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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-10-12 - Orange Coast PilotTHI ORANGI COAST WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 12. 1983 COUNTY IDITIDN ORANGE COUN 1 Y C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS .. ..... What triggered slayings in Mesa? Mesa s treet an unlikely .. murder site ·Distraught 111an kills two relatives, hirnseJJ; ,J By STEVE MARBLE Ofho.117 ......... At first glance, Florida Circle seems an unlikely spot for murder. A Costa Mesa police sargeant lives on one side of the quiet, nine-house cul-de-sac and an Irvine police captain lives across the street. Until recently, the Placentia police chief also lived on the block. "You'd never think it could happen here," said Tim Holbrook, the Costa Mesa officer. "But when you've been a policeman 15 years you know that anything can happen anywhere." By late Tuesday afternoon, the street in Costa Mesa's Mesa Verde North community was lined with neighbors who'd received word of the quadruple murder-suicide in the house at 3309 Florida Circle. What they eventually learned • was that a man who lived in the neighborhood had killed a cousin, the eight-months-pregnant woman wbo lived in the houae and, finally, himself. The husband of the pregnant woman waa away on business at the time of the shooting. By STEVE MARBLE Of1Ml)elljPlle41W1 Costa Mesa police were hoping today to learn why a 53-year-old gas station owner killed two relatives, including his pregnant sister-in-law. during a family gathering Tuesday before putting the gun to his own head. The wife of the gunman. who ran screaming from the death scene, told police her husband was distraught over marital problems but had been calm before the violent outbreak. "We don't really know what set the whole thing off," said Lt. Jack Calnon early today. Costa Mesa Officer Tim Holbrook said police are consider- ing the episode on Florida Circle a quadruple murder-suicide. The gunman, identified as Mahmood Family, reportedly shot and killed a cousin, and h.is wife's sister, who was eight months pregnant and lived in the house where the shooting took place. Paramedics spent nearly 45 minutes in an unsuccessful at- tempt to save the unborn baby by keeping the dead woman's body systems functioning through cardiopulmonary recusitation. The pregnant woman's identity o.117 ,...,.._itr.....,..u,M was not released early today. "They were a nice, quiet cou- ple," said James Ballone of his neighbors. "They seemed to have a lot of relatives and family over at times." Shirin He djezi, a relative of the slain upon learning of the traged y T ues-Police said they were still attempt- Costa Mesa people, breaks into tears d ay night. ing to contact her husband, out of (See MURDER, Pase AZ) --------------------------------------, town on a business trip. State enters hospital rift Both sides of conflict quizzed on care o f Medi-cal r ecipie nts By KAREN E . KLEIN Of ... ...., .... lllllt State legislators, who fear Or- ange County's Medi-Cal recipi- ents will come up short when the dust clears in the Irvine hospital battle, stepped into the fray Tuesday on behalf of the poor. Proponents on both sides of the fight were grilled at an all-day hearing of the Joint Corrunittee on Medi-Cal Oversight in Santa Ana. ~mblyman Richard Rob- inson, D-Garden Grove, who chairs the committee, said he doesn't want UC Irvine to lose sight of its hlatorical role as a provider of health care to the county's medically indigent at iw primary teaching facility, the UCI Medical Center in Orange. Robinson also raised the ques- tion of a provision in the recent Medi-Cal reform legislation which would allow HealthWest- a campus hospital proponent -to Cable increase OK'd hills won't go up yet By ROBERT BARKER Of .. ...., .... lllllt Dickinson Pacific Cablesystems received pennisaion today to raise rates 10 percent to its television customers in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Westminster and Stanton. But the liearTy ~.ooo-wer Orange County subacrlbers won't notice immediate increases in their monthly bills. according to Cablesystems General Manager R.J . LaTourette. LaTourette said the i.ncreaaes will be based "on what the market will bear." He said he doesn't expect to put into effect any increases for at least slx months. The average subecrlber, he said, pays a mont~ bill of about $28 and the average increase would come to about $2.80 a month. He told directors of the Public Cable Television Authority - Ctty-Councit-ttpreeentatives-of the four cities who unanimously approved the rate increase without discuaaion -that the company has lost nearly $8.5 million since starting up in Octo- ber of 1979. LaTourette said revenues (See CABLE RATES, Pase Al) affiliate with an insurance group ~ form a "preferred provider organization" or PPO and build a hospital without going through th..e state approval process. ffealthWest officials said their attorneys are currently exploring that poalbility. ' Robinson said he fears that if the Hoag Memorial Hospi- tal-sponsored Irvine Medical Center gets state approval to build in Irvine, UCI medical staff will pressure the university into an affiliation and then compete for a chance to work there rather than at UCIMC. He said UCIMC annually cares for 300,000 indigents, half of the Medi-Cal patients in the county, while Hoag handles only about 1 percent. He and Assemblyman Richard Alatorre, D-Los Angeles, and state Sen. Dianne Wataon, D-Los Angeles. heard arguments for both the Chatsworth-based HealthWest,lnc. and IMC, a pri- vate hospital proposal during the hearing. ~-he-has no-opinion on the hospital matter, but Alator- re, who once taught at UCI, and Watson said they favor a campus hospital. At one point in the lengthy, complicated hearing, Robinson hinted that there might be legis- lation proposed which would bar UCI from affiliating with a hospi- A ---.....ftft Hat of llltofmetlon patient mix at that hospital. --.-....... (See HOSPITAL, Pace Al) Two injured in crash ...., .... ,.._..,...._.IC...., Huntington Beachp ar&meaics aw two men injure d this morning in a two-car accident at Beach Boulevard and Atlanta Avenue. Sam Eichler of Huntington Beach, (foreground) d rove o ne auto . In the back is the second vic tim, Ron H all, a Huntingtog Beach city traffic engineer. Both men were reported in good condition later a t area hospita ls. Officer Tim Holbrook The other victim in the house was identified as Gholma Hoeaem Shamlou, 47, a a doctor from Villa Park and a cousin of the gunman. Family's wife, identified u~ Shaicia, escaped from the hou.e,: after the shooting. She told police• that just prior to the violence, her; husband had squirted her in the: face with a can of tear gas. She: said she took refuge in a bath- room. (See SLA VINGS, Pace A%) Hot winds will fade tonight ByL.P.BENET .;., OflM....,......... ... Just when it was getting cool enough to break out the fall wardrobe. Orange County got a taste of Indian summer as Sania Ana winds fanned the area wittl hot, dry air the past two days. National weather forecasters said the winds won't start to diminish until tonight. Today's temperatures in Orange County will reach highs of 94 degreei inland and 82 along the coast. Lows will be in the high 50s. Thursday's temperatures, ho~ ever, will drop to the mid-80. inland and to the upper 70s along the coast. The unseasonably high temperatures -which hit 9'1 degrees in Santa Ana Tuesday and 84 in Newport Beach -can be traced to a high pressure system over the western part of Ute United States which is pushiJ11 hot desert air into Southem California, forecasters said. !he 1Ugh-temperatures "Ud- strong winds forced Orange Coun- ty Fire Departments Tuesday )o go on a high watershed dispateb level alert -one step from a reCt flag alert. Orange County fliie Captain Mike Reinhold said early today that no major fires have OCCUred. . "The wind is bad and combined with high temperatures this ctn (See HOT WINDS, Pace AZ) .; ; tal unless it could control the Among the lnformatlOn In today'• 8oUth Coelt li> PlaueecttonlaaHetofthemanyt\nefoodoute.ta f r· I ' h • h .t' I • c ~~~·~thefacl_ltty_.P ..... ~B1_. ... _ .. \ )·---1·· t s 1g noon ior rv1ne o. . . •' .. ·~ .. .,.... .. ...., ......... k NNPGft IWbor'•Stev.~~o Rllhed for 8 7yMllMd fourtouehdownle.t ... -~MmedtheDMyPllot Playw oftheWMk.P11geD1 . A popul•r culaln• Mexican food 11 the fut•t growing ethnle fOOd In the country and wh«I you ltart coqklng Mexican dlahel at home, you dllcoYer It lan't all hot and aplcy. P8Qe C1. . , Bren's me r ger forces will squa re off with determined heiress a t Newport m eeting By STEVE MARBLE OflM...., ......... Tucked away in the privacy of a Newport Beach board room, 12 powerful people are expected to reach a decision Friday that could dramatically chanie the way the bllllon-dollar Irvine Co. doe11 bu.Ii· neu. At lleue it a plan to merge the mallive development firm - Orange County'• largest land- holder -with another company formed lut spring to help one man 10lldify hia control over the' local empire. Oonald Bre n , a shy multi-millionaire who owna 86 percent of the Irvine Co. of wh!ch he la chainnan He la trytna to financially restructure the -de- velopment flnn throuah the mer,er. Bren wanta to ahlf\ h1a penonal $560 million atock buying debt to the company in the proc.'ftl. While Bren, hil UIOclatea, com- pany financial ldvllen and law- Irvine Co. growth outlined o n Page A7. yen deteribe the merger u a common buainea transaction, dis- sident bOard member Joan Irvine Smith takes a different view. '1lt's h1a loan and hia damn problem. We shouldn't have to pay off hia debt," said Smith, the granddauahter of company foun· der Jamea Irvine and a multi-millionaire. Smith hll not attended a board meeting in five years and lives alone ln teeluaion in Emerald Bay. She hll threatened a $1 bUllon lawsuit if Bren and other board membera attempt the mercer. To dilrupt the deal, Smith hll demanded all com.,::r record.a and books be o to her lawy~n. ,.. a board member and ltockf'lolder the can make the demand. "Thla la my firat move." sald Smith, who wants a complete audit of the company's holdings and an asaessment of Its worth - eatimated by Bren to be about $1 bUllon. Smith's plan la to stall Bren by tying u p the deal in court. She hopea Bren will be forced to sell 10me of hla stock to private inveltors to pay off hia debts or even make the privately-held company sell atock to the public to rai.ecaah. "lt'a his move. I'm juat aittl.na back waltina.'' she aaid, laugh ing as if enjoying the trouble she's created. "I don't trwt him, I gue.a you know that." The merger propoul stems from Bren's purchue lut April of 52 percent of the Irvine Co. stock from a conaorUum of Eastern 1hareholden. The deal wu pUt to1ether quickly. Bren , who U8ed hi.I exittina Irv1ne Co. stock and other uee\I u colleteral, formed hit own company c:a11.ct Newco I Corp. to help make the deal. According to his cloeest aldiif. Bren and the banks that loanid him the milliona agree the • way to pay off the stock-buyiJll debt ia by mergin& Newco and ~ lrvlneCo. To sweeten the deal, Bren h4f promited to double the stock ~ by minority shareholders. Thi would mean Smith, the tar" minority atockholder, could eri up owning 22 percent of company. Smith, though, wan\I no part the arrangement and has t-h.m.,_il that Bren "illegally'' oommlt the company to the meraer. said Bren could not have recel the muatve loan unlea ~edged Irvine Co. uee\I bey ..~::!'do lhot," utd s~ "And they're (Irvine Co) becau.e I've caucht them wi their handl In the cookie jar." s Bren flatly denied Smith'• tertiona. (See IRVINE CO., h1e A7 ) ~. .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 Krishna order Peace talks ordered in Irvine hassle Council te ll r eside nts, d e ve lope r to settle Woo dbridge shopping cente r site dis pule An Orange County Superior Court judge has set a Friday deadline for the International :;§ociety for Krishna Consciousness :~ comply fully with an appeals :r<ourt order· to surrender its assets i::CO a court-appointed receiver ··~hile a $9.7 million judgment is oeing appealed. Judge James Jackman agreed esday that the Ha.re Krishna ganization has not <.-omplied th the 4th District Court of ~ppeal directive that it tender its ..,.pts in lieu of posting a $15 million bond while the appeal is pending. The sect is appealing a $9.7 million judgment awarded to Robin and Marcia George of Cypress who sued the sect claim- ing Robin had been spirited away by Krishna m embers during the mid-1970s and brainwashed. The two women also claimed family • efforts to locate Robin contributed :"''°·the death of her father, Jim George. Following five months of testi- , ,£nony in a Santa Ana courtroom, , -pie jury aw(lfded the Georges $32 'rh.illion. That sum later was re- duced to $9.7 million by Jackman, ' ~ho presided over the trial. Attorneys representing the Georges were back in court argu- ing that the sect had not complied ~~with the appellate court order • :..tiecause it had reserved title to its property listed in an inventory ·-·! Robin Geor~e filed with the court. Attached to the inventory, Hare Krishna attorneys attached a statement saying the religious group retained all "equities. rights, remedies or legal pos- 1t1ons." Jackman agreed that the state- ment violated what appeals court justices had ordered and directed the sect's attorneys to submit a statement from Hare Krishna's c.-orporate leaders indicating they were surrendering the property. Guilty verdict returned in Tyberg trial ompiled from staff and wire reports Charles Tyberg -a 17-year-old San Diego youth, charged in the shooting death of a San Diego police officer -was convicted of first degree murder today by an Orange County Superior Court jury. By ANDREA ADELSON Of .... D.ilr l'tlol ..... • Angry Irvine residents, oppoeed to an Irvine Co. proposal to shHt shopping cent~rs to major roads rather than in the middle of their village, were ordered Tuesday night by the City Council tore.new negotiations and resolve their disputes with the developer. Residents of the largely de- veloped Woodbridge area in cen- tral Irvine contend the proposal will drain an existing commercia1 center in the heart of their village and undermine the self-contained village concept. R e presentatives o f the 20,000-member Woodbridge Vil - lage Association have criticized the Lrvine Co. proposal to build two shopping centers on either side ot the villqe inatead of developing previously planned parks on the village outskirts. Residents would prefer the build- ing of a previously planned shop- ping area near the existing Wood- bridge Shopping Center instead of the company's current desire to substitute a 22-acre park and a nine-acre residential area. lrvine Co. representatives say a central park will be more com- patible with the surrounding neighborhood and that com- mercial development which will serve a district rather than just a village is needed. The city's busiest shopping area is Heritage Plaza. on major streets a l Culver Drive and Walnut A venue. . h is not an Irvine Co.-owned center. I Commercial landlords common - ly set rents based on a merchant's 1 revenue. "So the landlords will do everything in his power to make it SUL'CeS&ful," explained Irvine Co. spokesman Dan Carl.son. Dr. Alan Cameron, head of a village committee reviewing the plan. pointed to a study of com- mercial development needs within the city and said the Irvine Co. is ignoring unmet demand in the outlying villages of North Wood and Turtle Rock. In addition, residents protested that the proposal changes plan- ning guidelines that were a pri- mary rea&0n for living in Wood bridge. According to WW H.alne9. th• proposal will make Woodbridge "neither the corrunu.nity the olc Irvine Co. envisioned nor thf community Woodbridge reaidenll wereaold." Only former planning com· missioner Larry Hoffman urgeo the council to approve tht measure, saying "I ask you not tc be afraid of change." The council asked for a progres.5 report Nov. 15 over the proposal to build a third commercial center on the southwest comer of Culver and Barrarica roads, where Gemco is a prospective tenant. Cops probe two reports of rapes Pohce an Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley are investigating two rapes that occurred this week during early morning hours. It was not immed4ltely known whether the incidents were re- lated. The more recent attack oc- curred shortly before 4 a.m. today on the 4400 block of Fir Drive in Huntington Beach. Police said a man entered the home through a front sliding window and awoke a 30-year-old woman living there. Police said the man, armed with a handgun and a knife, forced the woman to disrobe before raping her. The intruder was described as a 30-year-old black man, 5-feet 9 inches tall, weighing 180 pounds. Ham radio class ~et in Newport The jury of six men and six woman deliberated for one day before returning with a guilty verdict. Judge Myron Brown set a Nov. 10 sentencing date. Tybert faces a 27 year-to-life sentence. Paramedics a nd a mbulance a tte nd- a nts move suspected kille r to waiting ambula nce. H e la ter self-inflicted inj uries. d ied of The victim was examined at Humana Hospital Huntington Beach and released, police said. In the Fountain Valley attack, ah intruder climbed to a sec- ond-story balcony in the 10,000 block of Warner Avenue and entered the victim's master bedroom through an unlocked slid ing glass door. A ham radio class for sailors, Aaught by Gordon West of Costa Mesa, will be offered at Shark Island Yacht Club, 1099 Bayside The trial was transferred to Orange County because of massive publicity in San Diego after the Feb. 20 shooting death of Police Officer Kirk J ohnson. SLA YINGS PROBED ... HOT WINDS ' Drive, Newport Beach. starting at 7 p.m. today. The class will give mariners _ · Iast. non-technical instruction enabling them to pass both novice and technician class license exam- .' foations given by the FCC. accord- -j ng to West, head of the West t:Oast Amateur Radio School. Emphasis of the nine-week course will be on ham radio installation ; ' aboard power and sailboats. -· Partricia John.son, the s.lain lawman's widow, called the jury decision "a giant step" for police departments everywhere. "This decision is important to ever)( officer on the street," she tearfully said. Tyberg, wearing a blue sweater. jeans and sneakers, showed no emotion as the verdict was read. A court bailiff was as.signed to sit beside the defen- dant's parents. From Page A1 When police arrived at the house. at the end of a small cul-de-sac, they found a woman's body m the en tryway and the bodies of the two men in a living room. Officers said Fam1Jy was still alive w h en police arrived but died about two hours later after being rushed lO the Fountain Valley Community Hospital trauma center. According to other relatives .".HOSPITAL ISSUES PROBED ... . .,. From Page A 1 '-' UC! Chancellor Daniel G . Aldrich Jr. was on the hot seat for '• an hour and a half while the '* eommittee fired questions at him • about UCI's affiliation with · • Health West and about his reversal of position on the hospital issue last swruner. Members of the committee questioned his reasons for pulling support from the Health West proposal in ligh t of a recent phone survey that showed 54 percent of Irvine residents favored a campus hospital. Aldrich said lack of community support convinced him to drop the campus proposal and he repeated his contention that divisiveness within the community led him to back out of the Health West plan. Aldrich also cwured the com- mittee UCI would remain com- mitted to UCIMC and to care of the poor. But Robinson said he wants to prevent what happened at UCLA from happening in Orange County. The UCLA campus hospital in Westwood, he said, is an "ivory tower" for the rich where doctors compete for patient priveleges while campus-affiliated hospitals in poorer areas are ignored. Healt.hWest officials promised the committee that indigent pa- tients wouJd be provided for at their proposed campus hospital. CABLE RATES ••• Robinson said testimony from the IS-witnesses at-the-heaRng will be drawn up in report form and the comrruttee will consider it at another hearing. The commit- tee does not have the power to approve a hospital proposal. but it can make a recommendation for or against either of the two proposals to the state Health Planning O ffice. From Page A1 haven't met projections and that the company has been forced to pay an averag~ in terest rate of 16 percent on $27 million it had to borrow from banks. He said the actual cost "to put the system on the streets" has been $37 million. He al.so said that penetration has lagged behind initial projec- tions but that the company has now reached a "break-even" mark of 37 .827 subscribers in the (our cities. The current cost for the basic services of $10.95 per month could We're Listening ••• 642·6086 o=.:~· 1e o_,.,entMCt Ml'll'dt y ''<Ny II 10.. 00 "0t ~l•f '°"' f1•P*' br 6 30 0 "' ~--n.1<><• 1 p m •"O rov' cop, ••II o,. °'"'" .. "° &•twd•r •"d Su,\dAv tt yW oo na1 'tc•1w11 .,tx..r JUmp to $12.05 a month. Monthly rates are $10.95 for Home Box Office. Showtime and Playboy pay channels. They all could jump to $12.05 per month. A subscriber of the basic service and the three pay channels now pays $43.80 a month with a discount included. The rate couJd go up to $48.20 a month for the same package with a discount. Officials. said that agreement between ·the television authority and the cable television company provide for reasonable increases not to exceed 4 percent a year. Legislators who attended the hearing included state Sen. John Garamendi. D-Stockton, As- semblyman Nolan F rizzelle. R-Huntington Beach. -who expressed support for the IMC proposal in a prepared statement and state Sen. William Campbell, R-Hacienda Heights, as well as Robinson, Alatorre and Watson. Whal do you hkl' about the Da ily Piiot" Whal don't you hke" Call the number .at left and your message will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate edi1or T he same 24 hour answering service may be used to record let ll'r' to the editor on any topic Ma1lbo1t contributors must include th1•1r name and tell•phone number for venfica11on No r1rculation ca 11.s. please TC'll us what's nn your m1n<t ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. 8chw•rtz Ht Publlsher c1 .. 11n.ct Nv9'tl•tne 114/tu-se11 All ottt.r d_.,.rtm•nt• '42"321 MAIN O,,ICE no WHI B•v SI <;utt• ......... I.A u ... •<IOP~ 9o• '~ Coo•• ....... CA 91&n Coe>ynont HleJ <>•~ Coe11 Plil>Wl"'O Company No newt tlo,,., 1llu"'"•On• tO•to11•t m•lltt ot Al:Mtf'ttMnltltnl• P'l.,Ml l'Nly t>e t91)t00VC.tct w•lt\Ovl WM<•.t4 f)t'H'm1n .nn ot Ct>f>rr!Qrtt nwMt c.c>oy Oy 7 f m t•• ""'"'* tO a "" 4Ad f('Jl.ll COO• .,_,. 0. OO"'V .. o<! Chazy Dow•llby A•ymond MacLHn (d1t0t ana Ass111en1 Cootrooer ~f'C.Ol'1J C'IO "'°''·~ O~·O ., C:nu a ... ,. .. (' •• ~IQJl\IA tllPS 'u 8001 Su~h()hM l)y ,., ... , I• 1•, mtwotht. fir m•lll '6 \0 'N)nt~v Ctrcu .. tlon T~"" -<>~C-•r A1e.. Mt-I "4>11""""' Hutll"'Ofil" l\f.C~ A WHIM_,.lf' ... , ... •"9'· .. ~ ...... ; to tl'le Pubhsller • .....,... '· CetH O ,.,Qdu(.1>(1'1 ....... 04" at.fl• A,, _ _.. O.t• j ~l,'fl!'fltt1A@ )JArw~t DOf\Md L. Wl"l.m1 C"H'fti'41tinn MtMI)" VOL. 76, NO. 2U ' who arrived on the scene later in the evening, Family and his wife were considering divorce. The couple had gathered at the Florida Circle home to discuss their prob- lems. relatives said. Neighbors said Family and his. wife had children who were playing in the neighborhood at the time of the shooting. One of the chtJdren broke through a police barricade at one point and had to be restrained. MURDER ••• Fr om PageA1 Sgt. Holbrook, who lives acros.s the street from the house where the violence took place. was the first to enter the residence follow- ing the gunfire. He said a woman, later ident- ified as the wife of the gunman. was running up and down the street, 9CI'eaming. He said she was so emotionally spent that it took several minutes for her to explain what had happened. James Bollone, an Irvine police captain, said he knew the couple who lived next door to him as po ·te an nen y . Re sara t ey had lived in the neighborhood two years and always waved to neigh- bors. "But I can't really say that I knew them." he added. From PageA1 create dangerous conditions,'' Re- inhold said. The Santa Ana winds began blowing at 15 knots at noon Tuesday, forcing John Wayne Airport air traffic controllers to reverse takeoff and landing pat- terns for six hours. If winds keep up. controllers may change the patterns late r today. an airport spokesman said. ''We only use runway one about 2 to 3 percent of the year," said Mark Peacox, superevisor of air traffic control. "We have to do this because the planes have to land and take off into the w ind." Meanwhile, air quality for parts of central Orange Coun ty today is expected to be "unhealthful for sensitive persons," according to a spokesman from the South Coast Air Quality Management District. The county air quality was rated "good" Tuesday. officials said. Orange County lifeguards said early today that the air was smoggy along the coast. Some lifeguards sulf~ from minor eye and throat irritations Tues- day, lifeguards said. "We can't even see Catalina Island because it's so hazy." Bill Richardson, a Huntington Beach marine safety officer. said Tues- day afternoon. "W e had a breeze earlier in the day, but it's not nearly as strong now. It's very sticky too-and we're just not use to this kind of thing." Four men bind woman in HB Police are searching for four armed men who invaded a Hunt· ington Beach home early today and robbed a woman. Police Lt. Barry Price said the four entered a home on the 8,800 block of Dorsett Drive through a kitchen window at 4:25 a.m . Price said the intruders, de- scribed only as young Orientals, fled with cash and jewelry valued at $1 5,000. He said the resident was not injured in the incident. Huntingto n t een , hit by car, dies A Huntington Beach teen-ager has died of injuries received early Saturday in an traffic accident in Anaheim. Richard Robert Senske, 18, died Monday at UCI Medical Center in Orange. Police said Senske was cros&ng K.atella Avenue on foot near F..aSy Way inthe ri\IddJe of a blocl< wfi-=..--- he was struck by a car driven by Michael M. Guarino, 19, of Anaheim. Guarino, who told of- ficers be did not see Senske, was not cited. EITU HIGY 3 90 avoauos................ · ... HllUll •2•• POii LOii ROAST.......................... u. =~':n POTATOES. 4 u./ S 1 mu w1111111n 4 /S 1 VIUIOll OllllES. u. · SPICIAL ........ OllllAI •22• OllEEIE...................... u. •3•• . PlllE Ill ROAST........................... a... BULLITIN BOARD Fund -raising run set Saturday in I rvine The Orange Tide, an annual run-jog-rollathon that raises funds for non-profit charitable groups in Orange County, will be held Saturday at 9 a.m. in Irvine. Sponsored by the Orange County chapter of the Building Industry Association of Southern California, the event will begin at 9 a.m. on a one-mile course along Sky Park Circle in the Irvine Industrial Complex. Participants needing further infonnation should contact the Youth Services Program office at 540-6921. Octoberfest slated in Huntington The Mesa Harbor Club is sponsoring an Octoberfest, to be held in Old World, Huntington Beach, Thursday at 10:30 p.m. Admission is $6. which includes food and entertainment. For more infonnation, call 642-6849 or 831-3839. El Salvador cha r ity concert set The Latin American Solidarity Network will hold a benefit concert featuring the Rebel Rockers and a guest band Saturday at 7:30 p.m. in the Heritage Room at UC Irvine. Orange"Coaat DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 Al .. Proceeds from the event will go toward humanitarian aid fqr the people of El Salvador. Tickets are $5 and may be ordered by callinJ{ 595-6349. '.Jupervisor Ralph Clark proudly holds u p his winning orange as other board members (from left, Bruce Nestande, Harriett Wieder and· Thomas Riley) str uggle with t heirs. P rogram o n Rome at Orange Coast "Rome and the Romans" is the title of an "Armchair Adventures" travelogue that will be presented Friday at Orange ·Coast College in Costa Mesa. The program begins at 8 p.m. in OCC's Robert B. Moore Theater. Supervisors a-peeling orange cutups "Rome and the Romans" will be presented by Clay Francisco, a journalist who has shot footage for travel films in more than 80 countries. Tickets !or the program are available for $3 in advance and $4 at the door. They may be purchued in the OCC Ticket Office, located in the Student Center Building. Mesa author keyn ote speaker Carta Mesa's Michelle Morri.a, author of the novel "If I Should Die Before I Wake," will be the keynote speaker at Thursday's meeting of Volunteers for Kids Sake at the Plaz.a at Villa del Sol, Fullerton. Morris' novel deals with child abuse, which the volunteer group is organized to help prevent. The program is scheduled for 11:30 a.rn. and reservations may be obtained by calling 525· 7653. POLICILOG By JEFF ADLER OllM0..,"918WI Lest there be any doubt, Orange County supervisors proved they have the right stuff Tuesday-or, at least, the orange stuff. Engaging in a rough-and-tumble contest that tested mettle, courage, practical determination and surgical fi- nesse, four of the five members of the Board of Supervisors showed they have what it takes to make it in the kitchen should their politi- cal careers falter. And the recipient of all the good will was Orangewood, the coun- Huntington man's arsenal looted A resident of the t6400 block ol Sol .. Chk:41 Street tOld Huntington a..ch police he Checked a locited ck>Mt Tuesday 1.nd dllCOY91'ed nu- merous handguns and rifles had been stolen. The loss Involved weapons valued at $9,570. A garage bruk-ln was reported Tuesday on the 200 block of 8th Street In Huntington Beach. The loss Included 12 cant ol motC>f oil valued II $t0. A home burglary waa reported Tueaday on the 18800 block ol Thornwood Clrc... Entry wu ap- parently mada through 1n unlocked 1lldlng glue patio door. The loss lnciuded an $875 stereo and $100 In jewelry. A w~ reported to police that IOfTleOflfl hid broken the windows out ol her 1981 Corvette. parked on the 16000 block of 8eaci'I Boutevard Tueecl•!. ~ht. The auto's T-tops, valued T ' 50, also were liken. Foun tain Valley Thieves stole 1 stereo lrom a 19&8 fo~ Ratked In the 10000 block of Pebble Court and Then ~ hood and ripped out the battery. Total ION w11put1t $190. A Fountain V1lley student reported that his red Schwinn Cruiser bicycle was stolen lrom •achoo! parking lot. Irvine A t-4-year-old Woodbridge High School coed reported aorneone raided her unlocked gym locker Tuesd1y attemoon, mulng"off with clothes and shoea valued at $200, she told polloe. Thieve• stole three pleeet of Jew- elry valued at S 1,500 from a home In the 15000 blocil of Verden Court. Entry was made through an unlocked slldlng glua window. Lagun a Beach Household good• valued at $2,750 were stolen from a houM In the 400 block ol PNrt Street the owner told Lagun1 Beech police. A tire 1nd wheel were taken off a vehlcle parked In the 800 block of Cress Street, pollce .. rd. A tota beg stolen from 1 parked ear on Ocean Avenue Tueeclay w11 later f®nCI rn rnarby~. police M id. The contenll, valued 1t S800. were mlaalng. A bicycle valued at $610 was taken from a 1tor1ge ttled In the 700 block of Summit Drive. Newport Beach A Colla Mesa man reported the thet1ofhlt 1979C1merofromthe200 block ot 35th Street Wednesday. A business In the 3300 block of Via Lido reported the theft of twO IBM typewriters valued at S700 each sometime Sunday, pollce uld. Costa Mesa Burglar• took five IBM tyepwrlters worth $7,000 from Galavln. Schmle9- lng and Blled. a Britto! Street I t· torney's office. Police 111d h IPP81rt the Cfooks ueed • paaa key to enter the offices. A water bottle containing S500 In looM ch1nge, a cordless telephone and a video caaaette recorder wet'e hauled off lrom an apartment on the 2800 block of Fairview Street. Police put the total 1011atS1,930. A crook entered an unlocked ~·rave on ttie 140ttbtocic-ot Dettu •Ille treat and pried a $500 radio out of a par1ced Volvo auto. TODAY'SWIATHIR Cooling off p e riod Thurs day Coastal Bot• a3 38 ao.ton 116 $8 Brown~ llO 13 ""'9tly t• ... °"Oii n.ur..s.y Pllelly 8"11111o as M 9uf1ln01on St 47 '°"' _..,. -log -11'9 -~ ~t l1 ~""°"*" Coolw Thlncl9ywltll ~on.S C 17 .. :;:,;:1ato84_t,,.cout-14to to c-i.ton.w v 64 68 -It-lowt tO!li9fll 64 to 14 CllerlOtt•.H C a3 112 S-C,,.11 ~ -t ... Olll .. c,__ ~ 36 _.,-...Prom POinl ~tlon to ChlCaogo 1• N a.. NicdM -lot~ -Onclnnetl 12 M 16toH"--4to7·foOI~ ~ .. .. ---.-..~t=-T,.._ ~.Sc 91 .. Mylo_,_ I to20 not• Soo.Moc Cotl.mt>vt 71 .. S...Hlcolee---•to 0"'4•·ft Wo.111 82 112 11 •note wllll 3 to &-1001 -ll'lrc11'911 O.y1on 72 .. ~.-...... 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The supervisors good-naturedly agreed to partici- pate in the "Great Orangewood A-Peel," an orange peeling con- test staged to promote an Oct. 27 one-day fund-raising drive for the home. Orangewood's di.rectors are hoping county residents will purchase 50,000 oranges at $2 apiece that day, adding another $100,000 to the $6.6 million raised so far for t he project. The goal is $7 .5 million. Although the fund-raising drive for Orangewood is still under way, construction on the home's first phase is progressing, reported Mona Hobson, the cam- paign's di.rector. She said framing for six build- ings has been completed and construction workers are readying those building's roofs. The builli-_ ings should be completed some- time in mid-1984. While supervisors have tackled weightier problems in the past, the peeling contest certainly proved to be one of the juiciest tasks they've ever encountered. They're a competitive bunch and it was apparent that each of T r ustee h opefuls in forum tonight A forum for candidates running in the Nov. 8 Coast Community College District election will be conducted at 7 p.m. today in the district board room, 1370 Adams Ave., Costa Mesa. The public is invited to the free event, which is sponsored by the district chapter of the California School Employees Aaloclation. All 13 candidates running for three boa.rd seats have been invited to participate. the four who participated clearly was seeking the "a-peeling" title. It also was politically revealing to watch how each supervisor ap- proached the county's first fruit. Supervisor Bruce Nestande at- tacked his orange as if it were a political opponent or a tough problem in the Third Super- visorial District. He clawed, teared and pulled the peel from his orange, showing no mercy. He lost. Supervisor Thomas Riley mounted his campaign with the time-tested method one would expect of a Marine Corps general. He attacked it from land, sea and air, stripping the peel around and around. He, too, loet. The winner was Supervisor Ralph Clark who went about bis orange peeling businem the same way he approaches pOlitics - quietly and lWuredly. He peeled his orange by deftly slicing the peel, round and round. Chairman Roger Stanton failed to make it to the contest, tele- phoning in his regrets at the last minute. An aide said he was lll. Was that an orange a day th.at keeps the doctor away? Irvine school hoard candidates to speak Irvine voters will get the chance to hear the positions of 10 can- didates vying for four seats on the Irvine Unifled School Diatrict board during forums in coming weeks. In the first forum. starting at 7 p.m. Thursday at Lakeside Middle School, 3 Lemongrass. candidates will outline their po8· jtlons, field questions and partici- pate in a mock board study aess.lon. Following the forum, members of a citizens group called Irvine Tomorrow will endorse can· dldates. In addition. a representative of Citizens for KIDS (Keep Irvine Di.strict Successful) will explain Prop. 1, a local school tax in- itiative. U enacted, taxpayers would agree to a $150 tax over three years, raising $1 . 4 million for di.strict use. Monday, candidates will answer questions by a moderator at a 7:30 p.m. forum to be held in City Council chambers. 17200 A carat or more. Jamboree Road. The panel dis- cussion is sponsored by three civic organizations, Irvine Village Forum, the Sunrile Exchange Club and the Irvine Advocates far Better Schools. On Oct. 24, the Gifted and Talented Education committee will sponsor another 7 p.m. forwn at Lakeside. The PT A of El Camino Elemen- tary has organized a final 7 :30 p.m. forum Nov. 3 at the campus, <t782 Karen Ann Lane. Those who have filed candidacy papers for the Nov. 8 cont.est are incumbent Gordon Getchel. Helen Cameron, Mary Ellen Hadley, William Crosby, Alan K.lofkom, Kenneth B. Adama, Roderick McClain and James Wilds. The eight are contending for a four-year seat. Bruce Lee and John R. Mundy are in a two-way cont.est for two-year term that expires in 1985. Programs will be televised for broadcast by Communi ty Cablevision Channel 13. A spectacular way to say you couldn't have done it · without her. A diamond o a carat or more -one in a million. J. ,C._J.Jwnp~rt4~ J.wefer~ MEMBER AMEAICAN GEM SOCIETY ® 1809 ~~EWPOAT BLVD .. COSTA MESA ~ SINCE 1948 B1n~Americara-M11ter Ch1rge PHONE 5•8·3•01 . • ' I ; r I f i Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct 12, 1983 OPOFTHENEWS Man 'suspended'forsurgery Texas shooting s pree ends with five d ead HEMPSTEAD, Texas -A man packing two .357-caliber Magnum pistols gaw up peacefully at a roadblock to end a 160-mile rampage that left five people dead and a 70-year-old woman critically wounded. authorities said today. Six other people taken hostage during the 51h -hour spree Tuesday night were released unharmed, authorities said. A state trooper who stopped the man for a traffic violation was among those slain, said Department of Public Safety spokesman Larry Todd. It was the third mass slaying in east.em Texas in as many weeks Law enforcement officials identified the suspect in custody today as Eliseo Heniandez Moreno, 24, of Bryan. He was seized at a roadblock outside of Houston Sidney Jaffe set f,.ee TORONTO -Two years after Sidney L . Jaffe was grabbed by bounty hunters while jogging, hustled across the U.S. border and jailed in F1orida, the Canadian businessman who became entangled in a diplomatic dispute 1s home and Cree. Jaffe arrived Tuesday night at the Toronto airport about six hours after a judge's order permitted him to walk out the door at Florida's Avon Park Correctional Institution. He had been serving time for failure to appear in court in connection with charges of unlawful land'l$31es. Jaffe, 58, a native of New York and a naturaJibed Canadian citizen, hugged his wife and daughter and told reporters he would celebrate. Senate candidates set Democrat Mike Lowry and popular Re- publican Dan Evans of Washington took aim at each other after beating out 31 candidates for nomination to fill the late Sen. Henry Jackson's • seat, while a Boston nominee appealed for white votes to be<:ome the city's first black mayor. Conununity activist Melvin H. King will face former busing f~ Raymond Flynn, a white city councilor, after both earned the right to appear on the Nov. 15 Boston mayoral ballot by leading a field of eight Tuesday. The winner in November would replace Kevin White, who has been Boston's mayor for 16 years. In Binrungham, Ala., Mayor Richard Arrington was re-elected on a wave of near-unanimous support Crom black voters. Defeating City Council President John Katopodis, he called it "a turning point in Binningham's history." Charges in casino skimming KANSAS CITY, Mo. -A $2 million casino skimming indictment that names the reputed mob bosses of Chicago, Milwaukee and Kansas City rould be the key to "destroying the structure of organir..ed crime" throughout the Midwest, a Conner FBI agent says. The indictment against 15 people, the result of a five-year FBI probe rode-named "Strawman," was unsealed Tuesday. Patie nt' body temperature cut to 66 in rare cancer operation BALTIMORE (AP) -Robert Crowe says he never heslsUlled when fac:t.-id with the prosJ>e('t of being placed in virtual "suspended arumation" for 41 minutes during rare Life-saving canc.-er surgery. '"The condition I was about to face is extremely common - prolonged death," Crowe JOked Tuesday at a news conference where he was joined by his wife and daughter. "I figured anything Pact reached in air dispute; strike averted By The Associated Press Eastern Airlines and its umon flight attendants reached a scttle- mL•nt m a 19-month contract dispute tud~y. averting a strike· that had ~n set for midnight. Patricia Fink, president of Local 553 of the Transport Workers Union, which represents 5,800 of the Miami-based carrier's [light attendants, said ''I'm op- timistic (about ratification)." Neither she nor Walter Wallace, cha1nnan of the National Media- tion Board, would reveal details of the proposal until union board members could review it. But one major issue that was overcome involved staffing of lucrative Latm American flights. that might work was worth the chance " Johns Hopkins Hospital sur- geOl\!1 said Crowe's body temperature was reduced from 98 6 degrees to 66 degrees -with his heart beat and circulauon completely stopped -for 41 minutes during the operation last year. "He really was not kept alive on the machine, as there was no perfusion of blood through the body," said Dr. Fray Marshall, associate professor of urology. "Mr. Crowe was just cooled down and 1n a sense was closer to a state of suspended animation." Crowe, :n, of Alexandria, Va .. was back at his job full time within six months of the surgery and shows no signs of any tumors today, Marshall S41id, Crowe was "critically 111" when wken into surgery on Oct. 29, 1982, with kidney, liver and circulation dysfunctions and severe body swelling. His blood was drained into the reservoir of a heart-lung pump, where it was cooled and recirculated into the body. Marshall said Crowe had a canteloupe-sized growth on his kidney which spread through t he vena cava blood vessel into his heart. Chemotherapy and radi- auon treatment are ineffective in treating such cancer, and conven- tional operations to remove such extensive growths have a high mortality rate, Marshall said. "We thought extreme measures t'Ould be taken to save this man," Marshall said. 10 perish as airliner goes down in Illinois PINCKNEYVILLE, Ul. (AP) -An Air Illinois plane that may have suffered mechanical failure and tried to make a forced landing during a lightning storm crashed in rural Southern [Uinois, killing all 10 people aboard, officials said today. State police said the flight manifest showed seven passen- gers and three crew members were aboard Flight 710 from Chicago to Carbondale when it crashed about 9:15 p.m. Tuesday about 25 miles north of its desti- nation. The British-made, twin-imgine, Hawker Siddeley crashed in farm and strip mme land in Perry County where heavy rains were reported just before the accident. Police sealed off the area for investigators from the NationaJ Transportation Safety Board, the Federal Aviat ion Administration and the Civil Aeronautics Board. ------------------------------_..j 1 ! __ A"•c ·~ ·--· SPECIAL OCT. 12, OCT. 11, t-.S BarbU• IChWeMnfeldl; 1"· I have resplendent silver scales. Qfange fins edged 1n blacil. my pucelul but llC11ve nature me~as me a moSI wel-come addlllon 10 any oquerlum. See me et Aqualk: T rop1Cel1 where I am on sale under the name ··nn Foll Barb .. fOf only 1." 1510 W. Behr Coile MeH 54t-1H1 Corner Herbor &a.lier -, f!Jl. 9. ffayk1t~ fht.(jjj_ CERTIFIED CLINICAL HYPNOTHERAPIST-HYPNOANAL YSIS • Hypnodonllcs • Biofeedback • Athlete-Sports • Phobic An1t1ety • Sexual Problems • Hypnoanes1hs1a·Anatges1a • Hypnotherapy tn Obsletrlcs • Stress Anioety • Narcollc, Alcohol Addicuon • Appetite Disorders • Personalily Problems • S1u11ering·Stammerlng HYPNOTHEAAPEUTIC MANAGEMENT FOR THE PAOLONGEO CHRONIC PAIN SUFFERER OR THE DISABLED ANO DEBILITATED PATIENT BY APPOINTMENT ONLY INDIVIDUAL. SMALL GROUP ANO CORPORATE SELF-HYPNOSIS TECHNIQUES TAUGHT 151-1758 833 DOVER OR., SUITE 2 • NEWPORT BEACH 92663 --C~I-;;;; ~~. -, Put a few words I to work tor ou _ ~ BEAUTIFUL . .,... . ·~ .p7 ...,., 7 • ON OYER SOO WALLCOVElllNGS Enter our Sweepstakes! Win $200 credit toward your Beautiful Room. Hurry' Sale ends Oct, 24. 1983 A member ot our decorating statf wtJl help you create your beaulltul room ........ ' 1 • .1. I' "'" .... , .... "" ....... ,, ... -'~· t.-ollr-4 ···-,, ...... I lof ......... '' t -••n lit .... ~ I II R ' .. • ,. ''-· .... ••• j .. ~ ... j ......... ... ..... ,, I I "I ..... ,,_ ' '•"•' •4 I t • ._. .. II• I • I••~ I f! ,.1,U ,\ ti f'•t't ~ ...... . ' .... -n,... 1 .. 1 U1I \ I j •1•<f\ I ~-· .... t1 .... .. , ,. ..... ... . ...... .. \ I· t • I ••• \t11l1 ._ ............ . .,o, I 1114••'' hltl•t . .. ~ ""l•I I I I H\ fl,I !{I•\ 1 1 in .... ,,,' c- .. •• fll •• . .. . .......... \ -· I 11•••1' ""' ., ... .. ''" .... .. _. ... ........ ..,.,,111• ti.I.I .... lllot I ,,ql11 I ''''" ifif,J• ........ .,..., -· ..... .... .... . ....... , ...... '"' t. I flt • ,". 11r.. ' ,, h• t ~ "' ~ ... 1 •• , ' ' ' .. ·"' .) /~ /' aboucs_ only! diamond sale ., ... We've added $250,000 worth of diamonds to our regula·r stock and put this selection on sale! Save on dazzling diamond jewelry 1n our Fine Jewelry Department, plus a special one day only collection You·11 save on pendants. bracelets. earrings. cocktail rings. bridal sets and men's rings. Choose solitaires. diamond clusters or diamonds w other precious stones. All are in 14kt. gold settings. Our Diamond Counselor will be 1n our Fine Jewelry Department to help you Reg. 115.00 to 6000.00. sale 68.99 to 3599.99 · Mervyn's 01amont1 Cert11ica1e 1s issued with each p~rchase At any tome the amount ol the cerllt1ed selhng price 1or the total amount ol payments maoe on the price) may be appl1eo toward the purchase of a more expensive diamond. prov1d1ng the return is made with the Diamond Cer tificate and the diamond is 1n the or1- g1nal mounting. not marred or damaged All returned diamonds are su1>1ec1 10 ver1hcot100 by our 1eweler Soma 111ustra11on1 may be enlarged 10 show detail Styles may vary by store Thursday only October 13 Huntington Beach Friday only ~ October 14 V Cypre11 atore 12 noon to 8 p.m. t •t• H • ,l,1\'• t '-'' •' \t111ul•\ ti.tu I t11l n llJ tf. ~h1l1ml '" tlf h '"iu1t•l,o I • 1 \I• 1 k '' ~ t•rt .... ol '-' \11u ..,, ,m • ,1.r,... It ~-;_ ., .... •• I '~ f iiv ' 11 tfll! ,..,_ iltr' It t • ~ 1 I ..... Thurs .. Oct. 13: Huntington Beach, 9f11 Adams A11e &t Brookhursl SI Fri., Oct. 14: Cypress. 10201 Valley View St. et Ball Rd ' .. Judge finds Tanaka guilty, TOKYO (AP) -A Japanese judge today found fonner Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka guilty of accepting more than $2 million in bribes to promote sales of Lockheed Corp. aircraft and sentenced him to four years in prison. Judge Mitsunori Okada of Tokyo District C.ourt also found Tanaka guilty of viola · foreign exchange laws and fined him the equivalent of the bribe, which Tanaka allegedly received from Lockheed's Japanese agent dur- ing his 1972-1974 tenure as prime minister. The powerful conservative politician immediately appealed his conviction and vowed not to give up his seat in the Diet, or Parliament. He is the first postwar Kakuei Tanaka Japanese prime minister to be given a prison term for crimes committed while in office, and the verdict could affect the political fortunes of Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone, who rose to power a year ago with Tanaka's support. Tanaka, 65, bowed to the judge as he entered the courtroom, but stared defiantly as the verdict was read and remained standing after the other four defendants sat down. The ruling climaxed a marathon trial that began in January 1977 and was a severe blow to the governing Liberal Democratic Party's largest faction, which Tanaka leads. There were immediate calls for his resignation. Tanaka resigned as prime minister in 1974 in the wake of an unrelated financial scandal, but was elected to the Diet in 1980. Power returns LOS ANGELES (AP) -Utility crews have restored full power to a downtown area blacked out when an explosion ripped through an old utility substation, idling hundreds of workers in the central garment district for a day. Electricity was resto~ about 1:45 a .m . Wednes- day to the remaining 2,000 customers who were without power for more than 30 hours since an oil fire inside a 34,500-voltage regulator triggered an explosion at the Department of Water and Power substation. The cause of the explosion is still under investigation. But DWP inspectors at the scene Tuesday, inspecting the three-inch crack in the regulator's steel casing apparently caused by an internal oil fire, called the blast an accident. The outage affected 8,000 customers downtown and cost millions of dollars in lost production in the garment district, authorities estimated. T-OP OF THE NEWS STATE Another man arrested in huge land fraud case By Tbe A11oclated Prest LOS ANGELES -A second man was arrested in one of the largest land frauds in U.S. history as an attorney pleaded innocent in the case in federal court, authorities said. Assistant U.S. Attorney Henry Rossbacher said the second man, Rienk Kamer of the Netherlands, was arrested Tuesday only moments after Bernard Whitney ... entered his plea before U.S. District Judge Richard Gadbois Jr. Whitney and Kamer were named in a 57-count federal indictment which was unsealed last Friday after Whitney's arrest. The two are accused of defrauding about 4,000 European investors out of hundreds of millions of dollars in land schemes in four states. -1----uc.ke kidna_JLtrial begips_ SAN FRANCISCO-Two men chargedwith kidnapping and sexually molesting little Tara Burke while roving Northern California for 10 months in a garbage-strewn van were headed for trial today facing a "heroic" boy as star witness against them. Luis "Tree Frog" Johnson, 33, and Alex Cabarga, 18, are charged with sexually abusing 3-year-old Tara Burke after kidnapping her Feb. 6, 1982, from a parking lot near her home in West Pit\,Sburg, about 50 miles east of San Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT l'l(edneaday, Oct. 12, 1~8~ _ A Robinsons Sae 1 0 0 y . E A R S 0 F S T Y L E FALL SALE AND CLEARANCE 4 DAYS ONLY $99.99 NOW WHEN NEW BOOTS MAKE THE DIFF~RENCE, WE'VE TWO ON SALE. Thursday. Friday, Saturday and Sunday. only! This year's classic boots from Barefoot Originals are what you need! Left: traditionally styled with convenient zipper for easy-entry. Taupe, black, or wine leather Reg. $160. Sale $99.99. Right: our stacked heel classic with zipper. Truffle, brown or black leather Reg. $115 99. Sale $99.99. Both with all-weather. non-skid soles Colors may vary by store. Sale ends October 16 In Robinson's Women's Shoes. 47. ~~ciaco. ' WORLD • Soviets threaten to end talks WASHINGTON -The Soviet Union is threatening to break o!f talks with the United States if an agreement is not reached by December blocking the deployment of the first batch of American nuclear missiles aimed at Soviet territory from European soU, according to U.S. officials here. While the move is taken seriowily, it is eeen as an attempt to influence public opinion in western Europe against the Reagan adminis- tration. ''They're trying to put the acrews to the Europeans,'' said one official Tuesday. Shultz to visit El Sal vador WASHINGTON -Secretary of State George P. Shultz will atop in El Salvador Oct. 24 to confer with Salvadoran government leaders on his way toa previoualy announced \rip to Brazil. State Department spokesman Alan Romberg aaid Tues~ day that Shultz wants to diacuss the U.S.-backed effort to defeat a leftist guerrilla insurgency in El Salvador, and to voice mounting ala.rm in Wuhlngton about a recent rash of killings by right-wing death squads. 'Korean terrorist' captured RANGOON, Bunna-The government radio aaid polJcemen captured a "Korean terrorist" today after ki1llna a companion during the hunt for IUlpecta in the bombing that kJUed 20 people, lncludiOR 16 South Korean officials. .. ' ,,.. -THE QUICKEST WAY: JUST PERSONALLY PRESENT AN AMERICAN r--1 EXPRESS. VISA, MASTER CHARGE, DINERS CLUa OR CARTE BLANCHE CARP lO ONE OF OUR SALESPERSONS ANO WE'LL OPEN "() AN ACl OUNT YOU CAN use THAT VERY DAY. TtiE EASIEST WAY: PHONE US TOLL FREE 1-800-422-4241 FROM 7 AM-10 PM AND OUR OPERATORS WILL TAKE YOUR APPLICATION INFORMATION. I . ---------· ·Al Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 .-. A fiasco ends but l is not forgotten City officials in Huntington Beach learned last week their city probably will not be required to pay off $20,4 13 in debts left behind by a non-profit outfit established to , handle a federal job-training program for the city in 1979. • A grants officer with the federal Department of Labor recently ~ued what seems to be good news for the city. The officer said Huntington Beach isn't responsible for the Western Institute of Careers' debts because the outfit was a separate entity. It was more than just separate. It was, for a brief but damaging period, virtually unnoticed. And its shoddy - even criminal -management practices during that time created the kind of fiasco that bruises a city's reputation ' .and discour~ges policy makers from risking public money on government jobs programs. , The Western Institute of Careers operated for only a few months before it was shut down due to misuse of funds. It was started by former city empoyees who contracted to administer federal Comprehensive Employ- . ment and Training Act programs. An audit by the Orange County Manpower Commission revealed the institute ~ppropriately spent about $168,000, partly by spending ~money without federal authorization and partly by -frivolous business practices such as renting unused office space and buying expensive office furniture. According to audits, President Robert L . Cun- ningham bought a $1,700 desk and a $1,300 credenza for .his office, and Western paid $3,000 a month to rent an office in Irvine it never used. All that was necessary to tap the job-training funds for these extras, said investigators, was a signature on a voucher -and no documentation. Whatever the motivation, temptation must have ·become too great. Cunningham eventually was convicted ·of transferring $16,000 to his personal savings account to make payments on a house in El Toro. Records show he paid back the money before investigations began, but that didn't make his practice legal. He was discharged from a conservation camp this March after serving almost two . years for embezzlement. How di4 all this happen? Enough responsible parties ap~ntly were involved, but none was investing enough attention to discover the abuse until too late. The result of this episode was another of the horror stories that buries well-intended jobs programs such as CETA. . In retrospect, it is easy to say the city and the Manpower Commission. which supervised the program, should have audited the institute more often . Indeed, the conunission ha.8 increased its review procedures and has significantly reduced inappropriate claims. But it must be recognized that diligence has its price. More auditing means higher administrative overhead, leaving less funds ... for training people. The $20,413 debt, meanwhile, remains a small but thorny problem. If the city doesn't have to pay it, the commission does. An appeal is likely. (City and Labor Department officials previously agreed that training expenses incurred by the city would balance the other $148,070 in unauthorized expenses.) It will be a relief to have this ugly mess straightened out. But it will be a long time before people forget the damage that occurs when misguided administrators take advantage of trusting accounting practices. MAILBOX · Harbor grads make good news To the F4iitor· The 1964 graduating class of :'-*'Newport Harbor High School was ~ ranked academically in the top ,1 third of the United States. Your , paper carried a very nice article l applauding their achievements. ' Late last month -almost 20 ·~ years lat.er -I was privileged to t have several of thoee young ~ peoplP, still, although they are now 37, in my home. My eldest eon, Bill Wrighton, was a member ~ of that claaa. It was a pleasure to $ 1ee them, all looking ao fit. They f are incredibly loving people, to me ,. and to each other. ~ Five of them had been in the "Ten Most Outatanding Athletes" of their clam. Wade Pearson. football at Harbor then UCLA, he and hla wife are both i.naura.noe , agenta and tu.ve two boya. St.eve ', Shedd, baseball, co-owner of an i antique store, married, two chU- ~ dtt.n. Todd He11. bueball and footba.11_,_president of the New- port-Mesa School aoanr.-mam , three children. Terry Lorentzen, football and wrestling, a football coach at Edison High School, married. two children. Jeff Pleroee, baseball, a teacher at Newport Harbor High School, still waiting for the right girl. Bill Wrighton, baseball and wrestling, roofing contractor and coach, mar- ried. two children. Jackie Caaala Wiseman, teacher and now admin- istrating a program for "burned out" teachers, married, the mother of three boys. In a world where bad news seems to take precedent over good news I thought your readen might enjoy knowing how lucky we are to have these outstanding people working for our communi- ty. What a joy it was to be around them! RITA J. WRIGHTON Costa Mesa '$ ~ ~ ~ $ l. I. BDJILPrasier's legacy j .f" LJ.ona have to be extremely 1exy t.o perpetuate their kind. Eichty-five percent of the cube cl.le. The malel •nerally dle young. And It takes about 1.~ matingl to produce one Utter. Even to, the lion populaUon Is on the rile. Clergymen ao where the call lakes them. So do ldentista. It's ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat said these two types of pro- f esaionab a.re more Ukely to leave their home towns to find work than others. By ltw In the Scandinavian rountrieta, you drive with your lights on during the day, too. Most guide dogs for the blind a.re retired at about age 8. tt.L. 8chW8f'tl Ill ~ LOOIC.l'MJUSTAN~NAW ~ FAN UJ<E MRY8oW ELSE. I ADMIT l'M MOO<En MY WIFE 'JUSE~ ME 8VT SME AND 1ll f<JD5 WOULDNi M~ IT f-OQH Wo121.~ ' YOU GOOLD REALLY FEEL TUE EXOTEMENT. OOLY A LITTLE TIME REMAINED ON ™E Cl!Xk. ™E S~D5 WERE TIC.KING AWAV! ™EN ™EY CALLE D oFF ~E EXECUTION l U.S. may wind up backing Iran WASHINGTON -The Persian Gulf could erupt ln an oil fire that would inflame the Middle East. To defend our access to the.e vital oil fields, the United States may even resort to military support, includ- ing ''tactical nuclear warfare.'' This is the somber warning of Dr. Robert Hunt.er, the former National Security Council official who helped author the "C.arter Doctrine." Under that doctrine, which was proclaimed in 1980 and reaffirmed by the State Depart- ment only a few weeks ago, the United States is committed to defend the Persian Gulf "by any means necessary, including mili- tary force." Hunter thinks our best course may be one that would have been unthinkable a couple years ago: Increase support for Iran. Such a bizarre twist in U.S. foreign policy would take a lot of explaining. Here's the background: The Iran-Iraq war is in danger of igniting the Persian Gulf oil fields -all because of ir- responsible action by the French government. France has offered to sell super-sophisticated Eten- dard jets to Iraq, which has been bled white by the war. Facing G.--Jll:_l_ll-111-11-.--.~ military and economic collapse, Iraq has threatened to use the French warplanes for a desperate, come-from-behind victory effort: Bombing Iran's oil refineries. In angry response. Iran's can- tankerous Ayatollah Khomeini haa threatened to abut down the Strait of Honnuz, which would cut off the flow of Middle East oil on which West European industry depends. He might alao order retaliatory raids against the Per- sian Gulf oil sheikdoms, which have supported Iraq. Massed near the Iranian border, meanwhile, are 26 Soviet divisions. which are ready to roll if the Kremlin should ch006e to intervene. They have al.ready staged a mock invasion of lran. The best way to avoid a catastrophe in the Persian Gulf would be to persuade the French to rescind their sale of the warp- lanes. "lt is vital," Hunter told my associate Lucette Lagnado. ''for the government of France to recognize its responsibilities ln not raising the risk of a broader conflict.'' This could be "devaatatinR to western interests," Hunter said. He minced no words. He called the French decision to sell the planes "stupid and irresponsible." So far, the United States has had no success in talking the headstrong French out of the plane deal. The Iraqis are suspected of hoping to provoke a crisis that would force the United States t.o support their war effort. Only by making clear to the Iraqis that this won't happen. Hunter argues, can Baghdad be steered 111way from ita reckless use of the French jets. But President Reagan may be forced to side with the irascible and unpopular Khomeini to keep the Russians from intervening. If the conflict escalates, the United States is committed to go to war, if necessary. to protect the Persian Gulf, Other sources confinned Hunter's fear that tactical nuclear weapons might have to be uaed to defend the gulf. The implications of such a move are staggering to contemplate, but the !act that the nuclear cont- ingency has been discussed shows how seriously the White House takes the threat against the Per- sian Gulf. I have seldom seen the strategists in the backrooms so worried. , Meanwhile, the administration has asked our European allies to join in bringing pressure on the French to call off the plane sale. FEUD OF THE WEEK: Feder- al Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker has privately infonned Treasury Secretary Donald Regan that he will no longer consult with -or even meet -Treasury Undersecretary Beryl Sprinkel The two men just don't get along. Sprinkel is regarded as the Treasury's ''Fed watcher." ser- ving as the admiruatration's liaison with the secretive board and monitoring its monetary policy. The feud has a philosophical basis of sorts: Sprinkel has made no secret of his distaste for the Fed's loose-money policy. which he fears will re-ignite inflation But there's personal animosity as well. F.arlier this year. S pnnkel had the temerity to campaign vigorously for Volcker's job. Vol- cker. a more experienced political infighter, won reappoinunent and isn't about to let his defeated rival dictate policy now. New politics bring UFW boycott By==~= didn't know Clllflllll fBCUB it as they bankrolled Gov. George Deukmejian's election campaign percent cuta in the board's budget last fall, but they were bringing have sent Chavez back to the back the boycott. d boycott. After eight years of life un er The changes in the farm labor the state Agricultural Labor Rela-board reduce the pressure on lions Act, the growers may have growers to renew UFW contracta forgotten the impact of the grape they signed during the ALRA's and lettuce boycotts mounted by first eight years. And while the Cesar cnavez~ U-nlted -Farm-I.aw f0rb1& -me unnm-°10' ~ Work.era Union. In 1975, a f~eral boycotts to pressure growera into survey showed that 17 million of new contracts, it allows them as a the nation's food shoppers had bargainina tool in renewing old changed their habita because of ones. the boycott. Or the farmera may believe a boycott can't work today. "I doubt if Cesar can generate the interest today in a boycott," &~dent Henry Voss of the · omia Farm Bureau Federation re- marked last month. But Deukmejian's election, his appointment of a grower-approved former R~­ publican uaemblyman as general counsel of the Agricultural Labor Relations Board and hi.a almoet-30 "U I would have known then (when the farm labor act pueed in 1975) what (know now, ( never would have dismanUed the boycott. even at the expenae of the law," Chavez aaid recently. Thus the new Chavez boycott. starting with a planned $1 million effort against Lucky Stores Inc., California's second-largest super- market chain and No. 3 ln the nation. Chavez targeted Lucky because it carries Sa.Una.s Valley lettuce grown by Bruce Church Inc., which has refuted to renew Its labor contract. His union plans to carry on the effort against Lucky for two years if the lettuce grower doesn't give in. So far, letters have been sent to each of 75,000 households in 15 California communities with Lucky stores. A poll paid for by the UFW found that 43 percent of thoee who received the letters clumgechheirahopping.ftabits Qd 21 percent were ~yi.ng out of Lucky markets altogether. Lucky says the poll is wrong or irrelevant, claiming lta revenues and sales are unaffected by the new boycou. Even it that's true, the boycott is still young. Other growers and market chains may find them- selves affected if more contracts are not renewed. For Chavez feels he has little choice because of the state's poUU- cal changes. The farm labor board's general counsel will be deciding which alleged unfair labor practice cases the board will hear. Only the most fl.agrant illegalities now seem llkely to be pursued. By contrast. the UFW could get a hearing almost any- time it wanted (luring the board's first eight years. when general counsels were union sym- pathiz.ers. And the board itself will work more slowly on cases it does hear The budget cuts ensare that. Chavez prechcts the new boycott will be at least as effective as the earlier ones that carried him io na onat promt:nenre as a major Hispanic spokesman. Eventually. he told his union's annual convention. this will force growers again to embrace the farm labor law as preferable to the boycott. That may just be brave talk, for it's far too early to tell whether the new unfon effort will gain momentum or peter out. What's for sure is that after eight years of relative quiet, farm labor battles are about to become ftont-page news once again. Thomas Elias is a Santa Monica-based ro/wnnisl on state issues. Sovereignty is a state of the past "You'll alwayahave war" iaone of the most stupid and thoughtle91 atat.ementa a penon could make. 1 Because such a penon hu no idea what war means, historically and actually. What such a penon really la aaytna I.a thatJou'll aJwaya have qgretl1on an hoetWty and con- flJct among people. There I.a no question of thal; no utopia we can even dlmly conceive would re- move theee unlovely tralta from the human animal. But war is a very different matt.er. War 11 a eodal lnatJtudon. and Ukt any lnatlt.utJon It can be abollahed •• N c.annibalJ.rn WU abollshed, a. slavery was aboliahed -· tf enough of ua want to. We cannot 1top~ple from dJMveelna or from t:tnc over thelr dlu~~ . ~is la one rea1e>n every acat.c hae, a police m1nU1111 ~ ~ force and a judiciary: To nJp conflicts ln the bud and _, bring the advenaries before a court wtth the, power to reeolve the laaue. The people of Milwaukee do not go to war against the people of Chlcago when the latter prote9t that their water supply la being contaminated by the other city. The argument la taken to the courts. and the d ties agree to abide by the courta' dedalon. The countria of the world, however, are unwllllna to give up their 90verelgnty ln tbi. ,.peel. They do not want an lnt.em1t.lonaJ poUOI! force to a.rrat such conflkU or 11 world court with the power to enforce dec:ialona. Every country wanta to be the proeecut.or, judge and Jury in lta own c:ue --and to decide favorably for ltaelf. Thia la the root cause of war -- not man's INtlnctual aggretalve- neae or greed or any other emo- tional component. U we can aettle our hoetilitiett domestically by going to law, there la no reuon we cannot settle our tnt.ematlonal hostlliUes by going to law. Actually, while the notion of aoverelgnty might have made eome 11e111e three centuries ago when the modem nation-state wu emergtna, the new tools of war have turned It lnto • danger· oualy oblolete concept. The only eovereignty now pc 11 t~d by even the won,est nation is the power to kill the enemy 20 times over while It la bel~ killed 10 t.lmel over. Nuclt'ar war(an has made cf· " fective defense impossible; only retaliation remains aa a threat. And even that la dubtoua: Ebemy submarines can lob nuclear bomb! upon our coastal cilia and run away. Who can Identify the enemy ln IUCh a oovert and Wld~ war? One that could be over, for all pnictlcal J>W'PC*S, ln 20 minutes. lllllYla Summer la over. and all thoee W-~ d.rtvera we thoucbt were tou.rlats have turned out to ~ "loc:alll', G.P. The-$1 billion story: How Irvin~ Co. grew James Irvine's 1864 ranch purchase expands by acquisitions from family's empire to major land development company By JERRY HIRSCH Of tAe o.llr -..... Here are the major events in the development of the Irvine Co. •Irish immigrant James Irvine and three partners purchase 120,000 acres of the Orange Coast in 1864. About 40 percent of the partnership's holdings, the 47,000 acre Rancho Lomas, is purchased for $7,000. . • The partners pioneer sheep COSTA M£SA I i \ r-J TUSTIN 1 I I . .,.,111"19..,J, herding in Southern California and make a fortune shipping wool from Newport Bay. • James Irvine buys out his partners and names his holdings the Irvine Ranch in 1870. • A 1882 drought causes financial l~ and forces Irvine to sell some ranch parcels to Orange County's fledgling com- munities. Today, the company's holdings change on a day-to-day I I C { I 0 c l • • basis as homes and lots are sold. • The senior Irvine dies at age 59 in 1886 leaving the ranch to his only son , "J.I." • J.l. is the major force behind the company's development changing his father's grazing busi- ness into an agricultural company. J.I. plants citrus groves and other cash crops. • James Jr .. J .l.'s first son and heir dies of tuberculosis at age 42 / ' ' ' El TORO -- ' ' ' in 1935. • J .1. intended to give James Jr. control of the company. Soon after his son's death, J.I. establishes the James Irvine Foundation, a chari- table non-profit corporation to which he wills control of the company. This action eventually allows others outside the family, like investor Donald Bren, to gain control of the company. • In 1947, J .l. dies at age 80 and the foundation names his second son, Myford Irvine, president of the company. • Myford dies in a mysterious suicide in January 1959. The foundation appoints a new presi- dent and the company begins changing its focus from agricul- ture to land development. • By 1963, industry analysts estimate the company's worth at $500 million. • The Irvine Co. builds posh Fashion Island Shopping center, Newport Beach, in 1967. • The company completes a master development plan for real estate holdings in 1970. • 1977, federal legislation limit- ing the amount of corporate stock held by a non-profit corporation forces the company's sale to a TOMORROW: Powerful People Proflle1 on Don Bren, Joan lrvlne Smith end the company'• he•vy- welght board of dlrec- tore. group of investors headed by shopping center magnate Alfred Taubman. The $337 million sale follows an intense bidding war with the giant Mobil Oil Co. • Donald Bren, a member of the Taubman group, buys out his fellow investors in 1983 and now controls 86 percent of the Irvine Co.'s stock. •The company is now valued at $1 billion. The Irvine Co. still holds 68,000 acres of the original 120,000 acres. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 BJ GINA DePAOLA ...,,...Ocu., a C-. M-aciomey may have the answer-for~ County~ who can't bear children and who don'~ want to wait yean to adopt one. l She cautions. though, that her amw~ may not~ for everyone. A family law attorney, who normally handles divorce ~ adopdon c:Mee, Marjorie .E. Edwards aaJd she's prepared to fintY 1urropt.e mothen for IUCh couplee. ~' While she h-1't received any requests yet. f,dwarda aaid she thinks there'• a real need for such a eervice in Oranae County. ''Theee days it'• really dif. flcult (to adopt a beby)," lhe lakL "I've had dJenta stop.people , , (J>resnant" women) on the street (and uk them if they're F,b1I to put their baby up few adopdan)," Edwards laid, exp1ain1na IOme couple, are desperate few a child. Before lhe dedded to bmdle ::~=-= about llx months. '"lb.ere are a nUmber ot plt.falll," lhe l&id. ' What bappem If Che ..... deddte thatlhewutl to kills> tbe baby, Edward111ME• . MARJORIE EDWARDS Or, what ii tlleaanapfllt la ---------.....-told. durina c:hldllktb v .... that -mull \.mdsS> • tua.l litiption. If dla& ... bllilwn and 1be ..almll bm notl:Jlha at• own. Edwar* 8'4 lt wOUld anly I» fair to allow her to mp tW 'baby. Of ~ aaMt lboukl Ntw1l a porUon of dW fee to tM puellfa. ~warda iaJd. But~ much! I t Whdetbecbarpl '61000 fGt tm' lepl lervicel. <>ranee <Aunty couplel will ~ find tMlmelwl with a ~.ooo bill {Of' a 1Um>pte l!IOihm--that '"dudll •10,000 for tbenatual ioothel' and the cost.of~.,...,..,....,,,. . ) Before ibe~w up a c:aatr.et few a couple and thei( IUl'l'Opte mother, Bdwudl mid they all must be examined by a ~ . Tbe attorney ....... doem., have a Ult of ~ve IUITOpte modMn, llW onupW may want to 911pdate what bet ""'&k'm md •eeadaMJ~ ahoWd be, -.... bet race,• md ph,.m1 c:bm • But .,.... ...... llart ,.,.... far anopte mocben, Bdwardl mid .. 'll~ "'callw c:ernp-l '1 Chink ............ llllPt tie a lltde more pr-._.., (open to tbe ...,, .... ..... ....... ..., ....... .,.._ ....,.._.. -.y be lmei-.ct bi ~·.~~ .-i them in making a ~ paynmit Oft a-.," lbeaakl. ~ IRVINE CO. FACES 'HIGH NOON' ... JURISDICTIONAL GENERAL PLANS "-··--·-J . . . LAND USE AND CIRCULATION ELEMENTS COMMERCIAL IHSTITUTIOHAl c:::J GeMrll Aoot.11 c:::J 0.-.. -Ol-.Aam.Prol..A-\ c::J[J Utlltlee -~ ......CJ Elomentsy Scnool -'blllt·~ 0 ........ ...,. Scnool INOUSTRIAL >Cl Hluh School -a.n.11 ........ C'*9e ••-w ~Scnool c::::J UCI lnc:!l-. ArM Map's key indicates diverse uses of land throughout Orange County PAPARAZZi •• ~...\__!.•~ .. ~-· .... ·~·u-c.....~ Debut Ill Parade of fashion There's no business like show business ... unless it's the chance to catch the spotlight as a fashion model and parade down the ramp to the applause of your friends and neighbors. Plt.RKS & OPEN S~CE C~ -A9cfution 15.31 ==a F-o:::.:::J C<lfmu«y Pwti -'""- C!!;:J Qoll eo... ---Pnwey . w.... "'-w - - - -cOhctOf c:=i ............ RMoo.K• 15.11 c:=i ...-.... '"115.22.) m:::rJ Of-. 15.4) -~(S.4'1) 43;:J C-y 5 ~ly 0 Olelllcl V VIN1199 IS lf'llennedlete SChool -Wiidiife H«lllat g CMcCenW -0.. ......,(/llQJZ) -...._, ll5 CMJ..~) either owned or controlled by leaseholds by the Irvine Co. H Super cook Jackie Olden, left, chats with Dee and Ben Padilla and Roger Fenton. From PageA1 "She misunderstands it and she hasn't been to a board meeting in five years so she doesn't even know what the company is doing," a Bren spokesman said. Smith antagonized Bren late last month by having copies of a loan document delivered to news- papers. She said the document proves Bren did not have the financial resources to buy 52 percent of the company's stock. Bren's aides not only challenged Smith's interpretation of the document but blasted the 50-year-old heiress for passing "confidential" material to t.he press. "Her reasons for making this public are really quite puzzl- ing," one company spokesman said. "They're telling me I'm out of line and I damn well don't like it," said Smith, who promptly re- leased several other documents to drive her point home. Despite Smith's caustic remarks and legal threats, Bren -because of his control of the company - has the upper hand. The Irvine Co. board is a mini who's who of Orange County. It Thirty-seven poised and polished men and women from Huntington Harbour had just the opportunity Saturday at Debut ill. the Huntington Harbour Cancer League's third annual fashion show and dinner dance. The black-tie fund-raiser for the American Cancer Society was held in the Anaheim Marriott Hotel's Grand Ballroom, magi- cally transformed into Oriental splendor. Sbannon Nelbllng, Julie Roescb, Kathy Seay, Jolla Ivey, David Lawson and Robert Seay. Savings of America Orchestra. Throughout the evening, guests also bid at silent and live auctions and drawings were held for opportunity prizes. Models J oanne Tom and mother Marilyn cuddle an auction item. Out of the 60 ladies who auditioned for the fashion show, the following were aelected as the Debut m models: Joanna Claaae, Sally Fenton, Mlcbele Gibson, Jou Land, Jalle ~cklln, Melo-, le Nelblla1, Jalle Prowell, Dorotlly Ralpb1, Joyce Saba1ea, Jeu Smltll, Myra StJllmu, Sblrley Stltll11er, Pat Sh'eblow, Salalllle Talarlc, Catby Tbom11, Joaue Tom, Martl)'IUI Tom and Joyce Wel11. The men models .elected in- cluded Geor1e Maplre, Berale Jones, Marc Rabla, Pat Kelley and Don Banett. Teena Included Cindy Armor, Mar-Mary Ba11, Slaaron Feldman, Kim Garber, Kimberly Gibson, Jennifer Hay- nes, Jalle Land, Jennifer Marx, J oining the Harbourites on the fashion ramp in the latest fall and holiday fashions from Nordstrom South Coast Plaza were celebrity models Assemblywoman Marlo Bergeson. Jackie Olden (KNX News radio's food editor) and Sa1u Suw (Clwtnel 13 anchor- woman). Jou Robert Powen of Orange trained each of the modela for their faahlon debut. Following the ahow, the 160 guest.a were feted to dinner at magnificently decorated tables, setting the evening'• Orient.al mood .. .fans, lanterns, orchids and UUes ... from the creative handa of Sandra CloaH and Joyce Wel11, with help from Dick SeekJD1 of Ftesta Floata. One of the highlights of the evening was the .emallonal Home Among the auction winners were Mike and Sblrley Stlt1ln1er, who picked up a seven-day cruiaoe on the Cunard Prlncesa and a weekend for two on the Queen Mary. Ratb and Eel Subera took home a week'• atay at the Palm Deeert Tennis Club, donated by the Jamet Tbompto11 and Mn. Renee Bl1bop. Ralpb and Jayne Clave were the winners of a weekend for two at the Stanford Court 1n San Francisco wl to airfare by Pacific Express AJr- llnet. Paparazz.J 18 edited by Style F.ditor Vida Dean with contribu- tions from Gloria Zigner. Ci ndy Harri on, Ed trickier and Sandra Clouse. ( includes industrialist J . Robert Fluor, developer Donald Koll. former Irvine Co. president and now Walt Disney chairman Ray Watson as well as Thomas Nielsen. the current company president. Smith calls them "Bren's boy~." a phrase she uses without endear- ment. "They're all the same," she adds. While it's unclear whether the board members will buckle under Smith's legal threats and atop the merger, there has been no indica- tion Bren will shy away from trying. a lly Fenton, who initiated De but (or . HH Cancer League, model& at the third annual event. .. . -- ,, ; ~-· Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 12. 1983 Graduation time ••• Attendance by her father would upset her mother • DEAR ANN LANDERS: My parents were a Dear Malone: 1 ta)' your aunt bas no rl&bt to and there is never a hassle abo~rus in our house. divorced when l was 14. I don't remember much tell you bow to feel. Sbe bas not walked In your The pattern was set early. -PADUCAH, KY. about my dad because he was hardly ever at home. • ANIU lAN'ftltlS 1boea. Slnce your decl1lon, ID part, Is bated on DE AR PADUCAH: As tlle tree It bent. My only recollections are the terrible arguments n ~1 conslderallon for your mother, you are on solid Tbanks for remi11dln1 IH. with Mom that ended up with him beating her ~~ ~·· ground and J bope you nay there. DEAR ANN LANDERS: What makes people senseless. When I begged him to stop, he hit me, J7. interesting?-J . IN HILLSDALE, MICH. too. • • • Dear Hiils: lnteretllDI people are Mom finally left him, and 1 thanked God for want him here. It would upset my mother and DEAR ANN: 1 Live In a small apartment in a INTERESTED. P eople who a re bored bore giving us freedom at last. We moved to Texas bring back some horrible memories. As far as I am good neighborhood and am a quiet tenant -no others. when I was 17 and later hear..i Dad had remarried. concerned, his presence would ruin my happiest trouble to anyone. The problem: A nosy landlady. Are your parents too strict? Hard to reach? · day. ' I realize she legally may have a key to my Ann Landers' booklet, "Bugged By Parents'! How , · I will be graduating from college m June. Do I have a right to feel this way? My aunt a~rtment in case of an emergency, but the woman to Get More Freedom," could help you bridge the Dad's sister (whom I hardly know) has written to says it isn't Christian. What do you say?-A GIRL comes In everyday for no reason. For example, she generation gap. Send 50 cents with your request , say he would like to attend my graduation. I don't IN MALONE, N.Y. brings in my mail as if it were 8 favor and leaves and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to stupid notes such as, "I watered your plants. Ha Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chi~go, m. 6061 1. II T DR. PETER J. STEINCROHN rou1 HIAl1H ,. DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: It all began with an ordinary case of chicken pox. Our 12 year old '. daughter wasn't bothered too much by it. But just · • · when she seemed to be getting well, I noticed a change in her behavior. •,. She wouldn't answer questions because she 10 :· seemed to be confused. She was also quite irritable. • When she began to vomit I knew she needed ~·!• medical attention right away. :i We took her to the emergency ward, were our pediatrician examined her. He immediately suspected she had Reye's syndrome and admitted her. I believe his early diagnosis and proJicient l--treatment saved our daughter. Although I can't mention his name in print, I want him to know : how much we appreciate it. If you reprint my ~ letter, I'll send him a.copy so he'll know.-Mrs. W. Dear Mrs. W.: Thanks to early diagnosis and treatment, many Reye's patient• are 1aved from serious compUcations -lncloding fatality. I can understand bow much you appreciate your pediatrician's work. ... We don't know what causes Reye's syn· Surrogate Parenting Services C o nfidential Inquiries Call (714) 646 -9603 FRESH LOCAL LOBSTER DINNER 113.95, Includes soup or salad, choice of potato or rice pilaf 673-7726 801 E. Balboa T,,.._ D•Y• Only- OCTOBER: WED nu FRI SAT SUN 12 13 14 15 16 DAILY: lOAM-8 PM SUNDAY: 10 AM-5 PM Beach Boulevard, WESTMINSTER -Harbor Boulevard, COSTA MESA 'Magnolia Street, HUNTINGTON BEACH amino De Estrella, SAN CLEMENTE THE PORTRAIT PLACE drome, but are aware It may attack children of a ll ages (usually between 5-15). The disease should be suspected whenever a child is recovering from the flu or chicken pox -and has the following symptoms: confusion, lethargy. irritability, and repetitive vomiting. Prompt medical attention is urgently needed. Laboratory tests help make the diagnosis. In- travenous glucose administration is important. Although we aren't certain about the c.-onnecuon, there seems to be some relalion between taking aspirin for virus infections. To play safe, mothers should not give their children aspirin during an attack of chicken pox or influenza. The main effective treatment is early diagnosis. • • • FOR MRS. V .: Rhinoplasty 1s the term used for reshaping the nose. Plastic surgery is not performed only to improve appearance, as in your case -but to correct deformities m patients who have suffered injury in accident. Don't expect complete improvement immedi- ately after your operation. You'll have blackened eyes and temporary eye inflammation at first. But real improvement won't be apparent until 6-9 months have passed. So reserve judgment on whether or not operation has been a success or failure. • 1n ha." r The woman gets on my nerves, but I like this apartment and would hate to move Do I have the right to tell her to keep out? Can she evict me? I pay my rent regularly and have never-damaged anything. Please advise. -FRUSTRATED IN ALBANY Dear Al: You have the right to tell your landlady tbat you would rather get your own mall, that you prefer to wa ter the plants yourself and she need not enter your apartment unless there ls a good reason to do so. She cannot evict you, but she can refuse to renew your lease. h 's her proper ty. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Over lhe years I have read at least a dozen letters in your column about brides who were delinquent in acknowl- edging wedding gifts, grandchildren who were left out of wills because "they never even let us know when their Christmas checks arrived," and aunts and uncles who are tired of sending presents to young people who don't say "thank you." I believe the problem started in early childhood. Those kids were never taught to write thank-you notes. As soon as mine were able to hold a crayon, I taught them to write "THANK YOU" and they grew up knowing it was a must -no ifs, and's or hut's. My children are in elementary school now lejaby Mandarine Reg. $44.00 NOW $36.00 ~,;y LINGEl\IE (2 Weeks Only) 673-7710 3406 Via Lido, Mewport Beach Pair up and go for it. October 29th at Griffith Parle. SK-10K relay-8:00 a.m. Here's on event for everyone who likes to run . l~~~o~------------------- 1 Each 1 unner mus1 complete on entry 4 Remember to include oll • equested 1nfor mohon I opp11collon to onsure proper d1v1s1on ond colegory Any two-person team con enter. Th ere's a Family and Open Division even categories for mole, female and coed teams. All runners get a free Foot locker I-shirt and winners receive medals, trophies and Foot Locker gift cerlificates. Even a trip to Jamaica's Sandals Resort for the winning husband & wife team! -er Enter by Wednesday, 10/19-Entry Fee $4.00 per team <r Cost for post-race picnic-$3.00 per team Mall Checks Payable to Foot Locker Partners To: Footlocker Partners, P.O. Box 49913 Los Angeles, CA 900 4 9 (213) 471-2492 Further Information Valene Johnson & John Brennond, Roce Director~ Am.,ln o MMI Compt•t• ALhl•tlc Teolw.Ot Slot•.,. 2 Be sure to 1nd1cate your fomdy relohonsh1p 11 plocement I you wish to compete m the Fom1ly 01v1s1on 5 Be sure to 1nrludP you• rntry lee ond op11onol J Runners moy compete 1n only one (I ) poi Iner f:nt nic lee I 1eom Selec1 Fom1ly Relo11onshop Partne r 11 1 SK or O pen 01v1s1on !Choose One) I t'f T 1 i~"1 I T r-1 I LI L I 1 1 I J LO I 'IDOl!t~~ I l L I I I Li l I L ! J ! 1 J J 1 L LJIIJ Family Division Husband W ife D (IJY ~ ZIP I CILlTn rrcu []] LLJ [ I I I I I DAil OF BIRTH IMO DAY YI! l ~IX ACE PH~NE IL I I I I I I [ 1 LIJ [en LJIL LO Partner 112 10K NAM( lAS I FiltS fl CI l_J IITl..I IT LJ _ ..... l_.___..__._.l_.l_..I'--' f~fj D I I TI Ll l__._l-L.I __._I _.__.__.__I [_.._I ~I J ltv ~ ZIP C:CII I I I I I I I I Li LLJ ~'·~I ._.._l.__.I UAll Of 8tRTH 1MO OAY YR I SO ~ ., ~! n.J. LI J l n LLJ u L LI I _.___.__..__I l.__.I . Fo1her.Son n Fothe1·Dou9hter l J Mother-Son LJ M other-Doughier D Bro1her·S1Ster 0 S1ster-S1ster D 81other-Brother [] Open DlvlslonO In (OMJdt'fot•on of th1l •n•ry bfl•~ ou•pte<I •o P°'tl<•pot• ,,, Foot tn<:••t 'Of'"•''' I t\l'f'eb, •o• ,,,.,,.tt_ ,.,, he•tt ••9\tro•\ odl"t.nt\hdo•t t.tf\d OU•O"' ~·--• 4.)nti ••l•tn • Jo,...-.. Ut\y C"tnd 011 tty~h t ln1m\ or tOV\" ot o«hon wh(Jt"l...,._ thot I moy n,...,.. o• 1°'-'•aft .. hovt O~•MI '•N'•1 \J-(,. ( 0tpotahO"' '''I 00" toc\et d'l••"Oft o~ •h•tt r~p(e4~11.,.., \\,1((11\\0tt 0• O•ugn\ tm ~f ·~1vl't' fttOth e>t_ pr~~· lt\f)I '""t ti. wfle.ed b, .... "'"'"\l ovt ot o< '" onr wo, <onn .. t•d "'''" "'•"""•••_...on Ot•ob., 1 1 taJ O<'Obeo 79 1 .. 3 0"4 olt ••tol9d "•fl•nt\ nr CKt1 .. 1t1et 11\(lvd•"Q ''m•ll1n.g ro'" from C)f\' \\;(foi .,...,,. Ot O(hw1to, I h•eb., (~t1f) ~ t Of'!\ ohf\t(nlly ht ON.i hove \vfiftc.•tftttr ttotf'\"' fC)I ""• """n' fv~th .. I t\,.,.h, ;•on• •vn °'""''"'°" fO K'""-V Sho. CO'po<ot1on O• '" ··~t\•f'\t0'1y···· iVCC.,•O•\ O• OU•OM, IO cooy11fh1 publtlh f11\fr.bv•• o• "'• '" ""'' '"°",,., Ol'lir ~·af>h ••d•~ "'°''°"' f'.Mi1.1'• tt<Ol"d•"'Q 0t OC"l!y othff tecotd of~~ '"<'vd.•"Q Of\r tvch ftem thnt (qnlo1"\ "'Y f.C()Qthlftt>fe t1~~U ~.~Of f'W)t •ft CGnNMhO" wt~ tflY Owl\ *'on"• If I ""'""der ••ll~1ten ft 81 ""°'' ol OO• my Po••"' O< leqol QtlO"d•O• ""' ••on•d b•low ot -" 'O •"<tt<OO• lh•tt OQ........,, w11h l>flCI '-U"\tlf\4 "-1h~ obov• P•Ov•\f0"' Oo•t 5•gnO'v•• on lull "'••M°• 1•gn<1fu•• 1t unll!H II-• ol og. • ~~~==-~---?----···--·-· ___ , _________ ·-~_--_-.::_-_-....;.. _____ -L·~ Tonight's TV EVENING -400-l ~~TAOL FAHTASY ISi.AHO THREE'S COMPAHY HAWAII FTVE-o MACNEIL / LEHRER NEWSHOUR G'i)OCEANUS Cl)C8SHEWS QIN8CNEWS 8' OICK VAN OYl<E (C)MOVIE • • • "P1al" (1!17JI Brigitte Ariel. Pascale C11ns1ophe (H)MOVIE • • "Five Days One Summer" ( 19821 Sean Con11ery Betsy Brantley ltilMOVIE ' * * Jinxed' (19321 Bene Mldler. Ken We/II MOVIE • * "Wallz ACI~ Texas" (1982) Arvie Arellef Terry JtillOW U MOVIE • "Modern Problems' ( 19811 Chevy Chase. Pam D'Arbanvlfte -1:15-gvwoooClOSEUP OJ) ENTERT AJNMENT TONIGHT -8:30- i LOVEBOAT P.M. MAGAZINE MOVIE • t '1r "The Missouri Breaks·· ( 1976) Marlon Brando, Jack Nlchotsoo. 0-0MOVIE t * "Amllyvtllt II The PQ6SeSSlon ( 19821 llurt YN\O. Jatntl Olton (l)MOYIE .. "Suj>efchlCk ( 1973) Joyce J1tt· -~oung. "HOllOI Guaid" -10:30- • INOEPEHOEHT NETWOAt< NEWS !=' wooo·s AMERICA t t "JO$e!>ha" t 1982) Claude Bras· *'·Bruno Cremer. -11:00- IDD Cll«DJClt NEWS TAXI GOHGSHOW THICKE Of THE NIGHT BEHHYHILL JACKIE Gl.EASOH ID VIETNAM: A TELEVIS!Of4 HISTORY D MOVIE • • I, Monauw t 1972) CIVISlopnet llee.,::;:~~TIN'S LAIJGH.lH ALL IN Tl4E FAUil Y LOVE, AMEAICAN STYLE ENTtRT AlfMNT TONIGHT MOVIE * • * h "Five Flnoers" (1952) James Maaon. Dllf\lelte Dameux. • -12:.0- IJCI) MOVIE • * '1t "The SOlllaty Man" ( 1979) Earl Holliman, Came Snodgfesa. -t:00- 8 MOVlE t 1; "Kronos' ( 1957) Jeff Morrow. Barbata Lawrence. Cf) MOVIE • * • "Johnny Apollo" (1940) "!Yrone Powet. Dorothy Lamour. QJ NEWS G) MOVIE Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct 12, 1983 ,f t 'Pygmalion' 'Straight versi~n' of ' My Fair Lady' st ill sings By TOM TITUS their a.ssignmenta adequately. But there remain .ome OttMDellrN•Uwt shortoominp in this area which miaht have been It takeB a good bil of self-discipline to view smoothed out with a full reheanal period. George Bernard Shaw's '"Pygmalion" without David S. Lewia lntetpreta the Hlgginl role with thinking periodically. "Ah, here's where the musical concentrated bl.andnell, rarely allowing the echem- numbers come in." ing spellbinder to surface. Hi. actions oft.en appear I mean, who can really llst~n to H enry Hlggins unmotivated and bit relatioruhlps with o\}ler c~acten are frequenUy fuzzy. say, "I find the moment I Jet a woman make friends His Elba, Barbara June Dodge, functioru more with.me. I become jealous, exacting , suspiciowi and a effectively and radiates a reservoir of stage energy. damn nuisance" without e>epecting him to add, Yet she seems to be pressing too hard both for the "After all, Picker ing, I'm an ordinary man ... " "squashed cabbage lea f" of the opening scene and the ''Pygmalion" is one of the theater's landmark genteel lady she becomes. Mlasing on both levels~ plays, but it isn't done too frequently -probably natural sense of character. -8:30- G» AUCE Ci> FACES OF CUL TUR£ Cl) NEWS CHANNEL LISTINGS • • 1'1 "The Cast1llan" ( 1963) Cesar Romero. Frankie Avalon maENESCOTT -1:05- (C)MOVIE because its musical incarnation, "My Fair Lady," is Some richer, better rounded performances come done all the time. And watching the "straight in the supporting ranks -primarily from George version" at the Newport Harbor Actors Theater Pelling as Higgins' crony Colonel Pickering, Burt makes you realize that Lerner and Loewe didn't have Goodman as ElJt.a's dwitman father, Patricia to tamper too much with Shaw's basic dialogue to Gi rist as Higgins' opinionated maid and.Pauline Qt WHEEL OF FORTUNE m DRAGNET (Q) INSIDE OH 0 MOVIE • • • , Ad~entures OI Sherlock Holmes ( 1939) BasJ Rathbone. Nigel Bru<:e -7:00-U CSSNEWS 0 NBC NEWS U HAPPY DAYS AGAIN 0 ROWAN & MARTIN'S LAUGH-IN tD TliR£FS COMPANY g) JOKER'S WILD SI BUSINESS REPORT al) MAGIC OF FlORAL PAIKTING ([) P.M. MAGAZINE Qt LOVE CONNECTION C"O)MOVIE * t Five Days One Summer" ( 1982) Sean Connery Betsy Branlley (~ FAERIE TALE THEATRE l l 'MOVIE • • "Josepha" ( 1982) Claude Bras-seur. Bruno Cremer -7:05- m ORANGE COUNTY TODAY -7:30- u 2 ON THE TOWN 0 ~FAMILY FEUD D LAVERNE & SHIRLEY & COMPANY O SOAP (!)NEWS G»M'A'S'H ti) PEOPLE'S COURT SI 8UTTEAFLIES G'i) CHARLIE Ml.JFFlN (() TIC TAC DOUGH m MOvtE * * * '• It Started With Eve" (1941) Deanna Durbin. Charles Laughton -8:00-e ())WHIZ KIOS 0 @REAL PEOPLE U MOVIE • *·* '• 'l <Ue1otas1· (1978) l<HTI Mil· ford, Cheryl Smith O LOUGRANT m OOERT AJNMEKT TONIGHT g) MOVIE • • "The Deadly Trackers" (19731 Rlcllard Harris. Rod Taylor &ll CHARLIE MUFFIN (C)MOVIE * • Hie Toy (1982) Richard Pryor, Jackte Greason 0 KN XT tCBSl fi) KNBC (N BC! 0 K TLA flno I Q) KABC IABC) 0 KFMb ICBSI 0 l(HJ TV fln<l_) a;> l\.CS T I ABCl Q) KTTV l lO<l ) ID KCOP TV (Ind ) ED KCET I PBSI a:> KOCE I PBS1 -8:45 - DMQYIE * * *I" "'Ben Hur" (Part 2) ( 1959) Charlton Heston Jack Hawkins, -9:00- U Cl) MOVIE "Sunset Limousine" (Premiere) John Ritter. Susan Dey. 0 Qt TliE FACTS OF LIFE • ~PROFESSIONALS (!)MOVIE • * "Batuestar Galac11ca. Conquest 01 Tile Earlh" ( 1980) Lorne Greene. l<enl McCord (l)MOVIE • • t •, · My Favorite Year" ( 19821 Peter D'Toole. Jessica Harpe1_ -9:30- 0 Q!FAMILYTIES (!)MOVIE •• • "Tile Seven-Ups" (1974) Roy Schetdef. Tony Lo Blanco. Ci> NEW VOICES IN AMElllCAN THEATRE CiD OAK TREE RAISING -IO:OO- D 8 CANOO CAMERA: NOW AHO THEN I =~ SOUHOSTAGE MOVIE • t "Island 01 Despair" (1969) Mercedes Mccambridge. Marla Sohell. (C)MOVIE t t * ~ "The GOdlather" ( 1972) Marton Brando, Al Paclno. LUXURY THEATRES 1st Two MatiftuS•Hl1uCIMLYS2~111tlusOtlltnristMlittd s 113GU'1•tt.tl6t6J-4 2ssJ t~~. J "'tr l.IFOR Fun I excrremenr1 V1s1tOur ... ARCADE of GAMES* 'rri.~~!': ~:=-. R BIG CHILL Show••• 11 302:15 665 7lO10 15 1'20 3::10 5 :40 7 :50 10:00 ......-1C1RM ---In 70MM _._ 1:4(1, so 6 ·00 . 10 10·20 l :lO 3:40 5:50 1:00 10:10 ---STA-.WAU'--,,,_,. • • '""' '°' ,.,..,.,,g '' RETUR'!~F7~;.~EDI !!Cl -;:k~:;; B~0' •.. 11 115.415, 7'15 & 10:15 12:00 3:60 7 :20 Sl•yln9 S2.75 1st:tfm All .. (PG) 1:50 5:30 t :10 Eir~ __ L,_~216}"4'2SSJ '~~) ... ~-~O COJl•D~I, ~~'f Shows •I rDl S hows at 7:20" 9:30 7:30 "t:40 Ii l;lij1ija 1I.ii.JM6) 639 8770/ ~~) SUl'{I CINl-#1 Sovl>d Olte< I To'°"' <.or ROC1o Or Ir inq lottery Pot tc>Ole ·--~)•t/c COii•»~' Plu• CO·Ftaturt PD' NltllUlllft ( .. I BIGCHILL • Ptus Tnt Su,..,lvort (R ) EDDIE ANO THE CRUISERS R ~rm&Wr.Bi Plus Co·Htt Ahky Bu1lnu1 (R) NATIOl\IAL lfA/tl'nNI Ill LAMP•elll'S J"'6ft Ull Phu T r•dlnt Pl•CH (R ) " IEHY Money (R) Ptu1 ,.orkys II (R) Or1 ... 1 n1 Open 7 : IS Wttlentthll / 7:00 Weekends Children Under 12 fret Unless Noted RUFFELL'S U'HOUTHY, INC. •.. ., .......... ..,,. 1922 HA~BO~ BIVO COSTA MESA -548· 1156 No matter what you're doing. your hometown newspaper The Daily Pilat rtts In ln•ex•pen•slve• "(1n lk spen' !!Ill not high '" price, reasonabl e . ctasslfled ..._..._. edvert1s111g -1 rW9l C lassified Advertising 642~5678 0 On TV 2 I T\/ 11 HBO C: ( Cinem.u I • tWOR I NY NY l1 tWTBSJ E IESPNt S tShowtm1") 0 Spot119ht g !Cable News N9twork1 l.O)MOVIE • • * • · Tne Godfather · I 1972) Marlon Brando, Al Pacmo -11:30- 1 Cl) POLICE STORY Qt)T~IGHT SATURDAY NIGHT 91 ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE IN SEARCH Of." ti) STREETS Of SAN FRANCISCO e ~TANOING HUMAN BEHAVIOR e 100CLUB 0 MOVIE t t "T 1a1I 01 The Pink Panther ( 1982) Peter Selle<s. Da~1d Niven -11:.-0- (S)MOVIE * • • ·~ The World Accordtng To Garp" (1982) Robin Williams, Mary Seth Hurt -11:50- (H)SITCOM -12:00- O MOVIE * • ·~ "Do No1 Fold, Spll'tdle Or Mutttate" (1971) Helen Hayes. Mil- dred Natwick (!) INOEPENOEHT NETWORK H£WS -12:20-CID MOVIE *•'/a "The Sender" ( 1982) Kathryn Harrold. Zeljko lvanek -12:30- D Q! LATE NIGHT WfTH DAVID LETTERMAN D TWIUGKT ZONE • * 111 'Used Cars" ( 1980) Kurt Rus- sell. Jack Warden -1·10-make their show "sing." e as his sophisticated mother. UMOVIE ** Making Love" 11981) l<ate There is, however, one scene in "My Fair Lady" Valerie Mcllroy and Bridget Christiansen fWlC- Jackson. Micllaet Onlkean that one wishes had been included in the original -ti n effectively on the sidelines as mother and -1:30-the moment when Eliza blossoms from the Cockney ughter society ladles, while Tom Dugan is fine as 0 a NBC NEWS 0\1£ANIGHT flower girl into a reasonable facsimile of a duchess. an upper-class ninny smitten with Eliza. Suzan LA. TODAY the real heart of the musical version. ln its place is an the cast in bit roles. l (()CBSNe::>.OOHTWATCH Shaw skipped over this transitory period, which is Touby, Jack Holmes and Theresa Carroll round out NEWS overabundance of Shavian philosophy which un-An ent.erprismg production company could *•':°~~~om 119821 Nicol Witlt-doubtedly played better in the early 1900s than it borrow much from "My Fair Lady" and discard amson. Klaus Kins~1 does today. mu.ch of the more tiresome aspects of "Pygmalion" to (.Q)MOVIE The Newport Harbor production is handsomely create a fascinating hybrid. Cer\.ainly the straight * "Virus' 119821 Glenn Ford. Chock mounted by director Deborah La Vine and set play's conclusion leaves much to be desired, though Connors designer Wally Huntoon, and the two performers the scene in which Eliza is "tested'' on society is a pure (S)MOVIE * * 1,, .. True confessions· p981~ .-w_h_o_s_te~p:..;ped:..__in_to_t_h_e_le_a_d_in_.:..:l(_r_o_les_o.:..n_s_h_o_rt_n_o_ti_ce_f_ill-r-'g=-e-m_. -------------------- Robert De Niro. Robert Duvall -2:30-D MOVIE • • ·~ 'Three Desperate Men" (1951) Preston Foster. Virginia Grey D OI NEWS m uov1E • • * "Beal The Devil" ( 1954) Hum- phrey Bogart, Jenniter Jones. (2)MOV1E ••• "Ghosl St0ty" (19811 Fred Ast111re. John Houseman -3:00-CI> MORNING STRETCH (t)MOVIE t *'~ ''TO Race The Wind" (1980) Steve Guttenberg. Randy OoaKI. -3:05- 0 MOVIE .. "Boddy, Buddy" (1981) Jack Lemmon. Watter Matthau -3:30- (I) FAITH20 g) MARCUS WELBY, M 0. -3:35- {ffJMOVIE • * J1n•ed'" (1982) Bette Mldter, l<enWaht -3:50- D MOYIE •'la "f1ngerpr1n1s Don't Lie" (1951) Rlc11ar~. Sllelta Ryan. (l)MOVIE * • "Superchtck" (1973) Joyce Jiii· son, Tony Young * PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES * r Barg ain Matinees! * MOlllOAV Thru SATURDAY AH '-forr1U111ce1 loftrt ~.OD P'M (fl S,.. lf1t91'111Ntl6 MllSf "IFtOMI M lMTS" (a) 1145 l~ 4SO, lSO l lS II 00 "aoMMTIC C(MJ)Y" (") 11 JO 1 lO. 4 JO US I JS 10 40 ..... , IUSIO$" (I) 11 JO. 410, I IS -"CUSS" (I) 2;15, 1:20, 10:10 ''OlCIE A111 M CllUISOS" (") 1230, us .• 40, HS. ass. II 00 "11£l1JtN Of nt: JIM" (PG) • 10 Ill OOtJY STUlO IUO. l:OO, S >a. l'tS. 10·40 •u~A'~•rn•l4)'2~J; CfNTfll FACULTY ot CANOLEWOOO ''BRAICSTmtM" (PG) • 10111 OOUY I 00. l:ZO, SAO, 1-0G, 10 lO "Dm All> Ttt: CNSOS" <"l I 00, JOI, SOO, 1• UO. 11;00 "flAStllMCl" (a) 1'00,~~. 10.10 "AM OfTICO A111 A IDTUJiWr' (a) JIG. HS ALL OPEN 7:00 P.M. Start Ousk *~~·~.:;.~~FREE! ''-l~tmo] !8!ildt2 "STUCIC Ofl YCM'' <•> P\US "ZAPrlD" <•> a. ·nr .. '*'..a aoar (IJ Z. -WS'(ll l. '11111'm'f" (I) .._, MIDS" (I) l'\14 ''USY 111£f" (a) •Q!t=i :'.:J.W ,,. e11) .... ~tl .. ~i•-1862 -.,,.,..1',__.,.._ .. c~a..ch "aollWfTIC CCIE>r' (PG) P\US "lCMSIC«" (PG) ONll' TWO 'l'lllNm CAN SCREW UP THEUl llEIATIONmIP M0.6'\f. • littO Tlll m'llEa 11 JAMIS IOND In wm -..., Slll-..W. ~ ...... ~ "IDD& Of M llNIA" (a) l'\US "fMllfTTllM('' <•> "flWI SAY flWI AWJ' (~) l'\US '1llmMllF(N) NEW! Breaded Shrimp Platter $2.99 THR<J OCT. 30 You'll feast on more than 1/.. lb. of lightly breaded shrimp, 2 hushpuppies. fresh cole slaw and golden f ryes. 3()C)~ Harbor Blvd. In Cosr. Mesa Oun South of S..n Diego Fwy .. ecrou from Fedro) 1471' Jeffrey Rd. i'\t Walnu1 Qllat off S1nr1 Any Fwy.) Irvine ... -·.....me CGIDI"' ,., rililf -""" 1 oo. too iiJf ·•nc ll'IU lMT-(II) -llS 1040 ._._ .._ .. romwrt11 •l·lt·J5 too W mt ---a:r lt!f --- WOOlllHIGE ..... Mey let Woe --r:.-c:..."""' Ml-OISS iiiOOC&IGc 1111• U1 l ' ---· .. ----~ .\II Of1ng1 Cout DAILY PILOTIWtdnMday, Oct. 12, 1983 ••DO by Gus Arriola I I I I I I I I •I "ARt'lt:l.lt I by Jim Davis JUST WMAl DOEt> Ii TAKE TO IM~(~5 YOU, LAPY ? A':> 500N ~5 SME Rf:GAIN'I> l0N5CIOU5NE.~5, ['LL CMALLENGE. TM£ MEART PARl . JfM li'A . ..;.vr.:...~.;..._-----.....;..'0-·1__.2 •• ... THE t 'r\,.IL\' CIRct·s by 811 Keane "Who was the lost one in the both room?" "NOT ME." "NOT ME!" by Brad Anderson "Just close your eyes and you won't see him." pt;A~l·Ts YOU LIKE HER. f.MP WELL.~OW A~ YOU601M6 TO MEET MER? RIG (;t:OR(;E by Virgil Partch (VIP) ' -"What'll It be today, you ol' homed toad?" Hank Ketcha ------<~ 10· 2.. by Charles M Schulz MAYSE 'r'Oll s.lOULD JUST CALL HER ON TME PHONE ... • by Tom K. Ryan l Nf:l~E'ORll\IG-... VIL.l..A6E .. :fAKE:S .. ON ... IN"re~f\JA110MAL .. •. FL..AVO~ .• ' ,~ . ..... --4 Hoth vulnerable. Soulh dealt NORTH +n t;)884 O KQ 109 t 87U WEST [AST t 8 t 9H4 '\)Jl09 73 <:>Q 0 84 0 J76532 +AKI094 tJ2 SOUTH t AKQJ 103 <:I' AK 52 O A tQS The bidding: South Wut North Ea1t 2 • P111 2 NT Pa11 3 ? Pa11 3 NT P111 4 t Pan Put Pau 01wning lead: King or +. Uon't give up just berausc GOlfl ·011 lllDGf BV CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF a conlracl looks impou1blc Sl!&rch for 1 dlalrlbution lh11l will allow you lo makt• tht• hand. thcry play 118 iC that di11lrlbulion exists. Sou th would have ~n wiser to let Norlh play thrct• no trum p. Thal contrut would huvc been Crigid ex ropl 1n lhc unlikely event that East were to lead a club. f'our spades appeared doom ed unle11 hearts split 3 3. West led the king of clubs and conllnued with lhc ace and ten. East d1Brarded on the• third duh, and declarer madt• a Cine piny whrn he t hOU' lO rulC With 4 high trump Thn·t· round~ of trumps were• drawn, follow1•d by Lh1• at•c• of diamonds. lldorc• dr11win1e the lut lrumn. declarer made another rood decision by first cuhing the king of hearts. t:aal's queen broughl a ray or horw -It began ~o look u IC the distribution of the u rds was going to be declarer' a savior. To test the distribution. declarer continued with the ace of hearu. East reali1.ed that ruHing would be Lanta mount to surrender -he would be end played and be forced Lo lead a diamond into dumm y's K-Q JO. So ~asl chose to sluff u diamond, but he wus only dl'layinK !ht• mo ml'nl or truth ( l>1·clurtr exiu·d with hi c11rc•fully prl'St•rvrd lhr"<' o trumps. East was Con·cd to win and ri>lurn 11 clrnmond. ;t>JtT Of= .... I~ A~·" rM ~r11N6 A~ foR ~~. ~MAN . and dt1rl11 rcr'1 two hu rt IOM'n went on dummy's win ncr1. Wh1•n you firat loolu•d at this h11nd, did you think lhnl Oftt• oC d1•rl:in•r'1 l brt'I' losrrs wns ioinic lo be a lrump'! R•ltber brld1• tl•b• ~ ......... , ~. eetlllWy ... the f"1'-deal ltrW,e f.,..at. De tlley ....... ,tWll& 1" du't? Chrlu G•ru'• "F .. r·Deal lrl41•" will teach '"tile lltrawp• allCI tattiH •f tble fa1t·""4 It· tlon 1ame that provldH lM cure for llHedi., na~n. For a copy, Ned 11.75 ta "Gorn·f'•w Deal," earr ef thi1 newapaper. P.O. Bes 259, Nttwood. N.J. 07648. Mak• check• payabl• to Newapaperbookl . bv Jeff MacNelly by Kevin Fagan 1tr.O~'f Mt, eoe ... 1'U. ~o 11'1'0 ~~£N l'M ruMMU>~ by Lynn Johnston ., -ITS Hf\LF PRSI MR. POSEPS- 1 ·Ll BE 1HE.RE. BYA quAf(fE.R To SE.sAME- SfRe:ET. tT~K ,. "l'KERBEi\' WHAT DO~ FEEL OUAlJFIES CXXl m WORK Al AN Al1ERNA1l VE 6C.~OOL I ANN ~ W8..l 1 Fl~~T I I 'VE. 6Pe.IT EIC::Aff l.,1£A~ 1EA~IN& EN6U!>H urERAr~ IN 'TME RJSLJC. ~00..S ... Sf{.OND, l 'V£ GONE 10 ~ADUAIE. ~L AND REC.EIVED ~ MAf>TERO b Tom Bat1uk ANP "THIRD ... 1'M OIJf OF WORK! ~ ANQ "T'H.A ·f"'s_ WHeN JHE!!! CHIHUAHUA JLJMPE!P OLJ1'" OF HeR PURSE! ANP A'f''f'ACKeP M.E!.' - --p . - . •• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednetday, Oct. 12. 1983 Mn Defense contracts for lrvlne firm Ultraayatems l.nc. of eraJ new contracts from ware development for Pl"Olrams. Theee con· Irvine announced Tu~ the Department of De-space and command, traeta have a total value day that the company ferae to provide systems control, communications of $6.2 million. MUTUAL FUND LISTINGS arded •v-e · and aoft-and inte nee C31 A$ part of these con· jiiiililiiiiiimmmifiimiiirliiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliilmmmmmmi. tracts, Ultra.systems wW GUILLAUME AZOULAY IN PERSON • Two New Etchings at Pre-publication • • Original Pastels and Drawin s • STERLING FINE ARTS 111 s South Coast Hwy Village Fair Mall Laguna Beach, CA (714) 494-1025 TOWNE PLAZA GALLERY Brea Mall Brea. CA (714) 990-8405 ~~·~ .... ION DAII~=-»EAI·S Dr.AUllO DAILY TOSAV'E YOU MOHBY 011 ALL VOUR01''1CESUl'PLllS SXfili•fiBR iflr10.-"1 111' SOUTH •OYD I!, SANT" AHA, CALI'". tHOt CALL DA TAMA TlON 1U • IJS·71!>1 OFFICE SlffLIS -WORD PROCESSING SlWPLIES DRAFTING & ENGINEERING -SlffLIES-XEROX PAPER design complex real ·time data-processing systems combinin g state-of-the-art com· puters, networks, and date-base management system.a. Ultrasystems will also design and de- velop applications soft· ware to meet complex, time-critical require- ments of Department. of ~fense programs. Award for UCI prof Dr. Lyman Porter, professor of ad.minis· tration and psychology at UC Irvine, is a co·recipient of the first Scholarly Contributions to Management Award given by the Academy of Management. Porter shares the 1983 award with Dr. Herbert Simon, professor at Carnegie-Mellon Uni· versity, Pittsburgh, who received the Nobel Price for economics in 1978. ''His critical analyses of motivation and work, managerial attitudes and performance and com- munication in organiz.a- tions have had a pro- found impact upon man- agement theory. prac· tices and research," read the award citation in part. The award was presented at the annual meeting of the 5,000·member academy of management professors. Porter, a Newport Beach resident, has been a UCI faculty member since 1967 and just con- OVER THE COUNTER ~!~~~ I ~!~~~ Compounded Ml)lllhly U .500 Minimum Baluncc SYRS. 1 !:.!!~ I 1!:.~,~y~ C •llllpo11ndcd Dllily \I{)()() Minimum lk pos11 3~YRS. 1 r!:~.~~ I,!:.!,!~ C11mp.111mkd f);1ily \1000 Minimum lkp.l\11 Al Southern California Savings. we've always had a Ltadition of offering high interest on your savings. But we don't just stop there. Drop in at any of our offices. and we'U customize a savin~ plan especially for you. designed to return the rug.hes\ possible interest on your money. ·~t31'HIAI flenall)' fol' early withdr9Wtl n cauFOrn1a SBVllJGS Newport Beach '!727 Newport &ulevartl lietwecn 27th & 28th St reel~ Phone -6 73-S6JO Irvine I 5475 Jeffrey Road and Irvine Center Drive Phone -559.4493 llAID STOCK Ul181GI cluded a five-year stint N:fu"Xov0!!11~~! ~:;:t!r.. ~: ;!"" ~~1~ ' las dean of the mAn<>ae. sllOwlno llloNtst bids ConPeP 4711• .. J~yn ··--o end k>wetl o!Mrs by Cordis s ffY, )0 KeltSI pt ment graduate school. ;,~.k·~:t~' ~~ ~~=~~ ~!~ ~~ ~:::~ tHheanis6tOh~!~ctleshoanr odf e~hret ~~~·~·! ::;.~ ~~!1b~ ,' ,1~ 11~ ~~'f!~1 ... ... -·Iu lo!! for Tuetdlv O•YIM 39.,.. :!''Ito Kllllllnl boo'·-Se.di ltld aw Olleer '"-I 7·>1 KlootG ~. AEl Incl J1 .. U V. Deklt>A U1' 27'1• Kne1>1V AFAPrOI l' ~I'> 0.tCenT lltol U .. Krelo• S I I. b AVMCo 711» I'" Dewey s WI> IS Kutcll.t s a es C U •cedlns JI..., ll"' 01.crn 47 411' L.•nee Acullev 11-. 1"-OocuOt 13\0i 14 L.andltH Alld1"1W 2l 2JV. Dot<Gn s 11'1» 11 L.eneC s t • Ad"olltoss 61' 1 0ov1oe 11 .. 171,1. L.flt!V• Sets mee Jfig Aft81h 24 241" 011efCn JI .. J11' Linard s Allcolnc .. ..., 50 OuM.O s 14.._ 25'4 L.Qfllrn Coun Arner" ft 111.i I" OvrlrOll 12~ 12"-MCI s The Orange ty AFurn 1"" 1•1o e.1nvr>e W l't o MGF Oil Ch f W · AGre1 s it•• ?t"' E<onLD 27 .. 21"-Nled•GE apter o omen in AlnGo , ., .. 10 e1Pu is, 1!• • M1"4Pt Sales wW conduct its ANnns 21•. 21'> E-81 IO'• 11'· M1l1t1 AQuav 11'> I"' EltNu<I ,. ""' •IMrlon monthly meeting at 6 !!:~-:" \~~·1~~ ~~. ~~>:',,~~ ~~~P p.m. Thursday at the !::!l~o 11 .. 111. EnrMe12 IH'2 1,.16 ~~ Hungry Tiger, 1168 m•,, 116''> e111t.. ·~ N McFer1 South State College :=, !~;: m: ~~:0/~11 1::: 1;~ ~ Blvd., Anaheim. :r~3p .~~ ~ ~~or ::: ;:: =~o The program, entitled ~~~~! • ~~ ~ .. ~:~~s ri ~~ MkllRH "Sales Careers In a 111100 ' o.,, .. ..., FrWnFln 1 ,.,. Midi&~ ealrdCP ""' 11'-Flet9 »"-J.lll't Mlnlor Changing Decade." will ::~,1 , ~~ !:"" ~~li ' L~ Ir'=~~ be presented by CB & S e1v1aM1< 11 11 Fiurpe11 13.,, 1~ Mon1Co1 Associates. =~ ~J~ m~ ~r.~~p 2f;t,2fr =p Charge for the event is :~,: m~ r,~ ~~:.""J1 :~ !~ =a: $12 for members, $16 for e1r1c1v 1~ 1"' F....,.,1 14 14" MuetMr &ivYO« ,. .. ""' Fu11H8 ... >11' NerrllC ~n_;O;_n_-_me;_,;_m.....:..;be:...;;,;;.f'I.;,._. ----, ~Tn~ 6~N :~ g~~ I n~ ~.: ~~~~ \ Buff~• so 501'1 Gn0.YCS 3" 31' NYAlrl 2:~'fi~ 1."' ~t &~:~~ u .. a .. ~~~~. CPT I~ ,6 GroyAdv Nlelt8 1 CafWIS• 41 4111> 1 0 S \') I 14 Nlkt t I C111rMIH S'I• Sl'I GHAOkl ll'h 12 NC1r<ls CeoE11 GvrOdyn 6't. 1 NwNG I 11·16 1 13-16 Hldsqn 6 614 Nw1IPS CeoSwst IS 1~ HerntPI UY, 16 No .. tt ' Cthit tl'-14 HeroGo ,,.,.. lO•to OcHner Olerllv •I 41-" HerttN1 3$ ... )6 OttlvyM CllmlS s 21"' 21"' Hec"98 26Ya 2t ... OllloCu Chlr1H JS-JS°"' H9"'dF 40 ~ OllFerro CfvnLff II 10 Hoover 24'1. 2.._ OllerTP CMtUtl " ,,,.. Horlllh 2~ , .... PCA lnl ChUt>b na. .. IMS 1111 271'1 21"' Pebll8 1 Clrflco '°"' 6"4 ISC Ill!. ""' ~Gell ~~~..: , ll"' ll .. :.r:17' !J"' 3:1 ~~r CtaU I s 2' 2~ 11>1rcEnr 2'h 2"' "9NEn1 a.nr ' n-. 1'8,,, lllfVtlfl ' l'7 .,.... """'91r CIOwCP ~ '-" 1111rn1G, 11'-11 PwPPE s ColrTlo 16 "" lnlWtl\ 11 .. 12'1• Petrne COIOCiu ·i. S• 16 lw1SoU1 351' )6~ Ptlllbon CornCIH S7"> 60\'t J.,,.tll\I 2011. 10>4 PlcMV41 western Thrift & Loan DCMNE't· 95eO E. Firestone BM1 . r,213) ~ LONO llACH • 4501 Pacific Coast HWV • l215l 498-3301 TOaANCI • 2424 W. 5eOUIWGI BIVd • 12131 534·~ lUU~ • 18724 Yentuf'1 Blvd • Q13l 881-0200 C&.llllCW.I • .-,4 N. 8rancf81vd • C'2'15l 240-5550 wttma • 15242 Whittler Blvd • tZt3l 94S-7561 ~ liW'SA • 2000 Hart>or BIVd • 1714) 645-3155 SM DllOO • 1180 Miramar R<I • 1619> 578«ZSO SAH o.x> • 5681 soorcs Arena BIVd • 16191225'1011 7·16 .... 11 "~ 3 3 ,.., l6 ll 14 1111. 4.\lo 5 ,, 2'•t. 13\of 13"1 31>oi l2 2 .. 311• 11'4 II 11~111 22lll ,, .. 1'\o 14 311'> )J I"• •'-100. 11•1. J.l .... ll .. lt\o 20· .. .. ,,,,, ,. ,. .. " " ,. 11i.o. NEW VORK (AP) -Motl e<:llve ovtf • ·ll>t-counler llOCll• Sl$Pllecl llV NA$0. Nome Volume lid Asll.ed CM. MCI 1 U7UOO U U" -'-Al>PllC 1, 121,400 1'1.lo 1t l'> -11> Ter•CP 116.fOO s•.t. ,.... -... Telldon 112,IOO 21 2114 _._. Fulll'tl ...... It~ 1''4 -.. Con•OI \ 516,IOO 70'h '°" -II• Inlet ' $71,.00 0 0 °/t -I'> T1ncl9m S2t.700 l71' JI~ + ~ Gle•H 1 176,500 10-. l°"' -"' PNIGI U2,000 I~ S~ -'- WIA19DO .. S NEW YOltK IAP) -Tiie follow"'9 Ult 111\0WI lht 0...... • t... · Counter atocll• Ind w1rr111t1 Illa! ..... -UP Ille rnos1 end dOwn '"' motl blMCI on -c.nl of Chi~ tor T.-dev. No s.ecurlliel trldlno below '2 or 1000 ,,..,n .,. lnclUOed. Ntt Ind -c:.nlete Cl\el\WS IA Ille dlttertnu between 111e ..,..,lout bid P"l<e -lodeY'• letl bid P"lee Herne I Overrnv 1 T-m wl l COl'llnm I llowel'r ! T,,.,rnPr • PrllllltDI '=At • Scl«l•d 10 c ... oi.c 11 Crnpc;m 12 EdlJCO"' 1l AC$En 14 S1ttrn un 1S ManufHrn 1' lnlrelnd 17 GunlS II -0"1 It COPYlel 20 F.._ w1 21 llnMld n Go•ea• 1l PelrO\Y 2• NIHll un 2$ Cllel 26 u-rnn N1mt 1 CusCr w1 2 Lumb.AC J CmPU"ln 4 CusCr u11 S Nw~ wlt7 6 l lTcllGn 7 Custer I re~ lg r,:.;1,w~e II CorntYS 17 Cl9rleo 13 a.nt1S 14 NAltTc 15 Ttf1C1> 16 UnFse ' 17 Corndlel 111 Caml>SS t FeoN11 ' n fnf~p • n 811911'151 13 AdeCU> s 21 ComPUs U K11v1r Uf'S I.all CPll 4 + l ~· ... ! l\of I''-+ I 10'/io +I .. 191,. + ,. , ... .. , ...... .. )lit • -s. + 'fl'I S'• + l.o"a s .... + "' '"" . ,,_ ... 5-\o + .... 11-. + I , ..... "" Jlll + ... ll'l't + 1 ... + l'I •l4 • ll't 12'!. + "' J .... + I°" • ... ~ ..... 71 .. + 1.,, DOWNS L.•:~ _cr;t '" -.... S'lto -Ill» 12 -2.\lo 1\<o -.... ..... -I .. '"' -IV. 24 -4\4 ''" -I 7llt -11• 4 .. -... , .. -.... 10~ -, .... 1"' -"' S\li -l4 ''"' -111a "'" -"" ~ -... ~ -.. ..... -1 l 'A -I 2~ -"' , ... -I~ .... -.... 1llo -i-1' DRUGI COUNTY BUSllllll 0 I Operation increas ~ for Costa Mesa f ira\ . Archive , Corporation o( Costa Mesa has t?C· panded its operationa into two new bull~ amounting to 130,000 square feet. almost all of wbkh will be devoted to engineering and production of I~ Scorpion streaming tape drives. The com~ expects to produce 150,000 Scorpion units per yeu; I • • • I ' La CbardoDnay Restaara.Dt •t lrvtne'a Regiau;. Hotel has signed Coombe & Pedl10 of New1'e~ Beacb to baaclle ltt 1rud opeala1 1M1bUc rela...,. aad radJo advert11ta1. Tiie PR firm wlll alao ~ dlreet mall ud pl'Ut advertl1la1 for ==;• Blvd. Soatll, • wholeule fumilu.~ and ahowroom in C.O.ta Meu. ! . • . l Dr. Elenor Saltier of Orqe, ~-A nuralna re.earch and quality ...urance al the UC lrvlae Medical Ceoter, haa been named a f~ the A.!Qericu Academy of Nanlaa. Sal~ re.arch focuaes on how behavioral llluel ln=r the practJce of cllnlcal nunina. She II an t cllnloal profe.or at the UCJ Coll• of Med.id.n9. • • • I Bora·Waraer Cof1>. hu ~ lts board ot directon-haa approved a two-for-one stock aplJJa 10.~ percen\ 1.ncttue tn the quarwrly cu.h di on common 1tock. The dividend on pre-.tpUt will incttuo to 42 te\\tl per aha.re from the 38 per ah.are paid each quart.er since Nov. 16, 1982 ~ -.. Newport Betch ret1k1e9t S.ua Mudy .. moved from Gloria Zl1Mr' & Alloda-. Inc. lO I I ~-it Assttl over uoo,000.000.00 wltn.-more than a quarter of 1 Av•~ ro 0 .. ,., Otlly century serving c111tomtans. llffllf!IO Olft< become a wrtier a.nd media ttl.atJona apedaliat few J Carol Campbell 6 Co. ,~~-------------------------------~~M .. . -------------- - All Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct 12, 1983 t $1Q.~JJ s.1.,. .. ,, ~.,., """' P f hctl {IO_. <;1\\1 p [ ,,.., '"'"' '"' ' \ NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS OUOfATIOHI ti.c:lUOf TM0£1 ON THI! NIWYOAK, MIOWUI, PACIFIC PIW IOSION OfTAOll AHO C:IHCIHHATI I TOOI< DaiANOD .. HO REPOl\110 I V THl ~80 IHSTINET ~.,... ..., P r net\ <JO"' C"41 S•••\ ,._, P E "Cl\ C'<lw (119 S•I•\ Nel P E hit\ {IO"' t "O S•••1 Ntl PE 1111\ C•ow ("9 •1••D1 Prudential-Bache executive arrested in $5 million theft By Tlte Al1oclated Prft1 NEW YORK -An executive of Prudential-Bache Secwities Inc. and thf1' other men have been arretlA!d on conspiracy charge.a ste~g from the theft of millions of dollars from the fnvee~t firm, offlclals aay. The complaint ac.cwied John Eller, a 38-year-old manager ln the compeny's dividend department, in connection with a mialing $5 million. Another $11 million was diacovered milaing and company offSda.11 do not know where it went, Aadatant U.S . Attorney WilliamJ. Schwartua.id Tuetday. Nocharges have been filed in connection with that m.i.ISing money. T-bill yields up slightly WASHINGTON -Weekly auctions brought slight increases in yields on short-term Treasury securities, marking the 'highest levels in · three weeks. The government on Tuesday sold about $1 2 billion in new T-bills -half in three-month bills at an average discount rate of 8.83 percent, up from 8. 72 percent last week, and half in six-month bills at an average rate of 8.97 percent, up from 8.92 percent. I Justice Dept. sid es with labor WASHINGTON -The Justice Department is siding with the labor union position in a key case being argued before the Supreme Court. A department lawyer told the court Tuesday that a company should not be permitted to enlist the helpo{ bankruptcy courts to cancel a union contract unless the business can show its survival is at stake. The case before the Supreme Court involves Bildisco and Bildisco. an Avenel, N.J ., building supply firm that declared bankruptcy in 1980 and canceled a wage increase it had negotiated with the Teamsters Un.ion. Lifemark Corp. seeks suitor HOUSTON -Llfernark Corp .. one of the nation's largest hospital-management companies, says it is searching for a suitor and has hired First Boston Corp.. an investment banking firm, to help evaluate "pc:mible future cou.raes of acquisition " Lifemark stock, which jumped $2. 75 a share on Friday and which soared another $7 Monday, fell $1.75 on Tuesday to cloee at $37 a share as the most active iasue on the New York Stock Exchange. More than 2.4 million shares c.hanged hands. ln a brief statement Monday, Lifemark said it had begun preliminary talk.I with potential suitors. Gulf Oil will reorganize . PITTSBURGH -Gulf OU Corp., the nation's fifth-largest oil company, says ita directors agreed to reorganize Gulf into a Delaware-baled holding company, in part to preventa poaible unfriendly takeover. Gull said it has noticed an "unusually high" amount of trading in ita stock since mid-Auguat. [t al8o noted "published rumors that one or more persons may be accumulating substantial shares in the company." Japanese investments sought KYOTO, Japan -Government and business officials from seven southeastern states -tncludiJlc Cive governors - have urged 100 top Japanese industrialists to increase investments in their region. "F1orida wants business. We want Jobs, .. Florida Gov. Bob Graham.Aid 'Nitday, ec.hQina.ll;\e aentiments of the more than 300 Americans who attended the fint teslion of the two-day meeting. The meeting wu the eighth joint session of the Southeast U.S.~Japan Association and its Japanese counterpart. GOLD QUOTATIONS WHAT NYSE DID NEW YOllK IAPI OC1 11 WHAT AM£X DID NEW YOltK IAP) OC't. 10 METALS SYMBOLS T~S m ns 111 ,. 7 ,.,...,. deY)46 161 212 tU ,, • I I , .11f' I DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YOllK tAP) -l'lne4 0.W·J-• eJv, lo< Monctav. Ot• 10 STOCKS o..t~ JO '"" 10Trn ISUll .S$11t. '"°"' Tran Vllh 6Htlt. AMERICAN LEADERS Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 12. 1983 Annual Pre-Season Sale Friday, October 14th Saturd ay, October 15th Sunday, October 16th Mall Hours: Monday-Friday 10 am -9 pm Saturday 10 am -6 pm Sunday 12-5 pm Valet Parking Available (Saki Entrance) Incredibly, there are almo1t 103 11\llllon way1 In which 1b: 8-1tud m LEGO• brlok1 can b4 joined to1ettier. It 11em1 hard to lma1lne. •But you ou He for your11lf by vl1ltln1 the LEGO• E:1hlblt now on d l1pla1 at South Cout Piasa throu1h October i3. Repllcu ofthe Capitol B"1ldln1, the Liberty Bell and the S tatue of Liberty are Ju1t a few of the amaalnf LEGO• model1 featured. If you're youn1 at heart, you'll dellfht n thl1 oae·of·a -klnd dl1play 1pectacular. See It now. Only at South Coa1t Plaaa. J ~~----~---------------------------~· j l I In Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 Statue of Liberty towers in recreation. Conservative look out for the holidays Conservative dressing Is thrown to the wind this holiday season. Evenings sparkle with splashes of rhinestones and glit- tering sequins that dazzle and bedazzle. Luxurious fabrics In black and white are the most elegant backdrop for these lavish jew- eled touches. Color. In sophlst~­ cated hues such as deep peach, brilliant blue, chocolate brown, hot pink and fuchsia, also creates a perfect foll for this glittering year. Hollywood shapes return. While dress fronts may sparkle. backs are elegantly exposed. Folds of soft draping frame a bared back as do gentle geometrics of deep U-and V-shapes. Long, lean, glamorous looks In liquid fabrics of sllk-llke "Qiana" Jersey create head-turning en- trances. Bubble and tiered sil- houettes feminize short evenlnp, dresses In soft rustling "Qiana ' taffeta, the party fabric with practical luxury. The word " understated" Is gone this season, replaced by a new theme. "too much Is not enough." You can never be too elegant or too jeweled for holiday '83. For more holiday fashion tips, consult your favorite South Coast Plaza store. 'Qiana' taffeta creates a perfect party dress . 111 J =~·•·~' ~ r: a a s e t r • ' f ~ g m i _,....__.._~~ Supreme Court building detailed in LEGO miniature. Monumental display at Plaza National treasures recreated in LEGO exhibit being shown through Oct. 23 The Washington Monument, the Lincoln Memorial, the White House and many other of our national monuments wlll be "vis- iting" South Coast Plaza through Oct. 23 via the fifth annual LEGO roadshow exhibit. In honor of the 1984 Olympic Games, the exhibit Is carrying a patriotic theme. The Amrlcan Heritage theme Is also ln- corporMed Into Mall decorations for the annual pre-season sale, which runs Friday through Sun- day throughout many of the mall stores. Colorful American flags are draped In the Sears and May Co. wings. As part of the LEGO exhibit, a "Guess the Number of Bricks Contest" wlll be held during the dlaplay period. Prtzes Include South Coast Plaza gift certlflcatee and LEGO bulldlng sets. Entrants can receive entry blanks from the carousel ride operator and list their guess tor the number of bricks In the Liberty Bell replica. As an added bonus, every child submitting a cont.at entry form will receive a free ride on the carousel, compli- ments of South Coast Plaza. The LEGO exhibit contain& Impressively accurate repro- ductions of our historic national buildings. These replicas are built entirely of the same LEGO brick pieces that children play with as toys. Addltlonal structures Included In the exhibit are: the Jefferson Memorial, the Supreme Court building, a large map of the United States, the Statue of Liberty, Independence Hall. the Old North Church, and the most dramatic piece, a 24 x 10-foot Liberty Bell looks r eady to toll for freedom. replica of the Capitol Building. 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiilliiiimiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil This display Is free to the 11 public, concentrated In the Carousel Court and also the May Company and Sears wings. and open all Mall operating hours: 10 am. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday; 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Satur- . day; Sunday, noon to 6 p.m. • I Hickory Farms'w Cheddy-Brewe: fflcttor.1 Farms 99'!" 120.00 HEW£ETT·PACKARD 99'! 120 00 HEW£ETT·PACKARD (~] ""4 ...... ........ ..,, Oktoberfest at its best. Now's your once-a-year chance to treat yourself to our famous Cheddy-Brewe™ (J)eese. It's a deliciously different cold pack cheese spread f1a.. vored with a nip of beer. Come to Hkkory Farms today. And tum your Oktoberfest intd a real Oktoberfeast. Available only while supp~es last. ff ldcOr1 farms :;,o. We'll give you a t.&lte of old·time country goodnem.n.1 -z • 1•o•t f.,, .. ,,, It ··•' ·11111•1 ,, .... (If fl/.1/(1 Leww C:..vMI Mon Bristol at the ~n Diego FrMway Cotta Mesa 0,.., •tty ... ' '·"'· Sot"'4ey 'Ill • '·"'· Svn4ey 12 te I ft·'"· HP·JJC ADVANCED SCIENrlFIC PROGRAMMA8££ CA£Cll£ArGR ' 448 program lines. matrices. insert/d61ete editing. complex numbers. solve & integrate functions. HEW£BTT·PACKAaD llP.llC ADYAJfCBD •CIEHrlPIC nOGllAllllA8£S CAl.llU!'Oa Condltlonal tea•. flaga, branching, 203 program 111\et. Math I atat functlona. Sllmilne. HP·l2C ADVANCED FIHANCIA£ PROGllAMMA8££ CA£Clll.A ro• 99 program lines. cash flow. time. money, & deprectiation functions. Slimline. ROTA£ •OLARRU£BR CAUUUl'Oa Never need• batteries. Clock calculator ruler. Ideal gift for anyone. Model SL8. SOUTH COAST P,LAZA • 545.cM31 ....... .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 Plaza mall attracts sidewalk diners ,.. A recent search by "Vogue" magazine to find the best croissants In the nation declared La Baguette one of the top seven bakers of the popular French Item. La Baguette, one of the most recent additions t6 South Coast Plaza's dining arena, joins an already outstanding selection of restaurants In the Mall. Another recent addition Is the Lettuce Patch, a salad/bar restaurant featuring fresh, healthful menu Items. The Mall at South Coast Plaza ls a haven for lovers of sidewalk cafe dining, with many of the locales allowing diners to enjoy outstanding food while viewing the passing pedestrian parade. Amato's Espresso Cafe, with ceppuclno, coffees and espresso, Is a perfect place to lunch on one of their generous sandwiches. Back Bay Rowing & Running Club offers a unique atmosphere with superb sandwiches, omelettes, quiches and outrageous salads from Its 34-foot salad bar. Yet another European-style sidewalk cafe Is Caffe Pasquini, serving continental sandwiches, salads, homemade pastries plus an excellent select Ion of coffees and espresso. Forty Carrots also offers a patio atmosphere and features healthy, creatively prepared food at moderate prices in Its restaurant, bakery and bar. The Magic Pan combines sidewalk cafe tables with a lush, gardenllke interior seating area, and Salmagundi's open storefront allows homemade soup lovers to view the passing scene. The popular Vie de France bakery/cafe serves hearty sandwiches, homemade soups, salads and quiches with authentic French bread and croissants. Fine dining abounds In the Mall at such hallmarks as Twentieth Century, Ltd., an authentically-recreated railroad dining car. Pronto -------~-- 0 ... CT ...... .. • Alstorante, with classic Northern Italian cuisine and Its accompanying Pronto Trattorla, are Italian favorites. The five-star Riviera Restaurant, serving continental cuisine wlhtln Its plush red Interior, has been enjoyed by Plaza patrons for years. South Coast Plaza also features a variety of prompt service restaurants with the shopper and businessperson on the run In mind. Carl's Jr., the California masterpiece of hamburger restaurants, features a salad bar, potato palace, soup bar and even build-your-own hot dog, In addition to their famous char-broiled hamburgers. Kaplan's Is a full dell with hundreds of sandwiches plus breakfast and d inner, along with a take-out bakery. Lindberg's Nutrition offers breakfast, lunch or just coffee to the health-minded, with homemade soups, sandwiches and Ice cream and yogurt also served. McDonatds serves up Its famous hamburgers for the family In Its typical quick and courteous manner, white Del Taco caters to the lover of Mexican food. Rendezvous Cafe, situated by the Carousel, ts the place for all kinds of sandwiches, hamburgers or just popcorn and drinks. Sweet tooths will appreciate Haagen Dazs Ice cream and Kron Chocolatler, which carries fine chocolates, fresh cream truffles, fresh fruit dipped and special chocolate gift Items. The finest In old-fashioned chocolates and variety boxed candles can be found at See's. It Is undoubtedly the diverse and quality restaurants at South Coast Plaza which have contributed to the Mall's reputation as fine retail and dining destination, and continue to enhance It as a truly exciting experience. ' WE'RE HAVING A SALE AT SHOP FRIDAY THROUGH SUNDAY AND DISCOVER FANTASTIC SAV· INGS ON FALL "J4PPAREL, SHOES AND ACCESSORIES FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN. TREAT YOURSELF TO THE FASHIONS YOU 'VE ALWAYS WANTED, AT PRICES YOU'VE ONLY DREAMED ABOUT. OPEN FRIDAY 10:00·9:30, SA TU RDA Y 10:00-6:00 AND SUNDAY 12:00·5:00. . . . 84 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 Dennis a nd Earlene Landesman have a wedding anniversary to remember as they board a hansom cab for a !Lauren f as.hion 1heads the list ' Ralph Lauren Is one of the premier names In ;American Fashion design. Here are some notes on t:auren and his fashions, available at several of South :Coast Plaza's fine stores. , •One of the most frequently seen photographs of ~alph Lauren shows him In worn and softened blue denim :Shirt and jeans. at least two decades old. This ls the man ;who has become THE symbol of the well-dressed IAmerlcan today. Lauren's security In his own taste Is <almost legend. "After all," he says. and believes. '"fashion is a function of lifestyle." New vitality and luxury, injected by Lauren, dally Ian the growth of his reputation. , •The first Polo banner led the ··wide-tie revolution" :in elegant and refined fabrics. width and price ;extravagant. hand-made and luxurious. a symbol of the Duke of Windsor at his sartorial prime -these ties !became THE status symbol of the affluent American male 10 1 the ·sos. • •Bankers, stockbrokers, and lawyers found a new 0dlmenslon 1n corporate dressing with Polo. At the same \time Lauren addressed the need for weekend sport lclothlng and these men found a newly comfortable look In :roughwear. Lauren shirted their llfestyles In sea Island :cotton and oxford cloth and In vital, mascullne wool •plaids and long-wearing cotton kplts. I •Women who saw "Annie Hell" may have found the .costumes designed by Ralph Lauren outrageously •1mascullne, but unforgettable. Today beautllully man-tailored clothing Is sensual and feminine - leapeclally for evening. The fabrics are the finest, the cut l1mpeccable and the statement -pure Lauren. I •The thoroughbred, monled, good-looking Lauren costumes for "The Great Gatsb)" lllm are found tOday on New Bond Street and Madison Avenue, In Newport Beach and Southampton. Men wear pale pastel foulard or rep ties with contraatlng ahlrts; suspenders on trousers of fine llnesn show beneath beautllully tailored 1acketrs. Womert under the Lauren Influence wear pastel cashmere, cotton or sllk sweatera over llnen blouses with a alngle strand of pearls. Lauren style transcends fashion, seasonal, sexual. and age barriers. •Ralph Lauren translated East Coast "dress for sueceaa ' Into a code the whole world understood and wanted to emulate. The "preppy look" prevails for men, women and ehlldren of all ages. •Recognizing the native beauty of orlglnal, regional and native American design and color, Lauren gave hnlc and country dressing a wHole new dimension with dolored and textured Navajo.Inspired sweaters nta -Jn coordinated with traditional country, all can denim. leisurely trot around South Coast Plaza, smiling from the back of their carriage. Shopping spree highlights winners' 12th anniversary It was not a lost weekend for the Landesmans -Dennis and Earlene -rather It was a dream come true Saturday and Sunday as they spent their 12th wedding anniversary on a shopping spree at South Coast Plaza. Before the weekend was over ..tffey shopped for $12,000 worth of merchandise from the South Coalit Plaza stores. They even ate to their heart's delight, dining on delicious strawberries and champagne at I. Magnln. The L~ndesmans were the highest bid- ders In the countywlde "Bid For the Gold" ·auction held at the Newporter Inn to raise funds for the Olymplcs. The day, Sept. 24, started with a limousine ride from their Irvine home, slppling cham- pagne In the chauffered service of Exqulstite Limousine and ended with more champagne that night in their deluxe suite at the Westin Shopping list for the spree South Coast Plaza Hotel. They breakfasted at Cafe Casino In the Town Center, were chauffered back to the Mall where they were met by Mall representatives, Kathy Fick and Linda Wolfe, and made shopping stops at Jewels of Joseph, Saks Fifth Avenue, and a half dozen other stores before returning to Town center Park. The Land- esmans witnessed 1,000 balloons released In their honor from a specially designed Olympic red, white and blue Olympic star before sitting down with their children Julie and Rich for a picnic In the park. The afternoon was back to shopping. Their llmo was stuffed with luggage, com- forters, clothes. Jewelry and all the trappings of South Coast Plaza stores. Sunday began with an exquisite brunch at Alfredo's. followed by a horse-drawn carriage ride through Town Center Park, then back to Woodbridge in Irvine by limo, with the fun and fantasy to be continued another Saturday on Oct. 8. l Since this couple were treated to a surprise anniversary party in their hotel suite with closest friends joining In the party Shopping spree items: Sports Shirt from The merriment, cm Saturday night, Sept. 24, the Gift Certificate from Ann London Shop, S4o. Landesmans returned to South Coast Plaza on Taylor, $50. fro~~pti~!~s~og~ngiasses Oct. 8 for another day of shopping stops at Picnic basket from Bull' Men's wallet from Mark Eddie Bauer for down sleeping bags, camping ocks,$135. c $ Down Comforter from ross, 7o. accessories and books from Rlzzoli Inter-Competition shoes lrom Scandia Down, $400. Bally 01 Switzerland, 575. national Book store. Limousine service from Dinner for two et Le They dined at Le Premiere and took In Exquisite Limousine, s7oo. Premier, $200. .. Amadeus'' at South Coast Repertory before His/Her luggage. Le Saturday breakfast at Sportssac. Cele Casino, s25. retiring for a night cap at Copa de Oro. Alexander Jullari outfit Nightcap for two at Copa Their extravaganza wlll also Include a from Saks Fifth Avenue, de Oro, $50. Western Airlines trip to Hawaii arranged by $Sg?amond necklace from Gift Certificate from On-The-Go Travel and lodging at the Outrig- Koven 's Jewelers. S285. Jaeger, SlOO. ger Kuhlo Hotel. Hermann Teddy Bear .--A_l1_z_o1_1_ Bo_o_k_s __ to_re_.,-'B-'-o"""o_ks'--.-----. ---------------- from Toys lnternatlonel, $375. His/Hers Concord watch- es from Jewels by Joseph, $1700. Gift Certificate from Amato's Espresso Catie, $50. His/Her bath towel set from Descamps, $150. Gourmet knives/block lrom Plaza Cutler, $135. I His face treatment/her makeup from Alda Grey, $55. His/Her navy blazers from the Livery, $400. Floral arrangement from South Coast Plaza Florist, $30 . .. Olympic" chocolates from Kron Chocolatter, $40 Gift Certificate from I Natural Cosmetics. $50. Horse-drawn carriage trom William Barton Family, $875 , Trip to Hawaii from On-The-Go Travel. S 1050. Coffee Table book lrom B. Dalton Bookseller, $50. Waterford decanter and glasses from Grafton Street, $375. His/Her sport outfits from Eddie Bauer, $215 Catered picnic but- ler-service from Back Bay Rowing & Running Club, $100. His/Her makeovers with strawberries and cham- pagne from I. Magnln. $300. Her tennis outfit from Ten· nis Ledy. $55. Giit Cftrtlllcate from Gen- eral Nutrition Center. $50. "Ogette" red egg from Great Things!, $400. Bath sheets from Inge's Bed & Bath Boutique, $55. Suite for two. brunch at Alfredo's at the Westin. South Coast Plaza. $400. Tickets for two at South Coast Repertory Theatre. $40. Gift Certificate from Capezlo, $50. . ' • capez10 c.,,..,11no Cot to M••a ti I ' '•OI • '"· 714 I • I II THURS., FRI., SAT., SUN . ONL YI with the purchase of any size SCANDIA Down comforter. .,.,~ We will give you a Scandla Down sheet c ase -FREE· 1 Value to $169.95. Insure the beauty and utiNty of your new comforter by f ashlonably covering It with a Scandia Down sheetcase. We have pre-selec ted an array o f solids and patterns, but thls otter Is limited to stoc k on hand. High zippered boots that are long on looks. High stack heels. High quality leather uppers. ~lgh time you got some zippered boots. In an array of colors. Just $~9.99. l~~Cf\n_ South Coast Plaza SOUTH COAST PLAZA (Lower Level near Nordstrom) ( 714) 549. 9046 Ph6ne 6rdert Accepted 'fM 'f I Crange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 U • Where Else Can You Find the Monumetits of Washington, D.C., The Liberty Bell, and the Statue of Liberty? South Coast Plaza. . . :: :: :: :: :: : :: :: :: :: :: : ........... ®Lego Exhibit October 1-23. Guess the number of blocks in Liberty Bell Exhibit. Open to Children 10 and under. Entry Blank Courtesy of Carousel, Operator. Prizes include Lego Building Sets and South Coast Plaza Gift Certificates. SOUTH COAST PLAZA Bristol Street at San Diego Fwy., South Coast Plaza, CA 92626 (714) 546-6682 • • Valet Parking-Bear Street entrance to Mall at I. Magnin. Mall Hours-10 a.m.-9 p.m., Sunday 12 noon-6 p.m. Saks Fifth Avenue · Nordstrom · Bullock's Sears · May Company · I.Magnin ~----------------~ __ , _____ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. iiiim~ B8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 S. Coast Plaza wins Business in Arts Award All roads lead to South Coast Plaza South Coast Plaza has been named recipient of the pres- tigious Business In the Arts Awards for their outstanding program of support to the arts In a presentation held at the Goodman Theater In Chicago, Illinois, recently. The Seventeenth Annual Business in the Arts Awards competition was open to busi- nesses of any size located anywhere In the U.S. which supported the arts during 1982. The 41 winning companies were chosen by nine dis- tinguished judges representing business. the arts and govern- ment. The judges based their decisions on the Impact of the business support on the com- munity, the orlglnallty of the support program, the Initiative demonstrated by the business to support the arts and the level of support provided. initiative into publlc art was the recognition that when people learn to live comfortably with art. they can better enjoy their own lives -they develop a deeper understanding of each other, nature and the world,'' Segerstrom commented. "In a sense. public art can enhance the appreciation by Individuals of their environment," he con- tinued. Support was wide and varied for the diverse artistic and cultural projects at South Coast Plaza. whieh includes the Mall. Village and bu si - ness/commercial Town Center complex. Seven commissions and one acquisition can be found throughout Town Center, including lsamu Noguchl's "California Scenario " sculpture garden. \_ TH£ EASY 'STR.lET \ TO ~ FRO"\ n\E SEACl-I \ 1":> ~EAR Sl'REH l ~ AWROACH, f:.K,,'i ) ~RKING f;' wrrn UIRECT ACC£. 'SS 10 vA\...EI PARKING f Nt'ff POl\1' BLVD l. A long-standing commitment to encourage a cultural, artistic presence within a busi- ness/commercial environment is a fundamental premise of South Coast Plaza, according to Henry T. Segerstrom, who received the award on behalf of C.J. Segerstrom & Sons. "The motivation behind our South Coast Plaza Town Center is the site of the South Coast Repertory Theater and the future site of the Orange County Performi ng Arts Center, both beneficiaries of land donations and cash con- t r I but ions fro m C . J . Segerstrom & Sons. It Is be- lieved that the Segerstrom or- ganization's contribution to the Performing Arts Center Is one of the nation's largest single gifts ever given to the per- forming arts. Dramatic jt;?welry for holidays Fountain an Oly mpi c f und-raiser The fountain In the cen- tral promenade of the South Coast Plaza Mall has been otticlaily designated as a source of donations to the U.S. Olympic Commit- tee/Orange County, with South Coast Plaza stores committing to a guaranteed donation of $25,000 from the fountain . Long known as a "wish- ing well" of sorts, inspiring passers-by to wish their dreams into reality. tt'le fountain is now hallmarked by a red. white and blue kios k . whi c h c om- memorates the contribu- tion the community makes to the nation's continuing amateur athletic efforts. ''Cali forn ia Scenario '' sculpture garden was In- troduced to the community during week-long celebrations hosted by four art-support or- ganizations In May, 1982. The garden, Noguchi's first-ever major work In his native state, joins other South Coast Plaza pieces of srt as ''Tour Aux Jambes" by Jean Oubuffet, "Pekin" by Alexander Calder, "Nlghtshlft" by Jim Huntington, "The Ram" by Charles 0 . Perry, "Constructivist Pagoda" by Doug Edge, "Un. Deux, Trols" by Shella Hlchs and "Sun Ribbon" by Claire Flakensteln. The Business in the Arts Awards program. the first and only national program of its type, was created by the Busi- ness Committee for the Arts, Inc., In 1966. Forty-one busi- nesses In 31 ci ties and 19 states have been named winners for 1982. Fine jewelry from Yves Saint Laurent. MULTIPLE CHOICE PUMPS Fanfares pumps are beautiful at their basic best; and even more eye-stopping when you decorate with a bow. High In red. mauve, plum, wine, grey, navy, teal, taupe, brown, black, black suede, black peau de sole. Mid In red, grey, navy, taupe, black, black suede. Low in red-. light grey. dark grey, taupe, navy, teal, plum, wine, rust, camel, black. black patent, black suede. All styles S35. Matching bows, $5 each. Want it D High D Mid or D Low? Wear it D Plain or D With a bow? fanfares. slloes SOUTH COAST PLAZA To Order by phone, call 556--0262 ' MAl.L OF ORANGE • HUaTINQTON CENTER • WE~MINSTER MALL • MISSION V EJO ~LL Yves Saint Laurent Is one of the most popular names In many of South Coast Plaza's finer stores and the newest collectlon of YSL jewelry offers a selection that can only be described as lavish - looking rich, spectacular and splendid. Anything but shy. Yves Saint Laurent jewelry soars Into the holiday season with the same sure sense of drama that gives his clothes instant recognition anywhere In the world. Bold gold to emblazen the tailored chic of the season 's favorite coat dress. Super size, faceted colored stones flash In lengths of handsome chains; as Important bar pins, necklaces, bracelets .:. to dramatize a strict- ly tailored suit ... or draped silk. Smooth cabochons glow with the real look of sapphires. emeralds, rubles, amethyst, topaz. One of the most elegant faceted stone groups spills Its splendor of ' Bermuda Blue In multl-cuta - diamond, oval, square, pear, octagon -Into chains, cross pendants, cuff bracelets, b~r and stick pins, necklaces and a selection of earrings. Grand scale geometrics of enameled metals In darkened, subtle colorln9.s conjure Yves Saint Laurent s favored Near East-Mediterranean mood. Oc- tagonals, squares, over-lald ab- stract stars excite In comblan- tions of bronze, blue and red ... or bronze with black. Quintessential fashion drama -a close fitting collar with octagonal enter of red and adjoining squares of blue and bronze, as It hangs from a black silken cord with matching drop earrings. Yves Saint Laurent's new favorite motif, the heart, appears as variations of pins, pendants. earrings. A quadrant shaped pin of bronze enameled hearts Is I nterspersed b y "black Ii) AMERJCAN.,GREETINGS Amencard '•t ......... . diamonds" surrounding a great. faceted jet stone. Heart clip earrings are cnetered with a single, faceted stone. Bold and beautiful, wear your heart for all to see hung on a black silken cord es a super pendant, In bright hammered gold with black enamel Matisse-Ilka design ... with Important matching ear- rings, or course. And wear It on stark black as a "work of art!" Splendid pearls ... and a new way to wear them ... as "collector antiques." leave It to Yves Saint Laurent. From this spectacular collec- tion a "Signature Serles·· Is draYfl· Some of the most superb pl~s. carefully edited and selected by Yves Saint Laurent, will be crafted In llmited quan- tities. signed and numbered. Distribution is on and exclusive basis to a limited number of fine stores. STRAWBERRY SH ORTCAKE DOLLS by Kenner4> Reg . 4M1 •44290 ••• llO 12aa NOW Let LEGO challenge your child's · · Imagination. LEGO' Bulklng Sets .. ALL LEGO 20o/o OFF SALE GOOD THROUGH OCT. 23rd Century Stationer$ Toy Center 5 45-6026 3333 Sou th Brlatol 546-63831 South Coa•t PlaH Mutercbar•e Coeta Meu vi.. \ COST A MESA ONLY , I I Assorted Nylon Panties Reg. 6"'e Price l ea Bnef. h1phugger or b1k1nt. CUT '3 to '5 Flannel Shirts Were $4 99 to $7 99 177 to 2 ~?en Big boys sizes CUT 60% Men's Sports , Shirts Were $9 99 tn Spr ·83 3 for $12 Ban-Lon· knrt pullover Recond1tioned Appliances Former Ptoces Wnen New NOW $399 99 Stereo ,.,9 t 883 20-only 229.99 $699 99 Color TV #4440. 1-only .499.99 $599 99 VCR ~5312 2· only . 449.99 $299 99 M1n1 S1ereo #9240, 5-only . 199.99 $399 99 VCR !!5309 2· only .. 299.99 $349 99 Video Disc Player #5480 4· only 249.9!f $459 99 Receiver #92593 3-only 239.99 $619 95 Color TV #4229 t ·Only ..... 399. 99 $179 99 Turntable #9799 1-only ... 139.99 SAVE '130 Gas Grill Was $299 99 #23737 16 9 99 t4·only 25% OFF Laundry Detergent Rei $1 9 99e 31bs #9330 . '\ SAVE NOW • Seamless Bra Reg. $2.69 1aa White In Our Budget Shop t CUT '3 to '5 Big Boys Pants Were S7 99 to $9 99 4 97 pa11 Sizes 7to 20. !~ \ "'·. I I Special Purchase* Wayfcrrer 788 Bedspread 100% Polyester Twin. Bunk size •A special purchase though nol reduced is an ex~~»~}i ~~ St 19 4-0Z 4·ply Acrylic Yarn 66• skein Assorled Colors 30 ~. OFF Former Prices When New Recondit ioned & Floor Model Sewing Heads , SAVE '120 Microwave Oven . Reg. 27999 $399 99 •88431 12-only CUT '12 to •22 Discontinued Paint Was . $14 99 to '2 gal 124 99 Assoned Colors 30% OFF Trlcot Halfslips Reg. 222 $3.29 Antron · Ill nylon Budget Shop Men's Long & Short Sleeve Dress Shirts Rf!. Prt.96 3 o:fy •10 Assorted colors 50% OFF Cotton/Polye 1te r Velour Both Towel, Hantt Towel, Wa1hcloth Reg. $3 49 1 74 each I 20% to 50% OFF Former Pnces When New Reconditioned & Floor Model Vacuums SAVE '10 Microwave Oven Cookware ~:g~ $19 99 9 99 #64S21n our Housewares Dept CUT '150 10.1n ... nch Saw Was $349.99 199" #29575 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 3 DAYS ONLY Most items at reduced prices. Limltpp quantities. Friday, Saturday, Sunday October 14, 15 and 16 SAVE •2 to •a Reg s9.9910 s15 99 Family Athletic Shoes 797 pair Men's, women's. big boys and ch1ldrens sizes tn assorted colors ~• .. • ... < § Fi.EX HJlfr: = ·."";.· ... - $3 32, 32-oz Listerine •• i.--: .. < § . Fi.EX 1::1.r:. = "::."':. -- $1 16, 5-pk B1c Mouth Wash 2. 72 Shaver... . .96c $1 90 Revlon Flel! Sham· Not Shown poo or Conditioner 1.59 $1. 79 Colgate Too1hpas1e 6 4·0Z t .44 99' Sears Cosme11c Pulls 300-count 59• $1 05 Pepsodent Tooth Brush .. . . . 44c $2 39 Goody' Hair Vent Brush . 1.59 50% OFF 25% OFF Regular P11ces Regular Prices Hampton Twin or Full Sheets Lamp Shades Many sizes and styles L1m11ed to SIOCk on hand GREAT FURNITURE BUYS $100 Pure n Simple Cha11 •22903 2-only S6 99 Bean Bag S1ulftng SSS Ca1ken Chair 1-only •25088 $129 88 Rataan Cnair •33910·997·8 2·only S39 88 BenlwOOd Rocker ti 17S71 1 ·only $1 S 99 Ne1a1 direc1or cha11 •90261 24-oniv S329 99 Calkin Table 1 ·0nly •25079 SSS Ca1k1n Chair 4·0nly 1125088 S 199 99 While Book Hu tell 1 ·only , 13792 $300 Homes1ead china base 1.only •25072 $2SO China Deck 1 -only •2S073 S39 88 Colonial End Table 1·0nly •68646 SS99 99 Lynchburg Colon•at Coucn 1-only •42342 S 799 99 Plymouth Couch I ·only • 1234·998 s119 99 Newporl Table base 1op •·only #28904·8 SSS Newport Chair 2-onty •29907 S219 99 Twin headboard •rregular 1-only •14387 S219 99 J.drw while cnes12only .t13701 $129 99 Whole N19ht Stand 1 only • t 3706 $349 99 Lane Love Chest •9694·21 4-only .S 199 99 Homes1ead white headboard 1-only • t 38S 49.88 2.88 43.88 99.88 25.88 9.98 189.88 43.88 99.88 189.88 149.88 25.88 399.88 399.88 79.88 43.88 109.98 139.88 89.H 199.88 119.88 '50 to '100 OFF Former Prices When New Reconditioned Electric Typewriters '17 OFF Energy Saver Flourescent Table Lamp Bulbs Reg $29.99 tn Winter 198:? Catalog #91611 1297 50% OFF 'ormer ~rices When Ne w Reconditioned Automotive Aa 1.ow At •·Tracie & Ca11ette Decks 29~~ Installation ellfra Use S.artCharge Fo1 Your Purch1111 . '3 to '5 OFF Misses Activewear Reg $•3 pants 9.99 Reg $9 crew neck top5.99 Reg S9 V neck top 5. 99 $1 S Zip Iron I iacket 9. 99 1 /2 PRICE Men's Sport Socks Reg. $6 99 349 to $7.49 6-pr. pkg Crew. Over the call, tube style SUPER BUY Vin yl Floor Covering 12xl3·1t 12X9·fl 12X8·1t 12~11.11 12•1011 Reg Price 59.88 79.88 69.88 89.88 104.88 I! -J \L--- SAVE '170 Washer Reg S549 99 •22831 37999 20% OFF Re gu lar Prices on All Physical Fitne11 Clothlng In Stock Guardsman Radlal 29•• 1·slze only G78•14, P215-14. Plus $2 39 F E T. ea. Boys and Glrls Underwear Out of pkg 47e '125 to each Sizes 3 to t4 SAVE '4 Winter N lghtwearA 97 Reg $9 .. Misses sizes Assorted styles Reg $4497 3397 #2570 --~ ~€ $t 49 Box of 100 While envelopes 74• 25 % to 35% OFF Former Prices floor Model & Discontinued Re frigerators '10 to 160 OFF Regular Prices All Family Tents In Stock 25 % to 40% Off Regular Pt1ces All Power Mowers In Stock Special Purchase * Little boys soclcs 6-pr pkg 397 ·A special purchase though not reduced is an excep11onal value Special Purchase* Misses Jeans Couon navy 5 99 denim pair ·A special purchase though not reduced is an exceptional value 20•;. OFF Regular P11ces All Patio Fur· nlture In Stock HOME IMPROVEMENTS 40% OFF Regular Prices All 1912 Dish wash ers In Stodc 18 and '24 ·in SO % OFF Regular Pnces All Air Conditionin9 Colla, Condensers, Ac. ces1orle1, Evaporative Coolers In Stodc so ·;. OFF Regular Phces Do-It -yourself g utter- ing and Acce11orles, Chain link Fence Fabrln and .\ccen orle• · :.0'41. OFF Former Prices Discontin ued Mir· ro red Close t Do ors 20% OFF Regular Prices All Sleeping Bags In Stodc SAY! '17 Craftsman Hand Trude Reg $34.99 1799 #87215 Items shown are repres~ntative of Sears stock. Delivery not Included in the selling price$ of items in this ad, .. . -----·-····----- B8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 .1 ,. llooten'S Presents Skyway Luggage to Miss California ' Present yourself with a set ·- of Nytweed Luggage by Skyway ANAHEIM PLAZA (714) 9&8-1180 . Now 25o/o OFF at ._. Rooten's Luggage Stores SOUTH COAST PLAZA (714) 540-3110 WESTMINSTER MALL (714) 898-3331 Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1983 MEAD ON WINE SLIM GOURMET C7 C4 Working women need all the help 1hey can get balancing career and f a mity responaibilities and do-a head dishes can be a big help. Page CIO. • -! -·· .. Make favorite Mexican dishes at home exlcan food Is the fastest growing ethnic food in the country. For years it has been a staple in the Southwest and West. but now it is gaining popularity In the rest of fhe country. You see this in the growing number of Mexican restaurants and Mexican Items on menus In other eating estbllshments. When you start cooking Mexican dishes 81 home. you discover that It rsn't all hot and spicy. Usually the sauce adds the heat. and you control that with hot. medium or mild varieties. Advantages of Mexican cooking. besides the delicious flavors, is that it is relatively inexpensive and nutritious. And, you never have the problem of "picky eaters'' when you serve tacos or enchiladas.· Adapting Mexican food to family menus isn't difficult with the sauc¥. tortillas. chilies and other products available In your super- market. Below are Mexican favorites which your family will enjoy. CH IMICHANGAS 1 pound ground beef 1 can (10 ounce) tometoea end grMn ch Ille• 1 envelope (1V. ounce) taco ... eonlng mix 12 ftour tortlllea, I-Inch 3 cupe ahredded lettuce 2 cupe (I ounce) ahredded Chedder cheffe '.4 cup altc.d green onion• 1 'It cupa teco Nuce Brown ground beef in medium skillet. Drain fat. Stir in tomatoes and green chilies and seasoning mix. Simmer 5 minutes. Spoon 11• cup of meat mixture along one edge of tortilla. Fold nearest edge over to cover filling. Fold in both sides. envelope fashion. Roll and secure with toothpicks. Fry In 1 inch of hot oil until golden. turning as necessary. Drain on paper towels. Keep warm while preparing others. Before serving, top each chimlchanga with V:i cup lettuce. 'I• cup cheese. 1 teaspoon green onions end 2 tablespoons taco sauce. Serve immediately. Makes 12 chlmichangas. HUEVOS RANC HEROS e cort. or ftour tortlll• 'It cup chopped onion 1 ctoYe gerllc, minced 2 tebleepoona vegeteble oll 1'h cupe (14 ounce•) canned tomatoee 2 cena (4 ounc.e Heh) chopped grHn chlllea "'4 t ... poon Nit, divided UNge I egg• 'JI teMpoon pepper 1 cup (4 ouncee) ahredded Chedder ch .... V. cup butter, melted Fry tortillas in 1 Inch of hot oll until crispy. Line a jelly-roll pan with tortillas. Cook onion and garlic in 2 tablespoons otl until tender. Stir In tomatoes. green chilies and 'h teaspoon salt. Pour over tort Illas. · Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Carefully break Cook-of-the-Week She sails through cooking By CHRISTINE DECKER 0.-, Ne4 C:.rl '' • 1 I Goldie Joseph said she learned to cook by standing on her ear. What she means is 25 years ago she had to cook for a crew of hungry men while aboard a rocking and rolling racing sailboat. "I loved the sea and I loved to cook. Back then, women were not acceptable as crew members for racing, so I learned to take over the racing galley," said Joseph. "At home there are places to warm or cool food8, even 1et them down. There ii no such thing at aea. Boat.a are never level ... or still ... and things cannot be eet down, even for a moment. without Trifle tempting the danger of spilling," writes the Newport Beach resident in "The Racing Galley,'' a waterproofed how-to book for cooking sailors. On a boat, one-di.sh meals from start to finish are essential. Her book conn.ins recipes for Chicken Kiev, Cabbage &lls and quiche. Each is made and cooked ln the same pan. The book alao tells how to stock the galley for overnight or 14-day tripe. Joseph 9.lso gives such hint.a as to how to keep pots and pans from slipping off the stove w hile in turbulent waters and how to plan each meal of the day.Her expertae ·has tal<en her on racing boats to Acapulco, llawaii, the Caribbean, Florida and Scandinavia. Here she aha.res IOtne of the recipes from her cookbook, \!(hich, ahe e.aya, are as euy to make on a swaying boat aa ln a stable kitchen. lt'a allo easy to clean up afterward, she point.a out. And, ahe emphaaizea, the recipes have been teated by quite a "few· famiahed aailora over the years. Joeeph said that although ahe owns a 46 ~ foot wooden hull sailboat, ahe no longer goes on more than overnight races. She i. the pilot and plcka her qwn crew ana ahe~ atIII doee aa much oookina on board aa time and weather permit.a. CHICKEN KIEV 6 boned chicken breast.a 6 large muahrooma \.-i pound margarine 1 teaspoon oregano, salt, pepper and roee~ 6 patty shells Remove fat from chicken breast.a. Cook chicken breast.a ln a bit of butter for 5 minutes. Melt rnaraarine with aeaaonlngs. Roll out aheli.. Dip breasu In margarine. Put a mushroom In eggs. one on top of each tort Illa. Sprinkle remaining salt, pepper end cheese over eggs. Dribble butter over: cover. Bake for 15 minutes. Serve Immedi- ately. Makes 6 servings. FIESTA CASSEROLE 1 cen (10"'4 ounce•) creem of chicken aoup 1 Jar (I ounce.) peateurlzed ~ .. chMM•prHd 2 oupa chopped, cooked or cenned chicken 1 CM (4 ouncea) chopped gr"n chlllea, drelned 12 corn tortllla• 1 cen (10 ouncea) mlld enchllede Nuce 1 to 2 cupe ahredded lettuce VI cup chopped tomatoea Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Combine soup and process cheese spread, mixing until well blended. Add chicken and green chilies. Spread Y2 cup of chicken mixture over bottom of a 2-quart rectangular baking dish. Layer four of the tortillas, dipping each In enchilada sauce and one third of the remaining chicken mixture; repeat layers two more times. Goldie Joseph serves hungry crew • the center and roll upln the pattyahellaancl freeze. Separate and bake (either thawed or fror.en) in 400~egree oven for 30 minutes. TAMALE PIE 28 ounce. stewed tomatoes 2 cups commeel 16 ounces creamed com 16 ounces drained olives 40 ounces chill con came l tablespoon chili powder 4 tablespoons lnat.ant onion 1 12-ounce can rout beef, or any meat Including atew can be cut up and added c.ombtne all t~ient.a and bake at '300 de~ one hour qr afmmer (over asbestol pad) 20 -----··-----------·-,. Oz Cover with foil: bake 20 minutes. Remove 1011. continue baking 15 minutes. Top with lettlice and tomatoes. Makes 6 servings. TACO SALAD 1 pound ground beef 1 envelope (1''4 ouncea) teco ... aonlng mix 1 amell heed lettuce, torn' In blte-.,u plecee (3 to 4 cupe) 'It cup allced bleck ollv" 1 cup (4 ouncee) ahredded aherp ChedderchHN 1 large tom•to, cut In wedg" 1 amell onion, thlnly allced end Mper- eted In ring• 1 cen (15 ouncn) gerbenzo bona, drelned Avocado etlcn Coel'Mly cruehed teco or toetede ahell• or tortllle chlpa TecoNuce Prepare ground beef according to directions on seasoning mix package. In a salad bowl, combine lettuce, olives and cheese; toss well. Top with meat mixture. tomatoes, onion, garbanzo beans, avocado slices and broken taco shells. Serve with taco sauce. Makes 4 to 6 servings. to 30 minutes. TRIFLE 2 cups cake pieces ~ cup sherry, cordial or brandy 2 cups fruJt, cut up (either fresh, fror.en f' canned) l .,.ckage vanilla puddlna mix 2 \I\ cups milk .. Break cake into •rvina bowl and sprinkle with ahelT)'. Combine fruita and add on top of cake. Make puddlna, followtna s>Kk.aae d.lrectiona • for time, ualna all of milk. or aublUtuting canned .:: fruJt ~ for some of the liquid. Pour over cake and fruit. Refriprate until cooled. DK-orate with more •, fruit and whipped cream. .~ ..• - . . .. . It-.~-~ :c. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12. 1983 Stew is favorite dish among American recipe buffs Stew, a t one time was not a dish people were particularly homesick for. In fact, it was so out of favor that in 1970 the army and air force removed stew from their menus. It's back. however, and very much a collectible among American recipe buffs. The beef stew offered here, as most basic stews, includes potatoes and carrots. Like the famed armed-services stew, this too, includes green peas. One ingredient that tends to show up time and again in pol roasts is tomatoes. Tomatoes not only add , flavor but help tenderb.e the meat. Fricassee, is from the French word "fricaser," to saute. But today most everyone considers Chicken ·Fricassee an all-American dish. Open any communi- ' ty, church or regional cookbook and there'll be a : recipe for this all-time favorite American main dish. : The three recipes that follow are from the recipe : collection developed by home econom.iats in the • Kingsford's Test Kitchen at Best Foods. The : techlnque for thickening the stew, pot roast and ' fricassee is the same. Com st.arch is stirred into the hot bubbling juices. Stir the gravy constantly until it returns to a full rolling boil. It's easy to adjust the thickening of a com st.arch gravy. If too thick, add a little liquid. If not thick enough, stir a little com starch into a bit of cold liquid and go through the ~rocess again. When using a recipe on hand that tjills for thickening With flour. convert i\ to corn st.arch by using half as much com st.arch as flour and following the technique suggested above. BEEF STEW 2 tablespoons com oil 2 pounds boneless lean beef, cut in 1-inch cubes l medium onion, coarsely chopped l clove garlic, minced or pressed 4 cups water 1 beef flavored bouillon cube l ~ teaspoons 5;81 t ~ teaspoon dried thyme leaves ~ teaspoon pepper l bay leaf 3 cups cubed, peeled potatoes 4 carrots, peeled, cut into 1h-inch slices 1 cup sliced celery 1 cup frozen peas ~ cup com starch m.i){ed with ~ cup water In 5-quart dutch oven or saucepan heat com oil over medium heat. Add beef, ~ at a time; bl'Q'Wll, turning frequently, about 5 minutes. Remove beef: set aside. Add onion and garlic, stirring, cook 1 to 2 ~minutes or until tender. Add water, bouillori cube, salt, thyme, pepper and bay leaf. Bring to boil over • high heat. Add beef. Reduce heat to low, cover and simmer 30 minutes ~ longer. Add peas. Cover and cook 10 minutes longer .-or until beef is tender. Restir corn st.arch and water. Stir into stew. Stirnng constahtly, briiig to boll and boll l minute. Makes 6 to 8 servings. YANKEE POT ROAST 2 tablespoons com oil 1 (4 pound) bonelea bottom round roast 8 small white onions, peeled 1 ~ cups beef bouillon or broth 1 can (8 ounces) tomatoes, undrained ~ teaspoon salt Va teaspoon pepper l bay leaf 8 medium potatoes, peeled 4 medium carrots, peeled, cut in 2-inch pieces 2 medium white turnips, peeled. cut in 1-inch cubes 3 tablespoons com st.arch mixed with ~ cup water In 5-quart dutch oven or saucepan heat com oil over medium heat. Add roast: brown on all sides. Remove. Add onions. Stirring frequently, cook until lightly browned. Remove. Pour oft excess fat. Stir in broth, tomatoes, salt, pepper. and bay leaf. Return roast to dutch oven. Bring to boil over high heat. Reduce heat, cover and simmer 1 ~ hours or until roast is almost tender. Add potatoes and carrots. Cover; cook 20 minutes longer. Add turnips and onions. Cover: cook 20 to 30 minutes longer or untU roast is tender. Remove roast and vegetables to serving platter; keep warm. Restir com st.arch and water. Stir in liquid in dutch oven. Stirring constantly, bring to a boil and boil 1 minute. Serve with roast and vegetables. Makes~ servings. CHICKEN F RICASSEE 2 tablespoons com oil l broiler-fryer chicken, cut in parts 2 cups sliced onions ~ pound mushrooms, sliced (1 ~ cups) 1 cup chicken bouillon or broth ~ teaspoon salt ~ teaspoon pepper 3 tablespoons com starch 1 cup milk In 5-quart dutch oven or saucepan, heat com oil over medium-high heat. Add chicken, a few pieces at a time; brown well on all sides. Remove chicken. Pour off excess fat. Add onions and mushrooms. Stirring frequently, cook 5 minutes or until just tender. Add bouillon, salt and pepper. Return chicken to saucepan. Bring to boil; reduce heat and simmer 20 to 30 minutes or until tender. Remove chicken; keep warm. In small bowl, stir together cornstarch and milk until smooth. Stir into saucepan. Stirring constantly, bring to boil and boil l minute. Return chicken to sauce. U desired, serve over rice or noodles or with dumplings. Makes 4 servings . ' .. ;Pies can be made with variety of fillings for any occasion · Pies a.re one of the few :dishes that can be made : with a variety of tempt- , ing fillings, each one .' tailored for a specific ~ qccasion. Meat pies are especially popular in gland while Ameri- pies are more often an not dessert ,Sies. uffy chiffon piesJner- gue-topped cream ·es, luscious fruit pies, ch custard pies and talizing frozen pies all included in the rt p:e category. # Here are ,a few pie ipes especially ap- ropriate for fall. One homemade pie that's easy to prepare and is a nice alternative to a pumpkin pie is Luscious Sweet Potato Pie. For the finistting touch, gar- nish with dollops of whipped topping and delicate sprinkles of cin- namon. Another fall favorite is all-American apple pie. This version differs from the traditional be- cause of its unique crust. Create-its-Crust Apple Pie forms its own crust from biscuit baking mix. The custard-like texture of the filling comes from the blender-mixed com- bination of sweetened condensed milk, water, eggs and butter. poured over succulent apple slices. Serve warm from the oven with a scoop of vanilla ice cream atop each slice. Chocolate Almond Pie also satisfies dessert ap- petites. This rich pie blends contrastin g flavors and textures in a palate-pleasing manner. Dark, unsweetened chocolate and crunchy toasted almonds are mixed with sweetened condensed milk and eggs for acrurnptious fudgy goodness. Amaretto ~cup margarine 1 ( 14-ounce) can sweetened condensed milk (not evaporated milk) 1A cup or - ange-flavored liqueur OR 2 teaspoons grated orange rind l teaspoon ground cinnamon ~ teaspoon ground nutmeg 1A teaspoon salt 2 eggs Whipped cream or whipped toppin2. op- tional 11' Preheat oven to 350 near center comes out clean. Cool. Serve with whipped cream if de- sired. Refrigerate lef- tovers. Tip: l (17 ounce) can sweet pot.at.oes or y ams can be sub6tiruced for fresh. Melt margarine. Proceed as above. ~ liqueur adds a touch of flavor. degrees. In large mixer bowl, mas h sweet potatoes with margar- ine; add remaining in- gredients except pastry shell, eggs and whipped cream. Beat at medium speed until mixture is smooth and well-blended. Stir in eggs. J. iTomato soup easy to make t The creamy kind you can quickly put together zyounelf. ·~ TOMATO SOUP ~ 16-ounce can stewed tomatoes I ~ cup heavy cream ii. l tablespoon medium sherry :; Sugar, aa1 t and pepper to taste -, In an .electric blender or food processor puree .. tomatoes; do not strain. Just before serving, h~at to simmering. Add cream and heat again to simmering. f heat stir in sherry, sugar (Stewed tomatoes vary their sweetness) salt and pepper. Serve at once. akes 2 ~ cups. • ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1 J--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 ~ ~ ~ ' ~ ,,, ~ .,, ii!. ., J x LUSCIOUS SWEET POTATO'P IE 1 (9-inch) unbaked pastry shell 2 medium sweet potatoes (about 1 pound), cooked and peeled Pour into prepared pastry shell. &ke 50 to 55 minutes or until wooden pick inserted 5 GOOD REASONS TOHAMITUP. Hon•y &hd Ham It fully·«KlkN and rndy to Mrn. In rac:t, it IHIH bftt wh•n wrvN al room 1tmpnia1u~. which maket 11 lh• perfKt ham ror your hollcLly picnic or puty. To on:l•r rout whol• or hair ham , call your loca Honey &kN Ham Comp.ny ttore WE DO CATERING• GIFT CERTIFICATES ":~OCA~ PRE-ORDERS NOT NECESSARY BUT APPRECIATED ' Refrigerate leftovers. \11 teaspoon salt 1 c up slivered almonds, toasted and chopped Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In medium saucepan, over low heat, melt chocolate and mar- garine. Stir in sweetened condensed milk. hot water and eggs; mix well. Remove from heat; stir in remaining ingre- dients. Pour into prepared pastry shell. Bake 40 to 45 minutes or until center is set. Cool. Chill 3 hours. Garnish as de- sired. Refgrigerate lef- tovers. ·PUMPKINS 5eLb. with produce purcha1e of $3.00 or more LIMIT 3 -----{(•l11i!ItJ-----... r-----lffilll;lil:t.----i .-----«·11J:ltl1l----- 1 ... COWAMI 1 HALLOWllN • t •VD TMI MCtt &.ARM I CINTIRNCI• : I Lill A UMAlt I CELERY i ARRANQIMINT8 : I l.MQI D~TI~ I 29• t INA n t I -~----~~-: ____ . L__~l~~-_J L~-~~-~J COUPONl IXPIRI TUES., OCT.11th -8 P.M. : Coming Oct. 25, our new crop gltt pack•, re•dY to •ltlp to your tr/end•, r•l•tlv•• or cuatom•r•. Give u• th• addr•••H, ••do th• r••t. We're th• prole••lonal, we've been •hipping trull tor 40 --, .. ,. on l/mel • a Ask M11 Olman at Ollnans R1sta11ant :a:. • I • • ··-··········--····---':.~~~!!!!-~'!!!.f'.!.'!! .............••..• ' . Fish dinner custom made for two Tired of all those leftovers when it's just the two of you for dinner? Tonight, enjoy this fish dinner, developed by the home economists at The R. T. French Company. It's custom made for two. You can easily buy "just enough" by choosing serving-size sole or flounder fillets to prepare Golden Fish Pinwheels. Golden Fish Pinwheels deliver a kaleidoecope of taste treats in a matter of minutes. Each tender fillet wraps around a moist stuffing made from bread, shredded carrots and melted butter. Bold and spicy deli mustard sparks the stuffing with its hearty flavor -a delicious complement to the mild fish. Remember that fish cooks quickly -so cook just until the fish flakes easily with a fork. Garnish Golden Fish Pinwheels with Potatoes for Two. These hot, creamy cheese potatoes stir up in no time when you start with instant mashed potato flakes. There's no spoilage either because you make only what you need. Cold, leftover potatoes are a worry of the pi!tt. Complete your dinner for two with Ralian style zucchini, bread, milk and pudding parfaita for dessert. GOLDEN FISH PINWHEELS 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 slice white bread, tom or blended into c~bs ~cup shretlded carrot 1 ~poon spicy deli mustard 1 teaspoon lemon juice 2 large filets of sole or flounder (about +. pound) Potatoes for Two (recipe follows) ' Paprika l tablespoon shredded Swiss cheese, if desired. Melt butter; stir in crumbs, carrot, mustard and lemon juice. Spread over fish fillets and roll A.... up, enclosing filling. Place, !learn-side down, in small baking dish. Bake at 450 degree for 10 minutes. Meanwhile, prepare Potatoes for Two. Spoon around edge of fish. Sprinkle fish with paprika. Sprinkle potatoes with cheeee. Return to oven and bake 3 to 5 minutes, until fish flakes easily when pierced with a fork. Makes 2 servings. POTATOES FOR TWO ~ cupwa tr 1 ounce cream cheese ( ~ of 3-ounce package) !I.I teaspoon salt ~ cup potato flakes Combine water, cream cheese and salt in small saucepan; heat to boiling. Remove from heat. Stir in potatoes. When liquid is absorbed, stir lightly with a fork . Use as an accompaniment for Golden Fish Pinwheels as directed in that recipe. 2 servings. 642-5678 Put a few wo rds to work for you m th• Daily Pilat ~NNOUNCING ··Pampers.NEW MAXIMUM ABSORBENCY TODDLE RI Pampers introduces a new size designed especially for large, heavy-wetting toddler-size babies. And here's soc toward your first purchase: -------- 111 lf(J l>t'iPOSAfll l t••P£ •1<. (.ONIE"lS 40 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 · -1a1r "::::~=~AWES FREE ( .. BY MAIL WHEN YOU BUY 2 (ANY SIZE) BOUNTY PACKAGES ANO SEND 50¢ FOR POSTAGE AND HANDLING. ~ Plcil up • 50% dlM;ount on a weekend rental or 251Mi off a w"tdy rental from -·-l '. Picic up a S200 per couple discount on any 198314 Caribbean Crulae with' • Holland America DISCLAIMER Otters are sub1ec1 10 ava1lab1lity and gooc:t al part1c1pa11ng 1oca11ons only Some otters not valo<I al peak llavet De<•OdS Otter may vary lrom lo<:auon IO IOGlllOn Ptease Che<;~. brocnure lor c:letaols r-------------------------------------------------PICK UP 2 BOUNTY AND PICK UP $350 WORTH OF VACATION VALUES FREE BY MAil WlllM YOU BllY' !Ari Sllll eoom PACKAGES AllO mo soc fOR POSIAG( ANO KAllOllllG RECEIVE ",,..,,,I~ H'"""'" Mtl!llW• '4",'i\"'•11()"' '""~ Enc~ a•t my 7 UPC <ymool< "Of' 7 '~"· ' ., Boonrv packaQeS al'C1 '>Oc Plea!e m~11 mv 5350 v~c~''"" v~1 ... Bto<>PI-' •l1<P1J1no r•wll"< ~aoll 1n ~AMf ttr .,.~ .. _...,(,~1US '"""""" .. ' 1'"'flll"'C"·'....,""'~ A00RfS5 t.•I\ _.,.., t .. t ,,~,~ l"w •I, .. I 1111,\Jopo • ••411tff 1~1' Vt C-"' ~ -·-• ,..~ r-.... ~" ...... ,.~ ......... rlUSI llOll TMUI AOOITIOIAI m •t I t ('O. w , •t'• \I\ (tlV I I "'qfRll<or• !f M•• ~01 M Mfftillol •II• I RfPRnour~n ANO M"~' L(I f1tJ••N• •n11P PtOlll \1 I i., 11.,, ~ .. n '¥''' ,, , ... ~ , ,,,, • STAT• l f' I I ~·· '" ... f " t i~.a Qtlp, ')I ,. J • .,. 'l('l 'Q84 I , ,.,, .,,,,,,.... • f••·"'"' PIMt•n~ t~fl'f'v,ino-;\¥1'f'~ '" : I I ••. ... '' """ ht•Hl ,..... '"'' '" .. ~' a....ty 13~0 Ytat• v-.. """' °"'' • -U~•--•C-_"'_ PO ... 7 I ·---1/rt"l<I lllaea,_ n lft71 I L-....---.-.~~--.-....._~~--'--------------------------------------------------' Send For the Crys!al Lighf GUideto Tof8I rrtness ' --- I f 4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 Meal-size soup can.warm the tummy without adding inches to it For super lunches and dinners. think meal-s11.e IOUp. Few foods are as 1800thing ... or as filling There's something com- 1forting and restorative about soup: it's so "tummy-warming. But tummy-warming ""n e e d n ' t m e a n ;c a 1 o ri e -b u l g i n g . 1 1Meal-size soups can be filling without being fat- ., tening. Here are some ;'Seasonal favorites. GREAT NORTH PEA SOUP 2 cups split peas 2 carrots, chopped or shredded 2 onions, chopped or shredded 1 cup diced Can- adian-style bacon or lean fat-trimmed ham steak 2 quarts water V. cup loose-packed chopped parsley 'h teaspoon d ried thyme (or savory) Pinch of ground al- lspice Combine ingredients and heat to boiling. Skim foam. Uncover and sim- mer until soup is thick. Makes four meal-size servings, 230 calories each. SAN F RANCISCO CRABARONI SOUP 2 cups tomato juice 6 ounces (~ cup) tomato-clam juice 1 cup dry white wine 1 cup water 16 ounces canned sliced tomatoes 1 cup each ; chopped onion, celery, carrot ~ cup diced red or Try yogurt for healthy snack time Between school. foot- ball practice, piano lessons. scout meetings. video games and au thl' other acttvrnes. there's very little time in the fall for kids to s1 t down to 1 three w ell -balanced meals. Here are a few ideas for healthy snacking that are so simple, older kids can prepare them for themselves. Superhero Break-1 faat-ln-a·G lass: Put 1 cup of lemon yogurt, 1 raw egg (we promise that they won't taste it), 1 tablespoon of orange juice concentrate. 't'a banana and 1 table· spoon of wheatgerm in a ble.nder and process un t1 l 1 smooth. Lucbbox Trick: Stir u p a fruit-at-the bottom flavor yogurt well and place it in the freezer overnight. Re- move it before going to school. Leave at room temperature in the school locker. Yogurt will be just right to eat at noontime. Yogurt Pops: Mix a 6-ounce can of defrosted juice concen- trate together with a cup of plain yogurt. Pour into pop molds or use paper cups and sticks (insert sticks when mixture has started to freeze). Makes 6 pops. Indian Summer Soup: Stir a cup of plam yogurt with half a can of c h i lled, condensed tomato soup. Season to taste and thin with milk. If desired. Serve cold. Ambrosia Sundae: Slice up fresh fruit and blend Into a cup of vanilla yogurt. Top with , handful of nuts, raislns fl n d /or sh r e dded ~nut. I Tbe Sma rt Snack: 1 To 2 cups of plain yogurt add 1 packet of dry onion soup mix. Stir thoroughly and refriger- ate overnight. Serve with bright, crisp veg- etables. Pean1t Butter 'o Jelly: Stir 3 tabl~poons of peanut butter lnto a cup of 1traw~rry yogurt. Zebra Yogurt: Swirl chocolate syrup lnto a tall glass of v1mlllo yogurt. green !>'Wet.>l bell pep· per (or mixed) 4-ounce can mush- room s tems and pieces, undrained If• cup chopped fresh parsley crabmeat. Heat to ooll- ing; stir in maC'arom a little at a time. Simmer 15 minutes uncovered, stirring often. Ad<l crabmeat. Simmer until crab is thawed a·nd heated through. Makes four meal-size servings, 260 calories caC'h . tomatoes Sli m Gourme t By BARBARA GIBBONS add ch icken necks. When boiling again, skim foam from surface. Add remaining ingre- dients. C.over and sim- mer 50 to 60 minutes. Remove chicken necks and chill quickly. When cool enough to handle, remove m eat from bones; return the meat to the soup. Before serving, skim fat from surtace of soup and remove bay le af. Makes . four meal-size servings, ap- proximately 200 calories each. Small c:love minced garlic 'h teaspoon dried savory (or thyme) l quart tomato juice 10-ounce can un- diluted onion soup Worct!stshire sauce, gar- lic and savory. Shape into 1-mch meatballs. Combine remaining in- gredients (except lemon juice and sweetener. if using); heat to boiling. Drop in meatballs. l teaspoon fennel seerls 1 cup eac~; 1 slieed celery, onion, carrot ME ATBAL L CAB · I medium head cab- bage , coarsely shredded Cook uncovered 15 minutes. Skim any fat from surface of soup. (Remove from heat and stir in lemon juice and sweetener, if desired.) Makes four meal-size servings, 210 calories each. ah teass;..>0n marjoram (or oregano) I cup small uncooked macaroni shells ti -ounce package frozen cra bmeat Combine ingredients except macaroni and C HICKEN BARLEY SOUP 2 quarts water 2 pounds chicken necks, skinned Hi-ounce can sliced 1~ cup chopped fresh parsley 6 tablespoons medium barley I bay leaf ~ teaspoon dried marjoram Heat water to boiling; BAGESOUP Vi pound fat-trimmed beef round, ground 3 tablespoons bread crumbs 2 t easpoons Worcestershire sauce, divided Optional; 1 tablespoon lemon juice Opti9nal: sugar (or substitute to equal 1 tablespoon sugar) Combine meat, bread crumbs, 1 teaspoon Jim Castillo saved S12.18 Lillie Howard Saved S13.11 Mae Jones SavedSS.90 Lydia Vigon saveds8.67 Leigh Venhaus SavedS7.67 Mary Patterson Saved $14.50 Thi' Luci..y 101a1 S67 08 Ttie iota• at me other supormarkel on me 'nme or comparaote 11ems $79 2<> The Lucky' IO!al SSJ 1& The 101a131 the 01ne1 supermar O.el un 1'1e sarne 01 corr.parable 11oms S66 ?\l Tne l uc• v 101a1 S99 49 The 101a1 al 1ne 01ner supermarket on lhe same or compa•JOle 1lems S 106 39 Ttle Lucky 101a1 S64 08 The 101a1 al Hie other iupermarkel on me same 01 comparable 11ems S92 75 The lucky 101al S68 SI lhe 101a1 al me other supermar•e1 on lhe same or compara~le items S76 18 Tne Luc•y 101a1 S86 88 Tne 1ora1 al 1ne 01ner •upermar~el o n ll'lt_Haf!! 01 comparable o1em$ $101 38 Tell•,...,. t .,,1 '''-"" S.ot•"'lH" 1 o , Ml 181 l•'t'"c; .. ,11wml'I.-. 10 t9il) ltt\I ,,..._.,, St1ur•H1041 10 'IHIJ lnl la~wnS•ol•rnO•' 10 fNJ f nt ,.,.,, S.&Ht rnb*' 10 tM3 Meats Guaranteed Quality WHOLE BODY 5 3 ~v~~~t~e~ rnotA lo e FRESH 99 ~~<?,~~D BEE~0 e ooes NOt Excreo 10~ rar T-BONE STEA~ aonoeo Beel L4 PORTERHOUSE 239 STEAK eonoeo Beef 10tn lb TOP SIRLOIN STEAK eonet~s Bon<H!O Beef l0tn BLADE CUT 89 ~~fl'e~ ROASTLO e CROSS RIB ROAST eonet~s eoncteo Beef cnuo LADY LEE 129 ~,~CON 1 ~~q •taov lee Braunscnwe1ger to AQ1 ROUND STEAK •• 1 .89 PORK SPARERIBS .1 .59 f.f\ .. tiitf( ~ •II PORK LOIN CHOPS .1 .69 llAOI l'\Jt PORK LOIN ROA ST .1 .49 \I~,,.. u1 i 1a •~ PORK LOIN CHOPS .1 .89 ••ro1 GROUND BEEF PATTIES •oon• 3 • 3 99 nnl:\li0,f1r lf(' u,• ttar • HILLSHIRE SAUSAGE HORMEL BACON ... 11<• l>tll MOftil(l HJrw .J 4'6t l")lrt I UI P. \ II ARMOUR PATTIES WHOLE FRYER LEGS Utf\tof I, t'!f(f\ ot• ft&_. 2.39 1 ~r.1.99 , ... 1 .59 ... 89 FISH & SEAFOOD SWORDFISH STEAK Fr e\h Centtr cur ~!~LET OF BUTTER FISH " 1. 79 ~;srERN OYSTERS,,,(11ru 1.99 ~!~:~.~OSTON SCR00 10 3 .19 FROZEN SCALLOPS 11111 "'" 4.98 OCEAN PERCH ll 1 .69 IA7 Lady Lee products ~ for grlater value. t 1'1tv ~"'t;. wf111 I\ r-11vt ;o Uu ,,,,,., "'''''''fi111' ,f ' t '"'" ( t ··•r1• I I ,, ,, fh1 I ult Ill ti It •f"tt\ f1;tl •t OH' lft•f ,,. '"'1' ~k Light ~na ·~-~----14.,jll.YI ~dy Lee and Harvest Day Quality Products at Greater Savings for your amily r HARVEST DAY 59 TOMATOES ie 01 cane r HARVEST DAY 37 PEAS 1101 can e rLADYLEE 53 !~,~~~E iooc 1 uo• e 8t19f 0< Ytl10W !LADY LEE PEAR HALV.~~ ••• 49 rs~e.~~:}~!Y ORINK~Ot•ro 1 .49 r ~~~y LEE TOMATOE~.ui ·• .49 r~~~~D VEGETABLES .. / ••• 39 r .~~~.~~.~~.:rl SAUCE .,.,, , •• 1 .19 !LADY LEE SPAGHETT!, , .... 99 r ~.~.?~~1~TRAWBERR!,E.~ 1 . 3 5 r ~_e~v LEE COB CORN ., .. , .• " • 99 r ~~~£.~~~;~:GET ABLE:, .. , • 79 r ~;>Y LEE BLEACH .. .,, •• , .49 r HARVEST DAY 3 5 ~~~EN ~~t~~e Frtnen CU! pe HARVEST DAY 39 i S,2~~nt1 11 01 can e or Cru m Sivie !LADY LEE ou1cK o~r,s .• 1 .27 r ~~l~KEN NOODLES~~' ••• 29 r~~~~~~,BARS ,. .1 _19 r.~~~;INE CRACKERS .. , , .• 63 r ~£?.; L~E.:UNA .~,,, ""1 .89 r ~~R~.~!,1COOKIE~. ,, .. 1 .39 r ~~.?-'! L~_E POTATOES., 1 ••• 39 I .~.~1.~~~? TOPPING I ., • 7 5 r ~~DY LEE DRESSING .. ,, .59 !~!?,'!'.,!-.~~' PRESERV1~~ •• 1.69 rTOMATO 29 ~~~CE 1so1 can e r lADYLE~ 99 ~!ToSUP no1 er1 e r HARVEST DAY 79 ~ul!!AD 24 01 loaf e Wlleat SandWICI\ or llounct Top r~l .~?COA MIX 01••r·•n• 1.19 r~~~~~l:!5~~1• .. .,, ... 69 r ~~DY LEE CHILI , ,, ••• 99 r~c;.~.~~:«NOODLES . , , •• 55 r~..P.~.~EE DETERG~~; •. ,. 1 .99 r~~ LEE DETERGE,~T.r 1 .29 r t,~~~IC SOFTENER ., 1 ," 1 .13 l•Oo .99 •"'rt •• .45 Groceries storew1de Name erand se1ect1on PET ITEMS r ~.~LASS DOC FOO~o1•o•2.39 £~!CLASS CAT ~o""' 1 .29 •tiff\ nor fl'fffC'f+v• •n \anr l l.,OM' .t~S~tuis()C)t~OOCOV!"I( ,., BAKERY rHEARTHFARMSBREAOS ~~i~ir:.c.:::=•'Olt >•Ol \0•,.99 FROZEN ITEMS r ~~~.~~E JUICE 79 .. Gll.~()efllAt\,19&1 , , '101 (AH• r !.RJ~D BREAD.,°' .. , 1. 79 T"1 '""'" S•D'•"'D"" HJ •!f.1) ooc.vmu\U!IO Produce Quality Fresh GOLDEN BANANAS ll1Pt 11eaov 10 Ut ... 69 Tt'nOer Cro\jl RED DELICIOUS 49 APPLES large 10 e Wit\n1ngt on'\ F•ne\t HASS AVOCADOS ,., •• 39 DAIRY & FROZEN r ~~?c~~ SPREAD .. o, "1 . 79 . £EGGO WAFR.ES ,.,, .... 99 r ~~?.~ETCHICKE~ , •.. 4 .79 £GORTON'S FISHSTIS~lsl"• 2 .69 @r ~~NGE JUICEwo""' 1.69 LIQUOR & WINE r !.~~ .. ~!~~.~.?URB~~ .• ,. 8 . 99 !!~~9R~~·s 7 c~~~~10.89 r G~ SEAL VODK~ ,, 11 6 . 99 r ~!!,~~.:-!~S (IMlllllllll llL•--< \it •• Iii ....... ,, 2 .39 3.89 DELICATESSEN ITEMS pe FRIGO 229 cL ~u2~ZAR~~~,u r ~~1LVEETA SllCES "°' ... r 1.59 • • • • • • • • Photo Developing • • • • • • • • r Earty Bird Photo Chriltm• Card .. .... .. ..... .......... .. 10°Vt II• ... tt'I' I'"'' 1 I •1'1 .... ""'1 '~ 0 lf•I 1l••f'l-0Ah.,.-• ... -~.l\d, «W t .... ,, ,.. ¥Yf fH .. t-•• I t ..... "1'. O\iO ,.IC, 1't0ttf1KW\ """'¥ .,.,.,-,.., ,_ pntft 10.,. tflfol'llff W-f ¥ 0<1-'f ""11 f-'f Ott-II iWI ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 ca Spjce up your backyard barbecue recipes without being salty It takes care fully aelected ingredients to create the right sauce or &laze for barbecued chicken, spareribs or hamburgers but extra salt doesn't have to be among them. Homemade barbecue sauces, lncludl.ng reg- ular, hot and spicy and barbecue ginger sauce each rely on such readily available ingredients as catsup, onion powder or cid e r vinegar to flavorfully enhance barbecued meats. None of the recipes calls for extra salt added from the shalt.er. U a glaz.e is preferred, a honey fruit glaze adds a tangy flavor to meat, while orange juice and orange peels create citrus flavor addition to the barbecue. Salad dessert mold Dissolve a 3-ounce package pineapple or lime-flavored gelatin in 1 cup boiling water. Stir in ~ cup c hilled lemon-lime soda; re- f rig er ate until thickened. Fold in \l'l cup EACH small green seedless grapes and fresh blue- berries and ~ cup me- dium chopped toasted California Walnuts. Chill in a 3-cup mold or 4 or 5 dessert glasses until firm. Serve topped with sour cream and a light sprinkling of brown sugar. Makes 4 to 5 servings. Brandy adds some zest . . to rec1p1es Here are some handy tips on how you can use brandy to tum simple fall fare into savory treats: •Mix Roquefort cheese and butt.er in equal proportions, add a gen- erous amount of ground white pepper and a splash of cognac. and spread on crackers as an hors d'oeuvre. •Sund ay-bru n ch omelets and frittat.as made with zucchini and other fall vegetables are giver\ a touch of class with the addition of a couple of tablespoons of the brandy. •Marinate fruits in cognac. Let the fruit stand several h ours before serving. •Try a dash of cognac over chocolate ice cream -the flavors are es- pecially complementary. And the calories will help keep you warm against the fall bluster. Turkey Chan tee lair Marin.ate 3 pounds of small California turkey thighs for 24 hours in the refrigerator in a good California burgundy to which has been added chopped carrot, minced shallots, celery and fresh garlic. Drain, season and saute in butt.er. Then stir in wine mixture (add more w lne if needed) with julienne strips of bacon and 10aked dried mushrooms. Cook untll tender. , .... . .... .. ...... t for C.lfltd Ad ACTlON C.D A OAIU ,.LOT AD•V.SO. MJ-H11 BARBECUE SAUCE 'A cup t.omato cat.sup, no salt added 114 cup cider vinegar 3 tablespoons flrmly packed brown sugar 2 tablepoons Worcestershire sauce 'h teaspoon dry mus- tard •A teaspoon onion powder ~ teaspoon garlic powder \4 teaspoon. pepper Combine ingredients; mix w ell. Baste or pour over chicken, spareribs or hamburgers. Makes l cup. HOT A.ND SPI CY BARBECUE SAUCE ~ medium onion Y. mediuin green pep- per l clove garlic 1 can (8 ounces) tomato sauce, no salt added Y. cup tomato catsup, no salt added Beef Round Steak USDA lnsp.-Golden Premium Boneless Beef Round per lb. T•Bone Steaks tablespoon ugh l molasses ~ t e a spoon Worcestershire sauce 'h teaspoon liquid smoke 'A teaspoon pepper ~ teaspoon cayenne pt:pper Combine ingredients in blender container. Cover and run on high 1 minute or until smooth. Transfer to saucepan. Simmer, uncovered, 30 minutes. Use on spareribs, hamburgers or chicken. Makes about l t,.S cups. BARBECUE GINGER SAUCE ~ cup tomato cataup, no sa1 t added ~ cup pineapple juice 3 tablespoons flrmly packed brown sugar 2 tablespoons cider vinegar 'h teaspoon ground ginger I \4 teaspoon garlic powder I.ft teaspoon onion powder Combine ingredients well. Baste or pour over chicken. Makes 1 cup, HONEY FRUIT GLAZE \4 cup tomato catsup. no sa1 t added \4 cup pineapple juice 3 tablespoons'honey 3 tablespoons cider vinegar 1 tablespoon lemon juke • 2 tablespoons rom - stareh · IA dry mustard Save .50 per lb. Beef Rump Roast Rib Eye Steaks USDA ~.-Golden Premium Bonelelil ... f Bottom Round per lb. Whole Beef Brisket 1A teupoon grated lemon peel Combine lngredienta in small saucepan. Bring to boll. Cook, stirring co nstantly unti l thickened and trans- lucent. Baste or pour over chicken, spareibs or hamburgers. Makes ~ cup. CITRUS GLAZE 'A cup tomato catsup, no salt added ~ cup orange juice \4 cup firmly packed brown sugar 1.4 cup lemon ju.ice 2 teupoona corn- starch 'A teaspoon grated or- ange peel 'A teaspoon dry mus- taid Combine lngredienia in small saucepan. Bring to boil. Cook, st.i.nirlg co n stantly until thickened and trans- lucent. Baste or pour over chicken, spareribs or hamburgers. Makes about 1 cup. Ralphs Double Guarantee You can d•peod on RolplU 101 lop quaJllr m•cn and powlry Heryday' II your• nor ro1auy MJ1LSll•d w1tb yow pwchose ol Ralph£ GOld•n Premium ... , Po1lr. Lamb V•al Powtry t Sealood we will CbHrtully 181Und double your money back •.. ln cash! Save .50 per lb. Lean Ground Beef Pallles USDA tn.p . .Qold•n Premium· .... Loln USDA lnsp . .Qolden Premlwn-5-7 lb. AYg. hozen-Detro.ted-Not to bceed 22~ rat Du• to a~ •not, thal lletn .-&nconectly ~;:,;:.,::perl~~59~- per lb. Ralphs per lb. Save.40 All Natural Ice Cream 1/a gal ctn. 229 ptllsbury Biscuits Buy 6-Save .62 6 ButtermWt, Country style 0 1 lu"•' ,.,., oz. pkg. Ralphs Super Bread White or Wheat 11/J lb. loaf King Size-Dish Save .44 With 2 · Coupon In Ralphs Cucula1 • J2 oz. btl. 39 Save .60 per lb. per lb. Plain Wrap ™ Orange Juice Ftozen·Prom nortda l2 oa. can ·o•N lea oam• bra:nda Coke, Tab or Sprite* or Decdelnated Coke 12 OL c:Gna 6pack • SaYe .so· Save 1.10 Save.52 'arkay Margarine 2 4stsdt Wlth l lb. pkg. Coupon In Ralphs • Cucular Laundry Detergent 171 oz. 1984. box I-- per SaYe .30 lb. per lb~ Iceberg Lettuce W"'•m each -Valencia Oranges s., ... J\Uey 4 lb. ceUo bag Charmin Swttch & SaYe Switch• Save Save .65-- Bathroom 4 Tissue c!~~n Assorted Colon In Ralphs 4 roll pkg. Circular • Laundry Detergent Cheer JoyLl~ld f\-6 Double Coupons! Bold3 ...... fl~ ...... Double Coupon --·~IA.• .. -· Double Coupon That's right you get l Double c-poftll ln ltUJ newspaper acs plus l Double c-pona t.n RaJptu circular that's 6 Doub&• C"pona. Pim ul\NU.ffb&e eoupon ICl'J1ngl on yow fcnonte bfonda. ti you don't have a circular ptck one up at yow neareS1 Ralphs While supplies last S<n• I 00 plw Taa wUh Coupon Coftl•ll\llOfarr llecatNkl• Any natware Item Ptesent lhu coupon alono Wiii\ any on• Manul~en' •cenb ow coupon and o•• dOUbl• lh• IOY\n~ •ll•n 1ou pwchOM the nem Not to Include ,etaller· "Ir .. -. oee1y.puichaae cou n ... couponi gieate1 thCD'I one Um 01 eaceed 11\e v':S::e ol lh• llem b clud .. llquot, lobOcco and dalry ptoductt Umit On• Item Per Mcmwac:twen· Coupon and Limit l New1paper DoUbl• Coupoo.a Per Cuatom•r CO\lPOD tilectl•• Oc:tober U October 19 191.J SOT• &O plua tea Wltl'I Co1.1pon ·~ b, ........... 500' Cutlery ftem :.. l'Ca(;N-J ,._.,. ._, • Umlt One Item and On• Coupon""' C~m•r CO\l ft r:n.c:ttH Oci ll lhlu Oct lO. 196) Prices effective October 13 thru Oct. 19, 1983 ( .. pftef\t tM I •, -."'". 0fOC.,., '•"" .. "' Alf llti .... 11 ,._..,.,., •• , ••• , .. ""-nr• .. t.Mtl., , ............. c~c•• ........ ., -.... ..... , ... ~. ··11t1t• ,. ,........._, ........ ,,,,.,.. ""'-• ..... , .... ,,... ......... ~· ... ,.,. ·~ •. 1: ..................... .,....~ .. ,,.." f IUCMtwmD IUffMTOll llAQI • 1711 IT., com lll(SA *'mil.,...., !&LS "'' ....... , ... CM 'AD 11 VA&aCM, lA4111A MUS 1204 IWI Mllt, IOPOIT t llWI( awo. ..I ll lOMA, ... -•"' .-0, lllffl9TOll •ACM CIUIJ •.. AJ M.lllT... i11tl 1711 lf .. JUI,_ MAllllM I WMI. JClllffAlt Vlllltl Pl•Hnl lhu coupon olono Wllh any one ManU/at'fWers -een11 off coupon and oet double th• IO'Y\nQs •h•n rou l)\UChOM ih• Item Not to U\Clud• 1et<n1e1 hff 'alc>cel"Y pwcllase c:nupons coupona QI.al•• 1tton on• ~OllOJ 01 eaeeed the value 01 ttte 11em £acllld•• bquoi IObaCW cmo dairy PlodUCIJ Umit One Item P•r Manwactw•n' Cou_poo CIDd IJJDJI l New1paper Dou.bl• CoupoN Pet C\&ltomea. Coupon lltectt•• October l.J tbna October lt. 19$.) Cl Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 New taste appeal with breakfast tarts Bacon and eggs take on a new look and taste appeal when served in a .. flaky tart shell. These En and E.gg Breakfast .:. ts are a peffect selec- for a fall brunch yet 'eonvenient enough to .11erve to the family on weekdays. too. Individual tart shells . .are easily made with pie 'crust mix or sticks. For ':time savings, they can be made ahead and frozen. Simply thaw at room temperature and fill with Canadian bacon, .. cpeddar cheese and egg . . An egg-ceptionally good idea. BACON AND EGG . BREAKFAST TARTS 1 package (11 ounces) pie crust mix or sticks 1 package (6 ounces) Canadian-style bacon slices or 1h cup diced fully cooked smoked ham or crumbled cooked bacon 1 cup shredded ched· dar cheese (4 ounces) 4 eggs V. cup milk or whip- ping cream 1.4 teaspoon ground nutmeg V. teaspoon pepper Heat oven to 425 degrees. Prepare pastry for one crust pie as directed on package except - divide pastry into 4 -equal parts. Roll each Versatile olive serves many purposes By TOM HOGE Of ...... 11 ')' (~ One of the richest heritages from ancient times is the olive, which rank.a among the world's oldest f:ruit.s. 1 Olives and the oil they produce have a long, fughly profitable his- tory, originating in the aarm countries of the Mediterranean and the Middle East. In those lands where .tairy products were scaree. olives provided the fat vital to to the 'human diet. The oil was a key part of the cuisine, and still is in Spain, France and Italy. Olive trees are late starters and•don't bear fruit until they are 8 years old. Thus an olive grove, which ev~ntually becomes highly profit- Jble, represents a ron- iiderable outlay of money at the start. The F.gyptians were among the earliest con- sumers of the olive, de- pending on both the fruit and oil as early as 3000 B.C. From one large tree, a family could obtain a year-round supply of -:creen olives and the ripe 'black ones. as well as th e oil. ln fact. such a tree could produce as much as a half ton of oil and all the fruit a family could ~· The F.gyptians made more extensive use of olive oil than we do today. Oil from the first pressing was used to baste meat roasts, dress vegetables and make sauces. The fruit was pressed a second time to produce an oil to moisten the skin and dress the hair. A third pressing ·elded oil for lamps and el for stoves. Jesuit missionanes in- uced oli'{e trees into exico in the 17th cen- and later took them to southern California, here they flourished. EAmericans grow olives nly for the fruit. A quality oil can be talned from California E. es, but our liquid ply comes mainly m France, Italy, pain and Greece. ~ Americana U8e olives ~tly as a condiment, ~ppetiser and for aeaeon-•q . Eu.ropeana are more -verutlle and have lon8 uaed the fruit ln cooking meat dia~es. es~ally stews and meat loaves. Classy A utos Advertised in the Diiiy Piiat part into 6-mch circle on w ell -fl o ure d cloth-covered board 'fw i t h f 1 o u r e d cloth-covered rolling pin. Fit circles ove r backs of large muffin cups, 3x I ~ inches, or 6-ounce custard cups. making pleats so pastry will fit closely. (If using individual pie pans or tart pans, cut circles 1 inch larger than inverted pans; fit into pans.) Prick tops. Place on ungreased cookie sheet. Bake until light brown, 8 to 10 minutes. Cool 5 minutes; carefully re- move from cups. Re- d u c e o v e n temperature to 350 degrees. Place 2 Can- adian-style bacon slices or 2 tablespoons ham or bacon in bot- tom of each pastry cup. Sprinkle cheese over top. making slight well in centers. Break 1 egg Into each; add l tablespoon m\}k. Sprinkle with nutmeg and pepper . Place on ungreased cookie sheet. Bake until eggs are soft cooked, 15 to 20 minutes. Makes 4 ser- vings. Do-ahead Tip: After baking, tart shells can be covered tightly and frozen. Let stand covered at room temperature 10 minutes before con- tinuing. WITH PUICHASI Of EA. PICG. Of lllUU. Y COOKI D CINTll.cuT, IONE-IN HAM IL·ICI UCK ROAST •••• COUfO• BILOW BLADE CUT BEEF BONELESS NEW YORK STEAK COOKED ,,, .. ACIFIC LOBSTER USDA CHOICE ~' 'L. lB6~~ 4 99 ; .. V!IMO\.I ;: FROZEN 5 98 LB. e -:::. ... ~ La. e L..::::::::::::::::::..~~~~~~~~~--J eatlt-1 '-~'~~~~~~~~~-­ U ~D A (hooee Beel Chucl.. Bonele\\ FAM. STEAK OR CLOD RST. LB 1.89 usoA (ho1ce Beel CENTER CUT CHU<tK ROAST LB 1.29 c LB. LIMIT 2 FRYING CHICKEN WHOLE LEGS SOUTHERN FAMILY PACK Beel Pork o• (hocken LB .• 69 ARMOUR BREADED PA TIIES, LB 1.89 ·~/llflll1• ••COUPON••••• I ONE DOZEN GRADE AA .......... : LARGE EGGS: \!~~-FREE i N ' WITH f'UICHASE • • OF EACH PKG. OF I -, FUll Y COOKED i .--.. CENHAM''" i I . . ~ . SLICE WIT.. I • • -·. COU,ON I -~ (~ .~ .......... ,.(Jiii C..000 OC' l .... , - ••••• HUGHE\MKT COUPON•··- Blocl.. label HORMEL SLICEO BACON LB 1.89 QUART CHUNK LIGHT TUNA KRAFT MAYONNAISE 1··39 A SUGAR FRIE LIKE COLA .. :_... OR DIET 7-UP • . 6PA(f( 99 1207 CAN5 liMtl 4 OF EACH •• o• Ol Corton TROPICANA ORANGE JUICE 1.59 6.S-OZ. CAN ...... JIFFY CORN . , J1FfY -MUFFIN MIX (.!; B5 0 Z 4 6 s I . iii BOX R 3 lb Con Reg or Bultery CRISCO SHORTENING 2.15 GEISHA IN WATER c JOHNSTON'S i HEINZ " ........... YOGURT KETCHUP ...... <• I/ • ~-~ ASSORTED .45 OU ART 1.09 flAVORS ' BOTTLE IN DAIRY CASE -l!MIT 1 Duncan Hir"n Auld E.<cepl A'1gtl food CAKE MIXES .79 12 Or A\\011~d DORITO CHIPS 1 .69 --~,,! RED GRAPEFRUIT · '1,. JUICY, TEXAS ~ R1th To\ty ll\ .39 PICKLING CUCUMBERS lB .35 FRESH RED YAMS , 5-PIECE CHINA WARE PlACE SETTING CAMBRIDGE -{:_) ROSE OR SOVEREIGN COlD 499 <._( , -, r DELITRIAtl~~-..... ~,,.. HUGHES t$1ac;) DRESSINGS ~ 1000 ISLAND 99 • _,. OR COUNTl!Y STYLE 16-0Z e r •oft I b O t C h~t<t Food AMERICAN SINGLES 2.39 Zotk'r Form\ I lb Pkg ~ ~ .... CHICKEN BOLOGNA I . 19 ~ ,,,,----~--~--~-----Ll~UOA DIPT. IPICIALI . u SEA GRAMS 7-CROWN I 75 llTER 10 98 BlfNOEO WHIS<E'f e 750 ml Roynol VSOP FRENCH BRANDY 5.98 7~0 ml PLAIN LABEL CHAMPAGNE 1.89 ~"·'' h.,,, 3-LITIA '::::-v~~·:61~1 ~ PLAIN LABIL WINI '=;'UllOUNOY:; 2 79 ~" ~ e FREE ''COLOR ME'' MASKS ~ ... .. OUlllNO OCTt)llR I ACH HUGHES SHO,"NO BAO IS AlSO A OILIOHTFU~ HALlOWHN MASK COlllCT 4 OIHIRINT MASI< ANO 4 OIFFllllNT MAOIC TlllCl<S '~!S!N 1:~7. M~O~C~~y S~!F! (j~~~J 0£ T "llS & COUPON ON HUG MES SHOPPtN(j 8AC ., :;J F 0 R nowv FRESH CAULIFLOWER lB .69 VALENCIA ORANGE S 4 lBS 1 1 FOOD9 OF THI ORIENT HINODE TOFU .59 J'-. lomo\tlorogo 10 ot Pkg SOMEN·NOODLES 10 or Bottle Mer11•11 KIKKOMAN SOUP BASE .45 I.OS ly~den Fo rm1 70 or SHOESTRING POTATOES .49 I 1 or loye1 PEPPERIDGE FARMS CAKES 1.69 .1;~. . DOWNIYFLAKI ~iff((f;~ 1 90~f(~FFLllO It • SuTTERMllK 1 e 9 --·~ LOWIR YOUR TOT AL FOOD BILL! We •ccel't ceu11tent fr•m ALL ether l1111term•rla•ta! •".,. ·~i., .... , .• •••4 ..... , ........... h• ........................... c.--.. ct o-o .. .,. 1)--, •"' , .. •• tiff'"'• ..-olve o• '"'' It~ ov•<ho\ld no• ou•ptff 2 f1pt'.d "" ' • J 1t f'1f'1 ) -~· .. '• tt"o-o• •""' o~o g•CK•'r n .. •tko"• rO\IPO"' ,_., fM<•PttJd • • ·~t• • .... o~, •' I ")()II!! •"to"' ta• c:llo b •d ) ~vtnM"''°" ot ,,.,._,Oft ""°" G.E. 4-PACK LIGHT BULBS SOFT WHITE 60-75·100 WATTS 2 39 SAVI 1.00 • • • ' l~OO ··o· b .,., &, Q.-) '¥fll' • o• ......... , o• '•"O•'-'• 'IOVfJOfU ~by 0¥ ...... ::..··::.::.'t:t":-~=::::::: .. __ . i'•'"' • 1 1••~ ht,,...,,., ••• ,. '•,..\OH••d o"n•u,1•,,t• ... •&" •••'"'vb\t1tv'9.effll ..... ._._..._.,_~---·..- ._.,.,. .,. ""•to4el'lf "'°'"' 8 ~fit\., 'Ot)OC(.0 ' dO"• C,)J j1f •• t~ ••ltvt.IN 9 ~ ... bt.t• •e ti.Mtt\ 11 'tD• •1tcl o• 10(~ l.owH' IQ Olio• OOtd ()(t I) '~'" Oct 10 108) T•IPLI 01 UNLIMITID DOUBLI COUPON OfflRI NOT ACCIPTID PRICES EFFICTIVE 7 DAYS, 8 A.M. THURS .• OCT . 13 THRU WfD .. OCT. 19, 1983 -( 17 ~~~_(:I.\() --~ I !"' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 fl1 BB?r~}~:1:!A~~ard~.:1:?..~rwOOyond~~~§jod Italian wine :~~~§. .. ~.~w :.~:kf -Readers of uya column have become accustomed to Most of the Gaja wine1t currently availa~le ln the M d W • accepted. .~ reading about value wines and "Best Buys" long U.S. are labeled "Barbaresco," and are among the ea Ofl Ifie Under another administration, the govemmpn before they're discovered by other writers and wlne best of th.la type you'll find anywhere. A Gaja By JERRY o . MEAD might be co~. ed with anti-trua\ quesui. specialty periodicals. That timeliness is something I BarbareilCO has more intensity, more finesse, than because combining Seagram (Paul Masaon and d pride myself on. Barbare!IC08frommoetproducersandalsoagenerally Seal) with Spectrum will create the number t ' o Once ln a while I goof, letting a good one get higher price tag. I think you'll find the price worth winter. The coet of attending I.a amazingly modest. wine entity. right behind Gallo. The governmettt away. That leaves me with two choices. Ignore the paying. Older Wines Available I can't liat the entire aeries of programs here, but usually becomes involved when it iii thought di-at wine altogether and let everyone presume I didn't -One of the frequent complaints heard ls that one some of the names participating include L .A. Times competition might be restricted. WW It be In t1'lis think the wine worthy of review, or admit I goofed just can't find older red wines at any price. There was columnist Robert Lawrence Baiz.er. Wine & Spirits Instance? . and write about the wine long after it has received a time when wineries and their negociants were able Buying Guide editor Gerald Boyd, and winemakers I don't think so, at least not in the traditi~ national recognition. to hold wines while they aged, releasing them far Myron Nightingale (Berlinger), Jack Davies sell8e.Gallo'11i:z.eissuch thatifeveryotherwinertln Since the occurence is so rare, I tend to admit my closer to their optimum drinkability. That was in a (Schramsberg), Bob Trinchero (Sutter Home), Jim America joined together, there would still 'be mistakes. I" day when interest rates were a fraction of today's Fetzer (Fetzer Vineyards), Phil Baxter (Rutherford competition. ~; About a year ago, I was illvited, along with double-digit percentages. Hill), Bernard Portet (Clos du Val) and many, many From the consumer standpoint, there is one vety doz.ens of other writers, to preview a new Italian One California winery to make old wines more . definite negative point to this takeover. wihe white wine. For a reason I can' recall, I missed that available is Silver Oak Cella.rs, the Cabernet For the price of a room, attendance at the various Spectrum has been the only company in the bus~ tasting, never got around to buying a bottle for my Sauvignon specialist that releases no wine until it is seminars and tastings ls included. Dinners with wines to challenge, through the courts, all those antiquated own edification and the next thing I know the wine Is n early five years old. The youngest Silver Oak and winemaker speakers are . extra, but still laws and regulations that have restricted trade e\ll!r doing close to 100,000 cases a year. Since there was Cabernet you can buy at the moment ls a 1978. reasonably priced. What a way to relax just before the since the repeal of Prohibition. Spectrum has .touftht little advertising hype, I finally got the idea that this At the winery in Napa Valley, small quantities of holidays! for the right to offer direct consumer discounts, wine might be pretty good. previous vintages are available dating back to 1973. For further details contact: Vintner's Holidays, advertise freely and even sponsored a model Bollini 198% Chardonnay dJ Mezzocroma You'll pay dearly for each year of age, though, with Yosemite Park & Curry Company, Yosemite, CA legislation study through a famous universityr ($4.99 or less) Chardonnay from Italy? Yes, and a the 1973 conunanding $45 the bottle, $90 the 95389. Seagram on the other hand, is another member pretty damed good one, though not to be compared magnum. Not so bad really, when you consider the Oops! of the "g<>OQ old boys" fraternity that believes in directly to the produce of either California or France. 1978 goes for $16 and is worth it. Yes, I'm the guy who said not to pay any attention to making no waves and working with the system, no Interpreted in a purely Italian fashion, the wine Wine ID Winter the rumors that Coca Cola was willing to sell its wine matter how bad It is. combines recognizable Chardonnay character with a -The Ahwahnee Hotel in Yosemite National Park division (Wine Spectrum), which includes Sterling It is my guess that the minute Seagram takes lightness, a sprightliness, so typical of so many will once again host its "Vintner's Holiday" series, Vineyards, the Monterey Vineyards, Taylor Cali-over, legal challenges, such as the one to assure refreshing Italian white wines. There is no oak with wine tastings and gourmet dinners, featuring fornia Cellars, Taylor of New York and Great California consumers the right to benefit from influence at all, but a well-balanced crispness makes top wine industry spokesmen, over several weeks this Western. I'm sure you've read by now that Seagram coupons and rebates, will be dropped. it ideal for accompanying food, while it is not so --- austere it can't be used for refreshment or cocktail time. Selling, as it does, for up to a dollar less than the suggested retail printed above, the wine is a definite "best buy." _, Down Under Exporter -The Bollini wine mentioned above was discovered by a New Zealand native who married an American of Italian heritage and moved with her to Milan over a decade ago. Neal Empson is the fellow's name, and first thing he discovered upon landing was all the great wines from small winegrowing estates that never left the country. He set about forming an export company, and has been doing very nicely ever since. Another Discovery -Another of Empeon's discoveries was a tiny producer named "Gaja" in the Piedmont region. Working primarily with the Nebbiolo grape, fourth generation ~emaker Angelo Gaja is considered something of a madman in his region, for his many untraditional oenological and viticultural practices. ·. Untraditional in his region per.haps, but sound practice in the best winegrowing regions of the world. Gaja prunes for very small yields, ages in small French oak barrels (everyone else in the area uses large, very old casks), and is even experimenting with plantrng, of Chardonnay and Cabernet Sauvignon. which he intends to produce in the style of the great vineyards of France and California. Gaja currently produces about 20,000 cases a year, about the same as many small California estates, Enter your recipe If you've been enjoying our Cook-of -the-Week series and would like co join in, the Deily Pilot wan rs to hear from you. Send us several of your favorite recipes so we can pick a couple co share with our readers. The series also includes a phoco and short profile of our special cook each week. Send your recipes co the Food Edicor, cl o the Daily Pilot, P. 0 . Box 1560, C06t.a Mesa, G.tilif. 92626. and be sure to include your name, address and phone number. Tarts great with coffee Chocolate mousse in chocolate shells are two-bite size tarts -great with coffee for dessert. Instead of pastry, the containers for the smooth, chocolate-orange mousse are brittle spiced-chocolate shells. To make the shells, paint melted chocolate into paper muffin cups and chill to firm. The empty shells can be stored in the refrigerator up to 3 weeks. Fill and garnish to serve. CHOCOLATE PASTRY TARTS 14 ounces semisweet chocolate, coarsely chopped 'h teaspoon ground cinnamon 40 to 60 paper muffin cup liners (2 'h inch si:z.e) 3 tablespoons water 2 tablespoons coffee-flavored liqueur 'h teaspoon grated orange peel 3 egg whites ~ cupsugar 1 cup whipping cream Thin strands of orange peel Place 8 ounces of the chocolate and the ground cinnamon in the top of a double boiler set over barely simmering (not boiling) water; s tir until the chocolate melts. Remove from heat. Stack 2 or 3 paper muffin cups together. With a 'h-inch-wide brush, paint about 1 rounded teaspoon of melted chocolate into the bottom and about 'h inch up the sides of each set of cups. Set cups in muffin • pans and refrigerate until chocolate is hard, about 1 hour. Use, or wrap airtight and chill up to 3 weeks. For the filling, combine remaining chocolate and water in the top of a double boiler. Stir over barely simmering water until chocolate melt.9; stir in liqueur and grated peel. Set aside to cool. Beat egg white until 90ft peaks form, then gradually sprinkle in sugar, beating until stiff peaks form. Whip cream until still and fold into chocolate; fold in beaten whites until no lumpe remain. Cover; chill until cold, about 1 hour or up to 3 days. To terve, carefully peel peper off chocola~ aheU..; avold toUching chocolate -heat from your hands can melt it. Mound filling in shells and gam.ish each with a few thin strands of orange peel. Makes about 20; allow 1 or 2 for a RJ'Ving. ... Exclusive Offer from ALPHA BETA! r, .· T HAND CRAFTED AMERICAN DINNERWARE .. t shaped and styled with great care and attention to every detail. Every plece of Homestead Dinnerware is dishwasher safe and microwave oven safe. American Homestead Dinnerware captures the flavor an<il romance of an earlier America. : 3-PIECE .. '• PLACE SETTING •DINNER PLATE• CUP• SAUCER ~ PLUS TAX AND ONE FILLED SAVER FOLDER WM"H 2SBONUS SAVER I COUPONS . SERVICE FOR 8 FOR LESS THAN $8.00 $4. 99 plus tax without folder •· HERe·s HOW TO PARTICIPATE IN OUR PLAN: .· 1. You will receive one FREE Bonus Coupon for each $5.00 purchase made In our store. 2. Paste coupons in Bonus Saver Folder provided. Save 50'/, ind More Off Department Store Prices SALAD PLATE* ........ 1.19 SOUP/CEREAL BOWL ... 1.19 SUGAR BOWL WITH COVER ............... 5.99 CREAMER ............ 5.99 9" VEGETABLE BOWL ... 5.99 12" PLATIER .......... 7.99 CASSEROLE WITH COVER .............. 17.99 COFFEE SERVER . . . . . . 11.99 BUTIER DISH WITH COVER ............... 8.99 SALT AND PEPPER SHAKERS ..........••. 6.99 GRAVY BOAT .......... 7.99 2 MUGS .............. 2.99 • YOUR CHOICE OF PA TT£AN 3. With one filled saver folder you get a 3-piece place setting o• your choice fol. only 994 plus tax. ,, 4. Fill as many Bonus Save,.. Folders as you wish. OFFER GOOD THROUGH JAN. 2& 19M " (l t .~ > ..Q Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 Try new turkey stuffing "What's best to serve with lhe turkey?" That's what the family cook is asking as more people select turkey for year-round enjoyment. The answer is to sample a new dressing. Select a vegetable stuffing, flavored by adding a QlE!d}ey of vegetables. chicken broth and Parmesan cheese to a favorite packaged stuffing mix. Or pick a fruit combination such as diced apples. ,..c;l}opped dried fruit, pineapple and lemon juice to .9{fer variety. And since the trend to health foods continues in a growing crescendo, how about making seasoned com bread stuffing mix into a natural stuffing casserole, with wheat germ, chopped nuts and honey? STUFFING AND VEGETABLES 2 bags (6 ounces each) seasoned dressing 1 cup butter or margarine' 1 large onion, chopped ~ pound mushrooms, sliced l 1h cups chopped celery 3 carrots, shredded 2 cups cooked. cut green beans 1 cup chicken broth 1h cup grated Parmesan cheese Pour stuffing into a bowl. Heat butter and saute onion, mushrooms, celery and carrots for 10 minutes. Pour into stuffing and stir in green beans, chicken broth and cheese. Spoon mixture into a 2-quart casserole. Bake in a preheated moderate oven (350 degrees) for 40 to 45 minutes or untiJ lightly browned Turkey can last for many meals With the soaring cost of everything these days, food remains one of the few places in the family budget where it's still possible to economize. And. there's no better way to do just that than with turkey. Economical and nutritious turkey from Cali- fornia offers versatility and flavor as well as economy. Here, for example, a golden roast turkey is the star of a special family or company meal. Slice off the meat that is needed and refrigerate 1 ,or freeze the rest for "planned-over" dishes, such as l Tµrkey-Macaroni-Vegetable Soup and Turkey Club .b.jelt. TURKEY-MACARONI-VEGETABLE SOUP l small onion, chopped 1h cup sliced celery 2 cloves fresh garlic. crushed 2 tablespoons vegetable oil 1 can (16 ounces) Whole. peeled tomatoes. cut-up ,, • and undrained 1 can (7 ounces) whole kernel com, undrained l can (8 ounces) cut green beans. undrained 1 cup shredded cabbage 1 cup elbow macaroni, uncooked 1 teaspoon Italian seasoning 1 teaspoon instant beef bouillon , 1 teaspoon salt V. teaspoon pepper 2 cups water 1h cup red wine ,. 2 cups cut-up cooked turkey In a 3-quart Dutch oven, saute onion, celery and " garlic in oil until onion is transparent. Add tomatoes, corn. green beans, cabbage, macaroni, Italian season- •• i.ng, instant beef bouillon, salt, pepper, water and red "·wine. Bring to a boil. Cover; reduce heat. and simme,r " . 20 minutes. stirring often. Add turkey: simmer an • additionaJ 10 minutes. Makes 4 to 6 servings. TURKEY CLUB MELT • · • ,. 2 sUces sourdough bread (about 4 x 7 inches) 1,• .. Bottled thousand island dressing .. SUcedturkey , , , 1 avocado. sliced • J 6 slices cooked bacon 2 slices Monterey Jack cheese (about 4 x 7 inches) l large tomato, sliced 1 hard-cooked egg, sliced Place bread on rack of broiler pan. Spread each slice with thousand island dressing. Layer each slice with turkey. 1h of avocado, 3 bacon slices, 1 cheese slice and 1h of tomato. Top with additional thousand Wand dressing u desired. Run under broiler until cheese melta. Garnish with hard-cooked egg slices. es 4 servinga, 1h sandwich each. L .M.Boyd m~r~!Dlily Pil ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_.;;;;~~~~~ and hot. Serve garnished with red pepper rings Makes 8 servings. ' STUFFING AND F RUIT 2 bags {6 ounces each) corn bread stuffing 1 cup butter or margarine, melted 2 apples, peeled, cored, and diced l cup chopped dried fruit. such as apricots, figs. prunes l 1h cups pineapple juice. Grated rind and juice of l lemon Combine all ingredients and stir until well-blended. Spoon mixture into a 2-quart casserole. Bake in a preheated moderate oven (350 degrees) for 40 to 45 minutes or until lightly browned and hot. Serve garnished with lemon slices and parsley. Makes 8 servings. NATURAL STUFFING 2 bags (6 ounces each) com bread stuffing 1 cup melted butter or margarine 1h cup wheat germ 1 cup chopped nuts 1h cup honey Grated rind of 1 lemon 1 cup apple juice Combine all ingredients and stir until weU blended. Spoon into a 2-quart casserole. Bake in a preheated moderate oven (350 degrees) for 40 to 45 minutes or until lightly browned and hot. Serve garnished with nut halves. Makes 8 servings. • l LB PKG •STICK KRAFT PARKA\' MARGARINE •IN WATER 7-0Z. CAN • GEISHA SOLID WHITE TUNA ... 4 ' • ' , ~ ... · . • ' J ~· ••• ! ., ... .-. ~· lo I ' t "" ~ .. -~ Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, O~t. 12, 1983 C9 Bananas off er bonanza , of good eating ventures •ORANGE •LEMON LIME •PUNCH •LEMONADE •ICED TEA 8-QUART • CRYSTAL LIGHT DRINK MIX 32-0Z. BOX• BETIY CROCKER COMPLETE PANCAKE MIX You can bank on bananaa' versatility for good eatina. Their naturally sweet taste and smooth #creamy te>Cture are enjoyable anY'Yay you serve them. There's plenty of culinary creations in every bunch. Banan.u are well known as a molst ingredient in breads, muffins or cakes. Serve banana bread warm with butter or margarine or slice thinly and use for sandwiches. Cream cheese, peahut butter or chicken salad a.re tasty spreads over banana bread. This regal fru.it combinee into duzllng desaert recipes incuding custards, puddings, aouffies, tortes and p.ies. Banan.u offer a bonanza of breakfast creations, too. Serve bananas broiled with Canadian bacon or top a fresh fruit compote with creamy fresh banana sauce. Saute firm banana slices In butter or margarine and serve warm as an accompaniment to ham and eggs. Whip up a frothy banana breakfast "shake" by combining milk, a ripe banana, and a few ice cubes in the blender or food processor and blend until creamy. Bananas are offered to shoppers at varying st.ages of ripeness. Consumer taste preferences for desired ripeness range from green tipped bananas to those tinged with brown spots. At home, let bananas ripen at room temperature to the st.age of ripeness you prefer, then use or refrigerate. Refrigeration will SWEET AND JUICY 46-0Z. BOTil..E •LEMON-LIME GATORADE VALENCIA ORANGES EA. 12-0 Z.CANS PABST BLUE RIBBON BEER 8-0Z. CAN • CONTADINA TOMATO SAUCE HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! MANY 15,000 & 1 10 000 PRIZES STIL[ AVAILABLE! No IM'<,_. NC"Mf'Y t0 ~-"9(..-... • "-C-.Ctiot C•d _..,, ODO'IC:MAAf ............. M, •llJ 9't""* ttctM on'""""'., tN ~ covnhtt °" •tc>t11 ~ LHNt O"'t Oo ... P9' IO\At ••I~·••• Of'~t°" ""•~f o-tOh 0•""" ot..-1VM t•t f'tfulat Otfl.00 OnlV ~ wt~.., ~'O (lftl)tO,.... of 1>1,,'CICMlt•"'O "°'" teno ~"''*' of ....., ,~ ... '•Mll'f' rN W')f'Mf ltt ....,, • ..,..~ .... tl'loCIOtft'llt ......... ,,,.NJl .... t)Nlto-wt"•)'O".t" '""-~"'_ .. ___ ..,_....,_,~·- ..... f'liG ... "9Q•A-'Of'• .. •MOt•"' ........... e-.......... #llCfrNl~f•J '6.~ AtOft,t fh1a tW H tn tM tt ... of NiflwlOt KMIOUllD l1-IOATIC)fl 0Afl• lt0-111 I,,.., Ol!T YOUR ALl'HA BETA 91NOO CARD TODAY c-,eoto _____ .. ..,.._ __ _ AND A GA• TICKET WITH EACH ITOM Vlll'T. ._ ----- Price• Effective 8:001.m., Thuraday, October 13thru Midnight, Wednesday, October 19, 1913 HERE ARE JUST A FEW Of THE WINNERS IN THE 12,500,000 ALPHA BEJA BINGO GAME . . Mil. & MH . ALllllT COUH A Mltl .AHMIUCN AICDCIHHHll UUI MoDHlll 111ao1 a. mu I P&Tltctl lll U .... turn the akin dark brown but, inside, the frun ket..,s well for a few extra days. It a recipe specifies firm ban.anaa. wie ~n tipped or fully yellow bananaa for best resulta. Wh~n baking with bananas uae well-ripened, 110ft fn.ait., You'll enjoy cooking creatively with bananas. Keep a bunch on hand and iry 110me new taste experiences with thia tropical treasure. BANANASAUTE 2 large bananas or 3 medium bananas 1 tablespoon fresh lemon or lime ju.ice 1A cup butter or margarine 1A teaspoon allspice 1 tablespoon S\.lgar Sourcreain(optional) Peel bananas and cut in half lengthwise; cut again in half crosswise. Sprinkle with lemon or lime juice. Heat butter and allspice in a large skillet. Add bananas and cook 5 minutes. Sprinkle bananas with sugar; turn and cook an additional 2 minutes. Serve immediately. If desired, serve topped with sour cream. Serves 4. HOT BANANA SOUFFLE 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 2 tablespoons cornstarch 1 cup mashed bananas (3 medium) l tablespoon rum l tablespoon fresh lemon or lime ju.ice 1,12 teaspoon grated fresh lemon or lime peel ·-:' 4 eggs, separated :•, 1 egg white -, .. • ~cup butter ~· In a large saucepan melt butter or margait;: blend in the cornstarch. Add the mashed ~ Cook the mixture 2 to 3 minutes over low stirring constantly. Stir in rum, lemon or lime · and peel. Remove from heat. Beat the 5 egg whites until stiff peak.a form; 1et aside. With same beaters, beat egg yolks and sugar until light and thick. Stir into banana mixture. 1.. Fold in the reserved beaten egg whites. 'l\,nl into a buttered 2-quart 90uffle dish. Bake at 350 degrees 30 to 40 minutes, or until center is set. While souffle is baking, prepare the Rum Sauce. Sette immediately with Rum Sauce. Serves 6 to 8. RUM SAUCE 1h cup butter or margarine, softened 1 cup confectioners' sugar 1 egg, beaten 2 tablespoons rum In top of double boiler, mix together butter and confectioners' sugar. Stir in the egg and rum. Place over boiling water and cook, stir constantly, until slightly thickened. 1 GRILLED BANANAS 3 large bananas 1A cup butter or margarine ~ cup graham cracker crumbs ·- Peel bananas and cut in half lengthwise; cut again in half crosswise. Heat butter in medium seuce pan. Dip banana pieces first in butter and then in graham cracker crumbs. Place on a broiler pan and broil 5 inches from heat 5 miutes; tum and broi\ an additional 2 minutes or until bananas are ligtt\ly browned. Serves 4 to 6. BANANA COFFEE CAKE ~ cup butter or margarine, softened l cup S\.lgar 4 eggs t 2 cups sifted all-purpoae flour 2 teaspoons baking powder ~ teaspoon grated fresh lemon peel 3 medium bananas IA cup packed brown sugar 1h cup chopped nu ta h\•a large bowl cream butter and sugar together until fluffy. Beat in eggs one at a time, beating ~ell after each addition. Sift together flour and baking powder. Blend into batter. Add lemon peel. Spoon half the batter into a greased 8-inch spring-form pan. Slice bananas and layer over batter. Cover with remaining batter. Sprinkle top with brown sugar and nuts. Bakes at 350 degrees 1 hour and 10 minutes, or until cake tester inserted in center comes out clean. Remove side of pan and cool. Garnish with extra banana slices, if desired. Serves 8. Apple salad spices brown bag lunches Take the ''ho hum" out of brown ~ lW\Ches and add some real flavor interest with this Brown Bag Apple Sa.lad. And now is the right time to try it with a new fall harvest of Golden Delicious applet on Its way to local marketa. Brown Bag Apple Salad is a natural for autumn with Golden Delicious apples, grapes. oranges and walnuta combined in a tangy dressing of citrus juices and honey. The different fresh fru.ita and cn.anch walnuts give this salad an intriguing flavor and texture combinations. This salad can eerve a dual purpoee in menu planning. Why not try it for breakfast to accompany muffins or cereal. Then pack the remainder into plastic containers for lunchtime brown-bag eating by the kids. BROWN BAG APPLE SALAD l Golden Delicious apple, cored and chopped 1 cuJ) grapes, halved and seeded If neceeaary 1 cup orange or grapefruit 9eCt.ions V. cup walnut pieces, chopped V. cup orange or grapefruit juice 1 tablespoon honey 1 teupoon lime or lemon juice Duh salt Combine apple, grapes. oran,e and nuta. Combine oranae ju.lee, honey. lime juice and fijllt. Qe\lly ~With apple mixture. Portion lnto JndMdUAl · plutlc containers for "brown bas" lunchee. Make. about 8 ( ~ cup) lel'VlAp. ·~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 -~Urried? Try it curried .. •"•" ..... ::~ Whether working in their homes or out in the ~eel community, women are busier than ever. •!-'Aaa salute to these working women, the National Federation of Business and Profeuional Women's Cube hauet a.side Oct. 16-22 to highlight their aocompliahments as well as bring attention to related problems and issues. One problem many busy women face is =·~personal activities with family • responsibilities. When it comes to meal planning, do-ahead di.shes are a big help. They can be made when there is a little extra time and then popped into the oven just before serving. This Curried Chicken and Broccoli Bake is the ideal do-ahead dish. Because it uses leftover chicken, canned aoup, frozen broccoli and instant mashed potatoes, the dish is quick to prepare, too. Made the night before, it goes from refrigerator to table in less than an hour. CURRIED CHICKEN AND BROCCOLI BAKE Instant mashed potatoes (enough for 8 servings) 2eggs i 1 can ( 10 ~ ounces) condensed cream of chicken soup ~Crunch bars satisfy ~fter-school hunger Fall means the beginning of another school year for youngsters everywhere. While lessons in reading, • 'frlting and 'rithmetic may change with each new term, there's one golden rule of school days that : remains the same: When children come home from ~.chool, they're hungry. Mothers who have their own golden rule about snacking want to give their children treats that a.re not only tasty, but wholesome and nutritious too. For concerned moms and hungry kids, a new· snack that's sure to go to the head of the class is Chocolate-Peanut Butter Crunch Bars. ~, These creamy, crunchy sandwich treats a.re sure i'> aatiafy after-achoo! appetities in a delicous and ~utritious way. At the heart of these bars is a !ilp-smacking center made richly delicious by blend- 1 i.ng the natural goodness of unflavored gelatine with I lllilk, egg and chocolate. This creamy filling is j landwiched between crunchy outer layers of peanut 'butter, honey anq toasted rice cereal ... for healthful 'goodness in every bite. MQthers will also give Chocolate-Peanut Butter Crunch' Bars high marks for convenience. Because they're made in a blender with versatile unflavored gelatine, the ban need just a quick chill in the refrigerator before they're ready to be served when achool lets out. CHOCOLATE-PEANUT BUTTER CRUNCH BARS 1 cup peanut butter 1 4 tablespoons honey 3 'h cups oven toasted rice cereal l envelope unflavored gelatine V. cup cold milk 'h cup milk, heated to boiling f 'h cup semi-sweet chocolate chips .. 1 egg 'h cup ice cubes (about 3 to 4) Blend peanut butter with 2 tablespoons honey; 8ti.r in cereal. Press 1h mixture onto bottom of 8-inch baking pan; set aside. In 5-cup blender, sprinkle unflavored gelatine over cold milk; let stand 3 to 4 minutes. Add hot milk 'and process at low speed until gelatine is completely dissolved, about 2 minutes. Add remaining honey, chocolate and egg; process at high speed until blended. Add ice cubes, one at a time; procesut high speed !-lfltil ice is melted. Let stand until mixture is slightly 'thickened, about 5 minutes. Turn Into prepared pan; presa remaining cereal mixture onto gelatine. Chill until firm. To serve, cut into squares. Makes 16 servings. 642-5678 Put a few words to work for you , '"lh• Daily Pilat 'h cup m.ayonnalae 1 teaspoon lemon juice ~ to 'h teaspoon curry powder 2cupscut-upcookedchickenorturkey 1 package(lOounces) frozen chopped broccoli, thawed and well drained 'h cupslicedalmonds Heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease square baking dish, 8x8x2 inches, or rectangular baking dish, 10x6x l 'h Inches. Prepare potatoes as directed on package for 8 servings except- decrease water to 2 cups and omit milk. Stir in eggs. Spread on bottom and upsides of dish. Mix soup, mayonnaise, lemon juice and curry powder in medium bowl until blended. Stir in chicken and broccoli; turn into potato crust. Bake 20 minutes; sprinkle with almonds. Bake until filling is hot and crust is light brown, about 10 minutes longer. Makes 6 servings. Do-ahead Tip: Casserole can be covered and refrigerated up to 24 hours before baking. Bake 30 minutes; sprinkle with almonds. Bake 10 to 15 minutes longer. elt9911lor •Diet • Coffeine Ffff •Tob mm> Cake Pani!2.:•0• Eacn'F' """""-S . F "'"" """' to ~ tir ryF•OJl'l•Shl•"'P.,s1 H ~ °'' r.to<\lt lln•••llitneO 46 01 ..,,. Juice P1no•oo1< Juo« ~" 99' - NiO•ICOl30l Team Flakes c.<t~ eo. '129 IOSIMll ~ Co•rt 4 01 ~Folger s Crystals J• 11° mmr)Burritos ':.:::-: . ' 1 SAVI r 40 • --------------............................ -.--.......-· c.-• I ............ ,.. ........ -.... _...... ,... .,_._. ... -:::.. -_-::., :---..... : r::..--1 .::. ::r:. ..,_... I ................ ~ ... '-----,... ....... ~~ . ........... .,....._ ..... °" .... , , .. , ............ ,-..1 ......... ~1 ......................... c.---I ,., , ... __ --_______ _, DOUBLE COUPON -----~---------.., ............................... ___...._, c....OI' I =~ :::r !: ... .:;:.., ...... ~ ~-.:.. I .... _ ................... 'J ...... ::r:. ...... =::. = ~ ::-.::.-;-.:-.. -:--~.:: I :. ........... ~ , .............. • ~_:::::: I -·---_,... ___ ._,_. SAFEWAY QUALITY I ~ ~ llght GiiarCI c..31~r.-~;;:*•1•t'9CL1 5 ;;$1 GB'""oi."' I c ··-~199 16-os. l-01. 2• Cone Cont 12·••· 5,.1• C•n• Sue L B H•ftv 39 CAllOI' Bo• 11H awn ags eonusPx• or 12 Aluminum Foil~••••v200'1:11 ri '311 Purina Mainstay r~ 2;~. '500 -Tomato Juice t!::4t; 79' DOs.o s PadsSc~~~"9 o'r':. 99' 7-Bone Roast s.•:.::~~;~11'Y ""~ 1'' Boneless Roast Sof:.:f',~~11'' ! 1•• Beef Rib Roast s.•··;;:,~v;~~y ... : .. ~ 2'' Rib Steak Chuck least Potatoes :.~~scotch~. Keri's i;ciars 3 ~··1 -d~;~ ..... -3·.-.,,1c I c Tomatoes 1.7S 12·H w~ ~" Solod 5 1 c ii!. of 6 mmr) Green Onions .~:ii:~~. 4 ... n.~.1 Extra Large ro .... loe$ Green Cabbage c~'Si ... 3•o• 89' Pork Loin Ribs c~.:;,~v 10 11" Fresh Limes o~lnfLfol r ~o ... s 1 .,.. • fi Yellow Onions f~~~' 38~079' Sliced Ham 1$.':~~ ~~ •1 1• 10 79' Griddlean Strips ~~ ~ 99< Fresh Bulk Garllc 111 79c Mcintosh Apples 10 69' s1iced aaco:i :,~:· ~ '1~ Fresh Avocados s:is 2 Fo:69' Sliced Bologna or°'f<;r... ·~ 89• 2•11t.S 1'' Fresh Celery ~Hsu. bell69' eraunschwe1ger =' lb 79' "'•· Breakfast Prunes ~-=:. It lpplis Fresh Fryers ==A·55c lb, 3 l>e'lclov• * 1 Wethlntt.., ..... .. ,.... Sofewoy • 1 s 9 Sofewoy 1 1 /t ~'.lty f ~~'.lly ' lore• ...... End . Cv1. It. •. Ground Beef s.~~"\~:-~~~... 1i.99c 7-Bone Steakw .... 0~~~,lty '"' 1! 1'' Round Steak s.::=..0::.~ty Beef Pot Roast s.•·;;:r !:'"'Y londoll Pormt Pr.ah Prylnt Chicken With t lltt Att~hed. ... ~2" ,.~1'' ~ .. -. .... 0r •. 1a.1•. •••>"'~~1•--..--. • ........,c.-_ c..-. ¥-1 .......... --°""· • 1000 e.r•lde Of .. Ne__.,,..._ .. , ... .,.... .......... ) SAFEWAY . AMEAJCA'S 'AYOllTt IOOO SIOU • 2• Menerch a., flteH. 101101 L•tu"• • hm• Ano ,,. ••• , 11 L• , .. , Ml••"..., • , u11 Cwtvor Dr:. et Wetnvt, Irvin• I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 c\ I Pear G ratin unusual combination For a superb accom- peniment to cold meats or poultry, try California Bartlett pears. Pear Gratln, an unusual and delicious cornblnation of pears, buttered bread crwnbe and pannesan cheese is a simple to prepare delight. To properly ripen Bartlett pears, place them together in a loose- ly closed paper bag or Learning how to cheat on your diet You've lost rive pounds on your diet and are now faeed with a friend's anniversary party tomorrow night. How are you going to stay on your diet with all those hors d'oeuvres, cocktails and sweets tempting you? "Why not cheat a little bit?" suggests Suzanne Rice, R.D., M .P.H. and a nutritional consultant with Alta California Re- gional Center in Sacra- mento. ''A diet should be an eating management plan that allows you to lose welght and maintain that loss while consum- ing enough nutrients to stay healthy indefinite- ly," says Rice. "It will allow you to 'cheat' on occasion and will teach you how to deal with food at home, in a restaurant, at a party or on vacation." Rice suggests ea tiJ)g a diet based on the lour food groups -milk, meat, vegetables and fruits, and breads and cereals. Following the 2-2-4-4 plan -two ser- vings from the milk and meat groups and four eervingJ from the veg- etables and fruits and breads and cereals groups -will give you about 1,200 calories. It's an easy way to keep track of what you've eaten during the day without having to count calories. Remember to eat small portions to ensure the 1,200 calorie level, advises Rice. "lf you know you're going out to dinner or to a part y, save up food-group servings dur- ing the day and eat them in the evening," she ex- plai.M. When you're at the buffet table choose cheese and crackers, and fresh fruits and veg- etables as substitu te ser- vings from the four food groups. Limit fried foods and dips. If you want to indulge in something sweet, have a half piece of cake or one cookie. "Make sure to count the calories in alcohol if you drink," advises Rice. "If you allow yourself a daily glass of wine or beer in your diet plan, omit these drinks for a couple of days before the special occasion. "Allowing yourself to cheat once in awhile is a way of avoiding uncon- trollable food binges and gives you a positive feel- ing towards yourself and your diet," says Rice. Rice encourages dieters to exercise. "Ex- ercising allows you to eat more calories and still maintain weight loss," she says. "A 1,400 calorie diet that lncludes an hour of brisk walking, aerobic dancing, or swimming each day is the same as a 1, 200 calorie diet without ex- ercise.'' If you can't exercise one day, cut back your calories to compensate, aayaRioe. "The key to cheating on a diet ls planning around your lifestyle. A diet should be a healthy eating plan, not a short tenn punishment.·• • California Fruit Ripen-ln culinary creations of the quart.era ln t,he diah. ing Bowl and leave them every de9CripUon Mell V. cup ot the butter at room temperature for dazzling aide dishes, tan-ln a skillet and aaute the a few days. They'll give tallzin.g salads and delec-bread c.rwnbe until they off ethylene, a natural table dessert.a. are lightly browned. honnone that promot.ee Sprinkle the aauteed ripening, and gradually PEAR GRATIN bread crumbs and the turn yellow and yield to 4 fresh California grated parmesan cheese gentle pressure. Bartlett pears, peeled, over the pears. Dot with Ripe pea.ta can be cored and quartered the remaining 1A cup of stored in the refrigerator 'h cup butter butter. Place the di.ah for a day or two without ~ cup breed crumbs about 5 to 6 inches away deterioration in flavor or V. cup grated from preheated broiler texture. pannesan cheese for 10 minutes or until California Bartletts Butter an oven-proof lightly browned. Serve. will be available into baking dish that will Delicious with hot or November, allowing the hold the pear quart.era in cold meats and poultry. • creative3fd ·wEE.l{Nm. ENTER VON.s . 77th ) ANNIVERSARY SWEEPSTAKES VONS 100 FREE PSA TRIPS FOR 2 TO SAN FR ANCISCO FREE llAl.l.OWEEN MASKS I ~ T ttt-: BAG AT VONS lOO"nQ 10< a 01neuint "'"° ot HaHowMn map? A >1•11oween pro1ec1 thats gr•at tun tor scnOOI kids ano youth gro.ii>s ah~e? Then come to Vons 11111 weal. ano start your Vons Brown Bag >ialloween Colle<:l>On lnstructoon• ,.,.. lour 011 te,en1 Nallo ... een masks you ma91.e Oul ot Vons grocery Dags ~110 nouHhOl<J riema hke &mply egg cartons ano paper towels Just come to Vons and pickup lhe t11st ot tour "asy·IO·IOllow Brown Bag 1nwuct1n bookleta A .99 VALlrE-1-'Rt:E WITH A '1' SS PURCHASE l l :2' 49 VONS VONS VONS VONS VONS VOICS VONS ~ l>Ol Bl.E ~ > > ~ COl .PO'.\S ~ J UMBO WALNUTS ... 59 o<AllllCV N(W (;Ol()P .73 JO,,\C~I . <.\I 1111 H(. • ti .... 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Ov TO •••l Pllltbury Plpln Hot Loar ••Ol ~•0 0111.!"'•IH.UIQONA 89 f'MCtt fanM ci.kkttt Frank'! • 8-PACI( SLICED PL.AIN, SOURDOUGH .. OUftfC.( IOUl( "''-1t0 111 WHtT( Ottan Stw•Y Gnptfniit Juice 11:) 7~ OUffCI CAN C1mpbtll'• Tomato Soup 1t·'>UNCl &OJI. Minure Rice .J2 Ol ;~A l'L..AIN Ml.A' lrr'USttAOO~ Raau Spa•hflll S1uce •• OVNCf eo• llf •11 Ol en Ht Vuns Apple Cider 16 01 &AO S...C:•IRS ... Ii.WV J .. ~. \tars Fun lzr ( and) Bus >O O\IHC( J•ll 17 Ol l fl Oil t / • Onillt Rrdtnbachtr Pop Com t ~OUHOCAlllO..-o-COAl'iOlL M1zol1 Sckk Maraarlac • .,,,, G"\lO'< CA"IOO.-C><tuto flYt Alht Fruit Bfnr•I«' 'Ou'tCl C•lHO°' • '•••OflS Conflnirnc1I Noo-F1t Yot1Ur1 11 ()l ClN ••11,.111 lO tAl Clll ... •lO Jtrstymald CoU••t Chfett 10 .25 J99 )49 139 )99 ]99 .79 J49 .43 .85 111 \ I I 11 & BI· \ l I ' >1 OU!otl lulllt-~1-4'" Ll.ttrl11t AntlHpelc ao cou"' ,.1u u £fftrclent Dr11turt O nnMr TWtN ~-I V-Ill I OY Oii ~l"AllN oiO.IO•• Head Shampoo .t C'ondklonfr .Je-COVNT ,CMl Alkt ~lt1tr 16-0UNCE C"'N ~ROZEN .~ ~ °"'"''t s~"•¥P C~l(EN ecE• .49 \hruchan Instant lunch tl 0<J"''"l , ... J39 Knoll'~ Bo~senbfrr~ PttWnn • 0•~ \ 1•" (R(Ul(f4 I " ( un1tlun Corree ,\latf '1 O\.t".ICC JAA ·~~O~tfO YAq1(Ttti .89 I.a \ ktori1 •l~as 19 O\,lfli(.( \,_' 011 HI()" l h,(1 S9K Hills Bro,, C'offrt I 0 "'°' f'OP t .83 Holl~,.ood Italian l>rt~\ln11 '~ou .. • P•i.. 109 S.O.S. Scourlna t'1ds IOO fl)(tft•O\L J39 ll1ndl \\ r•p 1610 l o•.T AO\\ .65 Gala P1pn fo,.tls .. 01 llOffll lo()O•O 2'9 hor~ 01\hwulllnic Dt1tr1ttnt '' ov"'c.r •O"~' ]"5 CorMI liquid l'lun~r '\,oz •o• •~r•oto v1 Al wrs, .. o a ouct79 !'lwamron Mntb91h W /Gr.Yy • rr Ol I01 CttQC root at ... Q< (HI )69 Pl'1't"'rid~ F'1rm Llyt r C1ktt '''oz to•-'•..,"'•••c• Mu·Kt, Taqultos 111\0l IO(QllOl-S•VIA<l• \1) ('11.,k Comb. Pin• •o 01 llO• 011 '"'* 1.0AN \'OM Mhcrd Vfaetablu H .\I\ FR\ 269 2 99 .39 ttOl CfN llAll""'"\I )Of IJ""C~-l'Vlf" OOWOf"fO AN\f~I Jl9 t....CM G1rdml1 Rkou1 Chftw Cakt l>oMt• Appl• Pit 1" 13' '' 01 ••O t "fltl 1000 2 J 9 o t "OVNOlOAt 79 • ''0V••C)l0AI I< raft Amtrlun lnales BtiCCtrautl Bn1d • Bftkholm't C'IMamon Brttcf ""'"1Mlf0M llAOM HUNTWOT'N llAOH HUWT•TCMI •aOH "'VM -I ... a 9"1Al ••I• .,. 1H1t1 ~. ..., Alteftt1 4110 ._,,_, 11141, OOlfA •IA I AN JUAN OAll'llTHNO "'VM "' I . 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A Vlttefta -• -r-•......, ,_ I . ., C'l2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 .. _ d Soup, sandwich lunches for small fry Mothers around the country are facing the daily challenge of the carried lunch. Children 6 to 12 carry lunch 50 percent more often than the average American does. Small children often like the comfort of eating much the same thing every day. It seems to be reassuring for them to know what is coming in the lunch box. This is one reason why soup and sandwich lunches are terrific for small fry. Small variations in the daily soup-and-sandwich satisfy any adventuresome spirit. but the meal semains constant and familiar. Consequently it will probably be eaten -the bottom line for most mothers. For really finicky eaters, little added touches might make the difference. Pack a cup of sandwich filling and a dinner roll or whole-grain muffin rather than an imposing full-sized sandwich. A plastic knife or fork gives the child a chance to control the situation a little. For finicky eaters, trim breadcrusts before tilling sandwiches -dry crusts and whirl in a blender to use later for homemade bread crumbs. Some small appetites would rather eat two quarters than half a normal sandwich. Or cut fancy shapes from bread slices with cookie cutters. It can be exciting to eat a sailboat or a camel -or even a star. Soup lovers might like a special little plastic bowl to pour the soup into, or a favorite spoon to eat with. f or dessert. homemade cookies go down very well. Cut-up fresh fruit is.. also popular. Whatever you pack. be sure lunch is a balanced meal. Really Rosy Peanut Soup invites two of childhood's all-time favorites: tomato soup and beanut butter. Chunky Chicken Salad makes a .. sa,ndwich' a meaJ in itself, and Smoky Chicken Vegetable Soup is ne.arly filling enough to be lunch by itself. REALLY ROSY PEANUT SOUP 1 can (10¥. ounces) condensed tomato soup , V. cup peanut butter (chunky or smooth) 1 ~soup cans milk In l 1h-quart saucepan over medium heat, gradually stir soup into peanut butter until blended. Add milk. Heat thoroughlh. stirring oc- cuionally. Makes 3 cups or 3 servings. Note: For take-along soup, pour 1 aerving into v~um bottle. Remaining soup can be kept. covered, in refrigerator up to 3 days. CHUNKY CHICKEN SOUP 1 can (5 ounces) chunk chicken V. cup chopped celery 2 tablespoons mayonnaise 2 tablespoons raisins 4 whole wheat bread slices Lettuce In medium bowl, mix chicken, celery, mayon- naise and raisins. On each of 2 bread slices layer lettuce, 1h cup chicken mixture and another bread slice. Makes 2 sandwiches. SMOKY CHICKEN VEGETABLE SOUP 2 slices bacon l can (10¥. ounces) condensed chicken noodle soup 1 soup can water ~ cup fnnen mixed vegetables '. In 1112-quart saucepan over medium heat, cook Turkey, rice good combination TURKEY AND RICE bacon until crisp; pour off fat and crumble bacon. Add remaining ingredients and bacon to saucepan. Simmer 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Makes 3 cups or 3 servings. Note: For take-along aoup, pour 1 serving into vacuum bottle. Remaining aoup can be kept, covered, in refrigerator up to 3 days. . ·····-~ --- vllencia oranges good produce buy Whether taken from a kitchen fruit bowl, a brown paper bag or a cafeteria lunch line, fresh citrus fruits are now here in plentiful supply, ready to provide "golden" opportunities to back-to-achoolera. Becawie ot a reoord-break.ing valencia orange crop this season, valenciaa are likely to be one· of the best produce buys during the weeka ahead. "Thia 18 the meet abundant valencla crop we've had since the mid-194011. Comblned with the bumper navel crop just completed, California-Arizona's orange crop ia the largest ever produced in one year," staie. Mark Tompkina, spokesman for Sunkiat Growers Inc. Because each valenda tree produced ao much fruit this season, individual oranges just didn't develop to their usual large si:r.es. But thete vitamin C-rich, '.'kid size" fruit are very good juicing and KDCM eating oranges, perfect for lunch boxes or after school snacks. Pon't be fooled by the green that appears on the outside' of some valencias. Thia "regreening" phenomena oocun u rhe orange hangs on the tree and its golden peel reabsorbs the green pigment. "Regreened " oranges are fully ripe and juicy. Cutting them into easy-to-eat wedges la on way to show their beautiful interior. Wedges, wrapped in plastic, are perfect tor eating anytime. Taste tingllng grapefruit, brimming with Cali- fornia sunshine and vitamin C, are perfect for waking up sleepy appetites. And this aeason there will be abund8Jll supplies. But they, too, will be running slightly smaller in ai.z.e than usual. However, their eating quality and beautiful appearance are un- matched. 1D!l.1 FMSTEFIED "OUR MUSIC MAKES YOU FEEL GOOD!" • For 4 people, combine 2 cups cooked turkey chunks with 2 cups chilled cooked rice (brown. white, wild or combination). V. pound quartered fresh mushrooms, 1 cup chopped fresh spinach, 2 sliced green onions with tops, and mix well. • Blend !I> cup dry white wine, V. cup vegetable oil. 2 teaspoons sugar. ~ teaspoon salt. ~ teaspoon pepper. Add to turkey and rice mixture. Mix well and chill. AND KIDS EAT MORE CHEERIO& When ready to serve add 10 halved cherry tomatoes and garnish with drained canned lna.ndarin oranges, if desired . . U se ,,,,_,.At/ service when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your classified ad . we take your m essages 24 hours a day ... you cal I in at your conve nience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... thi s service i s only $5 .00 week. 642-5678. ,. ANY OTHER CE ' .. Dally Pilat WEDNESDAY, OCT. 12, 1983 CLASSlfl 05 l Impressive start? Hardly But Giddings saw something in Brazas others didn 't By JOHN SEV ANO Of ... Oellr ......... Steve Brazaa' freshman year at New- port Harbor High was hia first of playing organized football. And alrno6t his last. "I wouldn:t even call it a football season. I was the wo~~layer out there," recalled Braz.as Wedn as he sat in the bleachers at Davidson Field following the Sailors' afternoon practice. · Inexperienced, lanky and awkward, Brazas didn't play very much as a freshman and he was understandably discouraged as a result. "I went to the fresh.man banquet that year not knowing whether I was going to play again or not," said Brazas. "I didn't even know if I could play." Someone was convinced he could, however. and at that post-season affair Mike Giddings, who was then the sophomore coach, told him so. "He just came out and told me I was ftl;K: .. ··~ ..... ~ .. I , -,,,.. ~ ~I • . • , • • . r . .. .,. , ..• , 1. •"'·•. -:...-• ""°-."1 ',. '-.r". good," said Braz.as as if he was st.ill dazed by the revelation. Giddings, who is now the Sailors' varsity coach as a hobby and a top-notch evaluator of NFL talent as his primary occupation, explained his feeling about Braz.as this way: , "I remember watching him (in a freshman game) against Edison. They were losing 22-0, or something like that, and Steve just never quit. I think he ran two or three faked punts during the game and each time he dragged guys with him. He refused to go down. Plus, he seemed to like football. He would come and watch our (sophomore) practices and I figured anyone who was attentive enough to watch the sophomore coach must want to play," he added with a chuck.le. "Actually, all I did was encourage a young man to keep playing football. Maybe I aaw10methingin him, but it wasn'tanything brilliant on my part." ' Brilliant or not, Giddings' encourage- ment paid off. The following season Braz.as helped lead the sophomores to a league championship while going undefeated. As a junior, he rushed for 1,162 yards and caught 35 pages for 450 more in leading the varsity unit into the CIF playoffs before it was finally eliminated in the quarterfinals by Fullerton, which went on to win the Central Con- ference. As an encore, all Brazas has done this season is help the Sailors (3-1 -1) to a No. 7 Daily Pilot ranking while rushing for 543 yards, re<.'eiving for another d seoring 10 touchdowns. Defensively, although he•,;. played sparingly the past two games, he ~ a total of 29 tackles and two caused fumbles from his linebacking position. (See NEWPORT'S, Pace DS) .S. Korea in, Brazil bows Out Old-timers 1, Birds o :~: Wheezers Morgan, Maddox give Phils edge1 ; BAL TI.MORE (AP) -Philadelphia's Garry Maddox and Joe Morgan found two of Scott McGregor's 83 pitches to thelt liking, and the resulting home runs proved dectave in the opening game of the 1983 World Series. McGregor and winning pitcher John Denny were superb in a classic pitching duel, neither making many rniatakes in the strike zone and fewer out of it in the fint walkless Series game since 1967. So sharp was McGregor that he threw about 40 fewer pitches than one could expect in an eight-inning performance. But Morgan's game-tying homer in the sixth inning and Maddox' game-winner in the eighth rendered those numbers incoJUequen- tial. All that really mattered waa that the Phillies had a 1-0 lead in the best-of-seven aeries on the strength of a 2-1 victory Tue&day night over the Baltimore Orioles. T""41rt"I Scere-l'tlllJ I hil t. aelllmen 1 T ........ I OWM-...... J I hil (HudMft l·I) et ...... "*'9 (leMdl• 1'-t) .. s::ao ''*V'• ca.me-......,..• et ....... J1'9!Na. S:JI p.m. ...,...,., GMw-8 .. ,_.. et l'MI , , th, IO e.m. SUndeV'I GMM-aelllmen et P'hlil' ' .... , 1:JO IUfto. If 4 ,.....N ' Tvwltlylt .....,__,..._I ?; hia et ...... ,.,.., 5:211 tun., ; If MCelMfV Oellr .......... "' _.,., ~ Newport Harbor H igh 's Steve Brazas is the Daily P ilo t's Player of the Week. The Orioles, who live by the home run, 9COred their only run in that fashion when Jim Dwyer connected ln the fint inning. But Denny was clearly in control until the first hint of late trouble. That came in the eighth. but vanished quickly when Manager Paul Owens reached into his bullpen for Al Holland. The ace Philadelphia reliever mowed down the last four Oriole hitters to nail down the vi~tory on a rainy, windy night more suited for football than baseball. w...._v, Oct. tt-,....••la'* et ......,.,.,.., sao ~ .. MClllNtV Al terMI ""· TV: CMflMt 71 ..... KNX (1170)., heelchair tou~ney ures 300 players y CURT SEEDEN ... Deir_...., For the fourth straight year, e Racquet Club of Irvine will oat a world championship event, et very few people are aware of Others, like Gene Wilder, Andy illiams, Carl Reiner, Arthur e and &leooe Tanner know bout it. They're avid supporten f the National Foundatiqn of eelchair Tennia which will In all, 12 divisions (six singles, six doubles) will make up the townament. Action begins Thunday with qualifying rounds from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Play continues Friday and Saturday during the same houn, with finals set to begin Sunday morning at 9. The feature division. the men's open, la ached- uled to for at noon Sunday. Dwyer was the Orioles' second batter of the game and he jumped on a pitch down the middle. sending it soaring over the right field fence to become the 18th man in history to hit a home run in his first Worlp Series at-bat. "I was just trying to get on base," said Dwyer, who hit just eight homers during the regular season and is not known for his power. "l knew before the game it was going to be a low-8COring contest." "Dwyer hit hi.a pitch,'' Denny decided. "It was not a good pitch to throw." "A fastball down the middle," noted Dwyer. Hedidn'tseeanymoreof thoee, he said. It was to be Denny's only ma jot mistake and, on this night. he could afford only one. The run stood up through five innings as McGregor pitched airtight bueball. The 9z"iole left-hander had two out~ the sixth and on the phillif bench, Owens started to .quirm. Just a week ago, Owens had seen the Phillid' Mike Sc.bmidt beat Los Angeles with a first-inning homer in the opening game of the National League Championship Series. "Honestly," he said, "l thought about it a couple of times. But I felt we would come back." Morgan was the next Phillie hitter. "I threw him a curve," said McGregor. That 1eemed sensible, since the Phillies are suppoeed to be a faatball hitting team. It did not wor~' though. "l don't know· if he was swinging for a fastball, but he smoked it." McGregor continued."~ was right there on It." • Most 40-year-old players watch the World Series on television. "First l was too short to play this game," said Morgan, who's all of 5-7. "Now I'm too old. I don"l worry about that." old ita biggest event of the year · today -the National heelchair Tennis Cham- ionshipe. J PCAA· looks tough and so do the Anteaters .... Nearly 300 wheelchair tennis yers -from men's open to or division competitocs -will t in four days of tournament on, concluding with cham- ionship matches Sunday ln 12 ·visions. Wheelchair tennis waa the rainatonn of two men who are nfined to a wheelchair -Brad arka of Laguna Niguel and Jeff ebraker. Their reasons for h a sport were simple: physio- gical development, sunshine d fresh air. That was in 1976. Today, the NFWT has a rating ystem not unlike that of pro- ionaJ tennis players. Parks. ho is chairman of the organiza- on, not surprisingly 1a ranked o. 1 ln the country amona heelchair tennis players. The women's open competition attracted No. 1-rat.ed Marilyn ton of Freme and Susy llatrap, who 1a abo an actreta, Santa Ana. lllllllll- TONIGHT UC Irvine's 1983-84 basketball edition hasn't stepped OQ a gymnasium floor, hasn't taken a single jump shot or even dONled practice jeneys yet, and already c.oach Bill Mulligan is extremely op- tirniatlo. But then Mulligan Is always optimistic . . . at least until the aeason starts anyway. With the official opening of the college practice season a mere four days away. Mulligan tempen his enthusiasm with a warning. Even though he feel.a the Anteaters are vastly improved, the rest of the Pacific Coast Athletic As&ociation field have made tremendous strides as well. In fact, many are predicting thia is the strongest PCAA field in history. The Sporting News refers to the PCAA "as the UCIRWE JOHN SEVANO most improved conference in the nation," listing five teams -Fresno State, Cal State Fullerton, Utah State, Nevada Las Vegas and UCI -among the top 48 in the nation. So, while UCI will be better, just how the Anteaters fit into the overallpicture remains to be seen. "I think you get excited every year," says Mulligan of his enthusiasm. ''Of course, I was naive enough to think we were good last year." Last aeaaon the Anteaters finished 16-12 overall, 8-8 in conference play. which, according to Mulligan, "wasn't too bad with the guys we had." What the diminutive Irishman likes about this year is the fact everyone returns -and then some. To go along with Ben McDonald, Bob Thornton, George Turner, all of whom scored in double figures last year, Tod Murphy and Ronnie Grandison, the squad has added junior college transfer guards Jerome Lee. Derrick Johnson, Raymond Lankford and JC transfer Jamet Rhodes, a forward. "Yeah, this is the best talent I've had since I've been here," admits Mullig&J)t who is beginning his fourth year. "They fit more into what we want to do." Synonymous with the word offenae his first three seasons, Mulligan is bent on UCI becoming more defensive-oriented this year. "We have to potential to be really good . But we're going to have to play defense." hesays, whichdoesn'tmeantheAnteaten are goina to become a mirrored image rl Fresno State (among the nation's leadel'ia defensively the past three aeaaons). "This is a team that can play defense.~· Mulligan adds. "We tried to do somethin& like this three years ago but we had to hi~ three suys then." (See ANTEATERS, Pace DJ) Image? Capo Valley doesn't care J . Something'• wrong when two coaching 1taff1 are left smoldering u they watch one league rival whip the.other. Why ahould they care what happens to'. the other one? You have enou1h trouble taking care of your own problemt. But in the cue of two particular teama (Captstrano Valley and Woodbridge high IChoola), there are eome bulc values that rully take a beatma. Surely, theni lan't a coach around who doem't know what the next Is IOinl throuah, nobody exactly baa It euy. But at Captatrano Valley, where the Coupn inherited the po.ition of eaining all ~! the favorable territory when the echooJ came lnto exlMence, almolt puttlnf-Alu. Schaff and San Clemente olat of buainftl, there ta a ph.llolophy bent on cett.lng ~ Uck ln. The tak1na of prt.onen ia unheard of. When Capo \'alfey COICh Qlck llnriaht ordered ht. teur\ to condnue their almott Ul11to~ble pMllnc ati.ck In the clOliJ\a te()Ol'\da Thunday, P1nlna their flfth touch· down with 3(1 teCOilda Wt ln • 34.7 South " PREP SPORTS ROGER CARLSON Cout Leaaue victory, It waa not unexpected. Coechlns ataffs from Mt.ion Viejo and Lacuna Hilla watched in .Uence, and I don't think even the pre11ence of Bo Derek oould have taken them out of 10me pretty cold thOtUlhtll. Wlth Capo, you expect thia. And, you can expect the Cougars to def end their rtahts to run up the ecore. Att.erall. they'll tell.you. this I.a football. What makes th1a evun toucher to stomach ta the fact the Co"'ian dwell in what la a relat.ively avera,e lHaue (with the excer.uon of Million Viejo). The others aren t exactly mince mHt. but they aren't powtthou.et, either. They don't have the ability to atay with the Cougan on any kJnd of bull . I>\ And, the Cougan know it. lt'a very doubtful they'll have to answer to many, or any, the next ti.me around. The next time around ifll be another Nil-It-up game for Capo Valley. I This isn't big man on big man. It'a not &peranza VI. Capistrano Valley, Edilon VI. Mater Del or St. Paul VI. Servite. h's Capistrano Valley VI. Woodbrl •... and Laguna mu. ... and Dana H1lJ.s ... There la, of c:oune, nothlni Wepl about It. The game Is 48 minutet Iona and lf you want tc aubject your atat q~ to a potential lai.-.garoe knee lnjury, u Wood· bridee eo.ch Gene Noji •uae-ted after Th~t• ~· well, I CUftl that'• the Couian'~ What lt deft do, however\ ii dllplay the atark dlare1ard and diare9pect the Couaan have for teanw from their own leque. What a ahame Capo Is burdened with thJa kind of reputation. They'll always c.rry this·~· Frankly. I'd always Uke to think (lee IMAGE, P11e DI> • Wildcat Roll Jacobi, a -6-7 1enJor forward aa · Fountain Vall ey Hip, .. ,, he'U play~ ba1kelhaU at Unber-~ 1ity of AIUona nu t" • Beaton . DI Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, Oct. 12, 1983 .SPORTS BREAK Domed stadium to be constructed in San Francisco From AP dlspakilet SAN FRANCISOO -Plans for the largest retractable-domed stadium in the United States -a 70,000-aeat facility that would be the new home of baseball's San Francisco Giants and football's San Francilco 49ers -were to be announced today by Mayor Dianne Feinstein. The stadium would cost between $120 mil.ijof\ and $170 million dollars, according to a mayor's task foree that has been working on the idea for more than a year. Bill Strawn, the mayor's press aide, con- firmed Tuesday that the mayor would endorse the idea, but the city's Board of Supervisors would have to approve legislation before construction could begin. Financing also has to be decided from several possiblities. It also would be necessary in a referendum next June for voters to approve the sale of city-owned Candlestick Park, which Giants' owner Bob Lurie believes is no longer suitable for his team. Lurie has threatened to move the Giants out of San Francisco after his Candlestick Park lease expires in 1994 unlea a downtown stadium is available before then. "To even consider spending any money on this place (Candlestick) is ridiculous," said Lurie, who wants his team playing in the new stadium at the start of the 1987 seaaon. Lurie, who complained that his team lost "many millions of dollars," said aging, windy Candlestick isn't suitaole because it lacks mass transit accessibility and there are limited routes for private transportation. Quote of the day Veteran golfer Bllly Casper, explaining his expanding waistline at a aeniors golf tournament: "Li.ke1a lot of fellows around here, I have a furniture problem. My chest has fallen into my drawers." Studley is new Oiler coach HOUSTON -Chuck Studley, [i] who became defensive coordinator of 4. • the Houston Oilers in January, stepped up a notch to interim head coach Tuesday, replacing Ed Biles, who resigned Monday in the midst of a 13-game losing streak. "I didn't look up the word 'interim' but I think it means temporary," Studley said in his first meeting with the media. "If we continue to play inconsistently, it's adios (goodbye) at the end of the season." Studley, getting his first pro head coaching experience, enters the job fully aware of the task that lies ahead in breaking the losing streak and the team's 0-6 rerord this season. "Right now I'm wearing two hats," Studley said. ''I'm still the defensive coordinator and I know what that involves plus I have the duties ot ' the head coach and at this point I'm not sure what that involves." Jahbar satisfied with pact INGLEWOOD -Kareem m Abdul-Jabbar confirmed Tue.day that hla new contract wi\h the Loa Anaelt!9 Lakers will be of two yeen' duration and the 36-year-old atar cent.er conunented, "I think l can gtve two excellent years." He said, "1 know I have that physically and mentally. l would not want to push it any further than that. I wouldn't want people to go down the line tor me and then have it blow up in their face.." Abdul-Jabbar, a veteran of 14 aeuona in the National Basketball A.>ciation with eilhtua Laker, hauigned his new contract which his agent, Tom Collini, aaid is worth $1.5 million annually. Earlier, Abdul-Jabbar was believed asking for a "~ longer pact. He became a free agent after last season and his agent talked with other NBA clubs. Kareem maintained he would rather continue with Los Angeles. He presently ia second among all-time NBA scorers with 29,810 points, topped only by Wilt Chamberlain at 31,419. Should Abdul-J abbar play all of the 1983-84 seaaon games a.nd average 19.6, he would pass Chamberlain. Last season, the Laker averaged 21.8. "I'm glad to be back and I'm glad we've got that settled,·• said Abdul-Jabbar at a Lakers' morning practice. Celtics romp past Lakers INGLEWOOD -Dennis John-m son, Larry Bird and Cedric Maxwell each scored 20 pointa to lead the Boston Celtics to a 121-103 victory over the Loe Angeles Lakers in a National Basketball Asaocia- tion exhibition game Tue9day night at the Fonµn. The Celtics won their third of four pre-aeason games and the Lakers dropped their first exhibition contest. The Celtics led by u many u 11 points in the finlt quarter, 14 in the second quarier and as many as 30 in the third quarter (97-67), before the Lakers caught up to 15 in the fourth quarter Scott Wed.man came off the bench to 900re 18 pointa and Kevin McHale had 11. Robert Parri.ah did not make the trip becauae of a contract dispute. Mike McGee, fill.ing in for the traded Norm Nixon, led the Lakers with 20 points and Magic Johnson had 12 for Loe Angeles. The Lakers played without center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Swen Nater and the unsigned Byron Scott, newly-acquired from San Diego. Kings stopped by Islanders UNIONDALE, N.Y. -Andera ~ Kallur acored a power-pJ,ay goal mid-, way through the second period to lead the New York Islanders to a h?me-opening 5-2 National Hockey League victory over the Los Angeles K.ing:s Tuesday night. Clark Gillies scored at 3:26 of the opening period with a 15-foot shot past Loe Angeles goalie Mario Lessard for a 1-0 Islanders' lead At 6:09, Wayne Merrick fired in a 10-fo.t back-hander boosting the ecore to 2-0. ' Television, radio TV: World Series -Philadelphia al Balti- more, 5 p.m., Channel 7. RADIO: World Series -Philadelphia at Baltimore, 5:10 p.m., KNX (1070). An American institution Some recollections of a trip to the World Series One who would question the World Series .. being among the most-beloved American institutions is reminded there Is barely an element of our llOdety without wondrous childhood memories of the Fall Classic. SPORTS COLUMNIST BUD TUCKER I don't think I will every forget the time back home when Paddy Moran won a trip to the World Series for collecting cigar bands. Paddy wu a - genuine champion of the contest because he smoked every one of the ropes hlmlelf. memorable. There waa Paddy at.anding on the obeervation platform, a lamp shade on hia bead and a horaeshoe of flowers around hia neck. The dty co_uncil preeen~ him with a gallon of store-bought wtne, the Ladtes Aid Society gave him a box lunch and some magazines, and the librarian handed him a lifetime membership card. It would not be accurate to say Paddy was the town drunk because of the size of the town. It wu ao small the male adults took turns. Paddy did take a drink, though, and waa known to toast a friend on more than ordinary ooca.sions. He drank bourbon and water for years until he discovered a drink he said was twice as good -double bourbon and water. Anyway, when Paddy won the all-expense paid trip to the World Series, it was the bigget thing to happen to the town since they dedkated the parking meter. What made it more dramatic, the World Series was always held in New York in those days. Few in town had ever been beyond the county line. Sure as hell, no one had ever been to the Big Apple. The day Paddy left for New York, they closed everything down and declared a civic holiday. They had three-legged and sack races down Main Street and a big dance in the town hall. A bunch of the local cut-ups shot oU the cannon on the courthouse lawn and draped ladies' unmentionables on the sword of the general on the horse ln front of City Hall. One of the local dandies lit a giant firecracker and held it in his right hand until it exploded. I can't remember his real name, but they called him "Lefty" from then on. JUBt before the train pulled out, the scene was Sea Kings drop second straight The CIF 4-A's top-ranked Corona del Mar High water polo aquad has hil a mas in the road after dropping their second straight deciaion Tuesday, 8-7 In overtime, to visiting Sunny Hilla. The Sea Kinga, who won their finlt 12 decisions this seaaon, were beaten by Northern California power Bellerman Prep, 7-4, laat Saturday in the championship game of th~ Palo Alto-San Joee Invitational Tournament in San Joae. They appeared to be on course to righting the ship against the Lancers Tuesday, taking a 7-4 lead in the fourth period. However, Sunny Hills tallied the last three goals of regulation, the final pair coming 23 seconds apart, to force the extra session. Two minutes into the overtime, the Lancers ended it. Both teams had a couple of good opportunities to decide the issue in the waning moments of regulation, but were turned aside. Greg Robena of c.dM provided a pair of key steals late in the fourth period to thwart Sunny Hills. Matt Wesner had three goals and John Morrow two to spark the Sea Kings offell9e. CdM is still playing without the services of one of its key players, Jeff Oeding, who had his noae broken last weekend. He's expected to be sidelined at least two more weeks The commander of the local American Legion came right out then and there ana stated, by God, Paddy Moran would be the grand marshall of the Fourth of July parade. The mayor presented rum with the key to the town and said Paddy was the greatest in the history of the community and promUled the next spring Paddy would get to lay the cornerstone of the new jail. Of course, it would bf! necessary that Paddy was not in the jial. The last thing I remember Paddy saying, "I'll drink to that.'' Paddy would drink to jwlt about anything. It goes without saying that it was one of the best winters the town would ever know. Paddy spent all his sober hours sitting ln front of the pot-bellied atoVe in the pool hall recounting his experiences in New York. Paddy told how he got up on at.age and sat down beside the piano player in Guy Lombardo'& orchestra and danced in the chorus line with the most beautiful girls he ever saw. Paddy said he atayed on stage until two very big gentlemen in tuxedoa asked him to leave. Getting up on the horse with the policeman in Central Park was fun, too. Paddy wondered about the desk aergeant who seemed lriah but couldn't pronounce Moran and kept calling him "Moron." But the police were very nice, Paddy said. A couple of them insisted on going all they way to Grand Central with him and w ouldn't leave until the train pulled out, a fitting farewell to the greatest trip a man every had. Yankee Stadium? The World Series? Well, Paddy always said he waa going back to take in a game or two. I wonder it he f!Ver dld. Rustlers prevail in overti:me, 9-8 Tom Hermstad scored the game-winning goal 30 seconds into sud- den-death overtime to give Golden West Col- lege a 9-8 South Coast Conference water polo victory over visiting Cer- ritos Tuesday. Hennstad had earlier scored his second goal of the afternoon in the first overtime session to give The two teams then traded goals with Cer- ritos getting the final score of regulation with 2: 15 remaining in the fourth period. The verdict improved the Rustlers' conference mark to 4-1 and 8-4 overall. Next on the schedule is Mt. San An- tonio Friday afternoon In the Mounties' pool. the Rustlers an 8-7 ad-r;;;=========~• vantage. But the Falcons W oodhridge, Laguna try to rebound tied the game in the second extra ses&on with nine aeconds remaining to force the sud- den-death period. Woodbridge High will be trying to get back on course toward a playoff spot, while Laguna Beach takes a break from South Coast League activ\ty Friday night in prep football action. The Warriors, 1-1 in loop play and 3-2 overall following last week's 34-7 1etback to Capistrano Valley, will meet Dana Hills at Irvine High. The Artists (0-2 and t=4) will try to snap a four-game losing streak when they hit the road to meet Atascadero. Both are 7:30 kickoffs. The Warriors will be hoping to alow down running back Paul Harvey, who rushed for 118 yards last week and caught the winning touchdown paaa of 37 yards with 1:32 remaining in the game. "I still believe we have a 90lld ahot at the playoffs," Noji noted. But he reallz.es the Warriors HB cyclist competes can't afford to slip Friday night. Juon Crow, the Rus- Laguna meets a team that ls the defending CIF tiers' leading scorer Desert-Mountain c.onterence champion and which Tuesday with five goats, has been ranked in the top 10 of that conference all had a hand in both the aeuon. overtime goals aa well, "All we know about them ia that they have a getting assists on each of good football prosram." said Laguna Coach Dennis HemlBtad's tallies. Haryung. "And their siz.e ls about the same as ours Cerriwsatartedquick- and it's a rarity for UA to be playing someone like ly, building leads of 2-1 that." Former Head Pro BIG CANYON C.C. Woodbridge is facing a team in Dana Hills that not only won ita finlt game of the eeaaon against Laguna Beach last week (13-7), but alao snapped a 17-game loaing skein in the South Coast League. after one quarter and 5-3 James Gordon, a 17-year-old cyclist from Haryung added, "It would be great lf we could at halftime before Crow Huntington Beach, leaves Friday with a continaent of win, but we're more concerned about looking at some tied it with a pair of goals .. llUJIA'I ... -. 11111.,,.. .. 11tM.i-011 "We think that Dana Hilla will come outfired-up for us following that wi.n last week," said Wood- bridge Coach Gene Noji. U eo -• people." in th third .;,. cyclists to compete at the Junior World e · stanza. Championships Oct. 20-29 in Aucklund New ,----------------------:....:..:.._:___:__:....: __ _JJl!!!!!! ______ I!!!!!!~ Zealand. • I ~ "They play a good hard-noeed game and don't try to fool you. It's a real fundamental style. They like to run right at you." Gordon earned a berth on the seven-person team w~ PORSC::HE !_ TWllflll. & by defeating defending jwUor national champion .c)A•vT·E·ij SMOG STATION Bobby Livingston of Georgia in competition at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs. --___ ---- ---- BUD WARMINGTON INTERNATIONAL GRAND PRIX~ ~ OCTOBER 14-15-16 A WEEKEND OF SPECTACULAR ACTIVITIES: MARINE EXPO~ PERFORMANCE BOAT SHOW (FRI-SUN) DANCING UNDER THE STARS WITH H ENRY BRANDON (FRI) CELEBRITY CHARITY CHALLENGE AND ADDICTOR CUP CHALLENGE (PRACTICE, QUALIFYING FRIDAY, FINALS SATURDAY) GIANT FIREWORKS SHOW (SAT) GREAT AMERICAN BBQ COOK-OFF (SAT) THE BUD WARMINGTON INTERNATIONAL GRAND PRIX (SUN) 200 MILES OF THUNDERING OFFSHORE RACING ACTION NEWPORT DUNES (JAMBOREE & PACIFIC COAST HWY, NEWPORT BEACH) AMERICAN GENERAL ADMJSSION $'4 ADULTS $2 CHJLDREN SOCEIY CANCER PROCEEDS ro BENEFIT rne AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY ADVANCE TICKETS AND SPECIAL PADDOC~ SUPER.PASS INF01 CAU. 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OrlOltt 1 !Gem• One> PHILADELPHIA IAL TIMORI Ill r II Ill ab r h bl MO<Oan 21> Ro•a ID Scnmol 3D Le1ceno rt VHavu pfl Mallhw\lf Maodo• cf BOier c OaJu u• u Oennvo Honano p • I 2 I Bumbrv cl • 0 1 0 4 o l o ssrewur p o o o o 4 0 0 0 TMarrn1 o O O O O l 0 0 0 Owver rl J I I 1 I 0 0 0 ioord rt I O O O 3 0 1 0 Rlp .. en '' 4 0 I 0 3 I 1 1 EMuHV 111 ' 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 Lown•ln II l 0 I 0 l o O o Roeno. on I O O o 3 0 0 0 Dauer 20 l O O 0 0 0 0 0 TCrur JD J O 0 0 Oem1av c 2 O O O Snetbv cl t o o o McGrevr P 2 0 0 0 Nolan c 1 O O O Total• JI 2 S 7 Total 12 1 S I Score bv lllnln4n Pllll•dll""la 000 001 010-, IS.ltlmor• 100 000 000-I Gome·wi""'"ll RBI -ModdO• 111 E -Tenn OF>-Bo1t1more LOB-Pnlladtlohla 1 B91tlmore 4 2B-8 umbrv HR-Owver Ill Moro1n Ill MaOOo• 111 IP H R ER 118 SO PnMade41)111a OennvW 1-0 72·3 s I 11011ano S, I I l·J 0 0 llalflmor• McGrtgr L 0 I 8 • 2 SSlewarl 2 3 I 0 TMarlnz l·J 0 0 T-2 22 11-57 704 Wor1d Serles at a 91ance Tuesclav'• Scor• Phllaoe1onla 2 Baltimore I Tonltfll'• Game 0 0 0 6 0 1 0 0 Phllaoelohra <HuCl•On 8·81 er Balflmo<e I BOCld1cl\er 16-8) S 20 om Fr1dav'• Gama Baltimore al Pnllaotlonlo, 530 p rn Saf\lrdav'• Gama Baltlmore at PnlleC1t1onla. 10 o rn SUndaY'> Game Balllmore or Pnltaaeronro. I JO om 11 nectuarv TUHclaV'• Gam• PhllaClelpnia al Bolllmore. S.20 o.m .. II neceuarv W.a..sdav. Oc1. If G1me Phrlaoelonia al Baltimore. S 20 om. 11 neceuary "Ii limes PST TV· Cnannel 4, Reolo. KNX t 1010) Women's 1ournamtnt tat Tarpen S~lftei, Fla.) Finl R.ulld SlntNl Merrlna Nevralllove IU.S.1 dtl Pttnur Louie tu s 1. 6· 1, 6· I, Bein Herr tu s I Ciel Marv Lou Piortk (US ). 7-S, 7·S, Pnv1ln Blaelcw~I (U.S I Cit! La urie McNeil tU S ), 6-• 1·6 6·1, Wtnov Wr.ltt IU S.) Clef Anna Marla Fernandez IU S >. 4·6 6· I, 6·4, Pa m Cuelt (US ) Clef Mtl•Ua Brown, 6·.l 6· :, Pam Snrlvtr IU.S I Clef. Ann Htnrlc .. u on IU S.1, 6· 1 6·J, Bonnie Gaouse~ tu S) Cltt Robyn wnlre cu S I 6· l 6· I HIOfl ""°°' wonwn Laguna IHCll ll, Caohlr•M V ... y 5 SlntN\ W•ll•Me (LB) IO\I •o Mllcntll. 0·6. Oel Miller 6-3, del Pe!lar.on. 6 1. Wetiect IL81 lo" 0·6 7·6 won 6-I T•e••• ILBI lo\t 1·6 2·6 won 6·0 OWllMl Pac,·NavlO' ILBI Off 4\n•e<\·Harov 6-1 Clef Ca•t•·Gien man 6-l Otf 8roo •new Orion o·2, Suo• Con~tv ILBt won, 6-7 6 I 6·3 C.ootro Taul ILBl won. 6 2 6· I 6·? CO\la /\MW It, Sa~O 0 Slfttlt• T•1t"tr ICMI Otl N Tran. 6·0, Ott f Tran 6 0, Gel HamaHkl 6· I, Han•on (CM\ won. 6-?, 6· I 6·0, 8ermort ICMI WO~ 6•0 6 2, 6•1 Doulllel Chono-Beneo er ICM! oef Gtennl1-Van, 6· I Cl.i Sool<vl·L~aOe 6-0, Clef Lt · Nguvt n 6·0 Jon,,.r·Sonrl tCMl won. 6·• 6·2 o·O, Ven Scovoc·Ourren (CM) won, 6·3, 7·S. 6·1 MarlNI 11, H""""9ton Beach o Slntlt• Crllell (MJ oel Miii>. 6·0. Otf VenClelle 6·0 Clti Nkol, 6·0, At~r ll (Ml won, 6-0. 6·0 6·2. Lieng IM) won, O·l. 6·0. 6·0 Doul*t Herrl •-Cnurc11 (M J Cle f Subntrwot·Subnerwel 6·4. Ott A ttur t·Ma \e n 11~••, 6·0, Cltl Nakamuro·TurrlH. 6-0, Lollto-SlanllelCI IM) won. 4·4. 6·•. 6·0 Fenton·Rooer1M>n (Ml won, 6·2, 6·1, 6·1 WNdbf10.. u , Laeuna Hiii• • SlntMt S1e11muno IWJ Clef McCov, 6·0, Clef Luce 6· l Clef Btume, 6·0, lvev tWI lost, 3·6 won. 6·l 6·0. Solvtv (W) lo\I S-7. won. 6· I 6·0 Doutite• Querrerero·Ven Hee (WJ Otf Prucol •·Perk tn\, 6 ·4, Cltf Ta ole ·Pommerren no 7·S. def Focior·PeoV\. 6·3, 8 rown-Glddan• (W) loll. • 6. won. 6·2 6 O Ohon·Wonv loll, 1·4. won 1-S, 1-S Malff 091 IS. lhwrv l SlntMl LaVeltt •MO) ael Bomtnoer, o·O, ael Scn'"man, 6·0. Clef Vlrroa 6·0, S.rmltnro IMO! won O·O. 6·0 6·0 Prtello IMOI won 0 0 6· \ 6·0 Ooubltt A .. 1n·So1nn•r IMO) lo•• , lo Youno·LYnell, l -6 del vare•a•L.vncn. 6·0. Cltf Burke·!Oarlev 6 0. Wrlter·Wlnoerr IMO) IO\t, 7·6. won 6·0, 6·0 Saunder, CrawlorCI IMOI IO\I l·o won • 2 6·0 EdlHn 11, W••lminlltr 0 Sine!•• Slttltrv IE I atf 8ttlrin, 6·l. Otl Brown 6-0 oef .A\t\. 6·0 JoM•on 1E1 won I>• Otfeull 6· I 6-0 Sn'lllll CE l won 7·6 oe1au11 •·I Dwbte• l(lrk·Snea IEJ Cltf Pt meH·Anronlo • '· Otf Mertlnei·She•P. 6·2, Otf Mactra·Snlnln. 't·7, Slmmon•·Felnoo•d IE> won, l·S •·2, 6·1, l(tuDnl~ Trullllo IEI won. •·• 6·0 6·0 lrvlM 14, •I To .. 4 ~· Pnam (II Cltl Ceo. 6·1, Clet Camon, •·O, dtf Batro. 6·0; Lowe\ 01foll,1·6. •·6. won. 6· I, l(alr Ill won. 6·4. 6·•· 6·0 ~· Pa .,ona rlu •·Revno1e1 • Ill d •I Cel'TIPbell-Coootf\mlrn. 6 1. Clef OH r lno•r·Sltvtns. •·I, de! FOChl Vlnu•. 6·0. Truono·Mlcnatl•on (II loll. ?·6. won. 6 I. 7•6, 8t...Olct·s.Mltr rn '°''· 4 •• wOll, • 0, 6·4 waiw .-. COMMUNITY COLLaGI 04rlden "'"' ' ~ • Ct trllOl 1 f 0 7 0 I 0-I GOICl9n Wnr I t 7 7 I O I-f OotOtn Weil KOf"lnO H¥msttd ) f" Ltwln 1, Crow S HIOH SCHOOL WMV H•t 11 Cw-.. M., t Sut111v HINt 1 2 0 4 0 1-I Corona cll4 Mar • O ) 3 I O 0-7 Corotll Ott ~ lCOflno WtMltl' J. ~row >. ltOOtf" 1, VI"-'• 1 Odeh Mf L •R•m• .l!h over All11•te Raiden l'n over xSu ttle xOetrolt 3 ovtr Cnlcego San Ole;>o 4 ovtr xNew En9lano AT amo• Bav l over St Loul• xNew York Jtf\ l"i over Miami xPlllsburgh l'n over Cttvt l1nC1 ~Ntw Orrean• I over San Francl•c:o xMlnnuota 10 over Hou\lon Buffalo •• J<Baltfmore, even O•nver 3 over aCfnclMetl xKt n\u CUv 1 over New Vork C.lanll J<Od u 1'1> ove< Pnllo<Hto111a Wa•ntnvton 4 Q)>tr .-:Grffn Bev COLLEGE I. Nebruka 20 over xMluourl 7 Tua• 10 over •A.rllansu l Norrh Cerollne 16 over xNorln Caro· llna srete • aWrst Vlrolnla 13 over Vlrolnla l t Cll S Auburn 14 over xGeorola Teen 6 Ohio srare 31 > over xllllnols I F 1orlda Is Idle 8 Georgra 17 , ovtr •VanJerblll 9 sArl1ona 2• over Oreoun 10 Miami. Fla . 12 over xMlnln lool S1are II AlaDamt 13 over xTenneuee 12 SMU IS Idle IJ •M1ch1oan •• Norrhwesrern, no ooo• 14 Alowa 19 over Purout IS Oklahorrla 8 over A:Oktanom• Slate 16 Morvlond 16' • over xWalle Forrs1 II •Wasn•nvron 17 over Sronforo ~ Arizona Sl•I• I ' over •USC 19 allltn01> J , under Ollio Slalt 10 •B'ltU v• New Mexico. no OOCI\ w-<ienole• home IHm From Harrah'• R-5-1"1 Boole NFL standlll9S MATIONALCON,ERENCE Wtll W L T P'ct. P'F P'A Ram• 2 0 667 us 104 New Orlean\ San F ranclsco Allan la 2 o 667 1'S 173 1 0 .661 111 109 2 • 0 .333 "' Ill Mln,,.sota Grten BaY Chicago OtlrO•I TamPa Bav Ctnlral 4 1 0 ) J 0 2 4 0 , 4 0 0 • 0 Eut 667 130 IS3 soo 161 16' )JJ 129 123 333 116 116 000 81 IS2 Delle• 6 0 0 I 000 178 128 Washington S I O 133 182 172 PhllaOtlOhla 4 1 0 667 104 101 NY Glanrs 2 4 O 333 Ui7 Ill St Louts I S 0 167 103 191 AMERICAN CON,ERENCE Raldtr> Denver Sa n Oleoo Stoll le Ken,., Cllv Plll\Ourgt\ Cleveteno C1nclnnarl Hou"on Walt S I 0 ) J 0 ) J 0 3 J 0 2 4 0 c""".i 2 0 7 0 ~ 0 0 6 0 EHi '3J 1'5 94 soo .. 100 soo 170 11' soo 126 122 333 107 106 667 139 llS 661 Ill 11S 167 91 122 000 109 174 Banlmore 4 1 O 667 130 12s Buttalo 4 2 O 661 I I• 123 NV Jell J 3 0 .SOO 132 113 Miami J 3 0 .SOO I 16 112 New Enoland 2 • 0 333 118 I« Sundav'• Game• Allan111 al Ram• R•ld9r• •• Stttlle (Channel • II I pm , Miami at New Vorlt. Jen Houston •I Mln,,.sore San Froncl.co al New Orleans (Cflennel 7 a r 10 a m J SI Louis er T emoa Bev Sen Oteoo er New EnvlenCI Cn1caoo or Detroit Cltvelana at Plll•bur11fl BuHato ar Bt lllmort C1nc1nna ll ar Denver NY G1•nn er l(an•u Cilv Pnllaoetphla er 0 •118' Mondav'i Gtme wasn1no1on al Green Bev (Cnt nnel 7 at 6 p,.,, 1 Collt9t rank Inv\ AP TOP 20 I NtDra••• ISSI 6·0•0 I 19S 1 Tues ISi •·O·O I, 144 J Norrn Caronna 6·0·0 1,014 ; We.I Vlrg1n1a S·O·O 91) S AuDurn 4 · 1-0 166 oon.o S••t«' •·I o 1161 1 FtoriOI S·O· I 136 I Georola 4-0-1 12S 9 Arizona S·O· I 102 10 Miami, FIA S· l·O 600 11 Alabama 4· l·O SH 12.So MtlhOOl\I S·O·O 5'3 I) Micn1gan 4·1-0 SIS H Iowa 4·1·0 411> 1S Ol<tenoma 3·2·0 31' 16 Marvland 4·1·0 277 II Wu nlnvton 4· 1 ·0 246 11 Arizona Sralt 3·0· 1 1'5 19111inols 4·1·0 2:09 20.B<ICl!lem Young •· 1·0 96 CGIM9t footbel s~le SATURDAY'S G.AMES WEST Arf1ona Sr ~' use et LA Cotl••um ti.JO om ) UCLA el W8'nlno1on St Cat Slele Fullerton at San JoH St . n Orevon St el Caflfornle (Ctiannt l 2 11 3 30 om.I Stanford •' w .. r.1n11ron Lono Beacfl Sr al Peclfle. n Cet POiy SLO ar Cel Start Nortnrlove. n Hewell ar Nevada Lat VevH UC Davis ol San1a Clare (hlCO SI el Sonotno $1 HumbolOI St el Portland SI St Marv's er San Fr1nctlco SI ROCKIES Ortoon et Arizona New Mulco ar BVU San Oftgo SI. ar CoioreClo SI. Fretno St er Monlena Sr. Wvomlno er Ulan Te•H El PHO el Air Foret Boh• St al Ulall SI Ora•• er New M•11lco SI Idaho or Weber St • n Norrnern Arllona ar ICleho St , 11 Nevada Reno 11 Montene SOUTHWEST Toll at Arllanst• Tuu A&M et Bavlor, n Mlu lu lppl er TCU O~renoma al Ol<lanome SI lllce er Tues Tech, n Loul\lene Tech al ArkeniH Sr n lllino1• sr a1 Tuln . n Lamor ar Ton·Arllnoron MIDWEST NtDra ... • ar Missouri (Channtl I ar 12 ~ om) Kansas SI al KenH • Colorooo ar lowe St Ohio SI ., tlllnol• M1cnto11n Sr er lnCllano Purdue el lowt Nor1nwes1ern al M>enl111n WIKonstn al Minn.sole "rmv ar Norrt Dame Btll St er Kent St 8owllng Gretn 11 Wurern Michigan Centr•t Mlchlo1n ar Onlo U Northern llllnoll 11 Eutern Mlcllloan Mlem(, Onfo er TOltCIO • SOUTH Alabama •I Tennatlft ,lluourn el Gtorola Tech Cincinnati al FlorlCI• St • n CltmlOn er Dull• Georgia ar l/andtrblll Ken1ucllv e t LSU, II Pill t i Loullvllle. n Marvlend er Wake FOft\I Sou1nern Mlu lu lool al Mtmllflla $1 • n Miami, Fla a1 Mlnln lool SI Nortll Caronna ti Nortll Cargllr>a $1 VMI at VlrOllll• sw Loul1t1na 11 Tul•nt vtrolnla Teen et Wttl Virginia Norin Ttlll SI I I McN"lf s1. Jef'ntl MaCllton el Wlllla m t. Merv 5outll Caroll"I 11 Oavkhon F urman at Wttrtrn CarOllNI, n NICllOMI SI •• NE L.Oul•l•na •AST PtM $1, 81 hreCUlf Nov al Prine.Ion CorneN et Brown COlg•I• er Rutvera COlumDI• ,, Vele CIH'lnecflcur •' Motv Crou Oar1mou111 at Harvtro EHi CerOllna al ftmjlle L.afavelle al Ptnn Lt llloll et New Htmo•hlre ~Ina 11 MenaclluMll• Rlltdt Island t i k slOll U Hletl &cMef ~ <• .. met 111 1110 llf\lttl IWIM) THUA•OA't' ..taa VltW L .. _ 4 It Toro "h Coslt Mell tr NtwPOtl Hef llOf • a •• Futile effort Philadelphia's Sixto Lezcano climbs the wall as Baltimore's Jim Dwyer homers in firsl inning of World Serie opener Tuesday. StOclle~ck vi Unlvtrsflv al Irvine Ctntu"' Ltaeue T u•lln vs VIiia Perk ar El MOdtna Emt>lra LNtue Cvortu v• El Ooraoo ar Vatencle Of'a,,.. LNtue Wrsrern vs. S.venne el Le Palma Park 'RIOAY SN View LNtue Esroncla II Newoorl HerbOr SvnNt LMtue Hun1lngfon Buc11 "' ECll•on ar Oun~ Co8'1 ColltGt Founlaln Valley at Wrslmln\ltr Ocean View v\, M1rlne er HunllnQton Bttcll S.Ulll CMtt LM- Mln •on Vlt oO 11 Ceot•trano Valtt• Dana Hiiis vs WOOClotrove al Irvine Sen Clemente •• Laouna Hiiis at Mru •on V+eto A""'u' LNeu• Meter Oet el Serre Servile "' SI Paul er Cerrllo• Coneoe P•u• X at Blsnoo Amer Ctnturv Le•- Oranue n Cenvon at El Mootna El MOdt na •• Sanle ""• Valley al Sanla Ana Slaolum Same Ana •• Foo1n111 er T u\lln Emolrt LHeue O(artll• vs Elotranta 11 Vattncle t..ennedv vs Loera t i La Petma Park G1rde!I Gr ... t Ltaeue Sonllego at La Qvinla Rancno Alamlro• •• Lo• "m1go• ar Geroen Grove On1199 League Anaheim vs Meonolla at W"ltrll Valencia et Bru·Ollnde ,,...way LM- Bu.na Perlt. vs Sunnv Hlnl et Buena Part.. Sonore Vi Trov ar Fullefton Fulltrron el La Habra Non·laatue Laguna 8eecn al .Alu cadaro tll SATURDAY SN Vlaw LMtue trvtne Vi. Coront Clel MU al Ntwoort Har Dor GarcNfl G,....,e LNtue Garden Grovt el Botw Grar>Cle Empire LM9Ue Pacifica ., LOl Al1milOl I I Wtlltrn HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS Sea View Lueu• Corona Cltl Mar Newoorl Harbor Co"• ~s• E t Toro SaCICllel>eck E111ncle Unlversllv lrvln• Laaeut W LT 2 0 0 1 0 0 I I 0 1 I 0 I I 0 0 I I 0 1 I 0 , 0 SunMt LN9Ut Fountain Vall" H11n1lno1on Beach Edison Marina Wt\lmrn\l~r OcH n View ..... _ WLT 0 0 0 0 0 0 .o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Souttl Coast LH9Ut CePl•lreno V911ev Mlu lon Vlt lo VllOOODrldoe Laguna Hin• Laguno B11cn Dane Hiiis San C1emen1t L.aaeue WLT 2 0 0 1 0 0 I I 0 I I 0 0 I 0 0 I 0 0 I 0 °"° ......... Ovwt• W LT s 0 0 l I I ) , 0 2 ) 0 I 4 0 1 ' I J I 1 , J 0 OY«al WLT • I 0 4 I 0 1 1 I I J I ) 2 0 I • 0 0v .... W L. T J 2 0 J , 0 ) 2 0 l l 0 I l 0 0 4 0 ' 3 0 DAVEY'S LOCICalll (....._, ... di) -N anoltf•. IS vtllowtln tuna,,, llllolart tun•, I wnll• H• ban. ' velfowlell, 1• roct< fl•I!, 31 bonito, 9 calko ban. 16 llnCI btu. a:io maekttel OAMA WHAlt' -1:16 anolert. ~ ban. 27 llOnUo. 2 ytflOWtall. 7 rack fllll, 283 mackerel. 1S thffosl\ffO, 7 teufOln. 11 •kll)llCll IUM, U yfltowlfn lliflt H&M L.~MOINO lltll D .... I -1lS 1n11lef\ 144 Ytllowfln lull•, 11J •kloltcll 1una . 2t vtllowte fl NHL C~IELL CONPEltlNCE Sm~ Olvlllefl W L T P'tl Eomonton J 0 0 6 Vancouver , 7 0 4 C11oarv I 0 I J Wlnnloeg 0 1 2 2 IC ..... 0 J 1 1 Nani\ DIVtllen Sr LOUI\ ) I 0 Cmco110 7 I 0 Toronto ' , 0 M inne lot a 0 1 I OttrO•I 0 7 I I WALES CONFERENCE Patrlclt DMlMll NY Aonger\ • 0 0 • Pn11ao&ton1a 3 0 0 • NV'''" J 1 0 6 New Jtr\tY 1 1 0 2 Wasntnoron 0 J 0 0 P111i11uron 0 J 0 0 Adam\ OMu.n Bo••on 2 I 0 4 BUltalo 2 I 0 • Quet>ec 2 2 0 4 Monrreal fl 1 7 0 2 Harlloro 1 2 0 2 Tundlty'• SC.et NY l•laneltrs S, l(lflet 2 SI LOU•• ). Vt ncouver 2 T.....,,I', Gamet Wlnnloeg at P1111ouron 8uHalO ar TOfonto Vancouver al Chicago Calgerv 11 Mlnnuore Oelrolr al Edmonton TiwrMllV'l G-ll,.,., al SI LOUll . n Monlrtal 11 Bolton, n Queoec •' H1rlfO'CI, n Washlnglon er NY R1no•r., n Wlnnlot9 at Phllao.1onte. n lalandtn S, Klnft 2 Sc-llY P.n.cll GP 17 n 6 13 9 IS 11 14 IS I.) 17 II 23 ' 10 s 16 12 23 13 • GA 13 21 • IS ,. 10 11 15 11 11 s s 20 12 17 II • u 20 11 17 L .. A....... 0 0 2-2 NY lllanden l I 2-S ,trll ""*' 1 New Yori... Glllle• 1 tGorlno. Gilbert), 3'2&. 2, New York, MttrlCI<. I (Lengtvln, Tontlll). 6'09 Pt11elllts-Nlcno11•. LA. I 11; Langevin, NY, 1'02. La,,.. NV, 11'?2, Nvsrrom NY, llAI St<end ""*' J New Yor~. Ktllur 2 (Po1vln. Trotlfer), 17·'3 (PP) Penellfe•-Potvin, NY, 9:19. Heidi, LA, 1?:21, NlchOllS, LA, 19:•0. Third P'arled •.New York, ToMlll I (Potvin, Ptrrlonl. I OJ (PP) S Lot Al>Qeltt, Fo~ (Nlct>olls), J 2S 6 Lo• "ngetes, Simmer. I 14 7 Ntw York. Bourne '3, 12 It Ohl Penal· Hes-~rlcl• .. NY. 11 25 Sno1' on Goal-LO\ An9•1t• 1J·t · 12-34. New York l-14·14-35 C.oalle•-Lo• "ngern, Lenard New Yor,. Smith "-lS,ISO • .>'-• Wtm.n'• v•Vbal HIGH SCHOOL S-LNtvt wu1mln•ttr Cit! Edl•on. 12· IS 1S·6, IS J, 6·1S. lS·I Marina Clel Hufllll!Olon llHcll, IS· 10, 15·2, l ·U, IS·IO Founltln Vtlltv Cltl Oaan View. IS-I, IS·t, IS·I SN vi.,w 1.M9Ut Corona del ~r Cltf. N.woor1 MerbOr, IJ--11, 16·14, IS·ll. Irvine Cltl El T~o. 6•U, 1S·2, lS•ll, 1S·7 Aca-.mv ~ Ntwoorl Chrlslltn Off. Lll>trlY Cllrllfien. IS·O. U ·l, 15•4 TuetcllV'I tt'IMectlem IA$llAU. MalleMI L-MONTRE"L l!XP'.,S-Addect Ruu Nl•on ro tne cOKlllnt uaH $l LOUIS CAlllDINALS-Ntmtcl Mlkt ROtfkt °'""'"° coecn. ClluCll Hlllef men· eoer of Jol\rlson Cllv Of lllt "-~nten Luoue o.-101111te1 Hub Kfltlt, eoecn. ~ rttulonmenr at.M(ITIAL..L N ................ A•Mtlellell WASHINGTON IULLETS-Srtneo Jeff Maion.. ouarci POOTIALL N ....... ,.._..L....,_ HOUSTON OIL.Ellt~N•med (hUC1' Srudlev need coacn Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 03 CdM takes over Sea View lead Corona del Mar dld it the hard way, coming from behind in each of ita three games, but prevailed over Newport Harbor, 15-12, 16-14, 15-11, Tuesday in a Sea View ~gue women's volleyball mat.ch. The Sea Kings assumed sole possession of first place with a 7-0 loop mark. while dropping New- port into second at 6-1. The second game was the key to the victoey as C4M trailed 14 -13 when Cristy Moiso preserved the game by putting the ball away on a side out. The Sea Kings then put the game away by quickly getting the next three points. In the final game, CdM was down 11 -8 before Kara McGuin- ness served seven straight win- ners to cl08e out the match. Brooke Harrington also played well for the Sea Kings. In another Sea View League battle, Irvine rallied for a 6-15, 15-2, 15-11, 15-7 verdict over El Toro. The win put the Vaqueros in third place at 5-2-Middle blocker Elaina eruor back-court specialist Wendy Martin played well for Irvine. Westminster maintained its grip on first place in the Sunset League.while Marina and Foun- tain Valley prepared themselves for Thursday's meeting for sec- ond place. Westminster outlasted Edison. 12-15, 15-6, 15-7, 6-15, 15-8 be- hind the play of Jackie Mendez, Melodie Heximer and sophomore middle blocker Sabrina Dennis. who served for 25 points. VOLLEYBALL Westminster (3-0 in league play) trailed 2-0 in the decisive fifth game before going on a spurt of 12 of the following 14 polnts. Playing weU for Edison (1 -2) was setter Erin Tomblin and outside hitter Laura Engdall. who provided anexcellent servMg match for the Chargers. Marina stopped Huntington Beach. 15·10, 15-12, 3-15, 15-10, as Renee Robitaille gave the Vik· ings a clutch performance, es- pecially in the late stages. Marina led 10-1 in the final game before the Oilers came back to close the deficit to 12~10. Rob- itaille served the 14th point and on the final play of the match, saved a ball from going out of bounds. getting the ball back into play, and Marina eventually won the point. Margo Kuester had 11 kills for the Vikings, despite sitting out most of the fourth game with a sore shoulder. Fountain Valley, led by junior outside hitter Amanda Tavoularis who had seven kills. stopped Ocean View, 15-8, 15-9, 15-8. Also instrumental in the win was junior hitter Teri Newman. Newport Christian continued its domination of the Academy League with a 15·0, 15-1, 15-4 romp over Liberty Christian. Seniors Chris Yearley and Stella Berkebile helped Newport Christian improve to 4-0 in league play and 5-0 overall NEWPORT'S BRAZAS • • a From Page 01 And, oh yes. not to be forgotten is his performance of last week in which he rushed for 287 yards (on 22 carries) and croosed the goal line four times in Newport's 52-0 thrashing of Irvine. Not to shabby for the one-time gangling freshman who was so unimpressive o ne coach told Giddings three years back: "He'll never be a football player." Now, not only isn't the 6-3, 211 pounder a player. he has colleges drooling over him -both as a running back and linebacker. "l don't know anybody that hasn't inquired about him," of- fered Giddings. "We're not going to do anything, though. or make any decisions, until after the season." At that time, Ban.as' choit'e wiU be a difficult one. "He's just going to have to make a decision which is going to have more impact -a linebacker or a running back . A lot will depend on how the college wants to fit him," said Giddings. ''De- spite the fact my business is evaluating, I'll just have to see how he goes. If it was me, I'd probably recruit him as a running back and then see how I'd do with the rest of my recruits." Brazas is equally noncom- mital, although he says he's be- coming more aware of his instincts as a runner. "I'm just starting now to get a feel for defenses and how they're moving and where their weak- nesses are," he said. "Last week everything seemed to click. I started doing things instinctively. "To me. it just makes so much sense to know where the next tackler is going to be even if you don't see him. I think that's what makes a good running back." And just where does Brazas think he fits in among tha;e "good" running backs? "l don't really know how good I can be, although Coach Giddings told me awhile ago I'd be going to college on a scholarship. He told me, 'You can'tdo asbadas it would take not to go,"' he answered with a trace of a smile. "Coach never had a doubt how good I could be. He told me once he thought I was going to be a great player . . . and that's something I never thought alter my freshman year." ANTEATERS TOUGH • • • From Page 0 1 In other words, rather than sitting back in zone, a UCI trademark of the past, the Ant· eaters are going to become an extremely aggressive, overplay type of man-to-man squad. "That doesn't mean we're going to pressure all over the court. And, yes, we expect to get burned at times. But I feel this is the only way we can get the tempo we want," says Mulligan. "We can't do that sitting in a zone." As for an early starting lineup. only two positions are set - McDonald's at one forward and Thornton's in the post. The other three are up for grabs with a number of competitive battles anticipated. Murphy and Grand- ison, both sophomores, will battle IMAGE • • • From Page 01 that someone, somewhere (outside of my own tight little circle) Is on my side. The.re's no such animal loose when it comes to Capo. What's the answer? Well. El Toro moves lnt.o the South Coast Leagueln 1984,and tha\'sa bonus. The Couga.n will have to get up for two league gamee rather than one. Now If we could juat get Ted Mullen and Foothill, Bob Letrter and El Modena, Mlke Giddings and Newport Harbor and Dave Holland and Corona del Mar roped In the South Coast Leque, too, there would, I auarantee, be no mo,.. 1tortea about the run-it-up C.ol.lgan. * * * STATISTIC OF THE WEEK -Newport Harbor'• peatna game again.It lrv1ne: One compJ~­ tion for minus four y&rdl tn six attempta. The•retult? A ~2-0 victory for Newport Hubor. Rhodes for the No. 2 forward, while Lee. Johnson and Lank.ford will take on Turner for the two guard spots.· Mulligan says the latter will probably be the fiercest. It should be noted. too. that the Anteaters will have 14 players on the floor when practice opens at I 0 a.m. Saturday of which onJy 12 will be chosen. Two players, though, are having academic problems which may solve that predicament. Rick Ciaccio, in- cident.ally. who red-shirted last year, broke his wrist workiJl8 out last week and is expected to be sidelined anywhere from one-to-three weeks . * KEVIN MAGEE UPDATE: The two-time UCI All-American. who is t.rying to hook on with the Phoenix Suns. is not having an easy lime of things. In the Suns' opener Saturday against Bost.on, Magee. tn eight mlnutes of playing time, had two pointa (on 1 of 3 Crom the field), 3 rebounds, two fo\.lls and four turnovers. In the team's second game Monday against the Celtics, the 6·8 forward scored 8 potnta (3 of 3 from the CieJd; 2 of 2 from the free throw line), had 3 rebounds, two foula and 0 turnovers in 10 mlnutes of playing time. M•gee's toughest obstacle, however, is numbers. With James Edwards starting at center with Rick Robey a." his backup, and Maurice Lucas st.a.rti"i at power forward with Alvln Adams as his backup, Magee ia OghUna Alvln Scott <• slx.yur veteran) and Charles Pittman, who spe.nt the last half of the wuon with the Suni. for the fifth, and final o~nlng between°"*. pmitJona. The Suns hav thtte more roed games thls weekend bef~ Coach 'John MecLeod "'*ket h.la final decl&Jon. Stay tunei . . . .. D .a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 President's Cup Joe Johnston of Newport Beach dis- plays tro phy a fter h e defeated Bruce Cofe r in rece nt tourney ot Irvi ne Coast CC. BUllETll BOARD Smaaquetbllll tourney The flret Senior Olymplct SmacqlHltball l ournement will be held Saturday and Sunday at the llndborg Racquet Club, 18182 Gothard St., In Huntington Beach. Smacquetball 11 a court 1port played with two high-Impact re1l11ant nylon racquets. A racquet 11 atrapped to Heh hand with Velcro fastener•. Tiie aport la a crou between hand· bell and racquelball. Scheduled are men's and women's alnglea and mh<ed dcx.iblea competition In •Ix ege brackete beginning at 25-29 and ending at 70-and-over. First through thlrd-plaoe llnl1hara wlll re- ceive medals. All entrants wlll receive a partici- pation patch. Entry tee la $7 for singles and S 10 for doubles end mixed doubles. For more information, phone 898-2054. Bleyele raees The Riverside ·Centennial Mission Inn Cen- tury bike races wlll be lleld Sunday, Nov. 13. Registration begins at 6 a.m. and rides of 100, 50 and 25 miles are scheduled to begin at 7:30 a.m. Starting site Is at 12th and Lime In Riverside Finish Is at the Mission Inn at 7th and Main Trophies will go to first-place finishers In all age categories. Aiders are encouraged to wear helmets. Fees are $4 tor singles and $8 for tandems lor the 25-mlle loop: $6 and S 12 for the 50-mlle loop: and S8 and S 16 lor the 100-mlle loop. Checks or money orders can be made out to the Rl11erslde Blcycle Club and mall to James Watrous. 3008 Floral Ave .. Riverside. 92507. For more Information. phone 686-7539 lualor penU.tltlon Tlckele art on tale lor the 1983 Junior World MOClern Pentathlon acheduled to begin Satur- day and continua through Tue1day at Coto de Can. The cempatltlon feature& pentathaletaa aget 16-21 The pentathlon conalata of five even ta over four daya, The avant a are riding an unfamlllar hOrM Olltlf a pre-tel obltacla ccx.irse, a 300-meter rrMltyte awlm, epee tenc- lng, lhootlng a .22 callbfar platOI over a 25-meter range and running a 4,000-metar cro111 country race. ' Compatlllon begln1 with the equestrian event Saturday et 10 a.m. Fencing takes place at 8 a.m. Sunday. Swimming wlll be held et HerUage P1rk In Irvine Monday at 4 p.m. The two final eventa return to Coto de Caza Tuelday beginning wtth •hooting 11 9 e.m. end cro11 country run at 4 p.m. Tlcketa are S5 par day or $15 for all four days. Ticket• era avalleble et Tlcketron outlets. Slngle event tickets are available at Coto de Caza. For more Information, phone ~6·7408. Bas ketball ellnle Fullerton College will hold Its second annual basketball coaching cllnic Tuesday trom 6:30-9 p.m. In the school gym UC trvlne Coach Biii Mulligan and assistant Herb U11aey will Join Fullel'ton Coach Robert See and Cal State Fullerton player Leon Wood lor the cllnlc. which la free of charge. The clinic la open to all Interested persona. For addlllonal Information. phone 871-8000. Sooners kick off Dupree NORMAN, Okla. (AP) -Marcus Dupree, her- alded before the 1983 '.l;eason as a leadmg can- 'didate for the Heisman ~rophy, has no\ been seen for two days and is officially off the Univer- sity of Oklahoma foot- ball team, The As- sociated Press learned today. Oklahoma Coach Barry Switzer told The AP that Dupree, a 6-3, 235-pound sophomore tailback, has not been seen or heard from since the Sooners' 28-16 loss lo Texas last Saturday "I don't know where he is. His family doesn't know where h e is. As of now, he's off the team," Switzer said. "He's prob- ably off hiding, in seclusion somewher e with his friends. I don't know." Dupree had been given perrmssion to visit n1s family in Philadel- phia, Miss., after the Texas game ln Dallas, FICTITIOUl llU ... la NAll1I If A,....,. Trie followtng ~ llf• O°"'< bu .. ,,.. ... LITTl.E CAESAR'S PIZZA, tt-4 1 Vortnown. Huntington e.a.ctl, CA 92M8 T-N-T Mgm1 Cotpe>r•tlo(I. No. 3 Mlch!Qan, Mlnneeota. California. 32' ~bury Or .. 0.Yllon. Mtc;hlgan 48433 Lyl9 T, Sher<>At, 18700 Mlll'llhen' St .. Founlaln \/alley. CA. 92708 Thia bu.alneee la conducted by: • corpe>r•Uon. L yte T. Sheto.lol Thia atal-t wu fltec:t )llltll the County Clerk of Orange County or Sept. 23, 1983. ,UllOQ Publlthed Ofange COUI Dall) Piiot Sept. 28. Oc:1 6, 12, 19, 1983. 5337-83 Pl8JC NOTICE '1CmtoUa M.ll*IH NAMI a'TATEMINT The IOltowlng pereona are doing butlnHSU: HEBREWS FOUR-TWELVE. 3222 Oc:Mn 8tvd . Co<ona del M111. CA. 92625 Richard WlllOn. 15466 Klamlcttt. Apple Valley, CA. 92307 011110 Aloe, 756 Main St .. Hunt-ington Beach. CA 92648 Montie ~. Q111dner, 18211 Bayl>er· ry Way, trvlne. CA. 92715 Tony Z.et>ee. 13 Mountain Ro .. Llnthlcun, MO 21090 Thia bullneu Is conoucted by: a limited partner.hip Mont.19 G111dner This atalement WU tlled wllh the Counry Clerk ol Orange County on Sept 15, 1983. f22U11 Pubttahed Orange Cou1 Dally Piiot Sept 21. 28, Oct 5. 12. 1983 5245·83 fltml.IC NOTICC '1CTmoua ..,.,.. .. NAME aT A TDlll!NT The tOllOwing person• are doing bullnMSU. Prep football players of the week but did not return for practice Monday. His mother. Cella Dupree Connors. said she had not heard from her son since Saturday, when he was to fly from Dallas to Mis&ssippi. CHEVRON PROPERTY GROUP. Sult• • 177. 1813 Newport Blvd., Newpot1 Beach. CA. 92663 Steven R Smith. Suite 11 177. 1813 New1)0<'I Blvd .. Newport a.acit. CA. 92663 T O'Netl, Suite 11177. 1813 N--port BtvO.. Newport 8"ctt, CA 92663 Allen Ellis, Ocean View Ellis, a 169-pound senior noseguard, graded out over 85 percent efficiency by his coaches after coming back from a hamstring injury. In what was otherwise a very disappointing performance by the Seahawks against Western, Ellis stoodout. Eric Lawton, Hunllogton Beacb Lawton, a first team All-Sunset League quar- terback in 1982, led the Oilers to a 49-35 win over Serra with a 9-for-15 perfonnance for 164 yards and 2 TDs. He has completed 49 of 98 for 805 yards and 8 TDs in five games with just two interceptions. Chip Rish, Marina A junior and the fastest player in the Sunset League. Rish caught three passes for 114 yards, including a 60-yard. TD reception. He has scored four touchdowns for Marina in five games, which includes 17 r«eptions for 420 yards. Dave Swigart, Fountain Valley Andy SloclaJr, Edison A standout at offensive tack.le and at linebacker (where he w as or iginally as a junior), the 6-5, 240-pound senior was at the point of attack on two touchdown runs and was in on five tackles and a quarterback sack in Edison's21-7 winoverMaterDei. Peter Stoughton, Corona del Mar A 6-0, 175-pound senior strong safety. Stoughton recorded six unassisted tackles in the off-tackle hole last week in the Sea Kings' 20-0 victory over El Toro. Scot Hagey, Costa Mesa The Mustangs' 6-1. 180-pound quarterback passed for 57 yards and ran for 53 in Costa Mesa's 21-13 setback to Saddleback. Tom Dobbs, Univer sity A 6-2, 190-pound juruor defensive tackle, Dobbs "did JUSt about everything," says Uru Coach Rick Curtis. S pecifically, Dobbs had six unassisted tackles, six assists and one sack in a 10-10 tie with Estancia. . A 185-pound junior . the Barons' tailback netted 127 yards on 30 carries in a 16-11 victory over Long Beach Poly. For the season he has 346 ,Yards on 90 carries. in addition to 7 receptions for 96 yards. , , Jim O'Donnell, Laguna Beach The junior quarterback scored the t\rtists' lone touchdown in a 13-7 loss to Dana Hills. "He was our third-string quarterback, but I was impressed with the way he took charge," said Coach Denrus Haryung. "His touchdown run (5 yards) was JUSt a super effort." Tim Valenzuela, Westminster Valenzuela, a two-year starter in combination with quarterback Tim Hanson. caught three passes for 26 yards and ran twke for 34 yards, in addition to some superb blocking. according to h is coach, Jim O 'Hara Revolutionary new boat Popeyes competes in Warmington Grand Prix By ALMON LOCKABEY Dellf ,._. ....-.. Wr1"< It is said thal a boat is a large hole In the water, surrounded by wood, fiberglass or aluminum. into which you pour money . If that be the case, there wil\ be a larger hole in ,the water, surrounded by aluminum, into which a lot of money has been poured and may change the face of the already dangerous and exciting sport of offshore power boat racing when the Warmington Grand Prix gets under way Sunday. The revolutionary new boat, labeled Popeyes Pepsi Challenger, will be seen in its fourth outing in Class l of the Bud Warmington International Grand Prix offshore power boat race starting and finishing o ff the Newport Pier Sunday. In the past, offshore power boat racers have been in the 35-40-foot range and capable of speeds in the open ocean of up to 100 mph. Popeyes IS a 50-footer said to be capable of speeds of over 120 miles per hour if seas are just right. The giant craft is powered by four engines developing more than 2,800 horsepower, according to owner-driver A1 Cooeland. At th.lS year's Coral Gables Challenge Cup in the resort city or Saugatuck, Mich., Popeyes, on her maiden outing, was leading the pack only to fall back : due todrivetrain problems inidway through the race. More problems at the next offshore event out of Northport, M ich . over the Labor Day weekend U.S. expected to play Argentina LONDON (AP) -The United St.ates will likely get a retWTI crack at Argentina ln the 1984 Davis Cup tournament and a chance to aver1ge thia year's defeat. The countries are paired together again In the ll'(.'Ond round, provided they get through their first-round matches. But thla time the United St.ates will be at home and will have the choice of court. The Americana were kn.ocked out of the compelltlon thls year In Buenos A1rei by Argentinr •W'S Guillermo Vllaa and Joee Luis Clerc. Jn the first ro1md of the World Oroup Feb. 24·26, the top division of the tournament, Argentina has to vlalt West Geno.any and the United States l.s at Romania. The last time the U.S . team vaited RomAnla fora Davia Cup meeting wu for the stormy a.nd argument-riddled final o f 1972, when Stan Smith led the Americans to a 3·2 victory againat Ion Tiriac and Tiie Naai.... Tlriac wu 1UJ~nded afterward ~uae o( lnddenf4.~n hi.a deciaive slntJes againat Smith: which thf' American won prevented Popeyes from performing up to her peak, but in York City, P opeyes brought home the checkered flag. "We were elated," said Copeland. "Not just because we won, but because we were able to prove that our boat was not just an experiment doomed to fail'-'re· It worked. And we are confident this is the way to go in the future." The success of Popeyes may weU signal a turnaround in offshore racing as' more teams look to the new breed of "superboats." At least two more of these giants are under construction and one is reportedly being readied for the Warmington Grand Prue. "Popeyes will be there for certain," said Copeland. "We look forward to competition," says Copeland, "and if we were norconfident the big boats would help the sport, we would not have gone to the expense of building one ." Confidence in the "superboats" is echoed by long-time boat builder, driver and design engineer Howard Arneson who has been one or the sport's most active supporters and Innovators over the years. His Arneson Drive System has brought many teams the checkered flag. "The big boats might mean the survival of the sport In the long run," says Arneson. "They may be more expensive to build, but they should be more reliable and Jess expensive to maintain over a racing season because the hulls and drive systems won't have to run on the edge or destruction," Popeyes will be in a covey of 40 offshore races in live classes which will be arriving for race registration at Newport Dunes Aquatic Park Thurs- day. The boat will be on display there until Sunday. Edison third at Stanford run STANFORD -The Edllon High women's cross country team finilhed thlrd overall this put weekend in the P""tigjous Stanford Invftat.lonal meet here. The Chargers, In fact, had a shot at a seoond-p~ce finish, but the Chargers' Nleole Ritchot -running in third place -collapeed from exhaustion with less than 50 y&rds remalrung ln the race. The Chargers' Tammy Sn yders flnlaht.'<i I 5th with a 19:35 clocklnf(: teammate Shelly Vander Molen wa.s 25th in 19:5'7; MelanJe Manke wu35th In 20:29 and EdlAOn's Mitch Nadon wu 38th with• 20:40 effort. Other F.dilon flnl1hers Included Colleen McCulley (43rd. 20:52) and Colleen Andreten (76th, 21;42). .. Tustin HJgh won the oornpet.illon. Ron LaBrtola, Macer Del The 5-10, 175-pound defensive back had four tackles, including one at the goal line which preven t.ed F.diaon from acoring in the Monarchs' 21-7 Joss to the Chargers. Lance Neal, lrvloe The 6-1, 190-pound tight end/linebacker had eight tackles in the Vaqueros' 52-0 setback agaiMt Newport Harbor. ''He was the one kid who stood out as far as competing with Newport," said Coach Terry Henigan. Dao Ludwick, Estancia The 5-10, 160-pound senior wide receiver caught three passes for 70 yards, including a 38-yard reception for the F.agles' only touchdown of the game in a 10-10 standoff with University last week. BUI Ru11ell, Woodbridge The 6 -0 , 1 75-pound wide re - "I don't know here he is. All I know is he's mis.sing," Mrs. Connors said. "All I know lS that he went to cat.ch a plane and he never got on it." Mrs. Connors said she has called police and highway patrolmen in an effort to locate her son. This bull,_ le c:onelue1ael Dy a f9'*al pannerlhlp St9'18tl R. Smith Thia stat-I WU flied With the County Clerk of Orange Collnty on Sept 15, t983 nmn P\lblllMO Orange Cout Oalty Piiot Sep\. 21. 28. Oct 5, 12, 1983. ~248-33 Pl8llC NOTICE FK:TITIOUI au .... H NAMI STATl•HT The fOllowlng penon la Ootng bull,,.. .. BULAICE, TRAVEL I 21982 Satoedo, Mlaeion \/lejo, CA 92891 Mary Ann ButrlOe. 21982 Sate.do, Mlseton Viejo. CA 92691 Thia buslnHS II conducle<I by an IOOlvldual. Mary Ann Bui~ Thll atal-t wu llled with the Counry Clerk 01 OfanQll Counry on Sept 15, 1983 "mm Published Orange Cout OaJly Ptlot Sepl 21, 28 Oc:1 5, 12, 1083 5249-83 ''We don't want to rule out the possibility that something simply has happened to him, but he definitely won't play against Oklahoma State (on Saturday)," said Mike Treps, director of sports information at Oklahoma. "As of now, he's simply off the ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t_e_a_m_:_·~~~~~~ i~~~fltml.~-,C~NO-TI-CE~~~ Of ATH NOTICES ceiver/quarterback/defensive back carried the ball six times for 19 yards and caught three passes for 101 in the Warriors' 34-7 loss to Capistn~no Valley FlCTIT10Ult llU ... aa NAMEaTA~ The lollOWing person IS doing WHISENAND bullnns .. GOORGE s ChurcCoh. 611 HeMholroCape MADELCEOIRNMEIERLOUISE 24~ho~~~~lass:;.~~=Ev2:;: . V. WHI ENAND. Ave.. rona del a.r, · Je<emy Sm•th 226 24rh Pf-resident of Newport Beach. 92625 Paci fie View CORMIER, resident of Costa Mesa, c~ 092626 Ca. Pasaed away on October Mortuary directors. Costa Mesa, Ca. Passed Th•• business I• c.onOucled Dy an 9, 1983 He was born Febru----away on October 10 1983. lnalvklual an1 1'6 1913 in BJnnminmnn WELLS · . ' Jefemy Smith ~~ ~"-"0-'" LOR ELLA E WELLS She IS survived by her hus-This statement wu flied With the · Survwed by his · Oc ' band Albert, daughter Lois County Clerk ol OranQll County on wife Loy Changas Whis-passed away on I.Ober ~· Smith of New Jeney, son Sepr 1s. 1983 enand, a daughter Julianna 1983. Resident of Fount.am David JAl't'tues of T xas 2 P"22f:Z27 Smith p nel V•"""~ Valley Ca. Survived by her --, e • Publlthed Ofange Coa.tt Dally and 9. e ~~hil_;: . .ug·~~ son Slanley p Wells grandchildren, sister Piiot Sept 21.28,0c:15,12. 1983. gran"" un:n. r u -. . • Marion Holmes of Massa-5250-83 neraJ aervices will be held daughter-in-law Patncia E. chuaett.s, 2 brothers Roland 1----------- on Wed.needay, October 12, Wells, gra~ddaughters Heraom of New Hampshire fltll.IC NOTICE 1983 al ll:OOAM al The Terri L . Macis'. Sandee R. and Fred Henomof F1orida.1---.:....::.:=..:;..:.;.;;..;.;..;.;;. __ _ Church of Jesus Christ of Victora, TarnD\I C. Weill, Services will be held on ~!A~,J' Latter Day SaJ.nta, 801 grandson Todd G We':b· Wednesday, Octobdr 12, The fotlowtng pereons .,.. dOlnO Dover Dr .. Newport Beach, brother Rex Magee. her w -1983 at l:OOPM at the Pa-bual,_ u : Ca. Intennent at Pacific ter F1orence Rldunond. Ser-cific Vie Chapel with Re IN\/ESTMENT CONCEPTS, 1796 View Memorial Park New vices will be held on Thurs.-Dan J r:.n ff . '"'"' i: · N. Mt. McKtnley Btvd .. OranQ9, CA. port Beach, Ca. Padfl~ Vie~ day, October 13, 19~3 a4 terme:l at oPi::i~oeVie~ 92~ E. F.,.g-. 179& N. Mt Mortuary directors. 1 :OOPM at the Dilday Memorial Park ln lieu of McKinley Blvd., Orange. CA 92&67 Brothers Mortuary Chapel. fl ·~ 'b Lwta Twlll. 6220 Woodat>oto. JORDAN l 1 t at Roose It owen memon oontn u-Anaheim CA 92807 JOAN P. JORDAN. loved ,:;e:::Z Park eeme:'ee lions may be made to the Thie bull*• 11 oonduClec:t by· a and devoted wile of Lee Garderua, Ca. Dl.rec1ed ';;'; American Cancer Sode~.~~~~~~ Paxton Jordon, Jr , Dilday Brothers Mortuary Pacilic View Mortuary di-This ata1ement wu flied with 11M cherished mother of Wendy Talbert and Beach Hun.; rectors. county Clerk ot Ofange County on Mariann Jordon Blades and ington Beach. 842-1711 rtaJC NOTICE Sept 15. 1983 '221t1t Mark Paxton Jordon. Mn. Publlalled Orange Coaal Dally Jordon wu bom August 14, rtaJC NOTICE FICTtTIOUa 8Ul*IH P1io1 Sept 21. 28, Oct. 5, 12, 1983. 1921 in South Shlelda, Eng-NA .. aTATl•NT 5248-83 land and died October IO · 'te~a aua .. H b~°'a~og '*'°" 1• doiog 1-----------Ml98~~~e~~ Beacwill~· ea: The f;:,.,.ngsT~-r::~ doing 27~~T~::.Rl~!d;~N~~;T~~~: __ __;P\lll-=.;;;;l;.;;.C....;NO..;..;;..;TI.;.;CE;..;;._ __ _ en11UntU """vices be bullnMa H Coela M ... CA 92828 '1<:TTTIOUa mu ... aa held a\ 12:3-0PM on Thurs-JUST PHONES OF HUNTINGTON Dawn I( ~tme 2775 Meu ..... aTATHllJfT day, October 13, 1983 al the BEACH, 7tea Edlnoe< Ave . Hunt-V«de E. S-203, Coate MeN, CA The fOltowlng perlOn .. dOlng Co uni Co . lnglon Beach, CA. 92«M7 92828 bullneat ai mm ty ngregauonal Juno 0 . L ... 2388 Btu• Haven Or.. Thi• bulln• .. I• conducted by· an ARABIAN. MEDICAL REFERRAL Church. Corona del Mar. Ca. ROWiand Hts., CA. 91748 lndt\'ldual. AND INFORMATION SERVICES. 6 In lieu of flowen the family Thia business la oonducltk:I by an Dawn K. ~ sim. Almono Tr" Ln., lf'Vlne. CA 112715 requests donations to Pep-l~IWju~ L Thia atatement wH !Med wtth the Anorew Staine Miiier. 8 Almond -• Rid Co liflil · " County Cletl< of Or•llQ9 County on Tr .. Ln .. lrvlne. CA. 92715 pe111unt ge, clo m -Thi• 1tatem9l'lt WH flied with tile S~t 23 1983 Tills bu91MN I• conducted by: •n munlty Congrega tiona I County Clerk ot Ot•nQ9 County on · · · l'22llOI tndlvldual. -:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::-"JSept. 23, 1983 Published Orange Cout 091ty Andrew Blalne Miiiet r " ""·bll Or c '121a11 PllOI Sept 28. OCI 5, 12, 111. 1983 Thia statement WU nieo with the PIERCE BlllOTHERI Hll aROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 6-42-9150 eAL TZ M.f'QllllON IMfTH a TUTHtlL WHTCLIPP CHANL 427 E. 17th St CostaM ... ~6-9371 rACtFIC VllW MHIOAIAL rARI< ~tary Mortuary • Cha~l-Crematory 3500 Pacific View Drive ~port Beacn 644-2700 r-u tt!ed anoe oatt O•lly ss.62-63 County Clerk ot Orange County on !Piiot Sept 28. Oct 6. 12. t9. t983 Sec>t. 15 1983 53~4-83 . l"DDal Pllll.IC NOTICE Publlllhed Orange Coat! Dalty flCTITIOUI .,...... Piiot Sept n 28. OCI 5, 12, 11183. ...-aun•HT sa41-a:i rtaJC NOTICE TM 1011owtno P«'800 hi oc>1n91-----------,1CTmous mu .... H t>u•IMH ••: fltll.tC NOTICE NAME aTAT•M•NT KAREN S. TORRES CO., 208 Col-1---;..;;.;;;.;;.;.;;...;.;.;;..;.;..;.;;;... __ The IOllowlng l*IOll• are Ootng Un• Ave .. BatbOa Island, CA. 92862 FICmM>U• IMlllMSI t>ualnMa.. l(aren Sue Torr.e, :toe Colltn. ..,. .. STATamNT HERITAGE REAL ESTATE Aw .8alb0alllend.CA.92M2 TM tonowtng per90n hi doing ANO/OR HEAIT AGE REAL TORS Thi• ~It condvCltd by. .,.. t>ual,_ aa: ANO/OA HERITAGE REALTY. 278!1 tndlvldual, AJ AVIATION SERVICES, 8126 Waxwing Clrcte, Cotta M .... C/4, Kmtn 8. Tcn'H Kerry lane, Ca.ta Meea, CA 92U8 tH28 Thia 11•1-11 wM tlled with lh9 Alfred J German, 3125 Keny David WaltM' MYflr•, 2785 Waxw-County Clel'k of Ot~ County on ~. Cotti ~. CA. 92828 Ing Clrcl9, Cofl• M .... CA 92828 Sept 23, 11183. Thl1 bu"'*9 It oonductec:t by: 1111 Oll'lld Walttt MYflr• nmu lndMdl.lal. Thie atat~t .., .. flied wllh the Publllhed Of9J199 Coaa1 o.Hy A"rlld J. Germen County Clerk of Ottn~ County on Piiot Sept. 28. Oct. 5, 12. 19, 11183. Thi• 11a1emel\t w•• 111.o with the Sep! 23, 1983. 63-45·8.'\ Counly Cterll ot Of9ng9 County on '221114 Sept. 15 1183. Pub11911«1 ()fenge Cout Deity . ,_ P11ot Sept H. Ocl. 5, 12, 19J_1"3 "8.IC NOTICE Pubtllhecl Ofllfl09 Coeat Delly oa48-M l'tCTl'TIOUI _,..... Ptl018ept 21. 29, Oct !I, 12, tN3 MA• aTATIMmfT 5242-M Thi ·~ '*9009 -doing -PlaJC NOTICE bu91MM • P\llJC NOTICl ~--;..;;,;;~;....;.;.~;;.;:;..---CANNl!AY VILLAGE HAIR1---;..;;.;;;.;;;.--.;.--.-.. __ _ l'ICTmGUI ....... SAi.ON. 2110 ~1 Blvd.. ....... lltCTmoue ..,_. .. .... aun•NT pof1 heoh. CA.·~ ..... HA,....., The loltowlng pereon la doing JOMC>f\IM Oocl1141, 1827 Newpof'I Th9 IOllowlng perlOI\ 11 doing ~ M : 8IVd. Sp. 40. Coela "48M. CA. bvtlntill u : CENTAUR ACADEMY OF t2t27 CHARTERS UNLIMITllO, te1t4 HOFISEMANSHIP. 18 2.2'" Newpof'I Tlll11M1ei-le conckl01.0 by. an Mapt•wOOd Court, Sir Juan 81vd., Sult• 246, C:O.ta M .... CA. lndlvlf\lal. CeplatrlnO. CA 112en .. t2t28 J<>MQhlne Ooclo-l)lrtc Weawr MuntMn, Hlt4 \/t*le Jo Hubbard, 247 Ao. Thie etal""*'I WH 111~ wttll the M•Pl•wood Oourl. Sen Ju•n l-. Coeta M-. CA 12827 County CIWll of 0rllfl09 County °" OIOlllr9nO, CA Ht15 Thie bu11nee1 le oondu¢t~ by. 1W'1 &tot. 23, 1113 'ftlle ~la GOnCluCMd by. WI lndMdual ,_, lndMduel v•i. Hubbatd PublltlMd Ofenge Coelt Oell\ Olr1l w. MunMM • Thie 1t•t~I WM llltd Wiii\ tilt Piiot Sept. H . Oct.&. 12, tt, 1"3 Tillt llatem.nt ... lllild with IN County ci.nc ot Or.,,ae County °"1----------134-1-·8<_.' County CIWll ot OtlnOI County on ..., .. 2a. 1"3 1ei>t. ta, t"3. ,_ Get OREl!N ceen ,_ P\iblllhecl llrtnQe Coul Delly 1 for WHITI elapflenll Pu~ Otellot CoMt Dlilty ' Ptlol8.,t 2,, Oc1 a, 12. 111, 1113. with. Ola.Hied Ad Piiot $4pt. :21. te:Oct. •• ti. 1113 &331-13 Call M2•H11 N40-G I PmUC NOTICE NIUC NOTICC fll8JC NOTIC£ rtalC NOTIC( NIUC NOTICl l'tCTUIOUe .,._.. l'ICTITlOUI llU ... H IUNW COURT PICTmOUI ltU ... aa flCTmOUI ., ..... Mm ITAT'UmNT NAm STATl .. NT -.IUVI ... llATTl"8 N.u. aTATl•NT MA.-8TATl•NT TN lollowlng l*90!1• .,. doing Tri. followlng ptnOn• llll doing .. Ille TN9 fOllOWlng P«eof\9 .,.. dOlng The f~ ~ ere doing ~ M ! t>v91ntiM u : 8TATI °" Ca.NICTICUT butlneM... bu.in.. .. : KLINE SCHOOL. 1209 Oelew.,.. VANGUARD PARTNERS LTD., aGHTH DteTNCT LITTLE CAESAR'S PIZZA, 1182 EIKO MARKET, 14806 .wtfr~ 8trMI, Hunt1no1on BeKll. CA COUMA CEHTER, 881 DoY9f [)five, OMIS" °" NOTtCI Herbor Blvd., eo.1. M-. CA. Road, IMM, CA. 92714 t2t4t 3Wt• 16, Newport BMctt, CA. 8 City Coeta ...... Callf0tnlt 82928 MMlko Mldllue. .... 1 Ponut.ea 8-1 A Kltne, 1209 o.lawllA Vanguard P.,,Ml't Ltd Pllrtn«· September 2t. 18'3 T·H-T MantQel'l'*ll Cotp, Ho. 3, Wey, 8vana Pane, CA. 80$20 Str•t, Huntington BMch, CA. 11\lp )('JI, 881 Dover Ottv., Sulle 15, NTTTION fOR TM Michigan, MlnnetOta, C&11f0tnla. 3 M&ll H. Ojima. 12121 Hu1WOod t2Me Newpot1 heclh, CA. 92ee3 TINllNATION 01' PAMWTAL !Mabury Of., Dtv190l'I. Mlclll04ln, 8tr .. 1, O.ffl\ Grove, CA. 02640 Cheryl DIM, 1209 Delaware Str .. I, Roberto. Smith, 881 Oover Drive, MONT• 48423 Thi• butlneM le oonduc1.0 t>y: • HuntlngtOll S..Oh, CA. 8?$48 Suite 15, Newport BMch, CA. 92863 T-f ..... L~ T SherOlkl, 19700' Merl\ genw.i pennet9f\lp. Thia~ 11 conducted by: 1 Raymond W. OeMott, 881 Dover 9f Pllfl• unllnown St .. Fount.in v.iw;, CA. 92'708 Max tt Ojima, o.nw.i Pllrtlltlf oentral CM1f1Mrlt\lp. Drive. Suite 16, NtlWPOrt BMch. CA. Upon the petition of THE COM· Thlt t>utl,_ It oondue1ed by: e Thll 1tatement ... Ill.cs With the ~Jo., KllM 92fle3 MISSIONER OF CHILOAEN ANO eorporltlon. County Clettl Of Ofengt Counly on T"h611tatemant ... fifed With the Robert 0. Smtih YOUTH SERVICES Mektno the ,.,. Lyle T. SherOllll Sept. 23, 1ee3. County Clertl ot Orange COunly c>11 Thia 1111emen1 wu n1ec1 with the mloatlon of the parental rtgllf1 of the Thlt 1t•t-1 wu llled with the ,..,_ Auo. 29, 1983. County CWll of Orange Couniy on bow named peraon In, her Chlld, County Clwlt Of Orange County Oii PublllMd Ofenge Coatt Delly l"u:.47 Sept. 23, 1883 now • wttd of the COmmluloner Sept 23, 1983. Plto. Sept, 28, Oct. 5, 12, 19. 1983. Publl1hed Orange Co1at Delly f22SIOI lch peUUon wlll IHI ....,.d Oii lhe f'22ACM 6343-83 Pllol Sept. 28, Oct. 5, 12. 19. 1983. Put>llthed Or111ge Cout Dally 24th d•r, of Oetobel IQ83 at 10:00 Put>llalled Orange Cout Dally 538&-83 Piiot Sept. 28, Oct. 5, 12, 19. 1983. 'OIOCk n the IOt• noon, It 11\e Su-Piiot Sept. 28, Ocl. 5, 12, 19, 1983. 5340--83 lor Coun-Juvenlle Mall.,.. 22~ 533g..113 ------------PlllllC NOTICE Mein Street Extentlon In the Clly of P\8JC NOTICE ___ ;...;.;;,,;;,;.;;,..,;.;.;;..;..--. ___ i----... ---1C-NO_T_IC£ ____ Mlddlelown In Mid Olllrlol. It 9P-... .-'".._. no lo and ~no found by the fltB.lC NOTIC( ~·· ACTITIOU• llU..... blCflblng tulhotlty that the •l><>W T.a. No. 1.......,. ...... ITATW.•NT NOTICE Of lmed Tammy MMdt haa gone ' flCTmOUI .,..... NOTIC• °' The follOwlng petWnl Ille doing TtllUITEE'• •ALI 11111 unknown, therefore, .... •T•Tl•NT TMllTll'I IAL.a bulineu u : n October 20, 1983 II 10:30 a.m. ORDERED. That notice or th• The followtng peflOl'tl Ille doing you AM IN Ml'AUL.T UNDI" A PROPERTY BANKERS, 2915 PLANO MORTGAGE SERVICE ring of thlt petition be given by t>ullneu u : DHD Of TtllUtT DATID ~- RedhlU, Ste C.107, Coete Meh, CA. 0 . INC. u Trustee, ot SuCClffaOf bllShlngthlaordetofnotloelnthe JOHNSON, HIGHMAN & llefl,1-UNLll8YOUTAlflAC- 92629 rull .. or Substituted Trustee, of enge Cout Piiot a ,_tpaper DILLARD. 4100 MllCArthuf Btvd., T10N TO l'ROTICT YOUR NOP· Eugene Tnbolet, 8 Rockr<>M way, h1t oertlln Deed of Trust executed •Ying 1 cireulallOf'I of the etty or Suite 360. Newport Beedl. CA. IRTY, IT MAY K IOU> AT A f'U9.. IMM, Ce. 92715 by Dennis E. C1rpenter. a m111rle0 11 M .... onoe • wee11 2 weekl 92UO UC IA.LL• YOU .. IO AN EX- Gary Smith. 1827 Porl Seabourne. man u his sote Ind aep111te prop-lvtlly, commencing tmmecll-St-1111 L JoMaon, 1118 w .. t PLAMATION OF T-.. NAT\Ma OF Newport BNen. CA 92~ rty, u to an undivided YI Interest; tely up0n receipt of Nottce. 7 d1ye Lu Ptlmu Or., Ful"'1on, CA. 82832 THE P9'0CEIDINQI AQAIN8T Euo-ne Trlbolet • Bruce H. Carpenter, 1 alngle man u 111, David R. Htghm1n. 11 w .. 1pon YOU, YOU IHOULD CONTACT /4 Thia 1t1tement wu filed with the to an undivided 'h Interest end Ken-oyce R Haight Avenue, lrvlne, CA. 92714 LAWYl!ll County Cl«t< or Orenge Couniy on nethR.Carpenter.at1nglemenuto l«k Thomu S Olllerd. 27951 On October 28, 1983 11 1:00 P.M Sept. 28. t983. 1n undivided V. Interest, lather and TRUE COPV ATTEST Cuacabel. Mission Viejo, CA. 92692 CENT~AL CAPtT AL CORPOR· F221112 n1. as tenants In common, end roe R Zeeb Thlt t>v91neu 11 conduc:ted by;• ATtON u the duty appointed Pubtllt\ed Orange Coast Deity recorded September 10, 11180 u In-ty Shertfl tor MIOdlesea County general pannerahlp Trull .. undet lltld pursuant to Deed Piiot Oct. 5. 12, t9, 26, 1983 11rurnent "° 11215, of Official Re-Ille of Connec1tcut 01vld R. Highman of Trull recorded on September 8, 5454-83 cords or Orllfl09 County, Celllornll, Eighth Olstrlet Thlt 111tement wu llled with the 1982 u Document No. 82-317295 01 ------------end pursuant to 1h11 C¥teln Notloeipubll•hed Orenge Cout Dally Piiot County Cletlt of Orenge County on Olflclal Records In the office of lhe PllltlC NOTICE ol Oelault and Etee11on to Sell there-1. 5, t2, 1983. Sept. 27. 1983. Recorder of Orenge County, Cell· ------------under recorded June 16, 1983 as 5<491-83 fZll011 lornl1 executed by: MICHAEL E. l'ICTITIOU89UllNl!SI lnstrumentno.83-255898.otOHIClal .,._IC NOTICE JOHNSON, HIGHMAN a FALKNER & NAN C. FALKNER, NAME 8TATl!Ml!HT Records of said County, w111 under !"..-. ~ HUSBAND ANO WIFE WILL SELL The lollowtng peraon la dolng end purwent 10 said Deed ot Trust FIC ............ 'I .u••...,aa AH-ya at Law AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE t>ulloeu ... Mii II publlc luctlon for CISh, • ''""" -Ute *· 4100 MKMh"' IMVd. HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, (pay- ROJAN °ENTERPRISES. 8332 eathlef'1 cheell. or oath equivalent NA• ITATU•NT .... port laMch, CA.~ 1t>kl 11 time of .... In lawful money Arnett Dr .• Huntington Beach. CA. which hu been 1pprolled by the The followtng peraon le doing Published Orenge Coast Dally of the United Stites) 11 Nooh front 92847 ruatae S days prior 10 111le), al The t1neu aa: . Piiot Oet. 5, t2, 19, 26, 1983. entrance to the County CourthouM. Thomu F Pepper• 6332 Arnett 1ront eteps to City Hall. I Civic ENERCALC, 180 Newport Center !5'480·83 700 Civic Center Drive. Wnt, Senti Dr .• Hunttngion BMch: CA. 92&47 center Circle, Brea. CA .. e.11 that Drive, Suite 120, Newport Beach, Ane, CA. 92701 111 right, tltle end Thia boalneu I• conducted by: 1111 right, tllle and Interest conveyed to A. 92880 lnteree\ conveyed to end now held lndlvld al end now l>eld by 11 under said Deed Mlohael Oyer Brooks, 308 fltB.lC NOTICE by 11 under Mild Deed of Trull In the T~ Peppers f Trust In lhe property sltueled In lbrlltet Ave., Coall M ... , CA property lltueted In .. Id County. Thia ateternent wu ftled with the llld Counly and Stile dete:rlbed u : 2628 . f1CTTTIOUI _,..... Cllltomla deeetiblng the land ther&- COunty Clerk of Cringe County on P111cel 7 as thown Oii e P1rcel Map This business It conducted by: NAME aTAn•NT In: Sept. 28, 1983. ftled In Book 111, Pagee 10 and 11 of lndlv1dual. The loltowlng peraon 11 doing Lot 9 of Tract No. 9788, In the City f'22S115 P1tcef Mepa, In the Office of the Mlchtet 0. Br<><*• t>vlllll4lll u · of lrvlne, County of Orange. State of Publlahed Orange Coast Delly County Recorder of aald County. Thie atatemenl wu flied wl1h t CONCOURS WHEEL COMPANY Calllomlt, u per map recorded In Pllol Oct. 5, 12, 19, 28, 1983. The •treet addr ... Of olher com-ounty Cieri! of Orange County OI 1109 Vlolorl• /IC, Coell M .... CA: 8ooll 285, Pagee 3 lo 5 lnciu.tve, 5455-83 mon dellgn1tlon of aald prop«ty· Sept. 15, 1983. _. 92927 mltotlleneou• mape, In the office of 17892 Cowan, lrvlne LoulM Ell1.•beth Hudton 1525 the County R41corder of uld county. ------------Name and addreu of the Put>llahed Orange Coast P.... Pl-'tl• N-port BHc~ CA The 11r .. t eddr-and other NIUC NOTICE t>enellclary al whoee requat the Piiot Sept. 21, 28, Oe1 5. 12. 1 ....... 92629 ' • · common deelgn1tlon. If any, of the Nie It being eonduc:ted: B111k of 5243-8 Thlt bulllneaa la eondueted by. an reel p<opetty deteflbed •bc>Ye It ACTTTIOUI ....... Newporl clo Upl1nd Mor1Q809 Ser-•-te NO'""r lndlvtdual purpc;t1ed to be: 379 f BM..., Street, ~ 8TAft•NT Ylce Co. Inc .. 391 N. Central Ave.. l"UIK. iiw. LOUIN Hudaon trvlnt. CA. 9271.t The f~ng peraon• ere doing Uptllld. CA. 91786. flCTITIOUI IU81NEl8 Thi• lllt-• WU flied with the The undetalgned Trutt.. di•· bulll114111 u . , p RT ERSHIP 04rectlons to the 1bove property NAME ITATDllNT nty Clerk of Orange County on el1lme 111y llablllly for 1ny lneorrtct· ELDEN/23RO A N 290, may be oblllned by requesting The followtng penont era doing Sept. 28• 1983. neet of the 1tr .. I addret1 Ind other Two Cori>or•l• Plaza, Suite • same In writing from the beneflciery bu9' . f221f1fi2 common dellgnallon. If 111y, Shown Newport Beech, CA. 92860 within 10 d1y1 rrom lhe ftrat publl· neu u . 0 LI"" p btt·...... Or "--~ n..11u herein. J-R GrlMt Two Corporate tton f thl tloe TEENS IN ACTI N. 15202 .. ,, u ........ ll1Q9 ....,.., ~, Said Nie wlll be midi but wllhOUI ........... ,t· 290 '..,__,__. eeeen ca 0 •no lrvlne. CA 92714 Piiot Oct. 5, 12. 19, 28. 1883. • .---. "" • • ·~,,..... • • Said Ille wot be made wtthOUt co.,._ J&me9 E Palmer Jr 435 C•rn• 5457~ coven1111 or wwranty, exprwe or Im· Clo.. 82fSeO n11111 or warranty, ellpreN Of tmpfled. Cor · Del M CA 92625 plleO, regarding tltle, pOUMlion, or Mittler ContlruC11on Inc .• • Celt.-.. to tllle, poueaalon or encum-'°Q· on~ Bo .,:;1 15202 Liiiy encumbrencee, Including fHt. fornla eorpof"atlon. Two Corporate branee9 to 111t11fy the unp1ld bat-reg~ 9271: 1• • ehtrQM and expen-of the Tru1tee Plaza. Sull• 290, ,..ewpon Beech, ence due on the note OI notes M-lrv~':;d A. Babcoell 95 Rockwood fltllllC NOTICE •nd of tht tNtltt CTMled by Mid CA. 92UO cured by Mid Deed ot Trust. to wit: · • ' Deed of Trutt, to l)ly the remllnlng Thia butlneet It eondue1ed t>y; I $478,000.00, plus the followtng estl-l~':ly• c:n:~1::0,, 15411 L<>rTll F1ClTTIOU8 ltU ... H prlncipal IUmt of the nole(I) MCUred Olf*'al pertn«tlllp mlled coell. e.cpen-and ad-• MAME ITATIMOfT by Hkl Oeed of Tru11 to wit: J-R. GrlMI veneee 11 the time of the tnnt.i pubtl-L~l~·,:~~ucted by· 111 TN9 followlng peraon It doing $38,985 53 with tntereet thereon Thia ltllernent wu flied with the cat'9" of this Notice of Sale: 1 Ion iher 1>1191,_. ea; trom Jenuary 1. 1983@ 15.~ per County Clerk of Of~ Counly on tntel'elt Due trom July 7. 1981 ;1~•tedthl uaoe 11 0 P A RA D I S E N U RS E RY , annum u provided In Mid notl(•I s.pt_ 28, 1983. $ Conteet Trustee 11111 E ";'am!; Jr PRODUCE, FLOWERS & LAND-plut Ill c:otll, ehergM and any Ind · f22t14t Trutl-1-1111d cotta ~ri::,,-.,.,,.,.,1 wei flled With the CAPE, FARMS & CONSTRUC-111 IKlvtMel $1,253.47 Wiii! interest Publlthed Orange Col.It Diiiy s Contee! Trustee ION, 3382 Tempe Or., Huntington thel'eon. Piiot Oct. 5. 12. 19, 26, 1983. Adv11t1ce1 maoe by Beneficiary ~ounty 5c~~of Orenge County on Beach, CA. 92649 The beneficiary under Mid o..d 54511-33 S Contae1 Truatee ept. 1 • 1 · F22U1 Chrlttopher Juan Bor11• & or Of Trutl hereloforetxecuted and ct.- ------------lnter•t due on IKl•lneet P blllhed Of~ Cout 0..... lley, 3362 Tempe OJ .. Huntington livered lo tile ur>derllgned a WT111en $Contact Trust.. u .,,::;• Beeeh, CA 82649 Oedttallon of Oefeutt Ind Demand PllllJC NOTIC£ DATED: SeptemtMtr 20. t983 Ptlot Sept. 21• 28• • 5• 12521«:"93 Ttw. bu"-11 eondue1ed by: 111 for Sale, and• written Notice of o.- F1CTIT10UI .UatNEU Upland Mortgage Service Co. Inc. ndlvidual. fault and Election to Seit. The under· NAME ST Jo. Tl .. NT 391 N. Centre! Ave. Nil.IC NOTICE Chrl9t09ner Juon Borke & or lllgned ~ Mid Notice of Default Upland. CA. 91786 lley and Election to Sell 10 be rec:orded In bu~~ng perlOl'la ..-e doing (714) 981-1078 PUeLIC NOTICE This alatemenl wee llled With the lhe county wtlere tile rMI p<CX>«IY 11 HYDRO-IRRIGATION SALES Jo.NO Madellne Sa~ra SunMt Fibre 11 requeellng approvll nty Clerll of Orange County on located SERVICE 34295 OOhen p 0. ForeelOMJre Secretary of 1 0-11 Plan A"*1dment and I 28, 1983 Oated. Sept.,.,,ber 19, 1983 Capltt ' BMdl CA 9k,28t' ' P\lbllsned Orange eo .. 1 Dally Piiot Zone Change to n11bltth 1 solld F22t147 CENTRAL CAPIT .-,L CORPOR· reno Ruiti 33171 DeSoto Oct 5. 12, 19, 19113 wHte1ran1ferl rnourcerecoveryfa-Put>llshed Orange Cout Delly ATION W~I ~nt CA 92629 5362-83 clltty H a eondltlonll UM tn the In· Piiot Oct 5, 12. 19, ?e, 1983 By 01e1t Fo>., Vice PrMIOent ~· Melody Ruth, 33171 O.Sota duatrlal 1re1 within lrlllne Bual,_. 5480-33 Pul>ltllled Orange Cout Diiiy Piiot Wey,~ Point. CA. 92629 P\8.IC NOTICE Complex. Oct 5, 12, 19, 11183 5291-83 Thia but1neu 1, conducted by; 1 . The 3,09 acre site 11 located on the ·-ic NOTICE generll pannerthtp FtCTmoua .UllNl!I& Northwest corn« of Con11rucllon._ ___ 1"_..-. ________ 1 Oouglu Rusi\ NAME STAT!MENT Wey Ind Con11ruC1lon Clrc;le In the I ANGE.II ------------ Thie lllltetnent wu filed with the The followlng pertons a.re doing trvlne Bualneu Complex Planned LO l'tllUC NOTICE County Clerk of Orenge County on t>uslnaa u · COmmuntty. au...::~ Sept 28 1983 BEACH CITIES BOXING CLUB, The p<opoeed pl11111, • copy or the LM1~ CA.~ ~TICl" °' TaU8Tll'8 aJo.U · · Fml4t INC , 9191 Plone« Drive, Hunt-envlronrnentll delerminetlon end P ~ LAURA KAUfMAN L_. No. 0011a/WOOOAN> P\lbtllhecl Orange Coul 0111)' lngton Beech. CA 8?&48 other protect lnform1Uon ere 1vall-.. ~t; JESSE COLBURN T.a. No. .. tol11 Piiot Oct 5 lZ 19 28 1983 Beach CIOee BoMlng Club. Inc., Ible for lnepectlc>11 al the Communlly ,__,..,._, UNIT COM 11 · ' ' ' · 5481•83 g 191 Plonetr Drive, Hunllnglon Development Oepertment, 2801 ale• JIM JUT~ 7.,,. T .o. aa.aVICI COlll'ANY Beaeh, CA. 92648 MeG1w, trvtne. C __ Ho. ""'"'l ._ .. duly eppotnted Truetee undet the Thia t>vtlneea la conduC1ed by: 1 You 111• lnvlted 10 altend • Pubtle ..... ~O:-(~:!!~ followlng deeerlbed c:leed of truat c:orporallon. Hearing on the matter to IHI held by ............ Ml ,,_..,.. WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION f'talC NOTICE Meek Huriher1, PrMldent the City of lrvlne Pt1111nlng Com· oewt IMf _... ....... _.:: TO THE HIGHEST BlOOER FOR ACTTTIOU• llU..... Thi• rt•t-• WU nled With the mlulon Oii Oelot>er 20, 19113, II 7:30 ,..:= = :-::... ..... CASH ANO/OR THE CASHIERS OR MAlll ITAn.NT nty Cieri! ot Of1.ngt County on P.M., In the City of lrvlnt Council ...._ • ...,._ CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIED IN The ....._.._ perwn le doing Sept. 28, 19113. Cl\tmben, 17200 J1mbor .. Road, If ~ 1 1 ~ t....:. ....,......_Of CIVIL CODE SECTION 2924h (pay- ............ " 'V '221144 lrvlne, Ctllfornla. you.._, 0 -... ~ .,, 11* tt the time of .... In lawful buel,_ u . Pubtlahed Orange Cou1 Dally For more lnforrn1tlon contact Joan llornty In Ihle matter, you "'°'*' mooey of the Untied Sta111) all right, AMERICAN • $WISS BULLION Piiot Oct. 5, 12, 19, 26, 18113. Bedtll 11860-3751 •I the Commun!· 0 IO l)'omptly IO that your ..-men Ulle and Int-I conveyed to Ind EXCHANGE. 4029 W•tetly Place, 5483-83 ~ Devet~t °1111ment eaponM, If 111y, may be llled 00 k-0 .. b II undef Mid Deed ol &1111 117, Newport 8Mctl. CA · . lme now "'"" Y 92fle0 PUil.iC NOTICE ~:A.oo:O'. 3 • Z C • O o 78. 1o.Viaotueted ha lido demanclede. ~ the p<opety hereinafter de- Normen Wymen, 414 AUllO Av· Publlttled Orange Diiiy Piiot Oelo-El trlbume; lede ~ _.... Ud. TRUSTOR: JAMES LEWIS enue, Newport BMeh, CA. 81623 'lC'TITIOUI M.lllNEH 1M1r 12 1883 au•incile • _... .,_ Ud..,... WOODARD Thie butlneea la conducted by. 1111 NAME l'TATl!»ENT • . 5&02-113 ....,.,. ...... L.. .. BENEFICIARY· CREATIVE BUSt.- lndMdual. The followtng pert0n la doing 4'M .._-. NESS FINANCE N0tman Wyman bu91neu u . PUBLIC NOTICE "JCMI #WI to IMit IM..,.. of RECORDED NovemtMtr 12 1980 Thi• ,, .. _, WU nled with the FOSTER & ASSOCIATES. :l303 •Homey "' ... lftllttw, '" .. ln•lr No 13562 In BocNI 013829 County Clerk of Ofange County on HtrbOI J-1, COii• M .... CA. 92628 NOTtCE °' DtllOlUTION do .. PfOMPll1 eo tMI ,_ ~ 512 of Offlolal Record• In lhe Sept. 28. 19113. Atch111d w. Foater Jr., 1824 Simer OF PAlnMI"... Wftttefl 111111-, " ...y, _, bl olftQa 01 the Recorder of Orenoe f'2291M Of , Colte M .... CA 92629 I lft ltlM. Coun • Publllhed Orenge Coat Diiiy Thi• bull,_. 11 conducted by. an Public nollel II hereby given thll II U.l.cl-... ~el-HJ:/'o..d or trual dMCril>el the Pilot Oct 5, 12, 19. 29. tllS3 tnoMdual. L.awl"enoe M. Campeau, and D1llld )o de llfl abofedo en .... aeuftto. tollowl . 5456-33 R, W. Foster Jr W Mytire heretof0t• doing bu .. ,_ deelefb ..._,.. 1N111 ... ......,,... Lo1 ';¥of Tract 5698 u P4lf map Thia atatement wu flied With the under the flct111ou1 firm name lllld de 11t. "**., tU ,...._.,.recorded In Book 218 Pagee 16 •-II' NOTICE County Cieri! of Orange County on 1ty1e of Hentaoe Aeloelllon Service -'la. .. ~lflll_. -tllrough 21 lllclutl•~ of mlt-____ n..;;.;;--..""--------Sept. 28, 1983. ti 1'491 Baker St. Suite 1, City of ,...._., .... • • cellaneout map.. In the Office of the aNE F2291M Coate M-. Counly of Qranoe, l -TO T.-M : TM County Recordef Of Mid Count; ftC~:A~a Publllhed Orenge Coeat Dally St111 of Cellfornl1, did on the 30th ,_l!Uonef Ma ftlM • pettltClft _.. YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UN0£R A TIM ,.............. OOI Piiot Oct. 5, 12. 19, 28, 19113 day ot Seplember. 19113, by mutual cemM8 ,_ _......,,If,.., ... to DEED OF TRUST DATED Novembel --"'V P9f90nl ere ng 5453·83 GOf\Mnl, dlNolve lhe Hid Pll1Mf· .... ,..,.... ...... _,.oftt.e 4 1980 UNL.£SS YOU TAKE AC-~ u : SSOCIA TES • 750 ltllp llnd termln•le their reletlonl ..... tMt ... -.. _.,. TiON TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· A MAN A • fltB.JC N0TIC£ Plll1'*'1 l~n. .,. fe'I, ,_ defevtt "'If IM ERTY l'T MAY BE SOLD AT A PUB· Von Ktnn111, Suite 200, N-r>or1 Seid bu .. n.. In tilt Mure wtll IHI eflteNd Md "'9 -1 -r entef • LIC SALE IF YOU NEED AN EXPLA· BMctt:.. CA. 82flfJO.. 2808 ACTTTIOU• .U.llNE•• conducted by L1wrenc• M . "'41-t _....,.. lnfuoottft Of NATION OF THE NATURE OF THE Rlcnard J n1nger, N.U. 8TATIMINT Ctmpetu.111dN/A,whowlllpay1nd ...._,_.,. _ _,...,.....of WaWCTelt Ortve, Corona de4 Mar, The foltowlng peraona are doing dlt1Ch1tge Ill llablllltea and debts of Pf'OP41'1J, lpouMI ~. ctllld PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU CA. 92825 bull-... the nrm and receive Ill mon ... P•Y· _,..., ohlld ......,. .....,,., SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER Jo Ann Cownle, 37 N1v111re, lrvtne. TAB TURF PRODUCTS, 17335 ablt to lhe nrm ..... ~ ... anchedl....;., ,..._. M 59<4 Orllnd ~ven Clrele, Coale CA. 92715 Skyperlt Ctr . lrlllne. CA Fur1her notice IS '*tby given thll lfteJ' be 1rented Dr the -.rt. TM ~· CA. 826 ' Thia butlMu 11 condueled by • 01ry Tabb, 82 Beeon Bay, N4tW· tht Uf\derlllQned wlll not be rnpon.-~· of w ..... talflt of d.J::n~t~ .. ~1-:'::' ,~,::;:: general Ptr'llltlftlllp POr1 e.ach, CA. 92MO tlt>le, from thla day Oii tor any obit.-......., Of pt09Mf1Y, Of ~ oowt lbO..,. no wtnanly i. given u 10 111 Rlcflard J, Ranger Giii)' Tabb g1tlon Incurred by the other In Illa llUttloftud ptecndlt191 niey -.0 . I " TM Thie 11•1-t wu tiled with tilt Tttta 1111ement was llled with the own name,°' In the name of the llrm, ,....,.., <lOmptel.,_. Of eorrl01neet · Coun~ Clerk of Orenge County on County Clerk of Orange Coun1y on Oiied at Coale M ... , C1llfornl1, Deted: Jl.IM tO. 11U rn:.f~~~~f ."r!:'.-e~ d~ Sepl 7, 1983 -Sept 28. 1ge:i thlt 30th day Of September, 19113. JOHN J. COftCORAN, Ci.rtl f~\ • In the obtlgatlonl MCUr«I .--.1 "'2211148 David W. Mytire ty: D. ••Ml. Deputy ed and Publlaned Ofange CollS'l Delly Publiltled Oranoe Cout Delly P\lbHlhed Orenge eo .. t Dally .......... ~ .... c-t De1tJ Nol thereby, heretofore e11ecut Piiot Oct 5, 12, 19, ?e. 18113. Piiot Oe1 S, 12, 18 26. 1883. Piiot Oct 12, 1983, ..,,., it, a, Oot. 1, ta. ,-. ::i=.::t= :.~led.,!, 0:.: 5468-83 5<162•83 5584-83 ....o-t:I mend r0t Sale, and Wfltten notice of ------------------------------------------------breeeh end of elte11on to c:euM the ___ Pta __ IC_NO_T_IC_E ______ .;..Pta.;;,,;;.;;_1c_NO_T_IC_E _______ M.,;,.,;,.,;L_1c_NO.__T_1c_E _______ Ml. __ 1c_NO_T_IC_E ___ :~~~~~=I=~~.,!,~ 1ner th• und«lllQned c:auMd Hid NOTtCI OF PUaJC HSANNO nottct of breech and of 16tctlon to cm 01' ~CA. be rec:orded June 22, 1"3 .. lnttr. NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN. thlt. public '-Ing wtlt be hetd by the City of lnllne Ctty Council orrlueadey, Oetobet 25, 1883, .. 9:30 p.m., Of .. aoon No.13-2fle327 Of Offlelel A9cx>rd1 In .,_ .. ,... • poa1111ta, 1n the City~· Ctlambert 11 17:x>O Jambor• Aotlcl. 1n11t1tn CMo Center, lrvtne. Ctllfoml•, •• whlett time the Chy Coundl tht omoe of tile Aeootder Of Orange .. cone10er eny publlO oomrnante l)teMl'lted In connectlOft wtth the flnanGinQ. wltf\ _up to tt 14,000,000 tu-eiiernpt b0nd1 of the Chy Of lrvlne, County; Celllomia, tor the poealble oonttrvc11on ot the fOlowlnQ proJeett 10 bt localed ln the City ol IMM, Cellfomla: Bald Mia wm bt ""*· but wtth0'11 ................ WOOdbrtdOI Cove N.E. Woodtlridoe Cow 8.W WOOdbr1dge Otoet ~Mk llAWofd Court I - 0.1111,ur 180 Tf\e lrWMI Company 144 144 328 380 240 200 200 a...... • c:ownant or werranty, ·~ .. or Im-.,..... plied, regarding tltle POIUHIOll, Q( • 9 000 000 tnQlmbftnCM, to pey the remaining • • pnne1pe1 eum Of the no41(•1 MCUfed by Mid d4l9d Of T tutl, With 11'1\«Wt 7,200,000 .. 1n Mid note pr~. edv-. If 7 """'000 eny, under the terme Of Mid OMd of ......... true\, .... ctulrQll, lln<I ..,.,.. of 18 ,..,. OOO IM Truet .. lln<I of the lrutte crNled • '"""· by Hl<I Deed Of T f'Utl1. Saki M1e wll be held on: Wed,_. 11,500,000 d1y, Ocrtober ff. 1"3, at 2.00 p.m. et the CNcMnen A~ anvanoa to t2.000.000 tf\e CMo Center luitdlnQ.. 300 &.It 000 000 ~ Aw .. Orange, OA 10, , At the tlfM Of the lnltiel publl- c;etlon Of lNt l'Ottoa, tht total 10,000,000 amount of tile unc>eld .,...,_ of IN obllQlltlon MCllred by the 9boW ct. t0,000,000 ICfllied deild Of tru .. and •tlrneted 10.000.000 =;;2:.-:.-· eno adVMOll ta ~total~ MlnO en t 26 ll'lllnt Houtlng <t,800.000 111lm•tt on whldl t~ tild .. ,,311 OpoonunltlM t ttS,I00,000 ::::"m':i'~ lhe day~ ln•.nacl ~ #tlO apc1eer mt 1ne '*""' dMcrlbed 1n "* Nottce w111 be Q1Ven ., 09POl'tunl1y 10 «XPfW their vtewe oonoernlnO the aono.. Al the ..... t per90tll WWllna to OOfNnent on the~ Of the londa °'Iha ~left and Mtur• Of Ille l>'Ottctl to be ftnenoed -Invited 10 llttend. Wtttttn Oiied. 8eptll'llt>er 21. ltl3 T.O. oommenll on 1r-1Mttert and~ tor llddltlonll lnronne11on oonoer11lng Ille llMnclna and project• to bt oonttldeled ~ bt d~ to SERVICI COMPANY ~ ~ CoMmunlt'f o...eoPf'*lt 0epet1men11 11200 Jtint>otM Road, 1mn.. CA ea11a 111,.1 MO.H4'7. A map lhowlnG the locAlllon ot the 11 u1c1 Tru•tM PtOl)Oeed " .-o .,_.....,.. frOm ltwon wooa ly• Ao.a Jo... Oen:le ~ °'. 11, 1113 ....... ,.,,, s.or.t") CITT' ~ IAVIHf One Clty IMS ~ lt/N«tt:t C. 1.-r Wtet. Orengia. CA. t2ttl ~Her 0 . I.Ace' / (714) 9U-t2N ~ ~ PulllWl!Kf Otenoe to.al °""' ,.,....,., Orwioeeo.t o.11y '1lot 0c1ow 1a, 1113 H01~ ,Piiot 0crt 5, 12, ti , rta 64•1.a! 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1883 D5 ..., .... CLASSIFIED · INDEX ~ ... ____ ... __ ... __ ... _. ___ ........ lale ltwtl lln .... al Ull 111.1 tttl To Place Yow Ad, Cal Tradiliona.I 3 Br, 3~ &. ~t, pier, ~ • float for 65' boat. Pric-ed to 1ell $1,250,000. 642-5678 UAL ESTATE r.:.i:~ fitlll 8"1-t.'-1 a..1-P•ninout. C.pt.tnuw 8"..m Corona cltl M111 C<>olA M-Douw ..... ftl El T0<u r....,.i.1n Volley llunu"""" e .. ch Jtun'• Uatbuur lrvt .... t..qu,,. llH< h ._. ... Hlllt .......... "'""'' LAktt Pon1\ M-1Vo.p H•w,...,.-11 S.n ,..........,.,. San JUJiU ('.epulra.tw_. S.m.t An.t s .. 1 °"'"'" Sou1h t...1un.o Su ..... llH<h T"6tin Wr1iunmt\f't Mubilt' H"""" """'""' Ap.rlll'Wnu S.t<h l'<uporty ew..,... p,.,..1y c..,. ...... 11..v .. Comml •rvporrt) Condom,Nun\I Uupft.•hl u ..... ll•,.....lubrMw..i :=.n~rrr~ Luc... f~H S.I"' MOO.lo II"""' p.,i... ~·~llUlltl ........... ,, 0.•oti•' Co Ow 11'1 loUOl) Ou1 ut Su.u u,.,,,. h.,.1 t"lltnu "-<~y Tllno Shal\nc RE.~ R.L Wan""' RENTALS tlOOM'tl run ... heJ "'"'"" Unrumiahed 11, .. ..,. f'umuhrd QI Unrunwil...d CUndo Fum Cond<> Uni T""'""'-lum T-n-Unl Duplu" f\.m Ouplo• .. Uni J\partmenta PUmaMd Apat.,,_11 Uni Apu f'Urn "' Uni -Room & 8oeld Holelo. Muu-t. cun1~ Summtt ~Lab Vo<aUOft Rml&ls •fl<ontalo IO St\&ror • 11.!n'"lo Wanu-d Carag .. I<>< Rmt Olt._.,. 11.!nlAla 8u.Mf"""'9 R.onl.611 Comn\I Rm .... lndlUl R~n"'Ja ser.,.. Mur Rm1Ala AHHOUNCEMEHTS Anf'W>Ul'M.Tl~l'\U, .. .... & f uu.l\d p...,.,.,.i. P•""""I Sttv"""' 8mooll • ltvltWU<Jn T'ravrl BUSMSS & FINANCIAL BUAi~ for SaJ• •SUM,.__ 09pon.ut\4"'" 8uaat"'9 Wan\L'd •lnW!l:t.mirn\ Opponun.lU.-.. lnw.tn'W'nt W•nloif"d ·M~y to Loan •Munor~ Wan\<Od M""Ll•C"'-T P ~ EMPlOYMENT Hrlp w.ni,.t •Joi. Wanted JOCHANOISC Anuq .... Appl .. """° A11rU.-Bld& Mou-mlt c....ntrM .. Equ1pmt"I I c .... ,,..wn I f"9 10 Vou """''""' car ... s..1 .. 11.,.....hotd ('..,00. J ..... try -ht,_.y M-ti.,,.,,... M1.r-Wa.nWd M..-J lnolt'Ummlo 011 .... IUrnllW'f" ~ a:q .. ,""""'' "'"""" & Or1u11 ~~1\:3.~s:!~.., •Remodeled 3 br, 2 balh + larae rec. nn., bM.rn ceilings. fum.lahed, pedoe. $420,000. UYllH PUOI UYPlllT I~ Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br, • ::: , 2 ba dn. 2 boat spaces. Redooed4UOO,OOO. ::! 1 PElllllU llME llUlnllT :m Ocean & jetty views. Marine roam. 4 bdrm, 3 1oi. bath, 3700 tq. ft. 4 car parkina. $1,385,000 . 1040 1042 1044 Fllll&lll UJIOl llLLTIP :~ New 4 br, 4\1\ ba; cuatom ~Normandy 1<»2 J!'Atate 1.2 prime acre hilltop. Now $995,000 . I~) 108"7 1068 107• ODlllUll OHi UYFlllT iu1e Coronado Island cust. bayfront k>t. 85' boat ::: deck. Plans avail. Now $370,000 w/trade . 1086 IOU IOllO AlllltWHW llOME :C: Near new 4 bdrm, 4 bath, lake view. 3500 tq. ::~ ft. $440,000. WW trade for a local property. 117) 1200 t2l) 12~ 127) 130C 1n: I~ un 140C. 14?6 14!14: ULHA OOVEI Traditional Bayfront 3 Br. 3 Ba, remodeled 2,000 tq. ft. furniab.ed & boat. $600,000. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR 34 1 f111y,•<fr Dr•v• ,.... fl t.I'> 61t.I ·~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I)~~ - l)~I > 1)7, l!MIO FORECLOSURE! '* 1800 IW 2100 2200 llOO l400 2410 2)20 2)" l)JO 2~ 2eoo 2700 2llOO 2900 2902 2904 290) ,_ ?907 MUST BE SOLD NOW! HARIDR RIDIE CUSTDI HDIE IEllOEIFllM 11,100,000 Tlllll,000 673-3051 i9011 anyllme/owner 290\t ~-~--~~~~ ::: OtmlNWlY IOW UALllllTY And t oreet loctllor thould pu1 ti* property high on your 11a1 of mu.i ..... Slngle l9Yel 4 bdr!f 2 bth on • very lerge fol In a 'I• mllllon doll•• nelght>ornoocf. Rodi bOt• tom price 1118,90( 761-3191 C:: SELECT ';s._ ... PROPERT~~ 19•9 YllW .. EJ ~: S Br. 4 Be contempotary ..U WllW lt22 home In private Emerald IWlllS l.1111 lt2) Bay. Swimming pool, Both tttrKttwl 3 Bdrm, lj)02 il0()4 :IOl2 ll014 3018 :IOll spa, aecurlty system, CdM hllltlde, min. traffic, oommunlly tennla court• mu. privacy, private and much more. Thi• bMct). $285,000. home would ooat far lJ~l()Us Ll().twlFt.:: more to reproduce today . L • ' ,......_,. then 1he uklng pr1ot of RMltora, 875-4000 17a5.ooo. Aatc for Rod i-.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim Deley. fl4.4-7020 I• L9lt IUL llTITI m:~Ddebout :~:: Bay& Beach ::: Red Estate 4026 .,,.l Ul-'U' u ccu.t#Cf swc1 ,,;, • 111 lllVElllITT POI Great for the growing fam- 11 y. Four •P•CIOUI bedroom•. 11"1 one of the Deane Homes choice model• .. the "Ken.,_ lngton" Atrium, pellq, flreplf and fenced yard. .,. aSTUl1D Prime corner location on the euttlide. Specious unit• wtth pool, Income almost $2000 per mo. Motivated Miter ulclng 1250.000. 17141 UJ.4400 IJIJI U .. HJI HARBOR ~~.~~.':.~~bell ··· 1·-------·· .11-llOO Sell thing.I fut with Diiiy Piiot Went Adi. &0101---------1;========;-8()11 IOtl I.Ml Yl1llAll :l! 3 Bdrm houM In eo.1a eota MeN w/~ room lllld 901i complelety f9nOed yard. ~ Eanhtone carpet• & brick 8~12 BBQ. Altllng 197,500. 8214 VA •• F H A term a . 8Jte 831-7370 9211 tl1lO llJ4 TRADITIONAL REALTY * BOATS L:::miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Rn.1 7010 ,.. ~ TRAHSPOU~TION 7011 70t2 7014 7018 1011 1010 7012 7024 ?o:te 7028 A11molt 8010 0..-yc.... llOI? ••mr•ni 8014 Moklt lllk,.. llOIO •Mo""1"v.t..iS<m1•n 8018 Mu"" flnnv,. 8020 ""'• llU'l2 Tn •l<in 'T)o""I !!014 Tr•114'n Uulnv 80%6 ........,. llPlD lnmll .. 11- fully furnlallec:t Income property w/Httoned wlnterlaummer mtal• '°' maximum Income. Fabuloua bMch tocatlon '°' tht• corner property with 3 bdrm & 2 bdrm taptl. ~ Wiii cany the financing With 10% cut\ dn. pymt. A new llsllngt 631-1400 - W/\lllOHtlNl IHJMI., l•c. REAL ESTATE 131·1400 AUTOMOTIVE ~~~!'~, ---- Au111 t...<u•"IC 111110 llMll IJl,000 Au1to Serv-.-iPuv llOI~ ""'~• w.no...i ~20 Ocean view dup!ex, upper s1..,. .. 11 .. .,, 11<.1. w2~ unit, 3 Bdr 2 Ba, lower • Wt>Pt °"'"" llO:!O unit 2 Bdr 2 Ba.. Bolll ~::... :!~ have nrep1ecea and ere 8 An11q1"' \..,.,_... eoo yeara old. large II· tumablll loaM. Now uk· Ing l305.000. 431-7370 TR,\OITIO\,\I J.ll ,\I TY --... . ....__ -.._ COLDW<?U BANl(C!RO for Ad Action Cal a Daly Plot AD-VIS<I 642-5671 • p ~ en. • ~ Om) ~ • >< Om) • ~ • I t •(In lk •J~m· slvl nnt high in prirt, l'NIOn· ablti tc>tl, clutrifi«t 1dvm~1ni ' 11 ,, 08 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesda , Oci. 12. 1983 CtrHI ...... IOU ...... ltl .... .. .... ltr.... I 1J, I ...... I ' =-•-L-:1 -, __ .:Li._.i i ••1t1 • u . nMt .,...... Ap.rtat!ta uu ..... ,.,... ... !at. lpr!P!!tt, Val. but!ftta1 Val. -lntab t• IEITflUI... ,_•m=··==--=•:;04::~ ....... lean IOH leatral D02 Dau Ptlat D2t Wew INCaa IAI C.111 .... tnl I .. ~ -2740 •-..rt .... , ~It ·~... 2tOI I 141.1111 1• •• W/M llA l•••tr I Wllttr Xrti111C 2Br 28e hm fl1)k T11r 1r:JI., et Trwure 1-.0--.1;;,·.-.-ac..,_...,;-.-1 .;;;~,:.1;:;:,.::.::;:;:;:;:.....::.:.:::::1•...;--..;, ___ _......., ILi Olllll lllnl llOI 3 Br very aophlatlceled dll'tw1hr ger deci< kldi l•l•nd, ooun vu, $450. BAY TIMBER APT Meet Warner/Sol .. ChlC& NO FEE Apt & Condo ret1-Shere Blull1 beyvlew 'l Br *Ba. 30K118' lot, I Lovely "Heather Model" 4 Bluff• condo only step• ltatal1 pets nr Marina uoo·1 213~33-9991 1 Br. lrple, pool, prlvete 2 Br. 11~ Be 2 atory tali. VMla Rental• home. pool, 111, laat, dep. block lrom Big c&ona Bdrm• plua 3 beths, on 10 comm. pool. Owner .la.I ll&LR 539-6190 BEST Riiy fee pall, enolad ger1ge. CONDO, frp1o'. dtwthr, 875_.t128roil• 1250+ 644-2607 Beach. $285,000. Call cukl&-sao. Patio e11tenda hu reduc.d pric. and PllP llAUIEllEIT B k 0 nrrt ltac.. SS Hi/mo. 399 W Bey St, petlo, llngle garate. ~ Pn1ule lltre lg 2Br. Shr t>eautllul beech houae. Unique Hom.. Barbar• to big grMnbelt with view will ualit In financing. 11./llM1t• aat. IC Im/mo. 3 Br. 2 Ba.1tep1 650""8357 dOOt opnr. 1 chlld oil, eundeck, yrty. $745 mo. ocean front In Balboa. Hutchings 675-6000 or of hlll1 and tr-. Freshly Aaaurnable 111 TD. • • 2BR, lndry hOOll-uo. lro from beech, carport, Kint Clean 2Br 1ba Eutllde. 1tnall pet. $875 + $400 552--0&53 or 875-2538 Winter: 1350/mo. 6«·1211· r•nted end reedy $225,000 Le11et1old. lalMa blu• '~r ~:t-ctllld OK loc. 203 33rd St. no pell. $475/mo, Roy ~:.· 8&3-1500 Ao-nt. no Qulet2 Br, 1 bli, peUo, gar, 673-5410 or 241-5536 IOW I .IETTY YllW 248,500. 944-6200. Peula Balley. 2 Br. 1 ba. vrt; rental. . 2 N.8.RMlly 675-1642 McCardle Rltr. 548*7729 pool, no pell. 180 t-C Shr bellut lurn lrg hOUM In 200 Blk. 40' lot, 3br +den, 142-1200 $650/mo. Yard/patio. S300'1 pay1 ret1I & ullls on OCEANFRONT-wntr clua IUTa.,. •I IUWlll 15th St, Nwpt Hgt1. C.M. wsh/dry, lrplc:, yard, 3ba, yard. compl. rerurb. 842-9259 ah 6pm. Brooktiurat/HamU,ton A e1eeo, quiet, turn. cie.n. -• YIWIE $600/mo. 645-7355 mlCfo. '425. 650-6314 $499,000. 217 Jasmine. custom hide-out Into 11000-$1100. 67s-4688 2 Br. 1in Ba.Townhouae. Open Sal/Sun 1-5 3 Br 2ba, yearly Frplc, 539-6190 BEST Alfy lee enclad garage, pallo, New t & 2 Bdrm lu1eury 111111 I IPAOllll Shr luJ1ury furn condo. Owner/agt 673-5551 laundry rm. Ger age SllllT Tiii $585/mo. + $275 MC. apta In 14 plan1. 1 Bdrm 2Br, 11Ja, cnoic. Nwpl Hts, $300, 111• tut & dep. C - 0111 Mtll I $1095/mo. 675-0349 Min,\ l~al~ ~-~ Br 2 Ba Furn. 3&2 Br Apt1 Nr total move In coll. OrNt from $565, 2 Bdrm from cathederal c:elllng1, wood 966-8479 664-~29 CHARMING 3BR Qf 2+ $~3:53~'81~;rs'T~ar beach.Ao-nt675-8i7o toe/clean. $860. TownhouM from burning lrplc. new Steps 10 Beach: 3br/2ba, llUT f .. ILJ ... E I• llYI STUDY. 1 car gar. S900 • 88 2346 Santa Ana Ave. $725 + poo11, tennl1. cpl/drpa. LG PVT DECK, 34 St, NB $265 650-3407 5 BR t den, llreplace, dbl AT THE BEACH _ 3 plus yrly. 780-8384 Old town upgraded 5 rm WllTU IEITW TIL llllT M2-1IOI waterfalls, ponds, Ou for pv1 garege, no pet1. Lae. or Ans Ad 810. 642_.300 N d La It L l04I hmcu11omdelallskldca1 Step• from beach, oar-cool<lng & heating paid. $795mo.Agt.631-5155 gara~e Owee s some llH ac. Iott A-frame, 'A blocil to C•H•& ••I ••r 2222 line mid S500's & sm lee agetcarpon Xlnt loc. 203 lllTUT Ill From San Diego Frwy v E A S A 1 L L E S WE LOO• FOR touc up. ner trans-} bay. Extra bonua -539-6190 BEST 33rd St. N.8. $425/mo. sm unattached N :>n ~ " 1R~7·~~~~~· llttr. I UCl IAY·YIEW ;~;~~. unit. Asking 1:11::;: ~'ti~· p'::~ Spec 3Br 2ba condo, 3 Br 2 Ba S700lmo. ~:!s'o:~l~t Br, 1 8•· off ~~add~h a~d westh ~~ =:w~~u~n8:9y2 ~:: YOUU 1810 Newport ~1 CM A perfect hideaway In 2 blks to ocean. Avell Gr ea 1 amen 111 es N.B. Really 675-1842 2072 N~port Blvd ~c~•d~enL 10A s~wro Ing. Sec, comm pool, apa lt11t/l••••atH HI 1121' glamorous sophlstloaoed AT THE BEACH -Brighi. 1 O I 1 6 S 7 O O I m o , $795/mo, no pet1, call A · 1714)893_5198 · etc. $915/mo. Bonnie • setting. Walk In & you'll cheery 3 Bdrm. 2 bath 760-0142 alt 6pm. Mrs. Ganz 846-1372 ,.rtatal1, Val. TSL l1•t 142-1111 · Barrington agt, 875-6000 lall•ff .. 4Br 2Ba 60ll 120 tot, at-leel you're walking onto with private patio. Move , L 1 8 1 4 1 Spacious qule1 1 Br. $435. or 644-0452 # 1 In Orange Co. tached gar, RV pkng, the water." ti's fabulous . In condition, lust steps to 2br/2baF/ So oll Hwy$. No Jmat 2244 &Jc== J1Jaa• z7n1: aOr/gwe I rd bas'•25p/ e1e. 2 Br. TwnhM $515. Walk VERSAILLE & Eetabllshed 12 years! 3 •--I / bea h S 75 000 pets urn/un urn 900 . ---• aun · .. mo. VILLA Ph 1 1 k /R f' chk $96.500 call 6-46-8386. ~~lie .... , ... elsevwat'~ mspasaterln ol.421 1' 200 213/355-1597/466·7745. Check these rentals 2 Br YALV RENTAL: $800/mo. 645-6625. to bellch 960-8656 BALBOA Condo o ot a en e s d -""' • ale decor $630 or this Lovely 2 b• /pall A va-'~ from $800 6 mo Ouarntad Service ldl FlllOLllllE bedroom.11'1 Mductlvel-2 Br, 2 ba spilt level. bright styling 3 Br w/mod kit 67,. .,36•2we 89 o Large 2 Br. 2 Ba. new Walk to beach 1Br .. 1tove, ..... y •Credits• Eye Witness Local bank has foreclosed but totally elegant, ma & airy. $1150/mo. Incl 2 $675 BEST Ally lee .,-., v carpel & drapes, lreah relrlge, crpt, drapu. 631_.960 News. Time Magazine, on 2 beautiful condos, Breathtaking VIEW of car gar, w/d & frig Avail hlMa paint. 382 Vk:lorle btwn $450/mo. 536-4637 Saa Cl .. eatt 77 KNX Radio. t·3Br. 2'n8a ($155.000) ocean. coastllne & tights 11/1. 2700 Bayside Or Super 5 Br. 3 ba. apa, lrg p. i. l 2707 Harbor & Newport. $525. Walk to beach studio ~ Newpon Ofc 832-4134 & 1 . 4 Br 2 in Ba lrom this 3 bdrm home 875-5688 den, preatl~lous Racquet ta a11 a 851-9523 itove relrlge' crpta' 2 Br. $495, pool, year 'n olltoall ($185,000). Theunltaare with greenery end huge. FabulouavlewotNwptbay Club.$1 19 .556-6576 ~BLOCKTOBAY Lrge 1 bdrm. Lndry rm, drapM MOO uius lncld, 5oun~ nr geacn· bUMS, whoarerelocallng 3 years new, spacious sunning balcony. In a 10 Catalina 1 Br 2 ba TlllTLEllOl llLLI 2 br, 1 ba, pvt patio, gar. pool $404 firm All ullle 535.4637 · o. an lemente. No Tustin Ole 832-4134 ond fully appointed gu8fded gate c;ommunl-• ) · , $675 Incl. utlls. 310 548 0336 · pell . 496-8277 w/modern features Bank ty. 631-1400. din & llv room. S 1 OO. 4Br + family rm + 2 ~ ba + Alverado Pl 752-5710 pd. • wtllWE OCEAN VIEW Studio Apt Ca1a111 ftr lsolle 1 c eallvetln -239 Carnation. 675-3030 3 car gar. $1450/mo. · LIKE NEW 1or2 er It 291 Ing s~g~, an off~~ WAH HI HO'\l UllH 11111 ,. __ 11 .... •444 (7141553-9202 $350. 1 Br duplell, utll pd. PRV patio, pool. IP~ &PUTllllT1 Cfpt, dfJ>•. stove, refrlg. at 2 Agent 642-4623 HOMI .. h•<· .. ·-10.. --~ 417 E Bay Ave Balboa TOP le I 1-2 bedroom• $310/mo. 496-7151 E.ilde c.b. 10X20. Ho REAL ESTArE st-, HafrJ 2BA 18 a 19 I CM Vlllege112M250arque,tte3m8dl, 547-1155 ' . aree,qu t,nope1 Beeutlful lake• 1nd •--•LI:: ... 211• mo. 20X20 $125 mo. Coll""e Park 4br 2ba fixer a• .. ,.,. Renalnance Model belt ' a up JI n · ·• approll •·" r, MESA. PINES 2650 H8fla 11re1m1 Complete ..... ~ • s upper 1115,000. own egt -1-1_, locatlon, price & 1erm1. ~~el~:·, ,:•a;.:;~~· lamlly rm, formal dining 3BR 2BA. 115 25th St. Yrty $495-$825 549-2447 emenltlei. Security Slept 10 beectt, lrg new 2 tor&ge only. 645-723 4 759-8006 &olters invited I Only 20% dn. Asl<lng · rm, very fresh. nu leaM. lleps to the beach. NEWLY PAINTED g1tn. Entry by phone. Br 2 Ba Condo frplC, 257~ Columbia Drive IOW YIEW LIT $374,500 2 Br. houae Westside. cpl/paint, comm, pool & $1000 mo. 640-2036 2 8 d r m 1 8 1 No pets. 64&-8591 pool, 1pe. $850/mo. OfUce ltatall 2tl4 IWIEll ••ys l 20l,OOO ~~~Pl-!!,llTIIUEI ~~~·~~~{~oo S555tmo. ~~~~~5~13ootmo. Aot s100 Rebate. Loe 1br,112 S555 1 Bdrm S435-S455 La~ua litHI f7S2 788_.529 &. 557-1928 IEWNIT IUOI ---R"5 blk 10 beach. W/O, No Ulll1 paid, garage, pool, no _ -Suitt .... ~ fin m·-11m "Olve 'em a bargelnl" One acre on gentle slope -I 2 Br w/stove, crpts, ... 1 ... ltac~ 2241 pets. S625 mo, )Iffy. Gar. pets. * EAN Vu condo. N:W ··--------·--•n 5 Eestslde Oasis Towne down a private driveway. 11-1"4 drapes, enclld garana, $50. Craig 870-6500 301 Avocado 642-9850 3Br 2ba, frpl, pool, etept 1 bdrm, M/mo; 2 bdrm, IFFIOll Home w/3 bdrm1 + den Spectecular ocean and no pell. $550/mo. 773•w 1 R 1ba + den. ocean X204 wkdy1; 675-9780 ----beh. $950/mo 551-0585 S725/rno. Slept to 1Bnd. BELOW MARKET RATES • 2 baths + dble garege canyon views. Owner will w u 63 4889 view. $575/mo Incl. utll. 1 Bdrm $450 Nu Carpet/pelnt. 16466 GOOD SELECTION running stream1, tradefOf da«t property. 1'°8,000 son. l-So. Leg. Avell now, JMrt-C.rtaa •el Mat fill 2 Br 1 Ba $555 I rt...... 2711 241h St. 213-592-2725 714/780-8070 waterlalls & tr-. trees, 631 -1400. lark IW It y 3 Br. 2'~ Ba. refrlg, lrplc, nine/A.gt 497_.811 28( Iba FrplC sunaeck 241 w . Wiison --------- o NL y $ 1 3 2 , 9 o o . llOMI" 111<. Kensington. A11urnable dener. 191 & last. i7oo Nearfy 2006 aq fi lu1e 3 Br 2 pell. 780-0344. Nice 2 Br. 2 Ba. No pet1. 2f~m~t~7~t':: ~~· ~~oe:rv:-c~J:'~ medlcal or dental. A.geot. !.~~~·s~" F.~~~s~~!:e~ -IA.Ml HI HOM lmmac!1ate ~· br, ·3-: b~ ;~~~~~:d1ncYd'•' •ga~~ ....... 11111 2250 Walk to beech. $850.No 631-0960 MINI VIEW ..... 2tM 1~j~w:~~\~i~i:~81~ 759-1501 AEl\LESTAlE 10.3750/e, 30 yr loan. By security dep. No pets. Ba pool hme 2 gar .$690 Co:ry, small. lurn studio. $495/mo. Avell appro11 yrly Agt546-5805 w/ocean·v1ew, ll'tare eic-541-5032 831-1400 0 w n er . 6 4 0-1 169; 6-42-4210 M-F. 8-4 only. kid/pet detall1 539-6190 no kllch. Pool. Emplyd Nov. 51"· 7eo-141e or · pen HI. lmmed. oc-1617 Westcllff, N.8. 278 10 Wraw V'W7D •-LEE~~~~~~~~~ 856-6771 BEST Riiy lee fem non 1mkr $335 Utll 642-7528 eves or wknds. 2 Br 2 Bi. yeerly W. New-cupanru, r .... -. r~ulr...... 1365 .n, ". Sullab"" tor ~ • • 3Br 2ba dplx. $650/mo, pd ' 1 1 I t • R. f' ..,.,.. Wlhr/dnw hk-up 2 -·-1 ..,_ _, ...., " "' n--t r~ · Here Is a BEAUTIFUL 48r tstllall + S250 dep La Ii I ""52 · s as MC. e 1· ""'·· · ,. • 495-5346 or ee 1-48 medleal or det1ta1. Agent. nc411.....,.. OPEN SUNDAY 1-4 3'A ba, lam rm, lrml din. 548-4022 ah 6pm . IHI 1at AA 640 .. 999 ti 1'111 lllff car garage. 541-5032 370 Mountain Roed rm, ulll rm & llv. rm . PVt Ntguei Shor• ocean F1bulou1 view of t ba Quiet 28R 28A cloM to 209 Lugonla $875/mo. C.M. In 3 br • 2 ba home. --------- 2 bd. wood shingle wllegal w/lrplc, 2 car gar • pool In 3 Br 2ba, lam rm, no pets, view condo: 2 br. lrpk:, to Cllalln• 1 B~a Y bet!. DIW. din rm, frpl, N.B. AMlty 875-1642 Neer OCC. All ~· 250 sq It. $200/mo 7711 w . S~~9.~.b~t. '~97~~· beaut. Dover Shorea 1392 Gllwey Lene. new crp11. Step1 to din & llv room. s1'100. ' p1Uo, encl gar., $825 mo. ~ y yq T S250lmo. 64 9- 74 ~~1~8928SI. C M. Tom V8f"/ good assum lllled $875/mo. 644-1836 beach. $850. 493-0195 239 Carnation. 875-3030 2 t63 Pacific, C.M. Call • ')f~.Li''ikfjJlf ... ...., lttedHI PRESTlllOll • rt ltac.. 1069 rate loan. Cash dn to 5Br 2',,BaMesadel Mar,. rl ltac~ 22' RGE mgrJeff.548-4530 )1 n;,nE Sevecareo111a.11me.Pvt. Bayfronl. Offlcea, patios, E side cul de sac, across loan. $335,000. Ph pool & Mrvlee gardener l!J! · LA lew 1 Br. 1895 + dep, 1 UNT V CLUB LIVING rm/pvt bath w/MfJ entr parking, l•nltorl11. from country club. Spot-942-7o53. eeo-o455. Avail 1113, St 150/mo. 3 lfr."'2 Ba. 2 i tory water-~ 19 ~::~o~V~2~~· PALM MESA APTS IN NEWPORT BEACH evall. Mon thru F~I for 873• 1003 less condition. Luxuryac-1111,000 ti lt'l B 1100 Sierra Mgmt. 841-1324 front, yearly, lrplc, patio. · 1581 Mesa OR Slngles 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart-Quiet oonaervatlv. em-Eastside Costa Mesa commodatlons: 28r + HUI YIEW • l I tan Avell n w 3 1 1 garege, utllslncld. $1150. Studio S340/rno. utlls pd. Unlurn 1 Br $4s0. ment1 & TownhOUMI. ployed men In lge moblle 101e10x24. S85. 180 E den condo. 2'~ ba. pvt From balcony of this "best . ce upgra~ed lnsl~~ f~rn ~:J; 75-4912 Isl & last. S300 security JunlOf t Br rum $440 Some are elegently home In adUlt parl< 'nr. 21st. 646-4262 pallo. fireplace, wet b81, priced" 3 bdrm, 2'n bath size rooms. convenient wor1t.shop garage utlls Beyfront 38d 2b1 St200. d~ ~o pets. 642-4210 Call btwn 9-4. 546-9880 l~rn~lhedb(,From $860 beaeh In H.B. $60/wk. NEWPORT CENTER F II micro wave. also jacuzzi, Towne Home In walklng toe .. 117•300· 548"2453 SSOPAIO '47 1 !> 537-5q27 ~ ~~~b!:~~~u ~~r4;..1 CM-' .-4 only. 2724 PENTRIDGECOVE. 2 Br. 2 Sa~ J~~qu1~~1~: ~~ :::,,re= 980 " 5844 senllce Executive Sult! l'OOI, ~Q enter1elnment distance to t>eachl Over llEEILW PAii secur ty lee 1111 na Ba c o N DO near ... 1100 · $575-$625 640·5470 erea. !Standing Condo 2100 sq ft. Pool, spa & Bea1111t111 24K60 Home L Custom Beck Bay 4 Br Incl Big Canyon Townhouse; 3 1 bdrm a t S38o w/ atlo B•ker/Brlstol. lncld1 -Furnllhed room nr SC ---------7~ Stl51~5900 Broker tennlsl 759-1501 kltchen.&llvlng rm .. dl~ l/r etrlum lrplc muoh Bdrm.2'h ba.Gollcourse or s3sJ>'upstalrs.PGas washer/dryer, relrlge,$835/mo. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Plaza. female prel .N~c:;e~a~,f~:fr ~~~· rm. lamlly rm, 2Br , more $900 kid/pet vi ew Av art ·o c t . paid Reis Required No micro-wave, etec oar upper unit, garage. w/d $250/mo.556-1737 H 1 ~h N / ar : · SC Plo.za condo 2Br 1'1• ~&LEE 28aths. Large storage. 539-6t90BESTAllylee $1500/mo,640-5274. pets. 141 Flower door o pnr, lrplc, hk-up,3blocl<stobeach, Fur!!. pvt room/ba. Npt s~f5imo 963~s!r;'0 er. be, pool, spa. In Santa n--t -:........_ Permanent porch steps. ---BLUFFS 3B 2,,, b 645-8161 dshw1hr, patio, gas & all bit-Ina. His. Pvt patio $275 Incl ------- Ana Own IOf cost of rent! ftCill ~ Agt. 540-5937 Eastslde 3 Br. I Ba. gar-neautral dee;, 2 car g!; water f:'d No pell 208 Lugonl1 ulll, 750-0189 Offloe 1paoea IOf ieaae. i8~.rS0:,~5£.~~2sCul 10 "--"'-UEHWI PUI ~~~d!/fr~ w~~ ~k~:~· S985. 760-8384 1c!~e~. B~r;=.Y· Ir~': g~~Soo 50· Agt, no lee. TIL llpt M2· 1IOI HB. nr Adami & N-land, ~4:nt~1;1N'~~:!'~~ls ~t D p . IO"<I! ~. Beaullful 24ll60 Home Lg $665/mo Eves from 7-8, Comloneble 3 Bdrm hOme paint 382 Vletorla, btwn S 2 ~ Brand new 2 muter ault-$250. No pell. Non smkr. A/C, ground nr 1055 El 181 ttat -kitchen. & llvtng rm, din 548-0648 329 University on quiet c;ul de sac nr Harbor& Newport $425 h"fsd r up~~'; ~t, M , Ndl with lull b1th & 754-7067 dys, 980-7037 Camino Dr. COlll Mesa OCEAN OiEW TownhouM. rm. lamlly rm, 28r., ELEGANTLY STYLED Tri back bay N-ly painted 85 1-9523 ~~-19f.feTs°PM · 111 mirrored werdrobu, Pool. )ac, tennis, welk to 3 Blks E of Fairview & 3br 2'nba 1750 l<l It 28athl. Large storage LA!vel 4 • 2 lrg modern kif In/out. n-carpet Mint · ceramic Ille kltcllen, brick beh. $250/mo Incl utlll . Adams. $156,500. Xlnt financing. FORECLOSURE! Permanent porch 11epa formal dining custom cond $1200/mo 1"'41 lBr unrurn, 1475 mo. + WESTSIDE-2Br. 1Ba. utll frplc, luge 1undeck, 548_.280• 993_.888 754-1040, Mr Trecy owner 714-240-3102 Agl. 540-5937 oecor l)uge master suite 644-7424 dep. Newly decorated, pd, $550 mo. S250 MC. laundry hk up & i"~· •$340/up, crpll/drps, Bsat:l.ac.. 1040 MUST BE Older unit, Npt Bch, BBQ patio solar heated 28r, den. 3Ba. new stove&retrlg,offstreet Ca11Beth631-52.30 $850.Nopeta. 75 - 91 4 IWAllllltll 8/c,rstrm•.l 7301 Beacn IOX42. Adult park, no pool & much more. ONLY twnhse, lrplc, 233 16th perking. Quiet neigh-W/SIOE SPARKLING Cllff Hl\1911: 2 br, 1 ba, Wkly rental• now 1vall. Blvd. H B, 842-2834 Y.&. Tll•I pet1. P111k approval r• $525. 537-5027 I $50 se-Place, close to every-borhood. No pets. To -CLEAN&. SPACIOUS patio, garage, eto. Ideal 115.50/wl<. & up Color 3Br In H B, l/p, I/rm. lk nu. SOLD NOW! quired. Furn. S 15,950. curlty tee. thing S935 mo 67s-4333 cell &45-9804 1 br. newly decor, crpta, for retlfed ~. No TV. PhonM In room. 2274 wrl.I" Hurry call Key 962-7788 Stephanie 241-9292 dys. EXL T E/SIOE LOCATION BEAUTIFUL New Twnhle drp1, OW, r•lrlg. V19w & Pel•· Yearly. 548-5308 ~~.."fs CM. EXECUTIVE SUITE lniat 1144 HARBOR RIDIE Ceutrcial Brand new condo -never Brick frpk:, pv1 patio. 2Br, 2 Br t~ BL Xlnt Eu111de S:07:_8::);:,~t~ Nwprt Ctr 640-5470 P 1250 lived In -gorgeous. 3BR den 2'h8e lmmed pos.. IOC. $825/rno 7~4 1 I t I~ la ._. Weterlronl office apace for CUSTO. Ho.E • f 2',,Ba. lge yard. _, bar, aeUion. 233 16th Place Dua Ptlat n B Spacious single, one •• I • ._,. ...... 600 to 1600 aq 11, GllUllM TIWllllSI r n 1 lo MI tra e lormal DIR. S 1175/mo, $895 mo. 87s-4333 .& two bedroom apts. Cl X BEACH Nwpt Beech 673-0641 FOfeclosure completed • new off bldg SA 9700 11 yrl)' lse. 645-7050. 28r apt, 2195 Miner •t., MIUYllW ,, MOTOR INN 11111 sale needed! 2 bdrm llEllOEI FIOI S65K req'd gd loc SO"A New cpll, drpa, paint. Only 10 mlunut• from Wkty rat• $105 & up. laalan1 iv. bath condo 11 loweat leaaed714/558-1433. FUILlllE.lllE HARBOR RIDGE OCEAN Dahwtlr, stove & refrlg. Lagune,yourownprlvete DatlylWlllyl Monthy lntal1 2t16 prloed Plan 'A' In Walnut 11,100,000 C 3 Br 2 Ba tgl lamlly home. VIEW Kenalngton 4br. No peti. $850 mo.+ MC. ooean view from Dana Kitch'• avell. Color TV, ___ ....,,... __ ..... ......, ... Squ11re Vacant end unit, tt 1111000 •••taiaJaal 1275 $850/mo. Pis call 3',.,b•; tenn11, pool $2400 clep. To-call 945-9804 Point'• moat aecluded heated pool & etepe to llAll IEW cent. air S94,800. ' ' S.C PtBZAI condo 2Br 1V. 831-7090. Agl mo. 856-8771, 940-1169 toenlc bluff, like newl 2 OCMll. 985 N Cout Hwy. Generou1 tet1ant lmprov• COLDWELL BANKER 673 3051 ba, pool, ape. Own for Fnce12BrEaatlldegarden LWIW&llll 2 . Br. $850/mo.TwnhM, Br. with den, xtre large L.agunaBMctl,494-5294. menll, II~ aq. II Wyt11 Dom -Gary YC>f1< • coat of ret1tl $10K or leas 1pot $500 avall 1111 Ell Mell lrplc, w/d, aueched QBI· prlvete petlo. $825/mo. Motel rms for rent by wk oftlcei -comm. S.90/lt. 552-2000;-631-1"4a8· an"'lmet dn .. By ownr. $85,900, 539-6190BESTR1tylee Nee.a.· or c'd.1 •. yr.1eaee1100 tlon agel.~9 .. ;IP•.vefYQulet. Call M on-Fri. 9 -5 . FURNISHED or 195-up wl kltchene11e 2488 Newport Bl, C.M •-~~~~~~~ 1 ___ ,. __ owner____ 556-1826 or 776-2560 ,.. • 631--8 4 3 -O 2 1 2 _ wk n d 1 UNFURNISHED. evell. 875-8740 942-3-490 PlRI CREST 4 Bdrm , 2'-'t ba Plan O. 2·Slory llvlng at It's belt. Micro-wave. new carpet, 1ecenlly painted Mov•ln rondlllon. $205,000 ~isor ·Realty 651-1177 ••95~ of mr IT•p-ODHt eame frvrn rite Pi/01. •• I ed•nu...I IA l~t l'tlot end lh•·"••l•••t lar mt • .,.,, hOllH. I ttul .. d 20 <•lie - 10 f•lll• 1 •• ,. lh• rllol .... Hit H t rMPHW "•• .... "'llfl•• I .... ••rr llapp7 "''" '"' ru.1 .ll,000 •••• t.la Dtl. _. Lrg back bay condo. 3 Br 2 S 1500 mo mu. Must be ee 1-6« 1 ALL UTILITIES ,.=-__ -_-,-,,....,,,-.al---- •• Ba. frplc, garage, pool & by Nov. 1 or aooner. 2 Br w/gar apt1, water ~-~---------• In upgrades In this 5 bdrm, ltto t ' 1450 spa. $800/mo. Wkdys 780-8702 paid., 636-4120 1-5PM I H t. ltack '14 PAID. HEALTH Vatatita lntal1 It 11 3 ba SomerMt model r 8-5 call 1-62 l -6630 2176 ··c " Plaoenlla $460. CLUBS. TENNIS, w/expanded din rm. In Big &ar Cabin. MCiuded. eves 1-760-1165 ' Lido Ille 2 •try. 3 Br, 2 ba, 1571 "8" Orange $475. 2 bd, 1 bl, $490. $300 a-SWIMMING, plus ltatal1 zt07 Retail apace 1250 aoq fi. btfl Harbor View Homea great for 4 wheellng or formal din rm. $ t650/mo, pollt. No Pets. Avall Now. h , S c;09 Big e;;; cabl Poot 17th St., C.M. Prime re- Sec:urlty ay.tem All new get-away wknd. Sleeps NEW LUXURY 3BA. 2'hBA 644-4895 or 646-7922 M~r, 7731 8 Ellll, m~~ p:~rMod~;;· table, color TV, t trplC, tall locatlon. 645-3477 kitchen. Biii IP• Better 12 s 150 I wk n d or Condo, Fam room, Jae, IEW a IEllNI 64 -634 l aleepe 14 (714)546-6918 Shop/Store/Olflce space -this today! 759--1501 S60tday. 957-e<l71, Tub, Lrg yard, Avall Nov Totally remodeled 3 Br. 2 Br l 'h 81. Townhouae, open daily 9 10 6 300 aq tt or more, reaa c I.I. 1. $1050. 851-6226 Ull ISU 1'A Ba townhouM anti Ir""', bit •n1 .• v•"lt.-.. ~•...... O kw d ltatall ti ••--C 2 .... 72•9 • ., •• ~•-LEE he...... 1100 48r. 4'h8a. lamlly rm. O/W _.. • ,,_ ... --~-a 00 --. .,_, ... ~-Nr So. Cst Plaa. 38r 2ba. pool IPL lmmedllle oc-. p1tlo9, kid• OK, no Ing, lllnt ., ... neer Hunt. SL·-_... n--tr-...... OPEN HOUSE Sal/Sun Xlnt ar•a . $885 . cupancy.S2500mo.Edla pe11.$695/mo.Forrental H1rbour. $650/mo. GairdenApairtment.s ww • ._ W11trial fteill l»WIC 1t-4PM 2109 Belboa 545-4731 or 545-0034 Olton or Cynthia Agt. eppltoallon 645-8648 846-0736 fAI 0# lfrelocatlng ltat1l1 2t20 Blvd. Large tamlly home. S Newport 8Hdt So. WHY HASSLE? bay v i ew, S575K STEPSTO SANOIGIOen-IU·IHO 525/mo 2Br.1Be.pool, 2Br tba, gae paid, $425 ROOMMATEFINDERS 1200sqlt.Newerbldg Sale/trade dn E-Z termi. tic 2 rm plea.ure palllOe laundry room, cloM to w/$375 dep. McFldden 1700 16th Street Interviews ecreena W lrvlne area $504/mo OWC. PP. 7141544. 1642, gourmet kltch breel<fast atiopplng. 149 E. Bay St. nr Beech. 893_.194 (at Dover) photo's & matcnea prof. 1 mo frae. Tom 651-8928 ... a·-·'' IWIEI 675-3772 nook 1uper eiush decor Udo Ille: lge 4 br, 3 ba, Tll 11c9'. W-1801 2 br apt, sgl car gar. Nloe 642-5U3 people. You talk OfllY to 2500 SQ " warehOUM In--· very low MO E IN $345. formel DR, beaut. decor "91ghborhood nr Beach & Q allfled lo' .. 4341 eludes 2 offlcin & 1g 11% llxed rat• 30 veer•. ll ...... I s 537-5027 $2200/mo. 675-9t03 $545tmo. 2 Br. 2 Ba. lrplc, Ellf1 .. ••65/mo. •91 •31• Newport Beaidt No. u 81 .. ~ Monaco with GC view. 14 balcony/yerd. enolda ... u .., .. re,,,. ...... .,.,... mezzanine. So of South Aue Vlllars. Open wkndi. ltllll I atllll Unique Ill bungalOw micro N-porl for lelal A-1 2 Br garege, lndry rm. Avall. 2 Br. Corner of Huntington 880 Irvine Avenue 841-1899 Cat Pia.ti & 405 FWy. 640-1538 Win pay up 10 1~ value wave & relrloe et $300'1 fresh paint Clean decor now. Mull_, & Baltimore. $875/mo. (at 16th) 2bf pity tum. $312.50 Incl. 3042 E.nterprlff, C.M. at .'I • and all cos11. 859-3342 539-8190 BEST Riiy fee encl g1rege flat $500'1 810 Center St. . OCMn vu, v<>IJeybell, gar-645-1104 utH1. 4703-B RIV9r Av.. Paularlno btwn Brlslol & Wll YOllESEIYEITl 539•8190BESTR1tyree T1Ll1 .. 142-1801 d4H*.Qute1 581-9100 N.B.955-9307.073-3071 55 Fwy 54• •q ft, Harbor Vlew-t·fftla 3 Bdr 2 811111 hrallla.. ----957-2731, 54M985 B• model perfec:1 home l NEW gated 20 Towntlome TIE ILlfFI $600/mo. 2 Br 1'1\ Ba. lro Raat •---L 1'141 I t It L 1740 4 Br 2 Ba llouM, WIO, 2 680 It 397 .. at 1218 Keel Or, CclM. la Ma VILLAGE COMMUNITY. Avall Oct 15. 3 Br, 2>A ba. T w n h I , Ind r yr m, '-• •a • Ha llltch., etc. 1250/mo + ' lq • " Birch, $362,000. Euy term• PtaiaHla 2107 2 Bdrm, 2'n Ba. 1600 sq 2 1tory Twnhae. 2 car gar. carpor1.c 1oee to ltl<>P· 1 $20 dep, 94&-8388 ~~~1330 M 1~4~~~3g2 Appl, only. Call 642-7787 ocEAN FRONT HOME tt of pure lu•ury. 2 car $f2001mo. ping & beech. Avall now. BMut. 3 Br condo, CdM, __,,,...,.,,------- CONDO EASTBLUF"' • 8 28 18 I garaoes, spas In every 850-0504 942-9599 2076 Thurln WOODLAKE welk 10· oceen, dbl gar. •$775 up 2285 It lnd1tr1 ,. .. r r. •· garage, grM home -mut~ aulle, din-WATERFRONT·.1oua1u 2 br fll ••.. •••-180• ottic.. t8101 Redondo 2'A Bl $185,000. Xlnt Joe. Winter $900 mo. Call ~ ·~1 -. -« • aundeck. Mml·Pvt eepat-nnenclng evall. P.P John S&S Properties Ing room•. WOod t;>urnlng & den 2 be lrplc bit Ins S675 2 2B E APARTMENTS ate llv rm, weaher/dryer Cr.#U, H.B. 842-2834 (7l4) 950-4018 or collecl 898-9824 llreplacea, micro-wave pity furn. o( unfu;n, mini · atory, r. :1 eV1111. 1111. $400 + 112 '"'"" (819) 340 5434 oven1, prlvlle patio• & cond No pell LNM/09-tNwnhme. Gpood. '~lldl ~~21. ~,.!..Ana24 .. ~d #212, W".Dll" . I U I 1 kN Yer d • · ~ a r d e n er tlon. S 10&0/mo 87M2.41 Nr rww. eta'" .... ren _ __,.,, ... • --··-IUYIEW-llH -'. alH a 811 1 provided. Etttg1nt llvlng oil. Agt 845-9850. w/.,,,I offloe. lmmed. ooc. 8 ., HatbOr-Muat ~ leatral 1202 only 15 minutes from Hta I Fem. 2 Br 2 81, non-1mkr. 30t grou. 631-8480 wllrg 10¥•% 111. For tllec '5 6r. 3 91, 3.660 aq ,, Fuhlon Island. 7 mlnulel 2 bd. 1 be condo. 065 + EASTS I DE 2 BDRM Spaclou• C.M3r 10. Oya ef4-1700. t detalla 8404227 hm-golf ........ , ... p•"-to S.C. Plaz.e or O.C. Air· te011rlly dep. Laundry 1 ba, PSY15 Spatio, ~-ext 1, -2-7220 pitOiil;;;lf&;;t_..,. __ ;;:;:. -~ •ttt It ora;~ vi;;; u95. port. Ju11 ... , of N--hl u, pool, 1pa, play-llalf9. 2 . 957-2...... 1-2-3 b-... room Fe. non-amkr. 10 lhr 3 bet For ~t: OUtild: IOCl(a6' • .,_ -•, __. C rt ~ 3 pon Blvd, & 80 Of San ground. woOday .,..., nr E/llde lu11. In• pine fornt. WU 2 ba. 2 cw gar, C.M. '330 atorao-~ IOf boat• Tm Wlllmt a lbad '4...-l:! 5 Diego FrWJ. $1050/mo. Felrvlew and Warnet. Lge2 bf. 2 be. retrlg, OW. + ~ utlte, 060-4it7 or cart. Coate MeM. 3 Bt 2ba E.Mtbllltt condo HARBORVUt!Ot'nee Mon-631·5439, 2473 Orange 831~2039 belc, BBQ, QBf. Gu Incl. apartment• H I .,..,.. 2 . 831~7271. End unit 1209 &oo ep.,; aco plen 3 8d on comer Ave. co111 M.... 3 Bdrm. 2 ea. POOL Ss&stmo. ~2-t844 agt ' ~rom •~1111 r.:. o Point.' B~~:: ""a..-..... -.-._--.. -.. -~~ Set/Sun 1-6 JooO Vle111 lot. Oar"-Included W F II ~ ... ..,. ....., .a7• ........ ..iiiiiiiiltiiiPiiiiiiO'iiw.,.;;R;~ C · Sl150/wly Ctaialfled •de are the home, neer e•I· rpl pool prvt patio ,_.,.,mo. , .. ,.u ..........,. ...... p1A1fulL f ovisAH* -~:::=:::=:;:~=~~:;=·~Jon~, z:No=Ag~I•=·===-NEWPORT CReST 3 9d + enawer to ; euooH1lul mln1terl N•hor.:· fncd dlhwthr X·LG I Br on MIF Non·lmkr to th.,. 2 A~ln .;_ ~.,.,.,,; & ':':~:::~' S~\lci}l-A-/t°t~s· ::!: ::i:.i~n:'1~11~~r~: C~;rr:~~~~~:~1~:r: ~r:7¥:'.To'1• '~!'~ eaata1dets 10557 • 2 &4 1 *Lakes & Streams ~~2:.~~!4·~·::: ~~~~~:: '"'t 91orhea {'f, .. ,.,. &Hd ..... ,.., t"'' ' _l.., ·~..... people! 863-1500. Pam 241-1492 IV m90. Gu.ranteed IOOlproo~ ............... .... •• .... •1-1... • ........ ·-·· -Makellyouf'1nne5rmuntt meatiBJIV *Poot·& Spa MIF-.. r"""M2•·2BahM 1-to --·~;-,.:,."';!~ .... ~".;.,:;. • -.. crpll thru-out newer 8H11tuully lend1t1ped pvt .. ~ti;. ;dn, lrplc: T~1eto.;;\"'~ In I I T ~I r Ii Al p I' I •• ..,.,, ltaek ..... ..,.rt ...... ltlt ~~ ,:~E~~ '400'• J:==· p~ :.ttt•· * Large Recreation Room ~dtl: mo. 111 & IMI. ~s.: 15."+ ~ . - . -. . . Ta1tia 2 8dtm w. B• seoo * Bar-8-Ques N/lmk . N • et bMCh to PWP-2. 3'67 8lrch a1. YILU .IL.01 81ua:i1 61J(ige1 a hit 1315 2 ~~~. ~ ~~'. 548·2=5 LOI ..A. b4i1h & kit. S325: ST A 434 N9wpor1 ewm. f "' I r Ly I renll thl• baalc 2 Br * Newly redecorated "45-3015/IMW110(4-t) c.. 9 2teO I' I 1· I I pell 7 Low deposit 1 Bdrm. S515-.S820 Prof. per-.on to tht bMu1. t .... _..._.._~-L.-.....J. I 639-t t90 BEST Alty ,.. 2 Bdrm tv. a.. S595 CdM furn. llOl'M, OOMl'I Found 2 ma' Xirea&: . ... , -P_E_S_T_[ _,I }. V')U c•n °" O¥•<>•••M .. ,,.~ Profeulonal decorated, furnished & Atatt .. atl r.m.w 2260 't:ote-:: Way * Beautifully Landscaped view. 1500. 944-5347 VIO 8r00k~5 Adefnl t I I I I' -U .. tlQ 011 ... tonn& """'. neelth unfurnished units are now betna -* s It G t Reep ,. to "" rum ODM . . -. -" ,, ed aaJ n..i 0 Cetta.... MM n_ ........ _ ---••4• ecur y a e TWnha9. .... 5 ..... M. Nr1"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9 ,--......,..-~~....,,..__, 1JOO> '°" "'10111 ~' •efy 111 o er for e. ~,reel range from ...,.,..._,. ... " -v• 1 • I I H C A T 0 l ou•to • $189,000 to tl95,000. If lnt.eretted, UIAlllll 131 E. llth ~lO OOWt.Noow.'7 58041 fOtll) ADS ME FREE Cat I I I' I l'O l-......... ~"·"'-pleaaecalJ&4~·64~9. ~LL UTll.8P~10 (714) 848-8591 "9ap.Fton,,..2t1r,2 ,__.., _ __,_.__ ..... _. _ __. . ....., ,.... ,;-:..::,.·1 . .:;. ~":,"';.'"'1 ~~· Comptre before you ret1t. '°' CIUelfled Ad be II.lie. oondo: ,leo. 9"M1 Cu1tom ....u... IMtu•M. '"CTION YIW, OM/NB .,._, 1360. 8 .... ,, .• _,...~,.'" I' I' I' 1· I' I' I' I' I pool, bbq~~d oar.. "'can • lull. 141-704 OeYld ·""? ,,, 11w•u . . . . - . -. . JIL PIOPlllTOEI eu"°""'*' with plulh Deity Piiot 1100 l!dlnger Amm\e "'1ted '°' qui.t ~; ··: :~·', '"'"' 1andeoap1ng. No pet-. AD-1J1soA Huntington Beach pOOlelde ~1. ~~· Fem. 811Ch. F'um. S&10 &42-&eTI non...,,.r, 2~. *300. ~rm. Furn $870 ' 131·4174. Clll Ana 694, w. Wiison. 142·1971 ==~~l!~.i:_L: ... ~2~-4:~300~=====1=======~ Ml-1111 .................... 1111 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Oct i2, 1983 01 Aqlili-Cewt C•nttt De.tdA1 .._ CIM•'• .... Palatlllt Pl..., $2 17 per dav -m:::;11:aa;;; tot MOb'i bONCMiti I MietNieiXA: Pr lo.a HOIM ~Af1)el'ltr; --lllPIT PX'fio C6WAl/Dicki &JSfoM EXT 11HT H llr a f Ml-tin Thti1'•.~l.pi .• PJ'Yfwa &&':'*~1t~ M~=v~~~1::;'9 5zC:-em:'=~1.C:. F~·~~9 ........ Fr .. T=~=~~~537 PF::1t~7~; WATERHEATER~ ~ret•lal Svc Reuonable ret•. Pickup/ deliver. Joanoe 845-1902 '"""*Y""' ·--r-· ·1 873-03H -~... W• do thofouah work."-"" POOi ,......,.*furn.:. In IM All!r!!r!-~...... . ONE CALL DOES IT AL.L liable & REFS. With oom-~ O.ve'a Cuetom Ptllntlng •F~•• OiaC>OMll* DALY ~g 1106+ emr 1AO F&d wOOCIY * llllTIW * W• fix It, brMk It. buy It plet• CWpel & hOu... Int/ext. Hlgheet ~. Drlllnil clMf trom 16125 •DAUNK OAIVING 1250+ Ctleuffwur tor wMdlnge. RMloneble 831·2346 or haA'4 It. 54-6009 a-nlng, wlndowl done • MOVING-IOWIM rat•. 640-5448 ...., lllucMI, dlep, *· lii@en Pl.OT Acddentl/Bankruptcy> pre>tN, etc. MO/hOur . PAINTING-CARPENTRY ... FREE. CALL TODAY! OuldV~. Low rel•. ef&llf ....... 86l-MCMM&M432.()600 lllTU.Ulm/llPlll Fr .. OONUlt 2'1..00.3 967-8071 • E~~~~~~RS REPAIRS-Gary 845-15277 640-5&54 Lie. T13804e l5152.0.10 C.,pentry & AemodellnO No BOii to &lppott. Self Fr .. 111. PMl879-2821 SERVICE ~y CkJWcart 646-7802 PTL HOUSE-APARTMENT *'"'--* Uc443908JohnMl-3tH emp.81 11c#31IM50J~ ''" rric• --ii:~ c ... nlng or Renovating. Beat qu.ilty 215 'ff •xi> ..... LPH'S PAINTING ~no lob too llNll J.C. fBEE SERYfCE pg, peyr • gen. llCC1g Ctllld Cele, C.M. tlOml, lu4..U. -Free •ttmat• ~ee Comc>9tltive ratea · "" ,, nmECTORY a eec'I. Flex. tire. Ind. *iced yard, lnlent• to 2 ....... MP Joh ' HOUSECLEANING Lie T-118 42' 730-1353 . Int/ext. Reu. UC'd. ... ... ""'"' Trimming, removal, yard 1111\ wkndl, II your~ yrs.,,..,.. 842-2"6 111&S• SMAU MOVING JOBS Aefltbtl Reuonable • ' . Fr" llt. 841-3688/24 tv ml We'A eec:ure deen-upa, etc. 642-2914 P1U1 tM IRVINE MIRROR and the HUNTINGTON BEACHCQMBER every Wedneed.V at no extra ctlargel CALL TODAYll Ulnlum& Your Delly Piiot SeNlce Direct°'} Repteeentatlw MJ-llllnt.111 °' cen pld(up & dellwr. . Topped/removed. CIMn MIKE ~1391 Own tran1. 860-3283 STARVING COLLEGE Top qu.ilty ... Reeaonabfl tenant&, ftnalln doelnga. l a lenin F,... COUMll. 642-7047 "~tattr leniMI up, MW'-. 751-3478. . STUDENTS MOVING CO. rat•. Cell tor 11t1rnat1. Aiits. STARR 54M471 "~~•...,._,,,... _ _,._ -_ HAUL·MOVE·REMOVE HOUSECLEANING Uc. T124-43e. lnaured. 850-2328 Uk 'or Brad ngtword PrOC8iilng C.W.tt llUlat fBM· HELPI Anordat>te llf•HIM W..W Furniture, Trutl, T,... EXP'O. GOOD REFS. 841-&427 • · lnw ltntCt AJ Jal'*8, ectlool & I*· ;A;; c:abiMta, cabinet 6. ueetul on-Ill• 9d"1ce. Mowing, EdQTng. TWlcl 1 963·5'115 NORM GliadYt 549·0859 (4-9pm) WATCH US GROWi P!g~ia . . aonat projects. 851· 1041 feeing bara a tormk:a training & product&. month 120 to S215 LT HAULING • MOVING --Custom reeumee/C0\19f' w c --·-counttW1ope 642--0881 SSP/PC 7154-1038 84&-l5737 ' R«ltal Clean Upe, Jon HOUSECLEANING Paiatiat F ntWlor DMIQn lettert/Job wreh tlpa Jt.aul i-----·----i 645--81921731_2918 Have •11'11 ret1. Call Atlcta, _ HANGI /STRIPPINQ Celt CDS 873-1107 WHITE WIZXRd Cablnel• & Carpentry C.atr11tm JESSlE'S GARDENING 646-8392 alt. 3pm ,. Pllllm VISA-MC Scott 873-1512 ~ WINDOW WASHING Small )obi and repairs ltaeraJ CleetHipe, yltd melnt. GEORGE'S CLEAN UPS PAM & BOll'S CLEANING ~ Richard Sinor. Lie. BLACKWELDER Paper-~ "The only magic la Fr• 1111lrnat1 645-2003 Free 11tlmal• 54().8035 & HAULING. No job too Husband & wife. 6 "/fl exp. 280644. 14 yr1 of happy hanging & removal. Oual. u Roofing-all 1ypee QUALITY" 631-2026 Remodel/Rep.ire, comm. MOW/EDGE/CLEAN-UP am811. 896·8006 873-7012 alt. 6 local cuat~. work only 494-3618 New·AeooV9f·Oedl• t'iimmmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim ~~~~~~~~l ___ ,... ____ .... I & reek2. Llo'd, bonded, TRIM. Fr .. eat. ReH. Thank you, "3~11• . Lie. #411802. 548-973-411 .; ~r9P:fr. unique 1 ln1. For •I, 5152-9142. retM Jim 846-1958 lHl'StillJll THE CLEANMAKER QUALITY PAINTERS EXPERT Wallcovertng In-, lfPllnllm Aetesatiat unuaualwortcaapeclalty. • Hautanyth'ln0.845-7331 5yraexp.Home/ofo 1tall1tlon.Reu.Conaut1-~,.-831-4008 k k 11 h ou CPX: Hn:nc:l:J atat~ta. 20 )'Ml't. Uc'd, bonded. Dnlt• Jiii • re• IPI Reluvatl. fl7~853 Pr 0 m PI • n ea I Pr 0 • ant Aaalgnmt. 581-8590 ~.._I!"" Orange eout noc 1 0 en w •n Y tu retuma. Cott;~ PaiomboConlt9e2-8314 -Fr•11t.PM1979-2821 IHH Cle~ Ladacatlat leulonati. 83&-7149 Pl.tier --/OOl'lng ~T::,1r~~1!:i:!~n~:1~·~1~ Jotm Brown 831-8483 Repaif·Alt8fat1on1 lesln'r I WW'r .... ~ R681N's CltfNINd Pruning liandecaplng 1~~~~~mam~~"· 1 LCJttarial reach the Orange Coast Alnltk!I =.;!:...~~~· ~.f&~t ;;1'HOME REPAIR SERVICE:• thoroughly Speclallet ... Call Alfredo flS0-64771650-6646 Aeltuccoe. Int/ext. 30 yr1. lentcn mar~e~one 642-5678 Elec Pluml>-C t clMn tlOUM. 640-0857 549-4930 or Leon Maciel Neat. Paul 545-2977 TYPtNGlBOOKKEEPING C.Jiz1 "If• ••P· Jerry 543-•413 KITCHEN DESIGN: NMd F~ K9'th"fl:'"r,.;J12 Dependable Chrlallan 751-212fl free eatlmetea. Custom Graphlca/Murata For lndlv./amt bualneaa NeW' .... m . I Repalr/amall Joba. Fenoea. plan• for new or remod. Woman with references Ouallty lnt/eX1 painting ~ meell Mller·wlth an H /d /'""' a~n n8"" ' I " C C R L h H 'hi t It" 11 d d r ay .,., .,...,.... "" Ot···•t..,. A <*l*llry. Uc. #341012. lheMle, part tlona. Low kltcti.n r ALL A Y , WANT ACTION? will clean your ome. ave 1ome. ng o M • for your home or bualnMa • ecttve cta111 • a . -..., d1, your on. A~ty Bldre 730-1900 ret11. Stew 731-8311 842--0355. Ref11111011. Claaalted Ada 842-5878 551-3226 Ctaaaln.d ad• do 11 well. Free eat. Randy 9e2-7519 642-6878 CIUllfled Ada 642-5878 11~ shopping center. 1111 Wu... Slll 1111 Waa... llM lel1 Waate4 SIOI lel1 Wute4 llM 1111 Waate4 SIM •11 Waate4 SIM 1111 WaatM SIM BABYSITTER: Needed tor eo.ta Meu'1 llnMt HMllh LIQUOR CLERK..patt time NEW FUTURE In spare R.E AGENT (Lied) for tu-Seiel SecretarytReceptlonlll, HOROSCOPE fl mo. baby, Vic 18th & Food Store 11 Miking Ell.P41f & rcrl'a a mull time, ulttmate muttl-level crallve SunMI Beach ;ff * * top akl119, for Lagun• Hiiia Harbor, C.M. Call before quailfled. enlheualutlc, trvlne •N-551-8801 food plan. Info call Carol rental ofllc•. (714) 1111010 lew office. 830-6880 BY SIDNEY OMARA 8pm, 646-3117 healUI onented pereons Loenl 552-5919 ~5. 213/1592-2871 Serv1ce Station Attendant, a.ntclnQ :'.:::-~ :=1 P':_ .. OllNUll RMI &cat• SHORT HOlllS PIT, Evee & Wknd1. Neat CEITUL CASH PIMM call 548-7355"for DPAlllll A=nfn ~,!.=P!f.:~ Salllplnont Needed • Photo~SupPlea :r.::an:ly ~"~~ Tbanday, Oc&ober 13 VIUL T TELLER c::~ help win train fl r~u~: ~~:ro.~~~ ~~t~r:'1~/~,= a r ,:,w~;~ O:..ic. ~': : ~~ ~ ::J:l.Y~,!9~~~wport ARIES (March 21-April 19): Efforta, abilities receive special At 1eu1 1 yeer. l>wlklng or dYt pr wti'. 1144-4422. areu: em. -7:30 pm.m Van, branch. Catt Pacific • Exlenatve training attention. Emphasis on achievement, wi.'der appeal. Project will S&L experience (wonclng 844-4421. Bergatrom L'c,:'1P~!1,r;:~:::C~t Station Wagon or Small Coutlloe Mk lor Marina • ~~T;"PayGuatantee s:~=:11nF~r~~ be moving toward suoceesful conclusion. Financial picture is with cuh). Type 415 wpm · Cleaner'I. CdM Loan Aevi:w Speclallat plekup needed. Only very 7141720-1105· e Pteeunt, ProlMalonal pwlerloed aatesperaon brighter than origjnally anticipated. Libra and another Aries !~!~~~~,~~ CUSTOMERSERVICE Challenglngpoemonawfth ~:i>1';''~ 119flt•n Ofcln~oneOel Mat 875-1010 "-·-~tly kHplng experience P9r.arl need9d to handle a l!ynamlc company on $200 oo week plue mll• Front offtce poeltlon. ,._ It your• bright and 1--mu--1-.-•• -1-1--ua-"' ·. . pr9fwr9d au.lltled moderate to hllvy cua-themovelnthemanufec-age · Cont9Ct G Hyde qui,... good -* and en ergetic, Call Mr -T URUS (April 20-May 20): Excellent tune for new ~11 ~tact YV9t't. tom« contact, and aome tured home tndu1try, 842:.S21 Mon-Fri, V:30 _ knowledge of general of. ThomM bet'Mllf'I e am & Good opportunity for q>11tacta, f« be1 ..... introduced to boolaa ~ya and a variety of ~oreno (2131641•2114 tig ht oltlce work. delllng In conventional 11:00 a.m. ONLY. floe prooeclures. Good 1 pm at energ•llc, fun people. b.'-"t. 1C\ ... "6 ··-•-• ·'b · and · ' PIMNnt voice II a mu1t, FHA title and VA. PO&· ... , .. ..,and company bin 113 0111 Xlnt $$, cash paid dally au ,.--r .ocua on ~1lllhu .... tion, poml ~y punwt llPERllL SIL and good attitude 11 a +I ltlon reporta dtrectty to New.paper ;n'tP,ogrem. Apply 1~ • Call now. 831-6391 of educational project. Member of oppoSlte aex finds you Equel OoP Ernploy9r " you 111 thl1 dMctiptton. the Vlce-Preeldent, aper • ..,... lllTI IUIJEi penon. Edlckaon Yadlt•, sa1e1 ITMI TUii ii.iii attractive and will let you know about it. Mt~/H t;_ me a call. Judy, atton1. Salary com-Immediate openings for 193t Deere Ave, !Mne. Ull I• ·-""'""~ t Ith M 1• ---Requlr•: typing u1111 tor GEMINI (ll•-y 21.J"-20)· lntuiti'on provi'des .... W .. "' ....,.. menaura e w ex· AM dellvery. uat be o U•fll•IT d 1TMll ...... • ---... 1111111 0 E pwlence. call 851-6266, "If ol age and have valid ••--,., .... , ...... I ala entry, 8'Crow ex-mpeci.ally where money la concerned. Don't take chanoe on ~1 ~typl ~try o~erl Aa« lor Phll Eckstein. calll Dflver Uc wtth cur· Sharp penon to aneww Ea1y aco•u/elr con-~m:n1b•~=1 ~~~~ lleCW'ity by following get-rich-quick acheme. One who brap Exciting opportunlft for ~.°:.top~en:~~rma-Loving childcare wanted rent car Insurance. Npt '~ ~ ~ot ~ dltloned office. Sal ary negottabte. a bout "bi& deals" may actually be bereft of funds. Do eome prof ... lonaJ lndlvldual ceutloal firm 11 looking for for new born In our home. ~·H ~~ ~l. ~= ~ Good grow':h op-IAll lllllU IULTI w/ralM In 90 daya In-_,., rmeUch. wno enjoy9 wor111ng with a pen0n to provide word w • • k day 1. Go Id · 5~~8 bef;,,. 11 am · por1~ty. 8«-4350 No Otlarge-baot<al euranoe benefl19 Con· ~--CANCER (J 21-J··, 22)· Go alo li lo . the publlc. prOCMllng lkllla for the 1nw11t/McF1dd1n. ._ 11._ · NoAllenllll tact Etatne vaaullo. une ..uy . w. e w, examme llmelycompl9'1onofdata 892~826 ·--·-RECEPTIONISTtort>eeuty C&llBr1an,836-9334 720--02C/21or Appl. varioua aspecta of subjects and do plenty of reeding. Focua on ... ,, • .,AIU_. entry & gener81 offloe t! Mec:htoe operator """" nursing =· ~t':..COI\~ F~~· ',~!. E~?._R DH~ lwth"9ar• ... , . putner'. ,mate,apedalagreementaandlegaldocumenta. You'll be lentet/"-' :=:1='~!...., tmmldlat• opening, aJi OU Ouele Salon 200New --· ., .-n.. -·-.·nei in contact with l"e8tle9s, dynamJ.c people w h o are channing and V•led dutlM tn our Ac-olthe dept. Send reau~ gin department. Coata Expwtenced, FIT d•Yt· por1d:ter0r'., N.B. • Fumiahlng• relaller need P!.~"~'::~ e:· '*::· who encour.,e you to live up to potential. count Servlc• Phone to Pereonnet officer. MeH plant, O.ltrontc XLNT working condition• •:XJ> Salee Peraon. Mu1t Call &45_7585 • ~ 22 '!:'--,, vel k Cent8f. Should tlav• ex-N 1wP0 r 1 p harm• Corp. ~5--0413 and benent• 842.8().44 Rec:ec>tlonlTY.,llt know drapery meuure. -===-:-::==-=---=--=-~ (July 23-Aug. ): r-1'U:Alent for de opins wor cellenl communtoatlon tloal 1 1 11 ,; or apply In P--ton 466 Newpor1 Beactl R.E. office ~ Mr. Bruce, TEACHERS. Pr•tehool habits. Emphua on buic illues, special 9el'Vices, employment uR .. ror hMV"J phone ~ eo! 1~~ ~ ~ahtp Roecl. Npt 'ech. looklng for• l>W90n with . Nettle er.-PfT, 14/hr. Cotta M-. and ability lo make~ repairs. Focus abo on revi&iona, ~~:V~!i':'~•nck~~"!!: ~.CA. 92Mo/0147 F ~~ OFFICE HELP GENERAL ~0:85~~Mtype SALES _84--:2,.....·8_1_8..,..1 __ .,..-__ reviews and po.able rebuilding program. Scorpio native pla)'ll pertence and femlllartty lllTAL &llllTAIT ~ ~''convai!:: Mon-Fr1. $4.00 hr Irv. __ 1.;_., W ll•lllU Ttt.-11..tetlM. key role with CRT prefwred. so.-enlt\Y91Utlo RDA cent llOlplt• xtnt t>en-551-8003 U...-1 _. .. , Mature peraon w/buel. & P~ue11n..wlnT'ed. · · ' -,., ,._ .. ••2 :.,,. OC Airport .,.._ Financial computer ellP>-7~ Prof relaxed atmotl(>het• VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Emouons dominate l<>lk -W• can oner you 1>e11u11tu1 for bull"/ Newpor1 9Mdl ente • ..,.. .... .._.4"4. Older more meture. •table serv Firm r9qulrM In· ptMtant autroundtng1'. aweepingchangaoccur,acenariolshighllght.edbylove.Imprlnt MW omc... •friendly reconalructtve general 11119 In 8abyaltter1or 2 telllgenl • .ii groomed IALll(PUT/MI) Salary ~comm.-+bonu1 •-be · deal 'th ,_ .... , 'd• ·-•-h r.............f WO<k environment com-practice. EJtperlence In •l'tliU Elli chlklren. Mon thru Fr1. Individual for front dllk Mat~ person for ted(ee' s.rtou1 nnanclat poten sty.ic, perceptive. wt uawVl U&MJ W O are not uuaa~ petlttve Mlary and bin--taking hydrocollold Im-7:30-4:30, e11e1/wknd1 Ellp/good reta. Type eO clothing. Sat. & Sun. O.C. tlal. 09portuntty tor ed: down with red tape old-faahioned concepts Another Virgo efll.I pr...ion1. corone po11.n. 11 you ha119 • ·~•tlon off In excn.nge for room wpm lmmld opening Swap M.., E.cP8flence EVEN NG 4 Plava key role • . Ing & the making a trim-Wagonl or Van an can & bo•d. Daya &45-216 1. Cd 553-0940 . preferred. 1:2131703-8128 ~!·hllt1 . ~huck .1-' INTERVIEWING BY ming ol acrytlc tempor-recru I, train, motlvlle ,. . lJBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis on details, .ecwity, APPOINTMENT ONLYI an... Excellent beMtftt and aupervlM teenag.r1 Part time, atterooon1 tn en Reataurent: lltlJ/l .. ll Tr... Randolph. 497-7501 property,conclumonofaa.lescampaign.You eet whatyouwant i.f &Mlary.631~238 contacting n•7 oua-~!"!!r':~2~':;1;'0 ware-Appllcatlona being ac-Requtr•• a t r.o n g ft1t"9 .. tlelltlten __...._..,...l, f --n . • d ... nu ..... to tear d f PIHM Call: SS ST o tomera for tooa ,_.. . oepled for day time typing/phone sldlta Wlfl w tea to eke apptm'1 r--~ aware o 111i.wu. ~· an ............. "& • own or Penonnel Dep1 DENTAL A I I rtho. papera you oan Hrn PART-TIME high ICtlt 11u-bartendtng. day food leach WOl'd procM.ing. ,!'..,Ii "2:a11 673-8421 ultimate purpo9e of rebuilding on a more aolid bue. Major (71jl70G-«>00 ~ ~. :,o:_.~-~· $450 10 $800 per we4* dent ~ 2 hre per waller/ waltren. day Pleaaant, non-amo6i:lng t>etwn ~:5 Fred ~•Jre dcmestic adjustment oa:ura ~ working evenlnt and day !Pr ofc meint~. codltalla. dey hoat--1 Oftlce In So. CO..t Plaza Dance StlKilo SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov~ 21): All may not be what appears on .;: f>. k llMtrMlt Tt1ltll1I•, ~r~':~.•'flc!'4n~ct 2~':', The Bath Matt 875-4830 :;:*· 1c1t~t ~· = .,.._CM. 151.~ TOP m ,,..., m ust take care to avoid a wild-aooee chase Member of of & MfV\CI. EJtper. only. w .. kdayl between dent, no experience r• e.t..., 8:30-11am only. Pharmaceutical firm Eaconl. (213) 886-18~ aurface. Orden are changed, directions could be revened and :. X~ll Paging & BG Mualc lflata'll Roundtree at 548-7058 Part tim. Job, 1-tWM, •tu-Pel~"Hwport BMoh. Secretary: lnternatlonal F«na1e1 Prcrl. Modelt & .1--8 • 54&--8871 Coate Meae 11:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. qulred,oftlce/typlng/llllln need• • vet91tHe, cateer iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii oppoaite leX. oould be lllncere but a1ao misinformed. Know it, N.•W llOrt nu-p•J • g. $4/hr. Well9 Fargo Reeteurant, Mana(ltr9. II minded tndlvldual to Fm own tune •-• Bldg. FHhlon laland. IMl't 2.5 )fl old. Olna'a provide MCr'9tll"/ eup.. 111111• • • EqualOpptyEmplM/F NIT-W-MllllDtuml N.B. Sul'lewk 011. Pm&. exper. Pf91. Con-por1 tor our lntemaUonal .. llllU G ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Thia could be your Ing Opp0f1untttet avallable $4004e00perweek 844-4533 tect btwn 2-5. 673-2473 Dept. Muat be Xll'lt et power-play day! Emphasis on responllibillty, productlon, bwlk ~ wtth the Loe Angelle LMm IU1•t gtowtng tn-typing, & trllMCriblng & ~ "'E:mt';"" '"hMd executive abiliU. and IOlid clwlce to make money and Jove. .....Un Ttmea Clrcut1t1on De· duatry In U.S. National PIJllU II.Ill. In... tie able to 0<ganln & time evenl':fga ~ Y 'Il ha 'Il be · ... ori and llPAlllll p •rt m • n t I n our Organa.atlon upending. The Jolly Roger tno, .,, ... epeclalty atlop looking for maintain ni.. exper In ' OU vemot'erecognition, you gavenmoreau • .u ty require 3 90tFeeaiV9 lndl-doof-t<>-door MW91>aper No Expw. neoMNly. We tab1t1h1d r11ta11rant matureMlf-at.,,er-worti l'tandllng the documertll• potltlve, depend•ble. member of opposite leX will be totally lmprewd. vlduala tor the followtng Mlee progrem, Guatan-train, Call Mr. H•rrl1. chain, hu en OJ>llllng tor Into m&n8Qll'flln1. Salll tlon & proceedur• f0<0-=l~h~u::;6-;~~ CAPRIOORN(Dec.22-J an.19):Lunarcycleissuchthat you areu: teed hOUt1y wage piu. 882-5789 an experienced Pll"/l'oll •XJ>ll"· nee. King• Row ommerc1a1 1htpment1 2.30 io 6 pm Monday · -.. u Loan Servtolrlg Manager ~ Houn: OM,\ clett< lo wor1I In a 4 per-F\rep4lot Shop. WMt· ~ -would be tietp. · · · make right mDWll. c::iraumlancea tum in your favot, ~ --ty Loen Pac*aotng SpeclAll9t • 2PM. or 4PM -8PM. MMMUMe wanted, exit '°" department Ablltty mlnlt• Mall. 894-7552 lul. Send reeume to Per· thru Frldey. sparklel and you oomple1e Jong~ aMlgnment. lndivid· Loan~~ Training 11 provtdad. -:'Ing cond. w~ wtN to l'landte extenalve eonnel officer ~ --lU-YIL--llm---- uala who formerly expremed doubt oonoernlng your capabilltiea CtlAllenglng poeltlon wtttl • Potentiel to Mrn S300 ~at~ ~~· ~r phone communk:atlon• epec1.-. ~Ill.looking f Pharmaceutlcel 1 In· Min 2 yrs •JtJ>. Se~ ~.1..1 .. .~L -m -dynemlccompenyonthe pluaperweek Foran In· ,........, t 71., NH l>or. and 10-key by toueh • -·1 or ternatluonal, P.O. Bow &Vee Mittie fl75-1311 UAMU now ueootoe ~eroua IU.l.U:9. • move tn the manyfeo-tervlaw, Call (7141 ,..,.,.., • • ar • mual. Salary com-matureMlf,...arter-work 1HO. ~ Beacl\, " • AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Anlwel"I att found behind tured tlom• lnduetry. 957-2381, IXI 1204 FUiierton, bet 12•2pm. men1urete wl1h ... Into manegement. Salll CA. 92880/0147. nPElmEI ICeDN -an ardent suit.or lends spice, could help you make DMllng In conV111tlonal, Gardnere. r•tldenll•.' Mecihanlc. upe. rtenced, :i~~~r· ~=~'"'°sh~~·w~ 11--·•y;u--. Comp. edit. 5900, H · valuable and nee . uy contacta. Strive foe story behind story, ~~~ P,c:":: uper, loo Irvine -. ~t~· 1~~=~ at:· pm mlnater Md. "4-7562 -·-_,... pertence a mu11. Full or rejl!ct one who aeeb to plant ll!eda of suspicion and doubt. Leo Vlc•-pr11ld1n1, oper-Cell ESt •t 956-l lM ua. C.M. • THE JOLLY ROGER tno. Full/tt!!'f f1~mo to part tim.. 842-9e78 andanother Aquarianf:igureprominen~y. ::~~~~ra~:l'!Tth co1~: ..... /KIN. lllll&LUllPIWT 170421~':.ttaAve ROOFING ltart. I~• <>Piil-Vllet Perking attendant•. !~.,<!,~2_9-Marchand bill2~L StopotUghmakt onwiahideals, romance, pw"'1ol. Cati 851-8288 °'.::;r..;: ft~I;~ Part 1im. tor Pediatric 7141 M6--0331 = ~ ~= !'~ ti~ ::00~0 R~:. emowuu•1 &MU.U.Uucut a ·~ e es come true. and Ask for Phi Eckstein. Ulery St000/1'.t!O. C.ll f.:'°"P· Call 845-4870 Pl'lone canvutlng, work •t lllflll 11., IOftware. Conflden-Pellcan, 1830 M81n St, Intuition LI on taqet., you eewe Whal people are thinldng despite HHllQll '-''· WllQllOMr 955-1155. "· Aueten. 8PM-8:30PM Mon-Thur Large project, need t~ 11•1. Mr. T rowbrldg•. lrvlne. No Phone Calta what they aay. Telephone call results in change of direction, Manual potting, c..h ,... .__.._ ... tn..-.. Modell. AC1ore. pit Xtru: 14.00 pr hr + bonut. Ot· qualltyworker1. Forem.n 842~397 ... 1.... celpta dlsburtementl •1-•!'"'• .. lfi commen::lel1 & TV Show-lie• n•ar a tr port. <4> capeble of running 1111n••y PART-TIME. Vatted hOurs ......--. • • VIYadous & energetlC Pl'· Fl'.. 857-2528 cnw9. Joumeymen (10), -general ledger, bWlk ,. aon to tMCh beginning cae, 778-..,... kid& too. 5-lO tlXPll'lenol Sharp gal needed to woni 10 lnc:lude early A.M. Ltat I Ft... 31'4 Ptntuh 3012 ltlt ...... UM concttlat1on1. Edward• gymnutlca uHllto amalt NANNY Wen ted for PIT Salee. Co4leQI atu-;;All •I F · In fut s>eceed Newpor1 ,..-end•. Ml.Ill have ct.- Found German Short Mir UOlm/llllLI IUU.. Thea~~F· dllldren. 788-2555 Balboa., ... wlll 11119 out. m'c~l~ .. :Z~1:·~ 1 Capable ot quality WOf'k. 8"ch,.... •tall office, ~=~v=~~,~~:~ pup, Newpor1 & Bey, Outcalt ONLY 835-9199 Experienced pereon to • ....,._/lll'I Help wantiad for aandWlch ~~=-~t:fld!,,~fo' PM.' St~. Muat know all typea ot ~~:m~9:7:=) rc:~ wagon) to ...iat newa-CM 831·1030 work dOMly with end _ _.._ preparation. 21 or <Mlf. Mon-Fri 3-7. For Int..-: roofing. 5 yHre •x· taptlonl allllte. Contact paper dllll« In lrvtne Found· Germ Ship M luJwl 0,,. 4fJt help expll\d 11t1bllahed Full/time. Typing, 10 key, Call between D·101m. vtewcall S73-0988 pertenoe. ~(714)133-2900 1irea. Mu11 be depen-m..no heir~ Nnd' teo' -m•tne mfg. rep & d .... AIR, It.IP, etc. Pay ac· 645-1100 11.11.mAll 111,.mmllll · dabte. Contact Greg oft PaUlatinO 558-4309 · trtbutor. Mult handle .. cording 10 ·~ H Singe now htrt ci. Rent81/Mlel agent tor ac-Roonng Eatlmater (4). ExP llllllAIT Hyde Monday thrv Frldey ---,.,--·----Inns offtce and emall war• Calllor appt, 545-0171. 1':9 drtvera and ~ler Bab)'ll1t• needed In my 11119 Balboe 1-.nd Oftlce. not nec.eary but ahould Tys>e 80 wpm. 10 key between 9:30 and 10:30 Found: Wl'll Fem. Uaaa Super etghllltex MCh with houae tunotlon1 lndudlng ... _... ;:"' Apply In pweon home 2~ d•'fl P8f week. We ha119 opentng1 for be farnlllat with conetruc· adder dlctaphone. Min. 4 1.m. orly· 642-4321 AC>to. IP• 1'h "If, vie. 3 Bdrm, ~IA ba, double typing, aom• book· -· 1~ North Cat H • MWF 2-&pm. Mua1 be twoexperlenoed,tuHtlme tton. Top commttalon. yre •xPerlence. Admlnia-llilill•-•••••• M eta Verde No. garage wltl'I oarage door keeping and ..... fol-Good driving record. Laguna Beactl 494-404,' non·tm<*er and enJoY lloeneed aqent•. Com· Beneft11. trallv• dull11. Non/ l;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 841-8836 s1oo.ooo. u -low-up. RequlrM pat11Cu-Ellper. pref but not nee. · young children. P..... mllti<'n• onty. Call Bette ue t•JJ tmo«lf. Sal. °'*'· CPA 11 Found: Yng Malt ... mix. :'iln.ncinQ 1'2~'4. tarly 2.:_od pl\ one 14 hr lo 9lar1. 850-171515 ......... call MORNINGS ONLY W81111'1. -· c firm.~ retume: Per· WAITlll/WUTllllll blond. vtc. Ad•m• Terrific lnv11tm1n1. ~llfllty e:=''hand Caahler, ~ 21. tun time, 3 days wk 8 llf9/dey. Cleen 845-7841 -WATl HI HUNT eonnel. 187.!1..ifn Felipe, • llYI l'IDw'f} School, M.V. Dee-0659 1795,000. t .,O,,.oon ~ wlll train. Newport hou11, dO i.undry, ac>fM UOMU. .__ H•vt you rHd today'• Fountain ~2708. Prtvate dub. ~iiilied ·<MY a. Loat: 10/3.REWA~D.Xtre lH-1• :;'~ O< In p9,.on. :.~~·~~rt Camp ~:,~~~~12°27 Call Haveeomet~youwant R~ALESTATE ClaHllled Adi? II not, m'f/UllPJ, :":c,.~~"8' lg • Sh•ltl• male . B.H.BallardCo, 18315Su-10 ... ? ld1d0 111·1400 you're mlMlng the blll for growing compeny1 _______ _ 8eble/whlt•. 3~ )fl. 3 P8f1or #5. C.M. Allume ceramic lite HoU9ek"'* lot bulY pro-11 well. &42·&417 . bargain• In town! bued In ~ 9eech. 1_.,.,.,....,...---..,.._,,....,.,...,...--Aroh Bly, So Lag. necwary. Oualllled Ille and marbfl l9M6onal In NB, must be Muet be txperiellOed In wa11rw'1 l Wal1en "ScMuy". 499-4139 or ..ner needed. tooi. r• l'MPOftelblew/own trana. office prooedur• ond f1Yel 11, llPPIY In penon. meo et 4t4-17M ~t ~c.N8~-~ QU!rM. J>leoe or houtty. 15 hn • dey..t M~Frl. ~M N~ preotlc ... ca"dldat• 11ae N9wpOf1 Blvd, C.M LOllt Blue F Ot1t Arnuon . eNfta 13'1-664o Weatyte Co, l87 • l4'48 or PM. "EF 1 req d. Medi OOod O<ganlz.atlon, Wanted 2 MCntat'IM 10 Ptirro. 1~ StOO RE· Coff9e Shop, hlOh ~. · Ctlld oere our tlOml ,. 840-e982, HO to 5:30 KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZ£SI typing, btd!P'O and W\11· work 'with k•y ex- WAAO. 714!8'73-0321 ~ ~~ &°"" ~ -::-v: llebtl r.-.. ioea. Own HOUSEKEEPER. ll~ln, ~Ion~': ; oeoutMla to wortc In p1u1t 8ti-385-19it · ,.. ...... -~ · lraneportatlon, Englleh Engllltl epeetclna. wtth •· ~ ol'llCet located In the ~~f:'c!:r~ 81t.Hg.7117 :;i:~d sr.· 1~~4:; ;r:~11ng . l rvln•. •••ioea. 87&-H22 ::_1'::3 Call a. ~ ~vtP:, = ed up by "*" & boy I PM hedl HOUSEKEEPER ~ OOOd typing .... =-~Fite,..,,. T '."' tm A.88EM8LYWOfU<ER8 :::'but ~com-":!:O::.:rc',..: ••• , ... 1 dlotepllone capeblllty'. ; LJQM ...-nbly W'IJl1t from __.. ._IOed for -, ....._ No 11 ... mannered. Mii ep. -1.oeT--·-t.o-Ptt_M_,_.....,_.-, WIOOW HX8 Wr°'T6'., home. bc.llent 1n-C"'w• ..,,... · __ ,,,_,. "'"" knodl• often-'*' you pw91a. and poatttv.. wt.Mt. c:MIC, 111~.HB S10,000up. No credit C. oP9ortunlty tor Self'=-~"= Ing. Muat...=9Pvt rm & 1111 ·rwun .. tlng Oe#y MllM 21 yn and okMr .,.., Aewerdl 184..eot5 CMc:k, no penetty, Aleo ~. eto. Start a ml.lltl lotfl .;;;;;r~ Mlery. Piiot Clanllled Ad1 to 8eglnnl"g Salary, lend on i buy TD'• ll'nmedlatety. f« 118.H oomputtn rMCfl tN Oranoe eo.t s 1 2 o O t m o . Ca 11 ~C:'6:: •10.000uo 10 .1umt1oe. ow.ctory.cea MIOQlut ~P.~~ •NULD,.... "ttrfl 11_14 ... martt~842-M7• ae1.o120. A• tor Matti 8ml IWW1'. 6424t0s Oenlaon"-oo. 171-7111 :z!.': eeae. AlllO open ~ llelpM. Salary uuat bef9mlletw/18M PC ftaw NcNirdlOn. • · open. Call 546-0111 e. ca1 .,..,. • !!"'· Com-EARN .. TO $75 00 PER WEEK c....m.d -'°d• 842-~111 L.08T St Andrwws M , NB, AU T 0 0ETA1 l. IN G . ~ ~ P'lter Baron. 91t-24M ' -- luny, till, wftt & Net F ULll ,.__, ...... ..-... ---... W. now ""' I~ °""""" lof JOW• .... I •ty Pil pMplly. ,._ Olll If .... PN9CIOIOU9 20 yr Old.,.. ,JP"'~~ LL.... ---• ....... .. .... to J«wt ,.., for nr. Orqe Com II .................. . 6424816. 642.eec>e ._. ~ ,...,. few,;., wtllfllno and .no 7am -11 am. M9N Verde Opening In i::l. Oftlce, =r Not. Our ettwi stert IC t.30 p.111. n : . .... e1· ae11 ==: .::-~ ::.·~0· Fltlm•. ~:M~mac.m.r =· :\ ... •/c1'4> _.:;:.•:,::u~~~,:~i,; oar"' minded Hiii COMtNCtton' 711·2010 .,.. ,._ -""" ..... JOI!' OWll lliCMlly PAIT TllE 01 •• 1 .F rep•. Draw + com-'=T'~ 87a.:: °"'*"" ...., needed. ~ help. PIT, wknd •. IMrt Ill• ......... or Ctlltboll !MoMll. t'""910nl 1 c' Unllmltedll a •PC>Mn-I befor9 ;-;:::,:· 115-<MT2 E • p • r I• no e In llve·ln. Orlver'1 llo •JOU•• .............. c.alllr C.rl 111,11•11 a . a . Oorle, &wk;;t;. EMtotMttcdedeooetlng needed. 540,42~ .-A -• 84&-ll23 ..-.. •Y•l•m• and EPO•Y I WI --·-...,.. 711 NO. HAMOR ll.VO. l=;;;=;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiim;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-iiebYliiW. Gf•ldmotNr Trowel009l ~ ...--•-• C(ll( (714) 548.7058 'VLiiM'OH For Qwlfled Ad type, ~.: cet'I 642·7122 Npt IOtl lftlQatlon ftrrn -"1U ACTION fOf 2 tm1 . PIT ,.-~ legal ••-Call a Inell. wkndL Own ttana. ontractor need• well MO~t•ry "T. )(l.~T 1 llY I-DeltY Piiot "44114 rounded conetrvotlon llklW / Wtflndl ..,_. AnMC'TIYI AO-Vl80A per90n, letMW to ~· ..,,_ req, Good ben- MAllUl8U 842-H78 fllnd what &:.::;~. In vtllon. Tructc •• • rtl t"Y. eMa, XL.NT oppty. Call TO If~ YOU. Deity Piiot 13f.Ml3 840-e8eO --------- a Deliver Dally Pilot by auto in •: Laguna Beach area (2 houn per day). Weekdays P .M. • weekenda A.M . F.am about $400 per mo. C.all Mr. Barrow or Mr, Bush 642-4321. IDE . . . . ........ . - 08 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE J'"l'L UH llbc. Wutet IUI .. ..,_ . Ttl4 Yw IMI A11 ... lapr!M !ti•, lar=... All!!!. ........ Mefl't "ml m re;; H' C«onaoe>. if'IOW, 1ifi DOdQ: liUPWvan. J • -tilt frat HD f;n:::==::: tJ•• "625. DWnond l\or.-WllTll rnuofl mote. 17400/obo, Carpet, paneling, !IUI ......... u ...,. ring 1425 ..... 24& MICAOWAVE 141-7426 btwn 4-tptn hl-bdl, auto, llWao, 7nJi, te>CI mr. '88 SQUAAEBACK, reblt VW OuMt lf 4 auto, ... ._ llII ..... 1211 aft. lpm 'IS COLUMBIA 2t fu1iY CIUllt pelnt, ~.12400 8alMe -1/tan Int, MIOO. ang. 11100. 54t-.2t00 am/fm I 8'r. H .000 ~ -g;: ~'°'IM~ obo. 880 ••• 842·17$1-P.P. 'H vw BUI, oamptr mllaa. 11'60. 141-7248 '------------------------'• nr ..,. ... &~ • l..aJ IUL 1114 wlltl. N9wpM loll llllp. 'H Dod9a, 1ablt 8, ....... "'L IHI 1pac111. run• good. Yth9 lifl •-----·----111,000 caU7M467 1750/off. 541-Mt7 S668Ethto:a:I '711 S1S60/otr. 64&-5-474 . ACROSS 54 Peace. Heb. ~IOUI ........... Uu eic lan• 1 wanted. ''2MacGR£GOR25' '71 Ford,~ coectl OWMt, Moootot><i. o9ti ·u sunroof Bug. 'UWIL ... • 1 Eyes 58 Eternity PUZZL£ IOLVED 31\C>. 1 pt\Me, eo gal.,,.,. lntM .. tad n ••rnl~ 7~tipHonda, VHP'racllOI T .. k conv. $51< ml, 781-t7~ ti1001otr. Wiii pey fOf & W 5 Route 60 Flurry tloal Coda Tank. .... t60.000 +.Cell 542-32 many u.v ... 11700 taa am/rm ,...,_,, Mlctlalll't '70 2eos dMtl low emog oert. 84W127 A11uma P•Y"'•nt• of uHd. 17211. Tarme. ~drum Mt, lllnt f¥Yfll ~ta 64().57S1 or '9Cllale, dual ale. tffOO. l.. '*Y • . ISSI /mo. 0 AC . 9 Bicker 61 Half·world 772-5380 cond 1110. 144--5378 841-1060 ut. 221 Dy• 5n·8401, avH .,,.._ 115.900. 83M105 ~eoo~~ ":j,~ (1EHHOOI) 14 Sassy 63 OoPnlno • ..... OWM hlalnn/ L t4#2731 en trallar. 2 07W092 '77 240 o. ~chman1. mllel rblt. """' crpt. LUii ... 15 Agonize 64 Vestment Llncotn 300 w/flow "*•· ~~I 1._ eulti Ulman aall• Aa"'--Sn Rf, I • XLNT Loo1<1 &. run1 grHt. 111·1• 16 Marshal 65 Desserts tonih, ~trot, ato l 1300 _ ... lt400/obo. 413-4179 ev. a:;;;. 1141 cond .• sio.500 842•5175 11560. Jim 860--3188 iillC tin 17Jacob'skln 66Slr «battoffat.546-0171 MOOPiW, ilJnt 8ANTAHAS2S"-'Sharp UOSE 3 5 Coupe, ....... ~ 18 Hibernians Anthony_ wr.=tt=::::: I'll cond. w/wv. conttact . .. . .-. ... thla tredMn l.AM90A<iHINI 1970 gotgeou1, mint, 111.760. Ir Coma In I .. N9WpOrt RIMll..._.. a $400/C>bo 4M-8029 -• Gotd w/btown & CAfM 631-3018 AM/~M. MW I ... camper BMetl'I flnaat ea6ac:tion 20 Eplcarp 67 Bogs fodi' bMUt fine ru ~ Ofter. Sctlod< 873-·2060 leather Int, rablt ang, • lntr.. run1 xlnt. 81c; of prav1ou11y owned 21 Exhume 68Anr\oyance (l<Hhan) hind mid~ Plun/Oqw 1111 WIND8URF£R.Roc:ttet". QOOClcond.$26,000/obO. 7~~omi:_"'*f·1:=· l18ll0.~253ev. Potl(lh ... Audia and 22 Quits 69 Vaccines from P.tlla, Sacrlfloa xntFci\t. upright piaya r Unuead, death In latnlly (010)45t.7722 caii e75-l387. • · '74 Bug. axil cond rabn Volk-agene. 23 Frolic DOWN 112.000. 751.1102 plat)o t50 cumm a en.-11,050. 8SO-ON1 & "' la...tM ano. nu 11r ... J1750. ..... 25 Metes 1 Stage fare A "' ,........ tlqua rotle, tt«aga type u::L: =· Tiii I , ~ 'llO 3000. 30.000 ml. take 53&-3410 -utomat..,. ....,.."'.,, water band\ ... t p1ayer unit -... t. a_.1r lfM ~ payment• $445 20 27 Blunder 2 Amber •oftener. UMd. 1400 nH dl w~rk . -HOO. a H.P.WAMUoe aw ., mo. SH-3131 ~dY' . '70 CAMPER. Ilka btand 29 Ushered 3 Game birds obo. 842-3631 am. 876-8408 outboard, na_. . bean :74 F'oic. :a dt. auto, 1&11 ·ao 300D enr1 •Int cond new. '2700. 842-9259 455 E. eo.t Hwy. 30 Stunt 4 A teller BAD BACK? Try Gr8'11ty Contola Plano, 15 yra old ueed taOO obo 075-8023 contdS14~:i:1~~n 1 Lo ml. ·s 11,Sootb11t otr: '70 Karmann Ghia, new ~~ 34 Frighten 5 Settled Guldanoe Syatam (new). teOO. 714/48&--7834 ltlt Llllt Qt'M . . 540-0885 dye, 87~78 paint, new llr•. xlnt lnl. -------- 36 Circumvent 6 Tari IOOO/obo. 871h7780 pm •--'--• 11-'81Aucll6000S, xlnt cond, -1wttnd1. *" daparldable. $3300 &atn hmHtlt or 1Y mag. FUN Old Grind PlanO, It ..nww -fully loaded. Wiii pay you firm. Aft. 5, 984-1393. ' ~: ::-:~~~~;:!" 7 JQ~!~~·s 28 Mr. Ziegfeld 41 Insurgent CORDLESS TELEPHONE ~~i:.·~~ = Boat cc;:;;:;m;p;;int. to 8:2~8';-:.1~~/ ":!,,-= 1~ ~;; ·71 9 pua VW v811• New AJIC HIS 30 Calendar 46 Incline Like new. $80. 54&-5318 Guar. etltchlng. Fut MtY. mo. • purc:twle & ..... ptana. Rad., pnt, eng 1trong, '86 lmbmM 8Gti0n Tragedy'" 8 Loki's abbr. -48 Tangs Fri/Sit Oct 1._.15 &-5pm Gulbtat'IMn Sp!Mt ~gen Pree CrM 720-0573 NB ·94 ~AUdl sooos. Every M llllllll $2250. 771-5222 W1gon, va<y rall1bla. author daughter 31 Rellglous 49 Stances 2 00'nvartlbl•' 10,11: ~~j tr~or::'& PROF. BOAT FINISH option, lnol"g 1 .. ther. ..Tl ·71 Bug. auto, rablt eng. "475 obo. 891·a808 42 Comforts 9 Stalls period 50 Abrasions t>Mut 11arao conaola, 3 or bait 0,::. 631~11 CUSTOM VARNISH 8 ~•5:;r ~&.. '388/mo, 1301 Ou.all Streat s2000. 240·7141 '74 .Jaap W11QOM91". 4"4· 43 Map feature 10 Famed 32 Allege 52 Fiithier HIY chra, coffee tblel, Pl Llk S t Fr• •t. Dive 94o-544 • • ~m. NEWPORT BEACH ·72 vw cam"'"r WMtlalia $2500. Good cond . • 1. U d t k pOrt TV ar1 aupptlM, ano. • new pine . Ill I "'--Ill •o•• ,..... 875-3210 . (5 n er a e soprano 33 Can. Con-53 Stadium ledlal clothH 22092 Whitney by Klmbalf mdl !i -' -IJIW 1112 ........ dome top, lllnl cond .. -------- Sliver grade· 11 Competes servatlve 54 Fake R 0 ck p 0 r' L n . n r All wood. '850, &41-311S Sida '· Lht"ll1nd, 10 fi ·77 3281. MltO, rn. al-M«<*es "89, 200 D. Tiil. S3lOO. 646-3349 lalck ,,.., • abbr 12 As to 34 Sweetsop 55 Hall: pref. Brooid1~1 & e.nn:ng. PIANO amatl upright, IWlv beam, maximum lnglh 38 loye, elf, RaMda gr--.. XLNT Cond. S4200. '72 Volvo Sedan 111 ... E. 176 Rl&a. l&lt co;;a .. 46 Ump's equal 13 Fewer 35 What's -56 Asian prince 983-3428. aft 5pm. •tool, walnut, ral:>ullt. ft. 873--07IMI '8100. &45-2375 213·f63.9755 S1700, c;aJI 751-3178 11200. 48&--11258 47 Beast: Fr 19 Sank a drive 37 An archangel 57 Insects Gaoafal Hardwer•. 8198 tuned, ~to play, wtll LiliiMl4I '1111 ·ao 7331, "* tan/t1nlelth. •I 1141 '14 o....rftMe C .. illlc Hot ~; g~~:s ~: ~~'~[;~y gals 38 Pepper type 59 Retreat ~~oe:~~~~~c~ s~~· ~,'w.. :,:~58;:n. i~m!!~. ~ln~1• ~ !:,'1c,!~~~1,:C, ~:~ 179 Midget [OOl(1 and 3!·=.~~· c::~~ :.'~ 1682 White c:dC! Et= 40 Above: pref. 62 Body part & Donut with every IOla walnut l(Jnt cond Boatd 842-8155 ml. $19,500. Eo1. rune Ilk• new. 20,000 mt apprac;lete. 18500/090. Dorado (8), c;tun, ,..--.,...,.2__,....,,3-.-4-6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 purch ... SallSun. 11470. 842.-490t · 875-2092. dys 553-640t. $3950/obo. 873-9020 642•78e6. S13,950, 213·927-4409 llT IOI' ,. Karma Fun Fly 17'6 MW. 'llOMGB run1 grNt, lo ml days. Upr1ghl P'SJ.aa.t c;ond, 10·~· A.B.S. Fun Board. '81 BMW 3201 l4500/0bo S50-40...9 ' '75 Rabbit. " apd, sunroof, -,98......:..C_ld_ll_lac_Con __ -1l __ ble-~ mu11..... . 7~87 Sartiac malt, thort LO MILES.SUPER CLEAN · eterao cue. 92,000 Biua/wht top Good OILY WIKll!Jllt fruitwood aptnat boom. 8'2-6t55 8alga wfbrwn ~·int, Pn •t HSS ml .... Att ~-Super lhae>e. $2200. eS3-1888 Caramk:I made IO Ofdat rano tuned ldnt cond ca llJ4 5 apd, anlrf, air, amlfm auto ltl r c;ond, 11875. 1·3018 ----------1 lnc;ludlng natMly eat: 750.' 1548-9214 btw~ 8, •Cea I ouar Cimpar CUlllO • pOlllhedadl 1&. palB~~adW p/a,' ~. m0re. 'ert '787 VW Sqbk. New ens. '7x~n~~l =·g~o::· large & t1mall anowman 4-7PM !ii • • ye, r a'· ... cond. $3400~5-84 1 br1kt1, belt. 1130 • · and large & lmall Santa I .... i••• wfr.w by/coot, uMd ap-m1t1, IMI th.,, 14K ml. ~ 751-3178 $5550/ftrm. 642-9259 e1au ... Mr &. Mra San-IJldimt -prox 20 tlmat. $1150. Sl2,500. Ptnc~t ilST ·79 Eld«aclo wtit wlblue tae too: 2 ·11zae. Oma.. BeC'.dOif cart. ttr DO. ldt ~5 851-~ dYI &. -187 612 Por;a;;, g IPd. 7"TmmV: =5o •0~u~ leather int •. a1c, amtrm mant9 and other ltama.. c: on d . n • w b a It. Cmpr lhall, 7 ft economy '83 BMW 320!, full auro-ivory w/bik Int. 2nd Sandy ·546-()8113 · et•ao radio, blue landlA.I PtMM Qll LoulN for 11950/obo, n~ 111ze. 1260. c.ii Sat/Sun paan upgrade. Quality own«. Everything new top, lac CB. 850-e228 your order. 840-8709 Pool tabla e ft felt ,150 558-4522, att 8pm wttdyt carrtad through to the Se 5 O o . 8 7 5 • 8 e 3 8 . '78 Super Beatie Convtrt, Cluey '80 Eldo Blartltz. ~..._-"-.....,-·II AY91. 000 l54Wl<61 · a:::a:::: ... L...-llll 1m•::a 11 da ta I I. 845-2375 Champagne ldll. 37K ml1 Xtnt Cond 8* on 8lk Kanmo+'a Wuhar & Dryer · --Matlouloutly maintained '70 911T LIKE NEW burgandy/whl tl>C)/lnt, 4 Rex OAC0 113 500/otr". runt xk:nt. $275; 20 gai SKI EQUIPMENT ·Ski '16 MOto m L&tnil. by • detannlnad par-'8500/obo . 842-9259 apd, nu bt111/batt, git· Sue 875-874', 851..a22·4 ftlh tank etend heater P •ck a g a , I a d I a I 1295. 84()..2488 Rob rec:ttonllt. 118,000. By · aoad. )(Int cond. '850011 _______ _ ate. seo: "To Maco . .; Roulgnol 110 1k11. .. '-/ appt. 11~2 ·11 911 3 Ut• rerga, Bllu ofr (213) 372-11192 TIE llllm i. S200· Honda EJalnor9 Soloman 222 blndlngl l .. ,,,_ Con\IANantlyLocatad etro,recato ... t,gdc:ond '73 Calif Bug )Ult r.. SIU..,... CR 125.' xlnt c;ond, seoo. Scott Polel s 1,5. l.adlal ...... 1111 I Com IYaly PrlQad l9500obo 831..aa2t etorad. s.. io ballava. .. I .... After 5 pm, tea-o2eo ~ ... ·l~bt wcondmat~ 173 HONDA BOO & . '78912E IUnrf new P/8'1 $3000 firm. 642-9259 °c' lat• modall, low8omllaaga ,_..... ""' . ...... ..,...,.. • · · adlliaca n utha m ••~.._.-.. ,p Uni_.... Man'• Formula Sid boot• 4 c:yl, eupar lhapa. _.,..,. alloye, rabll ang., ctlany, '79 VW Del R1bblt, dlx. air, Callfomtal Sae"' tod•Y1 ..,,... .. .._ .. " .......... , II 9'Ar $30 Must ... l§.46.-0883 before 9am Of after epm 4apd 4dr lltarao xtnt IUlll Ath~~1'?r1~t700. 54M2ao . . '76 BMW 900, r.w clutch, ~laulng 78().8582 24K ml. $4100. 851·3822 Aaaawo ~..J.-J-_J~.Jlu.;;;;-d,;;tt;"i;;;;::-t~iir.i Woman'• tltl t>oota ez 7 36,000 ml, Krauaar baQt. '78 914 2.0, Appall Grp. 5 '88 BUG aoorf xlnt .,... Mani clothlng: Mad/lg 1175 Yll.1"6ll. 631:1()111' wtnd)ammat fairing, ruoe Jn' CARVER tpd, Immaculate. "4550. S2l05/bat.' 642-12511 2800HarborBMS. 1MtharJkt,2F'A1ehpant1, great $2000/ofr. 840.1289 COSTAMESA •hlrt1. ate. Cheap. ""Wit, 841.()887H.64().8()()1 W. ~~~~ '79 911SC Matlouloully ·eo Rabbit Convert. 140•1110 teo.5944-· lltnt 1132 '82 Suzuki RM125, xtnt ~tw .. •1•w1iwo ... w maintained by Porleha ~~~~':,oali.t~ld M~rii:::· .~r:t~I~:: B~Ti~L 2 2~ ~~ ~50t~~ :=~:a ~ naJlllft "4ft':i ~2 '81 Plctcup D~. 5 apd, 19K ··c-hnt--ltt----.-3-1-3 16531 Sabot Lena, , 1, 1148 Fr9. dal ,..__. ~Wad!' .7 9 SC mt, blk/tan, mega, Clll. 1Al&l;;;p;ia.XA4 _.+-+--4--' Hunt Ing ton B ch , Sun Tv John' Ma.'Ji'e 83 HONDA 360XR, 120 Sal• SarYlo9-Laaelng t 11 large, blt</blk, ax1ra Ill• cowr paff 1na1 ee 000 orig m11a1 848-5990 • • 1 ml., Ilka MW 11450 Flrm. uaailM9 all optlCJM, 7·1 l 8'1, cond S4a5o 8"0.1030 Clairi .,; and OU1 ~ 17 1-4 20 23 39 42 45 61 67 .__...1.._..&......,.1...___ 1---.....,,.-----RCA 19" Yleta color TV 407-173e c8'I Frw* 95•• '23,000. ~11704 dyt. Of 83°1 .... 721 . et ... bait tlr• ~bat ----------------.,....,..--....... -------~QB~~t;~.,C:~ S1" obo. 5:J6.1Ml · llVDl•Y '79 928, all 1pac: .• 81 vw Del Rabbtt PU l..X tafY,ganar•t°''.andragu.: ltlt Waal.. 5100 AtJllwts IOU Flraltart 1125 unll 155. Tbl lamp S25. UMCI ttln. Col« TV'1. -ISJ.. *'77 830c:ll; 4 IPd. AIC. equipped, mu1t Hit :o mi, 5 apd, 1'C: lator. Mutt S... IUIOO ~ AM/FM dock tbl radio RCAIZMlllh.l175aac:h. Goodforr.t>u~M for (~78VDA) lmmad. Blk w/tan ithr. l41110lofr.84().1289 638--3932aft•4pm WAREHOUSE rlgldalr• ratrlg, IToat-tr ... DIVORCE FORCES SALEI $30. M , 752-tOOO. ext Call 754--1091 anytime ~ .. -. MW k • '50 *<2.!x3E20IQ); 4 19(1. AIC. $2175. 495·3718 . '71 El Camino. xlnt cond ••H Tiii 'UIS 2 yre old, 18 c.f. xlnt cond Beaut. oa1c dining rm -~ ._ ,80 92 , __ ..._.. 32 000 82 Rabbit. convanlbia, Clltm ....,.t anl1 lltru wum • $300. 873-2690 alt 8 w/prlnc.t claws, c:ompt. 2242, Bobble, aft 8pm INb lliiflal Till 8111 Ht-1221aft.10am *'82 320!; 5 apd. lo ml. 4, .....,_, • llr. magi. eK ml, under .,_.. • . ........ t,..taa Olk bdrm. roll top on 648-3979 ¥ (1FGE84&) ml, 1r1rf. AC. lthr Int, new wirantH. S 10.900. S2800/otr. S31·1M112 WaretlOUM G:i,c:.t~~~5. t~agc;~~ dreaaar & bad. Mull... ORANGE COUNTY WAN ED Advantura11 IV' AU ··93 3201, 5 apd, "S" Pkg. tlr•. INUmA IM 1335 645-0792 Of 551-9295 IEE II FlllTI Packaging dryer. S75. 842.,..994 call to 1pprac:l1ta. Vompl. •I .Ultll'S Couple 1°' Bara boat lall-1 (ll003ll05) mo. or buy St 1.500. --------Shlpplng/Rc;vg after 5. p1tlo Mt, 4 moa .old. Ing to Carlbbaa.n Of Max-25' Motor Homa, n-. *'81 3201· 5 l9d AIC 1·585-9798 'll IAlllT .wlll Wt hava • good M6tction Must be 18 and depen· Klmbtlic;omputarOrgan. ... lco, ovar Ctlrletmu HOI· llMpe e. Air & Gan., r• (1CUU444) ' ... 111 .... -E GrMn wllen top & int, 01 NEW 4 UMd Chav· dable. C111 or come In 10 I Ill APPUlllll Beet offer. 432-8128 alt llY ·SIU· 1'1111 ld•Y9• lhara ~. ..w now for holid•Yt· *'79 3201· 4 apd aunrool • ,._ am/Im CUI, only 12,300 rolatal S.."' t~ayt ~~ptJ;•t;'.c·~ie 231101. KLH __ ... ~9,57d"8133 G51rl:~oFrwl(nhdl.p t•·• FM~ng11-..=.•! Ill ~~~5i=~-~~ ~~5~:.~7~~~~~;~~ ~~~;4~.Lo MI: Alauma~ OAC. ml,8-;'tra~::;~\~~500. lrvlne. 83J.. l4" I enmore 111--tyllf. 1 ranc rovan -· . * * D (5555493) CEL ( 171808) •83 RABBIT GTI xlnt cond. S 100 H . twin canopy bdrm Mt. 4 •u1: Swordt, oollneh, nna ftwtr .... 7f ll =/mon;...!._ •Trtr *'82 7331· 5 apd loedad. Wll .... 11!! uuST SEL.LI 5 ........... -ftm JtM Waat.. 9105 544-6488 pc:'a good cond ax1re opt ca. gunam t on .. ,...... . ...... • • -,.. _.. _,. WiiioPww~----------..,..--=-=-=-• uceu 1300 ' obo pramlH1. o .c . F1fr· 18 ft Dufflald Bay boat. /off. 842-1353 (735 ...... 7) 111·1111 cue. sunroof, ex1. werr. EXEC SEC1Y, ,g yrs eJlP, M1(agtW9hr dryr saoo. Bar1:>1a 975--5080 · ground, c .M. Enter 11 11000. 84&-11529-T Ill *'78 320I; A/T, Ate illl S8850. PIP 840-5023 ;:~~;,!~1't":e-~~1~ gE T~a:,1:°3pa~~ ~d Gorvao:,• '°'' wlm•tch· gate 5• off Arlington. 18' Southcout. •t«eo. r Tr!!!\ 1114 ,i~u3~/; A!T, aunroo1. l!le!!!ill!!1Wlm!!Jr!!'--!!!!liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1iiliiillii-----"--• Practical Nu,. & Hou ... =~ot~E1::0. Te ~0,=.-~ =~=: 7~~1:r_2~:1i~ ~:1·=.· :~~ 2iH 17§ ™ tr&f. <1FR°:l.anl 'MYWUlllT1 ~=· ~~~ .. ~ Dlhw9hfl75.831-3283. sa15.1213>402...a139 ~~ ~~~4r"d. 20aw.11t.aant1An1 ~CARVER .ntT::n e13-5100. Rac:ond refrtg•. ai111. run 111Y-•l'ftl11 SCR•u.LETS Ck>aadSunday ~ 'c_~ ·a:t1o.scouNTEDl '88 Dodge eon1tt. good cond. $025/ofr. 631-~397 .. ___ ,._..,. Nft 27' Car l1on, f ully Arlttoc:rat (Barch) Trav9f1_,...~=-=-=_,,..,,=..,..,..,=-1'1JLL..J c111 ssos =r/=n·~1™ Lee 951..a133 •NSWERS aqu•ppact: 1nt>rdloutt>td, rra11at. Pf09l'l8 81cwe. LARGESELECT10NoF ·~~~~~~r 11•111wua.n Almal1yan blue point, Rtfrlg S225 Wa1h· Klngazbadoompleta,lnc:I. " dual350MarCNINA,lthr loaboi1S700.873-1431 N~&~BMW'SI <>Pl!NSUNOA'l'S tM YILllWAlll '72 Monaco Sta Wgn, papare 3'-' rr• 1100 · . · headboard, xtnt cond... Int, oompleta wfretng. & 11 tinlffl/ SINCE 1053 good cond7 · S900/b91 orr. 494--11>95 Of 494-3381 . :=1~:5a::: 1125. 556-637hft. 1pm &.•11•:f~':i = ~~adcu~~ •,utl Mll lad ills MMJH ._..An ~ SSH Light grHn 9' 1ola =PRINT c:anvu l 3 wtll trlr l.111 llAll... I~~~~~~~~ '73 Colt. 4 tpd, mag whit, ...,. _______ Ratrtgaretorfo+'Nle:Hot-w/matchlng Love Seat You c:en be OYarZMIOUI 135000/bit ofr Cali PAWTAHDLKJHTBOOY VOLUMESALES '76s::tlfur60.bJUe.4dr,I: alrlhoc:U,am/fmet-.o. ·om Rel. pu1>9, point, Sapertla tr-. go od cond. S.150: when = dlrac:tlon1 Lauria for deUll1 WORK: Saw~~ 8EAVICElLEA81NG 9'1nroof,MWtlr•,4tpd, rwbltang,runednt.1895 ~~.i,92r.'~eady ~:!.~,~~· ~!~ 83t.2874 ~iti.::~lil°:e~o~ 640-88488-41-3604 :Vi:'~aee-~2;1 38t°c:.Q~va. ,;::.oF:n~~-~:ia ~ Ofbaetoflet'.240-3152 Golden RetrelYet Pupptee. 84S.7230 __,Inge. M=~:llk~ua:'w.~ Ml P INT. •71~08::.'•Y1~2~.~~=: &a"' Wul.. NH (No. Chatry axlt-406) lakn IH7 -~f.. ·.~ ~· ,... lilt $200. AKC. 548.2828 Refrig:, 12 c:u ft, '*1 cond. LOYMMt. It&.. Gold dbla TRAIN SET. 460 placaa. 111,876. 552-9728 H;;;t CMfi m . for tl1•) Ul-llM :82 K.!b--· DL w-. 4 ~~~ •ee/~tl'ltCon~ulnradt • ~· S • .200. 548-7827 contOUf chair S85 N9w Muat ... , W/tum tabla 3 wtllcta ~or l'rac»-lna Walcoma "" -.. -..-·· w ..,, op,,_, · v "'" .... s.s ·~ ... .....&-•-Ml4 q-matt. ·, .pong., ~a IOtl of trac:k a '78 15' Botton Whaler, '(04lt \Ill. 561:..m Now°'*' Sun 11.-4 wh••• drive, 18100. am/tm CMI. xtnt mach Q 1 tad Pr A I 61n 1 • -185. Beaut .... ,. top cof· Cer9. 831-29'7 40HP, trlf, Bimini. many foreign 873-3116 cond. U 10010 bo. coc:btiall $80. 549-7585 Fl 2 x 8 rm &di I• tabla, tao. Antq. cut UM Athletk: c:lub Eq xtrH, ahora moMlng ii llY DUaJer ltu ti U --M-,-1-11-1-11111---i .. WIMA'S 873-7085 Ing. From 4t <*'Ill par ft. gtw oac:antor &. tumt). · · ~ ava11. 14960. 875-3704 Sim ·n GRANADA 4 doof Aad .. n IOH lancing al10 Harbor lera S225 957~98 mbr1hlp avail. H O OL.1111 Ull Daimler Royal Majaatlc GOOD SELECTION! In cond ati FM/AM. -Redwood 714/SJ1-1317 • . vtlue. Wiii Mii fo+' '860 ...... lall 7114 .. TIMll Malor Saloon. Valu• We're dealing on '83'•1 oou1n ll t .. • • * WUTEI Tl Ill *llOIDlll *IUTUTI.IEI ......... " .. Otntc• .... " 111 ...... 1411 lit-HU --~---.,......TT·I MoYlng Sala: Dining rm Mr. P0t1ar 213/82~ '2:=: 110.000. Mull Hll llLllTIHAll MW tlf'al a batt. S2350. FrH t• It• Atl Mt, ... t, 14 wtleafa, 24ft Dolphln by ~man s1s .ooo or offer, e.auo-lllllm 795 Armoolt1!:l;.E.ut-cXt 8 ,o;a il'lrt Qf cNn• a ~ S1200. Mo+'• famll ... .,. getting • Staphena. 19 ,,..... ful car. 530-1528 1221M-:-Hiirbor YILllWAlll bluff. N.B. 7 · COit OY9f 12000 Qn ez the camping "bug" thll wat• boat w/8 baQll of ..._ Ill" ... -'111' ·e1 T-Blrd, Town l.Mldau. p rttty gray 1p1yad. watart>ad w/hd~d & year. II you htve 1 111111.tl'llllar,manyatr• -bu • (1tRlvar.ldaFWy.) ..... loaded. c:ta.l 81111 499-3710. 882-7525 htr $150. Coclttall tablaa. camper lhlt'I not getting S15.000. P.P. (714) 'fl 24ot reGlt ang. rMW 1·772·8800 11 •n~ under ::'f1n1 .... new Fr" 10 gd hm, Garman Lg deal! I Chr. $260. uMd, NII It now with 1 9-46-4497 or teo...a125 paint, uphOI. & ahodle. 'Wt\' tlii VolumaSalal, Sarvtoa MlchlMne, rune on gae or Shorthair Pointer, 8 mo. Mutt Ml! mike ofr Clullftad Ad. Mk IOf Ben. 13SOO/obo. 54!1.20t8._ Andlaulng propane. 111725 ob<>. Cell P • ....,, -It tem,,_.,.._.,t 97' "2""" . ·-'7 ROLLA Wgn 11500. 16711 Ba1c:t1 BIYd. A •97 .... 9j3:'8883" ..--··~· . -"'"" USED CARS'ifRUCKS 'U JllZI tml '73 CORONA 2 dr hard· Hunllf"i~ 9aach 1 • .._......1 ----..,...----Oriental bl1c:k coffee COMEINOACALlFOR A11ume p1ymtnt1 ol top,S1200,itlnt492-3530 (lH)i Nl-2000 '82 ESCORT GLX deluxe To gd home: 7 moa mixed tabla, 30 x 88. 18. $100. na UPPlllllL I 3 3 8 I m 0 . 0 A c wgn, ale;, crulaa. r/r.O.. ~~~~~~~~ ~~-Lo7~2~&kld•. 875-0288 ,._._:.~"";';to-(1EOH0311 ftlknrlltl tlU ·--orw 18K m1 .. ldnt cond .• = 1N10t8. ....-H Qn st matt/boJI tprlngl.. --=--~ Ll&ll ·-· -!Rm'll5& $5195. 0Ma 557-.3534 ltntlfltll9'1hlttlik itlnt. $120. 548-6318 -·-· .. 11111 *IUTllD""* vw .... n tJ ___ ,_ •·" Dr411Mf w/cal"Vad mlrro+'. FREE TO GOOD HOME 1821t BEACH BLVD. -• Cholc:eotl0.842·925Q FOi' ....._. •-$300. 642-2884 RadeCM•tlng S1Ja: Good J fEllAL.I Ll&U IPll HUNTINGTON BEACH '715 280Z, 4 tpd, air, mage, •59 w/'U rblt ang, 12 volt, Sa .... P1rt1, & s-vloa '73. 1 OWner, rune vr-t. Oii•• 1to0 atufl at oood prloa1. DIME s Ml ... lt Ml-1111 nu 11,_., arnlfm, wail hvy duty xtrH, graan. 210 W•t Kllalle Ava no dame, all option•. -Lo ..... people. 551 .... 435 8alga COfdaroy eota pit malnt. '4800. 1184:.aeea $1200/obo, 487"81 t t Batwaan Nawpot1 FWy& '8SO. Jim 860-3188 Side by eld• Secratetlal, seoo. rat• 19" Zenith wht WI PIY lW llU&I Anaheim Stadium ~ 13-mlll<>gaoy. EnoUth !Md· To good hOme w/lrg ywd, padaatal remote TV 'II lllm 111 '83 Rag1op IUl'trool Micro In Orange - ad gl ... dre, lold down 2th yr old l9mala blk Lab, S300. ovarelied vlnyl .. .. .... AHum• p1ymant1 of Bue, rellorad claulc;, .........u,. Vary oooa delk.$.450 493-7227 loving &46-8405 burg.rac:tlnarchalrS260, A ILAl•HH 1113.85 mo. OAC. '3000.842-92159 -cond. S1200/obo Eu 48" I)( dac:ofato+' c;r .. m love---· ·--NINI/Miii (9~). 77().4889 ~~~ mat:i~\ ,:!': Fuallut HIS ... t saso. &ia 851·2788 .. 480 Hw...... ....... 1 ••-...... ·1a BUG · RESTORED ~~W 11 TWA CH N@ --------..._ 873-9333 awe. /1. ""'........ .._ •--BattaJ than MWI 12800. /la paraonal and,.._.,. ax-'74 Clpri, QOOd cond, rune ... , Olk cttalre 75 ea. **Sora&:o.,. ... t,i1lnt w 7 •• COSTAMESA 111·1111 842-92&'9 553-9&3 clualvaVW~"'"d.d1. wa11.S8t57ot>o.673-&8tl tonH . Aaklng $1110, Gemt Tb wl4 cane bk -• _. -'U llfm '84 CAL LOOK BUG ~lad to q ty ..me.. '76 Cepr1 II rad V8 4 IC)d 49.-.7340 c:ond, vary clean. Bfown Sofa: .. rthton.. S300, LINE ••• •• •-1••1 I 551 2708 aft•-...._ .... ..,., ,._...,. _..... ww•--11360. 842-11259 IPW• Part•. and a com-ltl/rf lltc:'ti.....: 571< m1' 9WPY UT8'11 llL1 · ......... ... ... --· """" -antq -· ,_ ..a IL . !>A'lllve .. 1" praMn· """ & 1oo1te """'· t u200 Have You Vllllad Ut Slnc:a 9' caramel ftlvat IOf1. Brm S500. 7ee-7oe7 &1111-1111 Anuma pt ymant1 or 85 BUG, GOOD ENG. talion of th• unique obo ~7r · THE GRAND OPENING? wllnu1 trim. xlnl cond. Twin bad corner unit wltbl WA NT ADS I 2 2 t I m o . O A C NEEDS TRANS. WORK. Vottutwtlgln ~ ..,.... __ • ------A Lot Of New Mac:hendlM S 100/0bo, 902· 7738 AM/FM cloc:k radlO 1160. ( 1EJH534) '400. 855--e878 hlctea. '78 Ceprl II VI, :Jl>f. ale. 4 Plul New Oealarl. 1957 9' couch $260. Tabla & 954-5128 LUii ..... ·~ BUG. complete MW BOB CHALLMAN'S tpd. radlblc, 1tarao ,..,., Newport Blvd. C.M c:MJra. S200. GOid chair, X-L twin bad, ll1ra firm. Ul-1111 br1k1 1y1tam. clutch. @WllTWAGIN@ OOYer. S2100.113--01M &45-4272. Southbound MO. K~ bed & heed· rreme s12&. 912-3758 -----ttr•, body & upnoe.. In Ecutte.,...Cotp. '71 Mere~ )()M OOncl. AIC. ~ Bay St. & ltth. t>oetd 1160 882·2173 IMPORTANT NOTICE TO filt till fOOd lhapa, r.'4 reb1t 2 s.t Deal. Al WllY' PS/PB. ato. 12250. om11 ,,.....,-__,.-..,.."r-!'"~_,_-Ant~ ~ 9 drwre, ·~..... 1111 '78 fGi f2l. MW G . yrugo.11400. M44IO 7IOOWeetm•n•terltvd. M2·19f4 Ro1ttopdaaki1500,3 ... , 4h22. 1125:540-0042 L&w;n WOCil "'Clll 88 PRIVATE PARTIES ...,..,, ~·Medi• ·09 aq~. Mot0t weet1111n•• ...... , hit :.C ~~ r~~~~·;;; Boy'• bdrm rum: 2 c.tm :;· :=': .:J~ ~ s.11 your ""'"' tor $50 or ,... In 1'111m:4 • 4. Q; Oi :: = ~1~ r::;O: ~~.,TI°'t To.!.1~~., 'fl m: nina I i00k1 tbl, c:hra 12500. 845--11550 qutffad fitted twin oom· •tend• 120 ... 101~P Of.Jr t•-ou• DIME.S-A LINES p b .. ,.., exit cone$. lmmaO ITlllll· • . . arem. Ml.e .... 11200 . .. ll fort•ra. dut tara I 8uzukt outboard MOO. 2 _.. • u -atiape, yell/blll, am/rm ..... tlU VW '79Bui1 P-.. l<onlll. 145-0251 or IS1·721t _ botetar1. Auet/blua pta1ct nlgl'lt etancte S20 -.. new 11.W .ch S•turd•y In tlw1 O•lly cw.. pie. p/b, wide tW.J 'l6 xcco;a ;un;:oot iiftt '87 VW BuQ. ~L':; 1tlnt oond, mtm pnt. =~ ·=· R AREA on beige, Pd IMO. •· :J IPd bloydl ao ttt bm Piiot. tMOO o«>o Muet .... ' • Jdnt cond. Lo CfJ)ta. P8Mllno. am/tWI iii-iilliiiiiii-ii---...o-•--- APPLIANCE 8ERVICE Ina UOO. CrM group L.Mther tote WS. 4 lnlmadleecM2t5 ;:';J:.~.:eo~ ~I •~paint, ft79~· G UI . Mil eaa . NT, :u&0, Wuell rac:ond guar. tbl'llbl toy cheet to matd'I Patio ct1an S10 -. 25 DIMES·A·LINE ada mu•t N * •11 Ford 4 X 4 PU • 1 obo, Its.. 4 17400/090 .. ta0-8427 e. nw1t minor trw. ~-S..~11 S1?8/b0tfl. 720-C>IM cu.ft Wll~ uprigf,t , p,..p#lld aom•ll or brlnfl them Into te400tobo 142..a121 • LUa tin SELL :di• lt•m• with a Find wl\'ii~ou w1nt 1n =:s=,r· 8300 AU WEIT M&l1 8!~ :~t~~!=~ ;r=.'n. ~~~ :::~:':c:~~~:!":um8:.r ~':.~~ ·14 JEEP J1o 1Neil. ve .. · Delly Pilot cl...mad Ad. Dally Pt1ot oaei"*IL --,.-------IPPUllll hdbrdt, bolt tpOl/matt, lea maker, oru1har. dr ... In your •d. h•ve • price on 9G/pb,pe, c/c, ewr tnk, · flat II Plat tlU 2 cir lli~. Lv ~ .. che d rwre, dak/ohr; baorage dlepe nu r ..... 14200. 17'3-.2112 .:=iz: . ._ _......_ ••• •• 19 MOW 2 LOCATIONS 0" II d It .. n . • t 2 5 165(). 25rt cabin en.... ..... ,, Item & no •bbrevlatlon•. e:::c. ..., ~ "' .._ --1880 Hwtlof BMl., CM. ~1 nawoond. 114,000, 1813 •~ ... 06().7077 or850-7082 Fii i 124 Sport Con· Sorry, no comm.,.cl•f •d•. QM~ •• ,, Ford a i a P\J, 1328o.Maln8t.,Otanoe 8UYOIRECTFROM varllbl• 11.450. 128 .. ,.,, produc., Pl•nt• or •nlm•I• Mo400/otlo.842..a7tT 834-4200 or 5~ MANUFACTUAEA ~ Clubhoule Ava , apt A, •t Aebulft Aafrlgar•ton end Nva so to 76% on,. 3811\ St., Newport Baa.di. .,. ~.,.,,,.. 'fi LUV P.U. FraeN111IWMMt'9!~ top quality bad Nit. Nin 87S.SM1 Xlnt cond., new paint 3 MontM Wanilnty, Parte NII )Ult MO.I&, fUll _., *2200. 534Ml142 1 Labof, Dal!Ywy.AY911. Juet 171.96. Sava 9YWI Walnu1 din tbl. Plde. 8 •11 FOtCI ~ i"T. Od M/C&Vlu.M~M m«eOtl queen and king ctlrl; dlrwna Ml. e chra: DEADLINE·. ::0nu-.w-Hlt. Fr.. dttlvary ooffw f. encl tbel; patlO -e:...n ~-ML ........ 1. ~ 185 Ht: buffet; plolura1; 3 ......_ __...JI_ labo, 14 752.o658 lfter epm hdboatdt; mlto It.me; p.m. 1 nU.-....r '71 ...... iiliMd PU. Cuetom tlC)ellry lovaaaat l'langl. ng 11mp1; •lee Coeta ..... Ofl'loe IUNf + meny a.tru . COA* apt. a. Stew 1278. All mlrfOtad OOftw tralne Satunley llOOO/ofr tn-1411 ta·•. s1a. Ce1111CM>1tt t•1>tt• baWtad enc1 tabla ,eoo Unoo.n Ln at 1 ..... -.--· ..... .....,,.,.,.-.....,- .. ..,. ~ you wani toeell?~ad•do It wall. 842·M78 •I •5 a 1176. Ornet9 ou.-H.-npeNra. ~H .-A W•t ~ ,.__ 'ii CMW; 114'f. llwttlcto tom lemp/tabte lt2&. -.,.. .... , t .I ~ loeded ldnt l.Almpa, \Ill. 11000. ... WANT ACTIOH? Coete ...... L -oond. 1iK ml. 810,IOO. '2Nl pr ISMOl8 ~ Aclt 142-NTI ~ • •• •m••.., ................. , ......... .. • .,... • l1IANIMlllfOtl oYPHAtJL •nM-UP•IRAKll lOIZ ........ " Ctsta 11na, ca. tau '11 OfW\d Pnit, ~ di. loadad. M ,000 mt, ldnl cond. 1 7500/otr. ....... 21 .... ., THI ORANGf COAST COAST EDITION WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1983 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Wh-at triggered .slayings in Mesa? Mesa s tree t an unlikely murder site By STEVE MARBLE Of IN Delly l'llo4 llafl At first glance, Florida Circle seems an unlikely spot for murder. A Costa Mesa police sargeant lives on one side of the quiet. nine-house cul-de-sac and an Irvine police captain lives acr05S the street. Until recently, the Placentia police chief also lived on the block. "You'd never think it could happen here," said Tim Holbrook, the Costa Mesa officer. "But when you've been a policeman 15 years you know that anything can happen anywhere." By late Tuesday afternoon, the street in Costa Mesa's Mesa Verde North community was lined with neighbors who'd received word of the quadruple murder-suicide in the house at 3309 Florida Circle. What they eventually learned was that a man who lived in the neighborhood had killed a cousin, the eigh't -months-pregnant woman who lived in the house and, finally, himself. The husband of the pregnant woman was away on business at the time of the shooting. "They were a nice, quiet cou- ple," said James Ballone of his neighbors. "They seemed to have a lot of relatives and family over at times." (Sff MURDER, Pase A%) Shirin Hedjezi, a rela tive of the slain Costa Mesa people, breaks in to tears Delly ..... pllelo ltJ ..... .,.. u,111 upon learning o f the traged y T ues- d ay night. It's high noon for Irvine Co. Bren 's m erger forces will squa r e off wi th de t ermin ed heiress at Newport m eeting By STEVE MARBLE otho.IJ"'91 ..... Tucked away in the privacy of a Newport Beach board room, 12 powerful people are expected to reach a decision Friday that could dramatically change the way the billion-dollar Irvine Co. does busi- ness. At issue is a plan to merge the 1 massive development firm - Orange County's largest Ia,ld- holder -with another company formed last spring to help one man solidify his control over the local empire. D onald Bren. a shy multi-millionaire who owns 86 percent of the Irvine Co. of which he is chainnan He is trying to financially restructure the de- velopment firm through the merger. Bren wants to shift his • personal $560 million stock bu ytng debt to the company in the process. While Bren, his asaociates, com- pany financial advisers and law- yers describe the merger as a common business transaction, dis- sident board member Joan Irvine Smith takes a different view. "It's his l~ and his damn problem. We .shouldn't have to pay off his debt," said Smith. the granddaughter of company foun- Irvine Co. gr owth outlined on Page A7. der James Irvine and a multi-millionaire. Smith has not attended a board meeting in five years and lives alone in seclusion in Emerald Bay. She has threatened a $1 billion lawsuit if Bren and other board members attempt the merger. To disrupt the deal, Smith has demanded all company records and books be opened to her lawyers. As a board member and stock.holder she can make the demand. "'I'his is my flrst move," said Smith. who wants a complete audit of the company's holdings and an assessment of its worth - Police probe death threat in Newport By JERRY HIRSCH Of1Mo.IJN9llWI The son of shopping center tycoon Phillip M. Hawley re- ceived a death threat at the family's seaside residence in New- port Beach Tuesday night. Will Prescott Hawley, a 33-year-old bank officer, answered a telephone call for his father at about 8:45 p.m .. The male caller, who refused to identify himself, said he was a friend of ''Phil's" and asked for the elder Hawley's Los Angeles phone number, police reports said. The son hung up. Hawley is the chainnan and chief executive officer of Carter Hawley Hale Stores Inc .. owners of the Broadway, Neiman-Marcus and several other depanment store chains. The man called again. This time Will Hawley lost his temper and "blew it," he told police. He challenged the caller to "come over and settle it right now." "You are going to die," the caller responded, police reports said. When the younger Hawley asked how. the caller replied "You know, with a shotgun or other gun. You are probably going to call the pigs. right?" police reports said. The son contacted Newport Beach police followin,e a third call by a different man asking for "Phil." Police attempted to invesUgate the incident by contacting the elder Hawley but the 90n would not cooperate with the investiga- tion. police reports said. estimated by Bren to be about $1 billion. Smith's plan is to stall Bren by tying up the deal in court. She hopes Bren will be forced to sell some of his stock to private investors to pay off his debts or even make the privately-held company sell stock to the public to raise cash. ''It's his move. I'm just sitting back waiting," she said, laughing as if enjoying the trouble she's created. "I don't trust him, I guess you know that." The merger proposal stems from Bren's purchase last April of 52 percent of the Irvine Co. stock from a coll90rtium of Eastern shareholders. The deal was put together quickly. Bren, who used his existing Irvine Co. stock and other assets aa collateral, formed his own company called Newco I Corp. to help make the deal. Attording to his closest aides, Bren and the banks that loaned him the millions agree the best way to pay off the stock-buying debt is by merging Newco and the Irvine Co. To sweeten the deal, Bren has promised to double the stock held by minority shareholders. This would mean Smith. the largest minority stockholder, could end up owning 22 percent of the company. Smith, though. wants no part of the arrangement and has charged that Bren "illegally" committed the company to the merger. She said Bren could not have received the massive loan unless he'd pledged Irvine Co. assets beyond h is own stock. "You can't do that." said Smith. "And they're (Irvine Co) mad because I've caught them with their hands in the cookie jar." Bren Gally denied Smith's as- sertions. (Sff IRVINE co .• Pase A'7) Killer once prisoner in Iranian conflict By STEVE MARBLE Of -o.ltJ ,... ..... A 53-year-old gas station owner who killed two relatives and an unborn baby before shooting himself to death Tuesday after- noon in Costa Mesa was identified today as a former lranian war prisoner. "His wife said he hadn't been right since he was released from prison seven years ago," explained Costa Mesa Lt. Jack Cal.non today, offering the first insight into the apparent murder-suicide that left four dead. Police believe Mahmood Fam- ily and his wife had called together two relatives Tuesday afternoon to seek advice on their marriage. They were planning to divorce. The couple's two teen-age chil- dren played in the neighborhood as the family meeting took place at 3309 Florida Circle, the home of the wife's sister. Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Tim Holbrook said police suspect Fam- • ily pulled out a gun and shot his wife's sister and cousin before putting the gun to his own head. His own wife reportedly had retreated to a bathroom moments before the gunfire after being squirted in the face by Family with tear gas. When she left the bathroom, she saw the bodies and Sam Willett Adoptive parents to accept study By L.P. BENET Of ... Delly ,... ,..., Despite calling-a congressional demand to subrrut to a home environment study as "harass- ment," the adoptive parents of Sam Willett agreed to the inspec- tion if it would help keep their 28-year-old Liberian son from being deported. "It's ridiculous," said Ruth Willett, Sam's mother. "He hasn't lived at home for six months and he's 28 years old. But we'll do it." The study would cost the family $300 to $500, Willett said. A House immigration subcom- mittee has requested the study before a hearing can be set on a private immigration bill in· troduced on behalf of Willett by Rep. Robert Badham R-Newport Beach. "It's a bask requirement to make sure there's ,good home," (See SAM WILLETT, Paae A!) Officer Tim Holbrook ran from the house screaming, police said. P olice identified the dead woman as .Shaida Assefi, -:32. Authorities said nearly 30 minutes passed after their arrival before it was discovered the woman was eigh t months pregnant. Efforts to save the unbom baby were unsuc- cessful. "To look at her you would not have known she was pregnant, let (See SLA YINGS, Page A!) Hot winds will fade tonight By L.P. BENET Ofllw~ ......... Just when it was getting cool enough to break out the fall wardrobe, Oranae County got a taste of Indian sfunmer as Santa Ana winds fanned the area with hot, dry air the past two days. National weather forecasters said the winds won't start to diminish until tonight. Today's temperatures in Orange County will reach highs of 94 degrees inland and 82 along the coast. Lows will be in the high 50s. Thursday's temperatures, how- ever, will drop to the m.id-80s inland and to the upper 70s along the coast. The unseasonably high temperatures -which hit 97 degrees in Santa Ana Tuesday and 84 in Newport Beach -can be traced to a high pressure system over the western part of the United States which is pushing hot desert air into Southern California, forecasters said. The high temperatures and strong winds forced Orange Coun- ty Fire Departments Tuesday to go on a high watershed dispatch level alert -one step from a red flag alert. Orange County fire Captain Mike Re.inhold said early today that no major fires have occured. · "The wind 1S bad and combined with high temperatures this can create dangerous cqnditions,'' Re- inhold said. The Santa Ana winds began blowing at 15 knots at noon Tuesday. forcing John Waynt Airport air traffic controllers ta reverse takeoff and landing pat.- terns for six hours. If winds keep ;. up, controllers may change the '= patterns later today, an airport spokesman said. "We only use runway one about (See HOT WINDS, Paae A%) A popular culelne Mexican food 11 the fateet grOWlng ethnic food In the country and when you at art coofdng Mexican dlahea at home, you dtacovw tt ian't aM hot and apicy. Page c 1 . ~.~ Airline will get bill for firefighting -A Newport Beach council to ask Re publiC to pay co st of putting out fires caused by jet .... ~~ .......... P-----.... ~-..~~~~!'-"!!"-~-P ..... . , Newport Beech City Cquncil memben voted unanimously to ask Republic Airlinet to pay the expen1e ot fl&hUna fires cau.ed when a Republlc jet ~ed hot efl8ine parta on a. Dover Shores netahborhood Sept. 27. The vote followed a brtef cloeed sellion by the council Tue.day night. Newport mayor Evelyn Kart laid preliminary •tima~ place the 009lJOf puttina out about 20 roof a.nd' IJ"UI flre cauaed by the jet at between $-4,000 and ~.000. "We want to recoup our lou6.'' Ii.be Mid. The city expecta a complete report de\ailing the coeta will be finished by the fire department 10metime thia week. "The matter may go to liti- gation. It depends whether Re- public pays off our claim," CJty Attorney Robert Burnham aaid. In • related matter, the pr'fti- dent of a local homeowner'• aDOCi4adon .. td hil arouJ> I.a petJ- Uoning U)e National TraN~r· talion Salety Board to hold a public h.eartns In Newport Beach on the jet mllhap. Hatt .. id ahe believed the city • would be interet1ted in partld- pating if a hearing la held. . Thomas &iwartk, president of the Mariners Community A.Mocia· tJon, told the council hil group is alJo aaking the .. fety board to hold hearings on the takeoff and landing pattema at. John Wayne Airport and on w hether the airport can safely be expanded. "We need to know lf we have to clear a two-mUe attett:h (under· neath the fll&ht path) from the airport to the ocean," .. id Ed· wards, who Mid hit oraaniution representa 2.000 homeowners. But the chances of a local hearing are probably remote, said NTSB spokesman Bob Buckhol"I\. "l know of no plans to ho.Id ~ hearing at thia time. h would ta.k9 a decltlon by the ffve-mem~ board," Buckhorn said. While NTSB hearh\p are opet> for public vlewma. they a.re noJ open for public comment, he aai4 The board Invitee lnduatry ex• perta and Incident witneelel • tettify and don not accept~ ment from the ~ral pubUc. . Hearings are uau.lly held ~ the alte of the incident. he .. td. . • \ Krishna order Striking a blow for quality education ----Aca d~mic Excellence Confer e nce in Costa Mesa reflect r en ewed public interest • g·1ven ;weight An Orange County Superior 1 Court Judge has set a Friday deadline for the lntemationaJ Society for Krishna Consciousn~ to comply fully with an appeals court order to surrrnder its assets · to a court-appomted recei'.1er while a $9.7 million judgment is being appealed. Judge James Jackman agreed Tuesday that the Hare Krishna organizauon has not complied · \vi th the 4th District Court of Appeal directive that it tender its ·assets m heu of posting a $15 . million bond w hale the appeal 1s ·,.pending. vr. The sect is appealing a $9.7 : million judgment awarded to Ro bin and Marcia George of Cy press who sued the sect claim- ing Robin had been spirited away . '9Y Krishna members during the mid-1970s and brainwashed. The two wome n also claimed family efforts to locate Robin contributed to the death of her father, Jim George. Following five months of tesli· " tnony in a Santa Ana court.room, " the jury awarded the Georges $32 r'nillion. That sum later was re- 1'.luced to $9.7 million by Jackman, •who presided over the trial. '· Attorneys representing the Georges were back in court argu- .· 'ing that the sect had not complied • with the appellate court order •because it had reserved title to its property listed in an mve ntory Robin Geor~e filed with the court Attached to the inventory, Hare Krishna attorneys attached a statem ent saying the rebgious group retained all "equities, rights, remedies or legal pos- itions." Jackman agreed that the state- ment violated what appeals court juslll:es had ordered and directed the sect's attorneys to submit a sun ement from Hare Krishna's l'Orporate leaders indicating they were surrendering the property. Guilty verdic t r e turned in T y berg trial C harles Tyberg-a 17-year-old San Diego youth, charged in the shooting death of a San Diego police officer -was convicted of first degree murder today by an Orange County Superior Court jury. By KAREN E. KLEIN Of-0...-,Httl ..... A large turnout at the 1983 Academic Excellence Conference> in Costa Mesa Tuesday proved that rent·wl"d public interest in education is good, ~ven if that interest is painfully cnticaJ, said teache rs C1nd administrators at- tending the conference. The day-long seminar was pri- marily "ah honest quest for ways to respond to society, new legis- lation and some of the criticism" educators are facing today, said Dean Waldfogel, assistant super- intendent of the Irvine Unified School District. More than 500 teachers. princi· pals, superintendents and district admmistrators from Orange, Los Angeles, San Bernardino and San Diego counues attended the con- ference at tbe Westin South Coast Plat.a. State Sen. Gary Hart, D-Santa Barbara, told attendees he ls concerned about how California's new education reform law will be funded next year. Gov George Deukmejian vetoed second-year funding for the law, saying he wanted to see how the refonns work the first year before guaranteeing a second year. "It will be very difficuJt" in such a short time, to show that the law is working, Hart said. He also said he is committed to providing better support-systems for teachers. and be tter self-esteem. "We're going to ask teachers to be more accountable We'U be asking more of them," Hart said. "But we're llkeJy not to succeed if we don't give them greater status and re<.'Ognition." Attendees also heard from three other speakers and partici- pated m small groupworkshops, WaJdfogeJ said. Another large portion of the conference was devoted to new technology in the classroom, Waldfogel said. Richard Byrne, a pr6fessor from USC's Annenburg School of Communications, told attendees that children who learn computer technology need a big dose of e thics and morality along with it "Breaking into a data base - like •WarGames' -is like break- ing into a houae and ruml.ng a valuable stamp collection," Byrne said. "It's not a challenge or a triumph." He also said the fear some teachers have of computers is not based on their reluctance to learn something new. but their reluc- tance to give up some skill they think they will lose 1f they learn computers. "I was afraid because I thought I was a humanist -an artist, a musician. I thought I'd lost my humanism and become a technol- ogist if l learned computers," Byrne said. ''For teachers, (con- quering computer phobia) is not a matter of breaking a barrier but a matter of letting go of a n anchor." Cops probe two reports of rapes Police in Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley are investigating two rapes that occurred this week during early morning hours. It was not immediately known whether the incidents were re- lated. The more recent attack oc- curred shortly before 4 a.m. today on the 4400 block of Fir Drive in Huntington Beach . Police said a man entered the home through a front sliding window and awoke a 30-year-old woman living there. Police said the man, armed with a handgun and a knife, forced the woman to disrobe before raping her. The intruder was described as a 30-year-old black man, 5-feet 9 inches tall. weighing 180 pounds. ~Ham radio class ... set in Newport The jury of six men and six woman deliberated for one day before returning with a guilty verdict. Judge Myron Brown set a Nov. 10 sentencing date. Tybert faces a 27 year -to-life sentence The triaJ was transferred to Orange County because o f massive publicity in San Diego after the Feb. 20 shooting death of Police Officer Kirk Johnson. Paramedics a nd a mbula nce atte nd- a nts m ove suspected killer to waiting ambula nce. H e la ter self-inflicted injuries. d ied of The victim was examined at Humana Hospital Huntington Beach and released, police said. In the Fountain Valley attack, an intruder climbed to a sec· ond-story balcony in the 10,000 block of Warner Avenue and entered thl! victim's master bedroom through an unJocked sliding glass door. ~~~~~~~~~~- ,,.._ ·-A ham radio class for sailors. SLA YIN G S IN MESA ... Tennis club wins lawsuit ove r tourney J.aught by Gordon West of Costa Mesa. will be offered at Shark ' lsland Yacht Club. 1099 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach. starting at I p.m. today The class will give mariners fast. non-technicaJ instruction enabling them to pass both novice and technician class license exam- · ma tions given by the FCC. accord - ing to West, head of the West " Coast Amateur Radio School. F.mphasis of the nine-week course will be on ham radio insta1Jat1on ·: aboard power and sailboats. Partrkia J ohnson, the slain la wman's widow. called the JUry decision "a giant step" for pohce departments everywhere. "This decision is important to every officer on the street," she tearfully said. Tyberg, wearing a blut! sweater, jeans and sneakers. showed no emotion as the verdict was read. A court bailiff was assigned to sit beside the defen· dant's parents. From Page A 1 alone eight months pregnant," said Calnon today during a press conference The other dead man was 1dent- 1 fled as G ho lam Hossein ShamJou. a 47-year·old phys1c1an from Villa Park and a cousin to Family's wife Of all of them, Shamlou was the only American c1uzen, police said. SAM WILLETT ••• The husband of the dead woman, police said, was in Bakerf1eld atte nding a confe rence at the time of the shooting Officers said he 1s an engineer and was informed of the k1Umgs early today F:rom Page A 1 explained Howard Seelye, a dis- , trict representative for Badham "Sam's not a child -so it's a little considered legally adopted under federal law. · UnJess Congress gives him per- manent residency status, immi- gration authorities will deport Sam on Nov. 18. The Willetts-as they have done eight times in the past -will seek another stay of de portion before the deadline, Ruth said. Calnon said detectives are puttied by the violent episode and are uncertam what triggered the carnage. unusuaJ.•• Sam presen ti y b ves w1 th hlS adoptive brother Davtd, 22, in a San C1emente apartment, Willett said. Ruth and her husband, David, adopted Sam 11 years ago wtu.Je the couple was serving as Peace Corps volunteers in Liberia. How· ever, federaJ Immigration and The surviving woman -Fam- ily's wife -told authorities she and her husband had agreed to a divorce but needed help from her sister and cousin in drawing up a property settlement. The meeting, she satd, began caJ.mly enough. Seelye said no date has been set for the subcommjttee hearing. A hearing date for a similar bill introduced to the Senate by Sen. Pete Wilson. R -Calif.. also has not been set. J:aturalization authorities say ince Sam's age was listed as 16 at he ume he was too old to be HOT WINDS ... "At some point," explained Calnon, ''he (Family) got angered and stormed out of the house. He returned about 20 mmutes later. His wife answered the door and he Maced h er." Police are unsure how many shots were fired from the gun. believed to be a serru-automatlc Colt. Assafei was shot once in the chest and Sharnlou. the cousin, ' From Page A1 2 to 3 percen t of the yPar," said Mark Peacox. superevisor of air traffic control. "We have to do this because the planes have to land and take off mto the wind." Meanwhile. air quaJity for parts of central Orange County today 1s expected to be "unheaJthful for sensitive persons," according to a spokesman from the South Coast Afr Quality Management District. The county air quality was rated "good" Tuesday, officials said. Orange County lifeguards said We're Listening ••• 642•6086 D•lly Pllol o.tlv•ry 11 Qu.enlMd Mont.Ja., f tfCUr If 1"'• -..,. 001 "••• '°"'' ..,•r•• "' ~ )() 0 "' .. °''"'~ 1 0"' •''" vov• r oa, •W b• °"' .... ec1 5•1w!l-.y •'\Cl .,_.ut1dl 'f' II rnu On fl()t fWt.•1~# ,-U-lf early today that the air was smoggy aJong the coast. Some lifeguards suffered from mmor eye and throat irritations Tues- day. hfeguards said. "We can't even see Catalina Island because it's so hazy," 81U Richardson, a Huntington Beach marine safety officer, said Tues· day afternoon. "We had a breeze earlier m the day, but it's not nearly as strong now. It's very sticky too-and we're just not use to this kind of thing." F iremen ext in g uish Mesa trash blaze Cost.a Mesa firefighters ext- inguished a blaze inside a Large trash dumpster that sent black clouds of smoke into the afternoon sky Tuesday Fire administration chief Jim Richey said the fire broke out in a dumpster sitting in front of ln- teriors Delivery Service, 1638 Babcock St.. a t about 3.40 p.m Whal do vo u ltkl' about the Dail}' Pilot" What don't you ltke~ Call lhl' number a t le ft and your message will bet rec.'Orded. transcribed and deli vered to the appropriate editor Thl' same 24 hour answenng service may be used to record let l~rs to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include thl'tr namt' and telt.>phont' number for veriflcatwn No c1rculatton n 1 I ho. plt>~S(' Tell us what·,_ on your mind ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. Schw•rta m Pvbliahet CIH1lft9d eclvertl1lng 7141W·5UI All other depertmenl• &42-4121 MAIN OFFICE l:lO Woo B•y $1 C:oo•• loleM CA loll• llOO'tt• !lo• l!>e() CDlll ,_._ r A ·~lf>l(i foPY•Y.t 198) Ot•no-c:o .. 1 ~'O C.·-• IWI n••' \fO•••\ 1t1v•Ht 11on' 1d1•a'•• m1tt1t u• "4"'"'''•~~h "'-'"'""1Ay Ot 'filf"°'°'-"'ed Mtnout ,,,_,.1 '1""'f"''Wllt0n d COUt''~''t n~t !OC>y I>'; 1 • m 1 All""'"'' tO am ~ -;nut ftiJly .---.. l)fl<le" ... ~ ChHy Oowellby Aeymond MmcLHn (C11tor and ASSIStant CoolrOller '>w.0011 t.1~1., ,,,)'\,,.~ Pft•d ,., '""''" ",.~ c.-1-1~'"""'' lJf'~ u• 80(h f,.;(''(•<Jl.r>n t), "'"rf!H ,. ,~ 1uuutt 'If ttv ""'~ S6 ~ tnf'lt INv Clfcutedon TetephonM -· ()fangoo C.°""'' ..... ...,_, "'°'"'"'""" \HumOIQIC"' 6t<o<h o\Wf'tl-lf' _,_ 1119""""'919' ...... to lhe Pubhsher ~,.c. ••• Pfoduc110f1 Mal\AO'lf" Otort. 4.1'-9'1 "'-••• 1\1)¥ .. ,"~ ...... "O'" ·. OOft.W L. Wffff-1 r .-cui1i1tl•-'• .... ~ • VOL. 7a, NO. 215 was shot m the leg and head. Police said it appears Family fired one bullet into h1s own head. Family. according to statements given by his wife. had been a prisoner in Iran . She referred to him as a prisoner of war. according to police, but did not say precisely why he'd been jailed. "She said he was different after he got out -not mentally right," said Calnon . "He'd made threats to her and his children severaJ times. But nobody really knows the motive," he added. "these (the dead relatives) were people he trusted. He'd asked for their help because he trusted them." Family, still living with his wife at the time of the shooting, lived only severaJ blocks from the Florida Cirde home. A local tenms club won a court battle against a promoter who failed to pay a $13,000 bill follow- ing a $300,000 tennis l:'Xhibition in August The Newport Beach Tennis Club won the suit by default after promoter Bill Stamps failed to answer charges in the suit last month. Orange County Harbor Munici- pal Judge Brian Carter ordered Stamps to pay the club $16,428 in re ntal fees. court costs and at- torney fees. A lawyer for the club said chances of collecting were slim. All attempts to contact Stamps have failed, he said. Four men bind womaninHB Poli ce are searching for four a rmed men who mvaded a Hunt- ington Beach home early today a nd robbed a woman Police L t Barry Price SaJd the four e ntered a home on the 8,800 block of Dorsett Drive through a k itchen window at 4:25 a.m. Price said the intruders. de- .scribed only as young OrientaJs, nee! with cash and jewelry valued at $1 5.000. He said the resident was not injured in the incident. Hunting ton teen , hit b y c ar, dies MURDER SCENE ••• A Huntington Beach teen-ager has died of injuries received early Saturday in an traffic accident in Anaheim. From Page A1 Sgt. Holbrook, who lives across the street from the hou.ae where the violence took place. was the first t.o enter the residence follow- ing the gunfire. He said a woman, later ident- 1f1ed as the wife of the gunman, was running up and down the street, screaming. He said she was so emotionally spent that it took severaJ minutes for her to explain EITU FAIOY IYllC:~llllS •••••••••••••••• what had happened. James Bollone, an Irvine police captain, said he knew the couple who Lived next door to him as polite and friendly . He said they had lived in the neighborhood two years and always waved to neigh- bors. "But I can't really say that I knew them." he added. Richard Robert Senske, 18. died Monday at UCI Medical Center in Orange. Police said Senske ~ros.sing Katella Avenue on foot near Easy Way in the middle of a block when he was struck by a car driven by Michael M. Guarino, 19, of Anaheim. Guarino, who told of- ficers he did not see Senske, was not cited. ,_DI •311 IWIRIFISH.................................... a.... Ill. FlllAYI 'Ill SEAFOOD SEOTIOIS ........................ $ 11u. OIEIOI Liii 001.......................... u. SPECIALTY MEATS •ruu '2'' POii LOii ROAST.......................... u. •3•• I PlllE Ill ROAST........................... u. IAllll 4 /$1 RUSSET PllTITllES. ~ mu W1111111n 4 /$1 YALEICIA lllllllES. u. IPICIAL Wllllllll 011•0 $22• OHEEIE...................... L•. Ill I YllEIU OIUIEI IPllAGM GWI GllOWlll BULLETIN BOARD Co ping with e lderl y paren ts to p ic at O CC A three-hour seminar designed to show people how the.Y can best cope with the changes and demands of elderly parents will be presented Friday in Room 1 of the Science Lecture Ha ll at Orange Coast College. Elana Peters, a consultant m social services wofi<, wiU instruct the class, scheduled from 7 to LO p.m . AdmlSSion 1s $6. Tickets are on sale in the OCC ticket office an the Student Center and. 1f available, wiU be sold at the door For further information. call 432-5880. Mesa aut hor k eyn o t e s peaker .,_ ~ '-... 1111 7 ••?• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 19t>.> .. "~ Niguel crash • • v1ct1m, 73, ili!J s Long-time Lagu ) Niguel resi- dent Virginia Bec~nbaugh died Tuesday at South Coast Medical Center as the result of a traUic accident that occured in Dana Point a week ago. She was 73 .. Costa Mesa's Michelle Morris, author of the novel "If I Should Die Before I Wake," will be the keynote speaker at Thursday's meeting of Volunteers for Kids Sake at the Plaza at Villa del Sol, FuUerton. Morris' novel deals with child abuse. which the volunteer group is organized to help prevent The program 1s scheduled for 11:30 a.m. and reservauons may be obtained by calling 525-7653. Supervisor Ra lph Cla rk ho lds his win ning or ange as boar d me m bt-rs Bruce esta nde, Harrie tt W ieder a nd T homas Riley peel a way. Visitation will be fhursday from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m . at McCormick 's Mortuary on Laguna Canyon Road in Laguna Beach. Funeral services will be Friday at 11 a.m. at the Uru~ Methodist Church on Wesley Drive in South Laguna. Nume rology workshop slated in Mesa Supervisors are real cutups "Metaphysical Numerology: A Tool for Self Discovery" is the title of a one-day workshop to be presented Saturday at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. Orange slicers a-peel for county's n e w Orangewood sh el ter She was married for 51 years to Don Beckenbaugh, co-owner .of Laguna Niguel Realty, a past president of the local Rotary Club and chairman of the board of United Methodist Church. Registration fee is $15. Workshop tickets can be purchased at the OCC Ticket Office, located in the Student Center Building, or at the door. I srae l Fair sche duled Su nday in Mesa The 11th annual Federation Israel Fair will be held Sunday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m . on the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. Continuous live entertainment will be offered, along with kosher food, exhibits, arts and crafts, gifts, games and door prizes. Free bus shuttle is available from assigned parking areas. Admission is $2.50 for adults and $1 for children 6 to 12, with those under 6 admitted free. CaU 530-6636 for further information. Program on Rome a t Orange Coas t "Rome and the Romans" is the title of an ''Armchair Adventures" ~ravelogue that will be presented Friday at Orange Coast College tn Costa Mesa. The program begins at 8 p.m. in OCC's Robert B. Moore ThealPr Tickets for the program are available for $3 in advance and $4 at the door. They may be purchased in the OCC Ticket OfCice. located in the Student Center Building. POLICE LOG By JEFF ADLER 01 IM Otll)I l'llol II.ti Lest there be any doubt, Orange County supcrvts0rs proved they have the right stuff Tuesday-or, al least, the orange stuff. Engaging in a rough-and-tumble contest that tested mettle, courage, practical determination and surgical fi- nesse, four of the five members of the Board of Supervisors showed they have what it takes to make it in the kitchen should their politi- cal careers falter. And the recipient of all the good will was Orangewood, the coun- ty's home being built in Orange for abandoned or abused children. The supervisors goodsnaturedly agreed to partici- pate in the "Great Orangewood AsPeel," an orange peeling con - test staged to promote an Oct. 27 one-day fund-raising drive for the home. Burglars loot L agunan's house Household goods valued a1 $2.750 were stolen from a house In the 400 block of Pearl Street the owner told Laguna Beach police A tire and wheel were taken otl a vehicle parked in the 600 block 01 Cress S1re~1 police said A tote bag stolen from a parked car on Ocean Avenue Tuesday was later round 1n a nearby alleyway, police said The contents. valued at $600, were m1S$lng A bicycle valued at $610 was taken from a storage shed 1n the 700 block of Summit Drive Newport Beach A Costa Mesa man repor1ed the thett of his 1979 Camero from the 200 block of 35th Street Wednesday A business In the 3300 block of Via Lido reported the theft of two IBM typewnters valued at $700 each sometime Sunday. police said. Fountain Valley A Fountain Valley student reported that his red Schwinn Cruiser bicycle was stolen from a sctiool parking 101 Thieves stole a stereo from a 1968 Ford parked in the 10000 block of Pebble Court and then opened the hood and ripped out the baltery Total loss was put at $190. l nine A 14-year-old Woodbridge High School coed reported someone raided her unlocked gym locker Tuesday afternoon. making off with clolhes and shoes valued at $200. she told police Thieves stole three pieces of jew- elry valued el $1,500 rrom a home In the 15000 block of Verden Court. Entry was made through an unlocked sliding glass window. Hunting ton Beach A resident of the 16400 block of Boise Chica Street told Huntington Beech police he che<:ked a locked closet Tuesday and discovered nu- merous handguns and rifles had been stolen The loss 1nvo111ed weapons valued at 59.570 A home burglary was reported Tuesday on the 18800 block of Thornwood Clrcle. Entry was ap- parently made through an unlocked slldlng glass patio door The loss included an $875 stereo and $100 1n Jewelry A garage break -In was repor1ed Tuesday on the 200 block of 8th Street 1n Huntington Beach. The loss Included 12 cans ol motor oil valued at $10 A woman reported to police that someone had broken the windows out ol her 1981 Corvelte. parked on the 16000 block ol Beach Boulevard Tuesday night. The auto's T -tops, valued at $750, also were taken Costa Mesa Burglars took five IBM tyepwrlters worth $7,000'from Galavtn, Schmies- ing and Blled. a Bristol Street el- torney's office. Police said It appears the crooks used a pass key to enter the offices. A water bottle containing $500 In loose change, a cordless telephone and a video casselte recorder were hauled off from an apartment on the 2800 block of Fairview Street Poflce put the total loss at S 1.930 A crook entered an unlocked garage on the 1 '400 block ol Oeauvllle Street and pried a S500 radio out of a parked Volvo au10. TODAY'S WEATHER Cool ing off perio d Thursd ay Coastal BooM 63 38 Bo•ton 6S 58 Btowntvt'-II() 73 Moetly 1.., lhto..gn T""•ld•y P•tclly 8<111810 65 s8 8utllngton SU 41 ID* cloud& one! IOQ Mlll 1 .... c;oul c-St 37 TPlulldey m0<ning C-.. Thuno.-, ""111 c11ar ... tonSC 77 et "'91'6 7510 84 ""'", .... co .. , an<l 114 10 II() c11.,i..1on w v 6.o st "' tn1•no ,, .. , ~o..,. ton'91'1 S• to IA Cll.,IOtt• NC 63 62 Bm•M Ctah .., •• _.,. -t .... OUl•r c....,."",,. •• 35 COhlll ... ,.,. "°"' p04n1 Conc<!!>tlOn to Cll"6QO 76 SS Sllft "liCOIH ,.,_ '"' nonl>-1 .,,.,.,. 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Seit Lok• et ., WIClllll ., ., ~,,...,. $1 ll Ti .., ..... ~. 75 05 emperatures -°'-· •• ., ~Yori! ... 92 .. ~ No<tolll 10 .. ,._, ,, n H()nll PletM H a1 ~Ill"' ,, •1 °"-•Clt't 71 .. ""'"'"'° 10 ,. C>Mena H 3& Anchot"9" •• 44 Otlondo " 71 ~ eo .. Altal\l.t ., H Ex tended Alt.lltte Ctr, IS 13 -... .,. 1·2 lelr·l)OOt t folr ' ,.,, jl\Uel'" " ., ._,_... ... .. a-. ;r.:: -IM'flll\O iO"' "-"' :z.... '1 "' ~ 11< H!Ofll Ill Ille 70. l\Mt tM .. . , --•:rn to mio llOt 1111-'ld .. , .... .,Cl! 41 ,. ~ lOwt 210•• t -I ,,_., ... 0 , ... ' -~""'I dlttellOn .0..t-1 Orangewood's directors are hoping county residents will purchase 50,000 oranges at $2 apiece that day, adding another $100,000 to the $6.6 million raised so far for the project. The goal is $7.5 million. Although the fund-raising drive for Orangewood is still under way. construction on the home's first phase is progressing. reported Mona Hobson, the cam- paign's director. She said framing for six build- ings has been completed and construction workers are readying those building's roofs. The build- ings should be completed some- time in mid-1984. While supervisors have tackled weightier problems in the past, the peeling contest certainly proved to be one of the juiciest tasks they've ever encountered. They're a competitive bunch and it was apparent that each of the four who participated clearly was seeking the "a-peeling" title. It also was politically revealing to watch how each supervisor ap- proached the county's first fruit. Supervisor Bruce Nestande at- tacked his orange as if it were a political opponent or a tough problem in the Third Super- v1sonal District. He clawed, teared and pulled the peel from his orange. showing no mercy He lost. Supervisor Thomas Riley mounted his campaign with the time-tested method one would expect of a Manne Corps general. He attacked n from land, sea and Trus tee hope£ uls in forum tonigh t A forum for candidates running m the Nov. 8 Coast Community College District election will be conducted at 7 p.m. today in the district board room, 1370 Adams Ave., Costa Mesa. The public is inVlted to the free event, which is sponsored by the district chapter of the California School Employees Association. All 13 candidates running for three board seats have been invited to participate. a ir, stnppang the peel around and around He, too, lost. Supervisor Harriett Wieder tried a different approach. A problem solver. Wiederattempted to quantify her problem and then solve it. She quartered the orange peel and then tried to pull if off. Obviously, she didn't win either. The winner was Supervisor Ralph Clark who went about his orange peeling business the same way he approaches politics - quietly and assuredly. He peeled his orange by deftly slicing the peel, round and round. Chairman Roger Stanton failed to make it to the contest, tele- phoning in his regrets et the last minute. An aide said he was ill. Was that an orange a day that keeps the doctor away? Mrs. Beckenbaugh was active with the South Coast Medical Center Auxiliary and the South Laguna hospital's Silver and Gold chapter. She was former treasurer of the center's gift shop as well ·as treasurer for the auxiliary. She was born in Fort Wayne, Ind., and moved to California with her husband 16 years ago, taking up residence in Laguna Niguel. The couple met in 1929 in Racine, Wis .. where she worked with her father in his retail shoe business. Her husband-to-be was an JC· countant with a Cann machim;ry firm. The couple met at . a Methodist church and were mar- ried three years later Laguna council OKs two swimilling pools By L.P. BENET Ol t ... Deltr ,,... ..... Rejecting a city staff rec- ommendation to build a single community pool on the Laguna Beach High School campus, the Laguna Beach City Council unanimously authoriz.ed city and local school district officials to begin planning the construction of two pools on the edge o{ the high school baseball field. However. council members. considering the city's uncertain fmancial status, only committed $375,000 to the construction of the pools, which will cost about $750,000 if built this year, accord- ing to a report prepared by the aquatic task force which was set up last year to study the communi- ty pool project. · Council members decided that the school district and the com- munity must raise the rest of the money for the facility . Before a standing-room-only crowd -many of them members of high school water polo and swim teams -council members A carat or mo re. listened for more than an hour to several speakers before debatmg the pool proposals. Carl Schwan, task force ch.air- man and a member of the Laguna Beach Unified School Distfict Governing Board, argued that a city proposed "L" shaped pool wouldn't accommodate senior citizens because the water tt>mperature would have to be kept below 82 degrees for athleuc use Citing several surveys, Schwarz added said the "L" pool would not be large enough to meet public demand. City Manager K en Frank rec- ommended a single pool costing between $750,000 and $1 million. noting that a second pool could C05t another $240,000. "l don't think there's anyway they can build two pools for $750,000.'' Frank said, referring to the task force estimate. The city and the school district still have a number details to work, including the financial obli- gation of renovating the El Morro Elementry School field into a regulation size baseball field. A spectacular way to say you couldn't have do ne it without her. A d iam nd o a ca rat or more -one in a million. J. C.JJwnp~rie6 r}ewefer6 MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIE'TY 1800 NEWPORT BL VO .. COST A t.AESA SINCE 1!»48 Ben11Amtr1card-Matter Cl\erge .. @ ' ( I All Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1983 NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS \•I•> N4t ff I! "0> (low ("9 S..tlh N•I pr ""' (tow ("Q S<lln N•I P ( ~ (lo-. C.l>O I' Dow Jones Final Down 5.49 Cloelng 1,251.85 •1•1,111 Prudential-Bache executive arrested in $5 million theft By The A11oclatecl Pre11 NEW YORK -An executive of Prudenllal·Bache Securities Inc. and three other men have been arrested on conspiracy charges stemming from the theft of millions of dollars from the investment firm, officials say. The compl.alnt accused John ECler, a 38·year-old manager in the company's dividend department, in connection with a missing $5 million. Another $11 million was discovered missing and company officials do not know where 1t went, Assistant U.S . Attorney William J. Schwartz said Tuesday. No charges have been filed in connection with that missing money. T-bill y ields up slightly WASHINGTON -Weekly auctions brought' slight increases in yields on short·lenn Treasury securities, marking the highest levels in three weeks. The government on Tuesday sold about $12 billion m new T-bills -half in three-month bills al an average discount rate of 8.83 percent. up from 8. 72 percent last week, and half in six-month bills at an average rate of 8.97 perrent, up from 8.92 perrent Justice Dept. sides with labor WASHINGTON -The Justice Department is siding with the labor union position in a key case being argued before the Supreme Court. A department lawyer told the court Tuesday that a company should not be permitted to enlist the help of bankruptcy courts to cancel a u.nion contract unless the business can show its survival is at stake. The case before the Supreme Court involves BUdisco and Bildi.sco, an Avenel, N.J., building supply firm that declared bankruptcy in 1980 and canceled a wage increase it had negotiated with the Teamsters Union. Lifemark Corp. seek s suitor HOUSTON -Lifemark Corp .. one of the nation's largest hospital-management companies, says it is searching for a suitor and has hired First Boston Corp .. an investment banking firm, to help evaluate "p<*ible future courses of acquisition." Lifemark stock, which jumped $2.75 a share on Friday and which soared another $7 Monday, fell $1.75 on Tuesday to close at $37 a share as the plO&l active issue on the New York Stock Exchange. More than 2.4 million shares changed hands. In a brief statement Monday. Lifemark said 1t had begun preliminary talks with potential suitors. Gulf Oil will reorganize PITTSBURGH -Gulf Oil Corp., the nation's fifth-largest oil company, says its directors agreed to reorganize Gull Into a Delaware-based holding company, in part to prevent a possible unlriendl:J tak.ecwer.Gulf said it hat noticed an ''unusually high" amount of trading in its aiock since mid·August. lt also noted "published rumors that one or more persons may be accumulating substantial shares in the company." COLD QUOTATIONS WH" T NYSE DID NEW Y()jl!K fAPI Oct 11 Tocie v ~ lewf "' I ... 21 IS WHAT AMEX DID NEW YOltK (API Ocl 17 Aovericeo Oe<U11t0 UllCll•-To1e11n.,., Ntw l\loh• i"'eW IOW\ METALS SYMBOLS TOClh 20;S Cl7 110 111 IS l Pr ... day Sl1 1150 M1 107• ., u Prt"Y d•• t7l a 710 141 11 10 I l I DOW JONES AVERAGES 1161.10 12'7l 07 lfSUS lUt .S-S.., SIO 7J S"-Of S7U9 f7U6-S ~ IU" 1J7 '1 13S~ ll7 IH 0 10 .soi n sos.n "'.M soo.so-1" 7.344.700 1,SM,900 l,I07.000 11 7U,.OO NEW YOltK !API -$a1H, W-y Pf'kll -,,., dlelWle ol .,,. 10 ""'" ed••• Arnenc.. 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