HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-10-17 - Orange Coast Pilot0.-, .... ..._.,Lee .......
Popeyes Pepsi Challenger had the most muscle in the Warmington International Grand Prix. More photos, story Page Cl.
THI ORANGI COAST
COUNTY EDITION
MONDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1983 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
The$47,000 qu·estion ,.
Cash in brief case left with restaurant hostess siolen in Newport • ..
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of-OallyNotli.11
A claim b~a Santa ·Ana man
that a briefcase containing $4 7,000
-470 $100 bills -was stolen
Saturday night from behind a
hostess stand at a local restaurant
has Newport Beach police more
than a little curious today.
"The whole thing seems very
Masked
gunman
·robs FV
eatery
By STEVE MARBLE
Of -0.ily ,._ llelt
A man wearing a Halloween
mask and clutching a
chrome-plated revolver held
up a Fountain Valley res·
taurant late Sunday after con-
fronting two employees in a
darkened ally and forcing
them back inside the business,
police reported.
The midnight robbery at the
Cask and Cleaver, 16525
Brookhurst St., marks the sec-
ond time this month that a
bandit disguised in a Hal·
loween mask has robbed a
Fountain Valley diner.
Police do not know if Sun-
day's hold up and one at
Naugles, a fast-food stop also
located on Brookhurst. are the
work#>f the same man.
Efforts were being made
today to see if descriptions of
the Halloween disguise
matched.
The masked bandit ap·
proached two e mployees
outside the Cask and Cleaver
just before midnight, forcing
them at gunpoint to take him to
the manager's office.
VVhentherobberdiscovered
the manager had no cash,
police said the thief ran to the
restaurant's bar and helped
himself to the $500 in the cash
register.
.. lllDEX
Births
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Classified
Comics
era.word
F.ditorial Page
En~rtainrnent
Hol"09COpe
In tM Service
Ann Landera
Movies
National New•
Police Log
Public Notices
Sporta
State News
Dr. S\elncrohn
Telft11ion
Thelten
Wnther
World Newa
i
strange. We are going to have a
long chat with the victim," said
Detective Todd Wilkinson.
Wilkinson said he found it hard
to believe that the victim. David
M. Booth, 21, would entrust that
much cash to a restaurant hostess.
No arrests have been made and
police are still looki.qg into the
details of the alleged theft.
Joe Lobe
Colleges
plan rally
over funds
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
OllMO..-, ..........
Orange Coast College students
will join comrades from Santa
Ana and Saddleback colleges
Tuesday in a rally to demonstrate
concern over cutbacks in com-
munity college funding.
The rally, scheduled for 11:50
a.m. on the OCC Quad, will cap a
month-long petition drive focus-
ing on the funding i$ue. The goal
is to collect 15,000 signatures on
petitions that will be carried to
Sacramento Thursday by stu-
dents oJficers from the three
colleges.
Speaking at Tuesday's rally
will be OCC President Bernard J .
Luskin, Santa Ana College Presi-
dent J . William Wenrich, and the
student body presidents from the
three campuaes.
(See COLLEGES. Page A!)
Booth, accompanied by Mark
M. Barone, 30, a Costa Mesa
chiropractor, asked the hostess to
watch the briefcase while they ate
at Bobby McGee's restaurant at
353 E. Coast Highway, police said.
The two men, who said they
deal in cl.assia and exotic ca.rs, told
police they planned to spend the
money on a Ferrari the next day.
Debre.u
·called
devoted
theorist
By ANDREA ADE~N
Ol_O.itr ..... lt-"
Gerard Debreu, a UC Berkeley
professor who today was awarded
the 1983 Nobel Memorial Priz.e in
Economics, is a devoted theorist
with a wry sense of humor who
loves good food, according to local
colleagues.
Julius Margolis, a UC Irvine
economics professor, said today
Debreu's theoretical work on how
markets operate has achieved
international prominence and de-
serves recognition by the Royal
Swedish Academy of Sciences.
What is a surprise, Margolis
said, is that Debreu's achievement
in proving the existence of
equilibrium-creating prices was
made in the 1950s, working wi\h
Stanford University Professor
Kenneth Arrow. co-winner of the
1972 Nobel economics prize.
"Arrow's work was in a joint
venture with Debreu. And they
overlooked Debreu. That was the
appropriate time" for the prize.
said Margolis, whose speciality is
government economics.
Margolis, who taught in the
Berkeley economics department
with Debreu in the early 1960s,
described the 62-year-old
Qrofessor and native of Calais,
France as "extremely conacien-
tious and devoted to the develop-
m~nt of mathematical economic
theory.''
He also has a wry wit and "like
any goOd Frenchman" enjoys
meala prepared _by his wife, an
(Sff DEBREU, Page AZ )
'
But Barone said today he
thought the money was locked in
the trunk of their car and did not
know that it was in the briefcase.
"I never saw the money in
there, I saw it earlier in the
afternoon," Barone said, adding
that it was Booth's money.
Booth, who told police he was a
"pro golfer," could not be reached
for comment.
The police report said the
hostess agreed to watch the brief-
case but told the men the res-
taurant would not be responsible
for it. Booth then placed the
briefcase behind the stand.
When the men fl.niahed eating
about 1:30 a .m. Sunday, they
returned to the hoeteea sland for
the briefcase and found it miaing.
Numerous customers and res-
taurant employees saw the brief-
case when it was placed behind
the stand earlier that night.
According to the police report,
the two men had visited the
restaurant on Friday night and
claimed to have a briefcase with
$60,000 in &sh. The men dis-
cussed the cash with several
va1ets, police said.
"It is rather bi.z.arre. Why would
you leave that much money
behind a hoetess stand? Somehow
it does not add up," Wilkinson
said.
"On the face of it it does .not
seem realistic but we have In-
vestigated weirder things." he
said.
~ ' •:1 \; l/ . ....
. f .
~r-
Oellf ...... pM!O by ..... •oelllll -
Jim Creighton is fi ghting city hall over a sign for
his Fountain Valley cookie business. · '
Cookie crisis
Valley baker fights for shop sign
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Ol IM 0.-, ,_ --
If Jim Creighton's five-year battle with Fountain Valley City
Hall were a soap opera, it might be entitled "~ the Cookie
Crumbles."
CreightQJl has squared off against city officials because he
wants to erect a free-standing sign in !ront of his business,
Creighton's Cookie Jar. .
In the past, the City Council and the Planning Commission
have said his business doesn't qualify. Now they say maybe.
According to Creighton, the controversy dates back to
December 1977 when he and a partner opened the Cookie Jar on
Brookhurst Street. He claims city offkiala inititally discouraged
him from applying for the curbside sign that Creighton said he
needed to attract business from passing motorists.
(See COOKIE CRISIS, Page AZ)
O.itr ,_,......,Lee .......
Youngsters participate in live cable
TV press conference at Huntington
Beach school headquarters as
preview of educational program.
Kids hooked up to.cable TV
Reagan press aide fields questions at live HB news conference
BJ ROBERT BARK.ER °' ................
Eighth-grade student Je~er NelllOn had a
good question for President Reagan's deputy press
secretary for fore'\gn affain.
She wanted tO know what would happen If his
opi.nlon differed areatly from that of the pl'ftident.
The deputy, Lea Janka, responded that if the
difference wu major he would relllgn because he
couldn't repreeent the Whi~ House. .
Fourth p-ade student C«y Joh.naon al.lo wanted
to know how many letters Re.can ~era per-
.anally. She didn't have time to uk her le<lOnd
question. She wanted to know how many jelly bNna
the preeident Htl.
The9e and other questions received national
expoeuni Sunday ln a Uve televbed Prell conference
conducted by MYen HWltinaton Beach·Founlain
•
Valley atudenta over the Cable Satellite Public
Affain Network.
The pre11 conference demonatrated to about 400
local offid.ala and memben of the public the wonders
of televtaion and how they will apply to ltUdenta
when the JCET pr'Oll'am (Joint Coundl fOl' Educe·
tlonal TechnolOI)') .ieta under way next month ln
West Orange County Schoola.
JCET will provide a cable ~levilion channel to
schoola In the HunUn,ton Beech Union HJah School.
Ocean View (elementary), Hunttngton Be.ch Clt)'
(elementary), and Fountain Valley (elementary)
1ehool distrlcta. A cable-a>nnect:lnt celebration w•
held Sunday at ita he~qlW'tera at the offke of the ·
Huntington Beach City School Dlatrtct. 20451
Craimer Lane.
The new ayat.em will brine math, science,
compu~r and other cW.. to about 43,000 YOUJ\R·
(See CABLE TV, Pace Al)
. .
~
U Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 17. 1983
Douglas Workers itr.ike·]
•
6,900 walk off their jobs; Huntington facility not-affect'ed ·' I • ' I
l
J I
Dolly l"llo1 pl\<>10 by LM Poylle
"Jonah' wins sand prize
This depiction of a skin diver who
got too close to a whale won the
Commodore's Trophy in the 22nd
annual sand castle contest sponsor-
e d by the Newport Harbor Chamber
of Commerce. The entry was con-
structed by Thomas .Maurer AIA
a nd Associates of Fullerton.
Teen faces court in heating ·
Costa Mesa woman may lose her eye; youth pleads innocent
A Costa Mesa teen-ager has
been ordered to face charges of
burglary and assault in the beat-
ing of a neighborhood woman
who may lose the use of her right
eye because of the attack ,
authorities said.
Donald LewJs Gambill, 19, was
ordered to return Oct, 25 for a
preliminary hearing after he
pleaded innocent to the charges
Frida}. Gambill remains in
custody at Orange County Jail on
$250,000 bail.
The 19-year-old aUegedly
broke into the home of a
51-year-old Molly Loucks, a
neighbor, and beat and choked the
woman before neighbors came to
her aid, police reported.
Gambill, wearing blood-stained
clothing. was arrested at his home
later The teen-ager originally
was held on suspicion of at-
tempted murder and may hem.
Police detectives said they are
still uncertain what provoked the
alleged attack . The woman was
treatt:;ef at Hoag Memorial Hospi-
tal in Newport Beach.
Mesa man held
in gun assault
on roommate
DEBREU DEVOTED ... A Costa Mesan allegedly open -
ed fire on his 57-year-old room-
mate at 11:30 p .m . SundjlY afteP'?
they had been drinldng and
arguing all e~enlng. police said.
No one was injured.
From Page A 1
excellent. gourmet cook. accord-
tng to Margolis.
The comrru ttee tha l chooses
economics prize winners rarely
recognize pure theorists. pointed
out Charles Lave, another UCI
economics professor.
"It's usually given to people
whose work :1ave immediate real
world applications," Lave said.
Because the committee has
previously promoted more prac-
uca l economic work, Lave
theorized that the Nobel. commit-
tee realized Debreu's mathemat-
ical models have "real world
connections."
Margolis described Debreu·s re-
search on equilibrium in a market
~nomy as having "greatly as-
sisted" the application of manage-
ment tools to a competitive busi-
ness market.
Werner Dibbern. 52. was ar-
rested on suspicion of assault with
a deadly weapon after he alleged-
ly fired two gunshots through his
bedroom door at Hilmar Heftved.
57. on the 200 block of Pauline
Plare, said 'Costa.M esa Police Lt.
Tom Durham.
Heftved narrowly missed being
hit by one of the bullets, Durhart)(
said.
COLLEGES PROTEST FUNDING ...
From Page A1
The petition drive was
launched by Joe Lobe, OCC's
student body president. and Tony
Nelson, business manager of
OCC's Associated S tudents.
Plans call for Lobe, Nelson,
Santa Ana student body president
Valerie Pryer, and Saddleback
student officers Tom Sala and
S teve Metzer to Oy to Sacramento
Thursday morning. They will
attend a Senate Education Com-
-mittee hearing on community
college fees.
At 1 :30 p.m., the students are to
meet with Dr. William Cun-
ningham, Gov. George Deu-
kmejian' s education secretary.
"The purpose of the rally is to
mfonn students and our com-
munity r>f our efforts to convince
the governor of the financial need
of community colleges,'' said
Lobe. "The rally will kick off our
Sacramento trip."
The petitions circulated by the
student leaders have two goals.
First, they ask Deukmejian to
restore $108.5 million he vetoed in
cnmmunit.y college funding
earlie1 this year.
In addition, the petitions ask the
governor to address the issue of
mandatory student fees as quickly
as ~ible.
The governor has asked that
community college students be
required to pay a first-time-ever
$50 per semester tuition. This
proposal has been opposed by
some legislators and community
college leaders who fear it will put
highe r education beyond the
reach of many students.
The local petitions do not take a
stand on the tuition issue because
there are mixed feeling about it
amon~ students.
1'lf there is a tuition, it should go
directly to the colleges, instead of
being used to bail out the state
budget," said Lobe.
The campus leaders said many
students feel uncerl.a.in about their
future education because the fee
issue is unresolved. And because
of reduced funding in the mean-
time, many classes have been cut
OCC President Luk.sin ·ob-
served, "We are already well into
the month of Ocwber. School has
been in session for one month, yet _
-the Legislature has not yet acted
on community college funding for
1983-84.
"If the Legislature doesn't want
to cripple the state's community
colleges, it must restore the $108.5
million that the governor cut from
community college funding for
1983-84.''
CABLE TV SET FOR SCHOOLS ...
From Page A 1
sters In 70 schools in West Orange County over publk
cablevision channel 12.
ln addition to the technical courses that will be
available to each school four hours a day beginning
Nov. 14 , the programs wtll fill the void for music and
art ennchment programs axed by recent budget cuts.
"Nobody is ~g_ ~usic lnstrumental chlaes
now," according to JCETCoor<Irnator Jill Henricks.
"What the music programs will be saying to them is
that it's OK to play football and the French horn."
D•llY Piiot
D•llV4'fY
I• Qu•t•ntMd
~tJf1t).., I ,,. f ii fh•I 1J1 •
lll)f 'A-...-1 I ·11 f •P"' t1r
•, 10 C' t "'Iii Mivf• 1 ~) fY •t d '/• • l • * r.11
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. 8chwertz Ill
Publisher
Henricks said the system also wiU help to take
the place of field trips to such places as the local
museum that have fallen by the wayside.
Henricks also claimed that JCET will enhance
and supplement regular school programs and that
teachers shouldn't feel that their jobs are being
threatened.
JCET will <.'OSt the four school districts $80,000 a
year. The rest of th e money is coming from grants and
volunteerR wlll assist the service.
CleHlfted 9dv•rtl1ln9 714/942-5'7'
All other department• 942-4321
MAIN OFFICE
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112MI+
VOL. 71, NO. 280
By tbt Anoc:lated Preu
More than 6,900 McDonnell
Douglas Corp. workers in three
states were called out on strike
today after last-minute <..'Ontract
talks between the company and
the United Auto Workers sta.lled.
(The strike does not involve
5,100 workers at the McDonnell
HB teen injured
i?.Y van still critical
A Huntington Beach girl who
dashed into McFadden Avenue
and was struck by a ~ing van
remains in critical condition today
with severe head injuries and
numerous brol<en bones.
Douglas Astronautic.a Company In
Huntington Beech who chiefly
a.re represented by the lnter-
n.ational Association of Machin-
ists, said local officials.)
"The company's proposa l
would move u8back into the Dark
Ages," UAW president Owen
Bieber and secretary treasurer
Raymond Majerus said in a joint
statement Issued today.
Union negotiators voted unani-
mously for the walkout after talks
were halted at 9:30 p.m. Sunday.
The strike affects 4,900 em-
ployees at Douglas Aircraft Co. in
Long Beach, 1,932 UAW members
at two facilities in Tulsa, Okla.,
and 83 in Melbourne, Ark.
A picket line sprang up immedi-
ately at the Tulsa plants. Workers
w'ere u/ pick.et in Long Beach latef
in the morning. f
"I irnagjne you'll see very fe\f
people crossing the picket lines~,~
said union spokeswoman Jeai
Katz. She said the UAW
struck McDonnell Douglas in 197
in a 21/i-month job action . f
McDonnell Douglas spoka
Don Hanson said the oompan
would try to operate the aff
plants with supeTVisors and:J
ployees from other divisions.
Hanson said the St. Louis-
company was "very di.sappointedr
that bargaining since 4+1g. 22 ha1
not produced a new ~ee-yellf
pact. •
"We believe the offer we havt
presented is a fair one," he said.
Jody Hill, 14. was rushed to the
Fountain Valley Community Hos-
pital trauma center after the
Saturday accident, authorities
said. She had been strolling with a
friend along a sidewalk near
Golden West Street.
Police do not know what
prompted her to bolt into the
street.
Meeting called on
IrVlne Co. merger I I I I
The driver of the van was not
cit.ed.
•
A special Nov. 14 meeting of
Irvine Co. sharholders could seal
the hd on heiress Joan Irvine
COOKIE CRISIS ...
From Page A 1
By the summer of 1980, Creighton said he was disturbOO
because two nearby_restuarants, JoJo's and Naugle's. both had the
type of signs he desired.
Creighton compiled visual field charts that showed motorists
who spotted the sign on the face of his building would be unable to
stop in time to pull in to the.Cookie Jar. He also took pictures of other
free-standing signs approved throughout the city ~d gave copies to
each planning corruni.ssioner.
But on Aug. 27. 1970, the Fountain Valley Planning
Commission unanimously denied his first official request for a sign.
Creighton appealed to the council, which reaffirmed the
planning decision. ·
Undaunted, Creighton found a loophole in the city's sign law.
He parked a 1936 Ford pickup in front of his business with a large
sign mounted in the truck bed. .
The cookie store owner said city officials began looking for
ways to clamp down on his business, accusing him of using illegal
gold light bulbs, having substandard landscaping and lacking
bathroom facilities for the handicapped.
In J an. 1981, the City Council closed the loophole by passing a
new law prohibiting the use of a vehicle as a free-standing sign.
Creighton complied. "l didn't want to go to jail over a pickup
with a-sign in it," he said .
Still not discouraged, Creighton returned with' another sign
request.
But oo June 24 , 1981, the commission again turned down
Creighton's second request for a free-standing business sign. The
<.'Omrmssioners did, however, allow him to erect a small sign
direcung motorists to his drive-up window.
The cookie shop owner later decided that if he <.'Ouldn't fight
city hall, maybe he could join it. In 1982, Creighton ran for a seat on
the City Council. He adnuts the run started as a vendetta but says
eventually 1t evolved into a serious campaign.
Still. it was a rather low-key effort, and Creigh ton spent only
$700. He finished ninth out of 10 candidates in the April election.
Earlier this year, an errant motorist destroyed the small
dtrectlonal sign the Planning Commission had approved. Rather
than replace it, Creighton made yet another request for a
free-standing curbside sign. ..
This time; Creighton met personally with each planning
commisioner and argued that he was entitled to the same sort of sign
that had been approved for other businesses.
The strategy worked, On Sept. 14, the commissioners voted 4-1
to approve a 4-112-by-5-foot sign for Creighton's Cookie Jar.
But the battle wasn't over, Councilman Fred V os.s appealed the
commission's decision , saying it went against council policy. '~
Last week. Creighton was back before the council, again
arguing for his sign. He enlist.ed about 25 friends to support him at
the meeting.
The council then unanimously referred Creighton back to the
Planning Commission to work on a modified version of his proposed
sign.
"I'm not discouraged," he said. "But I'm sure no t encouraged
either"
He's one tough cookie.
Smith's attempts to block cor{
pany chairman Donald Bren fro~
merging the land developme
firm with his 'personal holdin
company. (
The company has only a hanct
ful of shareholders and with Brefl
controlling 86 percent of the stoclf,
h is plan is virtually guaranteep
approval. ' :
A special meeting of the lrviJl?
Co.'s board of di.rectors approvep
the proposed merger Friday. :
Meanwhile, Smith said h~
attorneys are preparing a ~
\?i~on suit against the company 1'::>
be filed in Orange County S4-
perior Couri this week. ,
Smith claims the Irvine ~
·cannot afford the $560 mill1oti
debt Bren's holding compaey
incurred last April when he
bought up 52 perc-ent of the
company's stock. :
Bren, who was reluctant ti>
disclose the date of the shart·
holders meeting during a press
conference Friday. said then ttw
Irvine Co. has adequate resourcts
to pay off the debt and that
shareholders will benefit tty
having their stake m the firm
doubled.
HB Council
to vote tonigh~
on zoning pla-.
Huntington Beach City Council
members are slated to vote on a
second reading of a zoning plan
that wiU change the face of
downtown Huntington Beach and
its environs.
The plan. which wiU allow for
12-stor y building on three blocks
facing P acific Coast Highway near
Main Street, needs four votes to be
adopted at 7:30 tonight.
It will become effective in 30
days if it receives the votes.
The controversial zoning plan
-which has been caught in a
crossfire between residents who
wish to retain a sleepy village
atmosphere in the downtown area
and property owners and officials
who favor redevelopment -was
approved on first readjng last
Monday.
Tonight's meeting is in the City
Council chambers, 2000 Main S t.
We're
Listening ...
Whal do you ltke about the Daily Pilot" Whal don·1 vou hke.,
Call tnc number at left ~nd your qiessage will be reL'Orded,
transcribed and delivered to the iV>propraate edttor
The !>ame 24•fmur ans..<•enng s~rvi<·e may be used 10 ret·ord let
tt-r.; t•' the <·d1lor nn any topic Mailbox contributors must tnrlude
th1•1 r 11am1' ancl tt'lt•phone numtx>r ror venf1C'11tion No r 1rC'ulat1on
1· :i I b . pll'HSl' 642·6086 1'1•11 u~ what :-; un your mind
Please don't begrudge smudge
By A.a.De SplD.D °"" ,... UlnflM
•
We're listening-you're talking; and here are
some of thinp you say. These are some of the most
pressing questions posed by anonymous voices on
the Daily Pilot's "We're Listening" Line.
"Can't you do anything about the ink rubbing
off the newspaper?"
As a matter of fact, we can't. Not yet. We
certainly are aware of it. We look like a regional
meeti~ of the Black Hand ·
Society ounelves from hand-
ling papers all day. and moet of
our woodwork is done in Early
Smudge.
However, 1 have '™'de a
survey of all the newspapers in
the area and found that the
problem is not uniquely ours.
EVERYBODY'S ink comes off
on your hands. The cleanest
paper is the Wall St.reel
Journal -maybe it's the rarified atmc.phere of
hlg.h finance -but they don't have comics, the
horoecope or a crouword puzzle, ao 1 advi8e )'OU to
stick wltb the Pilot. The stuff does wash off very
nkely, after all.
Speaking of comics, hol'08COpe and ~rd
puu.les1 you certainly do. The line fairl>-crackled
from irate Cusp dweUers that day we inadvertent-
ly omJtc.ed the hor'OICO.-. and you certainly can't
fool an old croeaword pun.let with a Ulll!d ruule
when tM new o~ w~ delayed In the mal . And
,
never print puzzles on the fold.
Some of you hate Funky Winkerbean, others
adore him. We quit running John Darling and
nobody noticed, but Nancy ls atill mourned by
faithful fans. (Note: Nancy still lives in our Sunday
comics.)
Then there was Black Friday when the
computer spat out a garbled mess of letters and
figures in.stead of the Stock Market Reports, and It
seemed that hal.f the county was out on the
window ledge waiting to jump. We're sorry about
that -but It's nice to be able to blame it on the
compu1er. We DID print an explanation but not too
many people noticed.
We do listen -and learn -but !IOllletimell we
can't help you.If you didn't get a paper. please call
642-4321 in.stead of the "We're Listening" line.
There are real, live people answering that phone
and \hey can get your paper delivered. The"We're
Listening" line isn't tranacribed until the next day
and by then our real. live people can't do anything
more than forward your message to clttulation.
And you still don't have a paper.
We uae your auggeatlons, too. Th~ Poli~ Log
13 In blager type novfbec.aUM' of vou.r request.a.
We're atill puu.llng out the complexities of
fulfilling the wllhes of a lady with two TV .ets
who wanta two TV lop. Would we offend the
one-TV hOUMhold w1th Mt and hen cople87
Would the t.hree-.et houae demand more? We
don't know -but we're llatenlna.
• I
..
Coping with c ance r
course starts tonight
A !ree 10-hour patient education program on coping with
cancer will be offered by the UC Irvine Medical Center
hematology-oncology division in Orange Mondays from 7 to 8:30
p.m . beginning tonight in building 53, Room B.
The seven-session course is slightly different from the
American Cancer Society curriculum and will focus more on
lectures and question and answer sesaions.
Registraton can be made by phone by calling Penny Harris at
634-5152.
Computer exp ert set for NOW m eet
Darlene Faccone of Computer Auto\l'lation Techniques will
share her per90nal computer with memeers of the South Coast
chapter of the National Organization for Women at Tuesday's
meeting of the feminist group.
The session will be heldat8 p.m. at the El Toro Library, El Toro
Road and Raymond Avenue. Further infonnation is available at
859-9372.
T oastmasters off er s peak ing course
The Babble-on Toastmasters Club bf Huntigton Beach invites
men and women to improve their communication and leadership
skills in a speechcraft course
The course· is scheduled for eight consecutive Wednesday
nights beginning Oct. 26 at Wycliffe gardens, 18765 Florida Ave.,
Huntington Beach.
The cost is $10 and includes materials. To register, or for other
infonnation, call 646-1274 or 846-5151 in the evenings or 731 -2 323
during the day.
Forum on AIDS in South Laguna
AIDS -Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome -will be
the topic of a free public health forum Oct. 26 from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m ..
in South C.oast Medical Center's hospital auditorium, 31872 Coast
Highway, South~ ..
"All About AIDS" will feature a discussion by a panel of
J?hysicians who will address symtoms of AIDS, preventive
measures, current theories about ita origination and risk factors.
Speakers include Dr. Robert Graham, research coordinator at
UCLA AIDS clinic and gay committee advisor:; and pathologist Dr.
Christopher Vanley. Dr. Sol Sloan will moderate.
Coniputer
• cr1111e
• growing
problem
The exploits of four young
Irvine' computer buffs who last
week became campus heroes may
typify the problems of the "new
frontier," according to a computer
expert.
While campus coeds grinned
with delight over Woodbridge
High School gaining national at-
tention, experts cautiO{led that the
FBI's dragnet for computer sys-
tem-crackers points to the grow-
iQg dllenuna of computer crime,
UC Irvine Professor Ron Kling
said.
FBI agents confiscated com-
puter equipment at the Irvine
homes of Wayne Correia, 17,
David Hill. 17. 14-year-old Gregg
Knutsen and his brother. Gary,
15.
The California raid was part of a
nationwide investigation of com-
puter "hackers," who have tapped
into a Defense Department system
and an international electronic ·
mail network.
Kling said. because electronic
eavesdro;>ping leave8"no trace, "it
seems more innocent, like -0ver-
hea ring something in a
restaurant."
Lisa Rodely, 17, a Woodbridge .1
student, said Lhe foursome now in
the spotlight are studious, quiet
types." And now they are ducking
behind walls because everyone's
pointing them out."
Joanna Reeves, 16, defended
the teen-agers. "I don't think they
were doing anything bad or would
do anything to cauae trouble.
"They don't seem the type."
---~·
f . -
• Ora~ Cout DAILY PILOT /Monday. Octob•r 17, 1983
--WI AllllD:-------
"Which team --
(did) you
want to win
the World
Serles?''
Jennifer Hall,
banking,
CoetaMna
"I want Bait I more
because I'm In a pool
at work for them."
David Eberle,
paint contr11etor,
Co.taM ...
"I want the Phillies
because the Dodgers
didn't win and they're
In the National
League.''
Karen Flammang,
bookkeeper, CoetaMna
"I want Baltlmo.re
because I used to llve
In Washington O.C."
Dennette llurrte,
hOUMWlfe,
CoetaM..a
"I'm for the Phlllles
because they have a
good-looking pitch-
er."
Jim Taylor,
MCUrtty officer,
CoetaM..a
-~
"I want Phlladelphla
-just on general prin-
ciple."
l •ndrRamsey, .... ,...,
Co.taM..a
"I guess I want the
Phlllles because my
brother likes them."
Wayne Skinner,
lab technician,
CoetaMHa
"Phlladelphla. I llke
the National League
better."
Editor's Note: We asked our question during the World Serles. Only Jennifer snd Karen
are happy with the outcome today. The Orioles won the Serles Sunday, four games to one.
Breaking up dogfight pain£ ul No more 'dog food' for inmates
An Irvine dog owner s.utfMed
rnod«'ate hand rnJurl• Sunday as
the attempted to break apart h« two
Dobe<mana. fighting with each other,
an animal control officer Mid. Both
dogs we<e quarantined until It was
determined which dog bit the woman.
NeiQhbo<S on the eecond floOf' of a
Woodbfldge apartment complex ap-
parently scared oH would-be bur-
;.larl trying to Qatn entry to a ground
iev.I unit. A ICfeefl and window was
pried open at an unoccupied home on Southbrootl around 1:30 1 m
Sunday
Police cited tour people tor
traepuslng, alter the four allegedly
ICaled fences around the lrvlne
Meadows Amphitheater Saturday
n!Qht. Two other Individuals at the
Motels concert were citied for asNult
alter taking a swing at a aeourlty
guard. Two others received drug
citations after alteoedly being ob-
Mrved 1n<>rtlng 1 white SYbstance In
1 parking lot.
AuOt' COt'p. MCurlty chief Pat
Bonner uMd a stick to batt• a
ponum that bared hit t"th Friday.
Bonn« mletaxenty had tried to
capture the animal with his hands,
said an animal control otfleef. wtio
~ received an unfounded anlmal
cruelty report.
Huntington Beach
A break-In was reported Sunday at
the Mattlfnlty Fac1ory Outlet at 15083
Gofden Wnt St Entry wu made
througtl a r.., dOO< The IOU In-
eluded $300 In cloth Ing and S 100 In
cash.
Two car burglaries were reported
early Sunday on Blue Wattlf Lane.
Ste<eo equipment valued at $600
was stolen from a gold 1977 Volks-
wagen Sclr()C(;o. Auto parts valued at
$350 and stereo equipment worth
$325 were stolen from a white 1981
Saab.
A home burglary wu reported
Sunday afternoon on the 7600 block
of Washington Avenue. Entry waa
made through a locked rear bedroom
#lndow. The loss lnctu<Md a $45
stereo unit.
A tan 1981 Ford was reported
stolen early Sunday freim the rear of
Cagney's Bar. 408 Pacific Coaat
Highway. The loss was estimated II
$3,000.
A home burglary waa reported
early Sunday on the 1200 block of
Walnut Avenue. Glass was removed
from a rear window to enter. The loss
Included $50 CUh and S 100 In
miscellaneous goods, Including
camping equipment.
Fountain Valley
Thieves forced their way Into a but
belonging to the Klngamen Drum
Corps at 1 LlghthOUM Line and stole
a $300 CB radio. The vandals aleo
smashed bus Windows. caualng
$3,000 In damage.
A man reported to police that he
put his gym bag outside a rackatball
court at Los Caballeros. ~Of a few
mlnutn Sunday. When htteturned.
he dltcovered that eomeone stole a
purM and a wallet containing S 175 In
cash and $370 In mlleellaneous
Items.
ThlevN uMd a metal pipe to smash
a window at Radio Shack. 16157
Harb<>< Blvd .. and stole aterao equip-
ment worth $2.070. · ·
Intruders broke a gl~ window at
Northcutt sc;hoot and stole St• Jn
caah and cauaed $100 damage In tfie
prlnctpars oHlce and MCfetary's
area
Newport Beach
A Huntington Beach woman r•
ported the theft of $522 from her
purse left on the noor of a banque1
room at a hotel located In the 1100
block of Jambor ... Road Saturday
evening.
A Simi Valley woman reported the
theft of her w1llet OOrttalnlng S 120 In
cash from h« unlocked car In the
2200 block of W•t Coast Highway
Sunday evening.
A N.wport BMch man reported
the theft of three 12 ounce lltv.r bars
valued II S 1.200 NCh from hi• home
In the •OO block of 62nd street
eometlme between Wedneaday and
Sunday. po41c9 aald. The euapac:ts
alao stole $400 In sliver colM-. pollc9
aald.
~ain tonight, then clearing.
Coastal
E x tended
T emperatures
(
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-Yor\
Hottoll Hot1ll ll'lene
Ol;._.Oly
OINfle
0.-_..,... ,._,
~ ... l'Ot!IMd.Ore "'~ ~
Tides
TOOAT
ea llO 82 37
59 3• M 42
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82 34
64 ll5
5e 31
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80 78
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M 112 78 .. « 40
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l'leno .. ,.. =:= t4 ~ 10 43 12 llL-10 6a lc>olt-IO '' ....._r.....,. .. 12 ,,.,_ sa
19111.M• .. u ToPl'll ..
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Orange County Jail officials
have . agreed to stop punishing
prisoners with a dish described by
inmates as "gruel" and "dog
food."
The agreement. hailed as un-
precedented in the nation, setUes a
lawsuit.
American Civil l.ibert..les Union
attorney Dick Herman said the
.. agreement was "a step forward in
penology."
The food, which inmates said
was a foul-tasting concoction of 10
ingredients mixed in a blench?r
and baked in the form of a
meatloaf, was served as a diS-
clplinary measure to prisoners in
isolation, jail officials said.
It was served after inmates
trying to escape overcrowding in
the main jail area broke rules in
order to be sent to isolation cells.
A recipe released by the ACLU
gsb country, fe.l 1
•
fmm cra'Z'J ~, tbz.
l:esic ehzlland 'M:Ol
· S'M2alar. \Vlar it with
<Z\ltl.rythin9, f1rom
khakis to )OJt" i6\oritz.
i~· eimuet·fOr)OJ.r
full wardrobz.; 1n a
re1n'b:w or co1ore .
listed the ingredients as dry milk,
chopped cabbage. onions. grated
potatoes. an egg. cooked beans.
tomato juice. flour and chili pow-
der, all mixed with four ounces of
ground beef.
Jail officials said the food was
nutritious. but in the ACLU
lawsuit four former inmates said
the jail population referred to the
disciplinary diet as "jute ball,"
"dog food" and "gruel."
@J~c~@)§~
.. '
44 Fashion l•land ·Newport Ekoch • 1141644 ·5070
1001 ~•rwood Blud. ·Westwood Village · 213/208-3273
_____ ,.____ _,___ ... -II
t
, __
-/ • .. Orenge Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 17, 1983
TOP OF THE NEWS
NATION
Trident sub name~
in Jackson's honor
By tbe Auoclated Press
GROTON, Conn. ~The late Sen. Henry M.
Jackson. who was a fervent supporter of the
Tndent submarine program. has JOined the
Americans "of great character" whose names are
painted on the hulls o! Navy vessels. The late
senator from Washington wasJlonored when the
nation's filth Trident. the USS Henry M.
Jack.son. was launched at the Electric Boat
shipyard. Hundreds of anti-nuclear protesters
gathered as they have at past launches to
condemn the Trident. Authorities said 48 people
were arrested for crossing polit•t:> Llll es
Fourteen Ku Klux Klan members demon
strated nearby m support of the submarine
program.
Americans' abu e protested
NEW YORK -U S consular officials
protested treatment of Americans in Saudi jails
after documenting 10 cases of physical or
psychological abuse of Amen can prisoners, The
New York Times reported today· Ibrahim
al-Awaji, Saudi Arabia's deputy minister of
mtenor. said his government started an in-
vestigation after American consular offices cited
the 10 cases. "If there are any cases of
mistreatmt!nt -and we do not know of any now
-proper remedies will be taken," he told the
Times.
Balloon pilot injured
COLUMBIA. Mo. -An unoccupied hot air
balloon, its gondola engulfed in flames, floated
nearly a mile before it became-snagged in an oak
tree and the fire was extinguished, authorities
say. The pilot. William Yancey. 30, of Omaha.
Neb .. was treated for bums at the University of
Missouri Medical Center He was released later
that niJ(ht and no othe r injuries were reported.
STATE
Weevil spraying under way
BARD -The state has begun pesticide
spraying on boll weevil-infested fields along the
Colorado Rive r. hoping to avert what one expert
called ''economic disaster" for CaJ1fornia's
$l -b1llion-a-yedr cotton mdustry The outbreak
of the voracious in.sect in lmpenal County poses a
threat that has state officials and farmers
"extremely worried," said Rex Magee. assistant
dirE'<'tor of the state Department of Food and
Agriculture /
Man held in double laying
LOS ANGELES -A 33-year-old Wilm-
ington man has been booked for investigatiOP of
murder after a heated neighborhood argument
turned VIOient and"two men were shot to death,
police said. Lynn Bridges was arrested. after the
shooting erupted from an argument at the comer
or Fngate Avenue and L Street in Wilmington
around 2 a m Sunday. Detective Larry Kallestad
said
New trolley plans unveiled
LOS ANGELES -Some 22 years after the
last electnc Red Car clanked into downtown Los
Angeles, plans for a new u:olley from Long Beach
are being unveiled, promising better transit for
inner-<-1 ty and beach dwellers alike. Construction
is to begin next year, and service is to start in 1984
on the project, costing beiween $350 Ruruon and
$400 rrullion-financed from proceeds of the
half-<.-ent sales tax increase approved by Los
Angeles County voten m 1980.
WORLD
Five wounded in bombing
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -South
African command06 raided the Mozambican
capital Maputo today and bombed a downtown
office of the African Nauonal Congress. and
Mozambique said fi ve people were wounded.
The ANC 1s the ma.in black nallonalist group
seeking to overthrow whjte-nunonty rule in
South Afr1c-a. where 1t 1s outlawed
30 jailed in nuke protest
BONN. West German} Sue hundred
anti-nuclear activists formed a human blockade
in front of a West German army barracks today,
and pohce said they dragged pro~rs away
from the entrance six umes and jailed 30 people.
The human blockade an the northern city of
Muenster was one of several demonstrations held
nat1onw 1de in the second day of the "Action
Week" campaign to protest deployment of new
U S . nuclear rrussiles in Europe
State not prepa'.red for big quake?
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Of flc1als say the
Clawed emergency responae to last May's 6.7·magni·
tude Coalinga earthquake is a warning that ·
CalJfomia is LU-prepared to handle a Larger quake
that could hit in the next few decades.
A series of report.5 by the Calilomia Seismic
Satety Commission analyi.ing the response by law
enforcement, firefighters, medical workers and other
has concluded that reaction to the quake waa more
than adequate, but marred.
The lack of communicat.Jon among the diverse
agencies responding to the Coa.linga emergency posed
the greatest problem, the report.I concluded.
"What happened ln Coal.inga Is fairly typkal of
the problema" too be encountered in a moderate
disaster, laid Richard Andrews, executJve director of
the state aeiamlc commiaalon.
"When you're tallc.ing about an 8.3 on the San
Andreas, where the damage ls spreati over five or siX
or seven counties, that's a qualltatJvely dJlferent
Middle East envoy
choice ~or security
weekend.
situation.'' he said. ".,.We have no expenence in
dealing with that llC&l.e of a disaster.
"lfl many ways, it (the Coalinga experience) is a
microcoam of what wlU be encountered when there i.s
a major earthquake." he said.
"We feel for the restof Callfornia," &aid Coalinga
City Manager Glenn Marcu.uen.
Geologista say lt UJ likely that a qlJake in the
8.3-magnitude range could aoon s\.rike the San
Andreas fault in the Los Angeles or San Francbco
areas.
Paul Flores, director of the Southern California
Earthquake Preparedness Project, said that given the
greater number of agencies in the large Southern
California area "you can see tha t the potential, wtless
we begin addressing the problems, is great for
conlusion."
~linga's quake hlt at 4:42 p.m. May 2. No one
was killed. but 47 people in the town of 7,000 were
injured. Of the town's 2,700 homes, 342 were
destroyed and another 1,594 sustained damage. WASHINGTON (AP}-Presi-
dent Reagan, bucking a strong
lobbying campaign by con-
servative supporters, has decided
to bring his special Middl~ East
envoy, Robert C. McFarlane, back
to the White House full time as the
chief nauonal security adviser.
White House officials say.
White House spokesman Larry
Speakes said Reagan had not
made •·a final, final decision"
about the post.
~ Hundreds of aftershocks followed.
He also declined to comment on
reports that U.N. Ambassador
Jeane J . Kirkpatrick, who had
been one of the candidates for the
job, had been angered by the
decision.
l;The only telephone which was oper-
ational... was the rrucrowave phone at the local
CaJjfornia Highway Patrol office," said CHP Lt.
Kent Knight, a member of the commission's law
enforcement committee. "Agencies could not readily
communlca\e with each other. It took three to four
hours to develop a clear picture as to what the actual
...extent of injury and damage was." McFarlane would move into the
post of assistant to the president
for nauonal security affairs,
which will be vacated when
William P Clark becomes sec-
retary of the interior.
The officials. who spoke on the
condition that they not be ident-
ified by name, said Reagan
notified the top members of his
national security and foreign pol -
icy team of his decision over the
Conservatives allies of Reagan.
both in and out of government,
had conducted what White House
officials said was a strenuous
campaign on behalf of
Kirkpatrick. One White House
official said she was in line for a
new foreign policy job in Wash-
ington, although the details were
not set.
· Ha-waii storrii
winding down
Robert C. Mcfarlane
Marines will stay in Lebanon
R eagan 'disturbed' overco.ntlnued Beirut sniping, sixth death
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan's
spokesman said today,,. the administration was
disturbed that snipiJ1R incidents were continuing in
Beirut. where another U.S. Marine was killed
Sunday . but that the Marines will remain·there ·"as
long as the president thinks it's necessary "
Deputy White House press secretary Larry
Speakes said Reagan would speak by telej>hon.e with
the family of the Marine. whose name was not
di.sclosed.
Sunday was the third <.'Onsecutive day of attacks
on the Marines and raised the toll of Marine combat
deaths to six since the U.S. peacekeeping contingent
arrived 13 months ago. A seventh Marine died when
a mine he was trying to defuse exploded.
Asked about the increased violence, Speakes
said "we surely don't like it.
"We're disturbed these sniper incidents con-
tinue. There appear to be some elements in lhe
Middle East intent on disrupting the peace process
and they are centering on the U.S. _presence lhere."
HONOLULU (AP)-Troplcal Storm Raymond,
stalled about 680 miles east of Honolulu, is still strong
enough to pose a threat to the Hawaiian blands but
weather forecasters say they expect it to "die a
natural death."
"There always is the possibility it could move
this way, but I don't think we'U get much out of it
except maybe some strong :winds and rain," said Dick
Sasaki, a lead forecaster for the National Weather
Service here.
By Sunday night, the strongest sustained winds
near the center of the stonn were estimated at 60 m~h
with gusts to 75 mph. Gale force winds, of at least 39
mph,' extended. out Crom the center flbout 115 miles to
the southwest towards Hawaii and 230 miles to the
northeast, away from the islands.
Raymond was downgraded to a tropical storm
Saturday alter losing much of its punch Friday night.
Earlier Friday, the storm was packing sustained
winds of 135 mph with gusts to 165 mph.
Nurse accUsed in deaths was 'near victims'
RIVERSIDE (AP) -Nurse Robert Diaz.
charged with the 1981 overdose murders of a doz.en
elderly hospilal patients, was seen standing at the
bedsides of most victims minutes before they died.
<.'Ourt records reveal.
"Mr. Diaz waspreeentoneachand every death,"
Riverside Cou.nty Deputy Dia\.rict Pai.rick Magers
said in a document summarizing testimony at a claied
eight-week preliminary hearing that concluded Aug.
31. 1982.
ln the documents, which were 1.msealed for the
first time Friday, several nurses who worked with
Diaz, 45, testified he exhibited "strange" behavior
shortly before the patients' deaths.
One nurse said she saw Diaz with syringes and
empty bottles of medkine in his pockets Others said
Diaz predicted problems would arise with patients he
was accused of killing.
The 43-page summary and about 4,000 pages of
transcripts containeclio numerous volumes had been
under seal by a j\dge's order. Diaz's defense
Founder·of Birch
Society, 84, dies
attorneys requested the seal to avoid influencing
potential JUrors.
However. Diaz recently waived hlB right to a
Jury trial, and the documents were unsealed by
Superior Court Judge John Barnard two weeks
before Diaz's trial was to begih.
The documents also showed I>Uu's attorney.
Public Defender John Lee, told Barnard the
prelimary-hearing judge had made some "inap-
propriate'' <.'Omments.
Holy Moses
Willed art worth $75,000
LONG BEACH (AP) -Twenty-eight yean
ago, Aunt Jane died, leaving a pair of simple
paintings to her nephew and h i.s wife. A few days
ago. the couple learned the paintings were done by
Grandma Moees \Uld worth about $75,000.
The Long Beach couple, who asked to be
identified only as Jim and Ann for feaJ! of a home
burglary, had put the pa.lnUngs in•thetr living
room because they depicted the kinds of la.tldscape
Jim was familiar with as a youngster in Michigan.
But laat June, "we were in Carmel and we
spoke to a man ln an art gallery there," Ann said.
RICHMOND. Va. (AP)-T . Coleman Andrews After deecribing the pictures to him, "he impHed
Sr., a co-founder of the John Birch Society and a that the paintings were very valuable."
former Internal Revenue Service comrmSSJoner who When they sa~ a newspaper ad last week
Ironically crusaded against federal taxes, died at age about a California Historical Society authenticity
84 after a long.illness. and value w.ork.ahop at the Banning Residence
Andrews, an accountant who ran for president in Museum. Jim and Ann decided to find out more
1956 on an ~ndependent states' rights ticket and about their pa.in~.
championed the causes of the political right. died "It was all very exciting.'' Ann said. "There
Saturday. A funeral service was set for Tuetlday. were people with all kinds of art objects, but when
The documents s howed that the
preliminary-hearing judge who ordered Diaz to stand
trial. Riverside County Municipal Court Judge
Howard Dabney. said that an individual who "starts
with this type of approach to treating patients, I think
• is the most dangerous type of individual there is."
Diaz, who could be sentenced to death lf
convicted. was charged with using the drug Hdocain~.
a heart relaxant, to kill 11 intensive care patients at
Community Hospital of the Valleys in Perris and one
patient al San Gorgonio Pass Memorial Hospital 1Jl
Banning.
Prosecutors also had tried to Ltnk Diaz to the
death of a 13th patient in a Chino hospital where he
al.so had worked.
"Mr. Diaz is the common link between all 13
patients and all hospitals," Magers said in his
arguments. "There is no other rational conclusion."
Mqers claimed the patients each were given
massive overdoses of lidocaine hours before their
death. Magers said the chance of a trained nurse
making such a mistake was nearly impossible.
But the defense claimed the patients -all of
whom suffered heart problems -were receiving
lidocaine and that the drug level may have built up
over time.
"We have no one that has witnessed Mr. Diaz
ever doing anything to a patient that was not proper;·
Public Defender Clarence Hewatt said at the
preliminary hearing. "We have him working
diligently to save the patient's Ure, certainly not take
it."
George Liberace
succunibs at 71
In his Lifetime, Andrews was credited with we said we had slides of two Grandma Moses
saving millions of dollars for federal. state and city paintings ·we owned, all the attention was . LAS VEGAS (AP) -George Liberace, who
governments with tight-fisted reform programs. He suddenly on us." gamed fame ln the 1950s by playing straight rna.J\.!9r
al.so attacked income taxes and govemmentspending Saturday appraiser Stuart Denenberg veri-his pianist brother. died Sunday afternoon at his Las
as among the nation's worst horrors. fied the authenticity of the palntinp and their Vegas home
At 21 , Andrews became the nation's youngest worth. Hew~ 71. toertifled public accountant. He founded his own The 1943 painting, titled ''Sugaring Off Coroner's investigato~ at\.ributed the death to
accounting nrm, T. Coleman Andrews & Co .. soon Maple," d'pict.s a white winter scene with people heart disease complicated by leukemia. Paramedics
afterward. tapping maple trees for syrup as children play in were called to the family home by Liberace's wife,
In 1953, Andrews left his accounting firm w the snow. It is worth $50,000. Dora.
become IRS commissioner under President Dwight The other, finished in 1944 and called Pianist Liberace was in lllinoia on a concert tour
D. Eisenhower. He headed the IRS two years before "Church In the Hilla," ill wor.th about $25,000. he and was not immediately available for comment.
returning to Richmond to take over tht: troubled said. George Liberace ran the Liberace Muaewn in
American Fidelity and CasuaJty Co. as presilfent. The flnt is worth more. Denenberg srud. ~ Vegas which includes everything from can to
He then began his personal crusade qainst the because "It is more deoorative and lively, and also pianos and flashy clothing worn by h1a famous
income 1.ax, and he drew the attention of conservative the many people in the picture doing various brother, who came to Las V ega.s in the Late 1940. for
groups seeking a presidential candidate to lead their things ls of more hutorical value." a. two-week engagement and ended up 1ettllng in the
protest against the two established parties. ~~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~T=========~~c~it!Y.:_· ------------------
3 Yanks foiled on Mt. Everest
SAVI MONIY ON.
YOUI INIUIANCI • Your feet need a doctor of their own!
Phone for Import.an~ I . Runnina
2. J)1abftt'" Winds force two m ·n, woman back 1,000 f eel short of summit
K.ATMANDU, Nepal CAP) -
Ari American woman and two
American men tned to reach the
top of Mount .Everest but biting
winds foreed them to turn back
1.000 feet short of the summit. the
Nepal Touriml Ministry 4'.'lh.l
today.
Annie White h o u se , a
26-year-old nune from Alhu
querque. N M .. wu hit by a falling
rock and •uffered (rottblU' un hN
flnsera, the tOWiam office here
sa.1d Renny Jae~ 31. of Salt
Lake City~ Utah, alJO romp! med
of nwnb flngera
Th ~xpt'diUon. which includes
five fcm3Ie and sht male chmb(>f't,
as trying to put the first American
woman on top of Mounl Everest
Four women of other nallonaliues
have reached the 29,028-foot awn·
m1t of the world's hlgheat moun-
t.oin
Whitehouse, Jack.son and .Eric
M Reynolds, 30, of Grond Junc-
tion. Colo , launched their final
assault from Camp Five at 27.200
feet along the west ridge on
Friday They were forced to tum
back 1n tht late afternoon btocautf'
of cold wlnda.
Th..-Tourism Ml.nlatry ~port
Mid the thr~ were continuing
their dnttnt to bate' camp, but
that other climbers wert! •'OnUnu-
ing the effort. The report did not
say when the cUmber1 would
launcl\ another summit bid
The group la aporuored by
California's Yoeemite Alpine Clob
and the expedition ls under-
written by Cox newspapers. The
expedition leader Is Jim Sano, 28.
of Yosemite.
Tht! other climbers are Todd
Bibler, 31, or Boulder. Colo.;
Susan Galler, 36, of Boston; Anne
Macquarie, 29, and Charle9 Mac-
quarie, 33. Yoeemlte; Sandy
Stewart, 30. Golden, Colo.; and
Doug Dalqu lat. 30, Shari K~•.m~y.
30. and Lucy Smith, 31 . all of
Lander, Wyo.
• Il =~: "™'"' If, .........
1tA88ffl liSilMCE
441 ow .... ,.,. ...... ...... ,.., ...... c..
tJl-7740
Classy Autos
. dvertised
in the
D1Hyl'lllt
information and an
ethical referral. ·
Hxlmln(' phy~l("l;m1' and
~uraf" •M-prl(filltn•tll
havt' 1.i11t'<l 11nponan1
lllt''<llllllt'" for yuu.
l'h11t1•' nncl
,1•k
1111
thf
lllfl(' by
nu111bt•1
'
'
3. Athlete's fool
4. liunKIO~
S. Ccims/codluSt"" '
6. lkalth and l11C11111
1. lngmwn hlC't1ml~
8.Molri;
9. Pt;m111r wan
10. l htltllcr1'< (N'l
11. liammt<rtot·~
12. Fl111 frt 1
•
•
·--·----.. --~___., ~ . ..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. October 17, 1983 .45
Nobel Prize mixed blessing
Winner thrust into a spotlig ht that's often too illuminating
NEW YORK (AP) -Fnu Upmann, an
84-year-old professor. was almost evicted from his
apartment recently beca~ he (s>rgot to write a letter
to the landlord. I \
But the landlord changed ,his mind when he
found out who Lipmann was. No one wants to evict a
Nobel Prize winner.
"Sometimes the prize helps me like that," said
Lipmann, winner of the 1953 Nobel Prize in
Medicine. As for the letter, he said, "l was terribly
negligent."
Each autumn, the Alfred Nobel Memorial Prize
announcements in Stockholm bring instant inter-
national fame to scientists, economists and writers,
IN THE SERVICE
Cadet Brian D. Earl, son of Dale R. Carlton of
Hunungton Beach, received practical work in
military leadership at the U.S . Anny RaI'Cadvanced
camp in Fort Riley, Kan. Earl 1s a student at New
Mexico Military Institute in Roswell, N.M.
Second Lt John L. Minor, son of Georgiana
Minor of Costa Mesa. has entered the Air Force
institute of Technology to study for a master's degree
in electncal engineering at the University of New
Mexico in Albuquerque.
Anny Reserve Pvt. John C. McGrath, son of
John and Ahce McGrath of Newport Beach, has
completed basic training at Fort Jackson, S.C.
Patrick M. Kehres, son of James and Patricia
Kehres of Laguna Niguel, has been promoted to the
rank of sergeant in the U.S . Army. Kehres is a
military police specialist at Fort Bragg, N.C.
Spec. 5 Joseph Yang, son of Moon and Soon
Yang of Fountain Valley, has been decorated with
the Anny Achieve ment Medal at Fort Dix, N.J . The
medal is awarded to soldiers for achievement or
meri tonous service and acts of courage. Yang is a 1977
graduate of Fountam Valley High School.
PFC Taylor H. Mllls, son of Thomas and Diana
Mills of Huntmgton Beach, has completed basic
training at Fort Sill, Ok.la. He is a 1980 graduate of
Marina High School in Huntington Bead\.
Second Lt. Arthur Galvan, son of Ramon Galvan I
of Costa Mesa, has been awarded silver wings
followmg graduauon from the Air Force navigator I
training school in Mather Air Force Base, Calif.
Cadet David R. Pendergraft, son of Sue M.
Pendergraft of Newport Beach, has been accepted
into the Air Force Academy's Cadet Wing as a
member of the class of 1987. He is a 1980 graduate of
Corona de! Mar High School.
PFC Robert M. Keller, son of Virginia Murray of
Costa Mesa, has arrived for duty at Camp Casey,
South Korea, with the 2nd Infantry Division. He is a
1976 graduate of Newport Harbor High School.
·Cadet Jeffrey A. Lee, son of Mr. and Mrs. Terry
A. Lee of Hunungton Beach, has been accepted into
the Air Force Academy's Cadet Wing as a member of
the class of 1987. He is a 1983 graduate of Marma
High School
BIRTHS
ltOAQ MIEMO..IAL MOS~Al
Se9fember 14
Mr and Mrs Steven Ceg1e Hunl·
1ng1on Beach g1r1
Mr end Mrs Carl Hoove< lrvtr>e.
boy
Dr and Mrs Peul Umol Hunt-
tr>Qton Hert>our. Qtrl
Mr. and Mrs Robert Ande<son,
Newport Beech, girl
Mr. end Mrs Antr.ony Cebot,
Coste M .... girl
Mr arid Mrs Trevor Smyth, Coate
Mesa, boy
Mr end Mrs. Roberl Mendol\e,
CoateMese.g1r1
a.ptember 15
M' end Mrs wuuam Roaale4d.
Newport Beach. gtrl
Mr and Mrs Edwerd Jerrell,
lrvlne. boy
Mr. end Mrs Edwlld ProaMt,
Corona del Mer, boy
Mr end Mrs David Sch~kert
Jr Coate Mne. boy
Mr and Mrs Jemea McG1nn11.
Wes1m1n11er g1r1
hptember 11
Mr and Mrs Rot>erl Stockwell
Costa Mesa. boy
Mr end Mrs Mlcl\HI HIJCby
~1><>'1 Beech girl
Mr and Mrs Oantel cn11tren1
Belt>oa ISiand bOy
Mr end Mrs JOHC>fl Br-
Coste Mesa. girl
Mr enc M•• Monte Berke<. Coate
Mesa boy
Mr end Mrs Randolph Jonnson
Irvine boy
hplember 17
M• end Mrs Thomas Lally New-
port Beach gorl •
Mr and M" Ajlt Sewhney New·
port Beach boy
Mr and Mrs Valerlt Grtnenko
INlne, girl
Mr and Mrs ROl>efl ROM New·
por1 Beach t>oy
Mr aria Mrs Roria1a Hall. Coat•
Mesa. girt
.. ptember 11
Mr end Mrs Mlcheet Esp1no1a
Hunt1r19ton Beach ooy
Mr and Mrs Larry MICketaon
Coate Mesi. boy
Mr and Mrs Jettrey Jochum
lf'llne boy
SeptemlMtr 1t
Mr end Mrs Randal Metkl Coale
Mesa, t>oy
Mr e"d Mrs G0<don Pttton.
Hunttr>gton BMGh. g1tl
hptem!Mfto
Mr end Mra Geoltrey San~g. Huntington e.acn, bOy
Mr and Mrs Thomu Ana.<llO"I.
Fountain Valley. bOy
Mr end Mra Abel S9r>llao<>. Cotti
M .... glr1
Mr end Mfl Gr19ory Porto.
IMna. bOy
Mr and Mra Rldlard Scoll New·
por1 Beech. girt
Mr and Mr• Jon _,.,,_, lrvlna.
~. Ind Mre MICllMI Oeymon
Cotta M ... , boy
Mr I nd Mfl J-Kt! .....
IMM,bOy
hptemM<t1
Mr t nd Mra Patrlek Moore, 1 Nhl>Q(1 8-:11. bOy
Mr and Mrs. Lawrenu Fr..,,
Balboe. bOy
Mr •"d Mrt Richard Flyn,,, Hunt·
1r191on Beec;11, bOy
Mr and M,. Frank Landrl, Hunt
lr>gton BellQll. bOy ...,._.._n
Mr 9r>d Mfl T.0..11u• S.emor•
Cotti MMe. girt
Mr end Mr1 Karl C>Wlln, IN!ne,
girl
Mr 911d Mrt ~ Hewm"'
Cott1M .... g1r1
Mr ano Mrs Stephen Gill. Hunt·
1r19ton Beach.girl
Mr and Mrs Jemes Hill. Irvine. girt
hptember 23
Mr ano Mrs Rost Grimm Jr ,
Huntington Beach, t>oy
Mr and Mr• Dena Cllltk. Hunt·
or19ton Beech. boy
Mr and Mrs Stephen JOllnson.
Irvine. boy
Mr. and Mrs. D1nlel Snetl. Costa
Mesa, t>oy
hptemblr2A
Mr and Mrs Toblet Sender•.
Co11eMna.t>oy
Mr e"d Mra Frederlek Baedeker.
Huntington Beech, boy
Mr end 1 Mrs JOlln Herdesty.
INlne,gld
Mr end Mrs Ruuell Padle. IMne.
gtrl
Mr I nd Mfl Donald MCRH.
Sanlt Ana Helgtlla, boy
SOUTH COAST
MIEOtCAl. CENTUI
hptemberiO
Mr and Mrs H Keith Tretl>e<.
Leoun• Niguel. girt
Octobef' Mr and Mrs David Ward, t eouna
Beacll. girt Octobef.
Mr a"d Mrs l Stowe Ktll-
ongaworth. Laguna Niguel girl
Mr end Mrs Oicll Wolle. Laguna
Beaetl. bOy
Mr and Mra MichHI K.ily.
Laguna Beacll. girt
Octobef 7
Mr end Mrs M11k Slllle, Legu"•
Beach girt
FOUNTAIN YALLIEY
COMMUNITY HOSm AL
October 1
Mr and Mrs Arthur Gonzelez.
Foun1111n Valley, boy
Mr and Mrl William HHk, Wast-
m1n1ter. girl
Mr and Mra Mark Welsh, Hunt·
1ng10" Beacll. girt
Mr and Mr•. Mieh•ef Pochetko.
CoataMeN, t>oy
Mr and Mrs Gereld ~hetzl:>ltg,
Westminster, girl
Octobef2
Mr and Mrt Merk Munroe. Hun1-
1r191on Beecn. bOy
Mr and Mra Ronald Folkar1'.
Hun11r191on S.ech, bOy
Octobef'
Mr '"d Mrt David COOi<•. Hunt-
or>gton BMCh. t>oy
Mr and Mra Cherlft HIUCl\an.
Hunttng1on 8"cll. girt
OctoMf4
Mr end Mr1 Nellf Davit, Hunt-
ington Beecll. bOy
Mr end Mr1. l>aul MIC:helllO"I.
Founteln Vellly. glr1
Mr and Mrs <i1ann Hutted. Hunt-
tngton 8Mch, glfl
Mr and Mra. Denver Oftnkwtna,
Huntington 8-1\, bOy
Mr and Mra Jecll Bled<. W•t·
mtneter, boy
OotoMfl
Mr end Mra Bruce McCroc:ta.n. w .. 1mlneter, bOy
Mr and Mra Robert Conley.
W"tmtneter. g11t Oc....,S
Mr and Mre. o.tald Y~.
F0un1.in V•=J'~r 1
Mr '"° Mrs Stephen HltrlQen,
Cotti MMt. bOy
Mr and Mr1 Thom&• Ctenar.
Hunt1ng1on BMcn. bOy
Mr and Mra. Aob4tt1 1.&ramle,
Hunttngt.Beach, gtrt
Mr and Mr\ D1"1<1 Weyne, WMt·
mlnater, boy o...-.,e
Mr and Mfl Edwlld Olaon, Hunt-
ington 9"ch. l>Oy
many of whom are unknown to the general public.
This year's awards for pNCe, medicine and
literature were announced earlier this month. The
prize for economics waa announced today. Prizes for
physics and chemistry will be announced Tuelday.
The winners usually welcome the recognition
and the award money, but few are prepared for the
changes it brings to their lives.
The Nobel can be a mixed blessing.
"Rapt and shellacked," was how John Steinbeck ,
described his feelings after winning the Nobel Prize
for Literature in 1962. Facing reporters and
photographers after the announcement, he mumbled
a protest: "Talk isn't my field.''
Steinbeck was already we~own. But others
are unaccustomed to the spotlight, having spent most
of their lives in the company of colleagues who
understand and appreciate their work.
Their o pinions are sought on topics unrelated to
their expertise and their lectures, once attended by
graduate students and colleagues, are soon attended
by the masses.
Arno A. Penzias, 1978 Nobel Prize
winner for work in cosmic micro-
.,~
wave radiation, d escribes his honor
as "a haunting presence." ------
Jean-Paul Sartre once said the distinction of the
Nobel "exposes readers to a pressure which I do not
think is desirable." He turned down the 1964 Nobel
Prize for Literature. UC prof economics winner
Signing books "Jean-Paul Sartre" is not the
same as "if I sign 'Jean-Paul Sartre, Nobel Prize
winner,"' he said.
Gerard Debreu cited for mathematical applications in study
"Nobel Prize winner" or "Nobel laureate"
mevi tably becomes a part of the winner's name. Long
after people have forgotten the Nobel-winning work,
they will remember the Nobel.
It "is a haunting presence -something that
walks behind you," said Arno A. Penzias, vice
president of research at Bell Laboratories and 1978
Nobelist for his work in cosmic microwave radiation.
"A num9er of scientists are troubled about"'the
impact of the prize on their lives," said Rae Goodell,
associate professor of science writing at the M~
chusetts Institute of Technology and author of "The
Visible Scientist."
"Suddenly, they're in demand to talk about their
reactions to the prize and their work," she said.
"Then, they are asked to conunent on a wide variety
of issues. They become spokesmen for the scientific
community."
:\ l •tllljMfl'"" L,11tt .. n11t1
Fir.I
t\n11u.1I l't>ru·nt<11(1· 1<.1t•· '"" St.l.X 1111 IJ so.;
Mt111lhly l',1ynw11h $ :174 Tl
>. .18 M11111h, $ 17 ~11656
$ l>tfkn·m·l' s
1<1111 1J. ti m1111NI h1 r11d1·fH·11d1111 <11n~·.v
lak1•11 I )rtohr1 ll , /WO
It's true.
OAKLAND (AP) -Since he first began
studying economics 43 years ago in his native France,
Gerard Debreu has worked l.o apply mathematics to
the theory of economic equilibrium.
Today, the naturalized American citizen and UC
Berkeley professor stands honored w ith his science's
highest honor, the Nobel Memorial Prize for
Economics.
"I am very very pleased," Debreu said from his
Oakland home. "It la, as a scientist, the highest
recognition ... I am very pleased that the Nobel
committee is, indirectly, al.so recognizing the kind of
work I am doing, which ... ia abstract-looking, and is
not to the liking of every economist.
''Some would like the work done in economics to
be very applied. And I am glad this ia getting that
kind of recognition."
Debreu, 62, said a basic principle in his work is
~t'l Ulll)
l'anf1c
l!'"l"u
:113s IS
18,487.:.W
.. soo 64
A loan for this 1984 Ford
Thunderbird Turbo wili' cost you
$500 more at Security Pacific,
than it wi ll at California First.
major bank in the state. So no
matter what you need the money
for. California First could wind
up saving you more than you think.
In addition. if the loan you
want is under $50,000, and isn't
secured by real estate, we'H
answer your request within 24
The fact is, California First
Hank ha s the lowest fixed rates on
cons umer loa ns, 011erall. of any
that an economic system is made up of a large number
of "agents" -consumers and producers -who make
decisions independent of each other.
"My goal is to explain how those agents make
those decisions, how tbeir decisions are compatible
with each other and how they form an equilibrium
for the economic system," he said. "To do that in a
rigorous way, one has to build a mathematical theory,
which has been the work of many of my colleagues
and myself."
When asked if he knew he was being considered
for the Nobel, Debreu said, "Of course I do not know
how many possible candidates the Nobel committee
has considered -possibly dozens, and scores. And
·that isall I could expect, that my name could be on the
list of people considered."
Debreu said he's had "no time to think" about
what he'll do with the prize money.
hours. Sometimes the same day.
We think lower rates on
loans, and faster answers. are
two good ways to show how
much .better a bank we ca n be/
If you'd like to know how
much better, think of how much
farther you could go on $500.
'
Mr and Mra Andrew Yu. Coet1
Mfl.I l>Oy Mr end Mfl EUH N!Qol, FOIH'lelt1
Ve!Nly ~ • '" "''"' t I •tl
( ' ,. •
I
'\
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 17, 1983
MAILBOX
S to p th e Costa Mesa Free way
To Gov. George Deukmejaan:
I have been and am a strong
supporter of yours. I beheve you
are sincerely trying to bring
financial stability to California.
Please in heaven 's name save
millions by stopping the Costa
Mesa Freeway extension in tts
tracks. Eliminate buddtng
bndges. condemnmg valuable
property. daggmg an enonnous
ditch and d1v1ding the city
With the sun.set of tht.· t:oasUll
freeway through Newport and
theronden{i}ed property sold back
to the private sector we woulq.
have another freeway lo no-
where.
Instead. 1ns1.all four lanes (in
addiuon to the six now existing)
and a beautifully landscaped
center divider down the middle.
same signals, no bridges, no ditch
and a beautiful addition to the
city It could handle increased
traffic for years ahead and become
<1n asset that would automatically
empty into the redevelopm<'nt
area now being butlt Won't you
help us and all taxpayers?
P JAY BURCHETT
Newport Beach
Del Mar A ven ue is a mess
To the Editor·
What in heaven's name has the
Cny of Costa Mesa been doing on
Del Mar Avenue during the last
several months? It used to be a
decently paved road. Presently
the surface~ worse than a poorly
maintained alley. Most of the road
does not even have a painted
center line.
This summer the gas company
contracted to have the gas service
lowered along Del Mar and the
work was completed. The men
lowering the service explained the
city was going to repave the entire
street, removing the pavement,
grading down up to four feet and
making a new road bed which
would ellminate the severe dips
encountered at the intersections
with Elden and Orange. These
dips carry ram water somewhere.
Where will the water go 1! they
are eliminated?
Soon after the gas service was
lowered. Del Mar was posted for
temporary no street parking.
Pavement removal equipment
was moved on-site. One morrung a
Line of tractor-trailer rigs ap-
peared and the machinery went
in to action on the north side of the
200 block.
They scratched up the road on
both sides of the street the length
of Del Mar A truck driver told me
they would be removing pave-
ment in the 100 block later that
day but 1t never happened In·
stead of grading deeply in the 200
block lhl'y simply rt.•movt.>d th<.>
existing pavement and replaced 1t
with what \'\.e presently hav1..·
now, an uneven, <:rude asphalt JOb
They then removed all of thl'1r
equipment for several weeks.
In the middle of September, Del
Mar was posted again for tempor-
ary no street parking. The pave-
ment on the south side of the 200
block was scalped and shoddily
replaced with crude asphalt. This
also happened to the north and
south sides in the last 100 fa-t of
the 100 block. That ts where we.>
stand today. The cti~ are still in
place at Elden and Orange No one
ever ~placed the road bed. The
road work IS so uneven that some
of us drop off four inches bet ween
the gutter and the road when
exiling our driveways. During
recent rams the water preferred to
run down the asphalt instead of
the gutters.
We were told that thtS asphalt
would be resurfaced during the
last week in September Nothlng
happened. r do not set• how a
resurfacing job ca n restore Del
Mar to an acreptable smouth
surface, this asphalt is so uneven.
Furthermore. 1t could only t'xag-
gerate the dips and humps ::it
Elden and Orange l would be·
very pleased to hear some exp~d
nataon from the city un th ts c:cncs
of events
C BROCKMAN
Costa Mesa
The Daily Pilot solicits your views on any matters
of interest to our communities. If you wish to
contribute to these pages with a letter, or a longer
commentary on an Issue, please send your submission
legibly written o r typed. Commentary pieces shoued
be no longer than 500 words. letters should be
considerably more concise. Sho rter letters will be
considered first . Address such correspondence to:
LETTERS To The EDITOR, Dally Piiot, Box 1580,
Coate M•••, CA., 92626. Please Include your name,
address and telephone number.
If you prefer, you may call In your letter to the
We're Llatenlng special telephone number ... 842-6086
. Be sure to leave your name, address and telephone
number so that we m ay verify your comments.
Please do not call In longer letters or commen-
taries.
l.M. BDJd ; Lit erat e labor
ln Japan. the drive to educate
the citizenry ~at the top of the
national priority hst Illiteracy 1s
v1rrually unknown. therefore. Did
I tell you Japan's public schools
have no ;anators StudenLS do that
work One period a day 1s desig-
nated for dusting. scrubbing
floors, washing windows, so on
Call at a lab course 1n "upkeep" or
"maintenance." But whatever. it's
said by many to be the schoolwork
most generally valuable for the
test of the students' ltvcs.
Women conunue to Ulkc ovt'r
the jobs trad1t1onal~d_ by mf'n
Typesetters use6 ~ men.
mostly Now they're mostly
women. You can say the same for
bookbinders. 1nsurar\ce adjusters
a nd bartenders. I've heard Not so
yet with IPtter earners The
mailmen still outnumber the ma1l-
women by sev"n to one But ~tand
by
Q How mu<·h money did Willie
Nelson make for ht." song "The
Fam1ly Bible"?
A. $50. He sold the rights early
It made a lot of money for thr
promoters. though
Q. What's the average age now
when JUVenales have their. firsl
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
' .
; sexual experience?
A. Boys. 15.7 years. Girls. 16.2
years. That, according to a recent
study by Johns Hopkins Uruver-
s1ty researchers.
Q. Does any company m the
Unit.eel States still make manual
typ<.•wnters? ,
A Not a one Last such machine
came off the Smith Corona as-
sembly line on May 11. 1983.
Debate continues over whetht•r
il pnv11tt• secretary should be
allowed to testify against the boss.
Many say the se<:retary's knowl-
t.•dge should be dass1f1ed as privi-
leged, even as that of a doctor or
lawyer. Don't know. don't know
But it's not a new contention. The
male se1:retary of ancient Egypt -
there were many such -was
off1c1ally known as the "Keeper of
Secrets "
Overrun with carpenter ants?
Get yourself an anteater An
anteater prefers carpenter ants
over all.other kmds. researcht>r·s
say.
Am told a forthcoming
cookbook on pork dishes will ~'
called. "Unhand that Swine. You
Woman'."
'
tU. lchwart1 Ill .. __
Chuy Dowallby
tdllOf lfHI ~-'II 101"9,.._
,,
ol
lf5HARD10 -BEUEVEnIEY
NAMED m£ f-91 HEADOIWmRS
IN WASWN6TON
AfftR l EOOAJl. HOOVat
1
-
Thatcher's Belize gambit fails
WASHINGTON -Margaret
Thatcher tried a bat of diplomatic
blackmail on President Reagan
during her recent visit to Wash-
ington. It w<1s the best-kept secret
of a supposedly chummy ronfab.
Thatcher's little power play
was confided to my associate Dale
Van ~Ul by sourres familiar with
th<.> 1"c1dent They scud she suc-
Cf>edcd only in getting Reagan's
Irish dander up Here's the story:
The Briush occupy a strategic,
little p1e<.-e of earth that straddles
the smuggling routes into
southern Mexico. It's called
Belize, and it's tucked under
Mexico's big toe.
The toe 1s heavily mfet:ted with
Marxist revolutionaries who are
biding their time until Mexico
becoml's npe for revoluuon.
Given the raging inflation and
rampant corruption that afflicts
Mexico. this could be all too soon.
Howt>vcr determined President
Rl'agan may be to stop a Marxist
t.1keover m El Salvador. he is 10
times more roncemed about Mex-
ico He does not wa{lt the lurking
revoJutJonar1es, thettf<>N, to gee
arms from Cuba Happily, the
~
-JA-Cl-A-ID-fR-ID-N -~
most convenient smugghng rouLes
through Belize have been effec-
tively blocked by the British.
E nter Falkla nds
Thatcher was aware of all this
as she enplaned for Washington.
But she also had a worry of her
own: She feared that Argentina
stall has designs on the Falkland
Islands. So she tried to persuade
Reagan not to resume sales of U S .
arms to the Argentines, whose
arsenal was badly depleted by
their disastrous attempt to St'1ze
the Falklands last year.
So under Thatcher's tutelage,
British offil·1als 1..'0yly informed
their US hosts that Britain was
"willing lo keep troops in Beltze"'
as long a!> th<.> arms embargo on
Argentina stayed in effect The
1mphcataon was that the British
might pull out if Thatcher didn't
gel her way ..
White House sources reported
that the president was anfuriated
by this "obvious blackmail."
Though the British garrison an
Belize 1s small, at has been essen-
tial in limiting the flow of Cuban
arms through Belize to the Marx-
ist rebels in the Mexican toe ... As
long as the British stay an Belize,
they and the United ~tates w1U be
able to prevent large shipments of
arms Crom Cuba reaching the
rebels in Mexico." an mtelhgence
source explained
There's also another reason
Reagan wants the Briush troops to
stay: Their presence will d1s-
cou rage the neighboring
Guatemalans from invading
Belize, which they claim belongs
to them. ·
f ear invasion
A top secret C IA report warns
that Guatemala would invade
shortly after the Briush pulled
out. The result would (')(> l'arnagt'
on arr appall mg Sl'ale Guatemala's
rulers are notoriously anti-black.
and a large percentag(' of Beltw0!>
143.000 inhabitants isl'llht.'r blal·k.
creole or Garifuna. a black-lnd1an
mixture.
BLUNDER OF THE WEEK:
The Reagan adm1nistratton
doesn't trust the press with us"
secrets. But sometimes the gov-
ernment's own guardians of class1-
f 1ed material are careless
One slip-up was dtSCOvered
recently by an enterprising West
German reporte r, Uwe Zimmer of
Stem magazine, as he was comb-
ing through the publicly released
transcript of a spring hearing by
the House Military Installauons
and Fac1llt1es sulx'Omm&ttee.
Because of anti-nuclear· fervor
an West Germany. the Bonn
government has asked the Uruted
States to keep.secret the site of the
base where new ground-Launched
cruise m1ss1les GLCMs -will "
be delivered in DccemhPr
So the hearing transcript Wa.!.
suppoSt.'<i lo delete any referent~:
w Germany. referring only tu
"thl' fourth t·ountry " But on pagt.·
609 of the• transc:ript, the fourth
l'Oun trv 1s nut onlv rdcrred to as
.. FRG .; ( Ft-dera l Rt'publ1c of Ger·
lndOV). but It IS stated that'
"det.31led dc"Stgn work for the ·
((.;LCM) opc•rattons fac1llt1es at
Wueschhe1m has started."
War veterans find few henef its
1 am old enough to remember
the veterans' Bonus March on
Washington, which was daspersed
by President Hoover with the
gallant field leadership of Gen.
Douglas MacArthur. It was not
exactly our country's proudest
hour.
One of the strange discrepancies
that has struck me over the years
1s the, way a nauon -our nation,
at least -blows hot and cold on
servicemen (and women now, too,
one supposes).
Veterans have always been
treated shabbily, promised and
then disappointed. wooed with
ardor and then s hunned or
neglected when the need for them
as ended.
'-On the other hand, pro-
fessionals who enter the armed
services and may never have seen
IYllfY 111111 f
~
,Y>
a smgle day of combat are retired
on terms and with benefi ts that
seem positively princely by com-
parison.
As an example, in 1977 the
government spent more on pen-
sions for healthy retired military
men and women under the age of
65 than on all new Air Force
planes or Navy ships.
Nearly $7 billion went to some
800.000 "retll'ees" who were
under 65 and retired with no
disability whatsoever More than
90 percent of these were healthy
and still of working age, while
nearly half of them were stl!l
under 50.
This is an enormous sum to
d isburse for such early retirement
of still productive men and women
-many of whom promptJy take
jobs an t~ private sector that may
double their retirement pay or
more.
Possibly no one would be·
grudge them these e moluments,
were it not that the average
enlisted man during wartime,
who may be injured m combat,
finds so little provasion for tram-
mg and subsequent emvloyment
when his spell of service as over
Apart from a sporadic program
like the G .I. educational ball.
which did send many thousands of
enlisted men back to school at
government cost. there has always
been a dreadful paU of negllgence
hang1m~ over returned veterans
after a war's end
Years have been vanked out of
their ltves. at a m0st fonnallv.e
time. and there 1s llttle or no
prov1s1on for reabsorbing them
mto the mainstream of society
lndeed. 1t was not until after
World War II that much thought
was even given to their predica-
ment, World War I vet.erans were
generally treated with the diedain ·
MacArthur showed them.
If you want to spend the years
between 18 and 50 in the mihtarv.
you are assured of a guaranteed
income and splendid pension ben·
ef1ts under the third largesl
socialist orgamzauon m the worl&. ) I
1f you go m to fight for a couple of ,
rotten. dangerous years, the rejiil
or your life (1f any) may be pulleti
awry. Somehow the odds don'c
seem equitable
Hold off on CM development
By MARV ANN ROGERS
This column 1s prompted by the
recent let\er from the North Costa
Mesa Homeowners Association. I
<lm a 30-year resident of Los
Ang<'ll·S. nativt> Cahforn1an. who
re<:cntly rcturne<J to Orange
County &'ter nme years an Wyom·
mg
Much of the progess that has
t>o..'Currcd in my absence is com-
mendable, especially within th('
1..·onllnes of the Irvine Co.'s
planned communities.
The trafClccongesuon and smog
and noise pollulion appear to be
the same as iC was 20 years ago
Tbe streets are wider and mori.-
plentHul which adds compensa-
tion to the increased numbers of
people who have found Southern
.Callforrua t.o their liking and have
been asmmllated Into the lifestyle.
-....
John Wayne Airport's problems
are nol unlike those that plagued
LAX m 11$ infam·y
The free enterprise system has
t.-slabltshe<l a qualny lifestyle as u
hl\s gobbled up the fertile fatm·
h~nds throu~hout the ~an. Most
of the "progress" has ~n r ~pon.
slbly fllUllned, pbs are plentiful
and the mix o( industry. small
busm complex~ and reatden-
tl•l Pn<:lavt:'!t appean healthy and
Wt•ll phtl'1>d
The only element ITUS&lnS( 1s
, I
reasonable and speedy rapid tran-
sit of a nature that could reduce
traffic congestion. noise and air
pollut1on and monumental waste
o( human and petroleum energy
Until this single fact't of sunny
Southern Cal's lifestyle rs ac-
complished, increased density as
1mv1sioned by lhe Amel Project
and Segerstrom Bear Street Pro-
j(.>l·t should be held m abeyanre if
only for the health and welfare of
t·urrent residents
There as a Biblical admonition 1n
Isaiah, 5:8 which says "Woe llnto
them that JOln house to house. that
lay field to field. till there be no
place. that they may be placed
alone tn the midst of the earth."
After seeing the demise of
or ange groves and grape
vineyards m the past 30 years, 1 t
was plea.sing to hnd two farnllles
(the lrvlnes and the Segerstroms)
w ho held some land open for
man's basic agricultural needs
while capitalizing upon e<'Onom1c
t•xpanslon for their family's fu-
ture and to fill a n(.'(.'(j for the
w«>~twtlrd t.'><p&ndlng populaeoc
Thr thrNll of Acid ralntf og.
envLronml'nt.al poUution of our
drink Inf wl\ler and overcrowding
arc rca problems We and the
mowl"'I and •hakc-ni of commel'Ct'
· and growth must grapple wllh
1h1>!k• bt>fow our dlm1n1 h1n"'
quality of life is further allowt>d to\ I ft>t>I thl' v1brat1on of the 405
deteriorate • frl'l'Way traCf1c· in my hvmg room
Costa Mesa 1s a my of c•ontrasts ~d SW('(!p thl' black dust from the
Our v1ow must em.'Omµass a air we brt>alht.> from my patio each
bottom line philosophy as must week and l'annot hear nonnal
those of the developers, 1 c .tax t'Onversation when planes and
base. job.<!. growth. expan.c;lon. all hellt'optcrs fl y over early and late
for the sake of mt'reastng tht• each day I don't know what \IU 15
t'Offers of <..'Ommerce But the in th<.> water I drank each day. b~
bottom line mUst 1ndude lhought we all know that tl is in shol!l
of the pt.'<>ple already here and if supply and will increase in.~
the trade-offs are ultimately of wht>n Arizona . and Utah famsti 1
real value lo the health of the their water pro)l'Cts very soon. .
whole There are fields and hills still
SelCishly. some of us would coveted'bythe moruedgentrywh,o
pre~r to see fields of beans and can move to gated enclaves when
strawberries remain until health-the city becomes unlivable as
ful transport of the populace Cian growth continues and the
be accomplished. aestheucs of a ht'&Jthful environ-
With so many office buildings ment are further sacnficed.
empty or half-full and hotels and . motels throughout the basin run I ask with my ~e1ghbon1 th.a~ we
ning at less than 60 per<:()nl full, solve these ex1st1ng problems hm.
some of us dream that the de-Then we ca n consldel"
I U ·tr l th new-growth projeet..'1 for the be~ ve opers w1 s ave o erase e n f th mmun'ty as 8 whott> 1 decaying areas that have :llrendy e 1 0 cco 1 · , • borrow from Aldo Leopold when1l fallen into d1srepa1r and va,·ant sa tho• we must Ree this lard u 8 monuments of ont-e t'Ommcrclal Y ' SU~ ''OU}d be N'Vltallu_>d With rommunaty lO Which we alJ be)O~
your and their cxpertlM.' rather than tlS· a commod1 ~
Thirty and 40 year11 nao belonf;(lnR to us aub.Jl'Ct to our
planned rommun1tu.•s were e1 uto~ abu!St' 9 nd •'Xl'(' ~.
paan dream. Wt> wench with hopt" and con
But lhc future IS now and the l~m ond prny that the pro~u
pt'<1l>ll' and uucpayN''S nc-.><I o roordlhato~ re-. s their ~Ju·
hvelfbh• n•!\ponse from the c;:lty l'lllOtl.11 of tht• t'Onccrru of lht•
t'OU1W1l lO the problems Wl' fo1.'<.· pt•opl~
•
' -
I
I·
t
/
-~---------.it ~---.
lilly Piiat
D MONDAY. OCTOBER 17, 1983
~
ANN LANDERS 82
u A Case of Libel," debuting on cable TV's
Showtime tonight, is a courtroom dra ma tha t
makes I! po int about a n important issu e. Page BS. 0
I c• MD THI CGUIOY ENTERTAINM ENT 83
COMICS 84
Short 'n ' lively
Fingernails do the walking
,,,,~ ......
NEW YOR* -' Call it glamorous or grotesque, but
nevertheless the trend In artificial sculptured nails is booming. To
meet the need, independent fingernail salons are opening up every
day, according to the National Asoociation of Nail Artists.
Now women w ho want to sport these 2-inch-plus talons can let
their fingernails do the walking to the nearest salon. In response to
the growth of this new industry, • .... '
the Bell Yellow Pages has recent----..
ly adopted a new heading called ~
''Fingernail Salons." The head-f ......-
ing will begin to appear in the & ·..-.
dir ectories within the next six to .,,,
12 months. I -.
.---. p
Good vision for children
· ST. LOUIS, Mo. -School-age children should learn good
reading habits, and for preventive care should have an annual eye
examin ation to diagnose vision problems in their earliest stages.
suggests the American Optometric Association.
Parents should provide good lighting, teach children to take
breaks from close work, encourage proper TV viewing habits and
be alert for behavior signs that may indicate a vision problem, the
AOAsays.
YMCA offers come dy courses
NEW YORK -A series of
----humor courses taught by mem-
bers of the Asoociation of Comedy
Artists is being offered this fall by
the YWCA of New York City.
Dr. Kathryn Hahner, a psy-
chologist, will discuss the Psy-
chology of Humor. Other subjects
include History and Appreciation
of Women in Comedy from
Tucker (Sophie) to Tomlin (Lily),
Comedy Improvisation and the art of succeeding as a stand-up
comic.
'Self-health' program is urged
ROCHESTER, N.Y. -"The American way of hfe may be
hazardous to your health," says Jerid Fisher , a University of
Rochester Medical ~nter psychologist and developer of a
"self-health" program called SKYS -Stop Killing Yourself
Slowly
People have been led to give up responsibility for their own
well-being, he says. Nine of the 10 leading causes of death in 1900
have now been replaced by diseases of stress and excess -such as
heart attacks, strokes, and cirrhosis, says Fisher.
He urges attention to diet. exercise, and stress management
and an immediate end to such "life-robbing" habits as smoking,
excessive smoking. excessive cir. king, and overeating,
PAPARAZZI
Ho llywood ex-wives for• special club
Groufl_ meets regu/arily to
discuss unique p_roblems
By RICHARD DE ATl.EY
a-i. .... ,. .... wrtt ..
OS ANGELES -Some Hollywood ex-wives have fonned a
loosely
organized club to help each other cope with being divon.-ed
from
C'elebrity husbands and out of the limelight.
''Being the wife of a famous man is a unique category," said
Marilyn Funt. the former wife of "Candid Camera" host Allen Funt,
who has joined with_ other ex-wives to form their own support group.
It is called LADIES, for Life After Divorce Is Eventually Sane.
Among the members are Lynn Landon, ex-wife of actor Mich~el
Landon, who has since remarried: Jackie J oseph. the ex-wife of .
entertainer' Ken Berry. and Patti MacCleod, former wife of "Lov·e
Boat" star Gavin MacCleod.
LADIES has no office. no phone number and no formal
organization.
lt was born about six months ago, when Funt invited divorced
wives of celebrities to discuss their situation on her USA Cable show.
"Are You Anybody?"
"Each expressed a feeling of isolation and loss," f unt said. "They
felt people were unsympathetic, but the pain meant something to
them."
The group later met for lunch. and the session was so successful
that a nother was scheduled, then another. until the women decided to
Harho,lites chapter of the Sweet Adelines enjoy
singing barbershop style or otherwise.
give itself a name and a direction.
"Those private luncheons had an enormous sense of relief and
kinship," said. "We were married to men who were larger than life. It
wasn't to show anger and bitterness, but a chance to express
ourselves."
"Most of us were married before our husbands were famous," said
J oseph, who met Ken Berry when they were dancing in musicals in
New York and Los Angeles. "Because of the fame, it's hard to let go of
the illuston of what our husband is, or was. It's a little schiwphrenic -
you have two husbands, the man and the performer."
Three women who belonged to the group all objected to
references as being "dumped." _
"That's so unattractive," said Joseph. "Some of us were the
dumpers as opposed to being the dumpees."
She said some members don't want their names publicized and
there was no count of how many women could be considered members.
Others include Billie Jean Campbell, an ex-wife of singer Glenn
Campbell, and Sondra Blake, the former wife of actor Robert Blake.
"I think the main thing we have is other wome n who have similar
problems," said Landon. "A lot of it has to do with the media and its
very hard to escape."
Funt said the group has run into problems with p~blicity.
"It makes us look like a bunch of bltt~r women who've been
dumped," she said. "But none of us are wallowing and sitting around.
W e're not against men and we're not against marriage."
Funt said LADIES will remain a select group. but it may become
a formal non-profit organization. She said members are considering
offering discussion panels for other women's groups.
"I think sometimes we have to shake ourselves," Joseph said. "We
have that in common with all women. The man t hey miss is the illusion
of the person they originally married. The person we miss is the person
we feij in love with."
Sweet Adelines offer
good 4-part haraaony
Harbor/it es get
ready f_or the
annual co mpetition
By SUSAN MONAHAN o..,,....c _ __.
ar bershop quartets
have been through
some changes since the
day when four part
h armony provided
some impromptu entertainment at
the ba.r or barbershop.
The quartets have grown into
choruses and the entertainment
takes place on stages throughout
the world. And while barbershop
· music started as an all-male pas-
time, women have their own
organization, the Sweet Adelines.
T he Sweet Adelines were for-
med in 1947, "by a group of
women in Tulsa. Oklahoma, who
got tired of watching their hus-
bands have all ·the fun." said
Harborlites public relations chair-
man Fran Carmen. The Costa
Mesa-based Harborlites is one of
four Orange County Chapters of
the Sweet Adelines. (The others
are in Fullerton, Garden Grove
J nd Mission Viejo.)
The Harborlites support their
hobby t h rough variou s
fund-raising activities including
auctions and Las Vegas nights. "A
non -profit organization takes a lot
of money," says Carmen. The
preferred method of fund raising,
of course, is singing. Carmen says
that the H.arborlites will provide
anything from a quarter to a
chorus, "anywhere entertainment
is needed.''
They perform in shopping
centers and at banquets and they
also· put on their own shows. The
Harborlites offer ~ mixed reper-
toire -Dixieland , ballads. show
tunes -all set in the barbershop
mode. ,
The money raised goes towards
such expenses as rent on the
rehearsal hall, the musical di~
tor's salary and insurance. It is also
used to help defray the costs of the
Sweet Adelines competitions.
''We're a very competitive group
of ladies." said Carmen. "We1J
compete at anything."
There is a fall competition for
novices and one each summer for
double quartets. Th e annual re-
gional rompetition, for quarteta
and choruses. vf.ll be held in
Albuquerque, N.M. this April. A
quartet from the Harborlit.es,
0 See Harborllte~, Page 82
Sailing to Catalina
Bloomer Brigade takes fun cruise
he "bloomer burgee"
was blowing in the
breeze as the Western
Pride set off Thursday
morning for Catalina.
A was the Bloomer Brigade
-67 friends of Toni Armistead
of Newport Beach on the 20th
annual fun cruise. "My party gets
bigger every year. I started off
with just my mother and one or
two friends," Toni said.
Many of the guests met at
Toni's Dover Shore home for a
continental breakfast then were
taken by her big red bus to the
dock. Everybody was in pink and
white, with most w~aring the
pink and white T-shirts with
names appliqued on the front
Each year Toni gives a gift to each
one and the shirts were one year's
present. (This year it was pm k
nylon boat jackets with the
bloomer symbol on the back and a
Pilar Way ne-autographed
oookbookr (Pilar was aboard for
awhile until the radio call came
and the boat returned to drop her
of f-<laugh rer Ai.s.98 expecting
baby any m,inute.)
Many aboard were wearing
gold medallions (same weight asa
120 gold piece) engraved with
th eir name and the Bloomer
aymbol. This jewelry, a gift from
Toni indicates that the wearer
has made 10 crossings. (One year
when the price of gold was
exhorbitanc she had five women
'to N!C'eive their JO-year prize.)
On Catallna,, (the crossing of -
fered co11tin<mr..ll brcak lasta,
champagne. bloody miuys or
whatever) the Bloomeni hopped
<man.r of thf-•t.<>~ nomWJy
dosed at th/$ time opened and
offered them dl6COUnu> befo~
-•--
lunching at the Chi Chi Res-
taurant. '
Af~r a leisurely-spent after-
noon they reconvened at the
restaurant for awards (med-
allions went to Dorothy Mac·
Donald, former Zigfield 11tar
Florence Rypin aki, M iehe
Beaucha mp and former ice skat-
1 ng star Peggy Kenned y),
cocktails. dinner and special
ente rtainment by five male exotic
dancers from the Laff Stop in
Newport Beach accompanied by
an emcee. (The six had been on
the crossing, but nobod~ knew
who they were at the time.) ''l've
never seen anything like it," one
guest said commenting on the
performance. Every year Toni
provides surprise entertainment.
T he all-female group (no males
allowed aboard except enter-
t.ainers and crew including Skip-
per Bill C'.ampbell, w ho has made
every trip) were disembarking
from the Western Pride about 4
a.m . Friday morning at the
Pavilion
Toni, who was in show busi-
ness in earlier years, will soon be
embarking on another venture -
in January she will"be opening a
health and beauty salon In Palm
Deaert kno wn as Salo n
d' Antoinette.
Hospital be nefit
successful
Forty more and they would
have t\ad 1,000 at the St. Joteph
Hospt~l Benefit held at the
Dianeyland Hotel. The annual
event featured comedian Bob
Newlaart, who enlert.alned t'.hc
group followina a dinner of
0 .. ly ,..,.,,.. ..
Sue Cummin~
climbs aboard
Weste rn Pride.
tournedos of beef Henry IV,
<..'Oquile St. Jacques and chambord
pearch par fait.
T he $100,000 pr~s will go
for ~xpanding and remodeling
the cancer unh at the Orange
Hospital.
Donna Blue (she's with St.
John Knits) and her huaband Lance were there along with
Ja met Capretz of Capreu and
Ka..cian <if Corona del Mar and
James Plero1 of South Uguna
(<he latfl'r' rwo wert> on the
steering commitrcc).
Other steerina committee mcm~rs Included Rlcbard
Walke r of Newport 8e8C'h, David
Comedian Bob Newhart.
Fran Gate ly and Margo Brayton
show off their l 0 -year Bloomer
Brigade medallions.
BB hoste68 Toni Armistead,
rig ht, with Pilar Wayne.
Donna and Lance Blue watch
Bob Newhart.
Wbite of Huntingwn Beach,
Kelly McDermott of Newport
Beach with Watton, Eberling and
Lund.
They're 'Proud as a
Peacock'
Mo; than 800 women are In
Seau1 · Wash. this week to
atten the national A.Jisls~
League con"Vel\tlon, ··Proud aa a
Pe-ac.'O<·k."
.,Representing t he Laguna
Beach Chapter, one of 71, are the
Mmes. S•eldon PeHla,prea.ldent,
Elmer LaLanne, WUUtton L.
Bradway, Albert Leedom and
Fr11cl1 Yobe.
The Huntiniton Beach del·
ep tion wlll be headed by
Mar1aret Carlton, _praident,
plua P .. la McC11a, J11dy Watt
and Rae S111ukJ.
Act'Omp}hylng th~ NewP<>ri
Beach chapter president.
,.
----·-·------
Doro&hy Reicble, will ~ 1~
members lncludlng delegates
Marlo., Plckeat, Joan Rosa, Jeaa
Lacas, ElalDe Baamajlan and
Martba Crowner (she wJIJ bo
giving one of the seminars).
The Capistrano VaUey chapter
(the 66th group chart.ett!d) will
allo have 10 mem beni in attend·
a~ including Mrs. Gerald Glbh
esldent: and the Mm~. H~ary
y, Wendell Clo1e, Roaay
C m11, Robert ForemH and
Rollln Anderson.
.•
B2 Orange C.oast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 17, 1963
'We love you, Ann ••• ' R~aders say columnist is like at amily member I
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am sure you would
laugh if you could eavesdrop on a typical scene at
our house. I'll try to describe it.
My husband comes home Crom work, flipt;
through the ne wspaper and says in an annoyed
voice, ''Where's Ann Landers?" I tell him. "1 think
she is in the bathroom." I hear him muttering as he
marches down the corridor, "Why don't people
have enough consideration for other members of
the farruly to keep the newspaper together?"
DEAR FAITHFUL READERS: Tbaok you
for a warm and loving letter. To be cooaldered "a
part of tbe family" Is &be blgbest compliment you
could have paid me. I feel 7 feel tall! Your letter
made my week.
Then he comes back in the living room and
says, "Guess where I found Ann Landers? She was
in Kevin's room on the other side of his bed -on
the floor."
One day they left your column out of the
Orlando Sentinel Star. You would have thought
we had been hit with a global crisis.
This letter is to let you know we love you and
hope you will continue your good work for many
years to come. Instead of saying your name is a
household word, I would prefer to say you are like
a member of the family. -FAITHFUL READ-
ERS rN APOPKA. FLA
• • •
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was interested in
the study that showed more men die of heart
at tacks on Saturday and Sunday than on any other
days in the week. How come all those smart folks
at the Mayo Clinic didn't hook up the deaths to
Saturday and Sunday athletes -those over-
.weight, out-of-shape ·office workers who try to
lose 25 pounds In four weeks so they'll look terrific
at the high school reunion? Or the beer-drinking
TV viewer who decides to save some money and
reshingle the roof himself in 91:1-degree heat? '
The trend of overt.axing an unprepared body
on the weekend seems to be as logical a reason' for
the high death rate as nbme streti, or partying of
Friday night Do these conclusion! make sense to
~ )
·Wedding ceremonies
Sullivan-Nelson
The yacht .~a farer in Newport
Beach Harbor was the scene of the
Sept. 18 wedding of Kristen Ann
Nelson and William Thomas
Sullivan.
The bride. daughter of Dr. and
Mrs. Roger C. Nelson of San
Marino. wore a white em-
broidered voile gown with a
blouson cap sleeved bodice and
self belt. A picture hat with venice
lace and a short veil completed her
ensemble.
Her sister, Deborah Nelson of
Seattle was her atte ndant.
The bridegroom is the son of
Mr~ and Mrs. Robert Sullivan of
Carlsbad. Steven Tisdale served
as best man.
Seventy-five guests attended
the reception held on the yacht
immediately after th e ceremony.
A wedding trip to Mexico was
planned for the couple who plan to
live in Oceanside.. The bride is
employed at Hoag Memorial Hos-
pital in Newport Beach. and the
bridegroom is with Rancho La
Costa in Carlsbad.
Hausman-Julian
An afternoon wedding cer-
emony at Christ Church by the
Sea m Newport Beach was the
nuptial setting for Miss Kelly
Renee Julian of Palm Desert and
Richard Paul Hausman Jr. of
Newport Beach. A luncheon re-
ception at the Newport Harbor
Yacht Club immediately followed
the ceremony
The bride 1s the daughter of Mr
and Mrs. Paul Julian of Palm
Desert. She 1s a graduate of Indio
High School and attended the
College of the Desert and the
Rutledge Business School.
The bridegroom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Hausman
of Newport Beach. A graduate of
Newport Harbor High School, he
attended USC and is currently
employed by Century Systems
lnc.
After a honeymoon in the
Virgin Islands, the couple is
residmg in Newport Beach.
Engleman-Reichle
Paula Sue Reichle, a former
Costa Mesa resident. exhanged
vows with Michael Lewis
Engleman of Los Gatos during an
Oct. l wedding in th~ Skyland
Community Church in Los Gatos.
The bride is the daughter of J.
Paul Re1chJe of Orange, and
Barbara Reichle of Norco. She is a
graduate of Costa Mesa H1gh
School and San Jose State Univer-
sit.y. •
RUFFELL'S
U'HOLSTllY, INC. ... , ............... .
I 922 HARBOR Bl VD
COSTA MESA -548 I f.S6
p a a
Kristen S~l livan
the bridegroom, son of Douglas
Engleman of Boerne. Texas. and
Mrs. David Janse n of Marvel,
• Colo. also is a graduate of San Jose
State University. The couple plan
to live in Los Gatos.
Santoro-~cCants
Corona del Mar resident J oseph
Santoro marr ied Theresa Eileen
McCants during an Aug. 20 wed-
ding ceremony in S t. Anne's
church in Seal Beach.
The bride. daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John McCants of Seal Beach
wore a Fink designer ,9flginal
wedding gown that featured a
10-foot tram and a 12-foot veil
The gown, made of English net
with satin sleeves, and the hal
were beaded in pearls and sequins.
Bridesmaids were Vanessa and
Julie McCants, Nicola Bentley.
Debbie Townsend, Lelani Miller,
Marci Thomas, Carol Santoro and
Chase McCants.
Assisting the bridegroom were
Mark Pawlowski, Bob Santoro.
George Santoro, Brett Furlong.
Bill McCants, Bob Auzaradel. Bill
Shoemaker and John Carper.
Santoro is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Santoro of Corona de!
Mar. ·
After at reception for 250 guests
at the Long Beach Yacht Club, the
couple left on a wedding trip to
Mission Bay. They plan to make ·
their home in Fountain Valley.
Santoro is an F .A.A. Air Traffic
Con troller at John Wayne Air-
port.
D onnell-Cole
Candace Anne Cole became the
bride of Loren J. Donnell in a
Sept. 25 ceremony at the Com-
munity Church Cngregational in
Corona del Mar.
The bride. the daughter of
former Corona del Mar residents.
YOU CAN
lOOKlml•,
flll IXCITING,
GAIN CONflD£NCl
& succus
IN YOURLffl.
'
Kelly Hausman
Pa ula Englema n
Mr. and Mr-s. William S. Cole now
of Palm Springs, wore an
ankle-length tiered lace dress 1 with matching lace pillbox hat and
veil. She was attended by her
matron of honor, Mindy Tennen.
and Katie Mikles.
The bridegroom, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Donnell of Corona del
Mar was assisted by best man
Stewart Moore and David Ten-
nen.
A wedding trip to Carmel
followed.a reception at Jasmine
Creek Count.ry Club.
The bride is a self-employed
interior designer who operates
Candace Cole Interior Design.
ASID. and Donnell is a pilot for
AirCal. The couple will reside in
Corona del Mar - -------------!
Classy Autos 1
-
Advertised
in the
D1ily Pilat
KDCM 1aa.1
FM STEREO
"OUR MUSIC MAKES YOU FEEL GOOD!"
~ANN they are needed. Any more Ideas?
•••
DEAR ANN LANDERS : J know why . e
men die on Saturday and Sunday than during e
Wl.~k Ever ht>ar the expression, "Not on compaay
time?" Well, 'nuff said. -BAKERSFlE\t!),
CALlJo'. ~ ~ ~
you? -RICHMOND.VA DEAR BAKE: Beautiful.
• • • DEAR RICH: They do, Indeed. And now
another voice from the peanut gallery: . . ..
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Of course. more ml.'n
die over the weekend and I will tell you the real
reason -but you will never print 1t. All the
doctors are out playing golf, and tf you get sick. it's
too damned bad. -CLEAR-CUT IN VERMONT
Confidential to Open Mind In Columbia, S.C.:
read your "thesis on white superiority" and
suggest tbar your "open mind'' be closed for
repair.
• • •
DEAR CLEAR-CUT: Your lette r prompted
me to go through the list of top cardiac specialists
I know -from coast to coast. Only two play golf
and they both wear beepers on their belts in case
Ann Landers discusses teen-age drinking -
Jts myths. its rt"alities. Learn thi• facts by readinp
"Booze and You -For Teen-agers Only," by Ann
Landers. Send 50 cen~ and a long, self-addre~.
sf.8mped envelope tn Ann Landers. P.O. &x
119!15. Chicago. Ill 6061 J
Sweet· Adelines ••• Good harmony
v From Page Bl •
Suzy Sutton. Carol Anderson, kmd," she Sold. "It's not JUSl a
Norita Skvarla and Rita Van ml:'lody, It's four parts blending
Horn. otherwise known as S . Van together."
Andermac, are expe<:ted to <.:om-The four parts are the same as 111
pete. . male quartets -lead (melody),
The Sweet Adl'lines is a inh•r -baritone. lt-nor and bass. "Women
nauonal organizaticm wnh ap-con sing bass," :;.aid Carmen. The
proximately 34,000 members fin11l result should produce a fifth,
Winners of the regional even ts go <1rt1 fl<:1ally created chord, which is
on to Lhe international t'Ompet1-an octave above the highest part.
tion. which will be held in Detroit A musical background isn't a
this year. S . Van Andermac has must. Although Carmen estimates
placed in the top five, inter-that about one Lhird of the
nationally. for the last five years. Harborlites are music teachers.
There are about 60 Harbor lites, she says that the ranks also
and Carmen says they are looking include secretaries, nurses and
for new members. "There's some-homemakers. A member tnust be
thing a bout sheer volume that gets at least 18, unless she is sponsored
the (competition) judges' at ten-by someone in the organization, in
tion." which case 16 is the minimum age.
Anyone interested m pining Carmen says she devotes a great
must first attend at least four deal of ume to the Harborlites, but
consec utive rehearsals. Re-that a member can ''have as much
hearsals are held from 7:30 to or as little as she wants." As
10:30 p.m every Monday at the hobbies go, she says the Sweet
Neighborhood Community Adeltnc-s isn't very expensive.
Center. 1845 Park Ave .. Costa "It's cheaper than bowling."
Mesa. Chapter dues costs $3 a month and
Prospective members have to international dues is $50 a year.
audition before they are accepted. Although members don't draw
but Carmen says that it is a a paycheck, Carmen says the
"painless" procedure. Barbershop Harborlites is run as pro-
ls sung a cappella. so there 1s no fessionally as possible. There is a
instrumental backup. but "it 's in a board of directors, two assistant
quartet situation. no one as to sing music:al directors, Linda Chaffe
alone," she said. "And it's private and Carul Rawe, and a chapter
-just the director and the president, Pat Jadtson. Carmen
quartet." says they are audiuonmg for a full
A magnificent vo1c.oe isn't re· time> musical director
quired, aCX'ording to Carmen, but a Tht• Harborlites are constantly
Sweet Adeline must be able to learning new musit· and chorro·
sing on key and stng her part. graphy.shesa1d.andplantobrmg
"Barbershop music is like no other in some <.·oaches to help prepare
------------
for the c:ompet1t1ons "It's the best
musical Pdut.:e1llon you can gel, and
it's all free"
The Harborlites are scheduled
for twovrivate performances in
OC'lobt.-r Christmas is one of their
busll'~t seasons. In addition to
appearances at shoppmg ceiaters. -
parties and conventions. they.will
be putting on Christmas shows on
D<.'C I 7 ond I 8 at the Costa ¥esa
Neighborhood Center. '
For membership information
contact Ruth-Anne Stickney a\..
839-4878. Applicants for the pos-
ition of m usical director max call
Carmen at 552-1933. · · .. Nursing shortage
' is disappearing ·
WAS HINGTON -The ~u.rs
mg short.age reported in' the
'United States during the 1960s
and 1970s has for the most .part
disappeared. according to a na-
tional medical publication_
News reports that a two-year
study by ·the Institute of Medicmf.'
shows that in the 1980s the ov,erall
supply of generalist registered
nurses and licensed practical nu rs •
es is expected to keep pact' with
the demand. ·
The number of registered nurs
cs m the United States has
m t-reased from 550.000 in 1962 to
I .36 million m l982.
However, the study predlcts a
shortagl of nurses in research.
te<1t.:h1ng , ad\'anced clinical
Sf)E'<.:ialtie!> and administration
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, ~~~~~~~~~
Lillian Gish wave to p hotographers as
Fr e nch Cultu re Min is ter Jack Lang
waits lo award her the Aris a nd Letters
commandeur medal lasl week in Paris.
Lillian Gish
-·------
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday. October t7. 1983 a
Mr. Wizard
Returns with science show on cable TV
By PAUL RAEBURN
Of .... _...,,,_
NEW YORK -Mr. Wu.ard.
who fuPnat.ed and delighted a
generation of baby-boom young-
sters In the Sputnik era. ls back
with the magic of science for
children of the computer age.
Don Herbert, who launched hrs
career as Mr. Wizard on NBC; In
1951. introduced "Mr. Wizard's
World'' this month on Nickel-
odeon, the children's cable TV
channel.
"Mr. Wl:zard's World" will, like
its forerunner, explain to 9-to
12-year-olds the magic and mys-
tery of science.
In many respects. the new show
resembles the old one. The new
show has not become a high-tech,
"Star Wars" -style extravaganza.
Mr. Wizard still does his experi-
ments in a workshop that looks
like somebody's family room. And
most of his tools are common
household items: straight pms and
thimbles, yardsticks and medicine
droppers
Don Herbert is
Mr. Wizard
But this is the '80s. not the '50s.
a nd "Mr. Wizard's World" 1s
ZJppier than its black-and-white
predecessor, which was broadcast
live.
Each of the old show's episodes -, ----
........ -c:::::==:gL~u~x@:!u!R~Y[T~H~EA~T~RfESC-::21 ........
hi Two Matinee Shew1nuONLYS2.lliUnltss0therwistNottd
was devoted to a particu.larsc1en-
tiflc subject fncuon. for example.
or inertia
The new show is organized like
a news magazine. Each half-hour
episode is divided into eight or 10
segments with titles Uke "Super·
market Science," "How It
Works," and "Know You.r Body."
Herbert has made at least one
concession to new technology. He
has added a small talking robot
named Hero, which he uses to
explain the workings of com-
puters.
Herbert has retained what he
thinks was one of the best features
of the old show· the wide-eyed
kids whose questions allow him
nimbly to explain importantscien-
llfi(' principles without delivering
a lecture
HerberJ, 66, was trained as a
science i.'acher, but h1S entire
career has been in radio and
Lelev1s1on The name "Mr. Wiz-
ard" came from an advertiser's
suggestion that Herbert call
himself "The Wizard." ------
French pay tribute to silent screen star S tl3tdj•r•ntll6)61~ 2551 /~~~ .. ~:,) S
'"THIS IS A. BETTER BOND:'~~~~~
SFAN~ 'y MARILYN AUGUST
Of._ A··wt...., Ptw
PARIS -Franc.-e's cultural elite is shining the
spotlight this week on American actress Lillian Gish
-who turned 87 Friday and gained fame on the
silent screen when the French were embroiled in
World War I.
"I really don't know what I've done to warrant
all this generosity and goodness.'' said Gish, the
WlCOntested grande dal'ne of silent movies who is
being honored during weeklong festivities in Paris.·
Gish charmed generations of movie-goers as the
heroine in D.W. Griffith's 1915 Civil War classic
"Birth of a Nation." as the sad mother . in
"Intolerance.'' and the luckless damsel in ''Broken
Blossoms.''
Gish, who Thursday received the prestigious
<:ommander of Arts and Letters Award from French
Minister of Culture Jack Lang. made her stage debut
at the age 4.
She has been w orking almost non-st.op ever
since, winning honors for performances in 102 movies
and 50 plays that included works of Shakespeare and
Tennessee Williams.
French film dire<:tor Francois Truffaut says her
career of 83 years "follows cinema history as closely
as two parallel tracks of the Union Pacific."
Gish and her sister Dorothy are the subject of a
television documentary by Jeanne Moreau to be aired
aoon, along with a song-and-dance tribute to their
careers.
Although she had a major role recently in Robert
Altman's "Marriage," and believes cinema is the
major art of the century, she says going to the movies
today ''hurts my pride."
"We used to play to packed houses in theaters
that held 6.424 people," she said. "I go to the movies
today, and there are only six people in the audience
and they don't react."
Gish's Jove affair with France began in 1917
when she, her mother and Dorothy came to film a
"movie to make America make up its mind to go to
war for France and Englanp."
"I bet there aren't many people here who saw
Paris for the first time with not one light burning -
only a full moon," she said. "We weren't afraid
because we had just come from London where they
were having air raids without warning. At 11 o'clock
one night a bomb hit a tramway right under our
windows at the Savoy and 11 people were killed. We
couldn't stay in our rooms for the screams of the
wounded."
Parts was a veritable haven, except that "we got
thin and nervous. and mother got shell-shocked at the I
front."
Her voice dropped as she recalled the mud, the
rats and an epidemic "that came like a reminder that
we were all doing something very bad."
But it was "dear Mr. Griffith.'' the man who
discovered her in 1912 and cast her in a movie with
Mary Pickford, who detemuned the course of her
long and brilliant career.
* FOR fUO l EXCITEffiEOTI V1s1t Our... * k;100•11il®!t'll*U~lffl!Nl1•
11 :30 2 :15 4 :4S 7 :30 10: IS
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a BIGCHILL
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•• ,. Mt~ • ll#n• '"' -;:<>~73----~
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CITY cenTeR ~ 61-4 2553 /ryj::-~-
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Ii 1;1eJtij1,1.tM.j§ 6) 619 a1101 ~1~~,u:)
SUl'flC INf-" Sovt>d Dir IX 1 To l'oli' Cor Roo 100r 8r '"Q kit I<:>• y I'<>• •ot:)lr
WAllELENarH
The Alien Te,,01" "'" onE•rrh' m
Plu• Time Wilker (PG)
BlGCHIU M
Plu• Tiie Survivor• (R)
EDDIE AND
THE CRUISERS R
Al10 ~1una1nce (R)
Plu• Romantic Comedy (PG)
NAT 111N111. ''""AJiDn rn 1.AMPeeN b J~ W
Plu• Tnd lng PllCH !R)
&. f:Hy MOl\ey (R)
Plu• Porky• II lR)
Her soft face set off by curls the color of
champagne, Gish showed no trace of fatigue after a
whirlwind week in the French capital that included
newspaper interviews, dinners. receptions and
televisictn appearances.
Gish never married, and many say Griffith was * Or•••I"' Open 7, 15 wuknigllh 1 1 oo w111t1nd1 *
the unspoken love of her life. , Children Under12 fret Unless Noted
"He was older than my real father, so much more., _____ _
serious and fatherly. He was a genius. a poet with a 1 _____ -::::_-_-_-::::_-_-::_-,::,::,::_::_::_::_::_::_::::::_::---1
"I suppo6e ~lent film did speak to the world in a
way you don't have today.'' she said, pressing the arm
of a reporter. "You had to write the words so you
rememember them longer. Nowadays, everything's
done for you so you can just sit there and eat
popcorn."
beautiful baritone voice." she said, smiling.
They disagreed only over her name. "What kind
of name is Gish for an actress.'' she quotes Griffith as
saying. "Gish. pish. fish. dish."
"Well, sa1d slSter Dorothy. 1f GISh was good
enough for mother. it's good enough for us."
------People in the News------
Gerald Ford entertains
Gerald ford
By Tiie AHoclated Preu
GRAND RAPIDS, Mkh. -
Former President Gerald Ford
swapped his political hat for an
entertainer's as he played emcee
for a fund-raising variety show in
his hometown.
Ford as,,isted in the dedication
of a new hotel tower Thursday
and was host for the show featur-
ing Pearl Bailey. the Beach Boys
and the comedy team of Skiles and
Hendenon.
He played it straight as he
introduced each act, quipping just
once, after the Skiles and HeT\·
denon act: "Sometimes I wiah I
had them on the stalf of the White
~-·· The show. with ticketa atartJ.ng
iat m , Wal held to tai9e money for
1.he GNnd Rapids Foundation, the
• Qerald R. Ford M~ and the
Art.I C.ound.l of Greater Grand
RaP'dl. Dw1na the Beach Boys' per·
fonnance, lead linger Mike Love
eaJd he noticed "undesirables" in
the black-de audience, an ap-
p&ren\ ttfettnce to outaoing In·
tttior Secretary James Watt'a
comment lut apring, when he aatd
he clld.n't want the group per-
forming at the Wuhtngton Monu·
ment during the Fourth of July.
At a news conference earlier in
the day Ford. referring to Watt's
resignation, said he "finally made
the right de<:ision.''
•••
PHOENIX. Ariz .
Best-selling poet Rod McKuen,
whose income once jumped from
$3,500 to more than $1 million in a
year.says "now, I look at money as
manure -it's only useful if you
spread it around."
McKuen said he once worked
odd jobs with logging and rodeos
before striking it rich with hts
writing some 20 years ago.
"I had never earned so much
money in my life. 1 never even
dreamed of it. So I felt terribly
guilty.'' he said. ''It took awhile for
me to understand how to deal with
it."
He said his biggest regret with
suCC'eSS il! his loss of anonymity.
1'Sometimes I would just like to
hang out, but I can 't do that
anymore," he said. "There are too
many people who know me."
He was here Tuesday on the
first stop of a six-week publtc1ty
tour. •••
WEST PALM BEACH. Fla
Rod McKuen
Singer Kenny Rogers has won a
$75,000 settlement from a de-
veloper who four years ago sold
him a boat that Rogers says is
unseaworthy.
The Fourth District C.ourt · of
Appeal on Wednesday upheld a
Broward C.ounty judge's ruling
that Joseph Mulhern must make
good on the settlement.
Attorneys for both sides agreed
to the payment last year after
R o gers complained the
23-year-old yacht would not float.
But Rick C.onner. an attorney for
Mulhern. argued last week that
his client never ratified the agree-
ment.
Two-thirds of the settlement is
on deposit with the court and
Mulhern was oroered to pay the
remainder within two weeks,
Rogers' lawyers said
• • •
DENVER -It took only nine
minutes Thursday for a woman to
win a $175.000/judgment, after
waiting 19 months for her slander
suit against singer Johnny Pay-
check and a member of his band to
go to trial.
Helen Espinoza. a Frontier Air·
line5 flight attendant from Aur-
ora. sued Paycheck and James W.
Murphy in March 1982 over an
Incident during a flight from
Denver to Casper. Wyo.
The suit claimed Murphy
grabbed F.spinoza by the arm and
tried to pull her into the seat next
lO him, and that Paycheck became
verbally abusive when Espinoza
asked h.lm to fasten hia .e.a\ belt .
Paycheck, best known for hi.a
hit "Take Thia Job and Shove It,"
filed for bankruptcy in September
1982, and Etplnoza'a claim ag-1nat
him was stayed until that caae waa
ret0lved.
Paycheck did not ahow up for
Thuniday's trial. ao U.S. Oiatrtct
Judge J ohn P . Moore entered a
default judgment arantlng
Espinou the $17~.ooo tn daJN88
ahesouaht.
Save money and shoppingJ~7iid°the Daily Pilal
~-----1--...:.:......--------~--,
* PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES *
• Bargain Matinees! •t't~&;~•h!•f 4] ''~) ~
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M Orange Coelt DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 17, 1983
YOU LOOK OOWN iOPAY,
GA(RFIELD. OOT I TMINK 'M EVEN OOWNER
-
by Gus Amola
by Jim Davis
rC 11 > •Slel l>ntfed r utute S ale ire
THE
•'A'91l \'
CIRCL'S
by Btl Keane
"Corry me, Mommy? I'm too heavy t o walk."
'ti \R'tl \Dl'Kt: by Brad Anderson
"Among other things ... riding a skateboard
down Fourth Avenue."
't'IOO' 'ti l 1.1,l:\S
PE.\'l TS
11 DEAR 8ROTMER SNOOPY'.
LIFE i.IERE ON TME DESERT
IS FINE ALTMOU6~
SOMETIMES LONELY''
t O If
Tl"M81..Ett ££08
'#MB '1l4E**' PUFF #r1M1Me #HISN1'Al1.. PE..RSl'ICAC11Y:)
I ,...---MMN?
Bit; tiEORGE by V1rg 1I Partch (VI P)
"I hate Mondays."
11 I 6UE5S WE ALL
JUSi NEED SOMEONE
TO fALK TO "
I
I ) ~
JL .' . I
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
by Charles M Schulz
by Tom K. Ryan
SIGH } I
MISS 1lH: OL.C7
OAYS.
I
f
Q.l -llolh vulnc:rablr, a!>
South you hold:
•A9SS2 \?QJ063 OA72 H
The bidding has pr~c:ded:
Weit North F.aat So11tll
l • Obie Pa" ?
Whal do you bid now'!
A.-OpposiLc: 11 partner who
could make a lakroul double.
you have a very Cine hand -
lhc equivalent of an opening
bid. You have a guaranteed
l'ighl card fil in Ill least one
major, but 1l 1s not 1ncom
benl 011 you to gul'~!> which
Onl'. l'ue bid two dub!> lo a~k
p11rlnl'r LO choosr Lh1· suit.
lht·n r:m1• th.it mo11or lo
l(llffit•. or rourw. 1f parlol'r
r1•,p•1n<l' 1n rilamond,, v1111
(Jn lh1·n 'how ;1iur 'pad••'
U.2 -fh S1i111 h, v11ln••r:1hlr•.
l'llU h11ld
•AUH8 li3 AKQ •QIOI
l"h1· h11fd1n1: hd' ltn11·1·1·d1·d
'outh W t1ll 'orlh t-:a"t
I • 11"" 2 • Ph'
\\ h.il IJ11) IHI h11f llflV. '
A. -\ ou h.1••· ,1 Hf) ,1r11r11o;
hJntJ v. h1d1 h,n h1·1·11 1mpnl\
1·cl hy .1 Ill 1n partn•·r'" ~u1l A
iump h11l lo ~how your
Jl DGE P .\RKER
ANNOYED 8Y HER
MOTHER'S OECISION
TO LEAVE IN THE
MORNING, SHEILA
ACCUSES HER OF
BEING MANIPULATED
6Y RAYM0ND1
SHOE
~1?()JE~~~ ~ ~S Gl<Vi.tf<.
l a:xx;MT IT ~ 'iOV C.OVW
~A.ROW Nl1lj IT -»JD
GOREN ON BllDGI ..
BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMA.A SHARIF
ANSWERS TO BRIDGE QUIZ
stn•nl(lh is app('lling. hut
you <'ltn't leap to Lhrt.'t' 1p.1d1·'
on a f1ve rard suit. nor four
duh' with only thrl'r card
supporl Wr suggul you
l1•mporiZl' by bidding two
diamond~ -a new suil hy
opc•n<'f after a two over on1•
rt''lll>fl!lt• iH rorcing. Pt1rln1·r·s
rd111l should lt•a vt· you
pt·rr1·ct ly plt1cl'll 1 o dl'<'1dr on
lh1.> l1nal con lract.
Q.3-Ne1lhcr vulner.ihlt'. a~
South you hold:
•AQl04 "984 9 K97 •AKS
Tbr h1ddin1< ha~ pr0tc1·dc·tl
North Eut • South W t8l
l-111 PaN• I + l'u•
2 l'an ?
Wh.1t .it'l11111 tfo ,V•>U l.ckc•'
A.-rr )OU ;m • luok1ni: lor
K••ffit• 1<1lh \1111r hal;1n1°1•c! I.I
pu1n1' t1f1Jl•hrL1· .i p11rl1lt'r
.,. ho p.1 "1•r1 •Jni:1no1lh . 1 tiu
•ru.tlcf) fur .111 • 111>11mr.:1 111
lh1· \1·Jr" J1<.ml \u~Jr• 1n
,1 plJ I .ihli• 'Jllll .10ff Ill' rt• I'
11•1 i.:u.1rJll!\•1· th.11 ~" h•\I'
Ml\ 111•11,.r 1·n11tr.w1 f'J".
Th" n111(ht h1· ) 11ur 1.,1 up
porl unrl' lot .c ph" "'or1·
q .4 -"' -.uuth. 1 ulfll•rahlc·.
you hold
+987532 ._,92 OAJ3 •A&
Tht· tudd1nl{ h:a~ proc.ecoded:
North Eut 011t!t Weal
J • l'H• I + P111
2 + PIH ?
Whal arllon do you Lake!
A.-Hury thl' book on point
rou11l. You have a hand with
lWO aCl'lJ, 00(' Of whirh IS in
partner's suit. Now that part
n1•t hns announrrd 11 f1l for
your six card ~utl. anything
lr~i; I h,10 four sp11drs IS a
)fro" un1h•rh1d
Q.5-"' "ovth. vuln1·r.1blt•.
\'flU hnltl
+9_, 63 Q8762 +AKQIO
Th .. h11llt1n~ h.1~ pro1·1•Nl1•d
'orth Ea~t South ~t
I + Pu~ 2 Pan
-I Pan '
Whal tlt1 \tilt hrtl no-.."
I\. -\ 1111 h.I\ ,. I h1• '.tlut'' lur
:in 1lp1·n1nl( hid fo1rr ng :i p:1r1
n1•r ¥<> h." 0111·n1>d Jnd th1·n
1ump1•il 1n \uvpor1 "' ) our
'ult In 111 h1•r .,. urd">. ) •1u ctrr
1n ,1.1rn l1•rrilur} ll1•,p111·
-~ nur ... 1-.1k lrUntf.1 ~IHI. YOU
'h11ulcl h1· h.i J1JI} lo 1n
''''lll(.111· ,1o1m \'ut-hid f1v1·
duh, II po1rtnt·r \lm fJIY
rl'lUrn' lo f111· d1.imund~. you
~~.>.~~\T .)
~ It
DR \BBi~•;
~1u~H \ NE\1€.I< ~~ ·ovc
IN 'f~I~ ~~. ~NCN ~
Mi ~o MA~~ ~Ks\
606 I~ ~Pf'O".>tO 'fO U.
A ~A~ ?M'H AME.RIC.AN
~~ ~f 'fA~S ON
1'~ ~A~~1E~l~IC-~ Of A
t>Uc.K f~ ~fNl~~l,, IN
1'~ J\)tt(,\.£. '·
can then bow oul of the IUf
lion gractfully
A.4-As Soulh. vulnerablt.
you hold.
•Q9l ~9S OAQe •AJ7e%
The bidding has proeeeded:
Nortli EHL S111tli W11&
J • Pa11 2 • Pua
2 <;;) PIH 1
Whal do you bid now't
A.-You havr the values for
gamr and an almosl surr
t'il(hl card hL 1r spades:
Nt·v1•rt h1•le~s. wt would su$
gr~I ;i 1ump to thrt'l' no
trump fhc• ~p~dl' 'u1t should
provrdt• ,, ,ourct• or lrtrk~ 111.d
rnur 1111nur 'u1l lrnMc·' rould
lw mun• ~alu.1hle ,1l no trumv
1<1th 1h1• lt•.1d rominK up lo
vour hand.
How do you choo11e 'thr·
but oprning lead? l'barln
Gorrn hu thr an1wrr. for•
copy of "Winning Oprnia1
l,ud•. 1ud 11 .85 to
"Gorra·Lead•." carr of t bie
nrw1pap.-r, P.O. Bu 259.
!'liorwood, ~.J. 076411. Mah
chrd'8 payablr to Ntw•·
paprrbook1.
by Jeff MacNelly
by Kevin Fagan
~·~ A ovc.K m.1€N01"'-
1'0 U A
f~i
PllE.1£.t4 01 M£,
1b &€.. ~
OIJLJ(1
by Lynn Johnston
oy Tom Bat1uk •·t '" \ "l~Kt:RHt:.\'
GRE.Al 1 ANOTHE P rEPlY
TU OUR FtR~T ANNuAl WfST-
VIEW HI(,~ BATILE. r.JF THE BAND~ CDMPEllilOt\i I
~ ..J/IE1H II if,
f)Jpr,;t-J(, 2
fl/JTRf !AME (}\N'i
MAKE IT'
Ye!AH, YOU
IMAGIN5D
YOO SAWM6 'T"HB L.AS1" 1"1MB
YOU we~e IN HeRe, 'f'OO,
POC ...
by George Lemont
Edward Asner (right ) and Daniel J.
Travanti battle it out in court in "A
Case of Libel."
Sbo\Ntime
'Case of Libel' makes
point on serious issue
By FRED ROTHENBERG •
Of Ille AH oclaled t>r"o
NEW YORK -"A Case of Libel." starring
Edward Asner and Daniel J. Travanti, is a t:ourtroom
d.rama that snaps and crackles from opening
statement to Jury verdict, while also making points
about an import.ant issue
Based on attorney Louis Nizer's auto-
biographical account of Quentin Reynolds' libel suit
againsLconservativecoluronist Westbrook Pegler, "A
Case of Libel," debuting on cable TV's Showtime
tonight, demonstrates that freedom of the press
doesn't give license to vindictively setting fire to
another person's reputation.
The play, written by Henry Denker, was seen on
Broadway in 1963, and then on ABC in 1968, with
Van Heflin in the Nizer role. Asner, whose character
here is named Robert Sloane, does supreme justice to
the part in tonight's re-make.
The former star of "Lou Grant," known for his
affiliation with many liberal causes, said in an
interview that he wasn't appropriate for the Pegler
role. "although I would take right-wing roles if
{they're) right for me."
In tonight's play. which w ill have seven more
showings in October and November, Sloane r~luc
t.antly accepts the case, realizing his career has
become financially solvent but morally bankrupt.
"Am I dying of suc:cess?" he asks.
Yet he knows he and his client will be dragged
through the mud. The Pegler character, named Boyd
Bendix here, believes his might makes divine right,
and he'll use his prose to spray malice at anyone who
disagrees with him.
Bendix is sued by the Reynolds' character,
Dennis Corcoran (Gordon P insent). who has become
Bendix' public punching bag. ln addiuon. Corcoran, a
heroic World War II correspondent, can't find
free-lance work because Pegler and his paper's
owners are blacklisting him.
Corcoran 's mistake was favorably reviewing a
book that criticized Bendix, unleashing a string of
diatribes from the columnist accusing Corcoran of
being immoral, cowardly and a communist.
Travanti is delectably despicable as the ~nide.
smug, self-righteous Bendix who s tands
ramrod-straight both in print and. literally. in the
withess box, attacking anybody he believes has
commurust leanings. •
Before stardom discovered T ravanti, in the role
of the compassionate Capt. Frank Furillo on "Hill
Street Blues," he made his living playing one-shot
psychopaths in various series. He sinks his fangs into
Bendix, a 180-degree turn from Travanti's recent role
as the father of a missing boy in "Adam."
The courtroom sparring between Sloane and
Bendix is heavyweight stuff all the way. Because
witnesses who could prove Bendix' vendetta have
been silenced by fear, Sloane can't prove financial
damage to hls client's career.
To prove punitive damages, he must show that
Bendix acted with malice. How he gets the wary
Bendix to cooperate is a terrific twist. made even
more remarkable because it's not Hollywood fiction ,
but the real stuff from Nizer.
Nizer said in an interview that " A Case of Libel"
cURrently i.s playing in Brussels, the Ne therlands and
France, where his role is played by President
Francois Mitt.errand's son -m-law.
'Rose' funny-sad
tale of showgirl
THE DESERT ROSE. By Larry McMurtry.
Simon & Schuster. 254 Pages. $14.95.
F.arly in her career, Harmony, the lead player in
Larry McMurtry's funny-sad novel about the gritty
side of hfe in Las Vegas, had been the prettiest casino
showgirl in town.
But that was when she was young-she got into
the busin~ when she was 17 . Now, Harmony iB
nearing 39 and, while still a beautiful woman, the
man who runs the st.age show at the Stardust Casino
thinks the time has come for Harmony to retire.
She, of course. doesn't care for the suggestion,
since she has never done any other kind of work and
really isn't bright enough to learn how to do anything
else She's a nice, sweet woman, but when she was
given an extra helping of beauty she also got a very
small dollop of intellect.
"The Desert Rose" is, largely, Harmony's story,
and It's a weU-told one. McMurtry writes very well
and he also has the. talent to write convincingly about
the opposite sex. an ability many male writ.er:s do not
have.
Despite her handicaps -she is also a born loser
whether in gambling or in selecting men -
Harmony's optimistic outlook on life never wavers
and It is this that c.arries her through some very rough
: times indeed. Times that include a husband who
·abandons Harmony and their daughter. a lover who
: • to\als their car and then steals the insurance check,
and another lover who reeds her C ratlon.1 and makes
her ill.
R~undmg out Harmony's story as a cast of umy
characters, such as the old woman next door who
raiseft goats, who help till In the colol'!I of Harmony:•
. llft .
Phil ThortJP.s
AP Books Editor
; L.M.Boyd in~~r;;:; Daily Pila
,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 17, 1983 8 $
Tonight's TV
EV£HIHO 0 LAVERNE l SHIRl.EY &
-6:00-COMPANY II D NEWS 0 SOAP
8 CHIPSPATROL «D M'A'S'H 0 ®J NFl FOOTBALL CE PEOPLE'S COURT Cl FANTASY ISLAND Em 8VTTERFllES ({) SAl.VTE 6\) THE OIL KINGDOMS a> THREE'S COMPANY ()) TIC TAC OOUGH
.., HAWAII AVE--0 m MOVIE
fl) MACNEIL/ LEHRER t t "Hands 01 A Strangler" (1961)
NEWStiOUR Mee Feuer, Dany Carr eel
6!) OCEANUS I HJ FRAOOLE AOCK
(I) C8S HEWS 1 Z l MOVIE
Qt NBC N£WS t t "Time Walker" ( 1982) Seo Mur·
'1) DICK VAN DYl<E phy. Kevin Brophy
•O)M<WIE • • * 'Rich And Famou1" (19811
CM1<11Ge Betgen. Jacql.l841ne 0lne1
I z MOVIE
* t • .. A Streetcar N&me<I De&Jre··
\ 195 t) Marlo!! B1ando, VIVICIO Leigh.
-9.15-
0 THAT8 lffCREOl8LEI
-9:30-
f) 11) NEWHART
(1)MOV1E
• • • ,,., "Sllane' ( 1953) Alan Ladd,
Jeao Arthur.
®) PEOPLE'S COORT
'1') RAClffG FROM OAK TREE
<SJ MOVIE • • "Jinxed!" (1982) Bette Mldl81,
Ken Wahl.
-10:46-
UNEWS
-11·00-
1) D ($) fl.9) ~HEWS
O TAXI
O GOHGSMOW
ti) THICKE Of THE NIGHT
CEllENHYHIU
Ui> SPORTS AMERICA
I 0) EVERYTHING GOES
Il l MOVIE
• • "F0At1ot' (1976) Pet111 O'Toolt.
Chatlolle Ramphng.
-11:30-e I.I) HART TO HART
D 9 THE BESTOf CARSON 0 SATURDAY NIGHT U ®J ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE
I HJ OLNIA NEWT()N.J()HN IN . -8:00-
CONCEJIT II (I) SCARECROW AND MRS. CHANNEL LISTINGS
($)MOVIE KIHG
t t t "Gray Lady Down" ( 1978) D ~BOONE
Charlloo Hestoo, David Carradine. O MOV!f 0 MOVIE :"\.. t t t "Sweet Hos1aoe" ( 1975) Linda * * t "The Secret Liie 01 "alt~ Blalr. Martin Sheen.
Milty" (19•7) Danny Kaye, Virginia 0 LOO GRANT
II KNXT tCBSJ LO!> Angell•' D KNBC1NBC1 Loe; Anqeh•'>
O KTLA ot11d 1 Lo·, AllQ••h•'>
Mayo C!l FANTASY ISLAND
-6:30-«D EHTERT AIHMEHT TONIGHT
0 KABC TV 1ABC1 LU!> An<Jele!:>
(I.~ '\FMB 1CBS1 S.1ro O•llgf' 0 KHJ TV (Intl I Lo>. An4t'lr•-,
~ KCST tABC1 ':>an Do<>,1rl tD ALICE CE MO\llE
6\) FACES Of CULTURE **'It "Hunters A.{e For Killmg"
(fl NEWS I 1970) Burl Reynolds. Melvyn Doug-ID 1<. l TV 1 Ind I L .,.., A"fl""''
~ WHEEL Of FORTUNE las.
c;) DRAGNET fI) THE OIL KINGDOMS
G) O{CQP TV 1 lnt.J 1 L ,.,. Anqt>I••'> f:ID KCE T TV 1 P8'>1 L 1h Anq •. 1,.-,
Cl MOVIE !Cl MOVIE 6\) KOCE TV Pf3<.,1 ~,,,,,, nqtun Be..ic.11
**'""Misty' (19611 David Laeld. **·Lucky Lady (1975) Loza Min-
Arthur O'Connell nell1. Burl Reynolds
-7:<10-IHI MOVIE ,. -10:00-
i) CBS NEWS ** "Legeno 01 The Wild" (1980) 8 l! I EMERALD POINT N.A.S
0 NBC NEWS Dan Haggerty Denver Pyle 0 «D Cl) NEWS •
0 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN 1 SI A CASE Of LIBEL 0 POUCE WOMAN
.,,. ROW"N & M RT N'S UG 0 MOVIE @)ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT u " A I LA H·IN t * * t · The Godlather Part 11" ~ MOVIE (!)NEWS -. ~ 0) THREE'S COMPANY ( 197•) Al >'acooo. Robert Duvall • ', .. Pacific Oesltny .. ( 1956) Oen-
CE JOKER'S WILD -8:30-hOlm Elliott, Susan S1ephen
EI) BUSINESS REPORT 19 J LOVE BOAT • C MOVIE ~INSIDE ORANGE COUNTY 0) P.M. MAGAZ!ffE • * • '• The Front" ( 19761 Woody
I 11 P.M. MAGAZINE ~THE SHAKESPEARE PLAYS Allen. Zero Mostel.
13') LOVE CONNECTION _9:00-I H I MOVIE
10 1 MOVIE • • .. Five Days One Summe( ( t982)
t * * .. The Deep·· 119771 Robefl 8 !f J AFTERMASH St!an Connery Be1sy B1an1ley
I ' O ~MOVIE Shaw. Jacqueline Bissel "Pol1Cewoman Centerfold" (Prem· -lO:lS-
0 IN SEARCH Of ...
&I) STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO
EI) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR
c;)700CLUB
tClMOVIE • • * ·~ "My Favorne Year ( 1982) Peler 0 T oote, JesSICa Harper
OIMOVIE
t * t •, "The faorcosr· ( 1973) Ellen
Burstyn. Londa Bla11
•SJMOVIE
"Au Patr G11ts (No Date) ·R
@ MOVIE
• • "The Toy·· I 1982) Richard Pryor
Jackie Gleason -7:05-1ere) Melody Anderson. Ed Marina10 U EYE ON LA. m ORANGE COUNTY TODAY 0 NEWS -10:30-1H1 MOVIE
-7:30-«D VEGAS CE INDEPENDENT NETWORK H t •1 ··rtie World AcCOfdlng To
-t1:55-
6 2 ON THETOWN EI) THE SHAKESPEARE PLAYS ~NEY MILLER Garp" ( 1982) Robin Williams. Mary
0 ~· AMILY._F_E_uo _____ @l DONCOR_Y_EL_L ________________ Be~ H_u_r•· __
A Salute to
Women In Bu1ine11
11 --
-12:00-a LA fOOAY
OMOVIE
•• 11> .. How Awful About AllA11
( 1970) Tony P&1kin1, Juhe Harns
(!) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
QOJ MOVIE
* t "Trilogy 01 Terror" ( 1975) Karen
Black, Rot>en Burton
-12:30-D Qt LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAH
8 TWILIGHT ZONE 0 BEST Of A.M. LOS ANGELES C!l ROWAN & MARTIN'S LAUGH-IN
«D AU IH THE FAMILY
G)-lOVE, AMERICAN STYLE
IZJMOVIE
•**'It "The World According To
Garp" (1982) Robin Wiiiiams. Mary
Beth Hurt. -12:40-
6 CIJ COLUMBO
-1:00-
U GENEAUTRY ID THE PROTECTORS
Q) NEWS w MO\llE * * •;, "The Man WhO Talks To
Whales" ( 1977) Vietor Jory
l~GEHESCOTI
t SJMOV1E
t t • "Rich And Famous" (1981)
O:anOKe Bergen, Jacqueline Bisset
• -1:10-
Cl MOVIE * "Se~ With The Stars" ( 1979) Thick
Nilson. Martin Burrows
-1:15-
@MOVIE
• t "• 'The Border" (1981) Jack
Nicholson. Valerie Perrone
-1:30-0 ~NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT
-no-
-2:45-
C MOVIE * t • L0$1 H0t11on·· I 1937) Ronald
Colman, Jane Wyatt
I H OUVIA NEWTQN..JOHN IN
CONCERT
-3:00-
1.!J MORHING STRETCH
10 1MOVIE
* * ,., Love Child' ( 1982) Amy
Madigan. Beau Bridges
!StMOVIE
t • • "Tile Sm ( 1979) An11e ~
wood, Donato Pteasence
I ZJMOVIE
t t 'The Honor Guard" ( 1981) Rod
Stelge<. David Huttman
-3:0S-
@MOVIE
• • • ·~ "The World AC<;O<ding To Garp" ( 1982) Robin W1lham1 Maty
Beth Hurt
-3;30-!!J FAITH 20
CE MARCUS WELBY, M.D.
-4:00-
(!) TOP O' THE MORNING
-4:10-·
IH)MOVIE * • "Am1tyv1lle ti Tile PossesSIOO"
( 19821 But I Young. James 016()(1
-4:25-
, S ·A CASE Of UBEL
-4:30-
( !.I BULLWINKLE
I Z MOVIE * • • "A Stree1ca1 Named Desue"
(1951) Maiton Brando, V1vN!l'I L~h
-4:4S-
C MOVIE
t •' 1 "Mosty 11961) David Ladd.
Ar1hur O'Connell 0 GENE Al/TRY
UHEWS r::
9) MOVIE i • The Siar Packer ( 1934) John I
Wayne. Verna Hollie I
0 1MOVIE
• • ··The Big S)eaJ' ( 19491 Robefl 1
1 M11cnum, Jane Greer
Classy Autos
.\dvt>rtised
e m CBS N~Tt00HTWATCH ! OJ NEWS I
in the
Daily Pilat -2:1S-
H) NOT NECESSARILY THE NEWS
The Orange Coast's
Successful Business
Professionals of 1983
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October 30, 1 i83
in the Daily Pilot National Women in Business is October 16
through 22 . To honor area women in business,
industry and commerce, the Daily Pilot will publish a
special tribute i'n its October 30 edition.
A tribute to the
Orar1ge Coast's
SUCCESSFUL WOMEN
in business
llllJ Plllt -
642-5611
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Our salute to Business and Professlonal•Women
Is an exceptional opportunity to Introduce. a new or
longtime associate to the people of the Orange ..
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I
Ill O~enge Coaat DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 17. 1983
-STOCKS
Munday'• 11 a.m. (POT) erleee
M ir' f'rfpt ........ NP
p f ~0\ \ IOY \ nq 'j l "i.J' Cl1.1\f' C~
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANS ACTIONS
OUOIATIOHIS INClUOf TRAD£$ ON fHl HI W YOAi( MIOWUl ltACIFIC PQW IOlllOH. D£H\OlT ANO CINCINNATI ITOCk lllCHA~ ANO lllfPO"lto I V THf NASO INSTIHET
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U.S. money supply falls
$1.1 billion in October
By U1e AH~lltff PrtH
NEW YORK -The bulc measure of the U.S money
aupply fell $1.l billion 1,n early October, the Federal Reterve
Board' aaya. Economiata Lnterpret.ed the report as a sign thAt
the Fed, in it.s role as man.ager of the nation'• monetary policy,
waa unlikely to puah interest rates higher any time soon.
U.S. business in ventories rise . ,,
WASHINGTON -Inventories held by U.S buaineaes
rose 1.2 peroent in August, the largest gain since spring 1980,
as retailers restocked their shelves at the fastest pace ln more
than 12 years, the Corrunerce DepartmenL says. Continuing
increases in production, amid a.modest gain in sales, allowed
for the overall accumulation of stocks, which had been
severely depleted through the recession, eoonorni5ta said.
Consumers cred it i1Jcr ease down
WASHINGTON (AP) -Consumers took on $3.39 billion
more in installment debt than they paid off during August.
the Federal Reserve Board reports. The overall net increase in
credit amounted to an annual growth rate of 11.25 percent
compared with 16.5 percent growth recorded when the
increase hit a monthly record of $4.84 billion in July, the
central bank reported.
1,350 GM workers to lose jobs
DETROIT -About 1,350 workers will lose thelr jobs a~
General Motors Corp.'s Flint, Mich., manufacturing complel(
next summer when engine production is halt.eel there, thtt
automaker said. GM said the L6 six-cylinder engine built at
the Flint motor p~t in the complex will not be offered on GM
vehicles after the 1984 model year, which ends next Sept. 30.
Dow Ch emical gives up battle
WASHINGTON -Dow Chemical Co. has given up i~
$10million fight for the right \0 market the herbicide 2.,4,~-T..
in the United Stat.es. The government has severely restricted
the chemical's use since 1979. because it contains traces of the
dangerous contaminant dioxin.
IBM earmings rise 25 p ercent
NEW YORK -lntemallona.l Businea Machines Corp.
said its third-quarter earnings rose 25 percent from the
year-earlier period on a 15 percent revenue gain. Separately1 a Boston research house said IBM will unveil it.t
much-awaited home computer on Nov . 1 and expects to ship
about 90,000 of the machines thlS year
Dollar falls; gold fluc tuates
LONDON -The dollar fell agamst all major currenci8
in early trading today, undercut by expectations of declines~
U.S. interest rates. Gold prices edged above the
$400-an-ounce barrier in the early going, but then feU
sharply. Dealers attributed the dollar's retreat to a Federal
Reserve Board report of a $1. I billion decline in the basic U.S.
money supply. known as M 1. The drop was sharper than
expect.eel.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
WHAT NYSE DID
NEW YOllK IAPI Oct IJ
Tod•• "' ... ,,.
19'3 lf 11
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW YORK IAPI Oct. ll
AOvl tQCI T OOl~<IO
~":.a m To1a11u.,., I I> ...... llloll• I)
NI'* Jowl I
METALS
Pr1v .,..
~ lo.t J96 . ...
71 lS
NEW VOAK (API SPol "°"*'°"" '""'°' P<-•oc1av c:.,... 100;.13 '*''" • oouno u s Olt!lnellont c:.,... · 66 80 oenta p.< l>OVflO NV (;c)fN, apol monrh CIOMO ,,,
L__, • 2 & c.tll 1 e pouno
Zlftc • 411 centa e PDUllCI -CICI
Tift• M $ll()2 Molele W-CompcNtl• 11>
A-.-I l C.-11 e -nci H V
""--' • t330 004350 oo '* 1e io 11...i. -·Of\ ,......_ • 1-400 OO·a40S40 oom .. 1" fnlfct1a1111tov ou~. N v
SILVER
...... t IO°'° Hand't .. Hatman (only OIW!y ClllOl•I u-• 10 an '* troy ou~. NV Come• llj)OI MOllll\ Cio.ecl Flt
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
SYMBOLS
DOW JONES AYERACES
lOtno
tOTrn ISUll us" 1nou1 Tran um, .S Stk
AMERICAN LUDERS
NS
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I
-------~
Daily Pilat
MONDAY, OOT. 17, 1983
cs k ~ClASSlf Ill
..__ ________________________ .~------------------------------
. --
~-· --.
-
Top 10
_,_. PTM. __ v_ALL_v_ orange Conn t y
...._ IS·I) r'9tVm ..... "-...... Wlle11111e W"1m1Mtw,
IJ·l. Annual ~ (IEdlMlll aw•"' P'ridlly et .. A.
SM KMI 16·0) .........,...,... __
amille .,....... In leW1ll
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Mela ......... , occ.
Oller't IS· ll, led bV Dant1Y Theme1en, MM flff ..._.,, Wiii In
.,..", INYM -· ..... -·tl'wm·'*'INI ~ -IEllMI\.
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Valle¥, 27·0. T1'l1 .................
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Mann.n CS· II '*!·
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....
'
High School
Football
Thi• WHk'• achedule
(7:30 p.m.)
THURSDAY
Aneetus LH9U4
Plus X v1. Mltw Del at S.nta
AM Stadium
Century Lff9U4
FootNI at El Modtnl
EmOlre LHVU.
LMra VS. CYPf'flS If Wfft·
em Gardin Grove Leaeu1
Los Aml•H VS. Slntla90 If
Gardin Grove
Ora"'" Lneue
SIVIMI VS.. Mlenofla It LI Palma Plrll
Non-INeu• Et1w1nct. vs. Woodbf1d91 If
Irvine
FRIDAY
SUnMt LN9Ua
Eels.on VI. Fountain v ... v 1t
AMMlm Shlclum
Ocean View If Htn. Beadl
MlrlM at WMtmlnsfet'
S.. View LN9U4
Sldcleblcll 1t N1wPOrt
Cc:IM n. Costa Mesa at OCC
Estancia 1t lrvlne
Unlvenltv vs. El Toro 1t Minion Vltlo
S4Mlth Co.st LHeue
Minion VltlO 1t LaeuM
BHdl
U9UNI H•s at CaPO v1 .. v Sin Cltmtnt9 If DINI H•s Ctnturv League
C.nvon vs. Santa Ana et
S.nt1 Ana Stadium
Slntl Ana V11tv vs. v•a Pal11 at El Modtnl Orantit at Tustin
Empire League
Esperania vs. Ktnnectv at
Wfftwn
Les Alaml'-• vs. Ka'* 1t
LI Plfma Par'll
,rHWIV Lff9Ue
s.not1 at Buent P1rtr
SUMV H•s It FVltmln
Trev It LI Hlbtl
Gardin Grove LH9UI ..... Grande at lltandlO
~at Glrd9'1 Grove
Aneetua Lfftue S«vtte at a11NP AIMt
St. ,....,. at Serra
SATUlltOAY
• .,,..,. Lff9Ue
El Otnde n . ~IClfka It ..... Grande
0rlftll9LN9Ue VaMftdl VL AMMtln at Le
~*"' ~·rll .,_.Olf* at W"tem
Rallls' script
predictable
By CURT SEEDEN
Of llM Oellr l'llol Si.II
If the Rams were a weekly
television show, the critics would
only frown and sigh and then say
"same old ending."
Big moments
Fortunately for the Rams. an
unfavorable review by the critics
doesn't always mean disaster -
as long as the viewefs like them.
Sunday afternoon, the Rams
borrowed the same old plot line
-much to the delight of 50,404
viewers at Anaheim Stadium -
to stun the Atlanta Falcons, 27 -21.
John D'Elia and crewman Jack
Rea (above) celebrate captur~
ing the checkered flag in the
Off shore 4 (production) class
Sunday at the Bud Warm-
ington International Grand
This time, it was a 2-yard
touchdown pass from Vince F er-
ragamo to Mike Guman with just
17 seconds remaining in the game
that gave the Rams their fifth
pacemaker-jarring win against
two defeats.
. Prix. Al Copeland's Popeyes
(left) was the big winner~
Nicky Cutro's Boardwalk was "It was no big deal -we knew
we were going to win," noted
Rams Coach John Robinson, add-
ing new meaning to the word
"facetious."
· flying high in the Class SA
race, but linished·seeond.
Dtiltr .......... llr Lee l'l)'M
Indeed, Robinson was worried.
His playe?'S were flat in practice
and they were flat in the first
half.
"I was scared all week. Finally,
I kicked them off the practice
field one day," Robinson ad-
mitted.
He felt like doing the same
thing Sunday on a lazy, hazy
afternoon which sta.rt.ed with At·
lanta quarterback Steve
Bartkowski guiding the Falcons
Copeland an easy victor
His Pope yes. entry takes open class; Cook I ails
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Oellr l"llot ... 11"11 Writ ..
To no one's great surprise. Al Copeland and crew
pushed theii: 50-f90t Cougar. Popeyes-Pepsi
Challenger, to a decisive win in the Open Class of the
first Bud Warmington Grand Prix offshore power
boat race Sunday. 1
The only surprise in the Jefferson La. driver's
victory was that his average speed for the 200
nautical mile course was only LJL'.
82.15mphcomparedwiththe120 1 · r
mph the big boat is reputedly p
capable of. Copeland's crew were •
Bill Sirois and Stan Ware.
Copeland said minor mech-
anical pro~ms in the early part
of the race lnd rough seas across
the Catalina Channel slowed the f
boat at times. _ .--1L..A1.-
But there were other sur-AL COP£LANO
prises. Twenty-four boats started the race in smooth
seas of the Newport Pier but only 10 made it across
the finish line.
Former national and w orld champion Betty
Cook of Newport Beach was the first victim of
mechanical failure, being knocked out of the race
before reaching the first checkpoint at South
Laguna. Cook and her crew brought Kaama back to
Newport under the boat's own power.
Despite Copeland's win, he had no chance of
taking the point lead because he had finished only
two raC'es in the national circuit previous to tl)e
Warmington race. ,
Po~yes and Fayva were the only two boats to
finish in Class I. Others out with mechanical
problems were Jerry Jacoby's Super Brute; Tony
. Garcia's Arneson Special, and Cook's Kaama.
Winner in the Offshore II (Sports) Class was
Caliente, driven by David Milani of Roseville. Second
was Karl Koster's Kal Kustom, Los Altos; third was
Lew Cooper's Miss Gallo Wine. Bloof!lfield Hills.
Mich . and fourth was Peter Rothschild's Thunder-·
balls, Newport Beach. Gus Falcon's Seahawk, Miami,
Fla., did not finish.
Oo-la-la, drive.aa..Joey Ratner, Miami, wast•
winner in the Offshore Ill (modified) Class. Seco--na-
was Seahawk, Sal Magluta, also from Miami, and
third was Dick Fullam's Still Crazy out of Nassau,
Bahamas.
Special Edition, driven by John D'Elia, Green-
wich, Conn .. took the checkered flag in the Offshore
IV Class, followed by Peter Aitkin's Black Duck,
South Norwalk, Conn .. and Gary Parker's Hot Stuff .
San Dimas.
ln the Ofshore VA Class the winner was Tabu,
driven by Walter Beasly, Boynton Beach, Fla. Second
was Nicky Cutro's Boardwalk, Lake George, N.Y.
Pro football
scores
R•m• rt, F1lcona 21
S.•h•wka 38, A.Iden 38
Dolphlna 32, Jet1 14
Vlkfnga 34, Ollera 14
4hr• 32, 81lnt1 13
Cardin••• M, BUCI rt
Pate 37, Ch•rgere 21
Ltona 31, Beare 17
8tMlera 44, BrowM 17
Biiia 30, Cotta 7
Broncoa 2A, .tno•la 17
Chtefa 38, G nta 17
Cowboy• 37, EaglH 7
63 yards in 9 plays in a time span
of 4:35.
He felt like doing it when Rams
running back Eric Dickerson ran
into stone wall after stone wall
from the Atlanta defense ,
prompting someone to mumble,
"Hey. haven 't they (the Falcons)
been reading about him?"
(See RAMS. Page C!)
,.,___......
Greatest surprise of the day was the failure of
the 38-foot Cougar. Michelob Light, driven by Tom
Gentry of Honolulu, to finish the course. The dropout
moved George Morales' Fayva, which finished
second behind Popeyes. in to first first place in driver
points.
Hundreds of boats, jammed to the gunwales
with humanity, lined the race course from Hunt-
ington Beach to the Newport Jetty. The weatherman
cooperated with ideal weather and smooth seas for
the first leg of the course.
Triumphant Orioles Rick Dempsey
and pitcher Scott McGregor embrace.
Eight miscues
burn Raiders
SEATTLE (AP) -Jim Plunkett, a veteran of 13
years of the National Football League wars. has had
his bad days but S unday may have been his worst.
At least it was his worst this season.
"I suppose it was me, I don't know," said the
subdued Plunkett. "l feel bad because I put the
defense in a bad position. I was embarrassed. [ was
happy to come out of there."
Seattle's high-pressure defense victimized the
much-decorated 1970 Heisman Trophy winner from
Stanford, causing him to ma ke five o( eight LA
Raiders turnovers in a 38-36 National Football
League upset by the Seahawks.
The Seahawks' offense didn't do much but fleet
Paul Johns scored on a dazzling 75-yard punt return
in a 31 -point Seattle second half and the defense and
special teams cot'ltained the Raiders and helped force
the turnovers.
Marc Wilson replaced.Plunkett in the final 4:32
and threw two touchdown passes in the last minute to
make the final outcome seem closer than it actually
was.
"We did some different things on defense."
Seattle Coach Chuck Knox said. "We (red) dogged
•and blitzed. It's a gamble and a calculated r~k but if•
you give Plunkett all day, he'll flnd &0meone open."
Afterwar<f,'Raide rs '°8ch Tom Florea was asked
if Wilson, the club's No. 1 draft choice in 1980, had
earned the team's starting quarterback job. ahead of.
Plunke\t, who has been inten:epted 13 times in seven
games this season. .
"We're not going tD make any draatlc changes,"
Flores replied. "These things happen. You've juatgot
to bite tht' bullet and see that they don't happel')-
agaln."
•
Baltimore
celebrates
series title
BAL TI MORE (AP)
Thousands of Oriole Cans
broke into a noisy celebration
Sunday night of Baltimore's
third World Series cham-
pionship, crowding the city's
streets and ban to cheer their
ballclub.
About 30,000 fans welcomed
the Oriolet back to Memorial
Stadium from Phil9delph1a
early Monday,· police Lt.
Philip Farace'u£d,
}lundredt of fana had alf.eedy arrived at the ballpetk
m.lnuta afte-r the Orioles beat
\he PhWla 6-0 '° wil\ the Se.nee 1n ftw pmee.
1'Tbere ts one~ of a Cll'OWd fonnln& •t th4t atad.lum,., laid
police officer wuu.m hr\onc.
A tour-block am ~ the
ballpark was cloled to trafftc.
F\alona ..ud ·~ of&el'I -"u QW\Y a1 we can' lour
ha.ndaon•• -wen ~..ii.d
in from ~ around the
dty '° help Qep ordet>. In downtown BaltUnon.
hundreda of fana UMd UM
maJol' IA~ wavtnc
bannel'I and uf8jftl pel9tna
motorit\a to honk tt)elr homa.
r
Orioles upstage .
Fa.ther Tiine, Phils
And because of it., Baltimore is celebrating
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
They are a team of role players, a
baseball club assembled like an
army that comes at you in waves.
row after row of fresh troops.
And the Baltimore Orioles are
the world champions today be-
cause they have mastered platoon
baseball, a game that depenc¥ on
movjng players like chess pieces
to suit situationa.
This Is not a team of greats, but
it's a great team.
The general in charge of this
battalion of spare parts Is Joe
Altobelli, a &0ft-1poken ' man
whose club met the enero.y at
Philadelphia and wiped them out
ln five games .
"Now," he said, "I can go home
and see my grand-kids."
The last time Baltimore was in
a World Series was 1979, when
the manager was Earl Weaver, a
fiery Napoleon type. The Birds
led that Series S-1 -just like
ihey did against Philadelphia.
But they let Pltttburgh off the
hook that year, loslnt in aeven
games, only the £lhh time ln his-
tory a team has blown that kind
of edge. This time. with ~n.
Altobelli ·calling the shots and tr>
•
.. . .
troops from that team still in
Baltimore's army. the story had a
ditrerent ending.
"He's the smartest guy I
know," observed Eddie Murray,
who battled his way out of a
2-for-16 Series slump with a pair
of mammoth home runs and a
single in Sunday's 5-0 wrapup
victory. "He put the r ight nine
out there every day."
Not the same nine, but the right
nine.
The difference between
Weaver and AltDbelli is mainly in · '
style. 0'e was a screamer and the
other is not. _
"They were both outttanding
managers," said Rick Dempeey •
the Series Most Valuable Player,
who had Baltimore's other two
hits · Sunday -a double and
homer -and batted .385 for the
Serles with five hits. all for extra
bases. ''When Joe came in, there
was no yelling and screaming."
Ge n . Altobelli prefeflld a
low•key approach.
"Obviously, tt'1 quieter ln the-
dugout," said Scott McGregor,
whose five-hit shutout finiahed'
tht.' Phillies and helped llOOthe the
{See ORIOLES, Pase C•)
·'
,
C2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 17. 1983
SPORTS BREAK Muldown ey wins drag cro wn Ch hi h • ) d -~=!~~h~~~~~i:,~"r,£~ II argers ow 1g ea 1
Celtics, 76er s square
off e arly -and it's
only an exhibition
~:ti~ ~;1 ~as~~t~~natw~ion w orld 49ers rally , drop Saints with Wers ching's foot
Finals at Orange County International Raceway.
From AP dispatches
BOSTON -Three brawls -With m
Moses MaJone, Larry Bird. Cedric
Maxwell, Gerald Henderson and Marc
lavaroni involved in separate mcidents
-marred Boston's 99-86 Nauonal Basketball
Association exh1bitfon victory over the Philadel-
phia 76ers Sunday night.
Bird. Iavaroni and Henderson were ejeet.ed in
the contest that saw Celtics president and General
[
Manager Red Auerbach race
from his seat in the stands onto
. the court and Ph1ladelph1a
1 Coach Billy Cunningham have
,.,.. 1 his sport coat ripped apart.
· Malone, the 76ers' cenLer
I
1 and the NBA's Most Valuable
{ ~ • Jl Pl<:lyer last year. and Maxwell lf tangled with the game less I ~ than 2 1 1 minutes old. Max-
well. the veteran Boston for-
AUEABACH ward, took away a rebound
from Malol)e and threw the ball at close range,
hitting Malone on the side of the head.
The Philadelphia center charged Maxwell
and the two players. along with Philadelphia
guard Andrew Toney, went crashing to the floor
under the Boston basket The players were
separated quickly and Maxwell was given a
techrucal foul for unsportsmanlike conduct.
Malone was given a loose-ball foul.
A couple of minutes later, Bird, the Celtics'
all-NBA forward. and Iavarom exchanged
punches and both were ejected.
The fight started after center Robert Parish of
the Ce! tics sank the second of two free throws just
3:40 into the game. Bird went after the Philadel-
phia forward before he was restrained.
Quote of the day
Commented Rams offensive tackle
Jackie Slater after his fight with Atlanta's
Andrew Provence Sunday. "It was a
misunderstanding. I thought he did some-
thing to me. he thought I did something to
him. By then we were rolling around. We
both realized we had nothing to fight about.
But we were already on the bottom oC the
pile:·
Muldowney won her flr1t nice since the
season-opening Winternationals ln February.
de(eating Joe Amato of Old Forge1 Pa . 1n the Clnal
round of the 19th annu~l event.
Muldowney's pinR dragster covered the
quarter mile an 5.63 seconds at a speed ot 246.57
mph. Amato's tires lost traction and h e trailed at
11 75 seconds and 67 92 mp~
Muldowney drove the car In wtuch she won
four races and the 1982 world l'hamp1onsh1p for
the first time since last October. ··we brought 'Old Reliable' out of mothballs.
and 1t ran good," said Muldowney, who finished
fourth m the hnal world championship standings
behmd winner Gary Beck of El Toro.
Beck fell victtm to a broken transmission in
the second round, losing to Richard Tharp of
Dallas In the opening round, Beck established a
national elapsed time record at 5.39 seconds.
Dra m a tic Rider Cup finish
PALM BEACH GARDENS. Fla. n
-Tom Watson won the clinching, final
m<iu:h but dramatic comebacks by
Fuzzy Zoell~r and Lanny Wadkins
provided the keys Sunday to the United States'
one-point victory against a gntty European team
an the biennial Ryder Cup Matches.
The Untted States won the matches
14 1'2-13 Y2 and were 6 1•z -5 112 in Sunday's conclud-
ing singles matches.
The Americans now have a rerord of 21
v1t•tories. three losses and a single ue in the
matches that date back to 1927 when Samuel
Ryder, a wealthy British seed merchant, put up
the silver trophy for t·ompetluon between leading
professionals on both sides of the Atlantic.
The Europeans, who neither have won nor
tied at any time when the t'Ompetition was held in
the United States, took it to the last two matches on
the steamy, 7,137-yard PGA National Golf Club
<.'OUrse.
The overall matches were tied 13-13, with
Jose-Maria Canizares of Spain 1-up on Wadkins,
and Watson l-up on Bernard Gallacher of
Scotland.
Lake rs look sharp., 131-1 l 3
INGLEWOOD -Larry Spriggs m
scored 23 points and Michael Cooper
added 17 as the Lakers defeated the
Seattle SuperSonics 131 -113 in an
National Basketball Association exhibition game
Sunday night at the Forum.
R acer killed a t Riverside The victory raised the Lakers' rerord to 1-3
while Seattle's mark fell to 2-3
RfVERSIDE -Driver John Goss •
died in the twisted wreckage of his
sports car after slamming into a
The Lakers built a 35-pomt lead, 76-41.
midway through the second quarter behind
scoring Spriggs and Cooper Spriggs was a perfect
7-7 at the freethrow line
concrete barrier during a vantage car
race at R1vers1de international Raceway Sunday.
Goss. 40. of Santa Barbara, was trapped in the
mangled car and county firefighters 1.r1ed for more
than 45 minutes to frtt him His body was finally
removed and taken away by the county coroner.
T e levisio n., ra dio
TV: NFL Football -Washington ;,it Green
Bay. 6 p.m .. Channel 7
RADIO! No events scheduled
A real Sweet award
Loug h Mem o rial h on ors Newport teacher
By ALMON LOCXABEY
Dally Pilot Boating Writer
Richard B (Dick) Sweet, a
Newpon Beach school teacher
was presented the Richard H.
Lough Memorial Award Satur-
day at the Pacific Coast Inter-
collegiate Yacht Racing Associa-
tion Reunion at Newport Harbor
Yacht Club.
Several hundred collegiate sail-
ors from a dozen !iChools turned
out to honor Sweet who has de-
voted most of his adult life to
training youg sailors both on the
college level and 1n the Newport
Harbor Yacht Club Non-Calm
(Junior) program
He was the second rec1p1ent of
the coveted award which honors
the late Richard H. Lough. a
handicapped sailor who was con-
sidered one of the top connthian
sailors in Sou them Cahfomia and
champion in several classes.
Lough was a victim of polio and
BOA TING
had to be carried and placed in
the c.'OCkpit of a boat before the
start oC every race in which he
part1ci pated.
Sweet was responsible for or-
ganizing the sailing team at UCJ
and was the team coach for a
number of years. He 1s also the
donor of the Sweet Trophy for
the PCIYRA lntennediate Sloop
Championship in 30-foot Shields
Class sloops. He was inducted into
the PCIYRA Hall of Fame in 1973
for hlS sailing exploits at UC
Sant.a Barbara in 1948.
Sweet was the second recipient
of the Lough Award The f1rs1
was Robert M. Allan Jr .. staff
commodore of Newport Harbor
Yacht Club who helped organize
collegiate sailing while a studenl
at Stanford in 1942. Allan was
inducted into the HaU of Fame in
1969
Bang Bang Max well wins
Bang Bang Maxwell. skippered
by Kathy Adamson of Dana Point
Yacht Club was the overall win-
ner in the Spinnaker Class for the
Peggy Gregory Trophy in the
Orange County Women's Ocean
Racing Series.
Fifth and flnal ral'e of the series
was held Saturday out or Bahia
Connttuan Yacht Club.
Winner of the final rac.-e was
Rock N Roll. skippered by Sue
Rogers, Dana Point Yacht Club.
second was Bang Bang Maxwell.
and third was Gandalt. Susan
Jones, DPYC
Winner in the Non-Spinnaker
Class was Gandalf. sluppered by
Maryanne Nehrbas, DPYC
TM OCWORS is sailed m Per-
fonnance Handicap Racing F1ect
yachts over ocean courses The
series was inaugurated by Peggy
Gregory tQ give women sklppeN
and their aU-Cernale crews a
chance to prove their sailing sk1llS
2 Bullet. Dick Brown, BCYC.
3.Asap. Orchard/Thompson,
Capistrano Bay YC
SOLING -1 Gaston Oruz
Balboa YC. 2 Steve Beck, BYC.
3 Chris Jones. Wind;ammers YC
SA.BOT A -1. Eric Proul.
Balboa YC. 2 Juhe Nonnan,
BCYC: 3. Carohne Ulander, BYC
SABOT B -1. Allyson Dunn,
BCYC; 2. Claire Roberts, BYC. 3
Sheryl Mills. BCYC.
SABOT C -Sus.an Minton,
BCYC; 2. Stephen Lord, BYC, 3
Randy Cicero, BCYC
LUDERS-l6 Lollipop .
Karen Blue, BCYC, 2 KHdee.
Ben Hromadka, Capistrano Bay
YC; 3. Midnight Rose, Jerry
Saba. Ca1Homla YC
SNIPE -l Trappa-Ley. San
Diego YC, 2 Kleier-Baum. Santa
Clara Racing Assn.. 3. Kevin
Cassel. BCYC
without the aid of men 40
TheOCWORS race was held In turn OUt
ron)UnctJon with BCYC's CXto-
berfest Regalt.11.,Tht winners.
PHRF -ln~nse. Art CutelJH,
BCYC. 2 l..lckety Spht, Joe De·
tienhardt, BCYC: 3 Le Boat. Don
and Chrta Lebeau, BCYC
MOttC 1 P lan D .
Rogers/Ruthttrford. Balboa YC, ,,
r
Forty boat.a tumro ou1 Suncfay
for Lado [sle YDcht Club's FaU
fWgatta for small boata sailed In
sjde the bay The wlnneni:
LIOO •• " ~ • -I '-ov Wooh•v LIYC '
M•rlV LOCklleV I.IV(
)el1o A L I -I Mar-~r•n<o LIYC 1
Hllerv 8•~1fl LIYC
S.00< C -"'9t111 Gr0<k• I 1vc;.
I'\
I
Dirk Sw~ct
Snow repeats
• tennis crown
Randy Snow of Dallas success-
fully defended his national title
for the second straight year Sun-
day. sweeping past Laguna
N1guel's Brad Parks for the third
straight tifl1e in the finals of the
U S National Championships of
Wh~khair Tennis at the Racq~
Club of Irvine
Snow jumped to a 6-0 advan-
tage 1n the f1r..l set. but had to
rally for a 6-1 verdict m the third
set after Parks rallied for a 6-4
S(>t.'Ond set victory.
P.arks. With a n 8-2 edge on
Snow during the year, '" ranked
No. l m the world. ahead of
Snow. but the Texan held his
three-year JIOX over Parks in the
national finals
In women's singles finals play,
defending champion Marilyn
HamllLOn of Fresno repeated her
championship victory over
Canion's Becky White ln the
finals. loggin, a 6-2. 7-6 vic\.ory
Anteaters absorb
two losses in polo
LOS ANGELES ..:... tJc Irvine's
water polo squad suffered a pair
o ( setbacks Sunday In the
l'CAA-Pac-10 tournament. drop·
ping their overall record in the
tourney to 1-2-l
The Anteaters were 9-7 victims
of UCLA in their opener. then
Ml to 1tw host USC Trojans, 10-9
Senior Mike Evans te0red th~
limes 1n each game. The loas
drops the Anteaters' overall re-
cord to 10·8·2 (1 -0 in PCAA play)
Next ror UCI 11 Fresno State
Frldoy evenfni (7) at ~wport
Horbor H.i(ih In a PCAA mat.ch.
From AP dl1patcbet
FOXBORO, Mau. -Rick Sanford sparked a
second-half defensive surge that wiped out San
Diego's first-half offensive domination and lifted the
New England Patriots to a 37-21 comeback victory
over the Chargers in the Nauonal Football League
Sunday.
"We capitalized on some plays, things th.at
haven't happened here tn a long time. We have
confidence in our defense," said Sanford, whoee
interception and fumble recovery led to 10 points as.._.......,...___,
the Patriots outBCOred the Chargers 27 -0 in the second
half.
"The momentum changed," said Chargers'
comerback Gill Byrd. "When momentum changes, a
team gets hot and it seems like they can'tdo anything
wrong and that's what happened."
The Chargeraheld a 427-347 yardage advantage
for the game, but were outgained 215 yards to 178
yards in the second half when they lost the ball twice
on fumbles and once on an jnterception.
"We let ourselves down in the second half," satd
San Diego Coach Don Coryell. "Our offense was
putting the defense in a hole."
Elsewhere in the NFL Sunday·
49ers 3.2, Saints 13
Patience, said San Francisco quarterback Joe
Montana -that and the strong right leg oC kicker
Ray Wersching -gave the 49ers their victory over
the New Orleans Saints.
San Francisco exploded for 26 points in che
second half.
The 49ers went into mtennission trailing 13-6.
"We just weren't moving the ball," Montana said
after the game. "But we could be patient because our
defense was playing super."
Wersching kicked six field goals, the most he's
ever kicked in a game and the most ever by a San
Francisco kicker in a game. His longest was from 52
yards, another per90nal record.
"l just feel fortunate to have had all those
attempts in this place It's a great place to kick."
Wersching said.
He said even after 11 years as a pro~ional
player, it's still exciting to have that sort of a aay.
"[l's a great up for you. You feel great-just sort
of relaxed," he said. •
Biiis 30, Colts 7
Joe Ferguson passed for three touchdowns and
Joe Danelo kicked three field goals as Buffalo
tromped the upstart Baltimore Colts.
Battling for first place in the American
Conference East with the Colts. who entered this
season with only two wins in the past two yea.rs, the
Bills broke the game open with 24 points in the last 17
mmutes of the first half.
Chie fs 38, Giants l 7
BiU Kenney. a product of San Clemente High
and Saddleback CoUege, threw for a career-high 342
yards and Durwood Roquemore returned an inter-
cept10n 42 yards for the go-ahead score for the Chiefs.
4-3. TheGiants,2-5. led 17-lOlatein the third quarter
when Kenney threw 46 yards for a touchdown to
Henry Marshall Roquemore intercepted on the next
series
0.HAG K£NMEY WHl'Ta
NFL ROUND UP
Cowboys 31, Eagles 7
In D~Uas, Danny White threw for two touch-
downsas theunbeatenCowboys fell behind 7-3 m the
first quarter, then rolled over the 3-4 Eagles. The
Cowboys' 7-0 start is the best in their history
Dolphins 32 • .le ts l 4
Dolphin rookie Dan Marino tossed three touch-
down passes. including a 66-yarder to Nat Moore
against the Jets, 3.4. They also picked oCf six passes-
three by William Judson -including Kim
Bokamper's 24-yard touchdown return with a tipped
pas.5.
t'lldnl/S 34, Oilers 14
Defensive end Neil Elshire led a defense that
forced six Houston fumbles as the NFC Cen-
tral-leading Vikings improved their mark to 5-2.
Elshire's jolting tackle oC quarterback Gifford
Neilsen in the first quarter forced a fumble that
Charlie Johnson ran back 50 yards for a touchdown.
Broneos .24, Ben11als J 7
Steve DeBerg flipped a seven-yard touchdown
pas.5 to Rick Parros with 6:57 reroaining as Denver.
4-3, snapped a five-game home losing streak
Cincinnati fell to 1·6. ·
Lions 31. Be•rs l 7
Billy Sims scored his first touchdown of the year
and Eric Hipple and Gary Daruelson each threw a
touchdown pas.5 to lead Detroit. 3-4. to its win over
Chicago. 2-5.
C•rdln•ls 34. Bues 27
Neil Lomax threw for three LOuchdowns as the
Cardinals, 2-5, extended the Sues' w1nJess streak to
seven games. Two of the TD passes went to tight errd
Doug Marsh.
Steelers 44, Browns 17
Pittsburgh's offensive defense conunue<l as the
Steelers picked off six Brian Sipe passes. including a
31-yard TD return by Mike Merriweather with three
minutes gone in the game. Rookie defensive back
Doug Best returned a fumble 94 yards for a
touchdown m the f1naJ nunute. givmg the Steelers
5-2, five defensive touchdowns m two games
RAMS KEEP ON WINNING ...
From Page C 1
ln reality, while the ending
looked Camillar, Robinson did in-
deed change the plot lme. The
plan was to pas.5, and Ferragamo
didn't need cue cards.
back which found the Hams down
21-7 w1 th 3·05 elapsed in the third
quarter.
Andrews from breaking any 30 or
40-yard runs:· noted Johnnie
Johnson
"We wanted to throw the ball
against them and we succeeded."
Robinson said. "We wanted to be
effective passing the ball We
were concerned that we had be-
come too one-sided in our of·
tense."
"[think they were expecting us
to run. [ don't know why," dead-
panned Ferragamo.
''[ don't know what the prob-
lem was today." Ram offensive
guard Dennis Plarrah said after·
ward. "It might not have looked
like we were trying. We were just
flat. The season's so long and
sometimes you have a tendency to
look at 1t as a long tunnel.•·
The Falcons know where Har-
rah's coming from. They've drop-
ped four in a row and are now 2-5.
despite boasting the NFL's top
quanerback in Bartkowski and
the league's No. 2 running back
(behind Dickerson) in veteran
William Andrews.
"We did a fairly decent job or
stopping Bartkowski and we kept
"We slowed down Andrews.
but we never stopped htm ...
added Robinson. For the r«'Ord.
Andrews picked up 82 yards on
18 carries while Dickerson gamed
64 yards on 29 carries.
Ferragamo completed 23 of 36
passes for 247 yards and survlVed
a first-quarter rumble and a
fourth quarter interception by At-
lanta's Bob Glazebrook with 5:07
remaining and the score tied at 21
Mike Barber was on the receiv-
ing end of six of Ferragamo's
passes. tops on the team Sunday
Yet. ironically. Barber called at
his worst game of the year.
The fact is, the Rams 'own a
share of first place in the NFC
West because of Ferragamo's
pas.5ing. some big defensive
stands in the second half and a
very big pass interference call
which set up the winning-touch-
down with 2~ seconds left m the
game.
Comerback Kenny Johnson
was the guilty party on the play
as Ferragamo tried to hit Otis
Grant in the end zone from the
Fakon 17-yard hne. The play oc-
curred on a second down situation
alter Johnnie Johnson returned
an Atlanta punt 22 yards to the
Falcon 43 with 2: l5 left in the
game and the score even at 21.
Blue latest to plead guilty
KANSAS CITY. Kan. (AP) -
Vida Blue. a Cy Young Award
wanner, pleaded guilty today to a
charge of possessing cocaine in a
federal d rug probe that also
produced guilty pleas from three
of his former teammates on the
Kansas City Royals.
or been hospitalized or treated for
drug addiction'>" U.S . Magistrate
J Malton Sullivant asked before
Blue e ntered his plea.
One play after the interference
call. Ferragamo faked a handoff
to D1"kerson and found Guman
alone in the nght comer or the
end w ne just beyond the goal
Blue. 34, pleaded guilty to a
federal misdemeanor -pos-
sessing three grams of cocaine on
Feb. 4 -and acknowledged that
he had been under treatment for
drug addiction.
"Yes. I have." Blue replied
The former pitcher for the
Royals. San Francisco Giants and
Oakland A's pleaded guilty to the
charge a short ume before a fed·
eral grand jury went into session
today U.S Attorney Jim Mar-
quez said last week he expects the
grand jury to return "many in-
dictments" in the government's
drug invest1gat1on .
hne • The touchdown capped a come-"Have you recently been under
the care of a doctor or psychiatrist
Hungarians roll
COTO DE CAZA (AP)
-Hungarian athJetes
dominated the second
day of competition at the
1983 Modem Pent.tthlon
Junior World Cham-
pionships. fl.n.iahing 1-2
in the epee fencing Sun-
day to vault. into lndlvid·
ual and Learn leads U\ the
four-day. five-event
sport.
Lastlo Fabian, an
early f1vor1te to capture
the gold m~~l until he
faltered in Saturday's
equestriM jumpt\g, tJed
with teammate Robert
Bardl at the concl uaton of
Sunday's 11-hour fenc·
Ing exhibition. 'Fabian
thtn beat tht othe>r Hun·
aanan In a tle-b~aklng
maJ(:h to win the overall
lille Both w~ 36 of 46
matches Sunday.
Americans, who were
tied for first &fter the
opening days' riding,
fa r ed poorly In
swordsmanship. Mark
PohJ won 27 of 46
matches while John
Scott and Mike
Goetigian were 18-28.
*SHARK FISHING
3 TRIPS D~ILY
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~ 3m a• ea~hmeirtt
P 11\0urQh Of S~arne
~"'" 0 tt90 a1 D•nver "4e~ Or tan\ b' Tamr10 Ba"
Monoo,Oc1 14
NY Ci an1\ at St Lou\ 1n1
Rams 17, Falcons 21
Score by Ou1rttf\
A•.sn•o 1 1 I 0-71
R•m• 0 7 I 13-71 FlrU Period
AT-Boo1ev 7S DO\\ lrom Berll•OW\>
'Lucknur~1 ~1clo.) 4 JS
Second Period
.AT-Hoooe 1 oau lrom Borl,.ow'"'
• Luc•nur" k 1ci.1 I SJ
L.A 01c•e-.on I run !Nel\on 1<1ck1 v )f
Third Ptrlod
AT-Rogo\ 6 run !Lueknuf\l l<1ckl. JOS
LA-OeMara 10 oau lrom Ferrooamo Nelson .it• I 8 )8
Fourfh PtrlOd
LA-Ooe<erson I rvn INel•on 'IC'1
15S
L"-Gurnon 1 oou 1rom Ferraoamo
Nttson l\•Clri. It t l
A-
llllUiC\
AT LA
Ftr\I down• IS 79
Ru•"e•· vord\ 79· 110 l• 103
Pa""'O varos IS8 111
'le•um va rd• )7 2S
Pa.sh IJ 77·0 13 36 l
Soc"' 8 • l·S •·7'1
Pura 6 )f ~ .0
Fumo'"' •o•• 1 I J I Penall f\ va•tl• 6·SI l·)S
r "e ol PO\\f\\ 0" H '6 lS I~
INDIVIDUAL ST A TISTICS
RUSHINC,-At1onta An01tw\ II 17
R 00\ 9 18 Ba• h J 0 B•fl~Ow\•1 I 0
lo• Angr e• O·t•er1or 79 o• ltt<lotn 7·11 E11aro I 17 Curnan I I Ferraoamo I 2
PASSINC,-Allan1a Bar,.ows•
13 21·0· lo3 Los Angele• Ferrogomo 13· J6 I 7•1
RECE1VING-Aftan1a Saith 6 l06,
R•og• 2 7l AMrew\ 2· 19 Rootn•on I 13,
B Jonn•on I J '10llU• I I l u\ .Angtlu.
Baroer 6 49 U ckef\on S 48 Dennard
J S7 G•anl 2 38 Farmer 7 76 C. JOnt\
1·9
MISSED FIELD COALS-Lo\ An·
VPIP\ Nel\O,, 1 l
Seahawks 38, Raiders 36
Scort bV Ou•rt•ri --~ I~ I~ :::~!
F1"1 PtrlOd l..,.... ( • \IP• sen t9 oos~ from Allen
e~,.r .. ,~ .a 17
Se6 Uuor" ,,. t ',Jn N Jonn\on •·f" I) OJ Second Ptrlod
( .:> I' C. B•nr J7 S l•
~A "--"'' \ttt.,\e,. tJ U6\\ '' M
p ._ f'• ea~, t r.. "•7
Th.rd PtrlOd
\t"cl 1 r 18 t r N J """'\Ot'I " l ll. ..
J'.J' \ l'J v ... "' r~1 Jfr N
,. ~ I.. .J 1 I f' "'\
\ea -
A
FC, N Jo•~•"n 17 I 10 q; eon. 47 1341
I A Sa•,.t. A zao 1a..-:,1t<' p,011 " rr,o ,,...,.,,e> u to
Fourth P1r1od
Sec\ -Rob•r\O" 9 lumo t reiurnt N
Juf't'1~r'I IJ1L"-J 6 J/
)e6 "'"""'"~,. 6 ru" N Jo,,n\on -.irtl.' 7 40
L,. -Auen 1 Pd!t\ trom W•l~on f8ehr
"' ~ 14 1) LA CN•\ltMen n 08\\ from WU~on
1 Banr '"'., I' •8 A 60 961
RllOe" SH
''"' oown\ H IJ Ru•hrs·varo• 30 18J U·l~I
Pci\.\1ng v~rO\ 19 92
lle•urn ¥&rd\ 0 179
Pant\ 73 3• J • 16 ·0
Pun•• J '6 6·31
I-umble. lo\t 6 S I I Penall1U·VM<l\ s •S s 84
T 1me of Poues\oon JJ 13 76 41
IHOIVIDUAL \TATISTICS
q USHIN(, L." "•'oer\ Allen II 86 ~aw" ,n\ S ~O P1un1>ir.e11 " 11 W il\on 1 71
Pr .J 11 I 9 §pat' r W&tnfr 11 1~ l.or,, s 36 H ... o~., I 1• Ooo<n1n• • I C
8"va"' 1 6 Lane 1 '1
PASSIN(, lA qe+Otn P tun-.tl1
J 77 1 )9 N • \On 8 II 0 106 Allen
I I 0 l9 '>ta" e Zorn • 16 0 I)
'IECE 1v1NC, LA Ra•Oeo
Cl'r •'•"''" 11 1~7 ,., en S 7S W11t.•m• 2 )9 Haw• n\ 1 J Barnwell I 19 Monl
oo.,.,erv l IS M,narnrnao I 11 St•lllt
Ooor•·1on-1 ·m·nv\ 6 Vounv 1 10 Huvn~,
1·9
SemiP!'O
Ht"' Desert Ltltut
~t.Jnlonoto,, V11o~v M•r nen 10 CAI
Po11 Pc.,.,on.J O
How top 20 fared '-••j N •ne ''JO 1U 111m\ 1n '"e
A\\ '"'"'' Prr\\ ~ 1 f'tOP foofball nnll ,.,,,.,,Id\' wt••P
1 Netva\llt~ } 0 01 Ofit' M 1\\0yr
IJ 11
7 le••• IS 0 01 oeal Ar> an)•• )I l
1 "'O''" CMvl•"• 1 / O O• 11e,1 Nurin C-1t 111ntl ~' •1 14
4 Ne\t .J fU+f'!!i'I '6 0 0) t>Pftl V1ro1,,•i1
T•co IJ 0
~ A1101i1 ii"' 1" 1 01 UP"' C,fll')t{il1f' !pn II II
6 Qr110 '>'.itlf~ 4 1 01 IO\I IO l!l•nO+\
II 11
I f'.. it1r•Oft 4> 0· 11 010 ou1 ;llf\v a r,r 11\1" '~ o 1 u~"' va"O"'O•" 1n 11
.., Ar·1u1 o ) I I' tu\I h,.1 O'flJOfl
19 10
------
SCOREBOARD
10 M1•m1 Fie (6· l·OJ beol Min i•
\tDPI SI . ) I 1
11 Ala bama (• 7·01 lo\! 10 Ten·
neott • t • )4 17 Sou•ntrn MethOOl\I IS·O·OI did nc>I ot1v
lJ Moen1oan IS· l·Ol De•I Norlh· wf\lern 35·0
14 lo"'a CS 1 01 l>eal Purdut> )I U
IS O"anoma U 1 01 be•I at.1arioma ~· " 10 16 M•rvlano S I 01 oeat Wal.er
Forts• 36 33
11 Wa\n1n111on 1 S I Ol Deal S•an
loro )7 I~
II Ar.1ona SI c• 0 11 Deol USC
l• " 19 lil•no,. c ~ I 01 l>eol On•o Sia le II CJ
10 8 roon•m Young IS· 1·01 DUI Ne.,.
Mt.,CO l>6 7)
Communltv coh9e schedule
SA TUROA Y'S GAMES
Soulll Co.•t c:-renc:•
Comolon n Gotdtn Wts• ol Oronot
CO••' Oron~e Coa.1 ol CerrliO\
Ml San An1on10 01 Fullerton
Minion Confffenc:a
Palomar al San 01tQO. I JO om
Cotru\ al San•a Ana
R1.,er11de at Soutt1we,1ern
Soulllern C11ttom11 Conference
LA Voll•• al Eu 1 Lor Angetu
LA Pierce at LA Harbor
Wul LO• AnotlH •I Lo• Anotlu cc
MotroPOlit1n Can+erenc:e
E1 Camino al Tell >·30 om •
Bokttr\litlO 01 Pa\adena CC
Lono Beach CC al Senlo Mon•co
WHlern Stai. Conterenc•
Honcoc' al G1end1le. 1 JO om
Sonia Barbera CC •• Rio Hionoo,
om
Mooroer" •I Vl'nlur•
1'9t1'111 C~ Grou monl al Ml San JIC•nlO 7 om
Dtstrt ol An•t lol>t V•llev
Imper.al Vallev II San Bernardino "•"•• !Alf Oames efl)O~ l'lfU1\lfl• li0fld1
COMMUNITY COLLEGE LOG
Golden West (2·3)
10 saooieoack 11 JI Santo Ana 17
78 8aktr\l•e•o 1 0 PoHdena )I
I Fulltrlon 41
Sa• Oc• 77-Complon• \al CCCI
Sal, Ocl 79-11 San Otevo Mtsa·
Sal. Nov 17-al Ctmlo\•
Sal Nov l9-MI Sen Anlonlo• lel
OCCI
Tnur Nov 74-al Orange Cont•
Or.,199 Coast 12·31
17 Palomar • 71 o Saddltbaci. 11
O Sanla Bort>ora CC 11
24 Long Boen CC 19
JI San Oleoo MtH 27
S•I . Ocl 21-el Cernlo•·
Sat Oc• 19-ol Ml Sen An1on10• Sol Nov S-FuHtrlon•
Sal Nov l9-o• Como1on'
Ttlur Nov 74-Goloen Wt\I'
Sa~ck (S·DI
71 Gol<lt n Wu• 10
17 Orange Coo • 0
I• lO"O Buen CC 6
7J Cr ou mon• 6
10 Sen•• Ana 1
S•' Oct 1'>-•1 (itru\ •
Sal No¥ S-f:l1ver \10.• S•• No" 11-•t Pe~er• Sa• Nov l9-San O•eoo•
Tnur Nov 1•-•t ~utn""'"''''"' • otnot~~ COf'llet ence game
lrlll•nd·U.S. Amateur Boxlne
ti t Ctne~d)
106 oound•-Peul Gonral9', U S . \IOOOtd Cerrv Hawkin\, Iffland. 2
112 oounch -Peul Benke, U.S, OI· cl•loned 't.errv Ouddv, lrt lend
119 oouno•-T Ode! Hlclunen. U S
••oootd Paul Fll1oereld, Ireland, I 175 oound•-Rov Webb, 1rel1no.
oeCl\loneo Robert Franco. US
139 oouno•-Blllv Wel•h, Ireland.
Otel•loned Ht11rv Hugno, U S
147 oound•-Mari. 8relend. U S
\IOOe>ed Oevld Irving, lret•nd, t
I S6 DOUnd•-O•nnv T n .. 1110, u s .
otc1\1oneo Tommy Corr. lretand 16S oound•-M•cnatl Nunn, U S
\IOOOl!d Brien Bvrne. tretano . J 171 l>Ou•O•-ltarl R•ffe. US Ot·
t1\1oned Jommv Shor lfell lrtlend
701 oouno\-41 Evan\, us \IOOC>t.0
Tonv Halle1 Ireland I
hem .core USA 8 lrt11nd 2
E 1thlbl9Mft be4.lh
16S ooono•-Gt rr• Slorev Ireland
otc••ooned Mlehatl Frencols us
101 oouno•-Oav•d T1uloou. U.S
dtc•\loned Noet Gutrv lrei.no
Coltl9e
PCAA·P'AC 10 INVITATIONAL
111 USCI
UCLA t. UC lrvlnt 7
UC Irvin• 7 l 2 2-7
UCLA • I l 1 J-t UC trv•nt \(Orono E•an\ ), Oo••no I
Roi\ I Cnonuthuanca 2
use 10, uc 1rv1ne t
UC H vont ~ I 1 7-9
use 1 1-16
UC lr't'1nf \COr'"v c: vens J.
Col'•Ot>tl• 7 C11oqvehu1nc• I, Roni I MtCorm1c" I Rodda I
Oak T,_
A> I et Sallle ANt9 I
SUNDAY'S R•WLTS ( liltl M 22·dlY !Mr---M ,.,_..,..,
l'IRST RAC•. 6 furlonOs
01slanl Rlvtr (Sfbllltl 10 00 4 to ) 00
Sco11v·1 Led IOelo1dlllOI I 60 '00 Ryan'• Rtb (Pedroie) ) 10
Al•o receo SwHI •n• GolO, Sir S1ou1. Now LOOk, Jim Jim. HlghlY Hono<ed,
Sir Ruuetl, Av•ndaro, Ari'\ lutkv Son
Time 111
SECOND RACE. 6 furlong\
Pro Pur (McCrrnJ S .0 J 00 7 60
Trux1on'\ Oouble !Vln1ll 3 60 l 00
Marnie'• Cancer (Fuanlo) • 10
Al\o raced Valenllne Lew, C1Pllln
Oou1>11. Senior S.nelor. Norin Line.
AoPar
Time I 10 1/S u OAIL y oouaLE 11·11 Pl ld
$76.0.
THlltD RACE. 6 furlong•.
Cenov V1lnllnt 18kk) l2.00 J.10
Lil" Min Gooclv (McCrrn) 7 60
Eo1 Telou• (M111)
J 10
7.60
1.to
Alie rec.a Flourttw•d. Belll<ln,
Peach 8ranov. 81cker\llff Ttrne l l1 1/S
FOUltTH ltACE. I 111' mll1\.
Kev Plavtr IPt0ro11) 73 60 10 60 610
Leche (Mt11) 10 60 6 00
SPIOr• Ano SPl•ro (McCerron) S 60 Alie raced· lnvoll.e, Counlv S.11,
WI() 0.IKIO<, UraQOICI
Time I 46 ?IS
f'l,TH RACE. I 1/l6 mile•
Bo4<1 Frond IGrr1I HO 310 1to
Pac: Monie (~ron) 2 tO UO
WlcklOw (Ptdroiel J 40
Al\o rectd Auu Wert. Jull Ar·
rived. RolendO. Tlmbtnacll., Toner
Time 143 JtS
SS EXACTA 14·11 Paid Ml SO
SIXTH RACE. 6112 furlong•
Fr1un1 otngdm IMCrn) • 40 ) 70 2 IO
Monie M Ulleckl S.10 '00
KHO On Tl lkino 1oe101dlll0) s 60
Al•o raced C1Pl1ln Crorlt r. Jull
F0< Cn•rlle, Ono1lt , Trevt l, Jlnollno
Jollnnla. R11dv To 't''°· Cleer Im·
Pr-•uion
Time. 111.
SEVENTH RACE. I 1116 mlle\
Gleen Slrm (MCCrn) • 10 J 10 1,60
Procurer (8iacll.I 1.60 S.00
Liolllnewavh<>4me (Ptdroz•> S OOI Al\o raced Ofhh0<1, Beno Bing
Sano, Slaff Commena.r. Malor Htnrv
Time l O 7•S
SS EXACTA (S·ll 0110 S9S.00
EIGHTH RACE. I 111 m iles
Maml'°" (McCrn) I 40 1 to 1.40
Sunnv'> H110 (Ollluvel 2 60 1.10 F11111 Olv11lon ISlbllil) J 00
Al\o receo An\uan. Croe.a. Silk
Sut1.
Time 149 4 S SS EXACTA (S·6) Dl •d M7 SO
11 ~ICK SIX tt·l·•·IO·S·SJ Pl lCI
\71, 916 70 Wtll\ fl•t .... nnl (\ (\J•
PIOrtesl 17 Ptei. Sia Con\Olellon Paid
SS9t 60 Wllh 243 ••M•ri Ill•• ''°""'
NINTH RACE. I I 16 mile\
EaOl\lv Twt\I CMCrnl Jto 7 .. 14()
Hll•mo•o (Toro) 600 JOO
H•n•el IMelll l 00
Alie rece<i J1m1t1 sr..ooar11..
Monlclalr
Tcme 1 ..
lS EXACTA 11·S) oald S7000
A 11tndanct ll.ltt
HDIYWMd .-enr
SUNDAY'S RISUl.TS
14ttl1 .. Sl· ...... t "'"'"' ~) FIRST RACE I mile Diet N1nac11I (B•llia roeonJ 1160, S 60. JtO. Ntw
Ca<ltl J 60, 2 60, Suotr Ted 4 to Ttme·
7.0l 1/S U EXACTA O·l ) Pe ld UI 90.
SECOND RACE I milt Pact Jame\
Vlncenl (Perkerl S.IO, 3.60. 2.40, Ru•lv
Slivers 'IO, J 00, SklPOtrt Invader 2.40
Time 7 02 llS U EXACT A IS·tl N ld
17',IO
THIRD RACE. I mllt Net·
Oiemon1e S"loa.r 8 IAndtrM>nl 140.
l 00 7.to, TrtO\ure\ EdOf 2.60, 2 60,
Anovs Hu1101r1 S to Time. 2 10 3/S U
EXACTA (4·2> oeld 17' 70
l'OVltTH ltAC•. l mlle lrol lllu<lt
\FllCO) 13 00 6.111 •• 20, Redmond\ Jov
S 60. 4 20. HOOll Vk1orv I 00 Time 1 ~
l'll'TH ••c•. I mile DICtl Nlmblt
Y1n1<ff N (Croohanl J 40. 1 IO, 140.
OcMJOlt Gff N IAnatrM>n). J.60. 7 IO.
So.cl•I Oullllv S 20 Time l 51 llS Sl
EXACTA (1·61 N ici 111 >0
SIXTH ••ca. I mlle Pact TrlPlt NIM (8111111-I 6 60, l 10, l 40, Mt·
1e\llC MlldOw 4 00 2 IO. 1111111"9 llllv
•to Time 10l l !S U I XACTA 16·1)
oa1d \J060
SEVENTH RACa. I m lle ~·
Cockv\ Onlv llov I Per•") '7 60. 17.00. 10 40. Mireclf 0. .. 11 13 60 6JO; Rock N
Shine S60 lllr•'t 1 SI 41S Sl alCACTA
14·11 0110 SS42 60
EIGHTH ltACI!, I mite PICt Aler!
BrHte (Perktrl IS 40S10 100, Marv'\
Commend S IO. J to. Ktrr Heno•er 3 20
Time 100 U EXACTA (1-ll oeld
'701~
NINTH •Ac a . I mlle 1ro1 Br111aa
SoHd (Aut>lni 17 20, '60,, 3 40, Slt1k
ot1n9 3 40 2 60. Noble Ar.,.111 2 60 Time 101 U EXACTA C1· II Pl ld SU.40 12
l'ICK SI• (1·1·6+1·2) 01ld Ull 10
wllll 6t wiMtr\ !four PIOnH)
TENTH ••ca. I mile Diet La
Norm IP•r•trl 7 IO 7 60 '20, AmHIH J 10 2 20. Gtntrel Sflver S 00 T lme I S8
4 S ll tlXACTA <S·1) Plld 116 SO
Alltnalnte S.671
•
Orange Cout DAIL v PILOT I
NIA txhlbltlen
u1c1r1 Ill, SuperSenlca 111
SEATTLE (Ill) -~rev J·S 1·4 I. Vfll'lt\ 7· 14 I· I IS, Sill.ma 6· 10 11· 12
2J WIHiem\ l·2 0·1 1, WOOd 4· 11 7·2
10 Oe81ucl\Oo 1·1 1·1 S. Sundvo4<19·16
2·7 71. Brown 1·9 1·1 S. Hewes O·J O·O
0, Greto 3·9 3·3 9 Buri.1 1·6 3·S s.
Ovktme ,., 7·3 10 TOlll• •7·94 71·37
Ill
LOS ANGELES 11JI) -Sorioos
I· 10 1·7 73. Wiiii.es 4·1 O·O I . Naltr S·l
1·1 11, E Jahn'°" S·8 1-1 11, MCCH
3·1 0·1 6. Cooper l ·l1 1·1 11, Garrlll S·9 4·S 14. McAdoo 6·10 7·2 14, Phllilos
J·I 1·6 7, Cerltr S·9 1·3 l1. C John1on
3·6 1·7 1 Tol•I• SS·9J 71·31 lJI
S<ort bv 0111rten
sea111e 31 n JO Jo--113
Lektn 41 40 71 29-lJI
ThrH·POln1 oo•ls-Sundvold I
Foule<l ou1-Pnllllp1, C•rter Rt·
bound1-Su 1111 41 CStkm1, Wooo 81.
Lo• A"o•lt• " ISorloG•. McAdoo 1) Aul1l•-St1lllt JO !Wood, Brown.
8urlo.• SJ. Los Angele\ JO IE. Joi'IMon,
Coooar IOI To111 tou11-Se1111e JI, Lo•
AnQt lH )4 A-3."2
WMekNlr ,.,.,.,
lfll U.S. CH~NSHll'S ( af RK.,.. C11JD af lr""'9)
MaN s.,_.o..n l'IMh
Ref\dV Snow I0 1llH l def 8rao
Perks (Leoune Nloutl), 6·0. 4·6. 6· I
o.ullltt °"" l'Nh Park\·CrelQ 5hewm1ke (Min ion
Vit ro) det Oen Lechman IHunllnolon
B11chl ·Mllff Tnomo•on (San Juan
C10IW 1nol. 7·6, 6·3.
~·l'Nh WI Vlll LH Ylll \0ell8') Ot l Jev
Rollltdtr lOIHIS), 0·6. l·S, 6·4. '**" • f'INll Lu vlll·ROPllt<ltr <lt1. Ron William•
(New York)·Oon Oreurv \Fre1no), 6· l.
6·2. ~ c l'lnel\
Lff Monloomerv (Lo• Anoele1J oef
Rob Schw1t> (Ntw Yorio.I. 6·7. 6·0
OollbMI C l'INll Oale Fiil (Fr9'noJ·Monloome<v Otf
Mike Cler" ( Torr•ncel·Floel F au\lo ISacrame,,10). 6·0. 6·3
~D l'IMll Michel Zobel (Puls, France! def
Sieve Jar1motco (Grano R1old•,
Mich I, 6·1. 6·2
Otul*\ 0 l'INI• Tom 1(-rPIOuH !Grano Reolds,
Mkn l·Sltn Jar•motco Otf Mike
Wll'°" (An11'1elm l·lllN Buri.tholOlr
<Tu\llnl. •·6. 6·3. 1·6
WOMaN
~ °"" l'lrilts Marllvn Hamttton !Fresno> ~
lltckv Wllllt (Car..,...), 6·l, 1·6
Oeutl6tl °"" """" M1urHn H•nnon Clo• An·
0tlffl·Marl1Vn H1mlllon oel. 8eekv
Wllllt ·T1mmv Rigg\ (Long 8toCll)
6• I. 6'-4 SlntMI D l'IMI\
V1ler1e Saoer (Grend Rao1d1. N\iCP>)
def Emma Terrv (Min ion Vleio J, 6·0
6· I ~1 0 l'IMI•
Valtrlt Sager·L1urlt San11100 (Lo•
AnoelH ) def Kim Cham1>1r111n
(FresnoJ·Klm Ahlan\l1ger IFrn no),
•· 2. 6· I Slnltfl JVttM """'' Rene Srelav 1Coron1 dti Marl del
John Ven eeci. 10r1noe1. l·O.
Wtmen'a tournam.m
Cat Ta,_~. I'll.I Mntln l'IMll
M1r1ln1 H1vral110va IU.S.I dtf Pam
Sllrlver (U.S.). 6·3. 6·2. (Navra ll10v1
wln1 11t,OOO).
Wemtn'1 tournament
( ., Sift '*")
SIMMS l'lllllb Sharon W1l•h (U.S.) <ltf. Kerrv Reio
IU S.>. 6·2. 6· I IWal•h wins '6.000. Rtld wins U .SOO)
Oeutllel l'IMll W1l\ll·8lhla Jtan Kl"9 (U.S) oe1
LI Ufl DuPont (U S.>·Nancv Rlctwv
(US), 6·4, 6·0 CW1l\f\·Kl"9 lclil
SOCIO, OuoonHtle'Mv 10411 12.SOO.>
lhdlf"Cup
(II ~aim 9Mdl Gerdtlm, ""I u. S. 14Vt, tlur._. llVt S.vt &allelferos. EuroDI. lltd Fuuy
Zoeller, U.S
Hick FaldO. Eurooe. otf Jav Hu\,
US . 2 er\d I
8tn Crtn\hlw, U S de! Sandy L vie
Europe, 3 Ind I
Bernhard Lenger. Euroot. dtl Gil
Morgen, U S , 2 uo
8IOt> Glider. U S oef G0<oon Brena.
Europe, 1 uo
C1I PHii, US oel Brien WollH,
Eurooe. I uo
P1u1 Wav. Euro1>e. def Curll•
Slranoe. Us .. 2 and 1
Crelo Sl1dler. U S oef l1n Woo\n1m, Europe, J end ?
Ken Brown, Eurooe, dtf Rav Floyd,
US .. 4 Ind 3
~m Torrence. Eurooe. and Tom
Kiit, US., lltd
JOH·M1rla C1nliaru. Euroot, ano
L•nnv Wedkln•, US . lltd
Tom Wel\Ol'I, U S. def 81rn1ro
G•"acher Eurooe. 2 and I
•
~~ -·
NHRA Wor1d Drav Flnah
laf 0<1"91 Counrv lnCern.hori•I
R•<•wavl
Top Fut Sn1rl~'f' Mu•OO""' iev Mt
C•emen• M•cn S 63 seco"o' o• 7'6 ~7 mpP> Otf Joe Amo•o 010 Forve P•
11 7S &I 6197 mon
Funnv Car -Jonri LO'l'\Oa rtl1 l O\
AnGete. 6 J7 a• 719 Sl mpn dt• Jv'"
Force. Fvtleflon & 32 a• 74~ 13 "'On
Pro Stoc.h Warrtr Jonn\Of'
Oululn. Ca I 69 a• 171 91 m1>n dtl l •t
Slltonerd Art.nQ1on Toa• I 61 ,,,
111 SI mpn
Too Arconol Or a11\ler A
O•Por 10 Norinoroo• Ill 6 S7 a l 210 SI m oh del 8rvan Ravmer Aurora Co•o
6 80 a1 ?OSOi mon
Too Alcl>hOI r unnv Cor -B100
Anoerson. Cov.na. 6 '8 a• 71 1 IJ mon
dt l Fred Man<lohnt, Scn11itr Pon Ill
14 7• •• SS n moh
Comoe1111on -Lorrv l(ooo 8<1"•
more I 61 at ISS u moh dtl Do"d
Hlc•tn•. Hou\lon. 8 91 ao IJ9 JI mon
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CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
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Camel Lights
9 mg "tar '. 0.8 mg nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method
•
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health .
...
1983 ('3
..
I
•
C4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, October 17, 1983
U Wlrepftoto
Eddie Murray connects for a home run off Phillies pitcher Charles •
Hudson.
ORIOLES WIN • • •
From Page C1
" memories of '79, when he was the
seventh-game loser. "I think Joe
is just as good a manager as F.a.rl.
and maybe it proved we didn't
trave-to-~fuased at all the time.
But F.a.rl couldn't have done it any
other way."
of the stumbling Phillie offense coming the fourth team to ac-
throughout the Series. compli.sh that. The Orioles were
Rose, benched In a con-the victims the last time it hap-
troversial lineup switch in Game pened. in 1969 when the New
Three, roared back with two hits York Mets won the world cham-
in the fourth game and two more pionsh1p.
in Game Five, trying mightily to Without the designated hitter
McGregor's shutout gave Balti-
more a 1.60 earned run average
for the five-game Series, the best
in 40 years.
lift his team. He simply couldn't. in this Series. Baltimore 106t the
The closest Philadelphia came
to a run Sun5fay was in the eighth
inning when Joe Morgan tripled
and Pete Rose followed with a
long fly to left field. Morgan
tagged up but tripped leaving the
base, falling to the ground and
scrambling back. It was symbolic
''It's been fun at times," said use of Ken Singleton, one of its
Rose, whose future with this club, important offensive parts. It
at age 42, is clouded. "Frustrating hardly disturbed AJtobeW. Who
at times, depressing at times, but set a Series record by sending
it was OK for us because only two four consecutive pinch hitters to
of 26 teams get to the World the plate in Saturday's fourth
Series. We were one of them. We game and made rune line4H:::-.
just lost." changes in one inning.
Baltimore lost the opener but "I thought that was tremen-
swept the next four games. be-dous," saJd McGregor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lakers sign
rookie Scott
INGI.EWOOD (AP) -Rookie
guard Byron Scott, acquired from
the San Diego Clippers in a
multi-player trade last week,
signed a mulll-year contract wtth
the Los Angeles Lakers. the NBA
club announced Sund~.
Terms of the contract were not
revealed by the Lakers. Scott had
previously said it was a four-year
pact and that it was "about the
same" as Indiana's Steve
Stipanovich, who got $1.2 million
over four years.
DEATH 11mc11
WHEELER
........... 0
WARRi;N G . WHEELER.
reside9t of Irvine, Ca
Passed away on October 13.
1983 He is survived by h~
wile Patricia, brother Chas.
E. Wheeler. Sr. of Ohio. sis-
ters Ruth Harns of Ken-
tucky and Margaret Fulton
of Tennes.<iee, 11 nieces and
6 nephews. Mass of the Res-
urrection wall be held on
Monday.October 17, 1983at
6:00PM at St. Elizabeth Ann
Seton Catholic Church,
Irvine. c.a Final Interment
services waU be held at Riv·
erside Nauonal Cemetery,
on Tuesday. October 18,
1983. Services under the
darecuon of BaJu Bergeron
Srruth & Tuthill Mortuary
646-9371
World Series MVP Rick Dempsey celebrate with
Oriole teammate Eddie Murray.
•AL TZ 8ERQERON aMfTH & TUTHILL
WESTCLIFF CHA'EL
•27 E 171h SI
Costa Mesa
6"6-9371.
McC°"*K MORTUARY
1795 L.90un• Canyon Ad
Laguna a..ch,Ca.92651 •e..-t• 15
H~ LAWN-MT. OUVI M«1uaty • c.metery
Crematcwy
1625 Giiier Ave.
Coeta M9N
540-6M•
E
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~--~-
Navratilova wins again;
McEnroe fined, sµspended
By ne A11od1ted Pre11
Martina Navratilova just keeps roll-
ing along, while the John McEnroe
Express will be temporarily derailed.
Navratilova, the Wimbledon and
U.S. Open winner. defeated Pam
Shriver, 6-3. 6-2 Sunday to run away
with the championship of the Florida
Federal tennis tournament at Tarpon
Springs, Fijl. She alao teamed with
Shriver to win the doubles title,
defeaUna Bonnie Gadusek and Wendy
White, 6-0, 6-1.
Meanwhile, McEnroe beat France's
Heru1 Leconte, 6-1. 6-4, 7-5 to capture
~ Auatrallan Indoor champion.ship at
Sydney for the fou.nh straight year,
but he waa fined $1,500 and suspended
42 daya for verbally abusing an offlcfal
during Sunday's final. .
Navratllov8, who loet only four
polntt on her service in the IK'COnd set,
now hu won 36 atratght singlet
matches Lna! ahe loet to .K3thy
Horvath at the French Open last
1prin,.
Navratilova, who won $28,000 for
the alnalet vieu>ry, beat Shriver by
beatJJ\I her at the net.
TENNIS
"I can't attack her backhand any-
more," Shriver said. "I uted to chip it to
her backhand and come in but she hlt.s
it llO hard now. It's a heavy-duty shot
now."
Navratilova, who turned 27 Tues-
day, said the court helped, too.
"The court Is slow and it's easy to hit
the top spin," she said. "J never !eh
threatened by her coming into the net.
My backhand la getting better."
The $1,500 fine put McEnroe $800
over the limit of $'1 .~ per year set by
the Men's International Professional
Tennla Coun~il. The 42-day suspension
could be cut to 21 days lf he does not
play In any exhibition matches during
the penalty period.
McEnroe Miid if he had known hls
remarka to let<erd judge Barry Hill
would result in hia Ma>nd career
suapenalon, ''l wot.Ud have really let
him have it. I think I have said a lot
wor'IC! thlnp and aot ten away when I
felt I deeerved to~ penaJtzed." ---··-------------------
Soul searching time
Will Giles take the wheeze out of Phillies?
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The
Wheeze Kida won the National
League pennant for Philadelphia
this eeason. Now, after a , quick
and quiet exit from the World
Series, comes a time for "a lot of
t0ul searching," according to
Phillies President BW Giles.
The fate of the Phillies' vet-
eran-laden roster, and that of
their manager, Paul Owens, will
be decided at a series of meetings
Giles has called.
The confabs were to begin
today, less than 24 hours after the
Baltimore Orioles blanked the
Phillies 5-0 to take the Series four
games to one.
"They just plain beat us," Giles
38id In sunlming up his big disap-
pointment in a few words."We
have a lot of soul searching to do."
The board of strategy at the
meeting includes Giles; Owens,
the Phillies' general manager
who took over as field manager at
midseason; chief scout Hughie
AJexander; farm director Jim
Baumer, and administrative assis-
tant Tony Sigel.
Among the things to be taken
up in a series of meetings are the
;tatus of the best-known of the
Wheeze Kids -Pete Rose, 42,
Tony Perez. 41, and Joe Morgan,
40.
Do the Phillies want to pick up
the options of these players, all in
the twilight of their careers?
Giles has said that Rose wants
to play full lime so he can break
Ty Cobb's all-time hit record, and
he can't do that in Philadelphia.
He said also that Rose would have
to take a hefty pay cut.
Pete Rose, caught deep in thoug ht, may have worn
a Phillies uniform for a final time Sunday.
The Phillies have until Nov. 15
lo act upon Rose, but Giles said
Sunday it would be much sooner.
have time to think about it, it
won't be that important," Morgan
said."1'11 go home and talk to my
family and see If they want to go
through this again."
September stretch drive.
He and Rose participated in the-
playoUs because rookie Len
Matuszek, who also triggered the
September pennant move. was
ineligible for postseuon play. He
came up too late from the minor'S;
"If we do decide not to keep
him, it would be fairer to Pete to
do 1t quickly," said Giles.
Giles said Rose's perfonnance
in the playoffs and Series would
have no bearing on the decision.
Morgan, who was hampered by
injuries most of the season, hit
.230. But he was well over .300 i.n
September and carried the club in
its late drive to the NL pennant. '
Perez hit .241 with six homers
and 43 RBI.
Giles said Owens' status as
manager would wait until later. If
Owens does not return as man·
ager, the choice seems to be
among coaches Bobby Wine and
Dave BrisJ.Ol and John Felske,
manager of the club's Portland
farm team i.n the Pacific Coast
League.
Rose hit .245 with 17 extra base
hits during the 1983 season, and
finished the Seri~ 5-for-16, a
.313 average.
Rose declined to talk about his
status with the Phillies.
"I don't worry about things that
are not in my control," he said ..
Perez was signed last winter as
a free agent for use as a pinch
hitter. He played regularly at
rirst base in the spring and led the
club through the first two months
i.n hitting, but slumped in the
summer months and almost dis-
appeared from sight in the club's
He appears resigned, however,
to the fact his stay in Philadelphia
is coming to an end. U.S. wins volleyball tourney
The Phillies don't seem to be
willing to pay him more than $1
m1U1on for playing part time. And
it's extremely doubtful if Rose
would want to stay unless he
plays regularly.
Morgan isn't sure if he wants to
play anymore, even if the Phillies
want him. He is considered mana-
genal timber. but said he isn't
sure 1f he wants to manage. He
might consider playing another
year just to break Rogers
Hornsby's career record of 264
home runs by a second 'baseman.
Morgan has 260.
LONG BEACH (AP) -The
U.S. women's nat1onaJ volleyball
team outlasted Japan 15-13,
15-10, 10-15, 15-4 to win the
pre-Olympic Big Four Challenge
tournament at the Long Beach
Arena Sunday night before a
::rowd of 4,201.
The United States won all three
matches in the round robin event.
Japan finished 2-1. Cuba 1-2. and
South Korea 0-3.
Japan, which has never fin-
ished lower than second in Olym-
pic competition dating back to
1964, was playing without its reg-
ular setter Kumi Nakada. The
18-year-old high school student
returned earlier in the day to
Japan lo take final exarrunations.
The United States, considered
among the top three teams in the
world, now has won 14 of its last
15 matches and has beaten the
Japanese women seven of their
last eight encouters. Japan returns home to prepare
Cor the Asian Games which serves
as a qualifying tournament for
the Olympics next year at the
Long Beach site.
"I've always considered that
very important, but maybe after I
In the mate}\ for third place,
Cwba defeated South Korea
10-15, 15-6, 15-10, 9-15, 17-15 in
the four-nation event.
World Series on TV: F1CTITIOUIM.l ... H
NAm ATATamNT TM following l*IOO II ~
Just too nJ.uch chatter bull,_ .. :
MISSION MAINTENANCE., 27708
elle Vllldee, Mlslilon Viejo, CA
692
Chan. A. Stlmm. 27708 C...
elOM. Mia!on Viejo. CA 92e92
Tllll bull,_ la ~fd t>y: en By 'DA VE GOLDBERG .,._,.._
NBC learned in last year's World
Series that three men in the broacast
booth was one too many. So ABC did
them one better this year, using three
all of the time and four some of the
time.
The N!Sult was often no more than
chatter. chatter, chatier. chatter.
And more chatter.
Much of this was due to the presence
of Howard Cosell, whose voice and
personality so dominate import.ant
ABC sports telecasts. It's too bad -not
only is ABC hurt by the intrusive and
grating tmpression he leaves, so is
CoseU, whose Import.ant contributions
to sports journalism are being over-
shadowed.
Forgetting Cosell for a minute, it is
true that baseball done best is baseball
done simply.
Let Al Michaels de.crlbe the play; let
F.arl Weaver tell us why it happened
and what the participants might be
thinking; let the cameras show us the
key plays In slow motion from different
angles. Let the commentatont do their
"Oh Boy!" at the appropriate places.
Instead ABC gave ua mequen<ies like
thil one, in the bottom of the sixth
I
ANALYSIS
Inning of Friday night's third game.
With two out, Bo Diaz got an infield
hit off Jim Palmer, then Palmer threw
a wild pit.ch and Diaz went to second.
After Baltimore Manager Joe Altobelli
went lo the mound, Palmer walked
Ivan DeJesus and pitcher Steve
Carlton came to the plate.
"An unintentionaJ intentional pass,"
said Michaels. "Exactly," said Weaver
and Cosell uttered this blessing: "The
wild pitch was the key." Two com-
ments too many.
Technically, there was less overkill.
At times, there were a few too many
replays Gary Matthews'
fourth-game leaping cat.ch was shown
a couple of times too often and once In
Philadelphia, director Chet Forte be-
came enamored of the rooftop camera
that was fine as a novelty shot but
really dldn 't add much to the coverage .
But overall, the technical effect.a
were good. The camera caught some
striking moments. ABC uaed for the
first time the box Insert within the play
-and it caught Joe Morgan perfectly
stumbllna off third bue {n the eighth
inning of Sunday night's game.
ndtvlduel
ChetlMA Sllmm
Thia alelemenl wu filed wflh Ille
oun1y Clerk of Orenge Coun1y on
1 22. 1983
f"2lf72I
PubllaMc! Orenge Coal Delly
lol ~ 10, 17 24, J 1, 1983.
5531-83
NI.IC M)TIC(
IAC .... NTO COUMTY
IUNNOft COUltT C~""'9110I 120 ..... ln.4
lect-to, CA. •tt
Plelntltt-OON RICHARO STEP-
HENS
Oefef'denl' CHARLES A KIMES
C&MNo 30e876 11.WDNI
NOTICIJ YM lwft ~ _.. TM_._,..,......_.,_
wttMvtr-belllt ....... ...... ,_,........ ...... ..,... ......
IM IMonNHon ....... .
If you wish 10 IMll theed~ Oii 1111 ettonwy In lhla metier. you llhoulCI
do to ptOtl'IPllY to thet )'OIK wrttl9"
'"90f'IM. 11 iiny, mey be lhd on
time
AVtlOIUtled he tldo ~ El ltlbun\11, ._. .._.., .._.,_ Ud. ............. _ .... Ud.,... ................ ~.~ .....,..,.a11n1199...-. .,.. .................. .. ... ......, ............. ,.. .......... ,......, ..... ,.. .,,.... .......... " ..,, .., .. ..... llu..M ............. _ ................... _...
......... , .... 11
........... -.... UlllJ
Packer defense gets big test .. ~~·-1 .. , ................... .
'·TO nil It 1M1 ........... :z... ...
GREEN BAY, Wls. (AP) -The
Green Bly Packer defeme has been
breached IO often by National Football
League opponent.a that a state legis-
lator, during a speech on the floor of the
Legislature, cited It while dramatizing
the horrors of loophol~ ln the Jaw.
The 1tatiatically worst defense in the
NFL playa hoat tonight at Lam~au
Fi~ld to one of the league's flMtt
offenses, that of the Washinaton
Redskins who have won 21 of their wt
23 ga.me1.
"'l'hll ll the hnl that our leque hu
to offM," Packer Coach Ba.rt Starr aald
ln anal)"lina the Redaklna, addlf\8:
"We'll be ttM!y to play" dftpite the
Injuries th.at have aide lined many of h1a 's:-~ ';:. ..:,
start.era. ... • deY9 .,_ tt11e .-none It
Typical of the 1ubetitutes he bu '° eerwct;.. ~ ""':.. ":,=
uae ts noee tackle Charles JohnlOl'l, a u..... '°" 0o. )Qlr dltluft •
1980 1tarter who was cut and ~p~ on~. of .. ~ =~~5:t.~ by Terry Jonet. An injury put Jones ~. the "" ...
aside In the fl.rat defensive play of the OOUld ,._,.. '" ~· of
current aeuon. and John.on wu ......., tMlnQ of mone, or~
re·acquired. or°''*,.,,_ ~ttci 1n ,-~ ~
"What on.. around, oomet around.'' p191nt. ·-· DMecl: °'°'· 1, 1"2 Johnlon said. "~t'1 funny the way J.A.fM~=
thlnal work out." !MU.Im. 1 ....
It may not be funny when she A w-52!! ...
R«lakina' offenM uaault.a the Picker --=~•·:.i
deleNC. But Joh.naon aaid he la ready. ·'
''It's.definitely a ch&Uen1e for me 1111\!bllehecl <>anoe c... Deir,_
and everyone on the t.eam." he Mid. Oct. to, 11· '4• 11• 1*' ..__
I
------
Orange Coa1c DAILY PILOT/Monday. October 17. 1983 Cl -
NOTICI f!CTITIOUI ......... '1Cnnoul IU ... 11 fOUNTAMll VM.UIY K·t78'1 Y.wr NOTICI M TMMTU'I IAU • ....... f/f .:v=..::. The ~ ·~ ClolrlQ T1141 ~ -:!!!-:-:! ~ng ~~ NOTICE OF DEATH OF ,_,~~ C:ALI '-,~~.':AHY TT~=
NOTICE is H'RH'I' 01v1N ttwt~u: ~.. MMIOl.uno,eOf AUOUST E. ROWRE, ab , ... MO.WMt....._· UMYCOGe l YOU Ml• QDMil.Y UMDllll A
Meled propoMlt wlll be~ by WESCO CAPITAL, LTD. ~11 Illa THE PERFlCT 0 1". N Fair IWTINT TO LIAl9 """'-UI A. £. ROZAIRE ANO OF ._.. H ,.el WllTWOOO AUOCIATll DllO M T'MleT DATm .N/lf IO.
the Cny of eo.1a MeM, to wit· The U00,8'111• 204, Nftpoft 8Mctl. CA. Df'IY9, Costa......, CA. t lOat DtfllllCY MAL"'°""""' PETITION TO ADMINJ8. On Nowmbef 2. tOl3. •I 10:0CI = llP90inttd Tru11•und« the 1w. IML&at YOU Y~ ACtK* ~ Coullcil. P.O Boll 1200, Cost• 92143 Ca thy ...,dy, s S..blrd. "'*POr1 NOTICE 1& HE.RE8Y QrvtN 'l'HA T T•D ""°"'AT .. NO A 1•ta•1 A.M .. CALIFORNIA LANO TRUSTEE fO ng del«lbed OWd 0( tru.t TO MOTICT YOUR .... " MAY
• the "°"' Of , 1.00 L IT\, on 8oud, Nftpoft e..cn. CA 92983 JMnN H.,cty, H 11 ~ t 15. Dlll~ICT '* dec:Weel IN! the·~ To all ~. benefldariH, Tru.t .. ""'"' end ourwanl to 0..0 'l'o THE HIGHEST 8100tA FOR YOU NlllO .... Ufl\AMATIC* ,,. E Callf°""9112t26-1200, on°' lleter J. Ma<MoM. ~ Via LICIO IMoh. CA. t2t83 • THI fOUNT.\IN VALl.n SCHOOL .:.n r:..oa A • • 6 6 CC>f'POR+TION u dulV appointed WILL S!LL AT PUBLIC AUCTION •"°"°AT A "'9&.IC 1ALa. •
• Oc100. 28. 19'3 11.nall be Lido Flnanclal Inc .• Callfoml• Coat• ....... CA. 92928 lowtng real Pf°'*1)' ... not~ be creditor-a and contingent of Trutt -'*' ~-5, CASH ANO/OR THE CASHIERS OR THI MAYURS °'THI PfM>Cl~O
aac>ONlblllty o1 Iha 010oet to corpora tlOll, 347 t Illa Lido. Sulla TNa bl.taifleM .. COl\dUOted by. a rlMded fOf ct-oom pwpote9. credltort o! AUGUST E 1llt0, M lnat. No 5392. In l>O<* CERTIFIED CHECt<S SPECIFIED IN INCi AG.AJNtT YOU, YOU IMOUL.O
-Na bid to the City Cltfk'• 204. Newpon 8Mch1 CA.112083 gen«el parlnarll'llp F 0 u r 0 I• .. r 0 0 m I • n d • 13'21, oaoa 1834, of Olflelll ,_..CIVIL cpoe SECTION 2t24n (pay. COWTACT A LAWV.fl Dy 11141 proper anl"O\I~ Thi•~ la aonduoted by; 1 CathyHa1dy Multl-f>utpoae room In Building o. ROZAlRE. aka A, E. 00tdl 111 IM offtoa ol Iha Counr;•bt. •• tlM time ot MJa In lt wf\11 8TAN...SHAW COl!POAATIOH. .A
Bldt wm be pytlllol)' ~ Nmllecl ~n.r.hlp. Thi• llatamant wM tiled wltn t~ COl'lllOUou• rMtroomt, oonllguou1 ROZAIRE and pel"IOIU who llleQorw ol Orfll199 a11acuted l!.l' rnooty Of Illa United StalMI all rlQht. CALIFORNIA CORPORATION u
rMd aloud at 11:00 Lm .. or M Pet• J. MMl!gel\, PrMldent County Cleric of Orange County o" pa..,.O playground area, eurroundlng may be otherwi.le lnteresced Warr.,, J. Ewte and Juanita C 1111e and lnterMt conv.yecJ to and duly •w<>lntlld Trv•I• I.Ill<* Ille ~ UlerM flflf u practk:atlla on Thi• 1ta.tamant wM fti.cl wjth Ille OCt 3, 1963. grUly arM at\CI ....... paid paved Eberta WILL SEU AT PUBLIC AUC· now held b)' II Utld., Miid Oaad of folfolWlO 6-crlbed deed al trutl ~·Y· Oc1ot>ar 28. 1983, In Ille County Clert of O!w>Qe County on FDM71 automot>tla 8ce... roed ., ARTHUR in the wW and/or ettate: TION TO HIGHEST 8100ER FO~ lru1t In Ille Pt~Y herein•ft• 0.. WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION COunct• Cl\fllnban. Clty Hiii. 77 Fair S.O• 27, 11183 Pul:IOIMCI Otano-Coall Dally 0 Nll!BLAS SCHOOL. 9300 Gat· A petJllon h.u been filed CASH (payable •• t.,.,.. OI Mia I~ acirlbad' TO THE HIGHEST tllOOER FOR
()r"'9, C:O.ta MeN. Calltorni.. t0t Ille 1'2291111 Piiot Oc1 10, t7, 24, 3 t, 1"3 denll Avenue. Fountain Valley, Call-by JAMES M. LEWIS ln the lawNI money of the Unllad 81a1 .. ) at TAUS TOR AUSTIN J LEAHY CASH or M Mt forth Ill Sectk><I ~~o o~E·~~: T~~o~:A p~~ .~r~4. ~~ Oelly 5541-83 '°'T"i::· Boerd or Tru••-o• 11141 Superior Court of Orange t':un~~i:~~~O::'.~o IOCI~~ c~~~!~~IARY THE HAMMOND :~4~:,:i ~..;:·:: ~'· =
IG!A GOLF CLUBHOUSE. 6424-83 PlBUC NOTlCE Fountain Valley School D11trlct r• County requesting tha' c.nter O.lve WMt, Swtl• Ana. CA. RECORDED Match. 17. 1980 •• hel<I b)' It under Dead of T~ In
• Addltionat M ii of 11141 apec;lf•· IOf'olW 10 i.... the leollltlea llO In JAMES M . LEWIS be ap-ell rlgnt. uue and 1n1.,a11 conv~ ln11r. No t84611 In Boole 13537 page the Pf°'*1)' naretn1ft• dfllCtlbad:
Cloltion• may be obtained •• the 01· PdrlJC NOTICE ,ICTmc>YI 9Ul ... H dlcatad above undel' the t•m• and pointed u per.on&) repret1en· to and now held Dy It under Ulld 1122 of Olllclal Reco<da In Ille omo. TRU8TOR: JOHN 0, SMITH J~
IWla. Of the Purcf\aelng AQanl at 77 N.u. atATllllM!NT aondlllon1 atated In the ~Uon tAU toadlnJ.niat.e th Oaad of Truet In lhe proc>env lltu-ol lhe R«:ord• Of Orf11199 County, and NATALIE C. SMITH, hU9band
Fair Df'IY9, C:O.ta M .... Calllomla. flCTITIOUl IW ... I• The 1--....,. 11 ..,.._of Iha Board. ~tlon No. 84·t7. ve r eestate ated In Mid County and Stat• d• Miid dMd ot lru•I oe.erlbel lhe and wtl• 81dullouldber.tumadtot11ea11-..,._ I TATW•NT bu..,_--;;-"·"' perlOn ~... TM minimum monthly ..... pay. of AUGUST E. ROZ.AIRE, tctlbed aa: followt1. BENEFICIARY SANTIAGO IN·
tlon of the City Clar1!. wtthln Mid Tlla. lollow4ng peraona .,. dOlng 81RCH LANDSCAPE COMPANY "*11 IOf the term of the ..... lllell aka A. E. ROZ.AI.RE (under The Sout'-8tafly 76 feel of llM The Or1heUlor1)' 71.72 IM1 of VESTMENT COMPANY
time llmll, In • Malad en~. bulinflN u 2841 Crodd)' Way, Sat11a Ana, CA: not be !tea than SA,780.00 I* the Inde nden l A.llmlnia-Not11MM1eny 266 IMt ol U. Soulh Loll 1 iwti,ot IJact l'IWTiber 8211 In Aecotdecl AUQld1 12. tteo .. lcMntllled on the outlld41 wtth the Bid ICE LIGHT PRODUCTIONS 1950 92704 month llncludea U )I0.00 I* month pe -tatly 127.5 ,.., of Loi 132 ol the Coell M ... County Wat., °''" Instr. NO 12755 rn book 138t7 Peoe
Item Number ind the Opening Data. tOth St "' Sult• L 223 ~ Ban L Birch 1111 South Cout otmge for additional cuetOdl•I 1«· tration of Es~tes Act). The "tMwpon H-'ohtt" •• enown on a 1rlct and the Coa1a M4lu Sanllll')' 11&0 01 Official A.cord• In the otlic.
Eacn bid lhlll ~ry Nell and e.acn CA 92663 • · or coaia MaM CA 92028 vtcM on Saturday• 1nd Sund1ya). petition la set for h~arlng in map rac;oro.dln Book 4, PaQ41 113 OI dlalrlc1, Clly ol Co11a M ... , county of the Rac;ord., of Or•• County;
•vary Item ..... lorth In Iha 19Kl11-J IMrtt WM Hanon 1960 16111 Tiiie bulillftl ia ronductad by· an The minimum monthly ..... P•Y· Dept. No. 3 a l 700 Civic MllOflllaMOUI Mapa, recOfd'a Of Of. ol Orange. S1e1• of California, u Mid dMd ol lrut l de8Cfl* 11141 fol-catlona Any and all a.c.ptlol\e to u • ' 8MCh 1 di !dual IT\Wli may be adjuat.ct annually 10 anoa. Calllornlll, 11'town on • map record41d In 8oo1c lowlng propjtrty;
1na 8')6cillcallonl musl be clMtly ~~-;~~la L·223• N-pon · n ~ L Bltctl raflac1 tl\4l'lner-In conipanaatlon Cent.er Dr., West, Santa Ana, VOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A 27. Page 37, Ml-'laneoua Mfl4'1, TM land rafatr.ct to 1n thle guaran·
•ta11.1 In the bid, and !allure lo Ml Robat1 Edw1td (T.ctl Evans 918 t Thi• alllem.tll wu Ill.cl with Iha grant.a to Olllrlcl employ9M. AS.. CA 92701 on N ov 9, 11183, at DEED OF TRUST DATED Octobe• record1 ol Mid Ofange Counly taa 11 111ua1ad In tlM Stile ol CaU·
forth any Item In the spacjllcal~ Adami Avenue Huntlnglon Be.en County Cieri< of Oringe Counry on c;urlly/Cleanlng Oepoelt Wiii be re· 9:30 A .M . 211. 1980 UNLESS YOU TAKE AC. YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNDER A lornla, County of <>reno-. ClfY of
enatt be grounda '°' raiactlon of the CA 92640 ' ' Oct 4 1983 quired prior 10 occupancy (F YOU QBJF.CT lo the TION TO PRO'JECT YOUR PROP· DEED OF TRUST DA TEO Mateh 10. lrvlne. 1nd la datcrlbad u followa bid T I bu I I d led b ' ll'Z2elU No com,.,,lulon anall Qie paid any EATY. IT MAY BE SOLO AT A PUB· 11180 UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION PARCEL 1 Unll 8 u 11\0wn and
Each Did shall Ml IOl'lh !he (ull "I s nee• h~ con UC Y· • Publlalled Ori Coaal Dall ll~Md rHI Mlale broker In lhll granting of the pell lion. you LIC SALE IF YOU NEED AN EXPLA· TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT described In lhe Condominium Plan
r\alnQ and realdenC•• ol all persona g~::,~-c~o::· Piiot Oct 10, 17, ~31, 1983. y reo•rd, and lh«a allall be no deduc-shou_ld eit.her appear at the NATION OF THE NATURE OF THE MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE recorded on Auguat 24. 1979 In
end parties lnltrHled In Illa Thia atal t was IUtld W1lll Iha 5543_113 llon from 1ny propo .. I In detarmln· h eanng and state you objec· PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU. YOU IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF book t32&4, page 1555 lo 1588 In·
proposal II Ina t>ld la Dy a CO<POI'· C 1 Cle<~ O ,... County on _,. Ing the hlgllalt reaponalble bldde•. tJ fit b . SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. THE NATURE OF THE PROCEED-ctualva ol olllclal rac:ordt of aald euon. stete ,,... n•mes Of tlle ollic.<• oun y 0 ran.--s..i.o ptopoUll to ..... 1181d oru or e written 0 jet:-The 11r .. 1 1ddrast 1nd otlle• ING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD county ~ can llgn an agreement Ofl Sept 27• 1983 ~ fllB.IC NOTlCE property mull be rac.lv.ctby the lions w ith the court before common dnlgnatlon, II any, 01 theiCONTACT A LAWYER. PARCEL 2 An undlYidad t/10th
behalf ol lhe corporation a nd p bll heO 0 • e Coaat Dall delagtlad olflce< at the Fountain llaJ· the h earing. Your appear· real property dHcrlbad above Is 1935 Sant• Ane Avenue, Cotta lnlar"t tn end to Ille common., .. .nether more than one ottlcar must u 0: 0 r ~2 983 Y FtcTITIOUl ltUS*Eaa leyS<ihOofOtatrlcl Educallon<Anter. be · b purported to bf. 168 EHt 181h M .... CA.112827 of Lot 1 of Tract 9041 u per map
llgn. II the bid I• by a partnership or Piiot t. 3• 1 • 1 · 4• 1 ~30•83 NAME 8TA'n•NT 11210 Oak Str .. 1. Fountain Valley, ance may an person or Y s1r .. 1, Co1t1 M .... CA 112626 "(II • '""' addrau or common flied In book 372. page9 11anc1 11101
a Joint venture, 11a1e the names and The IOllOWlng pert0n1 ere doing C1lllornla, no later th•n 2·00 pm , your attorney. The undersigned Tru11ee di•· ~ealgnallon of proper1y 11 thown mltcetlaM0<.11 mapa, record• ol Mid
addr ..... of all general panner1 tlutlnen u · October 25 t983 lF YOU ARE A CREDI· claJma any ll1tllllty for any Incorrect· •bova. no wa1r1nty la gl11at1u10 Ila county u tuch term 11 dalll'l4KI In lhe
and Joint venlurare II the bidder It. l'ta.IC NOTICE DOLPHIN BUSINESS SYSTEMS. S.lor• accepll=•ny written TOR or a contingent creditor ""' ot 1na 11r .. 1 addrHI and Olhef compi.1-.. or correcll'lMI)." The lltllcle 0enlllled "'Oaflnlllonl" ol Iha tole propri.torahlp or anolher enllly 16092 SkyPark South, Sune A. Pfoposals. Ille d 1tad ottlcer . comf'T10!I dea10n1llon, II any, snown ~aflclary und• aeld DMd of o.c11r111on ol Covananll con·
that dOM t>us1nMe under a lictltlou1 FtCTITIOU8 IW ... U Irvine, CA. 92714 lhaM call for orel Did Ing Any I*· of lhe deceased. you must hie herein ITruat. by rauon ol • braach or de-dlllona and rHtrlcUona racor~ In
n.,.,,., the bid enall be In Ille rHl NAME ITA'Q.-NT SMNat. Inc . 1126 w .. 1 Arotta Av· 11on wno hu hera1of0ta tuomllled a your claim with the court or Sald 111• will be maoa. our wnnou1 ~aull In Ille obllgallona MCurad Book 11824, Paga 915 of OlllClaf
nam. ol the bidder with • delig· The loltowlng peraons era doing enua, Glend0ta. CA 91740 M iiian l>ld may tul>mll an oral bid present it to the personal rep· covenant or warranty. •11.PrH1 or Im· •llMatly, heretofore ••eculad and Recoroa Ind any amandm41'11• •nd
Ntlon lollowlng ahowlng ··oBA (the bull,_. u Thi• tlullnaM 11 conducted oy: • Hoaadlng by at teut five percent tat led b lh pli.d, •1011tdlng ma.. ~on. or oallvetad 10 the und41<aigned • _,,. suppiamanta ther.of
Octltlous name)"; provlo.d, h<>w· PHNOl.4 ANO JEWELRY ANO IM· corporation. (5%) the ntghatt written bid The resen 1':'e :9Ppotn y e ancumbr1ncas, Including laaa.1et't 0.Cllfall<>n of Default •rid De· l:XCEPTING THEREFROM all oll . .ye<. no llc11tlou• n11\'141 .nan be u!Mld PORTED CLOTtilNG STORE. INC.. Paul Fltt-Gltlbon, Praeldanl hlgheal ratponllbhl tlldd•r thall be court w1thm four monlhB ChlrOfll and Hpan-ol the Trull .. mend IOt Sala. and written notice 01 o11 right•, minerals, miner al right•.
,_...Iller• le 1 cur,_,I raQlltratlon 14340 Brookt11lrt1 Street, Garden,,.. Thia 11atematll wu llled wHh the f«!Ulred 10 execute the lorm ot from the dale of (int asaua.nce and 01 the lrulla creat.ct by ••Id bfttaeh and of alectlon lo cauM the natural gu. n11ural gu rlgflA•, and
Wltll Iha Oraoge County R.cord81' In Grove, CA. 92042 .. ounty Clerlt ol Orange County on IMla. tuc:h formal hll heretofore of letters 88 provided in Sec· DMd of Tru11. lo pay lht remaining underelgnad 10 Mii tald proP«ty to other hydrocarbon• by -.fao.ver
c:aM of c;orpora\l<>fl•. Include Iha Phnom and Jewelry and Imported Oct 4, ,983. tlMll approved Dy the Board of ti 700 f t.h P ba Cod P<lndpal tuma of the no1a(1I MCurtd .-1111y Mid otlllgatlona, and there-nam. known, that may be within °' n-of the Praald9nt. Secretary, Clothlng Stora , Inc.. 14340 1'221112 Trull-on O e ro l.e e by Mld OMd of Trual to ...-1: alt• Ille undalllgned cau!Mld tald un<I« the parcel olland '-eln•l>OYe r,._,,.,, and Managw Broo«hursi SlrMt, Garden Grova, Publlah.ct Of1nga Cout Dally n,. Board 01 Trutt-Shall ,.,,.,.. o f California. The time for $911,665 94 With lnterHI that19on notice ol breldl and or alacilon to Oalcrlbad. together With Ille pat·
The City Council or the Ctry 01 CA 92642 Piiot Oc1. 10, 17, 24. 31. 1983. 1119 determination u 10 wri.ttier to filing cl.aims will n ol expire from Aprll 27, 111113 ~ 18% per be record.ct June 27. 1983 u ln•t< patuaJ rtgnt ol drtlllng, mining, ex·
Coate Mesa ~ the rlgnt to Thi• business 11 conducted by· • 5S42-83 '-9M said facllltlal wltnln Ian !10) pnor to four months from the .,mum u provided In tald no1a(1) No. 113-273432 of Otfldal Record• In ptorlng, and C>Pat•llng therefor and
rtt141Ct any °' all bide. corporation day• •It• rac.lpt ol b1d1 . plu1 coeta and any advMOet or 1ha olllGe of Iha R4lcorda1 of Orange llOflng In and removing the ume
DATED; Oc1ot>« 10. 1963. . Hua o. Phu, PrMldent PtalC NOTICE lnlormallon concerning the dal.e of th e heann g nouced $none with lntereat. County; from aeld land or any othat land. Publllhed Orange Coa11 Dally Pllo1 Thl111a1emar11 waa lllad wjlh Ille propoaal llhould bt1 1dOraue<l 10: above. ESTIMATED FORECLOSURE Sald11Jewlllbamaoa.bulwtlho<lt ln<:ludlng Iha rlg'1t.lo WlllpelOCll or
Oc1 17, 1983. County C!e<k 01 Orange County on F1CTITIOUI llU .... H FOUNTAIN \/ALLEY SCHOOL DIS· YOU MA y EXAM. fNE lhe ~.OSTS ANO TRUSTEE"S FEE ARE covenant or w1rranty. •~Prffl or Im· dlrectlon1lly drlll and ml,,_ tr om
_________ ...;;..5666-;.,;.,;'-6,_3 &.pt 27. 1983. N,._ 8TATIMENT TRICT, 17210 0111< Str .. t. Fountain f"J k . b th If 12.32311. Plied. reg1tdlng lllla ~on. 0t landa other than thOM herelnabove
F2290M 1 n \/allay California, 112708 Tatec>hona I e e pl Y e court. you The t>enatlclary une.r Mid Deed ancumbtancea, 10 pay Iha remaining daacrlt>ad o11 °' gu ,,....., tunna11 PtB.JC NOTICE · Publltt>ad Orano-Cout Dally~~ o::w'ng pereo 11 doing K714) '842-M51 Allanllon Carol are mt.erested in the estate, of Tru11 heratolor. axec:u19d and de-pr1nclpal eum of the nota(t) MCUred and enatti Into. through °' llCJOM
NOTICI Pilot Oc1. 3, 10. 17. 24. 1983. PARIS 432 E 17th Sult• 8 Coeta Jon. you may serve upon the ex-11....,ad to IM unoerllgl'l4KI 1 written by Mid d4lad 01 Trull, with ln1., .. 1 1he tutleurtaoa of tna land herein-_,._ ..,. 5433-83 .... CA 112827 · Date Oc1obat II, 1983 d-'-'-l)ecjlfatlOn ol dafaul1 and Demand u In said not• provided, advancee, 11 •bow dMcrlbad and to bottom IUCll ,,.., '..... _ ... , FOUNTAIN ll.llLLEY ecutor or a uw ..... trator, or for Sale, Ind• written Notice of 0.. any, unow tha 1arm1 ol Mid Oeed of wt\lp910Cllad or dlractlOl\alty drlll.cl HOTIC~ "J:'Re~Y ~VEN that l'ta.IC NOTICE Ml~!~~~· :25:~ Bolaa A~· SCHOOL DISTRICT upon I.he attorney for the ex· fault and Elactlon to Sall. TM under· truat, '-· ctiaroaa. •nd ••I*'-ot wtlffa. tunnetl and •h•fla under and
-led propoaalt win be r.c.tved b)' Yhl• buihM• j1 conctuciad bv: an BOARO OF TAUSTEES •· ecutor or administrator, and elgMO cauMd llld Notice ol o.1a.u11 Ille TrullM and.of the tru1t1 crHlad '*-'h or beyond the exterior
1,,_ City 01 Cotta Maaa. 10 wit: The PlCTITlOUI .UlllNEIS ndlvldual · Suzanne Moore file with the court with proof and E~tlOI\ to Sell to be recorded In Dy Mid OMd of Tru1t, limit• thar.OI, and to radrilt, ratun·
City Council, p o . Box t200. Colle NAME ITA,.......,. Hang Minn~ Clark of Iha Board f . . t 1h• county Wiier• th• real prol*ty la S aid Nia wlll be held on: Monday, nel, equip, maintain. r~r. ~ Th'-1 .. ~ 1 Putllllhad Orange Co111 Dally PllOI o servwe, 8 wntten reques local.ct · November 14, 1983, ar 2·00 Pm. 11 Ind operete any IUCh ...... °'ml,,... M .... Cllllornla 92826-1200. on or TM lollowlnQ pareon• era dotng •• 11•1-1 WM .-.. w 111 IM Oct to 17 24 1983 suiung that you desll'e s.--.ial Oat.ct Sec>temt>at 27 1983 111e Chapman Avenue 9nlranot 10 thout hOweVar the ....... , 10 O<lll before the llOur of 11.00 1 m on bull,_. u . County Clerk of Olfl'109 County on ' . . · ..--: C FOR TR STEE COR C -~-,._ .... 300 Eu ..., ' . .,,.. Frid Oc1 bat 20 1983 I Shall be BAM·BEAR 14712 F kiln Sulta i0c1 4 111113. 5546-83 notice of the filing of an Ill· ALI NIA LANO u • the .............. t., .,.,lldlng. I ml,,., s1ora, flll.Plor• and oparal• ay, 0 · · 1 · ran · · d • f PORI< TION Chapman Ave., -0,anga, CA througn 11141 aurlaoe or the upper SOO Iha r111ponslblllly ol the bidow to I, Tuatln, CA. 92680 '22lal ventory an appraisemen l o u IAkl Trultae Al 1na time ol the Initial publt· feet 1 lhe tubMlr1-01 the land <Mil...., hi• bid to Illa City Clerlt't BIN H•MN. 14712 Franklin. Sulla Publllhad 01•1• Cout Dally P\8.IC NOTICE est.ale assets or of the peti· By: Stflllfln c Kuna.r cation 01 11111 no1lca, the total heral~lbove d.acrtt>ad, u ,~ ~ 8~ '"!:: :operbll~r::= 1· 1~1f~~92680 Piiot OC:t lO, t7• 2 · 31· 19~4_63 Mottca Of .... of tions or accounts mentioned Publlen.d Orange Co11t Dally Piiot amount of Iha unp1ld balenoe 01 the In tha dead from tlle lrvtneCompany.
and ; .. d ~ at 1~~00 1.m .. or u Thi• 1tat-t waa lllad with the "9al PtlC*'tY et in Section 1200 and 1200.5 of Oct. 10, 17, 24, lll83 obligation aecurad by Iha above de-• corporation racorOad Auou•t 12,
toon 1....,..11., .. practlcat>ta on County Clerk 01 Orange County on Pftw* .-. the California Proba~ Code S481·83 11erlbad d4lad of tru•t and ntlmalad t980 In book 13697, page 1151 of
Frida Octob« 211 1983 In Ille 5-pt 27 11183 l'ta.IC NOTICE No. Pe82828 · 00111• ••e>enMt. Ind 9dvanoea 11 Offlclal R.corda. ~I Cham'*-Cit Hali 77 F If ' · l"2290C1 In the Superior Court ollhe State DIANNE L. LIDDY, AT· PUBt.1C NOTICE $113,218 71 ALSO ~EPTING THEREFROM
OftY9 Coate,,..._' Cal~ornl' tor 1~ PubllaMd Ofanga Coul Daily '1CTTTIOU• .,..... of Calllornla, '°' IN County 01 Loa TORNEY AT LAW The t01al lnd41C>tad,_ being an ,,.,. eubturfaoa weter righ11, but l\lmleNna of LABOR ANO MA-Piiot Oct. 3, 10, t7, 24, 19113. NAME aun•NT Ano-fee Z7to Harbor Blvd., Salte 313 FICTITIOU9 •UlfNEH .. tlmate on Mlk:n tlle opening bid 11 Without Iha rlOllt ol eur1-en1rv u
TEAlAL f o INSTALL A SOUND RE S432-83 The lollowlng per11on1 •r• dOlng In lhe Miiie< Ol lhe Eat••• Of Helen Co M c.. •t•t• ....... ITATUM!NT computed mey ba. Oblall'l4KI by call· r~ In the dead rrom IM lnnne CORDING SYSTEM • bualneee u : R. Cool\, aka Halen Rotllnaon CooK Ila e1a, "· Tna fOllowlng peraona .,. dOlng Ing (7141 937·0966 the day before Company, • corpor1tton. recorded
Additional Mii ·01 Iha 19Klll-CREATIVE NETWORK, 3111 VIiia o.c.u.d. '(71') H0·08S0 tlullnM• ... Iha aela. Augull 12, 19112 in book 13697.
c;atk>ne ma ba. obtained at the Of. PlB.JC NOTICE W~ Newport Bdch. CA 92863 Notice •• hereby g•~ lhat the Published Orange Coast El TAX FORMS, 31841 Pa.MOL• Oalad. September 29, 1983 Paga 1151 of Olllclal A.cord• ~ lthe YPurcn aln A I 1 77 G Communtcatlona In<: . 3111 undalslgnad wlll Mii al Provete Mla. 0 I Pil 0c 17 l 8 24 Branu, S111 Juan Cac>latreno, CA. WESTWOOD ASSOCIATES PARCEL 3 e-11 u such Fair~ eo.1 • M g ~'. I FICTTTlOUI .u..... VIII• Wav. N-port BMCh. CA lo lhe hlgllalt and belt bidder. sub-aa y Ol t . • ' • 92675 .. Mid T•ualae. .~ ..... 1>8'11Cutlt1y Ml '°"" Bide~ be re~urr::io Iha;.~ NA• ITA ro.NT 112663 j41CI 10 confirmation of tald Superior 1983. 5668-83 Soh'9da, Inc • Calllornle COtPO<· By T 0 SERI/ICE COMPANY ~ In the artlcla amttlael "~II tlon of 11141 ClfY Cler1! within aakl T1141 IOllowlng '*'°" Is dOlng Thia bualneu 11 conduct9d by • Coun on or •flar 11141 27th day of atlon, 3 184 t Puao La Brann. San By Conl Cap•az. A11111an1 of tna Daclar1uon undat Illa. MCllOn
tim. Hmlt In _iec, ve1opa buelnwe u ; icorPO<l tlOn. Octot>er 11183, a111141 Office ol Aotl L Nil.IC NOTICE Juan Caplatrano, CA 92875 ra1ary hMdlnga In sUC11 llf'llda entotlael Iden lfied • ,,_• I~ w1:' the Btd OUALITY MINl·LAB SERVICE Dan Tack9noll, Pratloent Werner. 2725'h Camp P1ento; Road. Thi• bullneu la conducted tly a One City Blvd. Weal. Or1nge, CA "UllllllM" "Suppon and Sett ... llem'Num:r'an~M Opani Data ANO MAINTENANCE, 955 W 191h Thia l lal-1 waa llled wlln lh4t Canyon Country llt35l Counry orj NOTICE CW ntUIT'aS'I IALE' corporation. 921188 rnerll , "Encr~manf' and "Com-
Each Did Shall tpaclty .:',, and SL. E·129, C:O.ta M .... CA, 92827 County Clerk or Orange County on Lot A~. Siiia of Calll0tnla, •111 ~No. ~/LEAHY Richard M•lew•kl, Pra1lde n1 7t4-835-8288 mon Ar .. Euatnerlt" It forth I Iha apec:tll-Robert l<ellh GammlR, 955 w Oct. 12. 1983 right mi. and lnl•-1 of aald O• T.I. .... f.10S71 Thia •1•1ernan1 ...... flied with ,,,. Puollahad Orange COHI Dally PARCEL 4 E.uatnanll .. IUCtl ."fY am,.;: ::0 all n llOn t llllh SI . E· 129, Cott• MMe. CA ~ cae.Mci II Iha time Of dMlh and ·" UNIT COCME I County Cler1t of Orange County on PllOt Oct 10, 17, 24, 19113 5531·83 -*'" .,.. parUcularly ... lorth ~ ~tlOnl rm!~°: ~~ 92627 Publlth4td Of•~ Coul Daily Iha right, title and lnlatffl Illa! Ille ft8TW000 A810CIATE8 Oct 12. 1983 In Iha "'1tcle anUllld 'e-11"
tt.atad ,.., Iha bid, and laltur• to ... Thie bual..-a •• conduct.cl Dy all Piiot Oct 17. 24, 3 . Nov 7, 1983. .. .. ,. OI laid d-...CS hU flC· .. duly apc>Oinlad Trual .. unda< lhe F22'7291 P\8.IC NOTICE Of Iha Mulat Oac:IMa!lon of eo ....
lonh any It.,,, In the tpaclflcationa lndlvtOual 5&5>33 qulrad Dy operation of law Of Olher· follCl'llWlng d..crtba.d dwd of 1ru11 QA,.... .. AOHI!" nanta. conc1111ons encl ,..tne,_
tnall be grounoa lor rai-c110n of the ~berl Keitll Gemml~lad wlM other tnan Of In addition to thel WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION A fl'rah 11IUtilr Law Corpof•tloll ITATW_,,,. CW j racoto.d •n boo411 11766, P• 420 Of
t>ld 1 1tatamer1I wu with the f'ta.IC NOTICE ol .aid deCU.Md. at the time or TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR 1MOt V8ft K-. 8.illa 410 A•A~ cw UI~ Of' Olltctal Record• and eny amtono· ~ bid Shall Ml forth the lull County Clark of Orange County on death. In and lo all IM c.rtaln real CASH ANOfOR THE CA.S~IEAS OR lntna, CA..12715 "CTITIOUI llUlllHE81 HAIR mwnta lnO au~lt thereto
,,.,.,,.. and rMI~ ol aH peraona Sac>t 27 · 1983 ,tCTITIOUI Mll ... 11 property 1Uualad tn 11141 County of CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIED IN (714) IM-1118 Tne lollowlng peraona ll•v• a ban· unda< Mellon hM<ltng1 In tuCl1
•nd parties lnteraatad In tlla p O C F~ NAME ITATE•NT Olanga. Stale of Ctlll0tnl1, Plf1icu· CIVIL CODE SECTION 2924h (pay· PiJl:llllhed Orange Coall Delly Cloned Iha UM of Iha FlctlllOua Bual· ar11cle antlllad ··o-a". "Righll
propoeal. 11 tha t>ld ts by 1 corpor· Pl u~~ O "~ ~~I The lollowtng patlOnl 1ta dOlng larty 0.ICriba.d u follOwa. to-•I Ible at the llrna ol Mle In lawful Pllol Oc1 17, 24. 31. Nov 7. 1983. nast Name MISSION MAINTEN· and Ou1~··, , "U1111t~ and .. c~ •llOn, •••t• lhe n-ol tNI olllcara IOI • 1 . I . "· I S.27-63 bullnM• u Lot to In Bloc*! 2 of McOarmcHlll moneoy ol Iha United Siii .. } ali rlghl, S659·83 ANC'E. 27708 c.ii. Vaid ... Mlulon !alavltion • Enc.-oacl'lmant ~
who can sign an agra.nanl on SOFlRAOER. 311141 Puao La Addition, U par Map raciorda.d Boole 11111 and llftar•I con...eyad to and Vt.Jo. CA 92892 Communtll FacltltlM "-1t
bal'lall of the corpo11t1on and Branla, San Juan Cap111rano, CA 4, Page 80of1.411c*lan.out Aacofda now held by 11 uno• 181d Deed ol PlllllC NOTICE owner June E Stlmm. 27706 Calle PARCEL e-n....11 '°' lng(11•
wMlher more 1nan one oltlc4lr ITIU9t Pllll.IC NOTK:E 92875 In the onic. ot 1n. county rac0tdef or Trual 1n Illa propaty "8teinal1er d• V1ldM, Mlaelon lllajo, CA 1128112 and eorwa OY9< lhlll portion ol lot B
lllQn If the bid 11 t>y 1 plf1nentole> or Soflrada, tnc .. a Calllornl1 corpor. aald county tcrl!MKI The Fictitious ButlnM8 N1me •• of Tract 9123 aa par map flied In a jol~t venture. •l•I• Iha na"*I and F1CTITIOUtl •U'*4!18 1tlon. 3184\ Puao LI Branze, San Exoeptlng tn.telrom Ill oll, gla, TRUSTOR· AUSTIN J. LEAHY NOTICE OF DEATH OF VI· fened 10 at>o\'8 wu flied In Orange book 365, PflOM 29 lo 38 lndullw, add•-Of •II Oet*al par1Mr9 NAME IT•TllMNT Uuan Caplatrano. CA. 92675 mlnttral• and Other hyd•ocerbon BENEFICIARY THE HAMMOND Vienna Marlene Repp •ll• County on NoVllmbar 10. 1980 of mltcaOan.oua mapa. record• Of
and )olnt v.ntur..... 11 the t>l<ldef I• a The lolk>wlng peraona are dOlng Thi• tlullnMa 11 conducted by. • 1ub111ncat In.on or under Mid •and COMPANY Marlene R e pp ANO OF Th11 t1ullnHa was oonduct.ct by a ... Id county, u partlcularty de-'°'-propra.tcnhlp °'another entity ~ u · icorporatlon t>ut wllhOUI in. right ol euf1-entry. RECORDED March 17, 1980 u PETITION TO ADMINIS-ndtvidual 11Ctlbad u • landtcaptng •ll<I Pfl'/lng
,,.,., dOM Du--under I llc11ttou. HAIR ARllSTRV. 25804 AllcJI Rlchatd Mai-ticl. Praalda.nt •• r~ In lnatrumant OI rec.ord II lnltr No 18469 1n Q90'< 13537 page June E. Stlrnrn ., ... In Iha supp!Mnenlary Daclat·
name Ille l>ld lhall be 1n 11141 rMI Pantway. L.agun1 Hiiia. CA. 92853 Thia atalamant wH Ill.cl With Iha any 822 of Otfldal ~d• in the office TER ESTATE NO. A·l ZO%ot Tiii• 11•1-t wu lllad with the latlon of Cov9nanta, CondlllOnt and
n.,.,,.· of Iha bidder w11n 1 o.tlO· Rlcnard Hamman, 1se22 May-ICounly Clerk or Ora~ County on • more commonly kl'lown aa. 439 011ne Recotder of Ofanoe County; To all hetrS, beneficiaries, !County~ or Orange County on "'-trlctlone racorOad on Octobat
Nlllon tolk>wlng lt\o'tttlng ··oBA (the 1:1rooti St .. w .. 1m1ne1.,, CA. 92683 K>ct t2, 1983. Amarlgl. Fullerton. ca111 Mid dead of truat dNCtlbee the creditors and contin gent s.p1 22. 1983 ._18, !~~~-~/'~ 1~~;...~..2_8&2
flclltlQU\ name)''; provlo.d. h<>w· Mlcl'lala Haneman, 15822 M•y· ,227294 Tarm1 ol Hie cuh In lawt\.rl money folk>wlng. . Ille no F 1411133 ,.o ,.,.... ""' u .. ve, o "'"...._ ._....da -· noflc111ioua nam.lhall beuMd brc>c* St .. W•tmln1t•, CA. 921183 OA"WIH a WAOH.IA 011,.,. Unit.ct Sletee on confirmation Tlla Nortl!eute<ly 71.72 f .. 1 of c redt tors o f Vlvl e nna Putlllahad Orange CoHt Dilly ~I Mid county
U(llaaa that'e .. •currant raglatratlon Thia bull,_ It conducted Dy .• ~ .,.,_...lone! I.aw CWIMf•tlon of Mia, or pan CUii and balanc. Loi• 1 •nd 2 of Tract Numt>at 828 In Marlene Repp aka M arlene Piiot Oct 10. 17. 24, 31, 19113. MAY BE ALSO KNOWN AS. 1S4
tMth the 0rfll'ge County ~a.. In g«ieraJ part~p. ...01 VCNI 1<"""811, ...... 410 avldenoed tly not• Met.Ired by Mort· the Cotta M ... County Wal• DI .. Repp and persons who may 5535.83 ~I Yale Loop, Irvine, CA Untt 18 caaa of ~atlon1 lnctuo. the Richard Hanaman ~.CA. W711 OllQfl Of True! 0..0 on the Pfoper1y trlcl and the Cos1a MMe S1nltary be '--rwise · Led · ) (11 a 1trM1 addl9N °'common namee of the Pr~t. s.cratary, Thie 11etamat11 wu flied "'1th 1,.,.1C714) 116-115' IO lold. Tan per cet1t of amount l>ld d'9tnc,, City of Coat• Maaa. County Olru: tnteres Ill . ~tton 11 lhOwn a.bc>ve, no-· Tr-rer, and Managar County Clao1t o1 Orange County on Publlthecl Orange Coaal OaJty 10 be depOaltad With bid 01 Ofang., Stlla Of Calllornla. u I.he will andlor estate: f'tlll.IC NOTICE 'anty 11 glv.n ~.to Ila oorn~
The City Council of Iha City ol &.pl 27. 19113 Piiot Oc1. 17, 24. 31. Nov 7, 1983. 81dl ~ ott.,.10 be In writing and lhOWf1 on a map r9COfded In 8oott A petition has been filed NOTICE OF~ ltEAMNQ rOf' oorrac1ne11).
Cot t• Meu ,_..,.. the right IO ,22tlll1 SM0-83 wltl be r_..,., at the alOf...Jd of. 27, Paoa 37. Ml~-· MINI•. by Laura M Stough in the AICON LANOf'1LL The t>enelldary under lll<ld OMd reject any or all bid• Putlll1hed Orange Coaat Dally flea at 1ny ume 11tat Iha llral publl· raoord1 ol Hid Orange County ·. _f ot Truat. Dy r..aon of • llfeach Of
DATED· Oc1obat 12. 1983 Piiot Oct. 3, 10. t7, 24. 11183. .. .. 'IC NOTICE cation her.of and before dell of YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A Superior Coun of Orange fXTENlj()N Of' M<>llATOfUUM O.faull In the obllgatlona ~ ?iJl:llllNd Orange Coal! Dally Piiot ~29-83 ... _ M ia. DEED OF TRUST DATED Mereh 10. County requesting t h a l NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that • thereby, hat'etofO<e oaculed and
Oct 17 1983 ..... TTTIOUI •u·-·· Dalee! '"'' 11th day 01 Oclobat, 1980 UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION Laura M Stou gh be an-publlc helflng wlll be held by lhe City dellver.d 10 the undallllgned. wr11· 566~ fl"\ .. ...,. -1983 TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY IT . . r Council of Iha City of Huntington 19'1 o.claratlon of Dafaul1 and 0.. . . Pllll.IC NOTICE NAME ITAHllllENT E•ecutrl• Vl1g1n1a c HawthOt'n. MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE pomt.ed as pel"IOnal repre.en· BHch, Calllomla. morllorlum on mend 10< S ala. and wr!llan notlo. ot Nil.IC N0TIC£ Tile lotlow1ng l*lonl are doing of tne E11a11 ol Hid IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF lat.Ive to administer the estate Ille a1c;avallon of materlal from Int l>fNC11 and alacflon to cau11 Iha
F1CTITlOUI •ueMll ~~:.::· bu:~·H-:NOYMAN SERI/ICE. 210 Attwn.r. "811 L. ·-o.c.dent ~N~ :::.~~ ~~UTHY~~~~oEJ~ of Vivienna Marlene Repp= ~a!!.:'°!':1,,;':: ~:;. ~ :..:11:::. ~
,,.,... ITAn•NT The lollowlng ~· ere d0lng8tll St .. Huntington B•Kll. Ca. 27211,1, c.,,. fl'lenr, .-... CONTACT A LAWYER. (u_nder \~e lndependent Ad· ftmber 3. 1983. Thtl •• ,_Ion on •llat Ille und41rllgnecl C:.UMd N;cJ
T 1 bullnau u : 111211•8 c anron COtll'ltry ttl51 11135 Santa Ana A11at1ue Coat• rruniatrauon of Est.ala Act). the moratorium wiff be lor • period notice ol b•aac:h and ol a1ac:11on to bull'!..°'~ l*lon la dOlng P l A CE N T I A ~ U T U A L Timothy Joeaph Hoppa, 2222 Publlehed orange Coul Dally Piiot M ... CA 92e27 · The peUtion ia set for hearing not 10 I KCMd to Section 658511 of be R.cord.ct J~ 30, 19113 .. lnatr
FINANCIAL NEGOTIATION SER-PROPERTIES, 18771 Bay View Or .bai1wara .fC. Huntington e.acn, Oct 17. t8, 24, tll83 "(lf'a llra.t addr ... 0< common in De l No J at 700 CiVic Illa Govemrnat'll COO.. No 113-278895. ol Mid Official A.-VICES 21._B N Sen Sun.., e.acti, CA 90742 icA. 92848 566~83 Oaalgnlllon of Pfopert)' II .,_, P · · Said ••C.Olkln of Iha moratOflum oordl Ana. CA 92703 Newt>opa, •• Garald Allan Jonee, 111771 B•y Gttry Laa Gom ..... 210 11th St . above no arranty 11 gjven u 10 111 Center Dr .. West, Sant.a Ana, It~ t>ec11<1M ol the potential Said Mia 'tlllff .,. l'Mde. t>ul wlll\OUI
Lind · L Joh 2 l<f.B vi.... Or •. SunMt BMdl, CA 90742 ~untlngton BMCh, CA. 926411 •-ic NOTlrc com~,..;..°' corrac1MHI '" The CA 92701 on Nov 2, 1983 at tnrMI to the putlllc health and ttl•ty oova.nan1 or watranty, e•SHWe or Im· ~ :' A ~·A 112703 N M1tllyn Loul• .i-. 18771 Bty Tnte butll'lMI la conduct.ct Dy • ,.._ w. beneficia under Uld DMd of 9.30 AM of r..identa llvlng in the aurroundlng piled, raigardlng tllle, ponen lon, Of ·~·..,,,.., ant a na View Or .. Sunat BHCh. CA. 90742 llfl'"*al Plrtnetlhlp T . ry · · · community from dltlUttlanca. ••· encumt>tancee 10 pay the tatNlnlng Thll bullnest It conoucted ~· an t<eran L .. Lovato. 175680 Santa Garry L .. Gonu i.a 'fCTITIOUI au..... rutt. by raaeon ot • brMCll or de-rF YOU OBJECT to the c•vatlon Wiii an•IM the City lo com· P'lnclpal eum or 11141 note(I) aecur.ct
lnd•¥\dual, Cetalln• St .. Fountain Valla)'. CA Thi• ltltamant w11 llled with Ille NANI ITATl•NT fault In the obllgetlona ,MCurftd granting of I.he pe\luon, you ptet1 ltudlo 1nd ordlnan...a d .. by Mid Oaad 01 Trvt• w11n 1n1•n • i~d•,t":nnaon1 llled 1111 ...... Thia bualnaat 11 conducted by 1 County Clerk 01 Orang• County on llu T:14' IOll":"'lno Pat'IC>n I• doing :i':::!~ =·~:.:;:~ ~ :::i should eith er appear al the •lgnad 199Clllc1lly 10 prolac1 Iha an· H In Hid note provl<laO. edvanc.a, 11 1 1 omen wu w, ''"" llmllad partn«l/llp Oct 12, 1983 1 -u vlronrminl 1nd populatlon In the any under the l•m• of Mid o..o of County Clark ol Orenga County on Gatald A ,,_ ,227291 PERSONAL BEST. 3801 Jam. tan Oac:1ara11on Ol Default •nd 0.-hearing and s t.ate you oltJK· vlolnlly 01 the A.aeon Landfill T ~1 f-Chargw and . Of
Saot 27• t983 F2290N Thlt 111~1 wH Iliad .... 111 the Publlati.d Orange Co11t Dally llOr~rin"':~:i ~:41~2P~ :~':n~a:,. :=,::'::" C:~~ uons or file wrtt~n o bjec· S eid hearing 'tlllH be held 11 111e 1(; T.:Vtt.t and of the ,,::ad
p bllthad 0 ,. ___ • nan County Clerk Of Orange County on Piiot Oc1 17. 24. 31, Nov 7, 1983 eo.1 ....... CA M•27 . under .... necl to Mii lal<I ~to tJons with t.h~ rourt before llOur of 7 30 p M . on Octot>at 17, tly Mid Dead of TNlll u "~ .....,... ..,. ., a.pt 27 1983 5656-83 • • ._., ..,,, ,,. __ ., h h I y 1983, In lhl Councll Chambetl Said Mia wtH 1:1a "9ld on Novem. Piiot Oc1 3 tO, 11. 24 •1183 "DMl2 Thi• bullnne la conducted by an tall•f'r Mild obllgatton1. and ,,,... .. t e ear ng. our appear-Bulldl"" 01 tne Clvk: c.nt., 2000 .._. 7 ,..... 1 11.00 • •• .. _ S.25-83 Individual 11ter t,.,. underllgned cwaad Mid be · b ... ' ..,_ • ...... 1 · "'"' · 11 i.,. Putllllhad Orange Cout Dally P\8.IC NOTlCE L 1 O.SI 1 notice 01 D•aach ind of lllactlon 10 ance may tn penion or Y Main Str .. t. Huntington S.ach, C•ll· front entrance 01 Stan·Sn.w Co<-------------1Pllot Oct 3. 10, 11. 24. t983. euin ••no . ..., J .. your attorney lornla. pora11on, 1570 e..1 11111 Str .. t .,_,,. NOTlrc 54211·83 'ICTTTIOUI •u••--11 Thl11"111aman1 waa lllad with the be racoro.-. une 27. 1.83 I.I Instr. "" YOU ARE A C REDI All lnt11a11.o pe<aona are Invited S1nt1 An• CA 927t 1 . r~•'-w. _._ Countr Clark ol Or1nge Counry on No. 63-273432 of Olllcill R41cordt In ''" • and Id h I ALICIA M ' .
I NAME ITATIMl.flfT Oct 1e. 1983 the onlce 01 t1141 Recorder or Orange TOR or a rontingent creditor 10 •11 M ear ng, · Tha total amo1..n1 01 the unpaid
ACTTTIOUI 9UIMH PUBUC NOTICE The lollowlng l*llOlll .,. doing ,2ZTl97 Count . WENTWORTH bal~ 01 the ot>lloatton MCurM by ..... ITATUllNT .in.ti... Publlat>ad Or Cout 0 Sal~t•IHtlH ba.~. tlulwlll\Oul of the deceued. you must file CITY CLERK Mid property to tie IOIO. too-t'*
The IOllowlng PflflOn II dOlnO FICTITIOUI auslNlll EMEl\ALD ENERGY FUND, I, II Pllol Oct 17 24 9;1'8 Nov 1 198;itv icovenant or werranly ••PfMI or Im· your clatm With the coun or CITY OF HUNTINGTcltfl ~OEAR CH With 1111 ..... 1. ,,,. Chergaa. and .. 11. ~lllnMt U .... ._ IT'"Tl•"'T "' l>fl Cor Oa1 M CA . • ' ' •-' It h -··' "Llr' NIA mat.cl COlll ·~ and ad· HOT LEGS 3241 Of A -.. " .. am a. on1 er !5857·83 pllad. revatOlnO 111,. polNlllon. Of pretent tol e penion•u rep-l7 14)63a.5227 •1 he da hat9ol I ao. •• M ... CA 92628 agon ... • The loltQwlng person II d04ng 82625 , '--,;;_mb•encee. to pay Ille IMmlnlng ret1entauve appointed by the Publl•hed Ora~COHI 011~ Piiot s~;; 0 I •• . • • · t1u11naea aa: A-01ona1 Reeour"'91. Inc .. 9 Ctrp· atm•1c NOTICE l)f'lnolpal eum of Ille notl(a) aecured 'th l h ..... ..83 .. e3 3 • · ' GonlonBrlln HaY"-3241 Or900n OUITTLESAC ENTERPRISl:B, ~111, Corona. dal Mar. CA. 92825 .--b)' Hid deed ol Trull. ~lh lntarMI court w. In our mon\ • ""10 6• f.. " •8 Oatad, OctOO... 5. 1983
.. ,,. . Costa ........ CA 92628 2201 Paclllc Av•. •2A. Coall Meaa, Thi• t>uttnee• II conducted Dy I '1CTIT10UI llU9INlll .. lh H id not• provl<lild. edvancat, ll from the date of fl rat llluance STAN·SHAW CORPORATION
Tiiie l:lualnne 11 conc:tuc:t.ct by· •n CA 112827 Mmttad pertntrthlp. NAME 8 TATIMINT ~y. under 11141 t.,ma or Mid OMCI ol of lett.era as provided ln Sec· P\8.JC NOTICE H Nici Truataa lnOMOlMll Aaron L• McCracken. 2201 P1-Roy H Oelatllout. PteekMnl Tn. tohowfrlQ peiaone are OOlflg trval. I .... chargaa, and e11Pat1-ol ti 700 f th D-'--~ Cod By; STAN·SHAW CORPORA flON
9rlan Ha~ ctflc A~ .. •2A. eo.1. M .... CA Thia 1talamenl WH flied with tnt bvllMll •• ~ha Trv11 .. anc101the lrUlll«Mled on ° . e ........... e '1!CTn'IOUI .u..... 2315 E.aal, S-1.,,lh Strwl cc!!::' .. .,_, w•• ni.o ""'" '"-92627 County Clar1I of Orange County on HILL-TOP POWER SWEEPING lbY Mid 0..0 of Trull. of Calltorrua. The time for ..... ITAT'lmNT Santi ""' CA 92711
s.c>t ~7~of Or•noe County on Tni11:1u11,_ 11 conouc1eo by an Ocl 12. tll83. 1NC .. 23115 RutQar'll Or. Coat•~: Said Nlawll be helO on Monday, flllna clainw wiU not ~xplre The lollowinQ Petton1 .,. dolnti 171,4,!!'~
• · lndMduel. ':t1'7291 CA. 921:!8 NoYembet t4. tH3, at 2 00 p.m at pnor to four monlha from the "'*.,... ... "X "'""
Pvbllehad O••noa Cou~ Aaron Lea Mc;C1act1an ~·"nt. POWIU. I T ... a lMlyne Albertton. 2365 Rulgett the Chapman ... __ entr.nca 10 date of the hearing noticed AN AH E .• M T 0 y 0 TA . ,, ~ Putlllllled ~arr Dally PllOI "°' Oo1 3 10 17 24 1983 Thia ttl1_,I WH llNtd wlll'I 1114 ~AN Of .. Cotti M ... , CA 92020 J:!-ClvlC C41ftter Bulldlng, 300 Eul bov Lochmoor Ltne. Newl)Ofl ~ ,..._ t7 "4 l t 1163 • ' • • . County Clet1I al °'fll199 County Of1 .... ..,.... L.elynt Albeneon .. hapman AV9 ' Otanoa. CA a e. OA Hee<> ""'" • • • • .
• • !>4"26-63 ~ 21. 1H3 -,..... fhll 11ataman1 wM fllecl With the At the Um• ot the lnltlat pubff. YOU MA V EXAMINE the Anaheim lmporla, Inc • ·~ ~ ~ ,_..., .... T_ County Clark of Orano-County °" ~tlon or tflll nOtlce. Iha total file kept by the oourt u you Locllmoor ~-Newport a.-, rtaJC fl)lJC( rtaJC NOTIC( Publl9hed Orane-CO..t .....,.,.., ... ,.. ••4' Oct 12, 11193. lltnOunl Of tna unpaid balanoa or the CA 92MO ------------1PMot Oct a. 10. 11. 24. 1983 ....,,_. ._.., C:A. -~ ob110a110t1~b)'11141 1b<>V9 • .,.. lnettested in t.h~ e:1tat.e, sieven, soi.., f>raalda.nt PCnnoue .,_.1 • 1'1CTIT10Ue .,..... S<t31~ fl'ulllleNO Orenot CoMt o.ny Publlall.ct Of*'" eo.1 Delly w tl*t d.-cl 01 tfU4lt and Mtlmatacs you may ~rve upon I.he ex· Thi• 1111tmen1 -tllecl with'"" um ITA~
, • ..,... ITATllmN'T fl'llot Oct 1'1, 2•. H. Nov 1. 1983. P1101 Oct. 17, :i•. 31. Nov, 1. 1tN. ooa11 .... ~ .... and adv-le ocutor or admln'8trator, or County Olerlc Of <>reno-County Of' ni. fo11ooMno ,,..._ -~
. The '~ l*IOM .,.. dOinG rtaJC NO'OC[ Otse-N ffS.4-'3 1 113,21& 11 u......, ~ a~tome for the frX· &.pt. H , 1M3 tlualnMt• t1ue1nMe M. The total l~eclMN belnq an -·' ,.._ FOA SALi IY OWN!R PIJ8U. •AADA.SONA380C1ATU,21•e2 ncnnouewH P\a.IC NOTIC[ PlllllC NOTlCl -0ma11 onwt11c11111e:1ng1:11ct11 ec:utor o r lrator. and Publllhed Orange Ooa1t Dall) CATIONS. 1t u1 lofdl9YK LI\,
Pac:Hlc COM! ......,,_ay, 11untlngton ..._ ITA'nMUff ~led may be Obt nee! b)'""" flle with th~CQW"t with proof fl'"°' Oo1. to, t7, 24, 31, tH3. Huntington 8-ctl, CA ttf.41
'-ll.CA.9*t The~ "'90l\I era Oo1r1G flCTmOUl9U ... h PIClTTIOUa.U ... 11 w"' t1t4l 9'f..c>OM Iha day i.forelof tervlce, a written l"flqUftt 5~ SUMn Bark• llSSt toroeeu11
8-...l W. tadetre.t. 2901 c.,, ~ •: ..,._ •TA,.._N'T .. ._ STATu.NT the Mia 19\.alJn& that )'OU de9ire 1pc:c:Lal Ln ' Humlngton e.K.I. CA. wt4' *8:, w..,, -Linn . OragCH'I CEAE8l. 2430 Hotty Ln . Newoor1 The lolloWlnG ,,..._ .,. doing Tlla tOllOwlng peraon It dOlnO O.~':a~'Me~!~t:a notice o f the flli"a o{ an ln· rtaJC NOT1C£ ....,.. Dene Thoma , ... 1 lor· a..c:ti, CA. 112813 buliMM .. ; butllnMI 11 Mid T •.., CIMull I.I\., Hunt~ la.a.oh, CA. .P~"°t!.~~ o.vi.. 2 ''"' Cnr'lltlne 0 FrllM, 2430 l'40lly 1.n. WINDSONG AESIOENTIAL CARii. c H o. A880CIATES, 13502 t. Ool'll ~-:. IVnltory and appralaement ot ''°nnou• .,..... Ht•• ..__ C 9204 ay Humlnoton ~a.tit, CA. 92883 Mt J08f\n Str..i, Oottt MMa, CA. 1.turlnda Wey. Sama Ma. OA. ,,_·tam a:;.-. lelt.11\e ... ._ or o f the petl· NAIM aTAT9MIN'T Joan 1.aAu.. 1Mt1 ~· Ln ,
_... A. Thll llUelnMI I• con~ed llo;. I 12927 9270$ c;;.. OI -· tJ t.t tJ ned The lollowlnQ dOI"" Huntlnglon '-"·CA .,....
John 8. Wlltlam10n. llMll Coluea Mmltad Pllf'fMrltlll> Oona Barbara Wlndllldt, CIOt VatftOll Riiey Davia, 13!!02 l aurtn· w..i Or tr ~t2aee ona or ICDOUn ""°n ° bu..-u '*"°"' .,.. "'• 1<a111ryn Lvnn, 61t "°Yer°"· Lonv
Cltde C90I Huntlngton BMctl, OA. CIW!atlna 0 ,,.,.. Ctu~ A-.~ 8Mctl. da Wsy. Stllll Al\I, CA 9'705 (114i:1:!..2it ln Secuon 1200 and 1200.~ of TOYOTA 8ANTA AHA. 417 Waat .lelcl\, CA tol1~
t2f4t Tl'lll ~· -llled "'"" Int CA 02143 TN• bu.._ It conduel~ Dy· an Put>llel*I ~ Cout A~ I.he C.Ufornia Proba~ Cod• 'wltNr 4~ hnt• Ana, CA 92107 Joetl .... ~ Thia llualMM •i conouet.o Dy • ~ty Clatil ol Otanoa County on Oona. Wlndr.IO\ Individual Piiot Oc:t 10 11 ~INJ ~ James L. RaMI Jr. Toyoll s.;.t. An&. lftc . "17 WMt Thll atat.m.nt wlfl fllld with,.. .-,;;: ~ ...,, ao. 1"3 Thia ... ,.,,.,, WU flleO ........ Iha Vernon R Oav19 . • . 6531-83 HU Via n....rto • Warner Aft lent• Ane, CA H707 COUl'ltY Cl9rll of 0..,... ~ Of\
. ~ Cou11ty ~ of Dfanoe Count)' on Thia ll•tlfMfll ...... fllad with the -----..,.... St-F SUia.a, Prwioenl Sept n. 1183 Thie •tti.m.n• ••Ned wtth the Putl4Wlac! Oranoa Coal!'. o.t') OCt 12, 1963 County Ola.I'll 01 Or•noe County on N..,.r1 Betcll, CA. t!HJ Til'9 1111tm.n1 wu Ned wtth tt1e ,_,.. &:'":~~=Of Oranoa Co.inty on Pll<H Oct. 10. 11. 2'4, 3 t. IH 3 nn.a Oot. 12, 1H3. Vf/U oon·t need a oon •o (7UI 1'71~17% Cou11tt C*11 ot Orenot COUftty on Pu~ ~ Coal Delly
. 1'111* &540~ Plibltlhlod Oranoe CO••I Diiiy flll1tlll "draw , .. , .. wnen )'OU P\lbl11hod Oran.r Cout &.pt ta. tt83 fl'llot Oc:t. 10, t7, 2~ •• 1, 1113 :I Piiot Oot 17, 24. 3,, NOii 7. 1N3 Put>ll~ <>ranoe Coa11 ()ally place ad In No.I"' n...., no ,_ Wt-1.l Publlell«I °'';r. c-t Ollty. fh• lut .. , draw In •l'I• 14152.a) Piiot Oc:t 11 24. al. Nov 1 t"3 lttlot an . 'c ,, u.. 'f rilot Oct, l , l \, 17, Publillleo Or Coul Ody
l'lk>t Oc:t 17. 24, 3 · H0¥ 7:J~.... Wnl a Dally P iiot I · · · ~1-t.3 1 14t2~~Ad•t 1111 now 1983 6~7-83 Piiot Oc:t 10 11 ~31 llU Want Ad Help?
_.._ Cl..illed Ad '41·5671 s .. l ldla II.mt '42·6t78 • Cle.Miiled Adt 042·5611 . . ' 6537-'3 64).M71
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C•. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 17, 1983
CLASSIFIED·
. INDEX CLA
THE DAILY PILOT.
IFIED OFFICE HOllll
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Telephone ervic·e:
Mondav-Frida y
8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
Bu~iness Counter:
Monday-FriJay
8-00 A.1\1.-5:30 P.M.
DEAOIJN.ES:
Pl'BLICATIO:\
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CA'.\CELl.ATIO'.\ &
CUHRECTIO:\S:
::~ Canc:rlla11on" and 1·,1rrP1·11nrh 111a,
•• lie made o n alllt' d1·adl111e a<-" above. Plea ~r a5k for a ran<'l'lliitiun
number when r'anrelling your ad . ..
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:~ERROR : :m Check your ad dail y and report
errors immedil\telv. The DA ILY '""' .. n°' PILOT assumes liabilitv for the fir !)l
Grell vl•w of Balboa 1M1%onfal•coed~1rt•h••GC30v'~. 14 home, .-parat• yd. g.,. family rm. lorrneJ dining 719 M81tootd. &40-4265 Juntor 1 Br Fum. '440 Bay& Beach Beech ~ Cet1lln1 .. .... 1 ,800 c 11 1 h ... ..~ .. "'"'""
Real Estate sunse11. Thll 2 Bd 2'.\ Ba Rue Vllllrt Open wknds. •· w nier mo • rm. very ree • nu Cnta Mtu Call btwn • .Jil ..,.._......,
condo hu a large ~0-1638 John 898•9824 ~:~~:ln~·13i0/~~:. 1 BEDROOM, u11iltle1 In. PENTRIOOE COVE. 2 Br. 2
•r•• (HArl (ICllU#t't SIH(f .... aundecklpetlo, den end •• , Tiii WIEIEll a ..... 'Uafarailkt4 873·5354 . eluded. 781 B Joann St. BI. c 0 ND 0 n •• r HAlllOR security parking, Full OM 8-45-8453 Beker/8r111ot, lncld•
prtoe 1279.000. 631-7370 ... IN BAYCREST FR Gtatral 2202 ~••• ltacla 22 weeher/dryer. relrlge. Hll"UllS OWNER. 4 br, 3 b1. lem-1 Br 1 Be roomy, ,_ mlcro,weve. alee gar
lty room. office. pool. A 111. ut. No. Laguna 2 Br 2 carpet, dr1pee. freth door opnr, frplc. E>.cepttonally ettrec11ve. S320.000. Open Set/Sun ' ' <>-~·i Be home. View. frplc. paint. 382 Vlc1or1e, btwn dehw9t\r tJo & Th re• bad room •. 11-8. 1924 Holldey Rd Rentel Ll•t ~ • oe etalned glau, dbl garage Harbor& Newport $425 . . Pl . Oat Matlculoutly malntalr\ed Owner/""I 955-'>809 N B • H B .. C M. s !095 675-03•9 851_9523 water f:~ No pet1 Family ortanled neigh--• Lota of Listings ~. . Agt, no lee
borhood Beautllul play IY IWIEI Cell 631-0113 lllYI II TllAYI 883-1500 .
yard with pool New root. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Harbor View Hiiia 3 Bdr 2 M-F 0·8. Sat 9-1 Panoramic View. !Br ut1lurn. $475 mo. • ---------
Property has great corb Ba model perfect home EKec 5 Br. :iBa. 3,000 sq It 3 bd, 3 ba. custom, trplc. dep Newiy d.corlted. Sharp 2 Br. upetein apt.
appeal EXCLUSIVE • 81 1218 Keal Dr. CdM. hmovergolfcourse,pen-dlw, Microwave/range, etova& relrlg. oft ttreet enclldfierage.$495 Cell
WITH USI $350.000 $362.000 Easy terma oremlc vtaw $995 $1250/mo. 646-0603 parking. Qutat neigh· 549-19 6 aft 5PM. _ 13 1-7300 • Appt only CallS.2-7787 C8llabad 496-1235 Very attractive 3 Br 2 Be. borhood. Nopete To aee But leack 1741 call 645-980"4 • • • .. poot, $1350 494-3788 Beaut. 2 Br 1'), Ba. lw••tr A Wiater Beauttful setttng TwnhM, lrplc, patio. f~ llllllll llHE IHtllk . 2 Bdrm. 1 '!\ b 8 l h yard, encl g8leo-. ·x1nt
UITILIFF Obl•H ..... ., 10 o ..... ,, JAOHS IEAL n L11i 11 ....... 2252 Townhouse $635/mo area. "' Hunt. Harbour
Large back yard with Rena1111nce Model bell p•ep M•••IEME-Pvt Niguel StiOres ocean 631-6413 -$675/mo. 846-0738 01 ••s1• location, price & terms " -"' 1ew condo· 2 br frplc mature tree privacy and U1• • Ill 1111 11 • • 2 Br 1' a. Ekcet6eo1 2B tba u paid $425 immaculate 4 Bdrm. 2'J\ CIM llPLEX Only 20"' dn. Asking 114/ • new crpts Sieps 10 Easts1de tocatlon ~$375. 3. McFlddeo
bath home with farruly Dark woods. lush greenry, ~~~~T .IOll SllU hfltoa l1l1.. 2206 ~each !85~~~3-0 195 $625/mo. 720-0844 ~r BMch :3-4894
room Two fireplaces 81\d teadeo glass-: 2 fireplaces IPEITIE• 3 Br 26a, yearly Frplc. llewrrt hack 2269 2 Br 1 Ba. Private patio. 2 br apt, agl car ger. Nice
large assumable loan and a spa 2 Bdrms each OIMllUI P11 • laundry rm. Garage 3 Bdrm. 2 bath. 2 Ure-beam ctMllngs. frplc 2 neighborhood nr Beach &
63 l-l 400. unit S340,0000 111-1414 s 1095/mo. 675-0349 pieces. newly painted m & persons. nopete $595. Etlts. 14&5/mo 891-8314
-
\\\tt1cttc11't I llliiH.11 l ·t ~I\ CHARMtNG-3BR or 2 · oo1.culdesac $950/mo 650-1798 --2Br.CornerofHuntlngtoo
t It''" " In< Reatlors 675-6000 ~lo STUDY 1 car gar $900 lease 2304 Fatrhltl Or & Baltlmo<e M75/mo RLAl E '>tAI E lar~er Ill Ill yrly 760•8384 Avail now 844-7424 2Br apt. 2195 Min« at . Ocean vu, voiievball, gar:
931·1400 ---Vlew-'400, 2222 3 Br 3 Ba pool etc N-cpts. drpa. paint. denet quiet. SS1·9100 ~~~~=~~~~l e ..... ••l llar 1022 tmmaculete 4 br. 3'"> ba c ..... •el Illar Newport Hgts. Sl400/mo Dshwhr. ttove & refrlg 'suwtr .Ou. a 11rTTV VIEW Kenslnglon Assumable 26rt2ba/ So of Hwy. No Office 833-9773 No pets. S850 mo. 1 MC.
.•"' '' 10.375Yo. 30 yr toan. By pets Furnlunfurn $900 Home 556-4982 dep. To eee call 545.9504 YILl •1 LIOITIH LOOATill 200Blk.40lot.3br +den. owner. 640-1169; 2131355.15971466-7745 ---""
Easy melnlenence. qulel 3ba, yard. compl. relurb. 856-6771 _ Big Canyon 4 Br family S 50 T h N-1 & 2 Bdrm luxury
Heights neighborhood $499.000. 217 Jasmine 4Br • d41n. 3Ba. new paint, roonm. view. 1'ool, spa 2 Br. 6 Imo. wn M. apt.a In 14 plant. 1 Bdrm
Custo'I! built 3 Bdrm 2 Open Set/Sun 1-5 Here Is e BEAUTIFUL 4Br cpte. gar. grdnr S 1600 $3300/mo. Call Anna or frplc, wl d, attached g,a_:· from $565. 2 Bdrm from
bath '1)00d tor "empty Owneo egt 673-5551 3'~ ba, tam rm. lrml din. mo 644--0554. 673-0888 Magdy 476-1234 age. pool, spa, "8'Y qu...,t. $660 TownllOuM from • . 1 1 rm, utll rm & llv. rm _ 631-49M 1725 ..,. pool•. tennis. nesters or start ng am-Cetta Mt1a 1024 wlfrplC, 2 Cit gar , pool In IHFllll ·IHTAL BY OWNER G lly. Asking S 169,900 "' beaut Dover Shores "M 1 K 1, Harbor View 2 Br Den ~ 2 Br wl ger crpts, weltlf wetar1ene. ~ aa tor · 1•2 1200 2 Br 2 Ba 2 Story Conoo. I A gorgeous a a B I N l I paid 636-4 t20 1-5PM cootllng & heetlng paid ,. -10•.-down Now only very good essum. l xed condo on Iha bay Huge ,•200~val 673~3v251 "· 1511"·B" Orange $475 From San DleoO Frwy ~~~ incorrect ir,sertion .cnh:. $103.000. Dockalde R.E rate loan. Ceah dn 10 deck overlooktng the 1 _ mo. __ drive Nor1h on e..cn to
m l 840·8208 loan $335,ooo. Ph water. 2 Br, new kitchen. Gorgeous decorated 3 b, •2 Br 2 Be. 1>9<>t, apa. McFldden and weet oo
U2l CLASSIFIED 642-5678 ----6'42-7053, 660-0~ all large rooms. security 21~ b, gate guarded, see e/c, clbhse. nr SC Plaza, McFadden to SEAWIND
im llUT FAMILY HllE -system and lush entry view, wlcom. pool. tennis OH pd $675. 641·8 l38 v t L L A G E ~~~1---------111!"--------5 BR + den, llreptece, dbl Saa (:ltatatt 1071 petlo,2cargaraga.Avell-court&.prlvspa,Cltyl!Qht •MESA VERDE 2 Br. 1 (71"4)893-5198 zooo garage. Needs some secluded beach colony, e ble N ov 1st 8 I view w/ ref, WID $ 1795, Be. upper Newly decor Br $43S
HOO B•••H lor Salt a ..... for Salt touch up Owner trans-.axpenelve ocea. n and $2200/mo Lucy ROH I security dep & cleaning $525 No pate 633-8974 s~~~~= ~85 Welk = .,Gt...,.-...al..._.._ __ ~1":00":':1I Gt I 1002 ------tarred. Sl23,500 whllew818' views. 4 Bdr. 644-8200 dep, $450. Avail lmmed.. , -960 8&50
i'iln I :;~·~'=':;;;;;;;;;;;t;;;;•;;•;;••;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; •lSA IEL 1111 lier •Oar41t llltr. 3 Be, huge format dining 646-2215 2 story. 2 bd, 1 ~ ba. OIW. to ti.ech -=I' Lovely and epacloua 18 thla. 1810 Newpor1 St, CM rm. spacious Mstr suite. HARBOR RIDGE CONDO f!.~*~I~~· ~~~· Walt\ to bNch, 1 Br, ttove.
.'VO)lj LIDO ISLE 4 Bdrm. 2 beth lamtly 141· 1121 juSI 11eps to beautiful 2BR, 28A. View. Beaulllul 648-1955 refrlge, crpl. drapes
211\1" home The carpet is less beach. Pr Iced •I Condition. s 1850 mo __ $450/mo 536-4637
1111ll! Open 1-5 Vta LtdO Nord than 2 years old as Is 1he 4Br 2Be 60K 120 lot, at-S665.000 Cati Lingo R.E. 640•5324 $395 1 Br, mobtle home. Walk 10 beach, atudto. ;~I~ TradttJonal 3 Br. 3 1, Ba. Bayfronl. pll'r, & pool and spa. Ow~•, rs ,1a9c6~ ~=,~·64~v83~~ng, 498-4950 Custom Bayalde Dr home E w••tEI quiet adultperk No pe2171. llOV8, refrlg•. crpts,
M • very motivated As .. ng ,JVV • • w/sllp. Mo to mo Avail LEAi -140 Cabrlllo • . drapes. $400 utile tncid ;=:= float for 65' boal. Priced to seU $1,250,000 $148.500. 631-7370 llllFHEOLllHE Mo~ilt It••• llOO 1211. 955•2473 E~ec seek• 1 yr leaee In 673-7787 536-4937
m11 Remodeled 3 br. 2 bath+ Large rec rm . beam Local bank has foreclosed llEEIU&f PAil Harbor View Hiiis. tm-~2~000~~~8JI s~~~ ~ IEW I 11111111 ---... -.-,-uu----_.,.:_ on 2 beautiful condos. maculate 4 bd. tastelul · To1·11y remodeled 3 Br M) ilin furrushed patios $420 000 B (Sl55.000) A beautlfut Triple wide by Nov 1 or sooner .. · APAIJ-TI TRADITIONAL
REALTY re gs. • · • 1·3Br, 2'~ • 30x60, JBr. JBa home. decor. Ille enlry. skyltte, 760•8702 t ·~ Be townhouM 1pt1, 1_2 ._..roomt
& I -4 Br 2 ·~ B • lrplc, trellis to patio. DIW. pattos. kid• OK, no .,.., ($ 185.000) The unit• are Ideal locetton Agl spacious back tawn Im· Udo Isle 2 stry. 3 Br. 2 be, pets. $695/mo. For rental Beauttful Ilk ea end IAYSIDE PUCE llYFllOIT
....•
Spectacular bayfront dplx 2 br. 2 ba up. 2 br.
2 ba dn. 2 boat spares. Reduced-$1,500,000
PElllSUU HOIE OCEAIFllOIT
Ocean & ,etty views. Marme room. 4 bdrm, J
bath. 3700 sq ft 4 car parking $1.385.000
FAIRllllS RAICH HILL TOP
New 4 br. '4 11 ba. custom Frrnc:h Normandy
',.','.', Estate 1.2 pnme al·re h1lllop Now $995,000
'.
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COllOIADO OHS llYFROIT
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Seller will carry all ot tf'e
ltnancrng al a tow
1nleres1 rate Wall laid out
3 Bdrm 2 Ba wtlh a
balcony oll Iha Mslr
su11e. decorated with new
ca1pe11ng. new d•apenes
and new paint Leave
your elbow grease be-
hind Full price $99,900
751-3191 Coronado Island l'USt bayfronl lot 115' boat
deck Plans avail Now $370,000 w 1trade C:: SELECT
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AllllOWHEAD HOME
Near new 4 bdrm, 4 bath. lake vi11w 3500 sq
ft $440.000 WILi lrade for a local proP11rly
llLIOA COVES ·
T raditional Bayfront 3 Br. 3 Ba, remodeled
2,000 sq. ft. furnished & boat. $600,000
Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR
.)41 lloy\.d•· D,,.,,. N 8 6 7~ 6161
fti/41---------POILHOIE
OILY 1111,1001 ·•-•0t,.. .. #l!t ·-..c-..... --0--
COLDWC!U.
BANl(eRO
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U41,IOO I.
It
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El90an1 eKecutlve home In
prestigious area of San
Juan Poot-sized 101 with
vt-of the hill• BeauU-
., :: futty decorteted 1nterl0t
wllh Inviting ear1htones
Very •P•CIOUI 4 Br•.
3Bu "'''' lt4-IOIG "' :.
1101 • 1·~~~~~~~~-1'01•
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,_,,
OCUll IAY
VIEW!
Glorious view exlends
put Catattna Island lrom
th•s tuaurlovs 4 Bdrm N-port Beach home In-
cludes Mpareta quaners
for maid or for mom
Financing ass1s1ance of-
lered Musi see lor
$750.000 646· 7171
Beautllully maintained 3
Bdrm. 2 belh home
located In a quiet, peac~
tul neighborhood :>f
Coste Mesa A11ume
8'f·'lo VA loan of $66.000 You can't beal this tor
value. Belier hurry!
646-7171
THE REAL
ESTATltRS
UOIELHPAI
lll,0001
Downs1a1rs corner unit
with nice deck and lire-
ptaces. Across lhl streel
rom ocean beach!
Owner-tender wtll finance
at less lhen current mat-
ket rates and low down
Ask for Hallie Strocl<
644-7020
Lllll llEIL ESTITl
TWO ITOllY
I IElllOOI
..... PROPERTIES
C1ass111ed "ds are lhe
answer 10 a successful
garage or yard sale' ll's a
bettet way to tell more
people I
'* ~ • ,
•
3 years n-. spacloos 540-5937 Byappt mediate posseslon thru formaldln rm $1650/mo. eppltcatlon645-8646 stream• Complele
and fully appointed lllEEILW p••• Ot 1 s No pets Reis 644-4895 or 646-7922 emenlttH Secur11y W/modern teatures Bank -ympc 's1650/ · I I ----S4251Br refr"'e.nopets. gates Entry by phone A 1>11autllul Trtple wtdo required. mo. nc patio. 731-D'V 18th St. · 1solter1ngcreatlveflnanc-30w60, JBr. 3Ba home gard 720-0100 wkdaya UM ISLE 673_7787 No pets 846-8591
1ng Submit all oHe<s Ideal locatton Agl alter 1 pm. Agen1 642-4623 5 Bdrm .. 3 bath with South I 11. 27 .. 1 540-5937 By •PPt CHll Mt11 2224 Patio Close to beach and llSTUT II La1aaa leaca , ConOo 3 bd 2 ba $'6000 -- --1> iennls club $2000/mo $525/mo. 2 Br 1 B• pool. 1 Br apt, NCm. french dn Lo Pymt 190 000 ---------2 Br wl stove. crprs, W rfr It I laundry room. clo--to -· LUSE IP.TIOI d 1 d oto • •••• .... doors a pvt deck, ell util 476-1275or644-4157 repes encs garage. shopping 149E BeySt Incl 5685,mo 494•8128 WllllE OITIHE
Charming & cozy. sur-
rounded by towering
shade trees. Comptetely
prlvete front & rear yards.
Detached garage Pten1y
ot room f0t expending
Onty $124,1150 759-1501
WALKER&LEE
RealE.aate
~-
On ll'le Bay1ront in Bayside no pets S550/mo 773 W IU-1400 TSL •cllt. 142-1181 Village Recently w11aon 631-4889
remodeled 2 Bdrm wllh 3 Br. 2 be hm, 2 car gar & $675. 2 story, 2Br. Elegant large bay1ront tMng rm lrg fncd bckyo. $700/mo Splll level 48Ft 2',.,BA, tn 1wnhme. GOO<I location
and attached covered 494.3409 or 496-6000 Ees1btuff, dbl gar . nr Neer new. Pett & children patio Deluwe 1hroughoutl _ -----comm pool S 1250 mo. Mr ok. Agt 6•5-9850
$ l,250 P8< mo plus $3000 3 Br Kida & pets OK Harris 660-1895 wkdy BAY TIMBER APT
option money Full price $750/mo Avail 11115 Saata bl 2210 1 Br. trptc. pool, private
$l50,000 REF s 631-5107 10-2pm pelt, enclsd garage
171 41 671·4400 5 er-2• ... Ba Mesa dal Mar. 2 bd. 1 ba condo 1595 • $515/mo 399 w Bey St. pool & serv1C8, gardener security dep Laundry 650 6357 t21l1Ul·ll21 Avail 1113 51150/mo h/u, poot. spa, play------=--,-,.-
HARBOR Sle<ra Mgmt 641-1324 ground. wOOdsy area, nr Clean 2Br 1be Eutslde. Felrvtew and Werner no pets $475/mo. Roy
BIG flash l1itte cash I Lrg 3 831-2039 Mccardle Rtlr 5"'8-7729
Bdrm 2'"1 Ba custom -home queens kltch form 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba POOL Condo 3 bd 2 ba 2 car gar.
0-E• ••y• din soper plueh decor home. near We I I -$690/mo wl ,250 dep. "" " -• I I 1 1 mlnater/Newhope. fncd 476-1275 or 6'44-~157 "Gtve ·am a bargain!" --trop eel "at o re .,. ng K d I t
Eestslde OHts Towne Older untt.NPIBch. spa & more $495 • $50 yard 4 ~erage 1 5 pa 1 Condo p81k Mttlng with
Home w/3 bdrm• • den IOX42 Adul1 park, no MCurlty lee 537-5027 Ok s7 5. Agt. no 188 view '2 Br 2 ba patio.
• 2 baths • dble 08r908 pets Perk approval r• Condo 28r. 2'!\ be. frptc. 2 863" 1500· bhlns. ape. lodry rm, ga1
• running streams. quired Furn $15,950 car 08,, Frtg, wld Incl Cedtaiaiaaa From $650. 111 & S300
watM18111 & ''"'· tr88$, Stephenie 2"41-9292 dys J50 Avocado St $775. U I • 11.H 2410 MC dep to move In No
2 Br apt, near t:>eeefl. u111
l)<I. $700/mo No pat1
499-2690 wru •J! .. 1 nu * EXIJ u conao N:W 3Br 2be. lrpl. pool, etep1
bctl $950/mo 551-'>585
·~rtleac~ It 1• '·from m . lg 4b< 2ba. oo carpet. vec
S 1050 mo 53µ258 or
960·9214
1BR + Study Utll. paid.
1725 yMrly. OoMn aide
of 113 E Balboa Blvd
Call (7 14) 873--0532
2 Br 2 Ba. yMtty W New-
port. wehrldryr hk-up, 2
cat gareo-. 209 Lugonle $e75/mo. I F t I t 7 a &f&lla pals 631-8107 tree a an • • c ••••rcial 5'67-2888 731-774 3BR 2BA Condo. L8utl---=-=--==:-::-::-;;,=;--;--.. wood1y" e1mo1phera, ---EASTSIDE 2 BDRM -------,...--ON Ly s 1 3 2 . 9 o o ·''°=arty 1250 Condo 3 bd 2 be 2 car gar. fully decorated, pool,
N.B. Re9lty 875-1842
PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENT S --$690/mo w/$250 dep Jecuzzl. all alee kitchen. 1 ba.. pvt patio. down-759-1501 Bldr • to MU/trade 476-1275 or 644.-4157 . air cond. near So Ctl statre. 1525. 957-2909
W'&• ~.LEE new oH bldg SA 9700 et 8322 ~ $651( req'd ~d loc 50% p••ILlll E.lllE Ptau. 24 1-or Eleide lux. In • pine loreet. n--t r.. 7 ... 8 1433 -848-7496 eve Lge 2 br, 2 be. refrlg. OW. ftCm ~ leued 1 .. 1., • · 3 Br 2 Be egt famtly home bale. BBQ, gar. Gu Incl ., __ ( . .._ OlltlAHLUI ::6~~o . Pis cell At1rta11t1 Fara11kt4 55651mo ~2•1a.-4 agt
Rehab bldg (10,000sqft). 1• ~o_i __ -CHll Mtll 2624 Frpl pool prvt patio
pert111ty remodeled Lge 2 br, 2'"' b• twnhM. d•h-hr X-LG 1 Br on
Owner• very mottvateo yard. lrplc E/slde $825 IEWHllT VILUll Eastslde SS tO 557-2841 SC Plaza condo 2Br 1'1• Price reflects cond Musi sea 833-8105 7mlnltomt>each,ge.s&
~.
.ro • . :
IN NEWPORT BEACH
Singles 1 & 2 Bdrm "'*1-
menll & TownllOu-
Some ere •l•~ty lumllhed. From
On Jembofee Rd et
Sen Joaquin Hiii• Rd
ba, pool, ape. tn Senta $895.000 with $250,000 water paid. Junior 1 Br llSTAIT Ill
Ana Own tor coif of ren11 down Xlnt financing Lrg beckbay condo, 3 Br 2 $475 1 Br $530 2 Br. 1•,.o, Be.Townhouse, -3-=er:-.""'2"'",..,-=B-• • ...,2=-,-tory--:-11.u-ll-ury-
5 or 10'1. dwn. Cut to Cell Agt 675-6700 Ba. frplc. gerage pool & pool, spa, tann11. enclad garage, patio, condo. Bkr 642-3450 °'
...... , ...
$65,500. 556-1626. C • i , 1275 spa $600/mo Wkdys volleybellcourls.saunea. $585/mo. -+ S275 MC ~2•1010 iiiiimiii-.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml ta ta a1aa1 8-5. c ell 1-821-6630 rec rm Sofrynopeta total move In co" Great ...., I S.C Plan condo 2Bf 1'1• evee 1-760-1165 Cell 557-0075 1oc1c1ean ~3"""B:-r-. ""2-b-.-. .,-bMdl--:--:2,.,..,-bl:::-k-e. tnAlllllVll ba. poot ape Own lor ERIE L It 11. <11.r.aa 23-46 Santa An• Ave frplc, gat No pete. Avall
T'llln cott ot rentl s 101< or lest MESI Y If Ht IC• _, TIL ftlll 142· 1IOI Nov. 1775, yny. &45-1882
dn By ownr $85,900, On the golfcourse. 4 Br 2 1 §r trailer et TreHure ---------~-=--=-=--.,.-:--..,.,---.,.-Ou1 ot ere• owner MUST 556-t626 or 775_2580 Be family rm. st 150 lelend. ocean vu. $"450 llllUT lll 3 Br 2 Ba lrplc. dht. steps
SELL 49R 2000 aq It --------751-3191 Selecl 213-433-9991 $400/mo am unattached to water 209 4 111 near So Coaet Ptaz.11 lac••• Pref 1350 Properties -----• 1 B 1 B ft S7751mo. 213/IMl9-5985 SUPER STEAL s 120.000 -, ltw~rt leacla Hn cottage. r. •. 0 or 944-8914. LOW DOWN Mika (213) (6) 1 bdrm •PIS 00 Balboa NEW LUXURY 3BR. 2 ~BA road. quiet. =--=:--:::c=--=c---,--:----:=:-519· 7808 owner egnt Pen Ideal lor Investors Condo. Fem room, Jae, 1750 mo. 3 Br 2 Be steps 2072 N-port Blvd 3 Br 2 Ba Slape to l>Mefl':
Scott (2131318_3745 eve Financing avail 556-1655 Tub. Lrg yard, Avail Nov from beBch, carport. >tint TIL •imt 142-1111 ~:;.~~50 SC: :!'2•10~~ r ·
DUPLEX -I s 1050 851-6226 loc 203 33rd SI
NB Really 675-1~2 Large 1 Br lbl, • plex D-p i 1--l~ NwptHgts3br.3ba.frptc, -$ Olw. 1euno S445t mo. 111 ta lV.W STEPS TO IQH wel bar. bit Ins. patto. Beechfront 3BR 2BA 950 e.5_6625 OCEAN VieW Townhoo98 dble gar 2000 sq ft mo Vacant 535-4258 or
3br 2'1tb1 1750 sq ft Tradetoramallerproperty S1200mo 494-7'129evs 960-9214 Large 2 Br 2 Ba n-
$t56,500 Xlnl financing or Trust Deed 2 3 bdrm -carpet & drape•. fresh owner 714-240-3102 unna 1n •-cellent Sen SPACIOUS 3 Br, 2 Be, OCEANFRONT-wntr class paint 382 Vtclorte btwn --Clemente toceuon Ask-1mmac. frplc, yd, dbl gar A exec. quiet, furn, clean Harbor & Newport 1525
S795tmo 3 Br 2 Be
uppcw unit, gereo-. wld
hk-up, 3 ~.to t>Men.
ell bll·lna
. _ ~8 Lugonte m-... w-1aa
AUTOS IMPOfnED THE REAL
ESTATERS
Prtde of ownership In
Costa Men s llnesl
areas Double door entry
to a eunny living area
Counlry kitchen. lemlly
room, 5 hUQe Be<Jrooms.
3 b81hl Walk lo ell
schools Only St 49,900
total price Call to 868
546-2313
• Baat. leaela 1040 ing s 179•500 Ag• $925/mo Agt. 759-fj41 s1000-s1100.675-4688 851_9523
Newly decoflte<l spacious 644-9513 SURFERS DELIGHT Lrg SMO"l TH• Lrge 1 bdrrp Lndry rm,
BEACH YEARLY dlx 2 Br 2
Be, trplc, 1tepe to belCh.
ooean vv oar 1790/mo
213/420-Mec>
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•111 reach Ille Orange Coeat
w111 market.
"1" Phone 6"'2-58711 ...
¥141 1~~~~~~~~~ ,, •• ,1 .. Wt 6\
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
Clusill8d Ada 642-5678
•14 vu• Ol\t
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II)~
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-'• , - ' ........ 1, I O(~~PE I I I I I I TllJOY I I' I' I
I' I I' I M)' ''~''"' .-. • Ht" 111 ..,,,., ~f1
~"' tfHf r11t '°"" 1 I ,,,. I l't If ,, .. .--------,'~ 11 q I ~ [ 5 c c I I . I I I I' I 0
"T' I -.-" I I .--r1
IOUll~Llfl Mt•ttt I• ll1t1HtutlH HOI ---------~----~---4------~-
•
• ,
• 1111 1k 11wn ''' 1 nnt
h1ich tn prtn• rt·n~n11
gltl1• rt1•I 1111.,lu•cl
11111nf11tnl(
Daily Pilat
l••"''"'" 40\ f'M,,. .. 1 M,11
4 bdr 1\-, be. 9Unken llv· --moOMn 1 Br gourmet ktl Furn 3&2 Br Apia Nr poot. $404 llrm. All utllt
tng. formel din rm, lamlly 1._.1 IUOI breeklest bar custom beach Agent 875-8 t70 pd 548·0336 rm. wood beams Walk to awr-decor NOW $340 • $50 --
bee cll & echools 11Sllllll1AJ. MCurity lea 537-5027 Winier Rental 1111 June 191 LIKE NEW t or 2 Br
$182 000 988 2602 B W 11 t__, 2 --Oceen front. 3 Br 2 Bl PAV patio, pool, IPB • • Y •have 1 "" near n-TOTALLY custom 3 lrg Refs req. 535-0343 TOP area, ~ulet. no pate Owner duplexes, bOth In ucel-Bdrma, country kllch, __ --1A..a.a tent condition & very torm din. designer decor Wl•TE• llElt•• S MESA PIN S 2650 Harte lr•l•• _, CIOH 10 lh• .ocean. . " -$495-$825 • 540-2447
PRIV'cy • 29th St: 3 bdrms up thruout worlcd~op ~~~ag: Stops lrom beech, g2e0r3-NEWL y PAINTED a 2 bdrma down. 4 car big fncd yr or "'' egelcerport. Xlnt loc.
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
Brand Mw 2 mael9t SUit· ... eectt with full beth &
mirrored w8'dtotl••· oerarnlc tlte 1t.11cn.n, bric1I
frplc, t8'ge eund•ck.
oerte• $339.000 pet1 ONL V $490 • $50 33rd. St. N.B. Uttl1 paid, ger109. pool, no AIOUIDS • 46th St 2 bdrma up MCutlty 198 537-5027 3 Br 2 Be S700/mo. pets. , ... ,. ........ Cliff He.,,.,,· 2 bf, 1 ba.
2 Bdrm 18• ~-pa11o ver• etc ldMI on 1n11 3 Odrrn, 2 be Ex-& 2 bdrm• dOwn. 4 cir Xlnl IOO N-3brl2"'ba N e. Realty &75-18"'2 1 Bdrm 1436-$455 for .:..w.c1 ~ No
laundry hk op l oer~ MllO. No peta 7&t -91M
etlf MQdel In Perk II parking $339.000 condo. yerd. wet blf, OR . ...-----::r--:---.,.~'.E 301 Av_ocad __ o _&42-9850 pet&. YNf't'f. &"4&-S30I Large femlly roorn. c.n-Liil IUln SttOO leale 645-7050 aaHI ltac•
trel alrlum Large lot on 111-llll UI lffcla 4 f 8r. dtx, ec:roea from ocn. 1 Bdrm ~5-$490 LIDO 211, 28&. 2 ~.
FEE lend S 190,SOO • IVlly turn, vicant $800 241 W. Wiiton no peta. N75 IM mo I~~~~~~~~ S ac. 3Br 2ba condo. mo 532-&&92 e31"°9e0 &75--0377. f7M5"
~lsor
·Re-alty
651 .. 1177
ti reel emen l t l•• • l.50 795/mo, no pets. can At1rtaeat1 Val . -.ert Mre. Genz 846-137' -' dfo Btar ceQn, MCm , .. 244 ...... lllu• UM
NIC9 2 Br. 2 81. NO 1)918. Udo Beytront. 2 bO, 1 ba.
$495/mo. Avell 'l>PfOX aandy bMCtl, febuloUI
Nov. 5th. 710·1418 at view. 1911/mo yrly, ~2-7528-°" wilnde 175-0120 or 87S-o211 orNt '°' • wtleellng °'~ vRlY R@NfXl ii&lmo
get•ew1y witnd S'"P• 2 to 4 Bdrm• $750.Sf400 Lovely 2 bf w/plllo • lll •W• 12 'tSO/wknd or 815·8302 •vM
$60/d•y 9S7.ec>71 Oulel 2BR 28A C10M 10
NO F£E Apt l condO ren-
tals. VIiia "-"'• 87&-4112 8tOUr
-.. 11. ~or •~ bch, orw. din rm. frl>I, -N:-r-b:--c~h-~1>-a-c~l\:-e-1=-o'.""'.r
llaH, uaa Pnla1al1 1707 p\Uo. encl oar · M28 mo. w/kltoMMUe. utu pd,
-MIC:::V'i:: .. OfltYf '""' Ins lty 38#HBX fth81h St. Vriy 2163 P1<1tflo. C.M. Cll1 (liMn. 14• 1819.
•-It -.paa k1wl'1811CrH, QOOd pro-l•ue at.,atoth•t>Moh. mgrJ.tf.549,..MO P111u11 11tr1 19 2ar. ••r•• IC IVH ouc11on int onty pym11 651•1177 s1oo0mo. 840-2030 1 tundedl, yrty s 45 mo
Xuumellorecloeure. Curtis AQI 878-2040 PALM M!SA APTB 5&2-0W or 876-2631 ~ .... 000 d H 3 bf. 2 b•. 2 ety N9W crpt, 5e1 M OR
....,a, own. lft>Of iir .. 11g10u.....-L0t1Rtncho, deck, gar Hr l>Mc.h Nov U~turn 1 Tr $490 Out.I 2 8r. 1 ba, petto. Oii', ~~345tgt 775"4492• Calif Good 1erme. CYrtta _..,....,.,.. 10 UOO mo 87&-®88 Junior 1 8r tum $'440 pool, no l)9ta. 1to1.C
Agt 17'-2040 • ...,.. Ye8tly 2 Bf 2 8• p8111111y Cell btwn 9·4. 54&-"80 151h 8 1. H~ ~Ott
YO'J don't ~ • gun lo Waat..--rlH TllTlDIOI •UI furn $650/mo No 1>9te Heve you rHd today~ MOO/mo • .,.._
"drew fH1" when you •Ill I--• 875-&606 , Ctee•lll•d Ade? 11 not, V!ASAIU!:S & pleoe an ao 1n the Deity _. 48r • family rm • 2'it bl •
Piiot went Adel Cet1 now Wth Pl~ up 10 1~ value 3 car gar S,.60/mo Sl!LL Idle Items with • you're mtQlng. tt\9 l>MI VIUA IALIOA
1 8A2·5U8 and ell coel• 850·3342 (7 t4) !&3·9~2 Delly Pilot c1111i1*1 Ad ~n• In townt Condoe A01 II) 1~MO
:x::.. ..
\
..
" .. • •.
~ .. . ~ • . •
' Orange Cout!OAILY PILOT/Monday, October 17, 1983
11y ler 1111 llre•l•r
t .. ftftiU.1 lat" Aa;a11 Carr•& Dttlt• 1&r•em1 leaM ClMaiat IMTI. -Palatla1 Plauia1 ''" le"ice 1iiiiiiiiiiiii:miiiiiiiiiiii .SM P•·k· I Lot R I •11~111--1 i.;,;;.;.;m1~-----·---------J c TRE' SERVICE 111 "-1Y· -119 epar.,. -"'" •W•llll•llll Dependable Chrl11la11 *' 1 •Ytll* Top quollty .. Reaeon1ble Drain• clear lrom $:>!~:> 00 ) $2 17 da Repalra-Seatcoallng Doors-Wlndowa·Cablneta lt•!•'r 1 ltll4'r woman wHh reterenon • rat.. c all for 81umaia. R-alr fauo.1t. dtap, lie Trimming removal, yard , Per ~ S's •a.nhlt 631.•19"Llc P•-•.Patl--F~-. 35 ••& ......... ..........._, REAS RATES FREE BealquaJltu 25ur.e•p. v,. ~'""an Pl etc ••2 ""1• • ....... .. • ~-· Jv .. -5 ...... 46•4413 "' .. ~ ....... 300 .. ~· EST(714)241-t235 will clH n your home Com~litve r~tea. 850-2328 ... kforBrad. 851·9604M&M432·0600 ,..... •u · '"·n ..
_ 30 day ad MOW/EDGE/CLEAN·UP _ " .. " ..., Cuatom Graphlu1Mural11 No 8011 to S\llllPOft Self Tnla S.nlce Thal'• ALL you P•Y or • A. tttra~ yrs exp. etry -'""'" 561·3225 Lie T.11•.•2• 730·13"'"'
In the -.61 ACES S100 t Rep1lr/smaJI fobe Fences. KITCHEN DESIGN. Need TRIM Free ..-1. ReH. IHll·OAlPIT STARVING COLLEGE Quallty lnl/ut p11nt1og emp. SI lk; •319450 Joe I : sn.1...... pantllons Low p11n1 ror new or remod ror "°"'' home or buslneu 544•8444 no job 100 1mall Trprng7Word Prooeealng · DAILY •DRUNK DRIVING '2501 rates. Sieve 731·8311 kitchen? CALL CARYL, ratea. Jim &46-1958 WllMW OLIAltll STUDENTS MOVINQ CO. FrM 111. Randy 982·7519 Al bualneH. achool & per-Accldent11Bankrup1cy 642-0355 Relerenoea H • We do tll0<ough work ~ Lk; T 124-4-36. tn1ured. I tal le • I Jec1 851 1041
Free conault 241.0343 Ct•HI Ctacrtll · · aa !!I!• llabt. a REFS. With com-841-8427 SPECIAL OFFEFI wlll paint ta men aona pro •· • PILOT lalil alttla Rob's CONCRETE I llHtrlcal Homelr.Palr.-c.,pentry plet• carpet a hou... WATCH us GROWi· yO\Jr car PU or van GO<llordal We'll aecure fl I MASONRY 9 Y" same ELECTRJCJAN· Prlced C1blnet1•E*·Plumblng cleaning window• done w/IMRON paint, your tenant•. llnallze c;lo1lng1 w1 .... Cltaa1a1 SERVICE BAB'f's1nrNG In my toe. Free e~t. 840·1705 right. lree eailmate 011 fencing. DON 966-0t49 .. FREE'. CALL TODA YI P1iatla1 cholc;e ol color for undef Rall. STARFI 548·4471 WHJTE WlZARD ~or:r~r 5 TLC ~~~05~ard Ceraaic Tilt • ta~ge or 1m111 Job•. Lie. ONE CALL DOES IT ALL 540·5854 Fiii PAllTlll ,s300.
1
oary 536--9920 lff••• ler'fict ~.~11~~~ywm~7~~: DIRECTORY BABYSITTING CUSTOM fi(E SERVICE 3 821 . 673-0359 We fill It. break~· :~9 HOUSE-APARTMENT by Rlchlfd Sinor. Lie. •er •t Cuatom reeumeslCover QUALITY" 631-2026 , * ELEOTlllOlll * or haul It. 4 • Cte1ntng or Renovating. 280644. 14 yra or happy fl'arthlng lnterlor n.--rgn 1e11911/Job aearch Ups plus the IRVINE MIRROR In my home. nr Victoria.' Quit. workmanship, real. PAINTING·CARPENTRY Free e1tlm1t• 650-4488 local cu11ome,. IN ....... c cos 673 07
and the HUNTINGTON Costa Meta 842·848~ Aflcea. Wray 547-8322 Aea1on1ble. 631·2345 REPAIRS-Gary 845•5277 HOUSECL~ •NING Thank you, 963·411.. HANOI G/STRIPPING all • l l _ ,~•,.t .. at ... tiopoiiioJ.oiiioaw ___ ...,."'!"'"-.i
SEACHCOMBEA every • ...,.. VIS1'·MC Scoll 673·1512 ... liat 'State law r'""ulres thal ail Wed d t Babysllllng, your home, l Cbalftar Gar•taia1 PTL EXP'D. GOOD REFS. QUALITY PAINTERS • -.. nes •Ya dys wk Oc:caslonal Gla .. y1 '"'6 "~11 (4 npm) PRo••pT NE•T PRO BLACKWELDER Paper-Huber Rooilng·aH types contractors who pertorm nco:L•Ltr~0c~~r.:I ,,. wknds 549.7248 Ciasstc 1940 Ford Woody TllEES Haalia1 u "'" • .,.. ·• FESSIONALS. "636--7 ;49 hanging & removal Oual. N-·Recover-Decks work over $200 lncludlng --"Chauffeur tor weddings, oubP JOBS & HOUSECLEANING work only. 494·3616 Lie ,,411902 549.9734 labor and materials mue\ Ill FDR WHJ ... kbtti•t_ ''proms. ate;. $50/hour Topped/removed Clean Have xlnt refs. Call Allcta, 12 YRS EXP I'm small, be licensed Unllcensed
Y Dall PI _ , 957·607 I up. new lawns 751·3476 SMALL MOVING JOBS "•6-•3n2 att. 3pm ••u p'rt~ are smalll EXPERT Wallcoverlng In-I.=====::;;;:;::;;;.,....., contractor• lhould •o our Y 1 ot Bkkpg. payroll. gen acclg MIKE 646· 1391 .,.. " " ... , ...... 11111a11on Reas Contult· --• oa 1·400ti I m Service Directory & sec'I FleK hrs. Incl c1an• Care ABE s GARDENING PAM & BOB'S CLEANING 660·6477/650-6646 I A SI I 561 8590 ~. Or•no• COii! Siiia In their advertising
Represen1a11ve wknds at your business General malnl Clean-Ups HAUL·MOVE-REMOVE Husband & wife 6 yrs exp Dave's Custom Painting -an_ 5 O~ _ • ~ roollno Con1rac1ors and con-
·
•' 1•z.alll e-". 4122 or ca,.; pickup & deliver Former PreschOOl Teacher Free estimate'• 546·85 t9 Furniture, Trash, Trees 673_7012 att 5 WE GALS SHOULD HANG aumers, contac;t Mary • • v .. • F 6 2 7047 In CdM will babysit full· -963-5415 NORM lnt/ui Htghesl quallty. Secretarial Grond1e at 558-4086 with ree counsel 4 • lime weekdays. 720•9138 Gardening& ma1n1enance. _ _ THE CLEANMAKEA lowest rates 640-5449 TOGETHER W8llpape1 any Quetllons Colltrae-
• Caliliaet MaliiAt tree trimming. mowing. LT HAULING · MOVING 5 yrs elCp. Home/ofc LIMITED OFFER Give Y~ • uphol walls ~9·073u StnicH tor 5 State License
Acctaatia1 Coa1att1 Ser'fict1 clean-ups & haullng We Rental Clean Up1, Jon Refs avail. 675•4853 home 8 face 1111 ror the Plaater~lepair Supenor Secretarial Svc: Board 28 C1v1c Center
CPA·flnanctatstatements. •New cabinels. cabinet IB .. ·PCHELPI ~ti-dbl doll all 731-6366 645·6192t731·2916 f -Reasonablerates P1cl\up1 Plaza. Room 690 Santa
C lacing. bars & lormlce "" " or 11 e ----------hotldaya. HI 0 •~erage PlAS ER PATCHING tax returns oSla Mesa counienops 642•0881 & uselut on-site advice. ler4tilai Wiite• GEORGE'S CLEAN UPS Laa•aca~ill sz home pa1n1ed for deliver Joanne645· 1902 Ana CA 92701
Jonn Brown 631·6483 training & produe1s Mowing EdgiTng Twice a & HAULING No 1ob too -under $500, paint Incl 20 Restuccos lntle•t 30 yrs TYPING/BOOKKEEPING 1---------
Ac ••• tl•cal Cabinets & Carpenlry SSPIPC 754-1039 mon1h' S20 lo $25 small 895·6006 Pruning Landec;apfng yra e•P Gary 536·9820 Neat Paul 545·2977 For lndlv tsml business ---
Small fobs and repaors C -6•5•5737 Speciallsl Call Alfredo -Pl L ' Whal a Wonder1ut World Ctilia11 Free esllma1e 645-2003 Hlractora .. _ __ TIM'S UILlll 549-4930 or Leon Maciel aa•lBI Hr/day/wk 640•0688 or Shopping. 11gt11 at
New & Respray Aemod & Ca---al"' --Geier al JCESStE'S GAROENING Haut anything 645-7331 751·2128 free estimates c~ri!1!~ ~ ~~~c!!i~g w2~Te.ErREHIEA•TIE•RIS· '!!!,11&1 A~.~ec1L8re01aXr1SatTSAeTr1v01cNes your fingertips everyday!
carpeniry Lie .. 341012 "C _ "L Remodel/Re 11Jrs. comm lean-ups, yard maint H Cl • II . ,. ... ~ ,..,. Dally Pllo1 Clesslfled
A'blllty Bldrs 730-1900 Remodel/repair Unique & & resld Lfc'd, bonded, Fr~ estimate 540·8035 talt 1181~ _•_•_a""'allfllL __ ....,. ___ 1 Loe 443908 John 661•3 189 Poot heaters•Furnaces Downiown H B 960-9603 Ada To place your ad,
-unusual work a speclalty ins. For est 552_9142 --AOBtN1S CLEANING -Aik MOVING· RALPH'S PAINTING •Faucets•Dlsposals• --call 642-5678 and let 1
Seit things last with Dally 20 years. Llc'd, bonded. ' Have something 10 sell? SERVICE. a thoroughly Ou1ck/careful. Low roles lnl/axt Reas. LIC'd ;;Ji ---SELL Idle 11ems wllh a Closslfie<I Ad-Visor help
Pilot Wan• Ads Palombo Const 962-8314 want Ads Call 642·5678 Classlfled ads do 11 ~II. cte1n house. 540-0857 Lie. T 138046 552·0410 FrM est. 84 1·35~8124 h Want Ads Call 6'42·5678 Dally Piiot Ctesstfled Ad _Y_o_u ______ _
-·-5100 ltatala lo Aueaaet•Hll 3002 IHHl•HI Htlt WHIM 5100 Help Waate4 5100 Btl1.•aa1t4 5100 Helt W11tei
Slaart 2908 •sPIRtfuA[ ADVISOR* Waatt4 4022 AUTO DETAIL t N G . Counter person tor dry HOUSEKEEPER
.,., ott Ii relocalfng Advise In love marrrlage & Young dlttware Mfg needs Ste11e'a delalllng neede cleaners. 37 hrs. weekly Refined lady needed as nurelng
WHY HASSLE? buslnese 675-2495• $7000 to keep up wllh resp clean cul.lndl\llduat 646-7621, wi,11 tratn uva In companlon/hsekpr CU
ROOMMATE FINDERS *WIN WIN WIN• salel. 714·240-0295 lor car waahlng and auto .,,.....-,----=~--..,.---for elderly lady No nure-Exper1enced. F/T days,
Interviews. sc;reens, de ta 111 n g FI t 1 me Cr u 15 e Sh IP J 0 b s Ing Mull drive Pvl rm & XLNT working condltloot • HOROSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA photo's& malchesprof. Guaranteed foolproof sys-Ilea~ W11t.. 4026 631·6900 s14.000-$28.000. Carib-salary. 644·88l9 and t>eneflls. 642·8044
1 y t lk 1 tem 10 correctly SOive bean. Hawaii, World. Call or apply In ,,..,800, 466 peop e. ou ~ on Y to Tangletown puules In I NE 0 S2000 vantur-e BABYSIHER-HSEKPPR ref·undable. F-for Olrec· -----.,..-...,... Quallfled apple a l 1 Sh Id 1 ~ 11 you enfoy wrapping Flagship Road. Npt Bc:h. sec;onds or your money cap 11 · ou re urn Needed for Happy Fam· 1ory_ 1·3 12-888-4347 packages and heve an Tuesday, Oc tober 18 4341 Birch, Newport back Send $5. • SASE $16,200 by 15 Jan. lty, 2 chttdren, may llve In C-1533 eya tor detall. we have 8 OFFICE HELP GENERAL . ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19).· Focus on education, ability lO 641 -1899 to PWP·2, 3857 Birch St Ph. Tony, 645-7864 evea or O\JI, need own car. PIT position for you 7 30 Mon.Fri, S4 00 hr Irv
ST •3 ··-Be h I I II 5•5 2 •5 DECORATE INTERIORS 55 "'.v.3 articulate ideas. poss1b11it y of gaining definite advantage by 4 Br 2 81 house. W/D, c._A9'"2660
4 ,....,wport ac · M•ri•~tt, unh•r de 11 s .. • 1'" · Homemakers, bored at 1m to 1 pm, Mon·Frt. l-ovv kilCh . etc $250/mo ' $3 50/h BOOKS ON -------.,....,.. makmg inqu1nes to proper sou rces. authorities. Lunar positJOn 520 dep. 846-8386 T , 1 4021 Banking home? Have flair tor de-r Oldllf more ma1ure stable
SCRAM LETS C S U "" PIT FIT ea Art TAPE. 729 Farad St. llve In Babysitlertor 2
h1ghbgh1.S lntngue. mystery. glamour. ability to gain confiden · Beaut. pvt NB home. $250. • WIDOW HAS m for to•.. A H VA LT ~~8u11ai'.i1. no ~a:pe: nee Costa Mesa Children. M·F 7 30-4.30.
tial information. working Fem adult, Kitch S 10,000up. No credll Train avall 775-5447 eves/wtlnds off In ex-
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Harmony is restored to areas prfv 645·9515 ANSWERS check, no penalty Also L1dtoa,1 Lta4•a1 change for room& boerd lend on & buy TO'• TELLER Oellvery drtver. Costa Bi·llngual In English. 650-7454164S--2181 previously riddled with tension. dissent Suddenly events swmg ltatah Waatt4 2909 Peaked . Dirty StO.OOOup 10 Jumbos Mesa Blueprint 1690 Spanish fQr landscape In·
in your favor. hopes and wishes are fulfilled and friendships CHRlSTIAN M1n afngle ln ls~~T~~~~.c Oentson Aasoc 673-7311 At least one year S&L or Ptacentta.BrtngMVA s1atta11on/ma1nt crews P,~~1,:~·~~~bp~in1:-
become m eaningful relat1onsh1ps Basic domestic adjustmt!nl IS wheelchair, neees1 small My sister has a new Btlt Wait.. 5100 banking uperlence DENTAL Asst Ortho eKp Full ume Exper req 646-1566
part Of "tnLeresting" .,,...nano ground floor ap1 tmmed boyfriend He reminds (working with cash) Type req ADA pref M/Th Full 843·2114 -.... " E 1 1 1 45 WPM and 10 key by or p/tlme_ NB 642-2626 ---Part time. afternoons In an GEMINI (May 21-June 20). Career gets boost 1( you define fTIP oyer re oc 0 area me of I one story bulld· 2 YOUNG IO\Jch r--ulred ;ccount· LHAL SECHTllY 1ndus1r1aJ cale<ong ware-• . . Call Pastor Simpson Ing Nothing UPSTAIRS. ..., " I W rt h 552 5457 terms. draw lane between 1magmal1on and f3Jltasy. Pisces native 645-2062 or 5-40-2688 Ing end bookkeeping ell· Ex "'':t • r··· needed lor busy H B law ouse • ----
h elps you get backstage view. enables you to contact n1>rsons m Gara •• ftr .... , I r.... 3004 FOR AIRLINES perlence preferred Con· perlen sew ng ma-ollt<:e general pracllce & Part Time Perm ,...-I tact Debre Bugarin lor chine operator In custom corporale llllgallon
pos1uon to aid your cause Virgo native also plays import.ant role I 1 2912 Fe, Blk/Brwn D1cnle: M. more Information ai: drapery Apply In person: Self-starter. 3 yrs legal •tlllllS CANCER (June 21.July 22). Accept added responsibility. ta TerrlerX,puppy.whlte;M tmrnedlate openingsfor 10 (2 f3)641·2114 COIT DRAPERY, 1297 e~per preferred . . Eastslde storage garage. Brown Pit Bull; Fe, Sharp Guys & Gata, free Logan Av, C.M. 540-1366 647.6041 &mlllHIS
.inake plans related lo travel. educauon , commuml·at1on and 10 ic 10 x 24. 180 E 2181 Grey/Blk/Brwn terrier: to travel, u .s M•lor IMPERIAL SIL --DRIVER PART/TIME LIBRARY EYHIHS
'language. Special publication is part of scenario -important St $85/mo 646-4262 ~!' ~;!>'po~~h':~!~~ ;:~~ U~tq~:so~u1~~::: Equal Oppty Employer Ugh• dellverles. Mon-Fri, CLERK I. subslllUle clerk WEElHll ·~pie will recogniz.e your potential and wiU do something about Oflict IHtlll 2914 Animal Shelter. 125 Mesa Group Transportation M/F/H 8·5. $4/hr Apply: Mas· position needed for New·
tl. Capncom and anothe r C;anl·er play key 1:11es. . IEWPOllT IUOI Drive. Costa Mesa FurnlShed. No EKper llOllEEPER/lotry tar. 234 Ascher Av.C M por1 Beach Public LI· Newport Beach markellng
. LEO (July 23-Aug 22). Insist on ans w ers. not evasion s ElEOITIYE SlnE Necessary Must be 18 or 1 1 ftl T h di Telephone Sales brery. entry level pos· firm has several openings _ _, --• S k Found 2 mate Airedales. old ar \Ingle, well glr o ce o an e per-ltlon, SS 76/hr Clerlc;al for rasponslbie, adap·
.where m on ey. accounting prOCt"UUres arl.' ron t't'rnn.i. tr1 e OFFIOEI vie Broollhurst & Adams groomed. and free 10 sonal businesses WISIOOtellOO experlenc;e desirable table people who enjoy
·chord o f um versa I appeal emphas ize drama. law and love BELOW MARl(ET RATES 968-6775 s1art 1mmectlately For In· 7 141760•8 7 60• ( 2 131 PER WI, Piil-TIME Musi have on call fle•lblh· public coniact Must
Pro """'l l'an be completed. n egollal1ons l'an Ix.• finished in rela tion GOOD SELECTION tervl-call 750-8956 or 557·9000. ext 394 Easy ac:oess air cond olc. 1y and min avallabllly ol have clear telephone
r--apply In person 10 Mrs IHllEEPER/IEC"' cash bonu•as given oul 5·20 hrs/wk. da"". evea & voice A greal way lo In· to a "m a)Or work " 7141760·8070 • ~ ,_ a e o b dgel ---FOUND ADS Pike 12192 Chapman Full/tome Typing. 1o key. d11ty. No charge 1>aclls. Sais Applicat1ons may ere ' ~ ur u V IRGO (Aug 23-Sept 2:ll. Past procedures no longer 1617 WeSlclllf. NB 278 to Ava . Garden Grove AIR. AIP. etc Pay ac-No reserves Call Brian be obtained at Newport dollars We pay for your
suftu:e. Be aware of legal rights. pernuss;ons Y ou'll have 1365 9Q If Sutlable tor ARE FREE Be1ween 9am·5pm cording 10 a•perlence 636-9334 Cenler {lranc;h, 856 San training For Interview medtcal or dental Agent on-Tue-Wed Parenls -•· ---Clemenl\ Dr l'!ewport appt, Call Hugi> Bleem., ~nusual upporturuty to break free from reslnl't1ons n ew 54 1.5032 c;ome 111 tnierv1ew Call for •PPI. 545·0.2:_1 UIY I Fii Beach. CA 92660 Mail 545-5776
.methods, fresh C'OntaC\S l'an be f ea\ured If )'OU have Courage Of 250 sq II $200/mo 779 W call: E n 0 I I S II s Pe I k I n g lllA.IOl lllJIAl(lh We need Siudents Or appllcallon1 to Library Phone can111SS1ng. worl(
c:on v 1c11ons u 'O. A quarius natives play k ey roles 19lh s1 c M Tom Foreigner's Lindsey & Co inc. e Sacra· housewiles for loc;af Adm1n1s1ra11on. same ad· 6PM-8 30PM Mon-Thur
LIBRA 1Sep1 23-0t-t 22) f'ollow through on first 851-8928 142-Hll men10 bued mortgage phOne work. No exper dress $4 00 pr hr • bonus Of·
1mpress1ons Job g ets done t f ydu are selective. espec1aJly m Baytron1 Oftoct1s pa11os •·5 lull days per week de-~:en~4:~,~~~f7o~pe~:~:~ :~I\ h!,~.!i0 ~~~ouri~ LIOuOA CLERK-part tome ~i5c7e 25;; a r 11 " P 0 r 1
. Y II '--· 11 _.... d kl 1 1 1 livering dialers lor lele· comm paid Call Terry Expet & ref's a muSI • -choice o( personnel o u' lA' p u t.'U m two 1rect1ons par ng, 1ani or 8 phone company.Would looktng for a manager Irvine area-55 1-8601 Radiology ottic;e_ Mission
Slmu)tan""USJy ch"""~ ''OU"""" which offl'rs best protectton l o 673" '003 FOUND Blk female Poo-hel" II hacflo.nowfedge In wnn • mlrumum of 5 yrs 17141631"7932 v ----' f 11 11 ~.., """"-' '"" die Tltfrler med w/wttl ... 1enee 1 1 Restaurants oe1o. •.....uS u me ~unty family Eastslde CS0815111 MesEa spot on ~I 875-8170 pro gremm1n g auto ~~. VA .• ~gr~::e~~ EltotrHIO Teoe.110111, Lori's Kttchan Inc has the front ott1ce/med1cal tr81'1-sco. RPIO "'-23 N 2 1 D f h be d 'Ox 10it24 180 dla.ters Must have nell Paging & BG Music; Install scrlbfH Word process1"" (vd · ov ). 1vers1 y. r eac yon 21st 646-4262 Found. Slit & Wht young appearance. Mete Pref t1ona1 loans & se<vlce. Exper. only J:~fw~7~e~a"~~g~onlon helpful 495.4700 ...
current expect:rnons. imprint your own st y le and "allow" Exec sulle otliCeS avail male cat w/grMn leather Own transponallon re-TIP UWJ FIR llllT 548·8671 Costa Mesa
I I h Be d { h II P I StlC M QUlred Houre 8 5 p1111••• conlrol person, familiar REOIPT/FrHt lffioe yourse f to en.)Oy a unique re auons lp. rea y or c ange. from Nov f Preallge toc co ., 11 mer · s 1 H ,.... · 11 11: ..,., Factory wofker. nvy mttng. wfth Hob11r1 Sllcer 9 30 pft .. time 8.30 to 12.30 5 travel, variet y and paruc1pauon tn spet·utauve venture. Gemm1 on Nwpt Blvd nr PCH 642•6133 a •ry. ou." + m eage All replies are confidential. driving. mus1 be rellabfe, AM · 6 PM. Mon· Thurs 6 d'a'y -" Phones: 1i,..
I · f' I Telephone ans. 1yo1ng & FOUND large TORTOISE Ask f 0 r R 8 m 0 n a Con t a c I T r 11 c Y maiure, gd driving record AM . 12 Noon Sundays. res 1118 t P ng r~ pays stgnt tcantroe copying avail. Ideal for v ie M esa Verde 859"7204 714·730-0671 s IT 5 990 Baking and Food prep-u · Y 1 · ......... SA GITT ARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 2 1 )' Numerical. lunar cycles proten1onats 645·6484 546·7308 or 549·3587 Ad Agency 1eeks Aulst Brick Leyer's HELPER 4·50 hr., F · 40·9 a atlon workers PI T 1 30 dut•eee & some computfH
h ighlight restncuon. de!tmte specifications. pertinent details NEWPORT CENTER. Full Lost 9124 small wlll/brn F Pl/ft. N-pon. 673-4699 No e11per nee Must have FHl llPEIYlllll P~ • 6 pm, Mon· Thurs. 6 ~=u~~~~.ec:,~~~t~t~~
and preparatio n for a maJOr move or change. Be aware o f service Eiecullve Suites Mallese mht, Nwpt Hgts. IAl.I good 1rans. 675-3175 Convalescent Hospital. am· 12 noon Sun. 19752 MacArthur Bl, Ste
.econorrucs, property values, sales potential. You'll meet S575·S625 640-5470 834·1122/548·5962 Pr~t!:~J!~~·~ old b~sl· CHhler. over 21. lull llme. i~~~ ='Jie&to~~ef~~: F~. ~:4;';1~~.w~~~~F~I 5 110. Irvine. 553-t9l l
t!ndividual who is willing to h elp pul pieces in "working order." Nice small olflce lor rent. Lost Blue Fron• Amazon ness pubtlc.lllon needs wlll train Newport 958, Dally Piiot. P.O. BoK All appllcanta must be RECEPTIONIST for beauty :: CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan . 19): Emphasis on movement, Broo1Churs1 & Garfield. Parro1 10·8. $100 RE· aggreaafve ellperlenced Produce.Call Mrs Camp 1560. Costa Mesa. CA neat. clean. and depen· salon. luhlon consclen·
• . h d . . R 1 . Hunt. Bch Non/smoker WARD. 7141673-0326 telephone and outside alt 11 64S-0032 F S dable Must read and tloua. full-time. Richard ideas. meetings, s ort trips an answers to mqumes e ative in $175/mo 963·5647 d d 1 our upervtsory open. speak English Apply be-Ouellette Salon. 200
k d · I H · hi h l LOST· Lg Pit Bull. lawn cereer min • 19 81 OUll/nPIST ln91 for Health Orlen· 0 AM 12 N c o N B transit ma es contact an a spec1a request ig tg t versat1 tty, oc AIRPORT ~ w!Whlia chest. Skub1 HB reps. Draw ..-com-Earn Chrt1tma1 money led/self mollvated tndl· tween 1 • oon. N-pon enler r . .
be flextble, r ealire that many o f your ideas a r e valuable and SOC'O New corner olflc:e bldg area. A-ardl 964-8095 mission Unllmlled poten· Typist for compuier vlduats. High earning ~~~74 ~~ L~~1;~:,1tc~ Recep11on1s1 for HB law of.
will gain you added r ecognition. (90%1eaaed). Wiii bulld •o Lo11 pr mens glasses. brn ::!J.16~;11 B Gorla. work Evea 5 lo 9 No potenllal. No upertence (Harbor a1 Carriage flee Must be Intelligent.
J\QUARIUS (Jan 20·Feb 18). Eml>hasis on m on ey, Su~ ~~N~co!= R':csh7't leath case vlc Galson·s compu1er •KP nae Wiii required We Train In Np1 Drive) S anla A na congenl a•. dlllgeni
prole<.'t1on. hom e repairs and additional security m easures. Baste & Brlitol. 751-598l' Market 700-0408 ~r~~~~.~ou~,:~r ~~ ~~:~;112 C 1111 1 r en e G:e~a~~f~1~8 979-0747 ~:~~~d 0~~~~~~nl~:11\50
domestic adjustment is necessary. will prove o f definite beneftt Olltce spec.es lbr lease ITOLEl/llEWllll B11boa t11and Mon-Fri. construction ---Busy Medical Dlstrfbutor L~;1~~c~~l~n~~;-:;~~ ~;:11~~1 I~\~ J~~:.O:r:·
G1ftwh1c-hreprl'Senlstokenofaffect1on1s"onthe-way"Taurus. 747 II . $595/mo 1st 2Blue &Gofd Magaw's 12 noon lo 8 pm Deelllng 1nt11ller needed needsharpversatlleper· weekdays Gold·_-------
Libra Scorpio n atives Ctgure prominently month renl lree ullls pd II Found Call 645·2963 575-0595 Ell P • r I en c• In son exPetlenced In AIP. enwesll M cFadden IEOIPTIHllT
P.ISCES F b g M h .,0 d If d o -AIC. ground fir 1055 El 30 " Aldn Elutomertc deck c;oallng Inventory control. and 892 4826 National Real ES1ate nrm ( e I · arc &. ) A vo1 SC -ecept;on . IX" Camino Or, CoSla Meaa Ptraeula l. Certified Midnight Aide. 1y11ems and Epo11y purchasing Must be welt • 1eeks protesstonal r11-
open·mlnded. but n ot gullible C i rcumstances tum tn your favor. 3 Btks E of Fairview & . CIROUS OF lull time, 11 pm . 7 30 •mil Trowel coat 1ystem1 organized and able 10 llllmlllOE ceptlontat with light
you'll be al nght place at c:ructal moment Take 1nit1ative. start M7a5~~1040 Mr Tra'"" 6A2·5861. Newport VIiia, 642-7222 work under preasure Parlome all types of apt. typing sltllls High public
I th k th l .. b .. An th • _, 11ss1~E 4Bc000h Hllarl• Way. tip! o•-1 Benefits. salary nego· repairs, prevlOUI employ-contact and Client lnlfH· · p~o~l, et 0 ers now a you mean usmess 0 er PROFESSIONAL OFFICE • ...a tlabte 841-2665 bet~n ment In apt l"llllnt or action Salary open Koll
Pisces figures tn 'iCenano for rllf\J. 150 . SJOO mo 719 NO HARBOR BLVD Do You Enloy Cooking. we 10 • 12 noon only bullder cuatomer NtVlce Center Calf Miss Jones
-' --476 10l!O FULLERTON Teleph on e • PBX wlll train Good salary & required 642-4907 for appointment al
Af&rl•Hll, 01f. INaa 2900 ltatala to • An-lfl9 Sv1 e11p Cord benefit• Mesa Verde 1,.11ttl1t lattraoter -47&-0340. from 9 . s.
-Slaare 2901 • $340/up, crp1a1 drps 110-1112 Boards, Evet & grav&-Cnvatescent Hospital. Vlv1c;tous & energetk: per· llllTEUIOE
lfewrrt h1ela 2769 Lge Br 1n 2Br CM apl ate, rstrma, 17301 Besen l llY l WIH yard 760-8305 661 Cenler SI . Costa son 10 1each beginning llPllYISIR RecepllonlSl/TyplsL N--
Cloae to OCC S285tmo Empt F ntsmkr looking tor Blvd H B 842·2634 ATTRACTIVE .. NS SVC E•,_. only Mesa 548·5585 gymnastics skllls to small por1 Cenler law office Sml 2 Br 1 Ba, garege, no 545.3 137 " ~.--· h Full time. muat be eK· Call Lulaa 540.8900
371h Pl S6001mo 1st. ~~~~~s~;e5~ ~~:';;r ~:. uTllE '' T~~~~~~SY'g'U Pfsnt ofc NB Pit 3 pm -Costa Mea•'a iiiieit Health c lldren. 786-2555 perlenc:ed In convates·
188351'399s9250u ,secu,rol y N1:~~1:a,1ak:o rr~cho~~OI, 596-1988 x 15 wkdys 8·5 EXECUTIVE SUITE ESCOllTS/IOIELS 11 pm 631·5840 --Foodllf Slor• Iha seeking Hlol p Sldno,s now hdlrlng d,•· :enflts' hcoasllp611~2'~·8o·~n.1 ben· NewpR;;e~:~~~··~fflce 1• 11 no on · u n-213·796-6376 evs/wknd Nwprt Cir 640-5470 -Answering service tel•-qua led, en• euslastlc, very r vers an coun er v .. .. ·eluded furn S250tmo utlls Inc• phone operator Varied health oriented persona help, Apply In person. looking lor 11 person with 548-42601993-4888 Fem 2 Br 2 Ba. non-smkr. 1h1ia111 Outcall ONLY 835·9199 shift• E•P preferred for c;athlert lo work Pit 1000 Nortll Cat Hwy, Maueuses wanted, exit good office skllla, type
$H CltaHtl 2776 C M $310 Oya 64<1·1700, IHtala 2916 Handsome Man, some 382 3rd St, •C. Laguna Weallenda and evenings. Laguna Beach 494-4044 ~~r~.ln~o ~~~~ge~I~ ;~1; 85·70wpm 851·31_8_6_
1'ear General Hoapllal 1 Rotahaattll 2904 e•• 391, evea 682·7220 means, lady wtlh same. Beach PIHM call ~355 for HOUSEKEEPER. llve·ln. state approved school. Rellaurant:
bdrm. newiy decorated • 1~uN• ..... A''"H Femateroommetewanted llllll IEW relationship marriage ,. detail• English tpilaktng, with Apptu 11 719 N Harbor. Appllca11ons being IC· '"' "-~ '" Generous tenant improve 646-0721 ... nswering service or ' 1 ca1pe11 & drapes Avail OTOR INN 1BA eastalde c M $210 • ..._ awltchbolfd operator. fha fHIHI draw In Iha references 675-9322 Fullenon. bet 12·2Pm cepted or day time
Pct 29 $435 898-5974 w ates $105 & up ,..., utll 646-4663 ~~fc~~.:~~OOOS ~i,:: HOLIDAY SINGLES EXPO experience req'd Day Wut • Dally Piiot --------M1cti"iiiie. op1r1enc;1d. bartendlng. day food
S-alll •-· 2710 Da•ly/Wkty/Monthy Fem. lo shr 2 br:-1 ·~ ba 2488 Newporl Bl. C M 0 11 n e YI and Ho I & I ahlft at local a11chang1 Cl11Slfled Ad Call Today Find whal you want In own toola. MacGregor waiter/ waitress. day &
,... K11cn s avatt Color TV. apt, C M Avail Nov I 642·3490 1 1 I 2 5 • 2 7 A t • Cell 6415-2650 &42·5e78 Cally Piiot Classilleda 'Ocht Corp, 1631 Plaoen-~~~?I ~~~ts~:~~~:=~~ --*--* ___ * ___ *_ healed pool & 11ep1 10 $230 + dep 645-7542 I e nd I E l( h I b I I II•. c M. I h .. I ·-
OC41n 985 N Coas1 Hwy Ct••trcial 213/986·9255 park 119 °11 ,.pp Y "' · Piil Y1EW Leouna Beach. 494·5294 Finan smkr, mid to late •-1 I 2tll -Newspaper IH/lllT/PIT /OFO person 11 •he Rusty
{br/1b• condo o looking 20·1 shr 3br 2b• house -• 1 1 laaiaHHI 3 Year1 expertenc.e, prefer Paltcan, N-port Beacll
poot avail 1525 559-0050 ~~i~~;· !:;k~~~~:Xe7~e ~d~ffl7;'0 873-3729 Ret~i?~~~~!_ELN~~~ re ftr Sale 4012 KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES I eome b=~-~~~· PIT ~B•t~18,,,»f#~~:;~
..... 2tOO avaJI 675-8740 HOUielo shlfe. 2 rooms. modeled. 500•3000 111 L-11eae,..MMI MEDICAL ASSIST ..t1Lfl .• uJ~ . l•••ilhf Atttltftlt ltatab It Penn Point. Balboa_ Reu rent a. Agt 675-&700 Atr ..... IHH --Front & back offc 1icper . .JJi/lIJi ZFJ/r. ... ll
41vec.rcoa1a& time Pvt Ilaire 2tOI S350 mo yrty 673.fle33 Re1111 apece 12so-.qti St1•1t ~-u I 1 '~C::f'" ~ dlabeteallntl!Md pr1et .
11Valt. MOi'I tllfu Frt for Rmm1e anr luK g11den apt on r r tall toc1t1on 6"5-3477 c:allon In Corona del Mer. } ._ -· -·-..--f"'IPvt beth w/199 entr MtF N -smk lo It'll e 2 17th St . C.M Prime re· 1000~ member•. Xlnt to. ·~· _N_B_. _F._v_. _M_o_ ....... s_111,,,,_ __ -.. --,,-u-r--ft-,-. -M-.--....... --.-,-,
Sc p s255 BR 2BA In CM Pool. Jee. . ...Jll (~ ~ .,.ldlcal 1111111, PIT, Nwpt leul 25 yn old Olna'I qule1 conaervallve etn· nr II, pooll .. • len cri1. ate 1336 mo Office/Shop/Store tP~ Ca $45.000 with SlO,OOO '1. ~ 'r: .• •.• V . a Bch Ophthalmol<>Ollt of· Plue. axper pref Con·
'ployed man In lge mobile mo. 432-8797 Mar11l 8ob Pam 241-1492 Iv meg. 300 IQ f1 or more, r ... C down Owner !"°vtng 10 • • ll floe. exper Ar•I $..-id re-tact btwn 2·5 673-2473
·home In IOult olr11 nr Shere full"'" hm Y\I Prlv MUI C·2 549.7249 Aullralfa. Won I 1111 Call ~~.~. ~:.-a \J c • --:!l,_ 'tt """ ~ ~ In H 8 seo1• 8• 2 rrPiCs s285. ullls Need rmmte to ahr lov.iy 7141752-&955 A-~ -~IA, u aume to P. Boll 2115· '*l•urant
...... pleaM 960·5844 I t 111 08'> gee.-e4 79 • quiet ta 2br prlv coodo In •• aatrfal I I .... 4014 Coet• M .... 92028 ....... 11.m ...
, wknd•I-• • • £111 CM. $350. 642·0670 IHtala H20 !f affl !!'f: ~ AGES 11_14 " MOCltlt. Actora. ~t ~· fol' gourrn.c ... fOOd ,....
Fvrn"'*' room nr-sc WE LOOI FOR c~ENfgH 1~0 NEs~P,..':rET UiO 1q R. S67& Hln:h, I lllTI EARN un TO SJS.OO DCD .~..;. ::,n.~~~,! klda~'li.... ~.~~&.~= :;.~t;: Pl•i•. female pref YOUll 6•5 •22• NB. St330. M tA zoning "" n .n wtr.f\ 12so1mo 55o-173 ~ ,. -.. A~f 541·6032 Super elghtpleic • .-ch with
Room. w Coeta M... lt ... /I........ Prof male wlll 1hr lrvtne --3 90rm. 2'A ba, double S200tmo 3 6drm hovae, I ll-.1.1 .. 28R 2BA 1wnhm with M/F •S77f! up 2265 ft lnd1trl oaraoe with OlfaQe door 642~9~ Mate or Fem 1 •0 .,..•••c 35 t Ger. w/d, no kid•. office 18101 Redondo o~ner $700,000, .... __ _ • 1 n range o pet 1375 mo 786-3821 Cr •U. H.B 842·283• aume flnanclf19 12~%.
A o om w / k 11 c h• n Elllbllehed I<! y11r1I Terr Ille ln'llellment.
prtveltgee Nr tt\opplng Photo1 l•klfl/Ref'1 Ohhd Prof. per1on to thr beaut llOO le n 17115,000.
c.n1., a Bui ee2.1s20 6 mo Ouarnted Servtoe CdM furn home. oc111n WUllMR ll0-1IOI
. •Crldlt8• he Wttnes• view, $500. 844 6341 w/aml office. lmmed °"'
· IUUll llTIL Newt Time Ml(ll!Zlne. Reep fa to 1hr furn COM 30c groa1. 831·8480 :II Wkly rental• now 1v111 l<NX R&dlo fwl'lflM 1425 t utll Nr "1lli'li 41 e I I
• 116 ISO/wk & up Co10< N .... Pofl Ole 832 ... t34 ocean No gar 675 &04 1 lttJlll HAii ~llllllli'llN
'fV Phonee In room 2274 '"off to •II · "'or r-l Outalde IO&a6J; • l""'I I ..,____Blvd CM who.,. relocatl"G Reap F 10 lhr new 2 br 2 ,. '""' r • 111' ~ ........ ,..,.. · 11orege apace IOf bo•I• ~~=~~=~! __ _,,__04&-.,..__7445 Tut tln Otc 832 ... t34 e:.w~C=o~~: .. ~~1 or Clrt Cotta Mela People who need pec>lllla
XLNT nr Hoag fi'llt ent & White Feim 60 • to attr 2br Bual 548•7414 David 831·7271 lhOuW llw~ Ctledc the
Wt now ht•t I~ 00tnin1s lor younc •acer ~'"" to Meurt teldt" for fht Ounce Coail Dilly P1lol. Out crews slarl at J 30 pm and
"°''until 8.30 pm •f*kQyJ On ~MOIY. "'
work• ltw more II-Ours Yov 111M urn many t111>s
Ind or11n. •tone 'fl'tlh e.trninc your O'fl'n mane, -(1 ttisrt 11 no dtlivtr1nc or colltcnon 1nw01vta '" rou ,,. 1111tmttd. l)ltlH Clll Mr hrl = (714) 548-7058 ~ 1r------MV
Bl N~/no kit S300 2bl 191 In M-V~d• --8ervloe OlreclOfY 111 lhO ~10~~· ~5:;;;-909=.._s_--1._•r_._._c_M_l3_4& 24 t -62•6 Claslllled Ad• 64?·5616 S.H Idle Item• 842_·_118_7_8 DAILY PILO~T==l!~!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!lll!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll
,,
~aily Pilai ...... · ...........
PART TIME
Deliver Daily Pilot by au to 'in
Laguna Beach area (2 hours
per day). Weekdays P .M. -
weekends A.M. F.&m about
$400 per mo. Call Mr. Barrow
or Mr. Bush 642-4321. EX)E
.lo-----....
ca Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, Octobttr 17, 1963
ltlt Wutt4 Slot f111ltut lrrtl11 a.M1 HJO &atn Wute4 •HIO Aat .. , l•f!rtt4 Aat••· lllpr Aal•, laJ!!tM
TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
R"tevr•nt . 12Wwln beda wlgenulM 1m-ove 'IOU' j.ame with AiOtl .. 1 cuh lmmed. tor fiat 1123 Volbw11t1 t173 M&u flft bran tlud~de Ind "" U )'Out vehicle. d~auc Of i:...-.,. ... ___ ._.,....,.~ WllTllU/W&nU ort . . Ping Iron• .pw IC• l0<9ign 661-8280 ''5 Xf6. AMfFM c.••· ·eg BUS. GOOD ENG ·m In I .. N:POt1 wtlh w IOt Wicker buket :=.::':~I~. new new, mull .. II 128!1 m•g•. IUPet CiH n NE~OS TRANS WORK e.ectl'• "'*' ""9ctlon
ACROSS
1 Maple
5 -opera
9 Burn
14 Virile
15 Quecnuan
Ind ian
16 Orum
17 Image
worshrpers
19 Hab1tua1e
20 Re1ec1
21 Fell back
23 Regular
25 Oozes
26 Dioceses
2 8 Abates
32 Puts up with
37 Sheflltsl'l
38 Arab robe
39 Fast
41 Judan king
.i2 Furniture
handler
45 Two-sided
48 Undressed
SI
50 Catcti
51 Food
.&it Prooations
58 Conciliators
62 Fru11 1elly
2 3 4
, ..
20
23
69
63 Essence
64 Put bacli.
66 Cream
67 ·woe
--1'
68 Garntshmeni
69 --a
halter
70 Behold
7 1 If no1
DOWN
1 Arab VIPs
2 Middy
3 Skip out
4 Free
5 Squat
6 lnd1v1dual
7 Tract units
8 Glue
9 Increase
s1an1
10 Card game
, 1 Con101n
12 Learning
13 Sla11e -
Sco11
18 Tree
22 Electric unil
24 Time p erroa
27 Pierce
29 Mark
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOL YEO
30 Bear genus
31 Resound
32 Pack
33 instrument
34 Abslerge
35 Over prel
36 Alluvium
40 Scool
43 Peach 1ype
44 Reappraises
-l6 -Bulba
52 Lotty home
53 A111te
55 • --of
water·
56 Rocks suit
57 Tableau
58 Altentton-
get1er
59 Chrnese wax
60 Discharged
611~01
47 Brlle1 aou• 65 Napoleonic .i~ -M oines marshal
ii.Inch 9*vloe. t em· 1 831·76111873-1230 Scoll. 432·"30 WI PH TW 11UAJ1 11800/obo. 838-71411 t:>00 1155-88711 of pre111ouel)' owned
pm, MOft-frl brn If>-t POOi table. I tt. tell 1160 PH 11111&11 '78X19. A.Int e«id. low ml. '69 8quareb&e1k Motor PortchN, Audia end P<OlLlm11411)' • l&O·t 116 417• round Oek table w/ obo 545-31• 1 new t•dl1l1. ICltU $2260 wm· nd• It I na work Vottceweoen-. weekly. Mu11 be l'IMI. IMvee. 13115873·1202 ---WI IUllll
P•t•Onlbl• Ind BR Mt M1tchedoontemp SKI EQUIPMENT-Ski PllTIAO/llUll Ol>O. 720-43SllWkdy• 1175/obo, 645-1771 iv ..... • ~o-tlc ~I tor a!>°O wh1 ° twn bda, rattan ~::.~gan~r 17~ 1 ~~r.· 2480 H1r1>or Blvd ha~I S m1g__ ~-------polntmenl ,,.IWMft ' hdbtda l>0.11 ec>OVm1tt 6• COSTA MESA ; '88 SOUAREBACK, tet>lt em end 12 noon, o~ 2_. ch• d'rwra dektchr' SOiomen 222 binding• .all 711 Accord, 5 apd. air. reg •no 1 1100 548·2900 45~ E Coeet Hwy pm LOAl'a KITC,..EN. h 11d 1 e •'n 1 125 Seolt Polee I 125. L1<1i.1 a.1-4100141· 1• gu, nu II•... ei••eo __ Newpor1 8Mctl
3077 So Harbor. Sante 8,.4-00ll~ Cuti tkl bib w/malchlng -wtw•-JH• 13100 63t -~135 or '60 vw Bua, c amper 873--0900 Anl (t11fbor 11 C11rlagel Jecket, xln1 «>nd $50. -• n 6'2-t020 Mitch 1peciel, run1 good
979-0747 Butcher Block 6 Chrome Men'• Fotmul1 Ski bOOll olw .... O&ll ·79 Civic, 4 1pd. lier CIH. $1350/olr 540-5414 AalM hantlc
WELDER. Anp~7 am only Table, 4 cene \.•ck IZ II'~ 130 Mutt ..i1 n-radial•. run• itlni, •II· 69 VW Bug S 1600 Ob() .... C , .. chel,,, 38"x59" wl leivn 6'6·8280 v~tblk Muel Mtl thlt wk 9fl3.2GeS ,_. t3H MecGr-cior 1 Corp, s 150 11'0-33MI "'' , .. ...., ______ _
1831 Pl1cenll1, Coeta . Women'• lki boot•. ll 7, $2500/obo, 549-35118 •• YW "' '66 xms .. mr St1llon
M.... BUY OIRECT FROM I 175 Vll./149. 631· 1098 '80 Aoeord. aunrool. •Int AM/FM,~-tlr ... c1mpe< w,.-,QOJlbo, ,v8e!Y1 .'80.181able. ~,,--=----..---::9"1~9 MANUFACTURER cond. $5100 or offer. lnlt . runt xint Sec .. 5 o '" ..,. Jen Waat 1nd .. v•50to75%onn-n ..... 759-1980;542-8360mag s1•115.960""'253av '71 AMC Hornet. 4 d()()(,
P'reclicel NutM I HouM-top qulllty bed Nie. Twin 'ttrtt ' 6232 '80 Prelude 5 apd am/Im ·70 K Ohl lelt eond. 71 ,000 mile•. kMper elLperlenced & Mia 1u1t $811.116, lull Mii 4 Mttl Drlttl 9030 . . ermann •. new new brlkee new wller local' reterencea . juet s111.g5, S1ve even 21" remote control RCA caaa. aunroo l . red, paint, new llret, xlnl int. pomp. Mual·-.. econ
673-5100. more on queen end king pon, color TV. 1250 *'86 Bronco. a IC 4.1011 of $4•00. GtHI cond' very depend1bi. S3300 H po11lbl•. SllOO/OBO. ~------=s"""S' u11. Free deliver)' 873-12361631-7611 e111ru . e•lt cond. lmmac 642-17 14 firm. Att 5, 964-1393 641~91g
C1t1 S 638-" 195 BEAUTIFUL 25.. RCA shape, yeillblk, am/Im '82 Civic Halchbacfl. air, ·71 vw Convenlble, n• ,,..
1
-
1
..,.L------.i=::o-:
Speci1i older kitten• & Contemporery din HI Color TV, 2 yr wrnty CHI. pll , plb, wide llrea stereo, 511\/et, •lnl. $5950. lop, llrH, eeelS & ~ate. _.a,;;;•.·;...---.-!"~01,..
Call need reepontlbie In· w/1ued• chtl 1400 I 148. FrM del Open se5oo obo Muat tell 840-8300 amlfm CHI, rune & look• 119 Rivi::.. ~Int cond..
aide ho mu Neu-Melching 8' couch '300. Sun TV John'• 646-1786 lmmedi 860-4295 _ I 1127 greet. $4350/0BO $7200. 49&-g258
teredllhOll.839-70111 Co11Mtbi $150.End tbl' New uted 1 wk Ski Track• 9035 .... 11585·3223 '111EULLna1110
Detl• SSl S50·SlOO. 645•7313 -Pre1600 OSP. 727 Bind-·78 Ford Courier xtf Gd '12 vw camper Wnlfella Belowwh~ Dlr645-2963 m German Shep pup• Twin bed Corne< unll Wllbl Inga $300 firm 497-2288 cond. nu paint. runs great dome lop, icint cond. ( 1BGA252)
$250 & up. 1. 7113-4443 ' AM/FM clock redlo S 150 Penosonle Pot1 Video Re-$2900/obo, 6'5-2514 $3 ioo 646-3349 96'·5128 corder wlcolor vtdeo 80 Oat Pickup 5 sp long '67 v w Sqbk New engine. Caiillac tlot M&·~~t1~:~·9~~~~~~·0Blk WOOD OINEnE TABLE camera S500 6'4·71113 bed, cstm paint. many brake1/beller'I $1300, 1982 White cadmec B·
with 4 n-ly upholstered RCAl9 .. vista color TV extres, $3800. 538-8635 call 751-3176 Oor•d.P (6). cleio.
AatltHI 010 chelfl s75 obo 241•1508 $ 199 obo 536-1561 all 6 ·so Ford Courter deluice Miil MolUIU.. 73 vw Wesll1Ua Camper, S13.1150. 6'4-08t9 1;;;;:;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 1~rt ltacla 6169 Sony. 6 tt color TV comm·; shell, utility set xlnt cond $3850 OBO 77 Cad s.vni., 1 owner, * W1ITll Tl llf 6 $2400 obo 552-4360 up aor. mini cond. runs SOUTH 660-2750 or 675-7222 beige. loaded. Mint • Wa nul din tbl, Plds. great S3750 970-0548 --Cond. 18750 673-7S.4 * 01 0111111 Chrt, dlnelle Ml. 6 chra. ZENITH COLOR TV --• cou11n '1°'4 0eHtrt1Mt
*.UT allTIQIES coffee & end Ibis, pello S165 527-1265 '82 Chevy 314T Sllverado 32,000 miles. em/Im cu... ·79 Eldorado, wtu wl biue a eet; buflel, pictures: 6 2 diesel. loaded. xln1 ISUZU 4 spd Mini cond See 1o leather tnt. lie. emllm
hdboerds, misc Items. •--70l 2 cond 15K mt $10,500 1 S6500/0BO 1tereo r1dlo. bW. landau
....,.._,..6,,.......,.,,.7-,r.8:--~9.........,r1~0,-r~11:-T712::""'!'~1~3~ "le ... tlff H henging lamps. eiec Ptwtr -11 496-9258 "W( WILL Ill apprecta 8 top, fee CB 650-6226
trllns. Saturd1y, 141 wfnew 20 hp Chrysler R OIHSOll 642..,.·7.,,.8,.,.6-::6,....,--,..-,..,..------------101•1111~~1•1.•0•!'1' 1600 Lincoln Ln at Wd dck. trlr. gd cond, Aatoa, larrt-4 volume Sales. Service ·767 VW Sqbk New eng. '11EL.It111111.
-• Hamplhire ~8-4328 S t800/obo 644-5785 9101 And Leasing braku, ball S 1300, 30,000 ml, iclnt cond. Mu11
120·Hl4 Jntlry 6214 18 11 Duttield Bay Doat Adi 18711 Beach Blvd .761-3 176 MU. SI 1.500 f.45-537• ~~~~~~~~~! $7000 646-9526 evet 181 Audi 5006§. xlnt cond, Hunttngton Beach '76 vw p/1 camper van. wl<d)'a. 642-6189 eves ~-+--+-~l--t--"'11: •1. c1111 dlemond. nearly , . lully loaded. Wiii pay you {114) 1~2-2000 llke new, stove, 11nk, rel.. 'll ELM ..... .., h111tff11I El&lltla lat llawleu. relall S 1000, sell 26' SEARAY Express 78. to assume lease. $3021 __ __ 2 dbl beds. S5800tobo
Dreuerw/c1rvedmlrr0<. $450/oft. 8-42·8632 I~ mer~ cS~~se;~O "a?p mo 832-6462. 961-0461 J11Hr 9129 Must tell lmmed Jack (~~~;e~·c:~:;;39~·11 $300. 642•2864 Maclalatrz 6216 ~~~. ~;rl~a pu~ea 0
N.B OW tlff '7:fxJ6, top cond-redone. :~~=~~~~. ,•:: 4~7 =~~:·
-• Ask tor KeHh 641-9292 Sable exl/1an ln1. $6800. TIIE UlllEIT PRIVATE SALE-ANTIQUE Tll 1ws.LHn ' · '77 3201, auto, Recaros. al-642-9797 eves. P.P. '79 Convertible, xinl cond, IELEmll Furn chine bren prlnl• Lincoln 300 wlfiow meter. 28' Calllornlan. '66. FIB. loys. air. Reside green. red lmmac am/Im cue. or~~l•I• ~le By' •PPl~ torcn, 1111ptrot. etc $1300 sgl Crusader 250hp, tully $6100, 645-2375 Mtrct4t1 Ital 9145 snoo 12131o433.7773 or 1111 model, loW mileage
6..0-0:.ea or bell offer_ s.45-0171 eqpl $18,500 760-8677ev 79''-5281 I ' Ito '67 280§(. MUST setu -. __ · Cedlllec• In Southern ~~~~~~~~~~! _ " 11 t, sunroo . a Y 79 VW Dsl Rabbit. dill. air. C1illornl1I See us tod1yt ~,..+-+-+-----i~-11 •lactllaattal 6211 Wellcrall ScaraD38'1981. wheels. 59.000 miles $12,900 640-5192 ••Pd. 4dr, 11ereo, .int. UIEll i 1x \6' beeul line rug $50,000 )(Int cond S 10,400/0BO 675-2500 70 280SL. very clean. low 241( ml. $4700 1151·3922 ------11 WILllMllllASI (K11h1n), hand mede 7141752·1•00 eitt 2~0 '81BMW3201 miles $15,900 631-1105 '68BUG,aunrl.icint. OUILLAO IWJIPlllH from Per1la. Sacrillce •--I .1 70 LO MILES-SUPER CLEAN •70 300SEL-GOOD COND S2195/b11 1142-9259 2600 Hatbor Blvd
,__-+--+--4i Featuring country pine & 1 12.000. 751·7102 ~ti, II 14 Beige wl brwn velore Int. 14300. S73--0156 ·ao Rebbll Convert COSTA MESA
antlquee.414·A 3 111 ST. BAD BACK? r.ry Gravity 14 SunUSh, 1981• seac;; 5 spd, an/rt, air. am/tm •79 2•0D. Im.mac. cond, Wtte>lklop,8/c,can,gld 140·1110 CANNERY VILLAGE Guldenee System (new). roller, xlnt eon4. $550. cua. pollahed & painted 66 000 miles $12 995 m""t $7500 114s--0430
Newport e .. ch. Open S&OOtobo. 675-7760 pm 650-1774 ~~~~~·,,;,·~~:~·, .. ~Mm~ ca'n 675-1387 · . -• ' Clanrtltt tlU
11-5Tuee -Sit 873-0e25 or Iv mtg. 25· Coronado. Shower, s 12,500 ,80 3000, 30,000 ml, t!Mle ~~1~:.bb!~.~:~.·· 1~= '71 c;;:n;;0 GJiY SPOf1
C1blevelcampr 1Sheillf1S6 mucli more. S7500/0bo 851-5040dys5 eves ove< payments. $445.20 1hru-out, 40 mpg~ Mlior tredeforPUt~ Arrllaacn 11 11 6 b9d. S200. Oaa stove. 645-7425 btwn 4-8pm .83 BMW 3201• Mi eurO: mo 556-3131 wkdys $3950 obo 040-1289 Eves 4g4.5040
--+--+--+---4--1i HARBOR AREA good cond, u 5. ~a '82 Cetallna 27', dletel, pean upgrade Quality Ask -about the money ~ ·a 1 Rabbit delaet ~"""up '71 El C11111no, •Int cond. CE SER ICE brn crptl"", 3 lrg pc s. • .... -1 loeded S23 000 h h 1 th ~v .,...... APPLIAN V $20 B~ihroom sink .. ,...., ' . carried I roug o "' can save you lhru our delu11, air, stereo, 5 IPd. Calm paln1. lt'lrt, xtru WeMllr.cond .. gu11. w tvenlt)'. $20. Misc 714-861-0070 sm111es1 de1a ll purchase&lease plans runsnew.50mpg $4195 S2600tolt 631-8812
appllencet. ~9-3077 furniture. Changing ibl & L~~~t~73L1~nan"al!•:11 ,2 ~Yetl~ul~~~ZrmT:~111~~ JIM IUllll 640-12119 IEE IS Fiim ~-+--+--+--4i ua WIST OIAIT Olher baDy ICCHI $1500/obo 493-•179 '" iec:llonlsl $16.000 By IMNITI '12 WllT OllYtU we heve. good Miec110<l APPLIAIOE 1142"2238 appl 714-644-0262 1301 OuallStreet Or--. wltan top & lnl, ol NEW & ueed Chev·
CORDLESS TELEPHONE Luer '800. Going cruising Conveniently Local~ NEWPORT BEACH amlfm cus, only 12,300 roletil See ui todeyi NOW 2 LOCATIONS Like new. seo ~8-5318 mu111e11 '850 675-9260 1••.9•00 ml. superb cond SQ500 1880 Harbor Bl11d .. CM & Compelltlvely Priced •• • COHNRL 650-7077 or 650-7082 Darling Country French 3 lut1, &'... Mercedes .69, 200 D, Ten. 675-8370 ef1 8'30
132So.MalnSt .. Orenge 11ory dollhouse. Incl S~ A Ski 701fi XLNT Cond $4200 '82 Rabblt Conv, lmmec 1.1, Wu •• ~ 5100 Btlt W11tt4 5100 Belt Waatt4 5100 634~200 or 558-3992 mlnlture lurnllure, llghts, ; ·I 1 213.953.9755 cond, takeover leue . .::::::.c. .. ..::..:=.:;_:,:;._....;;;.;;.;.----R b Ill R f lgeralotl w1llp1per, cpts. $275. 75 a Bow-rlder, 17 "' • Sales-Servlce-Leastng nothing down S272tmo. lnUL IEORnUY/IECEPT. T1l•·M1rhti11. F:ee'!erai'Wuhera/Dryers 720-1704 or 85 1-9135. In-out drive, low hrs, xlnt MC 9149 553·0258 or 720-0480 •
CHEVROLET
'X." II .tr t• ., Hil of
~ •"'I \ \H .-.. \
546-1200 specialty shop look Ing tor OllTA IEU Pr&-quellllers wan fed. 3 Mont ha W1rr1nty, Pert a House lull of furniture that cond $4000, 851•1842 R(JY CARVER 'SOMGS. runs great, cass. --·93 RABBIT OTI ==~=~---=:-:
mllura Mll·staner ·work Full/time $1200/mo to Prof .. relaxed etmosphere, & Lebot, Delivery Av11i mull be sold Call •ariat 7011 c 1 ea n s 4 5 o o ob o MUST SELL! 5 spd. emllm DMt• 9311
Into manegement Sal11 111n. Immediate open-pleasant surroundings. M/C & V118. Mon-Set 9-6 6,.5-0260 Eye level oven. . uzukl utboard. 1-S. ~ J ~ 11\. ~ 1-·I{\ I\\ 650-4049 c8u. sunroof, ext werr 1g Charger. 383. runs
exper nee:. Kings Row Ing Do not apply unless Salary ~ comm.,. bonus. •Ef•tl.-1100 Rel. Moped. lvg room __ ... 11111 S500 L p L 9-1-57 S6850 PIP 640-5023 grell S1200 or best Flreplece Shop West· e~pertenced with Word· Serious llnanclal polen· n n u""" very e g HIC•e otter
989
_ 1
057 mlne1er Mell 89•· 7552 star software. Conllden· 1181 Opportunity ior 8d· 7 52-0558 eller 5pm furn. 2 bdrms, etc Igloo Icebox used once .a • .r ~ n•R ----,
ROOFING
tlal Mr . Trowbridge. vancement EVENING & -----M1d1me Alexander Dolls S75 675-5861 ~YIL '11Peraollel12 '"YWUUITI '68 ()o()ge Corw1. good
642·3997 daylime shtfls Chuck Frigidaire retrlg. lro•t-lree, SSS to $98 5411-7564 •--i Mas·al. 675-6970, 645-6757 IT cond $1125/ofr 631·9397 2 yre old, 18 c I Kint cond · -Sales·Serv1Ce-Leas1ng 114 II
'Eo.n .. , Randolph 497-7501 $300 673-2690 ett 6 Ott wtille queen sleep Soll Stnice 7020 u•1EST 6791' Porsche, 5 spd. MEH HWt Fer4 '311 " an TE EPHONE ---$225 2 beiQe/brown new n Ivory w/Dlk •ni. 2nd •TIHfDI Sharpgainlededlo work L IHYUPLWIOIS Ch•IMS1SOeacll.wrlllng PROF.BOATFINISH llYEITO•Y owner Everything new '83sDISCOUNTED• '66 MUSTANG CONVT. Lar--rvoi-t, need top In 1111 p_,d N-por1 APPT MAKER Les 957-11 133 t CUSTOM VARNISH " $6500 675-8638. OtnlllfllLTI xlnl cond $5600/olr .,.. ,., ,...... Beech real ett81e office. Exper. sel sor11 appts 10< d"k S90 2 antique Ir• FrM "' Oeve 6'0-5449 *'70 5301, 4 spd. SLA 54r..2315 qualltyworkers Foremen Mull have a)cel typing top closer WO<k 81 NB L1t1on dbl oven stove aide 'helrt Sl25 PCh (1ACL501 " YILISWAIEI 873-7085
(4) capeble or running (minimum 75wpm) & die-•oc. Hrly & bonusu wl m lcroweve 1475 S'KO' Playnouse S65 you Slips 0.Cb 1022 •·79 5281 All AIC 70 91 IT -LIKE NEW SINCE 11153 68 M-u-s-1a_n_g_, -M-e-gs-.-a
Cf'ewt Journeymen I lOI, la.phone 1klil1 Cont eel 720-18•0. 9· 12. 559-0168 hlul 2 Wrought Iron _ (265ZCEI SSSOOlobo 642·9259 1'8-0220 llltl bl I reek tle<eo. Mint Cond 5-10 years experlen<:e P (J l •) 833 2900 P81IO teblel wllh cha111 .-5· off s110<e mooring, * .79 3201 • spd. AIC _ __ $3500 bo 552-0523 IEPAIRl/F ~ '" · · Tllt•llHtltllolt•r• PhllcoSIS21cul1retrlg. S150 each 631-2191, good loc with boat 199,.XEOI f99ilsC:-25.000 mt. --=-0-=-=-·==,...,...,,=---
Capeble of q11e111y wortl IEO'l/PlllUIEIT PIT Wanted, to m~e epptrn •. gold $125 11411-7662 760-9206 Sll.000 Cail 875-0740 * 80 3201. 5 spd AIC Anthricllel tan. tmmac -11 MUSTANG
Mutt know en types ol For Mktg Service Agency no selling. Call 673-9421 Recond relrlgs, •II u -:-Tuii Pwr Trim 2 HP Edger Need 4ott 10 5011 slip, 1565zOL) $21.000 548-9337 ® V8. •uto orig owneT
roofing 5 yeers e•· In N B Need exr;>erle~ betwn 12·5. Fred Astaire wrnly Free del. Re111 almo1t ,_ S99 673-7499 Newpor1 or Hunungton •·a 1 3201. 5 spd. SIR ·7g 911SC Metlcuioualy • S l900 960-9095
patience respon. pe<son. Wlxlnt Dance St1Jdlo. price TV John'• 6•6-1786 Radio Control· Gear & Herbor 714·875-8220 ( IDMH865) m11lntalned by Poract>e fl.~ '72 PINTO. Runs Good . ...,. EmllATH secretarlel skllla Front TELEPIHE SILIOITll l I 181-2 +'82 3201. 5 spd SIR mechanic $20.000 S950ot>o1142-4308 Roonng Estlmater (4). Exp office appeerence Must Relrlg '225• Wuh· P11nes 1250 lntellhltslon I~ ti (1EVF4631 l714) 644-0262
not oec:etNry bul 911ouid hive car Call Ms Giiien Hourly ~Commission PIT e</dryer $135 •• Dlltl· wl canrldges & Compu1er dlr\;26" 10 S9d. Marly +'7113201, 4 apd. sunroot ·79 91 tSC Petrol Blue ·73 Pinto. rune well !Ml lemlllar wllh con11ruc-(7 14) 752-9013 H.B. area. Cell Mr Hunl wuher 1100. 648-5840 S200 6411-2570 new '40. 962-4510 evs (091YPZ) l 650totr 495-53611
lion. Top commlsllon. 84 I·•1 lO Relrlger1lor IO< .. ie: Hot-Red Fo11 coal lrom Lon-l 'L Ol +'79 3201 4 spd sunroof Targa. low miles. lllnl ·74 MAVERICK, avto. 1
Benefltt. IEC'l/IEOEPT. TILEPlllE SILIOITlll point, Separele freezer. don. wonh SISOO, setllor ••ttr 1.11H (407289i' · cond $21 •500 650•86..!: 1111 lolEllU.. owner. Sl500 1179·9098 142·1222 for growing company Salary + commission. working ve<y well. S175 S500. 497-5568. 180 Moto Becerni Sebring, •'78 3201, AI T, A/C '79 91 lSC Targa, blkl blk, SOUTH ~~~~~~~~~~ b1Md in N-pon Beach. Hunt Bch PIT Cell Mr. or beat qller, Call S··--"e Sofa ... 50. 8, Llhr S295. 640-2'468 Rob (687UODI all options, ?'s & 8'a, '7!1.~u~~.'!:'!~ii!': Mu1t be experlen~ In Hunt 841_..110 1 646-7230 even1no1. .,.... .., +'83 3201: 5 spd, SIR $23,000. 833-9704 dye OOUllTY ·-· .....,111 ·---... ..:~ .... n. office proc·edures and • couch 5250. Reitan ••tercyc.ln/ (tFZP975) ..... .... uvu, .. -Seiea
* * * 111 IOllEY =!'~~ o~g!~fi:.~,~~~ f!LE,0P•.••1!1 s~~~~.0~~g~~d. ~~~9$3:0~~~~!,: 1c .. 1111 1011 taa.a111 · ~!u1:::ci . ~~st'P:;11 YILllWllEI $~~: :;'~~= IUPl'b
typing. bkkp'g and writ-Un " 11• • t lal 14 & mllchlng dreHet, 1982 Yemahe xf.125 En-208W. lat,SanlaAna lmmed Blk wllen lthr HWfWIUllT '711 Thund«t>lrd, $3800
SHORT HOURS
e Photo Copy Suppiles
•6AM·NOON
ten and verbal com· No experlenceneceuary-I• I tr I mite. Tbla,etc.499-6768 duro,tt.legellrellmotor· CioMdSunday S21.750. -.95-3718 IElllElllLI"
munlcetlon akllls. fiel(· will train No Hlilng. Look! 2 x 8 r9dw00d a;c;i;. cycle Xlnt cond. elmoat LAROE seleCTiON OF '79 Porsc:ne 924, pertecl Volume SalN , Service obo, 775 ... 125
Ible hra. Call B. Oorla S1lary. PI T evening a. Ing. From 49 centa per ti SC t f. r 11 e wl~ ER 1 ~,' new. 1750 llrm. 648-3554 NEW & USED BMW' St U>nd, all options. 57950 And Leulng '81 E1cor1. ll!lnt cond
• No Exper Necesury
e Exlenllve 1r11n1ng
6'6-1623 Tcelaelpl hJoonean.
66
2-5
6
"
3 ~.'!,c!~ ;1,~~53 ~~;~r ~~~·~:rma11~'a~nk llO IHIA OlllPPll ~ Musi sell 8'40-0219 161119each Blvd ~~~'it'::~,'~':'
SHYIOl llOllAllC •lroller • S 145o: or a N-paint, 836 kit. 1011 ot "' '80 924. loaded, 32.000 Huntington Beech Only $3775 87S.3508 Pheum1t1c background Pe<tonwlthpleesanlvolce FrH ti YH beautltut Autumn Hue cmrome,run1good l 1800 ml,1nrt. AC. ilhr lnl. new (114) 142·2000 program
e Weekly Pay Gueranlee
• Ple&llnt. Proteaslonal
Otc In Coron• Del M ar
II '/OU're bright I nd
energetic. Celi Mr
Thomu belWMn 6 am &
, pmll
$1000/mo ~ cer andgoodallltude tou-Slole.'300 673-1202 BHl989-12211tt 101m lllllUOlllW llru. usume lse $335 slst sales reprlMOlallvet Oe<m Shep. M, VOLUME SALES IDFIEt Jl4·6'5•7811 In conlectlng lllelr pro-g ood wetch TRAIN SET 450 p~ '112HONOAATC250 SERVICE & LEASING mo or buy $1l.500
Service S11t1on Attendanl. t"8lonal cllent1, Relaxed 558-•309 Mull Miii W/turn 11ble 3 Xlnt lhepe. S 1300 PIP 3870 N Ch.,ry Ave 1•585•9796 YW·ISID
Pll, Eves& Wknds. Neel atmosphere, early hOure. F II IOH enolnes & 1018 or track 5 720-98115 or 863-0701 LONG BEACH 'H 111 NISOlll For
eppearaoce and hand-and conganlel people an art cert 631.2g97 .112 Suzuki RM 125, .11lnl (No Cherry exll-'405) n Selea, Part I , & S«V1ee
writing only need lo make up this office Ceil Custom ·~•try loveaMt Univ AthieUc club. Equity cond . trade'°' XR250 °' <114) 111·1110 AHum~':~~nls OAC e!1=~~=: :.::: &
apply 2590 Newport Judy lot appt, 636-11335 $275 All mirrored coftM mbr1hlp avail S900 OR250 or S900 496-11258 frade-lnt Weleome CEL { t 71608) Anaheim St1dium
'61 MUSTANG GHIA
Am/Fm Stereo. Console.
AIC. greet cond .• $5300.
673-5683
'82 ESCORT GUt detuxe
wgn. ate. erulM. tlrack.
only 161< ml .. iclnl cond.,
15795. o-557-353-4 Blvd. Coste M"8 TELE--E WIRI teble & t>av.i.ct end table value Wiii tell for S650. Now open Sun 11-'4 lWE-UIERto• o ,._,. Sll5 & s 175 Ornlle CUI• 2 3 628-6385 -• In r1nge Mtrcary t325 Sll,,llllPAOUllH 3 positions evlllleble tor tom 11mp/11ble $125 Mr Pot1er 1 / lllWlltlTllll D1t1aa 9117 Hl-1110 IH·IH1 SALES-HARDWARE Full Full/time Wiii trlln Coste selllng eppolntmerna. No 1 • 000 Mii s I Bed $295 I ·'2 b erqul1 Very gooa
113·0~ 11
time position In relall Meu 645-3350 selllng, salary Company Lempe, ve .1 • Unuled o a ' Good lot rebulldtng Of or '72 240Z Oat N-pelnt. ill .--9161 IN • d S 12001 b hardwere store See will train. PIT evening•. S21151pr 631-10Q8 Oinelle $150 527-1265 perts.new knobbl•.150 body etc 53600, call I I 17ct ,,;1,WfSTWAa ·'.'· ~On'4SOll o o
··-H w Wrlghl Com· SlllloneryStote lnCorona For Appointment, cal Desk wltyplng table 75. W1veieu weterbed . Biil 969-12211tt 10am 675-2661 ett 5 pm ••••• IEITUJ sa A peraonel end proud ••• ___ ·,...,=---,----:-
·,.·a-7745 del Mar needs FIT eit· Mrs Johnson, 662·51142 4118-5558 heeler, d.Cot frame, JCinl XlnllS17.000 533-4242 cluelve VW IOencf dfldl· '73 CAPRI, mini COnd PlllX, ~ perlenced 11letperson $300 J60-0268 1022 ·73 240Z. rebil eng. n-ceted 10 qualily aervtce, 11700 ot>o. s.411·11898 SALES 675-1010 TOP US Glrl'1 French Proventlal, cond. · IV'1 patnl. uphol & Sllock1 spare p11t1, end • corn----------11111 OlllPmRS Females Pret Model• & twin canopy bdrm Mt 4 •lac. WaatM 220 25' Mo1or Aome. new. $3300/obo 549·2096 pe1111ve salea prHen· '14 MIT SIOI
Prot-aonw/aalesbuai& ITEHISALES EscO<ts.(2131866-1984 pc'•. good cond . elLtra sieepl 6 Air & Oen . r•· ,122IOllTl•IO ~ r .A. rn rt:R 111lon ol lhe unique 968·2272
,,_ Good opportunity tor acceu $300 obo eerve now tor holidays. n l~l ~'\.V L Volkswagen quellty ve------,......--,.--.,-computer exp 754-6383 energetic. tun people. Barbie, 675-5080 WllTll $475/Wk O< S70/day. 500 Aasume payments Of °"' I c.~ hlcies '74 Lincoln C1prl. IJCll
Salea Xlnl 1$. cash paid dallv TlAll 1111 MICROWAVE free mli.e 7t4-957-607l S 3 3 & I mo 0 A C l"-..Jl,..l..J l~l \...L BOB CHALLMAN'S cond 1895 Musi Mii
MTITU,.11 c ennow,631-6391 llWTIHLL IHYFIHITHE 1169·1221ah.6pm T 'I 11EOH0311 ···~~:.~"' .. ·~~ • ··.~· ....• :,·: • WllTWAGIN "' 673-0691 Bre"nera Rents, Call· n57•8133 Ill tfll lWE-1111110& OPU< SUND""' 11 , ~.'•1 IU" " Help give them a head Les ,. T I 1024 II l lllO Ecurle ShlrlH Corp 1omle's iergell iurnllure ITHl/llAJL CUii 11art. Earn lop SIS part M ' l J11t 4 "" • Bett Deel · AllW1y1 rentalcompanylsloo~lng NptBchR/E firm Respon· time e11enlng1 Only Klngezbedcomplete.lnci. allCI ; . 26H '73 Cevatler trailer .. 75 2aoZ.4spd.elr.megs, Sa•ara--9111 7600Wes1m1n11•rBl11d
for Ult• coneuttants lor slDle tor proce111ng mall. positive, dependable. headboerd, xlnl cond ... HONDO Les Peul wlcaae 1ell-con1alned. gd cond nu tire• am/Im, well . Weatmln1ter
our Westminster & Coate shipping. rec;el11lng Own outgoing adulll need S126 558-8378 alt. l pm & pedala, never und S4500 obo 538-6142 al t s4soo 964-6886 80 SuDeru Station 11•1YW1·WEIT MeM Showropm1 II you cer req Exper helpful. apply. Phone 646-7021 , MUST SELL TV, l•mpi. S200 646-2570 . m n Wegon. 4 wheel dtl11e,
.,,Joy meeting people Heavy lllllng Involved 2 30 to 6 p.m Monday d•sk. elegenl oeklgla11 ti r It I Aat• ltnicta/ '12HTlll110 oronze Wiien Interior Total Performance VW'I
and ere looking for • Call 553-0940 lhru Frld1y din Mt, gorgeou1 aota, ce ara •rt Pull tOl 5 Auume payments ol S4200 OBO 673-1g55 v w ·79 Bui 7 PHI Konvl.
greet opply w/a , .. , lov .... 1. aof1 bed SOlld !sa'r-••• 1121 PAINT AND UOHT eobV $113 66 mo OA C '8tSubaruGLF.5 spd.elr, iclnt cond. cllm pnt. growing compan)' we STIOI TUii OlHl TUYEL Hiit oak. CoffM tbla. wall XP~b"m 80nd COPler. wbRK. Save SS & In· (92361 •lnl. $5900, 8211-3202 or crp11 p1nellng, am/Im ;..,..,.....--....,..-----r.il&li
WI/II to talk to you Requlrae lyplng skllia lot Mual hive 2 yr• •~per unit•. bar, 1toor1. din H t . Xlllf cond BMut oe>py ere ... your cer'a vel~ LUii &111110• 2131592 1458 c a •• M 11 • • • ;;ii;;;w;-.,.,,..~~'l""i~~ Sel•rv •comm Full ben· da11 entry, •tcrow e11· w/compu1er1. N.B. •gen· Ddrm. Ali mint PP SIOO/ bO 875-3581 d-• • • -$7500/0BO 850-5427 · " -'II• Call Mrs Score perlence Of benk lrull cy Send reeume 10. Ad 972-411115 ° · ,. Dy SS. Biii 969-1221 la1· 1llO ·e2 Sub1ru DL wegon. 4 -,--=--:---:-:--:--.,-
Mon· Tue btwn I0-2PM d•partmenl helpful No 967. O•tly Pllol. Box MIOOlll 101 copier, .11lnl " .. Trt .. ,11 '12 .... _ wheel drive, s e100 vw DHher '74 I UIO, (714)"45-4772 S alery negotleble. l560,CosteM ... g2828 NEW Whlrlpooi w1hr, cond wl t«V con1rec1 1111UN'· • _,_.. 873·3ll5 amllm & elr 75.000 --,,,.,..,=-~.,--.::~~~ lrMlln l•tltl wl rllH In to days In· 9Yal!IETTlll dryer, ftHHt. lllng, $400/obo •9<4-9029 Ara you d"8811-li.d wi the 20lll ll I miles I 1850 548-72411 "''·~ Mneflll Con· I .... ~ queen & twin m1tt'1 UI aervlee on your car? I ' 'm·· .... ..,...... ll1t• 1 873..a0• 1 Plutt/tlt111 I Pleue call & 11111 10 u• Asu2u2m8e / ~·oymen o A 0c ~,.,.,..w;o~ "A"'oTINl'!X"'w"d""N"'i"500°""'"1 Ytl" 1111 1IM tee I Elaine V1111 lo, Comp edit. 5900. H · Uulidll'I~----mov• we have OY9t 10 yr• ••· .,. OBO """"
3571
wtt d 72~202 IOf appt perlence • mull. Full or Poot llble. 1" elate, •h8'. 1 n g &u 1. V. m •ha 1>9rience wllh Brltlt h (1EJH5 .... ) .,,.,. .., 0< n '72 Volvo Soden 1&4E 'IO Cull .. Brom. ve." df • .. l /f ............. ,. pert time 642·9&78 oek nnlllh, _.. Tlnany lamp OS-8,5 .. Grend, ebOny. C1t1. ContlMntel Cer LWl-1111110& .78 COROLLA SR5. Air, I 1700. Ph 751-3158 ell pwr, ale, emttm cau.
ULU (PUT /Tillll P11111tlrM Exper -~pful. Valet PlfbinO ettendan11 S&OO. e61·993 i m-cintno.nt lnattulMl'll. Clinic: 75 1·0011Q la 1-1111 1mllm, 5 •Pd 12500 '74 2-dr ..01n, tunroof, s::o,:·7:~:f"d Milin~ ror led'"' wlll 1reln tight peraon $4/hr to 111111. No tlp1. On bed w/11><..0 175. S..5000 firm Alt o, A t W tM H10 .70 280Z. tunr1 m-oa. OB0951·14tl PP .--cy1, 4~1Pd w/00. Nu ...,.,,...,,......,..-...,,.-....,.--
clottllnQ. s.i a Sun o .c C1111145-75&S Apply In peraon, Rutty Sngi b4ld l30. Oryt ISO. OutbranMn Allilo Ii, w/2 a" U emlfm, 5 •P<I. xint cond 'Ill Celtca GT. loaded. xinl lthr fronlHale, Clu1Ch. '80 out..-dteeel, ~ aw.., M"1 E11,perlenoe Ptllc111. 1630 Mein SI, And kltchn lbi wtlMI, " 1ea1ey cabinet•. petf-.CI WI llY eee.nl!ll PP cond Best offer. Bob fuel pump & tlr!" 12780 option,"'"' 8Ul*tl. ftew-prtrfwrect. (213)7034 t28 TUftDI * 11111111 lrviM No Phone C1U1 ch,.• S35 Ott• 77S..Me condition, 14500 firm. lllll · 71_.,i.45-3914 873·0231 ,... wt\11• body 6 1111 tnt .,;.....--......,,--,:00-::C:;-;P:-:A~ ii you ua d~reed In Bu• On u metllbo11 ~Inoa. e1t-2117~t74 OLIAll ·eo 200SX 011 Ht~bk '80 VOivo 242, air, 4 lpd," '3975. 870-054I WO:~ ,:o~ ot .t Educ . h-mum tNCtl· PAAf·TIME, Veri.d hOufl xlnt.1 120 5'8·0318 Plano. Like new S~ All TllOll ~~'!~.~4~1;g~P Vtlklw1111 1173 cyl, 11ereo, much mOfe, p ~·
tO<N)' ~lettzing In tu IOQ lltlll• & lmm.d ev111 10 Include eerty AM, RedeeO<ellng Sei.. OOOd Whitney by Klmbell mdl. • •HITHD YW'S* Mini cond Auna lent... 'l!'RMbiM@ U86
m1nw Newport Beecn for • perm. ettrnoon poa ~enda. Muet h•v• d• alull at good prlcee. Ali wOOd 1860, 11• 1-3111 81 Oetaun 280ZX 2 + 2 • 5 Ohotoe of 10. 1M2.g25g lie ON ow,,.,. AH orig beet tt f.42-3824
locat!on. ••C411,..._1 titllie Call W 0 Pollck r-fOW pendabl• v.nlcle (•mall Betoe corde<oy eofa pit Storv & Ci11k Plano Con· epd. T ·bar root blk. ithr $8775/obo. g70·0849 Of o er .
...-ntHa Some overtlm• 556-11990 lor p.,.., l~•r· truck. van. 11111on 11®.r•N 111" z.tlllh whl eoie welnul 1tln1 eond lnl, lull pwr • lo mt '83 A•gtop iunroof Micro '80 Volvo 2MOL. 8"f'y '87 Velllrlt Slan1 e,
,.quired. 11200 to 11400 view Subjeet •reae· Bu• wegO!'I to "'1'1 newa-padHtal remot• TV ,,_.70, 842 _ _.90, 11, ,000 U I · 1005. Bua. re11or•CI cleuic, option. 1 OWMf, "int r .. l1bte $400. •'4-"0ll
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Popeyes Pepsi Challenger had the most muscle in t~e Warmington International Grand Prix. More photos, story Page Cl.
: THI ORANGI COAST
~-
I
j
COAST IDITIDN
MONDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1983 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
The$47,000 question
Cash in brief case left with restaurant hostess stolen in Newport
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of .... Oelly -.....
A claim by a Santa Ana man
that a briefcase containing $47,000
-470 $100 bills -was stolen
Saturday night from behind a
hostess stand at a local restaurant
has Newport Beach police more
than a little curious today.
"The whole thing seems very
Crowded
class
creates
conflict
By K.AREN E. KLEIN
Of .... Delly"°' -Since the second week of classes
at Whittier School in Costa Mesa.
there has been only one
sixth-grade classroom.
Every day, 38 sixth-graders,
about half of whom are
Spanish-speaking, file into a
classroom and one teacher, a
part-time aide and a bilingual aide
take them through the day's
curriculum.
Laura Margitan is one of those
38 students. And her parents, Vom
and Connie, are hopping mad.
The sixth-graders need another
teacher, the Margitans believe.
And the sooner the better.
Connie Margitan collected 30
signatures from parents opposed
to the size of the sixth-grade cias,.
She and other parents cite
health dangers, emotional trauma
and second-rate education as poss-
ible hazards.
"There is no air circulation in
that room," Mrs. Margitan said.
"Even with the doors and win-
dows open. there is an odor in the
room. And there is a lice epidemic
going around the school."
Margitan charges that the west
side Costa Mesa schools are seen as
poor stepsisters to the more af-
fluent Newport Beach and Costa
Mesa schools and thus are easy
targets for budget cutters.
Whittier's second sixth-grade
class was disbanded after the
second week of school this year
and the teacher was transferTed to
another school -in the district
ISff CROWDED, Pase AZ )
INDEX
Birthl A5
Bridge M
Bulletin Board A3
CJ.usified C5·8
Comics M
0-0.Word C8
Editorial Page AO
F.nter\ainment 83
HOl'09C:Ope C7
In the Service A5
Ann Landers B2
Movie. B3
National News A•
Po~Los A3
Public Notices C4-~
Sport. Al2, C1·3
State New• .u
Dr.Stelncrohn B2
Television B&
'lbeeten .aa .
WMther A3
World NeWI A4
•
strange. We are going to have a
long chat with the victim," said
Detective Todd Wilkinson.
Wilkinson said he found it hard
to believe that the victim, David
M. Booth, 21, would entrust that
much cash to a restaurant hostess.
No arrests have been made and
police are still looking into the
details of the alleged theft.
Joe Lobe
Colleges
plan rally
over funds
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of IM 0.-, ,_It.ft
Orange C.oast College students
will join comrades from Santa
Ana and Saddleback colleges
Tuesday in a rally to demonstrate
concern over cutbacks in com-
munity college funding.
The rally, scheduled for 11 :50
a.m. on the OCC Quad, will cap a
month-long petition drive focus-
ing on the funding issue. The goal
is to collect 15,000 signatures on
petitions that will be carried to
Sacramento Thursday by stu-
dents officers from the three
colleges.
Speaking at Tueeday's rally
will be OCC President Bernard J .
Luskin, Santa Ana College Presi-
dent J. William-Wenrich, and the
student body presidents from th~
three campuees. •
(See COLLEGES, Pace AZ)
,,
Booth, accompanied by Mark
M. Barone, 30, a Costa Mesa
chiropractor, asked the hostess to
watch the briefcase while they ate
at BQbby McGee's restaurant at
353 E. C.oast Highway, police said.
The two men, who said they
deal in classic and exotic cars, told
police they planned to spend the
money on a Ferrari the next day.
Debreu
called
devoted
theorist
By ANDREA ADELSON
OllMO.-,,..., ....
Gerard Debreu, a UC Berkeley
professor who today was awarded
the 1983'Nobel Memorial Prize in
F.conomics, is a devoted theorist
with a wry seNe of humor who
loves good food, according to local
colleagues.
Julius Margolis, a UC Irvine
economics. profesaor, said today
Debreu's theoretical work on how
markets operate has achieved
international prominence and de-
serves recognition by the Royal
Swedish Academy of Sciences.
What is a surprise, Margolis
said, is that Debreu's achievement
in proving the existence of
equilibrium-creating prices was
made in the 1950s, working with
Stanford University Profesaor
Kenneth Arrow, co-winner of the
1972 Nobel economics prize.
"Arrow's work was in a joint
venture with Debreu. And they
overlooked Debreu. That was the
appropriate time" for the prize,
said Margolis, whose speciality is
govenunent economics.
Margolis, who taught in the
Berkeley eoo11omics department
with Debreu in the early 1960s,
described the 62-year -old
profeaor and native of Calais,
France as "extremely conacien-
tious and devoted to the develop-
ment of mathematical economic
theory."
He al8o has a wry wit and "like
any good Frenchman'' en joys
meals prepared by hia wife, an
(See DEBREU, Pa1e A%)
But Barone said today he
thought the money was locked in
the trunk of their car and did not
know that it was in the briefcase.
"I never saw the money in
there, I saw it earlier in the
af~moon," Barone said, adding
that it was Booth's money.
Booth, who told police he was a
"pro golfer,'' could not be reached
for conunent.
The police report said the
hostess agreed to watch the brief-
case but told the men the res-
taurant would not be re8ponsible
for it. Booth then placed the
briefcase be.hind the stand.
When the men finished eating
about 1:30 a.m. Sunday, they
returned to the hoeie.s stand for
the briefcase and found it missing.
.,.., _,.,_~Lee~ ...
Thi• elaborate sand castle won sweepstakes_pnze
for Ron Raynsf ord's Dune Digge r s of Costa Mesa.
Numerous customers and res-
taurant employees saw the brief-
case when it was placed behind
the stand earlier that night.
Castle kings
According to the police report,
the two men had visited the
restaurant on Friday night and
claimed to have a briefcase with
$60,000 in cash. The men dis-
c~ the cash with several
valets, police said.
Mesa troupe best in sandy show
\
More than 40 participants competed in the 22nd annual
Commodores •. Club sand castle contest at Corona de! Mar State
Beach Sunday.
"Itisratherbizarre. Why would
you leave that much money
behind a hostess stand? Somehow
it does not add up," Wilkinson
said.
Ron Raynsford's Dune Diggers of Costa Mesa won the
sweepstakes award for best sand sculpture -a kingdom of
thatched huts and castle surrounded by a moat and a papyrus forest.
"On the face of it it does not
seem realistic but we have in-
vestigated welrder thWgs." he
said.
The winners in the business category were Basmaci-
jan-Darnell, Inc. of Newport Beach, first place; Casa Colina
Employees Fund of Pomona, second; and Pulaski & Anita,
Architects of Newport Beach , third.
Winners in the families and individuals category were the
(See SAND CASTLES, Pase AZ )
Youngsters participate in live cable
TV press conference at Huntington
.,..,.._ ..... ~L-...,_
Beach school h eadquarters a s
preview of educational program.
Kids hooked up to cable TV
Reagan press aide fields questions at live HD news conference
By ROBERT BARltER
Oltlle...., ........
Eighth-grade atudent Jennifer Ne)aon had a
good question for Precident Reagan's deputy pre91
eecretary for foreign alfa1n.
She wanted to know what would happen if his
opinion differed peatly from that of the president.
The deputy, Les Janka, responded that. if the
difference wu major he would resign becawie he
couldn't repreient the White Hou.e.
Fourth ll'fide atudent Cory John.Ion abo wanted
to know how many letten Rffcan anawen pet·
aonally. She didn't ~ve ume to Mk ber lleCOl\d
question. s~ wanted to know how many jelly beanl
the pcwldent eata.
'I1wee and other qu.tiona received national
exposure Sunday ln a live televlled praa cont erence
conducted by eeven Huntinaton Beach-Fountain
Valley atudenta over the Cable Satellite Public
Affairs Network. .
The pte11 conference demonattated to about 400
local officiala and members of the puJ1Uc the wonden
of televilion and how they will a~ly to 1tudenta
when the JCET pJ"Oll'&m (Joint. Council few Educa·
tional Technoloey) pta under way next month ln
West Ora.np C.ounty Sch~.
JCET will provide a cable televillon channel to
echoola ln the Huntinp>n Beach Union HiCh School,
OCean View (elementary), Huntlnp>n Be8ch City
(elementary), and Fountain Valley· (elementary)
echool diltricta. A cable--oonnect.ina celebration wu
•held Sunday at lta headquarters at the office of the
Huntington Beech City School Dtatrict, 20451
Crabner Lane .
The new 1yatem will brine rNth, ICience,
computer and other cl&llM!'I to about 43,000 )'OW\I•
(5" CABLE TV, Pa1e Al)
.. .
~I '* Orange Coast OAILY PILOT/Monday, October 17. 1983
I'
.: ,,.,
.. ""
~., . •
..
. .
o.-, ,_ ........ .., l ..... , ...
T his depiction of a skin d iver who got
too close to a whale won the
Commodore's T ro phy in the 22nd
annual sand castle contest sponsored
by the l\ewport Harbor Ch a mber of
Commerce. T he e ntry was con -
st ructed by T homas Maurer AIA and
A socia tes of Fullerton . ·
SAND CASTLES ...
From Page A1
Walsh and Lynn families of El Toro, first place: Elana and Friends
of Costa Mesa. second; and the Rosemarie Navarro family of Costa
Mesa, third.
Winners in the youth category were Matthew's Mudpie
Makers of Huntington Beach, first place; Pacifica High School
Spanish Club of Garden Grove, second; and Boy Scout Troop 106 of
Newport Beach, third.
The Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce placed first among
clubs and organizations. The Newport Harbor Jaycees placed
second and Orange County Parks was third.
The company of Jeffries/Larry Chaffers of Carson won the
President's Trophy. Thomas Maurer A1A & Associates of Fullerton
won the Conunodores Trophy and Sand Sculpture Workshop of
Solana Beach took home the SpeciaJ Award of Anything Goes.
Mesa teen to face
l charges in assault
· DEBREU ...
From Page A1
excellent, gourmet rook, accord·
ing to Margolis.
The conunittee that chooses
economics prize winners rarely
recognize pure theorists, pointed
out Charles Lave, another UCI
economics professor.
"It's usually given to people
whose work have immediate real
world applications.'' Lave said.
Because the committee has
previously promoted more prac·
tical economl<' work, Lave
theorized that the Nobel conunit-
t.ee realized Debreu's mathemat-
ical models have "real world
connections."
Margolis described Debreu's re-
search on equaUbrium in a market
d'Qnomy as havmg "greatly as-
sisted" the apphcataon of manage·
ment tools to a rompetitive busi·
ness market
-
Douglas· Woi-ker9 strike ·
6, 9 00 walk off their jobs; Huntington facilit y not affected
By tbe A11oc1a1ed Prell
More than 6,900 McDonnell
Douglas C.Orp. worken ln three
states were called out on at.rtke
today after last-minute contract
talk& between the CO(Tlpany and
the United Auto Worllers stalled.
(The strike does not involve
6,100 workers at the McDoMell
Douglas Astronautics Company l.n
Huntington Beach who chiefly
are represented by the Inter-
national Association of Machin·
lsts, said local officials.)
"The company's proposal
would move us back into the Dark
Ages," UAW president Owen
Bieber and secretary treuurer
&ymond Majerua said in a joint
statement llsued today.
Union negotiators voted unani·
mously for the walkout after talks
were halted at 9:30 p.m. Sunday.
The strike affects 4,900 em-
ployees at Douglas Aircraft C.O. in
Long Beach, 1,932 UAW members
at two facilities In Tu.J.aa, Okla ,
and 83 ln Melbourne, Ark.
A picket line sprang up immedi-
ately at the TuJ.aa planta. Workers
were to picket in Long Beach later
in the morning.
"I imagine you'll see very few
people crossing the plcket llnes,'I
said union spokeswoman Jessi~
Katz. She said the UAW lasf
su-uck McDonnell Douglas in 197~
1n a i~-month job action. :
McDonnell Douglu spok~
Don Hanson said the companx
would try to operate the affec~
planta with supervisors and em·
ployees from other d ivisions.
Hanson said the St. Louis-based
company was "very dlaappointed"
that bargaining since Aug. 22 had
not produced a new three-year
pact.
"We believe the offer we havf>
presented is a fair one," he said.
Union Bank aids Arts Cent(ir
Union Bank h91 pledged
$100,000 m the form oh five-year
grant to the Orange County
Performing Arts Center, Union
Bank Chairman John Harrigan
announced today.
Henry Segerstrom, chairman of
the center's board of trustees,
accepted a $20,000 check from
Harrigan as the initial payment of
the five-year pledge.
Union's gift brings the total
donations pledged to the $65.5
million arts center up to more than
$40 million. Segerstrom said. Of-
ficials hope to raise an additional
$20 million for an endowment
fund for the center .
Construction is under way on
the first phase of the performing
arts center, including a 3,000-seat
theater which will house ballet,
opera, theatrical and symphony
productions. The center's grand
opening is scheduled for October
1986.
A second phase, including a
l,000-seat theater for smaller
productions, will be comple ted 12
to 18 months after the first theater
opens.
The center site is on a five-acre
Meeting called on
Irvine Co. merger
A special Nov. 14 meeting of
Irvine Co. sharholders could seal
the lid on heiress Joan Irvine
Smith's attempts to block com·
pany chairman Donald Bren from
merging the land development
finn with his personal holding
company.
The company has only a hand-
ful of shareholders and with Bren
con trolling 86 percent of t he stock,
his plan is virtually. guaranteed
approval.
A special meeting of the Irvine
Co.'s board of directors approved
the proposed merger Friday.
Meanwhile, Smith said her
attorneys are preparing a S 1
billion suit against the company to
be filed in Orange C.Ounty Su-
perior Court this week.
Smith claims the Irvine C.O.
cannot afford the $560 million
debt Bren's holding cdmpany
incurred. last April when he
bought up 52 percent of the
company's stock.
Bren, who was reluctant to
disclose the date of the share-
holders meeting during a press
conference Friday, said then the
Irvine Co. has adequate resources
to pay off the debt and that
shareholders will benefit by
having their stake in the firm
doubled.
parcel at Sunflower Avenue and
Avenue of the Arts in the South
C.OSSt Plaza Town Center.
Union Bank, headquarterj!'d in
Los Angeles, has major facilites in
Orange County, Harrigan said.
Statewide, the bank has 55 offices
and 5,000 employee6.
Public meet
on Canyon
~Road slated
The public is invited to meet
with representauves of the Cali-
fornia Department of Transpor·
tation to discusa proposal.a to
widen Laguna Canyon Road
(Route 133) from Canyon Acres
Drive to El Toro Road in Laguna
Beach.
The open house will take place
from 4 to 8 p.m. Thursday at the
Boy's Club meeting room, 1085
Laguna Canyon Road.
The department is considering
proposals to widen the road from
two to four lanes and aJtemative5
that would realJgn the route and
construe.~ a frontage road along
the east side of Laguna Canyon
Department representatives
will answer questions but no
formal presentations w ill be
made.
For more infonnataon. contact
Ron Kos1nsk1 at 545-5229. Ext
3755 or (213) 620-3755 · A Costa Mesa teen-ager has
been ordered Lo face charges of
burglary a nd assault in the beat·
mg of a neighborhood woman
who may lose the use of her nght
eye because of the attack,
authorities said
broke into the home of a
51-year-old Molly Loucks. a
neighbor. and beat and choked the
woman before neighbors cam e to
her aid, police reported CROWDED CLASS ROOM ... HB Council
Donald Lewis Gambill, 19, was
ordered to return Oct. 25 for a
preliminary hearing after he
pleaded innocent to the charges
Friday. Gambill remains in
custody at Orange County Jaal on
$250.000 ball.
The 19-year -old allegedly
Gambill, wearing blood-staJned
clothing. was arrested a t has home
later. The teen-ager oraganaUy
was held on suspicion of at-
tempted murder and mayhem.
Police detectives said they are
still uncertain what provoked the
alleged attack. The woman was
treated at Hoag Memorial Hospi-
tal in Newport Beach.
From Page A1
which was Judged to have a
greater need. said Diane Schiesel.
president of the newly formed
Parent-Faculty Organization at
Whittier.
"Before they took the other
teacher away. our sixth grade had
the smallest amount of students to
COLLEGES PROTEST FUNDING ...
From Page A 1
The pe tition drive was
launched by Joe Lobe, OCC's
student body president, and Tony
Nelson. business manager of
OCC's As&ociated Students.
Plans call for Lobe, Nelson,
Santa Ana student body president
Valene Pryer, and Saddleback
student officers Tom Sala and
Steve Metzer to fly to Sacramento
Thursday morning. They wiU
attepd a Senate F.ducation Com·
rruttee hearing on community
college fees.
At 1:30 p.m , the students are to
meet with Dr. William Cun-
ningham, Gov. George • Deu-
kmejian's education secretary.
"The purpose of the rally is to
mfonn students and our com·
munity of our efforts to convince
the governor of the financial need
of community colleges.'' said
Lobe. "The rally will kick off our
Sacramento trip."
The petitions circulated by the
student leaders have two goals.
First, they ask Deukmejian to
restore $108.5 million he vetoed in
cnmmun1ty college funding
earlie1 this year.
In adctit1on, the petitions ask the
governor to address the issue of
mandatory student fees as quickly
as possible.
The governor has asked that
community college students be
required to pay a first-time-ever
$50 per semester tuition. This
proposal has been opposed by
some legislators and community
college leaders who fear it will put
higher education beyond the
rea<'h of many students.
T he local petitions do not take a
stand o~e tuition issue because
there d're mixed feeling about it
amon~ students.
"lf there is a tuition, it should go
directly to the colleges, instead of
being used to ball out the state
budget," said Lobe.
The campus leaders said many
students feel uncertain about their
future education because the fee
1SSue as unresolved. And because
of reduced funding in the mean·
time, many classes have been cut.
OCC President Luk.sin ob-
served, "We are already well into
the month of Octo~r. School has
been in session for one month, yet
the Legisla lure has not yet acted
on community college funding for
1983-84.
"If the Legislature doesn't want
to cripple the state's community
colleges, it must restore the $108.5
million that ihe governor cut from
community college funding (or
1983-84."
CABLE TV SET FOR SC HOOLS ...
From Page A 1
sters m 70 schools m West Orange ~unty over publk
cablevis1on channel 12.
In addition to the technical courses that will be
available to each school four hours a day beginnjng
Nov. 14,'the programs will fill the void for music and
art enrichment programs axed by recent budget cuts.
"Nobody is taking music instrumental clases
now ," according to JCET Coordinator Jill Henrick&.
"What the music programs will be saying to them is
that it's OK to play football and the French horn."
D91ty ll'ttol
0.llYef'J
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ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. l. Sch••rtz Ill
Pubhsne1
Henricks said the system al.so will help to take
the place of held trips to such places u the local
museum that have fallen by the wayside.
Henricks also claimed that JCET will enhance
and supplement regular school programs and that
teachers shouldn't feel that thelr jobs are being
threatened.
JCET will cost the four school districts $80,000 a
year The rest of the money is coming from grants and
volunteers will assist t he service.
CIH•lf~ ldverll•lnt 114/M2•!1f71
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VOL. 78, NO. 210
teachers 10 the d1striN by about
one.'' Sch1esel said. The two
sixth-grade classrooms each had
19 students enrolled.
Then. late last month, the
children were told Lo pick up their
desks and move them to the other
classroom because the classes
were bemg combmed.
The Margitans almost immedi-
a tely organized a protest -
c1rculat.mg a petition and speaking
at board meetings.
Last Friday, a coalition of
parents led by Mrs. Margit.an met
wath District Superintendent
John Nicoll.
''The principal had told us all he
could do was make a combined
fifth and sixth-grade class,"
Sctuesel said. But because or the
special needs of the bilingual
students at Whittier a combined
class would be almost impossible
to teach, she said.
We're
Listening •••
642·6086
About half of Whittier's 380
students are Spanish-speaking,
Schiesel added.
Despite Margitan's loud
protests, school officials said there
is simply nothing the board can do
beside appoint an aide for three
h ours a day to belp in the class.
"The general feeling from the
board i.s that it's not a good
situation no matter what. but that
there's no other alternative,"
Schiesel said, A teacher couJd be
taken from another school in the
district. but that would only mean
similar protests from parents a t
that school.
"We have a good school -the
teachers are excellent and con-
cerned.'' Schiesel said. "But thls is
the first yf!h.r we've even had a
parents' organization and we don't
have strong support from a lot of
parents."
to ~ote tonight
on zoning plan
Huntington Beach City Council
members are slated to vote on a
second reading of a zoning plan
that will change the face of
downtown Huntington Beach and
ats environs.
The plan, which will allow for
12-story building on three blocks
!a<'ing Pacific Coast Highway near
Main Street. needs four votes to be
adopted at 7:30 tonight.
The controversial zoning plan
-which has been caught in a
crossfire between residents who
wish to retain a sleepy village
atmosphere in the downtown area
and property owners and officials
who favor redevelopment -was
approved on fl.rst reading last
Monday.
Tonight's meet.mg as an the City
Council chambers, 2000 Main St.
What do you hkr aboul the Daily Pilot" What don't you hke"
Cati the num~ al left and your message will be recorded.
transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor
The same 24 hour answenng serva('e may bt> used lo record let·
lt•r!-to thl' editor on any 1op1<' Mailbox l'Onlnbutors must tnl'lude
tht•1r name and 1£'1t>phone number ror verahl'al1 on No ('lrt'ulataon
1·alb , pl£•ase
Tell us whe1t s nn vour mind
Please don't begrudge smudge
By ANNE SPI NN
0-"Y~~--
We're listening-you're talklng;and hereare
some of things you say. These are some or the most
pressing questions posed by anonymous voices on
the Daily Pilot's "We're Listening" Line.
"Can't you doanythlfl8 about the ink l'\.abbing
never print puu.les on the fold.
Some of you hate Funky Winkerbean. othen
adore him. We quit running John Darling and
nobody noticed, but Nancy ls still mourned by
faithful fans. (Note: Nancy still Uves In our Sunday
comics.)
Then there was Black Friday when the off the newspaper?" Al. a matter of fact, we can't. Not yet. We computer spat out a garbled mess o1 letters and
certainly are aware of It. We look like a regional figures instead of the Stock Market Reports, and It
meeting of the Black Hand ~ seemed th.at half the oounty waa out on the
Society ounelvea from hind· window ledge waiting.to jump. We're llOIT)' about
Ung papen all day, and moet of that -but lt'a nic:e ';<> be able to blame it on the
our woodwork la done in F.arly computer . WeDIDpnntanexplanation but not too
Smud~-many people noticed.
However. I have made a
survey of all the newspapers In
the area and fOWld that the
problem la not uniquely oura.
EVERYBODY'S l.nlc come1 off
on your hand.a. The cleanest
paper Is the Wall Street
Journal -maybe It's the rarified atmoaphere of
high finance -but they don't have comkl, the
horoecope or a croaword puu.le, ao l advt.e you to
stick with the Pilot. Tht( atuff doeca wuh off very
nicely. •f~r all.
Speaking of com1cl. horolcope and Cf'Olirword
puu.Jes, you oert.al.nly do. The line fairly CNC'kled
from lra~ CwipdweUen that day we inadvertent-
ly omJtted the horok'Ope; and you cenalnly can't
fool an old croesword puuler with a t.-d f.u.ale
wMrl the MW one wu dtla~'tn tho ma! • And
We do llaten-and learn -but sometimes we
can't help you. If you d.idn'lgeta paper, pleuecall
642-4321 1.natead of the "We're Listening'' line.
There are real, live people aNWerlf\8 th.at phone
and theycangetyourpaperdelivered. The ''We're
Llatening" line lan't tranlcribed until the Mxt day
and by then our real. live people can't do anything
anon than forward your me.age io circUlaUon.
And you atlll don't have a paper.
We ~ your auqestions, too. The Police Los
la In b.., type now becau.ee of your requesia.
We're aUlJ puzzling out the complcx!Ues of
fulfllll.na the wtahea of a lady w1th two TV wta
who wan\I two TV lop. Would ~ offend the
one-TV houMhold with hla and hen coplel!
Would th three...et houae demand moft? We
don't know -but we're llatlenlng .
'
j
Coping with cancer
course starts tonight
A free 10-hour patient education program 'on coping with
cancer will be offered by the 'UC Irvine Medical Center
hematology-oncology divWon in Orange Mondays from 7 to 8:30
p.m. beginning tonight in building 53, Room B.
The aeven-.esaion course is slightly different from the
American Cancer Society curriculum and will focus more on
lectures and question and answer sessions.
Registraton can be made by phone by calling Penny Harrla at
634-5152.
Computer expert set for NOW m eet
Darlene Faccone of Computer Automation Techniques will
share her per90nal computer with members of the South Coast
chapter of the National Organ.i?.ation for Women at Tuesday's
meeting of the feminist group.
The session will be held at 8 p.m. at the El Toro Library, El Toro
Road and Raymond Avenue. Further information is available at
859-9372.
Toastmasters off e r s peaking course
The Babble-on Toastmasters Club of Huntigton Beach invites
men and women to improve their communication and leadership
skills in a speechcraft course.
The course is scheduled for eight consecutive Wednesday
nights beginning Oct. 26 at Wycliffe gardens, 18765 Florida Ave.,
Huntington Beach.
The cost is $10 and includes materials. To register, or for other
information, call 646-1274 or 846-5151 in the evenings or 731-2323
during the day.
Forunron AIDS in South Laguna
AIDS -Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome -will be
the topic of a free public health forum Oct. 26 from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.,
in So~th Coast Medical Center's hospital auditorium, 31872 Coast
Highway, South Laguna.
"All About AIDS" will feature a discussion by a panel of
physicians who will address symtoms of AIDS, preventive
measures. cW-rent theories about its origination and risk factors.
Speakers include Dr. Robert Graham, research coordinator at
UCLA AIDS clinic and gay committee advisor; and pathologist Dr.
Christopher Vanley. Dr. Sol Sloan will µioderate.
ConJputer
• crinJe
• growing
problem
The explolta of four young
Irvine computer buffa who las'
week became campua heroes may
typify the problema of the "new
frontier," according to a computer
expert.
While campua coeda grinned
with delight over Woodbridge
High School gaining national at-
tention , expertacautioned that the
FBI's dragnet for computer sys-
tem-cracken polnta to the grow-
ing dilemma of computer crime,
UC Irvine Profeseor Ron Kling
said.
FBI agents confiscated com-
puter equipment at the Irvine
homes of Wayne Correia, 17,
David Hill, 17, 14-year-old Gregg
Knutsen and his brother, Gary,
15.
The California raid was part of a
nationwide investigation of com-
puter "hackers," who have tapped
into a Defenae Department system
and an international electronic
mail network.
Kling said becauae electronic
eavesdropping leaves no trace, "it
~ms more lnnocent, like over-
hearing something in a
restaurant."
Lisa Rodely, 17, a Woodbridge
student, said the foursome now in
the spotlight are studious, quiet
types. "And now they are ducking
behind walls because everyone's
pointing them out."
Joanna Reeves, 16, defended
the teen-agers. "I don't think they
were doing anything bad or would
do anything to cause trouble.
"They don't aeem the type."
Bandit robs Mesa liquor store . ' A man wearing a trenchcoat and
8Unglaaaea and carrying an aute>-
matlc platol atoi. seoo from the cash
f9glater of Vaughn's Uquor Store In
Costa Meta about 10:30 p.m. Sun-
day. Potloa Mid the man entered the
atore. at 1125 Victoria St .• Jumped
over the counter and forced the clerk
to open the reglater. f4e left on loot.
A kitchen window provided entry to
thleYel wtlo stoi. $2,785 worth ol
goods from a Cotta M ... home on
the eoo bl()ci( of Seavlew Lane
Saturday afternoon. The vlcilm re-
pot1ed two teleVlalon sets, a micro-
wave oven. a radio and cam«•
equipment was taken.
Whlle•the owner was In tn. living
room having a snack, a Hl80 motor-
cycle valued at $800 wu carted away
In a pickup truck. The dirt bike wu In
tn. garage and the owner had been
WOf'klng on It about ftve mlnutea
t>«ore a trvek pulled away from hit
curb with the bike In tM back.
A llquor atore office at 1746
Placentia Ave. wu broken Into.
Saturday evening and $680 caah wu
taken from a IOeked flle cabinet.
Huntington Beach
A break-In wu reported Sunday at
the Matflfnlty Factory Outlet at 15083
Golden West St. Entry wu made
throogh a rear door. The IOU In-
cluded S300 In clothing and S 100 In
caah.
Two car burglaries were reported
early Sunday on Blue Water Lane.
Stef'eo equipment valu.d at $800
was stolen from a gold 1977 Volk•·
wagen Sctrocco. Auto parta valu.d at
S350 and stereo equipment worth
S325 were stolen from a white 1981
Saab.
A home burglary was reported
Sunday aftef'noon on the 7800 block
of wuntngton Avenue. Entry wu
made through a locked rear bedroom
INlndow. The lou Included a 145
stef'eo unit.
Newport Beach
A Huntington Beach woman re-
ported the theft of $522 from her
puree left on the ftoor ol a banquet
room at a hotel located In the 1100
block ol Jambor ... Road Saturdlly
evenl~.
A Simi Valley woman reported the
theft of her wallet containing S 120 In
cash lrom her unlocked car In tn.
2200 blocil of Weat Cout Highway
Sunday evening.
A Newport e.ctl man reported
the tn.tt of three 12 ounce tllvef bara
valu.d at S 1.200 each from hit home
In the '400 block of 62nd ltreet
sometime be1ween Wadneeday and
Sunday, police said. The 1•1apecta
alao stole S-400 In silver coins, police
said.
Irvine
An Irvine dog owner suff•ed
moderate hand fnlurlee Sunday u
she auempted to break apart n.r two
Oot>ermana, fighting with each other.
an animal control offloer .. Id. Both
doga were quarantined until It waa
detef'mlned which dog bit the woman. •
Neighbors on tn. MCond noor of a
Woodbridge apattment complex ap-
parently teared off would-be bur-
glar• trying to gain entry to a ground level unit. A ecreen and window wu
pried open at an unoccupied home
on Southbrook around 1:30 a.m.
$unday.
Fountain Valley
ThleVel forced their way Into a bus
belonging to the Klngsmen Drum
Corps at 1 Lighthouse Lane and 11°'9
a S300 C8 redlo. The vandala also
smashed ~ windows, caualng
$3,000 In damage.
A man reported to police that he
put his gym bag ootalde a recketball
court at Loa Ca~o• tor a few
mlnutea Sunday. n. returned,
Ile discovered that meone atoi. a
purse and a wallet containing $1 75 In
cath and $370 In mlacellan.oua
Items.
Tht.v" uMd a metal pipe to smaah
a window at Radio Shack, 18157
H11bor Blvd., and 11oi. stereo 9Qulp-
ment worth $2,070.
Intruders broke a glau window at
Nortlleutt achoo! and atoi. S14 In
cath and cauaed S 100 damage In the
principal'• offic. and eecretary'1
area.
Rain tonight, th~n clearing
Coastal
T emperatures .....
UM 12 47
71 41
J1 " p ,, •
74 .. 11 ., ....
14 Q u.
" 11 41 K
N 42
.. 44
.. 71 14 ~ IO 11 M II
74 ti
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to 43 ,.,.. .. 62 .. 70 ,_ 12 IO 11 70 T-" 12 .. " W-"'91on .. ,, .. ., -· .. u
lllf llPllT
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Monday, October 17, 1983 * AS
--WI AllllD:-------
"Which team -
(did) you
want to win
the World
Serles?''
David Eberle,
.,.int contntctor,
Co1t•MeN
Denn.tte Burri•, ·
houMWlfe,
Coet.MeN
S.ndJ R•mMy, .... , ... ,
CoeteMeN
"I want the Phlllles
because the Dodgers
didn't win and they're
In the National
League."
"I'm for the Phlllles
because they have a
good-looking pitch-
er."
"I guess I want the
Phi Illes because my
brother likes them.''
JennlfefHall,
blinking,
Coet8Mna
Keren Fa.mmeng,
bookkeeper,
Cott•Med
JlmTeyior,
MCurlty officer,
CoeteMeN
W•yn.8klnner,
l•b tec:hnlcl.n,
Coet•Meu· "I want Baltimore
because I'm In a pool
at work for them ."
"I want Baltimore
because I used to five
In Washington D.C." ,
"I want Phlladelphla
-Just on general prln-
clple."
"Phlladelphla. I llke
the National League
better."
Editor's Note: We asked our question during the World Serles. Only Jennifer and Karen
are happy with the outcome today. The Orioles won the Serles Sunday, four games to one.
No more 'dog food' for inmates
Orange County Jail officials
have agreed to stop punishing
prisoners with a dish described by
inmates as "gruel" and "dog
food."
The agreement, hailed u un-
precedented in the nation, aettles a
lawsuit.
American Civil Liberties Union
attorney Dick Herman said the
agreement was "a step forward in
penology."
The food, which inmates said
was a foul-tasting concoction of 10
ingredients mixed in a blender
and baked in the form of a
meatloaf, was served as a dis-
ciplinary measure to prisoners in
isolation, jail officials said.
It was served after inmates
trying to escape overcrowding in
the main jail area broke rules in
order to be sent to isolation cells.
A recipe released by the ACLU
gafo country, fa.l l
fmm cra.Tj h:Jrsa., tb:z,
b95ic ehczile.rd iM:XJl
S'MZal<Lr. \Ml.ar itwith
<i\ll'Z.rythiJJ9, Prom
khakis toy:ut" fl:r..orik
i~ a mu.8ttory:ur
ful 1 wardtobz; in a
reinlx::NJ or co1ora
. .
••
listed the ingredients as dry mill<.
chopped cabbage, onions, grated
potatoes, an egg, cooked beans,
tomato juice. flour and chili pow-
der, all mixed with four ounces of
ground beef.
Jail officials said the food was
nutritious, but in the ACLU
lawsuit four former inmates said
the jail population referred to the
dOOplinary diet as "jute ball.''
"dog food" and "gruel."
@)~o@@J~@
44 Fashion lllond ·Newport &och • 714/644-5070
1001 ~1twood Blvd.· We11woo(I Vlllag~ • 213/208·3273
•, ,, ..-~~------~----~~~------~~--~~~--~~"-~~~--~~----~--~-·---~--~~--~--~~~--~~-o.~~--~-~~~· ···-·
~.
I '
-
llllJPlllt
MONDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1983 *
ANN LANDERS 82 Ill THE .Cllm ENTERTAINMENT 83
"A Case of Libel," debuting on cable TV's
Showtime tonight, is a courtroom drama that
make& a point about an important issue. Page BS .
0
0
COMICS 84
Shor.t 'n' lively
Fingernails do the walking
no. ..............
NEW YORK -Call it glarnorQus or grotesque, but
neverth eless the trend in artificial sculptured nails is booming. To
meet the need, independent fingernail salons are opening up every
day. according to the-National Aaiociation of Nail Artists.
Now women who want to sport these 2-inch-plus talons can let
their fingernails do the walking to the nearest salon. ln responae to
the growth of this new industry, / \. ') ~1
the Bell Yellow Pages has recent-......._ .
ly adopted a new heading called 1 !fr
"Fingernail Salons." The head-................ ~"_
ing will begin to appear in the .. ..-.
directories within the next six to .,,,,
12 months. --
Sculptured nails are a cos-................. ,.
metic application formed from an .._
acrylic solution that is painted •lllil•iiill••!!~=p• over the natural fingernail and _ • ; P
allowed to harden. cl
The compound can be ex-~
tended almost instantly to any
length, so that in less than two
hours a nail biter can be trans-
formed into a dragon lady. Sculptured nails cost about
$50, and with proper care, applications can last from two to five
weeks.
Good vision for children
ST. LOUIS, Mo. -School-age children should learn good
reading habits, and for preventive care should have an annual eye
examination to diagnose visibn problems in their earliest stages,
suggests the American Optometric Association.
Parents should provide good lighting, teach children to take
breaks from close work, encourage proper TV viewing habits and
be alert for behavior signs that may indicate a vision problem. tbe
AOAsays. •
YMCA offers comedy courses
NEW YORK -A series of
.....__ .... humor courses taught by mem-
rs of the Association of Comedy
Artists is being offered this fall by
the YWCA of Ne"w York City.
Dr. Kathryn Hahner, a psy-
chologist, will discuss the Psy-
chology of Humor. Other subjects
include History and Appreciation
of Women in Comedy from
Tucker (Sophie) to Tomlin (Lily),
Comedy Improvisation and the art of succeeding as a stand-up
comic.
'Self-health' program is urged
ROCHE.STER, N. Y. -"The American way of life may be
hazardous to your health," says Jerid Fisher, a University of
Rochester Medical Center psycnolog\st and developer of a
"self-health" program called SKYS -St.op Killing Yourself
Slowly. Peopl~ have been led to give up responsibility for their own
well-being, he says. Nine of the 10 leading causes of death in 1900
have now been· replaced by diseases of stress and ex~ -such as
heart attacks, strokes, and cirrhosis, says Fisher.
He urges attention to diet, exercise, and stress management
and an immediate end to such "life-robbing" habits as smoking,
excessive smoking, excessive drinking. and overeating.
PAPARAZZI
Hollywood ex-wives for• special club
Group_ meets regularly to
discuss unique p_roblems
By RICHARD DE ATLEY .....................
OS ANGELE.S-Some Hollywood ex-wives have formed a
loosely
organii.ed club to help each other cope with being divorced
from
celebrity husbands and out of the limelight.
"Being the wife of a famous man is a unique category," said
'rclarilyn Funt, the former wife of ''Candid Camera" host Allen Funt,
who has joined with other ex-wives .. to form their own support group.
It is called LADlES, for Life After Divorce Ia Eventually Sane.
Among the members are Lynn Landon, ex-wife of actor Michael
Landon, who has since remarried; Jackie Joseph, the ex-wife of
entertainer Ken Berry. and Patti MacCleod, former wife of "Love
Boat" star Gavm MacCleod.
LADIES has no office, no phone number and no fonnal
organization
It was born about six months ago, when Funt invited divorced
wives of celebrities to discuss their situation on her USA Cable show,
"Are You Anybody?"
"Each expressed a feeling of isolation and loss," Funt said. "They
felt people were unsympathetic, but the pain meant something to
them."
The group later met for lunch, and the session was so successful
that another was scheduled. then another, until the women decided to
Harborlites chapter of the Sweet Adelines enjoy
singing barbershop style or otherwise.
give ltaelt a name and a direction.
"Thoee private luncheons had an enonnous aenae of relief ,..nd
kinship.'' said. "We were married to men who were larger than life. It
waan't to show itnger and bitterness, but a chance to ex~
ouraelves."
"Moetof us were married before our husbands were famou.a," aid
Joseph. who met Ken Berry when they were dancing In mu.ale.all in
New York and Los Angeles. "Because of the fame, it's hard to let goof
the illusion of what our husband is, or was. It's a little achiwphrenic-
you have two husbands, the man and the performer."
Three w omen who belonged to the group all objected to
references as being "dumped." ·
"That's so unattractive," said Joseph. "Some of ws were the
dumpers as opposed to being the dumpees."
She said liome members don't want their names pubhcii.ed ~
there was no CQUnt o! hQw many women could be considered membetli.
Others include Billie Jean Campbell: an-ex-wife of singer Clem
Campbell, and Sondra Blake, the former wife of actor Robert Blake.
"I think the main thing we have is other women who have similar
problems," said Landon. "A lot of it has to do with the media and !ta
very hard to escape." .
Funt said the group has run into problems with publicity.
"It makes us look like a bunch of bitter women who've bet!n
dumped," she said. "But none of us are wallowing and sitting around.
We're not against men and we're not against marriage."
Funt said LAD!lS will remain a select group, but it may become
a fonnal non-profit organization . She said members are considering
ottering discussion panela for other women's groups.
"Ithlnk sometimes we have to shake ourselves," Joseph said. "We
have that in common with all women. The man they miss is the illusion
of the person they originally married. The person we miss is the pel'BOl'l
we fell in love with."
Sweet Adelines offer -good 4-part harDlony
Harbor/it es get
ready-f_or the
annual competition
By SUSAN MONAHAN
Deir,.. Ceu ••• "'" I
arbershop quartets
have been through
some changes since the
day when four part
harmony provided
aome tmpromptu entertainment at
the bar or barbershop.
The quartets have grown i:nto
choruses and the entertainment
takes place on stages throughout
the world. And while barbershop
music started as an all-male pas-
time, women have their own
organization, the Sweet Adelines.
The Sweet Adellnes were for-
med in 1947, "by a group of
women in Tulsa, Oklahoma, who
got tired of watching their hus-
bands have all the fun," said
Harborlites public relations chair-
man Fran Carmen. The Costa
Mesa-based Harborlites is one of
four Orange County Chapters of
the Sweet Adelines. (The others
are in Fullerton, Garden Grove
and Mission Viejo.)
The Harborlites support their
hobby t hrough various
fund-.raising activities includi.n&
auctions and Las Vegas nights. "A
non-profit organization takes a lot
of money," says Cam>eO". The
preferred method of fund railing, .
of course, is singing. Cannen uys
that the Harborlites will provide
anything from a quarter to ~
chorus, "anywhere entertainment
is needed "
They ·perform in shopping
centers and at banquets and they
also put on their own shows. The
Harborlites offer a mixed re~
toire -Dixieland, ballads, show
tunes -all set in the barbershop
mode. -·
The money raised goes towards
such expenses as rent on the
rehearsal hall, the musical dittc-
tor's salary and insurance. It is a19o
used to help defray the costs of the
Sweet Adelines competitions.
"We're a very competitive group
of ladies," said Carmen. "We'll
compete at anything."
There is a fall competition foe
novices and one each summer foe
double quartets. The annual re-
gional competition, for quartet.
and choruses, will be held in
Albuquerque, N.M. this April A
quartet from the Harborlltes, • 0 See Harborlltes. Page 82 ·
Sailing to Catalina
Bloomer Brigade takes fun cruise
he "bloomer burgee"
was blowing in the
breez.e as the Western
Pride set off Thursday
morning for Catalina.
was the Bloomer Brigade
-67 friends of TonJ Armistead
of Newport Beach on the 20th
annual fun cruise. "My party get.s
bigger every year. [ started off
with just my mother and one or
two friends," Toni said.
Many of the guests met at
Toni's Dover Shore home for a
continental breakfast then were
taken by her big red bus to the
dock. Everybody was in pink and
white, with most wearing the
pink and white T -shirts with
names appliqued on the front.
F.ach year Toni gives a gift to each
one and the shirts were one year's
pres.en&. (This year it was pink
nylon boat jackets with the
bloomer aymbol on the back and a
Pilar Way ne-autographed
cookbook). (Pilar wu aboard for
awhUe unUl the radio aill came
and the boat returned to drop her
off -daughter Aissa expecting
baby any minute.)
lunching at the Chi Chi ites-
taurant.
After a leisurely-spent after-
noon they reconvened at the
restaurant for awards (med-
allions went to Dorotby Mac·
DoDalcl, fonner Ztgfield star
Florence Ryplatld, Mlcbe
Beauchamp and former lee skat-
ing star Peggy Kennedy).
cocktails. dinner and speclal
entertainment by five male exotic
dancers from the Laff Stop in
Newport Beach aecompanied by
an emcee. (The six had been on
rhe crossing, bur nobody knew
who they were at the time.) "I've
never seen anything like it," one
guest said commenting on the
performance. Every year Toni
provides surprise entertainment
Theall-female group (nornales
allowed aboard except enter-
t.tiners and crew including Skip-
per Bill Cunpbell, who ha.t made
every trip) we re disembarking
from the Western Pride about 4
a .m. Friday morning at the
Pavilion.
Toni,. who was in show busi-
neta in earlier yean, will 900n be
embarkina on another venture -
ln January she will be opening a
health and beauty salon In Palm
DHert known as Salon
d' Antoinette.
Ho~pltal
1ucces1ful
benefit
Many aboard were wearing
gold medallions (.ame we'6h tu a
$20 gold pi«-e) engraved wtth
their name and the Bloomer
symbol. This jewelry, a gift from
Toni indicates that the wearer
haa made 10 cl'<*.lnga. (One year
when the price of gold waa
exhorbicant she had five women
to IY.'<'rive their·lO-year prlz.e.)
On Catallna, (the Cl'O#Jng of· Forty more and they would
fered conrlntmtal breaklura, have taad 1,000 at the St. Joaeph cham~. bloody marys or Hoepltal Beneflt held at the
whateVW") the Bloomera shopped Dlmeyland Hotel. The aMual
(1NJ1y of the •to,.,. normally ewnt featured comedian Bob
clcwd at tJu. tlrM o~ and ,-Newbn, who entertained the
ofltt't!d rMln dl«ocmm) before IJ"OUP r~
~··'-~~~~....-~~~-. -~~~~~~~ ..... --~~~~~-
D.ely "'4 ......
Su e Cummin1
climbs aboa.-d
Western Pride.
tournedos of beef Henry !V,
coquile St. Jacques and charnbord
pearch par{ all.
The $100,000 proceeds wW eo
for expanding and remodeling
the cancer unit at the Orange
H0&pttal.
Donna Blue (she's with S t.
John Kni'8) and her husband
Ladcle were there along with
James Capfet& of Capreb and
Kudan Of Corona del Mar and
James Piero1 of South Lacuna
(th~ i.ci.r two w~re on the
•teerlng commltw).
Other 1teerln1 committee
members Included RIC!91ard
Welk.er of NewpOrt Beach, David
Comedian Bob Newhart. •
Fran Gately and Margo Brayton
show off their I 0-year Bloomer
Brigade medallions.
BB hosteH Toni Armi1tead,
right, with Pilar Wayne.
Donna and Lance Blue watch
Bob Newhart.
Wblle of Hun\l.niton Beach,
Kelly McDennot1 of Newport
Beach with Wataon, Eberlinl and
Lund.
They're 'Proud aa a
Peacock'
More than 800 women an In
Seattle, Wuh. this week to
attend the naUonal A.8iliance
Lea,ue convention, "Proud u a
Peecock."
Representint the Laguna
Beach Chapter, one of 71, are the
Mmee. Slteldoa P"1la, pn!lldent,
Elmer Lal.Aue, WIDl1toa L.
Bradway, Albert Leedom and
Fr1Dcl1 Volte.
The Huntinp>n BHch del·
eptlan will be heeded by
Marpret CarllM, J)Nlident.
plua PHla McCau, J1dy Watt
andfteeS.IUJ.
AC410mpanytnc the Newport
Buch chapter prttldtnt,
Ofro&aly RelcllJe, wiU be n.lnt
members lnclucllna delepw.
Marloa Plckeu, Jou Rou, Jeu
L11e11, Elabte Be1ma.Jlu and
Martlla Crowwer (l.M will be
giving one of the 11emin.ars).
The Capistrano Valley chapter
(the 66th 6"0UP chMtel'fJd) wW
allo have 10 members ln attend-
ance lnclud.lna Mn. Gerald Glbh
,pcftldent; and the MIMI. Bary
E1poy, WtlMlell a.., a...1
C.lemaa, Robert P91e•• and
RelUD AaderHL
----·. -~------{--...__ ______ _ ·------·-· --------~ I
-·
.. NB Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Octeber 17, 1983
STOCKS
)10ND \Y'S t :1,t •SI 'IG PRIC:•~~
...... ,..... ""' ...
..-t ""~ t '"'• <-nv
\41"'' NP.I
P f nu' C lo\f>-< nq
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
0U01 A IJOl'j$ INCl UOE IRAOE!i ON I HE NEW VORll MIOWfSl PAClftt; PBV. tit.>?HON 01111011 AND CINCINNA Tl STOC!I EXO.ANGES AND
Al!PORTED ev !ttE NASO INSl!NET
B•IEalRllfl
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µ f ~' t '""• ' n"
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•• I fHh (ltJ'+f'" (~ '•Alt'\ N,.i
ft I ff(h t. IU\~ ( nQ
--..• -, .. -.. ,-,f" --,A-,.,--• U.S. money supply falls
'
•• l hd• l""~ t "Q •• • ,,
0
, ~"'" $1.1 billion in October
By the Aaaoelattd Pren
NEW YORK -The baaic meaaure of the U.S. money
s upply fell $1.l billion in early October, the Federal Raerve
Board saya. Economists interpreted the report as a sign that
the Fed, In its role as manager of the nation's monetary policy,
waa unlikely to push interest rates hjgher any time aoon.
Dollar falls; gold fluctuates
LONOON -Th~ollar fell against all major currencies
in early trading today, undercut by expectations of declines in
U.S . interest rates. Gold prices edged above the
$400-an-ounce barrier in the early going, but then fell
sharply. Dealers attributed the dollar's retreat to a Federal
Reserve Board report of a $1 .1 bUllon decline in the basic U.S .
money supply, known as ML The drop was sharper than
expected.
V.S. business inventories rise
WASHfNGTON -inventories held by U.S businesses
rose 1.2 percent in August, the largest gain since spring 1980,
as retailers restocked their shelves at the fastest pace in more
than 12 years, the Commerce Department says. Continuing
increases in production, antld a modest gain in sales, allowed
for the overall accumulation of stocks, which had been
severely depleted through the recession, econotfusts said_
Consumers credit increase rown
WASHING TON (AP)-Consumers took on $3.39 billion
more in installment debt than they paid off during August,
the Federal Reserve Board reports. The overall net increase in
credit amounted to an annual growth rate of 11.25 percent
compared with 16.5 percent growth recorded when the
increase hit a monthly record of $4.84 billion in July, the
central bank reported.
1,350 GM workers to lose jobs
DETROfT -About 1,350 workers will 106e their jobs at
General Motors Corp~'s.Flint. Mich.., manufacUUing-00mplex
next summer when engine production is halted there, the
automaker said. GM said the L6 six-cylinder engine built at
the Flint motor plant in the complex will not be offered on GM
vehicles after the 1984 model year. which ends next Sept. 30.
Dow Chemical gives up battle
WASHtNGTON -Dow Chemical Co. has given up its
$10 million fight for the right to market the herbicide 2,4,5-T
in the United States. The government has severely restricted
the chemical's use since 1979, because 1t contains traces of the
dangerous contaminant dioxin.
IBM earmings rise 25 percent
NEW YORK -International Busmess Machines Corp,
said its third-quarter earnings rose 25 percent from the
yeru-~earlier period on a l~ percent revenue gain. Separately,
a Boston research house said IBM will unveil its
much-awaited home computer on Nov. 1 and expects to ship
about 90,000 of the machines this year.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
WHAT NYSE DID
NEW YORI<.. (APJ Oct ll
Ac!v1 nc.o Otc1lneo
Uncn1no1<1 Tol1lluu1• NtwlllllM
New IOWl
Toc!IY 671 ... 424 196)
1' II
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW VORK IAPI 0CJ II
METALS
Today m
"' 19• 824 lJ 11
Pre11 on 5'c 1041 ,,. l"' 2t 15
Pr ..
0.Y 270 791 us 193 n
l)
NEW YOf!K IAPI Spot nonl&rtout rMtlt
P<._.IOClly c.,.... . 70 .. • 13 ~.... • l)OVricl. v s
o.111n1flon• e.._ . e5 eo C9'11t '* P<Nn<I, NY Comot• •pot "IOfllh <I-Flt
..... -25 «*Ill • """"° ZlftO • 48 1*'11• • pouno. Oe41v•ed
Tiii • te 5207 Metlll W-COtnPQell• II>
Al-'"-• II eetllo • pouna, NV
..._, • '330 00·~50 DO ~ 1$ ID ~Uf\.
N-YO<h ,,.,..,.,,,, 1400 00..$405 00 OO<Mllte ,,,.,~,..,,, ~rov ovn« N Y
SILVER
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
SYMBOLS
'
DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YOtlK lAPI -.Fl,,.i Dow \_.
l•t'tv<t> tor M on o 1 v ~I I 7
STOCKS
)0 too ~ HIGll i.ew 0... '~
ms o 1111 u 12suo 12., 10+s 11
10 Trn sa3 71 S .. " Sf2 I) S91'2+ 11.07 IS UJI 137 09 IJl.97 136.12 lllJO• 0.12
•S SI' w.J 1' SIO 50 500.>2 S06 SI+ U S '"°"' t, 1)6, 100 Tr t n l , ttS,JOO
UIM• 1 • .0,.00 6S St>. lJ,'73,IOO
AMlRICAN LEADERS
N1,,.,. t FlnStllor
2 Olt r>llKO J Norttll tnc
4 lnt1H1rv S 7601 S MflOIAUI 6 Cll•v•i.• wt
1 a.~., '"° I Oavco Coro 9 AMR Coro
10 Thll lnO 11 AMEi Pw
11 K1ty trio 1) S.IUIJI 14 WnAlt Un
IS llollln>Env
16 .... ~... ll<t\f
I) PanAm WI
18 ~llffll IN:
lt Con•NtlG"' 10 ChlNW>t 11 Ke<11IC0 27 M1UOfll~ n 2J k rrvwran1 14 COMOIKO > 1$ Lufll'llOI