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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-09-22 - Orange Coast Pilot( Cleaning up It's a dirty business, but someone has to do it -in this case it's chimney sweep Ted Humphrey of Sunset Beach. See story on Page Bl. Lineup slated in rape attacks By ANDREA .ADELSON °' ... 0.-W Nec IWI Victims of four rapes and an Irvine woman who talked a man out of ... ulting her were to try today to identify their attacker from a jail lineup that includes a Tracy priaon parolee taken into cu.t.ody Tuelkiay. lnvestigatora said Robert Elwood Morehead, 29, is under investigation for four pre-dawn rapes -two each in Santa Ana Her 'Love Boat' wish comes true BJ STEVE I01alELL Of .............. Her wish is to ••ao on • Illa. bea\ltiful ahipand .. thedeu' blue water and eet all that good food." And her dMln!s will be fulfilled. begbmina bricht and early Friday morning, when pretty, blonde Tamara Smtth. of El Toro. heads for the Caribbean for a week-lorla crime with her family. Tuuara. 14. is a frab.man at El Toro HiCh School. Tamara has bone cancer. Ber docton etve her only three to six months to live, ays Bob Davtmon •• member •of the board of Make-A-Wish FoundAtion of Orange Cow\ty, Inc. The non-profit cqanita- tion, wUh ot6cm in Ne'tlVJ)Ol't. BNch. •ttempll to .,..t • (lee Wllll, .... Al) and e>ranse -thin>c.rUrrid 1n Augu.gt. Irvine detectives also believe he is a suspect in a fifth attack in that city last week. Police in c.oeta Mesa, Irvine and Laguna Beach do not believe Morehead is under suspicion for committing six other rapes and two sexual assaults that have occurred in thoee cities in the last two weeks. Laguna police have arrested two men for suspicion of rape in two attacks, but Irvine and Costa Mesa authorities have not ap- prehended anybody in the rash of aex crimes in those cities, where victims have described the at- tackers as both Caucasian and Hispanic. The parolee, Morehead, re- leased from a Sacramento area prison July 30, is black. He is being held without bail on a parole hold in Orange County Jail. Orange police Detective Curt McMillan said investigators in Orange and Santa Ana noted similarities between the four inci- dents, but were unable to tie their cases together until an Irvine woman picked Morehead as her alleged attacker from a photo line-up on the day of his arrest. The ci.rcumstances surrounding the Irvine incident. where a man made lewd gestures to a women during an hour-long ordeal in her home, is dissimilar to the four other assaults. he said. The Santa Ana and Orange assaults have marked similarities, with a man forcing entry into the homes of women who were alone in the pre-dawn hours. The four victims each had their eyes cov- ered shortly before they were assaulted, McMillan said. Because the victims had only (See LINEUP, Pa1e Al) •••$ :::s ::e Colleges foresaw funding cut Officials say budgets can har1dle lawmakers' failure to reach agreement By PHIL SNEIOERMAN Of llM O..y '1MI II.ii Local community college leaders said the Sacramento squabble that has ltilled a $108 million funding package for Cali- fornia's two-year colleges will have little Impact on area cam- puses. Officials of the Coast and Saddleback community college districts say they did not count on receiving any additional state aid when they prepared their 1983-84 budge~. On Wednesday. Gov. George Deukmejian vetoed a $108 million THE ORANGE COAST commuruty college funding b1U approved by the Legt<ilature. He said he would not approve ad- ditional funding unless legislators agreed to a first-tune-ever $50 per semester tuition fee for communi- ty college students. He asked Assembly Speaker Willie Brown to call the Legis- lature back Into session to consider community college tuition. But on Wednesday afternoon, Brown said he would not call the Legis- lature back to reconsider com- munity college funding issues. "We were prepared for the worst, and it appears as though we were right,'' o~rved Coast Com- munity College District Trustee Barnet Resnick. "We are not happy about this tum of events, but we did take the proper role accounting-wise for this eventu- ality." . The Coast District includes Or- ange Coast, Golden West and CoasUine colleges. Although oommun.ity college leaders in Los Angeles said that district may be heading toward bankruptcy, Coast District Board President Carol Gandy said Wednesday, "the Coast Com- munity College District will keep its doors open. We have a balanced budget baaed on 10und fia:al planning. With IOund meal man~ agement and cooperation from everyone, we will make it." Officials 'in the Saddlet>.ck Community College Ol.trlct, which includes campu.aes in Irvine and Mission Viejo, prepared aev- eral financial plans baaed on various funding propoaals that might be approved in Sacramento. Saddleback officials trimmed. $2.27 million from their budget for • the current school year and hoped ~ (See COLLEGES, Pa1e Al) ~ COUNTY IDITION THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 22. 1983 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS . Clash of titans at Irvine Co.:-: Ex-chief Kremer sues Bren By STEVE MARBLE Of -Oelly l'ht II.ti Claiming he was short.changed as much as $5.5 rrullion, former Irvine Co. President Peter Kremer has filed swt against his loQgtime friend and business as- sociate Donald Bren, chairman of the Newport Beach developmemt firm. Kremer, in an interview today, said Bren used deceit when buy- ing up the former president's stock and paid him far less than he paid other stockholders. The former president said an arranged meeting with Bren last March to talk out the problem was canceled when the Irvine Co. chairman decided to go skiing. Kremer said subsequent tele- phone ca1Js were routed to law- yers representing the Irvine Co. and that Bren, wrapped up with a major stock-buying plan, could not be reached, The suit, which alleges fraud and violations of state and federal securities laws, was filed Wednes- day in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles. In addition to Bren, it names New York investment banker Herbert Allen Sr.. an Irvine Co. board member since 1977. "I have been.trying quietly for six months to get the company and Bren to deal with the fundamental issue of equal treatment for all shareholders," Kremer said. ''It now is clear that they will not take the issue seriously without going to the courts." Kremer, who like Bren is a highly private person, resigned Fountain Valley policemen Sgt. Vic Deutsch (left ) and traffic officer °"" ........... ...,Lee...,_ John McDonald wait at scene of fatal accident for possible information. Police hunt Valley auto killer Squad car with flashing lights to beckon possible witnesses By ROBERT BARKER Of llM D..., l'lklt II.ti A Fountain Valley traffic investigator is trying to track down the killers of a mother of four young children, and he has taken some unusual steps to get people to help him. Sgt. Vic Deutsch is dispatching a police car and officers in the late afternoons to the scene of last Sunday afternoon's fatal incident. The patrol car will have its red lights flasping to draw attention to signs in Spanish and English seeking witnesses to the hit-and-run tragedy. "We know there were witnesses because it happened in front of some people sitting on a bench waiting for the bus. We hope this will encourage them to come forward," he said. "It's got to get their attention." The tactic of sending a police car to the scene to locate witnesses has been used in the East, according to Deutsch, "but it's the fl.rst time it's been tried in Orange County to my knowledge," he· - said. "We think it might work." The victim, 35-year-old Maria M. Martinez, had gotten off an Orange County Transit District bus from the Anaheim area where she worked as a (See DEATH CAR, Pa1e Al) from the Irvine Co. late last year after completing a live-year man- agement and stock option con- tract, reportedly worth $20 million. Kremer now owns hia own investment firm, located only blocks from company head- quarters. The lawsuit alleges that Kremer was paid $150,000 for each share of hia stock while a group of Eastern stockholders were paid more than $200,000 per share. ISee KREMER, Page AZ) Hero's efforts won't be • • 1n vain By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °'_....,_ ... Brian Patnoe say he ctid.n't conalder the rlaka when he ch.Med a man who Indecently expoeed himaelf to aeveral women in Patnoe's Huntington Beach neighborhood, even after the man threatened him with a knife and tried to run down hia motorycle. For Patnoe, the pursuit ended with mixed results: the suspected flasher was in police custody, but Palnoe's uninsured motorcycle was wrecked beyond repair. It was the full-time Golden West College student's primary mode of transportation, and he says be lacks the funds to buy a new one. Still, the local good Samaritan'• efforts did not go unnoticed. Huntington Beach Police Chief F..arle Robitaille has end<ned a fund to help Patnoe buy a new motorcycle. Robitaille is encouraging con- tributions to what he has dubbed the "Hero Fund." Of Patnoe, the police chief said, "He could have just turned away as many others have, but instead he decided to do something to keep this man from returning and committing crimes again." Contacted this week, the mod.- est Patnoe said he was not ewe aware a fund has been aet up to help buy him a motorcycle. He also said he had not col'\lldered the consequences Aug. 31 when be aet off after the flasher. "I was home upstain in my apartment, having lunch on the (See CYCLE, Pa1e AZ) It's fall, but humidity doesn't Temperatures stay high, tropical storm brings drizzle to Coast Autumn begins at 7 a.m. Friday, but don't count on a crilp, cool day with falling leaves and all that. The National Weather Service says the heat and humidity that ·have given Southern California a tropical flavor for the past week or so, will eaae just a blt. Remnants of nowoodefunct trop· ical storm Manuel were to blame for the muggy weather, fore· cast.era aald. The atonn was a.1ao responaible for a blanket of heavy milt that covered the Oranie Coast this morning, 1UekenJns highways and 1Pvtng windshield wipers an early test before the real rainy aeaaon begins. The low clouds were expected to give way to sunny skies this afternoon, but a heavy cloud cover still hovered over the coastal area at midday. A high temperature near 80 waa forecast for this afternoon. Humidity and heat also were to eue in downtown Los Angeles, San Fernando and San Gabriel valley areas, wher~ highs in the 80s were predicted: Cloum will akin ooutal akJes again Friday morning -but the mercury t. expected to tag the mJd-70a in the afternoon. In the mountains, a shroud of fog will dissolve by early morning and highs in the 70s are predicted. The northern deserts will bask In temperatures up to the mid-90s; hJghs in the southern deserts are expected to range from the mld -90s to 102. The Owens Valley could get thundershowers. The extended forecast for Or· ange Coast beach cities calls for fair skies except for night and morning coastal low clouds. Highs will be in the mid-70s on the sand and in the low 90s inJand. Lows are expected to be In tht-60s (o mid-70s. ,. ) ,. . ' ' . , U Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Sept. 22, 1983 Pilots push for county tie-down control · . '_Brian Patnoe with wife Jil CYCLE ... ·From Page A 1 By JEFF ADLER Of ... ~ .... ·- Private aircraft pilots are hop- ing that the Orange County Board of Supervisors heeds their high-flying advice and votes to maintain control over 465 private plane parking speoes near John Wayne Airport's north end. Pilots have been up in arms for weeks over a proposal to lease the airport's north tie-down area to a LINEUP ... (From.Page A 1) quick glimpses of their attackers, other physical evidence, such as matching blood samples, will be necessary before linking a suspect to the crimes, he said. Blood samples have already been taken from Morehead, McMillan said. Morehead had served four years in prison after being con- victed in Orange C.ounty for assault with intent to commit rape and two robbery counts. He allegedly has had previous arrests on sex offenses, but no prior convictions, according to Santa Ana Detective Ron Huerth . WISH ... From PageA1 final wish to children with tenninal illnesses. The local wish-granting group is the only one in California. There are about 20 nationwide. private oonceaionalre, a move that could increase the monthly rental for spaces from lta preeent $40 average to u much as $1 20 a month. The county airpon commission voted unanimously this week to recommend the county retain control of the north tle--<lown area rather than lea.aing it to a private firm. Supervisors are expected to make a final declsion on the matter in the next aeveral weeks. The proposal to lease the north Ue-down area and lncreaae the monthly rentall was approved in concept by the Board of Super- viaors back in January following release of a consultant's report that concluded fees for private aircraft and other coMelliona at the airport were much lower than thoee charged by many airports of comparable alz.e. Superviaors directed airport of- ficlala to develop plans to institll'te many of the report's reoommen· datlons. They uked that e6Ch apedfic proposal be brought back for their approval on an individual buia. Ever since the county aought propou.la from tinns interested in leaaing the tie-down area oon- cealon, private flien have railed an out.cry that has not gone unnoticed in the Hall of Adminis- tration. Ken Hall, an aide to Supervisor Newport boat show first of two By ALMON LOCK.ABEY Oelr .... ._.. ..... The third annual Newport Harbor In-the-Water Used Powerboat Show has doubled in size over last year, according to producer Duncan Mcintosh. As a result, this year's show, which started today and will continue through S.unday, will run as a double-header. It will be followed next week, Sept 29 through Oct. 2, by an All Used Sailboat Show. Mesa soon will get· new branch library By JEFF ADLER Ol .. Oelr .......... Costa Mesa -in partnership with Orange County government -will be getting a new and larger downtown library in the near future, probably during the 1984-85 fiacal year. i.ng, explained George C.onnack, assistant GSA direct.or. One of the reasons city officials sought a new library is that the present 6,300-square-foot facility is 20 ye.a.rs old and only marginally meets service demands. In ad- dition, the building does not meet state and federally mandated requirements for access by the handicapped. "The advantage to showgoers i.a obvious," said Mcintosh. "They will be able to see an impressive ~y of what interests them most. Not many powerboat.era are interested in looking at sailboats, and vice versa." Thirty-five yacht brokers will participate in each show, with more than 100 motor yachts. sportfishers and trawlers being offered for sale during the power- boat segment, Mcintosh said. All of the boats on display will be 28 feet or longer. The show will take place at the dock area of Lido Marina Village. Free parking and shuttle service will be available from the parking lot at the comer of Avon and Tustin Streets, one block north of Pacific Coast Highway. Show houn today and Friday are 11 a.m . tosunaet,and Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m. to SUNet. Aclmiasion ia $4.50 for adults, $2.50 for children 6 to 12, and children under 6 free. Thomas Riley, said Riley, whoee diatrict includes the airport, ia aiding with the pilots on \hi. i.ue. U the county were to continue operating the tie-down area, monthly rates might increaae to approximately $70 a month, Hall said. That would be far less than what a private operator would have to charge to tum a profit. He explained the county could operate the tie-down area ao that the monthly rent.s would cover the co.t of running the operation. Currently, the rent.s charged are subsidized by revenues generated from other airport operations, he said. "We want it to meet theooetawe incur down there. But if we operate the tie-down area, it would go up less than It would if a private concessionaire operated it," Hall sp.id. He also said Riley i8 considering recommending the rental increase be phased in over a one-or two-year period. ' Another reason for the county to maintain the ooncession would be to "keep as much control as we can" at the airport, said Hall. Riley and other supervisors long have been sensitive to any airport issue, especially those which might re- duce their control over the over-crowded and controversial air facility. John Wayne Airport has ap- proximately 1,000 tie-down spaces for private aircraft, Hall said. All but the 465 spaces in question are operated by private aviation firms who sell, leaae or service aircraft in addition to renting out tie-down space. baloony that overlooks Walnut •Avenue wben I saw him in his car, exposing him8el.f to passing girls," he recalled. And Tamara's trip will be the first organized by the Orange C.ounty ~A-Wiah organization, which opened shop on Dover Drive in June, says David.son_ The 7,500-aquare-foot Costa Mesa branch oounty library will be located on Plwner Street, between Park and Anaheim av- enues, just behind the curre.nt library. COLLEGE DECISION ••• "What bugged me is that I've got three sisters, and I just didn't like to see that going on," Patnoe said. In addition. a neighbor woman had been the victim of an indecent exposure incident just a few days before. Patnoe, a fonner Marine who once worked as a bar bouncer, said he raced downstairs, told a neigh- bor to call police and jumped on his mtorcycle. He spotted the flasher driving around the oomer. a~ =-plann,./are off to "The ):ostol the trip - everything -has been taken care of," David.son said. "Sit- mar is picking up the tab for Tamara, her parents and sister aboard the cruise ship Fair- wind." In addition, East.em Airlines is flying the family-gratis - to florida Friday morning, and flying them back Oct . 1. The new building ia intended to better serve the community by providing expanded space for library materiala, especially large print books and Spanish language materials, according to Elizabeth Martinez Smith, manager of the county ~ral Services Agency library aervioes division. Cart of construction is estimated at $575,000. The county will contribute $250,000 and will be responsible for stocking. staffing and operating the library. The city will provide the land and the balance of the construction fund-Gerald Hayward From PageA1 additional state funding would be approved. "This is definitely the worst case scenario,.. said William Schreiber, executive asaiatant to the chancellor at Saddleback. "W e're going to have to live out the semester with our $2.27 million cut." At the st.ate level, Gerald Hay- ward, chancellor of California's 106 community colleges, said the two-year campuses face "catastrophic" losses in classes, students and employees. Hayward said if the budget cuts stand, the schools face the loss of 166,000studentsand the layoffs of 10,000 workers and part-time instructors. Locally. some employee and class reductions were made before the start of the school year in preparation for the loss of state funding. Officials of the Coast and ' Saddleback districts said they expect no further layoffs or c1aa reductions this year as a result of Wednesday's deadlock in Sacra· men to. "I told him he'd better stop because we'd called the police," he recalled. "But he put it in reverse, almolt hit a couple of pedestrians, went through the interesection backwards and took off. What 1 wanted to do was get his license The family will be guests of the Marriott Hotel Friday night in Florida, and Marriott will abo provide transpor- tation from the airport and to the boat on Saturday. KREMER SUES BREN OVER IRVINE CO. DEAL ... FromPageA1 ~ nwnber, but he didn't have front ~ or rear plates." A limouaine service will pick the family up at their El Toro home and drop them off at LAX free of charge, Davidaon said, and they'll be at the airport to pick them up when they come home. Bren, who has been a company owner sl.nce 1977, bought up 52 percent of the company atock from F..astem shareholders early this year, giving him controJ of 86 percent of the company. The purchaae was announced last April 15. Du.ring the lengthy pursuit, the flasher waved a knife, curaed at Patnoe and tried to run his motorcycle down. Patnoe said. But the chue seon caught the atten- tion of two t-olice officers. Aa Patnoe recalls, a policeman's van pulled in front of the flasher's car. Patnoe jumped off his motor- cycle and moved toward the driver. But the flaaher backed up over the motorycle, wreck:i11lt it. Police off.ici.als said contribu- tions to the Hero Fund can be mailed to the Chief of Police at the Huntington Beach Civic Center, 2000 Main St., Huntington Beach 92648. "We aren't going to have to pony up a dime," he said. ''Thafa the beauty of it all. We contacted the oorporatJona and they all aaid, 'You bet. We'll help.' .. The cruise will take the Smith family to porta in the Virgin lalanda, Na111au in the Bah.amaa, and San Juan, Puerto Rico. Sitmar i.a allo treating the family to day toura of the various laland a, Davidaon said. But Kremer said he was in- formed of Bren's plan to buy out the East.em stockholders in early February, just aeven days after the former president inked his termination agreement with the IrvineCo. Kremer said in computing what his stock WU worth. he WU told the Irvine Co. wu valued at $760 million. When Bren announced hi.a stock aquisition ln AS>ril. he put the company's value at $1 billion. DEATH CAR SOUGHT IN VALLEY ... From PageA1 cleaning maid at a hotel. S he was walking in the C!"C*Walk at Harbor Boulevard and F.dinger Avenue to get another bus to go to her home in Santa Ana. according to Deutlch. He said the traffic light changed from "Walk" ' to ''Don't Walk'' and Mrs.. Martinez ''may have ·. '. ,, panicked'' and began to run acroes the interaection. Deutsch aaid that a woman was croaslng the street with Mrs. Martinez but she stopped when the light changed, allowing her time to look and avoid the speeding auto. By running, Mrs. Martinez reduced her chances to evade the car. he said. It waa at this time, aa:ording to Deutach, "that 4 a male driver of an older-model car anticipated the light change and accelerated through the inter- '·~ aection.'' The car was believed to be going about 45 , • miles an hour when it hit Mrs. Martinez. It threw •: • her about 80 feet and ahe waa pronounced dead at , Fountain Valley C.onununity Hospital. "But she :· waa probably dead before she landed," said ., o..ai.ch. ' I I I I Deutach said police are look.l..ng for a full-sized car with oxidized green paint. He aald the-witness in the croeswal.k with Mn. Martinez lndicates the death car has characteristics sim.l.lar to a 1970 Plymouth Fury. The victim is survived by her husband Enrique, aons Juan, 16, and Bernardino, 14, and daughters Maria, 12, and Marlaela, 6. Deutsch urges anyone with information to call him at 963-9725. • '. 'I " ,, ~ We're Listening ••• What do you like about the Dally Piiot? What don't you llke? Iii 'II I ~ II :1 .1 ~ ll ! I Call the number at left and :your meaage will be recorded, tran1Cribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. 642·6086 The same 24-hour an1werin1 service may be used to record let· ters to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, please. Tell us what's on your m ind. ~ F•>Oty n yOu c10 l\01 ,,... '°"' papet by II '° ll ,,, Call -• 1 pm eftd your c.opy •Ill Ot _.., SotU<Oay o~ Svncl•y 11 yOll do 1101 ·-·· yO\lf COll1' Dy 1 • m c .. -· 10 • m encl "°"' ~OPY Mil lie ---eel ClrCllMttoft T1t111r..o .. Mao! Or....itCovtllr .._ ..,,_ """""Gte>n ~ ORANGE COAST Dally Pilat H. L 8chwerta Ill Publ!Shef Chazy DowelHw Editor end AN1t11n£ to tr.. Publlthef MAIN Of'PJC• )JO -8-y SI eo.lt ..._ CA Mel*""'-&o• IMO ~· MtM.. CA tieM CopyngM , ... Ol•l\09 C-1 ~ ~ Mo ~•·• ttOllttc lllw~llflllone ec11to1111 moll•• or -Mlnetltt -""'Y be ._CICMled wlltloUI te*tel l*mttalOn of~ - ~-~·-~= -~ VOL. n., NO.• ,, Kremer noted. "When I first heard about Bren's pun:ha9e, I was inclined to think the timing was coincidental and that we would reeolve this straightforwardly," said Kremer. "A.a eve(lta unwound, however, it appeared \here was an intent to deceive me and to make certain that I did not get the same benefits as other shareholders." Kremer added. Kremer's lawauit comes on the heels of threatened legal action against Bren by minority stock- holder Joan Irvine Smith, grand- daughter of the company's foun- der. Smith, who holds 11 percent of the company stock, said sh e will sue Bren for $1 billion if he tries to move forward with a plan to shift his $560 million stock-buying ~bt onto the Irvine C.o. Bren is proposing to merge the holding company he Wied to buy his stock with the Irvine Co. Aa a tradeoff for the merger, Bren said INTRODUCING F ALL'83 'We've stocked our store with a. distinctive new collection of classic sportswear and accessories. Also, our selection of s w eaters and hand-knits is extra. special. ·v Plan to stop by soon, we think you'll agree The Storekeeper for Her is well worth your visit~ A clotl\ina atorc committed to Ht'Vfce, qua.Uty and the •lmpllclty of good tute. Weetcliff Plaza 17th & lrvirw --~------ he would double the stock held by Smith and other minority share- holders or buy them out at $208,000 a share. Smith believes Bren is under- valuing the stock and haa hidden plans to break up and aell ofl the company. Bren's chief aides, though, said the company chair- man has long-term interests in the company and say aome of the best financial minds in the country have attested to the fairness of his merger plan. Phone 642 7061 ' . . . .. I .. '. . •• .. I •• 4 • Orange Coast DAI LY PILOT /Thursday, Sept. 22. 1983 BULLETIN BOARD Irvine hospital site to be resolved Scouting recruitment rally tonight in lrv.ine Chancellor Aldrich still oplimi tic about private hospital locating near UCI campus A recruitment rally for srouung m Orange County waU be held tonight at the Irvin e Marriott Hotel from 9 to 11:30 p.m . Appearing at the rally wall be Olympic gymnast Cathy Rigby. a live band, Rams cheerleaders and other cele brities The rally is built around the theme, "Today's Scouts -Tomorrow's Champions." Information may be obtatned by calling the Orange County Coun cil of the Boy Scouts of America at 546-4990. Lupus chapter convenes tonight The Orange County Lupus Chapter of the City or Hopt' Will hqld an tnfonnative meeting tonight m commuruty room 150 of the Caty S hopping Center in Orange at 7:30. Dr. Robin K . Dore. a rheumatologu;t at Anaheim Memorial Hospital, wall be the guest speaker. The public 1s invited, and further information is available at 997-8823 Tours of UCI biology lab planned A fragrant laboratory housing plants useful to people will be preview ed Friday from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. in rooms 808 and 852 of the UC lrvine engineering building. The display lS one of the undergraduate teaching laboratorws used in an introductory biology class and illustrates the s1gn1ftcant used of plants in everyday Life. Further information on the open house can be obtained by calling Carole Brown, 856-6927 Parking is availaple in lot 18 ~ State school chief sets UCI talk State Superintendent of Schools William Honig wall be the key speaker at a U~ Irvine education symposium Saturday The symposium is aimed at establishing ways of working with Sacrame nto to enhance state reforms in education. Further information can be obtained from the campus information office. 856-6922. Marathon champ joins lrvi~e race "lronman" Domingo Tibaduaza has joined the list of runners who will compete in the fifth annual KFWB South Coast Classic lOK run Saturday in Irvine's Mason Regional Park. The South American marathoner joins a field including defending South Coast champion Tom Wysocki in the raet> to benefit Childrens Hospital of Orange County. A field of more than 3,000 runners is expected to jog the course adjacent to the UC Irvine campus. Registration forms are available through CHOC at 558-2884. I POLICE LOG By ANDREA ADE~ON Of llMDelty ~IOl tt.11 UC Irvine Chancellor Daruel Aldrich said Wednesday that while the 20-year-old dream t.o bring a hospital LO the campus may not be realized, the issue of where to put a hospital in the city of Irvine will be resolved this year. T he chancellor, who said last wt.-ek he plans to make t his academic year his last, said he is suU hopeful the university will be able lO affiliate w ith a private hospital, the lrvane Medical Center, advan<:t.>d by a coalition of businessmen and ('IVIC' activists. The College of Medicine already has ties to 39 other medical inslltutaons throughout Orange County and elsewhere. including the campus-owned Medical Center Also Wednesday, at an IMC directors me<.'ling. a formal uni- versity negotaaung group was established, a('COrdang to &i Partmann, IMC spokesman. He said the !ave-member re- ' search a nd educauon committee was set up specifically lO carry on talks with UCI regarding the university's involvement with IMC. "The team will be meetmg with UCI officials and they'll set up a schedule for fonnal discussions," Portmann said. The location of I MC on Irvine Co. land adjacent to the univer- sity's medical school, ac; proposed by UCI officials, was discussed but no conclusions were reached, he scud. Portmann emphasared that the discussions with the university will probably be held over several months. "T his is as exciting a year as 1965," Aldrich said, reflecting on what he hopes to accomplish in his 21st year as the college's only chancellor, durin~ a breakfast meeting with the media. Cash socked away, hut not safe A young lrvlne man dlstrustful of banks who kept S600 cash In a soci< hidden In his bedroom loat the cache to a burglar Wednesday. The culprlt pried a sliding glass door of 1 home on Seron Avenve A man an his late 20s hiding behind bushes near a carport on Orange Blosaom lumped out and exposed himself to a woman getting out ot a car In Irvine early Wednesday morn- ing A Downey man was arrested tor ausplclon of strongarm robbery In an un<Mrcover operation by ahe<IH's deputies Wednesday. Thomas E Chapman allegedly sold deputies $ 1 ,200 worth of auto parts and then tootc oH without turning over the goods. . . , A burglar stole a piggy bank containing S 100 cash. a $350 bike and a cusette recorder from a home on Bearpaw sometime Wednesday. Hunting ton Bea c h An apartment burglary was re- ported Wednesday afternoon on the 21000 block of Pacific Coast High- way Entry was apparently mada through a loeked side wtndow The loss Included two telev1slons sets valued at $800, jewelry valued at $800 and $10 In change. A 20-foot blue traJler was rf!ported stolen Wednesday from a business on the S<lOO block of Argosy Street The IOss was eslmaled al S 1,400 A home burglary was reported Wednesday afternoon on the 16300 block of Anita Lane Entry was apparently made through an un- locked front door The loss included video game catrldges worth $600 plus $15 cash. A t978 Peugeot was burglartzed Wednesday while parked on the 18800 block of Valley Circle The loss Included a Pioneer AM/FM stereo cassette player valued at $259 A home burglary was reponed Wednesday morning on the 7900 block of Oceangrove Circle. Entry was was apparently made by prying open a locked rear window. The loss Included $1,500 In jewelry and $400 In camera equipment. Fountain Valle y Someone pried open an unlocked bedroom window at a residence In 1he 17000 bloc!( of Vaces Clrcle and stole a TV set from a table In the cloeet. Thieves stole two left Pinto stan- dard-sized hubcaps valued at $200 from a car parked In the 9000 block of Turtledove Avenue. Newport B ea c h A watch. camera and assorted pieces of stereo equipment were taken by burglars from an apartment at the Oakwood Garden Apartments Police said the thief may have used a pass key to gain entrance The IOss was put at $995 by the 22-yeer-otd resident of the unit A burglar reporiedly crawle<J through a window of a residence on the 100 block of 31st Street and took $860 In cash from a wallet on a bedroom dresser as the owner of the wallet slept nearby Laguna Beach Vandals used a 8/"larp Instrument to CtJt up a car seat In a vehicle lett parked at 350 Forest Avenue Wednesday afternoon Laguna Beach police said. A second car was vandalized In the 1600 block of Temple Hiiis Dr1ve and $30 In belongings were stolen A stereo was taken from a locked car parked In the 300 block of Ruby Street Costa Mesa A 1983 van was broken Into on the Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth car lot at 2929 Harbor Blvd.. Costa Mesa. Monday nlghl and stereo equipment was stolen. The owner said thieves climbed a lence Into the back lot and took mounted stereo eqlupment, an equalizer and speakers out of the van. TODAY'S WEATHER Cloudy mornings, sunny daytimes Coastal Extended Night wld momlng~IOwcloudt. ~ It« ~IQM renglng lrom llll0-10. ., ,,.. -lo loW -In Int-·~ °"9m1Qhl low9 In ,,.. eo. to low 10. Temperatures 55 36 59 37 •7 39 79 58 •9 ... 07 30 75 43 11 3.4 15 55 80 3.4 .. ,, &a 52 se 31 ee " ae se se 51 ~ 40 19 .. 87 45 Ml 72 eo 40 72 .. 66 42 11 eo 53 38 51 42 ~le Pr~ ~~ : ="City at 5t Reno ea 38 Ndlmoftd ... ., lllo.lle U 37 tll•ei.T- 92 74 ... Lei!• ~ • 7 8eft AnlOlllO ,. ~ , 84111 Diego 101 llO 8M Ft__, Stl!fonaty•• M 36 75 53 17 4a 66 31 .. "' n • 86 • " n .... '° $4 1$ • .. ~ II 52 74 52 70 q 51 47 n •2 73 43 7t '2 72 •• 11 •• 5t l7 72 ., SI 24 ~; ~ ~---------------------------------------78 ., .... ~~ :i Tides 81 11 71 ., : ~; • Second low ... 72 3-ICllllQll 1'00AV 404 pm 1ooepm 11 u 77 Q ,, ... 64 :it 63 37 a1 as 60 "° ... 70 74 .. ti 45 u ,. .. l7 ,,.., . ., , ..... _ 4 21 a m 01 "'"Ngll I0>1 •m $~ 1.0CAnotl ._..._ 4S7pm tO ~-~ a-'CI t11g11 10 tO p m 4 t Santa AM 1'11.w Jeotty "'" -'""" ... 00 p"'. ..... tOtll 81 . ~ Jr\M\'al.41 a M'al'Cl-~tlt ... f1tl081 .~ pm leltlolW.00-MOOft -Ill ? 30 p Ill IOCl<ry, -.to M IAOUfl• t..er. t M a m T~ Md -eoaln et lanO-t• 7f7pm Wa•t-ttl/fl ff Pf ·suRf RIPDRT ICD l.J t·S '2 ,,, ,., 11•1 ,,, "Things ar<:' undl·r wny thc1t we've dreamed about for :.!O years.'' he pointed out, anC'lud111g the building of new rt-st'ard1 laboratories and the round mg of •' campus housing authority Opening for the first day nf das.'lt's in October of J9fl5 wath I ,589 studen ts, the Irvin~ c~mpui. th1s year will break enrullimmt records with 11,750 stuJ1•nts, climbing by 4 to 5 pert·ent over lust year's student total. Aldrich 'N.lad How UCI enrollment stacks up against the res t of th( eight-campu!> system isn't avu1l- able yet, he said. In ('Omparason, statew1dc.• c.•om mumty college enrollment ha'> dropped between 5 and I 0 µcu:t>nt Aerial a ttac hn1ent this fall <.'Ompared to last. Officials of the two-year colleges at tribute the decline in part to student l'Onfusion over fees. All ~ven of Orange County's community L'Olleges report enrol- lm(•nt dips While students in the state univrrs1ty campuses are paying h1ghrr fees this year than last. Aldrich said, "I don't think the ft>c-s at this institution are the d<:tt•rmanmg factor" studen make an choosing where lO atte d eollt•ge H.-did say. however, that students eligible to attend the un1vt•N1ty but who choose to am•11d a two-year coUege do so in part because of higher four-year college fees. Aldrich credited the elC'&lation in UCI enrollment to a "growing appreciation of the campus" in both the academic and student unities. addition. another attraction de is campua housing, XPa'lilOE!<l this year with the ecen completion of a 300-room residence hall. That added hall brings campus housing to 3,800 spaces, or room enough for 33 percent of the campus population. Aldrich said that level i.a the second highest in the state univer- sity system after UC Santa Cruz, designed as a residential college wit h accommodations for 34 per- cent of its students. -Big party readied fot •, burned boy By tbe A11oclaled Prell David Rothenberg, 7, whoaptnt more than seven months ln ~i­ tals after his father set him afirii in a Buena Park motel room, has "quite a party" waiting for him w hen he goes home to Brooklyn, N.Y. Buena Park police Officer Terry Branum said David's mother, Marie Rothenberg, planned to pick up her son from the Shriners Bum Institute in Boston for the trip home Friday afternoon. Branum befriended the two during David's con- valescence at the UC-Irvine Medi- cal Center in Orange . "It's going to be quite a party," he said. Ken and Judy Curtis, the Fullerton couple who opened the ir home to Mrs. Rothenberg while her son was hospitalized in 'Orange, forwarded to New York 35 cartons of gifts that well-wishers sent to the Police Department. P e rhap ·in search of a fire or a ta ll tree, this hook and ladder model of a Porsche 9 14 was turned off the an Diego Freeway in Irvine by a driver who, a ct>ording 10 his lice nse plate . loves sk y diving. Police began a trust fund for David following the March 3 incident in which the boy's father, Charles Rothenberg, dooaed him with kerosene and aet him on fire. Rothenberg, 43, pleaded gull~ to attempted murder and in July received the maximum 1entenoe -13 years in state prison. Domestic violence foe lauded State senator honored for battere d women, children efforts By LINDA WOODS o.-,-c-.....-1 Sen Ro be rt Pres I e y. 0-Riversade. the a uthor of several pieces of successful legislation regarding battered women and abused children, w ill be honored today a t the first anniversary celebration of the Battered Women'sShelte r ofSouthOrange County in Laguna Niguel. The event IS a prelude lO Domestic Violence Week. which begms Monday. A strong advocate for breaking the domestic violence cvde. Presley authored legislation 1n the late '70s that established s1x shelter homes m California for abused women and bills that funneled $13 from each marriage license into fighting domestic viol - enre. "The key to ending the abuse of women and children in our society l.tes in changing the attitudes of our children," said Presley. whose bill to make parenting classes mandatory in public schools w as defeated. This philosophy has guided the development of the &tt.ered Women's S helter of South Orange County, which provides a r esiden - ual center where a w oman and her l'hildren can receive care and lodging as well as psychological, legal, and career counseling for about 30 days. The shelter is run by Human Options, a non-profit corporation organized in 1979. The shelter houses three women and their children or six smgle women. In tensive counsel- ing is provided to develop sd f-esteem and personal coping in sue ti areas as assertion and parent- ing. There is $trong etnphasi.a on building the self esteem of the children and helping them to cope with the affect of family viole.nce through individual and group therapy. Todate, l ,045callsforhelphave been received and 98 women and children have been housed in the shelter program. The staff includes trained coun- selors who are aided by 24 ective volunteers. The shelter has been supported through monetary award.a and grants by many community sources. including the United Way, James Irvine, the Fiuor Foundation, the Mission Viejo Co., R ockwell International. Ponderosa Homes and the F1urocarbon Co. The 24-hour hotline number is 494-5367. The P.O.S.H. · Attitude The value of quality. classic styling and natural comfort , .. an· important statement about t-ls good taste. , - ~4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Sept. 22, 1983 TOP OF THI NEWS NATION Workers mixing chemicals may have triggered blasts By tbt A11oclated PrtH SALISBURY, N.C. -Workers mixing chemicals may have set off four sulfuric acid explosions that.injured 26 people, destroyed part of their factory and cha&ed about 75 families from their homes, fire officials said today. But a company spokesman said it was too early to tell what caused Wednesday's blasts and fire at Proctor Chemical Co. in downtown Salisbury, 22 miles north of Charlotte. Study· views nuclear attack BOSTON -Neither the United States nor the Soviet Union is capable of wiping out the other's land-based missiles in a single attack, making the use of nuclear weapons "a gamble on a scale completely unprecedented in human history," an MIT study says. Enough silos protecting nuclear-armed, land-based missiles would survive an attack to permit either party to counterattack, according to the study by physicist K~ta Tsipis and Matthew Bunn, the Bost.on Globe reported today. No charges in L e wis death HERNANDO, Miss. -An investigation into the death of Shawn Lewis, wife of singer Jerry Lee Lewis, is finished, and no criminal charges will be filed, a prosecutor said Wednesday. Mrs. , Lewis, 25, was found dead Aug. 24 at the rural , residence she shared with Lewis near Nesbit, 1 Miss. An aut.opsy showed sh e died of an overdose of the drug methadone. • WORLD ' i: U.S warships shell Druse ;: .f BEIRUT, Lebanon -U.S. warships shelled ~ !>ruse batteries in the central mountains today and the !>ruse struck back. One rocket blew up the main ammunition dump of Italian peace- keepers, another wounded four French soldiers 1 and a grenade wounded two more. military "':· spokesmen said. : Derailed train injures 30 ' PITLOCHR Y, Scotland -A sleeper train :. carrying 75 passengen derailed in the Scottish . Highlands early today and plunged down a • 30-foot embankment,1 iniuriruz 30 people, rail • officials said. '. \.. - , Two Soviet envoys ousted O'IT A WA -Two Soviet diplomats were • expelled last week for trying to steal top-secret hJgh technology, but the Canadian government kept it quiet to avoid any link with its denunciation of the Soviet downing of a K orean airliner, the Foreign Office said today. Weinberger to visit Tokyo TOKYO -Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger will arrive in Tokyo Saturday to find America's most important Asian ally debating the reliability of U.S. security guarantees and the government's pro-<iefense policies. Masashi Ishibashi, the leader of the opposition Socialist Party, has insisted Japan sh ould remain neutral and unarmed. Terror in sky: pilot attacked SYRACUSE, N. Y. (AP) -Passengers shrieked and the pilot screamed "Get him off me!" when a passenge r cut off fuel to one engine on a commuter plane carrying 17 people, sending the craft into a 700-foot nosedive before it was brought under control. As a passenger and the co-pilot grappled with the man, the pilot pulled the twin-engine Swear- ingen Metro 2 out of its dive only 200 to 300 feet above the ground, witnesses said Wednesday. "My first thought was JUSt to try and grab him ... and when I did, I pulled him back and I confess to hitting several times," said James Henderson, the Boston University law professor who held the man on the floor until the plane landed safely Wednesday evening at Hancock lntemationaJ Airport. None of the 15 passengers or two crew members aboard Empire Airlines Flight 841 en route from Washington to Montreal was injured in the incident which lasted less than two minutes, authorities said' Charged with four counts of attempted murder and held without bail pending arraignment today was Christopher -Bradshaw, 27, of suburban Baldwinsville, said Syracuse police spokesman Rod Carr. One witness speculated Bradshaw was trying to commwt suicide, but police said they knew of no motive. Marcos warns of Inartial law MANILA, Philippines (AP) -President Ferdinand E. Marcos raised the threat of reimpo6ing martial law today and ordered his troops to shoot if necessary to counter anti-government rioting that left 11 dead and 200 wounded . But he said he was not thinking of reimposing martial law "right no w ." The street violence Wedneeday -exactly one month after the assassination of opposition leader Benigno Aquino -was the bloodiest in Marcos' 18-year rule. "I warn the opposition -do not force my 11.and, do not compel me to extremes that you already know of," Marcos Mid in a nationally televised address today. The "extremes" wev an apparent reference to the imposition of martial Jaw in 1972. Although Marcos lifted martial law in 1980, strict controls remain. He said an order he had given to the military to observe "maximum tolerance" with demonstrators, including-banning-anti-riot" troops-from carrying guns, was being reversed. Girl's tumor treated 1 KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -A preacher's daughter with a "red, hot, angry"' tumor received a small amount of chemotherapy today under court order, but her father pledged to continue fighting the treatment on religious grounds. Pamela Hamilton . 12, received th e chemotherapy while sleeping at 3:20 a.m ., said Pat Kelly, spokeswoman for F.ast Tennessee Children's Hospital. "She's doing fine," the spokeswoman said. Pamela will receive one such treatment a day for eight days unless the courts intervene. The therapy was ordered Wednesday by the Tennessee Court of Appeals. . Surviving ~toddler describes .attack An Invitation to our FORT WAYNE.' Ind. (AP) -A toddler w ho aurvived a brutal attack in which her lllther, ·mother and brother , were beaten to death has given authorities "sig- nificant" information in .. their investigation of the .'killings. a prosecutor. ~lays. Two -ye ar -old Caroline Osborne, who .waa sexually assaulted . and left for dead last .:week by intruders who .. killed newspaper editor . 'non Osborne, 34, his ~.94-year-old wife Jane ~et.heir 11-year-old son ~ • was intervieweq ~·-edneeday by Patricia ! J)mallwood, director of '"the Victims Aleistanol! =r.Program for the Fort ;.yrlayntt Police Depart~ ~ tnenL ~ The girl, who was • ~J)own to Kanau on ~• JNednelday al ter an aunt ~uncle were awarded ~ merge ncy cuatody, ~ve lnve1tiga'°n "lig~ ~iflcant" and "pro- ; 4iuctlve" Information 1i before she left, llen ty .Proeecutor Step- ~ M. Slml aaid. He ~'~Geclined to elaborate. Caroline WM found ~ooclled and wanderJ.na around her family'• Monday when the bod.le. were d1. 4:oven!d. pollce aaid. Of. flclala believe the murdttl occ:u:rred be- tween 9 p.m . Friday and ~ a.m. S.tUfday. Customers to a ''Sellabration·· on the occasion of our Twenty-Fifth Anniversary An opportunity to do a little pre-Christmas shopping at 25%' off everything and anything now in st ock. If you have no reason co take advantage of this special buying offer, please come in anyway and share a moment o n this happy occasion with your friends on the staff at CHARLES H. B~RR 9QM)..fe-t-& 17th at Irvine Westcliff Plaza , Newport Beach Sale Starts Friday, September 23rd. Through Saturday, October 1st. 1 O o'clock a.m. to 6 o'clock p.m. Thursday Evening until 8 o'clock p.m. VISA -MA STERCHARGE ------------·-.-. 2 I I' starts Friday, 9:30 a.m. m_any limited q~antities ... not all sizes may be available in each groupmg ... colors and styles limited to stock on hand, so shop early for best selP.ction! ' • 1n our Huntington Beach store women 's sportswear 267 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS 102 MISSES' TEE SHIRTS 49 MISSES' PULL-ON PANTS , • . . . . 111 JUNIOR SHIRTS 146 MISSES' TANK TOPS 89JUNIOR PANTS 55 JUNIOR SKIRTS 143 JUNIOR PANT TOPS 8' JUNIOR SHIRTS 27 SHORTSETS 136 JUNIOR L. SL V. TEE SHIRTS 41 JUNIOR CO-ORDINATES 66 MISSES' PANT TOPS 74 MISSES' POL VESTER BLOUSES 14 JUMPSUITS 76 JUNIOR SWEATERS women 's dresses 2' HALF SIZE DRESSES 18 MISSES' DRESSES 33 JUNIOR DRESSES 18 JUNIOR DRESSES large size fashions 49 PULL-ON PANTS 29SHIRTS 18DRESSES 18DRESSES 38BLAZERS lingerie, loungewear 11 BRAS · 90 CAMISOLES. SLIPS 76 SLEEPSHIATS 79 CAMISETTES 18 UNIFORM PANTS 1 S UNIFORM SMOCKS S6LOUNGERS 15BRAS 37GOWNS 19LOUNOERS 10GOWNS SS LOUNGERS 37GOWNS women's accessories 37 SPORT SOCKS 15 PHOTO-GO·AOUND ALBUMS 45 COSMETIC BAGS 69TUBETOPS 163BELTS 37 MEN'S-LOOK TIES 57 FASHION SCARVES 293 SUPPORT HOSE 73CANVAS HANDBAGS 300 TIO HTS ... 81 FASHION EXERCISEWEAR 13 SUNGLASSES • 19 MANICURE SETS infants and toddlers 27 JNFANTS' SHIRTS ~2 INFANTS' SHOAT SETS ,. T'QDOLEAS' WOVEN TOPS 41 NIWIORN GIFT SETS . . . . . . . . . .••. 51 INFANTS' BAS!BALLJACKETS '9 TODDLERS' LIOfllTWEIOHT JACKETS '8TQDot.EAS'PANTSETS NOW 1.98 1.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 6.98 9.98 11 .98 NOW 9.98 14~98 14.98 18.98 NOW 3.98 4.98 9.98 14.98 19.98 NOW 1.98 1.98 1.98 2.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 5.98 5.98 5.98 6.98 6.98 8.98 NOW 48C 98c 98c 98c 98C 98c 98C 98c 1.98 '1.98 ·2.98 4.98 12.98 NOW 98C 1.98 1.98 1.98 3.98 3.98 4.98 buys for girls • NOW 1373N SOCKS 4k 31 BRIEFS, PKO 3 PAS 98C 101RO~AS 98t t13 NY~~ SHORTS 1.98 SI 8tQ QI LS' PANTS . 3.98 518LOUl!S • . . 5.91 buys for boys 59 LITTLE BOYS TANK TOPS 87 LIGHT WEIGHT PAJAMAS 138 MUSCLE SLEEVE TOPS S6 DRESS SHIRTS 37LrTTLE80YSJOOSHOATS 108 BIG BOYS SWIMWEAR 187 BIG BOYS SHORTS 33JEANS 15 LIGHT WEIGHT JACKETS buys for men 71 SCREEN PRINT TEES 21 GENTLE MEN'S SHIRTS 59 OCEAN PACIFIC• SOCKS 23$. SLV. SWEATER SHIRTS '7HATS 17 YOUNG MEN'S HAWAIIAN SHIRTS 23 JANTZEN' SHIRTS 45 SHIMMEL$ SHIRTS 17 NIKE' TEES 1 OS S. SL V. GENTLEMEN'S SHIRTS 81 PRINT SHIRTS 87 HAWAIIAN SHIRTS SS WALKING SHORTS 23 ACTIVE PANTS 29 L. SLV. SHIRTS 21HAGGAA'SUITSLACKS 45 HAGGAR' VESTS 165 MUNSINGWEA~ SHIRTS t9 SWEATSUrTS shoes f.or the family 50 CHILDREN'S SANDALS 75 WOMENS' SANDALS ......... . 50 CHILDREN'S TENNIS SHOES 30 WOMENS' DRESS SHOES 15 CHILDREN'S HIKING BOOTS .0 WOMENS' CLOOS '0 WOMENS' CASUAL SHOES 30 MENS' CANVAS SLIP ONS 25 HAWAIIAN THONGS. . . . . . .. 35 GIRLS' TENNIS SHOES 80 WOMENS' DRESS SHOE.I . 30MENS' ATHLETfCSHOES 50 WOMENS' CASUAL SHOES 30 WOMENS' CASUAL SHOES 30 MEN'S CASUAL SHOES for your home 127 WASHCLOTHS 37WASHCLOTHS . . 89 FINGER TIP TOWELS 112 HAND TOWELS 58 HAND TOWELS 26BATHTOWELS 37 HAND TOWELS '1 BATH TOWELS 308ATHRUGS 17 TWIN SIZE SHEETS 23 CHILDREN'S TOTE BLANKET$ housewares 97PLACEMATS 27TABLECLOTHS 21 MIXING BOWL SETS, 3-PC. 17 STORAGE BOWL SETS, 3-PC . et TEAKETTLES jewelry buys 2'0 NOVEL TY PINS , 13~olRLS'SHOATSETS 4.9e • ariJtr~ OIRLS' SHOATS . . . . . • . •....... 8.91 105 BIRTHSTONE BAACEL!TS 98 TRIO EARRINGS 1219TtCK PINS · '8GIALI PANTa . . . . . • • ............. 8.98 75 PEN•DIGIT AL WATCHll 57COLOAEDADVANCE"WATCHE9 Huntington Beach• 9811 Adams Ave . at Brook h u rst St. ·. NOW 9k 1M 1.91 1.18 .. 1.91 1.91 2.N 4.98 1f.M NOW 1.9' 1.1111 1.M 1.M 2.M ••• 3 •• 3.M ,... a• . ... '"" 5.11 7.tl 7.18 1.M 7.98 t .te 17.91 NOW _(. .. ,. .. Ml. ;$.II 4M 4 •• .... ••• '1·· ' .• 14 ... 15 .. 17.)1 1t:ttl 21.tl NOW ... ... ... -1.M 2.11 ..... .Me UI , ... ... NOW .. 1.tH.11 .::: t0.11 . ,. NOW ... ..... = ·'· ...... TOP OF THE NEWS STATE Robbery suspect believed holding employees hostage SACRAMENTO -A deput y was shot today and a robbery suspect was killed at a film processing plant, and at least one other suspect was believed holding some 25 employees hostage inside, officials said. Canal break floods city ANDERSON -A large irrigation canal broke about 3 a.m . today in Anderson , flooding four blocks in the reside ntial area and forcing some evacuations, officials said. 'Officer Tim York said the 70-foot break in the Anderson-Cottonwood Irrigation District canal filled many homes and streets with u p to 3 feet of water. B eef to schools halted SACRAMENTO -State schools Super- intendent Bill Honig has halted the use of ground beef from the federal government because of allegations it may be contaminated by unsanitary processing. Honig's order Wednesday coincided with the temporary halt of shipmen ts of meat to the Agriculture Department from two Midwest processors that provide beef for school lunches throughout the nation. ExplosiYes cache found Hired to kill, • w1tness says SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -A man ~tified at the murder trial of heiress Frances Bernice Schreuder that he accepted $5,000 to kill the father o( a woman named Frances, then spent the money and invented a story tor why he could not commit the crime. Myles Manning testified Wednesday that he never intended to carry out the hit. After accepting the cash in New York from a woman who looked "similar" to Mrs. Schreuder, he said, he stayed at a YMCA for threedayssoshewould believe he had gone to Utah to carry out the killing. He said he later told Mrs. Schreuder that he had indeed gone to Salt Lake City, but had been unable to commit the murder because he had been picked up by police and held in jail overnight all a fabrication. Russians threaten to deploy new missiles MOSCOW (AP) -T he Sovie t military chief of s taff, in a highly unusual article for the Tass news agency today, reissued the Kremlin threat to target new missiles on the United States 1f NATO begins deploying new American rockets in Europe this December. cs ¥ ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thuraday, Sept. 22, 1983 JOIN OUR CELEBRATION SATURDAY, SEPT. 24, 1-6 P.M. AT COSTA MESA MEDICAL CENTER HOSPITAL 301 Victoria Street Costa Mesa, CA 92627 Tour Costa Mesa's newly remodeled community hospital and become better acquai nted with all the se rvices and facilities ready to serve you with your hea lth care needs. • M eet our staff o ( highly skilled personnel ... and know that YOUR community hos pital is ready to p rovide you with around-the-clock general acute hospital care. • In conjunction with National Emergency Medicine Week, see demonstrations of special life-saving procedures, techniques and equipment in our Emergency Services Department. • Visit our new 20-bed Alcoho lism/Chemical Dependency Unit. COSTA MESA MEDICAL CENTER HOSPITAL (714) 642-2734 "WE REALLY CARE FOR YOU" NEWHALL -Nearby residents were evacuated as a she riff's arson and explosives detail moved a cache of dynamite and nitro- glycerin discovered in a house during a drug raid, officials said. Sheriff's Deputy Wes Slider said four mortar rounds, an Uzi machine gun and more than 20 guns and rifles were found. Marshal-Nikolai V . Ogarkov quoted Defense ~ni~~~i~F.Ustin~assayi~inanAu~t h~~~~;;;~~~~~~~~=======~~===~=~~~~~~~~~ 1982 interview: "We shall adopt such response measures that A would make the military threat to the territor y of the ~~~~~:;~~;:;;.~~ec:~w~~:i~~~eb.~.·~: Deliver the Daily Pilat Boys and girls 10 or older istryingtocreatefortheSoviet Union and our allies. Call 642-4321 and apply today . Da1·1y P1·1·· . It goes without saying that such possibilities will be --------------------'found. And we shall be forced to do this." He's one in a million Boys Club youth of the year real model kid WASHINGTON (AP) -He's the kind of kid to make a parent glow. Smart. Polite . .Eager to be of service. Goes to church. Excels in sports. Is prone to look on the bright side of life. His elders can't find enough nice words to say about him. The 18-year-old paragon fitting that de.Cription is Mark Perry of North Little Rock, Ark., named Wednesday as the 1983 Na- tional Youth of the Year of the Boys Clubs of America. 'He is not nearly as ,stuffy as the title suggests. The award got ,him a ~.000 9Chol- arship, a smile, a Mark Perry ,handshake and a pat on the back in the 'Oval Office from President Reagan and a picture to put on the wall of his dormitory at Hend.nx College in Ar- ,kanlu. The title means that Mark was .choeen, after a year-long national oompetition, as the best that the 1.2 'million-member Boys Clubs have to ·offer. Predictably, club publicists call him one in a million. : Mark came to Washington as one of :five regional finalists and was told of h.ia melection at ll congressional break- : fut. President Reagan ''installed'' him. ' "I would have been diaappoint.ed if I 'hadn't won. but I would have handled 'it," Mark said. : At first meeting, Mark seems to be !one of those young men who is !majoring in Serious. ffis thoughts are : well chewed before they are spoken. • He talks about the pleasure he gets : from giving service. : Mark is president of the Golden · Knights Keystone Club, a service and ' leadership group within his local Boys Club and was co-chauman of the •national Keystone Club conference for ! two years; he was a Multiple Sclerosis ; volunteer, organizer of an F.aster Seal 1 fund-raising drive, the 1982 county • United Way Youth Volunteer, the 1982 'outstanding Junior Student Council member, secretary. of the Arkansas Association of Student Councils m 1983 I and president of his high school student body. His grade point average is 4.4, better than a 4.0, straight-A average because he received extra credit for honors courses. He's won the "best story" award of the Arkansas High School Press Association among other scholas- tic awards and he lettered in football ' for three years. Being in the Oval Office was "an awesome experience, knowing it is the seat of power in the free world." It was "marvelous to see the place where so many decisions are made." It was "nerve-wracking to be waiting for that announcement" but any of the others would have deserved to wm. He was impressed that the presi-I dent's office was neat and orderly. A questioner, sensing a crack in the facade asks whether Mark is not. "I'm not exactly a neat and orderly person," he says, "but I'm impressed with people who are." Mark's parents are divorced but he is close to both. He hadn't yet talked with his father. Buthismother"told me how proud of me she was. She said, in a joking fashion, '( never had any doubt."' Mark's girlfriend, Shelli Martin, told Mark that his mother "just cried and cried because her little boy was on TV." Dr. Lawrence Perry, Mark's father, told a reporter that ''this is something that I think Mark has done on his own." "He is such stuff as dreams are made of, superlatives just seem inadequate," said Bill Garvin, Mark's counselor at Ole Main High. In a senior class of 325, Mark graduated No. 1. His aim is to be a clinical psychologist. Jim Wetherington, executive direc- tor of the North Little Rock Boys Clubs, accompanied Mark to Washington. That particular club has an astounding record. It had the National Youth of the Year in 1979 and 1981 also. "We coach young people in sports." said Wetherington. "Why not teach them to be good citizens?" Chilly weather in South Autumn jumped the gun across the ; South and Midwest today with most . major cities Crom Dallas to Atlanta . reporting record chilly weather on the : last full day of an unusually hot summer. , (See related s tory, A 10 ) ~ It had never been so cold so early in ! the aeaaon in aome communities. • More than 30 cities reported record : lows for the date, most in the .Deep · South states of Teus, Couisiana, : Arkansas, Tenneseee, Alabama, Gi!or· : gia. and South Carolina, but &0me as far ' north as the Dakotas and Penn - ;sylvania. Morning lows dipped into the 20s and 30s from the northern and central Rockies across th e northern Plains to the Great Lakes. Readings' in the 30s and 40s reached from the central Plains through the Mississippi Valley to the Appalachians. Warmer temperatures ranging from the 50s to near 70 spread along the Atlantic Coast. While the mercury hovered just above the freezing point in mo8t Dixie cities, the National Weather Service in Birmingham, Ala .. said temperatures across the state averaged 20 degrees below normal, "making it feel more like the last day of autwnn." THE ( 851-8350 ,\~''-Jt 497~262 • ' • 1 -./ -..r \ .:::><- DRAPERY CONNECTION Cusrom Draperit's Etc. . . .... For Your Nt!w Outlook 40o/o FALL SALE 80°/o OUR MILL CONNECTIONS. OECO~ATING EXPERTISE & CONSCIENTIOUS SPIRIT EQUAL 40·80"/e SAVINGSI SENSATIONAL SELECTIONI PRECISE WOAKM.t,NSHIPl QUA,.ANTllD -LOWl8T HTaMATlt _J_ ___ , • ,. You'll find Bio Savings every step& the way! HURRY! WHILE SELECTION LASTS Store IHrt: .... -Sit. 11-1 ........... , .... TREDS &. THREADS ATHL&TIC SHOES &- CLOTHING 548-3435 Up To 503 oft ... , t l • Orange Cont DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Sept. 22, 1983 Riverside school has gas leaks . RIVERSIDE (AP) -Leaks have been di.acovered in corroded underground gaa lines at Glen Avon Elementary School and ottidalssay nearly half the system Will have to be replaced. The leaka were uncovered be- tween the main gas line and school buildings while excavation crews were revamping the water system in hopes of eliminating a carcinogenic organic solvent re- cently discovered in the water, said F.dward Hawkins, super- intendent of Jurupa Unified School District. Corrosive soil in the area ap- perently deteriorated the pipes, and work on nearby water lines caused more damage, Hawkins 'lid Tuesday. : Ben Pruett, district manager for Southern California Gas Co., said d)e gas has been shut off in the ~ and there is no danger. \ • The district began excavating the school's water lines two weeks .;,o when state water tests de- ~ a trace of perchlor- aethylene (PCE) in the water s}rstem. · Elegance on wheels Auto show to benefit juvenile off enders A competition and classic auto show, the Concours d'Elegance, will be held Oct. 9 at UC Irvine to benefit a program for juvenile offenders. The Concours d'Elegan~. literally "a meeting of elegance," is designed to raise money for the A.sses&nent and Treatment Services Center (ATSC) of Sant.a Ana H eights, said Lynda Shea, a NewJX>rt Beach member. A group of antique cars will be displayed and judged at the event, to be held in UCI's Campus Park from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. The public iS' invited to the show, with tickets for sale at $8 for adults, $5 for children 12 and under. Food and drinks will be sold at the event. ATSC is a private. non-profit organization that provides services to youths and their families auned at resolving problems which can lead to delinquent behavior. For more information on the Concours. call ATSC at 549-1814. Coastline enrollment improves In-class registration fills gaps in community college sche dule Many students who failed to register for Coastline College before the fall semester begt:\n have apparently de<:1ded to sign up in class. Coastline spokesman Jack Chappell said in-class registration at the college, which lacks a traditional campus, is running ahead of the usual pace. Coastline classes began last week at more than 80 locations in C.osta Mesa, Huntington Beach, Newport Beach, Seal Beach, Fountain Val- ley, Westminster and Garden Grove. Officials at the college ex- pressed concern early last week because mail-in registration was running significantly behind ex- pe<:tations. Coastline officials said some programs might have to be can~led because of insufficient enrollment. College SJX>kesman Chappell said as of today, Coastline has closed 110 fall classes to further enrollment because all seats are taken, 99 classes have been cancelt-d because of low enrol- lment, and 560 classes remain open In-class enroUment will con- tinue through the end of thlS week Aft.er that, students may stall JOm a class 1f the instructor agrees that a student can make up the missed work. Information on late registration can be obtained by calling the Coastline admissions office at 546-7600. Saturday seminars set at OCC Achievement. sexuality, hyp- nosis and procrastination are among the topics of discussion at four seminars scheduled Saturday at Orange .Coast College in Costa Mesa. Dr. Claude Farley, a spe<:ialast an human behavior, wall demon - strate the principles of the psy- chology of s uccess during a three-hour seminar beginning at 9 a.m. in OCC's Science Hall. Ad- mission is $10 . A seminar for women focusing on female sexuality will be of- fered from 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Room 227 of the college's Chemistry Building. OCC instruc- tor Shirley R. Lampert will con- duct the lecture. and the fee as $8. The art of self-hypnosis how to program goals and desires - will be presented m a day-long semmar in Room 112 of OCC's Counseling and Adm1ss1ons Build- ing. Jim Liles, dar~·tor of the Newport Hypnosis Center, will conduct the program, from 9 a.m . to 4:30 p.m., for which adm1ss1on 1s $25. Finally, a three-hour seminar that examines procrastinatio n will be prcs<mtc-d in Room 113 of the c:olleg1.· Counseling and Ad- m1ss1ons Building by Jacqueline de Raver-Daniel. a personal de- velopm(mt tonsultant. The lecture runs from 9 30 a.m to 12:30 p.m. and the f~ 1s $10 Tickets for all the OCC seminars may bC' obtained at the college ucket off1c:e an the Student Center. open weekdays from 9 a.m to 7 pm a nd Saturday from 8 a.m to noon If available, tickets will ht> sold at the door. Call ~32-5880 for further details. 48" FLUORESCENT &arlf JO-~----~· • Qn'f -"'· ........... --Sllop 1.;g11e insunt surt. IOnQ lift PrNlred. re~ to ll.1119. No SOKlal toots r!(lulred 100% Wiid stJte. ~t. OnfY 2~ ltls. 19040 KWIK·SEAL TUB a r11e caulk . . .. 2 TUBES FOR 12.58 ,\.. 11.00 Y~R .. TUBES s ,. •• COST iii FOR INTERIOR I EXTERIOR LA TEX ACltYLIC Paine •st!!· Did llldoor 1111 ocmlDor StllttO Ult. Df1IS In ~ Cltn up usy. #Z.ocl01. PRESTONE II Anel-,.reere $•99~:~ imii CAllOff SALi NICI ''·"· •"· nun 11.00 011 ~ CM.LOIS "KllASID. IPR-2 J~ GAL. WHITE f'Oll•e •s••• ~ °"" s~ ~or •attr is comoareo to tflt s \!\ 111C1M Ill normal tOllt'5 I All ·-*"15'2 ...•••••• ................. ,SU. 13 DRAWER OR 25 DRAWER Calllnee VOURCHOICE •&•• Cre~t for storln9 SINI Items In your wortshoP. Madt Of hf~ dutv met~. ITC1SIT\l25 1/J H.P. t:ar11a11• Dl•IHl••I .•s••• konomkJI 11J "·'· mottr, -SU.SS -9(lndll'9 r1ft9, llSY QUkt fftOIM. '111, . '12jl.P • ...W#2t00 ...... James E. Mitchell NB attorney in lung pos t Newport Beach att-Orney James E. Mitchell has been named presi- dent-elect of the American Lung Association of Cal.Jfom1a, the statewide office of the Christmas Seal Association. Mitchell was president of the American Lung Association of Orange County in 1972 and served as a chairman of the association's program and budget committee. R·19 RBERGLASS UNFACEO 8" x 15" Senior citizens celebrate Coron a d el Mar's Oasis Center m arks si x th b irthday Saturday When the front doors of the Oasis Senior Citizen Center in Corona del Mar opened for the first tune in 1977, the m~mbersh1p list t-Opped out at 200. Now, vastly expanded in size and supported by an amb1llous group of volunteers, the senior center has more than 2,700 mem- bers and annually serves about E x amples of architec ture to b e shown Archi-Fair '83 will be held Sunday from.9 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Irvine Bow I. The event, sponsored by the 600-member Orang~ Coun- ty Chapter of the American In- stitute of Architects, is designed to stimulate awareness of the energy of architecture. · The day-long program will include speakers, educational exhibits, demonstrations and The public 1s invited and tickets may be purchased at the door for $2.50 per person. For information caJJ 557-7796. 63,000 people. "And I'll predict that in the next year we'll easily have ano~r l,OOi> members," says Roland Bertonneau, fund-raising chair- man for the Friends of Oasis. The center, housed in what once was a private school, will celebrate its sixth birthday Saturday with a host of dignataries, including Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn Hart agd county Supervisor Thomas Riley. During the day-long event, members will stage a hobby show, serve a $1 -a·person lunch and provide afternoon entertainment, featuring a fashion show, a round dancing exhibition and the Oasis Ukulele Strummers. The event also will help kickoff a $110,000 fund-raising effort by the center's own non-profit sup- port group. The money, once raised, will be used for renovating the facilities, which now include three individual wings on six acres of land. The renovations would include dividing one large room into two, converting another to a social lounge and building staff offices, as well as constructing an area for an extStmg Bra1Uc p1 ogram. Supporters of the center, point- ing to Newport Beach's growing senior citizen population, also are hoping to establish a building fund for the future. While there are dreams of eventually acquir- ing more land, the future of such plans is uncert.ai.n . The lrvine Co., which owns the land around the center, wants to build high-density housing there. Though the city originally purchased the senior citizen center proj>erty -using federal housing money -and does staff three full-time positions at the center, the bulk of the work is done by volunteers. J esse Unruh to j o in cele bration cruise St.ate Treasurer Jesse Unruh will join with Democratic Party leaders of Orange County in a boat ride around Newport Bay at 7 p.m. Friday. Democratic leaders say the event is being held to celebrate the defeat of the Sebastiam Initiative for legislative redistricting. 1nsu1ae10n > Newport &.ch resident Chuck Buttner, the driving force behind one of the world's leading beach and •~rt.swear empires, will be nonored with the "Award t Hope" for h1a leadership by the City of Hope Na- Uonal Medical Center. Buttner, the chief ex- ecutive officer and founder of Ocean Pacific Spol't&- wear, Ltd., wW be pres- ented with the award Nov. 19 at a fund-raising dinner ln Beverly Hills. The award, which previously has gone to Wells Fargo Bank Chair- man Carl •Reichardt and fonner Twentieth Cen- tury-Fox Productions President Sherry Lansing, is presented by Proff?SSions and Finance Associates of City of Hope. Proceeds from the awards dinner will be used for capital projects at the m edical center and and research institute in Los Angeles. Buttner, who lives on Linda Isle in Newport Harbor. started Ocean Pa- cific with a group of friends in San Diego m 1972. A former custom surfboard maker, he and the ot.}Jer members of the small group started what has become a $200 million empire on a $50,000 loan. Ocean P a c i fie has licensees m Canada. Aus· tralia, New Zealand. Pan- ama and Mexk'O and af- filiates pending m Japan and South Africa. MINERAL SURFACE FIBERGLASS Cvt ~ n1 cooing costs l>Y using 1nsu1at10n. T1le lll9flfr thf 1-walW. thf grmrr the Insulating power. As* fOf thf fact shftt on l·nlues. 95! Roll Roo#ing 1"X2"X8'· Purring •~rips 39! 6' WOOD •~ep- 1.odder -..... lflnfoneel steps .tth fotO- Clown shelf All·purl>C)Sf W6 6' x 1 S' PREMIUM QUALITY Reed 1=encln11 St2BB Accent your oalio or use as a yaro 01v1<1er 1<1ea1 to~ llackvaro privacy 2' CONCRETE sca11011 Sdglng 3gc: 1oea1 t0< oecoratlVf ~ around flOWer garoens or t~ led COior #1621. REPLACEMENT PAnO DOOR SO'' •creen $ .•••• Automattc setf-&atcn1ng Miii finish. H " ......... ••t.99 ................... weatherproof your ioof aqa1Mt w10<1 rain or llllstennq sun Covers Aooro11ma1e1~ 100 square feel of space Chow from White ran or Drown 60LB. BAG cone,.,,~• Ml • .. • ~ • I .. ~. ~ .. .. . .. .. . • • • ---~~========-~~...,,..,......,,.._-----------------------------..,-------------------- Al Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday. Sept. 22, 1983 Sign ordinance should stand Next Tuesday night, the fave members of the Costa Mesa City Council will take a final vote on whether to change the city's nine-year-old ordinance regulating the size and scope of commercial signs. At issue is whether to insert a so-called "grandfather clause" allowing signs that are too big to remain standing if they were erected before the law was passed in 1974. Council members voted 3-2 at a meeting Aug. 15 to change the law, as suggested by the city's Chamber of Commerce. Mayor Donn Hall and council members Arlene Shafer and Eric Johnson cast votes to exempt the old signs. This vote comes at a critical time because the 1974 law gave owners of the largest and most expensive signs 10 years to replace them with smaller versions. The 10-year amortization period was meant to ensure that merchants who had invested in costly signs could leave them in place long enough to reap a reasonable return. That dead1ine expires next March 18, six months away. Before Hall, Shafer and Johnson voted for grand- father clause last month, several chamber of commerce members in the audience testified the exemption was fair because their signs preceded the law. Moreover, some said the signs aren't a nuisance at all but were good for customers as well as their businesses . . Hall argued thai illegal signs -th06e for which owners never obtained city permits -deserve city attention, not the oversized ones often owned by otherwise law-abiding merchants and property owners. These arguments, however well meaning, are meant to soften the impact of instituting the grandfather clause, but they fail to address the critical issues in the vote. Allowing the old and oversized signs to tower over city streets not only is profoundly unfair to other merchants who have adjusted their signs to the law but undermines the very basis for the ordinance. The law was passed because the jungle of skyscraper signs sprouting on Harbor and Newport Boulevards, as well as on other streets, was an eyesore. It was an ugly scene that residents and shoppers tolerated, but one rarely heard compliments about the city's commercial profile. That was more than nine years ago. Today, the ef feet of the sign ordinance is obvious. The commercial signs lining Costa Mesa's major streets are still evident but, with few exceptions, they are much more pleasing to look at. Th06e oversized signs which are still legal until next March. however, are all too obvious. The sign ordinance was passed because some of these signs already had spoiled the scenery. To suggest the law shouldn't apply to them -and to let these signs relnain standing -would be to turn them into beacons of bad judgment. Opinions e)(pressed in the space ab~•ara thOM of the Dally Piiot Other vleWI expressed on this page are thOM of their author. and arti.ta. ~·comment Is Invited. Address: lhe Dally Piiot. P.O. Box t560, Coate Meaa. CA 92826. Phone (7 t_.) 6"2--432t. MAllBOX Court steals our citizen rights To the Editor: Are we still a free Democracy' Or have we become a Totalitarian State, ruled by the anointed and the appointed? The recent decision by Cali- fornia's Supreme Court that the Seba.stiani Initiative is WlCOnstitu- tional, tends to support the latter. They based their dedaion on the California Constitution that states that California must be reappor- tioned once a decade. It does not however state, to my knowledge, that it may not be reapportioned more than that. In fact, in lhe past. it was reapportioned three' times in one decade . And aa for this decade, it is already the aeoond reapportionment. The finrt one being nullified by a vote of the people: through an inltiative. Thia arbitrary deciaion by the court, .in emence, rules that the initiative proceea is no longer the constitutional right of the people. Whether you are Republican or Democrat. liberal or coMervative, Libertarian or Independent, the ruling erodes your right to redre9I your government. It ii not a partiaan issue. It is an issue of your right.a. Have we, through the lack of watchfulness, allowed the dimipa- tion of the freed.oms left to us by our forefathen? It ls time to arouae ourselves. And to strike back at th.la Supreme Court that ha.a at.ruck away this right. GOLDIE JOSEPH Newport Beach l.M. BDJd /Even break Old Babylonia had its own Love and War man in Herodotus. He thought the wisest custom of h.la IOdety was the auction of mar- riageable girls. Men bid for same, and they bid more for the more attraetive, as you might expect. That money then was donated to the le91 attractive girl.a foe thelr dowrtee. So the men neither rich nor picky and the women of lelf ~appeal wound up with mttrtmon1al mates, too Q. Only one peace · treaty be- tween nations haa never been broken. Name it. A. Do you refer to the Perpetual PellOI! Treaty of FriboW'g? Have heard it claimed that'• the only unbroken one. It wu signed ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat between France and Switz.erland ln Sept.ember of 1515 aft.er the French beat the Swlaa at the Battle of Marignano. h has been claimed that a grimy smokestack over a grimy factory in H.ochester, N.Y., ia the moet photographed acene ln the world, Becauae Kodak'• la~ overlook same, and it'• uNld u a testing image. Am now advi.led that the nam· lng of Philips 66 ga10llne had nothing to do with Route 66 or 66 mph. but wu in fac\ the octane of that product in that day. There wu aleo a premium Phillp1 77 then. Octanes have jumped con- liderabJy lince, don't you know. M.L lohwamlll ,.,_ ChuyDow..., ~-~ Ml lN,....._ ' LMTyD ...... ................ N . E T w 1t 0 R '' Z~ P..OT, LIMP ~S, ~w ~ ~N~~ ~Ct-BY G~ORGE, CitNTU:M~N, l llUNK A Marcos tie to Aquino's death WASHINGTON -While world attention has been focused on the downing of Flight 007 and the fighting in Lebanon. someone has been getting away with murder in the Philippines. Secret intelligence reports don't say who assassinated Filipino dissident Benigno Aquino in Manila last month. But they suggest cautiously that he may have been murdered on the orders of First Lady Imelda ,Marcos, without her husband's knowl- edge. Here's the background: According to the intelligence reports, President Ferdinand M8l'CXl6 has a serious kidney ailment that could cause him to relinquish the dictatorial power he has held for nearly 20 years. Aware of trus, Aquino felt the time had come for him to leave his sanctuary in the United Stat.es and return to the Philippines. It's no secret that Marcos would like to see his wife succeed him. Though he used to deny this. ·pointing out she wasn't even a member of the Cabinet Executive Committee. he appointed her t.o that committee last year. Military aid_ Marcos also apon90red the rise of her closest military ally. Gen. Fabian Ver, who ii now chief of staff of the Philippines armed forces, with 250,000 troops under his command. Ver also dittct.a the G. ·-J1-c1-1-11-11-11-1 -~ Phllipplnes intelligence services and presidential security. Aquino made no secret of his hope to forestall a transfer of power to Imelda and the establish- ment of a Marco6 dynasty. }fu return to the Philippines, there- fore, was the great.est threat tc Imelda's ambitions. Sources with access to in- telligence reports from the Philip- pines believe Imelda and Ver ma} have arranged Aquino'sassassina-· tion to eliminate their most char- ismatic rival. One responsible administration source discussed this pos&bilit~ at length with my associate Dale Van Atta, who has also seen highly sensitive CIA and Defense Intelligence Agency re- ports on the subject. As the man in charge of presi~ dential security, Gen. Ver had been keeping track of Aquino throughout his exile in the United St.ates. Ver and Imelda also stacked the Philippines Embassy in Washmgt.on. as a secret DIA report explained: "The new (military) attache team was selected by Benjamin Romualdez . am· bassador-designat.e and brother of First Lady Imelda Marcos, and confirmed by Anned Forces Chief of Staff Gen. Fabfan Ver," the report stat.es. Watchdogs The DIA report continues: "The new team is also expected to monitor Philippine dissident ac- tivity in the U.S. The attaches will undoubtedly report on, and poss- ibly operate against, anti-Marcos Philippine activists in the U.S ." Their top target in this country was Aquino. The intelligence re- ports view Imelda Marcos' meet- ings with Aquino with some cyniciam, particularly her warn- ing to him last May that he might be e•Hlinated if he returned to the Philippines. ''Mn. Man:oe can be expected to become one of many candidates to succeed her husband, and her "'maneuvering will add greatly to the political turmoil and instabili- ty that will follow his departure," a CIA profile noted, adding that "in the political confuaion, she might succeed." Imelda's biggest hurdle, the CIA figures, is the Philippine military brass, whose loyalty to her husband is personal and does not extend to he r . That, presumably, is where Gen. Ver comes in. Imelda, whom the CIA calls "'the steel butterfly," has chosen her military allies well. Com- manders of most military units in the Manila area -crucial to any seizure of power -are, like Gen. Ver, natives of I1ocos Norte prov- ince in northwest.em Luz.on. This is also Marcos' home turf. In fact, Imelda's power play has reached such a point that sup. porters of her chief rival, Defe:me Minister Juan Ponce Enrile, are quoted in a highly classified CIA cable as saying: "We must keep our heads down and our mouths shut. Unless we do, we will not survive .... (We must) smile and do what is necessary to stay alive." The CIA's conclusion: "In a real power struggle . .. Ver and his prot.eges," along with Imelda, may well win. POOR PROTECTION: Sources cloae to U.S. Trade Representative William Brock glwnly predict that some sort of "domestic content" legislation will pass Congress thia year. It will require that cars sold in this country contain a cenain percentage -probably 90 percent -or American-made parts. The point of the legislation is to protect AmeriOl:R.. jobs. But the trade officials claim it would have an exactly opposite net effect. Reason: 5 million Americans work in jobs directly related to the nation's $220 billion export indus-- try. U a domestic-<.'Ontent law is passed, foreign nations will likely retaliate and the result could jeopardize more job& than the legi.slation would protect. But under pressure from t.be United Auto Workers, the domestic-content bill is expected to pass. New Social Security changes 87 REP. ROBERT BADBAM When a nationally syndicated advice to the lovelorn colwnnist ver\tured into the jungle of legis- ,lation and laws concerning Social Security recently, ahe opened up a Pandora's box which has been all but lmpmaible to cloee. In the two weeks following publlcation of the column. I re- ceived 10 times more letters·and fhone calla about the column than did •bout the Soviet action in ahootin8 down a Korean Airlines plane kDllng 269 people, which ought .to tell us something about the int.eresta and reading habita of Americans. Nottbatconstituentsin the40th Congreaional Di.strict were not highly lncen.aed over the senae- )ess and criminal Soviet action, which they were, but the lovelorn column strayed into the area of Social Security benefita which, aft.er all, hi ta people where it hurta -in the pocketbook. Gradual decrease The issue oonoemed what is dts:ribed u the "not.ch years," a period of five years st&rtlng in 1979 and concluding this year, during which Social Secwi ty benefit increases have been phased down gradually (a not.ch at a time) to compensate for a diaaatroualy generous deci&ion made by Congress in 1972 which lnaeued benefits far beyond the ability of the Social Security system and the federal budget to abeorb. Specifically, th08e bom in 1917 through 1921 are the "not.ch year" . ·~ ~ I_;~ t: J ~/ "I have to compnmen1 you, Rogenon. With h1rdly 1ny power lo •PNk of you'"18 t>ecome damned neat the most oorrupl penon here." individualB currently affected by the phaae-down, alnce they have been ent.e.ring the Social Security supplemental retirement system since 1979. What the a<Wice to the lovelorn columnist advocated was support for legialation to return the ben· efit level to that of thoae born in 1916 and previoualy, an action which would be disastrous for any attempt at solvency for the Social Security system and which could create a monster that might take over the whole United States budget. As explained by my friend and colleague, Rep. J .J . Pickle (D·Texaa), chainnan of the Sub- committee on Social Security, the 1972 formula tor Social Security benefits vastly over-<.'Ompensated recipients \. for Inflation, whi~h became th~ <:hief cause of the long-range financial troublee fac- ing Social Security shortly there- after. Benefits &oared "By the time Congress cor- rected this problem, relative ben- efit levels already had climbed hJgher than any t1me ln the history of the program," Con- are-man Pkl<le explalna in a Jetter to the lovelorn oolumnllt. adding, "A line had to be drawn 90mewhere and any delay would have made the problem w o.rw. Already ft would coet about $9 bi.lllon In the firs\ year -more thereafter -to go back to the old formula." Here's a simple explanatlon: In 1970, an lndlvidual who reli.red et the age of 65 received approximately 34 s»rcent of hls waae bue eamino ln Soclal Securtty btmoflta. Wa,e hue re- fera to the amou.nt from which contrtbut.loN are wi\hMld, not the total NITtlngl. which could be rnont. By 1972, the perttn~ had nan to 38 peramt and with a generous new formula enacted that year the percent.age increued each year, not only on the average earnings but on the inde.xing for inflation. so that in 1973 the percentage was 39 percent and continued upward to48 percent In 1979. It waa at thia point that an alarmed Congress cbanl'!d the formula. selecting 41 pen::ent .. a constant factor of wage benefies which, of course, was a big jolt for thoee who retired that year. However, if action had not been taken in 1977 the percentage of benefna would have continued to rise and would have reached 100 percent by the tum of the century, a situation which had to be corrected. Windfall benefit& Basically, thoee who received benefits in 1972 and thereaft«, until the new formula went into effect in 1979, have been and are receiving greater benefits than thoee who follow -a wtndfall. actually. From here on, the 187? legialation i.s int.ended to maintain a constant balanoe of 41 percent retirement benefit& against the wage bue factor. In the meantime, eon,re. Ml three optJons: to raJa benefits llO the level of pre-1977 yeera. to reduce 1972· 77 ~fita or to do nothing. The chances of Coogre. chanl- lng the formula, in effect to ra.i.e levela of post-1878 reW.. to U..t of the previous five YMf8, 19 remote. On the other hand. c.on. en-I.I not Ukely to reduce the level of benefit& for~ who an reeelvtng the wtndl.all So ltlftl'lll to me tha& the 41 percent f annW.. with annual lldjustmmta ot the w.,. bue compenuttnc fw lnfllt.. Uonary facton. wW continue to be a fair .... adequ.te procram .. I ' lJldJwn tt~nta f.M 40«h ~OM.I Dlarrirt . • --· -----------------_, _________________ _..;;_...=;..;;.:.=:.:.:. ...... ....!. ... ":_.._---~-----~· ~-----·---_.:;;..........:~ \ ,, "T Orange ( s) wood help the children Fund-raisers plan to sell 50 ,000 oranges at $2 each Oct. 27 in an effort to raise S I 00,000 for a new eme rge ncy shelter for abused and abandoned children called Orange- wood. Kicking off the campaign this week were fruit-hawkers Mike Manahan, Orangewood dirt'ctor, county Supervisor Roger ta nton and honorary chairs Don Aase, o f the California Angels pitching staff, and his wife, Judy. l [ __ \ L Rob1nson'S 100 YEARS OF STYLE Si! •• ¥ £ z ~ zese Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Sept. 22, 1983 ~· PENDLETON. Ne w Fall '83 Pendletons are in ... COUNTRY CLOTHES rlrnruughl~ "oph1 ... ticated fi:minint: L'<1rc..:c..:r- drc ... ~in!! al ih hcst. A. Pure..: \\' \lOI. aJ. MAJOR CREDIT CARDS \ Pure Pend It.: ton • --• Come and Si!e noh·j(Jr he'it \'election. \\ hac 11.arhnr meet' '-c\\ port Blvd. Sin rt.> IV./ 'I DIE PAftTMl!NT 8TO"I! Hour.': DeHr t :IO·t:OO CIOMd lundar• 1818 NEWPORT BOULEVARD COSTA MESA MEET THE GREAT DESIGNERS ROBERT STOCK HE UPDATES THE TRADITIONAL w1lh unexpected color. soft but rugged textures and fabrics and a loosened s1lhoue11e that's pure Americana Because spor1swear with an easy. masculine leel is iust wriat you want now HERE, AUTUMN WEEKEND DRESSING, available for the hrst time at Robinson's Including our argyle cardigan sweater vest. back· belted to become the centerpiece ol your fall wardrobe Mu1t1color diamonds on yellow or gray wool S·M L. S64 P1a1d cotton flannel shirt 1n port/turQuo1se on mustard. S·M·L S38 W1de·wa1e conon corduroy pleated pant m pon, gray or nutmeg 29·36. S48 From Robinson's Signature Collecllons, 15t , Newport, Westminster and Woodland Hills To order. call toll-free 1·800·3-45·8501 MEET ROBERT STOCK IN PERSON. Consult with him personally about your selections du11ng informal modeltng of his fall collection Men's Department. 2 pm Sunday September 25. NEWPORT -. A ROBINSON'S.GE? IT'S IASVI THE QUICKEST WAY: JUST PERSONALLY PRESENT AN AMERICAN EXPRESS, VISA, MASTER C"ARGE, DINERS CLUB, OR CARTE BLANCH& CARO TO ONI OF OUft SALESPERSONS ANO WE'LL OPEN AN ACCOUNT YOU CAN USE THAT VERY DAY. THE EAStHT WAY: PHONE UI TOLL FREE 1·800-422-4241 FROM 7 AM-10 PM ANO OUR OPERATORS WILL TAKE YOUR APPLIC,ATION INFORMATION. . . .Al i e Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Sept 22. 1983 Droughtof 1983:0nly .e in a genera ti on' By DAVID L. LANCFORO on,. ~11111 1 ,,.,_ It was over the Fourth of July weekend, when 3 million chickens perished in their coops, that the Drought of 1983 started firing up its stove in earnest. After farmers and gardeners in much of the F.ast w ere stung by an unusually wet and cold spring, the mercury sh ot as high as 107 as far north as Williston, N.D .. on July 16 and 110 in the rural community of Cheraw, S.C., on July 21. It jumped up to 108 on Aug. 17 a t Des Moines, Iowa, where it was Senior Otb.ens Day at the state fair. More than 50 people were treated for heat exhaustion. The 110 degrees in Fayetteville, N .C., on Aug. 21 was an all-time record for the state and the hottest reading in the country on that day. When summer comes to an official end at 7;42 a.m. PDT on Friday, it will go into the record books as one of the hottest and driest ever seen, producing the worst drought in the Midwest and Ohio Valley since the Dust Bowl days of the 1930s. At least 231 people died and losses to farmers were estimated today by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad· ministration at $10 billion The com crop is expected to yield the smallest harvest m 13 years, just over half of last year's record 8.4 billion bushels. Thousands of farmers have gone broke, with many losuig their fanns, and the cost of food at the grOL-ery counter is expected to increase about 6.5 percent next year. "It was something that we wouJdn't expect to happen more than once in a generation ," said Phil S hideler of the National Weather Service in Topeka, Kan. He said that although there we re more days in 1934 and 1936 when temperatures climbed above 100 degrees, this year "the combination of heat and dryness probably made it worse." Near Bowman, S.C., Hugh Weathers rigged up fans and water hoses to drip on the tin roo( of his barn to try to keep his family's 850 dairy cows Crom keeling over. Some died anyway. Under the blazing sunshine, farmlands dried out and cracked open m giant checkerboard patterns. "It would take lhree days of rain just to fill up the c:racks around here," Nplan I l The summer of '83: Hot, dry and miserable •,-~~~~--.. ,-~~~~~....., r~~~~~--. 11 Wllllalon, N.D. OH Molnff, Iowa 107 on July 16 108 on Aug 17 I ano Aug 6 Ho11•s1 Auguat Seronct rio11u1 '"''' II. LOUii S8 daya above 90 1' d•r• 11 100 or A 11911S/ in Ctly S ~=----.. ,.__, ----"'•SIOry l boY• lndtMepoHt, Ind. 5e Clay• of Ovt r·90 1em,,.r11urt1 Warm.,, 1umm•r I Yt r. ..._9",H.J. M on July t& Record tor th• dete: abov• 90 for 33 d•y• In June. July. A u1t. ~u..~~., -- WMmlftftoft, Def. Duke of the National Weather Service in Kansas City, Mo .. said in early September. St. Louis. practically in the dead renter of the country, was typical. It had one of the wettest springs on record, w1 th 17 .16 inches from March through May, as Clash floods drove thousands from their homes along the bloated Mississippi and Missouri f.!.V~.:_ -- But with the change of season, St. Louis was brought to a boil, with 58 days above 90 degrce1, including 14 days with temperatures above 100. St Louis offlcial<i opened cooling s helters for the poor and eldtrly as more than 40 people died from the heat m the area. The drought was unmerciful across the vast corn <md soybean fields of the Midwest. It shriveled crops from the tomato fields of New Jersey and tht tobacco fields of Kentu,cky to the peanut fields of Georgia and the cotton fields of Alabama. Millions of chickens died m Maryland, Virginia, Georgia and across to Arkansas. Catfish Canners in Mississippi and elsewhere in Dixie said hundreds of thousands of commercial fish died because the heat cooked the oxygen out of the ponds. Mississippi produces about 100 miU1on pounds of catish a year. Across the Southeast from South CaroLina to Alabama, which was also hit by droughts m 1977, 1978 and 1980. farmers were losing their farms In Georgia. TaJ C. DuVaU, st.ate director 25°/o off of the Agricult.ural Extension Service, estimated that 6,000 Georgia farmers were "insolvent." Many of the hardest rut were among tht• 16,000 growers of the state's $370 mlllioo peanut crop. which provides 40 percent of the nation's supply. "The situation is unprecedented in Georgia." said Jmuny Jackson, the assis· tant dm>ctor of the extension service. "It's a crisis of the greatest magnitud~." Many farmers are expected to be unable to repay their Joana this year. The Farm Credit Administrathm doesn't yet have figures for late summer, but the agency re port.ed last wee~ that as of June 30, even before the drought set in, there were 20,537 d~uent loans to farmers. That was about 3.1 percent of the total $~.9 billion in outstanding loans. as against 2.5 percent that were delinquent at the same time last year. Lndiana was the first state to get disaster reLief from the U.S. Department of Agriculture Gov. Robert D. Orr has estimated losses to the state's fanners at $1 billion. :. -; .st Nu hvlllt . Tt nn .. "P•' Ii)! on Aug 20 21 ' ''' l'·P· 0 .t. ~ 1tc01'C1s ____ _,,I'"' Ip "IC'lllfl OI All1nt1, Oa. 10 1 100 '"° 97 on Aug 21 ·23 All 1ecore1s for /flt ct ares 100 on July ti Record tor lht det•: hOttNI Auguet 1lnc• 1900 '•,.Ht.ttte, H.C. 11oonAuo 21 R•cord tor th• 111 11 llOllH I 1n u S tor '"' d1t• 8 Legoland systems 4 1,Q11SI llflOvt 90 Weather hits nation in the pocketbook WASHINGTON (AP) Bad weather has already cost Uncle Sam ne.arly $867 million this year, and it will be months before the federal toll from this summer's heat and drought can be detennined. There have been 15 presidentially declared natural disasters in 1983 -14 related to the weather -according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The weather disasters have caused federal agencies to allocate $866.8 million to date, plus $14 million for earthquake dam.age in Coalinga, Calif. The secretary of agriculture al.so has authority to declare an agriculture diaaater, which may be proposed after the September crop estimates are made public during the next week or two. Becauae of the heat and drought, the federal govenunent has al.ready had to revene a policy that banned tanners from using land set aside for the payment in kind program, under which the government is trying to reduce its huge grain $tockpiles by giving farmers free surplus com- modities in return for cutting back on the number of acres planted. Farmers can now we the land for grazing. Roads were buckled and damaged in many areas. and repairs will come from state and federal budgets. Indeed, state and local governments will spend milllon making repairs after the various weather disasters across the nation. The most costly disaster so far in 1983 was declared Feb. 9, in response to stonns. floods and mudslides in CalJ- fornia. Federal agencies provided aid to 17,004 families in that disaster, spend- ing $325.4 million. said Bob Blair, a spokesman for the emergency manage- ment agency. California Gov. George Deukmejian had declared a st.ate disaster i.n Janu- ary, and city and st.ate emergency services. as w ell as those of the federal government. strained to cope with the displaced_ The Army C.Orps of Engineers was called in to try to shore up dams, particularly in the Simi Valley area. Hurricane Alicia, which •truck the Texas coast Aug. 19, ranks second on the list of the year's disasters, but Blair noted that 1068eS in that h\.lge storm are still being calculated. To date, Blair said, federal agencies have allocated an estimated $158 million because of Alicia, and 11 ,410 families received federal aid. Storms, flooding and mudslides struck Utah in late April, drawing an April 29 diaaster declaration with $144.7 million spent to aid 1,267 families. High waters from the Great Salt Lake eroded highways around the lake, damaged dikes protecting nine wild.life refuges and destroyed 4,000 acres of freshwater marsh in the area. Record heat will raise • meat prices next year By LOUISE COOK OfTM, 11 ,,.,_ Higher pnoes for beef, pork and chicken are on the 1984 horizon becaUle of thia summer's heat wave. but oonawnera' meat bW. will ao down before they go up. The main reaon for the l.ncreue i. the rile ln the price of oorn, which is 1mpor1ant aa feed for cattle, hop and poultry. This year'• com crop ia expected to be only about half aa big u last year's. That's partly becawie of the heat and drought. Ironically, the reduced harvmt la a18o due partly to the fact that previous crope have been ao l.arge that the ,ovemment encouraged fa.rm- en to plant le11 \hi. year. The U.S. De~ntof Agriculture, which had been p.red..ictlng an mcreaae • of 4 pen:ent to 5 percent ln all food prices ne-xt year, reviled Its forecast at&er the late.wt crop report n.nd esU- mated a 6.~ percent boott. The bfggest change will be at the me.at counttt. "Mut prlcea will 80 up," laid Jens· Knut.eon. an economist with the American Meat ln.ttitute. "but l don't want k> pus a Usun-on how high." The increase will not come until next yearT b.owe.v~'There'll be.tome.~ bargains around this winter,•• Knutson said. The bargaina will occur because hog and cattle producera won't be able to pay the higher pricee for feed and still make~ profit, he explained. They'll tell off animals they would normally keep. That will mean a t.cmporary boost in supplies and a temporary drop In prlces. Next year, when the liquidation process la finished. supplies will drop and prices will rbe. Knutson said there already waa110me evidence of lower prices on the whole- sale market. ln July, he said, hogs were selling for about $45 a hundredweight, By the beginning of September, the price waa up to $47. Le. than two weeks Later, It was doWT'l to $46 again. C.attle were eelllnj !or $62 a hun- dredweight at th end of July; today, the prtQ? la juat below $60. Conrad Le.lie, a Chicago com- modhJew analytt with E.F. Hutton & C.O., wnt quou:.'<I by Supermarket News, a trade publication, aa predicting an lncreue ln rei.Jl beef and pork pn~ next year of l~ J>(!rt"Cnt to 20 J)C"runt. 19.49 ReQ 25.99 ~ h .-on includes fovr mini-figure firemen, special fire equipment and a coor1ul tre staoon Wllt1 wonuno Wlfldows and do<>rs 19.49 Legoilnd moble IVdl.c 1nlneport inclvele$ a sa1eltte rocket portable launching pad. transport veti.cle. two min1·f1gvre astronauts and more Aeo 25 99 15.74 Rey 2099 LA9C*nd OH ntlon Wllh lour hiel pumps lire and o• racks. car hit, two cats w1tn hOO<ls 1tia1 reaJy open. m1n1·l1Qure 11Uend11n1 mi>ehanoc and customer 26.24 Reg 34 99 l..,i.nd bl4.a I commend bale cootalns a detailed control room, sleep.no QuMers for crew, rockel Sled anel mtnl·ligure aslronauts 14.24 Reg 18 99 22.49 Reo, 29.00 t 9J1 l1111d ....... ...-. NI lnltfgllectlc apace LaeoiMd P'flblC ... Olf9 wllh WOl1Wlo cnnt. lrW1IQOl1 wtltl Jet CJl'OPUfillon engnee, 111t•UP dlMl14' trvok. '°"' mlrMigl,l'ff end • bl.ldlng Witt'! hatch, tnlnl-'9K• •trontut end more. oe>entnQ wlndOwa end doora, plul IOOlt end "10f't ~ prioM OOod through s.tunkty, 9-pttmbtr 24 New law snuffs smokers In Palo Alto, city council gives workers right to breathe free PALO AL TO (AP) -Smokers will face a new bicycle enthusiast who proposed the idea. hazard starting in November -people with the right The ordinance also prohibits smoking m em- under a new city ordinance to declare their work area ployer conlerences and public meeting rooms, a smoke-free wne. restrooms, medical facilities, hallways, office build- The measure adopted this week by the City ing elevators, hotels and multi-family buUJdings. Council, along with a ban covering other situations Two-thirds of the area of a cafeterias, lunch and facilities, was praised by Charles Moss of rooms and employee lounges must be set aside for Californians for Non-Smokers Rights. non-smokers. "If an employee who is a heavy drinker came The one disaenting vote was by Fr-ed Eyerly, into your workplace and said you've got to drink a who said he wasn't supporting smokers rights. He pint of bourbon a day, we'd think it was preposterous, said he opposed unwarranted government inrusion yet that's what happens with second-hand smoking," into business. Moss said. But the ban was backed by some of the largest The measure, which sparked little discussion employers in the region, according to City Attorney before it was adopted 8-1 gives non-smokers Diane Lee. "l think they figured that if there was precedence if there is a dispute when they declare a going to be a law, they wanted 80met)ling they could smoke-free w ne. live with," she said. It was left a bit hazy to let workers and managers The council also voted unanimously to ban thrash out just how much of a no-smoking space the smoking in public restrooms and indoor service lines, worker can declare, according to Councilwoman such as lines at banks and grocery checkout counters. Ellen Fletcher, a veteran environmentalist and Moss conceded that the hazards of second-hand ~ ...... ...------i. smoke haven't been proven, but said, "l don't think non-smokers want to be guinea pigs for the next 30 years to prove that there is a problem." ,.,_....,... The employee' rights law provides employers can be fined $50 for first infraction and $250 for three infractons. Palo Alto was among the first conununities in the United States to ban smoking in theaters and areas of restaurants in 1973. Mothers' smoke hits kids' lungs BOSTON (AP) - Evidence of slow lung development and an in- creased risk of emph ysema and bronchitis among chil- dren whose mothers smoke suggests that parents should snuff out their cigarettes when the youngsters are present, a researcher says today. The study by Dr. Ira B. Tager of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston concludes that children may risk serious lung diseases later in life if they are brought up by mothers who smoke. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Sept. 22, 1983 .-11 The Fine•t Quality OIJtalnable Veal Spec/al of the Week Ground Veal s19a Mannings Beef Round Steak s1 49 Veal Cutlets ~698 ~ ....... BAICH llRIET ... , .. 2411 IEWNRT ILVD.•CDSTI 1111•(114) 111 .. 1111 'J'ele Vlsecl c/01 ms about lower pnces are f me. hut the real haryClins (lf'<' rn µnnt . Daily Pilat Advertised prices good through Saturday, September 24 25°/o off entire · stock Cheryl Plunkett with roommate's dog, Birney. With friends like these ... Best. friend? H er treatment doggone shame LONG BEACH (AP) -A woman who rescued her roommate's unlicensed St. Bernard from the law said she ended up paying for her chivalry with a night in )ail. a strip search and $271 in fines and bail bond costs. "I thirCk there is reasonable grounds to advise parents that if it's po&ible, they ought to minimize the extent to which they expose their children to cigarette smoke," said Tager. However, he cau- tioned that it is not yet clear whether the lung damage occurs before birth. when mothers smoke . during preg- nancy, or later, when the youngsters breathe smoke-filled air at home. of men's and women's sunglasses "It was an indignity," said Cheryl Plunkett, 35, of Long Beach, who appeared in court Tuesday in the matter of Birney the St. Bernard's license. It was on Dec. 2, 1981, that Plunkettagreed to sign a citation admitting ownership of Birney after an animal control officer said the untagged dog otherwise would be carted off to the pound. Nancy Perkins, Plunkett's roommate and Birney's owner, wasn't home at the time. Later that day, Perkins purchased the necessary license tag for $19.50. But neither woman went to Municipal Court to show that the dog had been properly licensed. A routine bench warrant was issued for Plunken's arrest on the misdemeanor citation. Two years later, on Sept. 13. two plainclothes officers showed up at Plunkett's house at 7 a.m. "You are under arrest for failure to appear in court on a dog license matter," Plunkett recalled they told her. She was taken to the Long Beach City Jail. where she was booked not only for the Birney oversight but also for a four-year-old speeding ticket she said she had forgotten to pay. "Then,'' Plunkett, a paralegal, recalled. "a policewoman in Unifonn came into the cell and told me to take my pants down." The search was very thorough and very humiliating, she said. A Long Beach Police Department spokesman said everyone booked into City Jail is routinely given a body search because ''you never know what they may hide on their body." Plunkett was placed in a cell with 15 or 20 other women -"hookers, PCP users, one going through heroin withdrawal and a crazy woman" -until Perkins arranged bail of $418 plus the deed to the house as security. Appearing Tuesday morning before Long Beach Municipal Court Cornmi.Mioner George Pugsley, Plunkett entered a guilty plea on the dog tag crime and on the unpaid.speeding tickeL She was fined $161 for the ticket. "I'll dismm the dog license,'' said Pugsley. "Most of the mothers who were smoking when we did the study were also smoking dur- ing pregnancy," Tager said. "The.refore it's en- tirely possible that this is an effect that began in utero." During five years of study, Tager and his fellow researchers found that the lungs of non-smoking children whose mothers smoked grew at 93 percent of the rate of those whose mothers did not smoke. Thedoctorsfound that smoking by fathers had no effect on children's lung development, either because the chil- dren spent less time with their fathers or because their lungs were re- tarded by smoke ex- posure while still in the womb. "These data suggest that maternal smoking contributes to a reduc- tion in the rate of de- velopment of lung func- tion in children and, along with the child's own smoking habits, may be important in the development of chronic obstructive disease of the airways in adult life,'' Tager and his colleagues wrote in today's New England Journal of .--------------------Medicine. These zeroes mean more than nothing ClDCAGO (AP) -Nlne zeroes may seem like a whole lot of nothing. but that's not the case when they follow a dollar sign and the number l. Juat uk oil baron Armand Hammer, who recently wrote a check for $1 billion. Hammer. chairman of Occidental Petroleum Corp., hand-delivered the $1 billion check to top executives of Continental Illinois National Bank and Truat Co. of Chicago and Manufacturer1 Hanover Truat Co. of New York last week. The money was in pertial repayment of $4 billion in loans u.ect to finance Occidenta1's acquiaitlon of CUie. Service Co. last year. Contihental chairman Roger E. Andenon said in jeet that he was torry to see Ooctdental repay lta loans to quickly at a time when general lending demand waa80alow. Themostcommonvar- ieties of chronic obstruc- Uve lung dlaeue are chronic bronchitla and emphysema, which cauae more than 50,000 deaths a year in the United States. The doctors based thelt conclusions on a 1tudy of 1,156 F.ut Bc»- ton children between the age9 of ~ and 9. Once a year. they measured the volume of each young- ster's lungs. Tager nuted that about 20 percent of heavy-smoking adulta get disabling lung dia- euetl, while the rest do not. "The question is why,'' he aaid. \ \. \ \ \, ....... \ ·. ' Look great and be sun·smart! Protect your eyes from sun. wind. dust and glare. at the beach 0< on the boat. You'll find a wide assortment of styles from Foster Grant and other fMlQUS makers. Plasbe, metal and rimless frames. Gradient, mirra<ed and polarized lenses. all of lightweight. shatter-resistant plastic. Catch a few rays .. catch big savings on a new optic look from our Jewelry Depa1ment Reg. 4 .99 to 13.99, sale 3.74 to 10.49 ' ' r.:\ TARGET ·ij~·~rr:~mt=;~=:~o::.;~ ... ~. '1:J. I K le11mlaye·IO•m~•llfl\.....,.YIO•ni•lfill' ANMl!ft; LllCOlrl ... II Cr•~ Wffy "'" w"4 ot lt'4I ~ AN Fr~ NontlrMlf« lStlt>Oe 81.0 Ill NotdllOll 0..-cMn O,_ Broollnurat et w-.rrnt1\11!1 AY9 ivet ~ ot ,tcollll•. 1.IYf-4 C~~ 81\10 et 111410.oom. E ·~ Olrd41<'1 Ofo..e FrMw•v ot '"-Golot<1 Stet• '•ffWllY Otrden Oroftt Hlrl>OI OIYO ftt CIWIMIWI All1klu• O•ll•td v .... y .. o A .... o" th• Vtnll,111 ,, ...... "'"' Allltm0te· MM 84 11 Pfllm A~ 10 t!lt f~ Shoooono Cant# CO'fllla; Al:V9 Blvd aoum ot lwfow Hllji'""'Y 5111 ... n .. dlno< Notfl ~ t •t St II H!QftWl<I A,,. 0....rio• Nar1'I Mounflin A'ttt !Utl tOlitl't ol S.11 letn••di .... 0.lt'QI ~ AOilO ,.,., l'llt ot t t !IE Sir> 8-CWIO F1.-try ------~ A 12 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Sept. 22, 1983 Pacemakers keep pac,e with science By GINNY OLSON DA VIES . Those attl'ndm~ "A Heart t9 Heart 'fa* .. l\bout Pacemakers" seminar last w~k at Hoag Memorial Hospital discovered that pacemakers have e ntered the Space Age. The Cosmos pacemaker, a direct result of NASA technology, was displayed, showing thl' same amount of memory as an Apple U computer. Sponsored JOintly by the Orange County Heart Institute and Hoag, the seminar featured Newport Beach cardiologist Dr. John A Drews who t>xelained the natural electrical syst.cm of a normal heart, which causes it to beat from 60 to 100 times a minute. Dizziness. prolonged faintness or passing out are some of the symptoms he mentioned which might indicate the need for a pacem aker He said pre -Cosmos pacemakers are still doing a good job. They are smaff electronic mechanisms usually implanted unde r the skin below the right collar bone to improve functioning of the heart's electrical system. SlOet• the late 1950s thousands have been implanted With local a nesthes!a and the help of a fluoroscope, a wire attached to the pacemaker is passed through a vein into the heart. A short hospital stay, followed by limited ~xerc1se, allows time for scar tissue to anchor the wire to the heart. . There are two types of pacemakers -fixed tale models keep the heart beating at a selected rate, while demand pacemakers onJ y cut in when the heart drops below a certain rate. Drews explained. Patients are urged to follow the rules of good health, return to a normal life and have regular checkups with their doctors. Drews advised people with pacemakers to stand about three or four feet away Crom microwave ovens and to be careful near electrical equipment, such as a saw or dental drill. Someone else should be present, he recommended, to make sure that the pacemaker is not being affected "It is also lmportant," Drews said. "to infonn any doctor about your implanl 1( he is contemplating giving you radiauon treaunent or diathenny, (the generation of heat m tissue for medical purposes).'' Mary On.xley. a nurse Crom lntennedics Pacemakers m Free port. Texas, explained Pacemaker House Calls, which is the trans-telephonic monitoring of pacemakers. Patients must have thetr pacemakers checked regularly and the special equipment affords a central location where a chart is maintained for each patient. "The function of your pacemaker may be checked by phone, even from overseas," said On.xley. who reminded patients the checkup by telephone should never replace regular visits to a doctor. She also urged pauents to call their doctor if they have shortness of breath, d1Z.7.iness, prolonged weakness, I swelling of ankJes. wrist or arms, chest pains or prolonged and rapid hiccups I · Prison hill signed hut need reinains · SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. George Deu- kmejian has signed legislation to speed up work on housing for 11.000 prisoners. but says it hasn't solved the immediate need for high-security cells. Republican Deukmejian said he has no plans to call the Leglslature into special session on the overcrowd ing issue, or to ask again for authority to release prisoners convicted of non-violent crimes up to 90 days early. "These bills represent a giant step towards the medium and long-range solution of prison over - crowding in California," he said at a signing ceremony Tuesday. "However, because the Legislature did not authorize the transfer of prisoners to the Youth Training School ... m Chino. we still have a short-term overcrowding problem that must be addressed." Local opposition in Chino, where prisons are already heavily concentrated and escapee Kevin Cooper is charged with four murders, led to legislative rejection of Deukmejian's proposal to convert part of the Califorrua Youth Authority facility to a high-security prison for 600 adults. It was the only part of the governor's proposal that would have created immediate cell space for high-security prisoners, aJthough several hundred cells are supposed to be ready in Vacaville next summer. Deuk.mejlan said he had no immediate solutions. Officials in his Corrections Department say more prisoners will have to be housed two to a cell or trantferred from cells to lower-security dormitories. State prisons, built for 25,700 inmates, now hold nearly 37,000 and arc adding 100 a week. The problem has been created by years of laws lengthening sentences while prison construction was frozen, and aggravated by state and federal court orders condemning prison conditions and restricting the placement of more than one man in a cell. Attorney General J ohn Van de Kamp says 200 suits challenging prison conditions are pending. The cou.rt orders prompted Deukmejian to announce a crlaia in the prisons two weeks ago and ask for broad authority to speed up prison construction, oonvert part of the CY A facility to a prison, arrange priVJte financing for new prisons. and release as many as 16,000 prisoners ahead of schedule. Red is beautiful? :Redheads lntemational, Inc .. is hosting a beauty pagMl'\t for carrot tops of the female persuasion between the aget of 15 and 35. The contest will be held at the North Hollywood Uniyeru.l Sheraton ballroom in November, but inteteated flame-heads must be acreened and interviewed ln advance. Stephen Douglas, president. and fou nder ot the Laguna Niguel-hued club, said the goal is to find "the belt looking red-haired Ri°rl or woman in Southern Califomfa." For information oboui the contest, or to join the organization. call DouglM at 8~9-8714. Talk on divorce niediation set A free public lecture will be held at 7:30 tonight at the South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa to ac:quaint people w ith the process of divorce media- tion. p a t> Bird's eye view A eagull watches the traffic ben eath him Crom top a s treetlight on Pa- cific Coast Highway near Bayside Drive in Newport Beach . The lecture will be conducted by Affiliated Counseling Services o·c Huntington Beach which has slated another session at Golden West College Oct. 6. According to Director Leonora Treglia, the company is designed m part to eliminate the trauma of divorce as well as to provide various types of legal and psychological counseling. AT HOME ... AT WORK ... She said the divorce mediation process helps lead to a better community and happier. more well-adjusted families. IN YOUR CAR ... There's More "Divorce involves many complex emotional, physical and economic problems that are worsened by the adversarial system which most people use. "Our unique approach combines lawyers and mental health professionals working in teams to solve these problems within a noncombative environment. It is unfortunate that too few people know of this alternative," she said. Easy Listening Music On KDCM taa.t Divorce mediation involves teaching the couple how to restructure their relationship rather than focusing on what caused the marriage to break up. FM STEREO "OUR MUSIC MAKES YOU FEEL GOOD!" The process differs from arbitration where both ~esgiwat~partyth~~w~the~ts~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-then the third party makes a decision for them. -- I • THE J.H. BIGGAR IRVINE HOME AND GARDEN CENTER GRAND OPENING SALE! NO FINANCE CHARGES FOR 1 YEAR 1),. 5ep1E111ber 22nd tlm1 September 25 [ ......... ~. 1 r:~ ' \' l3o%l ~ f30%l ~ I . .~, !· ,.. . . . • { I ~~~ ''I ':-1 DREXEL PARTY TABLE SETS For E.rnmplt': From Editions the set mdutlt•.., 44" part y table anti 4 party chairs. REG S2.415 SALE: Sl,689 DREXEL WALL UNITS For &ample: WS..i Wall Uni t., Drawer & Grill Door Bool..cd<,c,.' Unit-. REG. Sl,069 SALE: S749 Narrow Door BookcclS<' Units REG. S449 SALE: 5315 CHIPPENDALE OCCASIONAL TABLES 34'' Round Cocktdil REG: S52Q SALE: 5379 End Table REG: S309 SALE: 5215 Nest of Tables REG: s530 SALE: 5379 Sofa Tabll· REC: S40Q SALE: 5285 ALL HERITAGE DINING ROOMS REDUCED 30% For example: FROM THE BRITTANY CbLLECTION Tl11s dining room gro11p i11cl11des: 68" oval table. 2-cane back arm chairs and 4-c:ane back side chairs. REC: $4,443 SAVE: 51,3..J..J SALE: 53,099 f30%l ~ HERITAGE CUSTOM SOFAS & CHAIRS 7 Sofas • 8 Chairs • 1000 Custom Fabrics To Choose From. Fo1 &amµle: 85" Sota REG. S2,005 SA~E: Sl,499 DREXEL EXPOSED WOOD CHAIRS 10 Sty1r<: To ChooS{.' From. Fnr fa11111plc: Bcrgel"l' Chair in your choice o( I Jbnc REG: $blo SALE: S435 DREXEL UPI IOLSTERY " 3 Sota and 3 Chair Stylcc; ll1 C.hooSt~m . Your Choice of 11 Velvet .mtl 7 Woven Fabrics. for fa11111 ple: SO" Snfo in a cri~r floral fabric: RrG 'SI, 100 SALE: S839 Plus you'll save .i minimum of 20% on all Dining Room, Ck<lroom .rnd Living Ro\)m groupings. Sof ~1s. Loveseats & Chairs. Wall Units. Arcd Rugs, JC'Cl'!'>Sorie5 .md mon?! Sre our House.' & Gan.lrn "lnVC'Stmm1 ~Orar1ng" p!"OjQClm A must tor any- one interested in ckcor,1t1nK 1twir homt Our designers will be on h.ind lo JMS\Wr your questions. Scl1rdull': Saturday: U:OO AM SunJ,iy I 00 l'M 1 00 PM I 300 PM DlffXFI 11 IERllACI· SI 10\\'CASE Sl (>l\I ~ WOOD! AND 11111~ IRV IN I· 21725 l:.rw 1n ~t Ir vtni· I hmw & C.11 dm ( 1•1iti·1 12131 888·4033 LS.BJ Cltlvt•1 Dr. 171-t 1 ss2 om To quJhty tor thi..• ··No intt·rr't char>.>t?S tor one year" .:ill order; must be placc<l betw~n Sc-ptember 22nd .rnd Scpll'mocr lSth Payment~ !>1.trt upon delivery. This otlt•r .. ub1<'<I to crt'<.111 approval DrexelA: ~v 1)11:> I lNCl l\'l: CAI I I R) ~ 1 01~1:~ f/\SADE~A ~,\:'\ 11\ t\:\:A ntKl L Ci,lor.1dn Bkd. 2800 :'\ :'\ 1,,111 St. 1 ~131 71):! t'f3l; 1711 1 '171021 I IOURS. Mnnd,w -S,llurd.-iy 10-o lrv1nl· & \ \°l,lKll.mJ 1 lilb l·rnld\' It' \l Now our Pasadena and Santa Ana stores are open Sundays toot 12 to S .... . ..... .... • ; . -. . 4 : . -: . . .. -. . . ... THI COAST AND THI COUNTY Customers often ask chimney Humphrey to pose for pictures. I Dilly Pilat THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1983 ANN LANDERS ENTERTAINMENT COMICS 82 83 86 .., The show, they say, must go on, but 0 they're having a devil of a time getting "Pygmalion" on at the Newport Harbor 0 Actors Theater. Page 83. ,, - _..~ L .. t \ ................ .., .............. Hamphrey 1ay1 he's never fallen off a roof. A dirty business But he's really cleaning up By PHIL SNEIDERMAN OllM~""''""' himne;y_ sweep T ed •ffumphl~y claims he gets ,four or five calls a week rom people who think his is a get-rich-quick profession. · He says it's the result of ads placed by chimney cleaning equipment companies, which promise a top-flight sweep can earn up to $700 a day. What these prospective sweeps don't realize, he says, Is that those figures apply to work in the Northeast, where fireplaces are used more frequent- ly for wintertime heat. "It's a whole different story in Southern California," Humphrey says. "Back East they may clean a chimney twice a year. Here, we clean them ont'e every three or four years." But because many people get taken in by the get-rich-quick ads, then undergo Uttle training in the trade, Humphrey claims there are many ineffective sweeps working today, people who may leave behind a fire hazard. "There are guys who have the . right equipment but don't know what to do with it," he says. 0 See Chimney, Page 8 2 play the long brushes he uses to clean creosote buildup out of a chinmey . er p Ding (there with husband Dr. Lock Gee Ding) was coordinator for the Opera Pacifi c gala Saturday at the new entertainment and conven- tion center at the Disneyland Hotel and Wrather along with husband Jack were were <.'0-hosts for the party attended by 500 thus the floral tributes. Rose Smedegaard (she handled reservations) commenting on the women's attire said. "Have you ever seen such gorgeous clothes." Yes, it was a good looking group with many of the women adding a touch of the '20s to go along with the theme "An evening of Promenades, Pavilions and Panache" reminiscent of soirees of the past. Complimentary comments on the music by the Bill Tole orchestra and vocalist Chris Costello were heard throughout the evening. "That's my kind of music," commented Gene Mix (there with JoAnnP) on the big band sound. The evening's schedule went Like this -dancing then the flnt course was served, more dancing, another course, etc. The band had arranged tunes compatible with the food, such as "Way Down Yonder in New Orleans" with the seafood pate w1th creole mustard and "Sweet Georgia Brown" w1th the dessert. Highlight of the evening (pep- pered with bravos) was a special production of Light opera and Broad- way tunes by professionals includ- ing Stephen Plummer, Adrienne Leonetti, Arlene Thomas and Peter Van Derrick. The program also featuring Francesco Sorlanello and P ete r Van Derrick was introduced by Niles Gates, OP president. (Nunzio Crisci is the group's musical direct.or.) Welcoming the group (OC Com- munity leaders. patrons of the arts, national and local executives) was Michael Bullis, general manager of the hotel. "We are here for three reasons," he said. "To celebrate the opening of the new center, to support Opera Pacific and to have a good time." The "having a good timers" included Barbara and Alex Bowle, Flo11 and Ed Schumacher, Pegy and Les Cotton, VI GJaspel, Nora and Vin Jorgensen, Lee and Jamet Gormley, Ano and Robert McLean (she was co-coordinator). J ean and Robert Lucas, Marilyn and Tom Nielsen, Georgia Spooner and Irene and Jim Bentley. The amount of financial support OP will not be known until the bills are totaled, but Gates has called it a substantial amount -thankB to the Wrathers and Bullls, co-hosts, cou- ples who paid $1~0 each and the underwriters of the musical portion of the program -Louis J.Knobbe1 (Knobbe. Ma.r1Rns, Olllon and Bear), Elaine and William D. Redfield, Edward Sebek, (Deloitte, HuJc.Jn. and Se/1') and Rose and Norman Smedegaard. • . ..... -.; : . 'T -:or e CE 82 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Sept 22, 1983 1iln CaSe Of a mugging ••• Passive behavior will minimize'Violence .• DEAR ANN LANDERS 1 haw t:ome to the ·. conclusion that there is no such thing ru. a safe neighborhood anymore. We live m one uf the most faahionaQlt'1'11uburbs in the United St.att.'S (Beverly ·· Kills) and two of our neighbors were mugged within a block of their homes between 7 and 8 p m ln both instances a well-dressed couple Jumped out from behind some bushes. Fortunately, both V1CUms eecaped unharmed. All they lost was some expensive jewelry and cash. Although most people beheve nothing bad will ever happen to them. I want to be prepared in case t get jumped. Can you or your t'Onsul tan ts g1 ve me any advice on how to behave if I am suddenly faced with a gun in my side and someone says. "Give me your wallet and your jewelry?" -COVERING THE BASES DEAR COVERING: According to Mar vin E. Wolf1ug, director of the Center of Studies in Crlmlllology at tbe University of Pennsylvania, the belt way to minimize violence is to behave in· a totally dsive manner and do as you are told. ~ Allll lANDEIS Psycb0Jogi1t1 tell 111 tllat often tlle mu wltb a gun bas always felt like tbe anderdo1. Wldl a weapon in bis ba:ld be feels powerful. It 11 beat to let -Im enjoy that feeling, even relnforcta1 It -say, "OK, you're in charge here. Just tell me wbat yoa want ~d I'll hand it over." U ls lnfurlaUng that some jlllced-ap tba1 wltb a Satarday nJgbt special cu demaad tbat yoa band over your bard-earned money. Bat remember, no amount of cash or jewelry Is worth a ballet ID tbe bead. Tbe more relaxed you behave and tbe more quickly you com ply, tbe better your chances to avoid being shot, cot or clobbered. • • • Th is chimney sw eep is really cleaning up ... v-From Pag~ B 1 ''Others use the wrong equip- ment, such as a chain, or don't have an industrial strength vacuum." c\-\\tJ\-CHI M CHEREE ,~tlE'I SWEEP SEP. .. C~' ""W~ DEAR READERS: The saying Is, "Into every life a little rain must fall." Well, I have just been bit by a typhoon. In a recent column I reported that efforts to open up adoption records bad led to passage of leglslalion tbat would seal them forever. Wrong - or at least prem ature. No new leglslatlon baa beea enacted yet and adoption records ln llllnoitl are still sealed. Stay tuned. If anything changes, I'll let you know. • • • Ordinarily. I would not be concerned, but our I I-year-old son sits ln the window and gawk.a ln a way I consider unwholet0me. Also, it occurred to me that with so many perverts looee theee da)'ll, lt might be dangerous. I mentioned my concern to one neighbor whoee 5-year-old plays nude, and she said I was "crazy." In her OIJiniOn it is "healthy" and "darling." la lt? - NEW MILFORD, CONN. DEAR CONN.: It IS dangeroas and ulaeaJtkJ. Panties should be woru by both boys ud ctrl• of aJJ ages. Suggellt tbat your oelgbbora dl1c1111 till• wltil DEAR ANN LANDERS: In Oct.ober we bought their pedlatriciH I. our dream house in the suburbs. AU summer long the ' kids have been running around here with no clothes t. on. l mean stark naked. I'm not referring to tiny tots, either ... some of these youn_gsters are 6 and 7 years old. · • • • Drugs? How much is ioo much? I.s pot OK ? Is cocaine too much? If you 're on dope or considering ti, get Ann Landers' all-new booklet, "The Lowdown on Dope. " For each booklet ordered, send $2 plua a long. self-addressed, stamped envelope (37 cen~ postage) to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, Ill. 60611. At first, I thought they were taking their clothes off because it was beastly hot, but then r saw the neighbors on both sides letting their young ones out of the house. So, the parents DO know . Entertaining vvith ease baffling When 1·enterta1n, I do It with all the chann of a charging rhino. I do not have time for superfluous t'Onversation like "hello" and "goodbye." The only time I mingle with my guests is when one wanders inw the kitchen looking for the bathroom. And my dinner partner remembers me as a blur. ERMA 80M8fCI ATWIT'S END the cleavage and a hot mitt tucked in the belt. .... Humphrey's own equipment includes 24 plastic and wire brushes; long, flexible rods that attach to the brushes; assorted hO&eS; a tool box and an industrial strength vacuum. He says an ineffective sweep sometimes leaves a layer of highly flammable creosote (a by-product of burning wood) on the smoke shelf in a fireplace. This creosote buildup could ignite in the chimney, he warns. I honestly don't know how other women do it. I do everything they do. Set the table the day before. Chop all morning. Have the dessert in the freezer. The coffee pot ready to plug in. The main casserole draped in foil . The moment the doorbell rings annoW\Cing the arrival of the first couple, I panic. A friend once told me the first recollection she had of meeting me was when she and her husband were invited to our house for dinner. The door swung open and as she extended her hand to me, I turned to my husband and said, "Check the hall bath. Make sure the boys flushed!" I know a lot of women who are as insecure as I am about entertaining. We're the women who put off having a few friends in until we get the aofa covered, the kids are married, the kitchen has new wallpaper, the toilet stops running, the big tree in the front yard blooms, oysters are in seaaon, the annual reports are out at the office, we get our tax refund, we've aeen the last of the roaches, or we get 12 iced tea glalees that match. Like some of his competitors, Humphrey was lured to the chimney sweep trade by an ad published in Mechanics Il- lustrated. That was seven years ago. After obtaining the equip- ment, Humphrey says he taught hmuelf the trade by studying books and through experience. "I learned the hard way,' he says. "There was no one around to teach me. When I started. there were only six or seven chimney sweeps throughout Southern California." Today, Humphrey estimates there are as many as 40 sweeps in Orange County alone. He favors federal regulation as a way to keep unqualified sweeps out of the buain~. In fact, the National Chimney Sweep Guild went on record last July, advocating regulation "to , , .-,11.A I PAI r:,_ help protect the public and legit- imate sweeps everywhere." Still, the chimney sweep pro- fessi on retairu a certain mystique. Homeowners learn to e xpect the sweep to wear black clothes and a top hat. According to European custom. it's good luck for a bride to see a sweep before her wedding, and some people aay it'a lucky just to touch a sweep. Humphrey says many of his customers insist on snapping pic- tures of him. often with the youngaiers. "Some people aay that if I don't wear my top hat and costume, don't bother coming," he says. Kids will get computer magazine TIM AMOClaled p_. NEW YORK -The Children's Television Workshop, producer of "Sesame Street," has launched a new monthly J"Oagazine designed to cover the realm of computers and computer technology for youngaters aRe 10-16. The problem is I am reluctant to ler people see how we really live. It's not easy being a phony. I want them to think that we always have fresh flowers from the florist on the dining room table. One afternoon, I picked a bouquet from the yard that made a breathtaking centerpiece. By the time the guests sat down to dinner the blossoms had tightened up into little knobs that looked like bait. "What kind of flowers are they?" asked one o[ the guests. "They're African daisies," -l said. "However, in Africa, they eat before the sun goes down." I want them to think we always serve soup fromJ a tureen even though the price tag glows like it had a light over it. I want them to think I always cook in something long and flowing even if it has a tomato seed lodged in --- 642-5678 Pul a few word s to tcurk for you "''"" Daily Pilot My husband said the other day, "When are we going to have some people in for dinner?" "I'm working on a big party with a theme and the timing has to be right," I said. ''What's the occasion?" he asked. "Halley's Comet in May 1986." (714)" 55 7-284 7 696 Ranoo1pn Ave. ... >\A I J•APlJt l I , BEAUTIFUL 100 MAITIN-SENOUI PAINTS. SAVE10% ON OYER SOO WALLCOVEllNGS Over 1200 custom colors • .it:Jlf' on lnmous pr1?m1um quality Mnr1m Senour Bnghl Ulo • 1-timls m la1ex or allcyd Satin Gloss $15.99 Reg. $21.99. gallon n at $3.99 Reg. SS 99, quart Satin Gloss $4.99 Reg $6 99, quart Huny! Sale ends Oct 24. JQ83 Waltpoper, -----,-\/-Ill-.. h~ll ""'",""'" • ._ • .• Enter our Sweepstakes! Win $200 cr~dit toward your Beautiful Room . • Hurry! Sale ends Oct. 24. 1983 A member of our decorating statt will help you create your beautiful room ID!lr.11" u•1;.--.1 .... , .. .. \-.~ t , ........ . tfllft .... ~ .. \!?:!'JU UJ~ .... 1·.,, \'!t '-'th K.M• Ht •'-'-.. u ,.,..,_. ............ " ....... '-·~ JI l\<ttttt""\rnh tll 1'QI • • 'I rttltl• llhlt , ...... 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'"'o llJ•ltt•ot'" flhtf I ... ttl1 -•Otil ,J '"'""' tth·l 1 I ~t • ,!1 -.,, ·~,.o~ .. tt·• 'tit,,,.. .. """"'' "•II 11,... ........ , ,,.,' ........ ..-,, ... ,, ..... h "r·ll··~ 1tn•l '-l"'wl111.I ..~~ ~f'\•:,..,1. Uh•• t , .... , lhn. .,_,. •t. , .... " , .. , ·~ \ Ofll'll 7 •Ill"' n w.-.-11-Mnn•hl\ 1hn1 h11ln~ lfl·''· ~nt11rtl1t~ Ill"'· ~11111lw) I!.!·!; \ '""® \111•lrfC11r1I ® A11u·r1,.•11 ~:,pr,..,..q!J "NO r11fl( 1111•,J" N[([c;SAPY "°'' ~· n Hf 1~ ,., ·~ ·~ ' " ... ~· ·r "' p, 11lr1 'I ' ·~IW<' Wll Ill 1 •r I r11. 1n111 ~ 1·~ I(~ 1•11 <; "' Tiff W"l l l'APC RC\ TO 00 NC•Rl'Sl 'IOU -.]1..._ _____________ ._ __ ,,_, __ .,. ....... ._ __________________ .............................. ,_,, ____________ ~~--------------~~--~~~--~~~-------- .:f Y-gma I ion' NHAT having trouble getting show on stage 8 yTQMTlTUS ' Of .. Deltr .... ··- TYPE CASTING DEPT. - When the Huntln~ion Beach Playhouse cast its <:urrent pro- duction of "'Pirnie," dire<:tor Phil de Barros had a spedal casting requirement -the leading role of Madge called for an actress of exu aordinary beauty, since this was an important facet or her character in the play The show. they say, mu.st go on, but they're having a devil of a time getting "Pygmalion" on at the Newport Harbor Actors Theater. Originally scheduled to open laat Friday, the show was post- poned a week be<:ause of technical , p-oblems. Then this week, the "theater announced a second post-Filling the bill in all respects was Lisa Wilc:ox, a 19-year-old lrvine actress who captured first runner-up honors last month in the California Golden Girl • •-.,onement, to Sept. 30, after the two leading performers were forced by illness to drop out of the cast. Howe ver, Friday will still be opening night at NHA T. The playhouse's dark night production ' •of "Dear Liar" -scheduled to " open next Monday -has been pushed into the breach and will Lisa Wilcox Pageant at Sant.a Clara I Lisa. a graduate of University High School and now a drama student at UCLA, combines acting taJent with modeling. mime and dance, and has madt' !>everal nationally syndicated telev1s1on commercials. She also has played major roles m lcx:al productions of I "The Hot L Baltimore" and "The Royal Family." " play in "Pygmalion's" opening weekend time slot with per- -formances Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2:30 p.m .. according to Stan Hatto, the theater's business manager. "Dear Liar" is Jerome Killy's ' two-<:haracter play about the ex- change of letters between play- wright Gi!orge Bernard Shaw and actn!s8 Mrs. Patrick Campbell - the original Eliza Doolittle in "Pygmalion." Bridgit Christiansen directs the two-character cast of Michae l Frym as Shaw and Elaine Barnard aa Mrs. Campbell. "Dear Liar" will revert to its intended Mon- day-Tuesday schedule after this weekend, resuming Oct 3 and running through Oct. 18. Meanwhile, "Pygmalion" has been recast with David Lewis and Barbara June Dodge moving up to the leading roles. They had been playing Freddy Eynsford Hill and Clara. respectively. Their parts will be taken over by Tom Dugan and Bridgit Christiansen. ''Pygmalion'' will run through Oct. 23, playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2:30 at the Back Bay High School auditorium, 390 Monte Vista St., Costa Mesa. If you're still confused, call 631-5110 for further information. ..................................... , To n i ght's TV EVENING -e:OO- ID D NEWS CHIPS PATROL BJ /LOBO THREE'S COMPANY HAWAII FlVE--0 MACHEIL / 1.£HRER NEWStiOUA , e IH>EASTAHOING HUMAN : BBtAVIOR I C8SNEWS ABCNEWSQ NBC NEWS ~~AH DYKE •• • •Tempest" (1982) JOhn Cas- sa"teles. Gena Rowlands -8:30-•ALIC£ D Cit WE GOT IT MADE I HEALTHBEAT ~ MASTERPIECE THEATRE MOVIE t t t 00Star Trek II: The Wralh 01 Khan" ( 1982) William Shatner. Ricar- do Monlalban (Z)MOVIE • • • • ·Sounder · ( 1972) Cicely Tyson, Paul Winfield -9:30- D Q!CHEERS (!)MOVIE • • t '"A Vtty Special Fav0t00 ( 1965) Rock Hudson. Leslie Caron I! HEAl THBEA T c_e)= GALLERY CALLBOARD -The Newport I Harbor Actors ThPater will hold I auditions Tuesday and Wednes- day at 7 pm for its next pro- du c ti o n , "Ld e With Father" .... d1rector Kevin Hog-I gard will be set'king a largl! cast in all age groups. including several youngsters aged 6 to 17 .. tryouts will be held in Room 2 of the theater, 390 Monte Vista Ave .. Costa Mesa .... QI!) HUMANITIES THROUGH THE ARTS CJ) NEWS 0 BAAHEY MIUER 18 WHEEL Of FORTUNE ·~ • • •;, "'Marciano" (1979) Tony Lo Stanco, Belinda Montgomery -10:00- g I KNOTS LANDING I Hill STREET BLUES ••• NEWS 20/20 UPHOLSTERY, INC. •••plMl•t••-tla....e 1922 HAl!BO I! Bl VD COSTA ME SA -5•8 1156 • • "Ttmerlder ( 19821 Fred Waid, : Belindl 8*'8f l ~~EHGUSH THE VIAGIHIAN INSIDE THE Hfl MOVIE ,- ·.. -7:00-1 ~= HAPPY DAYS AGAIN ~NEWSwJiAH NEWS THAEE'S COMPANY JOKER'S WILD 8USINE8S REPORT MOTOffWEB( P.M. MAGAZINE EHTERT AINMOO TONIGKT !~~ • • ··s1ais1ruck (19821 Jo Ken,. dy Ross 0 Donovan -7:05-m ORANGE COUNTY TODAY -7:30- 12 OH THE TOWN Cit FAMILY FEUD LAVERNE & SHIRLEY & COMPANY I ~~·~ di PEOfll£'S COURT FALL A"'1 RISE Of REGINALD P£MIH I WINE. WHAT PLEASURE TIC TAC DOUGH MOVIE • • • ·Tne Sea Snail Not Have Them ( 1955) Mtenael Redgrave, Dirk Bogarde -e:00- 1 CJ) MAGHUM. P.I. Cit GIMME A BAE.AK MOVIE • • '"Twelve O"Clock Hlgn00 {1950) Gr~ Peele. Dean Jagger I ~UMA COO£JI • tt Ntgllt Glllllfy 11969) Join Ctawt0td, 9atry Sulllvan ~ TWIUGKT ZOHE • :JJ:rA1NMEHT TOHIGKT • * t ""A Ca~ Of Rape 119741 El12· at>etn Monlgomery Ronny Cox 15=:8COUHTY t • • '"Tim" ( 1981) Piper Laurie Mel Glt>son (H)MOVE t * "The Sea WolYM" tl980) Gr• ~ Pecll. Roger Moore C1J LOLA FALANA.: THE FIRST lN1Y Of LAS VEGAS .MOYIE t t t'~ T1111e Alter Time· (1979) MelCOlm McDowell. Oevld Watne< -•:30-IL~:FAMILY P.M. MAG.AZlNE NUMEAOUHO MAK PAEVIEWS MOYIE • U'~ "Blide Avnoer" (1982) Hit· risOn Ford. Rulger Hautlf -t:OO- • Cl) 8lllOH ' ~ • • t • "Galt1pol1' (19811 Mel Gib· son, Mark lee -10:30- • IHOEPENOEHT NETWORK NEWS CID LOVING AEtOS ANO PSffCT COUPlES -10:40-CI> CHARLES CHAMP\Jfj TALJ(S WITH -11:00- • ~· (l)fllQ!NEWS I FOR THE LOVE Of A CHILO THCCE Of THE NIGHT BENNY HILL 8U8IHESS REPORT ~~AUISERS • • ··Tiln«lde(' 119821 Fred Ward, BelkldaBIUef ~80TTOMSUP (!}~ST AR BAR & GAili * * Ar.dy WartlOI s Bad (1977) CwrOI Biker. Perry Klnq -11:30- (J) TRAPPEA JOHN. M.O. Q!TONIGKT SA T\JADA Y NIGHT 9 ABC HEWS NIGKTUNE ~Of SAN FRANCISCO NIOKTTIMES:VARIETY 700CLU8 MOVIE • • • * ··payday l 19731 Rip Tocn. Anna Capri -12:00- G 1H SEARCH Of ... Cf) IHOEPEHOEHT NETWOfll< NEWS ~=OH * + * Shoot The Moon·· 11982) Atberl f-"1nney. O.a~ Kealoo -12:30-D (8 LA TE NIGHT WTTH DAVID L.ETTERMAH ·=HTZONE ••'.It '"Zeppelin·· 119711 Michael Y0tk, Elke Sommer I YOO ASKED FOR IT AOWAH & MARTIN'S LAUGH-IN AU. IN THEFAMIL Y MARY HARTMAH. MARY HARTMAN I::::: AIHMENT TOHIGKT * * "Giselle . ( 1982) Alba Valeria, Moniqlle LaFond Cl) LOVIHO FRIENOS ANO P£lffCT COUPl£S -12:~- 8 (1)MOVIE * U "To Flnd My Son"' (1980) Rlclltrd Thomas. Justin Dana ®MOVIE • • t •;, · Oinet" P9821 Steve Gul- tenbefg, Mldtey Rouflle CHANNEL LISTINGS fl l(N)( T ICBSI 0 On rv CD KNBC INBCl l l TV e KTLA llrl<J I .. HBO e KABC IABCl c IC1~mul 0 KFMB ICBSl •t i (WORINV N Y I) KHJ TV (Incl I im IWTBSl e 11.csr IARCI f IESPNl e KTT\I (Incl ) • ISrlowllmel e i<COP TV (Ind I • ~1110111 e KCET IPBSl • 1c; .. bll' Nl'w\ Nttwotk l e KOCE fPBSI -------- * PACIFIC WALK IN THEATRES * Bargain Ma tine~' •t"~~·.;~•Ia'.•14 J ', ... i1') ~ * MONDAY l~ru SA !UROAY fACUll Yui CA~Ol!WOOO All Putorruot " Brtott ~ 00 PM IC. $pr< ( "t-.•mtnl\ & Hohl IQM!l6l1~:~M) LA MIRAQA AT llOSlCl!Al!S "TUDIMG PUC£$" (It) '00 ~ '° 10 10 "MA TIOfW. Wil'OON'S VACA TIOfl"" l ~ 100 "RISKY BUSlft:SS" (R) I 00 JOO )00 100 •oo II 00 "GETIING IT OHi" (R) 12 &0 2•0 u o 640 840 10 40 "STAYING ALIVE" (PG) IZ JO 17\ CZO b 10 &10 1010 "STRANGE IMVAO£RS" (PG) 12 lO l JS UO 64\ I\) II 0C "REM" Of Ht: JCDI" (PG) '1 70nn Dolby Strr~ 1710 100) 10 ID~ 1040 "EASY MCWY" (R) I I lll I l\ t 11> h ·~ 8 \t ID~\ "STAYlltG ALM "' ('10) " 70lml Ool>J SltftO 100 J \0(/ 100 900 llDll "FLASH DANCE" (R) 1110 na 'Ju '1!i aJo 1010 "ANGELO MY LOVE" (R) 11 JU 100 )JO tOO 10.IO 1%/J}ig 3 tt~~t4) FACUllYo• Qll A "Ttl: FINAL OPTION" (R) IH) 11'> H~ I~ IQ)) "GETTING IT OHi" (R) I It~ 14) U I i Cl I 41 10 Cl "MDIRY C .. ISTMAS. MR. LAWREMC£" (R) I/JO 100 130 100 IOlO * PACIFIC DRIVE ·IN THEATRES * • All OP~N 7 PM '>WI\ Dvs• * Ch•lclren Un0•'FR££1 12 ALWAVS •• • @i(i :1? *''""I ~~~1:61 "SllAICC llNMOS" ('10) l'lUS * "MOICM WD£WOl.f IC LOfllOff" (R "G£TTllG IT oi.1•• (R) MS "Sf'RlltG FEVD" (PG ) "TOOTSI:" (PG) PLUS "111: UYMIH" (R) "TRM>ICC PUCfS" (R) I'll.IS "IOCIA..CS" (l'C) "MR, MOM" (PG) l'lUS "PORKY'S I. THE IUT DAY" (It) u.~&11 21 :1:.J \o.wo A"•''"". l \tot-.( ot"" "SllAlo: llNMOS" ('10) I'll.IS "AllDICM W(J(W()lf 11 LOfllOff" (It ''llOllY CMt!SIMAS, MR. lAmNCt" l'IU:I (It) "la>ST STi.Y" (II) •e-och "fHE fllW. <lrTIOlf" (II) I'll.IS "10 TO --.r" CIU "NATIOMl l~'S VACATION" (It) l'lUS "llAllM PUCU" (I) "Gmlll IT 0"1" Cll nus "snlli f[U" ('10) ........ (rG) I'll.IS ''POllll Y1 I. tHE llJl DAT" (Rl "llGHTMMES" (It) l'IUS "MOUUMY" (II) Mils• ':5~~3~ , ... o-• .,,. _.,.(yt ., ...... uu ... -., -.. •is.Y eus1u.s·· c•> P\U$ ··wv lil!Kr· (R) ( • Au1oci""~~~ =~· t : Cho ru line for 'Flashda nce II' Director Ian LeeC?h walks past part of the over 400 dancers turning out for a n ope n audition last weekend in Los Angeles for HFlashda nce II." LAST DAY WHO PARTIES AT FOR "FANNY AND ALEXANDER" LE CHARDONNAY LOUNGE? EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT STARTS FRIDAY Now Apf"·ann,:. J11hn \lallnn ,111J L\ 'xpt Irvine·~ aftt:'r·hour!> ehtl' Pl'opll' who know Whl'rl' conver!>at1on ~parkl~-. Yllu'll find it all at Le Chardonnay Luun~t·, wht•re the mood i!> hght and lively. Tonight dnnk, tlancc and romance tu the music of John Mallon and u..,, w~o'll be providing the mosl dynamic enlerta1nmt•nt in tuwn between 9 and 1:30 a m. Make your plan!> now and don't be late! After t1 ll, who partws at l.l· Chardonnay Lounge? EXCIT ING PEOPLE LIKE YOU. o Jiu! REG I ST~ ._ J /me/ ~- 18&10 MACARrHUK BUL'l LV/\RD, IHVINI . <.Al II OR.'ilA Y271"l 714 7"2 ~m --NOW PLAYING-- "IUIOll VllJC -l IM.IC>t WlllMt .. 11~ 'IMfillf" 'tf#Ol'l'tt. tM·~ l.,_.f'lh • .,,. .,.,,... ..... ,~bh ffl 1'l1'1 LI"''''" ., The 80 second war begins lOW! 7'HEliNA £ 0PnON R .~' ...... .. " •• \ • ,. • t.-' NOW PLAYING IAIA FOUlllAIN VAlllY MISSION Vil.JO WlSlMINSIUI 'J ,,"'""1'' . , 'f, I ,_,,,,tJ,M\'oH1' ttt1 "'•l'''' i, H1 W4v )q .. ' '" 11.1••,,. .,,, • •9\ &no II•,_, in ~g I 36'11 COW MlSA UGUNA 91At H ORANGE WlSTllllNSTEA Al• 11• . iotddmr UAM•I t . ,. .. , 41• 1S~l 8'11 05•1 COST• llllSA UHUllA QRANGf ~U\'-'llH lt•Ht J . •.. . "'''° u,,_ 0 ''" ~ . ·~ ,_ ())9 8110 t ·• '• lt ..... •t.flllf .. I 11/T~·--.. ,..-c LUXURY THEATRES • 1st T.o Mallntt Show1nuOfjlY$2~UtlltssOtlltrwistlloltd S 113fil$ij•J11Il 6J6:S'4 2553 {~~.) FOR FUOI EXCITEmEnTI V1s1tOur ... ARCAOEofGAMES* C:~.~~~!1~ :~::-~ Zelig (kll Shows •I IZ:OO Z·OO 4 00 •·oo 1 oo i o oo ... . I I ' . ,,..,. •• ,,.,... ,OI pl~'fH19 tf --n.. ••• ~ ... u t• .,.d~ '""'' 'OI ·-•~.,,-i-•un ;;.;.>.-ya ............. • Shows Al J1JO &. 7 ·JO. WH Shit .. ~t '-t,t :Z1l8 .. J b·OO Q 1:20 S:ZO t i20 5 JO a Sf --Ir ........ _ RETURNOFlliEJEDI Im John TrlNOha I/\ STAYll16 RllUI ~MM t :JO 4•30 7130 10:15 I 70MM No P111t1 / U .7!1 h t Hr, Onl)' 1110 3120 S1lO 1 •10 10110 «;iW?nljs1 2J6,•255s 1~~J Mlt.l.AWU:NCE ...., fl Mf.HVCHIJSTMA.~. rn I 1'",.",.:~~~1 .. ''ACATJfm Cl Al 1·:10. Tr•cllnt "''" .. snow• a t 1 111 • •:•O fAi '' 1110 ,, r;1c,,1,,1.11.;u 6 J6:S9 a1101~w:) su~c INI "Sovno Olt~ I To'°"' (Qt Rad lo Of .. #IQ'°',.,'"°' 1ooi. r;llNALOrnoN B~--m Phu l'"l11hcl1nce IAl -. .. ••• ,.,..,Cl "lu1 St•ylnt Allu (PO) ~lit ~rli lfl II C9'1 Drive 1111 OP•"1 49 WHllnltlllt / '1130 WHllt ncl• * Chlktrtn Under 12 fret Unlen Nottd 0.vtd -... . ._,omnm . .. LJ-"(I) 6001!01041 1 . .,~·~ "°""'I JO 1 1~ TO'lllR COOtl .. ,.,_ .. -m -'1M fOMi cooD u1.,_ --m .. JM fdiM Willi .. ,.,_ .. -7SJ.4114 SOUTl4 COAST ---546·1111 WH COAST --Ifill' TM '-... .,-.. 4t7 1711 SOUlH COAU C..••t ........ m 1111 '!l.._,.'1111 ~,,,,,o ,,, •·"' ":r11Wlllr (N) • ... , .... 1 .._,-~I _1 .. uo 10•0 --.• --<'Cl -tro 61~ II\ IOI\ ....,_ ·iwr C"1 ,, ... 0 ™llSP\.~(11 • •! -oCT~IP'i 6 IS II OC "',. ....... , /fl •• .. .. ' r • .. -' . IM Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT /Thursday, Sept. 22, 1983 GRlllil COUNTY BUSINESS RUFFOLO BALLANTINE FRITZ CLAYTON WEIOEL Cox & Burch Advertising Co. hires Ruffolo as account exec Jeff P. Ruffolo has joined the Cox & Burch Advertisf.Dg Co. or Newport Beach as an account executive in public relations, according to Job.n C. Cox Jr., agency president. Prior to this assignment, Ruffolo was was with The Bohle Co. of Los Angeles. • • • Irvine-based CIE Systems has hired two systems e ngineers and a design engineer. Cindy Ballantine has joined the computer firm in a systems engmeer capacity. She is responsible fo r writing and maintaining hardware diagnostics and penpheraJ drivers. Prior to joining CIE, she worked with Coastal Business Systems of Newport Beach. Sh~ is a resident of Santa Ana. Bob Fritz has also joined CIE as a syst.ems engineer. He is responsible for operating system software support. Prior to joining CIE, Fritz was with the Harris Corp. of Melbourne, Fla. He is a Laguna Hills resident. Joining CIE as a design engineer is Tu Ton-That. He is responsible for computer development for the CIES 680 product family_ Ton-That served as an engineer with Lockheed E ngineering and Management, Inc. prior to joining CIE. He is a resident of San Marino. • • • Jansen Associates of Santa Ana has an- nounced the appointment of Mary Ann Clayton to the position of personnel director, it was an- nounced by Ray St. Onge, firm president. Jansen, an advertising, marketing research and public relations firm, created the new position after their growth from 14 employees iin 1978 to their present 57 employees. Clayton joined Jansen six years ago as assistant to the president_ • • • Thomas J. Weigel has been named an associate with FORMA, an Irvine planning and design consultant firm, it was announced by Van Stephens, president. Weigel, an Irvine resident, was promoted from senior planner. In his new capacity he will be representing the firm in all project activites, and in business and profes:sionaJ organiza lions. .... Michael J . Vaughan of Santa Ana has been named vice president/manager of Valencia Bank's trust division m Irvine. • • • Walter W. Noce , former vice president and chief operations officer at Huolington Memorial Hospital, has been named president and chief executive officer of St. Joseph Hospital in Orange. He assumes the position vacated in June by John Goldthorpe, who is now cro of Hillcrett Medical Center in Tulsa, Ok.la. • • • LSA, Inc. has announced the promotion or Malcolm Sproul to corporate vice president. SprouJ has been with the Newport Beach planrung, natural resource management and envi.ronmental assesmlent firm since 1979 and is also an LSA managing associate. • • • fl NANCI Michael Brandman Associates, Inc. of Irvine has been selected to prepare an environmental impact report for the County Sanitation Districts or Orange County. The EIR wilJ focus on the potential impacts associated with the implementa- tion of sewer system improvements recommended in the master plan of facilities. The firm has also been selected to prepare a s upplemental en- vironmental impact report for the Irvine Ranch Water District. The report wilJ evalua te the potentiaJ en vironmental effects of IRWD's recent- ly completed Domestic Wat.er Master Plan Update. • • • Wastec Security, Inc. of Garden Grove, a residential security company, has acquired a Santa Monica headquartered company, Protective Ser- vices Corp. • • • Jim Weld of Irvine has been appointed vice president/treasurer of South Bay Savings and Loan Association, announced Slepben L . Good- man, president and chief executive officer. Weld will be responsible for rontrollershipo functions and recommend courses of action in cash manage- ment, investment and asset liability managemen t for the Costa Mesa-based firm. Prior to joining South &y, Weld was treasurer of Coloo!al Savings & Loan in Prairie Village, Kan. • • • Costa Mesa-based California Business Sys- tems will unveil its new rountertop automated rental system, called SMART (Syst.ems Manage- ment and Rental Technology) at the CalUonlia Rental Association Conventlon, Oct. 31 through Nov. 3 in San Diego • • • Norman W. Peduzd has been appointed president and chief executive officer of The Bank of Nortben California, a bank opened in March in San Jose by Orange Bancorp, a Fountain Valley-based firm Peduzzi comes to The &nk of Northern California from Howard Bank in Vermont. The announcement wa.s made by Lawrence R. Holmes, chief execuuve olf1cer o( Bancorp. • • • Reg Jones, formerly manager of Fatbioa Island Center for The Irvine Co., has been posted to Singapore as an executive volunteer by the International Executive Service ~ of New York, an organization providing qualified retired business executives to assist in foreign develop- ments. Jones will serve a two to three month term with Scotts Holding Ltd., a developer of shopping cen ters in Singapore. Jones is a Corona del Mar resident . 'Sallie Mae' a hit on campus By SYLVIA PORTER "Sallie Mae" may sound like she came out of Dogpatch and that wondrous comic world of "L 'tl Abner," created by the lat.e Al Capp. But far from it. Sallie Mae is headquartered in Washington and is of vital import- ance to you, IC you're a student facing repayment of college loans. For through this agency. you, the student, can consolidat.e some or all of your loans at lower monthly payments on extended tenns at 7 percent interest. Borrowers who now participate can take up to 20 years to repay. And you may be able to slash monthly payments by as much as 50 percent. This flexible progTarn. called Options, is sponsor- ed by the Student Loan Marketing Association -- Sallie Mae If you owe on Guaranteed Student Loans (GSl..B). Nauona.1 Direct Student Loans (NDSLs) or on Federally Insured Student Loans (F1SLs), you can take advantage of the program If you meet three oonditions: l) You have a certain level of indebted- ness. 2) Your loans are In good standing. 3) Your tint payment i.s coming due. Sallie Mae pays off your outstanding loans and creates a new lingle GSL. You can elect a longer repayment period than on your previoua loaN. Thia summer, about 22,000 people were holding option loans totaling approximately $273 million. To date, the default rate la lees than 12 of 1 percent, an outstanding achievement at a time of great concern over student loan defauJu. The fint loans were made atthe end of 1981. The Opt10111 program was tchedulecl to termin- ate on Aug. 1, 1983, but It haa been extended by Coneress through Oc.'t. 31. Congrem will now reconaider the entire program but probably It will be · continued. One oonsiderauon will be that 7 percent interest r11te, for It's lower than thechargt on almoet any loan you could get (althouah above what you might be paying on some older student louw). The goaJ of Optlona la to make repayment eNier !or you, and therefore you need . nO\ pay an origination fee nor are you aubjert to any prepayment penalty. You c.n chooee from three options the optJon that most closely fits your budget, the length of time ------··--- you want to repay your loan, and your income expectations. With Option l , payments remain the same for the entire tenn of the loan With Option 2. payments start low and increase gradually. With Option 3, payments start at the same level as under Option 2, but accelerate more rapidly, so you can retire your Joan with fewer payments. With each option, you de<:ide, within certain limits. how long you want to take to repay the entire loan. The average debt of current borrowers IS $12,500. The following illustration of how the Options progTam works is based on that amount and the actuaJ average term most borrowers elect to pay off their loans. For $12,500, the maximum term is 192 months (16 years), the average term turns out to be 180 months (15 years). In Option 1, payments remain at $113 for the entire 180 months. In Option 2, the irutial payments start at $84 and increase every two yea.rs so that during the last 24 months, payments will be $175. In Option 3, payments also start at $84 but rise more quickly to reach $227 for the last five payments. During the last full two-year cycle under Opt.ion 3, monthly payments wiU be $192. Do you qualify? Total up your outstanding, eligible Joana. U your tot.al loan debt ls more than $7,500, you can owe money to more than one lender. By ext.ending your loans, you'll eventually pay more interest. Al!olf you're paying a low rate on an old NDSL, It might not be worth tAmpering with It even to ext.end your repayment schedule. But you can apply for an opt.ion loan at any Ume u longaayouare no longer a full-Ume student or in a recognized determent period. For additonal lnfonnat.lon, call Sallie Mae, toll-free: (800) 446--4000; or wrlt.e to Sallie Mae, Student Loan CoNOlldatJon Cent.er. 1000 Thomas Jefferaon St .. N.W., W111hington, D.C. 20007. In- ve1t.lgate thll fully ("Sylv1a Poru-r's New Money Book for the 80s," 1,328 pagcs of down-ro-Hrth Mlvlco on ~r-.oNJ money rna.n.agerrumt, IJ now avltil•bl~ chroush Mr column. Send $8.9$ pl&.a II formltJllng and handllng ro "Sy/vi.a Porte's New Money Book f or the 60$.," In an of this news,,.per, 4400 Johratlon Drive, Fairway, /Un. 66206. Make check# payable to Unlvef'llAl ~ Syndicat~.) Mutual Fund Sales Sll13Sh All Records First Half-Year Sales Mutual fund sa les for the first six months of 1984 have shattered all previous sales records. T he $22.3 billion in sales of all f und,s o ther than short-term funds was nearly four times as high_ as in the comparable months of 1982.The funds provide a way for investors to get involved i n the s tock market without the pressures of choosing their own portfolios. Wayne • tennis club sold Newport Beach de- veloper J ohn Ward has completed purchase of the prestigious 16..a>urt John Wayne Tennis Club for an esilmated $2.5 million. Founded by the late actor and Ken Willig In 1975, the posh 700-mem- ber club -the only entity Wayne ever lent his name to -has been up for sale several times in recent years A deal in 1982 fell through when the potentiaJ buyers failed to attract interest in a plan to sell limited partner- shiP5 to club members. Ward, a resident of Spyglass Hill and presi- dent and chauman of Southport Development Corp., announced plans to purchase the club nearly a year ago. Ward bought 100 percent or the club's stock including shares from the John Wayne estate and Pilar Wayne, the actor's widow. MUTUAL FUND LISTINGS OVER THE COUNTER NA• llOCll UITINGI Ul'I AND DOWlll ~· Up .,5 UD ,.7 UD n t Uo 1l.l uo 11 • Uo JO.J e: ~ Uo 118 Uo 1'.I UP 1$.f uo lU Uo IU ~: II' ~= 11 f u. 111 ~ :u e :1 v. 't. Uo t.J Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Thursday, Sept. 22, 1983 a5 ,---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------STOCKS Thunday'11 11 a .m. (POT) Pricet "'"''"' ... .., .. ,~" t" I P\'h I !U\.t-1 .... 'llij NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS UUOIA ltONS IN\;I UOE m AOtS ON IHE NEW 10fl .. Ull)W(6l PAC•fll. P8W 8U!>ION OrTROll ANO , ... , ........ ,, STO\.OI r-tHANUl& ANO REPOIHED 8~ TH[ NASO INSllNfl '. ,. . .... I 110 ..., -· :s • CD >C • • -· < CD • .. .. 'llQ IUSINEll IRllfS UAW agrees to plan on GM, Toyota hiring DETROIT -The United Auto Workers has reached tentative agreement on hiring worken at a Fremont. Calif., plant where General Motoni Corp. a.nd Toyota Motor Corp. plan to bulld ca.rs jointly, the union announced today. Under the proposal, about 2,500 of the 3,000 employees of the joint venture will be laid-off Fremont workers, the union said. GM laid off 6,000 autoworkers at the plant early la.st year when it cloeed the facility becauae of overcapacity. Economic strength expands WAS HINGTON -With a six-month burst of growth, the main measure of U.S. economic s1.rength has regained all t he ground it l08t in the 1981-82 recession, the government said. The Commerce Department said Wednesday the gross national product -the broadest measure of economic growth -expanded at an estimated 7 percent annual rate m the quarter ending Sept. 30. A new estimate will be made after the quarter ends. AT&T to cut long-distance rate WASHINGTON -American Telephone & Tele- graph Co. wants to cut your long distance bill. The company said Wednesday 1t would ask federal regulatois to approve long-distance rate reductions of $1.75 billion a year, the largest cul in tele- communications history Continental president resigns HOUSTON -Stephen M. Wolf has resigned as president of Continental Airlines, which has 108t $84 million in the last six months, the carrier announced · The resignation of Wolf, 42, was "a personal decision,'' and was not connected to an ongoing strike ~y the airline's mechanics or to its recent request th.at employees develop cost-aJtting plans to save the carrier $150 million, spokesman Bruce Hicks said Wednesday. Eastern seeks to cut salaries MIAMI -Eastern Airlines. a money loser this year, has asked its employees to forfeit 20 percent of their salaries and cut vacations by up to 25 peroenl. The plan, which would reduce F.a.stem's payroll by $318 million next year, was outlined in a letter Wednesday to Ea.stem's 37 ,500 syst.emwide employees. East.em's largest union, the 12,500-member machinists' union, immediately rejected the proposal. Soviets purchase more grain WASHINGTON -The Soviet Union has bought an additional half million metric tons of U.S . grain for delivery under a new long-tenn supply agreement which goes into effe<:t on Oct. 1. The Agriculture Department said Wedne9day the sales included 400,000 tons of com-about 15.8 million bushels -and 100.000 tons of wheat, or 3.67 million bushels. ' Dollar, gold both edge lower LO NOON -The dollar edged lower in thin tradmg on foreign exchange markets early today in lackJuster trading. Gold prices were unchanged in England and down slightly in Zurich in light activity. GOLD QUOTATIONS WHAT NYSE DID HIW Y<*K <API S.. JD "'"'.._.. T-~014 OedlflM stt ~ •2 T--,,._. ..... llith ,, .......... . WHAT AMEX DID NEW YOltlt IAP) S.O. 11 METALS SYMBOLS DOW JONES AVERAGES llEW YOltK (AP} -Flnm Dow Jonel a•er-tor Wl!d, S.0 1J S TOCtl l ~~ lD Ind 10 Trn IS Ull 6H11o, 1"""1 Tran ~rn­ AMERtCAN LEADERS UPS ANn DOWNS ' .t ... t Iii!' Orange Coeat DAIL V PILOT /Thursday, Sept 22, 1983 HRIHt c; \Ht'U :l .H THE t '\.'lll\' t 'IRCl'S by Bil Keane "Loe*! It's o filled moon ton ight!'' W \ R ll \ D l k t: Oy Brad Anderson ~. "Don't read us a bedtime story. Tell us what happened when you walked Marmaduke today." Pt:.\'l TS VO\/ ~E ATTAOUNG WIRES TO MY ~EAr ... , . • r-~K":>-...--..... --y 6 l UIMAT HAPPENS 11: MY ~EAO LIGHTS VP 1 I WASN'T BORN TO BE. A Ll6HTl40USE ~ by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis l'MERE.'5 NOTHING WOR5f THAN A BORN -AGAIN JOGGER by Virgil Partch (VIP) ~~ l ~.l~ \ "Well ·• It's either mind over matter, or 1 Mexican Jumping bt1n." ~W COOE AAVI~ FUN rWWS "(.\SJ TIRED? by Charles M Schul z JUST A Ll'TTLE ~VMOR T~ERE SIR. TO PUT VOU AT EASE .. by Tom K Ryan HIGH 11i£:1R1 5Wf:f:1S! l'M ~ACK FROM MV ~fftO HUl\J"f! SN~E:KE:C7 lJPOIV'~M IN MY f'UFF'l-0 17156-IZt:! N0,1HANx. MIJS1A A"Tt= 100 MtXH GRASS. I , ~ • I N1•ilhn vulritr;1hl1· S11u1h dt·11I' NOltTll • 117 •:1 A103 I) J 113 • AJ65• Wt:sr •:AST • AQJll02 + 10 ·~ 964 'H~ 0 107 0 A Q96542 +K •10732 SOUTH + K6S '' K JH 7 5 2 'i K •Q9H Thi· hitlrlinic: South WHt No rth Eatt I 3 • 4 l'u• Pa~" t'uH CJ1wn1n1o: 1,.,11f F11ur ur DR.\BBLt: .. .... GOREii ON BllDGE BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAA SHAAl fi In ;1n 1•xr1t1n1e nncl 1·l11M· f1n11I. llrn1.il l'<ll(1•rl Ar.:1•nt ina 1n th1· South Amn1ran Chnni 11111n,h1p,, In "" lfoinic. lh1· l lr.1~ih11n1> t1ur11i(lt'cl lo r1·pr1· wnl llw1r 1A1n1• 1n lh1• World Ch11mp111n~h11'~. nhoul lo ~t11rl in Sw1·d1·n. On lhi~ hnntl frnn1 lht· final, Ariwnlinn had I h1• up ptir h11nd. A fnirly slr1111ehlforward 11u<'l1nn ~nw Ari(l'nllnn's South ll1'l·nm1• dt•rln rc•r al a ronlrarl or rour ht•nrl~. whirh •~ in 11·01iardy lx·euuw or lht· pro,1wrl of I0\101( lhr~1· ~pad1• tmk~ and a d1amonlf. W1•st wa11 rt•l111·1anl to m11k1· .in 111o:r1·~'1vt• lt·ad for f,.,,, thnt 11m11{hl1'11\t .1 trll'k. ~n h1• .;t'ltlt-11 "" 11 I rum p I lt•rl;1 rn d r1• w .ti I I ht• 0111 .. 1anrft ni.: truml"· th1•n lt•tl 11 low cluh WIK·n th1· k•nl{ ·'I' pt•arl'll, ht• look I hrt•t• rn11111f, of 1'111h" and I h1•n ruflt·tl a duh 111 ~l'I up ,, loni: duh tn tl11n1111_y. 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C'U f of thj~ ftf'Wllpaptr, f'.0 . Roa 259, Norwood. N.J. 076411. Mah chub payablr to Nt'wt1paptrboolis. t 'OR BETTER OR ··oa •0Rs1; by Lynn Johnston DR. S'90CIK BeMJSE -1'M Go111G-W LOSE WEIGHT' SO t'U. Fii ~..., INTt> THEM. '""\... I DoNT SEE WHV Yoo DoNT ~TGOOOT PJ'JD 6AJYA NE:WPAIR! II TH1s ~RNew PAIR " by Tom Bat1uk No, e>ecAuse ;r;. WAS A 51...0PPY SMOKeR by Wiley APPA~ITTL~ '100'~ ~'JER ?HN TH£ ~WX.ij~· OR REPIJ6l.ICAN'i N~TW~ COt·NUffON? ... ~----------------~---------------------------------------.--------~~-~·~~---.-. . Troy Ory DaHy Pilat THURSDAY, SEPT. 22, 1983 ClASSlfllD Brother, What a ·~ftlne! ByCURTSEEDEN Ot ... o.ir ......... Back in their high school days, Troy and Eric Ory limply ahowed up on the footbell field together and their parenta sat in the stands u F.dbon High knocked off opponent-after opponent. But, the Ory family has diacovered, life isn't always that easy. There seems to be a conflict now when it comes to a night at the football ga.-ne. It's the complicated issue of who goes where when. To be more specific. who follows Troy Ory as he catches passes for the Golden West College football team, and who does the same for brother Eric while he's on the receiving end of passes at Santa Ana College? Well, aside from this Friday night, that problem is going to linger for the duration of the community college football teas0n. ' Troy and Eric Ory will be on opposite sides of the Orange Coast College football field' Frid.a~ niSht when the Rustlers and Dons meet in the second non-cdnfe'r'ence game of the season . To 1pi~ the situation, each brother comes into the 7:30 game as his team's leading receiver. "Right now, my parents ~veto split upt.osee us," says Troy, l~. ''One week, one goes to my game, and the other goes to Eric's. This week, they j et us both." "Football is everything to us," adds Eric, 18. "We've been playing together since we were 8-nars-old. This is the first time we've plhyed against each other." ' Fortunately for the Ory family, Golden West and Santa Ana are members of different conferences, which means the cheef"i?g can be equal for the teams. • Still. it required some long-term planning to balance things out. "My father made out a echedule for him and my mother and posted it on the refrigerator," explains Eric, a 6-0. 17~-pound wide receiver. "I don't know how they figured it out, but every week there is 9Qmebody at my game.'' An easy solution to this domestic grid problem would be for both players to catch passes for the same school, but things just didn't work out. Troy was recruited out of &t.ison by Golden West and played free safety, the same position he owned on :Ediaon's 1980 championship team. He wanted to be a receiver, but Melvin Jackson and Mike-Garrity had a lock on the positions. Eric was a receiver for Edison during his senior year, but he had to play behind two standouts, Brett Blanchard (See BROTHER, Page CS) C7 Eric Ory Australia II • gets must-win, I I I f I l . Classic Inatchups tonight By ROGER CARLSON Of ... CWlr,... --needs two more · NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Re- silient Australia Il stayed alive in the America's Cup battle thanks to a must-win, comeback victory. That meant she needed only two more must-win victories. f Ficker's view. C4. J Newport Harbor High 's Sailors 1quare off against host Hunt- 1 ng ton Beach tonight in non-league football in one of the highlights of the 1983 campaign, ,...hlle Los Angeles City power Banning puts its reputation on the line against Sunset League power F.clison. Here's a capsule look at each of tonight's games, all beginning at 7:30: Pedro ~uerrero avoids tag of Hous- ton se&nd baseman Bill Doran dur- ~Net,._.,....,.._ ing sixth-inning steal while umpir e Doug Harvey ma kes t he call. Still, Aussie skipper John Bertrand, who conquered crip- pled Liberty in Wednesday's fifth race, says the tide is flowing his way. A victory by Australia II today would send the America's Cup to a seventh race for the first time. A victory by Liberty would make America's 25th defense of the Cup, which it has held since the first competition in 1851 , a suc- cessful one. Newport at Hantingtoo •The Sailors enter with 6-3, 208-pound Steve Brazas, a do-it-all tailback, receiver, punter and linebacker, with Huntington Beach awaiting with 6 -1, 195-pound halfback Danny Thompeon. Each was an All-CIF choice as a junior and both teams a.re stocked with all-league re- turnees. The line: Even. Edlsoo vs. BUlllD1 at Veterans Stadham Banning opens ita season be- hind option quarterback Lee Atencio with fullback Keith Cooper also big in the backfield for the bigger and faster Pilots. Ediaon is 1-1 after rallying to stop Vista last week, 20-15. F.di8on's forte is an attacking defense with (See ~IC, Pqe CS) "We certainly have momentum now," Bertrand said after Aus· tralia II sailed to a one-minute, 47-second victory that cut Liber- ty's lead in the best-of-seven series to 3-2. "Now, we've got two races to win." "I think we could win 50 in a r"w with this yacht," said Aus- tralia Il syndicate chief ' Alan Bond, whose bnats won just one of 13 races in his three previous Cup campaigns. "The victory today proves we can win in any wind conditions.'' Winds in the 10-20 knot range were forecast for today's sixth race. Australia Il was thought to be vulnerable in the fairly strong winds of 16-18 knots and choppy seas on Rhode Island Sound Wednesday. But it eharged ahead of Liberty late on the first of six legs and never trailed again. "I won't feel comfortable until we win, but I'd rather be three wins and two losses than two wins and three losses," said Liberty skipper Dennis Conner. "Obviously. Australia D's a very good boat and very strong in all wind conditions." The pre·series predictions - Australia II's superiority upwind and in light to moderate airs and Liberty's superiority downwind and in stiffer breezes -have not held up. The series has been un- predictable. So was Wednesday's race. Australia Il, plagued by equip- ment failures the first two races. seemed to be in control when one of Liberty's two hydraulic jump- er struts, V-shaped supports for the mast, bent and collapsed about an hour before the race. Fernando comes through at right time LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fernando Valenzuela hadn't won a game in more than a month, and he hadn't completed one in nearly two months. He accomplished both Wednesday night, pitching Los Angeles over Houston, 2-1, as the Dodgen improved their lead over Atlanta in the National League West to four games. Dodgers' • magic number: 8 crown on the road, and the way they've performed against the Giants this year, it would be in their best interests to do so. "We always seem to do things the hard way,'' admitted Los Angeles shortstop Bill Russell, who stroked a two-out, run·9COring double in the seventh inning that drove in Steve Sax with the tie-breaking run. who bad lost four successive decisions, the longest losing streak of his career, since his last win on Aug. 20. And he hadn't gone the distance since Aug. 4. "It was very important, for the team as well as for me," said Valenzuela, 14-10. "I knew Atlanta had split (a doubleheader) and, naturally, I knew I hadn't won in a long time.'' The victory abo reduced the Dodgers' magic number for clinching the division to eight. But Valenzuela did admit to one frightful moment, when Derrel Thomas made a basket-style catch of Alan Ashby's fly to center for the final out of the game. "Muy malo," muttered Valenzuela, disgusted. ''He shouldn't be catching a ball like that." Tom Lasorda has already warned Thomas, "U you ever drop one of thoee ... " But Tho~ didn't drop it, and the Dodgers made it two out of three over the Astroe and 12 of 18 in the~ aeries. Now the Dodgen are oU to Atlanta for three games beginning Friday night, then two in Cincinnati and two more in Sap, Diego before coming home to fini.ah the season against San Francisco. The Dodgers can wrap up the division "But we hope to.,..win it as soon as possible," Russell added. "But we have to do it. We can't rely on anyone else. And we feel confident going into Atlanta with a four-game lead.'' Actually, it'll be either 4 1h games or 3 1h by the ti.me they open the crucial series in Atlanta, since the Braves and Cincinnati Reda play tonight. The Dodgers flew to Atlanta today, .40nfident in the fact that ValenzYela has finlllly retumed to the fonn that won him the Cy Young Award two years ago. "I'm very relieved," said Valenzuela, The Dodgers acored first, in the Cifth inning, when Sax singled, stole second, took third on Alan Ashby's throwing error, and scored when Dickie Thon threw away Russell's grounder. The Astra; tied the acore in the sixth, on Thon's two-out, run-scoring tingle to right, one of six hits yielded by Valenzuela. In the seventh, against reliever and Jc8er.Vem Ruhle, 8-4. Sax aingted--wit,., two outs, his third hit of the night. He stole second, and then Russell lashed a double down the left field line. llllBDAB8 Angels to ruffle s~me feathers in Big Apple? ' HERE, THERE AND ..• •The Angela, in desperate need of a top-notch relief pitcher, are trying to obtain Rich Go.age from the New York Yankes. Gomqe, who will be a free agent at the end of the aeaaon, has lndicated through hia attorney he does not want t.o remain in the Big Apple and would like to move Weet. •Add Goaage: The Angela would nonnally go alter the Gooee in the free agent draft, but alnce the hard-throwing n,ht-hander ia a dncb to be typed as a Clue A product. the Anpla are hand- cuffed l1nce they are one of five teams who cannot draft~ clU9 types. •Add draft ~: U you'll re- member, when lliped • new contnC't back in \he ltrike-tom .1981 1euon. a rwolut.lon waa drawn up clatlUYtng free-.Ota into different type11 (A and B). The C9llh ~ hp;we ... r. If a ,tMm drafted a 0.. A p~r ft~ to put 1 Clue A pt.yer off lta roet.tt ink> « pooL At the time, the Anpl.t and Dbdgera, along with three other tearn1, volunteered -· SPORTS COLUMNIS 1 JOHN SEVANO ' to exempt them.9elvet from such Class A practtcee. Thus, the need to acquire Goesage through other means. By the way, the Angels' exemption runs out after the upcoming draft. •Now since that's been explained: The Y ankee1 are reportedly interested in making a deal with the Angels IF the Angela can algn aom• of their free-aaent pom.tbllitles, OR the Yan.keee can work out a contract deal with them. The &>Uiyer that comes to mind Immediately la Do\ij( DeCinces, but DtO.ncet ru. prtvately expi !!ludact.lretoiltay with the .Anaeb. The A.oaelt, Uloush. don't seem too arudOUI ln WaAUni .DeCinces. •The bottom line: There a.re approx- imately 10 daya left to work all this out, which would seem to make such a deal highly unlikely. Although, with the Yankees now out of the AL F.ast race. maybe ... •Manager John McNamara would like to acquire four pitchert in the off eeuon- thtee starters and a reliever. He would alao like to add aome speed in the outfield. •Mound poaibllities: Starter& - Cleveland's Rick Sutcliffe, the Dodgen' Burt Hooton, Houston's Bob Knepper, Cincthnati's Frank Pastore, Boston's Den- nis Eckenley. McNamara doesn't conaid« any of these pitchers a No. l 1topper-type, however. Just who the club will go after to fill that role is anybody'• guess. •Mound possibilities: R&Ueven - G<mage 11 No. 1 choice, the Dodaen' Steve Howe (depending upon how telioua the rumors are about the Docf&era wanting '° unload hlm), Monttffl's Jeff Reardon, Plt\.tburah'• Kent Tekulve (he will be a free agent, too. A.t of now it's uncertain whether he will be typed Claa A or B), Boat.on'• Mark Clear (a last reaorO, Minnet1ata'1 Ron Davis (a longshot). •Outfield poaibilites: Philadelphia'• Garry Maddox. Bob Dernier or Von 1 Hayes, Montreal's Tim Raines, Balti- more's John Shelby, Cincinnati'• Gary Redus, the New York Meta' Mookie Wilaon. San FranOaco'a Chili Davi&. Incidentally, McNamara doesn't feel the Angels' lone speed prospect-Gary Pettit -can play on an everyday bu.is. •Obeervatlon: U you notice a large amount of National t..e.g\Jera on the llata that's becauae the club la convinced that'• where they're golng to find and get the help they need. Plua. McNamara la more famallar with the penonnel there. · •Second obaervaUon: The Anaela are , obeeaed with gettlng aome apeed during the off -aeuon, juat 11 they are oti 11m 1 d In obtainina aome quality P'tchinl· •The Hit l.Jat: The. ~l"I lltW'e u top trade bait: 1. Fred Lynn; 2. Daryl. Sconiers; 3. Tim FoU; 4. Bobby Orlch; S: Mike Witt; 6. Lula Sanchez (dependlng upon the relief al tu.ad.on); 7. (Ue) Ker< Fonchi Geoff Zahn (If he'• re-alaned). Tommy John. ,, ·- t C l Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Thursday, Sept. 22, 1983 ,• '~ 1, SPOR·Js BRIAK Angels' threesom e to unde rgo surge r y in the n ext f e w days From AP dJspatcbes Outfielder Fred Lynn, catcher &I ii Ott and pitcher Bruce Kison of the Angels will undergo surgery within a week. Lynn will have arthroscopic surgery of the right knee today and also an operation for removal of a bone spur on his right foot. He has not appeared in a game since Sept. 8. Ott, who has been side- lined the past two seasons with a tom rotator cuff, will under- go arthroscopic surgery of the right knee Friday. Re ds earn split with Atlanta Ron Oe1ter'1 aacrifice fly ecored 111 Ga ry R.etlD• in the ninth inning to give Cincinnaa' a 4-3 victory over Atlanta Wednesday night and a split of thelr doubleheader. The Red.a had rallied from a 3-1 deficit to tie the game with two runs in the eighth. ln the first game won by Atlanta, 9-1, Craig McMartry tossed a five-hitter and Dale Marpby cra<-ked h is 35th homer. . . . Elsewhere in the National League, Jody Davia' sacrifice Cly and Larry Bowa's infield single drove in the tying and winning runs as Chicago dealt Pittsburgh a 7-6 setback. The Bucs fell 2 1h games behind pace-setting Philadelphia, which was rain- ed out in Montreal ... John Stuper tossed a five-hitter 'and drove in two runs with two Ch icago's Hoyt wins 22nd major-league leading 22nd game as LaMarr Hoyt w o n his II Chicago won the first game of an American League doubleheader from Minnesota, 2-1, Wednesday. The White Sox completed the sweep in the nightcap iB Scott F letcher doubled home Tom Paciorek in the bottom of the ninth inning for a 7-6 win ... ln other AL action , Baltimore reduced its magic number in f/I o ~ the East to three by sweeping a doubleheader from Detroit, 6-0 and 7-3. Mik41 Boddlcker fired a five-hitter 1n the open- er. Lowenstein came back to hit a grand slam in the second game as the Orioles rallied from a 3-0 deficit .. Tony Arpias belted his 34th homer as Boston edged the New York Yankees, 3-1 . . . J eue HOYT Barfield's RBI single capped a four-run third inning as Toronto downed Seattle, 4-3 ... Do n Sutton broke a personal eight-game losing streak with his first win since July 14 as Milwaukee topped Cleveland, 10-7 . . Mike Smitbson'a fi ve-hitter carried Texas to a 4-2 decision over Oakland. Finks named Cub presid ent Jlm Flllk1, who earned a repu-• tation aa an astute businessman and a tough negotiator during a nine-year stint as general manager of Ole Chicago Bears of the National Football League, waa named president and chief executive officer of the Chicago Cube Wednesday ... Rowing and canoeing oourses on Lake Casitas ra:eive their pre-Olympic tests this weekend in a series of international races. The two-day canoeing competitions today and Friday have drawn nearly 200 athletes vam more than 20 nations ... Race driver Richard Noble broke his own British land speed record and nearly eclipsed Craig Breedlove11 600.6 mph record for jet-powered cars in Gerlach,ttlev. Noble actually drove faster than Breedlove, averaging 606.47 mph in two runs on the Black Rock Desert, but under United States Auto Club rules, Noble la required to break the record by l percent to be considered the new record-holder. Televisio n , radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Baseball -Chicago White Sox at Angels, 7:25 p.m., KMPC (710). High School Football -&fison vs. Banning at Veterans Stadium, 7:30 p.m., KWVE (108-FM). OHTU singles, leading St. Louis past New York, 9-3, snapping the Cards' seven-game losing streak ... Dave Bergman belted a two-out, two-run homer in the bottom of the ninth to lift San Franci5Co over San Diego, ~-4 . . . The Montreal-Philadelphia rainout will be made up tonight as part of a twi-n.ight doubleheader. Kison, who led the Angels pitching staff much of the r;--=:==::-~~::::::==::::::::::::::::::::::-:::::::::::::::====:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~--::::::::::::::::-~--~~-::::::::~ '• sea.son, will have a herniated disc removed from his back on Sept. 26. Sidelined from May 30 LYNN through J une 27, K.ison com- piled an 11-5 rerord with a 4.05 earned-run average despite recurring pain. The operation will be performed by Dr. Lewis Yocum and Dr. Robert Watkins. Yocum will also perform the surgery on Lynn and Ott. Quote of the day Todd Blackledge, former Penn State quarterback after calling his parents to tell them about his lucrative contract with the Kansas City Chiefs: "I told them it was the last collect call I'd ever make." Broncos impress Flores EL SEGUNDO -Tom Flores' film review of the Denver Broncos' m•m first three games brought him to one oonclusion. "Each week they've improved some of- fensively," said the Los Angeles Raiders' head coach Wednesday. "I hope this isn't the week when they make a big improvement." The Raiders travel to Denver this week to play the Broncos in an AFC West game. The Raiders are 3-0 while the Broncos are 2-1. "Mostly the Bronco defense is the same," said Flores. "They play a swanning type of defense. (Comerback) Louis Wright is still making big plays, (safety) Dennis Smith is all over the field. The linebackers make a lot of tackles. I don't see much of a change defensively." That Bronco defense ranks second only to the Raiders in points allowed. 33 to 30, after three games. But the Bronco offense is of major interest because of the new man at quarterback , John t j Elway. I Woodbridge, ! LB on the road Woodbridge High will try to pick up where it left off last week, while Laguna Beach will attempt to pick up the pieces as the two South Coast League representatives enter the third week of the football season. The Warriors (1-1). after blanking Irvine, 21-0, will need to rely heavily on their defense again as they viJlit Orange High tonight (7:30). Meanwhile, theArtiata(l-1), who lost to Savanna, 20-7 last week, are hoping to be more consiatent as they travel to Elsinore High Friday. Here's a look at this week's games: Woodbridge at Oruge "'Thelr coach tella me they played their best game in years," says Woodbridge Coach Gene Noji of Orange's 10-10 standoff with Garden Grove. "All I lmow ia that they're real quick." Noji says the Warriors' defense, which hasn't allowed a touchdown in two games, will have to tum in a good perfonnance again if Woodbridge ( 1-1) is to defeat Orange (1-0-1). "We're going to have to continue to play 80Wld defena.ively," he says. "And offensively, we're going to have to be a little more balanced then we have been. Last week we were mainly a ball control team. We didn't plan to do it that way, It just happened." Lapu Beacla at El11Dore Says head coach Dennis Haryung of Elsinore (1-1): "They run theoptionlmd the,·ve·gm-~ speed. They're not as physical as they have been, but they've got a real quick-little quarterback." Haryung contends, however, the Artists (1-1) have to worry about themselves first. "Our biggest problem right now is execution," he notes. ''We didn't execute.in critical situations last week. We're still tryingtogetsome peoplein the right situations." Haryung admits many of the Artists' problems are due to injuries as three starters -Mike Flynn (linebllcker, running back), Paul Nugent (wide receiver, defensive back) and Mark Blthell (offena.ive guard, llneb&cker) -are sidelined. ''The problem ia we don't loee just one player, it's Ukeio.ingtwo,"saytHaryung. "Weahouldgetoneof them bade (Bithell) this week. "A lot of our execution breakdowns occurred at t.h09e positions because we have new kids in there. We ju8t have to do the best we can until they (the lnjured kids) come back." Blthell went down lMt week with a pinched nerve ln his neck. Flynn (Charley hone) and Nugent (brui.led knee) were hurt in the Art.lats' first game of • the.euon. • • Pirates beaten in volleyball EL CAJON -Orange Coast won the first game, but could do little thereafter and droe>ped lta leCOnd ltraiiht non-conference volleyball match to host .. Gn.rnont. 10-15, 15-10, 15-9, l~-11, Wedne9day n1Jht. here. ' "We played pretty well the flrltgame, but pretty much beat owwtvee •ft.er that," aald Pirates' Coach Jane Hilgendorf. "We made too many mistakes and ", gave away ~many polnta." in 1965 • Angel Stadium was being built. - A lour bedroom house in ivesa Verde was selling tor S24,000 • A skunk mterrupted Judy Garlands Concert at Greek Theater • Johnny Carson had brown hair · • Kerm Rima (Dad) opened a new store in Costa Mesa 18 year at the same location • Same friendly service • Same great prices • Same great selection • New paint • r€W HOtllS: Daly 8am to 9pm Satwday 8am to 6pm Stliday 9am to 6pm ~­ ~p'itNT lllAQNA~X 104,_E :tt·~eon­..,,_,1c: AFT ~ TV • MX/300 c:f\u11a • too• ,,, ''"'' IT'•t,.,, tube • Dioo11 contt~ '•ndom ace••• fouct\ Tu"'"O • 112 chonnel capabl~ly • E t11e1.n1 • ~ )f &'" aoeatc•r • Sl•r.oiSAI' lll<k • Conl*'"PO'""' 11y11no 8047~01'1: 10416Cll'E HAROWA Rf C, TORf S WHr• lrin.,, urwlce 1s ~ I la•tly tra~ili.. ~ ITS BEEN A COLORFUL 18 YEAAS ... WE CELEBRAT E WITH OUR NEW PAINT ..-....-RO M TAU -TEST Weatherall " Flat Acrylic House Paint Resists lading. cracking and peeling as It lights n'ltldew leaves a durable. long·las1ing. h1gh·h1ding ltmsh HPX E-Z Kare ™ latex flat Enamel 121 11 Ol I ~ Select latex flat Wall finish Solt 1111 linish 1s 1dt1l lor wills and ceilings Htgh·htding, one coat usually covers Soapy water cl11nup Wnheble A Our best-quality interior wall and trim finish Ideal tor wills, ceil· ings and woodwork. Dries 1n minutes to a durable and be1utrlul 1111 lrnrsh thll stands up to repeated scrubbing withoU1 fading or shining Grell lor high· """'iiili:=:::::::::::=::s:1;;;;;1-"':;:7" tr1tt1c areas like hallw1vs. kitchens, bed· rooms. etc Euv so1p·1nd·w1t11 cleenup ~~MAGNAVOX '83 .. ~~~· SV.P Real!Y Super Values Par!)' FEATURING RELIABLE MAGNAVOX COLOR TV VJM• 2666 HARBOR BLVD. IN COSTA MESA PHONE (714) 546-7080 • Same old story in Sea View CdM., Neivport Harbor open season with wins Thc St>a Vu.•w Lt.•uguc waler polo rat'e got undl'r wny Wt'Clnt'Sday with few surprises as pereruu<tl powt>rs Newport Harbor and r..orona dt>I Mar rolled lo Vll:lortes. WATER POLO Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Sept 22, 1983 Cl CLASSIC MATCHUPS ... From Page C1 quarterback Jon Nowotny the key to the offense. The line: Ban- ning by 7. Foothill v1. Marina at Westminster Ted Mullen's Foothill Knights are ranked No. l m Orange Coun- ty after ousting previous No I Founwn Valley, 26-17, and ~ led by quarterback Jason Schmid and a veraatile defenae. Marina, with rUnnlng back Eric K.annu1. doubtfW, is trying to reboubd from a 6-0 loss to Servite. The line: Foothill by 6. Lafuna HlUs vs. University at rvlne . Mt!anwlull', £1 TMustup~i E:5t.anc1a m another Stoa View matt·huµ, ;:111d 1n non-league ront.ests. Lakewood out.54:or1:d Laguna 13<-at·h, 11 -7, and Fountain Valley hrt.--ezed to a l 7 -8 declS10n over La Quinta at Golden West College, 111 a rommuruty college game. Saddlc•back captured its first Vtt'tory of the season. including the freshmen and junior varsity. a.n blasting outclassed Saddleback, 24-9. Fourteen players scored as Coach John Vargas made his Sea View debut a su~. The leading scorers for the Sea Kings were Mike Story, a sophomore who had four goals, and Kurt Rieder, a member c;f the junior varsity, who had three McEnroe blitzes foe Uruversity is off to one of lta best starts ever with victorieil over Woodbridge and Tustin, ~t the Trojans figure to be testa!d this week against a Hawks team that defeated Estancia a week ago. Quarterback Will Watson leads the junior-dominated Uni team. Nt'wport re<:orded u 12-7 Vlctury OVl'l' Uruver- stty, but the Tro.)Wl.S proved anything but easy marlu. Cor the Sailors After holding <• 4-:J advantage 1n the second quarter and forging three ttes 11\ the first half, University staytotl dost• unul Uw final four minutes. Rob Soloman'-; goal 4 4ti 111to th1• fourth quarter made the Sl'Orl' H· 7, bdnre a flurry of Sailor ta lites aC'COunted for tht' final margin Trevor Bcnt'Clit·t had twu of thl' final fuur goals, while Alan BuchctllcUI ignited tht: sµurt wtth 4:21 remaining. Mall Tingler pumped m tht• fmal goaJ £or Newport. Kelly Washbourne led the way for University with three goals, wluk Buchanan had four and Tingler three for tht' winning Sailors. Corona de! Mar played everybody on the squad. El Toro raced to a 7 -0 second-quarter lead and 11-2 halftime advantage against a slow-starting F.stancia squad and held on for a 14-8 decision. With the substitutes in to start the second half for the Chargers, F.stancia closed t-0 11-7 before El Toro Coach Don Stoll re-inserted the starters who quickly restored order. Lakewood scored three straight goals in the third quarter to break open a close game and beat Laguna Beach. The score was 6-5 when the Lancers talJted three times m the third period to open a four-goal advantage. Scott Kitcher and Stuart Fraser each scored twice for the Artists. J eff Moore and Rob Cope combined for nine goals as Fount.am Valley romped. The victory improved the Barons' mark to 6-1. BROTHER VS. BROTHER • • • From Page C1 and Greg Eskridge, buth of whom received full scholarships to San Dil'go State and Minnesota, resped1vely So. when recrwters wat.ched &hson football games. they didn't get lo i.t..oc much of Eric. Al any rate, the Santa Ana coat'hes heard about Eric through Phu Cooper, Erit''s teammate al Edison and thl' Dons' current starling QB. "Santa Ana was the only school that wanted me." says Enc "Phu told th<' coat'hes about me and l contactet..1 them." Friday's game will feature a battle of former Sunset League QBs. with Cooper leading the Dons and ex-Ocean View High standout John Heinle directing the Rustlers for the ~nd straight week. "We are not in for an easy game this week," says Golden West Coat'h Ray Shackleford. "Santa Ana is greatly improved from last year They are similar to us in that they are pretty balanced." SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Top-seeded John McEnroe, re- signed to the likelihood he will be suspended from tenrus, moved into the second round of the Transamerica Open Tennis Championships Wednesday ni'ght by defeating Brad Gilbert, 6-4, 6-1. The Wimbledon champ beat Gilbert with an overpowering serve and subtle drop volleys to advance into the second round_ He fat'es Roscoe Tanne r torught Mt'Enroe displayed only m ild fits fo temper during the Gilbert match, aware he will face a 42-day Grand Pnx tour dis- ciplinary suspension 1f he rollects $200 in fines at this tournament. --- "It's a good chance t will be suspeoded," McEnroe told re- porters after the match. "I would llke to avoid it, but it's a little bit difficult. My next fines come up in April and it's very hard to go until then with no {i.ne what- soever" The suspension takes effect when a player is penalized $7,500 within a 12-month period. The temperamental McEnroe has reat'hed $7,300. McEnroe said he was bothered by the realization of the possible suspension -and the fear he might be elimmated from Davis Cup competition -during the US. Open. The line: Laguna Hills by 3. San Clemente vs. E1tancla at Newport Harbor The 'J'ritons are coming off. a 31 -0 drubbing by Corona del Mar. Quarterback Bill Gearing guides an option offense and he's not afrrud to throw the ball long. The F.agles have been hit with injuries and will be missing running back Matt Wolf (foot). &tancla is also missing kicker Keith Hodge, who has suffered a foot injury. The line: San Clemente by l. · Shop T 8tV9t Automodve c.n... for ~Y low prtc. on auto Mntce. • Complete brake service • Wheel alignment. front end repair • Monroe shocks. McPherson struts • Mufflers and exhaust service • Air conditioning serv1Ce • Wheel balancing • Batteries and electrical service All wo~ performed by qualified ins~rs and mechanics. Tlll'g9t't gU1111nt•: We went you to be setitfled. If you .,. not •a.tied wtth something you bought et T erv-t. ptNM return It We wMI fix It. exchange It, meb en adjustment or wlllngty mum your money. We went you to be satisfied. Enc proved lus worth in the Dons' first game thts ycar, catchmg five passes for 50 yards and earrung th(• team's offensive playe r of the wi;-ek honors. The Dons dropped a 33· 7 decision to Fullerton. however Meanwhile. Troy was the Rustlers' top receiver last Saturday against Saddleback, catching three pa.s8(!S for 39 yards, one for a touchdown, m Golden West's 27-10 st.'lbal'k. Adds Sant.a Ana Coach Dave Ogas: ''l know we felt we could have won our game and I'm sure Golden West felt the same way. It w1U be too hungry teams on the field." Speakmgof hungry, when members of the Ory family go to the refrigerator thtS week, they can look beyond the I football schedule and head strrught for the food Food for thought: Which side of the field will they sit on? GWCplayer to sing anthem The Target pledge: expert car care · Bishop signs with Rams The Rams have signed eight-year v~tera.n nose guard Richard Btshup, a 6-1. 265-pound fr"'t' agent, who last played for the Miami DolphlllS this season. Bishop, a ftfth round draft t'ho1N· out of Lowsville tn I 974. wa<> onginalJy the property of the Cmcmnall Bengals He was released in 1976 and signed by New England where he played until 1!:181. ln 1981. Bishop played aU 16 games and led the Patnots m tackles M1arru signed hlm at the end of the 1981 season. 'fo make room. the Rams placed nost' tackle Myron Lapka on the injured reserve list Lapka 1s out with an m1ured ankle Bishop wilJ be m uniform Sunday when the Roms me-et th<' .Jets in New York. ByCURTSEEDEN Of 111e o.i1~ l'llol "•" She's not a smgmg criuc. but Linda Griffiths said 1t best: "He could wipe out Lou Rawls " or course. she's talking about he r son. Fernando, current starting safety Cor the Golden West College football team. And fans at Friday night's Golde n West-Santa Ana College game at Orange Coast Co!Jege, can judge for themselves when Griffiths and friend Darrell Hokuf belt out their own version of the national anthem. "1 sang at our 1981 homecoming game against Westminster when I was a senior at Edison," says GriCfiths, a 5-10, 195-pounder. The idea to have Griffiths sing the national anthem came from former Westminster High head coat'h Barry Waters, now an assistant at Golden West. "I love to stng the national anthem, but it's a hard song to sing," Griffiths explains. "Darrell and 1 devised our own version and it's on a lower key. He's a baitonesothc notes I can't hit, he can. The notes that are too low for him, I hit." Griffiths has never taken a singing lesson in his life. He says singing relaxes him. He's been doing it since he was i.n elementary school. "He sang "Ben" by Michael Jackson at his eighth grade birthday party," recalls his mother. The early t'hrorucles of his singing ·career may seem a bit embarrassing now, but Griffiths has no plans to quit. In fact his teammates "are pretty jazzed about the whole id.ea. "No one here knew that I sang. It's a surprise to a lot of them," Griffiths adds. Zahn breaks drought KANSAS CITY CAP) -Geoff Zahn nev~doubted hi.sab1hty. but he admit'> to wondenng 1f he would ever win again. "I felt like 1 would get a wm sometime," the Angels' lcft-handPr said after shutting out the Kansas City Royals, 3-0, on five hits Wednt'Sduy night. breaking a pel"30nal six-game losmg streak "I had p1tcht.>d some good g.am('S and lost and I had pitched some bad games and Jost," said Zahn. who struck out seven and walked one in posting hlB third shut.out and 11th complete game of the 1eason. "I felt like ( would get 3 win somewhere" Zahn. 9-11, last won July 31 when he thut out Oakland, 4 0 He had made 11 llics for his nJnth win "Oeoff Zahn haa pitched good buebaU for ut, but. w~ hAven't flCOrcd any runs for him."' Angela' Manager John McNamara said. "lt's been a tough year for hun. His record belies what his conllibution has been." The Angels. who acored two runa or less in eight of Zahn's losses, picked up a single run in the third and collected four singles for two runs in the fifth. Gary Pettis opened the scoring ln the thJrd when he tripled down the right field line and scored on Rob WUfong's single off Royals' starter Gaylord Perry, 7-14. In the fifth, Pettis led oft with a single and stole second. Perry struck out Wilfong and Rod Carew, but Juan Ben.iqu.ez singled to acore Pettit. Beni- quez. who had gone to aec:ond on the throw to the plAte, moved to third on Darryl Sconll'rl' single and ICOred on Bob Boone's infield hit. The Angels return to Anahe.lm Stadlum tonight to open a four-game series apl.nst the Wewt Dlvltlon cham- pion Chicago WhHe Sox. Ken Fol"ICh (8-11) races Jerry Kooanan (10-7) ln tonight's aerie« opener. at everyday low prices. Michelin Everydey low prices on M~ln steel hefted redials with 2 steel belts'°' protection. radial deS!Qn for better handkng and better gas mileage under normal dnv1ng cond1hons 38 99 Each. 155·12 blackwal. • Plus 1 .33 FET Blackwals XZX tread for small cars Size 155 12 155 13 165 13 1 75 70R Treed 0..lgn xzx xzx xzx XZX70 44.99 011f E¥9ryday Low Price Eac.h 38.H 39.'9 42.H -46.H Each. P155/80R13 wh1tewal Plus 1 50 FET Whrtewals. X. XZX and XA tread fOf domestic cars. When you b\ly tires at T•o•1 even el our '°°"" pncea )'OU Oel lhese Hf'YICH at no eJ(!rl ch11rge • Mounllng • Rol8110n tv9f'( 5.000 m~e!I • Punlvre repeor lor u long u you own me hres t f I ft ft • I t Target SO-month battery at an everydly low prtce. 39.99 With trade-in. Tll'g9t 50-month llmlted wwranty ti.nery f<>< long Mfe under nom'l8I use. In sizes f<>< most U.S. and impor1 C#'S, pickups end vans. No ct.ge f<>< lnstalatlon. , ........ __, .• _T•QMllO_.,,. _ .. _ .. __ tO...,..OI -, .... -.... ·-·-'°-'·~ -. ,-... _... .... ,,,_419 ~ __.,, .... , .... ''°_..,." ...... _,,_.,--~.,.eoew- ~~;:.i::: .. ::=.:.-: _., ..... ___ _.,,_,...,..IO_, Two-fltln <IW---·N-0' __ .,.,... y~~tft9Qeb_ ..... ...... __ ""....,. ... __ _ __ ,..._,,,,_"'ao- Monro-Metlc shocks at everYciaY low price. 4 shocks 59.96 lnstaled MolllfOo Mette~ 1beof1)era are heavy-duty with 1 a1 , ... bore f<>< 50% more ride control than s~ shocks In sizes for moat u .S. #'Id Import cars Cany-out. 4 ~ 43.98 Wheel alignment and front wheel balance. 21. 99 Everyday low pnce Target will. • Completely check front end • Adjust torsion bar height, 1f so equipped • Set c aster. camber and toe-in • Center steering wheel position • Computer balance 2 front wheels • Install new weights • Check and correct air pressure • Recheck and rebalance every 5,000 miles 1f needed tree of charge No additional charge for cars with torsion bars or air conditioning Replacement parts extra 1f needed. For most cars. pickups and vans. Monroe strut suspension units •.• Installed. 49 99 Each. everyday • low price instaled. MonlOe Super Strut tuapenalon unit tor OM ln'9rmedll" •nd x-body cert needing stnJt assembly repiecement. Super Strvta tor moet Ford car&. 59.~ eed'l Wtllaled Drum brake overhlul at everydly low price. 99.99 Target will: • instal new linings • replace brake springs • rebuild Wheel cylnders • resurface drums • repack front wheel beerlngs • Install new front oreue 8eals • Inspect mest9t' cylnder • bleed and retll brake ayatem • adjust~ btake Non·repeirable hydreulica •>Ctra. F<>< most U.S. cars, pickups and vans . ®TARGET r I ..... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Sept. 22. 1983 I OUTQQQeS JIM NIEMIEC :Deer season !set to begin I The general deer season for Cahfomia gets !under way &tturday with faLr to good reports. I Conditions are good in most h1gh elevation areas, with plenty of feed and water available. The deer ,herds are also in prime condition. but most hunters f 'will find racks on the small side due to heavy hunting pressure during the past couple of years. The fish and game department foresees a ,continuing down trend in California deer herds for 'the next few years and has taken steps to ltmit the lnwnber of bucks harvested. Even with the good forage and water, the deer have not been able to keep up with the hunters harvest. plus there is a tremendous amount of poaching going on in the state. lAnyone who Is in the field, and sees a violation of fish and game laws, should call CAL TIP. toll free. at 1-(800) 952-5400. One state wruch is not feeling any lack of game aiumats is Wyoming. I just returned form a very succes.sful elk hunt, in which, au members of the our hUnting party bagged bull elk. Hunting out of Jackson Hole. Wyoming, with Wolf Lake Outfitters, herds of elk were glassed on each day of the hunt. The amount of game in Wyoming is awesome and hunting pressure is very low compared to California. During the seven days spen\ in camp, 1 saw no other hunters except on the return trail ride to base camp located in the Pacific Creek drainage. Wyoming has always offered hunters the best chance at having a succes.sful hunt, and this year should be no exception. From all indica lions the carry over of elk, deer, antelope and moose will insure high percentage hunts for the next few seasons. Hunter success throughout the west for elk is less than 10 percent for unguided hunts. less than 50 spot for large spot operations, and up to 85 percent for those hunters who book with knowledgeable outfitters who have prime hunting country and limit the number of hunters in camp. Those who apply for elk or other big game permits in Wyoming for next fall, and are lucky enough to be drawn. should carefully select their outfitter. For more information on combination hunting in Wyoming contact Wolf Lake Outfitters, Box 9, Pinedale, Wyoming 82941. Ficker's firs t-hand view of Cup race By ALMON LOCK.ABEY It was alJnost like being there. Bill Ficke r was calling from the finish I.me on Rhode Island Sound where the fifth race of the America's Cup was winding down. "Stand by," said Fick.er over the ship-to-shore radio from the yacht Sophie D. "Australia II is approaching the finish line about a mmule and a half ahead of Liberty.". Seconds later the sound of the gun from the race conunittee boat conunit1ee boat was plainly heard followed by the roar of the crowd and the horn blasts from the thousands of spectator boats surroundbg the area. "And now here comes Liberty." said Ficker. The sound of the horn aboard the firu.sh boat was followed by another roar from the crowd -mostly Australians one would guess. Ficker said Australia D was over the starting line early and had to restart with about a 35-second disadvantage. "It looked as if it would be Liberty's race, but being 90 far behind, skipper John Bertrand took Australia off to the oppoaite side of the course and picked up a better slant of wind that brought him to the first weather mark 23 seconds ahead. "Liberty made up about five seconds on the reaching leg but was 52 seconds behind at the end of the triangle. Australia ll's boat speed and excellent sail handling kept her well ahead of Liberty going into the final windward leg," Ficker said. (Australia II's actual time split at the finish was I minute and 43 seconds). Fick.er said Australia II sailed higher and faster throughout the race and there was never any doubt about the outcome. He said it was too early to tell whether one skipper or the other would call for a layday today. Each skipper is entitled to one layday during the final three races. Before signing off Ficker had one la.st comment: "We have just made America's Cup history today. Thia is the first time a live report has ever ~n made from the finish line of an America's Cup race." Angelnian Series ends this week end Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club will wind up its 198;LAn&duwl Series Jor Performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts with races seven and eight Saturday and Sunday. Capistrano Bay Yacht Club will also provide action for PHRFers ln the sixthh and seventh racee of ita Ocean Racing Series Saturday and Sunday. Lido Iale Yacht Club will cater to Sabot and I Luer sailors Sunday wtth races for skippers 30 and over. ' Ne'#lJOft Harbor Yacht Club will start off the I' tall regattas for Lehman-12 sailors Saturday w1th a , five-race leries for the Schock Trophy. NHYC will , el.lo conduct lta Sepiember one-design regatta for ' outside clalle9 Sunday. • In other Southern California Yachting Associa- tion areu: 1 U. ~·Lllll ... di I OlorllO ~ Yedll Cl\* -Me<lntlef>d Rte• CCebf'ltlo S«lft> ieMdev, F .. 0,.-.oetlllft Sef''-9, Mlu<O.v Wnt C-1 Yedll CIUCI -Slne .. ·lllllCMCll fKe, S.tu<d•v Utt .. .,.. """ -ltllfll•flonel wi... ~Y. auec-YKlll CluO -AMWll Pertlea llece, Su"dev · , tMfll MINcll a.v It~~ Yect!I Cl\le -Glrt1 011 8 UOVI RKt lPHllF) Su!INv c..etferNI Yecllt CIUO -lfW~leCI EllOV<o RK• (Merrit S«lnl &etur...,. WlndliohWl'll 1 YKfti CIUC> -~ ·-11"41111. ~., IMO.. COP'--CIVI Y.cnt Clua -Slllo SlwtOt S«lft, S.lurO.v MluMI .. y VKlll CIUI> -low111 ~!el Ract (Ll.lltlllllO) ~. hNef; O..rv·t• hWll•ttonel, h '1Kdn, $urldtv I CerOMIN YKlll CIVIi -\le111tv SlllO~•llotcl rp~ (PtiltF) ltMdrt. ~ 0... Y.c111 CIUO -SllY~ Gete Trltnolt CIOlll Sth.,dll•, •"1Mfl WIM (IOHF) S.tutdl\' ~ Yedll OUO -~ l«lft tPHltF I SuNllY 1Wthw""'11 Vecflt CIUll -, .. Win llll"CfJQp) $Ulleltv ~ O'-....... S.tltllt Cllle --INv H•fldletw lltn, S<ind9Y AD STARTS THURS. AD GOOD THRO SEPT. 28 Grab the little ooea and come to theae 1tore1 on Sa1urday. Sept. 24th to aee SHORTY Sc CHEAP CHICKEN. LO~G BEAC~30 to 12' URDEN GROVE"2 to 4:30 0 /' ' I I( 599 " Db.ct youneU down to Na1lonal and try one out. Got q white palot9d frame. a.at and back In varloue colon. GLIDDEN SPRED I .~ WALL PAINT I flat latex interior paint for· thoee who want to do it white. that ie. White. Antique White or Off White. ~ ,r 4Xa PARTICLE BOARD . \ 2•• : t ¥1" ;' \ 4•• Ve" ~---===-4 Today'• recipe le football Playere Hore d'oeuvre: Put 12 whole ealmon betw-n two elicH of particle board. top with oliYe. MURRAY DELUXE MONTEREY 26" CRUISERS >IClll LADIES' OR MEN'S YOUR CHOICE 8888 #3·5033 OR #3·5032 Whitewall balloon tire•. chrome crulHr handlebars and black comJort 8<1ddle. all on a Flamboyant Black Che frame. ~ CLEAR RED OAK ,_. ::::::" 4' 6' I' ~ .. ~212 •• , 1097 14.., \ \L_L2x4 9" 14•' 1e., 216 1461 21 •' 29.., Good quality building •luff. You handypeoplH can uH it to whip together •om• nice cabinet•. furniture or wha1•••r. S4S -l;-7~~BLACK Ir DECKER -~~ i WORKMA.: 200 ., t ~\ 58 #79-032 Dual height table· 291/2' or 22·¥•". ht• •wive! peg• to hold material up to 11 -¥4 ' wide. 23" rule on front jaw and hole• lo atep for toole. ALMET ENTRANCE HANDLE SET 3497 #CT990 Pr•tty fancy handl•. In Pollehed BraH or Antique BroH linleh (Football' a come a long way. On TV. the credit• llet "directed by". "choreog?aph•d by", "wardrobe by" ... ) DIABLO SENSOR TIMER '\, : . 7 77 #STWl TABLETOP SEISOR TIMER 8 •• #STTl You can program thle eolld atatetlmerto tum your Ilg ht• on and off r<11ndomly, trom du•k to dawn untU end of cycle. . . - I I I I I SHORTY C LUB LESS SBELL'S IWL-11 IEllTE -I so LUIU= TOUll lfET COST lnEJl IEIATE 2 35 FOR S QUARTS LIMIT 24 QUARTS PER CUSTOMER U 47t QUART Good deal on Shell'• all·w.ather oil. Buy 5 qte .• Mod ln the Rebate Cenillcate. and theee guy• will Mod you a Sl.SO Rebate. ···············----12" ADJUSTABLE JACK STANDS 2 79 EA. Hey. you can't say the prlc; ie jacked up too much. Our •lgn •ay• lumber. but we've 901 a whole bunch of •luff for your car, too. ' • • • • GROW MORE FERTILIZERS YOUR CHOICE I 59 11/1 LB. BOUSEPLART FOOD BLOSSOM BOOSTER DEEP GREEN GENERAL PURPOSE lt'e like the bank-you can't keep withdrawing from the eoll without malting a depo•lt now and then. (Tell that to my wlf•.) I I I I I I K-LUX DECORATIVE ~·;. BRICK -1~:.J WILLIAMSTOWN 2•• BOX f~\ COUNTRYSmE 3 97 Box ~ ~ \ I BENCHMARK 5.., BOX Looh real. but lfe llghtwelght. fireproof. and {if you don't mind) ch.aper. Wllliam•town'• got 20 bric lee per box. Countryelde and Benchmark have 30. PHONE CLOSE OUTS OllE PIECE ELECTRONIC PRONE #AD8600 #TX7'00 #TPl13 "H•llo. Maigo? National'agon• bonlcer•, they're Mlllng pbonH for8 bucka. But they'regolng la1t and \here'• no rain check•." RECORD 0 FOIE CLOCK UDIO WITH PBOllE 2997 #CRX9000 ''ff•llo. Tb•lma? thanlre fof th• Up. I oleo got an AMI FM clock rodlo that bae on alarm and phone wlth mute. Worb oa tO\&Cb ton• or rotary." Lhnlted Quon ti ti••· 15" I 39'., (a.• SQ. n .) 13" I 39' (75.07 so. n ., MllMLLE &Vi" SUPER-TBIK R-19 FOIL BICK DISULITIOI 11 97 1847 G.t your home all eoug and ioeulated before the chilly winter weather. Remember. follre: "The higher th• R-valu•. th• gN<rt•r th• ln•ulatioo power." (How could we forget?) EVEREADY ENERGIZER ~.11 BATTERIES ;~ y~~ ¥ ~ill AA OR AAA TWIN PAX · ! · 97c 1 PAK C OR D TWIN PAK YOUR CHOICE 1 27 PAK The long life vari•ty. fred. (I wa• Ju•t the right aln for football in high •chool. But 1 got awiully tired of beln paHed and unted.) OR 9 VOLT SINGLE PAK EVEREADY ECONOMY LANTERN WITH BA1TERY 2 97 #3109WB Don•t go out in the wood• tonigbt without one. On our laet vacation we remembered e••rything except the lantern bad to cook b flo•hll ht. WESTINGHOUSE SEALED BEAM HEADLIGHTS • ' IO. 4000 LOW ~ OR 110. 5001 BICB YOUR CHOICE I .,., EA. "io. 5814 LOW/ Bllil I 9 7 EA. lf you're driving around with a one·eyed car. you be•t get one of theH replacement• before they pull you over and writ• you up. 'I AllCO WDIDSBJELD WIPER BLADE OR PAIR or WllfDSBIEl.D WIPER REFILLS YOUR CHOICE 22• CLUB LUO-RB = . ' FDR THE RECORD ~ • • • • MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS Am.rtcan LHOll• # • Cl11Cfll0 Kan1a1 Cltv THU Oeklancl Antell Mlnnt•ola S.e11i. WEST DIVISION W L " .. /l 71 73 ,, 69 u •7 as 6S 81 S. 9S •EAST DIVISION Balllmo•'• 9' SI O.iroll 16.., 66 New York U 61 Torooto 14 69 Mllwau•te II 11 Bo•lon 74 79 Clevtlancl 06 IS •·cllncnea 01vl1lon 11111 Wtdne•dav'• Sc0<•• Aneel1 ). Kan1a1 Cltv 0 Belllmore •·I. Oeirolt O l r .. u 4, Oektana 1 Mllwaukt• 10. Cit•tlallcl I Bo&lon l New Yor~ I Toron10 4, Sea111e 3 Cnlcago 7 7. MIMtlOle I 6 TOdav'• Gam .. PC1. S99 413 410 4SI 441 429 371 623 S66 SS6 S49 SJJ 4'4 437 GB . ., 10 II 131] 11 28 Cnico110 IK001mon 10 1 a• A"'"4• (For"" I· 11 > (n) Balllrnore (Flanagan 11 ll al Oe11o•I (WllcOK 10· 10). (n) Mllwaukff IC•~ 11 ef c1eve1a na 1Soren1en 10· 10>, 1 Mlnne10ta (Fll•on II 01 1<.en1ot C11v (R1nmuu 111 3·S) (nl S.eltle I Bee Ille 9· lll at Tu•• !Darwin 7·12), (n) l'rldeY'• Ganws cniuoo e1 An9tls. (n> Boslon ol Oelroll, In) Ctevelano et New Yor~. (111 Ballimoro al Mllw•u~eo en) Mlnne&ola ol Ken•o• Cllv (n) Sao111e al Toa" <nl Toron10 al Oa~lancl, In) Nelional LHvue WEST DIVISION ~. Allan!& Houlloo San Dle9o W L Pct. San Francisco Clnclnnall 91 6S 82 68 79 n 76 16 73 ,, •9 11 E•UT DIVISION PnlladetOllla Montreal Pllhburgh Sr Louis c111.:aoo N.wYork .. 10 7' n 79 73 14 71 .... ., 90 w-..wi.'l"s Sn••• OGd9en 1 HOullOl'I I Atlenlt 9·3, Clnclnnell I·• Cnkooo 7, P111s1>uro11 6 San Francl&co S San Dltv0 • Sn S47 S23 soo 410 4S7 SJ6 S23 S20 .. , 4'7 408 GB ,., 7'' IJ'> 1911 SI Louis 9 Ntw Yor~ J Pllllaaetollla 01 MOnlrHI. 1>00 rain Todav'• Game• Clnclnnoll I Run.ii 3·3) el A1lan1a (Dov lev 4·61. In> Pllt~r111> (Tunnell •·S> el Ch•caoo (Rtu•Chtl 1·01 PnlledtlPhle (Ot nnv 16·6 ana Huoson 1·11 el Montreal lllooe" 17· IO end Lt• lS-91. 2 (1·nl New York (Derlll'O 0 11 <'II St Loui• (Co• 1-S>. (n) l'rldaV'• Game• ~al Atlenla, (n) New York al Chlc.oo Plllsburon t i Montreel, 111) San Dl990 el Cincinnati, (nl PhllaclelPllla al SI Loula, (nl San Francisco •• Mousion. In) AMERICAN LEAGUE A11911t. J, Aovett. o CALIFORNIA KANSAS CITY Pellls d Wltf0<111 2b Corew an Benlqur If Sconln lo Boonec Velenllnrt Sc1'offld •• Aaams lo T- aO r 11 bl ab r II bl S 1 7 0 WWllsn ct 4 O O O S 0 1 1 UWsllln n 4 O O O 4 0 7 0 Wllllt 70 4 0 I 0 s 1 J I Mc A •e an 4 0 I 0 • 0 1 0 RJM1n lo ) O O O 4 0 1 1 BOa•ll If 4 0 I 0 4 0 1 0 Wallla n t 4 o I O 4 0 I 0 Molle'f rf 3 O o o 4 0 1 0 Cncocn lb ) O I O 3'313) Tehll\ JJOSO Score by,......, c-001 020 000-l !<-.• °"' 000 000 000-0 Gem.·Wlnnlno R81 -Wllf0ft9 (1) E-ScllOI~ LOB-Cellfornla 10. K•n MS Cllv 1 2B-Whlla 311-Pttlls.SB-Walntn (17) Ptlllt 7 IS), Aclams I I) IP ~ H REA Zalln W,t· ll 0 0 l(enuaCl!v Pe<rv L,7·14 s 10 Hul1mOnn • J 0 0 WP-Za nn T-231 A-14,174 NATIONAL LEAGUE Ood9ff' l, Astros l Bii so 0 4 1 • HOUSTON LOS ANGELES Oor'en 20 Puhl rf Thonu Crut Ii Kn19hl lb Gerner lb Mmonvd Al llOY c MaOcltno Totmen oh RuNeo "-· al>rhbl 4 I 1 o • 0 0 0 4 0 1 1 4 0 I 0 4 0 1 0 7 0 1 0 2 0 I 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ssu 20 Bltusstl u Olleker II Guerrer Jo Marsh! lb Lenara d Tl'IOmu ci RJRvn1 rt Flmottc Vtlenzle o ll I' I T-• S<trt bV IMlnet ab r II bl 4 2 ) 0 4 0 I 1 4 0 0 0 J 0 l 0 l 0 7 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l 0. 0 3 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 ll , , 1 Heuatvn 000 001 000-I L .. ~ 000 010 IOll-2 Gerne·Wlnnino RBI -II Auueil <11 E-Atllbv, Thon DP-Hou11on I Lo& ""9elts 1 L08-Hou~IOO 1 LO• Anoeles 7.28-Mar\l\tM. a ~usa.11 sa-s ~x 1 ("9), B R111Ml! ( 131 Oor&n (12), Guerrero (23), Garner 1171 s-Gerner IP H R Elt llB SO Heultvn Madden • 0 2 Ruttle L.I ·• 1 1 O Lft~ Velen1ul W,14·10 9 6 1 I J WP-vele<lzuN T-2 2'1 " •S.141 Amet'lc1n LH911e Ori*\ 6, T'-• 0 FlntGame Balllmore 03 l 000 m--. 6 O.•roll 000 000 ~ u O BOOOlcktr •na DemoHv, Morrl1. Rozeme 191 ana Parrlsn w -Boaclicller. IS·7 L-Morrl" 1' 17 HAs-Belllmore Murra• (291, Rlollen US>. Lowen1te1n 1131 Ortet.• 1, T'-l l Second Game Balllmore 000 000 011.-7 11 O 0.frolt 030 000 000-3 10 O Sweooeriv, Moroolello (31, Slewerl Pl ena NOien, Aooott. Gumoerl Ill. Loe>ez (9) •nd Wocl\tnruu w-s1ewar1, t·J L- Ournoen. 0·2. HR.-Belllmore, Murrev llOJ. Lowen11e111 (14). No•en (4) Oe1rolt, Leach (1) Wlllte Se• ~ Tw1nt I Flnt G1me Mlnnftoll 000 I 00 000-1 1 O Chlceoo 000 001 lOM-2 I 7 Schrom •nd Eno... HOVI tlld Hiii. SlllfVlllf' Ill W-+iovt, 71· 10 L-Schrom, 1)-e WN'9 SH 1, TWIM 6 S.C.onclO- Mlftnetole 000 101 031""°' 11 2 Cl'llUOO 100 000 • 11-7 10 O Wlllem1, L'/18.nder (1), WhllthouM (7), " o ... ,, m alld Laualllf. Smllh Cl>. 8-'11er, Tlcltow II >. AllO•lo Ill. Lt mo Ill, ~ ltl ana f"I•"' w -4MOflman, 1•0 L-« Devil, ~· HR-MIMnOla, Br~ll\lly (261 81119 Jen 4, ~ J ,.., lie JOO 000 000-3 • , T~onro oo. 000 OOx-• 10 1 Clenl, Sledc:lero W t nd SwMI, A .. • el\Ofl' •lld 8 Merllnez w-"1e111nae<, S·I. L-Clertl, 7·t lted SH ), Y-... 1 N ... YM't 000 010 000-1 10 0 aoaron 010 ooo 01•-i ' o Shll'i.v, M.ev (1), i:rawr (7) ano e.r-. W'fl'i9llar m. Oled"' s11n1n 111 end Alltn\ofl W-<>Moe 11 -1 -s111riev J.-1 Hlt-9oalon, Arllltt f)4) ......... 4,A'I J 0.klend 000 000 10C)-) f I Ttlla.J 100 012 OOx-4 6 0 Codlrotl, UnclerW00\1 <•> and KH rnev. OU (7), Stnlll\Mlfl 81141 ~ W- lmlll\tOfl, t-14 L -COdlrOll. U It .,....... 10, lndle•ll 1 Mllwaokff 102 100 111-10 U Ci.veland 100 000 I~ 1 I 1 Su11on. si.100 17), Walt• Il l. LaOcl ltl •ft<I Slmmon1. Hee100, EkMlberDe< (4), Btrnt> 191 and Heuev W-SultOl'I, I • IJ ~SJHHIOO 10·• HR-<t•v•l•na. Bannl11er NarloNI LN~ CUbt 7, Plrtlel 6 P1111ouroh 201 001 2()0--.6 11 4 Cl\lc..110 IOI 030 10.-1 I 3 O.Leon, Guenle (6), Telt.ulve 111 and Pena, Rainey, Jenkins 161, Lt Smlln ct> ona Dovl1. W-Jenkln•, 6·9 L-Guanle, ?·S HR-Pliliouron, Htoner (SI GM!ntl S, PtdHI 4 San Dl~o 000 001 071-4 I O San Frenc11co 000 201 ocn-s 1 2 Lollar , cruner (IL LUCH <9> and Ken· nedv, Gwo1clz (9), Davis, L••tlle (9) encl Btenly W-Levelle. 1·• L-Lucel, S·I HR&-S.n Dleiio, Lansford ( 1) San Fra n· cl,co. Leonerd (211. Voungblooa ( ••>, Bergman (6). BreYt • t, Red& I l'lnlGtme Clnclnneu 010 000 000-1 S I Allen!• IOS JOO 00•-9 11 I Puleo. Gole (J), Power (4), H•VH (7) and Trevino, McMurtry encl Slnalro. W- McMurlrY, 14·9 L-Puleo, S· 11 HRs-Allan1e. Mur1>1\Y (lSI. Cllamollu 1 110) Rea• 4, Brey .. l SK-Game Clnclnn•li 000 100 071-4 I 0 Alla nla 070 010 ~) 9 7 Pastore Scnerrer (7), Hume (I) end 8 11a rae110. Trevono (9), Nlekro, Forsler (7), eearoslen Ill ana Pocorol>o w-Hum., J·S L-8earo•lan1 9·9 Ct rdlne11 f, Mttt l New York 010 000 001-J S O SI, Loult 010 011 S0~-9 IS 0 Torr.a, Gorman 171, Gell (7) ena Orllr. Sluoet and Porter W-SluPlt'. 11· IO. L-Torret, 9·11 COleve fooft:Mll 1CMdult WEST Kon1as vs USC al LA Coil1tum ( 130) San JOH SI al S•enforcl Housion at Or119on Nevade ·L8' ve11 .. al Was11ln111on St Fresno St al Paclllc, n Cal Poly SLO al San Frencl&co St. HumDOlclr SI. e l UC Oavl1, n Cal Stele Norfl\rlclge al Sacramento SI $onl• Clar a et Ha vward Sr C1eremon1·Mudd el Chko St .. n Weoer SI a l E. W••lllnOIOO ROCKIES Cal Stale Fullerton al Arlloo•, n Wlcllile SI et Arizona SI , n Oreoon SI el ColorecJO New Me)(ICO SI et New Mulc:o, n 8 YU al Air Force Sen Dleoo SI el Toet•EI PalO, n Boise St er Neveda ·Reno lcla l\O el ldel'IO Sf , n Hewell •I U1a11. n Portlancl St at Monlena Monlene St al Norlnern Arlzorte , n SOUTH W111\lnoton al LSU Alaoama al Vanaerblll, n Georgia rec11 al Clem1on Wiiiiam & Merv al North Cerolln<i Virginie al Nortn Carolina SI .. n APoalacnlan SL a• Cllecltl, n Soull\ Carolina at Georole Notre Dame at Mloml. Fie. ICnannet 2 at 6 om.) Arkansas at Mln ln lool, n Auburn a1 Tenntuee Fiorlde a• MIU IHIPDI SI Marshall al Furman Tulane al KenlUCkY Wa ke Forell et Rlcnmono VMI •I Virginia Teen SOUTHWEST Nor111 Toes SI. •• Texu . n Tul•• at Qklal'loma 01\lel'IOma St at T txH A&M. n Te)( .. Teel! at Baylor, n SMU al TCU. n T .. n Arllnotoo et W T .. ., St , 11 SW Loul\lena al Rice. n NW Louisiana al Abilene Cl\tl•llan, n MIDWEST UCLA t i NeO<u ka IUlnois •• Mk:hlgan SI (CM nnet 7 al 9 a.ml Mlchioen al Wlscoo1ln Pura.,. el Mlnntt>Ole N0<thweslern a1 lnalena Olllo SI 11 IOwa ICl\anl>el 1 at 12 '5 om I Wyoming el Kansai SI Ulal\ S1 01 Missouri ColoradO SI. et Iowa SI. Clnclnn.11 at Loul•vllle, n Norlhern llllnola at Ktnl SI Mle ml, Olllo al Bowling Grfft> Ball St. at Toteoo. n llllnol• st at Drake Ea•lern Mlclll11an al Ofllo U. Cenlral Mlch191111 el Wt>ltrn Michigan EAST We\! Virginie al 8011on Coll-. n Plllsl>Ur11h el Marylancl Penn St. el Temole Ruloers al svracu•e Mau aclluMlls el Harvarcl Bo11on U al Mein• Holv Cron al New Ham1>1hlre Lel\lgti al Nevv Darlmoutll ar Armv Rhode l1land el Brown Bucknell e t Prlncelon Colgelt el Cornell Columbia at Lalevette Connecticul ti Vole Penn al Delaware COtN.<IUNITY COLLEGE Thl1 weetr•1 t.~ FRIDAY S.nte Ana v&. Golden WHI el Or•fl98 Coo&I SATVRDAY SocldleOeck al Ora l!Oe Co.SI L009 Buel\ CC at C.rrll0> Glendale a t Ml. San Anloolo, 1.30 o m Cllrus •' FullertOI\ S.cramet1IO cc at P&Mdene cc Venture •• Be1ter1lltla S.n Barnarcllno Vt l .. v al Htncoc" SoulllwHlern at lmoerlal Valiev S.n Dleoo at Sen Dle9o Mesa Groumont at LA Har"°' Eut Lo• A1199lu ti Rlvar&lcle CC Mt S.n Jeclnro er Ca.Lulneran, > 1 • m Lo• Anotlet CC el Santa 8 arl>er• CC, 7 om Rio Hondo al Palomar. l P.m Mooroark al Wt>t Lo• Angeles, 1 o.m. StQuolH al Tall Santa Monica CC al Fre1no CC. 1 om. Anletooe Valley al WHI Hiiis, 1 o,m, Portervlll• al Como100, 1:30 p.m. ~nlO •I LA Plef'ce, 1:30 o.m. All oame• e t 7:30 o.m. u111eu olherwl1• no100 Wem«t'' ¥eleVMI COMMUHITY COLL.GI Groumortt ~ Or'anoe Coe•• 10· IS, IS·IO, 15·9. IS•ll .• HIGH KHOOL Corona OM MM cMf. MK• Cotla, 15·7, lS·I, IS· 11. OMllNeltMllW ART'S LAHOIHO (.._...,, ... di) -ss a1191en . 11 ~loltck 1une1 n t>eu 206 bonllo, 14 mtCktrtl. M Yt110wtal1, 2 ShffOlllHd. DAVIY'i LOCK•lt (Hew-1 a.di) -IOI all91ara. la1 Donlto. 16 ca11eo belt" .0 mecktrtl, 2 rock natl, 2 aalld beu, 157 vellOwlell, 1 cloroclo, 100 bllllel l\lne, 160 >kle>t.cll 1111111. 26 v.-c>wfln tune H&M LANDING (Sell Oielit) -" •noter• lor 1111111. 5IO vetlowtln lune. S7• P loleek IUlll, t7 vel!Owlall, t dOf'oclo t) •noltf• 10 coronaoo , ... lldt. '°' ., .. ,.11 11 alllPIKll rune, 1 tend beu, 15 bonito, i •llffl>•ha•O. ' ~ rur1e, U rOCll ""'· I Ntllbvl ~ ~~SOAY'S aHULT1 .... ., llW ,_....., l'IUT lt~ALOOSAS H~f Fllet Ky$ f1,1r!Qft9& Hutrv•Scurrv ~l UO 300 UO 810 Chak (Aout'sael •.OO 2 80 Al&O raced ,. 4 60 ao Brown. Foun.edlletlon. T"4 Reanor, Time 1'01.iif' My Dea, NoOit Kl. U U lACTA ll•:1alcl '7UO SICOHoO::!~~oasES Ofllo Devit (Harll verd•. Au urtd Juen 18ero> 1'.00 S,60 4,20 Plenly A Truell (Gu el 3.40 2.60 Al•o reced, Too Em l ,40 Leo, Allrlde R1lnb0w.. Sheck• Cu&lus Matlv Miio, ~ov•I Paroon. Time. n .01. THIRD RACI 3SO v1rd Me roerul1 C09v (Blfcl) \ Another Allon 8uo IGerclel ~:: ~: Mr Merry Clllcll (MltcM ll) S20 Al•O rec.a. Th• lrort Ill.Ac B M«>n. Crlm•on C1dlll•c, P•r. ro Fl ·~ Em, BrlslOI Rover " 0 '" Time· 17.66. u •XACTA (6·1l oalcl SlU C). THOA0 UGH8REDS l'OuttTH ltACE. 6 lurlongs Grel>d Sc>orl (Pedroza) 2 IO 2.~ 40 S.ucv Meroe (Mun&tll) 29."i' HO.II'• Wino (MCCllntlCk) ~'° Al><> rec.a H1111gum, Young S S.a Raven, Merk'• Banalao. Bt • DUCl\n& Time 113 l'll'TH ltACE . I 1116 mil .. Alll• NIDO (Snvdtr) 6 IO '20 J OI. Loma Allo (Ptdrou) 160 4 70 ....... COMMUNITY COLLiGI S. ..... tll 11. c ........ ,,. Sacl4te0eet.. l 3 S 1-11 Cyoreo , I I ·-I St dclle baO. .corlno Delio•• 6, Me!OOft•dO l. Rowe I, Reid 1, KunH 1, Youno 1 HIGH SCHOOi. Hewawi Ha11Mr 12. Uf'INenttv 1 Unlve<slly 7 l 1 1-1 Newoorl Haroor J J 2 _., UnlYef'lllV scoring L•llOIOh 2, VVuh· oourne 3, Torclllano I, Solomt n I Hewoor1 Haroor •Corino; Stewerl I, Bucllenan 4, Tlnoler l, Slulzkv I, 8enao1c1 ), 1 1 T9"0 14, ••rencle I El Toro S 6 O 3-1' Ealencla 0 2 • 2-e El TO!"o acorln11; Ma111tr 1, t<ors11Hra I, Bernet<.1119 l. Sevc1l1ln l, Yokole l, Hone 2. Knox 3, Stem per 2 E"oncla scoring· Wicks 3. Lortnie 2. 8er11 7. Smllh l c.,_ • Mu l4, Sedclle«Nc~ t ~dcllel>ecll 2 l 1 :i-9 Corona oat Mar e I S l-24 Corona Otl Mar scorlno Story 4, Alaoer 3, Oedl119 2, Harmon 2, Crowell 2, Rooer11 2. Tomlin 2. Tichy I. Sehr-I, TrlPOll I, Fora 1, B. SMIV I, Merumolo I, Tucker 1 1Aktw"4f 11, Le-... Ch 1 Lellewooo a 2 ) 2-11 L•ouna a.acn 2 J o 1-7 Laouna Be•Ch 1cor1ng Kltcner 1, Fraser 2, Glltrt I Vtlleno I, Sllort 1 l'eullt•ln VtMY 17, LH Am ..... Lo• AmlllO• ) I J 2-• Foun111n Vallev l 6 7 1-11 Founleln Vt ll•v 1corlno Moore S, Coe>e •. Beum9er1ner 2. Slnoer l. AtYnOld• I, Dorvertanlan I, Devi• I, Rutek 1 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Sept. 22. 1983 Cl T,enumenu 0oen tat Sen l'ren<l"•l l'lnt Rtuftd ~ JOl\n MCEntoe (US l def llracl Gllbtrl CU S I, 6·4, 6·1 ~lltllnd~ Frill 8 ueMlftQ (U.S ) oat Elio• ToiltCMr <U S.1, 6· l, 6·4, lliH Scanlon (US.> clef Eric Fromm (U.S.), 7-S, 6·2, Senav Ml!Ytr (US ) def MerlV Devis (US), 1·•· 6 l, Rametn Krltllnan (lndle l oef Bet'nlt Miiion IS.utl\ Alrlca), 6·2, 6·3 w~·, tourne~t (at lllchmencl, Va.I Second RIMHICI Slnfllel Ro1elyn Falrl>anA (Soulh Atrlcal del Relttll• Rtool 111e111>. 6· I, 1-s, wenov wnue (U,S > a.i Calrln Jotil <Sweden). 6·l . 0·6, 6·3; Kim Sends (U.S I dot Julie HerrlnglOn (U.S.>. 6·4, 6·•; Ka in• Jorclan IU.S.) def Kim Sheeter IU.S.I, 6·7, 1 6, 6·0, First lttllnd Slntlle• U H Bonder <U S.l def. Jtnnller Mur>Oel !Soulll Alrlce>. 6-4, 6·). BOf>nle Gaclute~ !US) dtl Kellllttn Cuml'fllng, IU.S l, 11·2. 6·3, Anna Marla Fef'nencltr (U.S > def Leloll Tl\Ome>.on IU.S 1. 6·4. 3·6, 6·7 Hkltl ichoof WOl'Mn ll'Vlne 16, Dana H•• 7 SlntMt Pl\em (I) O.f Hamou•SI. 6 3. clet Dow .. 11, 6·2 def Cla uaon. 6· I, Manlev Ill woo, 6·1 6· 1, 6· I Mlcnael\00 Ill won. 6·7 6·2. 6·0 Dtllble• Re vnolds·Pavona rlus (11 clef Yt ue•Velt lke, 6·0, clel Miller ·H•rr"on 6-0, ael Ma r ... s ·S1oclllon 6 O. Lowes·Trooo (ll 1<>11, 4·6, won. 6-0. 6·l , Benecllct·Se<ller 11) toll. )·6. won. 6· I, 6·1 Wednt11Mlv'\ tr~dlon1 aASSaALL .t./Mfkaft LM-CALIFO~NIA ANGEL~lg-e worl<- 1119 a11rMmenl wllll Weltrl>ufv of IM Cleu AA Ee.,ern Lttoue Hatlentl LMtue NL-Announcao 1no l'le•• uOheld 11\a •u•i>en•lon ot D••• Conceoctoro, Clnc.klnlll Rea• sl'IOrl&IOP 1or lllrM oeme1 -Inning Frloev, CHICAGO CU8S-Nemtd Jim Flnll1 PtHlcle111 end chief uecu1lve ottlc.r 8ASl(IT8ALL HatloMI aeu.-AUK letlen CLEVELAND CAV.ALIERS-<:ul Jonn LUCO . ouard MILWAUKEE BUCKS-Announced ,,.. rt1lremen1 of Brian Win1er1. 11uara WASHING TON BULLETS-Signed Mike Wll•on, ouercl l'OOTBALL Cenadlen I'....,_. LMtue WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS-Traded Dieter Brock. ouarttrt>ecll, lo tM Hemllloo Tloer-Cal& tor Tom Clemen!•, ouerlef'O.Ck Ntllenll Ffftbell LH-LOS ANGELES RAMS-Sign.a Rlcnarcl Bl1noo. d.itntl•• llneman, 10 • free·agen1 con1rac1 Plecea Mvron Looi.a, no1e 1ac1o.i.. on 1ne 1nlurea re1er •e 1111 NEW YORI( GIANTS-Stonaa Pa ul Devh, ltntoocor SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-<ut Tneolh Brown runnl119 ooc". and slontld Zacherv 0 1•00, runn1119 oeo WASHINGTON REDSl(INS-Sloned Outnlln Lowry, hllel>acker HOCl(E Y Nell-I Hockey L .. _ NEW YORK ISLANDERS-Signed Bren1 Suiter. center Grt11 Return (V1lclul J.20 Al><> raced Whip It, Jt ue'• Gold Siar.-:=========================~':'...:...:::":'.~-=='.:.:.:.:::.::.'.'."_=~-------"""".==~~-:=====~"! Sliver A1Jftllu•, TraHic Turns, Vinci Grey Time. I ... n DAIL y DOUBLE (2·1) oelcl st.64. SIXTH RACE. 1 11 .. mu .. Derllno Dunne (Haruenl J,80 2.60 2.20 Qvffn of Dt rkneu (Mill•) l.60 2.IO Crvllt l'• Solo IPedrOH ) l .00 Al10 rec.a: Qvffn of Jen. Vtllev Babe, Aril>e Grlt>e, Candv'• Tori, Pe1111v'1 Orbll. Time: 1:47 4/S, ts IXACTA 19·3) oe icl Ml.00, SIVIHTH ltACa. 6 furlono•. Beller Hot Pan (Orleo•l 14.IO 6.20 l .IO Envoy Der>cer (P.Orozal 4,IO J,60 1101100 Meoic (HanHn> 2.60 Alto raced: Soverelon Gold, Bold 'n llttltr, Neer Future, El Fel\ed, Red Ryan. Time: 111 JIS. •IGHTH IUCa. 6 furlOno•. Eertv Quflt IMeN> 6.60 l .00 2.IO True Wlft<lv'• Baov (Ht nMn) 2.IO UO ECCllVl>llmP <Rona) 3 . .0 Alto rec.a· Nelural Flnl&I\, lrltll JIM, S.ult r'• Gold, Carved Ledy, Flnel Relect, Coton dO ROM, Just Luck. Time I'll JIS. tJ •XACTA IS·6l oekl SJS 00 HIHTH R.ACE. I 1116 mlles. Sir Sloul (Mena) 6.IO 4 . .0 J.00 Surlnem Gola (Orlao•l 6.00 3.60 OH·Hlol\lv Honor.a IPeclrOll ) 2.10 OH·Snakeblle Medicine (Oel9eclfllo ) 2.40 DH-OeedMe t for third Al><> reced Hlollbrown, Z.fflOc. Jim Jim, Vlel<l'I Rhythm TlrM· 1-46 T•HTH ltAC•. 6 turtonos HellO Hepotneu (Hen...,) 3.40 3.00 1,.0 S.Crt l Runner (0 119ecllllol H O 2.IO lml>ltnlvluff (Mena) J.00 Alto rec.a Fair Cl\ar!Mn, Tool Sa a.a.., NalurH Trlumoh. Lt Jav P•lll•. A111n'1 Souflle. Time 1.11 llS, tJ •XACTA (1·21 oeld '37,00, n ~K SIX ll·•·•·S·l·I) oeld M,073.IO wlln 12 winning tlcllell hi• 110rH1J S2 Plcll SIM consotetlon oelcl s 12'.IO wltn 22' wth· nlno llCktl• (II•• llOrSH ) RL•vEHTH RAC•. 6 lurl0n9•. Gell'• Girt (Henaen> 6.IO 4 00 l 40 Nal'I Park (E•lrade ) 100 SOO Summert SPrH IOelhdlllc>l t .20 Alto re'90 Lltllftl Ol<le, 0v9"Chtroe, Canedlen Jiii. Grena Siem BIOY. Cee>ralna ROOf'n, Mudl LH , Curious lletu TlrN 112 2/S. TW•Ll'TH RACE, I'/, mile\. Flri1 Al'Mf'leen c~alllo> l IO l.00 2 60 Gummo Men (Ronc:I) J IO J 20 Game OI Sole• (Fellonl HO Alto reGed Tlmberll>Ol't. Au Sa~ Jim, Tavl& F'Ylde, RoundobOul LUke, Jungle MJu lOn, ~etor Time 2-0.C 1/S U EXACTA 13·4) oalcl "'3 SO Allenclence l0,2SO HelVWMd Peril W•OHISOAY'S R•SULn (Ml .. "'"""' '*-'• ,........, l'taST ltAC•. One mile oeca: H-chl lllalllergeon) s..o, l.40, 2 • .0; ao.11 4.20, 3 00, El Toret1IO U O, Time: 2:01 1/S. u •><ACTA (Ml N ICI SlS.20. SICOHD RACIE. One mite oecie· L..av Slnle IOI...,) 10.IO, 4.IO, )..0; Orenoer1l Amy 21.40, 1.40, Ce11tornle S<Jmf' •,00. Time; 2'0'2 'IS. u •XACTA (J·S) oela snuo. THiaD ltAC•. One mile oeca: Hevaduher (Crool\en) 4.60 3.60 2.IO; Ex· .,., 11.20, UO; Kl119 of Ju1 3.00. Time: 2:01 2/S. U •XACTA (3·11 N ld S269.70 l'OUllTH RAC•. One milt trot: R E Todd (0.-..l J.IO, J . .O, l.20, Huallln Dude 5,IO, 4.60: Wel<u• 4,00 Time; ?:In 'IS. l'll'TH ltAC•. One mile oece: L A Dl<rator (Peterttn) 4 .. 60, UO, UO, Suoer NM IO 4.00, 2.IO, Trlote Nine 10.00. TltM: 1'02 l /S. U IXACTA (2·3) N ici 125.SO. SIXTH RACI. One mite oece: T'llet'& Lli. (Slltt'rtnl U O, 4.IO, l.40; Ket1hJdlv Go Go 10.20, UO; KlncNy Lillht U O. Time: l:St 2/S. u IEXACTA (S-2) oekl stS.40. s•VIHTH ltACI. One mite NC« SOffClY F'Ylnc9 (8ak9") 7UO. 20.00, 1...0; Ponll 7.JO, SAO, IM Ge!Cl\a 4.40. Time: Uf 4/S. U •XACTA lt·6l N ici M02.IO. llGHTH aAC•. Ont mlle oecie. Sioux (Ledley) HO, l .20, U O, Ru•llc Scoll U O, 2.10, Aulumn Slorm l IO Tlrne 1::57 415. '1 IXACTA (4•21 paid n uo NIHTil ltA(I. One mite oecie: Howdy Siar (Tockl Ill 14 IO, 1 00, 4.20, 8u0be Hal>'t 11.60, 6 IO, FletlW Fre nll 6.20. Time 1;57 2/S. U ax ACTA ( 10·4) N ici S16l 40. $2 f'K:K SIX 110·2· S·t ·4· 10l N kl 1103,.0 wllll U• Wltlf\1119 lldWift (five llO<Mt). CartVOVef' POOi: '16,360.16, TIHTH ltAC•. Ont mite oece: Com· l>lllff SIVle lllallM!roeon> 16.40, 9,20, 5.20; R-nt Mlle 6.40, J .O; Slratohl Eklht S.00. Time: l St. sl EXACT A 11 ·SI oald 1121.IO. A llendtnc•' 6.064 • ·.; S&,e•100 2999; .. _ .. 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Zero-adjust for prec1· sion low-resistance tests. #22-191 Audible "Beep" Continuity and Range-Change Indicator Complete Home Alarm System for 24-Hour Security at Low Cost SAFE Ho u se by Radio Shack Save *163& 12995 Everything you need: alarm system control panel. electrc. 1ic siren. tour magnet switches. 100 feet of wire. key lock. #4EM50/488/ 4951523, 278-860 Check Your Phone Book f o.c the ltadte l'IMlek Store or Dealer Nearest You .. __________ __,L ------------------------------e"""'=========----............... __ .... ___________ _ ('& Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Sept 22. 1983 Ml.IC NOTICE Pml.IC NOTICE MllC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE MUC NC>TICC NOTICE OF DEATH OF M N • H3 '1CTITIOU• ........... flCTITIOUt .UllHIH YOU AN IH OlfAUlT UtlMlll A '"ICTITtOUt .,... •• RICHARD CLAR· Rm' • 1 Nit.Ml tTATIMINT HAtH ITATIMCHT 0110 CH' TIIUIT OARD Oct..., ~ ITA,.....,,. A iw• NOTICE OF DEATH OF TM tollowlnO !*.on. .,. TM tonowtno '*'°" ta oo1ng 22. ttu. UNLIH YOU TAICI AC· Tne 1o11owtng ~ 1e CIOlllO NIERS, ah RICHARD C. ANNE KAPLAN AND O tiu.lnete.. lln•H H T10ff TO ""OTICT YOUR ~-ov~ .. RENIERSAND OF PETI· PETITION TO ADM NEWPORT TAAFFIC SYSTE JOANN( REYNOLDS COM· lflTY, l'T MAY .. IOU) AT" ""9-BREHM'$ IN0£PEN0£HT wooo TION TO ADMINISTER £S.. TER ESTATE NO All HOO 170 l 17th St. Suite 212 c SMUNICATIONS. 1303AvocaooA.,. • llC IA~. If YOU NllD AM IX· WORl<Ef\8, 230 E Ov« Rd , "Vn11 TATE NO Altt•11 • M ... CA 92027 • ull• 280. "'-PD<• ~. CA Pl.AHATIC>ff CH' THI HAT\Ma CH' a··. &Nita Ana, CA 112707 • .. . To all helrl, benefldanes, Gai). A CtOfl, 1965 An~ f· 82680 TMa "'O<lHOfftO AQAINIT YOU, R~ St.....,, Bleutn, 11 a.- To all hdra, beneftCl&rle9, credllor1 and contlngen ().' Cotl• M ... CA 92eV"} Joenne 6 ReynOld•. 013 Morgold YOU tHOULD CONTACT A LAW· ,.,,,... e.t•. ~.CA 82714 c.'tt.>d11ora 1md contingent c rt! d t t 0 rs 0 c ANN o;.,,1e1 L Bio'""'· 21~," ,.,.,. ·Coron• d-4 Mar. CA 82112& YEil Thlt bu~ 11 COl\OUC1eo by tn creditors or RIC HARD KAPLAN d h Cloud Ort .... Olamoncl~A Thlll>ullMlllecondlic:ledDy an HOTICIMTltU8Tll't•A~ ltldlvt<lval .... an penions W 1117116 lnaMaulll Ta No *41 Roget er.um • CLARK RENlERS, aka may be o therwlae lnteret lhl• D1,1ll-" c:ono • JoanM S Reynold• NOTICE IS HER.EBY GIVEN. that Thi• e11temenl wu 111«1 with the RICH.ARD C RENl'ERS and an Lhe will and/or esLac.e. ~al parlnerwtilp Thl• •latemen1 wu !Ilea ""th th• on WeQneaoey. Oct<>bef 12. 198J, at County Ci.rk ol Otano-County on persol'\li who m.ay be other· A peuuon has bee fil Gery A Cron Courity Clerk ot 0 1ange County on 10 00 1 m of H id dey, In the room Aug 211. t983 . n Thi• •lllement WU ml"ttn Ill• Aug 29 1983 Ml Hide IOI conduotlng TtUllM'I ~ WlSe interested IJl the will by Joyce Luk.ail In the Su· Courit Clerk of Or l"nty on f:t23M' Salee. w1thrn lhe ottkl•t or REAL ES-Publllhea Or~ Coat o.11)' and/or eiitate: penor Court of Orange Coun $4'PI ~. 1983. ang PubllthllCI Orange Co1111 Otlly TA TE SECURITIES SERVICE. PllOI StPt 1, 8, 15, 2.2, 1983. A petition hu been Cited iy requestlng thar Joy ~ Pllo1 St1>1 1. 8. 16. 22, tll83. ioceted 11 2020 North B•o•dw•y. 6002-83 by BARBARA ANN BOGGS L k be ted Publlahed Orang~h•I Dally •997·83 Suite 2011, In 1he City ot Santa An1. u as appot.n as per Pllol 6ei>1 111 22 2irt 8, 11183. County of Orange. 11111 ol Call· ------------REN'IERS In the S uperior sonal representative to ad ' · !11•1·83 fornla, REAL ESTATE SECURITIES l't&.IC NOTICE Court ot Orange County re-muuat.er the eswt.e of ANN MllC NOTICE SERVICE. a C111torn11 Corpor· ___ __,-........_.......,......, __ _ questing that BARBARA KAPLAN (under the lnde ellon,u duly 1ppolnled Tru11M fteTmoua ., ..... ANN BOGGS RENIERS ¢.TICE aUHllllOlll COlH'T under and purtuant lo the Pow.I of HAMI tTATl•NT . be pendent Administration o Mll Of THI aTATE Hie conferred In th•t certeln Deed Tile totlowing l*tDn 11 dOlng appmnted as personal rep· &it.ates Act). The petition . ;;UtlNIH Of CALlfOftNIA ot Tru11 UtlC\Jled by DAVID bUllneH U ; • resentallve to admlruater the set for hearing in Dept. No. Fl~TITl9ATIMIHT fOlll THe COUNTY PETERSEN BECKETT •• ,, unmtr· ORANGE COAST CLEANING est.ate of RIC HARD CLARK at 700 Civic Cen ter Dr .. West, The loll~~ona are do!ng IN THE M~ri~~AJ'FQ~HE APPLI· ~':g2."1~nih~ec~~:a 0~~~:m8:n~ ~~~~~: 92"f:,8 Crondon. Coeta RENIERS, aka RICHARD C. Santa Ana, CA 92701 on Sept. butlneH ·~). LIMITED PART. CATION OF MICHAEL ROBERT Aecoraer ol said County, H R• Jettrey Alyn Cootl, 29118 Cfofldon, RENlERS (under the lnde-28, 1983 al 9:30 a .m. N~~~I~ ·~2 MKArthyr Blvd .. FELi)( FOR CHANGE OF NAME cordars lnllrument No 82·387851, Cotti M'eu, CA. 92027 pendent Adml.IUStrauon of lF YOU OBJECT to th ••5 1 i",.;A 92716 CASE NO A 1188411 by reason ot • Dreach ot default In Thi• bu•ln ... I• conducttd by· 111 "'-tat A ) Th ll · is /1 • "' Moiayenl 18562 OAOEA TO SHOW CAUSE payment of perlormance ol lh• ODii· lnC1lvldu1I "°"' es ct. e pe UOn grant.mg of the petition, yo Abdul tvd , •446, ,,;,lne. CA RE CHANGE OF NAME gallons securllCI 1here1>y, Including Jttt,.y A, Cook set for hearmg Ill Dept. No. 3 should either appear al th ~ac,A•tl\u WHEREAS. MICHAEL ROBERT 1ha1 Draach or detaull. Notice of Thia 1111ement wu rii.ci wtth the ..... al 700 CtVlC' Center Dr , West, hearing and st.ate you objec-2i;,1, Rahimi•"· 18652 FELIX hH tiled hi• Petition with tile wnlch was recor~ea FeDr1,1ary 2, Cou"IY Cle<k of Or.nge County on Santa Ana, CA 92701 on Oct lions or file wntlen ob'-· MacArt' Blva . •445, 1rv1ne, CA Clerk ot thl9 court lor petmlu lon 10 1983 u R11eorder • lnstrum.nt No Aug 8, 1"3 ,--5 983 g 3 I"-change Illa n1me lrom MICHAEL 83-063700 WILL SELL AT PUBLIC -• I . al . 0 a.m lions With lhe <."Oun befo 92;~15 sln•H 19 conducted by • ROBERT FELIX IO MICHAEL ROB· AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIO-PuDllM\ed o,.nge Coatt Delly IF YOU OBJECT to lhe the hearing Your appear-llml 1 rtnerahlp EAT VEGA. Now. theretore DER FOR CAS H, lew1u1money01 lh• P1101 Sept 1, 8, 16, 22, 19113 grantmg o( the peuuon. you ance may be in person or by At H Mozayen1. general part· IT is HEREBY ORDERED thll all Unltea S1a1es or a c11riier·a cnecll 5021·83 AP w•--...~ \should either appear al lh person• Interested In the ma1111 Clrawn on a ala ta or "auonal Deni<.• " ..... -o e your attorney ""' siatament was liled wtlh the eroreMld appear In Oepanmen1 3 of 11ate 01 federal credit unlOn, or • David, the ""bubble boy'' of Houston, lhearuig and st.ate you ob,JeC· IF YOU ARE A CREDI· c/Y C1e11c 01 o""ge County on 1he 1bo ..... nu11ed coun 1oc11ed a1 stale or •eaaral savings and loan lions or file wntten objec· TOR or a conllngent Credito 9 7 19113 700 CIYlc Can1er Drive Weal, Santa usoc1111on domiciled In thll t111e, '{)Ok ... w1·c 1full" a t lhe outs'de WO Id uons With lhe court before (th d ased f'l f224612 Ane. Calltornla 92701 on Octol>er all payal>le .. the time ol ..... Ill <> "' -' I r h . • 0 e ece • you must 1 •ubltened aanga Ca.a• Ot.lly 24, 19&3. 11 10.00 am . of HIG..day right, mle ana 1n1e1est neld Dy 11. ea hr 's n ('\'Cr cx p~ri e nt'ed. the earmg Your appear· your claim with the court o 01 Sept 1~2 29, 0c1 6. 19113 ana lh•n •nd lhere show c•uM. Trua1ee In 1ha1 real property ellu•I• Boy in bubble marks 12th year anre may be in person or by presenl 1t to the personal rep. 5145·83 they hive any, why said Appllcallon In said County and Sl11•. described your attorney. resentallve appointed by th for Change ot Nam• 1hould no1 be es 1011ows Loi 12 arid the North 17 IF YOU ~E A CREDI-court within four mon g'ff'1~ FURTHER ORDERED lhal a ~~~:~~~~~a~ 11;::,~~~ec~~:;, ~~ TOR or a contingent creditor from the date o! first issua( Ml.IC NOTICE copy ot Ihle Order to Show Cause be Book 160, page 28 4 27 ot Ml•· of the deceased, you must fife of letters as provided in ~· FICTITIOUa aualHEaa puDllahed onoe a weal!. ror lour (.C) cella"eous Maps In tne otlloe 01 the your claun with the court or tion 700 of the Probate f NAME t TATEMENT 1ucc1Hlve -11.a. In tlWI Orange County Recorder ot said Ora1>ge t lt th naJ . . ·~O Coaal Oally Pllol, a new1p1per ol County. presen . to e ~rso rep· o! Califonua. The ll . Tile lollowlng persori1 ere doing general clrculellon, puDllahed In Tna street add••H or other resent.auve appotnted by the filing claims will not l bulln9" as: Colla Mase, Calltornl11 comon designation 011111 real prop. court Within four months prior to four months !ot Lh Pl;ce~t~. ~~l~~O~~~ll~o~: .. ~~~ It IS FURTHER ORDERED lhlt erty here1naDov11 d11orlbed le from th e date o{ first issuance d r t.h h · >ll 92627 the cl.,k m•ll a copy ol 1hls Order purported to be. 2990 Grace Lane. HOUSTON (AP) A boy who has never been . ate 0 e eanng not 1111 than tan (10) day• prior to Co1ta Meaa, Calltornla o! letters as provided lil Sec-above. Cornell llleacu. 272<1 Mendoza Dr .. th• dll• 01 the hearing 89 atoruald The undersigned her111>y dltclllm• touched by a bare human hand or kissed by his lion 700 of the Probaie Code YOU MA y ~th Cost• MeM, CA. 921120 10 SUSAN FELi)(, 116 South Hickory all 111blll1y 1or any 1ncoHectnM• In mother celebrated his 12th birthday Wednesday m of California. T he time for fil k b th ,. If yo Nici! Stlng•clu. l376t Minor Or · Street Sania Ana, C•lltornla 92701. said street address 01 otlllf c.om- h I . . . e ept Y e COi Wetlmlnater. CA. 92683 Oiied' Saplember 7 !983 mon designation t e p astJc bubble that protects him from the f~ng clauns will not expire are interested in ~ estate, Thi• buelneu la conducted by: a FRANK DOMENICHi°NI Said sale wlll bl made w1thou1 potentially lethal, genn-filled world. pnor to four months from the you may serve ur1 Lhe ex-general partnership. JUDGE OF THE warranly,expraseorlmplled, regerd· The party for DaVld was small and pr· te h ' date of I.he hearing nouced ecu•~r or a ... -.... trator, o Cornell Ill~ SUPERIOR COURT Ing lllle. posseaa1on, or encum· tva -1S bo """ ...,"''tor the ex-Thie t1a1ernen1 wH tlled wHh th• PuDllthed Orange Coall D•llY Piiot Dranc;u, 10 aatl1ty Ille prlnclpal Dill· fanuly's 1denuty has been kept secret -but there a ve. upon the a ttonv County Clark 01 Orange County on Sept 15 22 28 Oct 5 1983 anoe ot the Note or olher obllg•tlon was a cake, set o n a pl.ate sterilized with a pa.racetic YOU MA y EXAMINE Lhe ecutor or admf'U'~tor, an S.p1 7. t983. . . . . . 51•6-83 aecured Dy Hid Deed of Truet with add solution and passed to David thro~gh an airlock. We kept by the court. ll you rue with the C('t wtlh proo P 1 0 Coa ~ Interest an<I o1h•r auma u provided are mterested in the est.tte, o( service, a 11tte;n requ~ P11o~~6. ;rn, 0c1 :~ 19:'a~ :~'~.'!~!u:,::c,~111~~~~ "He seems happy H e seems to accept his life," you may serve upon the ex· stating th.at ..,.. desires · • 5142·83 PtJBl.IC NOTICE such advance•, and plua 1-. said Susannah Moore Gnffin, spokeswoman for the ecutor or admiru.strator, or notice o! w-~ of an in-• f'ICTl'Tloua •ut1NEH chargH. and ellpan111 or th• Baylor College of Mechcine, which directs his care. upon the attorney for the ex· ventory aJVIPPrailemen t o NAM~ STATEMENT Trustee and ol 1he 1ru1ta crH ted Dy Doctors say Davtd IS the world's oldest survivor ecutor or a ... _,_,_tra•~r d or o f the peti PUBLIC NOTICE TIWI to11owtng pereon I• do!ng aald Deed ol Trull The tot•I amount W'lu.rwt """ • an estate asSf . bualnesa H ol said 0D119at1on. Including reuon· 1Jf severe combmed urunune deficiency, which Cile with I.he court wit.h proof uons or ,ounts menuon f'ICTmOUt au..,..H (A) SMOKEOUT SEMINARS, (Bl 1bly es11ma1ed '-·charges and••· involves the lac k of two types of white blood cells: o! service, a wntten request in Secllcr1200 and 1200.5 o NAME •TATEMIHT SMOKOUT SEMINARS, (Cl SMOKE penses 01 the Tru1tM, et the time ol T -cells. wh1ch ward off inff..'Ction , and B-ceUs, which stating that you ~esire spa;ial I.he~ ~bate Code. bu:~Ol!wlng pereon la do!ng ~~.,s&~:As~~e ~;fo. ~=~ ~:~~~~~b~~111on ol tn11 Notice, 11 produce antibodies against genns. no uce of the (tling of an in-Robt tra, :\ NUGGET COMPUTER. 3303 S.aeh, CA 92660 Dated. Sep1em1>e< 19, t883 The cond i tJon, dtSCOvered while David was in his ventory and appra.isement of tOU ~·dory Park alt, Ste Harbor BIVd . J-1. Co111 MH&. CA. Clark w Hty••. 1106 GOidenrod REAL ESTATE SECURITIES SEA· est.ate assets or of Lhe pell-3780 82826 Ave .. -Corona det M1r. CA. 112625 VICE, u TrutlM mothe r 's womb. makes every germ potentially lethal. tions 0 ..,,..,... ts •1 ed Lo {!ele1 CA to017 Richard w. Fott9', t82'4 Sam., Thi• bull-I• conducted by· an (S..I) o J, Morg.,, 111 PrMldent c., h ed f h · h R . r ._ .. .,un menuon I . • • Or .. Coa11 Meaa, CA 92820 lr\dMdu•I. 2020 North Bro11<1w1y. Sulle 206. '":"' t e consecrat . wa ers e r«:«'1ves w en a_ oman t.n Section 1200 and 1200.5 of P1 hed Orange C.oas Thia buslnna 11 conducted Dy an Cl1tk w. H•Y•• San1e Ana. C• 92706 l~tholJc: priest VlSllS to m.uuster communion are I the CalJfornia P~te Code. Oaf Pilot Sept. 15. 16, 22 ln<llvl<1u11. Thie atalement wH Hied wllh lh• Pu1>llsheCI 01ang111 Cout Dally .rradJared his books clothing and bedding are Cynthia K Conan. Ean 1983. 5 130·8 R. w Foete<. Jr, County Clark 01 Orange County on P1101 Sept 22. 211. Octot>e< 6, 1983 . ' . ' · ' _,, Thia 1111ement WH tiled With the Aug 26, 1983 5279-83 st.enlized wnh eth y lene 0>ude gas. . 10960 Wll1blre Blvd., Ste. County Clerk ot oranoe county on f22M531----------- Fro m 1ns1de a four-compartment bubble that 15%6 PUBllC NOTICE Sept. 7, 1983. PuDllahed Orange Cout oa11v MLIC NOTICE t.ak es up m ost of the liVlng room and dl.IUll' · g r oom Los Angeles, CA. 900%4 . f2:M417 P1101 Sept. 5. 1s, 22, ?II, 1983. -----------. N FICTmoua •u•••• Publlahed Orang• Coul Di lly •960·83 CPP-60t73 Davtd can watch movies on a video casset te recorder Referei:ice 0• 81618 HAMR aTATIMIHT Piiot Sept. 15. 22. 29. 0c1 11. 1983. HOTICI OF the fam1lv instaUed last year H e plays an electronic ID ~lublisPihl edSeOrange 6Coas2 r Tha tollowlng p«aona ara dol 5i<10·93 PUBLIC NOTICE TRUITEE't •ALE d. h ~..i • I . 1 . a1 y ot pt, 15, I . bualnesa., T.8. No. 1zetl game an as start"-! to p ay a ffill\Jature e ectroruc 1983 0 RANGE c 0 As T Hy p 1-------------1on Oclober 6. 1993 et 11 oo • m. p iano ~189.J NOTONICS, 350 E. 17th St .. sr MUC NOTICE FtCT1T1oua •ua1NU 8 FIRST AMERICAN TITLE IN· " C C 92 7 NAME ITATEMENT SURANCE COMPANY, a Calllornla Fo r his birthday he re<:e1ved "Jedi" toys 116· oata Masa A 112 FtCTITIOUt auatNIU8 The lollowlng p&raons ere doing c:orporallon as Trustee, or Sue· h ed aJ h ' Oi nlel l Glllll•nd, 9'400 Cl NAME tTATEMIHT bu11ne11 H cessor T1ustea or SuDetlluted • avori tes since e was treat Lo a spec1 s o wing of Ml.IC NOTICE _ Ct . Foun1a1ri Valley. CA 92708 Tile lo!la...lng pereon 11 doing PRECISION OEl AIL, 738 west Truslee. 011,.11 certain Deed 01 Trutt Return of tht-Jedt" at a local theater He also got YOU .... IH -f T 1,.!" Mery E GlllllanCI, 9400 CIOVI< Cl bualneu.. 171h SI. Costa Maaa. CA 112627 IKllCUled Dy GERRI A GIFFI, •nun· , d d . .. .. ,. ,,,..; AUL U Fountain Vali..,.. CA 92700 1,11 eo game t artrt ges, clectroruc: toys and adventure DEED Of TlllUtT DARO Thi• bu•lneu 1, conducll<I by J·COA ENTERPRISES. 298 E Stephen F Perkins. 310 7th St., married woman, and recorded Sep. l ks ~" G ff d 21 1tl0 UH~aa YOU T AC• 17th SI Coat• Meaa, CA 112827 Huntington Bffch, CA. 92648 \embe< 10, 1982 u ln11rumen1 No IOO 0oc'"rs hn dtn sal I _.... f D 'd ' TIOW TO ,...OTICT YOU' Of'· ~:~'1an:i:~ 'John Courdy. 183511 Temarln<S Frltr OMnltl, 310 71h St .. Hunt· 82·320250,ol0111cl1lRecordtofOr-tors a p annt."Y a ter avi s birth to ffl'A', l'T MAY aE tOt.O 1A ""9-Thie ll&ternent wa• filed witn 1 Fountain v111ey, CA 92708 lngton e.1cn, CA 92U8 1nge Coun1y, C1lllornle. 1nd trcUlSp lant bone marro w from his sister. but LIC tAL.E. If YOU N«C.~_ 11; County Clerlt o1 OTano-ColJnty Thlt 1>u1IMS1 I• conducted by an Buck L Perkin•. 308 7th St . Hunt-purauenl 10 1hat cenelri Noll<:• ot Pi.A.NATION cw THI N'~ ..,..-ln<11vldu1I lngton S.llCh. CA 925"8 Default tl'lereunder recorded June 1. Jband oned the idea when they found the blood types THE "'OCHOtNG Ati,.IT YOU. Aug 211· 111113 Jonn Courdy Thia bullnes• I• conducted Dy • 1983 as tn1trum.nt No 113·2291113, were incompatible Bone marro w produces YOU SHOULD COHT#f A LAW· PuDlllhed Oranoe Coaat Del nus 11a1emen1 wu fll1<1 with 111e ~neraJ ~rtneuhlp 01 Ottlcial Aecord1 ot Mid County, h YER County Clerk ot Orange County on S1ephen F PMklna wlll under and l)l.lrtu•nt 10 Mid OMd lymp ~:ytes, which are used l1l the production of NOTICE cw TR~l't tAU Piiot Sec>t 1• 8• 15· 22• 11183 5001. Sec>t 18. 19113 Thia 1t11ernen1 wH 1111<1 with the ot Trust Miii 11 publlc 1uC1lon for tnllbod1es T.8. No. l'22NOI nty Clerk 01 Orange County Ofl cash. 1aw1ul mon.y ol the unit.ct Since then ex~pt for the fdlenng of the air in NOTICE IS HERE GIVEN. lll•I Pul>lllhed Orange Coul Dally Aug 22. 19113 Stales of Am4111()9.. caahler'achecll ' on Wednftdly Oct,., 12. 19113, 111------------1 Pllol Seo! 22. 28, OC1 &, 13, 19'3. f22MJ7 payeDle to Hid TruatM drawn on I l\is bubble a nd the constant protection from the dirty 10 oo e.m. of Mld rt. In the room PUBllC NOTICE 5267·113 Publl111ed Orange Coast Dally 11111 or na11on11 b1nk, 1 t1e1e or >Utslde w orld . David has received no treatment for s.':.:h:~~1~:~·~~ NOTICE OF DEATH OF Pilot Sept 1· 8· 15· 22• 19835014.~ :~:::!~~.u.':;~.~!.:i':ii: h is condJtion . TATE SECUR'~ SERVICE. Rud•ll w. HobbndAND OF PtJBl.IC NOTICE domlc:lled In thl• 1111e, •t the main H e is momtore<l for two w eeks a year. one each Ul located 11 2021' Nor1h Broedway, PETITION TO ADM.INIS-PUBllC NOTICE entrance 10 Flrtt Am.,ican Tltla In· J d Dece be h T Child , H · tal Sult• 206 In 111 Cit)' ot Sant• Ana, au..llllK>lll COUln' CH' THI tutan<le Compen>' IOc:ated 11 1 1.c unean m r,atl e exas rens osp1 County ot 0cioe. ttate of Call·TERESTATEN0.A·lltt08 tTATECH'CAl.lf<>NelA flCTmouaaUllHHt EutF1t1hStree1,1n111eC11yo1S1nta in Houston Two rooms are reserved for him at th e lorn11. REAL .STATE SECURITIES To all heirs, benefkiaries, '°"THI COUNTY M HA• aTATEMINT Ana, Clllltornla, •II !hit right. lltle hospital the year around SERVICE,• alllornla Corpor•tlon. redltors ind contingent ~ The totlowlng peraona •r• do!O( and 1n1., .. 1 c;onveyed lo and now u duty apodted TruatM under and In the mitt., ot the ac>ptleatlon ot· butlneet u · held by It under Hid OMd ot Tru111n ------------1r.:;r111an1 fohe pow« of Nie con-reditora of Randall w. Hub-MICHAEL ROBERT FELIX lor INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENl lh• propertlt •lluated In H id County DEAJH NDTICIS MLIC NOTICE erred In t~I o.rtaJn Deed of Tru11 bard and persons who may g~g'. ~~e4e ONSULTANTS co .. 500 s Mair ·~AS~~t:L ~~~~~vlded l/lOth I 1-----;..;...;;.;..;....;.;.~.;;.;;;---1•xecuted oy JOSEPH STEVEN be otherwise inten!Sted in t .. •Oi.L. Orange, CA. 92808 I t I d L t 1 r T N FICTITIOUt aUllHEH COHEN NO LOUISE HOLDORF d . OrOet to Show CeuN RE: Change Of Contut1inla ror lnlerntlloni t In-n er1111 n en lo o O '~ o. ------------1 NAME tTATl!MEHT COHEN tlutben<I llld wilt, r .. the will an /or estate. Name tl'Ml'l11 Ent.,prlMI Inc., 19611 10573 H per map recorded In Book P ETERS Th• following peraon ,, dotng corded·hvernbw 5. 1980. In Book A petlllon hu been filed WHEREAS. MICHAEL ROBERT lel'rl Seco lrvln• CA. 92715 '4116, Paget 31 an<I 32 of Ml .. bualnesa u · 13822 I OfllclaJ Rec;orde of Mid by S andra y 0Wli ln the Su-FELIX hu nled hi• Pelt11on with the Thi• 0011,;... 1,' COflducied b 1 cellaneoue Mapa, 'l)SlAH PETERS, residenl I HOLL V'S COLOR. 2009 Allao, Coi.m11•t P909 1482 Recordet't In· rior Court of n--... e Coun· Clenl ot Ihle COi.in tor permt..ion to orporatlon y. EXCEPTING THEREFROM Un1t1 1 1{ Costa Mesa Sll\ce 19.il. c0119 MeN. CA. 921127 11rufT1'1 No. ee1e, by~ ot • ,1_,, ...,tha .... t'6 San ... -ch•nge hi• name rrom MICHAEL Lung.o.n' Ll•w PrMldenl through 10 lnelullv•. u thOwn on • .assed ., _ Holly A Woot.,a 2009 Alla<> bteel or d411aull In peyment of I*'· Y reques~'6 o..u" ROBERT FELIX to MICHAEL ROB-Thia ttllement' wu nled with tile Condominium Plan recorded In I away on =-ptember Coate Mt1M. CA. 1121127 • formnce ot the ol>llglllon• eecured Young be appointed u per-EAT VEGA, N-. 111etetore ounty Clerk of Or1n~ County on Book 13687. P•~ 426. of OtflClal 1!-1. 1983 H e was born an ThlaDullneaeleconducledDy.•" hef'OY,lnctlldlnQthetbtMdlord• naJ -p-n'"U·v· •~ad-ITIS HEREBYORDEREOthalall ,.,,, 29 lllll3 Record• P ,.._ --· , .. 1. ~Ice of ~ .. r9COl'Cltd • "' • ~ -"' ..... .,_IOf\I lntet•teo In ,...... --11., -· • -.OA PARCEL 2 Unit 6, u llhOWTI on t>lers \.Alllyon . Ca He LS 1nd1v;au11 -;:· 5 1,., .. 3 __::: ... _. 1 1 • ter Lheest.ate of Randall ,....... ... .... .._ sun.,ved b\. his wife Mary Holly A Woo1ara '~' ' .... u .._.,.. • n• ru H bard •lor9Mld ~In Oec>ertmenl 3 of Publlllhed Oranoe Cout O•ll) h• Condominium Plan llhOWn In . . Th11 •taternenl WH n·-... with t"-mnt No. 83·143016, WILL SELL AT . ub (under the lnde-1he ·~11tled COUt1 IOclttd •I llol "-1 1 8 15 22 1983 Parcel t •bove daughter Joan (Eugene) County Clerlt ot 0 ,.nneCounty;; IOBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGH· ndent Attmlnl••,..,.tion of 700 CMc Cent., Or1W WW1. Sant• ..,_ ' · ' · 5ooo-eJ Neme and addraae ot th• L th { Costa M ,.._ 6 .. T BtOOER FOR CASH lewtut -.... "T" -Ana. Ctllfornta 9270 I on Oelober blnellclary II WflOM reqUMt tile u ~ h Id esa, ...... d ' S Aug 29 1983 1"2DM&""'" ot the United StalM. or • tales Act). The petition ii 2.c. 1983, el 10'00 A.M .. of Mid dllY Mia 11 being condUC1ed. BALALIS & gr 8 n c 1 r e n an :. -,:;:,;.~1er·e c:heck drewn on • •t•I• or t for hearing in Dept. N o 3 and then and lhete lhow _,.., It f'tll.IC NOTICE PIG NERI DEFINED BENEFIT PLAN, g:reat·granch1ldem Grave· Pll~~~~ r,r~~:2. ~~:;1 Dalt n1t1onal benk .• •t•I• °' r.defal t 700 Civic Center Dr .. we:..t. they hew ll'ly, why Mid ~Ion CIO Thi Ballll• CorPO<•tlon, 3'471 side .serv1ces wtU be hPld on 4811µ] credit union. or • elate or ted«el ta Ana CA 9270J on Oct f« Change ol N-lhould not be flCTTTIOUt ...,..... \/1• Udo, Sult• 207 ' Oll'IC11on• 10 Th rsd Se be 22 .-v1ng1 and loan UIC>Cietlon doml • • ,,..enttd HA• tTATEMIHT the ebove p1099(1y may be obtained 198u3 ay l JOpPlMem r • ~I«! In fhl1111te, aff ~yeble at t~ 12, 1983, at g:30 A.M. "01T IS FURTHER ORDERED 111&11 Tile follOWlng penon le Clolng 11)1 requ.allng Mme tn writing trom at a t the ~lme 01 ..... all rlQnt, tl!le and IF YOU OBJECT to I.he copy of thlt OfO. to Show cauae be "'-' H lne beneflclery w1thln 10 d•Yf from II arbor Lawn-Memorial PUBllC NOTICE ~n1.,n1heldby11, u frutt•, In that anting of the petition you publllhed onoe a....-tor tour (4) SUPPLEMENTAL BENEFITS AS-the tlrtt publleallon of thl• notice C hapel lntennenl serv1ces I real property llltuata In Mid County hould either ap.-ar ai Lhe ~ WM111, In 1ne O.ange OCIATION. 3218 Mlnneeot• Ave.. • Newport Baach. C•IUornla ed I u end Slit•. delcrlbed .. lollowe. A ..... Coaal Olllty PllOI .• ~ 01 ta MM•, CA 112e2e 1121163. Attention: Sh.,rla D•vl• Said imm tad~ Y fho odwing Serr "'~l'.!~0~!a~~'::r laaseho!d Mt•!• In arid to Loi 11 of earing ~d state you objec· generel cirCllletlon. pvbfi.tled In George H Winn, 32111 MlnnMOte aale wlll bl m•d• wlthoot covenant vices un er I e 1rect1on o Thi toliowing per..on 1, doing T•lci 5592. u per map recorded In ons or file written objec-COit• MM&. CaNlornla. ,,. , Cotta M .... CA. 92&26 or w1tranty, expr ... or Implied, H lldl hor Lawn·Mnunl Olive bullnflla aa BOOll 327. PllQff 24 to 28 lnclullw ons wllh Lhe court before IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Thi• bu•I-ltcon<lucied by 111 10 1111•, potMttlon or encumbranc. ~•Jrtuary of Co<ltA Mesa. PLUM INTERIORS. 213.,. Koron, 0c-t11Mhel~l~ty ,..!~dape., 0. 11n_~';"'d couoffleen e hearing Your appear-the c:lark mall •copy or thla Ord., ndlvldvet 10 aa1111y the unpaid b1l1nce due on '>40·555<1 Newport Beach. CA 9266' . c~n --• • not lelll than ten (10) d1ys prior to Geor~ H. Wlnea lhe note or notH MCUred by Mid Merie"e Ellzabelh wn~110n, 213 ty may be in penon or by the d•t• ot the hearing•• 1tortta1d Thia 1talemenl wu llled with the Deed ol T•ust. to wit: $25.48 1 59. :-;;••••••••-=-.;.=...,;.--;;;;:::--Via l<oro" Newport .-ach, Ce. The 11rMt •ddr••• or othar our attorney to SUSAN FELIX, 115 South Hickory County Cieri< ot o,.nge County on plus the folla...lng ullmettld coete, 1920113 comon deelgnatlon of the ru l proe>-IF YOU ARE A C REDI-SlrMt, Sarita Ana, Clllllornla 82701. Aug 211, 11183 expenMa and advenGH at tM time PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARI< Cemelary Mortuary Chapel·Crematory 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach 644·2700 McCORMICK MORTUARY 1795 Laguna Canyon Rd Laguna Beacn Ca 9265 t 494 94 15 HAASOR LAWN·M'T Ol.IVl Monuary • Ceme1ery C rematory 1&25 Gisler Ave Cosla Mesa s.co 5554 PIERCE IAOTHEAI 9Et.L BROADWAY MORTUARY MO Broadwey Coate Mes& 642·9150 BALTZ 9E'AQIRON SMITH & TUTHILL WHTCL"F CHAPIL 427 E 17th $1 COll8 MMt 6-46 9371 A Thia b1it1nese 11 condlCted by: 10 erty harelnabova dHcrlbed Ii R 011ed: Septembw 7. 1083 f2:UN1 or lhe lnlllal publlcallon or lhl• No-lndl~lduel pu•ported to be: 38 Almond T1N or a contingent creditor FRANK. OOMENICHINI Publlehed Orange Co111 Ot ll) uce ol Sele. $7,752.•5 · I Marlene Wllklnaon Lana, lrvlne. C111tornla. pf the deceased, you mu.st file Judge of the Piiot Sept 1, 8, 1~. 22, 19113. NOTICE TO Trils staiement wfl 1118<1 With the The under1lg!MKI hereby dltclalma iyour claim with the court or Supe<lor Court •9119-83 PlllONflTY OWNllll ' Counly Cl•rk 0; 0,,,~ county on all llablllty for •ny lncorreotnH• In I th nal ffl.AHZ I!. MILLllll YOU AflE IN Dl,AUL T UHDlft A Aug 29 1983 Hid 11rMt addreu or other com· prewnt t LO e pel'IO rep-Anorney 11 Lew Mt.IC NOTICE DEED Of ,.._UST OATID hcl'-t· · FZ2*3 mon detlgnatlon resentaUve appoln\ed by the tlO w .. 1 '"9111-ttl tlteet ber t , ttu.. UHLIH YOU 'l'AKI Publlahed Orar;e Coest Oslty Slid aale will bl mica wt1nou1 court within four months ,...,. c f'ICTITIOU• IUtlNI•• ACTION TO ltlllOTl!CT YOUR Piiot Sep1 I, 8, ti. 22. 1983 w1rranty.•~pr ... orlmpli.<1.regard· from lhedateof first t..ua.noe I.ii• Ana, CA. mot NAMI 8TATIMIHT ltlll~lllTY, IT MAY •• •Ot.OAT A •ees-83 Ing 11111, pot-Ion. or eneum• (714) f'n.OM1 Thti rotlowlng pertona ire doing "'9LIC SAi.i . If YOU NllD AN btBn<lel, to Ntl•ty the prlncl~I bel> of letters a.a provided ln Sec-Publl•Md Orange CoH I Delly Piiot bu•ln..... EXPLANATION cw THI HA""" •nee of llWI Not•°' other Obl~atlon tlon 700 of the Probate C'.ode Sept. 8, IS, 22, 21, 1983. UNBE~AABL y GOOD 20892 cw Tita '9tOCllOIMO AQAIMtT i------------111Cured by Mid Deed or True ' with of California The time for 5080.-83 Hunt., Lane. Huntington eMen. CA LY~~~Fl8HOULRST .. f!ECRONT1c•NACTITTlAE f>l81C NOTICE lnter111t and other 1<1m1 u ptovl<*I '--• •-ic NOTM'l' 92&40 ..... ''"'"· ..... .. 1------------1111e<ttln, plul 1ctvaneee, II 1ny. uncal filing clalrm _.. not expire ,-.-. ,._ Nancy T. Cfowt.y, 20892 Hunter INSUAANCE COMPANY, • CaJl- ,ICTl'IOUt •UllHlta the t.,m1 th91'eof and lnl.,•t on prior LO four months from Lhe Lane. Kuntlnglon Belch CA 920o48 IO<'nla corpo,.110n • Jte/lnlne L NUE tTATEMl!NT auc;h advt nc:ee, and plu• ,..,, date of the hearing not!~ ~..,. Rita A Ktnln, 111&4 SI~. ~~ro ~'f~r! ~83 bu::':.,~o1:-1ng peraon le doing ~~=f:ano ei::: ,i!•r~z~,•:,.::«fti;; a bove. The County S.nllaUon Otttrlcrt• ol Foun1.in lla-.Y. CA 82708 ~ L ~wrte , IKE & C\JOATT PUBLICATIONS, Mid o..o of Trutt ri,. tottl amovnt YOU MAY EXAMINE the Or1ng9 County. Cellomla. wlll r• Thia blltlnM 11 cond~ed by: • Allttlortnd °"'"' 138 I La .»lie Clr. H1,1nllng1on S.IOh, al Mid obllgetlon, lnclucllnO rMeOli· lie kept by Lhe court. If you Ctlve ...itd bide unlit Mondey, Ooo ~~C:::· U4 IMI '"'fl ,.,... CA 1128-41 tbly .. tlmated '-· Chtrgea and ••• I , _ _._... I th --•-lobet 3, 1113 at 11.00 A.M. IMdt Tllll 1 t. I wU m.d wtth th41 lafttll AM. CA. mt1 Wllllar'I o H•MI)'. 11391 1..1 Jot,. pen-ol the TruttM, 11 lhe lime at re """'.,.~ _n e .,._..,, mutl t>e reoe111ec1 II lht Oltt~· • • 9'Nll (7t4) ...,..-,, Cir . ~f"' 1flngton Beech. CA 92&48 Initial publication of tlllt N011oe, I• u may terve upon the ~-AdmlnletretM ot11o1e by the date Co\lnl)' Clttll of Ofanot COunty on ~blllhed Orange Cout O.llY Piiot Thie )\j.1,,..,. 11 cono~ed by· an 152,089 &7 tcr or 1dmln.lnratcr, or :!~1n:n_ ~ ':! '~ AuQ. 18• 1"3 '1:1:1Gtt Sep1. 15, 22, 29, 11113. &iM43 lndhl1~•' Oiied: $4'P19'1\btr tO, 1tl3 pon Lhe attorn~ for the ex-~ _ ... .:.:.:!...___. ... 1 .... ...-..... .... ...._._... "'-•-eo.t ..._..... .. -.IC N0T1C[ Wrr 0 H1rvey REAL ESTA TE SECU~ITIES SEA· • .., -""_, •• ·-"''""'" rv.,....,,_ "' .... "'•"7 ,-.-. Tttt lllllmenl ..... ni.o with the VICE. u TN•I.. tor or ad trator, and l)lt1rlell, 10S« Elle AYWtllt, Ptlot Sept. I, 8, l!I, 22, 1983. Coo~t~ Cl¥1C of 0t11noe CO\lnty on (S.al) O.J Morger, Ill Prll9id9nl Ue wi\h \he COW1 with proof F'ount&it' V*t. CtilfOl'nl9, tot the SOI l-83 ITATWWNT Of' Wl'THD9'AWAL IS~ 11183 ,22MM s~!° .. ~:.1~.~»roe•Y. Suite 206• f ~ .. ~~~ a wrtd~-~~! 1~ OR SPECIAL EMULSION Nil.IC N011CC '=..!::.an:::= OuDlltht<I O,.nge CoHt OaJly PuOlltl'lecl Ortnot CoMt Dally ta-,. lnat you """"'"' ·~ POLYILEOTAOL YTE CHIMIOAL '1CTTTIOUI .,._ .. ltAm ~101 Seol 16, 22. 28, OC1 e1 1983. Piiot Sepl 22. 29. OC1. e, 1H3. ollce of the flUJ\C of an in• Ft.OCULENT SPECIFICATION PK:n110UI 9U .... H The fOllOwlng pe,.on nu :11'43-1!3 a21e.93 entory and appl'alaenwnt o f P-oeo NA.Ml ITATIMlt(T wtlhdrewn •• • generlll pel'1ner ,,om --------tau-ueeta or of the peu-2. ONI (1) f'IHR0l.A88 8TOAAQI The tollowlng per'IOn .. dOlnQ the partMl'lhlp operating under the All new bu.lne••es ualng a llC1ltlou1 TANK(MlltlmuMCepaclfY OI 19.000 bu•lnMtU ftotlllouabulllnfMNllMOIHOlLY'S ..... Ont or lltt'Ounta mentioned Q4111on•) 8P!C1'1CATION NO. !·13t KAZ rec. 38H7 91reh St .. 8ul1• BUOOA, 2009 AlltO, Coe•• M .... n a me, must by law be regl1tered with n Seel.ion 1200 and 1200.5 of Sida MUet be 111bmlttect on the eoe. ~ ee.c11, CA 112680 c A. 92827 the County Clerk. The DAILY PILOT he Callfomh• Probate Code. IOtM aupp11ec1 by the Dl•trtcrt• In ao-Jevld K..-nltn. 2tOO Petll ~ Th• 11e1111ou1 b1,1e1ne11 ri•m• Id h ' d 'Ill I n·aua Sw11el Epetela cordanoe wllh •II f)t&Mlona ot the l>Of1 #Hl . ~ &Hen, CA. 11t11e1Mn1 tor the partntlr'INp -prov e1 t e orm1 •n ng 1erv cea ~ ll)eCltlcattoM. e2te0 11i.csonJu1y1, tH31ntheOouniyot for our i;ustomers. II you are itartlnn 1 aotla1to• Ex~Un Park SpeGlbttone. bid 1>1en11.1 1nc1 Thll bull,_. 11 oonoue1ed by: an Or•not • a1t Bldg. N J7f turtn. lnlOfmetton mrt I» otltlllMCt lndMclual. FUii Nem .. nd .4d<lr ... ot lht Ptr· new bu1lne11 call the DAILY PILOT tor •·U•~to Btac .. c• ..... 7 at Ille •boW add-: leleOflOM Jtvect '"'*'"ltfl •on Wltlldrawln11· Holly Ann -• ... "· • .. 540·2'10Ofte2-2411. Tnla '"'"'*" .... l1ttd Wllh IM WOOttl't, 2009 Allee>. Ooeta M9ee, lnformalion and form• 646-4321 EXT. J» 41-lt t /affect Hoftl'l'lan Count)' ci...11 Of Orenoe County on CA. Cl:l027 P\ibUthed Oranae Cout ~OClll'emttlt Aug. 12, 1913. Holly Ann Woot«I Daily Pilat Uy Pilot Sept. 1~. 1e. 22. Publlehed Orenoe Coal• Oeil'f Pllol PublllheO 0r.,. CoMt ~ PuOllll'ltd Otenge Cceet '-= 1'183. ~1 g()...S3 a.c>t 22, 1"3 62U-13 ltltot hcll I, •. 16. 22. 1"36012-13 PllOI 5->t 1, •. 15. u . 1W•H3-13 . • l't&.IC NOTICE f'ICTmOUa au ... u NAME ITATIMINT The tolla...lng pereon1 ara dotng Duslneas H . PATIO CAFE, 1900 WMt Balboa Blvd N-port Beach, C1 82M3 Snanll S Oewen. 253 Camlrio At· royo. Anaheim, CA 92807 Renu Dewan, 2.53 Camino A,,oyo, An1he!m, CA. 82807 Anand S Dewan, 253 Camino Al· royo, An1h94m, CA. 92807 Nlvedlt• O.W111, 253 Camino Ar· royo. An•netm. CA 92807 Sh•ntl S Dewan Thia tlllement wu llled with lhe County Clark or Orange Collnty on Sept 1, 1983. ~ Published Orange Cout OallY P1101 Sept 8, 1s. 22. 29, 1883. 6071..a3 f'tll.IC NOTICC au""'°" COUln' Of' CAL1'"0NllA. COUNTY Of' OttANOI In the M11t« ol the Apptleatlon of GRANT BLAISE 0£V1TT BY Hit P11ent1 SAM DEVITT Ind M~AION GRACE DEVITT lor Chenge ot Name No A 11117711 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME (Ste. 00&4) The Applleatlon of Grant BllllM Oevlll by hit nelural perent1, Sem Oev111 and Manon or-OeYtn, tcw Cf\ange OI "llme, having beer'l nied In court. and 11 ~ ll'om Mid 1pplleatlon that Granl 8lalM Oelltn, by hie patenll, hU Iii.cl an eppll- Cl llon propoalng 1ha1 Illa name bt Chino.cl 10 BlllM Oelilt1. NOW, THEREFORE. IT IS HERE· BY ORDERED ANO DIRECTED, ttlal all peraone lnt.,•ted In the m1ttet aloreNld appe1r ti.for• thle court In Department No 3 on the 17th drf oi October, 19&\l •• 10:00 o'oloclt A.M .. ot llld day to II/low cauM wtiy llUCh appllcallon lor c:n~ ot 1'1111'111 ehould nol be granted IT IS FURTHER OAOEAEO thal I COC>Y ot Ihle ord., to lhOw cauae be publlehed In the Orange Cout Oelt)o Piiot, 1 newepacier ol ~Ill circulallon, i><lnttd tn MIO County, al 1eut ~ a ..-..II for '°"' c:Ot1-aecut1v• WMll• prior lo Ille dey ot said hearing Oeled Augutt, 31, 1913 Fran~ OomenlcNnl Judge of the Superior Coun Publlllhed Orange C0Mt Delly Piiot Se9t 8. 15. 22. 21. 19'3 ~"'°" COUftT Of' CAL•OMU. 505~ COUNTY M ORANGll In the Matt., of the Applleatlon ol MARY LOUISE FILLBACH lor Ch&f199 of N-No. A 11978'6 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHA.NOE OF NAME (Seo. 9064) Mary LoulM FlltbKtl !let Ned & pell11on In thl• oour1 tor 1n order •flowing pelltlonef to ollanoe hle/'- n • m • lrom MARY 1.0UISE Flt.LBACH to JANA LOUISE FILLBACH. IT IS HEREBY ORDERED tllalt all peraon• lnt.,..,ed In 11't matt9t a!or...t<l IPPMf bef0te 1hll oourt In Oep1111mtnt No. 3 •I 700 Cf* Cent., Ori... W•1. Santa Ana. 0... fornla. on~~ 17. 1"3. 1t 10:00 o· <ilodc AM . Md 1'*1 end ttlW9 llhOW C8UM. II 111Y tMy IMlw , Wf!1 Mid petition tor chefl09 at name lhould not .,. grented. IT IS FURTHER ordered tllet • copy of 1111t Otdtt fo thow -119 publlahed In ,,,. Ofange COMt o.lr l>llot, • newapaper of ~II ctrcvttllon, pvblllfled In Ihle county •I teul onoe • ...-tor tour _. NCUllve .,._,prior to the day at Mkt heerlng 0.ttd Sept. 1, 11183 FRANK OOMENICHINI Judoe of the Superior C0\111 Publl•lled Orange Coaat Dally PtlOI Sept. 8, 15. 22. 29, 1983. 5091..-3 f'tll.IC NOT1C£ aunNOR COUltT M TI4t tTATI Of' CALl'ONllA FO.. THI COUNTY M OM.Mom In th• Mitt., ol tM Apptloetton at STEPHANIE MICHELL PAUGH. a Minor. by MARILYN A. PAUGH. her parent. !Of Change of N-. CASE NO. A I IN 17 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE F09' CHANGE OF NAME WHEREAS MARILYN A PAUQ", Pttl1~. 11 mothet at ~. STEPHANIE M!OiELLI PAUGH, a peraon un<ler 11 ~ at .. ._ llled • petition With tM C..-of 1N1 eoun f0t .,, °'w dWICllno ~ cant• n•lftl trom SfElrHANll MICHELLE PAUGH to 8T£PHAHIA MICHELLI COUY. IT IS OAOEMO 1"91 .. ,._. lnt-ttdln tM ~,,_ tet ICIPMf ~-~ .. ~ AM I Ol'I OCIObtt 17, 1M3, In "" ~room ~ ~ a It ()t. •f199 County ~ c-t. 100 CMc e.nt• DrMI w.t, S.... Mia. Cllllfomle 82701, end.,_~ II any, why Ille petition rot ~ GI name lltlould ~ M ~ IT 18 FVlllTHEA OAOl!AID tlllll t OOC>Y Of.IN• Order to lhow 0... M pvbitaMd In Ille Diiiy fttlot. I .,.... paper of generel otrwletlon .,,..,... In Or-1ng9 County, Cellfotnll on09 • ..... '°' f()Uf lllOOMtlW ..... Pftof to IM dllt Ml IOt '*"1nO o4 tM petition. DA TIDl hot. 2, Itel FRANK OOMl NICHINI Judge ot tfle l llt*IOt Cowt IAMIYt.•llnl .IAC09Y I ...,_.'-AW OfiPtCll •-.....iv-..1111111 ...,_=CA.-., ~ii.: 0r-. ~ ~ ,_ hot •. I,, 21. lt, 1113. ~ fltBLIC NOTICE f'tCTmOUI IUl*ltl NAMelTATl•Nf TM lollowtnQ l*'90l\I er• dOlng t>ual-u PHASE 2 PLASTICS, 2045 1 KalY· ~row Ln , Huntington a..cn, CA 8:f648 ZIP-Em E*:ttonlet C0<p . 20451 l( .. vtng1ov1 l.n .. Huntington 8Mc;tt. CA. 02~8 Thi• bualnNI la conducted by • oorpc>11t1on Edwerd R. RoQ«, PrMld.01 Thlt llat-l wu Ill.cl with tile County Cl«lo. ol Ore.no-County on a.pi 15, 1983 f'22S208 Put>lltlled Orange Coa1t Dally PllOI Sept. 22. 29. Oct 8. 13. 1983 525&-83 Plml.IC NOTICE ftCTITIOUI aualNIH MAMIE aTATltffNT TM lollowtng pertont at• doing butl""9 ••: MAPLE VILLAS. L TO . 881 OoV41r Orlva. Suite 30. N-port 8Mch. CA. 926&3 Terence M O'Shet. 34802 Ci mino Caplatrano, C1p111rano B .. ch, CA 92624 Thlt t>ullness la conducted by. 1 llmltad pann11sl'llp Terence M O'Sllee Thia 1t1tement was Ill.cl with tilt County Cieri\ ol Orange Coun1y Of Sept 15. 1983. F22522f Publltl'led Orenga CoHI Di ii\ PllOI Sepl 22 29 Oct 8. 13, 1983 5251·8~ Plml.IC NOTICE f'ICm1ous 8USIHIH NAMI STATUIENT The I011ow1ng pert0n la dOln{ bualneasa1 LIBERTY UNLIMITED, 275 Low., Clltl Drive. Leguna Beach, CA 92851 Michael Henry McDonald, 27! Lo-Clltl Drive. Laguna Beach CA 92651 Tnlt buameu 11 conduCled by; ar lndMduat. MlchMI Henry McOoneld Thi• 1111emen1 WU 111.0 wlll'I tt'li County Clerk or Orenoe County or Sept HI. 1983. f'22521t Publlahed Orange Cou1 Dall) PllOI $41pt 22, 29, Oc1 8, 13, 1983 5258-8~ Plml.IC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUa IUl'NIH NAME 8TAT£MINT TM lollOWlng p41r1or11 er• doing t>ullnMaN HILENE l TO., 845 Vlc:10tl1 •8, COiie Meta, CA. 92827 Alr.n. Merle Wrigl'll, 845 Vlet0<11 •8. Cotti MeN, CA. 92827 Hiland Wilton St'laddock. 645 VIC· tori• #8, Cotta M .... CA. 92627 Thi• bullMSI Is conduote<I by. ' gan«ll par1ne1sl'llp. Hiiand Shaddock Thia atll-1 waa nt9d Wtlh 1119 County Cl«k ol Orang41 County on a.pi 14, 1983. f'Z21111 Publltllad Orang41 Cout Dally Piiot Sept 22. 29. Oe1. 8, 13, 1983. 5265-83 f'l&.JC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS IU .... H NAMI STATl*NT TM IOllowlng Pat.On It dOlng bualnMaN- TAIAO ENTEAPAISES, 19782 MacAr11'1U< Blvd • Sul1• 300, lrvlM , CA. 92715 Roban L. Conn aka Rot>t>y Conn, 11100 Dorothy LAM, N-s>Ott a..cn, CA. 92&60 Thi• t>ull,_. I• conducted by an tndlvl<lu•I Rob«1 l Conn Thlt llal-t WU 1119<1 with 11'141 County C141fk 01 Orange County on s.p1 I, 1983 f224229 Publltnld Ofang. CoNt 0.Jly Piiot Sept 2.2. 29 Oct 8, 13, 1983 5284-83 Ml.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUS •UttNett NAME ITATIMINT The fottowtng persona are doing t>ulll"IMIU TREEHOUSE NAIL BOUTIQUE. 3810 S. Plaza Drive • 8-14, Santa Ana. CA. 9270. o.borall Lynn Laa. 838 Wl'lltnay wsy. Col1a M .... CA 82928 K•tl'l'-1 Barbare AgM, 22&, AoN-2, Long Buen, CA. 90806 Thll bullnMa 11 c:ondUC19d by 1 ~al partnarahlp. Kllh'-1 B. Agee Thie 1111-1 WM nl9d with tn. County C141fl\ of Orenga County on Avg 22. 1983 l"22MIO PublllMd Orange Coul Ollty PllOI a.pt 22, 29. Oc1 8 13. 1983 5270-83 Plml.IC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS IUSINIH NAME t'f A TIMINT TM lollOWlng P«IOO le dotng bull,_ ... INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS DE· VELOPMENT ASSOCIATES. 3151 Altwey A.,.., Suite H3. Coet1 M .... CA 82828 Rk:hard 0 Pl'lllllpt, 131 EIMll ld Bay, Lagun• Beech. Cit.. 92851 "Thia bualneu la condue1e<1 t>y; 1n lndl\'ldull A. D Phllllp1 Thia ltllemenl WU Ill.cl With IM County Clark ol Orange County on Avg 23, 1983 F~ PublftheO Orange Coaat Dally PllOt Sap1 22. 29. Oc1 8. 13. 1983 5211·83 PtllllC NOTICE HClltOW NO. •tOIDM NOTICI TO CRIOITOH CW •UUC ntANantl Notice It Mr•t>y glY9n to cradltor"t ot Iha wllhln nem9d par11M that • bull< tr11111., 111n1....a.o to b9 mld9 on P4lfWf'I prOl)ll'ty 1141f .. n•tt« ~ -ICtlo.o TM natl'IM(•l and bull,.,... ld- dr-ol IM tn111\ded trantl.,or(•I a1e. PLANT FRIENDS. INC , a Cell· l ornt1 Corporetlon. 222 WHI Wlltot\, Coate M•"· C1lltornl1 02627 DOINO BUSINESS AS. PLANT FRIENDS and PLANT FRIENDS, INC ~~~e<ld­of IM Int trentf9raa(I) er•: PL.ANTIQUE, INC ... Callfornl• Cof. poretlon, 2 15 No. EucalYPIUI AV· .,_, tl'IQl9wood, Cellforn1'1 8030 I T1wll tfie PfOC>ll'tY l*'ltn91'1t l'ler-.o le dMCflbed In ~II II: Mll«llll. ~. metcfl•ndlM. tqvlpmanl, end II roe.ltd II 222 Wl8t Wlllon. Coeta Mw9, Cellfornla. Thal .id D1141l lran.f41f le Int~ to be con.umma19d ••IM OfftO* of .,.,.,,_ Tltll Corc>otllton. 3920 WWW. llVd , Lot ~. Callf 90010, on OI •IW <>cioo.r 1, 1H3 I.Ml 011• fOt fM"'CI CUllma In 11111 .aorow 11 Ociot>w6. 1813 lo la.r .. 11 known to Mid ln- 1.nd41d T18nlferee(e) laid lnt911ded TranatetOl(I) UMd the fOllOwll\O e<I• dltlOl\al l>\lllntel nltl'lle an<f 96-~ tllttl'lln l1l4t lhrM .,._. IMI l)Mt: (" "none'', to 11a11) HONE l»LAH'rlOU£. INC 9Y Lii DNcoll Wallllt'lf\Oft .. ~tlldent ly; MatVltl WlltLetll'tolf9t Vb Praaldent Intended T,_l«M(a) Deted e.c>t. 12. 1tU PulllllNd Orenga Cou t Dally Piiot 9.9t. 22. 1H3 Ml.IC NOTICE NOTICI CW ,IUNO Of' """-lCATION '°" AHUWTION Of' ACCOUNT UAM.ITWt ANO A~tCA T10N ,Oft PUtMIHK>N TO HTAaUaH A MANCH Of'f'ICI Tiii• 11 10 lnl0<m lilt publlc 11'1•1 und•• •pproprl••• P•rlt ol Sec:llOfl• ~5. 548 •nd IS$2 ot the Ru ... end R90ulallon1 for Ille F~at S•vlng1 end loan Sy1t.m ("F9d«al Regu- 11llon1") and Sec11on 583.22 of tM Rulet and Reouta11on1 tor 1n .... reno. ol Accoun11 ("lnau1anca R.gu- l1llon1"), Pacltlc F.cl«al S•Ylng• and Loen AllOClatlon, Co111 M .... C1lltornl1 and Fld .. lly Ftd«al Sav- ings and Loan Auooaallon. GIWI· delit. C•lllornle. 111v• 111.o an appll- c111on wlll'I Ille F9dt1al Hom• Loin Bank Board tor P41rml11lon to In· oreue I CCl0Unl1 ol an lnaurabr. type by Pacllle Fed11a1'1 11sump1ton ot 1ccoun1 ll1t>llltlM ol Fld•ll•y F9d41r· al'I olftu loca19d 11 1855 H1tl>Or BouiavaJd, C~•• MIN. Catllornt._ 92627 Fur11'141f to Inform Illa publle. undal Sec11on ~IS 14 ol tM RUIN and Regulet1on1 tor IM "F9d«al Regu- 1111ons", Paclllc Federal S1vlng1 end Loan Ataoct1llon, Cot11 Meta, Cell· fornle, l'IH llled an eppllcallon with Ole Federal Homa Loen Benk Boerd for permission to ntablll h a brencl'I olf!Qe to be toc•led 11. °' In th• 1mmedlate vicinity ol, t901 N-port Bouleverd, Cotl8 Meta, Calllomla Anyone may wrlle In favor or pro1es1 01 lh• app1ic.11on. Four copies muSI be Mnt 10 "Superv!llOl)I Agent. Federal Home Loan Bank ol 581' Franclaco. 800 C1111ornla Street, San Franclaco. Calllornla, 94120", wllhln ten days ol the publlcatlon ot this notice An addlllonal Mven daya to submit commenlS may be 01>-ta1ned II a written requett ts recalveO t>y tile Supervisor; Agant wltl'ltn Illa ten day period Anyone a«tdlng • PfOINI dMmad subs11nt11I by tile Prlnclpal Super· vlsory Agent mly request en oral argument on the 1ppllcat1on t>y sut>-mllllng a written request to Ille Supervisory Agent during Ille ten day period For • proteet to be oon- lldeted 1ubstant11I, It must be writ· ten and rll04llved on tlma, the reaaona lor tl'I• pro1111 mull be con- slstenl with Ill• regulatory ball IOf denlll 01 the 1pplbt1on. and the protest must be eupport9d by tile lnlOfmatlon 191Cllled In Sec1lon S.3.2(1)(4) ol tM RulM and Regv- ta1lona IOf tM F.a.,11 S1vtng1 and Loan Syst.m. You may look II ttwl applleatlon end all comment• Iii.cl at tile FeO«•I Homa Loan Bank ol Sin Francleco, unleu any such m1t11tala ,,. ••· tmpt by l1w from dlactoeure. II you have any qu••llon1 conc•rnlng ttleN proc9durM. contect IM F.0- 1181 Hom• Loan Bani\ of San Fren- cieco I t (415) 393· 1000. Put>llal'led Or1nge Cout Dally Piiot Sept 22, 1983 527&-83 Plml.IC NOTICE FICTITIOOS 8USIHIH HAllll STATIMINT Tha lollow1ng p41rton It dOlng bualMSIU SPECIAL AUTO RESTORATION, 512 3111, N-port S.ach, CA. 92683 Heclor Ramon Sanucci, 207 32nd SI • Newport Balch, Ca 92863 Thia bulln.N 11 conducted by; an lndMdual H.CIOf S1nuocl Thia atattmenl w11 Ill.cl wlll'I tile COi.iniy Cr.tr. ol Orenge County on $41pt 1, 1883 ~ Publlaheel Orange Cout Dally PllOt Sept 15. ~2. n . Del 6, 1883 5137-a3 l'tB.IC NOTIC£ FICTITIOUS •U~H NAllll ITATI!llllNT The lotlowlng paraon 11 doing busln ... aa VILIT'S RESORT WEAA. 2148 Wastmln1ter Ava , Colla M .... CA 92827 Vlllt Sattut, 21~8 Wntmln11ar A.,.., Cotti MIN, CA 92627 Thia butln•N 11 conducted t>y. 1n lndlvldual Vlllt S1l1u1 Tiii• atatement wN llleO wtth Illa County Cler~ 01 Or1nge County on Sept 7. 19&:3 F22A491 Publlahtd Orange Cout Diiiy Pllo1 Sept 15, 22, 29, Oc1 8, 1983 5144-83 P\alC NOTICE F1CTIT10US IUSIHHS NAM« ST A TllRNT Th4J lollow1ng P«aon la doing bullnMIU: ELITE MAINTENANCE SER· VICES. 19000 MacAnhur Blvd .. lrvlna, CA 92715 Freel Zlalonko, 42 5911'1 Pl • Long Buen. CA 82805 Thi• bullMN 11 GondUC1ed by. an lndMdual. Frid Zielonko This stattmenl was filed wllh Ille County Ci.rl( ot Orange County on S•p1. 15. 1983 "2S22I PublllheO Orenga Cout 011ty Pll01 Sept 22, 29, Oc1 6, t3, 1883 5252-83 P\alC NOTICE f'ICTTTIOUa 8U8*1H NAMI aTATlllllNT TM fOll~ng P41rton1 era doing bulln181 u : G PHILLIPS EST A TES, Sull• I 111, 2813 N .... POl'1 Blvd , N-pon e.acti, CA 92863 Ron Alfano, Sulla It 177. 2813 Newpon Blvd . Nawport BMcl't. CA 92863 T O'N•ll. Suite •111, 2813 ~­ l>O'I Blvd . N .... pon BMcl'I, CA. 92~3 Ron Alfano Tt111 11111ment wea Iliad with IM County Cl11k or Or1nge County on Sept 15. 1983. ,221212 Put>llaneo Or1no• Cou1 Oalty Pll01 5-pt 22. 29, Oct 8. l3, t983. 5253-83 Pla.IC NOTICE flCmlOUS 8UtlHIH NAMI STATl•NT TM loflowlng P«ton 11 doing bull,,_ H ' MS MANAGEMENT. 2241 Canyon Ot .. Co111 M ... , CA. 82627 M11ger-. " Spotclcl'I. 2.24 t Ca-nyon Of .. Colla MaN, CA. 82927 Tnta bualnl81 11 conduc19d by. 111 tndMd\111 M11gat11 A 8po<clon Tl'llt llllatnenl wll fll.o with tM County Cltlk Of Orange COi.iniy on 5-pt. llS. 1983. ~ PubHlh.td 0flllQ8 Cout Delly PllOI ~I. 22, 29, Oct 8, 13, 1983, 525$-83 Ml.IC NOTICC '1CllmOUI llUeMlt NAMI tTAT'IMINT Tile followtng pefton II doing bullneal u : PACIFIC COit.ST CUTTERS, 1810 W CoutHwy ,~~.CA 92863 01ty E 01ay: 23 I 12nd 81 .. N9W- por1 BMc:fl. CA. 9U83 Thia bu"-la oonduet.O by~ en lndMdual Owy E. Orey Tiiie •atem.nt WM Ill.cl wttl'I l1l4t County ~k OI Orange County on e.c>t 18, 1883. naa-11 Pu~ltn.cl Orange Co11t Dlllty PllOt lapt. ,2. 29, Oct 8, 13, 1813. 525'43 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Sept 22, 1983 (''7 Ml.IC NOllCC flCITTIOYS•UU.H NUii STATIMINT Thi following P41rton ta doing l>Ull,.,... •• A & Z CLEANING & JANITORIAL SERVICES. 1822-.. Newport Blvd • , .. ;;-~;:;:~;;:;::-1;;;.;;;.;;;;;;;;;:;;~:;=====;;=;;=~;::::=;:~:;.~-,~~i.c°O~r~~·1~~.~28~:wport I CLASSIFIED· · lt•ltt fer lalt IH•H f11 Salt llo ... n fer Salt Blvd .. #198,Co•t•MMa,CA.92828 THE DAILY PILOT "·aar1I 1001 Ctata Mt11 1024 N·wiort leaci.. IOH Thi• bualn•N 11 conduct.cl by: an INDEX t•-:=:=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;: '" -• lndlvldu1I Cl.AS lf'IED OFFICE llOlJfl S11 4Br 2B8 6011120 lot. ul Zoll• Gulrol1 county C141rk 01 Orenge County on Telephone ervic!•. Boy& Beach 197.~ can 6•6-8386 Front house 11 charming Thlt 1111 ...... IOt Wll filed wllh ''* To Place Yo.. Ad. Cd ~ Dolebout tacl'ted gar. RV pkng, llllOl HPLU Sept 8. 1913 642-5678 1,l J F · J IA•I FORICLO•IRI with large lvlng rOOl'n. 1'224421 '" on a y · · nc a y Real Estate Q 11rep1aee c11n1ng 1oom Publlsl'leO Orange Cout Dally R[•L EST •tE 8 00 A 11..t 5 3(J (> .. , Local bank has lorecloseo and country kitchen Piiot s.p1 8, 15, 22, 29, 1983 " " : • IH . • : • i\ • •t•• '1'1'1 t•CllttNC•1·~c• •••• on 2 beautllul condos, Llghl arid sunny rear unit 5080·83 ..,.,...r•• \~~ Bus1'11ess Cou11tl'f: HlRIOR t-3Br, 2'hBa & HBr Call to see this on• ~~t!',:'~1!:~" iooe HlllHLllDS 2•;.Ba The units are 3 $279 500 &lo... l'M•n•uLI 100, M .I L• J years new, specious 11r1Cl 642 6200 C•pntr•no &0<h 1011 Onua Y. r fl( UY Oellghtlul lour bedroom I U 11 Y a P P 0 I n I tt 0 • Plml.IC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS 8UHtlH NA• STATl•NT The IOllowtng ~'°"' era doing l>UalMNH. L & L YACHTS, 12 It E W1tMr, Santi Ana, CA 92707 c .. r..,.,. tt•• M11 w 11 8 0() A M 5 'i() (> ~1 home. large Uvlng room wtmodern taaturas Oii <.:u.u. M... 1024 : • • : .._l • l~ • with llreptace Attractive Creallve llnanc111g avail ' °""" P0t~• 10111 O L, AO LIN IL,~ family room Conalder-Submit all otte1s A(ie111 D Turo IOJZ F...i l 1:.,~: ' 0 ; • • .-.,"""''" V•ll•v 103• Ible upgrading Cozy 642-4623 llunu,,....., b""'"' 11~~ P BLI 'ATION l>EADLI ~E pallos Sparkling pool College Park 4t>r 2be Ihm Ihm• •tart.... ~ .. t .I Exceptionally llexlble upper $115 000 own aot t'.:~'.: .• & .. h ::!:: n onus \ S dl. 11 :10 11.rn. 11nanc1ng , $265,000 759•8006 p~inclpals onlYI•--------• Jeffrey M Long. 1578 Santi Ana Ava .. Coall Mna. CA. 92827 Wllllam S. Lawhorn. t578 Senta An• Ave .. Costa Mesa, CA 92827 Thia business Is conduote<I by; a oena11l p1rtnerehlp J•llrey M Long Thi• atalemenl w11 llled with Ille County Clerk ol Or1.nge County on Seot 7. 1983 f'DMll Published Orange Cout Dally Pllol Sept 15, 22. 29, Oct 8, 1983 5139-83 Ptel.IC NOTICE ~~u ... 11.u. 11u0~2 Tuesda v M1111 ·l::W 1i.111. 131·1300 2575CotumblaOrlve l..a«iun .. N11(u .. 1 J l..ok•• ~· ...... , 1u'~ W r<ln<•i:.Ja y 'I 1w .., ·I ;:Hl I' rrt M1»11..m Vw,_, lfld7 "'" ... ..,,,t .. · .. 11 11 1u1111:Thur-,Ja,· W1·d t·'.W 11.111 San l.'lr"'t'nt• .., S.n Ju.11l'•1>,.,,.,,.. •1~~~ f mfa\ ll1t11 ~ •1. HI 11.111 S.m ... Atw """' s...i e.,, .. ,, 11~ ~atunla ' Vr 1. .{ 1)11 I' 111 Soulh L....aun• "'""' !>wn•.-10. .. h •083 un cfav ~rt .Hiii I' Ill Twun 1090 W f1tm1tuh t tWti Mubilt H tiffM" 1100 lu.r•·•I(•' I J1~ CANCE LLATIOJ\4 ri:::,;";;·~i:,..,.> ::~ l:OIUtECT IONS: JlU'ltHM'V t'tuJjt\ l ~()( <··n•••..rv i....... 11~=.· CancPll ations nnrl ''•Hr<'1'tiu11~ rrlHV l 'omml t'r111.-'"'" ,., ~~~:11."':::n·r::.~.. :~1: be rnaue on sa rrw Jf·adlinf'l> a!> lllYIH Sll,000 Great condo tor yng cou- ple o l sgl person Loca1eo In Orangetree tl'tls 1 Bdrm has a loft su1ta1>1e tor Oen 01 otllce Hurry on 1hla onel 631-7370 TRADITIONAL REALTY lllEUYHIE OWHR TllHSFERED Must sell this beautiful 1e- modeleo home laaturmg 4 Bdrms plus l&mlly. sky light, nature ! wood t11rougnout Ollereo 111 only $t79.900 Call 540· 1151 for an appoint- ment. BEAUTIFUL -- NEWPORT CREST CONDO Ocean view from every room 2Br & den. S46K 1>•1ce r e duc tio n 5 t98 ooo Lo dn owe SUN COAST A E Call Roy 646-0686 II& CANYON IY OWHll 11% fixed rate 30 years. No loan rees. no ciostng costs Monaco wl1h GC view 14 Aue Vtllars Open wkr\dS 1-5 6110-1538 STATfiMINT Of' A•AHDONMINT 0, UH OF flCTITIOUa llUatNaH NAMa TM following peraons 11ave 1ban-~~= ~.:~-~~·"'1 :~~ above>. PIPa f' ask for a 1·a111·cllation Oil Y S 111,000 B)-ownr ~ interest in 11 tile price on this excep-e1egan1 "'9 Condo ttonal Laurel Point Towne S15 000 down S150/mo Home in Eas1s1oe, Back Ga11 675-3412 lnd~Ul•I t•wp1'lt I t7' b I JI ,, ..... •·~!>.I· ~!'-~.: num er ..... lf'n can<·1• 11111 yuur ad . Mut'lr4k Uumf' !1..t.fkA ... t"" done0 11'18 use ol Ille Flelltlous Bull· ness Name. LA MOOE FABRICS, t8582 Beech Blvd • Huntington Be•cl'I. CA. 92648 owner Rosa Wllms, t328 Sun111 Grove Rd., Fallbrook, CA 92028 owner Ernll Wiima. 1328 Sunset Grove Rd .. Fellt>•ook. C• 92028 The Fletltlous BuslneN Name r• letred to at>ove wu Ille<! In Orange Coun1y on s.c>t. 3, 1980 ·"'"'"""'" °""'' 11!.~ ERROR '·. U.41ll(• (\ .,,..,. (Ju\ Uf ( OUhh I '1~• 0 u• "' s..... 1•\>~1. Check your ad Jaily and renort tt .. JM ih'\ ~ .. 1 HI\. r ~s="Y ::errors immediately. The DAI LY LIDO ISL COHH UH,IOO Absentee owner will con- sider 2-story !'tome with Interior patio Street to street privacy & aeparaie master wile • 3 lamlly bedrooms. 631·1400 Bay area 3 bdrms, 2'!t Custom EngllSl'I TUdOr baths. attached do1e car 11ome 1n the gate guard- gar age Short walkto ed community or Cherry pool area Beller see 1111s Lake Es1e1as formal one lastl 759-150t entry, llvlng rm. dining ~~ ~'::-:~PILOT assumes l1abi li1 y for the fir!,I - \.\1\111•1 ICll" IHIMI., Inc.. REAL ESlit.l fc 831-1400 WALKER&LEE Real&tate Tl'tl1 bu1lneas w11 conducttd t>y • lndlvtduat ., RENTALS incorrect ir.sertion r nly Ho~ Fufn1•""'-I JlW Tl'llt a111emant wu Ill.cl wcth IM County Clitrk ot Orange County on ~= ~:~~.~~.~ n0t CLA IF IEO 642-56 78 Aug. 29. t983 Urifurn~h.-.• l.lot. Ille no Flo4o4434 PubllaheO Orang• Cout Dally Piiot Sept 1, 8, 15, 22, 1983. 4892-83 tundu FUrn 24()()1 .. --------111111!---------· C:..ndv Uni HI~ POOl lfOllE T<1wnhuw. .. lu111 m u a ........ Salt a ........ Sal• Tvwnhvwn Uni l)n ---------.;,;;,;;-.o--...-.;;....;;;.;;.;-.. ___ I Tl'lla 3 Bdrm 2 Banome 11 S.C Plaza conoo 2Br 1•1. ba, pool, spa Own for cost 01 rent' $10K or less dn By ownr $86,~. 556· 1626 or 775-2560 0u0u""'pi-·.~ tuunmt 22~3~ C.Hral 1002 GtHrll 1002 located In College Park • •• • • Needs TLC but hae loeds flt&IC NOTICE "'*""""'" "'"''°""" uoo ol potenllal. A1klng ~~,: ~nin1 ~ llYSIDE PUCE UJFllOIT $133.000. Wiit conaldet' K,.07407 ::;:: a. 11uu.i : otte11. 631-7370. Daa1 oiat 1026 OCEAN VIEW f ownl'louse 3br 2'11ba 1750 sq II $ 156,500 Xlnt financing owner 714-240-3102 NOTICE OF DEATH OF t~~1:::;.11 = Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 br 2 ba up: 2 br. )tie A. FU11lmmon1, aka su""""' llffi~i. m.. 2 ba dn. 2 boat spaces. Reduced · $1 ,500.000 TRADITIONAL REALTY Mae A. Bean, aka Mae Y.;::~'.'.: ~$~.~. = Fltulmmon1, aka M.A. ·Rrn1ai. w ... ...., lWll Liii ISLE Flt1lmmoa1 AND OF PETI· Gu•• ... 1ur R.-111 21111 TION TO ADMINISTER ES-~~~!':.i. ~:: Remodeled 3 br, 2 bath+ large rec. nn,. beam ceilings, f um.ished. patios. $420 ,000 Haat. leacla f040 ---------•l2SOOdn,byownr t Br, T A.loE ~°h~;,l, l =~:fici&rles, =-!'::~ = PElllSUU MOllE OCEAIFROIT RlllllFIO YAUE 1 bl Condo. nr Harbor RlllllFIO PlllOEI $68.950 Assume. owe • BA ptusl Emlflld Bey 619·948-1216 eves creditors and contingent M...-"""~" 192> Ocean & jelly views. Marine room, 4 bdrm. 3 creditors of Mae A. FhZBlrn· ANNOOttCEMCHTS bath, 3700 sq. fl. 4 car parlung $1 ,385,000. ooean view home 3 BA'• 4 Br Condo 2'> 88 1 • r ptu1 2 dens that could mile 10 beach. 100 man) M rve as 5th and 6ttt amenities to llst Onty bed1ooms. Private. ... s 123,000. Agt 968-2297 curlly gate-guarded com· or 963·0867 mons, aka Mae A. Bean, aka An ...... .,....,.,..,... 3tl02 Mae Fiusimmons, aka M.A. L.c•• a. Fov.....i :ioot F• d p.,....,.,.11 lOIZ FAIRIAllS RllCll HILLTOP 1tzs1mmons an persona "•""""'• ~''""" ;iou who may be otherwise &h«•t. 41 1"""'"'""' :MJ1& New 4 br, 4 ~ ba, custom French Nonnandy Estate 1.2 pnme acre hilltop. Now $995,000. munfty. Private tennis -~---~ uiterested in the will and/or ,.,..,i '°18 and pool $675,000 Ask OPEN HOUSE Fri, 10 3 tor 01vtd HlrlCl'ller or 21662 Seaside 3 Bd 2 be estate: BUSlfUS ' A peuuon has been filed FINANCIAL by Robert Fit.zsimmons ln the a.....-'"' s.i. Superior Court of Orange ·a.....-<>w:.nu,,._ C.ounty requesting that Rob· ~~:"~u""'" ert Fitz.simrnons be appointed IP~n1 w.n...i u personal representative to :=;::~ ~~..; ad.minister the estate of Mae M"'•«•ll" r 11, 'A. Fitzsimmons (under the Independent Admirustrauon EMPLOYMENT or Est.ates Ac~). The pelluon !~:~·~ ~ .. ';;~ is set for heanng m Dept. No. 3 al 700 Civic Center Dr.. AlllMALS West, Sant.a Ana, CA 92701 f:,;. on Oct. 12. l983 at 9:30 A.M. ""'-IF YOU OBJECT to the l,jv .. ..,.~ granting of the petition , you Pe .. should either appear at the MERCHArl>ISE hearing and st.ate you objec-An•-. ...... lions or file written objec-~::'~~: .. Uons with the court before ~~~·~·r,.~."""", the hearing. Your appear· c.,..,.,.. ..... a.nee may be in per30n or by ~~';,,,':':,,~"" your attorney. c ... ~ .. s.1 ... IF YOU ARE A CREDI-u~1w1<1 a;L • ..Jo. TOR or a contingent creditor ~=~'.:~.~ of the deceased, you mu.at tile ~::--1~::;:: your claim with the court or M ........ 1 lnl\fu_n,. present lt to the penonal rep-011 ... r urnJlu"' & resent.alive appomted by the "'"~~~ ..... court within rour months w::::.;-s:. ... from the date of fint lauance of letters as provided in Sec-BOATS tion 700 of the Probate Code 'h•""' I\,,,, of California. The lime for ~~::;,•1 filing claims will not explre s...1 prior to four months from the ~-::,.s~"''' date of the hearing noticed M••n• S..rv.• above s1o.,. & llo.t" . s ........ YOU MAY EXAMINE the s..w11r~·1na1N<1>0"' rue kept by the court. If you S..lhumtt are interested in the estate, TRANSPORTATION you may eerve upon the ex-"'"'•" ecutor or adminatrator, or B11yct• .. upon the attorney for the ex· ~..,7,:7&"'~ ecut.or or adnunistrator, and "Motunvi~1&w••,. We wl th the court with proof ~~~ 11""'" of service. a written request +~:::.:; [,:~1;;: stating that you desire special notice of the filing of an in-AUTOMOTIVE vent.ory and apprailement of ""'" 1 ... ma estate a.sseu or of the peti-""'" s.-.-. .... I'"" tJona or account.s menuoned ~;~ ~!'.~'-Jn4itJ• In Section 1200 and 1200.5 of • w ....... flr•w .. the California Probate Code. ~~~.k• FRANK A. OLDMEN "n'"'"'"' 11 ..... 1751 Oru1e Ave. Cotta Meta, CA. 1%1%7 (714) 14$-1414 Pubhshed-Oraltge Coast Da.lly Pilot Sept. 21, 22. 28. 1983. 5263·83 f'lll.IC NOTICE NOTIC&M ~ ... llUNO Notice II ,_..,y gtv.n tllet IM Pllnnln9 COmf!\lallon of the City of ~ IMch wtll hold • publlc !'IMflng on IM application of Tile City of Nawpof1 e.ctt ZONING AMENOMENl''""'o &H ~uelt to contklet ·~"*'" to c~.,. 20.10 Ind 20.87. t40 of tile Nawport 8"etl Munlclpal Coda 1111blllhlng rtGul1llon1 pe1111n1ng to 8ec· ond•Farnlty Aleldanllll \.lnhe ffl tile C1ty ol N9wpof1 8Mct1 'fhl• projllet "* tlMfl ~. end 11 hM belt'I ci.l11m1Md that 11 II ca1~tcally u.mpt und« the r• q\llramantt of tlla Clllfomla B\· vlfonmantll Oue111i. Aot. Notice 11 l'IW•by tunhlt given tn.1 Nld publlc l'IMtlng will be l'ltlCI on th• 211t1 dlr. of S.C.tembar 1083, 11 tilt hOVf of 7~ p.m. In tlM Counoll ChM!b«1 of Illa ~ llMch City Miii. at wtllOl't time and ~ any and all p«90nl lnw.eted rMy eppaw and t. '*'d ttttreon Oew Goff, ~lt'y P141nni~lllon City Of 9Mcl't NOTE TIM PpMIM ol lhlt notlOl It paid from I flllng Ill C>Oli.ct.cl from Iha IOOllCMI Pul>ltthad Orange Ooaat Deity Piiot lapt 22. 1113. AUTOS M>ORTEO "', ... ~ ....... -BMW C.iltt..lfr1 U.&Aun IJJ>l_,,,..-f),.n Ji*t>tfin• Fu•t Ut•o•h louw )"IW'r J•,,_-n ~mOOrC'°''"' i.. ..... 1.o1 ... Mud.> M..,,.u M"""'Hit .,,.nt Ml\IUM,hi MO Op.I Pt nKt• ..... _ .......... !Unauh "'"'" "->\'<• ...,..Pf S...b S..ti.ni 'f'PYOU T'numph V<>lk1w1.,.n Volvu Mt. \IW .,,", 01111010 OlYI l&YFRllT Coronado laland cw t. bayfront lot. 85' boat deck. Plans avail. Now $370.000 w/trade. lllROWllEAI IOllE Near new 4 bdrm, 4 bath, lake view. 3500 aq, ft. $440.000. Will trade for a local property IGUI FRiil llOOME lllTS t>nme 2 Br, 2 Ba&# Br 1 Ba Duplex on xlnt sw~ beach g6od income. $725,000. Best view. t.al.leat ocean front bldg tn-plex with 1J)9dous 4 Br. 2 Ba. each level $1,200,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Aod Daley 644-7020 pool $1541( 642·5633 LlllO HAL HTATI agt iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I lrnae -1044 • otlH WILL TIUI Soplllttleated 1 Bdrm + Oen. view condominium Wiii trade tor N.B home $210.000. UlliliilCllJI t 1( ;_..f' Reeliors, 675-600b FANTASTIC Waldorf Model 1n Turlle Rock Vista 4 Bdrm, 2'" ba In TOP CONDITION Cent A/C dOCCJt&led '" eartl'ltones Backs to g orgeous greenbelt $288,500 ,Ml fl.,.,., .. 1,. Dr•v•· N B o7S 6161 IJOIU 60111~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ lllYEHtTYPUI t!Ou1_ Out1tandlng 3 Bdrm 3 Be =:: 1rl-leve1 wlll'I eep1r11e -tee~ DNVE to•• femlty rm. wet bar, 2 ------- 61ll1 * HARBOR RIDIE * frplce, format dining ll.lld La~ ... leack 1041 "°" a tong lilt ol decorator -610(! upgredes Located on 8 BU LO YOUR HOME Of'I a :~:; Come V18it the most fabulous view. New quiet ttreel In one of Or-apactecular OC EAN custom home in Newport. Nothing t.o ange County's llnetl FRONT 3 Arch Bay, lee :~:: compare with this 4 bdrm, ram nn, 5 ar .... Prloed to setl now. elmple lot C&ll owner Fri &22'l $23-4,900. 751-3191 to Mon (7 14) 49~3070 or am bath, formal dining, 3 f.rplcs, 6 car garage. T u e t o T 11 u r s Large pool & jacuzzi Com~ t.o the gat.e C: SELECT 1213)799-1159 and ask for 3 Yorkshire! 759-1931. -PPAOPERTIES ltwrrt hack 1069 tnl IAIU 1-1 111,000MWll lalMI 1111.. 1006 Model pedeci 3 Bdr home, ·1010 7011 HELEI B. DOWD ;~:~ RULTOR, llC. 144..0134 7016 ~=========~-::::::::-:::-· 7018 11)21) IHIHlll ITUI. ~:! UlllLEIT llOHE HHa 1200,000 7026 2 Br & 1 bf Apt 2 c.r gar-Court Ofdef9 Nie on 11111 102t eg•. EJcC911«it location 'ti! 1 8 h blk lrom Bey. Prlc.cl r~l'lt ch1im ng •YI or• cot- 11()10 •12 ~OH ll-01~ llOll 8020 e tege wl room to expand. It S295.000. 0 C1lltod1yforlln1nctng& P•l>IB· For more Into. land quote. Pr1n only Ill PIOU 011n1 C1ppe1 831-12ee PAYILlll IULTH lll-1120 :~~1 .............. __ _ IOl• HllLHI FdlLY ... I Ill OllYDI 'EDUC~ ED S l OOI Harbor View 1-illls. ep-n pralaed-5390,000 Wiii be Forced to aell 4 Br reno-llquldlted for $362,000 vated Cape Cod. Now wl 11K dwn or more Call uklng $425K. Shore Petrick Tenore 760-6702, mooring. 1 hse to So. 63 t-1266. agt Beyfront. 1'gt 640-1538 Sl,200 PER •09ITM CtrHI 411 Mar 1022 wllh pert of monthly lease g04ng 1oards lt'le down Herbor View duPl•x. p y m 1 whe n you Owne1. $385,000. Belt tease-option tilts J bdrm, buy In Cdm. 846-009e 2 .,.. b 1 res 1 o e n c e HUI I JETTY VIEW 200 t>lk. 40' lot, 3br + den, 3b•. yard. compl, refurb SS 15,000. 217 Jasmine Owner/igt 673-5551 OPEN HOUSE S1t1Sun. Cet1lln1 view, 5 Br 3 Ba wl mlnl-ocean vlewl Only 1 lew blocks to tho t>eacht 759· 1501 WALKER& LEE RealEstate i101u 4 B• 2 8• tingle story '""> t1om1 wl prlv1te/.OOI & "°'° •P• In lu•h HCIU Id Ml· t11tl) ting. Ugl'lt and 1lry OllTIM 260 1 Island View Or ~. ollely 4 8A custom home A g e n I 6 4 2 • 1 3 3 4 , on tile golf courae with 644-5117. :~~ wldramellc uae of mlr- 111;.o ror1 & 1kyllgh11. Only 1111•) $299.950 Stndll Fix pool end 9911. Very prl· --------- vete and recently re-C11ta Mt1a 1024 modeled. Alduc•d to • llP•••t1 llfTI S 1.295.000. Cell Biii Cote • """ IO 1 LIDO PHI DlllYI Reeaonably priced 8th Floor condo tn 11111 bay- front high rise corner toc1t1on. t>ay & ocean vi.wt lrom almost every room Built-In fish aquar- ium. sauna oll maa1er bath,.2 bedrooms ~ 2'"t bathe. total security $700.000 YI~ i10> i lljj fll2 "It 911 7 VIit 11121 9123 t 12a 0121 tilt llO llOO ~ 2 bdrm• ... ell with ger- -IQH Oood financing 644-8200 ~Macnab -Irvine People wno n.ad people ahoutd lltweys cneck tile M•k• your enopptng ..._ Service Directory In the l4'f by Ullng the Delly Pl. DAILY PILOT lot Clullfled Adt. Oood alaner 101 the new lnvHIOI. ll•Y llltlar411t.J IUtr. 18,0 N-port Bl, CM 141·ll2t SllOO IOWI LIHWLTY llJ-llOO 9111 --:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil~iiii•iiiilliiii~:--tl)J on tl'll• 1 yr new upgr1ded 3 Bdrm w. be condo. 2 cir Qlr Pymta epprox s 1200 . .i.n 831-48511 fl» •tn .... 110 .,., 91•7 8148 11)1 ••&l ti)& tl)7 tl)I .... tlQ tlU •1•' .... •111 tl7J tl7l tin COLDWC!U. BANl(C!RO Ull ISUll 7~· Bayfront! Slip for 95' boet home can be purchued as la or c.an be divided. Large pool. If you are look· lns for an exceptional bayfront a ''mutt tee!". IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 LIDO ISLE 2 Br, 35· lot. Heve somettt1119 to .. 111 OWCle1tchg. $299.500 Ctuellted tdl do It well Bkr 646-3949 '::~::;~' '2>~\\.6'llA-~ f..!r5' ...... ~, tuu • ,OUAfrril o::~·l~,~·JO\h:;·l~~t : low 10 l(lf,.. low, .. 1"1pt. ..., •• F I R H T T I' I I' I I U~S AI I .._..__I .__I I._.' I._.. 1 •O•O .... , SU CGS I t--r1-...-1 -.-r ...-, : AruHt'l•r t1mnu• Qwa •• "'O•lllOll It 1ne1 •••l>nO w~ @•t ¥fP\t~ Ult t)f•t,.nt lri'W> ltit .----,,-F -10-Gl_F_l' ....... I ~ da.:.:~:. ... . I • • • •"I ...._...__.__ ... __.._ ... __,_ ,., ~:.~~ Y,;. ':u :t· 1,: ~ fl t,t t•tl¥1f tfO U Hf" Wf ~l\t )Q. •tU I ,,.,'1t b1&1t 6''1vl 111111\ 1,1 c;f 1 •N\wll I' r I' I' r I I I I I 11 1m. musle conseNatory. all wllh vaulled oelllngs, large gourmet kltctten wlll'l Island. top ol llne ap- pliances, large sunny t>reaklast rm olf kitchen. lamoty rm downstairs wlll'I trplc 3 Bdrm, 3'" Ba, large master suite wltn lavish bath & 1Ctra large walk In closet Situated on IOI wllh lendscapecl 1rop1ca1 stream & view ol meandeflng patnw8.y1 S349 500 • By Owner 631·3014 HlRIOll RIHE last luy 10 CHHtry Renaissance Model best tocallon. price & 1erm1. Only 20•1. dn Asking S374.500 COIUCl JOH llU ClMlllll PHPHTIH ta&-1414 lllRIH YllW lllLU 3 81 2 Ba home at 1218 Keel Or CdM lmmllC. condlllon w/pvl yerd S362 000 Fo1 appl call Patric!\ Tenore. agt 760-8702. 631·1266 af WPORT lllTI ITW. "Ont I ti 1, TIO" Counf ry charmer wfcory trple s~. new plumbing. carpets roof 8 tueked aw•y in the Helgh11. Cell Diana Cappel 8j1.12ee IEWPOllT TIRUOI $122 100 3 Bdrm, '2 • ~ bl condo i n.soo assum 9 9~.% 8 Send Dollar Coun Ownet 631·2923 REAL ESTATl HEIT Great opportunity fOI resl· CenUal re-sate aoents & lnves1men1 11gen11 with expanding local com- pany l(lnl comml1llo11 spill with a bOflUt of property mgmt com- mission plus syndication lees EAperlenceo aoent• preferred but not re- quired Ask for Tom Lee TIL lllYHTMEITI I U-11H Moltile Ho•t1 12><52 Skyllne $ ;8,360 Wik to mitts &. St Joacnlms 548-2453 Beautiful El Moro, your Ill· tie cream home near tti. S!l8 2 t>drm, 2 bl. vi... $73.500 494-8204 ----GREHLlif POI Baautllul 24>c60 Home Lg ~ltchen, & llvlng rm, din rm, lamlly rm. 2Br .. 2Beth11. l arge tl<>rl(ll Permanent porctt steps Agl 540·593 7 New t4 wide MObiii Hom e . a d ll park $24,950 Agt 557.9390 Coahiiliii••• l 7S fohEctosuAe sXte 3br 2ba, 2 oncl g111Age. steps to S J C mlaalon, 1ake over loan. call All 645-6747 or 6•6-7171 lie••• Prof ifil G1J:Nt OtJPL~ 7 B•. 6 g11rages, Npt Hot• Ille&. S260K 975-0142 Ag1 01t of Stitt P11rr1z lSH !(. ocre approK 3 mllea wes1 o l C o toredo Springs, $9500, 25% d own, belanc• 10% lnte1ea1 tor 1 y••r• 7 t4/962-39t5 _H_A_W_A_ll __ _ EM ol buyer• mkt, lnvett low mkt value ptlor to 111011 apprte. Fc>recloeu,.. & e>cOhl~ IP*Qlllltl Waikiki from 145,000 to only S 110 .000 OCMnfront DlM'IOfld HMd Scott, Pacll~ CoulllM (714) 720-1105 I .I. bck111.1 1 ... Indian w0\11 b ondo !Ir. 20• In Cse• OoflC:O, tOP cond & too T 1 aci. tor Clplx or 4 unit•. CdM. OwMf 873-1197 833-2300 W I I. I. E X C H,..A-.,....,,N,..,0""""'E $00.000 e yr old Pu1<1eo1 Cu1tom ttome tor compar•ble °' i.... home In good Or1no- C o u n I y loc (21'1 198-9005 W11nl Ad• Clll 842-1187t ------~------------------------------ C8 -Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday. Sept. 22. 1983 IHHI ruahlau a ..... Uatuaiala1• lalMI Coata Nt11 2224 Ptaia1ala 2107 Sharp 3 Br 2•; Ba w/dlntng winter: 2 er or 3 Br. 2 6a. rm & 2 car garage on $575 & $650. 114 E cut-oe-sac. Marina High· Balboa Blvd. 879-5991 lands. Wtl\ consider lse opt $890/mo Curt II Winter: 3 Br. 2'1• ba, $750 631-1266, agt 305 Montero. 879-5991 hatlaLaaaa 2186 Step• to ach. /urn. Jrg 1 br condo, pool/Jae. $600. 768-452g, 557·1928 BH1t1 Oataraialat• GeHral 2202 1 Br baYfronl $69S/mo 2 Br ooeanlront S 1250 3 Br w/sllp S 1250 Wtse chOlce 3 Br 2 Ba nr CCC 4 tam/singles at $575 better hurry call 539-6tgo BEST Alty fee Daaa Poiat 2226 Spectacular ocean vfaw mini 2 81 2 Ba hme wllp newer bltlns dbl garage $6:30 539.51go BEST lee Supa< neat 2 Br 1 Ba gar- age mile 10 beach $575 673-3313 01 496-2430 Fooat1ia Valley 2234 HOMES FOR RENT Hoa111 Udaraialat4 Newrrt ltacll Hit Recently remodeled exec hrn, 4 Br. 2 ba, sap lam rm, rdwd hot tub Gdnr & assoc dues po $1700/mo 760-8194, 605-3g5-8874 Remodeled 2Br. 2Be on bay, boat slip avail Pool, bch. $1250 mo tse 675-t688 3 Br 1011111y remodeled. br ana new 1 •ti Be townha\Jse apts. O/W, patios. kids OK. no pets Sep t occupancy $695/mo. For rental ep- WESTCLIFF 4 bd, 3 bd plication 645-6646 wt pool & Cabana 2 B $1750/mo Answer ad i: $420, Roomy immec r. 593. 642_4300 24 hr new LR crpt, nr Harbor shops 642 1603 or 642-3153 S1Dta Aaa 2280 $4S5/mo 2 Br 1't• Be apt, t Br condo, pool, nr SC carport. l/r. all blttns. Plaza. $495/mo Joyce µat10. balcony Walt1e, agt 631-t 266 527 w Wiison So Coast Pl1a nr perfect a TSL MCltlf 842-1103 whole house $350 l\lds 5525/mo 2 Br 1 ea. pool, pots 539-6190 BE~T ree laundry room. close to Hant. leacll 2740 1Sr apt, S400 mo. alt utll pd Ralrlg & stove In· eluded. Walk to bch 207 Chicago Apt 4 985-4954 2 Bdrm. 1 'I> Ba Condo. trplc. dshwshr, patio, single garage $725 mo. $50() depo\jt 863-1500 Agent no fee 2 br 1 ba. gas pd, $425 · $375 dap McFadden Av nr Beach Blvd 893-4894 2 Br. 2 ba, fr pie encl gar $5301mo sac 847-8772, 526-3004 Beautiful 2 Br 1 Ba Twnhse. ~Int area. patio, Oceanlront·lowar 1 Br. lrpl, winter $625/mo Dys 83:1-3743, avas/wknds 730·0104 or 955-2830 On the Beachl Avail now 2 Br winter ranrat 1111 6-15-84 $700 631·0900 VERSAILLES PENTHOUSE 2 Br 2 ba, oceanv1ew. turnkey tlv· Ing Sec. comm pool. spa etc $915/mo Bonnie Barrington agt. 675·6000 or 644-0452 WESTCLIFF 2 Br 111> Ba l ownhouse, no pats $675tmo 548-7533 l•••tr I Wl1ttr R11tala -IAOIH REAL TY PROP MHlliEMHT 714/111-1113 •Soott Rentals* US YOIR REllTll NOW Fountain Valley 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. $850 Fenced yards & garages Kids & pets wal· coma 863-1500. Agent, no lee. Wt1tmin1ter 2298 shopping 149 E Bay St •Small older 1 er new TSL Ms~ 842• 18°3 redec, single or cozy cou-$595/mo. 2 Br 1'~ BA lrplc $675/mo 846-0736 .,._lllliitiiiiiiiiiiiiliil S800:-3 Br 2' ~ Ba, 2 lrptcs: close to beach. schools. park. encl gar. 6~3 9th St 536-9953, 536-4248, 536-9572 ANA 2 br trpl gar pet $400 ANA -4/2 ba lrpl pool $700 CM 2 br w/shOp gar $500 CM 312 ba pool pet $750 E. TORO private 1 br $285 F.V. 412 ba gar pet $750 F.V 4/2 ba lrpl gar $700 FULRTN 4 bd s5g5 G.G. cot bltns yd $375 0 .0. 3/2 be utll pd $425 HB 4/2 be deck pool $775 HB 2/2 ba gar yd pet $550 ORANGE 3 br yd pet $675 S.A 3/2 be pool pet $550 Wllmnatr 3 br pool S650 WSTMNSTR 1 br gar $335 None better redone 3 Br two sty radiant lrptc cool pool +more $700 sm lee 539-6190 BEST Hant. leecll -2240 3 Br l '.~ condo, lndry hook-up. pool. rec. area. nr school~. beach & shopping. No pets. $625 Call att 4PM, 536-5028 p 1 e $ 4 5 o N o Townhouse. garage. pets.752-5822 yard. llr, small pet ok ---763 W 19th St Hoaaea Uahuni11lti TSL lll11t1t 142· 1103 81lboa $595/mo 2Br2Ba P • l 2607 Townhouse small yar<l, eDIDlll a l/r, bltlns. carport, trplc Spacious sunny 1 BR on 940-W 18thSt West Bay Ave Incl: 6 TSL ll&Mf 142 1803 appl.. encl gar, Aval! • 9 I 2 4 $ 6 2 5 I m o UllllUTES FROM 553-8600dy 673-75ooav OCEA• Another 3 Br 3 Ba ram 'l.r2.4 2 Br. Condo lrg/deck, dbl singles ok lot 4 less 1.CiiioiiiaiiitiiiaiiiMiiiiieiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiii gar alee door opener $600's makes It yours 11 $650 631-4361 . 53g.51go BEST Atty lea 2 Bachelor Apts, 21g5 641-1884. L.Lord's lree service Beach peach bungalow 100's avall 895-5 133 lee w/bltlns & crpts thru-out Beautllul 2 Br. 2 Ba. air cond. dshwshr. lrplc. Beautiful 2 Br 1 Be. TwnhSe. xtnt area, patio, lrplc $675/mo 846-0736 IHUlnllU Huge 3 Br 2 Ba ,..,, new. nas everything. close to Hunt Harbour Only $725/mo Won't lasl Loe 4932 Charlene Clr- cle. Cell TSL Mgmt 642-1603 Nr Beach Blvd, Ors, Hosp & shops, new l Br apt for Seniors. $525. 536-6030 Ill OllJOll ~i~T T tee 539-6190 Totally remodeled home, =-...,,----..,,,--..,.-:-,-....,,. Minar St. Furn w/utll pd. $375 mo. + dep. Ott street parking. no pets. To sea call 645-9604 ralrlge, all ullls Pd Nice private bachelor apt $750/mo. 645-4411. close to beach. ulil pala, large and luxurious, w/4 Styllsn yer ellordebla flat --------.,,...,--,,-- bdrms, family room,+ 3 $425 2 Br w /gar CASA DE ORO llreptaces. $3500/mo. 539·6 lgo, BEST Riiy fee All UTILS PAID WATERFRONT HOMES Walk 10 waves lmmac 3 Br Compare before you rant. CALL 631-1400 3 ea splll leval lotsa xtras Custom design features. Easlside 2 Br upstairs. 1 $340 536-o43g8 Be. $525/mo. 548-0648 Oceanfront Condo on aves. sand 2 Br 1 •1, Ba, pool, E side cute bach. apt. 24 hr sec gated project. $400/mo. Joy()e Weitze, $750/mo. 751-5999. agt 631· 1288 I IJHNISHEO or lJNfUHNISHl 0. All Ulll IT1£S PAID Ill Al lit (I lJB'I 11 NNI~ 'iWIMMIN(i 11111, mudi mott•' '>mry, n11 fl+'I\ Modl'h np .. n (f,uly () to 6 Oakwood Garden Apdrtmenb Newport Beac.h So. I 7011 l bth Strel't (<11 OOVl'I) 642·5 '13 Share turn. rm In ks Apt. Walk to beech S275/mo. plus dep 53g.1642 STEPS TO-BEA_C_H_M_/F-. 38r 2Ba 34 St N B $285 & $325 650-3407 Mika ------- Rentala Wanted 2909 HllOllSUllD 4 Br, 2-3 ba turn home for 1 month srarttng Sept 15 -S epl 20 213-207-0455 Looking lor l Br In CM/NB area tor ra11a1:>1e elderly gentleman In wheelchair, up to $400/mo 646-6375 or 979-2834 -------•EEO COM 1 IDRM OR BACH $450-$500/mo Clean, quiet F 841-2261 Massage therapist will ex- change tor rm In CM or NB. Sandy 645-6084 Gu1gea lor lent 2912 WANTED· ahop space or large garage tor minor auto body repair. wlll pay up to $200/mo Coste Mesa or Huntington Bch Bill g59. 1221 Office lentala 2914 1617 WestcllH. N.B. 27810 1365 sq It Suitable tor medical or dental. Agent 54 t -5032 2000 sq tt, carpeted. $.50 sq ti. Harbor/Beker. CM. 540-2830 FANTASTIC XLNT RATES CHOICE lllDUSTRllL UlllTS HAS XLNT LOCATION NEWPORT BEACH COSTA MESA * Olltce Warehouse Combo * 1500 sq It to 3712 sq It •Carpets. drapes. •On site sec. & mngmnt *Beautifully landscaped •Water lncld •Avail. lor lmmad occup OOME IEE THEMlODAY 1835 Whittler Ave. C-13 142-lto• 142-llU WANTED. shop space or large garage tor minor auto body repair. will pay up to $200/mo Costa Mesa or Huntington Sch. 8111 969· 122 1 WANTED. Shop apace or large garage tor auto body repair, wllt pay up to $400/mo. Bob 5g8-8009 Ptnouh 3012 BtlJ Waatt4 5100 EApett hands ol massage Beauty to release the tensions. In •Asslsrsnts, tra1n1ng your home. 546-0124 program ----•Manicurist. e~par Successlul bus man 38 Cllantele not naceasary seeks lady tor travel, sail-Richard Ouellette Salort. Ing. dating 953·9984 200 Newport Center Dr Wealthy middle-age gent desires beaut. kind Ille- long companion 35·50 Joe 840-6363 la1i111u o,,. 4014 LIQUDR/IROCERY STOii£ Newport area, many com· marclal atrllna accounts. $595.000 annual gross Prima location 2500 sq It Free and clear Owner will carry or consider trade tor reat estate Bkr 675-5511 PRIVATE PO BOX rental business will sell lor value of equipment Over 400 boxl!s key' machine Matn St, N B Must sell quickly or treoe !or R.E 631-5775 Beverly Swimming Pool Chemical Services Business Costa Mesa area. n.:i a.11per necessary will train, $55.000 lull amount req Wiii nar S40,000 -Call collect Mon-Fri 9-6PM Ask , o~ TI m ( 4 0 8 ) 867--0111 NB beauty MllUOURIST Luxury hlg'1 prt~d salo11 has posirlon tor Mani curlst wllh ~llentele E~­ perlencad tn acryllcs, tips, llnnen and china wraps. 640-1901 beauty HAIR STYLIST lu~ury hlgtl priced saton has 1wo positions remain 1ng to r experrenced styhsts with cl•antale 714-640 190t IDlT IUlllT. MECHAMIO Person needed !or all rou tines. machantcal. main· tenanca and general maintenance ot corpor- ate boat A~erage 30 hr /wk yaar.arouna Sand Resume and salary re- quirements to Ad No 31 Deily Pilot. P 0 . Bo• 1560 Costa Mesa, CA 92626-0560 Bookl\eeper general of· Ilea wanted tor printing business. experrenc-11 prelerable or willing to M train right person Cell ortga'-ea, 4028 540-1355 ask tor Jack -•'-·--· •'--,._ ... -..-. Bool(keeper/O•<ler Des~ li.H. SATTlER 6-10/hrs per wk/ days llorti•&• Ct. Inc. only Call 645-0911 to• SpeclalTzlng In 1st & 2nd app1 TD's since 1g49 R.E Broker Bd Realtors 642-2171 545-0611 WIDOW HAS $$$for TD's, $10,000up No credit check. no penalty Atso lend on & buy TD's $10.000up to Jumbos. Denison Assoc. 673-73 11 IORED WITH RETIRE I HT OCEAN BLVD, CdM; ln- credlblfl ocean and jetty views In thla 3 Bdrm - lam. rm. home with old time elegance $1900 mo k 1d1 pet $ 7 00 · s at pool. bbq. cov'rd garage. 539-6190 sm tee BEST surrounded with plush landscaping No peta HUGE 3BR, 3BA, 2 Story 1-"a'ae 2244 · · t Bdrm. Furn $560 S625 mo, no pets 972 SU WIND YI LUGE Newport Beach No. •EXECITIVE SUITES* AHoancementa 3002 Heir Wuted 5100 Major Newpon Beacn Cn ts looking lor a retired parson to work pert t1m!l as a perking a11end · an11ma1ntenanca pe<son Mu$t posass a mechan- 1cat aptitude Working tiours 7 30am-lpm. Mon thru Fri Good working conditions, satery-com- pensation. $4 25 per nr Please cc:intect Norm Thorpe 759-7840 AVCO F'tnanc1BI Services. 620 Newport Center Dr New port Beach. 92660 EOE 2 to 4 Bdrms. S850-S1400. 2 Bdrm. Furn $670 Valencia. 851·2175 New I & 2 Bdrm luxury ap(s In 14 plans 1 Bdrm lrom $565, 2 Bdrm lrom $660. Townhouse from $725 • pools. tennis. waterfalls. ponds Gas tor cooking & heating paid From San Diego F'rwy drive Nor1h on Beach to McF'e<lden ano west on McFadden to SEAWIND VILLAGE (714)893-5198 XHO Irvine Avenv1• (di I lllh) 645-ll04 •sP1R1TuAL Aov1soR* MEED EXTH casNt NEWPORT TEARACE. 3 Bd. townhouse. excellent location $750 yrly. WATERFRONT HOMES 365 W. Wilson. 642·1g71 _H_u_g_a_D_u_p_ta_x_2_B_r_2_'"_B_a 1 MO FREE RENT With sl'iort term tease, lull service suites. Keep your ocvarhead low & protesslonal image high 881 Dover Dr, Sulla 14. Advise In love marrrlega & business 675-2495* CALL 631-1400 hlMl bla.. 2206 ciaulc Victorian on Balboa Island. 3 Bdrm w/gueal quarters, 2 lrplct. o4 Ba, $2500/mo. ~isor ·Realty 651·1177 ffHt. lt1cla 2640 YOUR OWN COUNTRY ESTATE Agt. 760-8333 lllO MIC1~~~~~N ORr'iE Ctrt11 ••I Illar 2222 ~----~-- SeautllUI & p81k Ilka with terracea pool. *Private 'Patios •Covered Patios *Spacious Apts *Dining Area •Walk·ln-closets *Home-like kitchens --~------~ 3Br, 2Ba, pool, lrplc. 1 br 1Ba, steps to beach, Lease $900 mo 1213) covered patio/yard. 592-2044 eves $675. 4gs-2228 Bayfront Bayside Place. 2 Br. 2 Ba. ~ boat slip $1850/mo 675-6161 So. Hwy house. beamo cell., trpl, 2 Br 2 t>a. 2 car gar. S 1200/mo. Ocean Bl., 2 lrpl, VUSI 3 Or 2 Ba $2000/mo or 4 Br 3 Ba S2250mo. Agt M. Hill 759-9100 IPYIWSlllLL lmmeoulate 4 bdrm. New Bedf<><d wlth large !amity rm downetaJrs and large game rm upstairs. Nicety landscaped yard with badmltton court. Avail- able Oct. 111. $2300/mo The lakes. 2 sly 1Br on the water, AC, ral!lg, lrptc, pools, courts. Jacuzzis. no pets t yr tse $600 mo (2131 373-1320 all 6PM Un1vers11y Park Terrace 2 Br. 2 ba Twnhsa. avall 101 17 S900 t mo 640-1212 1 block to Huntington & Frwys UTILITIES FREE 1 Bdrm From $575 LA QUINTA HERMOSA Wes1 01 Beaeh. 3 blks soutn of Edinger 847-6441 Wooooriage Estates Un-I L 26 I coin, 3 Br 2'1 Ba. lam rm, Llg11n1 HC• 4 tndry rm, $1000/mo $325 Furn charming bach 640-2021 nr Och. no pets. utll pd. 1 La HI letcli U •I rasp empt ao11 494-4200 w~oos covE: Secludea Newport Btac~ 2669 2Br Cottage. Prtv. Patio. Delul!e 1 Br on bay. nr Frplc, New Catpetlng. beach. yr1y. very qlulat, $825 mo. 4g7 -3511 private. Elec gar $525 673-6336. 642-9666. La1ua Niptl 2252 Oceanfront, 2 Br, 2 ba. Monarch Summit II. Pten $1200/mo, yrly Incl utll 8. 2 Br. den, 2 Ba. MSOC. 261-9466, 660·088 t prlv • adult comm .. OCEllFROIT APT non-smkr. no pats $850/mo g55·2631, 1 Br, winter rntl. $500/mo 476--0150 Incl utll. No p ets . 673-7844 ··~rt ltacla 2269 OCEAN FRONT wn tr, Condo 2 car attach gar $1 iOdimo. 3 Br. 2'h Sa. quiet. e~ac. comp furn. $850 ' Property House' Newport Crest Condo. $ 6 6 0 & $ 1 O O O Imo 642-3850, 642·1010 coatom Interior, 2 car 675-4688 garage. pool, spa. tennis 1-:-----:l::----,-L---,.2:-.6c:ICA:I 2 Br w/atove, crpts. courts. Cell for epp1. aaHI eaca drapes, enclad garage. Tll M&•f. 142-1103 Ofx 1 Br. across from no pets. S550/mo 773 W sand Aval!. now. $650. Wiiton. 631-•88g 14(yes 14)BR, 3'h8A, 'n 532-5692 $325. 1 Br. Traner. private & quiet. gaa & water paid. 111 -aec. only 497"8287 3 Br. 2'-' ba, 2 atry E/aalde condo. 2 car attacn gar S 1100. Property House. 642-3850, 642-1010 3Br 2ba, 2214 Avalon. Avail now $825/mo Incl gardener, 6'16-3627 3 Br. 2 ba, Goldenrod Dr Pool, gdnr. Aval I 10/8 S 1050. Sierra Mgmt 641· 132• Circle thla 3 Bdrm S550 lnels den bltlns E-alde lo- cale a llat steal ph 539-6190 BEST Alty lee Comp relurbtahed 4 Br E/slde No pets sg25 mo, gdnr Incl 548-2903 EASTSlDE CharmlOQ 1BR house. utllltles paid, encl • g arage $640 mo ~or t-492-1720 E.alde duplex, 3 Br 2'h Ba. yard. patio. auto. gar. 1800/mo, 111, lut & sec 316B San ta lubel 931-8283 blk to bch 1 lam dwelling --------- (old boarding hse) $1200 Ap1ttaeat1 1Jal. mo. &.46-8689 10·8pm. -' 199 23rd St. $299.000 81lboa 3 Br Condo, Blults, neutral Peaia1al1 2707 decor. grt cond $950 Loe 1 & 2 br, 1/2 blk to mo. to mo 673-5589 beach. W/D. No pets. BAYFRON'T Moblle 3br. $625 & $750 yrly Gar. 2ba, beech, pool. spa $50. Craig 870-6500 $950 mo .. yrly 673-6022 X204 wkdys: 675-9780 Big Canyon Townhouse. 3 Yrly, 1 bd. 1 be. carpets. Bdrm,2~ba.Gollcourse drapes. lrpt. $525 v 1 e w . Av 8 11 o ct w/gerage $575. No Pets. $1500/mo, 640·5274 675-66 6 Eastblul1 4 Bdrm w/poot tn Coro_a_a_ll..,..t....,l'""'M=-a-r --=2"'7"'2""'2 park·llke setting. avall 2 Br. 1'h oe twnhSe, lrplc, lmmed $1800 /mo pool .lse. $675. Bet Relrlge. washer/dryer. 7pm-9pm 650,0473 gardener & pool1-----~---­malontenance 1ncld 3 bd. 2 be, wall< to beech, Agent Brenda 640-0020 References required Call alter 4 pm, 540-2334 UEOUTlvt IUHIOll 4 bdrm. 3 ba. beaut pool. Bachelor, Avail 10-1. pri- vate. $365 675·6611 DR. lrplc S 1200 1924 b lb Holldav Rd_639:9.17g Totally prlv 2 r. a. part ' ol -Ouplex $645 mo GORGEOUS 2Br. lg den, 457·8 Seaward Ad. CdM 2',.,Be new twnsha. $1050 open Sarurday only mo 233 t81h Ptace C ·-01-,t-a-.M""e_t_a __ _,2"'7'"'2;<74 87$-4333 Many xtras. lncd yd. pet ok $735 673-6336. 642-9666 lrg 2 Br 4-plex. 720A Shalimar. $495. No pets. 646-2613, 545.3g24 Lrg bachelor on E/slda. all utll pd. $395 Ask tor Amy 760-8862 UNIQUE 1 Br $515/up PAV patio. pool, spa TOP area, quiet. no pets MESA PINES 2650 Herta 549-2247 NEWL y PAINTED 2 Br 1 Be S535-$555 I Borm $435·$455 Utlls paid, garage pool, 110 pets 301 Avocaao 642-9850 POOL EASTSIDE Lrg 2 Br. 1 ba. coin op laundry, hot wrtr pd, nr 17th St. $475 760·6227 1 Br. trptc. pool, patio, gar- age No pets $505 3gg W Bay. 650-6357 Stunning large 1 & 2 Br 2 Ba. garden apt. pool, $425 &. up 710 W. 18th Exceptional 1Br. encl gar. no pets. relrlg. alee range. $400 mo. 642-5964 IUe81iBllU TOWHO•H Otlltts far rt1t Frplc. vaulted oelllngs. dbl garage. pool & spa, 2 Bdrm Den 2'h Ba $770 t Bdrm I '~ Ba $630 WOODUIE lPlRTllEllTS 1-2 bedrooms Beautlful lakes ana streams Compte1e Santa Aaa 2710 Nr SC Plaza. 2 Br, 1'11 ba, pool, Jae, clubhsa. sac. A/C, dshwr. beaut lend- s cap ad $575 . 714-840-4500. e•t 372 dys. Z13-427-2096 eves. Saaift Buclt 2m amen111es Securtl ~ R gates Entry by phone OOml No pets 846-6591 1'L_r_g_s-tu_d_•_o_a_p_l _to--s-hr 2900 St501mo 751-4222 L1111aa Be&eli 2748 Quiet & nice 2BR 1'nBA close 10 town Costa Mesa room avail In anci beach $750 Days large apt nr OCC S200 494-4241 ave 494-3672 mo incl uttls 432-0351 ----Lo..,ely home Westcllff L1~ana N.i1ael 2752 area Room, ba & kit priv _ -b $325 incl uttl 642 7342 NI UEL TERRACE, rana . new conoo. ocean side or Lrg 3 Br hse In College Pk. Hwy at Seit Creek Beach CM Walk to OCC $200 2 Br. den, brick trplc, grt mo 549-8088 261-6229 kit Comm pool. 1ac & Rooms and bath, $235 gorgeous rSG rm REF'S each 8 p 1. $ 3 3 5 req. no pets. $1000/mo Swim.hot rub Christian, 831-1463. 8-5 30 non-smkr Mature Newport Beacla 2769 tBR 1 BA Bachelor. -12 block to sand $400 mo. yrly. 850-0581 851-1g10 or 539·3822 SUUHMOTEL Wkly rentals now avall 1 t 5 50/wk & up Color TV Phones In room 2274 Newport Blvd. CM 646-7445 666 W, 181h St. IN NEWPORT BEACH 645"273g Singles 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart· Walk to OCC. use 01 kitchen. wshr/dryar. $250/mo. 850-1088 Westside 1 Br. $425 utlls ments & Townhouses. pd. Stove. crpts. drapes, Some are elegantly laundry lac. No pets. furnished. From $660 646-4382 On Jamboree Rd et 2726 San Joaquin Hiiis Rd _D..,aa ... a_,P,_o ... ia_t____ 144-1100 OCUIYIEW Hotela~otela 04 LA NA BEACH MOTOR INN Wkly rates S 105 & up Detly/Wkly/Monthy K1tc:h s avall Color TV. heated pool & atepa to ocean. 985 N Coast Hwy. Laguna Beech. 494-52g4, Only 10 mlunutes from VIiie Balboa and Var- Laguna, your own private sallies $625 mo & up. Motel rms tor rent by wk, ~n view from Dana 631·4960 $120-up w/kltchenette Point's most aecluded s8501mo. 3 Br 2 Be avafl. 675-8740 scenic blutt, like newt 2 upper unit. garage. w/<l l 1 Br. with den. xtra latge hk-up, 3 blocks to beach. eata I lo 2901 private patio $825/mo. 811 bit-Ina Slaue Ca II Mon· Fr I. 9-5 · 208 lugonla 1 't\A--sn'"'a_r_a_•_B_a"'d-ro_o_m-. ""b-a.. 643·0212.. TSl M&Mf 142-1103 tween the bay & ocean. Call etter 6 Prn. 650-2637 Gel GREEN cash for WHITE elephants with a Ctassllled Ad Call 642-5678 Canal water1ron1, dock tor ____ --,---,--- sm boat, 2 blks ocean, 4 COM Fem to shr w/same. Arna. $850/mo utlls pd. turn 2Br, pool, tennis. 661-2g93 $350 mo Incl ulll, phone HBO 759-8940 H11at. 811cla 2740 ff Ht. Beeck .......... __________ , 2740 Christian lem to srir CM twnhse nr S.C Pita. lull rec lactl Pvt rm/be.gar $300. 75•-0103 dys. ... WOODLAKE APARTMENTS )' F ntsml\r to shr 2 bG2 ba Promontory Pt $380 • Ulll5 • dep, 675-3889 F nTsmkr to shr w/seme 2 hr house, lrplc. In CdM $350 -ullls. 673·46•7- rto shr 2 Br 2 Ba apt w/lrpt, terr . CdM. ~ rent & utll Sec & refs. Oya 752-4733. eves 640-1077 Newport Beach. 631-3651. 400 sq. tt ol furnished ol- 11ce space. $435/mo Call Betty 645-g151 BALBOA PENINSULA 400 sq 11. Pvt Bath. Re- done $300 mo 642-4623 Baylronl Otllces. patios. parking, 1en1torlet 673-t003 DOWNTOWN LAGUNA Low cost. 200 sq It, pvt rm • extras $250, less tor anyone wtcompallble computer. 494-4 1 16 E Coast Hwy. COM 500 sq It • be. sign rights Street level Cell 720· 1704 att 5pm M£W,ORT 1£lOH h1trt4uotory Rafts • Prolesslonelly Decorated •Garden T~pa •Private Suites •Some w/secretartal ~pace •Full Windows over:ooklng patios •Secretariat sarv avail •Copier. Receptionist •Kitchen, Etc 112·14DI llO·IOlO. tndlvlduel office, $400/mo. 0 C Airport area. lnclds cont rm. coffee service & copier. g57-8451 BAYFRONT BLDG. BASE· MENT-2500 IQ It 50¢1$1 00/sq It Cell· Mon-Fri 9-5. 642·4~4 WESTCLIFF BLOG. NEWPORT BEACH Co•"•' W.ctchft Dr1.e •nd h•1ne Ave 1·287 sq. tt. office With furniture for purchase It desired SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Thrift • Anise Guess· Otting SIGHS Another famous quole "Nostalgia Is that leallng we get when tria present knocl<s us down to SIGHS." Lost Ir Foaad 13004 FOUND AQS ARE FREE Call: 142-Hll Found blk Afghan. blk col- lar. vie Hell & Grand. 840-5181 Found: Germ Shep. Male, adult. Blk/Tan Vic VIC· torla/Placentla 63 1-4493 FOUND: Gray cat, VIC Hert>or & Hell. F V 546-8284 Found: gray & white cal. daclawad, vie. Seavlew &. Poinsettia. 673·0096 Found: Male beige Lab, Charlie. Female blk/lan Shepherd . Male brown/bfk Shepherd mtx Female blonde Retriever mix, blk Ilea collar Male blk Do•le. Female brown/wht Foxhound, tag & name Freeman Newport Beach Animal Shelter. 125 Mesa Dr. CM 644-3656 Found male part Aust Shep & Husky. wht mask vie Warner & Raitt 545.4559 141-1101 Found: M. dog, lrg Germ, Shep mix. vie. Garden NEWPORT CENTER. Full Grove 539· 1581 service E11acutlve Suites. $575~$625. 840-5470 O.C. AIRPORT AREA Former designer Found Old English Sheep Dog. Casltas Capistrano area, Sen Juan Cap Cell 496-7237, showroom. highly Founa parakeet, yellow. upgraded space and shell very 1 ame Beth el avail upto 4000sqtt, Towers, 642-9941, corner ol Redhlll/Brletol. 642-3931 good rate. 751·698g Found: Pit Bull, Coste Ottt,ce spaces tor lease Mesa area. g79-5799. 747 11. 1595/mo 525 It. Please Identify $420/mo Isl monlh rent tree utlls pd A/C, Found: Puppy. M .• lrg feet. ground fir. 1055 El brn/wht, Dana Pl/Del Ot>- Cemtno Dr. Costa Mesa. lapo area. 661·1317 3 Blks E 01 Fairview & ""F-ou_n_d_:_w .... h.,...lt_e_w_,/,...bl:-a-c,...k-=F Adams dog, vie. Newland & 754-10-40. Mr'Tracy warner. H B 847-8253 • S2901up. carpell, Lost 3 mo old wht/or&nge drapes. ate. restrooms. Ing hrd kitten, male. RE- 17301 Beach Blvd. Hunt• WARD 642-3731 lngton Beach. 842·2834. lost 9· 19: Blk Fe l ab X llYVIEW l ease. Condo. Npt Crett. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii -==__,.,...........,-....,.----2 1Br unlurn, $475 mo. i I EXEC. 4br •den, tam rm. 2 bd. den, 2'-'r ba. Rel, dep Newly decorated. ~ frpt. new paint. carpet, W/D, ()()een Vu, tennis & stove & relrlg. otl street 8ky llta.11050. 640·881 ! pOOf. S1150. Avell Nov 1 garklng Quiet nelgh-831·8344 Spacious 1-2-3 bedroom apartments from $480 Mature Male roomma1e to shr huge 4br oceanfront home on Balboa. Xlnt toe. panoramic view Beau111u1 large olllce avail· able. 842-4644, Mon·Frl. 9-6. Doble. 2 yrs. lrge eara. Vvlc Brookhurath\dams. ge8-6775 1 ldMI tocatlon, 2Br twnhet. ---..,.-....,....-=----,-.,....--=--.,.-orhood. No pet1. To aee o•rage, AC. pool, $625 lido 1118 3 Br, 2 ba, trplc. call 645°9604 mo. 8<47·3563. 557-2179 walk to bch lse $1-400.1•-------- Juat *'435 r411111 thll ch8rrrt '99•3300. 499•43 tg eve 3 Br upper 1575/mo. 5 rm abpde w/garage LINDA ISLE enctsd garage, Meaa del avail 10/ 1 otheu 1v1111 Mar area Call & leave 539-6190 BEST Ally lee 1.3 yr leaee. room for 3 menage 751-9905 Kid• pat• ok renovated 2 boat•. $5500/mo Appt t Br upper 1375/mo. Br hM lncd/pvt 1500·1 .. o n I y , 8 7 3 • 2 5 8 5 • enclsd garage. Meta del 1 Br bungalow wtgarage 768-8018. or 1·'96·3357 Mar area. Call & leave $375 539·6190 BEST lee Na&r Back Blly. com· mel68ge 761·9906 tortable 3 Bdrm 2be la.m· 2 Br crpts $495 lncd yard MOM Vtfde lovaty 3 Br lly home. Lene Sl200 638-4120 1-5PM, home. Yearly leaee, mo 844-7424 Bkr 2566 Orange (C), 11000. 770-0347 ---~-Newport Crest, 1750 11q II. e Br Townl!Ouae. very No., 1ttractlva. ctleen 3 Br Avtll now. No pet•. 1675. 7&1-3898 Old« t br, 2 nar gar. to• ~_,cLNwpt Hgta arH. Cntldfpat Ole Avail. Oct. 1. S&OOtmo. 675--2156 2 Br. den/3 Br. bch. POOl, quiet. trolc. j&cuul, g•f· tannll S 11001mo age No pelt. S650/mo 680· 1840 Oevt , Cell631-4084 496"6'45 evea. wl<nd •3 Br 2 Ba S.C.Plta SA, Nawport'a batt 2 Br under pool, patio. •P8 1750 No 1600 appls gar-oe 1111 pelt 762•5822 IM 530 8100 8ES't Alty ----- * Lakes & Streams *Pool & Spa * Large Recreation Room * Bar-B-Ques * Newly redecorated * Beautifully Landscaped * Security Gate (714) 846-6591 The l11te11 draw In the WHI. •• Oally Pilot Clutltl9d Ad. Call Today 642·5'78 Newport Shor•• °3TBr 2'1t Ba. 2 blocks tol>each. CIOM to pool & l"lt'rtl• N2·8683 8100 Edinger Huntington Beach * L&rge 1 Br. Apt, crpta, drapes, tlldlng gtau door I a b&leon) poot 1 1386/mo '131 ·8829, ~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;~~~~~ 842-7312 ' ~ ' SJ56 mo. 875-9644 "THI " M/F llhr 3BR houM in EXECUTIVE SUITE easulde c M.. n-smkr. Nwprt Cir 840-5470 S235 •ulll 850·7332 laalaen M/F shr 4 bdrm 8$>1. 1 blk Rtatal1 2918 to beach. Newport. 1280 ,_ ........ .-______ ... ...,. Incl utlla. 645-7971 a111 IRAll llW Generoua tenant lmprove.-MtF to ahr 3Br, 2Ba condo manta. 850-4000 aq. 11. nr S Cal Plue. 1235 mo. oflloea-comm. S.90111 • '-" utll. Todd 673·02'43 2488 N-t>Ort Bl. C.M. M/Fl()"ihr, 3 Br lux 642-3490 Twnhae tn CM. Rae room c. •• -,-rc__,.la...,l ___ _ & poot. nr CCC Andy 54&-7593. 859-7584 ltatal1 2tll Proteulonal Peraon 10 shr 1300 tq. It. commerclul lutn CdM hm Cc.an Vu. apaco for teaae. Avail S$00 644-5347 Oct t, S.85 per 28044 C&mlno de Eatr•lla, Caplatrano Buch 493·4019. Prof lem 26·36to1hr 3 Br, 211t b&. COM. HOO/mo or 1333/mo w/3 people. Call An1 A d •29 , 842-4300 2• hrl Am 101 rent In hom•, $300 mo .• 1tt a leat • '4 utll 7110· 1211 E.xt 280 dy• 840·8183 eve./wllnd• Bu ay N p-t-. _,,B,...lv-d-. -CM. 380· 1184 '"· elr eond .. otolrttall. 64$·9628 Retell tP8C• 1260 Tqlf 17th St , C.M Prima re• tall l~tlon. 445.3471 Loat Getman Shepherd. male neut.. lrg tan, Sept 12. San Juen Creak er ... 496-4881 LOST Sm Wht female SlameM cat. vie 13th & 1t41h St., NB. 676-5405 ....... 11 3011 CIRCUS OF MASSAGE 719 NO. HARBOR Bl.VO. FUl.LERTON 110-1112 l IAYAWIH ATTRACTIVE MASSUSSES TO SERVE YOU. ESOOITS/IODELS Outcalt ONLY 836-9199 11.IT10 l&Hllll 01c"9tor/Bt.ene1oratte Otttoe l 81rtl\Ctay P1rt1e1 THI UST llllllAH 730·0638, 5511-8538 Unlimited. permanent pan time positions open must be available at least 2 weekdays (AM or PMI and weekends Work ap- pro~lma tely 15-30 per week, depending on work toad Earn money while you learn to te~e Inven- tory using our system Wor'I< prlrnerlly In Orange County Must be 18 or High School Grad toeal job tor students and homebodies APPLY Ill P'ERSO• 17610 Beach Blvd, S1e 54 Mon-Frt, 9am-2pm WlSNIHTOI IMYE•TORY SERY. 2 openings Fl0rat trainee (PIT) ana Driver tF1TJ Apply tn parson. Call 645-oog3 tor appt ANSWERING SERVICE Expar. swing shift, F/T Call 540-1777 BRAINS brilliant director seeks top asst M/F Qr. gan1ze programs 10 yrs ol mgmt e>1p -rats ref: 1 FIT' 1 PIT job Satar i • AMumt MIT. BO• 162 legunl Ben 92652 Cabinet Shop Help 8 peroence helpful but no• necasury $4/hr to s111rt 850-1755 CABINET S1'10P TRll.INEE: wanteo some e•penencf' riSGessarv 855-0224 Cashier.clerk lor A M Snrlt F'n-Tues APP't Mornings Gill Sno.., John Wayne Airpor• Batty 546-0076 Cashier P 'T e~peroeric" prel Appry on Persor Genas Market 1080 So Cst Hwy Laguna Beacri lQUllllUlll SERVICE CNRISTM•S H£L• PIT must know Ftsl'\ & 11 " Aquar.lum equip Marine Sett fashion and aes1gne1 & Fresh Reliable trans 1ewalry Earn s2o per Appl 436,11 l7th C M hour. plus extras Mrs Y · Robinson 846· 38 7 ~ Be1wn 8·9 30arn wl\Oys 846_3874 9am-4pm or ARCHITECTURAL 6pm-7pm DRAFTSAMAN Ex per. Im med opening Pacific Building Concepts 548-1181 Assemblers Apply 7 AM. clerlcel PI T Weekends Light Bookkeeping Apply 1n person Margarltavtlle 2332 Wast Cat Hwy, Npl Sch., 1 30-3·30 pm MacGregor Yachts Corps. 1631 Placentla. ---C-LE_R_l_C_l_L __ Coste Mesa Quality Control Dept Assem biers ( Btc:ycle) Immediate operilng In vary needed towork In 11 pro-busy and grow ing gresslnve organization plastlcs manufacturing Must have mech'I &blllly QC department FIT pos. For eppt. 831-3248 1t1on tor sell s1srter abre l.Dlo ,"OOUCTIO. to work tn<lependentl) with good typing, llhng HltlTllT blueprlnts. and keep dept Full time. Wiii train. Eltp orgarilud Need pleasant with cassettes a plus. phone manners tor deal· $4/hr alter 1 month trial. Ing with customers All BOOKS ON TAPE. 12g major employee t>enellls Farad St, C.M., Ask tor package company peld • Greg credit union end em· C ployee stock option plan HTO •EOMHI Apply at: 265 Briggs Ava Wheel allgnment & brakes, Costa Mesa own hand 100111. Newport •---------Tire Center, 3000 E. Coast Hwy. CdM. COCKT A I L Wa l ter /We l rress SARGENTl 'S AES Automobllas TAURANT, 843 West £a,trlt1otd 19th St C M Apply Salt111tt,lt Mornings needed fmmedla tely Computer Date Entry. 1n Xlnt earnings potential Npt Bch reel estate or. Call sales manager for Ilea. Typing 45 . wpm a appointment must Variety or duties SHth CoUlty Call Lois at 833-2900 YW·lauru computers 142-2000 Comre>t. letter quality 1 ---prlntet (CR· 1 ComRHerl. :~11ot1me. 9·6. auto electric exit cond, paid $1.000 repair man and part time sell $600 Call Mon-Fr, • 8 30am to t 30pm 10·3 auto atectrlc nelper. 645_68 t 1 esk tor Susan some dellvertas. OC Aulo '-=-=-=---c=-,,..· ------- Electrlc 775-8165 COSMETICIAN Top Nwpt • RECECPTIONIST Beach selon. fixed salary lashtonable. FIT. Richard • lips. 494-t 555 Ouellette Salon, 200 customer servt()e Newport Center Dr .. N B. Join a growlng corpor- banlclng ellon; st11n with light d&- SAYINGS !Ivery work and doing · customer service. part MANAGER time. Hourly wage t "1lle· age. A,ppearance It Im· Aggreaalve, mld·•lzed nv· po11an1 and mull hive rnge & toan teel<• tal-cat. 859-7204, aalt tor anted Ind Iv Id u a I I or fijiiiiiRiiiiaiiiimiiiioiiiiniiiiaiiii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit t>rand new Newport Beach office Potltlon r• qutr.a 4.15 yeara sevtnge & 101n experience. strong op&ratlone background and proven track record In bu11nn1 development. Good eommunte111on skill• end ablllty to wor1< with people a must. We otter an a11ract111a companHtlon and ti.n• eflll pacllaga. PlatH aand '"""" tnctvdlng 1&l1ry raqulramanh to: ... Peraonnol O.pt SAN MARINO SAYINGS 1865 W. Kat•ll• Ave Or•nJIO, OA 92887 Equal of>f:yFEmptoyer N••• •••rt1 ...... , .... ,.,, e .,,.., For ci..Jtkd M ACTION C.11 A DAILY PtLOT AO-vtSOl Ml-W71 Orange Coast OAJL Y PILOT /Thursday, Sept. 22. 1983 l."9 Mnrtbla1 latn Aa.1blt Carrat2 Ctatraeltrt Qar•tala1 1.,B ... u.-• ... ploiiiioii•.-•----i•B•t.-•1..,t_,C..,lt"'"a""'ala..-1 .... -... 1a1 PHtrla1 IStcrtlarial iiiiiiiiiiii==iiiiiiiiiiiii9 l5rivew1y-Parkfng Loi Aep1lt-All11111on• Gtatral lar4t1lai Waalt4 NEED HELP? CALL JEFFI ltllll·OUPIT """'s·T•A•R•v-1N·G-c""o""L-L"'"e"'"G_e_ '°'..., .. w-..EiiiiGA._LS_S_H.,.O ... u_L_D_ ! Strric11 $1 84 Per da~ Aepalra-Sealeoatln~ Doora-Wlndow•·C•blnet• Remodel/Repalre, comm. Mowing, EdgTng. Twice a 8 ll WllHW OLUllll STUDENTS MOVING QO. HANG TOGETHER" 11iis .. u""pe""r""1o""r .. S""ec:""r""e""1a""rl""al""§""v-c:- • S&.S A1p0lt 631,...199 le Panel·P1tlo1-Fena.t1. 36 &. retlo Uc:'d. bonded, month S20 to S25. •• •I We do thiotovgn wo1k. A• Lie T 124 .... 36. lneurec:i. 839-0730 Anytime! R11111onab111 rat11 Pickup/ Thal '• ALL you pay Of a All•ran yre IMP Jetry 648-4413 Ina. For .... &62-9142 432-1867 BUMP Joe§ 1 llable and REFS. With &41 -6427 ••"'• ..... II dellvtir Jotn11e 6'6-1902 30 day ad A al F SM•LL .. OVING JOBS I t d WATCH US GROWi '"' "' ----REPICt AYER: Npt Bch IP r/tmall Jobe. enc:M. &!.! I! ...... ~ '••a11•1 Wlll"ll " ... comp•• carpet an Pltios: RedWOOd d~i.a. In the an.1'191, parlltlont. Low .. ar • " MIKE 646-1391 nousec:i.enlng. w1ndow1 p i ti "" Spriaklt n DAILY ~:Tn·,Y~O:~~j~1~~ t•I••· Steve 73 1-8311 9Uy dogal i O any IL 839·S035 HAUl ·MOVE-AEMOVE done 1111 CALL TODAYt I a •I cove11. rencea. •PH •·,·.-.-,·a·l-U_TI_O_l_/_ll_E,.P_ll_ll.,. n tnJury Olvor~ DWI Bnl\c:y C t lf-2 Gioomlng ec:ht teacher JESSIE'S GARDENING Fu1nl1u1e, T1Hh. Trees 540·5654 PIH PlllTlll ~~~1~0::2~·~·· Hp'o, • • PILOT I I.. n 1H 21 yraexper. 5411-2848 Compt clean upa & ge11't 983-5415 NOAM 0Uai11y_h_o_u_•_•_cl_e_a_n_ln-g. by Richard Sinor. Lie. I . • •mag Freees1 Pete_11_1_9-_2_82_1_ t.•~lttiat Car~t c:l9iinlno by retired =II malnt. Freeeit. 540·8035 thorough, reliable Pat 280844. 14 yrs ol happy Plaaltr/lt@ir Tr--Service mN9'efoXvcXRE Journeymen. For Ir .. "': LT HAULING -MOVING 494 0280 local c:uetomera. PlXS~R JrATCHfNG .... SERVICE r nc:h Snack• Potty Chatlea 673-743& ,,,, eXLLrXcousficXL ~andacepe ~elnt:n,!lnc:e Rental Clean ups. Jon ___ ·____ Thank you. 963-4114 Reatuc:c:os. lnll••t. 30 yrs Jc fl'IEE SERVICE T u 1 • 1 1 iu'e 7939 ,. i f'll Small Jobe & Aepalre lean-upa. ow rim 645-61921731·2916 THE CLEANMAKEA Trimming, removal, yard DIRECTORY rain no nc: · .,.. • .,., .. c 1 t BUD 552-9"'•2 Reas. 11111. 536· 1610 5 yre exp Home/otc OllUTY PlllTllll Neet. Paul 645-2977 u v GEORGE'S CLEAN UPS clean-ups. etc 642-1914 Quallly hOUH Cltenlng. o.c . rite SETTERS DRYWALL TAPING LAWN SERVICE. Aelleb141, & HAULING No lob too A••• evalt 87H853 Ptompt , nut pro-ED'S PLASTERING DO IT NOWll thorouoh. retlable. Pet Ceramic: & mosaic: llaota, All THtur•• 4 Ac:ovatlc: Aesponalble & Aecom-smell 895-6006 ---rfred or hou&ework? le11tonals 636-7149 lnl/exl Patc:lllng/le111uret REllOYE1'RllE/llllL U1 ftl UlllU 494-0280 kllc:tlerte. beth1, lt\ower1, Free eat. Kevin 673-1603 ·~m_1_d_aa_111ng __ 84_f>-_5_1_3_3 __ 1-----,.....,,,..,..,..,....,....,.....,..=-=-=-· TAY LACY! 12 YRS EXP· I'm small, Antuec-08. 645-8258 Lo-s1 est Aon845·2537 dect11. Cr•"' 648-9873 .-HAULING SMALL JOBS 96 9995 .,1 --Your Dally Piiot Ital •alal. ..., Tl" 11"11 IOEIE Trull & Furniture 4 . . My prices are sm.., I Plaa~ia1 T . S --t Sll'Vlc:e Olrecl""' • CL.,. C El I • I " " 650-84771650-6646 _ JflDf t n1ct ~, ltmct ab llt ff nca Lawn-lree-•hrub lnSlell MA TT 845·S089 L1dlC1fi•1 u lir H. 141-1121 Typing/word Proc:eulng .. ;~n~::122 l-i9•o""a"!1"'co'""'v""er""a"'lf•o.,p.,1~/IP"'n'!"1.-Afterachoo1 etlild c:are. wlh 1'e"l"'e.,c"'f"R~i"'cl'Pl"'X~N"': -PP"'r"lc.,e""d Tree 1rlm/Remo11•1 vou CALL -WE HAUwrt--Re11ovatfng -Ro1ot11iing CUSTOM EXT /INT WATER HEATER Spec:lal All business. achool &. per· Guar. atltclllng. Fa111 ""' pick up 11 achl, Beer SI., right, free eallmste on Lawn maln1/Aololllllng Comp!. clean up, remove, Sprinklers . Clean ups Prolesalonel pride. Aeaa. Pool heatere•Furnac:es sonal projec1a. 85 t-1041 ~~~~~~~~~ Pree Cnvs 720-0573 NB Peularlno. Sonora. St. large or small lobs. Lie. Free estimates 548-6065 auto detall & wkly malM Dave 642-4653 Free est. Steve 547~4281 •Fauc:eta•Dlsposals• ----ia Lf Jolin aenl areaa. Xlnt rela. 396621. 673-0359 H • service 644·8191 Vic Bud 549·5265 -INTERIOR . EXTERIOR Vanaiah Wttk -"•Cl.. . lttUH.J!•I 557-8051 1_•"!•-~l"'!•"!'!'!l~•!"l't!"""""'_.-Courtesy estimate• Oralns ciear lrom $5125 AeroblCS. Welohl Trelnlng. FuU Mrvk:· my home or .,,,.---,,..---=,.-----•Ete<:trlc:lan N-/Aepalr •••HOME REPAi'R Ho111 c1 ... 1., L•e·• Strvicta DON 644-4798 Aepalr faucets. dlsp, ale: HOME VAANiSH WORK d I I Chlld Cera. CM home. All types. Low prices Lie El Pl b C -851-9fi04M&M<432-0500 Doors. Ralls. Bars. etc anc.. etc:. ns1ruc:I on your oltlc:e. Retired · 35 lanced yard, Infants to 2 Free eallmates 631·2345 ec-um . arpentry ROBIN'S CLEANING E ICTION . 5 VAS O.C INTIEXTCALL .iiM:-ptlvate Of small group In yrs axperlence. 546-4062 yrs Paula 642-2995 Fences Keith 646-4672 SERVICE a thoroughly EKP S t50 ,. c c 6'45·881 1 P1yclttlttical * 2o_;rs exp _6_75:8_3_18_*_ your hbme or office. , ELECTRICIAN 20 YRS Home Repairs-Carpentry clean hOuse 540-0857 MOST IN l6 DAYS 131· 1110 C l Window Cluaia1 BOD SQUAD 544-9400 Ca•iatt M1li1a1 Chlld Care: llc:'d former EXP REAS RATES Cablnets-Elec-Plumblng -PAINT & REPAIRS tHH ia1 . I I preschool teacher. Ages 646 7602 Crpl & Window Cleaning 1111101~ Reiatlonshlp recovery: Re· Ap,IJ1act •N-cab nett. cab net 1·4. N1 OCC 546·8147 -Fencing. DON 966-0149 Prof iesul111 e1 reas reles -~P."!'f!P.P.'.!""'l-"!!'"!""!"-JOHN LAMBETH I . facing, bars & formic• ,. • I CALL BOB 964.4125 BRICk AK. Small 1061. Lie 443908 661-3189 view, Renew, Aevltallze lf!lr countertops. 642-0881 LIC'D DAYCARE ull ta •I Home Repairs · Carpentry Newport. CoSla Mesa. Aelatlonshlpe 640-6454 "Lei the Sunshine 1n11 SUNSHINE WINDOW b oat me]Or apple ailments C 1 1-4 yr olda, Mesa Verde. TREES Plumbing -Carpet Reis. lt,td1klt/Tlttrt111• Irvine Reis. 675-3175 RALPH'S PAINTING CLEANING 642· 1549 cured or NO CHARGE! lll!_D ~ Suzenne 556-3098 • CALL FRED 962-2443 REFS. Becky 841-2261 lnlleict. Reu. Llc:'d IHfill MACO 851•9604 .'-c""X"'M-E"'NT._R'l"!V .. : •e;;·pe-rt""e""t\O"I .,,..-----,.---,,..---Topped/removed. Clean ONE CALL DOES IT ALL __ Custom Brick-Stone Free est 641-3588124 hr Huber Rooflng·eJI types phases. 20 yrs In area Ct•f•ltr Stmctl up. new lawns 751-3476 We fl• It. break 11. buy 11 HOUSE-APARTMENT A~~~~~c;>~':i8'i49~1~~~2 Top quality Aeuonable New-Aec:over-Deck• WHITE WIZA~ WINDOW WASHING 'The only magic Is Alta I 811Pic1 Cnar Aenov. 6'45-3749 IBM-PC HELPI Xttordabte Clean Ups -Lendec:eplng or haul 11 548·6009 Cleaning or Renovating ___ rates Call lor ettlmlle Lie •411602 548-9734 QUALITY" 631·2026 ln1erl0f palnllng. special-Remodel/repair. Unique & & useful on-site advk:e. Hauling -Tree Trim This snouidbe your only Free eallma1e 650-4.468 Moviat 650-2328. ask lor Brad Secretarial lzlng In chlldren·s room• unu~el work 8 specialty training & producta. Free esllmales 642-9907 call. 1 do 11 all Free est HOUSECLEANING -p . Stm 962·7519 20 years. Llc:'o, bonded. SSPtPC 754-1039 Reasonable rates Jon Relleble -Aaasonable *A·l llOYlll* •rra•1 Ctl Palombo Cons I 962·8314 MOW/EOOE/CLEAN·UP 75 l -0870, 24 hrs Own 1ran11 650-3263 Best quality. 25 yr. exp Farthing Interior Dealgn TYPfNGIBOOKt<EEPING SELL Idle 11ems with a Have something to sell? TRIM. Free 1111. Reas. ___ Compell11verates. HANGING/STRIPPING For lndlv.lsml business Dally Piiot Classlfled Ad. Cta.ssllled Ads 642·5678 Cl6"1fied ads do It well, retes. Jim &46· 1958 Class1tled Ads 642-5678 wanl Ads Call 642-5678 Lie T · 116,428 730· 1353 VISA-MC Scoll 673-1512 Hr/day/wk. 640-088!1 More 18m111es are ge11111g lhe camp111g "bug" this year II you have a camper Iha! s nol getting used, sell 11 now wlin a Classified Ad • Belt Waatt4 5 100 ltlt Waatl4 5100 Btlt Waatt4 5100 Htlf Waatt4 5100 Btlt Waalt4 5100 Btlt WutM 5100 Htlp WaatM 5100 Full !line front & back ol· Liquor Clerk, nlghta & --------• PIT help In 3 Out Photo. H01'/IH. lfO. Sales SELL AVON· Full or pan flee help needed !Of busy wlmds 1868 Placentia PART TillE ltvlne Car Required Electronlca lltm. c M Are you Dynamic and able lime/time or 81 work. HOROSCOPE BY SIO~EY OMARA N e w P o r 1 Coste Mesa. PHONE CLERK Camera knowledge p1el Mlkll lull time recep-lo Mii? Need 1llltle1Mlra 642-1832 Oplllhalmologl11a· omoe. Houre, 10-4 657--0161 llo'11st w/pleuanl phone mon~/ a seoond Job or --------- experience preferred. lll.lmlllOE ~eraonallly. ability to perhaps a new career? Stationery Store In Corona 6•<>2•11 & gardening. Some ex-The Dally Piiot Clrcu181lon PIT Ottlc;e help. Typing re-T I I del Mar needs FIT ex-'""" .. quired Varied houis. anOle 4 llne lnterc:omm. ry en exc t no career In perlence preferred. Dena Dept Is seeking • phone 9 phone system & aome travel! For further Into perlenced seleaperson. IEIElll. lfflOE Polnl 493 6222(M F 8 5) verlllcatton clerk. 20 Newpon area. 673-938 675 1010 Frid ~-b %3 · · · · h .. $4 typing, Minimum 8 Cell Suzette, 648-4431 ----------ay, ~ptem er Ideal Job tor person ••••••••• ours a wee~. per PIT Working w11h Chll-monthS exper. 540-9264 between 6·30 5:30 Sll·COITll.AOTOlll ARIES (March 21-April 19): Circumstances take sudden w/c:hlldren In acnool. •n•a•Elll IE"l"I hou1. Appllc:ants must dren. 1s1 through 6111 Mimi ..-da 2 brlghl Of· -" " have a good pnone per· g 11 de M 0 n . Fr 1. REOn/IEO'T SALES Project tor bid now, all tum in your favor. Popularity increases, doors open, you reach genlzedpeopletodoeblt II you 111ve e •\•lion sonallty. Apply In person 1.30.6:30 In en altar Full time. ationg typing, •IOllOlllPmlll trades 897-9808 wide segment of public previously unavailable to you. of everything ror Iler Wagon °1 Ven and c:an bet. 2-4 Mon.· Thurs., ask sc:hool program. Call apelllng.! dlc:laphone Mature pe<son w/bual & Telepnone Judgment, intuition are on target and you'll be at right place at ~P ·~.11~~i.cf:t;~W: ~~~pe~J;. •=~~!~: •or c:~o•rwln.•lo&rYDebra. Amy, YMCA, &42-.9990 11<1111., rAeble Npt Bc:ti computM •MP. 754-8363 DITSTUllH \ "d · " t •• p1•011a11•ll Pllll local on. 111 Eatete ••L11• -1••1 'I T OPPT'Y ynamac momen . Days 850-7276 or c:ontac:llng new cus-Ctslllltll EOE n 11 • background helpful. -r;•rr; - TA UR US (April 20-May 20.): First impresisons prove correct ev/wknd 675-0212. tomers ior local news· IEOHTlRY $1200/mo. Call 955-2846 PLANT STORE. Pltlme •Salary-Comm· Bonui -take intuitive l eap and you will land on your feet. Strive for Hop Sln~·a now hiring de-~!~r~o ~~~0 c:peanr ::;~ Rapidly growing Orange Mon-Fri 9-5. 845·3392 10-6pm. • S 10 pr hr-easy · · · d d d -"--li h will be hed 11 1 a to N-pa•T TillE County lfrm seeking hlg1h --------•-y;•~orn. • Appt ·salting only creaUVlty, m epen ence an re~ g t s on areas very r var • r • working evenings end n -Reliable Nanny wanted. _,,. SK •Eves & 4 hrs Sat . usl cl ded . . . . F ll hro h . h port and Laguna Beac:h. S 1 dl"I •• •1 .. _ 21 or W""IElll ly motivated Individual twin boys our home ., __ , E t t I t 1 5 886 prevto y ou lJl mystery, susp1oon. o ow l ug wit Call 494-4044, 1000 a ur , .... u .,... u I ed I II • ' """ •a• nvea men Jett. 44. 1 Leo older . Conlac:t Mr. Supervise Newtpaper car· 1 1 Mpei0enc:11 nwtputhrc: •1 1• wee+< days. Call Judy company nda energetic: · Norlh Coast Hwy, Laguna Roundt1ee et 548-7056 r I er s 1111 y m 0 r n ng. 11 ng 51 89 631-3051 artlc:ulete lndl\llOuel 10 TELEPllOIE, PIT GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Emotional fulfillment high· S..c:tt. Waekdaya between 4am·l0am Sal &. Sun ~~~~~:onl\n~~~n~~ Antauranl aoawer phones and type Supplement your Income lights "interesting" scenario. Member of opposite sex cares very Horticultural 11:00 e.m. and 2·00 p.m. Mull have van. 11at1on Excellent verbal com-Appllc:allons being ac-o-oeral c:orr .. pondenoe. by doing Interesting tale- c.h f lack f •ty and fro P/T f II TI • wagon or small pickup. le 1 kill 1 AA 08 led f Cocktail & PleeN 1«1d resume to phone worlc on behllll of mu • ears O secun wants reassurance m you . ' I ••· un al ve s s requ 1""""• P or Mc:Lechlen lnvee1men1 na11onat companies. Hunch is on target instincts prove correct. Aquarian plays key lnlerl<>f and ext8'1or malnl. Mec:henlc:, foreign & Hourly wage & mileage. type '50-60 wpm. Good lood servers, c:Hlller• & Co, 1400 Dove St, New. Newpo11 Beach Office • Experienced only. Own domeatlc:. over 7 y1e axp. Apply In peraon week· lnvlronmenl and gen-aec:urlty Apply In peraon role. 1ranaport11lon 760-1486 Call Terry 551.2101 days. 330 W. Bey St.. erous benefit package, btwn 3-5PM. Don Jose port Beach, Ca 92660 has evenings and week- CANCER (J 2 1 Jul 22) Y mak · Costa Mase Orange Aeataurant, en<lsavallable $4 /hr . une • -y . : . OU e un~rtant ron~cts HITIOILTllE MEDICAL ASSIST with Cou1 Dally Piiot EOE. ~r~ri~ln~ha~l~~loi.~~ 15101 Goldenwest. H.B. Sn~::i~,i~~::~:!!~il guaranteeo • luc:rauve at social event. Supenor confides m you, prorruses promouon, Interior plant melnten. Baell & Front ofc exper. negollable . Phone pleasant office. non 1nc:ent1ve program. Good Your sell-esteem soars. Diversify, ask questions, communicate an~ Ex...., pref Re-tor Ophthalmology omce Pharmacy Clerk, FIT, 714·963·5500 restaurant ok "' d speaking 1101c:e • mull. -.,.... N 1Beami631 7577 mature e11pertenc:e Immediate openlnna IOf am er on.,. woi pro· For interview. Call Unda ideas and plan ahead for possible journey. Sagit tarian is in llable tranaporletlon req ewpor . neceuary Hrs 9·6. --------r 1 9 p 0 n s d; I 1 , ceulng and or IBM Sys. picture. 540-5«0 MOVEA/DAIV~ South Laguna A1ea OllLm CllTIOL entheualutlc people 10 tern 23 uperlence at 5_45_-_5_77_6 ____ _ LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Focus on publishing, cornmunica-RMl<lenllal clMntng -Pro-lt•nl•1 Aottn 499-2204 P~itha~'::'o~~';.~~~~ make sanow1c1111 and ~~~~=· r"~'::c:~';!~ TEUP11100LllEOno•a tion, pur.>uit of ideas.and education. Em. ph~is also ~n travel, ~·:::f:~~ ~8s%~claL! "'eede•d•~!~~~·lateiyt PHONE SOLICITORS wage to 11an. BOOKS PI T dellvlf~ (Min age 1a01. general office g n uni to tablish L---f ti f land 6 8 ... Subetanllal con1rac1or ON TAPE. 729 Farad SI.. lo drive. 8 310yra) H3r0a: purchasing, muat be aelt We need good people to opport ty es ~ o opera ons m a ore1gn . Message 31· 222 Mual b• relleble. hard now hiring. lull or part Mon-Fri, : -2: . 9larler. Enlllroac:ope set up appolntmen11 M ember of opposite sex is very much attracted and makes no Houaekeeper/Cook ior working, Valid Or Uc lime Mature. no11-sml\r11 CM Ask for Greg MEYERHOF'S. 557-6232 Corp 111 w 17th St. unit fr om ou1 Coate Mesa 01- secret of it. proteutonal woman In 650·1366 Hrly -bonus Call UlllL08YTECllllOlll RETAILSeleaAndAelated F8 Coate Mesa. lice '" the .evenings tor VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)· Be ready for change, a variety of Huntington HarbOur. 4 dy 549-8391 Mr Sullivan Muat be c.rtltled Position Work, P/T Potlllon AVIJI· 645 ...... 00 Holiday Inn s new travel thro h wt! Cell 846-1478. all 6 Aullllng Newspaper -,.-,-1-1-0-11-11-l -lllP-1-1-1-avelleble tor full time. able al l(ron Cnocoretter ---------cluo Saler~ • com-experiences, travel opportunity and chance to gain ug 846--0583 Dealer In Irvine area Mull be ranletered Pos. 9·6, Mon-Fri No av• South Coaa1 Plaza. Apply IEOllPUY mission • bonu• Call written word. Focus also on taxes, possible inbentance and HOUSEKEEPER/ COOK/ Must enl<>y wOfklng With ..., ntn91 or weellends Buay In Peraon To Fiii Out Ap-Busy ..... dept In reeort 751·'1222 attar 1 P.M . ... ,_ that uld be b' u· ( oU'c and acti'cal C D C AE ON TOA c:hlldren Moo-Fri. 10.00 ltloo avallabHI for lull tndu1trlal/l1mlty practice pllcallon hotel. typing 60 wpm, die-TOP S$S u.u...vvery co com Ula on o ex pr . HIL A M I time, 9·6, Mon-Fri. No in Senta Ana/Fountain ---------tephone. Apply In person. Females Prat Model• & Gemini playt1 significant role. Uve In, 40 llre/wtc. 3 moa ;7!',~n 7W~g:nm: S~~i evening• or wee11e"d11. Valley area. Mull be able retell M·th, 8:30 to 12 noon ,Escorts t213) 866-1984 LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Maintain low profile, defer to ~~~: =~'".~ R~~kj! plckupneeded Onty11ery ~~=~,.'~:u•~~lal~~~~I~ and wllllng 10 work In F~~~m:~~~-::;e·P~!! THENEWPORTER, 1107 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii wishes of one close to you inclu..4inn business associate, mate. Be Job Slr'llce, 3460 Or-reaponalble. neat person back ollfce. Spanlih ~111 tor app1. Coata Jambor ... Npt Bell. ........ '& C ne•d apply Salary Ana/Fountain Valley speaking helpful. Salary ... TRAii 1111 a shrewd observer, me inionnation for future use. Legal ange St Alveralde. A v area. Salery end benefit• ind Benellls com-Mesa/lag Bell. Store. IEOIPUY ____. ts f T ti fulfills · 92501. Ae: Job Order No. S200.00 weeli plus mil... c:ommenturate wllh e1t-menaurate with ex-Petite Marc:ne Chlldrena Corporate headquarters lllW Tl SEll pn:3U:Uen avor your case. aurus na ve promise, 1241514 301.474.010. ~e. Contec:t G. Hyde perlenc:e N-Graduales perlen<Je N-GraduelM Store. 714-642-4714. !Ofatete-widelnveatment Help give them a heed displays loyalty. Ad pd by employer. 2·4321 Mon·Frl. 9.SO -o K Con tac: I Tom. 0 K Contact Tom. MfVicea firm. Newporl start Earn lop W part SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): What seel'lU an impossible task HOUSEKEEPER· 1 t:OO a.m. ONLY. 54~233 54b.,.233 llllFIH FllEllAI Beec:h. Excellent Carllf i lme evenings Only can be ..............,pliahed and you'll play mainr role. See places, Nloe CdM famlly looklnn •-tor ASlllTUT -----___,,-......,,.... 2 Foreman Wanted. Top Opportunity, with di-positive, dependable, __....... .r-... .rr PRE-SCHOOL POSITION. Reel Estala SALES-quallty worlc, minimum ol venlty end cllellenge outgoing adulta nHd people in realistic light. clarify directions and define tenna. for Engllan apeaklng 10-3 Mon-Fri, atrong per1-11me 9 30-1.30 PERSONS. our Hawaii 6-8 yr• experience. 4 apply Phone 648 7021 d m1tu1e llv•ln for older tvnlng 1111111, mual have Mon-Fri, Combo poa-main 0Hl_ hes new Cor-Journavman minimum 6 Mual posaeas lop level 2 30 to 6 p m M~ey' Family member eserves more attention, there will be domestic c:hlldren, Muat drl-. Ute .,.. 911 bl ,_ 4 '""" .. _, · executive 11Cr1tar111 ex-: · · ad. d harm uld al . h • .,. own r a • trenepor-ltlon. c:ler ... al working one del Mar branch. Call yeere. Only qualllled ...,1ence. Call 553•0940 1hru Friday. JUStmentan onyco onceag nre1gnat ome. houlMlkeeplng, cooking, tatlon. po1ent111 for w/chlldren.Mustbeable Pacific Coaslllne. apply.714·842-7222 ........ 1--------- SAGITTARIUS(Nov.22-Dec.21):Emphasison p romotion, prlv. quartera, ref's, growtn.x1ntbenlllt1,tree to lype. Salary com-720·1f05. Ask tor Mon.Frl.9•5:30. WYEl&IEIT production, responsibility, special relationship and a real aala{;f!)~5f.= call :r~1:~.',.,,p;;~~~~ =u~~~kj~~~~:~~hrt Marina. ~~;,~:nglng opportunity IOf tax~?~~~Uhlon 1°:g:~:_ ~in1'~r1 ~~:: op~rtunity lo accumulate wealth. Creative juice:i . now, lllllHDlll Newport VIiia Weet. 393 dren'• Center. 18422 1ro1m1111TnP11T lor aetf-mo11vatec:i nom.. llland. Nwpt Bell Typl09 perlence Sabre ltelned charisma~· people are attraded to you and are willing lo Hotel Cleenlng Person, Hoapllal Ad .. NB. Culver Or .. Irv. 552 .... 858 H.B. Electronlo1 Firm, :T.k:rof !:'Jf.::"C:~~lgo~ 70 ec:curate WPM. dicta-desired Non-amkr encourage, mvest. apec:lel detail. tAuat OFFICE COORDINATOR P A E -s c H o o L lroot ottlc:e. typlng 60 quellty Qiita to buslneu phone expertence pref ~~r:r~ed t!'4~~ ~~0 CAPRICOR N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Project or assignment is apeak fnollahendt>ewill· Sm N.B. Ad Agency look· TEACHER-Full time pos-~or~~= ~~~t~~~;~ c11ent1. Call for appt. Salary 1120041500 mo 10AM·5PM completed, you'll be on more solid ground as result. Cancer ~111~0 c.iikM~:':~· ~~1::.~=g~_:;:~~i ~·~ldln c'!~~btll~'~ &46-1472 7141250-0352 DOE. 644-6516 __ ru_Y_E_l _l_l _E_l _T __ native haa faith, realizes your worth and doesn't hesitate lo sing 497 •• 477 SURF AND bookkeeping. elo Non w/8'eac:hool program. HOEmOlllT aalea SECRETARY· Reel Ellete vacation travel agent. your praises. Reach beyond current expect.at.Ions -potential is SANDS HOTEL ~.~·e!~~h!~41 Aal\ lor ~xp'! ~::.~~~~·~q.~=~ aum IALOI EHi TOP'" :nyvprng·mro~~~~s~~n~; Sabre trained, Irvine Of· tremendous and you are on way up the ladder. Laguna Beech frame •hop ---------commenaurate w/exper. Outatandlng oppt'y lor ax-1100-1110/Wl,P/T apeedwlrltlng, good flee. Call Sue 54S-5l23 AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Be ready for new start in new Maka apprenllce 1ralnee, Olttce Help, Tempore~ Chlld'a World Clllkfren·a perlenced profeaelonel. Selllng • new ad~lalng growth potential. Lota ot ... •~n·on. D~nt innwn· ·..., bMna favorable ""esponses. You'll get tun or F'IT avall Ph tor Cterlcal. llllng, Fle11lb e Certter. 18422 Cul\191' Dr.. Tuea-Sat, CdM area. Of· program to bulllneuee. variety. Cell for appt. ~~ OC'U:' -o..i = . .._ •· appt. 494-5822 hours. 846-1823 Irv. 552,...858 llc:e 871·9051 Worl( In A/C office with 7 ) 833 3525 Jiii chance to test ideas and be paid for doing it. You're on brink of medtc:al • -0-lfloe--P-os_lt_IOn __ ln-w-.. -,. prt1111e ~•tery. 1100 ~p!:ka. • ' valuable discovery and persistence could bring desired results. Large 08-GYN P"9C11oe In minster. c1er1oa1 ex-PlllTHll RefflffHl1t/s.Q =~··,0~aql~~~1~ PISCES (F b 19 M h 20) y 1 'cl that had Newport Beach II f 1 perlenc:e nec:euery Order deek Ell9erlenced Nwpl Ben publk: relatlona .,.. e -arc : OU ocate artl e .... ,_ ~·• I uaJI ronf Pleue call bet_, 9am pref but wlll lleln. Melure firm Miki per.onable & re .. ntallvea However. been lost, missing or stolen. Focus on basic values. correct ., .. ..,. ""'9'1 on •v · or "'"'rson with ablllty tor de-competent lndlvlduel.. no experience nl9Cell1ery. eMperlenc:ed m11ure lndl· -12 noon, 895-l222 .... -Good I -'-Ill &. NO CHARGE BACKS! judCnt, ability to synthesize hints, clues, observations. Sense vlduel with leederalllp --0.,,.-tL""c"""o""M,_,.,,.P-A"'N,...Y--tell work. Full company typno-• gen· NO AESEAVESI MUST Of · ·on as· restored, family member as· appeased and you'll background. potential for t>enefllt Mr. Emmona. erel oNlce cepabllltlet re- & I OPENINGS Newpon Stationers Inc: quired. 720-0941 T A Y I C a 11 S I eve MCfetlry Sherp reaponalble male or female. Typing, Khed· ullng. llght bookeeplng. with local c:omrny. Will treln. 957-812 • uk for Randy U· TITE·l llARIETI ll11ac••tlfTrllHH Stefl your n-c:ereer on our 3rd shift and pro- gresa Into upper m8fl- agemenl level. Dally In- terviews held from 9 am -4 pm et 12'22 Lampton street, Garden Grove. 0< cell 714-537 .... 640 EO E feel better as result. 1dvanc:.ment aa ery Ofl1nor1 rig• and re-863•1200 ThompMO, 530-" 140 open. Call An1war Ad f108fleS No 111p S30.000 ,,-,,,...-.,,...------RECEPTIONIST fOf law of- •831, 642·4300 24hra. plus a year. For Info. call PIT. 2 hr• per night. flee. Mo11-Frl 12:30·5:30. Trade your old etull for The 1aa1eat draw In lhe Make your shopping eas- _l_tl,..1_W_u_t_t4 ___ S_l00_1Btlt Waat.. 5100 BtlJ Wut.. SHO L"•i11 aroan••y 312·920-&e75 Ht 2239P $425/mo .. bonus. News· Hll)I phone1.11 typing S5 new good le• wit" a wea1 . a Dally Piiot 1er by using 1tte Dally Pl· c:ultomer MrVIOI .. , ... II&-I -,.u TillE ,,, .. _.,,_ -also Ope'1 evenings. pa1>9' dellVlf'Y 3AM -nr 833-8486 Clelallled •d. 642-5678 Clusllled Ad 842·5676 IOI Clusilled Ads NIQt voic:.. telephone Ill· ·~"'· Newport .... ll legal MC r• ---------6AM Call 759-0630 be-I ;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;J;;;i;;;;;;i;;;;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii----;;;;.L;;;;;;;;.;;;;;.;;;;;.;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii, penence, take ln11Urenc. Counter glrl wanted, PUT·TI•I Wiii ta~,c:MI 111. PI Call Mery PdTTilll 1ween 12 pm and 5 pm. 11 survey. M·TH, 6pm-9pm, I/time. Ex.per not nee. OpportunltlH 1vellabl1 84 -9450 Earn up lo s4oo per PIT, 5-6 hr• pr day, lite Nice He omce. S-4.751111 Apply In peraon. 1850 wllll the Los Angele• __ U_O_l _ll_O_L_E_•_1__ month. Aet11Ma, Hovae- to atan. 953.7457 San M iguel. N e • Times Clrc:uletlon De-n wifes. College S1uden11. date entry & gen'I ottlce. 644-0893 penmenl In our Mature Peraon, exper. Needdepeodableeutolo Good for lludent. Dental ~tlonlet. ADA required. e.11P1rlenc:e nee. lull time tor tut. tun ot- llce. Ask for Nancy &45-7580 DPUITH re quired. FIT night•, deliver Dally Pllol In 955•2600 dOOf·to-dOOt newtpaP9f ,.,...... p Ap I I """ ---------..... program. Guaran-!':..~293a/ E cf Y ~ H,.....r-Laguna Beech (2 hr• per CedH11ca 10 Go-Carls lndlvldual needed for Compu1enand. Npt Ben. 0u11n· ahlpplng and r .. c:elvlng. delivery, and atocklng of product. Hre: 8-4.30 dally. Apply In pet- aon efler 2 pm, uk fOf menager. 4250 Scolt teed hourly ~ plus """' oaa wy. day). Weekday P.M Wh11aver the Fad cOfnmlulon Hovr1. 9AM COM. Weekend• AM Call Mr Roll ·em ott the market -2PM. Of 4PM -9PM Find wnat you want In Barrow 642-4321. ext With a Clusttled Ad Training 11 provided. Dally Pllol Ctaullleds 343 EOE Cell Nowt &42-5878 Deak Clenc wanted See Lt1k Hotel. 846-7445 Apply 7AM-Noon only. Drlv9re ~ Crou country. Potential 10 eern $300 plul per ,.__ FOf en In· tervlew. Cell (714) 957-2381, ext 120' Drive, Npt Bc:l1 •---------Celllornla Llc:en" re· quired. Mac:Grego1 Yeonu Corp. 183 1 PieOtntla. CO.ta M .. --------SELL Idle ltema wllh 1 Clualfled Ada &42-5678 Dally Piiot ClaHUled AO. llm1MMll For locel l dl111no1 furniture moving. D.M.V. reQU!rad. FT /PT. Wiik· •ndt lnoluded. Cell Me-18M. 9am·4pm M·F. ~aily Pilat ········· .. ··· .. ... Oflv9re llMded, ln.urance requlr9d, eoomtcar ear ne.ded. 751--0453 llMU fttneport P•~ 10 I.A)(. AM/PM . Mini-. nun ege. 21 Y'· Mual : IC*ll and rMd Enolleh .. Mutt u• Tl'lomea Broe .: M8'). 14.2.8/hr t lfC>t. : AP91Y t 1&4 hat Fruit 91.. : Senti Ane OMV ~d wtl be reoMwed IAJLY PILOT m&llR TUllEE Now accepting applications for District Manager to supervise newspaper car- riers. Salary commensurate with experience. Company benefits plus bonus op· portunity. Must have Van, Station Wagon or Pickup w1th shell. Mileage allow- ance included. Apply in person, weekdays, 3 PM to 5 PM at 330 West Bay St .• Costa Mesa. " .............. ·---... ' : . ' ' . : : . . . . Newspaper KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! AGES 11-14 EARN lJl TO $75.00 PER WEIK Wt 110W haw• 1~ ~ lot /::inc tiltf btlftfS to !«Ute leMen The 111f1 Coast . :? Not Our crews slJrt 11 3 30 11. m arid untU 8 30 pm. '"'•611• On S.turday, "" . wor• • ltw mort hours. Yov wlll Hfn many trips • •lkl PflltS. •loi;tti e11111~r own lllOntY . .,~ lhtrt Is rt0 Vtl'tnl or hon 111~•ed tt you Ill lllltfttltd. l)ltH1 ail Mr br1 MCA (714) 548·7058 ~ ~ .. coot ~ I J YOU CAN WIN A FREE . HOME COMPUT•RIZ•D T•LEPHONE SATURDAY SEPT. 24 (10 AM-4 PM) HOW DO YOU WIN ? MEGA MATCH 1s Orange County's first computemed clas sified hsting service. We match buyer and seller according 10 their specifica tions. Instant consume( market matching and price scanning are available for anything, any where. anytime. If you have anything you want to buy, or sell, you can use this sorv1ce. The usual charge is just $15 for 15 days, NOW ME~A MATCH INVITES YOU TO ATTEND THEIR GRAND OPENING AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE FIRST 15 DAYS FREE! You can also come and try for a chance to win a computerized telephone. lhe Genesis Telesystem from American Bell Your coupon needs to be presented et the grand opening, however, winner need not be available at the drawing. Free refresh· ments will be served at 2148 S. Bristol Street, Suite A, Santa Ana . 1, t .. "''·' ... ... l I f lt 11111 l .(II ''UUU - MEIJ~..-MflTCH 2148 A S Bristol Strout. Santa Artll CA 97 l!M 1--------------------, I NAME I I I ~ STRHT ~ I I ~ l . ,• • ,~ .... I ' . I f-t.J. I em sun TIP I :. /" ' I I 41" PllONC -I w . .. I~~ -• ........ • C' lU Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Sept 22, 1983 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUULE ACRO~S I Po1.c~ 6 161,tr •l 10 Wl>uruJ 14 Me1ketµl.J(tt 15 lr1strumo11t 16 l 01 oritu tool baller t 7 E ggtrn..ill 18 SSl or STOl 20 Europt'dn 2 1 E.nt..losurP 22 Ollaw.i or Ohio 23 St.:llt:! 25 Uruly 27 Rubber- neckeO 30 Pencil eno 31 Quebec un111ers1t~· 32 Entreats 33 Pencil end J6 ussn city 37 Containers 38 Ceremony 39 Bitumen 40 Verns 41 Eater~ 42 Goodbyes 44 Entertain 45 Purple tirtt 2 3 4 41 -Breton 48 An Astaire 4<l Retiring .,o Sheep ">4 Carmine !17 Ult1ma1e ~t! Old Oog -' ~9 Bee genus ~Music passage 6 I Asian corns 62 lncllnallon 6~ Provoke DOWN I Vehicles 2 Cruel one 3 fly high 4 Court o f JUSllC.8 5 -Jose 6 Unw1lhng 7 Do as told 8 Eur nation 9 E,um Pref 10 Briny 1 1 L1rnestone 12 Girl's name 13 S Africans 19 Newspapers 2 t Blue 24 Far prel 5 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 25 Some exams 26 Negatives 27 Thlcl<en 28 -av1s 29 Joe Doakes 30 Lal<e and canal 3Z Italian crty 34 Brain canal JS Sassy 37 Rhymer 38 A1par1an 40 Fabric 7 8 9 4 1 P1c1<pocket 43 Postpones 44 rime period 45 Emporia 46 Love 47 Body part 49 Fleece 51 Column 52 Planet 53 Kind ot g in 55 College bldg 56 Anthropoid 57 Appro priate n 12 13 1141. Jl1t1d1la IOl4 Mi1e11ltaH11 '211 Ptwtr IMtt 701 Aat11 Wtattll t020 1te1, lapJt !•te1, laJ!!I.. !! ............. Loo(f 2 116 r:dwOOd deck Car pnone-nano ne10 '74 S••r•y. 220SRV, M.,c Hlghflt cuh lmm;(i fo1 DlllH ti 17 Teyeta 1111 Nlw. Im Ing Frorn •9 cent• pet n mobile phone w/hara to l/o w/20 lip trolllng your Y9hlCI•. oomMtk: °' '80 280Z 2i 2 NIU~ •gr TQyota a dr, Xie. rn "' I .. sa;:po;; lenclng 1110 Harbor get ull number•. Call motor Gelley, hHO, IOl~n 55l-t2116 leue at 1290/,'.,,o Of buy at~. tape, lllnt c;ond., 9eech'i llnelt -.Ctlon Reawooo 11411131 1317 anywhere In U 8 A Like tleepa eon Npt Sch 1llp WllTEll at 19500 831-41152 or 1 1200 OBO te2-7074 ol prevlou1ly owneo new $1175 720 1998 Aune 911d look• good. 840.91a.. Pottchtt. A~dl• and Caatrll l SHOO 831-7772 OOOd, CIMn uMd cen: '80 CrMlloa, or•y. velOur. Volk--... IOI. C01ecovl1loo, TurbO Ex-prelw 1078·1983 Buick•. '82 Pldlup. cmpr lltlell, loadea $8409 652-8505 ·-....-·· £s1ira11t pan1ionmoc:tule,......,a1 Penner wantto 31' J aou ara, TR71 & cua1omwtllt&tl1M.cu .. T ~ I l bark Rm Equlp Enlarge<, certrldgtl I 140. Call Pacemak~ Xlnt conO PorKMI Dul 1ny MOdtl tom paint & bmpr 151150 aa Lro Format & 30mm cam-3-0pm, 968-2729. 13850 dwn, $430 mo. Sllp conalderea. Top ~ &31~52 or 640·5 •IA "'7"A,..§Ppj"l!f!Pore"""1580"""•. ru--n,·o·rt~. -·-etN. Trl·poo Lighting & Encycl Brlltanlca '82 Blk & lne lncJ 720-1998 paldl Ctll Cllve It Bauer body & Int exh, ~a backdrop,e1c 8~0-9301 leatn OrtatBooki.Save Zodiac MK2 , 15hp, M otora 11 (71A ) Flat 1123 tran1.FlfltS1,000tak .. HHHblad 600 c w/A·12 SlOO• 731-•850 IOlded, extra•. IMll cond. 979'2500· 'Ki. i300/deo UX:3381. Call Jack s.~80 .• Back w/80mm 2 8 len1 Eltate sale RNtored '65 12200 obO. 81'5-0558 WE IUY can be paned"out '77 SJ>ltllr•. Mini eond. HHsablad NC-2 Priam MOB. olflce furn & equip, 34,000 otlg ml N-top & :;:~m1.--.-...-... r:':':' Dally Piiot llOUHhold furn 3400 hats, Sail 7014 OLEAI OARS a •• ~. 1125 Int $2500 493·8810 Contact Pno10 Dept Sauullto Or, COM, • OD 111011 • 7 t 642-5686 ht 279 M·F 8-5 759-89•• .... Ownet•hlp lallnder 30 179 Accord a dr. lo ml. Xe. • ••• ,.. ornet j'/gn. • • ,n Mark 11175 Otl 15600. AM/FM atlfeo, n-ttr", 157 Rag op, rebh \800 cond., 11950. 640-705 Coarateu 6011 Eurek• l•nk vac cteener. 2 Atoe crulM equipped. prlc.d 10 aelt at S•700. dual pon, Webberl, 12 laick 7 Osborne 1 w/Osl monlter ~?6·_.2112k5• new ~50 • 539-71137 ev••. O&A-74oo 1112-1010 Mon-Fri 9-5. volt, radle11. Blaupunktlfltj~~~~m~r-:::i:: ., .. _,. Ext 8650 dya. etereo no ru1t and Oood tury, m • on & HA 1 Daley whl printer, ~-=-...,----:::-:--~= V C t _.. '83 Civic, '6000. take over bod" 'S 1800 obo Wiii 2nd ownr, rune gn. clean. soft ware & many xtra1. OAS Lawn Edger S75. lw5'0 reknt.ure n 0•8• anl ........ I ,', payment•. 50,000 mile ,,.cona'l.der trade, .,·~ for $1000 obo. 557-3349 $2500 firm. 631-4836 Ferllllzer epreadar $12 t 845 7425 " " ''"to Joa 0 8•2-4778 atier epm $250/0BO. 642-50•0 Traelli 1031 X.:~::;0:~·aye. • · Dan, 546-31•7 evM Culllae UH Pr~ aZrable Kitten, "ery IET llEAIY Ftl '72 SABOT, xlnl cond. 162 Pord pickup, run1 eMJt, 1111'1 11 27 '87 VW BUG, anrl, nu brkk•. '61 Cadlilac 4 dr, gooJ r ~ uu • $500/ofr. 845-1915 r bait., nd1 minor ll'lg wr . running cond. 11000 or lovable to good home. O•lllTMAI am/Im CHI, nHda $1200 obo 557..()883 beat offer. 979·8648 545-1220 WLY HOBIE 16, trlr w/Cat box. clutch $700 firm. FREE 10 good home, good nat ured M/Harlequln Orea1 Dane 96•·3770 POOdle (Blchon Frleee), AKC. F . 4 yr•. sml writ, loves people 731-83 ll Ceramics made 10 order, rainbow aalla, ma~ e>e-841-3657 '88 Bug, rune i reet, needa ·70 Fleetwood, '73 eng, Including nativity aet, traa. Rarely ueed. actl-'65 Ford PU .. rune gOOd. ~~~!5~o:k, 800 Casey reg. gu. SOSO. 963-7114 large & am all Santa flee S 1795· 873"3600 long bed $800. 497-264~ '71 Sedan de VIiie. 74,000 Clauses. Ornaments and LllMf w/trlr & 2 11111, ••II '68 Bug. Rblt engine, new ml, ell power, ale, good other Items Pleaee call cond. S1000. 4114·6171 '74 Ford plc«up, y, ton w/8 paint, llrH $2200/obo. cond. $1450. 842-8058 Louise lor your order. 11 cm pr. good cond 720-1162 840•8709 eves. Udo 14. >elnt cond New $2500 54&-0883 Aaron ---'78 Sevllla, Loaded. 1 ••Ila & cover, trlr .76 Oataun ':'l ~. N~ 1111 Melllb'I '69 Bug. Wht, alarm. ays-owner, 711,000 mllH. To gd home 6 mot ma11 Membership, Gola Card, $2700/olr 546-5098 """' v-SOUTH tem, xlnt, am/tm, body 16495 675-681 1 dog Mixed breed. Loves Ma I Island S265 dues llrea/b11ke1 un• great Od s l800/obo, 1131.3590 =---=""7--:---:-=-:~= people Shots 786-2897 • g;ake oiler. ALSO Utile Yellow Sabot, ready $2700/obo, 673-8456 '81 Eldorado, $12,500, --2 KDhler blrtndey oath, to 1111 Gd Cond $175. ev/wknda °' 556-3380 COUNTY '69 VW CAMPER VAN s1ooo under market. Fu1itare 60 5 1 01 631-5874 llUZU CLEAN & STRONG Catrlage top, IOOke like claw loot. gold P um ng. ----...~----·77 Oe1aun King Cab. tac-S2900 846-2671 conv~lble, •5,000 ml, 1 sofa bed and 2 end $2000 675-57116 Newport 2T'inooard, auto tory air, AM/FM cus -' t tables $250. 786-2890 --=""="-=-...,......,~--::--:--:-::-pilot. 2 ancnor1, VHF. /b t T6 dials "Wl W1U HT • 70 VW Cm pr Van, pert c,ood Have to -0 NB T.C lull famlly mem-knotmeter. BBQ & mo1e. :/rl~~s. '!· m;nyr~traa IE llHlllLI $2600/olr. 673-4194 •7P7Pt-r5ecl91a9te Call Judy bershlp, $750 Incl trane-4-pc modular sectional, 2 chairs, 1 glass 1op collee table. ell Oak, $500/obo, 4 chrome oaratools $100/obo 640-6846 ler lee 759-9320 S 12•750/obo 842-768• S3500/bat. 873-5008 Volume S11e1, Service '70 vw Fastback, nu radl· -----,..-,--..,-,---::--: Prindle 16 and trailer xlnt •77 OMC, bob tall truck, And Leulng ats. battery. recent tune '81 Eldorado, loaded, xlnt Pool Table, gooo,c~n~ cond.$2000496-1488 22', 356 V8 eng. 5 spd 18711Btac:hBlvd. up clean low ml 11250 cond 32,000 m l . M u" s e 111 t box. 17.500556-0998 Huntington Beach obo MUST Sell 1174-1565 $13,500/otr. 851-8981 432-9641 Santana 21, great 1hape, (l1•)142 2000 dys. 786-1157 ....... rsora, neut pleld, xlnl I 00 8' O/B. new sails, In waler '8 t Toyota ahortbed PU, ~ • '71 ••t'IE•'OI ~~-T--t---1 50 6 3724 Relrlg. good cond 1 · ..,. " -Claaalc '80 Oil Eldo Cpe. cond Sl 0006'1 -Sola s75. 675.3504 Steve 675-1H9, dya AC, AM/FM ceasette laraaaa Gkta 132 Auna lair, good llM up car leatner, 10 ml. Sll,500 BUY DIRECT FROM S 975-7535 atereo, new Urea, & wflla, '67, 20,000 ml. radials. $800. 6.45-9258 obo 771-2390 14 MANUFACTURER Victor Elec Caan Reg. er hat roll bar. exellent cond. and save 50 to 75% on new 45. $200/olr 8•6-5193 sr;'' • ILi 701tt Best offer 646·647• new front end, rune well, '71 Super Beetle. new • • • rellable, am/Im cas1 paint. tlre1, Irena, ragtop top quollty bed aets. Twin WANTEOI V1a1 0 atereo. Won't 1u1 long at & more, $3000, 536-0448 se1s lust $69.95, full sets , '7 . I RCE ARROW JuSI $79.95. Save even Olflcea 18ft Inboard/outboard, '75 Chevy Beauvtlie Van .. t $3000. 842-2869 '71 vw BUS, 13,000 mllet more on queen and king ~:!:~~red homes 305V8. OMC175, >elnt owner, 8 pauenger '67 Cpe 12vo11. 1500 eng, on rebuilt engine, new sets. Free de I Ivery Messy apta cond., $6000 FIRM. $3500. 552-3595 eve. new paint. Good cond brakea. Interior and e>e- 636-4195 1 will transform your 548-1182 or 845·881• •-ti•••• $3200/ofr. 6'10·1674 terlor In great coodltlon. 1U1 t Carries 9 peopl e. Ethan Allen library wall Interiors, with ease •ari11 ~ur. 7 1 Claulca 1045 '70 nu paint & tires, very 12295/BEST OFFER. unit. xlnt cond, $325 and 1ty1e, and -d • p e n d . S 3 5 O 0 . 83 2 37 559. 7417 eves creellvllyl Minimum Evfnrude .9 long shah, 157 Metropolitan, mint 984_ 1393 2-1 coatl Maximum Aeaultsl low hrs, $600. CAL 25 cond .. 13000, 835~566, "'•7:-:4--=s=-u-per--8u:o--g-.~,o-m=1, --+--+---t F~~ .. •lzg~lmcmonodn.•1'°2501a lllerHllttrltrt main, $100. S-48-3683 546-0469 '71 Karmann Ghia. new grn/tan, l(lnt cond .,...., """ • i paint, daal'I, xlnt cond, s2600 6•0-8585 Window air cond, brand "•roe U2·2211 ... , I al. OUQIO 'II P&OUll 13000 831-4205 ---·----- new, $150. Changing Wlsti to purci'lue Rama ltmct 7020 One of aklnd, all otlg, run1 •aa~I tlfl !Ible. $20 831-5045 football tickets 2-4 tor -., •••t puma perf. 13100. Mrioue In-...... -..·~~~~~~-1 • "~ ..-n • -.. qulrle1 only. 750--0658 'la ua w···· I Ill Fll.,TlllE eecn ol the lollowtng· ""' Michael (213)5112-2528 - Lea 957-8133 ~·o~d8c~y2!~8~ llit1 i Deell1 7022 A1lt1, l•rrtt4 ~~~ =71~n1,;;:~~ Kg u bed, lltm, frame & any or tllete? Call Ted 27'lo 521 SaUbOat llip Alla ltaH 1105 759--0658 ~~;,;0~bri;0:ea:~~: 760-l313, 760-1585 near Larson Shipyard '73 Xlia s:dan. itereo, -.7-9_RX_7-G,..,S,....-0-00d-,--c-on_,,,.d, w/6 dwre S 100 Blu• vet-lbaical laat. 1224 Henry 642·8200 AC, 12500/ofr 673~ 19• 1011 ot eirtru. 15800 obo. vet chr $25· Sea!I Wuh-Bundy ftute, exll cond. 60' Dock 1pace, '82 Spy, ivory with black 67~2"675--0872 er/dryer $250 Full lgth S 125 760-8681 powe<. water lop, 10,000 mu ... am/tm ·79 RX7 many extru, nc- mlrror $25 All In good 714/673-1003 caaaette.llk•n-.StOfed rlflce . $5500. Firm. cond Cash only BUNDY FLUTE. new I n N 1 w p 0 r t 645-1757 631 -02•0 P•da/corks, •Int. $150. Newport Mar1na1111p1 s 1 2 , o o o Io Bo . ••ret4n a.as tt•s -..,,....--,--..,--.,.---rf::;-call 545-1479 day,~. montn 819-873-3117 .. -=~--T---t--r--1 Ladles antq desk, pe 646-0551 MllE .. IUIA'S '83 4 dr Fleetwood. S 18,950 Lido 6 75-4648. THE UllEIT SELECTIOI of late model, low mlleeoe Cadlllac1 In Southern Callfornlal See u1 todayl IOERI OAllLUC 2600 Harbor Blvd . COSTA MESA 540-1810 ClatT11l11 HU 163 CONafr bonu, X2k orig $950 536-1246 '65 Chevrolet Impala, run• greet 1675 631-4270 '67 Camaro SS. needs minor body work, nm• Mini S900/bll ofr 645-1229 or 521~849 ·10 Chevelle SS454. Runs great. look• gd, nd1 cond • S 150. IS40·0942 German made full elze 167 250S T.L.C. evident, cello Excellent lor begin-Wanted private allp In nloe Aaii records. member ol fam--......L-...L_....._-=~~~======--:...::...::.=...=_ Mull Sell -Entire content• nlng lludent Reason-area for 45' sall boat In 72 Audi 100, atlCk. gd Uy, thOfoughbred $5550, -----olmybeautllulhome.Ex: able.963-2187 •lntcond.WllltrldeuM cond. Sl200 , 840~110 Help Wnted 5100 Jolta WHttd/ Dot• 5510 8' 1111 herculon tole and otyacnt +-$$$.851-2350 ... 6 • 3074 --..,...,.~..,..,..,..--..,....- SOUTH cou11n YOLISWAIEll "WIWllL•T lllllHllU" Volume Sales, Service Andleaalng 18711 Beach Blvd. 1ome Int wo rk S 1000/obo, 839-3803 ·10 Monie Cerio, orig .. mint eng/lnt., R&H. AIC. pwr, reduced to I 1225. 963-8405 -D • 5107 -love-eeat w/matchlng Gibson J-50 Guitar """'---=:-:':"'---T'.:I~ ,... '88 230S Wagon, ale, pa, U-TOTE ·M oaHtlC Lao Pups, Yel cn:mp lined chair and ottoman, Juat wlcase, $275: Alrllne Ntttr liltH 1 A"""""a-it"""i- 1 ----..,.9""1-.x pb, 4 spd, 68K, lmmac. & • Babysllllng and/or house-7wks. sno11 worme paid s1200, will 1911 tor autoharp, $70. 642-7961 192 Honda E•presa, xlnt 160 SPRITE orig. $12,000. 845-3101 Hun1lngton S..Ch CASHIHS/CLERI. keeping Swedish girl 19. S125, 494-9655 only S450; Solld Oak F • / d S320 875 1889 s I t N OW HI RING FOR llve m 650-7748af14pm MUST SELL German gamet1ble1e•.Oakcurlo lice 11a1t1rt con .. . -Aeblt en~ .. n-clutch, '75450 EL, recent pan , ·75 Sclrooco. runt xlnt. CASHIERS AT 12422 Liv~. m~ rats, Call! Snepherd pups, 6 mos • cabinets, lorm11 dining Esairaeat 6221 llltltrryelu/ $1500 0 0 760-1'75 good ~~~74~1,500. $1900/0BO 673-9175 ·7n~evo"'t• r~pT81~19968' LAM PSON, OAR OEN or Uc.; Ctilldren pref 5 AKC, $150 240-2268 rm lurnlture: occ chalre, New RkOfi 4700 Copier. SeNttn 1011 llllW 9112 '78 MB 6 9 -XLNTI '79 Sclrocco, exit cond, 631-3089. btwn 1-5, (714) 142-2000 '70 Nova, 2 dr, rune good, 3 apd, $7!X) 963-7114 GR Q._V...,--t"'ff O M 1 guages wages nano hide-a-bed. solid ranch $1800 957-8451 '!'19~0':':::'":i::'!"'"i::rlJl'1r~~l;9~~mlf"'!"'~~~~ · runs pert, oe.ut red met, .,..~11 .. 5PM ..... -"'3An'°:JPM MON TUES an ""' -TOY POODLES 9 week• 1 oak wllnlald glaas tables. • '7 t Yamaha YZ80, good 174 BMW Bavaria. nfttop Ultimate Lu11ury Seaan blk Int s 4500 obo Mull 850~ • a.. .._ THURS FRI CA LL 1iablaJoann 53 t- 5 0 86 blk Ml t Wtilte F/ AKC petlolurnlture.allleather PB malllngmacfllne,mdl cond.$200 497-198• end , 1pot1e11 $28,500 ~242 sell 845-5374 or lotAnlt• 7l4-537·4840 Loving motlier of toddler S250ea. 845-7707 recliner, roll top desk. 5830, SealS1Po1ts/Atn .83 Suzuki OS750SO $4300/0BO 875-6014 • 78 300 Coupe dll, all 642-81811 '78 Corvette 32.800 ml. EOE would Ilka to Dabyslt WANTED a good norfle tor wall unite, antique cuh Adrs Like New $475. Katana, orend new c78 3201, red w/blk, air, al-xtraa, new tires, paint, -, 7 ,..,. 9 -vw-=---=-0s'""'i""'R,...a..,...b,...bl,...t,-d""l•-.'""'•l,...r, Immaculate In & out other toddletS Fun 8 good dog we wlll leeo regleter. 3 Dedroom aetl. 556-0387 14000 or bell 1142.9 131 loya. lo ml. xlnt cond. etc. Muat see to apprec. Lo a o e d S 8 4 7 5 PAAT-TIME Varied hours Daci.yard, close 10 oeach n1m for 3 mo II you wlll Includes King, Formal llv-RX700 dry copy macl'I. ••II Honda o400cc Four, allow S 8 3 0 0 6 4 5 -2 S 7 5 . $13.950 6«-81119 ::~.:n1"~·7~9f8~l-3x~~k &42-&30, 8 -3 pm. 10 include early A M & park 53 6 · 1 321 adopt this 2 yr old beared Ing room 5011 191 an~ cond 1300 incl paper, room condition. falroog, 675-8638 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim c,_,., Caprice Claulc '79 weei.enos Musi nave de· C --5505 ColUe 497 ·3521 anyltme m11cn1ng oak tablel. 20 10 n 9 r & c 8 b 1n 9 1 ...,..,.-..,.~-----:-:...,-~ -. 8 ...,. 0 -v-w-R""a_b..,.b..,..lt_c_on_vert_""'lble,..,..-. "V•, pendaDle ven1cle (small Ill 460 Ford Jet Ski Boat, 548_9827 Dags. like n-St. '78 3201. must 14111, exit 'll •H Ill white. 111 mllaga. xlnt 8 cyl, •l e, loaded irucit ven stallon HIMALAYAN KITTENS 010 over 150,000 lnveated 831-3375 cond, 50,000 ml. $7300. 0.HHnt tallfty cond S5950 FIRM $4995/ooo (811rta) call wagon! 10 assis1 11ews-Blue point. wlilie hybrid. AatitHI I Call anytime. wlll be Pi1111[0r1a.. 6 TraUtu 750-1484, 760·01115 I• w 6-4._505.4 uk lor All'I now 750-2140 paper .1••11er0 in /;,n• s no 1 s and 9 P: Pers nome 213~0• 1 200 GRANO"lllANO: high glou Tran\ I024 '83 3201 eoncou,.. Ouallty, IH~u:O :ilt-UH '82 Rabbit Convertlbta Cb~1c!:, c9.'!'cf0•1~' 8te8 Cs e ~ n-S200-$250 55 -5 ~5 *Altl19H AloHH* Must Mil aleeper eola, llke ebony, new cond ... peld •87 TNtdrop. 17 fi. llPI A. white w/parct\ment Int. Xlnt condlllon lnalde/out. S.i-3 482 oHay0o9ie••ondoany;~ncr~· Fri~~~ l<lnENS DUALITY PER-THURS. SEPT. 22, 6PM new, $200. 631 -1564 $12.000. sacrifice $8500 14,000 mll•. !ully Euro- 56795 . 631 ..a 297 --._.,.,..,,-:=-"="=-:::::.,..-- ..., • w , P S 50 wewlllhavealutrunnlng NEWM•nRESSSETS 760~718 xlnt cond SOO O. peen, N-P8'1 w/new SEEHSfllSTI oe1ween 9 30 and 10 30 SIAN edlgree 1 up clean out auction of an-" 839-~3 1•" BBS whMla. Holco '79 300SO, anrf, alloys, 10 '82 RABBIT CONV • 8 m only 642-4321 536-1692 llques thla Thurs. evening Full S65. On S 100 Twin HAMMOND Concotd 2100 alarm tytlem, Blaupunkl ml, xlnt cond., extra tank. AM/FM Casa, A/C, Maga, we have a good Mlectlon • 0~1 5510 to make room lor Ille 111 S80 Klngl120 Framee& With bench. gOOd cond • Coleman Tint Trailer 2010 eound aystem, Car $21.900. 498--04.44 5K ml. 111.500 of NEW ' uMd CheY- AK Bo••• pup, Fem ""' 11111 In box S1et91 8. ot our r""ular fall auc-del 11vall Andy 750-5832 12500. 5.48-7253 w/eitra room encioaure, ll'lown b1 'fJPt only. '80 30050 Turbo OSI. 5 cyt, 551-112115 °' &45-0792 roletal S.. ua todayt WAITllESS/WllTEll Brindle SlH 751 _8230 lions Thlaauctlon wtll In-King u deep red ve4ve1 Kim ball Artlat Conaole Stove, Sink, IOeoox, pon S 17.000. 14/ 4-02112. Ivory w/plnltr1pe, alloy • 83 OTI, am/Im c-tt•. w111i car •or Nicker basket elude a llule of every-quilted spread w/match Plano, golden oek, llke potty Uaed 4 tlm11. Convenlently Located wtlla, inrf, AM/FM radio eunrool, Plrellf Pe'a. ext lime• seMte 9 om-1 Collie male AKC, 10 yrs thing: American oal< & plllow1 $50. 642·4842 new. muet Mii & teke otf. 13300/obo. 754-7905 & Competltlvely Prloed t~ decle. new Ur••. warr $7400. 11-40-5023 COHMfll CHEVROLET pm Mo.,·Fr Eern ap. Old Must have large ;~r~~:c';1~~r~:1~~j0~1~ Solid walnut dining "0c" 6 ~11~ ~or5 ~~~·1 ~~ng Pvt perty w81118 to buy Q :,eogoaont':''·s 2 ':.05"'or;1, Marr,:O, Moving, Mu1t p(o,1ma1e1v S 150-~ t 75 yard Great dog wUh counlry store Items, adv-chrs, pad1. $475. to-213/594-8020 travel traller. Ready to 4116-8113 Sell. '71 Super S..tle. wee•ly Musi oe nee I. i\ids S 150 499-1526 ertlalng ltema & small col-gan game tbl, 6 barrel buy, wtll come to you. Call new paint, tlr•, 1tiock1 Pers c1 nab I e and German Stiepflerd pup, lectables. BARGAINS ewivel chrs 1325 Walnut Plano. Klmball Con.ale, 213/925-6840. SalM-Servlce-Leaalng '83 3000, turbo, an rf, elc.Alreood & tape deck. 11 enerqe11c Call for ep-female, 6 mo, papers, GALORE Buyer'• pre-bullet $125. Frultwood Pecan flnl1h, XLNT con-blk/blk, 7 M, $26,200, $2,700 OBO. Attar 8pm lfm; ... lii;,.""!""...,"!-""~i°!i~ 'X). 11.irl••I fl.\ I I I II-> I \ \1 ~" ' 546-1200 P?Jntment 1>e1ween 10 Large boned, good mlum la 10%. Public & colfee tbl S85. End tbll dltlon. S1000. 64().81131 Trallen, ~CARVER 546-93113 or 760--0980 Of 7am-9em. 548-1218 ''7 Olplomal. loaded. am and '2noon,or2-4 prolec t lon $300. deeleraweleome. $45ea.NB.548-4320 Plano. late 1800 Stortan Villi! IOH l"'-11 A1"aboutthemoneywe · 40.000ml.135!?0. pm LOR1'9 KITCHEN. 2402268 or"il 1 C"~l'MW "" WISTW"""EN •'• 873-0574/54..,..1•..e 3077 So "!arbor Sen1a · LarryM1r1HA1otl11 Table. draw leal/4 chr1 a. Clark.Orlgmahoganyfln-Utility tr 1er ·b8. New ~"'-11\..t:' can Mve you thru our ~1:•; "'w .,. ' Ana tH<1roor at Carriage) 1665"Toron1o Way, C.M. bulfet, 1350, •32-8647 lah, oeaut tone. $850 beef. good tlr• 1375. ~~~·~~ "'M ~=~·· purchua & leaM plan1. A personal and proud e>e-fir• 1311 979-9747 .1,. f'l.•<'t' )ou r 556-9901 B t a. cla 4 obo. Oya 851-1314, evea 241-0315 __________ __.._ .HM ILl•ll clullve vw agency dedl· ,,,,88c=-:M:-:-u1....,.1-an-g-=c:-:-on:-vert-:-::::1b~le=-. ~~~~~~~~~I •• · 1 499-4929 9 ~ .n•u1•n 1.,..TI ca1e0 to quality MNloe, ~ J'f Ht• ... ull = 3 FAMILY GARAGE -:----:'.--=-::-:::~:-=-Aate lttlCff ~YL" 1pare pena. and a com-reatored, $8200/0BO. '"' \ 11, l•rr1•1 t11r' ,\If I J)f 'o"' 642-5678 ht. l22 DIMES A LINE WANT ADS IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PRrVATE PARTIES Sell your items tor $50 or less tn our fa movs DIMES-A-LINES pub- lished each Saturday in lhe Dally Ptlot OIMES-A-L/NE ads must b" pre-paid so mall or bflng them m10 the Darly Pilot office Be sure 10 mclude your phone number or ad- dress tr1 your ad. have a Price on each llem & no abbreviations Sorry no commerclsl eds, garage salt>s proa11ce. plants or animals are accepa1able DEADLINE: 3 p.m . Thruaday Cotta Meta Office 330 Wett Bay Slrfft Costa Mesa, Ce. 9282e lllTIQUE TRUMIS Reatored, some arllully decoreted "" snapee & size $250/up 846-2995 Engl. 0111 linen press. $1200. Oat. sideboard w/Deveted mirror, 1300 Amer oak cnalra. aet ol 6, $300 Oval din table. S25<1. 5.4M11 1 GERRIE'S ANTIQUES IS BACK 3600 sq It or /\merlcan An- tiques. also department or used furniture & collec· tlbles Wiii buy Eatatff. consign or whal have you? 501 No. El Camino Real, San Clemente. 492-0638 or 492-4554 Secretary desk, Amer circa ·20. $725. 760-8661 ApplilllCll 11 HARBOR.AREA APPLIANCE SERVICE We sell recond., guer 8ppllances 549-3077 fltfrl1ereter l•I• AA WESl COAST APPL AEBUILOERS. NOW IN COSTA MESA. 2 Localloos to serve you 1880 Harbor Blvd., C M. between 19th& Newport. 650· 7077 or 850-7082 Rebtdg plant, lhowroom 132 So Main St., Orange Cllapm911/Maln 634~200 Or 5611-3992 •Aefrlglratora s 1 to up •Fr .. tetall 19 up •WUl'ler1/~1S129 up All carry 3 mooth1 p11n1 J labor warranty. Oettvery available Maa1er Cl'laroe & Visa. 9-e Mon~et T mo. gu range, Calorlc $400 "" 8. 55g...9170 F,REEZER, Admlral up- r~l'lt. good cond. 12&0. alto R1trtg S35. 494~4 791 FREEZER. Admiral . up-r~ht, good cond. 1250: 11190Refrlg1311. 49 .... 791 l llYAPPUAIOH Lei tS7·8l33 Kltch~ld dllhwHhtf, 3 yrs old, S 150 831-51144 Relrlg 12&0. Wall'ler & ~ 1135 HCh. Dtlh- WUl'l•t $ 100 848-58 .. 8 SALE-Cars, eppllanc", Start Ira•• M41 IH2 IMPORTANT Sa~Ltaalno 1301 OuallStr .. 1 petltlve Hiii p1t1en-873-7085 furniture. plan11. every-w/cuaetfe. recorder' NOTICE TO READERS WIEST NEWPORT BEACH talion ol lhe unique '70 Torino, Od llrw/batt. thing goea. Kiner Ave, playb9cie + elllru . barely AND 111-tlOO Vo4kawtQ9n qualll)' ve-MW radlatOf. Nda valve HB. Sat/Sun Beach & uMd S750 firm 54M 202 ADVERTISERS llYEIJQRJ MBZ t90SL. 1951 con-hlc:OB CHALLMAN'S Job S325 642-7864 Elll1, look lor atone .,.0 The price ol Item a *'77 ~. 4 tpd, A/C. v er t ., 2 top a , , 75 Oraneda Gl'A. lCln! lmat J 4 !erti•t a.Ma I-advertlud by vehicle (378VOAI S9500/0BO. 857-5068 ~:·1 W11 TWA GE H .•:•, oond. Genuine reuon tor cOJi Xri-15 bf'.alld new. ~ In lhe Y9hlcle *'79 320!, 4 IPd. AIC. MBZ •sosL 1979. 58K ml EcurleShlrteeCorp. aa1e s1900 720-0008 Ortet Garag• sai.Sept never fired' $400 Martin cla11lfled edvertlalng (994XEOI .. • 900 h BMt Dul. All Wayt · · 2• Kentucky HOfae Farm 30•30 rlfle' w/4x' acoc>e. eo1umn1 doee not ll'lCllude *'82 320!: 5 apd, 10 mt. (uu797) .20, · P 7800 Weatmlnater Blvd. ·77 TBlrd, 111 ntru. beaut lurnllure, dlanes. eome s125 S-48-9551 any applicable tu... (1FOE848) 846-3044 or 720--0495 Weatmlnater cond, batgaln. $2600. clothe1, tapea, tun •luff · 1ic.n1e, tran1ler , .... *'83 320!, hod, "S" Pkg •C 1141 7511-0650 rtt Derwin, Irvine. olf TV •-•i• finance chargee. IM•'°' (9003905) l14/YW1·WllT 1~L_,..l-,,-1_---"""T1\r.nrz Northwood, around cor-' -/ air polk.itlon control o. •. 81 320!, 5 apd, A/C '68 MOB Conv, >¥Ire whit, Total PerlOfmanee VW'• an.. •- ner from Savannah. '"" 6232 vie• certlflcat1on1 or ( 1CUU444) nu tlr91, remov hd top, liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '82 Da& VI, 8lli el .. cs; • I ...... 6 eEXOTIFOL 2511 RCA dHler documentary ··79 3201, .. •P<S. eunrool. runt itlt Sl500 5'0-8299 ••• ,. L_. ... _ ,If llgnef, wtllta. carriage l~I Color TV 2 yr wrn1y preparetlon cflargea un-(091YPZ) '78 MOB Conv, Wire wnla, ....... la .. Ar rool, lo.ded, 2.500 mlla. 3 FXMlLY Sat/Sun, cor-s1•8 Fr.;. def. Open leu otller'wlae specified *'80 633<:11: • IP<I. Lo Ml. am/Im cau, xlnt cond, lo fer H •• S23, 125. S-48-7300. ne< ol 16th & Santi Ana sun TV John'• 846-1786 by the advenlMr (5555493) ml. S3150. 546-3889 YW .... ,. • iiereary l'fS St. Set or chair• & tbl, i / *'82 7331; 5 sod, loaded. _ ... I nl ,. _ • Patio furn. camper lh•ll. RCA video recorder VHF Aalt '" en 73556371 •79 Midget convert.. •-QI 2 .. h ood cond ~ yrs :J 901 S ( • 3 o o o / 0 b o Former cu1fomere ol •t1 ••-11S P1an11. mauage tbl & .. r, g .. : arll *'78 3201 •/T •1c • -• Id $175 960 0015 ft 6 -• " · " 714-73•-7•80. Chick lvenion VW, N--lllO many mite treaeur1a. ~ wknd1.' • a ·61 MBZ 226 MOd, 1rvnk, (667UOOI port Beech. are welcome Ory copy mach, twin bed•. otllet parta. $75 ea. VW •'83 3201; All• iunrool. ~I l l at Common-•lth Volk•· llt .. 141 •cheat ol drwra, mon's p '$t'' 7012 Bus rur bench (1FR0833) '7fdTw7etereo &11iarm & wagen. You nMd1 fat •714 Capri, /ood running suite & much more. 1939 Wit 661-2220 881·2220 lll-a111 door dent. $l300 obo. Authorized Warranty cond • 1200/obo. Teresita Ln, Sat, 0·5. 17' BA INER 12000 8 3 Merc.dea eng s2800 208 W lat, Santa Ana Call alt 5:30 675_30511 Service, Servle., • Part• 850-231111 •• 111.E .. AT 1,.1,• or make708116~1r 1(511~gla11) :z40_9043 or 548:9670 Cloled Sunday wlll be courteoullly met ..... , 7 ,.,,. 8 ...,Merw,.,.__ry_ 4 ,_,,doof'--• ...,.A"7./C•. LAROE SELECTION OF Ptraclal 1157 Se• ua today! W•'re '11 Piil. OAR 6 PdT1 17' Sebercran '82 40 hp '66 Chevelle Dody, !root NEW & 10 BMW'S! '83 3568. )uat reatoted, nu located at Br1atol & Ed· ~~:~:!:i:,'~= Rigging, •ml boate, Suzuki elec, 'nu 'bttt & end, radiator, POil r .. r paint, chrome, rubt>w, lnger,NSanta, SAna., 11 JuCat 2'~ control, xlnt cond , Catam1r11n1. hrdwr. •lee· baJt tank w/lrlr $2200. end, •le. 548-88114 tlrM, brtc1, starter & bait, mile• o. o ou ou 797 tronlca, ahop IP<>1•· fbrgla 240-8328 PAINT ANO LIGHT BODY & look Mt S5800 Plue. S3000. te2-4 equpmnt, dock boxM & WORI< Save SI & In-LM I ..W ruboni ,..2 751 gOr . COUGAR CONVERTIBLE 11epe Weatport Marine, 32' Grand Bank1. N-creaM r car·a valu• VOLUME SALES o ' '"' • j( '72 XR7, lClftt OOftdl 4A7 N N•wporl Bl. paint/Int, tuperbly b SI el':"teo-1221 SEAVIC!& L~SINO-'P PORCRF3'WSUM~ ~ M500 ftrm. 533-4242 Sat/Sun tqulpptd $40K .l_;..Y_· ____ -:-:-: 31170N.Ch«ryAve f:f:; Red with Bleck • t 'l1 1 14 It 8 0 -1 3 2 1 or a Ill W ... M-LONG BEACH Le er. Exception al. ~ OW.. .. Ut • Btutlatl 11 1 2131&112.3911 •• u -.212 .. •-(No. Cherry exlt-405) Oa-714~51;lt~2 ~. ~ 8 ' gee). _, '114)111-tlto ,. dr, AJC. AM/FM Radio, I Ill '76 24' Aelnell cabin USEOCARSt TRUCKS "fr.O.fna Welcome E,,_ 714-332.0729 Power e .. te. h400. s~f~~~~b~· ~i=-=~~4 ~·~· !011hra.,.t~ COM!INac:;:.;La~OA Now open Sun 11.... '78 012E. MW PO ti,..., 53M31& dtyt: 540·1440-SeooO/obo 851'·t445 flll111T-'-•• l 1unroof, r•bullt •no. Since lt&S "'P-..U""T""-,...----.lll'l!riDm ' ConnlW·DelMlo •• CHE RAY I I 15,000/obO. I w•ufl ~~~!"!!!!'~~~=-nt 2 4 28'SEAAAY('78)~ ......u *'18 QIKll 818. nu 78CM5112bef.9/lft.8 ... IS'-eu ..... , .... 552 C11. &rtl&d garneta, CrulMI' Ilk•. MW. loeded. 192f1 8eACH BLVD. racnai "r•, Oe11Yn Ml'-....... One of a kind, .. ooo. rvne vall*I 131,000 Seti tor PP 873-7873 HUNTINGTON BEACH v1c.d onll· auto, air '':x'::a v:"1. :~ ~\~ Ml-tlJt a.t. IN I**\. 13100 ... sertou. S28001640·8688 llTill H llUIM1 Ul ... lt Mt411l •t•reo, P-ltHrlng. 1 990-3081 ' lnQuiti.. onty. 75t-0151 Ofamood Cutting Factory· see too OFSO CALS "4l50. Don 840-1200 • Pl '' ft1t Big .. 1e. Ian buya, low FINEST POWER BOATS WI'" TIP .a.II '73 1200 F111back 4 IPd a.111 ..,.. tll l '''" tu~ ,... pricee t>eaut diamond•. 21 Tl 11 nn FH 1a1 Ull •tn1 sen 84&-1ne 1171 8'.iROi; Royce, llC ; ; 'ft VOiYO bl i aoo; ·e T"R':"T 000r .1m un::.:; ALL SHAPES & SIZES And talk 10 over 25 l&JI •Mill '7e 280z ••It COfld COMP WK, grey Int. 10K orto. Ml, aunroof, air. Mult Miii ;tea,.-; &H..Sl tt ' Engag•ment Rlng1: eer-lle.nMd yacht broker• --••/Mall returblahea MOOO obO aervloe rffOrd avall. 111.500. Atk for Ev.tyn 1 ,.........,.· pe.r------ilrKlm rlng•:l.ooMDl•mond•. r119reaent1no 2500 lllted ,,_,_ Scott, a 40 .1oos: $48,800.~ 891-288&, 759·1211, ... 11111 UH 11 4- 69 1-2 969 veeH11'°'111e, 2"c8g~':'t~d, 550-6887 ..,.. 64 15 '82 Vol\IQ P1800, •trong 171 iunblfd. I Cif. 4 r:;I. bet HHll At•• h.,.n Ut-UH 141. Hll ·1e 2eoz. 5 ap0, iud<>, 'II II llm.IT II engine, 12500. •97-2643 an/11 rldlo, nu llrM, Xntique aola, wino back ltt·lllt•W ... r call 842.,.563 x1n11 t1e.eoo.6~242 •74 142, 11int COfld, baoo H,OOo ml. ~ ~ chair, tbl•. entlque MC.-USED WI WAIT TM 178 2801 am/fm 0111, air, 84&-1211 !~~ :f:~ ~O retary, oil painting, wallr, IUI U1J •epd, apolled whlaa mln1 ~R .76 vott\IO a:UOL. 91.lnroof, ·eo-w•-x:::::= 4 c)1 ,. Oryr & micro wave. Wk POWEi IDIT ....... "''' II"""' r1_,.,..,_ 8117 ·200 .. 7""' AU•• oond. ........ ...., • 19d, 0 /1>1', mso. I • d d. Jud~.. · ,,m «v-........,, SHOW ObO. t7Ma57 -~ 842~563 ~ns10eo. 1~ • O.~ ..... t.r tilt ... -.. .... ._.._ 1h 2102, ult cond. -..-i _..,., ~' """"~ ,,.~. ·12 OL, 4 9'>d fN9I dr, anf1, n •• _, .. 500 1162.0&70,...,.. ".,..,. .... ..,,.,...,_ AM/P:M CM1 ,,.,_,, Wll"f t&o yr I 1 Wit Old xlnt =-°"" IUflOA'fa tH C!Mn In a OU1 AllUIM cond, Re'.g Pllcel18, Nie LUt lleftu Plnd what you 111ent In lee. 1235 mo 121~a212 S6 99 544-3591 11 All te Delly Piiot Claaalftad.a. Cleaning up It's a dirty business, but someone has to do it -in this case it's chimney sweep Ted Humphrey of Sunset Beach. Se~ story on Page 8 l . Lineup slated 1 jn rape attacks By ANDREA ADELSON Of ... ci..,"" --l Victims of four rapes and an Irvine woman who talked a man out of a81!18ulting her were to try today to identify their attacker from a jail lineup that includes a Tracy prison parolee taken into custody Tuesday. Investigators said Robert Elwood Morehead, 29, is under investigation for four pre-dawn rapes -two each in Santa Ana Austral la ties It up NEWPORT, R.L -Austral· ia n, living up to her ~­ tation as a superi>oat, tweed tbeAmerica'sCuptoadedatve seventh race for ~ first time with a shocking rout of U.S. defender Liberty today that evened the sailing aeries at 3-3. John Bertrand steered the Aussie yacht to within one victory of becoming the first foreign boat to win the Cup that the United States baa held since the first competition 132 yeanago. Liberty, with Denn.is Con· ner at the helm, grabbed a seven-second lead at the start. but Australia U· BOOn barged ahead and led by 2 minutes. 29 seconds at the first mark. She never trailed again. Barring a call for • lay day from ei~ ..... &he ~th race ia echecluled for Frklay. · and Orange -that occurred in August. Irvine detectives also believe he is a suspect in a fifth attack in that city last week. · Police in Costa Mesa, Irvine and Laguna Beach do not believe Morehead is under suspicion for committing six other rapes and two sexual assaults that have occurred in thoee cities in the last two weeks. Laguna police have arrested two men for suspicion of rape in two attacks, but Irvine and Costa Mesa authorities have not ap- prehended anybody in the rash of sex crimes in thoee cities, where victims have described the at- tackers as both Caucasian and Hispanic. The parolee, Morehead, re- leased from a Sacramento area prison July 30, is black. He is being held without bail on a parole hold in Orange County Jail. Orange police Detective Curt McMillan said investigators in Orange and Santa Ana noted similarities between the four inci- dents, but we.re unable to tie their cases together until an Irvine woman picked Morehead as her alleged attacker from a photo line-up on the day of his arrest. The circumstances surrounding the Irvine incident, where a man made lewd gestures to a women during an hour-long ordeal in her home, is dissimilar to the four other assaults, he said. The Santa Ana and Orange adaults have marked similarities, with a man forcing entry into the homes of women who were alone in the pre-dawn hours. The four victims each had their eyes cov- ered shortly before they were assaulted, McMillan said. Because the victims had only (Sff LINEUP, Paae AZ) • Colleges foresaw funding cut: Officials say budgets can handle lawmakt:rs' lailure to reach agreement By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .... OellJ ... , .. .., Local community college leaders said the Sacramento squabble that has killed a $108 million funding package for Cali- fom.ia's two-year colleges will have little impact on area cam- puses. Officials of the Coast and Saddleback community college districts say they did not count on receiving any additional state aid when they prepared their 1983-84 budgets. On "Wednesday, Gov. George Deu~ejian vetoed a $108 million THE ORANGE COAST community college funding bill approved by the Legislature. He said he would not approve ad- ditional funding unless legislators agn!ed to a first-time-ever $:)0 per semester tuition fee for oommun.i- ty college students. He asked Assembly Speaker Willie Brown to call the Legis- lature back into session to consider community college tuition. But on Wednesday afternoon, Brown said he would not call the Legis- lature back to reconsider com- munity college funding issues. "We were prepllred for the worst, and it appears as though we were right," observed COM.at Com- munity College District Trustee Barnet Resnick. "We are not happy about this tl,U'T\ of events, but we did take the proper role accounting-wise for thls eventu- ality." _. The Coast District includes Or- ange Coast, Golden West and Coastline colleges. Although community college leaders in Los Angeles said that district may be heading toward bankruptcy, Coast District Board President Carol Gandy said Wednesday, "the Coast Com-\ munity College District will keep its doors open. We have a~ budget baaed on sound fiscal. planning. With sound fi8cal man, agement and cooperation from. everyone, we will make it." Of!lcials in the Saddlebaclc Community College District, which includes campuses in Irvine and Mission Viejo, prepared sev- eral financial plans baaed on various funding proposals that might be approved in Sacramento. Saddleback officials trimmed $2.27 million from their budget for the current achool year and hoped (SeeCOLLEGES, Page AZ) 4, COAST IDITION THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1983 ORANGECOUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Irvine Co. clash of tii'ans: EX-chief Kremer sues Bren By STEVE MARBLE Of !he .,..., IOtlof •telf Irvine Co. Chairman Donald Bren today accused former com- pany president Peter Kremer of gr~ errors in judgment in filing a massive fraud suit against the Newport Beach development firm. Bren said he finds it "in- conceivable" that Kremer could reach the conclusion that the company shortchanged him as much as $5.5 million when he left .the development firm early this year. Kremer filed a lawsuit Wednes- day against his longtime friend and busin~ associate Bren, alleg- ing the Irvine Co. chairman used deceit when buying up the former president's stock and paid him far less than he paid other stock- holders. The suit, which alleges fraud and violations of state and federal securities laws, was filed in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles. In addition to Bren, it names New York investment banker Herbert Allen Sr., an Irvine Co. board member since 1977. "Kremer's action against the Irvine Co. board is a continuing example of Kremer's poor judg- ment and total and complete misstatement of the facts," Bren said today. Kremer said when his stock was purchased at $150,000 a share, he was told the price had been computed on the company's value of $750 million. He said when Bren bought up stock from other MOTHER OF fOUR KILLED BY HIT A·ND RtJN DRIVER ON SEPT. 18 1983 CALL f . V. POLICE DEPT. WITH INf ORMA TION 963-9725 ci.., ,_ ......... LM,.,... Fountain Valley policemen Sgt. Vic Deutsch (left ) and traffic oHicer John McDonald wait at scene of fatal accident for possible information. Police hunt Valley auto killer Squad car with flashing lights to beckon possible witnesses By ROBERT BARKER Of IM DllllY ""'4 atelf A Fountain Valley traffic investigator is trying to track down the killers of a mother of four young children, and he has taken some unusual steps tcJ get people to help him. Sgt. Vic Deutsch is dispatching a police car and officers in the late afternoons to the scene of last Sunday afternoon's fatal incident. The patrol car will have its red lights flashing to draw attention to signs in Spanish and English seeking witnesses to the hit-and-run tragedy. "We know there were witnesses because it happened in front of some people sitting on a bench waiting for the bus. We hope this will encourage them to come forward," he said. "It's got to get their attention." The tactic of sencfu\i a police car ~ the scene to locate witnesses ha.8..been used in the East, according to Deutsch, "but it's the first time it's been tried in Orange County to my knowledge," he said. "We think it might work." ·!~e victim, 35-year-old Maria M. Martinez, had gotten off an Orange County Transit District bus f.rpm the Anaheim area where she worked as a (Sff DEATH CAR, Pa1e AZ) stockholders a short time later, the company's value was put at $1 billion with individual shares worth $200,000. A company spokes.man, though, repudiated Kremer's allegations. The spokesman said former Irvine Co. board member Max Fisher shared audit infonnation with Kremer in late 1982 and that when the board unanimously agn!ed to set the company's worth at $750 million, Kremer agreed with the figure. (Sff KREMER, rage AZ> 'Cheap' housing for NB unveiled Two sprawling housing projects that would bring 372 low-cost homes into affluent areas of Newport Beach will be unveiled tonight when city planning com- missioners meet. The projects, both proposed on Irvine Co. land, have already drawn protests from residents upset that the city has made a mistake in trying to squeeze affordable homes into areas where millionaires live. The larger project, known as North Ford, is on 118 acres bounded by Jamboree Road, Bison Avenue and Camelback Street near the established East- bluff community. The second project would spring up on the eastern edge of Newport Cent.er near Corona del Mar. The homes would be located between MacArthur Boulevard and Avocado Avenue. In both cases, the so-oilled affordable units would be mixed with market rate homes. On North Ford, there would be 888 homes with 222 designated as low-<..'alt housing. At Newport Center, there would be 428 homes -100 of them categofized as affordable. The North Ford project, when it surfaced late last year in a dif. ferent form, ·drew howls of. protest. Some residents said the project would cause traffic con- gestion and overburden a neigh- borhood shopping center. Others claimed the project would bring in a different class of homeowner. The comrniaaion meets in the Council Chambers at 7:30 p.m. I -Bus lJUilder gets a flat tire On oppoelng 1 .. 1na Former Edl'<>n High pJayera Troy and Eric Ory wlll be on o~te lk:Jeeof the ftefd Friday night wtten QolderiW•t and Santa Ana col1ee1'9clash11"1 Irvine firm files for bankruptcy; Laguna left holding the hag By L.P. BENET Of .. .,.., ......... An Irvtne-bued bua manufac- turing firm that was suppoeed to produce three bU8e8 and two trams for the city of Laguna Beach hu Wed for bank.n1ptcy, accord- ing to officlala. Thia the latest in a series of financial woes for Continental Motor Corp.. which hu been plagUed with financial difficulties during the put year, according to Laguna Beach City Manager Iten Frank. The .,firm's money problems ha.Ye deµtyed the delivery of three propane-powered bUlell -euen- tl.al to the city's transportation needs -by six months, Frank said. Since the bankruptcy proceed- ings allow Continental to finish orders, Frank said the city expects w recetve a letter from the firm thia week to arrange a new echedule for delivery. The new arrangement would call for two buses to be delivered in November and December, with a third to follow by1 March. The tram order, given to Continent.al long after the bus _s.'Ontract was awal'ded last Sep1ember, oalla for delivery in January and Febru- ary. The original contract called for ~very laat spring. T6"e city la payt.ng Continental J more than $700,000 to have the work on the five vehicles com- pleted, Frank said. "We're in a real bind," he explained. "Our old buses need to be replaced; they're falling apart. We have to play it day by day. U the first bus doesn't arrive Nov. 3, we'll go take a look. If we .ee construction i• 99 percent done we'll hang in there. If there's no improvement from the last time we inspected, we may revoke the bond and find another contrac· tor." An official from Irvine-baled Creative Transportation Syttema, which represented Continental (See BUSES. Paae AZ) football. PageC1. He'• the beat boJ Mark Perry of North uttle Rock, Ark., waa named Wedr*lday u the 1113 Natk>nal Youttt of the Year of the BoyeQube of America. PtlQ8A5. t . • a 'Al * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thuredl>'• Sept. 22, 1983 ____ _..:.. ______________________________________________________________________________________ ~ 'Love Boat' Workers free, OK after plant shootout 11 _. .~····desire SACRAMENTO (AP) Twenty workers were freed un- hurt today from a film processing plant after hiding in terror for 4 Yi hours In a maze of tiny darkrooms following a pre-dawn robbery shootout that left one deputy wounded and a bandit dead. uny darkrooms and sorting and processing rooms. Following the e xchange of gun fire, about 50 offit•crs surruund~l the building while a doztm depu ties Inside cautiously Wi:i1ll'd for other possible gunmen to enwrge and slowly began a room by room l>CUrC'h At lhl' 11lim c t1mt\ the emplCiyees hid qutt•tly m the dJCkrooms when· the gunmen had ul'dt•re<l them to su1y Sheriff Robbie Waters S<ltd tlt•pulies made contact with the hiding !.'mployl'<':o. after about tour houn>, and then for nearly haJC an hour exchanged various tapping signals with them to make etttaln the re were no additional gunmen hiding among them. "Deputies had to convmce themselves there were no armed suspects 'hiding among (the em - ployees), and we had to convinoe them we weren't the bad guya," Magness said. Two men were arrested, one walking away from the back of the building around 6 a.m. and the other two hours later m a car on a side street a block away, be said. ~·is filled By STEVE MITCHELL ~ OfhO.,_ .... Her wish is to "go on a big, beautiful ship and see the clear blue water and eat all that good food.'' No addit1onaJ gunmen were found inside the plant after the gun baule with deputies in the company's front office left one suspect dead, but two other men were arrested nearby. said sheriff's Lt. Gil Magness. Pilots push for county tie-down 1. ·. " And her desires will be fulfilled, beginning bright and early Friday morning, when pretty, blonde Tamara Smith, of El Toro, heads for the Caribbean for a week -long cruise with her family. Tamara, 14, is a freshman at El Toro High School. Tamara has lxme cancer. Her doctors give her only ~ three to six months to live, says Bob Davidson, a member of · the board of Make-A-Wish Foundation of Orange C.ounty, Inc. The non-profit organiza- tion, with offices in Newport Beach, attempts to grant a fin.a.I wish to children with terminal illnesses. The local wish-granting group is the only one in California. There are about 20 nationwide. And Tamara's trip will be the first organiz.ed by the Orange C.ounty Make-A-Wish organization, which opened ahop on Dover Drive in June, says Davidson. The wish planners are off to a good start. "The ~ of the trip - everything -bas been taken care of," Davidson said. "Sit- mar is picking up the tab for Tamara, her parents and sister aboard the cruise ship Fair- wind.'' In addition, Eastern Airlines is flying the family -gratis- to Florida Friday morning, and flying them back Oct. 1. The 19 women and one man, taken hostage by masked and shotgun-toting robbers as the employees came to work at 5:30 a.m. at the Technicolor processing lab in North Highlands, walked out the front door, many weeping and visibly distraught. "They were under the im- pression the suspects were still around. They were in fear there were still more people (robbers) in the buildings," Magn~ said. The processing plant is a maze o! several thousand square feet of Killer el e phant sold to circus Misty, the three-ton Asian elephant who killed a game war- den at Lion C.ountry Safari in July, has been sold to a Chi- cago-area circus, the Her - ald-Examiner newpaper said today. The Cuneo Family Circus ob- tained a permit last week to transport Misty from the San Fernando Valley, where she has been housed since the attack, to Chicago. John CUneo, the circus owner, said, "there will not be another accident"involving Misty, and added she is a premier performer. He blamed the July 24 attack, which claimed the life of Ranger Lee Keaton, on improper train- er/animal bonding. BUSES ... From Page A1 By JEFF ADLER Of !ht Dee, flllot It.II Private aircraft pilots are hop- ing that the Orange C.ounty Board of Supervisors heeds their high-flying advice and votes to maintain con trol over 465 private plane parking spaces near John Wayne Airport's north end Pilots have been up in arms for weeks over a proposal to lease the airport's north tie-d own area t.o a private concessionaire, a move that could increase the monthly rental for spaces from its present $40 average to as much as $120 a month. The county airport <..'Omrrussion voted unanimously this week t.o COLLEGE ... From Page A 1 additional state funding would be a pproved. "Th.is is defimtely the worst case scenario." said William Schreiber, executive assistant to the chancellor at Saddleback. "We're going to have to Live out the semester with our $2.27 million cut." At the state level, Gerald Hay- ward, chancellor of California's 106 community colleges, said the two-yea r campuses face "catastrophic" losses in classes. students and employees. Hayward said 1f the budget cuts stand, the schools face the loss of 166,000 students and the layoffs of 10,000 workers and part-time instructors. Locally, some employee and class reductions were made before the start of the school year in preparation for the loss of state recommend the <..'Ounty retain· control of the north tie-dowp area rather than leasing 1t to a private firm. Supervisors are expected t.o make a final decision on the matter in the next several weeks. The proposal to lease the north tie-down area and increase the monthly rentals was approved in concept by the Board of Super- visors back in January following release of a consultant's report that concluded fees for private aircraft and other concessions at the airport were much lower than those charged by many airports of comparable size. Supervisors d1rected airport of- ficials to develop plans t.o institute Gerald Haywa rd funding. Officials of the Coast and Sadd.leback districts said they expect no further layoffs or class reductions this year as a result of Wednesday's deadlock in Sacra- mento. many of the report's recommen- dations. They asked that each specific proposal be brought back for their approval on an individual basis. Ever since the county sought proposals from firms interested in leasing the tie-dOWl\ area con- cession, private fliers have raised an outcry that has not gone unnoticed in the Hall' of Adminis- tration . Ken Hall, an aide to Supervisor Thomas Riley, said Riley, whose district includes the airport, is siding with the pilots on this i.&<Jue. If the county w ere to continue operating the tie-down area, monthly rates might increase to approximately $70 a month, Hall said. That would be far less than what a private operator would have to charge to tum a profit. He explained the county could operate the tie-down area so that the monthly rents would cover the cost of running the operation . Currently, the rents charged are subsid.iz.ed by revenues generated from other airport operations, he said. "We want it to meet thecoetswe incur down there. But if we operate the tie-down area, it would go up l~ than it would if a private concessionaire operated it," Hall said. Used boat shows as run as doubleheader in NB By ALMON LOCKABEY 0.., .................. The third annual Newpon Harbor In-the-Wa ter Used Powerboat Show has doubled in si.ze over last year, according lO producer Duncan Mcintosh. AB a result, this year's show, which runs through Sunday, will be a double-header. It will be followed next week, Sept. 29 through Oct. 2, by an All Used Sailboat Show. "The advantage to showgoers is obvious," said Mcintosh. ''They w ill be able to see an impreaive array o( what interests them most. Not many powerboat.era are interested in looking at sailboats, and vice versa." Thirty-five yacht brokers will participate in each ahow, with more than 100 motor yachts, sportfishers and trawlers being offered for saie during the power- boat &egJnent, Mcintosh said. All of the boata on display will be 28 feet or longer. The show at the dock area of Lido Marina Village will have · free parking and shuttle service from the parking lot at the com er of Avon and ~tin Streets, one block north of Pacific Coast High- way. Show hours today and Friday are 11 a .m. to sunset, and Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m. to sun.set. Ad.mission is $4.50 for adults, $2.50 for children 6 to 12, and children under 6 free. The family will be guests of the Marriott Hotel Friday night in Florida, and Marriott will also provide transpor- tation from the airport and to the boat on Saturday. when it submitted a bid to manufacture the buses in Septem- ber 1982, confirmed that C.on- tinental had filed for bankruptcy, but President Bruce Cooper said he waa not aware of the firm's KREME R SUES BREN OVER IRVINE CO . DEAL ... '· .. A limousine service will pick the family up a t their El Toro home and drop them off at LAX free of charge, Davidson said, and they'll be at the airport to pick them up when they co~ home. "We aren't going to have to ~ pony up a dime," he said. I >'That's the beauty of it all. We contacted the corporations and they all said, 'You bet. We'll help.'" The cruise will take the ·" • 1 Smith family to ports in the .,.. Virgin Islands. ' .,._ ___________ _ -financial condition when it won the bid. C.ontinentaJ President Mike Mallard could not be reached for comment. "Their lack of money prevented them from finiah.ing construction of bwies," Frank said. "Our stal- ters visited the plant two weeks ago and found that all the parts are there and the buses are partially aaembled. We know they have had to stop work on two occasions this year because they didn't have the money to complete con.1truc- tion." FromPageA1 Addiuonally , a company source said Kremer picked up a final cash payment of $11 3 million a month ago. But the former prt.>sident said he has tried without sua.-ess for six months to settle what he considers underpayment for his shares. Kremer said an arranged m~t­ ing with Bren wt March to talk out the problem was canceled when the Irvine C.o. chairman decided to g~skiing . ' LINEUP SLATED ... He said subsequent telephone calls were routed to lawyers representing the Irvine Co. and that Bren, wrapped up with a major stock-buying plan, could not be reached. , . '(from Page A 1) · · qwck glimpses of their attackers. other physical evidence, such as ·' 1natchi.ng blood samples, will be ... t\ecesaary before linking a suspect to the crimes, he said. I, •, Blood samples have already · '•been taken from Morehead, •, 'McMillan said. Morehead had served four years in priaon after being con- victed in Orange County for .,..ult with intent to commit rape and two robbery oount.a. He allegedly baa had previous arrests on aex offenaes, but no prior convictions, aooordi.ng to Santa Ana Detective Ron Huerth. "I have been trying quietly for six months to get the rompany and Bren to deal with the fundamental issue of equal treatment for all shareholders." Kremer said. "It now is clear that they will not take the issue seriously without going to the courts." l ~ .DEA TH CAR SOUGHT IN VALLEY ... .: From Page A1 '· cleaning maid at a hoiel. She was walking in the c:roawalk at Harbor Boulevard and F.ciinger Avenue to get another bus to go to her home in 1,-;sant.a Ana, according to Oeutach. ': He said the traffic light changed from "Walk" i: to "Don't Walk" and Mn. Martinez "may have I: panicked" and began to run ac.roes the intersection. : • It was atthi.s time, according to Oeutach, "that 1 ! a male driver of an older-model car anticipated the I: light change and accelerated through the inter- 1? section." The car was believed to be going about 45 1: miles an hour when it hit Mrs. Martinez. It threw I ~ her about 80 feet and she was pronounced dead at ; : Fountain Valley Community H08pital. "But she I C was probably dead before she landed," said l , Deutsch. '" I • ! • Deutsch said that a woman was crossing the street with Mrs. Martinez but she stopped when the light changed, allowing her time to look and avoid the speeding auto. By running, Mrs. Martinez reduced her chances to evade the car. he said. Deutsch said police are looking for a full-sized car with ox.id.iz.ed green paint. He said the witness in the crossw alk with Mrs. Martinez indicates the death car h.as characteristics sunilar t.o a 1970, Plymouth Fury. The victim is survived by her h usband Enrique, eons Juan, 16, and Bernardino. 14 , and daughters Maria, 12, and Marisela, 6. Deutach urges anyone with infonnatwn to call him at 963-9725. E We'U!-t i Listening ••• Whal do you hke about the Dally Pilot'> What don·t_you hke" am-me number at lefi8nd your message will be recorded. transcribed and delivered to the appropriate edit.or The same 24 hour a nswtring service may be used lo record let ters to the editor on a ny topic Mailbox contnbutors must include their name and telephone number for verification No circulation calls, please. • 642•6086 Tell us what's on your mind. D=t .. o--t..ct "'°"°'' "'"'r tt you do not ., ..... rOur P•l)ar ~., ~ 30 r> m o• 0.1/>I• 1 r> m 1no yOu• topy *"' Ot -8alut01~ """ SV"!ll y 11 rOu oo ""' ·--. ,_ '°"" Oy 1 1 m '4111 -· I 0 I m 11\0 VOUt C"'PI' """ .. _.., c~ T1l1"'*'*' -OtM'(I' Counly ,.,_ ~ Horl-~()fl 8-f, """'"'-...... L ...... N9"' ..... • ORANGE COAST Dally Pilat H. L. 8chw•rta Ill P\Jblllher Chazy Dowallby RaJmond M.aLHn E<11tor and Alalttanl ContrOll« 10 the Publl9her ·~,.Car_ ... odu<I.,,. l.UIWQlf Cl•Htn.d advertlelng 71•1842-5e71 All other ffSNrtment• 842"'321 MAIH OFFICE 330 Wttl 8ey St eo. .. M.w CA Mt.I IOOt-8o• 1&60 c;o.11 U..o CA 11'~711 Copy19111 11111i 0t1noe eo.11 """'""'"9 1.:<~""' ""' n••• 1tot1t t 1llut1r11tont •011or1•1 'n•tl•' m ...,...,_,...,,. ,,.. .... "'"1 ""•"C>'O<M.., ""4,_. ·~ __,,, ol CAlOV'tQlll - ~ 41AM Poll•~ l)Af(I t i C<>tlo U-, C.lllOI""' (UPS u•·800l 1iubec;•11>tion by .. ,,,.. S• 1~ moot~ lly ""* a& Ml rnotll"'Y VOL. 78, NO. 285 l Kremer, who hkC' Bren 1s a highly pnvate person, resigned [rom the lrvme Co. late last year a[ter completing a five-year man- agement and stock option con- tract, reportedly worth $20 million. Kremer now owns his own investment firm, lOC'ated only blocks from company head- quarters. Bren, who has been a company owner since 1977, bought up 52 percent of the company stock from Eastern shareholdeni early th.is year, giving him control of 86 percent of the company. The purchase was announced wt April 15. But Kremer said he was in- formed of Bren's plan to buy out the F.astern stockholders in early February, just seven days after the fonner president inked his termination agreement with the lrvmeC.o. "When I first heard about Bren's purchase, I was inclined to think the timing was coincide ntal and that we would resolve this straightforwardly," said Kremer. "As eve nts unwound, how ever, it appeared there was an intent to deceive me and to make certain that I did not get the same benefits as other shareholders," Kremer added. Kremer's l.awsu.it comes on the heels of threatened legal action against Bren by minority stock- holder Joan Irvine Smith, grand- daughter of the company's foun- der. Smith, wtlo holds 11 percent of the company stock , said she will INTRODUCING F ALL'83 We 've stocked o u r store w ith a d istin ctive new collectio n o f c lassic sportsw ear and accessories. A lso, o u r selection of s w eaters and .. hand-knits is extra s pecial. Plan to s t op by soon, w e t h.ink you'll agree T he Storekeep e r tcrrH er is w e ll w o rTh your visit. A clotl\i~ "tore commltl~d to service, quality and the slmpliC'ity of .tood tA.'\te. We.tcliff Plau 171h & lrv11w ( sue Bren for $1 billion if he tries to move forward with a plan to shift his $560 million stock-buying debt onto the Irvine C.o. Bren is proposing to merge the holdirlg company he used to buy his stock with the Irvine C.o. A!J a tradeoff for the merger, Bren said he would double the stock held by Smith and other minority share- holders or buy them out at $208,000 a share. Smith believes Bren is under- valuing the stock and h.as hidden plans to break up and aell off the company. Bren's chief aides, though, said ttle company chair- man has long-term interests in the company and say some of the best financial minds in the country have attested to the fairness of his merger plan. Phone 642· 7061 Newport Beach l • . . -------- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Sept. 22. 1983 * ~3 BULLETIN BOARD Irvine hospital site to be resolved • I • ' . Mesa hospital plans open house Saturday Chancellor Aldrich still optimistic about private hospital locating near UCI campu~ An open house celebration will be held Saturday at Costa Mesa Memorial C.enter Hospital in conjuction with National Emergency Medicine Week. The hospital, at 301 Victoria St., will unveil its new 20-bed Alcohollsm/ChenUcal Dependency Un.it where new methods of treating alcohol and drug abuse will be treated. The program wiU be oonducted from l to 6 p.m. and further information is available at 642-2734. 'Male pe rils' topic of Laguna talk "The Perils of Bemg Male" is the topic of a lecture Sunday by clinical psychologist Dr. Jerry Btnder at a meeting of the Jewish Community C.enter of South Orange County in the center oCfices, 298 Broadway, Laguna Beach. Dr. Binder will present the idea that men have developed into a hardened machine oond1tioned against caring and sensitivity. Admission is free and the public is invited Lag una c lub set for October{ est The Laguna Beach Exchange Club will hold its Octoberfest on Oct. 1 from 2 to 10 p.m. on the Festival of the Arts Grounds. Admission IS $1 and proceeds will benefit the child abuse program and local youths. State school chief set s UCI talk State Superintendent of Schools William Honig will be the key speaker at a UC Irvine education symposium Saturday. The symposium is aimed at establishing ways of working with Sacramento to enhance state refonns in education. Further information can be obtained from the campus information office. 856-6922. Marathon c h~mp joins Irvine race "lronman" Domingo Tibaduiz.a has joined the list of runners who will compete .in the fifth annual KFWB South C.oast Cl.as&c lOK run Saturday in Irvine's Mason Regional Park. The South American marathoner joins a field including defending South Coast champion Tom Wysocki in the race to benefit Childrens Hospital of Orange County. A field of more than 3,000 runners is expected to jog the course adjacent to the UC Irvine campus. Registration fomlS are available through CHOC at 558-2884. ., POLICE LOG By ANDREA ADELSON Of .... ~-..... UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel Aldrich said Wednesday that while the 20-year-old dream to bring a hospital to the campus may not be real.ized, the issue of where to put a hospital in the city of lrvir.e will be resolved this year. The chancellor, who said last week he plans to make this acadenUc year his last. said he is still hopeful the university will be able to affiliate with a private hospital, the Irvine Medical C.enter, advanced by a ooalltion of buaineS8men and civic activists. The College of Medicine already has ties to 39 other medical institutions throughout Orange County and elsewhere, including the campus-owned Medical C.enter. Also Wednesday, at an IMC directors meeting, a formal uni- versity negotiating group was established, according to Ed Portmann. IMC spokesman. He said the five-member re- search and education committee was set up specifically to carry on talks with UCI regarding the university's involvement with IMC. "The team will be meeting with UCI officials and they'll set up a schedule for formal discussions," Portmann said. The location of IMC on Irvine Co. land adjacent to the univer- sity's medical school, as proposed by UCI officials, was discussed but no oonclusions were reached, he said. Portmann emphasized that the discussions with the university will probably be held over several months. "This is as exciting a year as 1965," Aldrich said, reflecting on what he hopes to accomplish in his 21st year as the college's only chancellor, during a break.fast meeting with the media Thieves get metal halter top A $350 haller top made out of mtlal chips was among the Items 'reported stolen from an apartment on the 2300 block of Elden Avenue In Costa Mesa Tuesday morning. Along with the top -Mid to be one of a kind -ste<eoequlpment, two TV sets and a 12-gauge shotgun were taken Police estimated the total los.s to be $5,084. Entry was made through an unlocked front window. A t983 ven was broken Into on the Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth car lot et 21129 Harbor Blvd • Costa Mesa. Monday night and ste<eo equipment was stolen. The owne< said thieves climbed a fence Into the bacil lot and took mounted lte<eo eqlupment. an equallzer and speakers out of the van. Newport Beach /!. watch. cam&fa and aaaorted pieces of stereo equipment -e taken by burglars from an apartment at the Oakwood Gard8f1 Apartments. Pollce said the thief may have used a pa.as key to gain entrance. The los.a wu put at $995 by the 22-year-old resident of the unit A burglar reportedly crawled through a window of a residence on the 100 block of 31st Street and took $360 In caah from a wallet on a bedroom dresser as the owner of the wallet slept nearby. Laguna Beach Vandals uaed a aharp lnatrument to CU1 up a car aeat In a vehicle left parked at 350 Forest Wednesday afternoon, Beach pollce said. Avenue Laguna A MCond car was vandallzed In the 1600 block of Temple Hiiis Drtve and S30 In belongings-• atolen. A stereo was taken from a locked car parked In the 300 block ot Ruby Street. Huntington Beach A hOme burglary was reported Wednesday morning on the 7900 block of Oceangrove Circle. Entry wu wa1 apparently made by prying open 1 locked rear window. The loss Included S 1,500 In je'Welry and $400 In camera equipment. Fountain Valley Someone pried oP9fl an unlocked bedroom window at a reeldence In the 17000 block of Vecu Circle and stole a TV aet from a table In the closet An apartment burglary wu re- ported Wednesday afternoon on the 21000 block of Pacific Cout High-Thieves stole two left Pinto st'"- way. Entry was apparently made dard-alzed hut>ca.pa valued at $200 through a locked aide window. The f(om a car parked In the 9000 bloci( of tosa Included two televlalona aeta Turtledove Av.nue. valued at $800, je'Welry valued a~ $800 and S10 In change. Irvine A 20-toot blue traller was rflported stolen Wedneaday from a business on the ~ block of Argosy Street. The Ion was ealmeted et $1,400. A home burglary was reported Wednesday afternoon on the 16300 block ot Anita Lane. Entry wu apparently made through en un- loci(ed front door. The lou Included vtdeo game catrldgea worth $800 plus S 15 cash. A 1978 Peugeot was burglarized Wednesday wtllle parked on the 18800 bloek Of Valley Circle. The loaa Included a Pioneer AM/FM atereo cauette player valued at $259. A young Irvine man dlatruattul of bank• who kept $600 caah In a IOcit hidden In hla bedroom loat the cache to a burglar Wednesday. lll9 culprit pried a alldlng glaaa door ot a home on Seron Avenue. A man In hi• late 20s hiding behind bushes near a carport on Orange Blo11om lumped out and exposed hlmeeU to a woman getting out of a car In Irvine early Wedneaday mom· Ing. A burglar 1tole a piggy bank contaJnlng $100 cuh, a S350 bike and a c .... tte record« trom a home on Bearpaw aometlme Wedneaday. TODAY'S WEATHER Clou .. dy mornings, sunny daytimes Coastal 66 36 St 37 47 311 711 58 40 44 47 30 1$ 43 e1 a• 116 66 llO Joi " 78 .. 62 . f'aln. lnOW Em lhowett """ ... ,....~~~~=-"'T"""-r~~-..,. "Things are under way tha l we've dreamed about for 20 yean," he pointed out, including the building of new reiiearch laboratories and the founding of a campus housing authority. Opening for the fint day of classes in October of 1965 with 1,589 students, the lrvlne campus this year will break enrollment records with 11,750 students, climbing by 4 to 5 percent over last year's student. total, Aldrich said. How UCI enrollment stacks up against the rest of the eight-campus system isn't avail- able yet, he said. In comparison, statewide com- munity college enrollmenl has dropped between 5 and 10 percent Aerial attachment this tau compared to last. Officials of the two-year colleges attribute the decline in part to student confusion over fees. All seven of Orange County's community colleges report enrol- lment dips. • While students in the state university campuses are paying higher fees this year than last, Aldrich said, "I don't think the fees at this institution are the determining factor" students make in ch006ing where to attend college. He did say. however, that students eligible to attend the university but who ch006e to lttend a two-year college do so in part because of higher four-year Perhaps in search of a fire oa-a t~ll tree, this hook a nd ladder model of a Porsche 914 was turned off the San Diego Freeway in Irvine b y a driver who, according to his license pla te, loves sk y diving .. college fees. : Aldrich credited the etea.latifn in UCl enrollment to a "groW\~g appreciation of the campus" }fl both the academic and studeflt communities. In addition, another attracti9n to studenta ii campus houair)g, expanded this year with tl'e recent completion of a 300-ro<:fn residence hall. That added hfll brings campus housing to 3.81)0 spaces, or room enough for ~3 percent of the c.ampus populatiQn. Aldrich said that level is tf'ie second highest in the state univ4tr- sity system after UC Santa Cn)z, designed as a residential collete with accommodations for 34 J>4r- cent of its students. ! ' Big party readied fof burned boy By tbe Auoclated Preu ! I David Rothenberg, 7, who s?fnt more than seven months in hospi- tals aft.er his father set himatirqin a Buena Park motel room, ~as "quite a party" waiting for hfm when he goes home to Brookltyl. N.Y . ! . Buena Park police Offi~ Terry Branum satd Davi~'s mother, Marie Rothenbefg, planned to pick up her son from the Shriners Burn Institute ~in Boston for the trip home Fri~y afternoon. Branum befrien~ the two during David's cdn- valescence at the UC-Irvine Mdil- cal C.enter in Orange. • ''It's going to be qwte a partJ'," he said. : Ken and Judy Curtis, Ole Fullerton couple who operied their home to Mrs. Rothen~rg while her son was hospitalized in 'Orange, forwarded to New York 35 cartons of gifts tltat well-wishers sent to the Pollce Department. '. Police began a trust fund tor David following the March: 3 incident in which the boy's !atl'ler. Charles Rothenberg, doused tiim with kerosene and set him on fire . Rothenberg, 43, pleaded guftY to attempted murder and in Jfly received the maximum sentellce -13 years in state prison. : . Domestic violence foe lauded State senator honored for battered women, children efforts . By LINDA WOODS o.e,-c.._ .... Sen. Robe rt Presley, D-Rivers.ide, the author of several pieces of successful legislation regarding battered women and abused children, will be honored today at the first anniversary celebration of the Battered Women's Shelter of South Orange County in Laguna Niguel. The event is a prelude to Domestic Violence Week, which begins Monday. A strong advocate for breaking the domestic VIOience cycle, Presley authored legislation m the late '70s that established six shelter homes in California for abused women and bills that funneled $1 3 from each mamage license into fighting domestic viol- ence. "The key to ending the abuse of women and children in our society lies in changing the attitudes of our children," said Presley, whoee bill to make parenting cl.asses mandatory in public schools was defeated. This philosophy has guided the development of the Battered Women's Shelter of South Orange County, which provtdes a residen- tial center where a woman and her children can receive care and lodging as well as psychological, legal, and career counseling for about 30 days. The shelter is run by Hwnan Options, a non-profit corporation organized in 1979. The shelter houses three women and their children or six single women. Intensive oounsel- ing is provided to develop self-esteem and personal coping in such areas as assertion and parent- ing. There is strong emphasis "lln building the self esteem of 1}le children and helping them to cqpe with the alfect of family violer'lce through individual and gq>up therapy. ' Todate, 1,045callsforhelphave been received and 98 women and children have been housed in the shelter program. The staff includes trained coun- selors who are aided by 24 active volunteers. The shelter has been supported through monetary awards and grants by many commUA.ity 90urces, including the United Way, James Irvine, the F1uor Foundation, the Mission Viejof:.o .. Rock well In te rna tiodal. P onderosa Homes and the Flurocarbon Co. The 24-hour hotline number is 494-~367. The P.O.S.H . 'Attitude ., The value of quality, · c lassic styling . and natural comfort . . . I -Extended 58 38 .. 41 .. 58 68 61 ... 40 80 .. 87 •5 .. 72 IO 40 72 44 16 42 17 IO 63 31 61 42 ... ,. ,. 58 It M I t M 82 31 ... 47 M 31 12 74 IM 87 71 Ill tOt IO an Important ! • M M l't N •t " .. at .... 17 .. .. . M n .... IO 04 .. . ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~--~ 78 ..... -SURf .RIPOil •• , ' ' statement about his j' good taste. _ Qenttemen'a Otothtng INP(fed by Trodff~ '(llGllH) M> ,.,IOC'I telond. ... ·r.ct leGoh • (714) 640-U• I 4 * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Sept 22, 1983 ,#'" ~---------=-----------------------...-------------------------------------------------------------------~ TOP OF THE NEWS Hijacker takes i NATION Worker rnixing c hemicals n1ay h a ve lrigger ed blasts By the Asaoclated Press SALISBURY, N.C -Workers m1x1t1g chemicals may have set off (our ~ulfunc acu.J explosions that inJur1.>d 26 peoplt>, destroy~d part of their factory and chased about 75 families from their homl's, fire offic1als s;iid w<lay. But a company spokesman said tt was too early tu tt>ll what caused Wednesday's blast.s and fin• at Proctor Chem1l·al Co. in downtown Salisbury, 22 lniles north of Charlotte. Study vie ws nuclear attack • BOSTON -Neilher tht> UnilC'<l States nor ihe Soviet Union is capable of wiping uul the· other's land-based missiles m a smgk att.al'k, rna kmg lhe use or nuclear weapons "a gamble un p scale completely unprt'<.'edenled in human JllStory," an MIT study says Enough silos p rotecung nuclear-armed. land-based m1ssut•s would survwe an attack to permit either party tu ""°unterattack , al'COr<ling to the study by phys1c1st J<osta Tsip1s aJld Matthew Bunn. the Boston Plobe reported today No charges in L e wis d eath HERNANOO, Miss -An invest.1gat1on tntu \he death of Shawn Lewis. wife of singer Jerry Lee Lewis, is finished, and no <.'riminal charges 'will be filed. a prosecutor said Wednesday. Mrs. [ Lewis, 25. was found dead Aug. 24 at the rural residence she shared with Lewis near Nesbit, , Miss. An autopsy showed she died of an overdose _of the drug methadone. WORLD :: U.S warships sh ell Druse . . . "' BEIRUT. Lebanon -U .S warships shelled .'· Druse battenes in the central mount.a.ins today ;~and the Druse struck back. One rocket blew up ~ the main ammunition dump of Italian peace- ·~· keepers, another wounded four French soldiers ~~d a grenade wounded two more, military ~' ~pokesmen said •\' _, ~:·Derailed train injures 30 .'~ PITLOCHRY, Scotland -A sleeper train ';carrying 75 passengers derailed in the Scottish : ·Highlands early today and plunged down a -~ 30-foot embankment. injuring 30 people. rail :~ officials said. ·: . ~Two So vie t envoys ousted :,.. OTTAWA -Two Soviet diplomats were ·• expelled last week for trying to s teal top-secret •.high technology, but the Canadian government '. kept it quiet to a.\lold any link with its denunciation of the Soviet downing of a Korean •airliner. the Foreign Office said today . Weinberger to visit Toky o TOK YO -Secretary of Defense Caspar Wemberger will arrive in Tokyo Saturday to find America's most unportant Asian ally debating ··the reliability of U.S . security guarantees and tQ.e governmen t's pro-defense polJC1es. Masasni Ishibashi, the leader of the oppos1t1on Socialist Party. has 11\Ststcd Japan should remain neutral and Unarrrled . . Survivi~g plane to Cuba NEW YOHK (AP) A man who claimed he had a bomb hl.):lt'k(-0 an American Airlines ,et with 112 vt'OPle aboard to Cuba today, officials said. AJ Bet:ker, a spok<>i>man for the airline, said the ~ing 727 was h1.iacked shortly after 1t left Kennedy International Airport at 10.:14 a.m. for St. Thomas, in the US. Virgin Islands lt landed in Havana about 2 ~1 hours later, said the Federal Av1at10n Administrauon. S pokesman Robert Fulton swd the plane landed "without inddent'' at 1.43 p.m. Leon Katz, a spokesman for the Port Authority uf New York and New J ersey, which operates the airport. said a passenger came forward at 10:57 a.m and told a stewardess that he had a bomb. The passenger demanded to go to Cuba, he said. "The c:a ptain radioed an<l said he was being diverted to Havana. That's all the information we had," saJd Becker He said the airline had not heard from the captain stnl'e that transmission Joannt' Sloane of the Fedf'ral /\v1anon Admm1s· tration said there was no word on huw many h1.iackers were tnvolvt.od Flight 625 had 105 passengers and a c:rc:w of Sl'ven , she said It was the 11th hijacking of u plane to Cuna sinc:e May J and the first since Aug 19, when a Delta Air I Lines jet t:arrymg 79 pt"Ople from M1am1 tu Tampa was divPrted to Cuba Marcos warns of Dlartial law MANILA, Philippines (AP) -President Ferdinand E Marcos raised the t~reat of reimposin.g I martial law today and ordered htS troops t.o shoot 1f necessary t.o counter anti-government noting that I left 11 dead and 200 wounded . But he sa.id he was not thmlung of reimposing martial law "right now." The street violence Wednesday -exactly one month aft.er the assassination of opposition leader l Benigno Aquino -was the bloodiest in Marcos' 18-year rule. "I warn the opposition -do not force my hand. do not compel me to extremes that you already know of," Marcos said in a nationally televised address today. The "extremes" were an apparent reference to the imposition of martial law in 1972. Although Marcos lifted martial law in 1980, s trict controls remain. I · He said an order he had given to the military t.o observe "maxunum tolerance" with demonstrators, including banning anti-riot troops from c:arrying guns. was being reversed . Girl's tumor treated KNOXVILLE, Tenn (AP) -A preacher's daugh ter with a "red. hot, angry"' tumor received a small amount of chemotherapy today under l'Ourt order, but her father pledged to continue fighting the treatment on relig10us grounds. Pamela H amilton. 12. r eceived the C'hemotherapy whue sleeping at 3:20 a.m ., saJd Pat Kelly, spokeswoman for East Tennessee Children's Hospital. ''She's doing fine." the spokeswoman said. Pamela will re<:e1ve one such treatment a day for I eight days unless the courts intervene. The therapy was ordered Wednesday by the Tennessee Court of Appeals. • toddler ;~~escribes ~ttack An Invitation t o our . ·-. FORT WAYNE. Ind. Customers to a (AP) -A toddler who survived a brutal attack in which her fa ther, mother and brother were beaten to death has Jiven authorities "sig - :1iJficant" mformauon In >their invest1gat1on of the .• killings. a prosecutor ·says. ''Sellabration'' . ,. T w o -y e a r -o I d •Caroline Osborne, who :·~as sexually assaulted ~a,nd left for dead last ~~eek by intruders who <,ili.Ued newspaper editor >-Don Osborne, 34, his ~-year-old wife Jane 'and their 11-ycar-old son .-&n, was interviewed ,<'flednesday by Patricia ~ltmallwood, director of ':the Victims Assistance ~~gram for the Fort ~~yne Police Depart- r nt. ~ The girl, who was "" wn t.o Kansas on ednesday aft.er an aunt d uncle were awarded , mergency custod y, ~ave investigators "sig- , .~fican t" and "pro-~ ctive" information fore she left, llen , unty Prosecutor Step- ' en M Sims said. R.e ~4Secllned to elaborate. ' Caroline was found oodled and wandering und her famlly'a Borne Monday when the ree bodies were lJl3-- '• vered. police saJd. Of- ciala b lleve the urden occurred be- een 9 p.m . F'riday tmd on the occasion of our Twenty-Fifth Anniversary An opportunity to do a little pre-Christ mas shopping at 25% off everything and anything now in stock. If y ou have no reason to take ad~antage of this special buying offer, please come 1n anyw ay and share a moment on t his happy occasion w ith your friends on the staff at CHARLES H. BARR 17th at Irvine W estcliff Plaza, N ewpo rt Beach Sale Starts Friday, September 23rd. Through Saturday, October 1st. 1 O o'clock a.m. to 6 o 'clock p .m. Thursday Evening until 8 o'clock p.m. VISA -MASTERCHA RGE MERVYN'S starts Friday, 9:30 a.m. many limited quantities ... not all sizes may be available in each grouping ... colors and styles limited to stock on hand, so shop early for best selection! • 1n our Huntington Beach store women 1 s sportswear buys for boys NOW 267 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS 1.98 59 LITTLE BOYS TANK TOPS 102 MISSES' TEE SHIRTS 1.98 87 LIGHT WEIGHT PAJAMAS 49 MISSES' PULL~ON PANTS 3.98 138 MUSCLE SLEEVE TOPS 111 JUNIOR SHIRTS 3.98 56 DRESS SHIRTS 146 MISSES' TANK TOPS 3.98 37 LITTLE BOYS JOG SHORTS 89JUN40R PANTS 3.98 108 BIG BOYS SWIMWEAR 55 JUNIOR SKIRTS 3.98 187 BIG BOYS SHORTS 143 JUNIOR PANT TOPS 4.98 33JEANS 84 JUNIOR SHIRTS 4.98 15LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS 27 SHORTSETS 4.98 136 JUNIOR l. SLV. TEE SHIRTS 4.98 buys for men 41 JUNIOR CO-ORDINATES 4.98 66 MISSES' PANT TOPS 4.98 74 MISSES' POL VESTER BLOUSES 6.98 71 SCREEN PRINT TEES 14 JUMPSUITS 9.98 21 GENTLE MEN'S SHIRTS 76 JUNIOR SWEATERS 11 .98 59 OCEAN PACIFIC• SOCKS women's dresses 23 S. SLV. SWEATER SHIRTS NOW 47HATS 17 YOUNG MEN'S HAWAIIAN SHIRTS 24 HALF SIZE DRESSES 9.98 23 JANTZEN ' SHIRTS 18 MISSES' DRESSES 14.98 45 SHIMMEL$ SHIRTS 33 JUNIOR DRESSES 14.98 17 NIKE" TEES 18 JUNIOR DRESSES 18.98 105 S. SL V. GENTLEMEN'S SHIRTS large size fashions 81 PRINT SHIRTS 87 HAWAIIAN SHIRTS NOW 55 WALKING SHORTS 49 PULL-ON PANTS 3.98 23 ACTIVE PANTS 29 SHIRTS 4.98 29 L. SLV. SHIRTS 18 DRESSES 9.98 21 HAGGAR' SUIT SLACKS 16 0RESSES 14.98 45 HAGGAR ' VESTS 38 BLAZERS 19.98 165 MUNSINGWEAR* SHIRTS 99 SWEA TSU ITS lingerie, loungewear NOW shoes for the family 11 BRAS 1.98 90 CAMISOLES, SLIPS 1.98 50 CHILDREN'S SANDALS 76 SLEEPSHIRTS 1.98 75 WOMENS' SANDALS . 79 CAMISETTES 2.98 50 CHILDREN'S TENNIS SHOES 18 UNIFORM PANTS 3.98 30 WOMENS' DRESS SHOES 15 UNIFORM SMOCKS 3.98 15 CHILDREN'S HIKING BOOTS 56LOUNGERS 3.98 40WOMENS' CLOGS 15BRAS 5.98 40 WOMENS' CASUAL SHOES 37GOWNS 5.98 30 MENS' CANVAS SLIP ONS 19 LOUNGERS 5.98 25 HAWAIIAN THONGS . 10GOWNS 6.98 35 GIRLS' TENNIS SHOES 55 LOUNGERS 6.98 60 WOMENS' DRESS SHOES 37GOWNS 8.98 30 MENS' ATHLETIC SHOES women 's accessories NOW 50 WOMENS' CASUAL SHOES 30 WOMENS' CASUAL SHOES 37 SPORT SOCKS 48c 30 MEN'S CASUAL SHOES 15 PHOTO-GO-ROUND ALBUMS 98c 45 COSMETIC BAGS 98e for your home 69 TUBE TOPS 98e 163 BELTS 98e 37 MEN'S-LOOK TIES 98e 1Z7WASHCLOTHS 57 FASHION SCARVES 98e 37WASHCLOTHS 293 SUPPORT HOSE 98e 69 FINGER TIP TOWELS 73CANVASHANDBAGS 1.98 112 HANO TOWELS 300TIGHTS 1.98 58 HANO TOWELS 61 FASHION EXERCISEWEAR 2.98 26 BATH TOWELS 83 SUNGLASSES 4.98 37 HAND TOWELS 19 MANICURE SETS 12.98 41 BATH TOWELS infants and toddlers 308ATHRUGS 17 TWIN SIZE SHEETS NOW 23 CHILDREN'S TOl'E BLANKETS 27 INFANTS' SHIRTS 98e 52 INFANTS' SHORT SETS 1.98 housewares 36 TODDLERS' WOVEN TOPS 1.98 48 NEWBORN GIFT SETS 1.98 51 INFANTS' BASEBALL JACKETS 3.98 97PLACEMATS NOW 98e 1.98 1.98 1.98 1.98 1.98 2.98 4.98 11 .98 NOW 1.98 1.98 1.98 1.98 2.98 3 .98 3 .98 3.98 3.98 3 .98 5.98 5.98 5.98 7.98 7.98 7.98 7.98 9 .98 17.98 NOW 1.98 3 .98 3.98 3.98 4.98 4.98 5 .98 8 .98 11 .98 14.98 14.98 15.98 17.98 19.98 29.98 NOW 58e 98e 98e 98e 1.98 2.98 2.98 3.98 3.98 5.98 5.98 NOW 48c 49TODOLERS' LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS 3.98 27 TABLECLOTHS 1,ga.5,98 46 TODDLERS' PANTSETS 4.98 21 MIXING BOWL SETS, 3-PC. 4.98 17 STORAGE BOWL SETS, 3·PC. 6.98 buys for girls 69 TEAKETTLES 10.98 NOW 137 KNEE SOCKS 48e jewelry buys 37 PRINT BRIEFS, PKG 3 PAS 98c 101 ROMPERS 98c NOW 173 NYLON SHORTS 1.98 240 NOVEL TY PINS 48c 38 BIG GIRLS' PANTS 3.98 1 OS BIRTHSTONE BRACELETS 48c 57BLOUSES 5.98 98 TRIO EARRINGS 48c 73 BIG GIRLS' SHORTSETS 4.98 121 STICK PINS 98c 37 LmLE GIRLS' SHORT& 6.98 75 PEN·OIGITAL WATCHES 1.98 48 GIRLS' PANTS . 8.98 57COLOREOAOVANCE"WATCHES 5.98 Huntington Beach• 9811 Ad am s A ve . at Brookhurst St. a.m S.turday. L-----------------------------------------------------J'-----------------------------------------------------------------------.-.. ' J ' ~-------------- STOCKS THURSOA v·s CLO INC PRICES ).A.I.,,• Nft ':t.•ltr\ Plfrl .., I ~" .. • I "4-1 ._, E "0' i 10,, 4 nq l -------------------------------------------· Orange Coast OAIL '( PILOT /Thursday, Sept. 22. 1983 NB a l NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS OVOIA !IONS INCLUDE IR .. UC!> ON ltif NEW ~ORI\ MIOWllil l'A(;l~I(; 1'8W llU~!ON Of I HOii ANO (;INCINNAll SIOCll Ut<;i"AHUtll AHU AEPOAIFO av IHE NASO INSllNE I ~, .. , Nftt P f hQ*t I h,,.,. (M; 'l•lf'\ N•t t> t rin\ t 10'•' t nq '"''-'' ,...,., v t ""' • '*•'-• r '"'' \Alt'"\ ~t't t• l-t\O\ l. IO~ l t'Q \• r' ,..,. .. , ~ t f\fh ' hi'• t "Q Dow Jones Final Up 14.23 Cloalng 1,257.52 New record higb BUSINESS IRllFS UAW agrees to plan on GM., Toyota hiring DETROIT -The Untted Auto Workers })AA reached tentative agreement on hiring workers at a Fremont, Calif .. planl where General Motors Corp. and Toyota Motor Corp. plan to build earn jointly, the union announced today. Under the proposal, about 2,500of the 3,00-0 employees of the joint venture wlll be laid-Off Fremont workers, the union said GM laid o!C 6,0-00 autoworkers at the plant early last year when it clO&ed the facility because of overcapacity. Economic stre ng th expands WASHINGroN -With a six-month burst of growth, the main measure of U S. economic strength has regained all the ground it Lost Ul the 1981-82 .recession, the government said. The Commerce Department said Wednesday the gross national product -the broadest measure of economic growth -expanded at an estimated 7 percent annual rate in the quarter ending Sept. 30. A new estimate will be made after the quart.er ends. A T&T to c ut long -distance r ate WASHINGTON -American Telephone & Tele- graph Co. wants to cut your long distance bill. The company said Wednesday it would ask federal regulators to approve long-disw.nce rate reductions of $1.75 billion a year, the largest cut in tele- communications history. Continental 1Jresident resig ns HOUSTON -Stephen M Wolf has resigned as president of Continental Airlines, which has lost $84 million in the last six months. the carrier announced. The resignation of Woll, 42, was ''a personal decision.'' and was not connected to an ongoing strike by the airline's mechanics or to its recent request that employees develop cost-cutting plans to save the carrier $150 million. spokesman Bruce Hicks said Wednesday. Eastern seek s to cut salaries MIAMI -Eastern Airlines, a money loser this year, has asked its employees to forfeit 20 percent of their salaries and cut vacations by up to 25 percent. The plan. which would reduce Eastem's payroll by $318 million next year. was outlined ma letter Wednesday to Ea.stem's 37,500 systemwide employees. East.em's largest union, the 12,500-member machirust.s' union, immediately rejected the proposal. Dollar, g old both e dge lo wer LONDON -The dollar edged lower in thin trading on forelgn exchange markets early ~Y in lackluster trading. Gold prices w~ ';11\Chang~ m England and down slightly in Zurich ui light actiVlty. GOLD QUOTATIONS WHAT NYSE DID NEW YOtlllt (AP) S... 77 "TOClaV •SJ '20 '°' lt71 74 " WHAT AMEX DID NEW YOlllK (tkPI $90. tt METALS SYMBOLS -rooa'\ts 1'6 HO 111 10 s Pf••· dav 273 U5 197 f?j IS 7 DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YOlllK (APl -Flnel Dow J~ ev.,._. 1or ~JTO!ouStW>I n ~ JOlncl 1243.lf l:Ul.2112:16.191257.~lUl 5M.J3 "3.GJ YI 61 _, + UO 1J3 43 1)4 10 IJU7 Ill 0 It "6 Y 503.U "3.'1 501.22+ tM AMERICAN LEADERS 1,717,IDO J,lM,flO 1,105,a ll,M0,100 ,,,~Ewn~°""c~!:!·. s.i.:1 4 ~~ cwiro motl llCll .. A~ Stoett. Ea~ ll· 1uu. ttaOlt'IO ne llonolh 1 1 more 11\an I I W-1.el>llt CONOCll Chn~A• AmMtdlllCll "Tto1,t.lrCP A.mclehl. TIE Commt Otark Air Anr11n1 A Ae.'11nl wt Name l !:;~:...· 1 f>anAm WI 4 l"rlmeCm • s O.ta Gell! 6 Am"""" n 7111..-Inn • C.nal """' t Cowlt•llro 10 lnl llectN 'i A.nacomo I lt'11'""9d n 1 NulrlSn 14 Am "°"' IS OCAC. t lt g~ue::: , lt Allftlt Co " '"~'''"' 20lloortt11H t1 GllltllFlt1 ·~~~~' 24 H!Mltw$• 2S A.i!a410• ' '31,100 ~7,100 1'3, 100 IU,700 112,fOO ll0,700 47,700 1)1,fOO 120,.00 9UOO WNS _, +1 _ .. +~ +1'9 -v. +'"" ·~