing
have iUen more llowly over the put 12 yean than ln
any other major lndustriall.r.ed country, accord1na to a
new study. Even.,, the at.olute level of hourly pay for
U.S. manufacturina employees la the highest in the
WOl"ld, Citibank eccnomi.lt Werner L . Chilton aald In the
study releued Monday.
$819 million deal offered
TULSA, Okla. -Williama Cm. ii offering $39 a
share foe all common Iha.res outat.anding in Northwest
EnergyCo. of Selt Lake City. The deal would be worth
about $819 million. The Williama offer Monday
comparea with an offB of $31 a ab.are, or $651 million,
made ln Aucwrt by a group led by Allen & Co., a Wall
Street lnve.Unent hou8e.
Chrysler to retire warrants
NEW YORK-Chrysler Corp. ou\btd eeveral Wall
Street firml Monday for warrants that carry the right to
buy lt.4 million aha.res of Chryaler stock at
below-market pricel. The auto manufacturer, Bee.kin& to
avoid dampening the open-mark.et value of itl atock,
Mid it would retii-e the wan-anti, which were owned by
the federal aowmment. By doing ao, Chryw.ler would
avoid the 1-uanoe of the additional ah.ares of 11ock.
WHAT AMEX DI>
N•W Yottl( IAl"l ,_., 12
==" 5!E
METALS
.... '"'"°,.. ftOy-HMdy • .--1~-..-.1 -• t it.ast pet ll'O'f -. NY Qcw,_ .-.-...-Mon.
DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YOltK (.AP) -Fm.I Dow•.-~ -.,, S.. 12.
JDlnd
N T"' HU" '5 Siii ....,.
n.n Utlll us.
0 ._......,.,.
AMERICAN LEADERS
·--
Daily Pilat \
ClASSIFllD TUESDAY, SEPT. 13, 1983
cs
Angels' demise· was hard to predict
The Angela' aeaaon, and quite possibly their
feelings, would be best summed up with a line third
baaeman Doug DeCincea offered last week: "li I could
push a button and make this year disappear, I would
in an lnatant."
SPORTS COLUMNIST
JOHN
SEVANO Certainly, in all his westerns, Gene Autry was
never involved in a more uncertain predicament.
What happened? Who knows? A combination of
thino I guess. There is no one answer.
You sit back and look at the season, trying to
come up with a reason. And there is none.
•That the Chicago White Sox would finally find
some defense.
Abeolutely nobody could have predicted the
following:
•That the White Sox would actually start
believing what the experts knew for years -they
had the most potential for being a winner.
. •That Reggie Jackson would have the kind of
season you'd expect someone like Jim Fairey (I bet
that name will jog a few memories) to have.
•That the Angels' pitching would be a notch
below what Marietta, Ga. possessed at the recent
Little League World Series.
•That all the doctors on Dr. Kildare, Ben Casey,
M•A•s•H and Trapper John combined couldn't
have kept up with the Angels' rash of injuries.
Since pitching is supposedly 75 percent of the
game, maybe the latter point carries the most
significance. And, it is here that Autry and General .
A new test for Barons
Milner and Co. aware of Foothill's power
BJ ROGER CARLSON °' ...............
It was strictly a guessing game when
conaiderini Fountain Valley High's prospects
for the 1983 football aeaaon. Even Coach Mike
Milner agrees ... he wasn't really sure what was
iii at.ore for his Barona. · 1
But after last week's 24-0 victory over
Mater Dei, his team almost baa him convinced.
Indeed, they have othen convinced.
The Barona have moved into the No. 1 slot -...a IWICWtT MUU.D
in the Orange County rankinp, but that status have 91 players on the varsity. I can't believe
la aerioualy jeopardized by 1bunday night's that in thia day and age."
(7:30) opponent -the K.nighta of Foothill -Mlli]er says the only thing he'd like more of
and Milner and his 1taff are well aware of the this week is a little more emphaaia on tailback tlllk. Dave Swigart, who carried 14 times for 71
"We remember what they did to ua last yards, but caught only one pass (19 yards)
~.:· says Milner, of c.o.ch Ted Mullen's against Mater Dei.
Knights. "They phyaically dominated us at the Another factor which Milner may be
line of 8Cl'imJna&e. We've watched their film concerned about is the back-to-back syndrome.
(lMt week'• 24-7 rout of Capistrano Valley) and Seldom has any team appeared aa crilp in
aa ~they're well-coached and diaciplined an opener as Fountain Valley showed againlt
and are physical on offense and defeme. Mater Dei, offensively and defensively.
'They've opened up a little more this year ''It llCarell me," admita Milner. "In 15 years
offemively becau.e they have two ~Uy ofcoachingitwaathebestfintgameoffootball
llldJJedwiderecetveraandaquarterback(Juon I've ever been .-x:iated with. And Mike
Schmkl, 6-3, 195) wbo appears to be a good Henigan (one. of Milner's top Uliltanta) baa
·athlete. -· : · · · ~ been witli it t1ryean ana he said the same thing.
"We really don't know that much about I waa extremely proud of the way they played ·
Foothill, but(defensivecoach) Bob Salemo will againat Mater Del, they dclminated all three
give you the multiple eight-man front. 'llley phuea of. the game."
Manager Buzzie Bavasi have to share the blame for
faulty judgment.
You can't really crucify Autry or Buzzie for the
course of action they decided to take years ago. What
they hoped to do in buying entertaining free agents
-like Reggie and Bobby Grich -and trading and
then signing such established veterans -like Rod
Carew, Fred Lynn and Doug DeCinces -was put
together a highly explosive offense that would not
only punish the opposition, win games, and please the
crowds but, at the same time, overcome any pitching
deficiencies the club might have.
What they tried to do rf18B put together a
second-coming of the 1927 Y afll\ees_,..»1hich was good
in theory, not in reality. The result being four years of
nothing but UP6 and downs.
Remember, pitching is the main constant in the
game of baseball, not hitting. Pitching will win games
Phil Sanders (left) of Estancia and
Newport Harbor High Coach Mike
when your hitting is in a slump. &rely does the
reverse hold true.
The Angels currently possess no bullpen, no
bona fide stopper in the starting rotation, and a group
of starters that would make the perfect Nos. 4 and 5
pitchers in a five-man rotation. In other words,
there's nobody you can count on1 to get you out of a
slump.
The Angels had a chance to get such people, but
didn't. They let Nolan Ryan go. They had a chance at
Tonuny John before he went to New York and w on
another 60-plus games in three-plus years. They
could have had Rick Sutcliffe at one time, Bob
Knepper, Terry Forster (in relief), Floyd Bannister
and, to lesser degrees, Don Sutton and Len Barker.
But they are all pitching elsewhere.
Bavasi has talked frequently of making a major
overhaul with the Angels once the season ends; of
(See ANGElS, Page C%)
Delly-·--Giddings are poised for Week No. 2
of the prep football season.
Charger~
try run:
It doesn't get an,y easier for Sea View teams
It w-orks
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -
Don Coryell finally discovered a
defense capable of clipping the
wings of San Diego's high-flying
passing game -his own.
And 10 the Chargers ran for 191
yarda on a surpriaed Kansas City
Monday night before finally
emerging -thanks to a patented
Dan Fouts-led drive -with a
17-14 National Football League
victory.
Almost as satisfying as the final
1COre to Coryell was the fact that
the Chief.a ran off just 51 plays on
offeJWe.
"We just couldn't have our de-
fef)le on the field for 82 plays like
we did last week against the New
York Jeta," Coryell said. Despite
rolling up almost 500 yarda in
total offenae against the Jets the
week before in the aeuon opener,
the Chargers came up on the
abort end of a 41-29 count because
their defeme was unable to keep
p with the break-neck pace.
•"&we've been saying, our de-
~ii young and inexperienced,
t they're talented and ag-
ve and they're just going to
better and better and better,"
ell said. "We just decided we
to keep the defeme off the.
, eo we decided we were
to have to run mote. U we
't been able to run, we nat-
y would have gone bade to .-. But the Chargers ran ·with
IMM~>n. Ja.mea Brooka carried 23
for 86 yarda and Chuck
wlde picked up 110 yarda on 27
I J'lUingly, the game WM decided
hen Fouta unsheathed hia pua-
ann on a five-play, 80-yard
' ve capped by a 12-yard touch·
pus to w. Cband.ler with
1145 to play.
1 "At that point, I didn't care how
kly we IOOJ"ed."· Coryell
qhed. "I just wanted to acore."
Two ,rat defenalve Nnda by
Cbiefa were quJckly followed
two touchdowna. After Rolf
... ntri.-tillrll ldcked a 51 -yard tint
....._~ · tield pl, the ChJefa
Brooka for no pin on
nh·•nd·lnchet from th•
fl,Hl.ICLll1 3-yard line.
I • '
By JORN SEV ANO
Of .. Dllllr .........
Week No. 2 of the prep football season
doesn't get any easier for a number of Sea
View League teams as Newport Harbor,
Corona del Mar and Estancia high schools
figure to receive stiff tests.
Here's a look at this week's games:
Newport Harbor va. Cypreu at Western
"They've got a new coaching staff and
they're a real quick-looking team on
film," no1e.8 Harbor Coach Mike Giddings.
"They're very aggressive. They'll line up
and blitz as many as seven or eight guys
which can be tough on a team early in the
year."
Cypress opened the season with a 9-7
decision over El Toro.
"If you're not ready to play aggressive-
ly, they'll do things to you," Giddings
adds. "They look very similar to us in that
they run out of the I (formation). They'll
run right at you and then they'll pass."
Kings vaulted into the No. 9 position in
this week's Top 10. "They're always
well-coached. I think Allie (Schaff) gets
as much out of his players as anyone we
face."
"But defensively. they're sound. Not
fancy, but sound."
Laguna Hills vs. Estancia at Newport
"They're much improved over last
year," says Estancia C.oach &i Blanton of
this w eek's opponent. "They've got their
quarterback back (Lee Plemel) and he
threw for about 1,400 yards last year." The Sailors, ranked No. 4 in the Daily
Pilot's first high school poll of the season,
maintained their position for a second
week after tying Santa Ana, 22-22.
The Sea Kings will be coming off a
stunning 10-3 upset victory over Hunt-
ington Beach in their opener. The Tri tons,
meanwhile, beat Magnolia, 20-7.
Sao Clemente va. Corona del Mar at OCC
"We go in against them always know-
ing we're going to have a battle," observes
CdM Coach Dave Holland as the Sea
"They're a very physical, sound foot-
ball team," says Schaff of CdM. "We're
going to give up a lot of height, weight and
depth, 90 we're going to have to play a
perfect game to beat them."
"They run the wishbone, so they're
prone to mistakes," counters Holland.
Plemel had a very uncharacteristic
Plemel-type game in Laguna Hills' open-
er , which it lost, 20-14, to Irvine as the
senior was only 12 of 27 passing for 137
yards, with two interceptions.
"We're at the point where last week is
(See SEA VIEW, Page C%)
'We played like Girl Scouts'
Workman criticizes Edison's play; Vista invades Thursday
By ROGER CA.RI.SON
Oftt.Del!J .........
It figured to be one of the premier non-le.ague
attractions of the season, but for the second year in a
row, F.dison High's Chargers have failed to live up to
their side of the bargain.
A year ago it was Los Angeles power Banning
• which was scheduled to meet F.d.Ulon's high-rlding
outfit, but Vista shocked F.d.Ulon, 6-0, although Vista
Coach Dick Haines didn't aeem to consider it an UJ)6et.
"As far as rm concerned, we'll play any team LA
\ (Los Angeles) wants to send us and beat them," said
Haines in the aftermath. "We're the best team and
we're supposed to be in an off-year."
· Now it'a Vista, the No. I -ranked team in the San
Diego Section, with a 14-0 victory already in hand
over Granite Hills, which invades Orange Coast
College Thunday night (8 o'clock), but Edhlon enters
with a bubble-popping, 27-7 loas applied by Damien
High last week.
And Vista arrivea with returning tailback Brent
Sepulveda, whoee long touchdown run sparked the
victory over Granite Hilla.
But F.dOOn Coach Bill Workman says his
concerns have to begin with his own crew first before
he can worry about Vista.
"After our last performance I'm as worried
about ua aa the opposition.'' aaya Workman.
We played Uk.e the Girl Scou1-Troop 414. If we
think 27 ia a lot, well. if we don't wake up we're goln8
to join the 50-pointclub two weebin a row (Banning
follows Vista) and be shipped to Santa Maria (the
following game) in a pine box."
The Chargers \fill be entering Thund.ay night'•
game without the aervicet of lineman Kevin
HallW'OITI, who suffered a broken ttcht arm and la
out indefinitely.
personnel to get their heads screwed on right."
:Edison entered with No. I laurels in the CIF Big
Five Conference and Orange County, pr ior to malting
a first down in 1983.
But eight turnovers against Damien soured the
Chargers' chances.
"We thought we were going to come back at
halftime (F.ciison was down, 13-7)," adds Workman.
"But in high school football you get the ball 11 -13
times and if you turn it over eight times, that cuts
your chances down. Do that, and play like the Sisters
of the Convent and you're going to lose.
"They (Damien) are a good football team and
they h ave a great back (Darryl Henley), and we made
him even greater."
"We were very unphysical and unemotional.
"We read real well," continued Work.man,
alluding to the buildup of his team, which went 90 far
as No. 6 in the nation by USA Today.
.. .. ---
WEDNESDAY
OODOllU aAS•BALL
OMIN'letMw.-
ltWH "" luitt, l.\Jt TV. OIMllll 11
. .., ..............
Thereat of the lineup fl expected back with only
a minor switch°' two (linebacker Jim Painter IN\Y
1ee more don at drtenttw l'J&f'd, aconttna to
Workman). Jeff Hipp and his Edi&0n teammate& ·await
Vlata Higk Thu.nday n ight •t OCC. ''The~roblem Isn't penoonet in tenna of the
• rtght poaitlona." says Workman, "tt•a• puing that
p " !!&!
C2 Orange Coast DAILY PJLOT/Tuesday, Sept. 13, 1983
SPORTS BRIAK
Sonny Shields still
going s trong at age 47:
Scores TKO in round I
From AP dl1patd1e1
LOS ANGELES -Maybe m
Muhammad Ali isn't washed up after
all. Maybe Joe Frazier and George · .
Foreman still have a few good rounds left in them.
A\ least Sonny Shields is still kicking.
In a special bout scheduled for five rounds,
47-year-old Sonny Shields, father of former
welterweight contender Randy Shields, scored a
first-round TKO over 26-year-old Bernie Smith of
Houston Monday night.
Shields, who last fought 21 years ago, broke
Smith's n06e with his first good right.
Shields, of Los Angeles, weighed 180 pounds,
while Smith weighed in at 178.
Elias and Erick Madrid, 20-year-old boxing
twins from Los Angeles, knocked out another set
of brother.; Monday night to capture the Pacific
Coast lightweight and junior lightweight titles,
respectively.
Elias Madrid knocked out Willie Daw, of
Vinton, La., at 40 seconds of the third round to
capture the lightweight title at Northridge State
University.
Madrid, 133~ pounds, had knocked Daw, 130
pounds, through the ropes with a right hand in the
previous round and was pummelling him on the
ropes when referee Rudy Jordan stopped the
fight.
Quote of the day
Mike Beam, crew chief for stock car
driver Kyle Petty. after Petty began wearing
an earring: "We're not going to start
worrying about Kyle until he shows up in a
fireproof dress.''
Dodgers' Marshall honored
NEW YORK -Rookie outfielder Iii
Mike Marshall of the Los Angeles
Dodgers, whose two homers last week
included his first major league grand
slam. was named National League pl.ayer of the
week for the period ending Sunday. the league
said Monday.
Marshall had seven RBI and batted .321
during the week.
Also considered for the award were Willie
McGee and Ken Oberkfell of St. Louis, Tony
Gwynn and Terry Kennedy of San Diego and
Dave Bergman of San Francisco.
J\hillies move back into first
John Denny pitched t~hlt ball Iii
for eight innings and Al Holland
worked the ninth for a save as
Philadelphia edged the New York
Mets, 2-1, to highlight National League action
Monday, The Phillies' win, combined with
Montreal's loss to the Chicago Cubs, moved the
club back atop the NL East by a half-~ame over the
Expos. Elsewhere, ... Dick Ruthven pitched a
four-hitter and Keith Moreland drove in two runs
and had two key hits ln a.even-runsixth inning as
Chicago whipped Montreal, 8-0 .... Brlu Harper
hit a two-run pinch single in the sixth inning as
Pittsburgh rallied Crom a three-run deficit to
defeat St. Louis, 7-5. The Pirates are now 1 !-1
games out of first pl.ace, while the Cardinals are 2
back .... On the abbreviated AL slate, MUt WUcox,
9-10, allowed just nine hits in leading Detroit to a
5-1 victory over Cleveland. It was Wilcox's first
triumph in three starts since coming off the
disabled list Aug. 1. He had not won a game since
June 12. In the only other game, rookie Ray
Fontenot and relievers George Frailer and Rieb
Gossage combined on a four-hitter, and WllUe
Randolph'• RBI single in the fifth inning
accounted for the game's only run as the New York
Yankees edged Milwaukee, 1-0.
Mauch rejects Expos' offer
MONTREAL-Former Montreal
Expos Manager Gene Mauch has ~
turned down the chance to return to ...
the National League baseball team in
an executive capacity.
The Expos were reported to have offered
Mauch a job as an administrative aide to General
Manager John McHale, with the long-term
intention of having Mauch take over the general
managing duties.
But McHale said over the weekend that
Mauch has decided to remain at his home in Palm
Springs.
"His daughter needs him and his mother is
old," said Mc Hale. "For theee two reasons, Gene
doesn't want to stray too far from Palm Springs.
"His reasons are fully justified."
The Mauch family still la mourning the l~ of
Mrs. Mauch, who died recently after a lengthy
bout with' cancer.
Mauch still may return to baseball, however.
lt 1s reported that he is interested in a front-office
position offered by the Angels, the team he
managed last season.
Manicure Kit pays $4 7 .20
DEL MAR-Mank.-ure Kit, a 22-1
longshot, rallied in the stretch run io E
poliah off pace-aetter Sales Bulletin
with a one-length victory in the
$54,850 feature at Del Mar Monday.
The winner, carrying 114 pounds and ridden
by Frank Olivares, flnlahed the six-furlong race
for 2-year-oJd filllee in 1:11 and paid $47.20, $20.20
and $8.60.
Sales Bulletin, carrying 117 pounds and
ridden by Bill Shoemaker, took the early lead and
held It until Manicure Kit took over in the drive.
Sales Bullet.in returned $5.20 and $3.60.
Gene's Lady, also carrying 117 pounds and
ridden by Laffit Pincay, waa 2~ lengths back in
third and paid $3.60.
The show was followed by Frannie Merete,
Refreshing Act, Mias Via Magnum, Pretty
Prospec~. and Always Dear.
Thompson: I'll be back
LONG BEACH -Speed king and
off-road racing pioneer Mickey •
Thompson faces a long recuperation
following a freak accident in the Las
Vegas to Reno off-road race two weeks ago.
Thompson, 55, who holds ~ozens of speed
records, aggravated an old back injury attempt to
right his race car after it turned over while he was
leading the gruelling race.
Thompson completed the event, finishing
fourth, but was admitted to St. Mary's Hoepital in
Long Beach the next day with a cracked vertabra
and four collapeed di9c.a.
He had broken his back and waa temporarily
alyzed in 1960 from a boat aoddent. ·
"The doctors say it will take aix montha before
y tell me whether I can race anymore,"
ompson said Monday.
Kings suspend Morrison
rison, the Loe Angele9 Kings' eec-, CULVER CITY -Dave Mor-~
ond-round draft pick in 1980, was
SU8pended by the National Hockey
League club when be did not report to training
camp, the team announced.
George Maguire, general manager of the
Kings, said that Moniaon infonned him that he
wasn't going to report with the team Sunday.
Maguire said Morrison believes his contract has
expired and that he is a free agent. But. Maguire
said that Morrilon is in hia option year and the
Kings sttll have rfghtB to him.
Morn.on played in 24 games and 800red three
goals for the Kings last seaaon.
Television, radio
TV: Baseball -Dodgers at Houston, 5:30 p.m ..
Channel 11.
RADIO: Baseball -Dodger8 at Houston, 5:35
p.m .. K.ABC (790); Kansas City at Angela, 7:25
p.m .. KMPC (710).
Angry Foli
says he'll fight
• suspension
From AP dltpatcllet
[nflelder Tim J:oli says he will fight bis
suspension by the Angela, but first needs to know
more about it.
'I have to fight it, but I won't know how until I
talk to Buzzie (executive vice president Buz.zie
Bavasi) tomorrow," Foll said Monday.
"At this point I don't know when it at.orle<f, when
it ends or how much money they're
taking.''
The Angels open a two-game
series with Kansas City tonight at
Anaheim Stadium (7:30).
Manager John McNamara
suspended Foll at Chieago's White
Sox Park Saturday night for having
taken a shower and put on his street
clothes during a 93-mi.nute rain
delay in the ninth inning of the
game. fOU
Foll did not play in that game and has not played
si.N:e Aug. 8 becauae of a bruised rotaior cuff. The
injury was examined again by team physician Or.
Lewis Yocum on Monday.
The shortatop was adviaed not' to play for
another two to three weeks.
"I was still getting to the park four or five hours
before the games in Chicago," said Foll, "but all I
could do was ait around in my uniform. I gue91 l
should have told ~ w.h@t I was doing, but I knew he
couldn't uae me and I wan i\ trYUl8-fu ahow h1nl up. Of
all the guys who break rules, l'm not one of them.
"It doesn't make aenae to auapend me when they
knew I couldn't do anything," said Foll.
ANGELS ...
From Page C1
going back to baaics and trying to rebuild from
within, foregoing free agenia and their huge
contracts in the process.
Well, that's a start, but m all honesty it doesn't
aolve the Angela' immediate problem. Nor la it fair to
expect the fans to wait five years (or maybe longer)
for the team to be a winner again.
The pl.ayen on the field, for the most part. have
been doing their job. Granted, the club could add
some speed to its lineup, but the Angels' basic
necessity la pitching.
So, my advice (for what it's worth): Stall the
overhaul. Sign your free agenia. Then trade ot' buy
threequallty pitchers-twostartersandooebullpen
ace. Yes, it might cost you a Fred Lynn, or a Bobby
Grich, or a DeCinces (if he's re-signed) to get the
pitcher, or pitchers, you need, but all you have to do is
look down the freeway to Dodger Stadium to see that
it's worth it.
GWC women: A brand new look this season Liberty,
Australia II
square off
By CURT SEEDEN
Of .... DMlr"" .....
Golden West College's women's vol-
leyball team has a new look for 1983,
s tarting with a coach .
With Lou Ann Terheggen-Selsky de-
voting most of her time to her position as
athletic direcior, the Rustler women will
be under the leadership of Al Gasparian,
who was Terheggen-Selsky's assistant for
the past two seasons.
One would think that's an advantage
for Gasparian -he obviously has an idea
of what his players can do. Unfortunately
VOLLEYBALL m
for Gasparian. there are but two returners
from last year's squad which finished
second in the South Coast Conference
Still, Gasparian is looking forward to
his first season at the helm.
"I think this will be a smooth transition.
Lou Ann and I share the same
philosophies. There will be no major
changes," he says. "As long as we can get
quality pl.ayers year in and year out, I feel
we wW keep up the winning tradition."
GoJden West's two returners are middle
blockers Debbie Spangler, a aeoond-team
All-SCC selection a yeu ago, and Phyllis
Lange. "With Spangler and Lange, we
have two of the best. middle blocken in the
conference. if they pJay up to their
potential. They will be our biggest asset,
the cog that will make our team run,"
Gaspairian predicts.
Newcomers to the team include outside
hitters Barbara Lambkin out of Marina
anQ Carolyn Kienast, a 5-10 product of
Westminster High.
Mary Cahill, a sophomore from Orange
Klgh has Lhe responsibility of replacmg
setter Llaa Bohm th.1a year.
Freshmen on the aquad include Chris
Donohue (Mater Dei), Molly Hughes (Los
Amigos), Darcy McCaml.ah (Mammoth)
and Piper Sexton (FoWltain Valley ).
There's alao Karin 0.up, who wu
Sunset League pl.ayer of the year aa a
junior at Huntington Beach, but Daugs
didn't play volleyball as a senior. Jen-
nifder Ket.els out of San Clemente and
Gigi Evans from Rim of the World round
out the squad.
The Rustlers open the season Friday at
Saddleback in the Gaucho Tournament.
NEWPORT. RI. (AP) -Ia
Australia II the breakthrough
boat that will aei.ze the America's
Cup that h.u been U.S . property
al.nee before the Civil War?
Does the more traditional
Liberty have enough all-around
strengths io at.ave off one of the
strongest challenges to America's
132-year dominance?
Tough foes
for Flores
SEA VIEW TEAMS ENTER WEEK NO. 2 • • •
Aft.er a summer filled with
competition and controversy, the
first few moments of today's
opening race of the best--0f•9e'Ven
EL SEGUNDO (AP) -Coach Tom
Flores' evaluation of the Loe Angeles
Raiders' first two games was positive, but
he warned his team Monday about the
weeks ahead in the National Football
League season.
"We've got to get better,'' said Flores
after reviewing films of the Raiders' 20-6
win over Houston on Sunday. 0 In the next
three weeks, we play the two Super Bowl
teams. We certainly can't get into a
comfort zone, just because we're 2-0."
From Page C1
over and we're forgetting it and trying to
regroup,'' says Hawks Coach F.d Adams.
"We're looking forward to Estancia.
They're a very aggressive group of kids
with IOme very good running backs. Matt
Wolf (137 yards on 18 carries) will run
over you and through you. I expect them
to come at uaand throw the bell. One thing
to remember about Ditancia is that they
do very few things, but they do them
well."
Eatancia wasn't premed in iia opener,
defeating Ocean View, 22-0.
Quarterback Rick Burna, meanwhile,
threw for two TOI and 187 yards.
"We will be greatly challenged again in
the 1eeondary," says Hagey.
The Muatanp will be without the
.ervicea, too, of defensive back Mark
Zachary. who went down with a knee
injury laat week during practice. Zachary
mi9ed Mesa's opener and ii definitely out
again this week.
Saddleback v1. Santa Au at Santa Au
Bowl
Saddleback, which was beaten by
Santa Ana Valley, 19-6, in lts opener, gets
the Dally Pilot's No. 3 ranked team this
week.
"I saw thelr game on Wm (in which
Santa Ana tied Newport Harbor, 22-22)
and it tooked·llke a pretty good football
game," aays Coach Jerry Witte. ''They
didn't make u many m1ltakes as you'd
expect tor a fin'\ p.me. I thought. they
executed very well offensively and de-
fentively. Their speed will be the biggest
factor.
"It will be tough, no doubt about tt."
final eerie. may answer thoee
que9tlona.
"It would be interesting foe the
fl.rat 10 minutes'' l£' 9ee which
boat haa the edge, says Liberty
skipper Denn.is Conner.
"Give ua 20 to 30 minutes with
average wind and you'll know
pretty qWckJy if .omeone ia get-
ting blown out of the water," aays
Warren Jonea, executive director
of the Aumalia n syndiaate.
Since trtala to determ1ne the
two final.lsta began June 18,
Liberty niced 50 timel. compiling
a 3'f,.16 record, and Australia ll. in
54 races, amu9ed a 48-6 mark. The Raiders play the Miami Dolphins
Monday night at the Los Angeles Col-
iseum. then go on the road to Denver and
Washington in successive weeks.
Flores said he was mostly pleased, but
the inability of his offense to score more
points was a concern.
"They have aome good receivers and,
with Plemel, \hat will present a problem ,"
says Blanton. "They key will be whether
our (defensive) line will be about to put
p~ on him (Plemel)." AS U has a score to settle
But they've newr meuured
their relative ·~ in the same race, making the beglnning
of today's battle especially reveal-
ing.
"We got a lot of yards, but we just didn't
get the points," said the ooach. "I think
we'd all feel better about our offense if
we'd hit on those three field goals and the
PAT. That would have made it a 30-point
game."
Chris Bahr missed three field goal
attempts of 36, 41 and 26 yards, as well as
the conversion after the Raiders' first
scoring dnve.
The Raiders emerged from the 1eOOnd
week of the NFL eeaaon with no
stcruficant new injuries. Starting right
gUard Mickey Marvin wu held out of the
Houston game with a 1pralned ankle, but
.la expeoc1ed to retwn io practice Wedne9-
,,/&y.
Cotta Mesa va. Santiago at Gardea Grove
The Mustangs. who aqueaked put
Bol.sa Grande, 14-7, will be ln much
tougher againat Santiago, which beat up
Bellflower, 34-21.
"They looked very good," admits Mesa
co-<:oach Jim Hagey. "They beat
Bellflower and they were a pre-eeaaon
rated ball club. From what we can gather
they have great speed. The Garden Grove
League's back of the year retuma, they
have two ex.cellent wide receivera and
they like to th.row the ball."
Santiago running back Ricky Simmons,
who ruthed for 9"26 yards lut .euon,
opened with 109 yards -Including
touchdown runs of 51 and 2 yard.a -
ag,ainat Bellflower.
LOS ANGEL.ES (AP)-Since Arizona'
State became a member of the Pacifl.c-10
in 1978, the Sun Devils have a 22-14
league record and have beat.en every
football team in the conference at. least
once, with one exception.
A.SU will have a chance to ~e that no
exceptions thia Saturday when 1n.a.kes on
UCLA at the Roee Bowl in a 1983
conference football opener for both teamt.
Kickoff time is 3:30 p.m . The game will
be regionally televlled by CBS. The game
WU originally let to begin at. 7:30.
UCLA h.u won all four pmm between
the schools, start.tna with a 28-10 up.et al
Tempe, Ari%., ln 1976: Terry Donahue'•
first aame .. the Bruins' heed COllCh.
•We've just. been lucky," Donahue aa1d
Monday at. hil weekly meeting with Australi.a II, an exceptionally
reporters. "We've played very well on maneuverable boat ~ by
occasion agai.nlt them. We've been very John Bertrand, won of it.a
fortunate. And we haven't played them at.arts during the foreign triab
.mde they've Wied th1I new defensive and .e~lled on the fl..nrt, fourth
approach (•\artini last year)." and sixth lep, whiCh go upWina:
The Sun Devi.11 led the nation in total Its crew wu happy to atay even
defemein 1982,allowingonly228.9yards going downwind on the 9eCOnd,
per game. On paper, the ASU defense third and fifth lep of the six lep
doesn't figure to be nearly u effective th.1a of the races over a triangular
.eelOI'\. However, bued on one game. 24.3-mile ooune on Rhode laland
Donahue la very tmptelled. Sound.
"I know their defer. returns only Moderate northeut winds o(
three atarten, but you look at the Utah about 16 knot.a and .cattered
State film and you don't 1ee an ap-ahowen were pnd1c1led for
pred.able diUerenoe," he utd. "Their f.lrat Rhode bland Soru.nd today. 1be
team defen1e didn't. look any different to W'lndl were expected to pcJt up
me except the numbers have chanced·'' W~ . ~~~...;:;~~~~....;;..;.;.;;..;;..;.;ii~~~~~~~--
Elway on Elway: He'll soon hear the cheers
SAN JOSE (AP)-Jack Elway hM teen his aon.
SO ml1"on quarwrblck John Elway, bounce back
from other rough expcrte~ and he expecta him io
get n'WlY more cheen than boot in pro football.
"I know J ohn ta aolna to work hard. He hM had
1\Ja.'elS. and he'• aotng to work bard to conunut.'
havlr)g 1UOOl!9I," the San Joee State f ootbell C09Ch
a.aid Mo~y, eotnn*\U"'-about the tumultuou. fint
lWO weeka of hla aon'• NaUonal rootmu Leque
career. 'n\e rookJe WU booed l\MCUJy and &oudJy by a
Cl'Owd of 62,613 when h1a c.un, the Denwr Broncm,
played It BAltlmore Sunday. ·•t t~lnk It was an unfortunate thing. John la a
>.,
11
human being,'' the fat.her aa.ld. ''He's a YOW'\l IUY and
tte'• paying cu.dt.e a prb for aotna ln and expedil!nl •
dedslon. I don't lh.lnk he cfeeerVed to be booed for
three quarten."
He added. "But they had their full houae. Now
they can ao bllck to their 26,000 O"OWcia."
When uked lf he'd evtt been booed, Jack Elw._y
Mid, "I've been a <l08Ch for 30 yeara. A.re you k:lddJna
mer•
Hla 10n, who tel leV1l!'81 NCAA pullna 1~
at Stanlord wu the NFL'• fint drafl pick thla aprine,
cholen by the Be.ltimont Colt.a. He refUlld w consider
Baltimore con\tact often. &htfftened to pwwue a
buebe.ll career with the New York Yankeet~
.\
I •
r------------------------------------------------_:O;:r,:a:_:no~e~C::oa:.s:,:l_:D::A:IL:Y:...:.P,::IL:_:OT/Tueaday. Sepl 13, 1983 C3
fDR THI RECORD
,
'·
~ t I • •
MAJOR LEAGUE S'T'ANOINGS
Amerlcen LHeul
Cnlcaou IC:1n.a1 City
TexH Oektano
Anetlt Mlnnttote
S1111la
Bettlmort
Oelroll Ntw VOl'k
MllwaukH Toronto
Bo\ ton
Clavtl1nc:t
WIES1' 01\/ISIOH
W L
84 59 1>1 7S
67 71 67 ,.
.. 79
61 al
SS 81
I.AST DIVISION
IS SS ., 62
IO 63
79 6S
19 "' 69 74
64 IO
MendeY'\ S~ ... u
New Yor~ I, MUwaukM 0
Ot1rolt S. C,.vela nd I
Pct.
517
0 7
46S .462 ....
424
.JIS
601
GB
16•• ,,.,., ,.
20
2l'n , ....
569 s SS9 6'h
549 • S4S I ll>
"3 l/'h
«4 23
B•lllmort at Bo,ton. OP<I r•ln
Ontv garnet sclltdulto
T oder • G•rrw• KtnH\ City (Btect.. l ·S) at Anet41
<Stnchei t-71. en>
Bettlmore CMcGr19or 17·6 encl Remlrti ~-41 •t Botton (Bovcl • S encl Nlooer 0·01.
2. lt·n)
Cltvelenc:t (Bthenna 0·01 et Ottrott (Morris II· IOI, lnl
Mllwaull.H (Celclwett 11· IO) ti New
Yor" (Snlrlev 5·61, In~
Clllceoo COol\011 'If ll ot Minnesott
(I/Iola 7-12), (nl
Toes (Tanen• 7·7J at Oa~lencl (Warren
1·31. (n)
Toronto (LU I 11-101 at Seellll ISIO<l· derd 1·141, (n)
Wldnet.dlly'a GlllW\ Ken»\ City et Anllllla, (n) Balllmore al Boslon. Cnl
Clevetend ot Oelroll. (n)
Mllwau~tt al Ntw Yo.-, In)
Chlteoo 11 Mlnntto!e. lnl
Texat al Oaktancl, (n)
Toronto al s .. ttle, (n)
NlfiOMI Lt19'11
WI.ST DIVISION
W L Pct.
o.d9tn Atlanta
Houston
San Otego San Frencl\Co
Cincinnati
SJ 60
90 63
IS 67
11 ll 6t 76
6S 79 \EAST DIVISION Pfllleoe!ohla
Montreal
Plttst>uroh
SI Louh
Cnlceoo
New Yor.,
,. ..
73 6t
1l 70
72 70
.. 79
S9 '4
MtncaV'a S<tret
Cnlcaoo I, Montreat o
PnllaOtlOllla ? New Yorio. I
Plll\burgn 7. St LO\ll\ S
Only vames achadult<I
TedaV'• GtmH
SIO SS9
S28
493 .,,
4SI
521
S11 SlO
SOI
448
413
GB
J ,.,.,
171.,
IS'h
11 ....
J ,.,.,
2
10''1
IS'.,
OedMt'a IRtuu 10-101 et Hou\lon ISco11
1·4), (n)
Montreat (Burri• •·61 at Cn1cago (NOit\
S·9J New Yor~ !Terrell 6-7> 11 Pnlt•<Mlonl1
(Ght"I 1·01. In)
St. LOOI\ (An<luler 6· 13) al Plll•lluroh
(R'10dtn 10· 12J. Cnl Atlanta IPtrei IJ·7) et Clntlnnetf (Solo lS· 121. Cn)
Sen Francl\CO (Garrell• 1·01 et S.n Diego (Whitson •·ll, 1nl
Wfdrltt.dllV's ~!Mt
0..,..... al Hou1ton, (n)
Montreal el P11ilaoe1011fa, 1 (1·111 Atlanta at Cincinnati, (nl
Chlceoo el Pltht>uron, lnl St. Loul• 11 New Yor~. lnl
San Frar>elteo al Sen Ol~o. (n)
A~Kan LNll'I•
Tleen S, lndleru I
Cievel1na 000 too OOC>-1 9 I
OetroH 000 l 11 oo.-s I• o Blvtevan J~coa1 ( S) Solltner 161 encl
Hess.ev, Wik:o a., M•rt1n tt ) an-0 Parr''"
w-Wllco~. 9 10 L-Bivte•tn 7 10
v-... 1, Brewen o
Mltwauk" 000 000 000-0 • O New vor.. 000 010 OOx-1 6 I
Porter ena S1mmont, Fontenot, Frazier 111. Goueoe 191 ana WvMOar
W-Fonltnol, 7·2 L-Porta<, 6·1
Nanon.I L .. eu•
Cub\ I, Ex-0 Moftirtal 000 000 000-0 4 1 Cntcaoo 001 0'11 00.-1 14 o
Rooars. Scnaueoar 161, Berger 17),
Olaon (7) ancl Carttr. Romo\ 111. Ruthven
and Oe•I• W-Rulhven 12·11 L-Rootn . 17· 10
Pln!H 1, C.rdlM!t s
St Loula JOO 001 100-S 10 O Pnt,t>urgn ooo 322 oox-7 12 o Co!!. LaPolnl IS), L•ntl (6), Ruoer (01.
Sek tr (7), Von Ohltn (I) eno Por!tr.
Tunnell. Sarmiento (7) and Pena w-
Tunnen, 9-S L-<o•. 7·4. HR-St. Louis, Braun (3)
_, t. Mlft 1
N•w Yorx 000 010 000-1 J ? PnlledtlOllle 001 000 ooa-2 s I
Oatll"ll, Sl\k II) arid Orth , Hooge• (7), Oennv, Holland Cfl end 01ez w-Otnnv.
IS-6. L-Oerllno, 0·? HR-New Yor~
\trewt>tnv (24i
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
A~lc.ln LHOll•
BATTING IJSS at bat\) 8oQ9\, Bo\ton,
.362, Carew, "'-'· .l411; Tramm.it, De troll. 317. Mo'911Y. Toronto 3 IS. Bonnell,
Toronto, .JU
RUNS Rloo.en. Belllmort, 101, Murrev,
Battlmort, "· MoMH>Y. Toronto. '7. Htn· Oll'IOn, 0.k .. nd '3, c-. Mflwaul<ft, ,,
llBI Roca, 8o\lon. 114. C-r. Mii·
weukM, 113, Perri\h, 011ro11, HO, Wlnfi.l<I, New Yorll, 100. Slmmont. MllweukH, 9t
HITS Bo111n. Bo\ton. 117. c-r. Mii· w1u"'"· 171, Whitaker Oatroll, 177, Rll>llan. Belt1mort . 172. Mclht, Ken»1
City, 16S, Simmon\, Mllw1ullH 16S
DOUBLES BOllQt, Bo\lon, 43. lllollan.
B11tlmor1. ~. Parrllh. Detroit. 39, Mcllae.
Kan\H Cllv, 38, Breit, Ken\n Cllv, JI
TRIPLES Grlttln. Toronto. 9, Frar>eo,
Clt •tll rld , I , Gentner, MllwtllkH. I. Win
field, New York, I, Yount, Mllw1ukff, I
HOME RUNS Rice . 9ot1on, JS. Kitti'!,
Chlceoo. 32, Armu, Bo\ton, 31, Luiln\kl, Chlca110, 29, Coootr, Miiwaukee, 27, Mur•
rev, Btltlmore. 27 STOLEN BASES Hendtnon, 01kl1nd,
91, It Law, Chlcavo, 69; J. Cruz, Chl<"AllO,
49. Wll•on. Ktn»t Cltv. '8. ~mpte, Tuo. .0 PITCHING ( 13 dt<"l\lonO lie8', Mll-
weukff, 13·3, J 27, F1tn101n, 81Hlmort. 11·3, 3.11, McGrevor, Balllmora, 17·6, l OS,
Ootaon, Cnlcaoo, 17·7, l.•9. Davia, Belll·
more. 12· s. 3 :It STRIKEOUTS Morrla, Ottroll, 203,
Stitt>, Toronto. 16t, Btnnl\ltt. CnlceGO, 147.
RIVlltlll, New York . •ts. Su''""'·
Cltv ... rld, 142
SAllES· OulMnOtrrY. 1(1n~H Cit~. le.
St.,,...., 80\ton, 21, II 01vl\, Mlnnatot1,
21, CaudlM, S111tte, 2l, Ooua~. New York,
20 L10d. Mltw1uk", 10
........... L.M~
IA TTING US$ ti 1>41"J; ftW~IO(k, Pll·
IMKKll!I • .l73, Cru1. HOU11on . .JlO. Hen·
drlek, " Lout., .:119, Dt•NI', Molltro l,
JU, LO Smith, St Loul•, lit_
ltUNS· NWr~v. At1tn••. 1n. ltelnat.
Monl•HI. 111, 0 1wM>11, Monfrffl, ...
Evant, Sen l'rencl"o· •. khl'llkll, Ptllle
delotll•. t7 aa1 Mutfl1/llv, Allanta, IOI, Oew•on,
MOtltrtal, lCI), Schmk!I, ""l~lt, tS.
G_,..,., ~. '11 K~. San oi.oo." HITS 01wt0n, Montrtll, 1n, Cru1.
MoutlOfl. "'; llamtru, Atlanta, 1 .. , Thon, HOUtlOll, t•S, Oll•tf, Motttrttl, IM DOUBLES llu<llMf'. Chl<aoo. 31,
Dewao<1. Monlr .. 1, », l(nlOllt, l40u•lon, »; Ollvtt, MOntr .. I, U , C.llef', Mottlr .. I, J2;
Rav, PllltlMHOll, ». TIUPl.f!S1 But"', Atltnta, U, Orftfl, St
LO\llt, t, Thon, Hoviton, t ; C:1u1, ~ton,
I, ""'"'· Clnclnnetl, I. WHnlnoton. Alteri· ••••• HOME ltUNS· k.nl'lllcn, Pnllto.!Dllle, )4,
Muff)l\V, All1n1~ J2. 01wt0n, MottttHI, IO;
E•tlll, kn Frt nclKO, 29, G_.,..,., o...n.a.
$TOLEN IASl!S· R•lll<n, MIWl1ttel, 70;
W'"1M. San 01-. SJ. L lu, DMllf'\, UJ
WM-. NI• Yorll. "'· LtMUltr. Sin FtlftdKO. ~
P1TCHIH0 (IJ clt(ltlOnt l o.Mv, ""lie•
Cltlollla, IS-•, Ut, McWlll4wn1, Plthbufqll, u-•. l.23. OrOKO, Nt• Yor•. I>·•· I 37. L ... Montr .. l, IS •• 1 .. , ~11. Atlarlt1
1>-7 > 71; tty111, HOu"°"· IJ.7 hJ
-----·
5TRtKEOuT5 Car111111, PllUedetpnl1,
141, ~10, Clr><:IMetl. 210, McWllllemt,
Pltl\Duron, 170, Ryan, Hou\ton, 1t7,
llNll\luele, DNeen. 160.
SAVES Lt. Sn\1111, Chicago, 2S, Hol .. lld.
Pnll1de!Ollla 10; R1erd0n, Montre•I, 10; !tclro,11,,, At1en1t. 19. Minton. Sen Fren-
cl•co, 19
Dal Mar
MONDAY'S Rl!SuLn
42nd OI 4l·deY ltl«OUll>brld mMtlne)
FtRn RACE. 6 lurlO"llS
FIMtln9 Past IBlocl\) 10 .. 60 4.70 3 40
Norcllc Lady (Ptncavl 3,40 l .60
Oon't Forott Me IE\lredaJ SOO
At•o raced Jonlll .. Beu. Al'ln• Gaye, Oellontfut Dotty, Rlont An9tu, Miu MOiiy
Dee. L•r"'s Sov. Ttrroto'> Btauly, M•rc•s Prlnctu Ml•lv Search Time 112
SECOND RACE. Ona mile Overla ncl J our ntv IM c Gurnl
420 290 HO
Proud Yankee (Uoneml 4 00 1 90
Hall Iha Eeote f Pincey) 2.60
Also racec1 Ru11 the Gal•uv, Phi Beta
K•opa, Doctor Foote. Bomt>utlc, Llontnlno
BOid, Wolf Keys Weel>.Jy lltPOfl. Time 1:31
U DAILY DOU II LE (9 Sl oald $22 20
TMIRD RACE. 6 lurlonv>.
Our Aclreu IPlncavl 1070 S.00 360
Caremt>ole (Vatenrueta) S 60 4.40 T•rtnlelle Lady (Fuel'ltetl 4 60
Also raced. !.tkra. Th•nl•" Judge, Glim· mer
Time· 1. 10 21 S. '5 EXACT A ll·S) oa10 $106 00,
FOURTM RACE. I 1116 mlln
Socio! Review (Ollvaretl uo 3.70 HO
Siik 'n Smooth IHawlevl 6.20 S.40
Nol a Straw (Meza) 7.40
Also raced: Chlcettt, Soecula te In GOid,
trl•h FHllval, Another Oto. Miu Trlut>uta· lion, Copper Nike, Golden Duke, Fran's Funnv Lodv, Torre's Harmony,
Time· 1:« •IS.
FlnH llACE. 1 1/16 miles. Boyne Valle\/ IHawlev) 35,10
Bl\on Bev (Plncev) Twlckennam (E\trecla)
810 ~60
280 2 60 4.10
R•nch, Also rec~: King Of Thi Al\hurouk, So Teltnltcl, OeConlrot
Time 143 2/S
U IEXACTA (1·J) oelcl $117.SO
SIXTH RACE. 6 furlongs
Golclen Toi (Pierce) S 20 3 00 2.80
Moment'\ Heoolneu (Plncev) 4 olO 3 40
Mv Donne B (Miiis) 4 IO
Abo racld· s~1acula Oanct r, Miu
Sendlr Wlrld. Mark Ffffl Olent Go Go. Tlmt I 10 C/S
SEVENTH lllACIE. a lurlong,
Po\lllve Tree• (McCarron) t 20 4 60 3 00 Lu<:llv C•mllte (Melt) S 00 2 IO
Her Solr (Pince YI 2.60
Al\o raced. Greuv, Aunt Lin, Miu
GttltrY.
Time. 1.10 3/S u E XACTA (4·S) oelcl $110.00
n ~ICI( SIX (S·1·8·1·7/&·4) oelo
12S,OS6 20 wllfl eighth wtnntno llcJc1ts l\hl
nortttl. '2 Pick Six Consotallon palcl 1321.20 with 315 wlnnlno 1tckels(tlv1 norte1I.
IUGHTM ltACE. 6 turlong\.
Manicure Kit IOtlv•rH) 47.20 20.20 1.60 Salta Bullttln ISl\oemekerl 5.20 3.60 A·Gtnt'• Leclv CPlnteyl 3.60
A -couolad
Aloo raced: Frannie Mertie, Alway\ o .. r. A·Refr1attlng Act, Miu Vie Magnum, Pr111v Pro,oect
Tlma: 1·11
U EXACTA IS-4) N ici \645 SO
NINTH ltACE. I 1116 mli.t> B•mlOVI (Va .... zuala) 4 . .icJ
Roll'• Mv Cnanct (Hewtavl
Bv Tnt SI• (MIMsJ Al\O raced Lon Lu cier,
Lark
Tlme I 47 4/S
'5 l.XACTA 12·41 0t1d S21 SO A lllltldenct 14,'96
Boxlne
(et l.M ,.,,,._.,,
2 60 no
2.IO 2 . .0 uo L.atavette
Llgntwelohh -E'llet Madrid I Lot An· 11tltll KO'd Wlllle Daw (Vinton, Le.) 11 40
'tcond\ Of Ille llllrd round. ( M.Orlcl wlll• llolllwelght tltte )
Junior llohtweloht• -Erick Madrid (Lot
AnoaltslKO'd Elvl\ Daw (Vinton, I.• l at
1:03 of the fourth rouncl (Madrid win\ lunlor llOhlWtiOl'll l!llt).
Speclet t>oul -47·vt1r·O!d Soonv Sllleldt CLO\ An11tfe,) scor&O a TKO In !ht
flr\t rouno over Bernie Smlllt (Houalonl '" • \Chtduled live-round e•enl
Women's ..,....,.,_,
GOLi.EGE .u-c.i T-...-,., UCLAJ
·~~ UCLA de! UC Sen 01'90, lS-3, IS· 1'
UCLA def Cal, 1S·2, 1S•I
UCLA dei UC lrvlna, IS·IO. IS·IO
UCLA del UC lltvenk:lt, 15·2, IS·•
UCLA del UC S.nla Bert>ere. 16· 14.
1'·11, 1S·11
uC Santa Beroara del UC lrvlne, 9· 15,
1S·t , 1S·9
uC 54,,111 Berbara del UC San 01890,
IS-7, IS-I
uc S.nle Berl>lre def uC Rlvtnldt.
IS·•, 1S·7 uc S.nl• Barber• ael c.1. IS-I . 15·S UC Rlv.,.tldt dt l Cal, lS-11. IS· 10 UC Rlver11oe def uC lrvlne, 17· IS,
16· "· UC RIVt!llde del. UC San Otevo, 15·3,
1S·4, C•I cltl. IJC San Oleoo. IS· II, 15·2.
Cal del UC Irvine, 1S·I, 14·14
UC Ir vine <)et UC San 01190, I S·9, 15•6.
Flnel St1odlno1 -I. UCLA. 5·0; 2. UC
Santa Bert>er1, 4· 1; 3. uC Rl•tnlclt, 3·2; 4.
Cal, 2-3, s uC lrvlnt , 1·4, 6. uc Sen Oleoo.
O·S.
SOUTHIRN CAL. COLLIGE 1fQ~
WtO. -Wlllllltr; Thurt ·Sat, -el uC
San DltOO Tourntment (•M dtvl; Saot. 10 -
Wnlmont; Sel>I. n -., AZUMI Pacific 17
o.m.l; seol. 23 -Pacific Chrbllan; Sept. 27
-Cler-I; SHI. 79 -el Pomona Plltef',
Stl>t >O -Fretno Peclflc.
Oct I -Notre Oam. 11 P.m.l, Oct • -
Point Loma Oct. I -Cal Lulfttran <I o.m.l, Oct. 11 -t i C.I 8ePll•1(7 p,m.); Oct. I) -
8lolt Oct II -Cal llaPlltl Oct 20 -11
Point L.-Oc1. 21·12 -et c.t St. Oomln9ut1 Hid• Tourt1emen1 1.8• elev); Oct
75 -et Wtttmont 17 ., m.l. Ou. 26 -•t
Ctvht c~ 11Pm1. Oct. 21 -Pomona
Plllt<
Nov I -11 lllola Nov 2 -Cntltt
Cot ..... Nov 4•S -NAIA Dlllrlcl Tourntv 11 Wnlmont !TBA).
All Mmes 1terl el 7.lO o m. unlfft otlltrwlaa Indicated
°"° ........... A1'T'S LANOIMO !New'"'1 ... di) -
M enoltfl 1' vtllOwt•lt, • b\liltt tune. 12&
DOnlto, 1S bat•. Ill m.cxtrtC, I r~ fltn,
OAVIY'S 1.0C.KIR CMtW-1 hlldl) -n .,,.._,,. 11 v•tt0wfln tvfta n tllllllecll
111111, 10 llUlltt 1.-, 17'3 11on1lo, 11 ~•lco ~ ... nc1 tltu. I roci. 11111, 115
""" oeaoo IMAM LMM11tte> -t l4 """"-sn vt110wtl11 ti.Ml, 1 \t1410wtaM. 12 blttYI 1""9, JI dOt ado, 6U \II lolKll tuna
DAMA WHA'" -Jl4 •tletett 1)0 Wiil 11en. ft bontto, 1l vt11ow11n, I rotll ClOd,
• mackerel. JO veMowfln rune
Prep f ootbalflog
MI w.'Oll T HU llOtl 1 ... 0 • ll n knla AM n Oct. 11-MIOIOll VltlO' Oct. ~ C1tmen1e• SUNSIT 1.•AGUI
aDISON ft·ll
7 Demian 21 Sept, 15-Vlale (el OCC, ,,
Oct. l~ount•lll Vallrt' Oci. 21-Matlnt'
Oct. n-EollOll' lei OCCJ
Nov ........ untlnel011 e.ec11•
Nov 1~ llleW' lel HIJ
s..1. 1~vtwn1 let w .. 1ar11)
s..1. n-1 Huntltltlon a..ch
s-1. 2'-Unl....-.itv•
New • ......,., C.Phtrano V•MtY'
Nov. ll>-Woodbrkl9e" <•t Irvine!
$ellt. 22-hnnlne l•I 11•1• SIMI.) Sept, ~I Santi t.Wrle
Oct. 7_,,.,.,.,. Otl (•I OCCI
Oct 7-trvlM•
Oc1. le-£ltln<la" le i NM)
Oc1. 21-$9~'
LAGUNA HILU (O· I)
14 INlne *'· 1t-E1tencl• (al NH) Oct. 1.._..ln fkK11• lei OCCI
Oct. 21--Ftn. Viv' (Anaheim $led.)
Ocl. 2t-Wtttmlnt1tr• (OCCI Nov ~n V1tw• (11 HI)
HA VllW LIAgUI[
COllONA OIL MMt Cl•tl
10 Hunt111111on leeCfl 3
Seot. 16-Stn Clement• lat OCC>
Sept. n-.1 ~1tr1no Vetltv S..t. >C>-~' (et NM)
Oct. ~otl• MHll' Nov. )-El TOfO' let MVI
Nov. lo-<dM' (et OCC)
see>t. ~nlv.,.tllv (•I lrvlntl Seot. :IC>-L.auuna 811cn• 111 MVI
Oct, .,_.., Mlu loo Vlalo'
Nov. II-Marine• (at OCC)
Oct. 7-EI Toro• let Miii flOUNTAIN VALLIY ll·tl
24 Maltr Otl o Oct, IHicvlna' (at Nt4)
Sept. l~OOlhlll lt l Min. Behl
seot. 2>-Mlnlon Vltlo (at Wmttr)
Sffl. 29'-Strvllt let SA Bowl)
Oct. 21-COlll Ma .. ' (DCCI
Oct, ~nl•eottv• <•• trvlnel Nov. t-ttt•nc:ta• (el NH)
Nov. l~POtt Mtrbor' IOCCI
SADOLIUCIC (1·11
6 ~nla Alie llt llev
Sel>I. l.....,Stnta Ana (SA Bowl)
Sel>t. n-t...a Mabra CSA aowo
Sel>I, lO-CdM' ltl NH)
19
Del. 14-Stn Ctamenle' lat Miii
Oct, 21-1 Caohtr•no Vatlfy'
Oct. 2t-el 011\1 HIN1 •
NOY, t-Woo<llW"kklt" (ti MVI Nov. 10-Montcltlr (•t Mii)
MISSION VIUO I l·Ol 42 Tutlln
Ste>I. It-El Toro Oct. 7-LS Poly (al V1t1 Siad.)
Ocl. 1-1 Wt1lmln1ttt• Oct. 71-EdllOn' (Anaheim SIMI.I Oct. 21-0cten View• (t i Wm1trl
Nov. 4-Marlnt' 1•1 OCC)
eosTA MISA 11·0)
14 \II.of .. Grende
Oct .....Coal• MMe' (SA kwl)
Oct. 1:>-unlver111v• lat lrvlnel
Ocl, 21-1 NewPOtl H1r1>or'
0c1. :1t-£111nct1• CSA aowu
Nov . .-at lrvtna•
Nov. 11-EI Toro• (SA &owll
Stl>t. 2>-Ftn. Vallty (al Wttmlr)
Ste>t. ,._.SI. JOl'ln 8ote0
• Nov. 11-1 Hunllnolon Bffch'
Sept. 15-Senltaoo (at Gft Grvt)
SHI. %)-Lot Atamltoa lei NH I
SHI. JC>-el Irvine'
Oct. 6-s.ddlebeck" ISA Bowl) HUNTINGTON HACH 0·1)
03 C«-de4 t.Wr
Sffl. 1S-.I Fulllfton
10 Oct l>-£1 T«o' (al NtWPOl'tl Del. 21-<:dM' (11 DCC)
Saot. 22-NtWPOtl Herl>Or S.ot 30-el Lii WllM>ll
Oct 7-S«ra
Oct 14-EdlM>ll' (I I DCCI
Oct 11--0cMn Vltw• (•I M!)
Oct 2t-11Mr1nt•
Nov. 4-11 Wntmln\ttr'
Nov. I I-Fountain V•llav"
Oct. a-.1 NtWPOl'I Mlrl>Or" No•. >-<Jnl••nfly• 1•1 NH)
NO• 1<>-Ellanclt• (t i NH)
aL T'OtlO (O·t)
1 CvPrna
Seol 1'"11 Mlulon Vi.lo SHI. U-Vetenci. (11 MV)
Seol. lC>-E11enc1t• lat DCCI Oct. 1-CdM' (al N\V) MAatNA (0·0·11
21 Elotrenze 21 Oct. 1>-<oste Maia" lei NH)
Fri., Oct. 2l-Unl'YlrtllY' (I I MV)
Thur., Oct. 27-irvlnt' (II MV)
Nov. >-NPI Herl>Ot"' (el Miii
Nov. 11-Stddlebeck" (SA Bowl)
Saot. 15-S«vllt lei SA Bowl) Saol. 17-f=oothlM (Weatmln\tar)
Sao!. ~. Quinta (el Blaa Grcl )
Oct. 1-Mflllken (WHlmlnlltr)
Oct 14-<>ctan llltw' (at H8)
Oct. 21-1 Wtttmlnsltr'
Oct. n-.1 Hunll"91on BHcll' Nov. 4-Ftn 1111\ty' (et OCC)
Nov 11-Edlaon' (ti OCCI
OCaAN lllliW (I• II
O Ealencla 22
Sept, 17-La Quinta (el 81M Grdl
Stl>I. 2)-Cvortu (al Hin. 8Hchl
S.01. 30-Sunnv Hiii\ (Buene Pll.l
Oct 7-t Wtst.,.n
HTAMCIA ll·tl
22 °'8an llltw $e!>I. 16-L•vune Hiiis (•I NH)
SHI. 22-S.n Clemtflt1 (el NHI
SHI. 30--Et Toro• (el OCC)
Oct. 7-Unlvenftv• (ti lrvlntl
Oct. 1...._I NtwPOrt Herbor'
Oct. 21-1 , •• ,,,..
Ocl. n-.seddleOto' ISA Bowl)
Nov . .-.CdM' (ti NtwPOfl) Nov. 10-Collt ~· (t i NH)
0
UMfVIRSITY t 1-t)
I) Woodtw"klve Sel>I. 16-81 Tutlln
Sectl. n--Leoune Hill• (el lrvh\I)
SHI. :it-.1 NtwPOl'l Htr110f'
Oct. 7--Estancta• (11 trvlntl
Oct. l~ck' (el lrvlntl
Oct. 21-EI Toro• (el MVI Oct. 29-<dM" (11 Irvine)
Nov. >-<otta MKa' lat NHl Nov. 11-lrvtne• let trvlntl
SOUTH COAST LEACPUE
CArlSTitANO VALLIY lt·ll
7 FoolhlM 24
S.01. 16-EIP8f'tnH
StPI. n-<or-clef Mar
Sel>I. JC>-tl Dant Mlltt'
Oci. t-Woodbrldot' (el lrvlnt) Del, 1.t-Mlulon Vltlo'
Oct. 21-Lavune Hltts• Oct. 2t-Sen GorvonlO
No• . ..-Levune Beeell" Nov. 11-1 San Clel'llenlt'
Oct. 6-l.eoune Hllft• (a l MV)
Oct. 14-11 C•ohlr•no V1t1t~·
Oct. 21-1 L..eguna llttch'
Oct. ,._WOOdbf'ld9e"
Nov. 4-tl San C1tmen1t•
Nov. 11-0ene Hiiis •
SAN CLEMENTE 11 ·0)
20 Ma;noU•
Sao!. 16-<0M (et DCCI
see>t. 22-E•••ncl• (el NHI Seol. JO-Woodbrk:I~·
Oct. 1-Stnt11110 Oct. 1.t-Legune HIM•' (al N\V)
Oct. 21-1 Dan• Hllh" Oct. a-.1 L1guna 8Hch'
NOY. 4-Mln ton vi.1o·
Nov. 11-<:eolstrano Vellev•
WOODMJDGE (O·I)
7 unlvtnllv Sept 16'-11 trvtne
Sept. n-<>r1noe (Et Modena)
SHI. 31>-el San Clemtfl!e •
Oct. 6-<•PO Vat:ev• (al lrvlnt)
Oct. 1.-0ane Httn• (al trvlntl
Oct. ~llw•nda (el Irvine)
13
DANA Hll.LS <•· ll 6 Gerden Gro'YI ll Oct. ,..._.., Minion Vltlo"
Nov. 4-uvune Hiiia• (al Mii) Nov. 10-uouna Beath' (lrvlntl Sel>I. 16-Unlveralty (SOI
S.01. 2>-Stn t.Wrco1 Slot. :JC>-Caplalrano Velley•
Oct. 7-1 La;une !Mecll'
Del. 14-WoodlW"ldcM' (•I lrYlnt)
Oct. 21-S.n Cltmentt•
ANGELUS LEAGUE
MATER D•I (O·ll
O Foun11tn Vettev
SIDI. 16-81 Oo1 Pueblos 24 Oct. 14 -Marina' Cat Hin. Bttcn) Oct, 21-a1 Hin. 811cn•
Oct. 2&-Ftn. Veltev• (Wm•trl
NOY. 4-Edl.on' (el Hin. llffdl) Nov. 11>-WHll'lllntt.,.• (•I MB)
lllVIN• 11·0)
20 uouna Hlns SHI. 16-Woodbrldllt Sept. U-Tuslln
14
Oct. 21-Levune Hiii•'
Nov . ......,., 8onllt
Nov. 11-1 Mlulon Vltlo'
Sel>I. ~It Ant (al SA Bowl)
Oct. 1-<:rnpl (SA Bowl)
Oct, 7-Edl\Oll 111 OCCI
WHTMINSTE1' O·ll
16 Le Qulnte
SePt. JO-Coate ~· Oct. 7-1 Ntwoor1 Harbor'
LAGUNA aEACH 11·0) 14 Catlfornla
Oct. 14-tt serra•
13 Oct. 20-Plua X' (SA Bowl) Oct. ,._., SI. Paul' 1J Oct. ls-<:dM' (t i NtWPOl'I)
Oct. 2l-E11tnc1t•
SePI. 16-Stvenna
SHI. n-.1 El1lnor1 SIPI. IS-f>Klflct
Seol. n-Strvllt (C.,.rltot Coll.I Seol. ,._0o .. ,,... Oct. 2?-£1 Toro• (•I Mii) Nov . .-SedclltCleQ• Sept. ~vune HIMt' (•I M'V)
Oct. 7-D•nt Hln1•
Nov. >-61illoP Amat• (SA Bowl)
Nov. 10-Str-Yllt" (SA Bowl)
' <lenolH ltt9Ut lltmt All
11tm.a •I 7:30 unteas nott<I Oct 7-al LB Wiiton New. 11-Unl,,....itv• (al trvlnal Oct. 14-tt Ataacadero
NP:L ,......,_
NATIONAL CONl'E1'EMCa Wftl
W L T ,.d. ,.,.
Rams , 0 0 1.000 "' Alltnl1 I I 0 .500 J3
NewOrttena I I 0 .500 SS San Frtncl\CO I 1 0 .500 '5 ... ,
Oallll a 0 0 1.000 65 NYGlanll I I 0 .500 22
PnfleOtlPlll• I 1 0 .soo JS
wuntnoton I I 0 .500 53
SI. Loul• 0 2 0 .000 34 C-tl
Cnlctvo I I 0 .soo 34 Detroit I I 0 .500 37
GrMn 8tv I I 0 500 '2
Mtnnatota 1 1 0 .500 " Tamoe Bev 0 , 0 .000 10
AM.,UCAN COMfll•EMC• .. ..,..
Otnvtr
Ken1 .. c11., Sen Oteoo
S111tte
Miami
8altlmort
Buffalo NY Jtla
New Enollnd
Cltvtlencl Pllltllufon
Clnclnl\811
HoutlCHI
....
2 0 0 1.000 olO , 0 0 1000 31
I 1 0 .500 JI I I 0 .soo 46
1 I 0 soo lO
Ea\t
2 0 0 1000 46 11 05003'
1 I 0 .500 10
1 I 0 .500 SI
07000047 e-... 1 1 0 .50052 I I 0 .5003S
0 ' 0 .000 1• 020000'4
Mef9Y'• SC.. San OltOO 17, Kanae& Cltv u
n.undaV'• Gerne
,.A
l3
33
41
39
47
29 olO
" 62
lO
31
63
" ,.
16
20
JO
SS
27
Cincinnati et c .. vtl•nd <Cllenntl 7 II S:lO
om I ,,,--sundir• co-ll1m1 n . Gr"" Bav a t MltwaukM
(Clltnnt4 2 al 10 1,m.) Chlceoo 11 New Orleans
Pllltburoh al Houston ~n Frenclaco •I St Lo.ti•
New Y«k Jtts at Ntw Enolerld
Kenan Cttv at we,nll!OIQll
Atlante II Ottrolt
lltttlmore 11 lullalO
Pnllade!ohl• •' O.nvtr San Diego at Sttllle (Channel 4 at I
o.m.> New York Glanh al Otll•t (Cllannfll 2 el
I P.m.I Mlnnaaola 11 Ttm0t 8av
MMMV'• O-MJ1ml el ,.,..,.., (nl
ChartMn 11, Oltefs 14
Sew. " Out'1111n Saft Dltote l 0 1 7-17 KtMHCllY t 7 0 7-14 ''"'...,.. S~G llanlr.c:llU SI, h i S.C..Whfted
KC-HencOCll 4.5 oeu trorn 'i.anntY (Lowery .ic-.), 12:00. '"* ...... SO-Munclt 10 run (8tnlr~1111e 1<1ck), •~• ,Mlf'9!~
l(C-MtnlltM .. OtH from C••ton
(Lowtr'r llldl), 11:$3, SO-Clltnd.... 12 OHS from Foul\
CSenlrsctWte lllcll), 13 15
A_.2,ISO
SD IC.C
Flrtt oown'
ltu1he\·Yerd1
Paulno verdl
Return vardt
Plltet
?1 13
Sl-192 11· 4S
2s1 m IS 14
Sacks llv
P\.lnls
IMS·I 24·-ll·I 7·14 ~ 1· •
Fumbl .. ·IO\I
Ptn•llle• ·vtrcl•
Tlmaol Poutulon
2-4) Soll
3·2 1-1
7· •S 6··35 l3:~ 26:06
INDIVIDUAi. STATll~I
RUSHING-Sen OltOO. Munclt 27·110,
e rooll.a 23·8'. Fo..tt• l·(mtnua-4) KtnMt•
Cllv, B. J1cklo<1 10·20, J, Tl'tomt\ 7·1',
Kennwl-6. PASSING-San Oltoo, Foult
17·U ·l·7St k•natt Cltv, Ktnntv 23·30·1-111, C•rM>ll l-l·0-41 RECEIVIN~n Oltoo, Chanc!W s-n .
Joiner 4·M, 8r004(• l ·4S, WIMlow l ·l7.
Muncie 7·J7, Oucllwortll 1-7 Kensa• Cltv,
H1ncoc11 •·73, Carto11 4·.S, Menllel 1·49,
S<oll 7·32, a. Jeck.on 2-10, J. Tllomes 2· 10.
Mldnol 1·2. I( Thomtt 1'1mlnut•4),
MIMED FIELD GOALS-SD,
lltnln cflllt 46
c ............ tCM!Ma
lAT\laDAY'S •AMllS
WUT Ariton. St. Vl UCLA (It-lowt. );JO
Pm .. Challtltl 21
USC el Ort9011 at , n
1.ono '"(.ti St al Hewall, n Mkh!Hn 11 w .. 111no1on
Art1-al Wtlhlneton St
Ntv•de·lt-a t "'""° St., n Ntvaclt•Lal ll-1 t i Paclflc:. n
Sen JOM St, at C•lltotnle
(II t..uttw•n .. UC De\llt , "
Clllco SI. •I Cal PolY $LO. n
Cal Sl•lt NOrfllrlclet 11 C•I Slalt H•v·
w1rd Idaho SI. el &:. WethlMIOll $tnlt Ctar. ti Mumllol<ll $t., 11
s.cramento St. el l"Oflltnd St., "
$Onomt at. at San Fr•ntltn SI. -.oc1<1u
Ct ! State Fulltnon al utall SI.
Sen oie.o SI. ti Ul•h. " Air "ore-at WVomlftt
lolM St. 11 Montena
lowtlN c;r..., •I avu
COIOrtOO St, el Coloo oo
kltllO SI. ti Mont-II.
Nortlltrn Atlt-et weoer St , n #fO'Wln
Wklll!I SI, ti 1C-.1
Mld!IMA SI. al No!Tt Dllme ....... ,. •• ,Ml,_,, or. St 11 01ci.11ome nuo "m. Cllell rttl 7)
\
Mlstourl el WIM:on•ln
TCU t i Ken»• St.
Ol<ltllOme St. et Clnctnne ll, n
Sttntord et llllnoh. n
Nor1llern Mlctl19en 11 Cantrel Mkllto•n
Oevton 11 Butltr
... $1. al Ohio u. Ol'ak1 at W. IMlnol•, n w. Kantuckv et AkrOfl
W Mlcfl'9en et IMlnola SI • n
SOUTH
Mlu lu tOPI ti Altt>eme
llldlana at Kentuekv
ArmY ., LO\ll\Ylllt, n
MJeml, Olllo •t North Carottn1
Tex•• at Auburn, n Clladtl 11 Nortll Cerollne st .. n ~ola et Ctemaon
Oukt 11 Soutll Caro!lna N1vy ., Mlulu(p9l St .. II
lrldllnt St. et Flofklt. n
Purelut et Ml•ml, Fla., n
Ftorklt SI. al TUiane
Furman 11 ~via Tech
towa SI. ti Vendtrblll, n
Ltf ... tllt at OevlcKon Oelew.,• at Wlllllm &. Marv J1mtt Midi.on al VtroJ11l1, n
T OltdO al R lc:l\tncW\CI
Louisiana Tech el Southttn MlulnlOl>I,
n
Wetl TUH SI. el McN-SI., n
Vwl!lnlt T.a> ti Memphfa SI . n
West ... n Caro41na et Wekt Fore11. n
VM.1 el "-ledlltn St
EAST '°'"'a et P-SI w .. 1 Vlrotnle al Mervlelld
Norlftwest.,.ft at Svn<ute. n &o.lon Colleoe at !tut"" Ntw H9""""1re et 80\IOll U Brown at Yalt
Lehloll ., COI09 '• Columbia et Hervero
C« ntll el "-"" Prlnoeton ti Ot rtmou1n
loiolY Cron t i Met MCll<nlllt SOUTMWIST
New Me1tco el Artl8ttM\
Arkan1u St. ti TeltH A&.M. n
••vlor ., T••••·Et PHO, n Lamer t i HouslOn. n LSu ti lllot, n
NE Loullltnt •• TUH·Arllnolon. n
NW Loul\llne ,, TulM, n
c ..... r•"'* Al"TW10
The T 00 20 IHm• In tllt nm '"" uter·Sff.on Auocltltd P'"' colle9t fool· 11111 POii, wllh flrll·PllCI volts In paranth·
11n .... '°" recordt end tottl POlnl•.
l,Nebraake !SH J·0-0 1, I U 2.0l<lahorN (2) 1..0·0 1,<Xl4 J .. TuH m o-o-o ,...
4,Nolre Ot me l·O·O 909
S.Aul>urn l1l 1 ·0-0 903
•.Ohio Stilt 1·0-0 7S6
7.Ar110nt 2·0-0 '67
t.Mlch19en 1-0-0 •2•
f,Florklt Stitt M~·O '" 10.North Carotlne 2-0-0 6n
11.Gtorola 1-0-0 we
I) Altl>ema l·0-0 452
u .towa 1·0-0 427
14.USC 0-0-1 lSJ
IS.Florlde 1·0-1 31'
It. Wtllllneton 1-0-0 2l6
17.Mtrvlelld 1·0-0 ?11
1UMu 2·H IN
lt.Pttltburllh 2--0-0 1'3
10.WMI Vlrolnla l ·0-0 190
COMMUNITY COLLl[GE
0....,,.. c ••• ldlecMe
Set .. Sel>I. 11 -Palomar (hOrnt)
Sal . • Sept. 24 -StcldleCledt (home l
Sal., Oct. 1 -Sent• ller11<tre (hOmt),
1:30 D.m. Sal , Oct. I -ti Lonv hectl (home)
Set., Oct. IS -San Dlaoo Male' (llOmt),
1:30 o.m. Sal., Oct. n -et Cttrllos'
Set., Oct. 29 -•I Ml. Sin AnlonlO'. 1:30 D.m.
Sal., Nov. S -F~ton• (llOmt)
Sel., Nov 12 -t>vt
Sat., No• If -ti Compton, 1:30 p.m.•
Tllur11.. Nov. 24 -Golden Wtal ltlomtl.
11 e.m.• AU aemtt et 7:30 o.m. unttts otntrwltt
nottd. • Otnottt Soutll Coast Conl.,.en<t
oeme.
G4ldln West ldlecMe
Sal .. Stt>t. 17 -ti ~" Fri., S...I. 23 -Santa AM (t i OCCI
Sat .. Oct. I -8tktrtlltld let OCCI
S.I., Oct. t -11 h..-nt
Sal., Oct. IS -FUiierton• (el OCC)
s.1 .. Oct. 22 -Conwlon' (ti OCC)
s.1 .. Oct. " -t i Sell Dltoo ,,,.... Sal., Nov. s -.,....
Sel .. No<t 12 -•• ~·
s.1 .. Nov It -Mt. itll Antonio' (at
OCCl
Tllur1 . "°"· 14 -11 er-Coett', 11
a.in.
Al """9 et 7iia D.ftl. unlttt ottl«w1M "°'"· . dtnolft Souttl Cotti ~ ..,,,..
s.••1t1dl ~ J
Sal, ...... 17 -~ Wt61 (l'tifN)
Sal .. s.t. 24 -81 Orlftlt CaHI
kl • Oct, 1 -~ a..cfl cc (hOrnt)
s.1 .. Od. • -11 o r.-1 (Oranl,.
H• Hllfl) kl, Oct. U -lellte Ant' (home)
Sal., OCi. 21 -DYi Set .. Oct. If -el OINI'
kt., No<t. ' -1u..-...· 111om1> s.1 .. Now. If -at ,.._, (S.11 ~
Hfell)', 1!IO D.tn.
kt .. Nov, 1' -kn D1tto• (l'roml)
Tllurt., Nov. 74 -at io\1111-tel'n', I
a.m.
A• Mmn 11 7:>0 p,m uni.-1 oll*wlM
noted, • del\Olea MlulOn C0/119ftf1Clt oarne.
l(aletl• VL Ville Perk ,, El Modena
SI. AnlhOllY va. LOI Alamitos al Wnlt<n
,ltlDAY
Sen Clemente n . Corona Ott Mar •' Oranve Coaat Collalle
Woodbrklot et l"'lnt
LffUl\I Hiii• V\. EtlancJa e l N•wPOrl
H1rbor
Sevenna at Leouna !Hach El Toro et Min ion Vlelo
Unlv.,.•ltY •I Tustin Seddlet>tck v' Stnl• Ana at San!• An1 Bowl
ftWI.,. Otl vs. Oo1 P\lt1>1ot et ~n
Marco• E-•n11 11 C1olllr•no Vt llay
unlvttslly IStn Diego) •I Dane Hiii\
El Doredo ••· C.nvon at El Moclene
Orenve at G•rden Gro ... Loera vi. An1ntlm el La P•lma Perk
iklM Grenclt 11 lu.111 P•rk eauell vs. R1nc11o Atamllo' el Botaa Grendt Welnut al Brea-Oltrlde
Sonora el llelencl• 8altflowtr et Wttlern Sunny HIHt al Don L.UllO
Ctrrltot n . Trov el Fullt!1on
SAT\MDAY
NewPOf1 Htrl>or n Cyprau al Wealern
Oc:Nl'I Vltw •• Lt Quinta al 8o4M Grencle
l(lnn.cfV ti Et Modena
Sant• Ane Vt lleY •• COiion
u H1bf'a 11 Celllornle
MeOnolle n .. LOI ArnlC>OI el G•r-
Grova
A~'• cuo
,ACTS AND ,.IGURES Slit : On 111'10dt ltland Sound off NtWPOfl,
It.I. Com0tt11ora· LIOtrlv, Of Int untttd
Sltlet, YI. Au\lrelfa II, of Autlr1i11
SklPotrl: Dennis Conner, Of LIOtrty, n
JOlln \hrlrtnd, of Auatralla II.
Ot1l11nen . JOl\en Veltnllln, ol Lll>e!'lv;
Ian Lt•can, of Au1trella 11. ttace delti' Starll tod•Y until ont l>Oel
win• lour raett. Et ch l>Oel ,,., ... can Ont lev
elev durlno Int first four recea encl one
1U>lec:1 tlltr llltl.
Coune : A lrlenoultr tevoul Ofl which
Mdl t>oel aalt• th• "91 101allno 24.3 mllt•.
Serltt Record: unlltd St1ttt1 2S, 10"1101'1
cila'*-S 0. Elllmettd coll ofcemoelona· Ll11tr1v. 'S
mlNIOn. Autlrall• II, '7 mllllo<1.
Items ...
1' Ntw VOi"" Giants 6
)0 New on.ant 27
Sun. Saot. lt-at G,..,. Bav (Mll-
w1ull"l, IO t .m.
Sun. Oct. 2-0ttrolt (home), 1 om.
Sun. Oct. ,_., Sen Francltco, I P.:TI.
Sun. Oct. 16-Allenl• lhOmtl. 1 P.m.
Sun Ocl. U-S.11 Fr1nctsco (hOmt). o.m.
Sun. OCf. ll>-11 Mleml, to a.m.
Sun. Nov. t-Chlcqo (hOmtJ, I om
Mon. Nov. 14-11 Atlante, 6 o.m.
Sun. No•. 20-Wtltll"lllon (llOmt).1 o.m. sun. Nov. 27--evtfeto (home), I p.m. Sun. Otc . ......,., Plllltde40llla, 10 1.m.
Su11. Dec. 11-Ntw E11111tlld lnomtl. 1 o.m.
Sun. Dec. It-al Ntw Orlu 1", 10 •• m.
All llm.1 PST.
Mend9Y'• tnMact .. 111
aASllaALL MwtcM...--
MIL.WAUKEE ••aw£RrAcllv•led ... Mcc:iut9 ttlldW.
HEW v0.K YAHICEE~I Ollnnl1
tt1_..,,, ,.,tclllr, eftd EdWln 1to0r111ut1,
t.cond MMINM'I, to tM Sen 01-ltKtes
10 <omllltle .,, tetller °"' ~ Mftf JoM Mont91\nCO, tMlctltr, to New Yorll. ........ '--NIW YOltK METs.-f'urdltMCI IM
contrec:ts ol Clint Hurdle. third
MMtMn·oulfltlcltt. and Mike F'll '"' etd, aldW, from T....,.,., olf tlll lntttnellol\al
1.M4Nt,
Dillon out
indefinitely
with injury
LONG BEACH (AP) -Long
Beach State quarterback Todd
Dillon will be out oC acuon in-
definitely due to a knee sprain
suffered in the 49ers 25-19 loss to
Cal St.ate Fullerton Saturday, the
school announced.
There was no tear in cartilage
or ligaments in Dillon's left knee
and no surgery will be required.
Dillon suffered the injury
when he was sacked as he drop-
ped back to pass in the third
quarter of the Pacific Coast Ath-
letic Association football opener
at Anaheim Stadium..
The 6-0, 195-pound senior came
back in for a Cew plays, but then
went out for the remainder of the
game.
Dillon was the college football
total offense leader last season,
running and passing for 3,587
yards to post the second-best total
ilf NCAA history.
Criswell,
Nevens~ earn
PCAA honors
San J06e State fullback Dave
Criswell and Cal State Fullerton
linebacker John Nevens are the
Pacific Coast Athletic Association
football players of the week, the
PCAA announced Monday.
Criswell, a 6-0. 201-pound
aenior from Shafter, Calif., was
honored as the offensive player of
the week for his performance in
San Jose State's 31-26
season-opening victory over Ne-
vada-Las Vegas.
Criswell rushed for 90 yards on
10 carries and scored two
fourth-quarter touchdowns for
the Spartans, who rallied from a
20-13 deficit with three touch-
downs in the final period.
Nevens, a 6-0, 225-pound junior
from Compton, was selected as
the defensive player oC the week
for his effort in Fullerton's 25-19
triumph over Long Beach State.
Nevens was credited with 10
tackles, nine of which were un-
assisted, as the unbeaten Tit.ans
won their second straight game of
the yeM
Beavers'
Oglesby top
Pac-I 0 player
WALNUT CREEK (AP) -Or-
egon State's Bryce Oglesby, who
leads conference players in
rushing aft.e...-a 143-yard day
against Portland State, was
named Pacific-10 Offensive Play-
er of the Week Monday.
The defensive award for the
week went to Aritona linebacker
Lamonte Hunley, who had 16
tackles and an interception in the
Wildcats' 38-0 victory over Utah.
Oglesby, a senior from El
Dorado Hills, Calif .• canied the
ball only 10 times in the Beavers'
51-14 victory Saturday His
84-yard touchdown run was the
aecond longest in OSU history. He
has rushed for 187 yards through
two games, giving him an 11-yard
lead over Arizona's Chris Brewer
in the Pac-10 statistics.
Others nominated for the con-
ference weekly award on offense
were Sean Salisbury of Southern
Cal, Luis Zendejas of Arizona
State, Jay Dobyns of Arizona and
Steve Pelluer of Washington.
Liberty wins
'Mini-Cup'
ALMON LOCKABEY D..., _ _..,. .....
The Miru America's C\Jp was
sailed in Newport Harbor Sun-
day, and yachUng (ans a.re hoping
the results are a harbinger of
thlngll to comes at Newport, R.I.
at.artlng Wday.
Hundreds of ahon?Side spec-
tators watched the one-man n.
II.Allon 12'11, a one-fifth acale model
of the Arnenca'a Cup 12·me1e.ra.
match tack.I and tactics with Scott
Schock repretientl.JlM the U.S. de--
fender Liberty. and Dennis
Durgan sittlng In the challenger
Australia 11.
Liberty won the 9e'Ven·race
terlea of 20-minute races by a
ICOre of 4-3, by taking the final
race. Both Schock and Durgan ar~
former crewmen lJ'I the ~al
America's Cup compctJUon .
The lllualon·12 II a one~man
boat In which the ak.tp~r sils
1nualy ln the cockplt.11een with
hi.a feet on a bar 001'\nt!CWd &o the
rudder, leaving h.lJ hands (rft to
hollt and trim ahteta. The event
WU 1poruored by South Shott
Yacht Club.
I
I
('~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Sept. 13. 1983
~o~f's run
tops week's
big plays
'1CTITIOU8 .,._.. l'tCT"10Ue-.. PUii.i() NOTICI! -"• NAMI ITA-....wf MMll ITATbmff Publle Notloe la ~ tNtn !Ml IUNMaiCMT PU.UC NOTQ NOTICE OP' DEATH OF
Tnt fOllowtng l*'90ll le doil'IO The 1o11ow1ng l*Mftl.,. ~ tntFountM\~~~-, NICMIC.WDr.Wtet No1lce of lnlent to= IOf AGl!!OllGE P'RAN&LIN bll~"m_~ HAAAINOTOH. 1317~=~FUND6 LTD., 1MQ0 ~-==~.eo.n. ·=lc;~·CA.emt ~~·!!Mn Ille! on USELMAN. au GEOl\0£
N. Pl~tl• 1102. l'ulllnon. OA. IM.in ''*'i &lltt 110. HuntlnglOfl IM!bllo '*'lnO S*tllnlf19 t~ . LINDA C. TAMURA AuQuet 2'~ 1ti',~IOnll Llndmark. Ulll!LMAN AND OF PETI· 921131 llMcn. CA. •2&41 ptQPOMd tlMnd"""' of the .. " .. POllOll\I: ntEOOORE T. Inc, MO Huntlnglon IMGh c-TION TO ADMINISTER £8.
Harriet I( 1(011011, 1357 N. Robert M. Smith, 1MIOO Main ~Ol)tMnt ""' fdr Iha lnduttttill T~ peny, \ET.heir ,._lattYa. Pllffnlle •t02, Fu1i.r10t1, CA. !t•..c.auna 110, Huntlngtona..cn, ArM ~1 Project, T.N C-No. 021-27-85 WOOO.ard Cc>n9Yltantt, fllecl TATE NO. A·llt7H
9263t wA 82841 publlollNrlnQW111beheldlnlheClty MWC*l(,AIAYLAW) APC>ikwltlon · 5-1$-702 Mttl lhl To all hel.n, ~ Thie~ It conducled by: Ill Tiiie bull,_. II COlldllC1ed by· • of Fountafn Va lley Councfl NOTIC•r Yw Mw Meft ....._ South Coaet Dltlrtet Ofllol Of ttM credlton and coot~ent lnclMOual. Dan~ Cllamblfl t0200 Slatw A.__ TM .wt .., ..__ ........ ,_ Callfomla CON-.1 Commllllon to d f GEO 0 • Harriet K KOMOll Robert M Smith Genwal Par1net• Fountain Valley It 1·00 ...... ,.. ...._, ...... _,_ ~ tor • CONtel -CrC' I ton ° &.
Ttw. 11•1-1 wu 111.o With the I.No. ' T\IMdty, 0c1o«* 4. 1"3. p.m .. on,_, .......... .,....•.,.._~ P#tn11 to conduc:1 geotectlnlGal in. FRANKLIN USELMAN,
COullty CWll of Ofan;. County on r Tiiie •l•t-1 WU 11'-d with Int A generll •t•t_, of the Plll'!H>M IM ............ I W.W. '*liOetlone ~ WO .. ~~~ aka GIX>RGE USELMAN
Aug 8, 1883 !county Clwk ot Orano-County on of the propc>Md amendn•n le .. "10V wletl to Miii the adYloe of an on l)Or1lonl of the Huntington_. and .,_,.,.... who may be ,_!Aug. 22, 1983. fofloM• lllOtney In 1111• mettet, ~ ltlOUld MeN encl tM BolM CNc. MeN.. ..-~-
Ml.IC NOTlCE Nil.JC NOTICE Mt.IC NOTICE
PublleMO Orange Coat Dally ,..._ 1. F1t1c8i arnendmtnte. do eo promptly eo 111a1 'j04llf ...m.,. ioo.t.o In the BotM Chica.,... t» othel'Wiw tnt.ereaned in the
Ectancia High 'a Matt Woll capped last week's Piiot Aug. 23, 30, Sept. 8. t3, 1913. Publlen.ci Orange Cout Dally •· o.i.te 11\t MCOnO ~aph on •MPOn•. ti any, tNY be llled on '-' Wtrn« A~ end ~ will and/or estate:
opening salvo of big plays on the high school level in 1 _________ 4_12_1_-a:t_ Plto1 Sept 13. 20, 27, Oot. 4, 1111:). Page 11 of 1111 Ptan w1tt1 time. W'9t end Ptcllle COMt Hlgtiw8)'. Or A pel.ition h.u been filed
(ootball w ith a 78-vard touchdown run, i·.~·tinn a •-IC Ml\Tll't 4911-43 llll!Utf till lncr411114111t llm11 In tll an-AYlaOIUlled Ila tldodemandade. MOt ~ty. Clltlornl&. by MARIE 8 USELMAN in _, -"6 r-. nv1iw; tW.ty El lrlbume; ....... -.tra Ud A pui>-'-lnCI wlll be Mid le ·
22-0 non-league victory over Ocean View· turday 1---.:..:=.:..!=..:.=:.._ __ .t-----------1 b. O...te the rot1owtno language • au111ne1a a -.-Ud. ,.: conalder tne Appltcatlon at tM Sep-the Superior c.oun of~
night. 'ICTTTIOUI .,..... P'UBl.IC NOT1Ct'. trom the fourth peu1graph 01 P1ge =•....,..••..._Lee la ::"J: =::m~ ~ Coun\y requeetlng \bat
h was a straight blast up the middle in the third The 1:=ng'T::.!n~ 004ng 'ICTIT10Ut .,..... ~ 0~=1::;~ =t ~ ~ ";::~ 4:' ::..--.,.. adWtol"' ulad IOf San Diego. Callfomla. No-MARIE B. USELMAN be
q uarter and if th d b h bu"-M: ...._ ITATDmNT ou111en<11ng a1 an• one time In the .. ....,_, "' INI .......,, '°" tloa wlH be~ 1110 the u.ct appointed aa penona1 rep. ere were any OU ts as to w 0 was (A) LAGUNA TIC CREA TION8 (B) ~.!he lollowlng pef'IOOtl are doing lndu11r1a1 •r .. project .,... In 112 .......... ,,......, ....... ,_ lllM Md ~ Of the .roremen-rmentative to adm1n1ster the
going to win. his900reaealed it as the li'M•.les went up LAGUNATICS. 31241 Monter•".,.,..,_.•: I"'--.. ......,. -If -...... tloned ~lllO. Thie Notlol l•atvwl f GEORGE 1C'D .. ......,. -a Slr•t. South L,agun.. CA. 82877 ' ••. J A E PROPERTIES. 7731 EIU1. m .. ..,.,. ....,......_. _,,, m., -kt of the estate O .r.nnn.n.-
by a 16-0 count on their first posse!Won after Gaye Honeycutt, 31241 M0tttwey nuntlngton Baach, CA. 92948 ~d :::if"::'J =·1~.:; -==...--:_.......,.,_ ~1.'0 co .. ~ b~~mtu~ LIN USELMAN (under the
halftime. ls1.. South Laguna. CA. 82877 Jana L. Davia, 4 Rac:lng Wind, amount 01 bonded lndlbtadneu 10 ~ • .. .._.. ...... ....., Guldellnee. Independent Adminiatration 1ncfi:Ui:::~-•• condllC1ed by: .,, ,~,;A.B Mllellell, 110 GarMt, be repaid In 'tWhOle Of In.,.,, frOM the ........................... NHHAIY!ft. ~.Kio ........ of btaies Act). 'n\e petition
Last week'• big plays
78-Matt Wolf (Estancia), touchdown run
67-Mark Favorite (University), punt return for
touchdown.
59-Chip Rish (Marina), touchdown~ from
Bill Marler.
55-Jeff Bielman (Irvine), kickoff return.
50--Steve Blokdyk (Marina), kickoff return.
Last week's statl1tlcaJ leaders
Rasbing
1. Matt Wolf (Estancia), 18-135; 2. Danny
Thompson (Huntington Beach), 18-103; 3. Remy
Rahmatulla (Irvine), 19-97; 4. Mark Draper (Laguna
Beach), 23-89; 5 . Mike Jones, 19-85.
G •.... H--··n _,boa lelend. CA. 92682 llllocatlon ot tu11 io Int AG«1CY • .... _., ., ,...... .. ~~ c.otiwc .. _Dr .. .,.._ MIO ia eet tor"'~~ ..... ln Dept. No.
1-~-•-pureuant to Cellfe><nl• Health and_..., al~' ----3 700,~Ci .. ·06 ,,,__ Dr Thia •l•llf'lllfll WU ftled With the ~~ bullnMa I• conducted Dy: • Safety Code Sec11on No 33870 ,.....,.... • P\tbbllacl Oran;. eo..1 Deity Plk>I at VlC -..cuter .. Counly Ci.rte of Ofange County on """,..al penner.ii1p, wtilcfl c.n M outttandlng ai any one l· TO THI .. 1 TM Sept. 13. 14. 15, 1883. West, Santa Ana, CA 9_2701
Aug. 24, 1883. Etalne 8 · Mltchell llme, "'111 not exc.ao .. ..,.,,t., ,..,......., "-MM • ,.-... --5121~3 on Sept. 28, 1983 at 9:80 A.M. ffnaeat Tiiie 11•1-I wu lllad Wllll the , ..__.__ ~ W ... Publlllled Orano-Cout Dally l~nty Clefk ol Orange County on mllllon dollere (170,000,000), except fjj';''"'W ,_ ~·--',... .. IF YOU OBJECT to tM
Pllo1 Aug. 30, Sept. 8, 13. 20, l&e3. _,t. 1, 1883. ~=.~· 0' 111" Aadevelop-..!=:'it:=T.::!: rtaJC NOTICl granUng of the petitipn, you
4956-83 Publlahed 0 ,11J:. Coa•~ c. Oelet• th• llret paragrapll on on rou. •-default ,.,., M NOT1CI Of TRUIHa'I IAU ahould either appear at the 1-----------PUol <>~t 13 20 7 Oe 4 9..,. Page·18 Of the Plen relating to• Iota! ~twed alld tM MWt lllllJ....., • a.-No. GWIUJAM h .... ~nn and at.ate you ob'--Ml.IC NOTIC£ ...., · · · · 1· ~ 1aa a11oc:a11on 11m111n 111 en11raty enc1 ~ ............. _...... .. ...,,....,. • T.a. Na. 1-10011 ti;;;. .. : file written obC. add the fotlowlng language to re--_ _. OOl-'*'t ........ of UNIT CODI M . ,..,...
FICTITIOUI __,..... place IUCll d•t.o language: "Tnt ::.:.:.:.r~· ....... -wart. ..... CRESS ESCROW CORPORATION tiona with the court before
...-ITATIMIEHT Pt8.lC NOTICE number of dotlarl of tu• WlllCll =~· aMd ...-t. ......., u~u appointed Truet• under the the hearing. Your appeer-Tlla IOllowtng per.one -doing may M dMded Ind allocated 10 tnt -. _.., alld ..., ..._,..., • I deec:nbld dead of truat ance may be ln penon or b
l>u&I-M: l'ICTITIOUI .,..... A9•ncy pureuanl 10 California ,..., .. plfttM _, ... oa.t. ,.... WILL 8 LL AT PUBLIC AUCTION your at•ft.....v y
ST Cl.AIR ANO COMPANY 429 NAMI ITAT'lmNT Health and Slfaty Code SactJon t ef ...... lalllfttl TO THE HIGHEST BIOOER FOR ""··-.1 · 8etvue Lri .• Balboa, CA. 92681' ~ lollowtng PlflOl\I ere dOlng 33870 eh all nol exceed_,•,.,.,..,.,, er ..._-1 CASH ANO/OR THE CASHIERS OR IF YOU ARE A CREDI-
St. Clelr Venrur11 Inc .. 429 Belvue l>u .. Mte u : ThrM-Hundr•d Ml Ill on Ooll•re -·-,. I It I ..... m-r .. CERTIFIED CHECIC.S SPECIFIED IN TOR or a conUngent creditor Ln .. Balboa, CA. 92681 • TACO TIO, 7871 Werner A--.. ($300.000,000)." '-::::................ • CIVIL CODE SECTION 282411 {pay· of the deceued you muat file Tiii• butlneaa 11 conduct«I by· • Huntington BMcn, CA. 92847 2. 0th« amendmen11: --,_..., • tw:a •Illa at 1111 lime of Mii 1n lawful ' oorPOf•tlon. · Do Woong Pm, 9718 Pettswood •· Rlltrlctlon• on OllC>Oaltlon. o.. Li• A. MANCH. Cterti money of the United Stat•) a11 flgllt your claim With the court or Juelce SI. Cl a ir. Sa c -DrlW, Huntington BMcll, CA. 92&48 let• numbered peregrl!Oll 2, (Oil-~ NANCY GAANT, Deputy tltll and lnterwt conYeyld to anci praent It to the penonal rep-
! Pa11ing retwy/Trauurer In H• Perk, 87 HI Pettswood poettlon and OeYelopment by Par-'•·-·--°' .... C..t .._Not now held by 11 under Mid Oeed of reeent.atlve appointed by the Sill Marler (Marina), 10-18-0, 207 yards, 2 TDs,· Thie ll•t-t WU ftled wttll the OtlWI, Huntington Beacll, CA. 92848 Uclpanll) on rage 29 In It• antlr.ty. r-w• .......... 1a, .. 1191. Truel In the Pf098f'i hal'llnatter de-court within f .... _ County C11r11 of <>ran;. Coonty on Tiii• bull,_. I• conduc:led by: In-b. Emll'llfl Oomeln. Cll.nge the •t..a ecrlbld· our mon .....
2. Jon Nowotny (Edison), 13-27-3, 191 yards, 1 TD; 3. Aug. 25. 1983. dMdu.ie (llu•band & wife) time llmll IOf commenoement Of eml-P'UBl.IC. NOTICE J TRUSTOR: PAULINE GWILUAM from the date of fint im11anne
Eric Lawton (Huntington Beach), 12-24-0, 188 yards, '21:1711 Do Woong Partc nenl dom.in ptOCMdlnge eontalnld BENEFICIARY: JOHN R. COR· of. lettera u provided ln Sec-
0 TDs •. -4. Tim Hanson (Wes+-:--ter), 12_30_2• 157 Publllhed Orange Cout Delly ... ..'.~• 11•1-1 wu nled w1tt1 lhe onpage22of1heP1Mlrom 12'fMI'• 1'C>tloaol ZINE tion 700 of the Probate Code
w1wi0 Piiot Aug. 30, Sept. 8. 13, 20. 1983. ~.,ty Clel'k of Ofange County on to 20 yaare. Bulle Tr-fw (CORZINE TRUCK & AUTO
yards, 1 TD; 5. Bruce Goodfield (Newport Harbor), 4~1-13 -'· 1. 1983. c. Publlc lmptOYemlflle. Add (UOC' '8101-8107) PENSION). of c.automla. The time f.or
11-21-1, 148 yards, 2 'I'D&; 6. Brett Stevens (Foun•ft:-1-----------1 Pnaa epec:111o dllcf1ptk>N of any 1>11bllc T0Credllor101A.U.S.H., Inc., Tr.,.,. RECORDED Oct. 8. 1H2 M lnetr. fillna cl.a1nw will not expire
w:u.11 rtlllJC NOT1CE Publltlhld Orange Coast Delly lmprovemantll, flf;IU1tee. Of lmpro..e-terOf: No. 82-351438 of Ofllclal Aecotd11n prior to four months from the
Valley), 13-16-0, 143 yards. 2 'I'D&; 7. Bobby Hatfield 1---;..;;;:;=;..:..;;;..;.;.;:=....._-.1P11o1 Sept. 13, 20, ~1. Oct. 4, 1983. mantll to be flnanc.d by the Agency 1. Notloa II~~ lhal 111e the Office of tha Aacorder of Orange date of the h.ellline Uced
(C.orona del Mar), 11-19-0, 121 yards, o TDs. l'lCTmout .,..... 505-83 under folnt development a;r ... T,_teror, R.U.8.H .. lnc .. le about County. bo no ,.._ ITAftmMT man11. ~o make• blJlk ,,_,.,of Pf°'*1Y MkJ dead of ttuet 11.ct11>ea 1111 a ve.
Thi 1o11ow1no pereone -doing ru8l.JC NOTICE d. Land u.. c11angea. to tnt undersl;neo. Shleld-o.m.t lollowlnQ: YOU MAY EXAMINE the ~ M : 1. Add the lottowlng -.ondery Of HMllll Car• Center, Inc. encl Shllld PARCEL I: An undMdad 1/14tll file kept by the court. u you Receiving
1. Greg Roelle (C.orona del Mar), 5-55; 2. Jamie
Craft (Fountain Valley), 5-53; 3. Brandon Jones
(Westminster), 5-26.
AONO -POINT INTERIORS. l'lClTTIOUI ....... auP90'1 llMI .. perm!Mlbll In de-HMllll Care Certter, Inc .. cot1activ. lnt-t In and to Lot 1 of Tract No. are interested in •L.-·-·-2515 AndOWif Pl., Coai• Meaa, CA. ..... ITATIMINT vele>pmenl .,_, s. I , encl 5Aon Int ly. T,.,,.,.,.., 9483, In lheCouotyof Orange, Slat• U>C es .. ...,,
82828 Tiie following l*'IOtll -dot land u• matrix follOWlng e>eoa 12 of 2. The bull,_ addr-ot the of c.lllOfni. ... per mac> ,_ded In you may eerve upon the ex-
Olane Marie Frledersdorl. 2515bual,_u; ng lheptan: fTran1ferOfar1t729-31W•tl<atlll• boOlt 430, pegee 27 and 21, Mt.-ecutor or adnilnlltrat.or or
AndoWr Pl., Coat• Meaa. CA. 92&28 CMP-ONE LIMITED PARTNER-111.C Trade -General Mlf'c:lleodlte AYlflue, Oran;., Orange County, Clllaneou• Mape. In the offtce of Iha upon the attorney for th~ ex
Scoring
1. Remy Rahmatulla (Irvine). 18; 2. Rich Power
(Newport Harbor), 14; 3. Matt Wolf (Estancia), 12; 4.
Tony Vertti (Westminster). 10; 5. Eric Kannan
(Marina). 9.
Tokens planned
for Olympic buses
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Angeles
Olympic Organizing Committee has announced that
special Olympic bus tokens will be sold to help fund
special Southern California Rapid Transit District
bus lines to events during the 1984 Games.
The plan was approved M onday by the SCRTD
Board of Directors as a method of overcoming an
expected $1. 7 million shortfall for special bus service
during the Olympics, July 2a through Aug. 12, 1984.
' The board gave its final approval for the special
service, which would use 475 buaes to transport
300,000 people a day. One-way fares of $2. $4 and $6
are projected to cover lll<lSt of the $11.8 million cost of
the service, with the tokens taking up the slack.
especially if purchased as 90uvenirl.
The tokens. bearing nwnerous Olympic designs,
are expected to generate at le.aat $3 million, according
to a statement iasued by the LACX>C
Dorl• Tiler ... Rani..-, 2953 Jave SHIP, 811 Anton Boutevatd, &ilt• ·Retail Celllomla, and 3427 8oulll Unco!11 coun1Y ,_def of Mid county. • Roed, Coell M-. CA. 92828 1320. Coate Meu, CL 92828 lll•F Trade • Apparej end Ae-Street, Engtawood, Ar~ Couii-EXCEPTING tnw.trom the fouow-ecutor or adminiatntor, and
Thia bu&I,_. I• oonoucted by: • Cal·M•1ro Petroi.um C<>rpor. ~-• Retail itY. ColOfado. lnq: file with tM court with proof llmlted pettnerelllp. atlon 8'1 Anton Boulevard Sult• 111..Q Trade · Fumlt"'9 encl Home 3. The bu"-addr-of the (a) Unit• 1 tlvOUOfl 14 u eflowrl of lerV1oe a written ,_.uest DI-Mllfll Frlldersdorl 1320: Coate Meea, CA. 8282t Furnltlllnge • Rat.Ill ITrantler• eta 2352 Souttl Colorado upon the Condominium Plan r• ' • .., . Tiiie •t•l-1 WU llled with 1111 Thie ~ " COnduc:led Dy: • 111-C Trade . Mllclllaneoul Retell Boule'lard. DenY'lf, COIOfado 80222 C«ded May 3, 1971 In book 12$59 st.atin& that you desire •peci.al
County Clltll ot Or9nQI County on lmlted pennert111p · 2. Delete one-encl twcMIOfY land 8705 VlllJMn Awnue, Van Nuye, e>eoa 120, Olllclal Aecorde of Nici notice of the filtna of an in·
Aug. 10, 1983. D. J. 9enttey. Secretwy ~t llmll on page 18 of the Plan Loe Angelll County, Calltomla. County. ventory and apprai8ement of
'2:DIS1 Thie •t••-t WM llled With the natead refer to appllubll City 4. Tiie 1oca11on1oftheproperty10 (b) The ~ rtgllt to poe-estate a.ell or of the ---" Pul>lllhld Orange CO..t Dally !county Cleric of Orange County on Codll and e><dl'*'Cal, lbe tr-lerred are 17211-31 Wiii ....ion of 111 ttloll .,_ dMfonated ........ ~Aug 23, 30, Sept. 8. 13, 1983 IAug 15 1913. 3. lAgal o-:r1p11on of lnd\19111111 K•t• A....,_, Orange, Orange u Patloe ... .,_upon the Con-tlona or 8000Wltl mentioned 4808-33 ' Pn2IM Project AtM. !County, Cellf0t1Wa, encl 3-427 South domlnlum Plan llbow ~ IO. in Section 1200 and 1200.5 of
-----------Publllhld °'rt: COM! ..._..._ ~q at the lntereacitlon of Llncoln SlrHt. Englewood, PAACEl.2:Unlt 14•aflownupon the c.autornla Probate Code •-"" Ml\TIC[ Pllo <>-13 20 7 ,__ _, the north rlgllt-ot-wey 11M of Wenw IA~ County, Colorado. the Conctomlnlum Plan above ,... · ,.-. .... "" 1 ..._t. · · · """ 4• 1983· A*-and Ille w.t fine ot the 5. The property to be tr-fefred lened to. GLASSER 6 SMITH
'1C1TT10UI IU ... ll 507o-es Senta All4I Rivet, Mid point ~ nauo.. all the lnw;ntorlal, fllUUtea. PARCEL 3: The~ rtg11t to By: ROBERT GLASSER
,.._ ITATS•llT •-.,. Ml\nM" the "T~ Polnl of Beginning: IMM!lold lmptovemen11, equip-'poe-.lon and occ:upanc:y of,,_ ctM MacArtaitr Blvd. SUte
Thi lo4k>wlng '*''°"' .,. doing r-.n. nu,"" tllenc1 w111 •long th• nor111 mant, motOf Wlhldll. lurnltllf9, of· portlOnl of LOI 1 dllctlbed In Paroel iiM ' bull f1;111-0l·Wly N,,_ of Wamer Alllfll.le iftoe IUPPllll and Otl'tlr lilNll of 1 abOw;, dellgnated M P-14 u ap-neu u : PlCTITIOUI llU..... to • point HO r.et Net of the R.U.S.H .. Inc purtenant to l)aroete 1 end 2 above Ne-,ort Bea~. CA. HI .. v BUILDING MAINTENANCE SER-..... •TATUm#T oanlarllne of Euclid 81,..1; lhenee 8. So fer U 11 known to the Tran• Cleacrlbld. ('710 7H·!7Z7
ICE, 3157 Blrcll St., Suite 120· Tiie followtng per.on II d04ng tou111 parllllel with Mid canlerllne to ~-. 1he TraneterOf llu not UNC1 YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNDER A Publiabed n.....n-Cout ~ ::c"e~!.2~27• G l>ullneat M : Ille lnlarMCllon with lhe north lany bu&lnaM name Of addr-othar DEED OF TRUST DATED SEPTEM· . ..,, -...... ar n • " lln· SCELSA FOOD INOREOIENlS rlgl'lt·of·••Y tine of Slater Awnue; ~hen IM abOve during the three BER 20, 1912. UNLESS YOU TAKE Daily Pilot Sep\, 6, 7, 13, ~i • 199• Yguna 8Mctl, CA.~ CtubhOllM Cl!de, Coet• ~ lll•noe -t •long Hid north ~ i..1 put. ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR 1983. 5010-83
Mark R. Edalllll .. A 92e28 r1gllt-ot-way llM approxltna1aly 810 7. The bl.Ille lranlllf I• to be con-PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLO AT A -----------
Thie etat_,I wu m.cs with the -J.ohn Nlct101ea SeelH, 3033 ,_,to Illa lnterMCllOn with the,..., IUmmated on Of alter September PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN 1111-.,. Ml\nl'C "-·-tu,..~ I"' ,._,_ ""'t>Mu.• Clrele Coela Mela CA r1gl\l-<>f·•l)I line of Evetld St,_,; 29, 1"3, at 1111 ollloll of Kinde! & EXPLANATION Of THE NATURE ----'";..;;;;~=;;..:.;""~'"°'=---......,,,, ...,.,. o .,.,ange ......,.,ty on li282e . • thenc. eouth along Mid _, And1reon, 4000 MacArthur OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST NOTICE OF D• aTB
Aug 12• 1983 l'2Dla Thia bullneaa It eonducled by. an r1Qllt-of•way h lo It.I lnllfMCllOn Boutevatd. ~ Beacll, Call-YOU. YOU SHOULD CONTACT A .:.A OF
Pul>llehed Ofano-Cout Deity lnoMdlllll. wflll the norttt ~••Y llne of •ornia 82680 LAWYER. 21M Canyon Dr.. •Q. B ERM AN BE RN ARD
Piiot Aug. 23, 30, Sept. 8, 13, 1983. ~•~at= WM ltled Wf1h the Talbert A1t1n111: t ,..., alOng 8. The bullc treneter le IUJ:/:' to Coet• Meaa. CA. W 0 LT ERM ANN , a k a
4737•83 '--.. -... C....-. ..., ,.....,.._ ,.. ___ .,. _ INllcl north rtant-ot-wey fine to ltll Jn. ~Ila P<oYlelon• ol 8ecUon 81 of the "(II • llrMI addt-e>< common B E R M A N B ~·· _,. "' ..,._.,,.. """""' -· tenac:tlon wftll the WMt rtgtn-ot-wey lform Commerct.i Code of the daligMtlon of property II .,_ 1-----------.l&;c,1. t, 1913, Hne of Ward SlfMI; thenol 10U1h at• 01 Calttomla. In accordance above, no warran1Y le Ol'V'ln .. to II• W 0 LT ERM ANN, aka "8.JC NOTICE rneau a10ng Mid_, r1g111-01-way Nne of 1111111 Section 81oe. any Claim by• comp1eten11a Of~,,...)." The BERMAN WOLTERMANN Publlltled Ofange Coeat o.lly Ellla Awinua, thancla ... , alOng Mid ~ldlfOf ol Illa Tranefaror mlll1 be ~llY under Mid 0..0 of AND OF PETITION TO A.I). ~TITIOUt llU.,..,, Pnot Sept. 13. 20. 27, Oct. 4, 1983. toutll rlght-ol••y line and It• ... 1. received by the Trant1,..._ on Of Tru1t, by reaeon of• breacll or de-MINISTER .,..TATE NO ,.._ ITAT .. llllT 5087-83 wly profoogeUon 10 Ille lnlerMCtlon be!Ofe September 28, 1N3 by no-fault In the obllgetlont MOUted c.o · lbu;11a fotlowlng pereon It doing wttn the WMt rlgl'll-of-w8)' llne of the tlce to: Iner.by, lleretofore llleOUled encl A-11 HU fE~ Ti;;,N ASSOCIATES. 151 MUC NOT1Ct'. =~·=~~-way "o;;'~ Shield ~~~~=·J:.: Inc ::=:.= ~ .,:,-:: To all helra. ~fldarles, ~.~~· Drive-Bldg. M·t. Coal• flCTITIOOI .,..... II• TntarMCtlofl wt111 the north 8705 Val!Mn Awnue' · man0 lot Sall, and wrll• notice of credltora and cont1n1ent
-·CA 92e28 MAllll ITATllMWT rlgllt-of·wey line of w-A--. Van Nuyl, Calllomla 91408 bfMCll and Of ellctlon to cei-. thl credllon o f HERMAN
Aodolf H. Abet«oml>ll. 13882 La The IOI~ perSOt1e are doing 1111 .. True Point of &egtnnlng." Oa1ed: Slptember 11. 1963. under'llgned lo 1111 Mid Pfoperty to B E R N A R D
Joli• J>laa, Garden Grow, CA. buw-M Clinton Sherrod ~~IELO-OENVER HEAL TH CARE Mllsfy uld ~Ilona, encl IMt'9-w 0 LT ERM A N N aka 92644 HESCO PRODUCTS COMPANY PlannlnO and Bulldtng DniclOf ~ENTER INC. after the undlrt1gned cauaad Mid H E R M ' Thie bull-.. conducted by an 311M B Airport Looe> OtM Coste City of '°""'Un Valley By. MeMn F Baron notlQe of bf'Mdi end of llae11on to A N B . lndlvldual ......_CA. 82&28 · and 11 VIOi Prealdent be ,_dad Mey 19. 1980 M lnetr. WOLTERMANN , aka "This will allow us to begin our detailed RodgerH.Ablrcrombll ~PIM11Cal~ 311MBA1r Ex«:u11WOir.ctor SHIELOHEALTHCARE No.13-212785ofOfllcllllAaoOfdaln HERMAN WOLTER.MANN
Preparation on"time in order to provide the Olympic Thi• et•t-1 -flied wttll the port Looe> Orm Coat~ M.-cA. Fountain V911frt ~ CENTER. 1NC. tne o111oe of the Aecorder of 0tanga and -~ who ma ...... County CleB of Or•noe County on 02829 · • IOf Community DIYllOpmant ~. ~ F. Baron CounlY; r-Y ....,, bua service next summer," said RTD General Aug. f2, 1983. Thia ~ 11 ~.o oy: • Publllllld a....,. coa.1 Dally Pttot he Vice Prllldlnt Seid..,. wlll be made, bu1 without otherwilie interested ln the
M.&ulgez;rlohn Dyer. ~ COf'POfltlon · Sepl. 13, 20, 27, 1983. Publlellecl Ofan;. Cout Dally Piiot cow;nantorWllnWlty,u~orin.. will and/or estate·
The RTD plans to aelJ the ... n_.._n• and •2-dollar Publlshed Oran;. Cout Delly &uoe. H; H ... , taecutlft VICI 111117-83 Sec>t. 13, 1883. plied, '9Q9rdlng 11111pcm111011, or A petJUon bu. been filed ""--"" ,. • Piiot Aug. 23, 30, Sept. 8, 13, 1913. P!wlldent G.M. 5117-83 eocumbfancae, 101>9Ytllerwnatntng b ELIZABETH HOPKINS
tokens through ita own outlets as well aa retail at.ores. ---------4730-33--~; ·~ern:;t~lllecl~~ 1: MlJC NOTIC£ NI.IC NOTIC£ ~':::' c:::;: ~~7,"~ ::= i: the Superior Court of Q--The 50-<:en\ token will come in 24 deaigrla and P'UBl.IC NOT1CE ~t. 1 1N3 HCilhOUl llUll•H •lnMldnot1j)f°"'°9d,ld-.lf anae County requeeltna that will be tor uae on e:xisUng tcanai\ eervioe. The more · · ,_ ...,_ STATDmrT fltCTmOUt .--.. any, under tM 1wme of MkJ Olld of EL.lZABE'I1I HOPKINS be
expensive token will have three designs and will be l'lCnnout ..,..... Publllhld 0r.,. Coast o.11y The ~ penon ta Ootng ,.... ITAW trwt ...... c:hargle. end~°' .....w..ted __ , for~ during the Games on special bus lines. Thi ...... ITA~ dol "°'Sept. 13• 20• 27• Oct.~ ~~AN'S HOME REPAIR ~~ig ~ • dolrtg ~ .:;-~~~=.trum~ ~~dve: ~ ': bu"-~ penon no & MAINTENANCE. 3'1'1 VI• AMERICAL INTERNATIONAL. tt s.tct .. wlll be'*" on: Fl1CSly. ea tat e 0 f KERMAN
The bus token plan was announced just as a
Howie subcommittee official di1cloeed th.at only 1.2
million of the 52 million oongremionally authorized
Olympic commemorative medals have been aold 10
f ar.
AL.PHATA<mlX. 40211 WMtaoy Sonota. San Juan ~-. CA. Startlum C'I., Newport !Madi. CA. Sept. n . 1ta •• , 2:00 p.m. at the B E R N A R D Pt Newport lhectl CA 92880 ru8l.JC N011C( 82e75 t2M3 CNomen A¥9. entranoe to the CMc 'Horm.n Wyman ' 41.i AlllO A..,. i ·----Rldlatd Arthur Gorman. 31141 SIMI aun CMn, te 8taniunt c. .. c.nter lluldlnO. 300 E.111 CNipman WOLTERMANN (Wlder the Newport 9w;11 CA 92t23 " l'lCTmOUe .,..... Vie Sonora. San Juan Cepjetrano. Newport awn, CA. 92983 A¥9., ~CA. Independent Administradcln
Tlltt ~" cOna\ICled by: .,, The f~ ~ doing c~.,:,:.,_ II oondueted by. an ~~ Is oondll01ed by. an oa~~ ~ t tNa of not"':..'"":, ~ of m.t&tm Act). The petHlon
lndN= Wyman bull-M; lndMdull. Shu Sun Chan amount of the unpaid ballfl09 of Iha ia 8et foe heerfna tn Dept. No.
tllle 9talement WU ftlld 1111111 the s v-R M A c 8 0 0 K • Alcllatd A. GO<TMfl Tiiie ltatament WM fllad wlttl !tie obligation llCllfed by the aboYI de-3 at 700 Civic Center Dr., ----------------------·r=r-.... .,....,nty CleB of Ofange County on KEEPIN0/8ECRET ARIAL SERVICE. Thie .... _, WM Ned Wf111 the County Clertl of Orange Co\lnlY on llOfl6ecl dead of trwf and .um.led West. Santa AzVI. CA 92701 Aug t. 19113 i130 Cibola A¥9., Coate ....... CA. County Qerll of Orange County on Aug. 12, 1"3. OOlll, ~ encl .ovanoae .. ~ .. 1<>•3 t 'n 30 A.'lli DllTH lllTICIS . . . 82828 Aug, 24, 1"3 ,...., 133,135.9.1. on-.~"• ..., a •: -· I ii Publ1911ed Orange Cout ~ Berber• L Suro-, 2730 Clbolt ,_'7 Publllllld Orange co... Dally Thi total lndebtaon.e belf1o an IF YOU OBJECT to the
Piiot Aug 23 30 Sept 8 13 1983 Av• .. eo.ta Meaa. CA. H828 Publltfled 0..,. COMt Dally Piiot Aug. 23, 30, Sapl. 8, 13. 1913. 1111ma1e on wllloll IM ooentnci lild la grantLnc of tM petition you
B~M
lNA 8. BLOSSOM, resident
of Huntington Beach, C..
Pa.eel away on Sunday,
September 11. 1983 follow-
ing a lingering mne... Mn.
Bloaom was bom in God-
l~y. Texaa. She wu at.a a
IAI. n lflGl•OH
SMITH & TUTHILL
WHTCLIFI CHA .. 11.
427 E 17th St
Coc;1a Mesa
646-9371
,ACIFtC YtlW
.....::>•IA!. PA .. C
Cerretery Mortuary
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac;•l•C View 011ve
Newport Beach
f;.l4 1700
-.-co.Miia MOITUA•tH
Laguna Beach
494•9415
L•gllni Hills
768-0933 s .. n Juan Clp1str<Jno
495 1176
KAllOI UW~MT. Ot.IYI
MOrtllll'Y • Cemelery
Cremalory
16?5 G1&lct Ave
Co,la Meu
540.5554
. ' ' . ' 4724-13 Hallll W. Mac;LIW'I. 2730 ClbOll PllOt Aug, 30. Sec>t. 8, 13, 20, 1913. 47'2-&3 oomputed mey be Obtalnad 6y cell-ahould either a...--r at the teacher ln the Hun+'ln ... _ Awi .. Colt• MMe. CA. 92t28 4M2-«l Ing (714) "7.otee the dey blfolw "'--"'--__ _. rr-ob·'----'6'"'" Thie~ .. conduc:led by I NI.IC NOTICE lhlNla. ' ._ ......... state you --Beach achooll for 25 yeMS, ru8l.JC NOT1CE general pettnerllhlp. Detect: AUQUIM 22, 1913. Uorw or file written obj9c-and tM widow of Donald Batl>tr• L SllfOll PllllJC NOTICE l'lCTmOUe _,_ CRESS ESCAOW CORPORATION dON with the court be(c;re
Bla.om, a fonner Chief of l'JCTITIOUt ., .... a Thia lltltlfl'*ll -flied wttll t.IM ...... ITATnmWT .. Mid TNelel Polbo!Hun ...... 8-h _........ Coooo.,_o10<.,..~ -=.:.u ''" --• _.,>T.0.IE-ECOMPANV 1he .......... y..., ·-·
Surviving are several nJ~ ~~ng pereon It doing Sept 1' 1943· ~°":'ng Plf90"9 -OOlng ~SPORTS, 1300 Adame ~~ J. Ceprw ~ ~ ln penon or by
and nephewa. Graveelde TERRI'S GALLEY. 4500 Ce/npu• PubMltled 01enge Coat CAPRI LAGUNA MOTEL 1'-4' s. #2h, Coeta t.4eaa, CA. ~ AMletant Secnotery IF YOU k A CR.J:Dl-.e.rvicel will be conducted onv.. Ste. •3-48, Newport Beacll. Piiot Sept. 13, 20. 27, Oct. 4_:~9;.13..;. ~...._. 1 -·na aMctt CA JlllMI Hiit Nagel, 1300 Adll!nl One City Blvd., W_., TOR rin-~ lcA. 92HO -. ·-1· ....yv • • '2 ... Coat• ....... CA. 82t2e OrMqlt. CA. 92M8 ~a con-.. ~ .. t \:nOUIU
on Wect.ne.day, Sep~ber Terr ... Ann Sallnger, 112"' Sap. 92J G Kalllnl t75e Downey Thie bullnaM It COf\ducted by: an (714) 83M28' o( tM dece.ued, you mid\ flJe
14, 1983 at 9:00AM at West-plllra, Balboe llllMld, CA. 92682 "8.JC NOTICE Sant°'d arid;. Rd• Downey CA ~ndMdual. Publl.n.d Olan;. CONI o.tly your cl.aim With the court or
mlnater Memorial Park The Thie bullnMl 11 eonaucned by: an 90240 ·• • · JTameaht Hau Nagel Pllot ~ug. 30, Sept. I. 13, t&e3. p-t 1• •-.... _ .... --• -p-. lndMdu.i f'ICTITIOUI .,..... I etal4111141111 WM lllld .ttll Ille 4t28-«J • .._., •.., .. .., ..-•-.., • ..,
family 11.1ge.ta contribu• Twr-· A Salinger NAMI •TA.,..,,, Virgin!• Kanlne, 8758 <>o.ney ()ounty Cllfk of Oran;. count; on reaent.atlve appointed by the
tlona be made co your Thia atatamant wae 111ec1 wttll tile r11a fotlowlng ~ -dOlng :C,~!:d 9rldoe Rd • Downey, CA. Aug. 28, 1983. rtaJC NOTJC( court within four months
favorite charity. Pierce Coun7: Clerk of Orange County on bull,_•: Vlfglnla KaMlnl Publllhed Or Colll ~ Tiie annual lot the CalendM from the date of fint i.uance
Brothen Smiths' Mortuary Aug. 2• lM3 f'2Dlll S1~~~~. ~~ Thli ltltetnerll .... tllld Wf111 lhe Pilot Aug. 30,SecJ~. 13, 20, 1983. ,.., 1912 of~ POBAU NIN08 of lett.en .. provided ln Sec-
directon. 536-6539. P\tbfflrled Oran;. COMt Delly Miik• M Doll•. ~1 ~· A't· Coun!y °'98\ of Orange County on •Ma-aa FOVNOATION.•prlwit•lounddon, tJon 700 of the Problat.e Code
Piiot Auo. 23. so. Sapl. 8. 1a. 1813. ~·CA toe30 Aug. 19· 1 ,..1• rtalC NOTICE :s,..ev:,::;:,_~ttoft'• SIM-of C.alJlom.1.a. nw dme fpr 4731~ enue, ~~f.=:, Myra Av· Publllhad Oninoe Coaat Dally IMr ~ "°"" ftOfn ~3'. fWnc cla1mll will bOt oph
TRINDL 1-----------™' ~ 1a oondllctld by. In· Piiot Aug, :so. s.p1. 8, 13, 20. tM3. PtCTmOUI ..,..., 10 8:00 P.t.4 .••. ~. pier to four monlba from the ~OSEPH A. TRINDL •• rem-Ml.JC NOTIC( ~~ & wn.1
4
MW3 The .~IT::=-: doing ~~:;~o ~Own~ d.a~_of the *rtna noticed
dent of C.0.ta Mea. C... 1'1CTITIOU8 .,._.. Ottlndo F 00!11 rtaJC N011C( ~ at: l'tlwy, Suite t03., L.-• aUlllV'C. Pa.eel away on September ...,_ ITATlmllT Tiiie ••tm,t w• llled 1111111 the CRAFTY I.ADV. 18040 Hartiot OA. t2tn YOU MAY EX.AMINE &he
10 1983 He la aurvtved ...... bu~~ l*'IOfl .. doing County Clertl of Or•noe County on ITAW °' llM!-1 Sult• N, Fountain Veney, OA. PRINCIPAL MANAGER -WILLIAM file kept by the CIOW't. If )'O'I ._,~ lt · u.-and L.•-""' .-; Aug ill 1H3 WNDCllW Oii Ulm Oii 9271111 W. MoOONAl.O tn•---..:........; ln • .__ --......
n.111 W e ..... 3 n.w chll-ECM lYPlNQ 81RVICI, 2101 I . . ' ' Plll1ll PltCTmOUe llUl•H MMm JO)'OI E. Ptttmen, 1131 Tahiti Dr .. NAMI Of' AOOOUNT ANT -PHILIP are ....__. ..,. --·
dren .84rwrly t.'Unnina}wn, FaltvlN, #o.8, hnt• Ana. CA. Publlllled Orange COM'! Deity The IOllowlnCI PtftOI\ ,_ Mien· Coll• M .... CA. 82928 MEYEA you may aerw upen tht ...
Doroth y llou1h, Ca.rol 12~~ll C. Maaon, 2701 8. rra.tr-Piiot Ay0.30.S..,t. 8.13, 20. 1913. ~ueaoffht~ll~.,.._ ~tM!nMlllcondUC1ecl by:an =:.~=·· •1o:s ec:u\OI'. or admlnlstn\OI', or ~ and Kenn.th Trindl. ~. •N, hnll An .. CA. tUC).4 4M~ =f~MW: MA DfWt THAU Joyoe ( Pittman • c:. Noc upon the attorney for the•·
a1ao 11 VMdchlldml and 9 "fhtl b11e11-. 11 COtldlleted bYo an rtalC NOTICE =. °o..,1~''/' """ St .• 0oeta Thie 11.t-1 -llled w11111t1e 11pt. 13, tta Daly ecu\OI' or adm.ln.latra\OI', md 1r~at·1randchtldren hla ~11 c M _,., a.mard Paul,..,__, 2HS Coun?: Qertl Of Orange Coun"' on IOl6-U We with thta>Un with proof
brother Ludwtc and .i.ter Thie ... ,.,,.;.,,": 111act w1111 in. '=•~ Hnor, co.ta......, OA. ~ Auo~ 2• '*· ,... "8JC NOncE of lef'Vtct, a writtien ~
Mary FMn\ley. Slumber County a.ti of Oranoe County on ni. lolowtnO .. dOlllg Thi FletlffOul ~ Henle -~ 0ranoe 0oaat Delly statlnl that YoU dlllre tpedal
room vUIH&UOn wUJ be held AUO. f. 1"3. buall'11e ae: pel'IOnl =·~ 9t:.1;;' =In ~ Piiot Aug. 23. ao. ~ .. 1~ MTmoue -nodce o( tht Wini ol an tn-
on Tue.day Sepi.mber 13 11\iblllhacl Oninoe ~ ,,_.,. NAQIL ANO NILSON A8· Tiiie ~ ... oonducteet by -..... ITAW wntory and ~·of 1~ from ' 12:00 noon ~ PtlotAuQ.22.ao.tept.1, 1i, 1~ ~~=.i.d~~ •a.. 1t1.=.:i: ~ ... aa::-io ~ It dolno em&a ...ca or ol the ,.el·
8:00PM at the Harbor wwn 4707-83 J-H. Nagel. tlOO Mama. Thie .... ,..;,.,.~ lllild wttll tM rtaJC NOTIC( LINING QAl!ITINOl.1... 4H 8 . dollll or aciaounta SMntianed
Memorial Chapel.. M&ll of ""'· 0oata ...... CA. Nt2t County 01ert1 °' OrW1g1 count) "-"' I 11, I.ma Ana. UA. N7CW in s.cuon 1200 and 1200.6 ol the 8.eaurrecUOn will be 81~ w. Ntllon, 1*00 Mame Aug< 1813 on MTmOU11Ut•• N1f'!O'jAnnOarvala.4$U.Hatt)of theCallfomJ.aProbat.eCode held Wedn.de Se Lei--UllE. 0oet1 .._..CA. tHH ' ' · ,.,_ ....._ ITA~ • 11, IMta Ana, CA. ffT04 BRADLEY ll &CBWW
tenbec:'14 1983at 1b;oo::t ~ ................ ~,J ~ .. ~~ectby: • PublllMd ~ooa.t. =~~ ~.,. dotl'O lftclri:u..~1e~by:1t1 l1MN...,.nliff.
al St.. Jo~ the&.pcinC..th· ,.,,.....,.. ,,. Jamea H...... . Piiot Aug. n. 30• •• ':~ MA ~IVI Tl-iAU PHOTO.i...!1-NencyA. o.'ftlll c.. .. M .... CA. ... .,
olJc Chwdl, with lntmnmt yee,~ 1zi ~ ':":tC:O. ~ ':.: IW~ ~= C:-. ~ ~ ~i.n:'C:. tledoa:; '= (7H) "'-iHl
..... ClllOTHHS
l&l llOAOWAY
~TU.UY
lft'Yica l.mn»dLltely tot-rv:~ AuQ.1t, 1"3, tn•e>e•J>9n•t1Ve• ~ w. 14&VI It., 10, 0.,.,..,.. JutY ti, lt83 Publilhtd Otar,.. a.t
. lowlni at Holy ~ ~our~ l'llbllafled Orange Coeta4 ,,_,. '(In "' tC*I' IN) "°' 1'llgtl ~ ~ Nlllfl1d er-.. eo..t "'= O.Uy PUoc ~ 11. 11. lt .
c.n.teryh di • s.rw., I ~. Plot AuQ. 30, .. , a.,., IO, f~ In prlc•, r111on1Cll•: ~,,,.. llllllMlll ... fled""" .. ~ AIJI, n . ao, ....... ,~,.. IMS. 50l4..a
110 8toadway
Oot1• Mesa 64, 9150
t • Net on o .-. \a Bmht 1111_. ....a ct•MltleO .... flll Clarlt of Onnga eo.n, en ...,, ..
Bt11fiOil Smltb & Tuthill -•J rllUI adverttllng tt13. Cell 142-H7e. l l
WllSCWIQ)&pel Mortuaey. 1..a2 ·5678 H,:9 ... ~.---: Cla1tlfl9d ~d~rtl•lng ~ Oftnte co."'J: Callt.4J-H7a. 1 Putetewwordt 1
846-9371. ""' it ..n. 8-'2-&e7t. S.2-5879 l'lot A4ll n , to.'-'· t. 1~ft ='!.::::,~:~:~ to worll ror vou •
• ..._ ____ -r·-------------·-------------·--. ~:.-------·-------
I 1-
1
I
I I
.. I
P\BJC NOTIC£
'2211S1
Pu~ <>reno-CoMt Delly
IOI Aug. 30. Sept. 8. 13. 20. 1983.
41155-83
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A
s s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tueaday, Sept. 13, 1983 CS
CLASSIFIED ·
INDEX
THE DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOUR
To Place Yow Ad, Cll Telephone Service: UYlllE PUOE UYntlT
642-5678
REAL ESTATE
'\)nwnl .
Anaheim HIU.
Balboe laland Bolboe p.,,,.\lul.t
C.pulrano llea<h
d.I M•1 ,.M_
Dana l'\lonl
El Ton>
fOW\1&1n VaJwy
H..nUntlOO S.. .. h
Hunl, ....,...,..,.
Irv•~ Loew .. e. .. h ........... "11"
Loew .. ~""· LA1tc r-1
M-Vwp
N"'por18"rh s.n '""'-""' s.n J-. C.pttll•flQ
Sonia A,..
~·• BN<t> Swlh t...cv,..
s-ta...h
l\oaun
Wr1ltnU\&Let
M01»'4>1"'"'-......._
"""""""' .. -.. Propff1y e.....,_ Prop<y c ....... ...,y 1...m. Ccimml l'rop.,l y
C'.oodonliru\.lnw
Dupion/ Unola
II°""" W> ho M<Wrd
lnt'Om<' Pn1i-• y
lnduallUI Pmpty µ,.. , .. ,. s.i..
Mnbil<' Home-Park.a
..toun1.a1n, Ott.rt 0r.-ns..-CcJ
Ou• of V,,unty
Out uf S1a1~
R.anttw.I t"1nn.
~~'I
:f~
RENTALS
11 ....... >'ltmuhtd u ...... Unl\lrnAhe<I
H<"'"" l'\ITntohtd or UnfWlWlh<4
Condo >'llm
Condo Uni
Tvwnhol--. lurn
T-11"'-Unl
oup1r ... f\im
Duplnn Uni "~ .. ~
"-"""''"Uni Ap<a l'llm °' Unf -"-" .. Boan! H""'lt.M°"'lo c ..... .._ s-r !WnlU v ... uon Rml&la
• R.-n&Ab \0 SM,.
·11m1A1a w.,.""'
Car ..... 10< R<mt
Off..., "-""'·" -.-Rml&I& °"""~ 114-nlalo lncfyal 1'4tnl&lo
s~
Mw R.m"'ll
ANN<UfC£WNTS
M ond~y-Friday
8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
\~ Business Counter:
::: Monday-Friday 1011 :~! 8:00 A)1.-5:30 P.M.
:~~ __I DEADLINES:
::: PUBLICATION DEADLINE
llHl
1044 Monday Sat, 11.30 a.m.
1041 1ooc Tuesday Mon. 4:30 p.m .
·~2 10~ Wednesday Tues. 4:30 p.m.
::: Thursday Wed. 4:30 p.111.
1016
1011 Friday Thurs. 4:30 p .111.
::: Saturda · fri. 3:00 p.rn . IOli6 1oee Sunday Fri. 3:00 p.m.
1090
:~ CANCELLATION & "" ::~ CORRECTIONS:
1200
122~ 12~
117~
lllOI.
Ul.
13:1! 137~
It!)(.
142~
Cancellations and corrections may
be made on same deadlines as
above. Please ask for a cancellation
number when cancernng your ad.
:~ERRORS:
:~~ Check your ad daily and report := errors immediately. The DAILY
:~ PILOT assumes liability for the fir~t
Open Su.n 1-~ 11111' Beyalde
Spectacular baytront dpbc. 2 br, ~ba up; 2 br, 2
ba d.n. 2 bolll lpll(leS. Reduced-$1,500,000 .
UM ISLE
Remodeled 3 br, 2 bath+ large rec. rm .. beam
oeWnp, furniahed, petioe. $420,000.
PElllllU llllE OOUIFROIT
Ocean & jetty views. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3
bath, 3700 aq. ft. Xtra parking. $1.385,000.
FIJlllllll UllOl llLLTIP
New 4 br, 4 ~ ba, custom French Normandy
FAtate 1.2 prime acre hilltop. Now $995,000.
OlllllUI OAYI UYFllllT
Coronado Wand cu.at. bayfront lot. 85' boat
deck. Plans avail. Now $370,000 wltrade.
llllWIW lllE
Near new 4 bdrm, 4 bath, lake view. 3500 aq.
ft. $440,000. WW trade for a local property.
IOW FRllT llOllE llnS
Prime 2 Br, 2 Ba & 2 Br. 1 Ba. Duplex on x.lnl
swimming beach good income. $725,000.
Beat view, tallest ocean front bldg tri-plex
with spacious 4 Br. 2 Ba. each level $1,200,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
).\I floy,,.I .. D"" N ti 67';:, 6161
* HIRIDR RIDIE * incorrect insertion cnly.
1100 Come visit the most fabulous view. New
l2UC CLASSIFIED 642-5678 custom home in Newport. Nothing to ~= compare with th.is 4 bdrm, fam nn, 5
10 0 ...... ,_ SU. ~LOW bath, formal dining, 3 trplcs, 6 car garage. ~~ Large pool & )acuxz.L Come to the gate
"30 ...... 1112 F II and ask for 3 Yorkshire, 759-1931.
1~3.) --If • handy you can • = I RfTl..1141.... _, Step up entry 10 • I IPIJI 1&11.J 1-1
uoo o,...t C.M. loeetlon. y..,. hardwood floor 3
: ~ r1~ ':.°•000i1 ::1
, ! :;~ct:;· ::,11 :.~ HELEI I. DOWD = wlgatageS. Only '52,000 ar .. OV« look• "Huger: IULTll llC au •1•J1
290I dwi\. 831-7370 pool. Exoallenl nn.nclng. . ' • ~ ... = Prloa only $114,900. Call .--:::::--i:=======:. ._ to -548-2313 I mu mil ::! Wide ahedy 1trMt1 with llt·
2918 t .. trafftc: 11 what quality
2918 IMng la all about. Thia mo hOme hu 11 all and more. ~m 111,llO . s Bdrm 2 sa wtth targe
T.Tll ,.IYl.'I room• and thick new ~ling, Prlc9d to Mii
~lsor
·J(8alty
651-1177
la1Ma WIM llM
CUI• 3 Gr. f sa; •••.
avall. now. $850 mo. 306
Diamond. (213)&K.171 I;
wtmdt (714)873-6243
Cute 3 Br, 2 Ba, frp6c:, get,
Piiio & IUndeclt. '900
-19Ctm '°" DMYI winter. 307 S apphire.
9IY9m 875-5319 :-.....-------11m1 am P&ll lalMI
3 Br 2 be, nrepiaoe, M1W Pnia1ala 1111
carpeting. Remod . a Bdrm 2 L 11306/
ltltchen. A.IC, dbl gar. V• Ava/I. 9125 mo. to ::::
cant •t34,500. A.gt 8S1-12M . .,~·"'· ___,·~...,..........---
18 fO N9wpott Bl, CM IOUIFlllT 141-llJI 2Br 1 be COt11Q« FfJ)6c,
Univ. Pk Terrace 3 8t e:;,J::~ .:::::::-·
Dover model, 2 a.. xlnt 8echelof unit $326/mo
location, wallclng di•· Winter rate · (utll ....., 1· tanoe to comm pool Fee • .......
•Ind S 139.500. j ean Call John 7141891-9824
Laten752·1414 Latw..... 1141
....... -IMc~ iMi Ft;. to bMdi'. tw. ~BOA ROUE on a laland: MCUt1..JL gated.
•P•Ctacular OCEAN 1~· -:,to:-~~
FRONT 3 Arch Bey, ... '50Citmo 56e 0638 .
llmple lot. c.ii owner. Frt =----· ~~~~-~o ~:' (7tl!) ·~~or~ fir"'t..... l!!t
(213)79e-t 16t. • pellQ:"lii"IY rm, 1166 mo. + aecurtty. winter. • ..,., .... , lilt 87)..3218, 773-8432
111-llWIU LIDO ISLE 4 BR. 3\t Ba.
Model perl9ct 3 Bdr home, Sept. thnr June $12001
appralMd '380.000. Wiii mo. No peta. 876-7167
be llquldafed tor S3ell.OOO w/10K dwn or ~ded Qm• •
m«e. Call Patrick TenOfe 2-bf. lrO lfY rm. ~
nc.oMn.. 3,0Cl2 A b.eutlM condo tudled .... -PAii now. Don't mlN It. Only
1Wey In• "Quiet Pnvate 11,Hl.MD St48,900. 761-3191 llUIFlllT 1eo.a102. es 1-1aee. agt. :'~0 ~.":.nC~c>
l..<lot " '"""'"" 300I Comer". 2 beclrooma. 2 eoeta Meea pnme i0cat1on !p With for-vi.w or the I lnL It 111• e t 1 5 S 9 o o / m o . 213 -972 -6101 , p.,....... 3012
bat111. tpeeloua country with 82 rental unit• and • SElECT Pacific. Pool,~. tun ... P•"°""'l .9trvl<n 3014 lic'hooi. 4f ll\ltll'ut'UOO 3019 kitchen • dining area. 2000 eq ft. for pe1entlal · PAOPEATIES c u r I t Y • Y • t • m • , 4 Bdrm. 2 be, ~. lge lot, ... 1~ .~2 .. .. gd area. 11.9% 111. • .............. n ,.,..,,.. >Oii Family arM with brick lndu11/cornmtt ~op. award-winning dHlgn OWCX. 1234,900. PP, no LIDO ISLE &AYFRONT
BUSKSS' FINANCIAL
eua-'"' s.i. ·-Oppw\--......_w ... ....i
•1n-lnwftl OppwlW\1-lnvn\mlf'nl w.,,Lrd
•M....,.7IQ1-n
•M..,.y Wanled
M°"""'" T 0 t
EMPt.OYMUfT
""-"~ AunlON Bide Mo1tt"'ll
C.""1'M & f',qUIP""'t I
Compuwn
f"rw to You
f'\.U'T\llUl't Cone• S&i..
ltouwt>old Ooocla
Je!Wrtry
M°"hoMry Miorello_,...
Ml«' WantMt
MuMca.J lnetrum.n\a
Ofln f\U'n111u,. &
Equlpmml
Pio,.. & Or1ono W"~...C~
BOATS
TRANSf'ORT ATION
""""" lloty<lrt
<AmP<"' MuU>r Dok.,. 'Motonl"'~ MOIOrfl..,_
RV'o
Tr11kn. 1"-•Yf'I
Trookon Ullhly
AUTOMOTlvt
lluw i-n~
A UIO S.,.,,.....,Port.t
Aull• W11nLtd s.-... 11 ..... !Ind> 4 wn .... 1 Orov.,. 'ml<'~· v.,tt
lrnbttU4""·C~
AUTOS WORTED
1\11• fl,.,,,..,
A"'11
Auaun BMW c..•uri..n
O.'-un o.i...:-...
l\otr.vt
l'lol
Hund<!
'"""' J....-i J-.._. ...... .._
"""" Mada ,.....,.u ... ...--...
lillwtJWw NO o,.t p.,....,.. .......,_ ,.,,,....
"-"uh ::;'!. "">'"'
&Mb luboru
~ v ............ VolW> "'"" AUlOS. DOMESTIC
nraplaoe. Two petloe. A ment ~l-1400 kitchen. $1,900,000.
quiet 1>arga1n. seu50. . llLY nLL Yllll UllllllVU.t 11(),..~S bkre. 648-9043. lido Nofd. 3 br, winter,
Call for 11'1owlng laetl.ll.1114,HI 1UT--1 · 4012 548-23 t3 Appealing family h<>rM r--AMltOfa, 876-eOOO •lllY•IY .... 11~ "•ed r9Te 30 ~·
No loan •-. no doelng
coetl. Monaco with oc
view. 14 Rue Vlllere.
Open wknda 1·5 . 84()..1631
::: wfth l.,ge back yard. ~"'="'&r.~:~ e~~~~~~~
4011 C-lent to llCtlool• hu changed DO you LbM l1lld
402l and ll'lopa, Miier will help know wl'lat ~r home II r~~P :g: finance thlt 3 bed. 2ba realty WOf1h? Call
4021 w/t1tn rm. 831-1400 Jrt w. Blount FOfced to Mii 4 er r.no-
•
WATIR~RONT Area~(714)76~1818 vated Cape Cod. Now
""'"" 011'1 OCLU.UilOt ....cl, ... ::: lllYEUITYPlll ~ A QrMt home~ !tie grow-
M» Ing famlly. Fovr ll)leloul
bedroom• with thrff
8010 bathe. ~lurel Include
eo11 llrlum, petlo, ftrepft and
eo11 fenced yard. Propertr. :!l: back• up to greenbel .
eo11 Community pool, ~and
9011 tennl1 court nearby 801~ $245,000.
:~.2 111· llOO m:i--------92111----------8~~~ llYllf 111,111 ~ Great condo fOf young e-m couple Of agl pereon. em located In OrengetrM
e:i:JO tl'll• 1 Bdrm hu a loft 1231 ault1ble fOf den or offloe.
Hurry on thll onal ;g:~ 831-7370
7012
7014
7018
7011
7020 11m
7024
70U
702e
TRADITIO\AL
RL\l.TY
1--------~
tiOMl i,, 1..,. PecHlc OcMrl Real Eltete =~ ~2~ 1~hSoe UllN -
REAL ESTATE ,..1811111 Beylfont. A.gt 84()..1538 ...... .., 1 ... , ..... '31-1400 Super .... ._I 3 Bdrm 2 .. _....__...._ M ... ,
bath --;;me on a lalMe ~f:'";to. °:-'~
Cul·d•·UC. Covered Palum 1117 Only m dn. Aalllng
--petlo, troplcal garden ont '374,500
Only one i.f1 a wttat • with Wtll9rfall. Many el!· on Balboa Penln, 4Br, ~Ill,,_ ml
l/leW. Veiy pnvate lo-tru . Only• l29,500. •BL By owner. 1775,000. 11•1ua PllPllTIU
cation. Adjecent to partt. I II -••M-• WIN trade f« lt.-na of lllte -Cloee to pool & ~ 2100 ft -:;--w value.. (305) &et-55e0 111-184 ~het~~=-= .. 1>19~ on .~ ~~~ c.lna Ml LI liB
$249,000. 844-8200. circular driveway, RV ar or ew up ex.
Barbera Cllllhan ltorage and much more. Owner. $385,000. Beet OnlY I t59,500. bUy In Cdm &46-0098
JASMINE CREEi< CONDO
A1aum1ble IV•% loan,
guarded gate, 28r + den.
1295,000. ~188 ll&UllllULn 1-~~-·~~-111·1'11 IOWI I .llTTY YllW --..... ---llT--
OPEN Till 8 PM. 200 bile. 40' lot, 3br + den, Prime 1111991 ooeenfronl lot
~Macnab· Irvine
--------1 3be, y.,d, compt. refurb. wtth e 2 ltory 2Br bch .... llMll IKJ '516,000. 217 Jumlne. hou1e thrown In for mull l&Y...,.. Owner/agt 973.5551 '495,000 located at eeo2 Ill GUYii flt Cftta .... 1614 w. Oceanfront. 876-9t11 MITll Emerald Bay 4 Br. 2'A a.. r t at-Open HouM Sat/Sun 1·5
lovely 4 BR ou1tom hOrne ocean vl9WI Reduc•d teched · gv RV pkng on the goll courM wtlh from 1 520,000 to sea 500 ca11'&46-83&e '
Two 1tory. 2 meeter eutt•. view. frplc. A.Hume
Me,000 at 10~% and owner wtll carry. Aalllng .124,900. Call Brotter at
875-3869
pool an<1 19•· Very Pf!· '440,000 for Immediate ' ·
vat• and rec:.ntty r• Ille. OP9ll l>Mml. warm 11100 NWI
modeled. Redu~ to wood accent1. Aoceee to on thl• 1 'If,_ uPQraded
$1,2:95,000. Cell 8111 Cote private l>Mctl, tennll and 3 Bdrm 1% bacondo. 2 1• 1 community pool1 and car gar. Pymtaapprox
pwkl. Superb Vaklel AM $1200 Jeff831~55 f()( ~ Deley 644-7020 , _____ . ____ _
..... UAL llTATI WTllll llTTAll I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Charnmlng & ow:y tur. rounded by lowering llhade ,,.... Comp6etely
prtvate tronl & rMr yard1.
Detached garage. Ptenty
of room for eAPllldl"iJ. Only 1128,500. 159-1601
or 152-7373
YALll m LIUlm A wining comblnauonl
Pre1t1glou1 WHIOllfl
home on tr• llned etrMt.
Hu wermth and c:tlfifm.
large ywd and pool plua 4
Bdrme. only S26t,600.
142-1200
111110
9012
9014
IOIG
8018
1()2\1
IOU 802•
llOM
VIO~
9107
tlOI
B\JY
A CAR
Ull
NII.Ill Ju11 111ted1 -¢ult0m bull!
tor arehltect on a doub ..
lot. dr1tnat1G 3 BA hOme
widen & 11' ctlllnQI. Im·
meoM wtndOW9 open on 1--------two patloe. Prtoed 10 NII E. llde, Old 3 Br., 12,000
TODAY. Cell for OP· IQ ft lot. $129,500. OWC
pottunlty to vi.w. piper at 10% Int. w/10% 144-IOll dn. A.gt 842-!Mlee
FtUOUllll Foroee Nie, PrlrN IPll .. Ull EMtlllde duplex &
A PETE
BARRE Tr
REALTY
YllUIUll-
UllllPI t bdrm, I beth, 2 oar gar·
age partclng. POOi, IPI. exerclM room, MCUl'llY
bUlldlng. MAKE YOUA
Or'FE.A. 1104,000.
L.91UALn
111-1• ti 13 9114 11111
If neatneet count• thlt one tri-ptex. Only S 129,000.
COUid ti. ~ you. 8Mutl• Agent 8t3-1550
'2000/mo. 87~
Udo lele Wint• 2 Br. 2 Ba. dbl garage, no pe1a.
1876fmo. 875-VO&
OCEAN FRONT WINTER
RENTALS · FVAHISHEO.
3 Br, '900; 4 Br, f1000 .
el50-73ea .......... ,, .. ~ ._... nu
21'2 L: nr i .e. Pili aec.
Qa19 & r9C w '625/mo
1 llf beyttont llM/mo
5 8r ocnfrnt yr rae
StlOO/mo
I nlWlltlt ....... ~IULn ..... ,,, •..
11•1171-1111
*lo'"l•llfll•* -MlllU Fvlly 2bf bltlna '430 FV 4br 2ba git pe1 1150
00 4br 21>1 I*• f.576
HBCH 2br 21>1 patio $435
HBCH 2br 2be bltln '525
HB hUge 4bf 2ti. 1750
s . An• ltarter lbr $295
Tuetln 2br lo -S5IS W1tmnatr 2br p«a $476
L. lcwde frM aerw.I
t00'111Vall 816-6133 ...
*h'"l•lflh* -MITIU
Fully 2br bmna '430 FV 41>r 2ba g1t p.-1750
GG 4bf 2ti. pttta f.575
HBCH 2br 2ba P9tto 14S5 HBCH 2br 2ba bttln 1525
HS hl.ige 4bf 2ba '750 s. Ana .. __. 1br UM
Tuetln 2br lo cMc> 1616
WllmMtr 2br p«a t475
l . l«de frM aerWlel
100'• avell lff.5133 ...
WINTERNALY RENTALS
M501up. Many ~.
A.ig. Prop. 816-4000
iUiillalllll UM wO:t S Ir i L 146
W/glt and unit llldpeie O,k
53t...etll0 BEST Alty re. .............
2 IN 26' tm: AA ft!Orii h•• ••o o ,c:all 213/7'0-0505
.. ..
8121 llJl Do It the easy
way-shop
classified .
Reading
~~~ and2 lamalonn-1 ... ftlll ''=•====·· '* ....,.., Cua I I T What a WOf'lderl\li Wond '4fY qUlel It. Prloed to tom 4 bdrm, fem rm, 0 place your meeeage of Shopping, right at fl2) .. ,,
"" .. ,. ••» .. ~ •m 1141
llQ
llU
tlO ••4' .. ,. ••» ti$$
llt7
tlM .... .. ., .... . .., ....
tl71
tl7J .. ,.
""
class I fled
regularly Is the
surest way of
finding the best
buy on exactly
what you want.
allow ttle Miier 10 moft frp6c:, garden rm, cerwnk: befON the
CIUIC*lY. only St 19,900. Ille k"ch. IPI-. IUndedc. 3 rM<Mncl putlllc, your• I flngeillottlpeCawryd8Yll ti ,. 15t-3191 p1Uo1. S189,800, by phone Delly Piie IHllfleit ownr 154-1841. ci...=r Pilot Ada. To place your ad,
!pe.r. Ll1 ""'7 cal 841-6171 end lee • ~ • 842·-• ~ Ad-Vleor ..
~·~ ............ J ,_
..---------Thie OWQndlno 3 ldrm ~ty--: ~ ~ '::~::· s~~~~-a£~s· = t • mo• .f.•!t cu ar ____ ._..,~,. _
bv)<9r. IMut!!""r land-~---__ .......
acaped a nd ·11tt1n ·~~ e" pretty" In • tNty IO¥efy .......... ._ ....... -
area. 8hM• roof, eleetrto
gwage door °'*""· and cultotn well unit• In tam.
11y room. Reduoed to
1182.500. 840--ll&t
· HERITAGE
Ill 111 I( ll~S
AMC ....
c.d!llM a-..i.1
(.'htyllff =-llft;'OOl'\ol u....... ::::=z.., ,.,_"' l'w\IW
--
-·~ ........
--
tl01 ·-Q ll ., ..
U17
n 1• nu
flU ~ Qfl
ts2t hM
--
Ol• t1tlid NhelUllltig
642-1111 • "rJ.;;!W.''"t" ... r r r r r r 1 • ~w·~#t lilnu I I I I I I I
•n•un...... •111•1 · ...
"
C8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Sept. 13, 1983
-...... Uafaral1~.. AJ!!l•tah, Val. ptatat1, Vat. •Ht1h tt Ctaatrtlal -'-''-"-a-.• ... l • __ ....;.;JO;..;;l;.;2 1 ltlt W11tt4 Slot l tlt WaatM 1100
Ctrw ••• llai W l L•,.a• a..c11 Ct1t1 .... 2724 ••.,." ltacll 21H l ll•re Hoa a .. 1111 2111 --1u1n anulT Hmat 111111 ... LYtfont LYil& p;c;,, OCEAN & CANYON VIEW PtalaHll 1707 w .. ttldt I Br $426 utile 18&0/mo. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Nwpt Cfflt, fem tl'lr loVllly iilW •• ESOOllTl /IODELI Wllollowlng Top Pay IMMEDIATE OPENINGS ~~~:!. :.,~~1~1p 28r, 28a, 11126 mo i265. i\1C4i 6;ci:;io;, r .. pd & 1Br '3115 mo .. ulll upper unit. gar-oe, •Id ~~o,:f~Mo:.=. G==i=~:aoft _Outcall ONLY 835--11199 ~ .... ut NB Salon A~ust'"::~ =tv.:rh
494'"'4516 aponalblll pettOI\, 1,.1111• not Incl. ttova, Cf'Pll, hk-up, 3 ~ 10 bMch. .. •• Ott', t.W..pool • .ic. olflc.a. t .90/lt 24ee DITIO 1110111 ...... -<>ee 1 --proof of lnauranct ...... II 1 trnt 99 lncld,nopet11oeE.B1y drapee. laundry tac No allbll·lnt $316mo.+1,.1t1.M2·2114 Nt•POrt 81 C.M . 8tchelor/Bactltl0<•1t• BloycltMNt.c:h Mut1~ GOOOPAY,NOWEEl<-e..utfti.ii-3 bdrm ~ Apt II peta. 84M382 208 Luoonl• mag. 859.-3750 ~-3480 Otnce & Blr1hday Pant" qualllled In all .,. .... ol ENDS OR HOLIDAYS
w/nloulew Nloe Int.nor 3 Br 2 Ba condo, vtewa JOI IEIERYE Ill TIL .,.. U2· 11H PenlhouH. lull ocHn l a aatJlal TllE UST HURRAH parta, Mrvlce 8 warn· Call 8511-5020 or apply In
AvaH. on yr-to-yr leaM $950. 600 E Oc .. n NEW~at--' 20 T~nno-Canal waterlronl, d~ lor vt-aJI am-11 .. "'Of 73•8538 658 8&38 Inly F°or tPPI Cl ll peteon Gam--4~ •-LI •2000, F "" .,.. ..... • .. -n • ... a 1 1 2120 ... · • " •31.32•9 "S• roo•Y. 1 ,..2 N··"ll· ,_. ng • mo. or 536-2690 VIL OE COMMUNITY Im boat, 2 blk• OCMn, 4 only. 1826 mo. 873-7650 ••• I u .. u " ,. ... .... mote Into plNM call 800 Rma S8501mo utll• pd 1 -•.--'l'l-l'I•'~""""' Honest, atralght, 1lngle, --lua Garden Grove
1173-1373 ~r 640-5118, tltal ••I Jiu 'lU ~.Bd0~mp'.~: ~~ury1 . Q ~ar· 681•2993 · ' Prol lem 26-35, n .. 1. '"P· 2,860 I<! f1 31175 Birth, retired gentleman free to lltllHPH '
2 B 2 8 b I k f pl ,. ehr 3Br, 2'.'oBa dplx, CdM, Nawl)Ofl Beach 11330 travel, relldent Orange PIT, axp thrv trial bal. lllUW llOllT&IY
Lg 28r, 2Ba eplt1-1eve1, r •· rc 18~0• agea,epulne~homt OLWtllllllP trplc, microwave, view MIA zonl11g Agenl County25yre,releren-Atternoona631·3241 CdM locatlon, brlgh1
brtghl & airy, Incl ~arage, beamed oalllnga -master 11,.11te. dining C 1 t 1 1 bl h d trom deck. $500 mo 1 641 -5032. c 8 1 • m 0 de r 11 e I y 8 kk mature ~IOll needed re''~' W/o . •vall ov 1 garage. Kid• ·~ta w·•-645-8324, 642-8600 rooma, wood burning omp e e Y re ur 8 e oo H"'"'r rhru trial bal ..... " "' "' 28 tB I 1 utll or $332 mo w/3rd. AUTO REPAIR SHOP llnanctally Independent ,,. • for Of Cly MCOnd """Ml
$11 Omo 675·5688 coma. 863·16 Agent. w Coro Udo 2 Br 1'h Be ttreplacea, mlcro·wava 1'· e.b e,ha~reksltnflew Call Ant Ad N29. Orange Co .. 1,po .. 1000 Cell 528-4065 belor ance Mull be able 10 & lrlendlle•t company. -:: Coata •••• 4 no tee. ovena, pr111a1e palloe & cp • naw 8 .. ra. 642 •300 2• h " " 0 handle all general omc. P'-aM '"""" ~m. • _ Twnhe, lrpl, PoOI, walk d d wood burning lrplc ... .. " aq 11.1188-0122 noon, 8311. for ene or dull ... Salary open. AP· he"'ve daa'ir'"e. 10 a van..:. it boh, 1860, no pelt. Ya r 1 ' 0 1 r en e' w/atone front, stove. A 1 h $250 ---P.O Box 1151, Brea Ca 11 1 k """ 2 Br. 1 ba. gar, nu paltll & 752·6822 or 833· 1863 provided. Elegant llvlng rafrlg. pllt gar, upatalre oom In arge ouae lndvatrlal bldg for IM, NB 9282 I ' • P c • 1 0 n' 11 • n E.xaellent benefits. Ring crpt. rncd yd. Elec & wrtr yes , , only 16 minutes from (quiet). Choice NB Hta 111 & laat, utll. Incl. Avell nr Hoeg Hosp. Perf A & O. 8AM._:3PM 5881 Englnter 547·5825 uJc 10< Lynn
pd. $600/mo. 7116 Joann bloci< lrom beach. 1 ram·. Cory 1 Br. duplex. frplc, Faahlon talend, 7 mlnvtea area 528 Irvine A Lee 15th. 642·6811 4•00 aq h. $2420/mo SPIRITUAL READINGS Dr· n.B. • St. 650-7737 lly dweltlng (old boarding pool, Ideal for 1 prof. lem, to S.C. Plaza or O.C. Air-,700 ve. SHA 3 BA/2 BA APT gro11. 834 Prod1,.1cllon Pl. Advice In all mailers. Love, -.-W--O-ll_M_W--1-1-11-E•perlenoed Legal Sec-house) $1200 mo non amkr or pets. Aef'1. pon. J1,.11t eHI of New-mo. No pet1. Agt. C .. 554-"200 marriage & bualnen retary needed tor
2 Br 2,L be condo $600/ 1 I 1 631 6155 In oata Mt&a Nr bue · Temporaru aaelgnm-t In h II I bll • ,. · 646-8889 10-8pm. mo. 11 11 aec gort Blvd. & eo. ol San • h b h 6· •6 ... 13 · --Alto counaellng 1816 ., -· c • eng ng pu c _ $750/mo. Avell 1011/83 840 4999 1 F S 2001 -• ope. eac · .. ·u.. WANTED· ehop apace or so, El c·-lno Real, San Dana Point over ... lng Interest law firm. Flexible,
B k u 2 Br 2· •~ be with ion. Fire-• · ego rwy. 1 mo. 01,.1pl8JC units l 'n blka from ~" .. Nr roo hurst1 .. amt1ton ,. 631 6439 2473 0 b h 1 1 Shr Irv home 6Br, 3Ba, large garage for minor Clem. Llt'd. 492.1296. aavlng opera1lon1. Hll·•tar1er. Some ramlly
A t B"d 652 e•9• piece, private patio. New 1 br condo: frplc, • · range c ' yr 98· t bod I Ill P e I ~ ... .-.. I I ..... f I "g · " • " " A e Coate M sa 1B tit d S47"' all frplo gar grdnr pk 1en-au o Y rep• r, w pay r 11 oua exper n-....... aw eitperence ,...,p u $895/mo, 6-40-5324 carpets, drapee, bit Int , v • e ' r • u P "·av ' ' ' ' t $200/ C t VllEI IATlll C • II R I I d C I C I 86 733
• 2 br, 2 be condo widen, all Nr Lido •hops & "---h
2 018a1r~.es,
7
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50
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800
1m,omoor. -Daaa Ptlat ~BBrr',uu111111pno01s18nc95$.1a0v50a11. 111 nta, pool. lac. no children, up o mo. 01 • v e r • • Ill aro. 1· 1 amenltlu. upgrtded .,_ ~ ., pets, smokers. Fem only. Meaa or Huntington Bch. Affordable 788-6000 (1)686-6080, Ut 168. • mil
-10/1 1850 mo. 84S.11548 Br, tamlly rm, nice patio. 556-5101 bet. " 5 wkd"" 28r. 28a, gtr~ wfopnr. &. teal + dep req 1400 mo. 857-11317 Biii 9811-1221 -i 4 14 E.0 .E M/F/H Fllll OAlPI .,... ,_ c ....... ~!· Apprenl~ needed. MUI\
$385. I Br Trailer. private dbl gar w/workrm & laun· (ask lor Bob) n-ly decora ed, trplc, ell Hedy 980-9214 Shr Irv home 5Br. 3Ba. h ataacaatl tl S··.,mm' Chemlcal Ill llllVElll be en animal for #Ork,
:--& quiet, g111 & water paid ?i~ $9s:>~'!'~6 :~•.oo;v:~'. STUDIO APT, oceanside ocn view. 493-1030 LIDO DELUXE 2 Br lrplc. lrplc, gar, grdnr, pk, ten-isPIRifOXL XBV1soR; ~rv1C::evalneae Colla Mull heva • driver'• dependable end have
1st+ sec only. 497-6287 2131339•9383 of hwy, reeaonable. Bach. Apt with lull kltch & lrg brll!I patio. $1150 nla, pool, lac. no Chlldrtn, Advll1e In love marrrtage & Mesa area no expar llcenae (bus oenlllcate) someexper. tn ualng varl-573.4318 balh all utlla pd 675-6359 pets. smokers Fem only bualnaas 875-2495* neceaaary. · wlll train. Hawthorne Chrlatltn ou1 tool• or the trade
3y!'d.11r:rc: ~;4;m~,~~ :fer 2ba. 2214 Avalon. c • 27 • 1376/mo 71 4/661-3853 -L-ov_e_ly_3_t>_r.-2-b_a_y_rly $400 mo. 875-11773 L r • 3 $55,000 lull amoonl req. School, 16835 Brook· Pan/lull l i me .all
W. 20th St 548-4900 Avall now 1825/mo. Incl t lll 111 Lg 2Br, 2Be & den, ntwly Steps/bch Gar. No pell. Shr lge Pv1 hOme. Brook-•at t al Wiii net $40.000 t . Call riurat. :~n~;1~2 Valley 5 4 9 -3 3 6 7 d Y c 0 '
•· --------gardener. ece..3e2 7 1 BEDROOM decorated. garage S1000. 650~1706 at16pm hurat/Warner. FV. S250 FOUND 2 wet 1utt1. on El coltec1 Mon .. frl 9-6P~ .. &46-2l3l 8"/wknds
3 Br, 2 ba, Goldenrod Dr BEAUTIFUL 130 E. 201h. St. smaller w/door opener frplc ocn Incl ulll1 962-"624 Camino Real. S.C ldent· Ask lor Tim (408) Carpenters wanted Ex-FILL TIMI PAY
Pool, gdnr Avail 10/6 NWPT CREST CONDO cute 1 Br, neat & clean view. 493-1030 ' Nwp1 1blk to bch. 3Br. s1-s to bch. ahr 3brl 2t>• lly 493-5084 aner 6. 867.0111. perle11ced In Siding Mutt PAIT n•E WOii $ 1050. Sierra Mgmt Lg 4er. lam rm, some with fresh pllnl. $395. __ 2Ba, 1800 mo. winter 2 -.. have own 10011. be able -... 641-132'4 ocean view Rent or 118 851-9523. New 2 Br 2'~ Ba, 2 lrplca, car garage 850-2493 3411'1 St, NB $285 Cllll Nort91'-11, 10 do clean work. Call Opportunltlaa 1v1llable
• 3 Br. 2 Ba Lorenzo Gdnr, option Agt. 6-48--0686 and unll, lrg atorage area, Oceanrront 3br, 2be. G111. Ans. Ad 809• 842-4300 FOUND ADS TD I 4021 afler 6 pm 846-3433 with the Los Angelea evall 9/24. $950/mo gar. aml ocean vu. ow, lndry, nr 58th park S1ep1 lo beach/bey. M/F • ' Tlmaa Clrculetlon De· Slerra Mgmt&4l-l32.c BtgCanyonTownhouse:3 21Brunfurn,$475mo. + $960/mo.240·3156 9117_6115. $IOOO, 1,.1tlls loshr2br. lbaPen.Pt 1.11.UmER OarW11llAHt .. Hh partment In our
Bdrm. 2'n ba. Goll course ~::fve ~~0~or.~~:!i ~8-.-.-t-. =a.-1c-k--~7=-4~0 pd 642_31251842_5369 dplK w/F $300. 673.9013 ARE FREE ltr1llCt Oi. l.o. Full/ time. pan/time, Uni· door-to-door newspaper
S575 Cute Cape Cod 2 Br v I e w Av a II 0 c I kl O 11 1 h VIEW _ LAGUNA BEACH Speclalfzlng tn lat & 2nd lorms supplied Apply aalea program. Guaran· Tiie ba wood fire new $1600/mo, 640·5274 per ng. u e neg • 2 Bdrm, 1111 Ba Condo VIiia Balboa 2 Br. 2 Ba. C II TD'aslnce 1949 Newpor1 Cuatom Auto leed hourly wage plu1
cpt/drpa. Uaed brick Designer decorated 2 Br borhood. No peta. To 1188 trplc, dShWShr, patio. gar-condo. ocean/bey View, Str. prof male or fem, dog a : A.E. Broker Bd Aeallott Wuh. •625 W Coast commlaalon Houra; 9AM
Grdnr, gar. 646-7171 or SSOO'sw/appls&garCall call845-9604 age.1726 mo. $600 de-sec.bldg, pool/spa. 1 yr ok.$300.499·4840 ,.2 llll 542-2111 545.0611 Hwy at Balboa. -2PM, or 4PM -9PM.
646-5743 (Chuck or Liz) 539-6190 BEST Alty lte posit. 883-1600 Agenl, le818 I H t1l1 W.atM 9 • WIDOW HAS SSS for Caahler, apply aft 6 Training la provided
Bike to beach prime 3 ,.,, 2 Bdrm. duplex with gar-no lee. Jill PllPHTIES 0 S di Nirvana Net Fooda, 1231 Po1enllal to earn $300 bach pad wtappls $300'1 Eaatblutt 4 Bdrm w/pool In age. Call aner 4 pm. -2...,,B,...r-. -1-=e,...a-. -1,.1p_a_1_11-r1-.-fr_p_1c, Ul-Ull llLIOA llUll T '1, 10,000. No ere t N Coast Hwy, Lag Bch plus per week. For .,, In·
539·6190 BEST Alty fee fiark·llke aettlng, avall 648-6481 patio. ancl1d garage, 4 Br, 2-3 ba turn home for Found: Blk/lan Fem check. no penal~. Alto ler view, Call (714)
Cleen & ready 3 Br 2 Ba A~:;:;:. w!~~.~~~r~e~: 2Br, 1Ba, yd, garage, peta clote to beach. S660/mo Wanted mature pro-1 month starting Sepl puppy, Atlanta & Dela· ~~~ ~ ~~l~n l~~~ OHlllER 957-2361, ext 1204
_ pool hm 5700•1 w/gar g a rd a n a r & P 001 & children OK. $655 mo. 642-7803 ~e=~~~:',!c/~~·~~n~er. ~iL?o~J4f6 I 2 O ware, HB. 968-3048 673-73l l , E>tperlenoed. Eve1/wl<nda IEHlllL tfflOI
pets 539-61110 BEST Aley ma1on1enence ·lncld. 840-4127 _2_B_r_, _2_b_a_, -,r-p-lc-, -.n-c_l_g_ar d•hwahr. waaher/dryr ---------Found t>lk/wht male WIDOW HAS SSS lor TO'a per1 /llme. The Spaghetti FrOf\I office rec.ptlonlat
lee Agent Brenda 840--0020 2 Br. TownhouM. very $640/mo + u c Incl $800 mo. yrly. 111. IHIO~M 111111 puppy, par11heepdog 1, $IO,OOOup. No credli Bender 645.0651 needed for amall Colla
COLLEGE PARK. 3 Br, 2 ORGEOUS 2er, lg den, quiet. frplc, JaCU121, gar-847-8772, 526-3004 last + MC dep. Must see OR BACH. $450-1500/mo. 81 COM stables. (Blazer) checll no penalty Aleo OllllElll Me I a I Ir m · He• vy
ba, fam rm w/frptc, bltln 2'nBa new twnahe. S1075 age. No pete. 1650/mo. 2Br 2Ba. TownhouM, 3151-;t;o;a;p;prmecm. 64;;2;-0;7;8;7;;;; Clean, quiet F. 841-2281 497-2816 lend 'on & buy. TO'a _.,pply In petton: Stone ~~1fi~~ ~~~~g P!':,'::
kit, hvge llv rm , mo 233 18th Place. Call631~984 Crall, "C". $550/mo.11 Raspon. F 1tudent Mek• Found· Chocolate brown $10,000Up to Jumboe, Creak Farmer• Market, computer axperlenced6-
crpt1/drp1 through°"'· 2 875-4333. •3 Br 2 Ba S.C.Plza SA. 538-1210, 831·3671 W1IT1l lllTW room In CdM. Rel'•. temakl alameae w/llee Denison Aaaoc. 673-7311 4250 Barranca Pkwy, llrat>le t>ut nol neceu-
car gar. dog run & much 1-L-e-... -,...,C,...o_n_d_o_, -,N-p-t ""'C-res-t, pool, patio, spa 1750 No 2 Br. Apt. crpt, drapes, bit N-port Penlneula 2Br Par.,-.11 guaranlte rent. collar 18th St, Coate Btl J Waat.. 91 Irvine. 652-4332 ary. GOOd front office ap-morel A vail 10/2 . 2 bd den 21.-\ be Rel peta752-5822 In stove & oven, relrlge. S800, 3 Br S750. Ptaya Call Roommate Flndtre Maea,645-27311 -C ASTINGANON-UNION pearance. Call 64S.1475
$975/mo (lat. last & MC) WtD 'aoean Vu tenn11 & 3 Br totally remodeled, No pett. 980-2876 R.E. 873-1900 6-41-1699. FEE. Found femakl black/White OE Yll llllJll COMMERICIAL for appointment.
Good credit req 244• pool' S 1200 Av~ll Nov 1. brand new. 1 '.-\ Ba ~~~~~~~~~ Strlou1 00\lplt, no ~ta O< mixed Cocllapoo puppy, WllAT Yll'IE In pre-production for GUADALUPE ~'::,~~is::Irb'f:!n::: 1--63--,1-_83..,,,...44______ townhoute aptt, OIW, L~~O.:nh~~::"~.,,.3 ::: Yrly. N-port laland. Walk chlldren looking for 2Br male blond Afgha.n, male -•t1' dotcln1g1•Nl~I • HERNANDEZ vel patios, kid• OK. no pe1a. Hee unlurn. 646-2752 eve black Lab, mate btadl "'-commer 1 ...., men.. CALL 557-2488 957-0702 Lo Y E1tbltf lmmtc, 3Br Sept. occup ancy roman tub In m•t be_ to beech. 1Br, lge llv. rm, Terrklr. mate Beige Lab 1 am 31 yeara old. In my women&chlldrtn,aJI
Eaetelde 2 Br. 1 ea. crpta. ~~9~;34 ~tt01f.0~,1t~1;;.,e· s6951mo. For rental llP-trplc, wer bar. yard, for-k I 1ch en· UP• t al r•. flfft tr (ch., 11 e). 1em11 e first year tn10 Hellth and lypea. Please mall pholo Hair Styttata & M11111CUrl1t
drape1, ancltd garage, !---.....,,-----pllcatlon 64s.8&48 mel dining, garage. 1500/mo. jvat compl. r• ltat 2912 bronw/btack/whlle Aue-Nutrition Industry • I with phOne only to needed Immediately lor patio, laundry rm. No Newp0r1 ShO<M 3~ Br. 1740/mo. 5"5-3115 modeled. Looking for trallan sriepherd mix made $60.0001 The MC· Cu1lng. Raleigh Movie beauttlul aalon, Hunt.
pets. 1550/mo. + MC 2.,., Ba 2 blocks 1obeech. $.425 Clee11 2 Br nr Harbor 1500/mo 1 Br, tJote 10 quiet conalderate peraon. WANTED· thop apaoe or puppy, temal e brown ond yeet doubled I I drive Studloa, 850 N Bronson, Beach area. Following
54&.5442, 770-5e29. cloee to PoOI & 1ennla. Shops, nu LR crpt. 2281 bch, park•. achoole Ca II 9 5 1 • 1 1 O 1 or large garage for minor Shepherd mix Newport a new Merced ... I have suite 100, Hollywood. CA prelllfred Top beneflll.
962-6683. Maple. 642-1603 or OOo• & kid• OK. Encl gar.1=-6_50_-3084==-------== aulo body repair, will P•Y Beach Animal Shelter two 1>eau11tul homes In 90004 538-113112
Exec style 3 Br. 2 Ba prl· 1----------642-3153 623 &th 636_1078 l a ltatatt up to $200/mo. Coat• 125 Men Or. C.M Celllornla and one In ---------1---------vate pool 1900 fncd 4 kid IOUIFllllT 536 9953 1 • Mesa or H1,.1nt1ngton Bch. 844•3656. Hawaii. wa have • Child Care: Pl tlme 11tter IUIYIUll/PHTlll
pet 539-6190 BEST Ally ery sharp 4 bdrm 2'/\ ba S495/mo 2 Br l'I• Ba apt, • • 53e-95 2 2 Br 1485. Furn. $520, 8111969-1221 =--------ground floor oppo111,.1n1ty for 3 yr Old on Balboa Pll position open In the lee oceanfront duplex. lrptc, carport, l/r, all blllna. $576/mo. 2 Br, cioee lo Pool, year round, nr ~Of .... f""l_ca_lt_l_ta~l-1-~z~t~l-4 FOUND. Female Golden backed by company Island Call Gall 675-2645 airport area Dulles ln-
Famlly Townhouse, 3 Br, gar. lg patio Greal 10-patlos:~~t~llllOn bch, parka, schools. Dog beach, bulet. No pets. Retriever, vie Edward• training. Call Gerl. Cterlcal AHlatant, part elude Irrigation repair. 2~ ba, dbl garage $775 cation. 1518 w . Ocean-& kids OK. Encl gar 623 498-6277. 1200 aq. ft. office or Hiii & Talberl. H.B. 714-891-1372 time, morning• or aner-sweeping ol wlllkways,
6-44-2562. rronl • lower unit. Avail TIL l111t U2· 1IOI 11th. 538-1078. 536-9953, =:--------,,,..,.900,,...,. ,comm'l 1,.1ae, MW paint & 847-5024 11r * * * • noon•. 975.0383 'llHhlng window• etc.
9115 to 8/15. $1100/mo. 1525/mo. 2 Br. 1 Ba. pool. 538-9572 lMal . 2 carpel, s11oomo. 328 N. =F-=o_,u..,N-=o-: ...,F~em-a-le__,,S,_he--.,ltl-e, SS 00-18.00 pr hr. Pia call
LJllLOllll Wayne. Agt 848-8818 laundry room, close to Clol8 to beach 1 Br. crpt1, Xre ahare Fountain Valley Newpor1 Blvd. 720.0295, Sable & whl, vie Irvine s~!~::~:~H1ng need• re-O&.llllOAL 831-7950
I provide quellfled people II TllE WATIR shopping, 149 E-Bay St. drapee, atove & rafr1ge. home, prof. male over 35, _64_5_·6_3_00_...,... __ ..... Blvd 831-1030 sponalble, clean cut lndt-IHlllAL IFFIOI HOME DllTY NURSES ~oRWer~~~~r appprl~~~n 1250 sq tt 28r 2ba mobile. TIL li•t. IU-1t01 $"450/mo. 636-4637 _8_4_2_·2_9_1_7_. ------'.'o Way belw Beeah & Fwy. FOUND· Gray cat, vlc vlduals lor car washing & Fln11nclal tervloe co. haa AIDES, pan or full time -..-B I d BBQ c h Back Bay NB $200 lncls Clauy new a11ac1,.1tlve H b & H II F v auto detalllng -lull time. opening for ettclll cietk for 2 disabled mtn, 11> llve form + proreulonally lllns, aun ry rm, · S5951mo, 2 Br. 1'n BA. Ondo.be area,MCgate, utlla oung woman suite. AU tervlce1 avall .. :6r 8o2r84 e ' 631-6900. lo do credit checking, In N.B. Call Soott Ford
drafled lease torm offer· 2 patios. S1 2001mo yrly. Townho1,.1se, garage, lrg ma• aulle, lrg ltv rm ' Y 6 • 210 sq ti $550/mo. " • llght typing. Hperlence (213) 618.0441 or Lee
Ing you maximum protec· 673-39091680-1178 dy yard, llr, small pet ok. w/lp, din eree, w/d, patio. non-amkr 64 ·5559 Mary. bkr 6'42·3998 Found lrg orange/wht cat, Babysitter. 2 dys a wk for helpful b1,.1t not neceaa-Miiler (213) 328-2900 !or
lion Call Peta Johneon Shoreclltta. lg 3 Br. 4 t>a, 763 W 19th St. covered prkg, $550/mo Blk to bch. tull pr1v, mu11 very loving, Jn Talbert 13 mo glrl In my home on a r y C o n t a c t detall•
631·1266 lamrm,frptc's.grtocean TILla•t 1•2 l lOI + dep.536-4040,agt be11eryr81p&v&ryclaan. Hl17We1tclltf,NB.278to Prk, HB on 9 /14 Mon 7:45-4:45 & Fri 714·640·0'420 ---------• Oceanfront Condo on female prel 675-9307 1365 sq. ft. Sul table for 848-2708 9' 15-6:30. 642-8853 IOIT /Hl-O&Ulllll vu, walk 10 pllt bch. $5951mo. 2 Br 28a 2 B 1'/. B medlcel or dental Agtnl ciertcal $1700/mo 548-7639 TownhouM •mall yard, sand r · • •. pool. Lag Boh furn atudlo, pool, 541-5032 FOUND'Male mix breed Babysitter for 5 mo11, old PI T Weekend• Light e,e0:.;~::t• Reateuranlla
Smell, 2 bd, nr waler end 11 bill 1 1 24 hr sec gated prolec:t prlv ba $395, Room dog, vlc Mlulon Vle)o. Infant. some days. some Bookkeeping. Apply In nl no lor 2 ellper
---------Npt Pier Ovleterea Sept r. 94~W~~f~1 rp c $750/mo 751-5999 $280. 40·. NON-SMKR. 250 IQ ti . $200/mo. 779 855-2720 nlte1 Flex. hrs. Debbie person Margar11avllle, hoateu/cuhlel"I Appry
MESA VERDE 111 time • June $675 tncl utile. tat TIL ··-1 .. 2.110• sr•w11D t>us/prol "494-0451 w 19th St Colt• Mese FO 0 650-3178, 644-5313 2332 Weal Cat Hwy. Npl IHn pers'°"L· 31106 Cout rented. E.xec:. 4Br. famlfy & Sec 646-7958 eves. •• • • ~ Tom 851·6928 UN Mele Orange &B -----,-,-.. ----Bch .. 1 30-3:30 pm wy, o eguna m trpk: ga den m spa VIL• 'IE Lrg room w/bath, turn , ---------White striped cat, neu· aby ... tler or ,.appy 5 mo ~,'amlc ·1118 ~11 ,; p~lloa' 1_7_30_,·....,56,...8_8....,d_a_ys____ $800/mo. 2 Br 1'n Be ut Bal 111, nr So Ba)' *WOITTYE tered, decliwed. Vic Sen b o Y M or n Ing 1 • CLERICAL l tlT /1111111 Grdnr/water Incl 11295, ESTCLIFF 4 Br. 3 t>a ex-Townhouse. greenbelt, New 1 & 2 Bdrm lu•ury S400/mo 675· 1030am Simi* Miguel & BeywOOd Dr, 7;30-1:30. your home Full time. apply dally
754.1648 panded mtster Bdrm, va-llr. carport, balcony. apt• In 14 plans. 1 Bdrm Room aveJI 9_ 14 In 3br 1 MO FREE RENT NB 644·668t COM 10 Hoag Hosp area lllOEmHtlT 11am-12pm Ml Cua. ___ ___ ___ cant & ready s12ooimo 2078 Thurln from 1565. 2 Bdrm from duplex In Bel Penn $257 WllhSh0<1 termleue, full ---760--0897, eves. Local Santa Ana mlg 105 Mllln St. BaJt>oa MESA VERDE 38< 2Ba Call Liz. agt 642•5200 TIL .,.. tU· 110I 1680 Townhouee from Found. Puppy. M · lrg feel. -8-A--B-Y""'s"""'rr_E_R_f __ 6--seek• reliable peraon ---------1 1 • 5725 + poola, tennta. Incl gar i.pece 87S.1447 S«Vlcesultet Keapyour brn/wht,DanaPll O..Ot>-t or mo. / ffST/llllllS ,_ pan , crpt• .. drps _ ocverhead '°"' & 86 old, my home, meiure w pleaaant phone YOIOe $ 1100 lncld gardnr Ta1tia to A~ utll pd, lrg 1 Br. crpt1, waterlella, ponda Gae for Room wl pvl entrance. proleaalonal lmeoe high lepo area 1• 13 17 person 9_ 12 Tuaa & 10 work In g_,aJ of't1C41 (Ptrttl 19 Ollar&•)
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770-<)347 ewty decorated 2 r 20rps. bltlna.Sfr1g. 1385. cooking & healing paJd. bath&kllchenette.C M . 881 0over0t.Stlltel4. Thura.75g_1083 Including TYP/Accll Upto $6pet hr.11pmlo · 13Char1e 1.960-3726 From San Diego Frwy 1ml 10 beach '325/mo Found· Sml gry M Cat, Pay/Rec Benellta 5•m. aun thru thurs
11.0lllTOllH w/ger lncd yd 4 pet• Charming 2 Br Apt, bllln drive North on 6Mch to Nopeta.631·9259 Newpof1Beach Laguna Hiiia 49s.-t8l6 BABYSITTER netded 548-5643 GrlnderAea11ur1nt 1400
1 Br, pool, tennis, lake, S400's 539-8190 BEST range, frptc, new crpt. McFadden and wtll on ---------631-3651· afl IOAM full-time Mon-Fr!. $40. -=---------w .. 1 Cout Hwy, Npt
refrlg $.485 751-3191 lee prvt patio. 1550/mo McFadden to SEAWINO SIALAlll MOTll 320 IQ ft w/J\a & Kit. LOST Blk wtWhlte noM per week 432-1667 Clerk/Mantger, Hallmark Bch
Select Propenle1 art.Hh ftlrlllltt~ 549.2530 v I L L A O E Wkly rental• now avall storage combo. 384 aq cat, hll harnau. Re· l&IYllTillll llEllll ~~~~·, gl~•xp!~d P~~~-S8fVelt, cooks •nd t>u•
• i t 211 1"-(714)893-5198 115.50/wk &upColor It. In C M 1 350 ward 845-1793 ~· poellloo• 1vall aaa 1 a 1 -• 10111 VISTA APTI SENIOR CITIZEN TV, Phones In room. 227 4 548-1425 ---,,,--,--~-Rel adult a, own trans, 21 +. _&_4_0_-7_3_7_3______ Apply btwn 3-5pm.
Che& thl1 2 Br 2 BA 1625 PtaiaHl l 2607 $.485 , Br, 1 B• Apt. Frplc, Newport Blvd. CM. BALBOA PENINSU' .. LOI I c . II c 0 c. t ' Temp Cherlotte'1 Sit-CLERI nPIST ----------. net w/t>ltlne appta & gar a ront r 8 pat 0 skyllghls, patio, all New 1 Br Condo. Sec: bldg, 84&-7446 400 ..,.. .. Pvt bath,"""Re-Drg/Blk/'llht. Hrbr Vu tera, 645·37'46 ah 4pm Hotel•
• Info 539~ 190 BEST Alty gar, wlnt~, no pel~ 1975: bullt-tni. cloee to •h<>i>•. churchea. ...., " t1ma NB 844-0388 ---------1 for Salee Oepl. Muat have E.xclualve tO unit•, on the , lte
673
_
753
5 386 Avocado medlctl. 1550/mo. Sl-.plng room, near So. done.$300mo.6"42-4623 l .. trtlO.Httrltlp good typing tkllle & l>Hch,need•P8r90!1tlor
--------TSL Mgml 842•9412 538-7423 or 963·5847 Cout Plaza. Fem. prtl Bay1ront. Otfloee, patloe, Loat F blk Lab."Teresa", Apply In pereon: Stone knowledge of 10 key by graveyard Shin. exper S::-l aat. ltacll 224 '"' larYlt• Wilk to t>eech. Bachelor. $270/mo. 566-1737 parking, tanlt0<lal. g~u~~ol~~2-~;~gt/l8th Creek Farmera Markel, touch. Wiii train In ad preferred, honeat, well =-a8r 2ba, xlnt area. mi to 2Br 2ba, p\11 bch, 2 car Huge Duplex 2 Br 2'h Ba crptt. drapu, alova, ltteJl~ttlll fi04 at~1003 4260 Barranoe Pkwy, placement, word pro-groomed, ldHI grad b h 11 100 11 k" 1,__ Many )(tr81, fncd yd, pel 11 11 111 Id _ Loat flame point Slameae. Irvine. 552-4332 oeaalng & on computer. work. Call 845--8511 for l ' si6-l038 ' Cl ~:.~·u~fu~~· 1:.i'1~50: ok. $736. 873·8336, ra~e, • u • P• . ex NA BEACH IEWPHTIUOI blue t)'81. Vic. CdM. ---------11000/mo Xlnt ~fits. appt.
A.II new renovation, 4 Br 21-8-73_-_8_24_7_._7_52_·_9_5_11__ ;~9= 2BA Newly Re-~::~:7 ' Wiiiy~~!.°:,~:& up. latrt41mry ..... ~~1~rP:·1 ~~~-g~o71: Bi~111n. OLHI ~~:~~~r~2.:~10Slr ,.H_;_OOd_"_C::,_'*"-,..-.-.-,'1-tood-,-~-~t :;·e:e~~6seso Call 1 & Sf,~~r!:~NI yrly. decorated, poo1, no pet• 2511<91. 2 Br. yearly Kltc~~'Y:'~~,~~hy TV. O.C:!~::i-10"a11y 850-3067 LIAll llPT. conaung operator, ex-SA~757
873_.928 S450. mo. 673.0884 1 700/mo. No pata. heeled pool & atepa to •GaroenType. Loll· Le Oueete Racquel ~ Center. ltmpor· pertenc.d, muat know ---------
' Baautllul 4Br or 3Br 1,...-.,.-,,......---"'%'>n
24
,.. Lrg bachelor on E/elde, 111 67~8640 ocean, 985 N Coul ':J· •Private Sult• Cl\Jb. Long hair blond yng llY poeltlon expected to machinery. 839-8271 H==~; s::"'~ -widen, nr Sprlngvttw ti •Somewl lMCl•ttrlal •• ..,.,. p 1 laat 8 montha to 1 ~ ---------: Elem Sehl, clean 11150 utllpd,$396.AtklO<Amy 1 Br apt, 50 yerdt from LagunaBeach,494·5 . apace. ~~·ard:"°Hm ~~n~. which may become per· ... ,HIH(Ltrila) help, It! hr/3 hrs ~ mo. 840-4725 morning
2
780-8882 oce•n. S475imo. yrty Incl ~ot .. rm• lor rent by wtl. •Full Window• wtt<l4&·"4274 manenl Oppor11,.1n1ty to Mature •Oman, llgh11_63_&-_20_80_.,._11pm ___ _
_ Bechelor Apia. 2195 UNIOUE 1 Br s51stup utll. 642-133" $120-up wlkltchene11e 0...,looklng patloe. learn loan packaglg and houMlteeplng, lor .. dt<ly H 0 u 1 • •
-Cetch ocean mist from Miner St Furn w/utll pd. PRV petlo, pool, apa 2 Br, 2 b•, frptc, end unit. 2 avail. 875-8740 •S«r.tarlal..,.., evell Loat· Olde< Slameee Cat, fur1her your cer-. Type lady. Mutt drive, Ilka cl•anau-profe11tonal.
::. 1300'• beach pad '375 mo + dep Oft TOP area, qule1, no 1>81• car gar, pool/lfL ,760. eCo91er Rectf>tlonlst Sunatt Hgt• ar• A• SOWPM and good or-catt.. Non/amoker. Call '6.00 hr Maida of Or-
: : w/bttlna 53S.-6190 BEST atrtel parking, no pets. MES• PINES 28""' Harle 778-238.4, 87 .. 224 Latah tt •Kit__:. e•• ward, no quettlon1 ganlzatlonal 1klll1 r•· Sandi. 842-1057 (8-5). Coun L Rlty fee To -call 64S.080'4 " "" ..-lfw ..aa ...,,_., -· 8-48-823"4, 848-2995 quired. For appointment ~ ty. v rneg, : ~~~~~~~~ 549-22•7 • --112... 111-MlO. c:onlaci Yvene Moreno 11 Conetr/Hvy Equip Optr 83 -8222
Cttfamo1cek~B1r.!_B9aokS600w/g·•.~1-Newiy painted 2 Bdrm. 1 1room,i21o+'ltu1h,F;TI ........... m LOST Orange male cat, (213)641-2114 Noa.xpttiaoo.neoettary HouMlleeper. tull ume. "' ,,.., -IEWPllT VILUll ea. $635/mo. & 1 Bdrm ~ 848-4~ e tide •-vie Bal Penln. 10th SI & II II For lnf0<mat1on cell mat, non-emkr, 2 chit-~ 539-3190 BEST Rily ,.. 7 min trom bMch. gu & 1435-$456. Ullll paid. C.M: . . Ralall or ornc.. 2000 or W.Bay. Reward 875-2846 E •• ~",1,AL Eml I , -II 1 9 -2 2 7 -II 1 3 I ' drtn. Cit lum, Qd pay,
: Lg 2 lty exec home, 3Br, waler peJd Junie>< 1 Br. garage, pool, no pell. IN NEWPORT BEACH 2 bf, l'h ba furn. twnhse, 4000 ICJ· ti. on t>uay 19th LOST Sm ftm YallOW Lab qu pp y p oyer 227·8119 REF REO 557-2488
...._ 2.,.,Ba, w1k to bctl. dnt $475, I Br.1530. 30t Avocado 842-9850 Slngltl 1 & 2 Bdrm Aper1-CoataMeea $282.60 + ,_. St at Harbor. C.M Rletl mh• dog, S.A. Hll aru mll 8:30AM-6PM. Mon-Wtd HOUSEKEEPER: Uve In.
: IOc 1976 mo 082·8847 pool, spa, 1.,-.nls, ment• & TownhouMI uttla. 548-7021 all. 8·30 Ouebedo 831-1286· Agt Reward 6 45·6967. BARBRA TOBIAS Coott&HouM1taeprfor1.m
or 638-7403 vol1tybellcour11.aaunu, Some are alegtnlly 955-7580 TALE.NT AGENCY board& cart. 2..t dyawti ~:;!,kl.,:;:~~·
' L~ 2 ety exec home, 3Br • recCralml.5S5or7·ry n7o6pe1. '· 11 lll ILIFFI turnlthed. From $680 *Beach frOf'll. 45th St. la look Ing tor New Fac:eall 24 hr, shift•. s.48-0795 , '<B ·00 Quiet 2 Br. 2 Ba. with vi.w. On Jamborte Ad al Shr 4br/3ba hM, 1300 SCRIM LETS We wlll be hold Ing OPEN ---------Hou11ketper, Mon-Fri ~ '11 e. wtk 10 b<:h, xlnl1:----;::--,---,..,....,. ciotteto beech,balcony, SanJoequlnHlll•Ad mo,1et,lut.642-1183 ft • AUDITIONS Sept, 12·17. 1111/IYITl•llA 7AM·mldPM.Cotonaclel
-loc. $975 mo. 962·8647 W ••• ltack dshwar, dining rm. enclad Attrac. Fem. congenial S RS No experience neceu· ontmtM1I OPtl pitl Stnd tmploy· Mer. cook, clean, laundry
:· or 538-7"403 garage. 1850/mo. 2183 IU· 1100 business peraon, will stir 1-287 sq. ft. otfl~ AN WE ary. Profualontl talent ment hrst01y to Mln11e•. 306 & market for profeMlorlal
.-:-MEREDITH GARDENS +. Pacific Ave. C,M, Call •CONDOS• CdM 3 br . 2 be w/Nme Wlth fumllvre lor A peel v welcome. Agea 5 & up. PCH. Hunl S.h 92648 coupkl, axper & rel'• req,
· 3br, 2'hba, den, din rm, bustprot. 494-0451 Mana-rJeff 548-4530 VIII• Balboa tnd Ver· MtF 1 med 759 8228 ovrch ... lld .. lred N'r ·s •or Call now lor more lnlor· --,.-.1-....... --0-WI---760-8868
.,. lrpl,gardnertncl S1025 i tltc' Bit ..-salllea, Studlo1·t'1-2·1. .m • Ul-110l Y~r.Ac~&pe matlon,545-3451, -•1m HouMkaeper,young,weu
" 833-3134 or 1175·0789 ~r I 631-4980. CdM Mille prof. quiet, non When I wa• younger, I h8d -,--h-,--,--,--1 Newport a.a.ch pherm11ey. groomtd, tionaat, ex-
-2~St 2 B 1 POO EASTSIOE emkr. $250/mo. 111 & lut ~~~~~~~~:!I ett HI Hp t Buying, atock control; , Nice 18r condo, adult• . . r. yeer y L 3 Br 2 Be. lrpl. garage, + 'I• utlla 640·7845 or ""' en hourglu1 ng1,.1re. Now for movie and com-HIH orlent•d Good clvalve 10 unit hotel In % preferred. pool, nr beach, S 700/mo. No pelt. Lrg 2 Br, 1 be, coin op beach 2 bike, no pet• 546_4370 wk. BAYFRONT BLDG BASE-lhat I'm older I've di•· merclals w/lashlon motif, lln.. Congenial 11• Newporl Baach. ax·
-14'50/mo. 567-9716 ,_,e,,.73,.,.·=-88=40.,,....,,..,.,,.,,,.....7=,,...,.....,, 1:~~d~: s~°is~ra:o~di2~r $775/yrly. 645-1882 MENT-2500 aq It, covered the Mnd h•• aet-No tees or dutareqvlred, moaphere. No nights or peri.oc. pralerr«l. Call
• •• Sunar eharp SSOO 12 NEWPORT PIER AREA 2 F•male non-emkr lo ltlt 50c/S 1.00/tq 11. Call: tied In all the wrong 2131943.0691, weekend•. 844_2111 Mon tht1,.1 Fri 11-5,
.... bd;m m.od kit yd 4 kid & Br vrly, gtl!. S7001mo . 1 Br, frplc, pool, patio, gtr· Conoo nr OCC, $260/mo. Mon-Fri 11-5 PL.ACES. 845-4411 tor app1.
!. pet 539-3190 BEST Ally no pell 673-8640 age. No ~II. 1606. 3119 Spadous slngle (1n11 Pool, etc Kay 882-1158 6A2·4644 tfltal I l ~utlcl•,n I t Ollllll llLP HOUSE PL.ANT SALES
., i.. 2BR 2BA dee. furn, ocean W. Bay 850-0800 & two bedroom apb F rmmta: t>Hchhouee. No. NEWPORT BEACH offtoe -;;;;;;;;iiiiiiii;ii];;;; ever• 818 11 anu Perl/full time. 6 days Wiii FfT R-.p ptqon, b«l-San Clem 1336 mo Incl 1 000 aq n Attrac11119 • needed, full time-training tr• In 15 • r g • l r om anti, exoalltnl future. en· · ... • •--'-e 44 vu, grn btlt. etepa to Slunnlng large 1 & 2 Br 2 · · w'aer MalntalMcs, M ..... ~n Arelou a mtkl or ltmele program. Richard CIHMrl CdM 844-4422 unm Po o I. 1 1 3 5 O mo Ba ~srden apt, pool, vtll1. 720-4467' 492· 73•3 """"' ••1 TRESS" w-•1 t k Ouellet It S•l?,n· 200 • . to~able w0<1I. 1 875 ••68 Bulldlng on Ou'·t Str .. t. .., • ., 1 tn ..-.......... ..,..,.,, -2104Bdrm1.1850·11 .. 00 ...,.. $425 up710W.18th. F/thr2bdrmCondolnFV Aaelgned Park'l:ig. Oar· care ol, apartment. Newpor1 Center0r.NB Count., Pe<aon. Gower ._,,_._., .. ....._...,.,
1-2Br, 2B•, ocaan view. THE VICTORIAN 2 Br. 1-A own rm, S225tmo +ulll e g e 1 Av a I I 1 b I e money, etc. A Dally Pllo1 bMlllY Str .. l Atlte.1,.1rant, par1 HouMWlvee, atudenU . .tc
•v ~ 11~10 pool 1 1350 mo. Ba w/gar, Crptl, Orpea, pool/Jee 776-81•8 eve 645-4800/846-3323 r8C)or'ttt •ould like to In-time, 1000 N. Brlatol. cor--F\111 t(nt and pwMlme lso r 67 •8 btllna, lncd yard w/patlo. M t bd $300-$325 _______ __,, tervleW you about your MW ULll 11 ""JembO<M In~ tMtP«llW '*P· Typl•ta. _ " pd 83., •120 C II 11 er rm · NEWPORT CENTER. Fuff llfeetyle. NatMe Wiii ~ e.td'I CMhl«a, tlc:ktt tak.,., -eof fy 3BR ON THE BEACH ~-~rM. . ~ a FURNISHED or ~ •• ~22~~·,. ~~1 Teri earvlot E.xec:ull\19 Sultea. kepi confidential upon .... Hl UI ....... .._: 1191\t OOM1ructlon. ""9ly
n-I " 1 f R '""""" • ~.,.....,,., 1676-182.5, 840-6470 ,...,..veat. If ""'"r• Int· •--....._........ .,.., .... , In ,,....,..,, Mon-"r1. ~ Wint., ""'"''', • mo. w. 667 \llctona "L" 1626. UN U NISH(O, .... ,.,. . ._.., 1 ,__ u. ... ,. '! Full time ..,....,Ion t vtllable ....-~2· • 1780 651·117 7 11150 mo. Ill • '-1 + i\LL UTILITl(S MUI., bdrm ....,...$325. omoe IPllCM lor .... areeted n talkln(I. print c....... ... """" 81, I I wt en •v at dep req Hedy 080-9214 VILLA MEOEAA Yo blk bah, NB. Tart 747 n 15116/mo 528 11· your llrtl nem. • phone now. "°"*' Morr· Morwovla A\19, St• C4.
Oule1 !amity complex Up-PAID. tl(AlTll 648--0922. 840-8301 $420/~ 111 monttl rtni numb..-ol where you can 'Us ,..atltlt ft 4-48 E 17th t, CM. C<)ata ..._.. Call ~
VtfY large 3br, 2ba, upper ttelra 2 br. 2 ba., lge m... Cl UBS TrNNIS M IF 35 t .,, frH. uille Pd A/C, be reec:Md •nd IMllltto· tfftt, lllntrfhh, ~ 1« tween 2-8, 84~Me ~7n~ wlaunn,.,d.c6k7.,. G~!ge tet bdrm, DWd, Cflll, drpe. SWIMMING plu\ ::~;:,,. 2b; 2°t,. ::.81 ground fir. l0515 !I Ad 1085, Otlly Piiot, P.O. llalltarttf, Oeltvwy P~. ptr1 time. Janlll>flal, ,._.,1 malnl,.,,...
• ~ ..,..3,...,,., lge play yar • 11\dry fac, muth mo1t' ~orry, ,. __ t .; __ :.41 8 ... 7 · CM'llno Dr. Cotta M..-Box 1&eo, Coeta M.... Ae•-_..;..~~~--mv•t bt 21, Florlal. It ..... In L~· ............... ~
Oeeanlron1, 2br, n•wly encl gar Mo-to-mo. gu no pet\ Models wuw 1 -·' • .. ..., 3 811(• £ of Falrv19'11 & CA 02828. ....,. --.. 751.,.705 h;'~~~'.50P4H
Ofange Tr" Tarr 2Br 2b• decor. 1780 mo winter. & wet., pd, '300 dep. No open dally 9 to 0 M /f. non-amtcr, to ellr 2 Br Adami ~~~~~~~~~! Artltt, llltl, hr. Call Mts.MM adult condo A ll 213-64S.t314 ~te. $580/mo. 2324 1'1• Ba, ldnry, pool. Jae.. 754.1040.Mrlreoy -.... Mparitftlte lrhtr/llltTr .....
tmentttH. 1726/mo Elden.Apt.1.842-5165 Oakwood BBOl)lta,pvicarec>0t.Nr CIRCUS OF L-tt,•--..1-ltl-1 Mval t>t 18 rr-Of ot<*. ~ 641H512. 958-5e80 oetanrront. 2 Br, 2 ba. OCC 1265/mo a al«ltr. • 1290/up, carpau, --n-.. ¥tlld CA. lie OOO<S dr1v· N..o • HANDYMAN to
Turtlttoctl. Sul\ny 28r 2b• Wini., 11150 Incl utll. G.trdtn Ap~11mtn\s No dtP Of NC. req'd. drlt>". tic, reetroorne, llASSAIE l•Mew. Ing r.cord, N .. t apf)ear· work In hlllO-lndfy l "yd
_ &fld unit, 2 car gar, wood 26M48e, 850-0811 Oavtd 5415·6761 17301 Beach Blvd. Hunl· 719 NO. HAABOR BLVD, 114 .... 1IOI••. ance. f!reeway 810,.., 'llOftl, M11tt ~Eng &
fire. fr;plc, Ult patlo,pool IOUlflllT WT mfe81iBJIU Ntwpor1 8uc.h So. Mtl' aht 3Br "" E'llde lngton S..Ch, 842-2934, tfULL£AlON Prt, I -• 1 ... tr Call for appt. 66&-03'3 ~ • good 'llOftl8f & able
tennl1U min toUCI &40S 1 Br, wtnt., mtl 1800/mo 1700 16th Street CM. Clttn, go r•I•, 25-30 IAT VllW 110·1111 114-tW-1111, lt1. brlv•rt otoH covntry. to worll th• l\ra of
twy.21311135-9039Anne Incl utll No peu. TtWUm (al Dover) vr•. 'h rent & utll. Ctll Buultl1,.11largeof'tlot...,•ll· ll&YAWHI frl,l·I••• Cell!, llotnee req1,.1lred. !f.~.·P2M:.~~·~ntMlffloubr
... C 22~1 673-7844 ......... ,... 642·5'13 _M<>,..,.,,..,_·7...,26,_5_a_f1..,..6_P,..m_.=--, 1bi.. 8-42...(844, Mon•f!rl, ATTRACTIVE Mtc Gr~ Yachl COl'p, .,,....., " """'
!!I I• OCEANFRONT wntr Frplc. vaulted celllnge, dbl Mir to ltlr axC!Ullve Cher· 11-5. MAS8USS£S 183 I Pla~tlt, Coale g:;~c:.~·10!~-6~~
be n~ ~~~Y'f!m!c8~·ultrl gulet, a11ac. co.mp turn'. r.w~~~ :•·1770 Ntwport Bue.II No, ry Lakt ho.mt, N.8, '378 "1111 " TO SERVE YOU. Mesa.
lll50tmo.'843>2239 · !7 .. s~ .. ! S 1000/mo 1 Bdrm w. 88 M30 880 lrvinf A¥tnut mo + ~ ulll. 6•6-8&35 EX£CVTIVESUIT£ .,,..1'1ITT Drlvert , mornln" and , .... ., _v_.,.._.,.... ____ ...,,......,. 886 W. 181h St. (Ill 16th) MiFiO tl'lr N.8 houee, 2 NwpnCtr 8'0_..70 Do you It¥• In• tcnC)Cjtt ottan 'lltlen you an.moon, Mon· rl, UM netOed for ¥9t hOllPltM In F~BU8LrOU&S OC2•nl!A, N2Vl&Wba. ~··'~HI ~ 845-2739 6•S-l1 04 bike from beaett. Pool, I T!LfVl8ION·FRHl\OfM7 uP .. 11 r..uCI lt...g1•1n1~d01Hy ~~~In~ UIOUM IMcl\, 4.~88 • 1ennle '300/mo. Andy, I an• A ~z PllOt ~ttr Ot ... ,, ecr .. • 10 ............... ..:a·. Mon. I n\KL 1 1500/mo g,. .... 57 4', I Jec/.1i n::tO ... .., ..... ,,.1... In l rMOh the Otanoe Coaat 24'P4'A N91 Blvd. Cott• C1Halfled Ada .,. th•
'! ---t>tech. utll 1950 Have you raad tod•Y'• ........ 903it .. ...,.., "" II I WO\.lld 1 •to talk 0 you market. M... ana~r 10 a &u00Mal1,.1I
Wanl Ad Help'? 7ee..tl529, &S .1828 Clutlfled Ad97 II not, Miik• your ahopplng .... Need r.ma1e rmmte. 8hr ::Ulr.t th~:i~~:,: ~ 1142-6811 91W'I09 or yvd .... I It'•• you're mlealng lht bttl ltt by 1,.1111ng the Deity Pl· l'louM, 8a4. la. w/ttudtn HL\. ldl• Item• wllh a ~ter -Y to tall tn0te
642·M 7t Want Ada Call 642·M78 ~In IO'lll"I _ lot ClaMlflecl <It • t275M.111~8518 tr*, 842·'321• .~~~~~~~~..1.=:Dlllly::::::::P11o=t=~-::aul=fled=-A-::d:l:::J*=O=IC)le==' =====::.
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C'\range Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Sept. 13, 1983 C1
Mnrtllla1 Lt• !Ur!ttJ!I Ctludc TU. llltldul luM!!s l1a11 Cltul_g La ..... J1•1 !!mat Plutn/letau letrttarlal iiiiiiiiiiii==iiiiiiiiiiiiil7Uc~-;:D::•::Y .. : .. -~, ... ~ed::: .. : .. : .. ' t:i.io::n:i-· 6.e. Tid' 8ffi@M ... ~ ...... --.. ...__.,.._ ... r lll =-... , KoeiN'8 cd'XNIAd •••--PWff»XtcHINd lwtint -w.,.. ., ,..,_ le '" ~..._ ...._ ..,._, .. ......, ._... ...__ -SERVICE th h"' Ul-llllAIOI,••-STARVING COLLEGE .. .--. .. -. Int/--'. 30 ....... "TY.,.Pl"'bAM'IMAAWfml''IMmlillPllllZDlf'lll" $1 84 d -•ti-pr""'r·-In I "'""em .... ,,,_: ............. , ._ I~ ............... Lie. • -~1~ ..... -·bln-all : • oroug ·~ STUDEUTS u ovtNO co .--.w.......... -· ··-~'""""'"'"'""'" """ per IY h~me ·;,viron,;.nl. c.1-kltchenl, betha. lhowera, Fr~'Mtimal.."'831-2345 -;;;.•t;~;; dMn houM. MQ..0851 LIG. T;;4..Se. lnaur'9d.. N•t. Peul S..5-2977 For lndfv./eml ~
Thal'e
1
ALL you pay for a ebrallng 8th yr, Tod· d.cka. Craig 648-9873 ELECTRICIAN.· 20 V"'"' Lawn mlllnt/Rolotllllng Crpl l Window C!Mnlng d~I 841·8'27 ED'S PLASTERING \ Hr/day/wt!. ~
30 cley Ml dlerl-Elwn 850-0907 ClllW CUt EXP. REAS. RATES"° Freuetimat .. ~..eoes Prof. raulta at r .... rat• Lan ~~;.;g, WATCH US GROWi Int/ext. Patcf\lngltextu,.. f ret ........
In tlM ......... ' llC'b blYClRE 848-7802 .... !!!!!.. CALL BOB ""-4126 sy1tem~::.r.111er or •••• a.. Aeat110001. 845-8258 .... 1 ... 1-. DAIL y FUIF ==r my m Of 1 ..... yr old•. M ... Vetcle. rualtu• Home 1'P:ir::t!WS*ltry lt~lt/Tlltrt11ll 11 yra elCptl'lenoe, .. PAHmH •••• wa, Fr...... Aon 846-2537
PILOT your omce. Retired · 35 S\llanna 65e--3098 ltflaJUlaL Cabln...-EJec..Plumbl~ R~FS~Bectcy~1-228l 11~.lneured.Lloyd'a by Richard Sinor. Lie. HllrDfaa.llH J.C.TREESERVICE yruxper~548 ..... 082 Cfalnlttrl Xii typee Of Fln"liJW your Fenetng. DON 088-01 0 ....... Plf Lendceape. 2808o«. 14 yra of MWY WATER HEATER Special Trimming, removlll, yerd
SERVICE c...... ...... ..... Home Of mys~. Stft9 Home Repair• -Carpentry ...... OLUllll 71-4/597·7822 local cu11omer1. Pool heatera•Fumecea cteen-upe, etc. 842-1114 tFJeW cablneta, C&blnat R:mOdei/Re;;ra. comm. 494-8937, Fr• Ett. ~~~~~~~~4':e. Wedothrorougllwork. ~ collect. Thank you. 983-il 14 *Faucet•*Dl9poul•* 1'~---.... -----
DIRECTORY facing, bVI & lormlca 6. retld. UC'd, bonded, Ll4ni · llable and AEFS. With Lttal ltnittl tlALm P&llTIU Drain• Cleared from 1$ & ~air;'(
countanope. 842-0881 Ina. For •t. 552-9142. 11• ONE CALL DOES IT ALL complete carpet end lNicTioN. g YRS 6.c. Prompt, nut pr o -$25 enytlme. Repair•. Al . 9dtO(NOO.:::. C try Remodel/repair Unique & EEi We fix It, bl'Mk It,~ houaeoleenlng, wlndowa Exp $l50 + c.c . 845-8811 tMllonela. 836-7149 851·"°4M&M431-0500 eonal pro)9cta. 861•1041 DOITNOWll
UlfllUlllU y OYr Dalty Piiot
Service Directory
Repreaantatlve
CmMRY: Srt ;Jj unUIUal wont a ep«:t_alty. Tqpped/removed. CIMn ~haul It. 54 ~J::· CAlL TODAVI MOST IN 18 DAYS IUl'l Pllm• PHl ifn/lt~t flill .. itrk
Ph ..... 20 -c In ........ 20 yra. Lk:'d, bonOed. up,,_ lawna. 751-347e. laalla1 1--=_,..,.,,,.,,,·-=-=-,.,.,,...=--r __ R ... Fr .... t ••"71'""" ti!! c 1 p .. !!l!! • • .. -Pel bo eon.t "2-8314 JOAN'S CLEANING _..... . . .....,.. .,.. ..... oun ry ...... ....... HOME VARNISH wOAR
Ch11 Renov. 5-37-49 om ALOHA Prof GARDENER DUMP JOiiS X Cooking -Errand• -& All Lil Room Dance leaona INTERIOR . EXTERIOR A complete oommerclal, Doora Rlllll Bara .tc
142-Hll tit. H2 Repair-Alteration• .,., ....... Hornet & Apt Clean-Up, SMALL MOVING JOBS HahldDutlea. 540-1287 $10 Speclal. Herbor CourtMty••tlmat.. r~en!~1~1•1 and •20vriexp.'81w3181t Doora-Wlndow.-Cablnata Mt:9y dO;i ilO any a . Yard, Roto, Edge, Mow. MIKE648-l391 Center at Wiiton. DON 84-4-4798 r.....,r . ...,.,.. "
Panel-Patloa-Fencee. 35 Grooming achl leachef ~!!~1!'.!!:1 aTrMa1 trim, HAUL·MOVE·REMOVE ~~~r~~gh H=:~~~ge, 1·10PM. 850-30-48. INT/EXT. CALL JIM, Psy01l .. l1aJ ...... Cltu.lat
Atrtllln yra exp. .J«ry S..8-4413 21 yre exp«. 546-284e F~-:;.: 0:..!8sa6 Furniture, Traah, Tr... Pat '494.0280 ' •a1tati HI· llt0 tfaall~ 1
8
1GtUNStiieHl-Nc;;;;;E· WINOOWlft"
•-.. -~ ... -----a-1Jr/1mall Jobi. Fencee, =all . 963-5-i 15 NORM Aerobics, Weight Training, ';h....,.. pertltlonl L Clean Upa -Landecaplng LT HAULING _ MOVING Jaailtdal BRICK RK: Smalf Jobe. FOR WO ONLY: CLEANING 842-1549
dence, ate. ln1Uuctlon: rataa s't-731 "~11ow ALL/ACOUSTfCAL Haullng ·TretTrtm o-1e1C'-·-Up1,Jon 0Nt00EMAJNf.SERYfCE Newport, Cotta M .. a. RAI /LPH'SRPAINLTlcl~dG Se11ua 1 Aweraneea --w-IT=E ...... w---1,.-..,,'" .. =-... -prtvate or amell group In · ..... ...., sm·" ..,. .. _ & Rep·'-Free ---lmet• ••2 """7 .._, -· lrvtne. Reta. 875 "17'" nt ext. eaa. . or-·p·••o .... ,.. H """" your home or office. -,.,.,. l58~.,·· -· · _. ... ..., 845-81921731-2918 Compl. Jenltorlal Serv. .,,, " Free eat. 841·3588/24 hr ~ ...,.. __ .,.. WINDOW WASHING
BOO SQUAD 544-9400 Carftt hrTl1t BUD 552-9 2 larM~ Wllfe4 GEORGE'S CLEAN UPS eervlng O.C. Llc'd, Ina. Cuitom Brlclc·Stone DIANETIC AUDITING "The only magic II ~.....--......------Carpet dMnfng bY retired DRYWALL TAPING Mowln E Twice Free Ntlmataa 751-3487 Block·Concrete. Llo'd. lnet .... Awar..,.... QUALITY" 831-2029 AIJlalt Jour~an. For Ir• e1t: All Taxtur• & Aoou1t10 mon& I ;;"'to 125~ & HAULING. No Job too · Rele. Free eat. S..9-9492 lnvett In you 845-5133 -'118(""""~iVeW--a•y ... p""'8fiC""""lng_[_ot_. Cnarlel 873-7435 att. 6 Free Mt. Kavin 673·1503 432-1887 mall. 895-8008 Laa•11•ti•1 a.. .. e stnlct F~f'=...:..Fe.:.=-te.
Repalra-Sealcoatlng c ;.._ HAULING: SMALL JOBS Renovating -'Aototllllng •m•t_ -· s&s Aapt\lt 831,...199llc tatat -acrttt D _._ 1 "111111 UIMlll Trun & Furniture Sprlnkier. -Clean ups -Ale MOVING· Cuetom raumee/cav., cement:Uuonary-BJ()CJ( fftn~a MATT 845-5089 Dave 842-4853 Qulck-.Careful. Low ratee. leltera/Job MarCh lttla Walla-Cu.11.work.Llc. ElECTRfCfAN: Priced 839'-603S YO c L E UL Bud549-52.85 Uc.T138048 552-0410 tlp1-Ca11eDS873·1107
#381057 Rob 673·8094 right, free Mtlmate on JESSIE'S GARDENING U AL • W HA II =---..-......-------1 lttfla I II Job •-Compl laa & 'I Compl. clean up, remove. *A-1 •IYlll* Concrete, muonry, net· arge or ema •· L.... · c n upa a ger1 auto detau & wkly malnt. Cla11llled Ads are the ioft~~~~~~~ 398821 873-0359 malnl Free•t 5'40-3035 Beat quality. 25yr. axp. u oo ng-typee worl(, foundatlona. Block, · · · MfVlce. 84+8191 Vic anewer to 11 successful Competltlveratee. : e, New-Racover·Oed<•
brick. Llc'd. 538-5013. LIC'D ElECTRICIAN Landecape Maintenance garage or yard Mlel tt'a a Lie. T • 118,428 730-1353 covert, lencH, apH. Lie. #411802. &48-9734 Quellty worl(/Reu. rat• GIMn-upa. Mow & Trim. Sell thing• rut with Dally better way to tell more 1--------Quality work, reu, axp'd, --------1 Want Ads Call 6-42-5678 Clasalfled Ads 642-5678 TOM 831-5072 Reel. ratM. 538-1810 Piiot Want Ads. people! Claaaltled Ada 842-5678 llcd. 983-0022 Iv• me11 Seo Idle ltema 642•5678
5100 i:liiltlii1i1Wiiluiit"iiiiiiiliilMi Belt Wu.t.. 5100 1111 Waatt4 5100 ltlr Waatt4
I• llOIPTllllST SALES
For Claeallled M
ACTION Calle
Dally Piiot
AD-VISOR
642-5678
A11l1tlng Newapeper Sml ed.,_...,., need• PfT llLll, Hff•'I llOH MPITlll Dealer In lrvtna .,.... -.--, Must enjoy wortdng with receptionist. Flexible hra. .. .llWIUY Mature peraon wlbual. &
children Mon-Fri, 10:00 97M851 Bunurna IMlc• an •>e-computer up. 75"-8363 • HOROSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZlE
am. -7:30 pm.m Van, U.,I....... perlenc9d flrie l•w.lry UU.I PU•-statton,,.:.~on or Small _, ••I• a Pe r1 on. W • -IMIAL lfflll promote from within and PLANT STORE. P/tlme. Wednesday, Septem ber H r~ble, ,,e.= Newport Beact1 rea1 et1ete otter excellent potent1e1 945.3392 10-&pm.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Vigor returns, optimism scores need apply. Salery firm llH •n tmmad tor promotion to man-sei.. Re9•
knockout over gloom and you 'll be at right place at crucial l200.00 Welle plua mll• ~,;!'."':,=~~~ ~~t~~.~~~np• nb~n•~I~ 1200+ IAY
t f:\ busin u· d · rsal age. Contact G. Hvda ,momen . .l"OCUS on career, ess, pres ge an uruve &42-4321Mon·Frt,9:3o -In • beaut11111 otrlce packm,. Cal Dixie 10.3, Comm. Olymplc Sliver
appeal. Project is completed, you gain greater freedom and 11:00 a.m. ONLY. w/nlce people. Pleuant 213·7 7·8518 Dollar Pro0rem to busl-
dded( . · telphone voloe. typing na11e1. Fuli or pert/time.
a recognition. NurMry Salal FIT PIT (45WPM). good apall-lea Cell 9-11am, 549·5101.
TAVRUS (April 20-May 20): Focus on travel, new starts, ~ellenglng ~· ben· tnglgcai:nmer. order!~ C'1a11tfle611dVertlllngt• Saoel.l!(loh ~for .. tab·
greater independence and a "serious" romantic encounter. Nu~.:= 49t&200 ='":e,-!':io..::;':a phone 111e1 poeltlon llahed route ln · Cd~.
Spotligh t on creativity, ability to articulate ideas in innovative tlon • & Polllhed cueni avallable with the NEWS ~ood . earnings. Hra,
manner. Also, Aquarius persons play significant roles. Follow ~ci lh:if;, ~~: contact ttcllla .,. re-In Mllllon Viejo. Eltab-9.30·1.30pm. Must have
hunch MacGr-.nr Yacht corp. quited. Good attltUde & lllhed cS.-with Nlary car. Alto looklng for PIT · · -..-· dependability a mutt Hra and commllllon. Ex<*-help In the Dell. Expc11 GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You're being pulled in two 1831 Plaoentla, C.M. ~!able 16 s* hr lent opportunity IOt ex· Prat, but wlll train.
directions-get rid of security blanket, take chance on your own PART-TIME, Count• help, w/revtews in 3 & 8 moe. perlenced phone peraon. 875-7404 after 3 PM.
talents. You gain information concerning fi.9cal. responsibility or 11-3. Gary'• Datil, N.B. A"*t In P*90n at 5031 Permanent poaltlon, Seoretarlel
lack of it. Involves one close to you, affects security and sa~ 752"5401 ~:"t>Or ~rte..= ~ ~ ~arf=~ ~:~ IMllllTUT1YI HIT
program. PAIT n• Jemborea) bl'Wt1 10.12 & appt. 788-3831 P,::'~":1 =::t:er"=~ CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Diversify, make travel plans, Earn up to $400 par 1 ...... (714) 861-1000. Salee pany Experlanca 1n
be prepared for surge of popularity that includes numerous =~·~t=:: Racept1on11t/H cratery. ~~~~::~~fA~Z~: phon.••. t~lng. Or·
90dal invitations. Lunar emphasis on p ublicity, p u blic relations, Need dependable auto to :!:!:!;t~~;.::.~~ Natlona laadlng pubtllhef gantzau:~~; •must.
partnershps and marriage. Gemini, Sagittarius natives figure =~~ = (f~~ ~ Job lnoludH typing, of Chrletlen Literature --------
prominently. day), Weekday P.M. enewerlng phones ftllng aeet<1 man&. women (lull llOllTlllY
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Attent on restrictions, health, Weekend• A.M. Call Mr. =-==~~} ~0 P=~ t';d~~ c,:~~~~:i~.:.~=~
employment and attention to tasks which have been neglected. :err~ 842•4321· ext e.rker PO Box 23, CdM. othare &. earn hlgll aervtOet firm. Newport
Recent reversal serves to make you stronger, more determined. 43· E. 92125 or call &40-1-428 financial reward1. Rap-Beach. Excellent Car .. ,
You are goina to win, perha""' despite yourself. Soorpio is PllTTml for eppt. reaent Zondervan Opportunity, with di· --c ,,..... -·----------i through th• Chrlstlen veratly end challenge. involved. "5&aa-llllPT/ll•nllY . Churctia, echool1, and M111t poNMS top level
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Focus on freedom, sensuality, l1,1nhe • .,,,.,., Fut peced ..... omca lMbte bellevlng people In executive MCr'1erlal •x·
d dre Be nrrten ........... _,. ..-, reoapt/MC w/gd yovr area. Thie 11 not Ptrtence. Call 553-0940 speculation, elements of timing and luck an chll n . ready ..._ 1._ WIS.. math ablltly a. typing bookstore wort!. Training Mon-Fri, 9-5:30.
for change, travel, variety and ability to imprint style. Definite 40-45, hr• 12-1:30, provided pluacan receive 1,,SeQ--_.------
pin lndicated through self-expression. especially wriUen word. llnt Utt........... Mon-Fr1 & 9-2 on Sat. i'' ~iow.:;:· quartr'Y EXEC~ESECRETARV
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Concern centers around moving, ..... If.... :_~· Call~ medical a 1n. ~=;.,::. Top management at luxury
property,domesticity.relationawithfainilymember.Keynowis ,....,......, ..... --------1 Ir• retirement plan & LagunaBeachhottl
...a: ... 1 .......... ..-. ,,_ ·-----..a ----> h .... ,.._, ......,....... ...._=rla lllPT/ •• lft. management level requlr .. proleeeloanl ~...---7 · ~reeepti~nn:u w en! ~--·.7• """'\.U'ty ---.-Electronlca fir"', C,M, promotion• (aven MCretaryforlut~ enter picture. Individuals you had lost contact with are again on ,.,... .... Ht ..-1 fUll time reoep-pa.rt-time) ptue be your otnce. Muat be
acene, available for help if you 90 request. W. lat It., htta tlonllt w/pleeaant phone own boll & chool9 own lndependant, Mlf·etarter
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Remain flexible, display ............... paraonaltty, ability to hourl.Many repaurgent-w/goodlkllla,lncld lallJ Pitt IM handle -4 llna lntercomm. ly needed to property..,. lh. We offer 1dnt wor1<1ng versatility, define tenns and communicate with relatives in • • phone eystam & eome v1oe local, •t•t• & na-cond.&.benefltt.Call
transit. Member of opposite sex is confused about feelings -PUl.ranl typi ng. Minimum 8 tlopel .,..... For com-OonnaBennett
don't make long-range commitment. Pisces, Cancer, Virgo Newport Baacn. 10-7 monthl axper. 5-40-9284 Plet• Information pleue 49"·8480·
M Ft ~ ......... __. --------1 lltend tlM ear-Op-llORn••y penons play prominent roles. on· r · • '"""' ,......,,..,. I.I Ill.II a.-"""uni"' M•tlnn·, Cell -RX depertment axpet· -· ""'' " . .., "Frid-~" SAGITI' ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ); Accept responsibility, 1enoe pref. 84+2111 for career poaltlon wlamall toll tr .. to 800-253-6-491 with atr~-· • .__.1_ --'~--th .. ..:11 be!!~ that 'll be ~~to 1 bu1 IMdlng commercial for time & location of ..,.... 1~ ere ,,.,.... J.He&SUre, you e ... .,......_. U11rave PHOTO counter penon, brokerege nnn. Oegr.. meeting In your.,. .. this Ing, and aplloM 11<1111
"tons'' of red tape. Cycle moves up, relationship intensifies and pit, •XI* pref. Snepetiot pref, exper. not '**"" week. 11 married, pleaM needed for buay medk:el financial picture takes on bright hue. Capricorn figures 1 Hr P?loto, NB 848-2-424 ary. Income, training, bflngyour epouae. Pray a dlatrlbutor. Muat be wtlll · tl benefit•. &ibml1 ,_,me ... If God wootd haw organized and able to prorrunen •Y· Photo lab printer to s .... Manager. 3500 you enter thlt wondertUI work under preaeure.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22~Jan. 19): Study Sagittarius message w/Norltau oper., PIT. E. Cout ~ Sulla 1. Chnttlari Bullnea. 11 you Beneftta. Salery nego·
f al bl hin L cal cl ak -t--apply M·F. Snapahot 1 Hr ,.._ tlable. Phone 841-28e5 orv ua .e · t . unar,nwneri cy esatpe -it4Ul.....,t Photo. 149 Rlveralde vvoon• del er, Cellf. mtaetht11mpor1antmeet· betweenl0·12 noon.
seems as if you can do no wrong. Focus on money, popu.l.artty, Ave, Npt Bctl. 648-2424 92625. Ing then write to
--'bill d d l Mak nal r-aurant Zondervan Recruitment respo..... ty, a vancement an ove. e pel'90 appear-PICTURE FRAMER end ~ng for aggr ... lve. Center, PO Box 8130,
anoe, direct appeals and stress independence of thought, acti.on. Art oe11ery .-d• e n • r g , t 1 0 • , 0 0 d Grand Raplda, Michigan
Secretary-RaoaP\lonlet,
typlat and oenaral office for L.aQune NJouel CPA
firm. ~1-0757 AQUARIUS (Jan.020-Feb. 18): Areas behind scenes that Ill 11T111 I flTTD waltar/Weltr-. Bax· i-·"-9_508_· ____ _
had been "dark" will n ow receive benefit of greater Ught. F~~·:'t:f;3M tera. 5180 Birch St, NB. Stnt.t lflt. l ... 14,
Emphasis on hospitals, television and motion picture sets. Guard ~3:n::'!. ~· UUI PIH Pltlme evea/wknda. N•t
privacy, avoid making yoW'9elf "target" for malcontents. Leo Pre-School tucl'l•ra 1--------TlredolCommllllon appearance and hand· needed. PIT, 1&-30hrwtl. litlii ......_. aalM? writing only need ~ply.
plays k ey role. Chrtatlan mlnletry. Exp. Nlght/wknd Aulat. llllllllUHIR 2500 Newport Bt. CM.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Success achieved by winning 0 r EC E n '• d • d · nHded to •:r.r11IH It """' can hire. train, SERV'"E ST'"TION
fri ..a-d ,_.., I Social ts.76--$4.00 hr. Costa ..,.. -.. ...., ,.. ""' " 'enua an uu.Juencing peop e. · grace is emphasized, wish M e 4 2 9 181 ...... ,.._, &xper. motivate and men11ge • ATTENDENTS
,,.. e2.~:28 • ' required. A"*t In P"· MMe team, thl1 martcat· tull &. pert-time, axper fulfillment becomes reality. Hunch pays off, genuine bargain .,.. eon, Pier 1, ·2'710 HarbOf Ing progr•m hll • only. 875·227e
available where property or home appliances are concerned. Pr..sctiool teectlar. Tuee. Blvd., Coeta Meta. $ fOO,oo + enn11a1 --------
Cancer native plays key role. WatJ. Thura. 8:30-11:30 UTAILITlll• potential. NOT A IDYIOllTATlll
•----------------·-------· A.M. 16/hr. Npt Ben. FRANCHISE, NOT A llland eeteaman needed.
ACROSS
1 Hoboes:
sla11g
5Jal -
9 Europe~
14 Berserk
15 Condemn
16 Greeting
17 Islands off
Tlmor
18 Caledonian
19 Stay clear ol
2Q Break out
22 Values
24 Hat: slang
26 Overused
27 Seth's son
29 Chem. suffix
30 Croon -
33 Garment
37 Pressure:
pref.
38 Ore bodies
39 ww.11 cratt
40 African river
41 Old likewise
42 Estate
employee
44 Vegetable
45 Card game
46 Venture
47 llallan
2 3 4
49 Grow to be
53 Spectacle
57 Scold
58 Pause
59 Let go
61 Futile
62 Co11dltlon
63 Corrupt
64 --do-well
65 Was sick
66 Count (on)
67 Eris'
brother
DOWN
1 Servant
2 USA: pret
3 Rose
4 Ran a ship
5 Classifieds
6 Miik: pre1.
7 Lifeless
8 Concerned
9 Pure
10 Stage show
11 Swan genus
12 "I cannot
teu --··
13 Foxes
21 Camp gear
23 la not: dial.
25 Lineup
6
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
28 Newt
30 Farm worker
31 Coax
32 African
33 Hit
34 Aspire
35 Brainwave
36 Adherent:
sutt.
37 Porcelain
40 Corn
goddess
42 Plucky
43 Charge
7 8
acoount
45 Burst open
47Way
48 Tooth pan
50 Mandate
51 Free-for-all
52 Jugs
53 Famoua
lioness
54 Abomlnable
Snowman
55 And others
56 Ruffle
60 Layer
10 11 12 1
982-3257 after 4 PM. Sport1weer, lull time, MUL Tl·LEVEL. CALL Honeet retleble, e.xper s1to1--------B•lbOI. '" P1v•lll•n. 1·800·323-e558, EXT pref. Part or f\111 time. Call r----------+---------+---------P/T IUllUL 87M2" A148, ASK FOR MR Greg It 499·1019 btwn ltlt Waat.. 1100 ltll Waat.. SIM ltlt ...... II ..
_ .. _ .... _._ .. _ ... _____ ,_ ... _ ........ .. Sito ....... ...
t.EGAL SECRETARY.--------Meturewomen tooarefor 10.5,3dayawtlly,66wpm, Salal: 811dii Shop, part JACKSHOW.lfwemlel 8em-4pm. -:.:.::.1~:.::::;.:.;:;::..._.;;.:.;_1__,;.m_...-;;;;;;;;-....__.-.. ..
expar. Nwpt Center Law ....... -2 eml boyl, 1 & 3 tn my Coronadel Mer, 16.50 hr. time, nax hra. c.M. Mutt your call, come dlractly S1'11PP1t"G 6. Tettpnon .. urveywork, no Typl1t1reoeptlonlet, full Office. U11gstlon & cor· -~ -• Irv. home. Mon·Thura 71487&-0838Jlm haw exper In woman'a to: Envlornmantal UnleMIMMutteteatona RECEIVINGCLI< experience nacetHf'I, time t e m p ore q
porate emph .. 11, IBM II you have • atatlon 10'"4. 851·9372 lo hi Wiii I I Dyna mica. Inc. •I TuHal, along came a Full Time. Crown Hard-compeny wtll treln, no gs.pt-No~. Marctl of Dll"taywrlter axpar a Wagon or Van and can PIT IUD c t ng. tr• n n R .... 1 Cu"-Cl~ 1pldet end read In the 1•14 San ........... • ... 11 1 r-..-..... Im••· oat• ...... -.. raervlt, train, motlvll• ..... Pvt. p, O .. NB. 20 hrt wt!. bttdel. •m-a nn, ,......, • were. " m >y..... -ng, •• ary. ,..._~"' ~~·~.·~~~~~oc~i and eupervlte taenagar1 Muttbeebleton:x"to 2 llght type, matura. 558-9333 541821 ~:,<~lved~~ ~t'i~/~l:,tc~::'~:~ NewportBMCtl. nreldeallorttuclenta.For 16.00tw.oallU1..-rDO
8.30-5.30, 759-1080 contacting new cu•· tOfl trudle. Mu1t nave ~9·2287 MOf'a farnlllel .,.. getting hOur on the ho\.lr ftom lat'a Tun.t and bought It SHOE SALES: 25-35 hra ~t:'&ak•9w call Joan IPIAIAT•TltMll!.•Vl•lrtld•••
UULIHlnlllY ~= 1~ '°:'n ~ :;..~'t.:.. ~o~~ble PfT hefp. In & Out Photo. ~':a~~~o~~~!"': 9amto9pm. ' ~~u~~~t~ety:;:d~o~a~: =·~S>tC~~~,H~~·~ T~·wor1c No tell· to ~ W1y ":::
Npt Beech ~lonal office. '450 to '800 per weak lrvlne. Car Required. campel' tllat'I not 091t1ng other thlnge through BoottfY. Newport BMch. Ing, M1tlng up In~ weakencte. MUllt Mwie c»-
2 yeart · lltlgetlon ex· working ev.nlnga and Mecllcel Alllatent with Oamere k~ Pfel. uaed. Nit 11 now wtth a Have aomethlng 10 NII? Delly Piiot Claullled 844-2484, Mr. Mll11f. oomp11nywllitrllln,no•· ~ ""*-C9l'MI penenoa pratwrecs. Prao-8edturd .. C Mutt be 2Mt Of r:* ~tr:1!i.t~ ~ Hourt. 1M, 1&7~181 Cleaalfled Ad. Clullflad Ide dO 11 well, Ada. Calt 842·5678 Special PIT work, evg. perlence neoe11ary. iruck, v1n, et•tton
ttoe confined to Clvtl NII· ol er. on tact r. SPM reo.t222 PfT Salee. College atu-S-40-UO Of more. hra SS-7/hr. Mlary, WOftl tin W900") to __. ,....
getlon wtttl emphatlt on Roundtree •t 548-7058 • denu preferred. 10AM-aPM. Gr .. t tor 5-9PM Me>n·Frl. 9'-1AM paper ...., In 1Mne
oomplax 1ubro9at1on, w .. kd•Y• batw .. n ....... ,.., ...... t e .00·$1 2.00 hr. Newspaper etudanta or home· Sat. For eppt call Mra .,..._ Mutt be dlOen-
muet be fam1H1r with 11:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. oc:.::!f."' offla.. 845-M70 llf't 1PM. 8'9Ve KIDS E G makert. Th• Lunch· F1lher 882·&844. dable. Contact Gree ;.:1~::W~:!: -----•I NwptBcttat!~~~i 1ua.man11111 -ARN REAY TRIPS AND PRIZES! bllket eww.~•· ToP• ===~
(714) 861-0291 1•1M11 TUlml G1'911t QPPOttunltY tor*"' needed. ~H80 or Fem .... Pr9f Modale l tm. •1 "'1"1
Uc.d co.metotocw Inst~ "'°°""'per,... ......... .,....... dantlal ,...... ·r.~ 6 . :::~~a. Of Eacotla. (21S) .... ,.. ••I -I -·
tor nHd•d -for:riro· Lwn f--growing In-AMMlr phoMe, iMka., ltM9tlMl'lt aQel' 1 Wltll C« N DJ I I 'W ~ t>eeuty owtry In u 1. Natronal potntmenta a mtllnleln expanding tocaJ oom· 8ttt1Qnery8toreln one YUll Im Dt .. t ll"P. ..,,,,...., •
ii Cotta MeM .,..., • Organlzatlon° ~Ing. reoordl '°'i buay grOUp pany.::r>Ont 1~ rndel~needl .. ._!~: Mt1-• ~ C4ll e.t oell. beneflta. Call YVOfV'lll No Elcpet neceewy We =o• n N'ewport IPfl1 .,.,._ .,.. ....... _. .......,. ---at
71._ .... 7884 tt'lln c.;. Mr. Marrta • Mu.t MY9 ex· proper mgmt com· e-1010 H411p QIW tllem • htlld 19·.12_11_"' ee2.57ee · • ~.Ceil 942.1os1. m1e1110n ~ ~tton .... F, 11.n Earn top ... pert -1•
Uquof CWtl ~. No ..et'"' 8endl. ,..., bpenelloed ~ ''"~': . time evening•. Only .... IM I• .. exp« nee. Part tJme Job. Wllml llP W prftrwd but not ,.. ~. 842 13 po1lt111e, dep•ndable. WAIThUIJWAittii ~:~ negot labl• Hew 3 poaltlona avalt. lti UAOLOOl8T: co.ta MMI ~-.M/il.,Dforl•T°"'11&.ee. •~s 11-14 .,. °"ii°'"" adult• nMCI FUii Ot ~ "'1fllt tn ~.-1ng deOt. °' rtPd-net• orQentl9d eixpered ,_ ,.ur;. Tall mL . PhOM 14-1021. .,.,.on. 11..,.._: '°'I'•
LIT--~ .. ·xpanctt ~--~.· Frnt/beokofc ....... Tran~ ...,.,... EARN tr TO ... 5.00 PER wrttt W• .. loolc. l'Of IUll Of i : toe p,m. Monday .......... '7114....,, r-"" ...,.......,_"'' '"'.., . ....,.. ,., nl.U\ PfT lnCIMdM who c.n ltwuF'~. ~
torcar,.,.elagenoy.C.. vancement, no U · ~~="'ance 1 IULDTl11111T, Wt now""' 15 .-tor }Oll!W t1C1f WOfl( dtya: Pia eootY al 1UWB.mf.. WALL PAHlli ..,,.;;; J.,.., eao-1190 pel1enOI ~. Wiit • a ... "41ct, .. ,. to top beeftfa to MCure tadtra for lht or.,. Coast t ,H a. coa1t · Hwy,, Ned9d tn Coat& ...._ 3 OIMttbutcw ....-... to
LYN/RN live-In relief train,,:' be •i ': :: MovEA/DAIVlR ~Oto"' a:.:..:.:-::r Pilot. Otlr a... st.rt •l 3:30 J.m. llld UIQUnll leaet\. ~ min. _,,.,, 8ebN cM and ... flltll1c: ..,_..
nMdad to tel!• care ot ~.,:. .___r:.r,, w .... ,___ -;::. """... IO r.q. ~.7 !"4tr ........ until &:JO p.m . ...W.yi On S.tl/ldey, .. -.--• ttWned ~ end •· Pn to _,, a.
lcMng Y'OUlltl Ql*1 gift. " ~ ,;;·~~ 4t4+4.. .... ......... WOfka,.. lllOft fllll11. Yot1 Wll wn Mally tr• •uar::.-.....,... '*" ~'*""' ..,.,,, '"'· ~ M 111 ~ ...
S•l•rr. n4oot. Corn-Mr. Mt• tea-NU. NHdad lmmeclletalyl M•llllllT ~ =~~ ~-===tion":iv':t°= • _,..,_ Coet "2.aOC> ton 40t Mk for H7, Coeta --..·~ fottab a warm .ur-Mutt be ,.....,.., hard PtlOMe ..-, lite btckPtJ. " int _..... ......... [ WOf11 ~ tn • Sh8ron. ., .._ ~Call~ If\. Metllff womMI bebytlt· workln~ V1lld Of.Lio. aome:;:' .,,...:W~:Nr '°" .,, ....... ,..,, .,_.. Cll Mr ari. ~ lMt .... OU/ IOf> ,_ • 711 terltlQUeek...,., llVe In .. ,.1 • WW put In t4 tlcM'I m• ....i Wanta ............. "-' "pm . °' out, w/cw. OOOklng, .,....,... ~!~~~ .. 9Jf* .. · 1:.1,,,. enta AM'.A 9ncHw~t hOme '3t4 Newport -haotl Ttn el Ptiolllo 'Nit.._
Maldweni.cs toctMnoon-l'Mtng Mt• hahld dutlta. ..MLPll ,.._.,.._,... 7-CC. {714} 548•7058 Cell 111-iHt llftaf 1 Agenoy. Non-u1111t. 17l-tlo40
doe , experlenc• Topi91.r.q'd.Gooddrtv· Mak• 1 Mno 1na1eae1 of MCiPfiOHilf. mature.. p.m. l1bre. 1·1 rr• ••· 'y*" ,__.__ .._ ...
Pf«arrlld, Mii', •bout I n g r • o o r o . Juel U'IMng. A pt1t1me needed tot ~ Of· pertenoe. Oall Ardla, .-~.":... -HI.•
2W61\1'9petWMk.Hour• WknOeltlolldmyaofU.,.,,.. oollat• •tudent toott floel.AftemOant 1f!*>to Oecllltca to Oo4lttl U0-11'1 1t!U!n9. 0.. Ofttv.-Unw.
ly f9te negotlabte. o.a ~on.Medperton.11yr tiomaMoo!Mt,._,IAt'• l:IOwtth tcMM ~. ~ttla'ld Metllodl1t Oflvrofl. amo.tetrw h'l 4N-2111t. f1(' 3 yr boy. IMM .,.. tattc. Wiibur 1out91ne. _.,., ~blnty • "oil •em oft ttw "*'-' ... wlttl IAKl =~~ aJ>~-:O.=..r.Don ~-:!:!d;\'.:.J~nua ~'2.1:~'\~'17::J: : =~·~~ Cl•~=fff_,.11 ::::~
---
('8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Sept. 13, 1983
For furth~r information
r egarding adverti8in@
placen1en t in the
School8 & lnstruction8
Directory -call
Louise Griffith
64·2-5678
ext 324
_,.
A
• • ······················••4'1 : Parents ... : e Yo1.1 C•"t'•dh.t o·w,w ;ah1'~'"\l mo't P'~'CvCh\il& • e f&lil1tonsn.1~w"''YVU' 1-111.31\•l\lfu~nSfEP -e e S;sfem41lrt. r,a,n•"g ''-" t "ttc.rir• P•rtmtm.; • • • • "": ' <e.~" ...-~ •
: ~. ~~=0)1 :t ~ ~:-:h l! .: t . .0 .~ l !°"~•'
: .-"""" f .w :
: ~~'b_,~ : • • • '. tEP +) l rl1M.1.;u-Of'I 0'1'0'""''1J' 04t''*"''""'"° •""'' tO e • ~Ove<~.,,~f'tt ll...it'ltw,ri tri...,rf'••"'"" ltot'tl\'fl'U •
• •t••·l.~t(.f1~'1':f{'C."'l'f!U' r"ll(\IT"f"f' ... 1'l9ftif' •
• " .. -e .,.e,.>11ilti1~ J<"' ttf"'ll'oo.I• • e • • • '°"'"'°""''"'•'-.-"'ftrr'•I l'ttlS-4~2(Y.)0 • • •
•• ~: .. ' ...... ,,, ,... t•''"' •• ',,.r "'II' \ 'I •\ . ' ' .. . • STEP begin\ Septerrber • e 14; STEP/TEEN begin\ e
: L NovlfT1>cr \I. J : •......................• ~
RD PROCESgtc
SCHOOL
Learn How to use
Wang. IBM OSG & D1splaywnter
Xerox 860
Coll
(714) 556-6604
D "Y' • h tt1i1191 • Sahrdoyl
URN MORE M<>t4EY
Become a Word Processing Spec1ahst
Excellent Career Opportun111es
WORD PROCESSING AND INFORMATION
SYSTEMS 2232 S E Bros101-Su1te t~ S.nta Ana. <.:a 927Ut
"LOVE YOURSELF THll"
COURSES
Mon lOAM
Tue4PM&6PM
Parker Center, CM.
148 E. 22nd St.
Behavior Education
Pro1r1m. . ... ,..,.,, , ..
IAOI Tl SOlllL IPEOIAL
Enroll for 2 months guitar
lessons at regular price ($40.00
mo.)
In lllTU FllEE
Enrollment starts Sept. 6, 1983
Offer limited to new enrollments
& quantity on hand. ••m A. f red Glett Studios
2052 NewJ>«t lfvd.
Cotta Meao, CA
851-8633
Pacific
Travel
School
610 E. i 7th St., Santa Ana.
c •. 9 2701
ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY PRIVATE
ACC.REDrrED TRAVEL AGENCY SCHOOL
Americ.n Alrllne Sabre Come>uter Trelnlng
MOANING. AFTERNOON, EVENING CLASSES
• Call ( 714) 543-9495
Aal .. ,.,_ --· - -,.._....., .......
w;-.;•-.i!Oiii;....•..i '79 Suzuki RM 126: i360. 950 y r Mull NII. Gd eoncl. Call'="--------
Kimble, xlnl cond., i3800 759-115& John ·n Chevy ~ton PU, good
M negotiable 7eo-tee t 'IO Y&mlha Maxim 850 cond. U800. 850-56'42
PIANO. Small Upright. Xlnt cond, fairing, xtru. '78 Chevy V. ton w/full l1a1a
Be1ut. eond. thr"out. 11500/obo. 552-1592 AlUka rllllng cmpr, Ilk•
Tuned. llOOI, Oeliv.r.d. 'IO Yamahl XS11. llke new se<>OO/ofr, 559-9363
$750. Catt 847-6872 new. 4800 mt, qulcklltver.
Pl'"NO. Stnrw & Clat;W it·~ $2500 obo. 731-8574 '79 GMC 12' Stike bed ,. -., " ~ w/full overhead rack, dlo mdl. Xlnt oond. Honda '83. CR.C80R. Rid· duel 8' tool box etch
$1400, 840-9097 den " tlmea, mu1t Mii. lid•. tower 1tor1Q• box PUOTIOI Pldll s 1950, 776-3149. uch lid•, d11&120 gat tuet
I I ..._ __ h I .. _ lttlr & .. n 10.,. tank1, radio, heater, PS, Miii .. i nc . ....... • norm• ..,.,.. M new Pwr brtc•. new velvet
llve ry & tun\tlQ-$395. 178 Titan, 21 ft. 18,000 ml, touch clutch, 1pprox SOUTH
536-1775, 10-ePM nlol. 18500. $tt.o795, 58,500 ml. Xlnt cond.
Upright piano, good cond, IYll 548-8823 0111 good mllHge. OOUllTY
1750 Incl. det. 98-4-3148 '77 Dodge Mayfl~ Mini $8750. 552-8583 lllZU
Upright Practloe piano & hOfM, 19'. 31.000 ml, nu '80 FMd Courier Ing-bed. uw1 WIU Ill
bench , 1250 obo. Urn. 380 eng, cab air, 5·1Pd, lo ml, S3000. t• ii-a••LI 842-9702 500+ gu tank range, 842-8495 " --1I11 pa 4 . $ 8 5 0 0 . -. --------VOiume Salee, Servic. fe1tl•2'"'• IUO 241-1109 81 Toyota llhortbed PU. And Leutno -I -AC, AM/FM c111ette 1871l"'---.. Bt d ® • ci\lbe, uled f ralltrt 1tweo. new tlrM, & wtll•. ......... v · W ~. 299. 873-7349 Tra"\ 1024 roll bar. l.llellent cond. Huntington Belch ~
Surfbcwd 5'10" round S..I off., 84&-e474 (714) 142-2000 ·~ ~
pin xlnt 1130. 54._..282 Colem1n Tent Triller •-ti laau 11 ... 1 _.. . • w/extra room enclolure. -.... , 'W a n, W le, 11111 1n bo>t. s1eepe e. Cla111et ton '76 RSt7 S:ep, Xie .• n:t. .__" t••z Sto\19, link, toebox, por1 u•1F•• ~··· REALLY VW _...._ ••• -po~t . Ueed 4 tlmH. 1111 Tl .. 11111 ,..., .., -· .,,..,,_., fricOIOr RcXR:m01e TV • ., lobo,754-7995 one ...... .,.. for 28 --r•. SHARP seeooiobo. •tU•••-• .. .., "" •-Darcy IMS-1757. P.P. ._.. .•
1135494-29211496-2675 Pvt party t t bu Whit• with black COV· SOUTH
BEAUTIFUL 25" RCA tri·-' tr-•~ :_--~y toy wtlble top. All power. '79 RX7 GS, mull Mil. ...., .,_ . ..--.. 19200. crl1l1. $5500 obo. cou1n Color TV, 2 yr wmry buy,wliloometoyou.Call 213-493-1151 87S-4021M&75--0872 $148. Fr .. det Open 213/925-8840. Sun. TV John'• &46-17ee '52 MG TD-genuine itrc .. n Ina 9149 YILllWAIEI
2800 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
140-1110
C~nnttt H 13 iM co;v:i; Ciu:IC w/146
eng. Fut. clMn, rune Qttl I 1400 obo. 978-3 f85
evee .
'87 Corvatr Monza ClllllC.
reblt mtr. elClt COfl(I, grt
mpg, nice Int, mlQI .
amlfm c111. 12000 .
840-7488
'87 CORVETTE coupe. Rally R.s. Xlnt Cond . '"°° p.p. 873-5595 STEREO SPEAKERS JBL TralU~ty' clllllc:, not rec>1ic.. Mull 180 300 Touring S«len, MWI Wl.1 llf uu IOU Mlt 159-0188 ev.e C)( '" Ilk• new. 1700 ,_, NC. ,. __ ...,,._____ like n.w. Sunrt. fuel 1n1.. 11 •a ... .,, ·10 Orig .. _t• ,.. _ _._ V8
$300/obo. 873-1800, Aulo triller w7ele c. meg. $10K. 6"2·3214 ~ · '"'"" ......... ••• A VolumeS.., ~ prime eng, cleen.1 1495,
.,...,...,4511 brlkM, new ramp•. re-'71 FMd Muetang Conv •• 88 23osL. 2 tope, And LMllng Call ll834405.
Zenith TV . 25" color Com-oently r,inted, 12000. Pro!Mllonally, Claulcally M1toon/blk, am/Im CUI, 18711 e.ecn Blvd.
manes.... Solld oek oon-70-1830 reetored. Totally rebl1 nu paint, uphol etc. Huntl"9'on BMc::h
eole, need• r.palr. 150 .... l1tim toil ~o . ml~~.~d1t!°4n~ 110.900. 493-8284 (114) 142-2000
Firm. 6-47-1M5 . . IMPORTANT 759-9078 '87 250S T.L.C. evident, '73 RED BOO . Muat Sell
'73 Chevy lmplll Cllm 2
Dr. AIC. PS/PB, 1111 whl,
CIC. 350 eng. 111tra
clean, 1 owner. 12260,
Call 540-0771. Pews INh 1112 NOTICE TO READERS Cllllk: Cruleer: '80 Pont. rec:ofdl, memt>w of lam-I 1800 (or beet ott.) ...... AND Bon Con Ilk lly, thoroughbred 15550. Good condition '78 Vege e..t. Wnn. New 18' Duftleld Bay ~1• ,_ ADVERTISERS n. vert, • new. 840-6110 .... batt. & motor AUQ. 13. Nr The price of lteme 14200/obo. 548_.88.4 Call 875-52341 tlrel. fully ~ped
n e w e ond. 173oo. adverttMd by vehlcle ReatM•'• drMm, '88 Cad '&7 280SL. mull 1111 '7.C Super Bug Snrl 1895" Cell 983-
1MS-7e73 dMlera In the vehicle Conv. Cfllllc. need• top, $12•900· 640•5192 am/Im case. gd Cono/n~ '78 Corwtte. 32.800 ml,
19' Botton Whaler, 125hp ot111llted advertlalng paint. tlr•. 11200. Mobll '70 280SE 3.5. mint cond, pnt. 12300. 6-45--0630 lml'I\~. lo/out. loed«I.
Evlnrude . 19500/0BO. column1doeenotlndude Station 1500 W Bllboe new IHther. pollahed ·74 vw WM1fall• p 1 18475 (zdu258) cell 875-1030em 1ny 1ppllcabt1 tlXH, Btvd. m1g1, 1unroof, &OK. camper Fact lie :,,: 842-8830 8M'l to 3 pm,
C llcenM, 1ran1fer fMa. a:n Ill! $11,500/obo. 548..,,451 can. · 1 4500; Ce ll '78 lmp&la, 4 dr, CIMn. lo 26' lf'Wtf, lmmac., wlll tlnence ctlargee, f ... tor ,..., I $2050 ~7 9 ..,, or trede. $1.C,000 or -•· ......, .. ,_ control d9-;77 Tudl Fox Station '70 280SL, very ci.en. lo 548-3387 dyt, 848-2131 m . obo. 4 . .._ o~ '"7"' "''"'"1 -....,.,..,..,., " ml. 118,"""'. '""1-1105 evtwkndL 834-9202 ..... , .... • v .,.,,,_, 11tce certlltcetton1 or Wagon. tmmec. Sunrt, .vu ..., ---------
40' Chrla Craft trl-c;abln, dealer documentery atlck, mult Mil. 11700. '78 450SL, xlnt cond, low •77 Rabbit, perfect cond. '79 Caprice Ct111tc,
hull whit• w/blue c:anvu, preparation chargee un-M8-11S. mu ... 127,000. 842·3002 Mu11 Mil. 12500/obo. loaded, lo ml, '*• MW.
eng needa wortc. GOOd leN OtnenrtlM IPlclfled 850-8139/834-4922 Mtt5. pp 87~220
value I 18,000 M 1.,m1. by the edV'lttleer. Alltet, l•...t...4 '78 MBZ 2.aD. BllCIY"f ____ .._ ___ _
•-.,..... ll12 Blue/Blue, perfectly '78 vw Duher Hthbk. '80 Monza, 4 cyt, IU1o. pa, 52&-aeao M 493-4101. ~,-,,-ltni--e-H_/___ .. ,. m1lnt. 83K ml, I 13,800 Stick, AIC. am/Im, lo ml amlfm, 11 blue wlwtlt vln.
'77 Continental 20' 10" '•un IOU 170 2802. a iPd. XMIFM. firm. P/P 780-M58 '3500,ph 552-8138 top. $2800. 54&-0M2
t/O , 1"01\p OMC, ctean.12500.84()-.0408 .82 300D Turbo. aaaurM .78 VW Pop Top '83 C a mero Be r· flberglau hull wltrlller, '11"1 MBZ 220 hood, INnk, '78 3201 I t d ..... t thl ltnettl•loeded. +VI , pert
VHF r.dlo "-th 11_ .. _ other_ .... $75 .., vw • x n con • peymen 1, no no cempmobll e , 110111. S • ...,. ,...., ,,_ --"' t I ...__. •7300 dn 770 7 • 15 cond ltvef/gray IXI, e lec wench. comp Bui rear bench ,....,. an, oa......., • · · -.. relrlg., ale, am/Im case .. cnarcoet Int. 4200 mJ
equipped w/boli cover, 8e1·2220 881-2220 75t-l43.c, 780-0195 '&2 300SD. Midnight Bluel 4 lK, .uper clean, $8,800 $10.995 obo 98&-G428
$8400. 7eo-.3&20. ·ee Mustang Body & Inter. '79 320, 11tra cleen. Bllatten P111mlno. 14,000 ml OBO 840-1292
'77 Formula Thunderbird $10-$100. 492-7343 llhoclca, Blaupunkt, alarm Euro headllght1, Mich· '79 Dal Rabbit, 2 dr. For Ille '72 Vega $500. metalllo gray. Mu11 Sac. elln1, Grand Prix 11 ... eo. 1unrool. rune greil. Minor engine work
V8 Mere crulMf. $6000 PAINT AND LIGHT BODY 19950. 54&-28&8 1unroof, cover, etc. 12900/obo 548-8451 nHded More info.
obo. 496-0798 WORK· S1ve " & In-$33,500. 494·6914 9e&-2584 r i .. •• ....._ GRAND BANKS dle .. I er-· your car'I value '81 BMW 3201, 5,000 ml, '79 Rabbit, exit cond ---------JeJte WHIM 5105 AHliHCH Hll II& tart -.... mir1m-.--•--...-:--tre~ 3_ xlnt ~.. by u . Blff 989•1221 _no title, wrecked left '83 380SL, ABS brak ... throughout. em/Im, air, 4 SEE II FlllTI AoOseKPA & OA CHllD-Coldspot SIS refrto rrzr, Country French rum. nr 2 CUh reg111an, Unleonlc, ..._ ''" ............ t Eno tren1 rMr 500 1uep, tow mll••· 1pd. grt 11uc1ent car. We hew a good 116actton
CARE. live-In. Swedish lcemaker. lllnt cond, new, 6ecorlted by Can· brand ,_, COii 1350, Pfc of malnlt5 .... "'5-00' °"p WP. FOREIGN & DOMESTIC "•tc Penect
0
'3500 $.42,000. PIP S.2-3002 $3200. MM533 am of NEW ' "* CM¥-Mll • 150 TCA. _.. btand ollt '" · · ENGINE MACHINE WORK Ill M j . ) ....__, .,_ girl 20. eJCper w/good rel• A v o c a d o • S 2 O O . nell & Chaffin, oomplete • · • .,, · &U-2814 Valve "'bt. eurtldng, be>-398-27 A.ell abwt the money wt ·79 vw Dllher Del. lmmac ,._... .,..
& drivers lie 673-~ t 1 6-44·5209 rm $4200. Coet of ar• MW, coet $400, Mii 1175. IN e:n 111... rl ;' One day MNlol can NVI you 1hN our thru-out. 1mlfm, air.
R'9iTned----;em.le. ea. Frigidaire 17 cu 11 relrlg, rug only wH 55.ooo Hitachi lleteo rec:leYW 1'tHU 'W ln~cC..... High quilt-Conventently Located purch-&. ..... plane. 111ck, eunrf. 12850. Pt1
$ 994--0500 dy 875-8781 ev $50. HltlChi IOlld 1t1t1 ii ' Hobie, Mang& h:J, nu ty wortl. L'-.-.-. D&D & Competltlvely Priced Jll nmlll 848-1184 perlenca in care ol elder· gd cond, 100 650· 1529 1 y , t • m G • 800 ..,_ r-----------
com 0 uprg r "0· beet llke new 1300 846-2131dye. M1-002tote.41-4383 rww • ._.... ' ·-·
..
COHHELL
CHEVROLET
...... """''"I 11. I "'-"i\\1f'-\
>46-1200
1)' Local refs 957-3063 GE -b-1 hi 11 1 Deluxe queen lllze 10l1 w/e'fFkre-atereo-8-trk, onzo lall8 .• 1 obo. Automottw M.etllnlng & llwm '7" vw ..,,_, ..,_bblt dlx -•-
Jo 1 WHIM/ Whi. 5 yrs old, xlnt cond., 988-7410 att.'4pm · A.M FM + turnte ble, OOll 1301 Qual1StrM1 41pd, 4dr, lt«eo. Jtlnt.
Do •• l tl·c s I 07 auto IC e·mllker S400. 1250 .... , $75. 873-1339 25 11 Santen• 625. Ulll'TWl '"· Tlllll s......s...vic.Leutnn NEWPORT BEACH 241< ml. 14700. 851-3922 • I
"'6 4112 Del U hol I• twtr aa111, nu outt>owd. Hm ··• Ill 1•-= ~·l .,.. -u11 P • r me w A.tmoat brand newelothlng ............ 3, off 982 .... .,. AITlllTIYI TUY CARVER • evv '80 Rabbit OelMI. lo ml, MA.TURE NORWEGIAN G W & bed wiped, met ax cond. it ore flxturll ·"'Oat .,............,.. ~ an/rf •• ..,, • dr ---o"-• ., ml , •DV 32, ·-ks dom~t·-E asher elec dryer, s250 55 ..... 50 (La.,....) •5000 11 ,.1 .. 500 Speot1llzed total cer1 MBZ 220D. '73. 4 epd, air, · .. ....,.... .. • ••--· -. ""• • ~ ~ -.... $200 pr 760-8738 ..-.... ,,_ • . I I • . 28' Lanoer '79 Del wN lor & & ll>" ..... 'c D-'6'1: m. "V mint cond 18500/obo IUPlf ctMn. 50 mpg. IU1o, PS. PB, IPllt pwr :"':C,~~,~~~~il2~~~ I l l Y 1_. .. _11 Ethan A.lien 80" LlbrlfY &73-1338 eteetlno. lurltno Jib 6 c:;t·Pldc~': ~ ~ ~ .. ~·i;,;:.:,11::~ dHperate · muet .. ,,: $3550. Ml-$533 lllTI ... ta.~ vlnyt top, 1111 wtll.
32 Swanage Ro. London rn,.,._ wall unit. exit cood. $325. Blck-Swtno. 1225. Brand ~;·~~~t~~~~~~ · 111...,1 ' '4..., "'" .... , .. ,,..,,.,..... • &75-8382 '81 Rabbit oonvert., 50K ~[of~ 84~~~ • 0 ·
SW18 Engtend ~ 957-8133 Evee 559.7417 new. Only 3 left. SteYa $15M. 25' Merrit Sloop, .... ...... Hti ~ i.lJlmn MBZ ·ee. 250SL. auto. 2 ml, Xln1, Sei50. 873-2658 • Dot 5510 Kenmore waahef & dryer, I Ill flHmRE 546-0729 mutt Mt! now1 Try l 10M. ~ WL" 1091, '*' olUllc, extt Prtv•t• pit1y. 79 Town & ~ Wgn,
arn'I 2 yra old $400. Evn Lee o57-8t33 Cotecovlllon. TurbO Ex· e.42-1234. Hlgtle9t CMtl lmmlcl. tor S......a.rvtc.L.wlng cond , malnt record•. VOLKSWAGEN ~'toc,~i,4 ~·
In Schnauzers, A.KC. 7 720·9097 .,1 _, __ ... _... •200 Ch-'r penllon module. Mveral 28, S..clleh Sloop,........,. r!'!,. ~n ... .,1_.. ct20!n.t85 le or WIEST 118.800. PP 956-2778 EXCLUSIVELY 81~ ~. e:..a..9769 ow
wlla. 11t shota. piper Maytag wuher, dryer, hvy "no -....,..,• · ., car1rldge1. 1140. Call .......,... ·~..., "" II tl"t "" tratned.$250 495-1430 duty,llkenew.late model ~·e=1/50· T•ble 3-9pm,He-272t. 4,dteMteng.helll~ IDllTlllY ,. @WISTWAGIN~1 DMJL HIT
Mutt NII purebred Glf· S185 ea.Reflg,2dr,lam· · Elec range 1 150 Pwr :l~=B~Prtvat~ Good ~~ ewe· •·n 830cel; 4 lpd. AIC.
1~~,!8J:.~in~:.:j~ ~a~~ 1i3150CJiii CONVENTllLE
man Shepherd pupa, xlnt lly u . $ 1•6. Freezer 19 cu Large dinette: MOdern, mower I fOO Apt ~ r91rtg Party 213-606-6781 .._.. ~ 197._ 1983 Buldli: •'~77!V3D.e!,., • .:....., .. 'C. ml. $3250. 546-3889 c:eted 10 qu.Ury MtVlo9. Sherp rAt. MUST SEE protection. lrg boned. t7 It, vary clean $145 Sturdy. Olk & Chrome. l l50 Truh ..-or r--• "'' ......... ...., ...... 12600080~ wks, $ 150. 240-2268 851-0192 MG 1150. 957-1390 s 100: 846-5648''...-• • s ANT AN A 3 0 * Jag u Ir.. T "7a ' ("4XEQ) '79 MO Mlget con'l'lrtlble .,. per11. ...... oom-LOlded, many 111r11. POl"ldlel bUt llllY model *'82 320I: 5 lpd, to ml. 20.000 ml. xlnt cond: petlttw ..... PrMen· '82 Dodge Olplomet, Pit Bull puppies, tO wtti1. Retrlg. apt alu , froet frM , Lthr chair & ottoman, trom GET READY FOR 115,000 under coat. OC>Mldered. Top pr1oee 1 lFGE&48) $4000 873-9020 tetlon of the unique 10.000 ml, "*'°' ecdo-pure-no papen, parent• almond. !Ike new $250. Norway, 1200. 780-03'" CHRISTMAS '39,000. 5"0-ton pllldl Cell Cltw at 8el'9f *'l3 320! 5 lpd "S" J>tcg • Volk.wegen q111J1ry .,._ dent, ~ fixed. Boot
P.R $100/obo 2<10-0131 839-4009 evenlnga ltllTTlln EARLY .,l mlCI INde 10 '48Cl8MICDenllh ~7;.t~ at (7 14) (900390S) ' . ftq"' . HH h~BCHALLMAN'S velue 17200, need cMh "~=:.fo~.P~~·.r~~· R~~:, :~~· .:n~llh~ 840-1141 ~~~~d~ei."~'vi:: Folkbolt 29'. xJnt cond. · *,l,~TT~: AIT. AIC. 18541.vgeot 464. naw lt'i\WISTW •""'IN '~'\ ~2'1:~ 13750. (2131
'350 up 546-2848 w11her $100. 848-5M8 MOVING SA.LE 1ntlque CleiuMI. Ornament• and ..S7ooo. 875-8335 meg WI llY .~81 32()1 6 IPd A/C l1et'IO, aunroof, 4 epd, '<i.11 ~-'lil'
dinette w/4 ehllre 1275. other Item&. PIMll cell ·eo Hobie te w/trV. Xlnt. auu DUI (~CUU444~ • ~ ... ~?tc!o~=t ~o:~~~· ,... Hll
Wanted girllrlend for my Relrlgetator, t9' Ft, gold N-Sota bed 1260. Olk Loulee fof yow order. 12795, 21sn22-0188dyt Ill 1l•I * 781204: 4 epct. eunroof. 7800WM1ml-t• , ·-·---1 AKCmaleSamoyed Call WHtlnghou11 Run1 coffeet.11>6&1175 ~ 8"0-8709-( "78delMl504 4•"" en/rt .... -·-•-494-8457dy494-3872evt good. $95 551-8182 . . Gholt 13, 13ft, flberet-091YPZ) ' ...,.., ' NMre.ecnlW-1"*191• X1n cones wtlt top 1MOO 112Fu1
11 -~. ~. Nt100.~· Hune y•rd eate, 1724 hull, oentrbtd, ~a *'IO 833c:al; 4 epd, lo Ml. air, lt-.O. "3,000 mt. Phone 714/VW1·WEST t • • •-.:-an a Ref rig., Ilk• nu. 2-dr ... .,.., • .....,... • (5555493) 13950. 831-3018 Total Pertormanc. vw·a or be9t ofter. r.u..aeso ,..... v f I $185 8"" ""'"" IOle Outeor TY 1280 TU811n Ave, CM. Oeenlng jib, trlr, OOOd cond. l560. *'12 7'"'"1 "' __ .._.. T _, roat rae . .,,, • .,,..... . out Ch1lr1 table• 87~ ._; "'epd, 1........,. p ..... Lt 1197 "Are You '87 Rencllero, OOOd WOftt ... nttque Amo. 18, ti.veled 432-8681 · • • (7355e37);••• Havln' A.ny F·-?" truck. I 1000/0 1 0 mirror door Sacrifice Under counter ber refrlg couehel, ptcturea, lampe LIDO 14 WITAAIL.ER. *"""' 320! •TT ''"'" "12 4 ::et ~ d .... $550. 841•1819 $50. 646-9526 N-w1terbed w/extru ""' ; ,.., •. 1Unroof. vv • • ....,..., oon 842-13-41 $475. 2 velvet challl John Wayne Tennie CIOb SAILS. ETC. Xlnt oond. (983ZER) 13800/otft,r. e ·58-42 ---------lMTIQUE TRUOIS Washer & Etec Dryer Frig-$ 1so. Swlvel rocker l50. memblrlhlp, 1900/obo. I 1900/obo. 8574211 *< 1'9SF~~) AIT. eunroof. 'II 111 f-.I Wt'rt lMJls ht ·~~~~:X,~ e.c':::J reel. ldalre, grHt cond 848-5990 83~145 aft. 8c>m Uttle recs 81bot, reedy 10 WI Ill n--.... -• fer .......... Reetored. some 1r1tully '300/ofr 540-7904 Ein I d U8EDCAAI & TRUCKS IJl-1111 compltly reltMed, nmec.h'I '74 Pinto Wgn, ftMdl ttree decorated. All ahapes & 218, 494-6087 Judy Oak dining rm tblw/2 18" L.=..H-~~f cn9tna. !8.2,: ~~ ~1!bf.~: l360 COMEINORCA.LLFOR 208W.1lt,S-ta ... 1 oondxlntl12,000.Call ,.....,.. & clutch. Mllll tell tlzl $250/up 846-2995 11111 & 4 Ohfl $800. lltVfn~a P:"~ CKrie:-"""' .,....,.,..,., ,,.. ,,_ .... APflAllll. CloMd sJ'nOay"'' 651-0824. 8114 .....i 11000/oft, 494-1119
GERRIE'S '"NTIOUES ·=·· . Mat1ria11 4 546-2789 ·~--.... •• -1 . 6uper Sabot ., .. ,,.. ,,..__._ .......... 'Ito '73 "11T ....... ,, ...... Former culfom-era of " -...w ''''·............, •2"'". ••• '"'"10 ""'"-......, ''"RO"' SELECTION OF • COUP9. """ '"'' ·n T-BIRD, LOW Ml. IS BACK L 12x&redwooddec:k-Oak llvlng rm Nl«>fa. Low coat video •rneafof • ---~ N'ewausEOBMW'SI lntr. Re bullt eng. Chlm<e!:':°" vw. New· GOOOCOHD.12100
35001qttotA.merlcanAn-lng .Onty 49 cenll!>l'ft. loveeea1. chr. tbi, ottmn all eyttema, ~.H 10 ta, 18211 aEACHBLVO. & liOOOlobo,pt\8"4·~53".C :reomm~~ CAL.Ll31~27
llqu11, ateo department fencing etao ~arbor PS2400. 548-2788 $33.96. Chip 89..,...47 1-::-a. &Li 7111 HUNTINGTON BEACH '73 Tari •· xlnt cond., '"n' ~~-· v-· A.._.., f~ 1-n-1•11 of ueec:tfumitur1& collec-Redwood 714/531-1317 ~••Ill --· vv ,,.... ..... ,,. 06 • llbtea.. Wiil buy Ettates retty, cotton print IOfl & MAGIC ISLAND gold ·--•• -11' Ml .... l• 1141-1111 gr .. t 10.300. 988-7981 Au horlud Warranty
· Caaerea love Mat. Like new. l300, llhl Incl tun -·-,._. L• 11111 In =· ~ ~~I 8ervlc9 Servlol & Plr1e '12 Montego MX. 2dr, reg. con1~n or whet have Ill-i I 1011 641-3194 evt memt>w p, . yre 70HP M.,o, A reel l•t. WI Plf--• •• VOLUME SALES I ~ wot ti. 'court.®-. met. g•. PIS P/8 AIC Jtlnt ,.._ you? 501 No. El Ci mino .,•~••• IM-t760. 831-3811..,... .. ,. ild/ftetl b09t. Clean. ,..,..__. -"-sw;;; --ii 8 _,W . llabll tr11NP. 111 '"5
R11t. San Clemente. Canon XEI. t Ammlf65A.. Sofa, green/beige, good omo. deek & IWIV9t etlr low eno In. '5"6. Dyl ..... .... s~~~·~~~~·!~ Whlllltan. Mull 1111: io:~· .,'~it~ & ~~~ tak• 551-127& Mat1l
492-0638 or 492-455'4 $185. 640-947~ ahape, $175. 842·8525 $100. Eurek• veowt'll • (714) 831-l480. AUi iii• LONG BEACH &41-8e03 CK 780-1475 Inger, S1.n11 Ana. Just 2\A4
Two antique C>fiental rugs, Ct•pttfl SOFAILOVESEAT. 1175 attechmenta-JClnt cond ~le!'" Hl~ Nl'Nt/ ... I (No. ChetyY Hlt-405) mllee No. of South Couf ·~512=~J..1r7'8 owner. Turkm1n-Bokh1r1 de-_ Leather1op tlblle. 150 $85 Singers-Ing M.etl ___ _ 24'0Her1)0f8MI. ll1..1)•-1tM Plaza.
11gn,1ppprox.3114' s250 det REXbv aa.W11tdt11ver.87MMe w1t~at1cMrtneab1Mt 1 P outbo er C08TAMEIA t, • ...-mCAR\fER ® OWllllMit tlft .. A.llO antique irunk, SCHOOL w/Alarl com-1200. Wedding ~ & motor, good cond. 137&. ..~ 141-1411 ra.ct.lna Wetc:ome ~ Cd &fia d. NCi1 \!Oit11Q9
175.caueves.648-2330. ~~11a1rr eqwu111~KA.&400B~oms1c· s ota1: Lret1apec11 s.et.,11 ¥.tP11110.10.!218_&.;~28C.CM ~!'Y11ff,~tm nw·--llnu tllf . -fChCE -~-~ reg. 1 bett q . ,196•
11 ,..w " "' l>ege lhhl•n cotton. ·.· ..... -• ...,, ···~=• '~ -• ,_. ....... -·~• • ... _ ... "~"" 545-1478 ~I HCll 195: 850 lnterfece Mod· atmoit new. 166010,r. ----_ ...... , '71 110, nu~ clutc:tt, ,...,,..,,.,, .. " , .. ,114i,,,..._ ---------tf cu. f\. retrlg, dl11 iloo. ule s 110; 830 Modem 786-0133 Pine nrewooct, IOI plte. •Bk II.DI -(bit ~ -4412 cond. °"" WHO•Y• ,,.. ·10 Cutlul, Medi peitnt,
Sharp micro, almOll ,,_ w I I ••• I Ink I I 8 0 T ndle bed I :~~:-"~~SM Need pelnt -the .. ~ • 1076. 2 12 Ille. Good tteneponattol'I.
1300 640-2"48 8e2-5955 N w new matt. ' ltiooth". Speolelllt lri LP 112 240Z • XL.NT COND. l&OO. 548-3123 aft. tpm
r
'
& nit• lland, 1150/obo. Pool tbl, 1100. 0-E cone. & tnwon. ~ atoo Brent 1-....e sa..., lUll 8tnoe 1153 AP~~~~ ;:~CE J:Jl.'tl kmen. -.y WATE~::~! .. .,d " 11..0, 1 100. ~ ... • ..... ,r:! .,, -uoelllnt oond. 1n:liu ..... t:tal! H•HNLTI ·~.~-~ ~~·
We Mii recond . guar. lovable to good home. Poetw Kl • :,o,.,.;.,. Portable 8pe JICl.llll, Ji' IO 4fm Muet Mll. Megt , 1tr. b 1 c le , a om p I e t e ........ '2000. 714-9'A.10
1pplt111COK. 549-3077 54s-1220 1100. s,.5.~4 good condition H 7&. ,,.., LMlon SNpyar $4 ,000 . 1v1 nlng1 Btaupunlct t0und IYt. Ml-8211 ........ '77Dllte N ,o.nttvuout •
• ..,. ........ s·• S.6-f<M1 Henry M 2-l200 · "4-3293 ,_ tlf•, cuetom rlma, great trllMI. l ll00/090.
AA ~TN~A'T :'P'PL F;.:~:~~·~ 1~1 old, Jnre!Jz 1114 Aepubllc Alr11!* "Buy 1, 3e' etlp """' boet lltff9 ..,, 11 .... ._,. '71 21oz, H,000 Ol'IQ ml. Konl'1, llarm. Xtr1 o4Mn, ~ ..... 928
REBUILDEAS, NOW IN Fr .. to _..,, hOfM ft ... or.m;;a ClliUne J='ectory: Get 1 Free" round trlP dOOI! bo11 MOUritY.' w..i .... M'll: ......... nt' '*'fir•. new i,.rtery, ~~~II. IO OO. ftlft 1111 '11 Cut1111 S upreme COSTA MESA. """""' .,..,. Big Ille, fant. bu)'e, low coupon:•too.eu OOl4 Nwpt,l2So/moed().122G lrtitr.. U600.97a-2222 meg. i7i votV0 J &, iti& i lfouo. dll, A/C, arvlle,
2Locattoneto....wyou SlameM •II blk male cet. 1)11c:ee, bMut. dlltn0nd9. Re• lfent wal9r ootor, · Cen't ... )QI# &or? We'• •79 ate> z. New P91nt a T!J'!!a~ ~. owrdrtw, "T;a:·ooo Ill~. 1SK ml..,.,,., 18IOHarbof81vd C M Mull bl lndoore. All8HAPH681ZU 1 1500. '20'1 Hrved SltpuveHebte.35-40X11· doltfofyou.Theee two Tiree A/C NOOO ml. ';"If"-Vlr1 · ml.lll00.8$ dy&. dlen.SIOOO.W..as& ~lt1h&~°'1 te&-5311,552-348e ~t Ainge; W • ctlelt.l l000.'424048 Cell 9 -6 • .,.on-Fri. ctwyetlk*ollll ... yow NOOOobo.'&42.:..oe7 llUMKlnt, K~Meoo. • 7S1-111&9'19L
860-70770f850-7082 To gd home. 8 moe mete rlnge; LOOM DletnOndl. M-4644 oer. 1t'UOk or VM, llllYt~ ..... ,.......,.,,.,.....,...,,-=-__,-=-~ 'lllm;;~== "-.bfdG pltnt, lhowroom dt>g Mlx.S breed. L.Olltl 714-M7·)!" TlfTtnY'I Df9 Memberllhlo, Wiijilf.lliP tw•M.Mnd meke 0t model. w.'I do '71 2IOZX 2xl, lepd, OL I* M2 ... na...,.. ...... _..,._.,....~iPI I
132 So. Main Sf., OrMQe. people, Shott 7N-2tt7 Genulhl ~ l>Mt s;p: no cfuee MOO. 640-2309 Bria, 111nt oond. uw on !flt .... drlWI. ~ ~·1~~ ·'A COfOlla Waoon. GOOd 'ff c.1 &Ii:. ldftt OO&i., 'II MTll ~~~.,,~~~9<! uaitart phlrH. Your cholol, OC'lly taflUM) Udo.t71-31N ltt9tlon, eeg ~. "£ t · cond. MNltne.11&00, am/tm 1e p1 , 11.aw 1tocrd JIOllcl 'A•kl
•Refrtgwator• '' 19 up 2dreenVlti;llounoeCll1ir1 120 11•1 &40-"'1 l11,1lla11. OD l l!J!!!t ~I =. ~~~ anct ''!:T~~~ 0~~ :,.';::~~~:Pick· ~~=-:er>O:·· 11aooiobo. 151 .. 112 "If
•Freeiera&tt9up w1rn1tchlngottoman.11k1 lla&Mu! 1211 XNttfV eLXNIQIT WMI tilliligLJW: 1.19on1y.Ma11e""yol.lf n11 lit bl~•. s hoo. ~&A5'°"Obed.o1bc;;;e1n a ... NNPOi1
•Wuher•I01Y9fll128up newS1.e<l.S.&-9'41 _ CllM, 1llnt cond. a7&. 15 .,. Mtllll.. cu tune oood. No e31·t740~ 161-1903 ll'lell, AM,,M oe.. Beectl'I f1M1t .-Ctlon f;lll; • Allc:eny3tn0ntl11p1r11& Em-Oto r compteMOf 7Mot....... -· klunk.._ We do It In !flt --•..... ' ""'lobo ..... • ,. l•bor warr111ty. Oeltvery 7 Ft )'91towlorente & grey w/lOO 11 di hOM. 146(). ..,. 1"2 CNrtel St t42·Tt10 ~ (lllp). Dofl't ~ ........ • -..., • -1ro of prevtoualy ow11•t1 ,..,......
avallable. Maat ... CNroe 11rlped COUCfl, 1160/obo, "*""" tndt 4180 Menr II Bundy ftut•, ldnt oond, w/ In exft oond, to" en lllle, -. toN)'. Mendy Md '11 1210 wgn, nu ~ IA& Corolle. lltce new. Por.ch•. Audi• and C&lll ~ ...., Ft'l
0
& VIM.. 9-8 MC>n-sl l 842•9021, 842-7208 m• 1000 etloel -+ ptl'I OM&, $12&. 7to-tee1 w/Ulcal ~QT bet. Ql Ac1M AM rM11y ~ to 1m/f"'· grH I oond. UOO etereo, AJC 3lfTIPG Volth11991i.. l'.10 ~
t1tt Room Air~ BUNKBEDStTlXi<)t75 250.&46-4320 n.UMMPH. nect ,,..., ~.OTfoftw..fto.e Ill ,our oet. ~ or NI000b04M-71$4 h•Y..1. L.9 .. t.cuo. ..... 'i0----eoup;:4~
1500 btu•h windo w "4-8492 ~· ¥¥..... ·~ t 170,Clllll 17&408t aft• Iii MW l*tl. NtO GIN>. nloM. '71417&0·210, 'ii tiOZXO f.-. 1 llCld. ....,,,71 ow" •!.l. lo•• •d mOdel.185,81~3723 ---S:30pm. -...11 71417~1 lolded.~ewvtoa AaM/u.o.llt U•
f l\1 1111111 dr1w IC. the aq · oelt ~., iOtiWlnn IA Tout 10 IPCI wr "9W littdt•. Allllna TtMe yo4lr Old 1tuff fOf 4111 .. 0.-Hwy.
Ct1Hllied Ada, your on.. w111. . a Oativ Piiot ~ .t!'!!·obo"9!""-!.'~11 Heve IOIMlhlng to Nit? '*•,,.,, 1115. l<UWlllWa HLL. Idle tt•m• with • ,,,,iOO/ObO, """' eel. n~odlH with • NllwPof1 IMaf\ 11op lhopl)lnQ center Clauilfled Ad. S.~·5878 i. -r9U-W CltlMlfled Ide 00 It.... IMX • 1to. t7S4t00 o.ty Piiot CIMIH!ed Act. 1811( 11'11. 4 ... atn C 1141. fq-.a87f 17'.otOO 't.n~ ·~•t&ov ••nt '" DallyfftllOt .......
' • ,,
..
THf ORANGE COAST COAST EDITION
TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 13, 198:1 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
• •• • • • ••
• ComtnunltJ'TPICH9'*ft:--=..-~wortceelfOr2 ~,_,.togeMs grueroott~~fDrl :HMlthC!1YAI •,thlyeay,~OfdyafewmonttllflgOWlth a handful otll90Ple Intent llmptyon kl-thl IMQ propoMI~
• COIMIOI: PtCH membert want oomrnuntty oonttol of the ~tel, rather•• unlWnlty
oontrot. Univ.eaty holpitala, they Ny, coet more bee*• patllntamuat PIYfor~
teechtng • reeNrch progrema. H9etthW• futthermcn. would controUhlelmpUlholpltai
u tt doee others within ttachaln.
• Loadon:ThetMClftelaoent'91tytooatedwltt*llMne'•IPhefeoflntluenoeandWMI
provkte aocee1 fr~ maJorplahMd roM8 to aH of Irvine.PICH membertgy. The HeMhWelt
location, ctoeerto ~~than toeome relldenttaiarwtn tMne. wlll p((MdedOctort
an eeey;.;i.:o '"P proftta from theWMlthy Newport clent ... ~ they uy.
• A-.n: IMO hU repeetedty~ted It want• UClafMatlon but not control. UCt
alreedyhu a teechll')Q hoapltal, IMC eupportera Ny-In Orange at the ftnanelallylroutMd UCt
Medlca1 Center.
A hospital dream fades
UCI Medical Center plan may be dropped by special Regents committee
By KAREN E. KLEIN
OftMO..,No41Ufl
For nearly 20 years, UC
Irvine has nurtured the dream
of building a hospital on its
campus.
The faculty and dean of the
California College of Medicine
at Irvine wanted more than a
hospital. They wanted a
world-class research center -
a Johns Hopkins of the West, a
place which would make the
UCI Medical School synony-
mous with the latest break-
throughs in medical treatment
and research, with the best
that science could offer to
better the human condition.
It is a dream that has often
seemed close to becoming re-
ality over the past 15 years -
and one that has often seemed
pure fantasy.
This week, the dream may
effectively come to an end.
UCl's campus hospital,
prop ose d by
Chatsworth-based Health-
West Foundation, will be con-
sidered Thursday by a special
conunittee of the UC Board of
Regents meeting in San Fran-
ci.9co.
The conunittee. acting on a
0 a:
z 0 > ~ lrvlne 0 Medical ~ Center
~ Site e
Map on left shows site for proposed UCI Medical
Center, map on right shows site for proposed
Irvine Medical Center.
recommendation by UC Presi-
dent David Gardner, may de-
cide to quash the proposaJ
entirely. Or, it may auee to a
medical faculty compromise
plan and make no decision on
the campus proposal or on a
rival hospital proposal backed
by a powerful coalition of
Irvine's business and com-
munity leaders.
Irvine's 20-year hospital
race has attracted several
medic.al groups. Irvine, the
largest city in the nation which
does not have a hospital, is a
lucrative marketplace for any
health facility.
With a 1983 population of
72,934 and estimates which
project the city's numbers will
swell to 208,115 by the year
2020, Irvine is ripe for picking
by hospital planners.
· The 1980 census showed
Irvine's median household in-
come was $31 ,300.
Out of five groups interested
in building an Irvine hospital
in 1981, two -HealthWest,
backed by the university and a
community support group, and
Hoag Memorial Hospital,
backed by a community group
called People for an Irvine
Community Hospital (PICH)
-emerged last year as the
prime competitors.
HealthWest has applied to
build a hospital on campus,
while Hoag would build Irvine
Medical Center (IMC), a hospi-
tal on donated Irvine Co. land
north of the San Diego Free-
way between Sand Canyon
and the Laguna Freeway.
The current battle is not
unique. In fact, it plays almost
like a rerun of an earlier
hospital fi$Zht in Irvine.
In 1975, two groups -the
UCI Medical School and West-
ern World, a group of Newport
Beach doctors and investors
joined by Hoag Hospital,
(See UCI HOSPITAL, Paae A!)
Posh hotel
hacked by
NB Council
By STEVE MARBLE
OfllieO.., .... .-
An opulent 19-story hotel in
Newport Center that will cater to
the wealthy and the pampered
was approved Monday by New-
port Beach City Council members.
The lavish hotel, to tower 214
feet in the air and house 325
rooms, will be built and operated
by Four Seasons, a Canadian hotel
chain with a reputation for provid-
ing luxury accommodations.
Construction on the hotel, to
include a sprawling garden, a
health club for guests and a dining
area where meals will be served
on bone china, is expected to begin
by mid-1984.
Plans for the $50 million high
rise, which will go up adjacent to
the Union Bank tower, were
approved without the fireworks,
confrontations, and referendum
threats typical of past hotel con-
siderations in the beach city.
The only objector to the facility
-the first new hotel approved in
Newport Beach in more than
three years -was Councilman
Don Strauss, a former supporter
of the hotel plan.
Strauss said he changed his
mind on the hotel when he
learned the facility would not be a
low-riae building has originally
planned but was to be one of the
tallest structures in the city.
The councilman also raised the
l
• I ' . ' • • • • ' ' ' • • ' ' . . . . ' ' . ' . ..,.;: I I I
...... , " . ~~-'·
Proposed new hotel
for Newport Beach.
possibility of a hotel glut along the
Orange Coast, citing documents
that project there eventually are
to be 24 hotels in the greater
Newport area with a total of 7 ,000
hotel rooms. (See HOTEL, Page AZ)
Modesty fatal for
victim of NB fire
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .............
N woman who died in a New-
port Beach fire reportedly resiated
attempta to aave her life and may
have delayed leaving the burning
structure becau.e she didn't have
any clothes on.
Steven Craig Nicholson, a
24-year-old bartender, told of-
ficers he tried in vain to get
Tonnitta White to leave the New-
port Heights house which was
gutted in the Sunday evening fire.
White, a 21-year-old Santa Fe
Springs resident, was found in the
living room of the 419 El Modena
Ave. residence, curled behind a
cou.ch, firemen said. She died at
Hoag Memorial Hospital about 30
minutes after paramedics wheel-
ed her in.
Though an autopsy haa not been
completed, investigators ten-
tatively listed the cause of death as
smoke inhalation. White suffered
third degree burns over 40 to ~
percent of her body.
Though it is believed the fire
was triggered by a cigarette that
was dropped and apparently al-
lowed to smolder, authorities said
they have yet to find evidence of
wha\_~the blaze. The fire,
fully involved when firefighters
arrived, caused about $250,000
damage to the house, owned by
Nicholson's parents.
Nicholson, who suffered burns
(Sff FIRE, Page A!)
Smith attacks judges
for reaching too far
Camera crew finds body
By JEFF ADLER
ot_Dlllr,.. ...
Echoing a theme aounded by
President Reagan during hia 1980
election campaign, U.S . Attorney
General William French Smith
Monday told California attorneys
meeting in Anaheim that the
nation's federal judges frequently
are making new lawa rather than
lntel'pt'eting existing ones.
"The judiciary has turned in-
creasingly from decidlng cases and
interpreting laws to making law,
supervising the manner in which
laws are executed and how ap-
propriated funds should be
spent," Smith told about 350
attorneys attending a luncheon
' . ..
during the State Bar Ateociation's
annual meeting.
"AB the judiciary has moved
away from its more traditional
role, it meanwhile has handed
down badly divided and
fragmented decisions, creating
unstable precedents that invite
more litigation," said the attorney
geneaJ,, a partner in a Los Angeles
law rum before hi.a Cabinet ap-
pointment.
Speaking on the subject of the
Constitution's provisions for the
separation of powers among the
legislative, executive and judicial
branches of government, Smith
alao commented that Cor\ltn!98
(Sff ATTORNEY' Paae Al)
t
William French Smith
Remains believed to be Tustin victim of Newport plane crash
By GLENN SCOTT
Of .. ~,..."""
A television camera crew dis-
covered a body floating near their
boat this morning as they waited
for salvage workers to begin
hoisting the wreck.age of a private
airplane that plunged into the
ocean off Newport Beach last
• week.
"The body of a man found just
befbre 10 a.m. today a quar-
ter-mile off shore was not immedi-
ately identified, said Newport
Beach police officer Thomas Lit-
tle.
However, authorities have said
since the crash early last Thunday
they believe David Leffler, 28, of
Tustin was a pasaenger in the
single-engine plane spotted Sat-
w'day on the ocean floor 35 feet
under water.
Leffler's body had not been
found before today. On Satw'day,
divers sent to the wreck.age dis-
covered the body of Marc West.
24, of Coeta Mesa still strapped
inside the battered fuselage.
Little said the body found this
morning was to be taken to the
Orange County Sheriff's Harbor
Patrol headquarters, where a
deputy coroner was to inspect it.
The two members of the
KABC-TV camera crew, Jan
Anderton and Jay Schermerhorn,
were waiting in Anderson's boat,
''Media One," when they said
they saw the body bobbing in the
water. They contacted the Harbor
Patrol, which sent officers to pick
it up.
Meanwhile, the salvaging crew
w as scheduled to tow the wreck-
age to shore today.
Workers fJ"Qm Aircraft Salvage
and Parts Inc. of Hawthorne were
expected to use air bags to lift the
fuselage and wings of the
single-engine Cessna 172 Sky-
hawk 35 feet to the ocean surface.
The tug then was to pull the
empty aircraft through Newport
Harbor to a boat ramp at Newport
Dunes, where the wreckage was
(Sff BODY, Pase Al)
Missing OC.inmate sought
Accused Balboa Island rapist reportedly 'had help' Oeeing jail
A manhunt throuehout
Southern California conUnued
today for an accu9ed raplst who
made a daring ncape early Mon-
day from the roof of Oranp
County Jail.
Michael Eric Gonzalea, 23, ac-
cu.d of raplng a Balboa laland
woman early this year, la con-
sidered danceroua and Ukely WM
aided Ln hla .:ape by fellow
pr1lonen and accomplicee outaide
the jail, authoriU• l&ld 10day.
Gonzal•, who triaered a
mamve dracnet on &160. laland
lalt June after eKapina from a
rnlnlrnum..-curity feclllty outaJde
Loi Anplee, lowe~ hlmeelf
from the roof of the four-atory e.capedearllerthiuwnmer,New-
cou.nty jail with bed aheeta that port police said they'd be aur-
had been tied together. priaed If the fonner Huntington
Orange County Sheriff'• Lt. Park resident returned to the
Wyati-Hart aaid it's believed ialand again.
fellow ~ helped Gonr.alea Police, th~gh, have drculated
collect the ~ aheeta and likely dt!9ClipUona of the eecapee to
cowred up fOI' the 23-yeer-old has laland Neighborhood Watch
he ripped hla way throuih a wire leaders and have ualgned a pa-
fence to &aln acoe11 to the roof. trolman to the populated laland.
Gonzalee repol1edly tecreted the bed aheeta under h1a ja1l Authoritlet allo have notified
clothinc, whkh he left on the roof the victim of the alleeed rape that
before lowerlnf himlelf to the Oonu.le.hueecaped.,.in.Pollce
ground. Hart aid it la belittVed . aid the woman no longer lives on
f rlends in a ptaway car were Balboa bland.
wa1Una for Oonz.alel. Oonz.alet WM arreet.ed for the
Although Gonzalea repoMedly flnt time lut March when he
returned to Balboa Wand after he (&ft ESCAPEE. Pa•e Al>
•
,
'
'
, A2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Sept. 13, 1983
Coast educator appOinted to,naiiqnal-paneJ
By PHlL SNEIDERMAN °' Ille o.llr ,_ • ..,,
WhJle auending a briefing in
Washington about 18 months ago,
Dr. Ruben lngTarn questioned
U.S. Secretary of F.ducation Ter-
rell Bell about why no elementary
educators had been appointed to
an important commission explor-
ing national school issues.
lngTam, who is assistant super-
intendent of the Fountain Valley
School District, said Beu told him
the nation's most critical education
problems exist at the high school
level. But in re\ro8pect, Bell told
him, elementary educators should
not have been alighted.
Federal officials are making up
for the oversight now by
oo-sponsoring a 20-member panel
that will study elementary educa-
tion issues of the 1980s.
Ingram will now get a chanc:.-e to
expr~ his concerns in this area
becaUBe he ha.a been appointed to
the national panel, which holds its
first meeting next week in Racine.
Wis.
"We're going to set an agenda
fpr studying the role of elemen-
tary education tn the United
States," the local educator sa.id.
Ingram said the group will
consist of teachers, administrators
and business leaders. He said the
panel will follow up on the work
done by the National Commiaaion
on Excellence in Educ.at.ion, ap-
pointe<l by the Reagan Adminia-
tration.
That commission released a
highly pt.tbllcluct report in April
calllng for longer school days,
higher'&cademic standards in high
school, more homework and high-
er teacher salaries to attract su-
perior educators.
Ingram said that report made
virtually no comments, however,
on elementary education.
He said improvements in
element.Ir)' education have been
viewed aa a lower priority for
aevenal reaaona:
• Test 9COre results have con-
tinued to climb for elementary
studenia, while high achool test
scores have plummeted.
• Elementary achools have
fewer of the serious dladpline and
drug abuse problems that have
pJ.agued high achools.
ESCA P EE ••• Kraft charged in I 0 killings
Nevertheless, Ingram said the
transition from elementary level
studies to high achoo! education
must be explored .
"I think It's absolutely critical,"
he said. "AB we see improvements
at the elementary school level, I
think we'll see improvements in
high school aoores following in a
,.,.....,...
From Page A 1
walked into a Balboa Island
restaurant where the rape victim
worked. Police closed in on him
when the woman notified
authorities.
The 3(.'Cused rapist was later
released when his family posted
$25,000 bail. Gonzales was ar-
rested a shor t time later in Los
Angeles on unrelated drug and
theft charges, according to re-
ports.
By JEFF ADLER
Of Ille OelJ ..... 11811
Randy Steven Kraft -the
Long Beach computer analyst
already charged with six
homosexual slayings -formally
was charged Monday in Orange
County Central l'y1unicipal .C9urt
with 10 more Southern California
murders. ..
Besides the 16 murder counts,
Kraft now faces 23 other related
felony charges and has been
indicted in Michigan for two
additional murders there.
pulled his car over, they dis-
covered the strangled body of a
25-year-old Marine lying on the
passenger seat.
Sinee Kra ft's arrest, a special
team of Orange County Sheriff's
Department investigators has in-
terviewed more than 350 wit-
nesses and examined material
collected from Kraft's home.
Sheriff Brad Gates contends
the evidence uncovered shows
that Kraft had a propensity for
sexually deviant behavior that
dates to the early 1970s.
The slaying victims all were
young males in their late teens or
early 20s. Most had been strangled
and all had been sexually
mutilated, Gates said during a
news conference last week.
Kraft, who has been held
without ball since his arrest,
pleaded not guilty to th e ad-
ditional murder charges during a
brief court appearance before
Municipal Court Judge Jack
Ryan. Last month, Kraft pleaded
innocent to the initial six murder
charges lodged against him.
few years." -
Ingram said he believes the new
panel, which will meet three times
yearly, will suggest educational
reforms for elementary schools
and propose sLandards for school
administrators.
The panel is sponsored by the
Carnegie F oundation, the John-
son Foundation, the National AJJ-
sociation of Elementary School
Principals and the U.S . Depart-
ment of F.ducation.
T o d ir ect m int?
Katherine Ortega,
lormer presfdent of
Santa Ana State
Ban k , has been
nominated as
treasurer of the
Uni t e d S t a t es.·
P r esid ent Reagan
announ ce d hi s
choice Monday·
He was given a 28-day sentence
at a minimum security facility in
Saugus. Los Angeles authorities,
though, apparently were not
aware of the pending rape charge.
Police said Gonzales simply
walked away from the facility.
The 38-year-old defendant was
arrested last May near Mission
Viejo when California Highway
Patrol officers observed his car
driving erratically. When they UCI HOS PIT AL DREAM FAD ING AW A Y .. ;.
From Page A1
HOTEL APPROVED ... squared off for round one of
the hospital fight.
From Page A1
Other council members and
civic leaders had nothing but
glowing things to say about the
hotel plan.
Councilwoman Jackie Heather
said the hotel will be "tall, slim
and distinguished" and will
provide the city's first true luxury
hotel.
Bjorn Sedleniek, president of
the Fashion Island Merchants
Association, said his group had
"suffered long enough," losing
business to nearby South Coast
Plaz.a.
He said the new hotel would go
far in bringing busin~ to Fashion
Island, the circular shopping area
in the center.
He said Costa Mesa has "wel-
comed every project we've re-
jected'' and has taken needed tax
revenues away from Newport
Beach.
Dave Neish , a spokesman for
the Canadian firm, predicted the
hotel will net the city more than $1
million annually in tax revenues.
UCI won approval from the
Orange County Health Plan-
ning Council back then . But
the medical school's plan lost in
the state Assembly, when
funding was not allocated.
In 1976, the UC Regents
voted to purchase the Orange
County Medical Center in
Orange and make it UCI
Medical Center.
And Irvine still did not have
a hospital.
FIRE VICTIM ...
UCI Medical Center officials
set off the current round of the
dispute in 1981, when they
applied to the regents to build
a clinic and ambulatory-<:are
center on campus.
The application spurred the
founding of PICH, which later
aligned itself with Hoag. From Page A1
on his hands and feet, said he tried
several times to lead White to
safety. He said he grabbed her by
the ann and tried w pull her from
the bed sh e was sleeping in.
He said the house was filled
with smoke and that he eventu-
ally lost his grip on the woman. He
told police he ran for the front
door in hope someone could help
him rescue White.
Nicholson told authorities at the
scene that he believed White, a
Compton bank teller, wouldn't
leave the house because she was
naked.
Fire department spokesman
Russ Cheek said it is believed a
tremendous amount of carbon
monoxide was trapped in the
house.
''One breath of that is enough to
make you delirious, confused.
Three of four breaths will knock
you out," Cheek said. "In a
situation like this you have a
couple of minutes to react and
that's it."
The single-story house was
equipped with a smoke detector
that apparently alerted K;cholson
to the fire. A newly-installed
fire--retardent roof on the house
may have prevented the blaze
from spreading to neighboring
structures, authorities said.
The university last year
decided to drop the clinic in
favor of a full-scale campus
hospital. After considering
several hospital groups, UCI
supported HealthWest's plan
BODY ...
From Page A1
to be brought ashore for inspec-
ti.on by a National Transportation
Safety Board investigator , said
Little.
ATTORNEY GENERAL ...
Harbor Patrol divers earlier
removed West's body from the
sunken fuselage.
The wreckage was located
about a quarter-mile off shore
from 60th Street in West Newport
Beech. Harbor Patrol officials said
the fuselage apparently sank im-
mediately at the site of impact,
although debris from the wreck-
age later washed west with cur-
renta into water off Huntington
From Page A1
seems to be more and more
concerned with overseeing the
enforcement of laws It has passed
while failing to carry out its
legislative charge.
He said this congressional
preoccupation has resulted in
legislation that was ill-considered
and often has lacked the "degree
of deliberation the framers of the
Constitution expected of the legis-
lative branch.''
The upshot of Smith's argu-
ment is that the two branches of
government are upsetting the
"the fine balance of powers that
must exist ... if liberty is to be
protected and if government is to
be capable of effective action."
He told the attorneys that both
the legislative and judicial
branches of government have
infringed upon the chief responsi-
bility of the executive branch -
that of enforcing the laws of the
land. And he urged the two
branches of government to con-
centrate on their Constitutional
duties.
"An activist judiciary and an
oversight-minded Congress can
We're
Listening •••
642·6086
0 .. ,, Piiot
DellYefJ
11 Ou.rentNd
U~ay I rtclay II yOo.I 00
no1 """' fOu• P•ll•• by ~ )0 '"" C11* ""'Of• ' I) "" 1n11 you• COl>t .. 111 lit ,,....,,.,..,
only weaken the executive branch
and thus debilitate the entire
national government," the na-
tion's top law enforcement officer
said.
Smith said that the concern
over an all-powerful "imperial
presidency," often discussed dur-
ing th.e 1960s and '70s, now has
given way to this new Conatitu-
1.ional challenge from the judicial
and legislative branches.
But the attorney general ap-
plauded the recent Supreme
Court decision overturning Con-
gress' a bill ty to impoee the
so-called legislative veto on cer-
tain bills. He said the high court's
decision was a "hopeful event" in
the quest to restore the constitu-
tionally mandated separation of
powers.
Smith's speech , which he said
was intended to "stimulate reflec-
tion" on the fundamental law of
the land, is the third in a aeries of
speeches on constitutional i.8sues
he has delivered since May. The
first two speec~alt with the
original ConstitatiOri and the con-
cept of federalism.
Beach. ·
The crash site -about halfway
between the Santa Ana River
jetty and the start of Balboa
Peninsula -is near a Coast Guard
buoy that bobe pennanently in the
w ater.
GOP u nit to he ar
OC schools chief
Orange County Schools Super ...
intendent Robert Peterson will
address the Balboa Bay Re-
publican Women luncheon
Wednesday at the Irvine Coast
Country Club.
Petel'80n, who has been super-
intendent for 16 years, will discuss
his "AnUdote to Mediocrity."
An 11 a.m. business meeting
will proceed the $8 luncheon at
noon. For reservations, call Ruth
Nerney at 673-7263 or Goldie
Joaeph at 673-5729.
What do you lik e about the Daily Pilot? What don't you likt~
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 u!I what 's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
H. L SChW81'tZ IH
Pvbllstwlr
c1 .. 1"'9d advertt•'"9 7t4/M2-NTI
All ot~ .... ment1 Ml-<U21
MAIN O,,ICI
330 WHI hy 81 . Cotti M-Cll '-II~ aOCllHt Bo> 1&e0. 0ot1e "'-· Cll 9~0~
OlOy"@lll f"' OfertOt eo.1 ~ ~ No ....... 11011 ... lllutl••llOn•. t dl!Oll•I mtlltr 01 acM!rt._it lletll!\ M<ty t>o 19il'OCIUCICI ••"11\0UI _,;Olli '*""'"°" OI C~I -5•1ur<l•t oM 5111\0•y II
y(lu "6 ~Of •.C•lvt yOVl (~ ~, t ..tm uU r:.•0te
•O • m '"" f{'roft c-Will !>!>_ .. ..,
c1rculat10n ,....,... ...
chazy oow11•br Editor and A1Mt11n
to the Publlthef
ha,mond Mect.nn
Controller
Uool
l1' •"9" Ccutl• y ""'•• ..,....,, '4°"'n•~j:t Hllfllot\GlO't ~
' Wetlmol\11.. ...., ...
1 ""' .... M9"" ........
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PtodUGloOtl
Mll\89"
'
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VOL. 11, HO. 29e
to build the facility.
Both groups. filed appli-
cations with the Health Plan-
ning Council After a long,
complicated process and
almost 21 hours of public
hearing1i this summer, the
council endorsed IMC over the
Health West plan.
In the weeks since the
council's decision, what has
traditionally been a town vs.
gown dispute has been trans-
formed into a gown vs. gown
dispute.
On Aug. 10, UCI Chancellor
Daniel G. Aldrich, Jr. met with
UC President Gardner and the
two decided to postpone a
regents committee hearing on
the hospital matter.
On Aug .. 11, Aldrich sent a
letter to HealthWest rescind-
ing the university's support of
the campus hospital proposal.
He cited community discord
and HealthWest's failure to
obtain approval from the
health planning council as his
I mon.
Do it
now
reasons for doing so.
The medical faculty and
Dean Stanley van den N~rt
voted to continue to suppdrt
Health West.
Since then, Aldrich has
come under fire from the
medical school faculty, which
censured him, and from sup-
porters of HealthWest, who
have criticiu!d his reversal of
position.
Aldrich, who has held the
post of chancellor since the
campus was opened, said last
week he is considering making
the upcoming academic year at
UCI his last.
Though he was planning to
retire in two years, he said, he
may move up his retirement to
June.
Me dical School Dean
Stanley van den Noort has said
if the campus does not get a
hospital he and othe r medical
faculty would consider leaving
UCI.
Aldrich has def ended his
decision by saying he must
consider the needs of the en tire
UCI community, not just the
medical school.
The business Leaders sup-
porting IMC might contribute
much to the university's over-
all effort -including the
athletics, engineering and arts
departments -if friendly
relations are established be-
tween them and the univer-
sit y, IMC President David
Baker has said. ·
The faculty and some com-
munity members charge
Aldrich with bowing to press-
ure from the powerful indus-
trial leaders behind IMC.
''If, for the sake of the
fund-raising efforts, he's will-
ing to sacrifice a medical center
and the future of this oom-
muni t y, then I call it
short-sighted," said UCI Dr.
Paul Sypherd, after the fac-
ulty censure.
"!rs hospital time in Irvine,"
Sypherd said. "If the regents
decide against us, we're dead
in the water."
.
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WESTMINSTER 6757 ~minster Ave. at Golden ~. (714) 894·3381
COSTA MESA 1XJO Harbor Blvd .• (8'!/lind Thrifty Drug), (714) 549-3368
ORANGE 622 Easr KDrefla Ave, ~st of 7Ustin A\le., (714) 639~2441 ·
M)ft ~ ~ HNlth Club$ .ilt' dftt'SJiblP ro rhe moJ;,,bt)I ""l>Wf!d ~ wrth dtwl)i/l}in, lr'IChitfitlg thf blw( ~ Wl'km'lt
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• •
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•
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------~-----,---~--~--~--~~--------~~------------------~--------..... ----.................. ...
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Sept. 13, 1983 * Al
40,000 students in her 'class'
Mexico film lecture
set Friday at OCC
Irvine a dministr ator ta k es o ver LA County's massive specia l education program
A 90-minute illustrated lecture on Mexico will be presented in
Orange Coast College's Fine Arts Hall J 16 Friday at 7:30 p.m.
Dr. Jerry Brown, a professor of history and political acience
who has traveled extenaively throughout Mexico, will conduct the
program. He will explore major arc~eological ronee such as
Teotihuacan and the Mayan and Toltec cultures .
Tickets, at $4, a.re on sale in the college's ticket office in the
Student Center building on campus. They also will be sold at the
door. Call 432-5880 for additional information.
Colleges pla nning Coast semi~a r
Orange County students, parents and high school counselors
are invited to a series of ev~nts Sunday through Tuesday sponsored
by Barnard, Bryn Mawr, Mount Holyoke, Smith and Wellesley
colleges.
The consortium will sponsor a lunch for local high school
college counselors Tuesday at noon at the Holiday Inn, 3131 Bristol
St.. Calta Mesa. Topics will include financial aid, as~ion
requirements, facultyrstudent activities, curriculum, testing and
campus life.
An admissions forum for parents and students will be held
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the El Toro Library, 24672 Raymond Way,
El Toro. For additional information, call Peggy Bloom at 839-7656,
Travelogue on Hungar y sla ted F riday
Orange Coast College will screen a feature-length
travel-documentary film on Hungary Friday at 7:30 p.m. in the
college's Fine Arts Hall 119.
The film, entiUed "Hungarian Homecoming.'' presents
modern-day Hungary in contrast to its 2,000-year history. It will be
narrated by Sherilyn and Matthew Me ntes, who have presented
their travelogue programs throughout the United States and
Canada.
Tickets are on sale in the OCC Ticket Office in the college's
Student Center. For further information, phone 432-5880.
By ANDREA ADELSON
OftlwO..,NeCI WI
The first week of school for
educator Harriet F. Danford
meant more than new lesson
plans.
The 42-year-old Irvine resident
iB now charged with admlnls-
teri!>g Los Angeles County's
special education and juvenile
NB firm
aids Arts
Center
The Newport Beach accounting
firm of Peat Marwick has pledged
$100,000 to the Orange County
Performing Arts Center's con-
struction fund, officials an-
nounced Monday.
The gift brings the total con-
tributions to the fund to $40
million. The first phase of con-
struction on the $6~ million center
is projected to cost $57.3 million.
The center, acheduled to open
Oct. 1, 1986, will include a
four-tiered, 3,000-seat theater for
staging opera, ballet, symphony
and theater. A 1,000-seat theater
for smaller productions will be
erected during a later conatruction
phase.
The center is currently under
construction in Calta Mesa aouth
of SunflowerAvenue next to the
South Coast Plaza 'l'own Center.
Groundbreaking ceremonies
were held in J uly.
I
Woman attacked in Mesa hoIDe
A 35-year-old Co1t1 Mesa woman
wu al1flci(ed In her home on the 2700
block of Longwood Court about
12:30 1.m. The 9USp«1, a white male
In hl1 early 30t, ripped the woman's
clothes and threw her 1galn1t a wall
before ahe managed to eecape.
A locked 1976 Chevy Wll stolen In
front of a home on the 2000 block of
lrl1 Pi.ca In Coate Mesa sometime
Sunday night. The car 11 valued at
$5,500.
A 1hle1 swiped $150 worth ot toola
trom a VW parked at an apartment
compleit on the 500 block of Wilson Streat Sunday night. The car'a right
wind wing wa1 pried Oi>9fl.
Laguna Beach
Jewelry valued by the owner at
$975 wu stolen from 1 hOUM In the
1300 block of Catalina Street Mon-
day. Laguna Beach police aald.
A man found alaaplng In a side yard
of a house In the 700 block of
Browncrott Road wu awakened by
polloe and told to leave.
MllOllllaneoua toot1 valued at $500
were tal(en trom a realdance In the
200 block of Lower Cllff Drive.
Three Of' tour su1pect1 wtlo banged
on doors and urinated In an elevator
Of the Surl and Sand Hotel, 1555
South Coast Highway, were lloPped
by polloe, but raleaaed When offlctals
at the hotel said they would not praaa
ohargea.
Newport Beach
Burglars who may have had acees.9
to a epecial key took about S800 In
qu1rt8's from 58 parking met8f's
al~ Balboa Boulevard betweao
28th and 30th street•. In a 19PV8te
Incident. crool<a sawed otf the head
of a parking meter on Via Lido ,_,.
Via Oporto. Polloe said It 11 unknown
how much money w11 In this meter
but noted the meter head 11 worth
$150.
A crook who entMad ZJno Pizza,
3112 Newpon Blvd •• by removing a
window fan, tool< $1,500 worth of
goods from the restaurant Including a
televlston, a stereo. and a pair of
speakers,
A burglar pried open a door to Bay
Corporate Plaza. 2240 Unlver11ty
Drive, and took a ty~ lter, a
calculatOf', an adding machine, a
coffee makllf' and aeveral rolls of
1tamp1. The Ion waa calculated at
$1,273.
Huntington Beach
A vehicle burglary wu reported
Monday morning by 1 reeldent of the
5700 block of Bellfleld Lane. A vent
wlndowwaabrokantoent8'. Thelou
Included a $280 ln-dUh 1tereo, a
$225 1t8'eo equ1112er. • $ 130
portable cauette play« and two
boxes of home-made tapes.
A cuatomer at the Hughes El
Rancho market. 16621 Algonquin
St., reported that her purM waa
1to4en from her lhopplng car1 Mon-
day afternoon. A man reportedly
grabbed the puree, ran from the atOf'e
and tied In an older car driven by a
woman. The lou waa estimated at
$196.
A woman rePorted the theft of her
1968 Volkawagan from a parking lot
at Golden Wae1 College Monday. The
IOM WU •llmated at 13,500.
A 1978 Dataun 8210 par1ted on the
9800 block of Hot Spring• Drive WU
the target of a bfMk-ln Monday. The
left tront window wu amalhed to
enter. The loea lnctuded S 153 In calh
and tool1 valued at 1275.
Two tlrM were reported 1tolan
Monday morning from a trec-
tOf'·trellor rig parked near lhe corner
ol Talbert Avenue and Gothard
Street. The IOU waa Mtlmatad at
S800.
Fountain Valley
A man armed with an 11Utomatlc
handgun fled with about 195 In cuh
and colna from Luv-U 8Muty &
Barber Supply, 16147 Brool<hunt St.
The gunman. wtlo uunt-.dJnto the
bullneaa at about 2:30 p.m. ~ondey,
told the cl«k to lock hertelf In the
raetroom for three mlnut• tollowlng
the robbery.
Vandall ramowc:t en engine COvef
from a car parked In the 18000 blodt
of Meequlte Circle Monday end cut
the coll wire. Ignition wire end ripped
out the eparttpluo-and then put bllcl<
the oover. Damaoa waa l .. ted et S-45.
Irvine
School maintenance WOfttere turn-
ed OV9f to polloe en ameteur-made
hand grenade found at .,, lr.tne
achool Monday. The Orenge County
1hlt'ltf'1 bomb aquad t~ the de-
vloe, OOflStructed from a ahotgun
lhell wrapPad with nails, which wherl
exploded It almll11 to ettrepnel.
polloe llld.
Dense fog rolling in along Coast
ClncinNU 8 1 113 R.ln -Snowl Coastal c:i...i-It IM Wednesday September 1 4 -Columt:M.SC 115 70 e H1 h Tem eratures Showe" -Flurrlee.-Somelowc:IOud•-'oO~ CoMnbul 85 58 °""" log In ,,.,. '~' Ind -Oell ... f'I WO<th 04 74 II> Wedi....,~ -l"9 _,, Dey!°" IM 58 I ~ moelly ,.., lllgntly _,.., o.n-78 ..
---llul cont-"°' In ,,.,. O.MolMt 88 50
lnlend ~ HlgN in IN 70. to low IOt o.4•0ll 78 58 I ~tlle-to,_ IOOlnlN DuMh 50 40
-~lowetnW.-to EIPMO IS ea
mld-70.. F lirMnl! 1 113 :i.
,,_,._~0¥9' 1heOUI• FllfOO so •• -. 10 9lln 0.-. .. ~ Ugllt ~ 113 M ..,.... -"°""""' ,,.,,,._ 10 Great-" ..
to 20 llnot• tonllhl end w~ H-d eo 65
-'Ill •llfty-31o 6 IMI ""* -70 42 ...
-loultt•o--1101e ......,...... llO 78
k-. ...--io wllh I to Moot wind Howl°" ea 74 .,
\,
-Wlnde -.. .... vwleblt ~ ., 51 h
=.=,.,~~-~.M ... eo 12 ' IO 10 11 W..in.. ...__.._ " 72 "'~ -.,..,_ ....,,_. &3 45 ,,..~II Wt•IP\f'• S.r-t<•
"-Cll'f n llO "OA• U $ O.c11 of CO"'"'t•u
Extended L.mV .... 103 16 Fro"'' Cold ..., Warm 9W Occluded ..,. Ullle "°°' 92 72 t:=-.. 75
'*· OoMlrlued hol ci.,. --II 17 ,,_,. 104 ., ... oi.eo 12 ts
~'*-*'II=-..... --~ t2 86 ==r-.. .. ..,,,~ .. ..
.... -IN~ MempNt 12 72 71 .. ......... ., u
Incl 11 IO 106 In"-~ l -In --17 12 POlttefld,()N IO 17 ...... 71 64
llle811dlows70.. -.. .. S3 ,..,~ .. eo ::1.: .. 71
M!*-81 P.ul .. 47 =hY .. .. 12 40
Temperatures
,....,.,.... '° 72 10 47 ~ 71 4t
N9w0f!MM 13 73 Aeno t6 llO =:-n .. N9w Ycwt. a& ... NcMIOnd ;~ .. fl 81 .__ .. 71 au.-118 ,_ .. Tl ...... Hor1ll Plefi.t 72 M It.PM. T 11nP9 17 Tl TlllM .. a ,,,,_,., 72 61 ~City .. 13 WUlle 14 u W-'*'91on .. 71 ===-... 93 • a.-70 46 lenMIONo 93 72 WlcHt• a .. .. 12 °"""°° '° 74 =-· .. ao ..... """"" 107 77 .. 17 A ..... 11 17 "111d llp!M .. ...
AllMllCl City 12 17
A"9Mll .. 73 Tides SURf REPORT ....._. .. 17 =...,,, 17 41
" .. TOOAY
~ " 31 8econdlllgl> 2 Mom 4.t .. .... 12 64 8-ldlow 1U7./"' °' IOMoft t6 ., "'*llOA .,_ '° 71 """• 1>2'."' u "°°"""' • .... ..,,.. 71 .. f'lrtlllew ew .... u =i::=.-y 14 .. E ... c
TS ti ._.,,...,, 4 ~11\ 4,1 , ... .......... 1t • ...,, --,. .. , :/. "' ....... 40lfl91~ ........ , .. ......... .. 1' w......., 91 I • "' .... liOM\ 22ftdl4,-.,.., .... c.w-,wv 11 ., •7·01pm ~wec1p 2-4 , ~ ... c 11 70 Moot! ........ , .. ,"' ~ ..... .i ~ .... ,.,
~~: .. .. 41 1142 '·"' ~ --"OAlll ....°"'*"' .. ,
11 64 W~tt, '"' w-..,.. .. Iii •. t1•1ll
~
• fr-..
court echools, a job with an
operating budget of $77 million.
delivering education to 40,000
atudenta at a 150 different aites.
The former special education
director for the sprawling district,
Danford now takes on expanded
duties that will put her in touch
with the 3,000 county youth
incarcerated each year .
The court school program, with
clas&es held ln each of the six
juvenile halls, nine probation
campe and six community day
centers, is the only accredited one
like it in the state, Danford said.
"We are up for accreditation
this year, and will, at each and
every hall and camp, be doing a
self-evaluation.'' she said. "1 know
they are overcrowded; there
hasn't been any building in
years."
For teachers, crowded holding
facilities translates into a tide of
new students, especially in the
halls, and knowing very little
about the academic performance
of each, she said. However,
teachers "know what they are
getting into."
The average court schooJ stu-
dent is a 16-year-old young man
who haa committed a felony and is
well below average in reading and
math skills. When the jailed youth
Co sta Mesa cle·anup
enters a probation camp, h1s
education "is geared to the level
he is at," Danford explained.
The court schools aren't all new
to her. Seven years ago when
educators were researching how
best to teach aphasic youngsters,
Danford analyr.ed the number of
incarcerated students with learn-
ing and language disabilites ver-
sus the nonnal population at a
Malibu probation camp.
Danford's special education
work led her to Madeleine Hill,
federaJ assistant secretary for
special education and rehabih-
tatJVe services. They exchanged
views last month m Washington.
D.C. over how to meld private
industry -providing job place-
ment and vocation.al training -
into education for the physically
and mentally disabled.
"At 21, you just stop," Danford
pointed out.
She is the mother of two
University High students and
re<.-eived her doctorate from Tem-
ple University in Philadelphia
after receiving two master's
degrees in educational psychology
and school administration.
Six schools honored
for OlynJpic project
Six Orange Coast elementary
schools have been presented with
cash awards for student partici-
pation in the Levi's Olympic
Children's Art Project.
The student art is to become a
part of 15 separate collages that
will be used to greet athl<'tes and
Southern California visitors
throughout the Olympic year.
The largest cash prizes went
Courrt!ges, Arevalos and Fulton
schools an the Fountain Valley
School District. Together the
schools were given about $1,400.
Also awarded cash prizes were
Spring View in the Ocean View
Elementary School District,
Harbor View in the New-
porf-Mesa Unified School District
and F.astshore in the Irvine Uni-
fied School District.
Eighteen members and their fa thers
from Scout T roop 8 0 filled 56
garbage bags Saturday with trash
strewn along sou thboun d Newport
Boulevard . "Aft erward, it looked
lik e a new city," said Tag Garver,
Scout leader. Fillin g their bags he re
are Raymond Hubert, Mike Eimers,
George Waale, Marc Sleenhof,
Vince Russell a nd Garver, in cap.
Coast people on advisory panel
Several Orange Coast residents
have been named members of the
advisory board for the South
Coast Center for Peraonal Growth
and Development.
The Santa Ana center will offer
counseling services. drug and
alcohol addiction programs and
nutrition-health guidance.
Advisory board members in-
clude:
Brooke and Bo Bentley, Sandy
Berwick, Marion and Lula Half-
acre, Gregg Herbert, Jerry Re-
ynolds and Bud Warmington, all
of Newport Beach.
Sam and Mary Anderson,
George and Madge Rodda, Dave
and J eanette Wells and Ellen
Ward, all of Corona del Mar.
Buck and Kitty Jones, Shen
Hodge and Allen and Wini Smith,
4u~o
L.•trll•f
17th & Irvine, Westcllff Plat a ,
of Laguna Beach
Ken and Paulette Curry, Den-
nis M. Green. Arthur and Suzy
Melin, Donna Schaik and Tim and
Pam Brown, of Irvine.
Clint and Holly Bellows of
Huntington Beach also serve on
the board.
For more mfonnation on the
group, call Paulette Curry at
972-2878
proven sapphire depoelt In the
world la located In our coun-
try ... In Montane? The mine In
Yogo Gulch extend• for five mtlel
and la becoming a major
producer. It was t1r11 dlacovered
by llQCldant In the 1N0'1. A
group of miners happened upon
II In their MlrCh for gold. The
mine waa aucc:.eatulty wonted for
thirty years and than lhu1 down.
S.lou1 mining wu reeumed In
1977 and abou1 70,000 tone of
rock have been prooaeaad lk'°9
then but preeent output of gem
matetlal la 11111 far behind Sri
Lanka.
Newport leach 642-3310
M I've Mid before, the flnlat
eapphtree come from KMhn*,
hfgh In the Hlmlla)'U. wNle 8't
Lanka (~I ~ ue with
the oreate11 quantity. Whel .. 491' I
go to Sn Lenka I 11w11Yt m9ke the
trip up to A•tMPUra and the
MPPhlre mtnea there. On my lat
vlllt I watched them puH up a
balket with thl'M nice atonea In
It. Of COUrM I tool< plcturae llnd
)'OU can ... thoM In our window
too along with our co4tec1ton of
dltterent colored HPPhlrea.
(There .. al90 • IMPlhOt of me
toeing my lhoee In the tleevy dtlY
IOll at the mlnetJ The mlMI .,..
not what we picture wt'9I\ M UM
tllat term. Theel are mot• IM!e
pltt .•• hotel dug Mlmlngty at
rendom ..• ttllt one In the mtddte
Of a rtoa paddy with Mmboo
acaftoldlng Ind bfaoee. Whet oon. out of a...~ l'IOte9
In the Mrth WI ~lful In-
deed •. grind ~ to mtlke an engagement rtne for • modem
day PrlnoeM. Maybe yow pttn.
ceet would Ilk• • 11pphlf'e too.
,
,HI Pit 1lf luP-.Ody c;,~pl 13 198J
STOCKS
"'"' .. , ._.., p l M • I,.,, "4
.....
t I "~'
NY E COMPO ITE TRAN ~ ACTION
OOOIAllONS IN(;LUOE l .. AOU ON 1t1( NEW YOflll MIOW(<;I PA(;tJI( POW BO'olOH Ol IAOfl ANO C~CIN.,All llOC" £•Ct1AN0U ANO
RrPOntEO BY h o[ NASO INSl lN(I
"'ht r\ Nff , ...... , .......
t t ••U\ t t •'--· '""
.._ ... ,,, N l"I S•·~\ Nl'I ,. "' "" .. '
t• ' n(J, ~ •OY ( ~ It no\ (to..,. Cl>Q p [ 110• , ....... (110 P f no, t •u.... c "<1
• .. .
Dow Jones Final
Down 4.98
Clo91ng 1,224.09
BUBINllS BRllfS
Pacific Telephone Co.,
union reach agreement
LOS ANGELES -Pac1hc Tcl~phone Co. and the
union representing YeUow Pages workers have reached
a tentative aet'Ord boosting pay by 8 percent, officials
say.
The company public.• relations departml'nt in San
F'ranC'IS(:O said Mum.lay th~ SE>llll'ment would end the
last of th<' str1k~ &gamst the phone company The 8
perc.'Cnt pay h1kt' for Yellow Pages salts reprcst>ntauves
would bnnK safartt'l> from about $30,000 lO about
$32,-tOO. thl• unw n said
Lockheed to advance women
LOS ANGELES -Lockheed Cahfom1a Co. has
agreed to put several hundred women in
middle-management jobs during the next five years in
settlement of a class-action sex-discrimination suit.
lawyers say. "The most significant thing about this
agreement is that these are management positions for
women in the aerospace industry, an area that the public
perceives as a male industry,'' attorney A. Thomas Hunt
said Monday. The company, which manufactures
military aircraft and parts, employs 17,300 people at its
plants in Burbank, Palmdale. Valencia and Watts
Money market cites n e w rates
WASHINGTON -Commercial banks and savings
and loan associations will be able to pay as much as 9.59
percent on six-month money market certificates and
9 04 percent on three-month cert1hcates starting today.
The new rates w ere establlshed m Monday's auctions of
Treasury securities at which yields fell for the fourth
time in five weeks.
V.S. hourly pay said highes t
NEW YORK -Labor costs in U S manufacturing
have risen m ore slowly over the past 12 years than in
any other major industrialized country, aa..'Ording to a
new study. Even so, the absolute level of hourly pay for
U.S. manufacturing employees is the highest m the
world, Citibank economist Werner L . Chilton said in the
study released Monday.
Chrysler lo retire warrants
NEW YORK Chrysler Corp outbid several Wall
Street firms Monday for warranl.l> that L'arry the right to
buy 14 4 m1ll1on shares of Chrysler stock at
below-market prices. The automanufacturer.seelung to
dV01d dampening the open-market value of Its stock.
said 1l would retire the warrants. which were owned by
the federal governme nt. By domg so. Chrysler would
avoid the issuance of the add1uonaJ shares of stock.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
WHAT NYSE DID
NEW YOl!tt. (AP) S.0 ll
Advaf'Ced
0.Ctlll90
Uncl\a-Totallu.,.. Nt•nloM New tow\
TO<ln
ll1 !OSI 3'3 ''" 19 s
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW YORK CAP) Set> 13
AO¥t nctd
O«:llMCI
Uncl\a-To•etlu~a
N•wlllOM New tovrt
METALS
Prev deo; II• ••2 )49
2001
Pttw
'° •
o .. '1• J•7
211 n• 21 )
NEW vo~ ... tAP) S(M')t "°'''MfO\H m•t•t
11/ic.t IOOey c..,.... 16"• HJ t..•nta " ~no VS O•lttfla\1001
C:-I~ 10 t""ll I>'" oovn!I N~ Co-• •POt mon1h cto.MQ Mo11
L-70•2+' •'"""I C>OvOO
l ine 46 v.ne• • l>Q'JflO tJ .. tV•••U "" ie •025 M11a11 w .. ~ compa•tt• In
Al-l11wm 16·81 Lenll •I-"" N'
*tcw1, '"'~ 00·.,90 00 !>ti• 16 I~ HU• 'Hw VO<h
l'lellnwm $0)8 QO.t .. O 00 ll0•11nl1<
1fl4tfC!'\Mt 1roir ()\Int• N 'V
SILV£R
-· .. •It.MO '°l.400 lll!
SYMBOLS
DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YO~tt. tAl"I -Final Oo"' J-l ••e<•ot• tor TuaWl•Y S.O 13 STOCXS
)C)lllO o-t! ... L-a...a..
20 Trn JSU11
0 $111
lndut Tr en
Ulll1 6Hlh
127t. 12 t:m U 17103 121' 09-Ht
S63'0 564 31 SS6 ll S6 I.OS-s 10 132 03 131 ., IJO 61 ll I '1-I 02
'tUS .., 11 "1 41 .. s lt-2-94 1,114,100 1,'30,100
1.6SS,900
10,7.0.700
AMERICAN l£AOERS
NEW VOttK (AP> -Se'-'· T-v
orlce al\O nat Cf\enoe ol '"" 10 mo•I eellve Amtrlu n $100 E>.C1\en<N I>·
IUU , tr •O••O ne tloll•ll• ., more tl\an 11
C'IP"ulCO WenoLaoe • Amdant 1 0-Prrl
llavllntA HouOllTr
TIEComm1 ,_,.....,
Cl\amo Ho ISNn
UP
•7'.SOO Ul,500 1:1s:i llt 700
111 • .00
IOUOO 101 .00
M.100 fl,100
l .. + " )O~ + ~ Int + ,
•fo lt -Ht •• , +'
ll>. + '-u -1 71; .. -. ~ _ ...
NIW YOltK CAI'> -l"-......-.. lbt ..... , ... IMw Ytnt Stea th~
1toecln -••rT-Ille! 11ew -119 ~ "'"' - -... "'"' ---9ft -(-.. ~--... -.. T-•· Ht~ tra-.-U •,.Mel. ·--..... ---~ ....... ......._ __ ..,...........,.~
onct .... -··· irs -Na""' Li ii ("9 Pct 1 Tl9ff Int 1 , ~ ..._ Uo II I 1 Putltn F,.n 20'9 • I'• Uo t l
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6 lltC1111n11 2 + ' Uo t 1 ' Coot. Vnll • I ~ .. uo • I I S'low llt0u11 2• + I , Uc ) S
' S•t•n• Co 10 '• .. l Up " 10 CeotiOlO •ol •• 10S'• -< •'• uo •a 11 PSA t•( n • 1 Uo ••
IJ ~1nltr Jt (t.. t. • t 1 UD ' 1 tJ Pu1aro10 71 , i t • uo • •
II (OltKO l )l't t l'o Ve> • j ·~ ~edP•olo u . • I • u o • I I• fl.N El\et~• U t. t I'• UP • t 11 l wn Sne lO. l•'t • 'o Ve> l 1
ti Cnt mo 5ol< 10 • t " uo l I If Wrlatev )J + 1'-UP J )
70 HoovrVn• ' tl'-' '-uo JJ ll lUPw ,,.,,, JI•. I I.Jo ll l1 LOOnlil > )I._ + 1 • UP J.J 1l Alrt>n r" t• + '-uo J1 1t l •0<•Hll llto t Vo ) I HEAl •tO •• + '• Uo JO
DOWN' Leal C"9 Pct
' -, ()ff 100
•"' -.. Olt 'j lt'• -l ... Oii I tlt -••Olt 1 ~-1 Oii •• ,.,~ -llto Oii .., tl•• -) ()II t.
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