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1983-10-26 - Orange Coast Pilot
Lebanon: • Vice President George Bush, standing before the mountain of rubble where rescuers were still looking for bodies from Sunday's Beirut bombing, said: "We're not going to let down friends because of terror." Page A6. • At dawn, the Marines were fired upon with small arms, mortar and bazookas and fired back. • The death toll from the suicide bombing Is 219 dead and about 70 wounded for the Americans, with French casualties llsted at 48 dead, 15 wounded and 10 missing. BATTLEFRONTS U.S. troops fighting in Grenada, Lebanon By Tile A1aoclated Pre11 Combat involving American troops continued today in both Grenada and Lebanon. with cas- ualties mounting at both sites. In Grenada, the United States landed about 800 paratroopen in today to reinforce the almost 2,000-atrong U.S . invasion force and began evacuating American citizens. Pentagon sowus re- ported six U.S. trocp killed, ei8ht miaaing and 33 wounded in fight- ing IO far. In Beirut today, American troops returned fire at dawn when they were fired upon with small anns, mortar and bazookas. Vice President George Bush inspected the devasted Marine base and said "insidious terrorist cowards" will not change U.S . policy. American casualties in Lebanon are now listed at 219 dead and about 70 injured. (For more on the I ..ebanon crisis, see PageA6.) In Cuba, a government an- nouncement in Havana said six U.S. helicopter gunships attacked Cuban positions on Grenada before dawn today. destroying the Cubans' main building at the Point Salines airfield. It said the "cuualtiee are nwneroua. But aurvivon will continue fl&hting." White Houae deputy pr91 ac- retary Larry Speakes told re- porters in WMh.lngton that 61 Americana were en route to Charleston, S .C. on the first evacuation flight from Point Selines. There are about 1,000 Americana on the ialand, many of them medical 1tudenta. Pentqon eources, who dia- clOlled the cuualtlee and the number of 82nd Airborne rein- forcementl, aaid the Americana were enoounterlfl8 ltiff re9iatance from hundreda of Cubans and (See AMERICANS, Pa1e Al) e 111e: >41 ...... mile• • llopOlellon: 120 '"°"""d • lndutlrlH : Arrowroot tltrch, coconvtt, etrrolt , tWHI poltlMt, nutl!l•I t nCI l!ltce e lln. IU -..ere ll"llet • "ottul1t1on: 1'0 tlMUMlld • tlldu1t•le1: Tourt1111, llen1nH. OMeO,nut,..•1.111 .... IU91r l"d-llUll • Six American seMcemen have been kllled and 33 wounded, Pentagon sources say. U.S. offlclals also said three Grenadian troops were killed and up to 600 Cubans captured. • President Fldel Castro vowed today that his countrymen on Grenada would not surrender. . • Some members of Congress, many concerned that U.S. forces are stretched too thin around the ~orld, urged quick U.S. withdrawal from Grenada. IHI ORANlil COAST COUNTY-IDITIDN .I WEDN!IDAY, GeTOIER • 1m ·. .,·"' ~ ·. -· -·----'l~ • ~ • • •_!-• 'a ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Missing car link in Irvine murder By ANDREA ADELSON °' ............ Irvine police hope a missing car and a buaine98 uaociate can help leecl them '° the killer of murdered tire store praident Boyd W . l'lnke.L SCt-Dick Bowman laid today inve.tigators hope to question an unidentified Maryland man be- lieved to be Finkel's financial backer. In the next two days, police hope to ask the man about previous business asaociates of Finkel who might shed aome light on a motive for the homicide. Police also are looking for a miaaing silver Honda Prelude with California llceme plates owned by Finkel, which ia "unac- counted for ," Lt. Bob Lennert aaid. The car may have been loaned to a friend or may be a link to Finkel's killer, he said. Meanwhile, autopsy results re- vealed Tuesday that the 39-year-old Irvine man, reported missing this week by his co-workers, died Oct. 16 after being bludgeoned over the head with a blWlt instrument, police said. Fingerprints were used to positively identify the partially decompceed body found stuffed in the trunk of a car Monday, Lennert said. Investigators have ruled out robbery, burglary or drugs aa a (See MISSING, Pase AZ) ullet tr.ain 'shot down' by analyst Some kind of hero ......... .,, ..... a..-. Kevin Yoches owes his young life to Bob Heber. By UREN E. KLEIN Of .. INllJ .......... Bob Heber w'un't sup- poeed to be on patrol that Monday. But since he'd lost his regular job, Heber was able to substitute for another Costa Meu police officer who wu abeent. u it hadn't happened that way, 13-month-old Kevin Elliott Y oches might not be the happy, vivacious little boy he la today. And Heber , a 28-year-old reeerve of- ficer and a sales rep- resentative with a pub- 1.ishini company, would not have made a new friend. It wu that Monday, Sept. 26, when J{evin fell in his backyanl pool and nearly drowned. And it was that Monday when Heber became involved with strangers who would just a few weeka later consider him a "dear and special" part of their lives. Heber waa patrolling the aoutheast part of Carta Meu when a medi- cal aid call of a drowning in progre. came in about 1:40 p.m. Heber re- membered all the kids he'd taught swimming lt!880na to in junior high and high echool and sped to the addreea that came over his 9Quad car radio. "I went emergency li8hll aJ\d sirens. You're really 1uppceed to let (the station) know when you do that, but I didn't care becauae it ju.at struck home with me since there wu a kid in- volved," Heber said. (See OFFICER, Pa1e Al) Speraw may ;drop out of Senate race BJ JERRY HIRSCH &M ROBERT BARUR Of .. ..., ........ A bitter fight for the local state Senate 8eat may be evaporatinc to the deJ.iaht of local Republicans. State Sen. Ollie Speraw, R-Newport Beach, will meet with his ltaff Thunday morning to decide if he will drop his challenge to Aaaemblywoman Marian Berge90n, R-Newport Beach, for the 37th District Senate seat, Speraw's aides said today. Meanwhile, Auemblyman Nolan Frirzelle, R-HWltington Beach, said today he has no plana to enter the fray. "fro happy where I am in the A.aembly and there's no virtue for me to be in the Senate," he said. ''This is where the main battle- ground is to support the positions of the governor and the Re- publican Party and It's where I want to be.'' the twc:>-Ume as- semblyman said, hoping to end speculation he might challenge Bergeeon if Speraw withdrew. Speraw, who ia beeet by a variety of health and peraonal problems, may want to avoid the bitter fight and devote his time to (See SPERAW, Pqe Al) Winds tangle south 'county power lines Power to nearly 4,000 homes and bl.ISinemes wu restored Tues- day after Santa Ana winds wreaked havoc on power lines in aouth Orange County. Meanwhile, the hot and gusty winds were expected to d.iminiah today, making way for IOmewhat cooler temperatures Thunday - if you can call temperatures in the upper 70. at the beachee and the SO. inland cool for late October. ''The wind blew treee into the wires in Capistrano Beach and took out power to 3,860 CUi- t.omen," aaid San Diego Gu & Electric Co. 1pokecnan Tom Larimore. He said the 6 a.m. outage affected homes from San Juan Capistrano aouth to Capistrano Beach and parts of south and north San Clemente. Power was restored by 8 a.m., he aaid. The National Weather Service ia predicting a cooling trMd Thunday under sunny skies. "It won't be aa wann as today," said 1pokeswoman Pat Rowe. ''Thinp lhould cool down to the mid 70. near the oout to the low SO. inland by the weekend," lhe aid, adding overnight lows will be in the 60I by thil evening. The dry winds prompted Or- ange County firefigbten to go on alert, patrolling the county'• bruah1ande for ligna of amoke or flames. Fire ravages paper plant ffi J in Santa Ana ._ .......... _. ....... Firemen battle major fire at paper reeyeHng center in Santa Ana Tuesday e•enin(J. ' . BJ STEVE MARBLE ... ..., .......... MARGE Bft'BI 11 ..., .... Ceo: S ' I A welder may have acddently .et off a lpect.llc\llar fire that roared th.roulh a Santa Ana paper recyclinc plant -r.':t night and ahrouded a five. ara in thick. black emoke. Flama lhot 20 feet in the air u police ofticen went door to c1ioor in a 1urroundtna neiahborhood wamlnc raidente to nay lndoon or eYllCUAte the aree beca~ of pomible toxic f W'De9 from burninC plaltic. J'tre Inv.Upton were dia1na throuah the ,remalnl of the SM ta Ana Recycllna C-eJlter, 2638 s. Main St., today. Authoritlel Mid while they had no atimate on the amount of damap \hey admitted (8" PAP~R. Pqe Al) ' Bridel .....,_ BuUeUn Board O ... fled Coma ere.word DMthNotica l'ditorial.,... l:ntertafnmlnt Food Hon.ope INDEX 84 Annl.anden B2 Be M~ Bl A3 Natiorial News Al 05..a PoliceLot .u 84 Public Notlcel DM D8 Sporta Dl-4 °' State Newt . A7 AlO ~ BS Ba ni.tan Bl Cl-10 w .. u. .u De World Newt ' Ae •• 1 ' • ll Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 I_ c_o_N_Tl_N_U_ED_s_. T_O_R_11_s_, _I 'Boy wonder' brought down to earth MISSIN(G AUTO... Loser of $4 7 ,000 cash i n brief case u nable to h ire attorney in embezzlement case From Page A By STEVE MARBLE unable to raise money t.o meet his someone had taken his day. Police in Anaheim allege motive in ihe murder. had not activated when police OflNo.llJ,......., $50,000 bail or to hire an attorney. gold-trimmed briefcue that he Booth took a Mercedes for a te9t No weapon was di.lloovered arrived, according to Lennert. He was scheduled to appear in said was stuffed with 470 $100 drive and never returned. The car "Riches to rags" lS how one CO"... ia•~r ._ ... ay ;,.. Fulle-~n b'"-. still haa not •"-.....a up, police Mid. when police searched Finkel's Finkel was la.st seen alive at U d . d ribed th .... ~ """ ~ ... 1 ...., lUA "-U1~ th dinn po ce etectlve eec e where he will be represented by He said he carried the briefcase M-.. w ... "-, police in N...amnrt blood-apottedhomeat ebueof 10:1~p.m.Oct.15having · erat li h ! Mi ha 1 Booth th ,.._., iuu: _ .. r" Lockhaven Circle. Police refuaed an Irvine restaurant, Lennert P g t 0 c e ' e Dtana Polos, a court-appointed intotherestaurantbecauaehewas reported that Booth "fraudulent.- if 'd d 21-year-old man who made flam-public defender. to meet a client to pW'Chue a ly" rentedaPorache fromaPadfic to say any evi ence was con-saJ . filcated in the three-bed.room Long-Urne residents of Lock-boyant claims of wealth until he Booth is suspected of stealing a Ferrari. The briefcue, he told Cout Highway car lot by using a home. haven described thelr neighbor 88 land~ in Ja.ilf. late dlasthwfeek ond $30,000 Mercedes Benz from an police, was left with a host at the friend's credit card. Officers ~d Police foroed thelr way into the a recluse who owned expensive suspicion ° gran t e t an Anaheim car dealer and unlawful-restaurant. he al8o failed to return w .. l home Monday after two cars and rarely had visitors. embeu.elment. ly taking a Porsche 928 from a Police challenged Booth to take expensive car. co-workers reported concerns Bill Julian, a fonner business Booth made news earlier this Newport Beach car lot. a lie-detector test but he failed to Police have hinted that other over Finkel's unexplained partner. speculated Finkel may month when he reported losing "Foraguywithsomuchmoney, show up. chargesagainatBoothstillmaybe abeence from Supertec Tire have made enemies in the tire $47,000 in cash at a Newport he sure isn't flashing it now," Booth was arrested late Thurs-!iled. Cent.er, the Irvine tire store of business. Julian said he and Finkel Be.ach nightspot. When police quipped Anaheim Police detective which hewaa prelident. in April were forced to sell their admitted they were suspicious of AJ Brubrink. "Riches to rags." Fink.el's body was found in the nearly bankrupt chain of six his claim, Booth angrily said he Booth made headlines this trunk of a dark blue C8dlllac diacount tire stores. The stores in was rich. He said his car alone was month when he called police to parked in the garage. Orange and Los Angeles and worth $70,000. Bobby McGee's restaurant in A burglar alarm in the house counties, had debts of $2 million. But as of today, Booth has been Newport Beach to report that SPERAW MA Y: BAIL O UT OF RACE ... From Page A1 Republican efforts to change the reapportionment system, accord- ing to Jack Gemlain, an aide. Berge90n said she would be pleued if Speraw dropped out but added ''it would not change my plans at all." "I don't know whether there will be any opposition. My race haa been run from the start as if there would be opposition. We have the staff, volunteers and financing to run a campaign against opposition," Bergeson u.ld. Speraw, who lost his Long Beach senate seat to reapportion- men t, gained the Legislature's approval to represent the 37th Distict in January. The seat was left vacant by fonner Sen. John Schmitz last year. Soon aft.er, Speraw announced his intention to run for the Senate seat in 1984. Be~eson, a three-term as- semblywoman, had already said she would run. Political analysts expected the battle would be one the most expensive and bitter in Orange Coast history. With the primary nearly a year away both can- didates already were sparring over pledges to run a clean campaign only la.st month. .T h e e n d t o l h e Speraw-Bergeson fight would help local Republicans concen- trate on unseating Democratic office holders in the area, said Tom Fuentes, a vice chairman of the Orange County Republican Party. "There was some speculation that perhaps $1 million would be spent between the two sides. Those dollars not spent on a inter-party fight could be used by other Republicans against Demo- crats," he said. The prime targets would be Rep. Jerry Patterson, D-Santa Ana. and ~mblyman Richard Robinson, D-Garden Grove, Fuentes said. Bergeson acknowleged that the campaign would have been hard foµght but now "I am optimistic that we will avoid a divisive primary," she said. The winner of the Republican June primary is virtually guaran- teed the seat because of the conservative makeup of the dis- trict's electorate. The distict stretches from Seal Beach to Oceanside and reaches inland to the Colorado River. Its most heavily populated area is the Orange Coast. Sen. OUie Speraw Santa's entrance not for Placentia youth By The A1socialed Preti A 10-year-old Placentia boy ~ learned the sooty truth about his chimney. St. Nick would stick, the same way Justin Bayless did when he tried to get into his locked-up house aft.er school. And laying his finger aside of his nose wouldn't get him out, either. Firefighters had to cut a chunk from the chimney to free him. It was a bad day at black brick, all around, for Justin. His troubles actually began about noon when he was sent to the principal's oUice for disciplining at Eastside Christian Elementary School in nearby Fullerton, police said. Ap- parently he left school early aft.er that, they said. But no one was home and the doors were locked. So Justin climbed to the roof of the two-story house and lowered hil"8Self feet-first into the chimney. Justin apparently lost "'his grip and fell nearly 25 feet, finally coming to rest on. the flue at the top of the fireplace, about three feet short of his goal. About that time, Palmer said, school offlcials searching for their missing student arrived at the house and heatd his cries for help. ''I want out! Get me out!" the boy hollered all the while. He was freed, uninjured, two houn later. Returning to • crime scene trips suspect Fountain Valley police have a nominee for klutzy crook of the month. OFFICER SAVES MESA BOY ... AMERICANS FIGHTING ••• It seems that a 20-year-old Santa Ana man was surprised by the intended victim while rilling through a van this week. The crook bolted, leaving his wallet that contained his driver's license and other identification behind. He did take with him a small security badge he found in the van belonging to an employee of Rockwell International. From Page A1 The precocious toddler had slipped away from his mother, Toby, who was talking to a neighbor at the door. A oouple minutes later, Toby returned to Kevin's playroom to find it empty. Her son was at the bottom of the swimming pool in her backyard. Heber was the first one to arrive at the Yoches' home that day. Kevin "was blue. Ria lips were blue, he was bloated and there were food fragments around him on the floor. His mom was doing CPR on him but she was pretty panicked. I just looked down and said to myself, 'I can't mess up on this.' 1n business you c.an 9Cl'ew up and it's not ., bad, but here I had a human life to think about," Heber Mid. He took over the CPR and noticed Kevin re9pOllding with gurgling 90Wlda. "It seemed like an eternity," in the few minute9 before the fire department and paramedics arrived on the acene, Reber said. CPR was not a routine procedure for Heber. ''It was the first time I'd ever done it in my life. In my class I always had trouble with the baby doll because I couldr)'t get my mouth over the nose and mouth like they showed me. I figured it was no time to experiment on Kevin. I just plugged his noee and breathed into his mouth like he was an adult." 1n the hours after the boy was taken to the hospital, Heber called Kevin's doctor and his houle. A doctor who treated Kevin told Heber the youngster would live but would almost certainly be brain-damaged from lack of oxygen. "It was so tragic. He hadn't even begun to live his life yet," Heber said. "I thought, 'Why did we work so hard for that, why did Kevin work so hard?'" Heber, who had been depressed since losing his full-time job anyway, was devastated. But he got good news the next day, when all the signs that pointed to brain damage turned out to be negative. "I jwlt couldn't believe it," Heber said. "Everything had gone from so bad to so good." In the days and weeks that followed, Kevin's recovery would be complete. But Heber'• Interest in the boy didn't flag. "He has been ao dear and so special to ua," Tot)y Yocbes said. "I think he felt responsible. He called every day to the hoepltal and to our home." One recent evening, after Kevin was relea.&ed, Heber paid a visit to the Yoches' house and brought along a teddy bear for Kevin. "We were so touched by his sense of involvement with Kevin," Toby said. Heber's actions went beyond the nonnal call of duty, she said. But Heber said what he did was just routine. "I did what any other officer would have done. I guess I'm proud because I handled acriaissltuation well. I've been scared many times, but this really involved somebody else's life and the re1ponai- bility of that is just overwhelming." PAPER PLANT FIRE ... From PageA1 it would be "considerable." have a fire," said Keller. "But It "The whole sky was lit up," she said. "The fumes were ju.It tttmen-could have been worse If it was doua. It was very difficult to really blowing." As many as 90 firefighters from Santa Ana, Costa Mesa. Newport Beach, Garden Grove and the Orange County Fire department were brought to the8Cene to battle the blaze, said Santa Ana Fire Chlef William Reimer. bre.athe," said Art Levitt, a A thin layer of smoke was still spokesman for Pad.fie Telephone vaible over the recycling cent.er Co. which has a service yard next early today. Firemen said paper to the recycling plant. and plaatic items stored at the The fire burned three buildings plants likely would smolder for at the two-acre recycling center hours. and destroyed 14 vehicles perked "Because 90 much of that stuff is at the telephone service yard. No As fire units concentrated on containing the roaring blaz.e., tele- phone company employees hur- riedly moved trucks. cars and heavy equipment from the service yard. one was injured in the 6:41 p.m. in bins or in bundles you just can't get it (the fire) out until you b~ta Ana Battalion Chief bulldoze it," said Steve Bunting, a Richard Keller said it appears a Newport Beach fireman who welder who wu working out-spent six hours on the IJCene. Lea vi lt said employes were able t.o move about 50 cars, vans and trucks before being driven back by the heat and the thick smoke . He said four vans, six station wagons. a construction truck and three cars belonging to employees were charred by the flames. doors at the plant may have Jean Williams said she was on triggered the fire when sparks the east side of the EJ Toro Marine from his equipment were swept. Corpe Air Station on Irvine Cent.er into peper bundles. Drive when she saw the flames. ''The Santa Ana (wind) con-She said she drove to the acene of dition didn't help. It was dry and • the fire. fearing for relaUves who hot and that's not good when you live in the area. We're Listening .... What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number at left and your message will be ra--orded. transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor The same 24 hour answering service may be used to record let ters to the editor on a ny topic Mailbox contributors must include their name and telephone number for verification No t'irculalion c11lls. please 642•6086 Tell us what 's on your mind D== .. OU.•teed MQll4,f,..I oldoly 11 yOu Cl" f\Of "•"'tt f04.I' PIP•' by ' )()'"' ctll tieln<e 1 p n1 ond you• c ill'.IY , .. u b• ~ed So1uro•v ono &tll'O•y •I yOU ou "°' ••c••n yuu• "°"' 1>y 1 • "' c•• ""'°'' tO t "' •Ml yw Ctll>V ..,. Dt .... ed Cerowttton T1l1911'MN ... Mott °'~~1 "'-..... , Hort ...... , #lifll"'ll'Oll 8Ncn ' w .... ,,..... ..., .. l ........... ...... , • ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. lchw•rtz HI Publisher Chazr Dow•ttbr R•rmond MecLHn dUOI l!lnd Ass1stan1 Controller 10 the Pvt>flther ...... ,.c.,uo PoOtMt""' ..... ,~t Gloria A. ~-9'• fl•••• ~-·'"""1 M•Mll"t OOft9ld ... WllllM11 C...t•\.ltl"lll)n MINI~• I Cl111Uted 8dvertl1lng 714/M2·H71 All ottt.r depertmen11 t42a4121 MAIN O,,ICI l IO v.,..1 llooy St Cotto "°""" C.A M1t• IO<ldr ... a Rt11 >~80 c...ta M• .... LA 91()26 C".((lyloQlll 111413 °'•119'1' C:o-11 ""'~ c:om.,..,, No ,, ... , t.tOft .. " tlhJIH•t•Ot'tl t tJllCH••I matlfl '" •C!v•1t1•••ht•llt f>tlft"' ..... y bf •tl"O<lil(tn Wolhool !IJ9<;'"1 f't'""'l"'I(.'" OI GOQyu!Jrtt OW'-' '•l!Cn<t•I 11~.,. P<ltl•Ofl i!llfl ol Co.,A Mtta Ce~lom•1 IUI'"> IU 1'001 5U~loC>l""1 IJV "'""" " 1~ """''~Iv ri, mjl~ VJ )() .... ollltoly '""ll••"Q"C,.ltlloto!yf>ilc>I .. 11\-t '"'"""'°'"""'" Nf'"' Ptftt "'0"~ ll't mt Oo•"G" C:O..\I I\~ 1.1>< .. , .... , f w<I ..,.,_ ••• ""Ol<lnllO "'•"'Mt '"'°"°" I rlday 4 ~ •9Q'Ofllll lfll,l•Ofl OI l"'OioV'tld lillU'O•~ On<I l:<""'•V-IM P'>rtC:OOlll PullhMlg piof't "' At J30 w .... R1, 111...r I' 0 flo• ,~ GMIA M-C•M0."'8 1,r,;>11 VOL. 71, NO. 211 ' From Page A 1 Grenadians. The military sources, who spoke on the condition that they not be identified, said U.S. forces were. being sniped at and that fighting was continuing around bothofGrenada'sairports. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger declared earlier in the day, ''There will be some more casualties because t he price of freedom is high." Jamaican Prime Minister Ed- ward Seaga said he was told 12 Cubana and three civilians were killed on Grenada when the invasion by Marines and Anny Rangers began Tuesday. On Tuesday, the Pentagon said two members of the invasion force had been killed and 23 wounded on the Caribbean island. President Fidel Castro vowed his men would not surrender. and Cuba's Prensa Latin.a news agen- cy said sending in 82nd Airborne troops "gives an indication of the disorder and hysteria provoked in the high command of the United States by the heroic resistance of a fistful of Cubans who were still fighting at dawn today after 24 hours of intense combat in which imperialism has made uae of all ita technical means of conventional warfare -a really humiliating and demoralizing development for Yankee imperialism.'' Weinberger told NBC-TV's "Today" show that "with the airborne and the other unita in there we would hope that some of the pocket& of resistance would be reduced today:· He said the landing force had taken about 250 Cubans priloner, I l l . llZE UTU FAHY including 200 ··~ed comba- tants." He said the balance of the Cubans had eome eort of reeerve training. "Those operations are proceed- ing there probably will be more before the day is out," Weinberger said. In addition to the Cubans, about 30 Soviet. advisers have been seized by the invaders. Castro, Marxist-led Grenada's staunchest ally, acknowledged today that an undetermined number of Cubans had been killed and wounded in the invasion. but vowed his countrymen would not surrender. Perhaps reali%ing that things weren't going as smoothly as he would like, the bungling bandit returned to the crime acene at the Tiburon West condominiwns at Adams Court. He told police who were there waiting for him that he was looking for somebody and got into the van by mistake. Hiaatorydidn'tw uh, however, and he WU booked Into dty jail on suspicion of pet\)' theft for taking the 8eC'Urlty employee'• badge. BULLET TRAIN ... From Page A 1 Richmond said he obtained feasibility studies, which were prepared for American High Speed Rail by consultants. The studies are biased and incomplete, he said. "I checked every single detail down to the C'OIJl of credit card transactions. They didn't even include costs of credit cards, or liability or a reeervation system." said Richmond. a rail analywt and former Fulbrtght scholar with the Masaachuaetta Institute of Tech- nology. John Lagomarclno, the vice president of American High Speed Rail, responded in equally vitriolic t.enna. "Richmond'• data la out of date and incomplete. He u8ed this same miain.fonnation before a (state) Senate committee. "We stand by our marketing anal ys.is. It's accurate," he said. "Stonewalling" by American High Speed Rail officials is why the city undertook the study, Tustin City Manager William Huston u.ld. "We got nothing but generalized information to ques- tions we railled.'' The project "will have a very aerious lmpect" in Tustin as the propoeed lines run behind two large subdivisions, he said. Huston u.ld the names of ex- perts who have reviewed Rich- mond's findings will be revealed aoon. The intent is to derail the bullet train. "We can't do it. But we can alert other decision makers," he said. SPECIAL TY MEATS IDEI IOIE llOIST ........................ '1 41 u. SPEIOEll llOIST ............................. '4'' ... . LUI 1110111 IEEF ........................ '1 11 u. Fllll llAlllE._u ......................... '31' .... JOlll THiil IPPLES ... 3 ~.' 1 PUlfHI ID llllPPU '2" .... 1111111111111 ........................... , ..... UTUFllOY ClllDY APPLES ........ 3 ,., '1 I .I . # 1 llW lllP BIBY WILllUTS ........ 39• .... II -· , .. . . . :· > .. I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday. Oct. 26. 1983 \3 Jury condemns slayer of newsboy Lieutenant governor to speak at UC Irvine Thompson should get gas chamber, panel decides in second penalty d e libe ration Lt Gov U'O Ml'Carth:v will m~·l w ith UC lrvme students at a forum open to thl• µublic Thursday at 4:30 p.m. in the He ritage lfoom of Universit y Center. The rneeting will have s tudenlS an opportunity to question Califorrua's top Democrat about his support for higher education. Ml-Carthy 1s an ex-officio member or the UC Board of Regents. Amateur radio lectures sch e duled "Amateur Radio, Technician Class License Preparation," a six week lecture series, will be presented by Coastline College from ti·30 to 9:30 p.m. Thursdays, beginning this Thursday, at the Peterson Leam ing Center, 2066'1 Farnsworth I..ane, Huntington 'Beach. Lecturer Gordon West has designed the class for those who curTently possess a Novic:t• Class license The Technician Class test will be administ.C'red during the final series session. Reg1s trat1on rec ror the SNl<.'S is $22. For more infonnation on the program, l':.tll 241-6186. Program on proc rastination planned Learn tht.' µrit-e or procrastination at a free Irvine Family Service program Thursday beginning at 7;30 p.m. in Northwood Community Park, 4531 Bryan Ave .. lrvine. Charles M . Denny. a psyhcological counselor in Laguna Beach, will present a motivational workshop on understanding why people procrastinate and what t.o do about 1t. Further infonnat1on can be obtained by calling 660-3814. , Pumpkin carving contest in Irvine Teen-agers can t'nt.er their works of art in the great pumpkin carving rontest at tht' Lrvme F'me Arts Center T hursday afternoon between 3:30 and 5:30 p.m The frt"C conwst as held a t the center. located al 4601 Walnut Ave. m Heritage Park By JEFF ADLER Of!Mo.lll' .......... The man convicted of sexually molesting and killing 12-year-old Anaheim ne wsboy Benjamin Brenneman in 1981 should die in California's gas chamber, an Or- ange County Superior Court jury recommended Tuesday. After only one day of delibera- tion, the 10-woman, two-man jury returned to Judge Franciaco Bn.eno's Santa Ana courtroom and recommended 35-year-old Robert Jackson Thompmon receive a death penalty sentence rather than a lifetime prillon term. For- mal sentencing is set for Nov. 21. The decision marks the first time a penalty phase proceeding has been retried in Orange Coun- ty. An earlier jury, whi~h voted unanimously to convict Thompson of Brenneman's murder, dead- locked 9-3 on the death penalty question. The jury's verdict Tuesday was greeted with a cry of relief and tears from Brenneman's mother, Kay, w ho testified at the protracted proceedi.ngis and at- tended court virtually every day. She tearfully hugged friends as well as Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright, who handled the prosecution. "I'm pleased. It was a right decision by the jury. I believe the case called for the death penalty." Brenneman said. "The people sent • ' \ ' a. ' ,.., -"" . ,.,,., ~ · . !1 r •j:I ----~ 'Ransacked' home just well combed A woman. who told Huntington Beach police that someone had broken Into her Toulouse Drive home and ransacked the place. latet told officers the mess In her house had been created by her daughter who was having trouble finding something to wear to sehool. A briefcase, a set of golf club and a wallet were stolen from a car locked In a garage on Alpine Lane. The total loss was $ t ,000. Polloe we<e called to a Pacific Coast Highway shop In the downtown area when a person reported see4ng an lndlvldual who resembled draw- ings of one of the men who shot \MvlMc>n encnorman Jerry Dunphy. Polloe. though, said the man pointed out to them was the keyboard player In a local band. fountain Valley Burglars to•ced their way Into a home In the 16000 block of Mt Hutchins Street and 91ole Jewelry. a TV sea and an Atari computer worth St.700 Vandals caused $2,500 worth ol damage when they pushed over and broke an eight-loot lawn fountain in the 8000 block or Hummingbird Avenue. Someone stole a S 130 boys' five-speed bicycle and llS tock and chain from a bicycle rack at Fountain Valley High School Irvine A man wearing nothing but a hood covering his face streaked twice through the 3000 block of Claremont Street In lrvlne about 8 pm Tuesday night, observed by a glrl seated In a parked car waiting tor her boyfriend who was selling door to door. Robert Brown, 18, was ar<ested on suspicion of theft Tuesday morning. after police round the bike he was riding had been stolen In the last week. Jack Manciel, 24, waa taken Into custody tor allegedly po._.,ng marijuana and contributing to the delinquency ol a minor In an atreet abOut 9:30 Tuesday night. Newport Be ach A Newport Beech man reported the theft of tools trom hie car pertled In the 1400 block ot SuP«lor T~ day morning. The value of the loea was estimated to be $440, pollce aald A Newport Beach man reported the theft of hi& 1977 Mercedes 450 SEL Monday. The value of the car was estimated 10beS19.000. pollce said. A retired Newport Beach marine colonel reported the theft of a car stereo and other Items valued at S630 from Is car parked near Superior and Placentia Tuesday morning. A Newport Beach woman reported the theft of a 1966 VW beetle from the 600 blocl( of Promontory Drive Tues- day The value of the car was estimated 10 be $1,700, police said. A Newport Beach businesswoman reported the theft ol $80 In cash and a $40 music box from her Park New- port apartment Monday night Laguna Beach A blcycle valued by Its owner at $100 was stolen In the 1200 block of South Coast Highway, Laguna Beach pollce reported. A man seen peering In a window of a houae In the 200 blOck of Ruby Street pounded on a door before disappearing at about 10:30 p.m. police said. A fire belleved caused by clothes Igniting In a dryer wu qulctcty put out In the 3oo btodt of Magnolla Drive. Co11a Mesa A convenience store at the Harbor Ct\Yng Texaco station on 3001 HarlMW Blvd .. Coa\e MM. w .. rob- bed Mrty today of MO caah and l30 ~ A man deecnbed aa a O, lata 209, 8-feet-1, 200 pounda, cema Into the a1ora and put the grocerlea on the counter. A aacond man, wearing a Halloween mask and carrying a pocket knife, than ent9'ed and demanded the money and goods. The pair were lut aeen traveling northbound on Harbor In a black-topped car. Two euapec:ta arreated on burglary chargee by the Tustin Potlcia Depart- ment have been connected by ln- vestig.tOf'a to 30 burglarlaa of ltorege garagee In Coeta M ... over the lut thr• months. Harry Wood, 30, of S.nta Ana and WNllam Deeter. 38, .ctdr ... unknown. admitted to brMklng Into the ltOf'&ge arMS at 2950 Bear St. The Sweat Cream Shoppe, at 1170 Baker St .• WU borglertzed OV9f the weekend and SU01 In cash and m•chandl" wu atoten. Among the lteml llatad •• mlaalng: a microwave oven, candy, football carda, meet and 18 three-pound tuba of Ice cream. \ . . . -. . Fair skies with cooler air due Coastal C.llar"'91on.SC. Ch~tlMlon,W I/ C11orlo110 H C Ctieye<ine ~.,, I l>urMJty PllCl>y 109 ~long in• C..lllC~O OOUlll co..t NllV ll'UISO•y morning Clnc!nlletl Coolet fllurMlay Hight fhvttday at C._ond bea<.llft 74 lo 19 l ow• tonlghl 821011f Columbla.S C IOgho T lluf tdey In lite tnlend ••llevt ... on Cotumbua .. LOW9 tc>•"Qlll ~ 10 llf 0.Nat ~t W0<1h a.... ......, eo&a•el •• ,.,.. ~om p...,,, O.rton Cor>c«tnon 10 8811 C-tt '"''"" to o...-the ~Alawl &or-. toul,,.,..t wind I lo 0.. M- 12 ~no!• 1on1g111 Dec:om•no _, 10 o.l•Olt ....,,,,_, n to te AM II lhu•lld•Y Outu!" Iller,,_, Wi<td WIWO 2 IO 3 IWI Et PPG 8out-• ~· t 10 3 '"' . Fotrb•nko 0-CkAle< coetlll wet.,, f1om Point FttQ.0 Co/l(.itptlOfl to San c...,_,. 1111ne1 e.ne1 Flt>Q•t•n OUI (I() m1._. ltom c:outNt,., n0<thwftt Gr••I Fall• ...,..,, a to f5 •nott tonight ""-" Harll0<d 'fltundey S...3to51eet F.irTloottd•y -· b\11 ,..icny tog _.., T hu"'d..., fl'\Of't>lllQ ::= Extended ""'*'·-JrK.AloOn Min Joell-le ,,...,_.. IC111 ... c1tv l•• VeQAt lllt!e Roe~ t:.:r U.b-r.temp/Vo • ,,.,_ ,,.~ .. Mj)lt-SI P-./1 H-'f"' -Ct-. 1 emperalures ::=:- Tides 72 S7 (j() 41 n •5 87 37 68 38 54 31 5? 33 74 so SJ JJ e1 45 54 3' 70 35 58 39 58 3' 50 J9 6' 50 I!> 01 81 34 59 43 8ll 53 49 34 ee l2 .. 71 7;) ~ 81 37 ee o 7S ~ •7 :II 57 "° llO so 31 .. .. 73 97 37 6t 46 II 48 14 ,, sa "° 55 Jt 61 » ee M &3 45 82 ~2 NI-W .. 1'-lt SeMCe NOAA us Otpt Of Comm .. ce Fronte Cold .,. Warm 99 .. 2t 81 40 69 '' 71 IO 113 71 51 48 " 11 "'17 .. ti .. 48 14 » 13 40 72 )I .. " 67 .. ,, " Stationary•• H 5t 13 37 1• 80 " 1J 11 67 .. 21 92 .. .. 43 ., S2 .. 43 .. 44 ., ,. 74 .. .. 42 M 41 80 37 SURf REPORT ,., a rneuage to other people not to touch children." She added the verdict came two years and two months aft.er the day her 10n disappeared while working on hia newspaper l"OUte at an Anaheim apartment com- plex. Thompeon, his loNriah blond hair nea\ly combed, sat quietly as Across the nation on Just 15 gallons? By STEVE MITCHELL Ollftel>ellr""'ataft Jerry Greer and Chuck Guy figure they can drive across the United States -3,145 miles from Los Angeles t.O New York -on only 15 gallons of gas. If you don't have your calcu- lator handy, that's 209.66 miles per gallon. They'll be taking turns riding a 246-pound motorcycle that is en- cased in a fiberglass shell resembl- ing a squashed teardrop -or maybe a special effects prop from an old Flash Gordon serial. Okay, so it's ugly, but boy, is it fuel efficient. ·· The fiberglass fairing, still in need of a paint job, encloees a 185 cc, single-cylinder, four-stroke engine, unaltered by Greer or Guy. What has been altered are the fenders and the seat. They'fe gone. The pair also dropped the front forks, installed a smaller L5 gallon gas tank, smaller wheels and changed the gearing for better mileage. The purpose? "We want to show that it doesn't take a great amount of money or f ngineering skill to improve fuel efficiency," said Greer, who operates Greer Sport Fairings out of a 5,500-squ.are-foot factory in Costa Mesa. That may not be an easy task. For one thing, the two middle-aged cycle enthusiasts will take turns squeezing into the the jury announced the verdict. He removed hia glasaes brieOy and turned t.6 look over at his mother. Later, he asked to be ta.ken from the courtroom as Brenneman con- gratulated the proeecutor. Thompeon's mother sat silently as the verdict was announced, cloeed h eT eyes for a short time, and then hurriedly left the C.'OW'troom before the jury was dismissed. Jury members all refUied com - ment on their decision. Several jurors left the l lth-rloor courtroom with eyes that were noticably reddened. Judge Briseno, in acceµting thl' jury's decision, said only, ''It seems the verdict is proper " .. : ~1 . ... . .. ··' .. . : Dellr -....... ..., ti_ lllllc_ Jerry Greer tries out the controls as Chuck Gu y watches. The pair plan to cross the country on 15 gallons of gasoline. incredibly cramped shell every couple of hours during the seven-day trip. Once inside, they'll lay nearly prone. their chests, beards and elbows resting on the padded gas tank. For another, they'll have to maintain speeds of between 55 and 60 mph to get the most fuel efficiency from the renovated cycle, which, in its original con- dition gets only 81 miles per gallon. "There's never been a vehicle of any kind that has run thia d istanc.-e and maintained anything like 209 miles per gallon," Greer said of the pair's cycle challenge that begms Nov. 2. Costa Mesan Tom Heyser donated two standard motorcycles for the economy run -one o.f which will be cannjbaliu..-0 for parts as needed on the trip. Rider Magazine is sponsoring the rW1. providing a mobile home to trail the bike and, of course, the 15 gallons of gasoline. "We want this run to encourage the riding public to get mterest.ed in fuel economy c<.mt.ests rather than just speed compeution," Greer said "Yeah," his41-year-old partner said with a laugh. "That's because we're old and fat " Sheriff's survey under fire County manaser labels Gates' quiz 'emotional and redundant ' By JEFF ADLER Of ... Dlilr ~ -- Orange County Sheriff Brad Gates has attempted to sway public opinion in his favor by circulating a survey to 5,000 county reside nts that raises ques- tions about the levels of police services they are receiving, a top county official has charged. County Administrative Officer Bob Thomas, in a letter to super- visors, characterized the sheriff's surv~y as being "leading, e mo- tional and redundant." In addition, Thomas questioned the technical validity of the survey and informed supervisors the sheriff may have violated board policy because neither the survey nor its methodology was cleared with the county's program planning division as required. Gates, who aides said was in his Gem Talk B:r J.C. HUMPHRIES Certified Gtmolo611t , ACS PLATNIUM the enhancer What 11 more preclou1 than gold? Well, platinum for one thing. It 11 heavier, tougher and more valuable than gold. A cubic foot of platinum weigh• about 21 times u much at a cubic fQOt of water. Platinum does not corrode or tarnl1h. It 11 Impervious to the 1trongeet acids. It 11 uMd In the belt aurglceJ ln1trument1, In key part• of automotive catalytlc con- verter•. and ••• yea, In jewelry. Why 11 platinum not as popluar aa gold In Jewelry uee? Beeldea the coat, the only apparent drawback of platinum 11 that peopfe llmply are noy aocu1tomed to this beautiful metal. tt II lltghtfy whiter than lllver. and a bit aofter than gold. Fashion e)(pertl con- llder It the perfect tetttng for dlan'londt, beeauee 1t1 aon patina and leek of color reflection make a perfect "neutral" compenlon which altowa a diamond to stand out In all ltt natural beauty. The Mme qualltlet make It alao let.al for setting of cotored gern1, such •• emerald• or upphlr•. Top world producers of pi.ttnum are, In order, Ruaala, South Africa and C.nacta. l office today, could not be reached for comment. But according to the T homas memorandum, the sh eriff has asserted his right as an elected official to independently survey hia constituents without first clearing it through the CAO's office. The survey questions residents' attitudes toward certain rec- ommendations made by a private consultant hired by the Board of Supervisors to review sheriff's department operations. The con- sultant's study was submitted to supervilors several months ago. Thomas found four areas of concern with the 17-question survey: •That it is be biased because it is a mail-in questionnaire and "those who will respond will have 90me self-interest." •That the cover letter signed by Gates "raises fear of change." • That the wording of the survey is "leading. emotional and redundant." • That most of the questions were asked m such a way that they don't really fit the surve y's response fonna l. Thomas also said the questions in the survey are posed as if in a vaccuum, failing to take into account the financial impact of certain actions. The responses. then, "will be of little or no value." School slates sale The Newport E lementary School PTA plans a Nov. 5 rummage sale to raise money for equ ipment and school projects. A wide assortment of goods will be 90ld. For more in fonnation. call 760-3454. We'll 9lv• rou Immediate caahl With today's skyroc~eting gold prices. It pays to Cesh·ln on your unwanted. outdated gold 1ewelry Bring us your old gold chains. bracelets. pins . earrings. rings, etc .. and we'll give you Immediate c11h. That's rlght. .. Top Dollar for your old gold' J. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY 1809 t.'EWPORT 9LVO . COST A MFSA SINCE 1946 B1nkAmo11ct11d-Master Charge PHONE 548 J40t - . I I The Great New Wa To Bank Today you need more from your bank than ever before. But not just more accounts to choose from. More and better ac- counts to choose from. Plus the responsive, personal service that makes the business of banking a pleasure. And as California's largest savings bank, Great American Federal otf ers you a great choice of outstanding banking services. Along with the friendly, one-to-one attention our customers have enjoyed for nearly a century. So here are just some of the reasons why Great American Federal is the great new way to bank. Apply for one. 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This Bonus offer ends October 31, so clip and use the bonus coupon on this page, or pick one up at your nearest Great Amer- ican Federal office today. • Frdual law rtq11irts sub11anl/a/ lntnr1t /'('flalt)• /or rnrlJ• 14itltdr<1M"11 • ~· Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oc t. 26, 1983 TOPOFTHENEWS Bush views Beirut NATION Shuttle r e pair a dds day to launch d e lay By ~e A1aoclate4 Pre11 CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. -A leaky joint in a rocket booster for thespaceshutth•Colwnbia was repair-ed Tuesday, lifting one more obstacle to the shuttle's already-delayed launch. The leak forced at 1east a one-day delay in rescheduling Columbia's mission, which is to Lake aloft the $800 million , European-designed Spacelab. Slayin g susp ect critical • GILMER. • Texas -A rambling note alluding to the "sacrifice" of a family was found in the car of a 37-year-old man who police say shot himself when approached by a trooper for questioning in the shooting deaths of his wife and t.hn!e children. Gandabhi':v M. Patel remained in critical condition today·'at Marshall Memorial H08pital with a single gunshot wound in the abdome n . Autopsies were scheduled today in Longview on the bodies of Pate l's wife, Bhikhibev, 35; the couple's two daughters, Jayben, 9, and Shila, 6; and their son , Jayesh, 2. Man wanted back in jail UPPER MARLBORO. Md. -A convicted ·child moleste r sentencetl to five years for breaking 'Probation was accidentally released from jail. then spen t two days trying to convince officials to readmit him, his lawyer says. It finally took a call from the sentencing judge to officials at Prince George's County jail to get Alexander S. Fenwick, back behind bars. Jail officials said his sentencing record had been temporar ily lost. Sinatra criticized b y U.N. UNITED NATIONS -Frank Sinatra was singled out for special criticism today in the first United Nations listing o( entertainers said to have performed in South Africa despite a U.N. cultural boycott of the white minority-ruled nation. The 5 Yi-page register listed 211 individ- uals or groups from 23 countries as having acted. sung, danced, played or conducted in South Africa since Dec. 16, 1980, when the General A.membly adopted a resolution calling for "cultural, economic and other boycotts of South Africa" because of its apartheid system of racial segregation. Rites h eld I or Savitch ATLANTIC CITY, N.J The death of NBC News anchorwoman Jessica Savitch meant the "loss of a very beauuful person," sajd a newsman who delivered the eulogy at a privaw memorial service. Tearful relatives and friends of Ms Savitch. who began her career a t a small radio station here, gathered in tiny Roth Memorial Chapel near the Atlantic Ocean for the service Tue.day. WORLD Mt. Everest climb re lived PEKING -The leader of the first American team to conquer Mount Everest from the Tibetan side says death was onJy a step away during much of the climb. Dr. James Mornssey on Tuesday cre<fjted skill and teamwork for puttmg six mem bers of the expedition atop the 29,028-foot peak, the world's rughest 500 pro test in Phili ppin es MANILA. P hilippines -Led by an 85-year-old activist, more than 500 people protesting U.S . military bases in the Philippines demonstrated peacefully today in front of the U.S . Embassy after the Supreme Court blocked city government efforts to ban th' rally. U.S., Sovie t talks held GENEVA, Switzerland -U.S . and Soviet negotiators discussed limiting medium-range nuclear mi8siles in Europe while separate delegations from the superpowers debated reductions of long-range ballistic mism.Jes. The meeting Tuesday between U.S . negotiator P aul H . Nitze and his Soviet counterpart, Yuli A. Kvitainsky, was the 104th plenary session of the intenned.iate-range nuclear force talks, which began in November 198 l. Gunme n lire a t ambassad or ROME -Gunmen fired shots today at a car in wruch the Jordanian ambassador to Italy and hia driver w ere riding, the Italian news agency ANSA reported. It was unknown immediately if there were casualties. The attack came a day after the Jordanian ambassador to India, Mohammed Ali Khourma , was shot by a lone uuilant in New Delhi. K.hourma was in st.able condition today and improving rapidlv from six gunshot wounds, an embassy official said. IVlll•n'I BADLY STAINED 0t f~ ,, tOt'I Lo ~1f!Jtly '~'" ,ft<J •· '"• ., • '"'" ,,. '\qt •J ""' , ._,.,~ " vou COi" tMno.-t•1" c<.llCI' ,....,.,...,..,,...~ ,,. t ... ,.,.. • •• , ,,. , , • .,. ff ~r-or WE GUARANTEE I~-ttJIOr ht .... 1•_."'f~~t .-,.,,.1 ('(lkw IOI! ft)'., ..... ,. lt4 tfltllt .rnr ,., A wot""""''f\"" ' .,.,,, (I.HJ•,..~~""'· " ' ...,. (1eot1 th• ,,,,,,,., -t•11o W• ,...;_,,,_. fM kiif"""'t....., 'f'(.io<'tl! I (O.-fO" ~ 'O'ld _.... O"ll ' --~r•••, 1011 orr OUR REGULAR LOW PRICES' CAll FOi FURTHER INfO ANO P'llCE DYE-TECH OIANGI CO.'t LARGEST ... , .. .,. .... 543-3359 VP vows ter ror ist won 't cha nge U.S . po licy BEIRUT, Lebanon tAP) -Vi<.-c President George Bush, wearing a helmet and flak jacket, inspected the Jevast.ated Marine base where a bomb killed 219 American servicemen today and said "ansidious terrorist cowards" will not change U.S. policy. At dawn, before Bush's arrival, the Marines were fired upon with small anns, mortar and #. • bazookas and Cired back, said Maj. Robert Jordan, a Marine spokesman. Bush, standing before the moun- tain of rubble where rescuers were still looking for bodies from Sunday's bombing, George Bush said: "We're not going to let down friends beca'-';;e of terror." "We're not going lo let a bunch of insidious terrorist cowards shake the foreign policy of the United States," he told reporters. "Foreign policy is not going to be dictated or changed by terror." Bush later left Lebanon, but his destination was not known. The lat.est Pentagon figures plal'ed the death toll from the suicide terrorist bombing at the Marine post to 219 dead and about 70 wounded. The French command today put its casualties at 48 killed. 15 wounded and 10 missing. Jordan, detieribing the shooti11g at- ta<.'k on the Marines today, said the Americans "fired two rounds from 8 l mrn mortars" toward the eastern perimeter of the base at Beirut airport. There were no reports of casualties, and the attackers were not identified. A convoy of bulletproof cru-s took Bush from the Marine camp to a Ch-53 Sea Stallion helicopter. Lebanon's state radio said Bush and his wife, Barbara, wore bulletproof flak jackets and st.eel helmets as they toured the ruins of the Manne com- pound . Accompanying Bush. on th~ tour were Marine Commandant Gen. Paul X. Kelley. who arrived at the base Tuesday, Regmald Bartholomew. the new U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon, and Col. Timothy Geraghty, commander of the 1,600 Marines here w ho are part of a four-nation peacekeeping fort-e. Kelley said Tuesday that security measures at the base were "very adequate" and that It would have been difficult to prevent the terrorist bomb- ing. Surrounded by a phalanx of Marines, Bush and his party boarded the helicopter. He flew to the Lebanese presidential palace for talks with Presiden t Amin Gem ayel and Lebanese Army Commander Gen. Ibrahim Tannous, Jordan said. SOLJD GOLD RUMMAGfi.. 'A l~E , 'I II' 1111<1 lll'tllh Ill'\\' d11rh111~ /11r I/It II. II fl/I/('// 1111rl d1iftln•11. 0 EDA >" 0 IJ' SATUl<l>AY. OClOBER }9, l'J8? 8 A.M. u1 ../ l~M. ORA,V(il:' ( OUN'IT fAIRGROl'.\ll).\ ( 'n1/i.~ B111/d111}.!. 11 16 VYc , 1r/i11xtrm Dri1'<' £111mm e GENERAL ADMISSION -fRl:.I. \1w< utl )5 dn1111r11111 /111 < 111ltl Rm1111 /1 tlll//1fll:, 111·11 tC <ftmf/11 /Ill r/ tf1 •\tKlll'I 1 {11//111/1!, \/'"" 11/11/l'l f/\f 11 fl• 'I fH11/1I 11 Hiii IUl"tlH I/till/ 1•1111 fll/111. t 111111"1 f •H,,/\ Liq•1or -Barn V isa & Maste rcard Gladly Accepted ~---You get "·hat.eve r vou "·a nt, ___ ,,, and \'OU 2e t it fo r le~s. , ''3(/~ ~ ~'Uf#,, Andre C hampagne Extra Dry, P ink or Cold Duck 750 ml $} 8 8 Cn,~mont • ·•11c •• \I. ; t ,,, , 99 ~ Tavt'rn .......... , ..... ,,. 11_i .. ,,. '!i J5'> Ro~c ·~ G n •n aJim.• 1 ·,. '5 12 9 Mixe d togethe r to r a gre at punc h ~s~ Seagram '!'I ~1695 t ~:.?.,;II M\' p,.,.,,f I . I:; I 1ll·r 12,66 'UI~ O o n1 ain\.' C hamlo n ;;,• ... t $8 98 P <arJU'-'.\.'i Bo ll ingt•r "; ,, ml $ 2 6 6 ' \ 1111 '• 'I'• I\ I "t "'''' $2 66 I l.•1 111 \ ppl. 1 \ .. 1, r I ; I ••• r ,., .. , Beau jolais Lichinr Alexis (France) Cella ,.,•, .. 1 $}7 95 7'"""$3777 Carlo R ossi" s :.i,::~ff $897 \ ... 11 •. 1 I . 7'i Lita ~ II I t il1H tlHln I •11 .. I • '. I ....... 11. I I ... . ...... 1 "'., 1• 111 1 ~· • 1 ... r ..... I loll -u1 °11 1.:1 4• t11f I• I 1 "f •' ·•11h t1n I• "· •• I\. 101.•l 11 '' ·i·I 1 I. 111. 111J "I \1 lf!I f 01 11 II! 1hu I. 11 ' 1, 1111 I 11111 I'', l,u,' Lambru sl.·1i. Ro~aw P r Biarn.·,, ~~·~ Rohl.· rt Mo nJavi ·• .. , .. "·• .... $J 99 Bacardi tl •. t \\ luh •'I u.n.i I ; I lh' Ch;1hli:.. Pink C h.1hli,, Hh i 1w. \'in H 11'l'' or Burgumly '1h1 I UI \ t1l•1 r I,.,,,,, 9 97 Vinccll i ., ... , ...... ,..... $J 29 Captain Mtlr~an ,, ..... 111 ..... 1 ,,,.,.,$9 99 u •• 1 .• , \\ 1 .... u. I .... '""'',.,~, I\~ ••UIH I w I; I Ht•f $7 98 ''. .. . $499 Mvcr:.', .... , .. ,..1p.,, ... "'' nuvcr aan 1 I :; I 1h:• s~ II "I ",..,,.,, $J 99 I. i I 1h'r ,., __ . O IJ · rnu~glcr ... "'"'' 1 ; , 1 ,,, , $9 98 \ trn11l1.u t l\1111 Bud1:~~::.~ Keg ~3 lir'I '''r\ l'1I. ~ lh K eg 95 ~ 'k/Uu4 ~ ~~ 'A¥"9'"' Alkan tl.' Bo usc hl't ;;,11111 $4 99 ;:;,, "'' $5 99 iil'ml $4 99 Johnnil' Walk\.•f ,. ', ", ', ·'""'1 8 95 Canada Dry Mins 10 OL Na 6 Pac11 • • 1 se Spu mantl' o•An~do Mu~cato O'Angclo •I 'lj ••II" 1•1• P epsi or P e psi Free ll<'~ul;i r or Di<'l $ 09 l U1" 1 ',,,, .. , $16 95 ..... 1. ,,,,, .. 1.1•, I ·t I ~~ Oly mpia ... 111.1 ... 111•1·..L 1• .. , .. ,.SJ49 chaefcr Coors Miller H1 ~111.~, •• I ·~,,I I I',.,~ 11 .... ) 3 42 s . 11.,.}JJ25 \Vc•IJ Meet A n y C u rrent outhcrn alifornia AdvcrtiscJ Price. 31 LOCATIONS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA \t1 ,,,,,\1.1 lht1,1-. ....... t t ... ,, .. 11\•f••\• ,,.,, .. n,. ''to•••f411" ll1ttt1J \n•h••m f11lm'1••1t11t"' flh .. ,.,.,n,I'''~ f't 1111.tM I u1 t~ht f1ll .... t1 • 11t.,:1l'ol ''''ll•1l1lf1fl Mnoi .. ,f, • • , • 'h , u "" h·,, .... ,. .. .,,,.~ 1• .... ,,;,, ,, t ~ •• , ., •• ,,,1,., f ~" ,, I\, 1101•\•,, \\, , l "' '". i h .... ., 1t..a.. ,., .. • 1 1 '"'"·'· t ' ''· .... l111r• ,, '' "· • h '"' "" ,.._. ""'I'• 1t,. ''· •• '' I h '" °'·l'll(\ I >1•nw•ll r llOJ 1mrtlrll'•' ht•i•r•, "111c•, d1.1111p.11,rn•·• ilml •pinl,, ,111 ,,, 1IH' 111" l''I J1" .111u1 pri, ,.,, 1726 Superior Ave., Costa Mesa -Phone : 64 5-1608 25876 Mulrlands, Mission Viejo · Phone : 855-1437 10932 Westminster, Garden Grove · Phone: 638·4145 263 St>uth Euclid Avenue , Anaheim· Phone: 991 -6892 ' . • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 De Lorean tape leak probed Court backs landlords ' Berkeley .,.ent control law ruled unconstitutional LA supervisor calls for congressional, grand jury investigation SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Land-lnC unwarranted rent lncreue. and} LOS ANGELES (AP) -The U.S . attorney's U.S .DiatrlctJudgeRobertTak.aaugiindellnitely Jorda have a JiCht to a reuonable therefore deprives 1andlorda of due" office has launched a criminal Investigation into a postponed De Lorean'• Nov. 1 oocaine-a>r11pi.racy return on their investment, and they Jll'oce9I of law." ( news leak of FBI tapes showing automaker John De trial Monday and said a decision by CBS to show the ahould not be vict1ma of awkward rent 'The law fon:ed landlorda to ~1 Lorean allegedly involved In a drug deal, but tapes could have a "devaat4ting effect" on the trial. control measures, a state Court of individual petitions to have their vtewa1· CBS-TVdefendsitauaeofthetapes. GeneMater,CBSaeniorvicepresidentfornews, Appeal held In separate dect.iona considered In the eettlng of rent "What was involved is pcmibly stolen govern-said "We didn't obtain the tapes directly. Flynt had affecting the cities of Berkeley and ceilings, the court said. ment property. We are quite upeet about what CBS the tapes and they were real; and the story was Cotati. But the court upheld Cotati'• rent has choeen to do with this material," acting U.S. newsworthy. How he got them was not a major The court aaid Tuesday that control law, which requirel that land- Attomey Alexander Wllliams said Tuesday. laaue." Berkeley's rent control law was un-lords get a reasonable return on their · He said his office was "vigorously pursuing" an The lniUal tape showed De Lorean's arrest -constitutional because it containee an investment. investigation into who leaked the tapes to Hustler allegedly with cocaine preeent. The latest installment "inexcusably cumbersome rent adjust-The Cotati Jaw is reasonably rela magazine publisher Larry Flynt, who turned them showsDeLoreanprlortohisarrest,diacusalngmoney ~ mentprocedure." toavalidgovemmentalpurpoeeofren over to CBS News. and "monkeys," said to be a code word for kilos of The court also said the procedure control, the court said In reventna a Los Angeles County Supervisor Kenneth Hahn narcotics, with FBI informant and codefendant was "not reasonably related to the Sonoma County Superior Court de- called Tuesday for congressional and federal grand ,__W_llllam __ M_o_r_gan __ H_e_tri_c_k_. ---------~J_o_h_n_D_e_L_o_r_e_a_n ___ o_rdinan~· __ ce_'_s_s_ta_ted_p_ur_poee __ o_f_p_re_v_e_n_t· __ cia_i_o_n. __________ --' jury lnvestigations into the leaks, which he said looked suspiciously li)le "a setup for a mistrial." "It was very strange and mys~rious how FBI tapes could be sold," Hahn said. He asked if "justice could be perverted and bought off." "Since this case involves people of great wealth, power and influence, the question must be asked if our national justice and law enforcement is being tampered with," Hahn said. TOP OF THE NEWS STATE Anderson may seek 'Unity' nomination By tbe A11oclated Prfl1 SAN FRANCISCO -Fonner U.S . Rep. John Anderson, who ran for president in 1980 as an indepel)dent, said he would run again if he could be sure a new party he is trying to found would be listed on ballots. Anderson, who as a Republican represented an Illinois congressional district for 20 years, was in California Tuesday tQ discuss chances for placing a new ''National Unity Party" on the ballot. Arson fire in El Cajon EL CAJON -An arson fire scorched 100 acres of brush and singed two roofs and a porch on "90me very expensive homes" before it was fully contained by firefighters. The blue broke out at 4 p.m. Tueeday in hills above the Singing Hills Country Club. Reward off erd for gunmen LOS ANGELES -A TV station offered $25,000 for infonnation on the assailants who wounded anchorman Jerry Dunphy and his female paaaenger in what police theorized' was the latest in a 9el'ie9 of random "drive-by" attacka by gangs. Four gunmen opened fire oo Dunphy and KABC makeup artist Sandra Marshall as ,. they drove near KABC'a studios Monday night. Dunphy was hit in the neck and left arm, a bullet 1odg1ng in his neck, but he ia in stable condition today. Marshall waa shot In the right arm and was also In stable condition at the hospital. Student named Rose Queen PASADENA -A 17-year-old high school senior studying for a career in business adminis- tration has been selected queen of the 95th Tournament of Roees and parade, officials announced Tuesday. Ann Marie Colborn, a student at Mayfield High School in Pasadena, was chosen from 977 initial candidates. 2 boys, stepdad shot to death LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two young boys and their stepfather were shot to death in the living room of an apartment in the suburban Panorama City &eetion of Los Angeles. police said Tuesday. All were shot in the head and pronounced dead at the scene by city paramedics, police homicide Investigator Andy Monsue said. The boys' mother. Gilda Reed, discovered the bodies when she returned home from work about 11:30 p.m. Monday, police spokesman Rod Bernson said. The victims were sprawled on the blood-spattered floor of the apartment's living room, Bernson said. The dead were identified as the woman's husband. Charles Reed, 33, and her sons, Issac Berkly Miller, 11, and Jonta Miller, 5. Mrs. Reed was identified only as a secretary in her 30s. Bernson said no motive for the killings had been established. but he said there were no signs of forced entry, theft or a struggle in the apartment in the 9400 block of Van Nuys .Boulevard. BASIC HEAL TH CARE Edwin H. Riedell, M.D. and Ken Lacroix, M.D. An Office Center specializing in Weight Control, Arthritis Therapy and Alcohol Recovery - After Detoxification Dtfiite Physical and Meclcal lqwovement Wltl*I 30 days when cu prosram Is folowtd 1817 Westcllff Dr., Suite 205 ewport Beach, CA 548-1183 Pico Rivera, CA 714-871-2109 213-945-6488 213-949-4011 . . Winter Jackets FOR THE FAMILY ROSS is the off·price fashion store that Invites comparison. Shop department af1d specialty stores. Note the labels. the assortments. and most of all. the prices. Then come to ROSS and be amazed. The same labels. the same or larger assortments. Only the prices are different. 2011{, to 60% off. EVERY SINGLE DAY. Come choose the warm. fashionable jackets you want for yourself and your family. Find every new and traditional styte. All with nationally advertised or designer labels. Then pocket the savings. at ROSS. COMPARE THE QUALITY LABELS! COMPARE THE VAST ASSORTfr'ENTS! COMPARE THE EVERY DAY 20% TO 60% SAVINGS! • H ' FOiZ t I EL TORO Rockfle1d Blvd. & El Toro Rd. (7141 855·0084 'TORRANCE Pac:lllc CoHt Hwy ., AnH Av• (2t3) 373-0784 RIV.RSIH Madlngton Square 4080 Madison at Arlington (714)1fSBM~930 THOUSAND OAKS Village Square Shop. Ctr. (805) 4H·3393 S'TORE HOURS; MON• ,RI 10 AM · 9 PM, SAT9 AM -e N & SUN 11 AM· I PM Visa. MasterCard, & American ••preH acce_.ted. • . ·:~ .,,. , ~ ... ~ '": • # ~ . ., . I .. . , Al Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 l \ \ i i \ l -- I I .. ..... ·-..... ... • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 A9 FINALLY, A NEW WAY TO BEAT THE PRICE OF TOP BRAND SPORTS SHOES AND APPAREL . . o · 0 . HOW DO WE CUT IT? By marathon buying, racing for the good stuff like overstocks, closeouts and some slightly irregular merchandise . And, asking you to serve yourself. That's how we can offer the top brands at such unbeatable prices . • Starting now, and everyday· from now on, we'll cut 25°/o to 75°/o off shoes like Nike, New Balance, Adidas, Pony and more ... for men, women and kids. And the same goes for men's and women's top brand running suits, sweats, shorts, sport jerseys and rain gear. And, don't forget our special Grand Opening extra 20°/o off, Thursday thru Sunday. You may never save like this again . Now, finally, you can run with the best, without sweating the price . . .. BEATS THE COST OF SPORTS SHIES EVERY DAY. Tustin: ~ Huntington Beach: Fullerton: 12872 Newport Blvd. 17362 Beach Blvd. 2949 Brea Blvd. Store Hours: Mon:-Fri.10-9 Sat. 10-6 Sun. 11-5 .. ~. ' ..c:. Ale Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 Drilling ban good but it's not-enough When proposals ariae for making use of Orange County's coastline, the usual adversaries are those who want to preserve its natural state versus those who would develop and improve it in the legitimate pursuit of making a dollar. We know from recording continuing battles over areas such as Bolsa Chica, the Irvine Coast and South Laguna that these battles can tum bitter and often end up in court. It is indeed rare when those representing the two sides find themselves united on an issue. But that's what has occurred when it comes to lobbying Congress to stop oil drilling near the coast from Newport Beach to the Mexican border. Members of both sides want it stopped because they are aware that oil rigs near our coast are not worth the negative -perhaps even disastrous -consequences they would produce. Today's demand for petroleum doesn't merit the need to spoil a coastline, if only by corrupting a magnificent view or, worse, by spilling a black flood of crude oil to smother our beaches and our tourist industry with it. When a matter carries such a clear danger to a local population that people harboring opposing points of view on most coastal matten suddenly find themaelves united to fight off-shore oil drilling, they must be heard. Credit Sen. Pete Wilaon, R-San Diego, for pushing in the Senate for a long-term ban on drilling within a 20-mile buffer zone. His ban wouldn't stop all drilling, we note, but it would protect part of this coastline and its commerce. "IM 60IN610 MISS RtMr~ ... THE R:>oR PEVILS HAD MOR£ MONEY FOR THEIR REPAIRS.'' Iran's signature on, bomb attack Wilaon last week won a one-year moratorium from drilling, but Congress, prompted by strong push from oil companies, was reluctant to pass a pennanent ban. The moratorium is included in a $7.9 billion Interior Department appropriations bill President Reagan is expected to sign. One of the concessions Wilson was granted was a hearing next spring to focus on.his propo8a.l for a 10-year ban. That hearing would give Wilson a chance to show how, as he says, the concerns of traditional coastal rivals are not always mutually exclusive. It's easy to give lip aervioe to the need for developing domestic energy supplies, but few areas are less appropriate -aesthetically as well as economically -for the intrusion of drilling rigs than the off-shore region in sight from our homes, our hotels and restaurants, our hillsides and our beaches. "We think the area ought to be the bottom of the barrel when it comes to selecting drilling sites,'' explained Wilson's press secretary Otto Bos. We strongly agree and urge Wilaon to keep pushing for a more satisfactory length of time for the ban. MAILBOX WASHINGTON The Ayatollah Khomeini's finger- prints are all over the suicide attack on U.S. Marine head- quarters that literally decimated the American peace-keeping force early Sunday morning. '°! No one can yet say for sure. of course. There's a poaibility that the muaacre of Marines was pulled off by a terron.t group that deliberately U8ed Iranian tactics to throw auapicion on the fanatical old mullah. But there ia circumstantial evidence that backs up Defeme Secretary Caspar Weinberger's remark that Iranian terroriata may have been responsible for the outrage. And It's more th.an just the call to a French news agency that claimed that the twin attacks -against U.S . Marinea and the French peace-keeping force - were the work of "the Iranian revolution's campaign against im- perialiat targe1a throu&hout the world." For one thing, the au.cb had all the eannarka of the bombin8 of the American Embuay lut April: A kamikaze ml..-ion by a fanatic driving a truckload of exploeives. G. -JIC ....... 1 ....... 11-1-fl-ll-I -~· The National Security AaencY and the CIA both had advance indications that a pro-Iranian Shiite Moelem group waa plan- ning to attack the embuay. The intelligence reports abo warned that preparations for the embuly attack were aupervt.ed by a high official in the Iranian Foreign Ministry -presumably with Khomeini'• approval. An organization calling itaelf the Ialamic Revolutionary Move- ment -previously unknown - has claimed "credit" for Sunday's bombings. But my intelligence sources say this group could well be part of a known pro-Iranian organization called the Ialamlc Jihad. The blAmic Jihad la a prime auapect in the expbion that killed 17 Americana ln the Beirut em- buay. lul April. And It.a prior record of violence has been cla.ely followed by U.S . intelligence agencies. The Jihad claimed credit for a car-bomb explosion that killed 12 penona in the French Embuay in Beirut 18 months ago. It alto took responsibility for grenade and machine-gun attacks on American and Italian peace-keeping troops in Beirut 1ut March. The Jihad ia an offshoot of Amal, a Shllte paramilitary or- ganization that haa tried to export Khomeini'• extremist revolution to other parts of the Middle Eut. Specifically, the CIA holda Kh()Jlleini responsible for an aborted attempt to aet up a revolutionary state in Turkey through the Iranian consulate in Istanbul; a planned coup in the Persian Gulf state of Bahrain; a meeting in Cyprua of Saudi Arabian opposition leaders to plot infiltration of the military and eventual rebellion by the large Shiite minority in Saudi Arabia; and the financing of aecret trips to Iran by MoaJem student.a who are ~~ tn1n1n& by What la probably most per- auulve, though, ia the fact that Khomeini hu hundred• of Tehran-trained terrorists acat- tered throughout the Moslem world -from Lebanon to In- donesia. In Lebanon, Khomeini's terrorista are holed up in the northern mountains around Bu.lbek. The Iranian terrorists could not. of coune, have engineered the Beirut airport attack without the cooperation of the Syrians, who may have given them munitions and certainly let them sneak in Beirut'• back door to do their dirty work. Syria ia hoping to drive the international peace-keeping forces out of Lebanon and take control of the country once they have left. . Some CIA analysta suspect that MOKOw may be behind the Beirut carnage -to keep the United States from aending Marines into the Caribbean Wand of Grenada to overthrow the hard-lihe com- munist regime that just took over ina bloodyc:oup.A U.S. Navy task fc:Jl'Ce wu sent to the Grenada uea with enou.&h Ma.rinea to do the,.. So in thia view, Yuri ~ tried to ct.e ••nate ~ apn by maklng • decmve move on the other side of the global cheeaboard. ?:~'°~JJnddi-ive::;~:.::.:.~:. Cranston's campaign survives To respond to the suggestion in Council was the.n organir.ed, and the Daily Pilot Letters to the highly qualified estate planning By THOMAS o. EUAS ClllfDRllA flCUB the long haul. It simply demon-F.ditor that community colleges profeeaionals ln the areas of law, atrates the grave dangera ln the should establish appropriate accounting, investing and in-He's still a definite underdotf, world today. It ia symptomatic of foundations for tax-deductible aurance were recruited. Thia vol-but the laat few week.a have the danger we all face when we're gi.fta, we aiOrange Coast College unteer group meets regularly to shown that not even the Soviet the airliner'• wreck.age. constantly targeting each other." agree wholeheartedly. establish gift acceptance policies, Union can euily knock California Instead, Cranston ran atrongly But when the public start.a The community which ia 9el'Ved to generate donor proepecta and to Sen. Alan Cranston out of the ra.ce in the Maine ca\IC\.IM9 and hla taking a real interelt in next year' a by Orange Coast College ahould meet with potential donors, to for next year' a Democratic presi-just-releued fin.andal atatement election and Cranaton 'une=age ia know that we have been at it since name but a few of thelr dential nomination. abows that when he get.a hia communicated to mueea of 1955. The foundation in support of 1eU-impoeed responsibilitie11. If anything could have meant matching funds from the Federal Americana, how appealing can it ~Coast College waa ~b-Legitimate fund raising efforts anearlydeathforthecampaignof Elections Commi8aion on Jan. l , be? liahed for ~e purpoeeof purswng which will helpotfaeteducational a''peacecandldate'' likeCranat.on, he'llbewellenougheettooompete That memage: ''l would sign an and accepting annual and de-costa l'e<IUire hard work and take Ruaaian atonewalling after the in the early going both in Iowa and anna control agreement • 8000 as {erred gift.a, which will be u8ed to time to generate funds. We are Sept. 1 Korean airliner incident New Hampahltt. pomible, but of cowwe I would not support the large number of attempting to rai8e funds and are should have been it. Why did the Soviet behavior trust Andropov. We would have to academic programs on this cam-doing 90 with great enthusiasm; The aftermath of that epi8ode not kill the Cranston candidacy? have the capll':ity to check on pus. we believe that we have our showed the Soviets at their wont, Perhaps lt waa for the aame compliance, ao that lf they In late 1982, a profeeaional community's support and en-lying~ covering up for days. It reuona that Pnsident Reagan's cheated, thett would not be .fund-~ firm was hired by oouragement. wu fraught with po1ential harm restraintwonaomanyplaudit.afor lrremedial ~to ua. That'• the Aleociated Studenta to de-An extensive fund-raising cam-toac.and.idate who has vowed that him. why we have cont:racta." velop a comprehensive fund de-paign for Orange Coast College hla first act in the White Houae "I'm convinced that the air-But cont:racta with the Soviets velopment program specifically Wi.1IbeunderwayonNov.17with would be a phone call to dWcuse plane inc:ldent aubetantiat.ed the are often abrogated and they're designed for Orange Cout Col-the meeting of the College En-anna control with Ywi Andropov. cue for making an all-out effort to not enforceable in U.S. COW1a. lege. The endowment fund was dowment Council. But the record of the lut three reduce the danger of nuclear "rm afraid he's going to come then launched with a five-year. weeks demonstrates that no mat-war," Cranston aaid over break-a c r o s a a s ext r e me 1 Y $15 million goal. Plana for auch a BARNET RESNICK ter how naive Cranston may fut recently. "It complicates my well-intentioned, but naive," said goal and the realization of it Chairman 10und, hla candidacy did not sink candidacy brieOy, but I don't one veteran DemocTatic campaign aound tough enough." But Cranston shows no signs of changing hla tune, toughening his rhetoric. And the record shows it hasn't hurt him yet. "I've traveled to a lot of states ainoe the airplane incident," Cranston said. "And I think the people want ua to talk seriously with the RUMiana. Sure, we don't truat them. and any agreement must be verifiable, but we muat talk.'' So far, that me.age has ob- viously appealed to a lot of Democrats. But can it sway enough Democrats to win the nomination? Or enough Ameri- cana to elect Ccanstoo president? Ronald Reqan, W.It.er Mon- dale and John Glenn all obviously believe the answer to both ques- tions la a reeounding "no." Thonuu El.ills 18 a Santa Monica-bu«/ columnist on state Jasuea. cannot be achieved in a vacuum or Orange C.oaat College lnto the Sea of Japan along with think It will be negative for me in official. "His ""988e just doesn"t without the help of experts. The Endowment Council -----------------------------.... ------------------ l.M. BOJd /St. Everywhere A revolt against men's stupidity Q . What town WU rwned aft.er a novel? A. You mean "St. Elmo"? Not juat one but nwneroua towna were named ln honor of that piece of fiction -towns in Alabama, Tennemee. Georgja. California, Colorado, Dllnoia, Kentucky. Lou- . Waqa, Mlmllllppi, M.imowi, New Yark. TexM and Virginia. The novel "St. Elmo" w• writi.m af1ef' the avU War by Aucu-ta Jane Evans, who had greet faith in her optnionl. 11)e tort of cu you drive lnfluencet your chanclee of betna ticketed for speeding. Or '° the ~ retearchers aver. They Ny ORANGE COAST Dally Plat they've documented at leaat one statiatic: The apeeder'a automobile most likely to be stopped ia the red Corvette. Q. What's the difference be- tween "naked" and "nude"? A. Naked lmpllel unprotected. Nude meeN unclothed . More than 3, 700 public Ubrarie11 ln the United States and Canada lend Polarold carneru. Q. U Henry Ford made $2 on each Model T, how much WM that? A. He built 15,007,033 from 1907 to 1927. U my battery ls atlll good. that'• $30,014,066. H.L lchwertz • l'llCllW* C"-1Dow81br Hiier lftd MllltWl4 .... ~ ~.wy .......... ,._,...~ o.... ...... ~-·-•ioatotowl ' L.rrJD ....... c-.. ...... CA .... .............. - I •uapect that the fuel that has fanned the flames of feminism in America baa been lea the eoclal and economlc inequities auffered by woman, real and prevalent aa they have hem, than the simple. pervlllve and lnfuriatlnc fact that the bulk of men are insufferably clW'nl)' in \heir confrontationa with the other 11ex. It ia an euy .-umpUon made by mmt men that, while they may no\ unden\and w~ women do not undentand them either - and thua that there ii a mutu.ily unexplored terrain that separates theeeue. 1 do not believe thla. If we have learned anythlnc from the new field of aocial psychololY, it ia th.at minort\y groups of any kind have • poeater •warenma of the ~and w.ucne-of their mMters than thetrmu\en have of them. Dominance makee a ru11.na group atupld. It d<>e1 not matter where you look. Servants have a shrewder • perception •bout thelr employer. IYlllY 1111• ~ ~ than vice vena: bl.licka have been forced to lfMP the Inner clynamlc:8 of whl• purely M • matwr of aurvtv.i, man than whites have ever bothered to do the mne: and homo9exUala, I have no doubt, eee more ~=into the unbiCWU. of the t world than they are perceived by ii. Women, belng al80 1 minority poop -.odally if no\ numert· cally -have Md to develop• ·~vu lf!l'\le1' about their male mut.eR. I don't believe in 80n'.le-thlnc called woman'a lntu.iUon (u Oecqe Jean Nathan IAld lona ~ "Woman'• tamoua lntu.ition ll only IDUl'• tnnlpanmcy"), but ahe doet ..-U\ lnllaht into men'• motivel end mooda th.at he utterly faila lo rwdprocat.e. betnc content to i.be,l her an mllJna. Beca~ of thll diapuity in pen:epdon, mm drive women up the wall with a repertoire of behavior and respomes that cor- responds only to what men im- -alne women IU'e like and not what they really are. The male haa eet up an lmage of the female (much u the .iitebellwn eouthem white did of the ''darky"), and women by now are almply refu.- lnl to live up, or live down. to thia uncomtorUble diatortion of reell- ty. What the whole apate of ttamt femlnilt books haa been •Ytna la &Mt women will no 1onpr pUt up wtth the traditional mucullne attitudel -which are, to name but a few of the molt prominent, condeacendlng, patronillna, whlmlical, heavily jocular, stereo- typical, .xually demeen1nl and aro-l.Y lneenaitlve to real pnerlc llmllartU.. It ll -.. l believe, an economJc and IOclal revolt than an erupUna ptyeholoO:al one. Ju.t • the bi.ck wtil no~ tolerlte betnc called ''Boy,'' \he woman will no lonaer tolerate being diam.illed aa "Girl." It ia her perllOnhood she I.a procJ.airnlrig. not her indepen- dence. •ttst .... -..-.... -.... - "No, sir. I 'm not the secretary, I'm the boss. Are you the secretary?" Illy Piii WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 26. 1983 ANN LANDERS ENTERTAINMENT 82 83 84 NBC's "St. Elsewhere" has a new coat of paint and a new lease on life as it starts its second 1ea&0n tonight. Page 83. 0 0 COMICS AdoP.ted wonaan She discovers her natural mother liY BARTl.ETT when Katrina identified herself on the Newllea~ Writer telephone, were: "I hope this is what I atr'UMl Maxtone-Graham think it is, I hope my little girl has p~ her;ielf she found me," wouldn t wnte. a book. It Her mother then filled In some of the would~ too painful, Then pieces. She was a teen-ager heneH, she decided it . unmarried, when Katrina was born. would be too painful not to wnte it. Her mother desperately wanted to Katrina was an adoptee, one of a keep her. So she refused to sign the wing number who have set out to adoption papers. Instead, every Satur- pearch for their natural parents. But day she was permitted to go and visit Katrina's caae had a special wrinkle: her daughter at the foeter home. Then, be waa 3 Yi years old by the time she for whatever reasons, the foeter homes adopted and she remembered started changing. And Katrina's ~ from the life before her adop-mother realized she couldn't do that to on, shadow memories though they her little girl. She tearfully signed the ere. papen relinquishing all her rights. She remembered, for instance, a Maxtone-Graham then was able to yery matronly woman who had held find the woman she knew had loved er and cradled her. She somehow her, a woman she calla Mama Hill in the mrr-it was not her natural mother nor book. Mama Hill was nervous at first it the woman who eventually meeting but when she learned Katrina became her adoptive mother. But who had been adopted and grown up with aa she? She remembered an older onefamily,hadbeenwelleducatedand y, a brother she thought at the time, waa all right, she wanned up. She ho lived in the same hou.e. Who and began telling Katrina about henelf as a here was he? She remembered a field child. little things like she liked meat here ahe played, a piano and, haunt-better than candy. She then got out y. eomeone who would simply not photographs and uked if Katrina •llll!U!Tl to her, believe her, when she was would like eome. Finally, she went and telling the truth. got her wallet and pulled out the The riddle of the1e ghosts was as picture of Katrina as a little girl. Mama stniog aa the drive to find the woman Hill bad carried it in her wallet for over who bore her, ahe aaya. 40 yean. "The 90cial workers thought I would She found the man who ahe thought just dry up and flO away once I found of u her brother, she found the woman my natural mother," says Max-who didn't believe her, she found woe-Graham. "But it waa really the half-brothers, half-silt.era. uncles and ~ ibree I wan.-1 -1"Q)' natural couslna, Her natural father waa deed, lhrdJMll', that other woman and the but ahe learned a lot about him. bl'other.l.alwayafeltthatotherwoman Now 48, Katrina charaderizea her had been the psycholotiieal role model le&l'Ch aa a le&l'Ch for her survival, for me u a mother. I knew it when I despite the pain it would cau.e her to bad my four children." re-aeate it all on paper In longhand. Her book, eight years in the writing, "1 cried every time I sat down to ia called "An Adopted Woman." It writefortheflnttwoyean,butlknew chronicles her difficult but suoce91ful I had to keep going. It was in one 1enBe aearch for her roots -all of them. a tribute to the people who helped me, Maxtone-Graham, now divorced, re-the aecretaries who were friendly on la tee her metamorphosis from the timid the telephone, the neighbors near the 38-year-old who hesitantly ap-houaes where I bad lived, the strangen proeched the adoption agency to the who wished me good luck." later activist who was not one bit shy When Maxtone-Graham finally fin- about going to court in an attempt to get iahed her book. two major publishers herreoords.ShewritesofheneHaathe were ready to bring it out. But they woman on the very precipice of a wanted to end the book at the dramatic crackup changing into a woman as-point where Katrina is reunited with sured enough to ring doorbells in her natural mother. strange neighborhoods looking for "My feelings about the rest of the hints, a woman.who sat for hours in search were just as lntenae. I couldn't public libraries poriJla over old tele-let them do that." phone books, a woman who called up By then, that shy little orphan who total atrangera on a whim they may crept to her first appointment with the hold a clue. adoption agency was no more. There Maxtone-Graham's reunion with was instead a strong woman who knew her natural mother came first. and it what she wanted and how to get it, was joyous. Her mother's first words, Katrina published the book heraeH. A busy 'bab'yline' Golden Cradle is an adoption agency with a difference -it advertises and deals primarily with pregnani women who don't want their children. By MICHAEL RODDY ' I I ......... rty Elgart has put salesmanship at the aervice of inlant adoptions, The result is a busy "babyline" in the ~ffice of his multimillion-dollar auto accessories bUSlnelS, ''This is what you call progress," the 40-year-old Elgart says, answering calls that divide his at.tention between business and the network of pregnant women and child.le. couples who phone the Golden Cradle adoption agency houaed in his 60,000-aquare foot warehouae. "Thia is what you call bringing things Into this century," Elgart adverti8es, He spreads h.l.a message on billboards, He goes on national television programs, like ABC's "Good Morning Anlerica" and CBS's "60 Minutes," Whathesays,esaentially, is that pregnant women who don't want to keep their children should consider adoption, and he will make it as painlea as poesible, "Just becaU8e she doesn't have a ring on her finger doesn't make her any lea of .a penon," Elgart says. It may not jibe with the image people have of adoption agencies as formal, stiff institutions, but Elgart contends that ha approach works. . He placed 100 children in 1982, his eecond year of operation, while more establlahed agencies In the city placed only a third that many, he says. So far this year he's placed 50, and he expects to top the 1982 level. He's coming up with white infant children at a time when waiting llata for such adoptions at other agencies are years long. He says he tapped into a lode of black parents ready and willing to adopt any black infants he can come up with, A one-time high school teacher with no degree In aocia1 work, Elgart admits his emphasis on advertising is unorthodox. But he thinks his sucoem speaks for ltaeH, ''We're unique," he says. "We're a model agency." Elgart· ia about to step down as the agency's fulltime director, turning over much of his work to a profemional aocial worker. He'll remain involved with publicity. In the meantime. the phone in his office continues to ring off the hook. One caller has a proposal from a caller that doesn't sit well with Elgart. ''We're a Ucen.ed agency. We can't play games," he says sternly Into the phone. A few minutes later he tries to reassure another caller who la iNJ.u.i.rina about the intricacies of adoption. l belleve anythJ.nc you •Y· hon." he saya. Elprt •ya he started the aaency aft.er he and h.ia wife suffered five years of humiliation and embarrusment trying w adopt a child. "There's just no end. You feeJ there's no child in your future," he says. They eventually adopted a aon and his wife shortly aftAu'ward conceived and bore their daughter. But the adoption experience stuck In his craw. "I atop and help people on the highway, 90 why shouldn't I help IOmeOne In a situation where they can't have children?," he says. Elgart started with a blind newspaper ad that said a couple was int.ereeted In adopting a child and asking women to call. The claasified ad bw.omed into a campaign that Includes billboarda, bus advertising and newspaper display ads. He rattled off the llat: "We spend $8,000 a month advertising. We're in 22 telephone books, 16 newspapers, six bWboarda, 11 sidewalk benches, 20 buaea on the outside, 20 bU8el on the inside," In addition, he takes ha message to local and national news programs. which have done much to boost his businem. "That'• 50 percent of it," he says of the publicity. "The other 50 percent is the penon who anawera the phone. They have to befriend that birthmother in the first 10 or 15 aeconda or it's downhill. You need aomebody who speaks to her. that gal on-the line, at her level." Elgart likes to have pregnant women talk with other women who are Pla.nnlni to give up their children for adoption through Golden Cradle, He~ for the women to atay for months at Stardust Ball attracts 400 guests Harriet Nelson honored during the evening By VIDA DEAN °' ... °'""',... .... rn he Home Savings of America Band played "Stardust" and the 400 gue.ta filed into the Newporter Re9ort ballroom to continue festivities of the Stardust Ball. The group had been in the patio area for the IOdal hour checkinc out the silent auction items and jotting down their bids, Othen at the ball (whkh will result in •bout $8,,000 proceeds) were Supervi.IOr Tom and Emma Jue Riiey, the Jack dJ ltndh, Barbara and lteat Freud'7 Barbara and Beta Barria, Doua and Georae BUI, Toal and ltea OU..._t, the Raymoad OtbrtU, S.1y and Herb S'tlttoa, Noey Zlumeyer Ottlq, Jaet ~oeabora, Fruk Terrert and 8 .. Warmt.ct-(he prs- ent«I a $20,000 checlc to ACS, twUlt. from Che recent Grand Prix, He UC> pl«f6ed to rat. ll mJ.lHon tor the group In tJw next lO ye.n). Arty Elgart has a photo collection of most of the babies he has placed for adoption during the past four years. a time with families 11\ the Philadelphia area before the birth. Hia fee? Elgart tells audiences that all he wants for getting a child ill for them to support hia organization, pay the hoepitallzation and other expemes, and give him a photograph of the baby -suitable to add to his collection. "I don't think it's aaking too much," he tells his listeners. "And get it framed, pleaae, Splurge." The approach has brought a 10metimes grudging respect from other agencies and spedaliata in the field. "What Arty'• doing In terms of adoptions is new." says Will.lam Pierce, president of the National Conunittee for Adoption in Waahlngton. "He has applied marketing techniques from the commercial aide of the world to IOCial service agencies. U agencies can just be In touch with the t1mee, and realize they are competing in a noisy media world. they can do it.'' "The adoption oommunJty WU horrified that thia guy could come In and do IOlllething they were doing," uys C-arolyn Johneon, executive director of the Adoption Center of Delaware Valley In Philadelphia, an agency apedalizlng In placing older children. "He'• not a profemi~ but he's put aomething Into it -wannth and peraonal attention." When Golden Cradle started, it was not licensed by the state. It ia legal to operate an unlicenaed adoption agency .in Pennsylvania, but that did not win Elgart any friends in the adoption community. "There are a lot of well-meaning people out there, but doggone lt, there are a lot of mi.stakes made when they do not meet the basic protections .et up by the state," Pierce says. Elgart says he now agrees with the critics of private adoption and endorees state licenaing. After operating privately for two years, Golden Cradle got a provisional license in January, Whether Golden Cradle is licensed or unlicensed, however, appears to make little difference to the hundreda of people who have heard of the service. • "I'm a very skeptical peraon, but I not only think it's legitimate, but al90 Elgart ill dedicated to what he's doing," says Larry Fairatone, 31, of suburban Wynnewood. Faintone, who says he and his wife Linda bad ~n trying unsucceeafully for five yean to have a child, says he was impre.ed that Elgart could often promise -and deliver -a child within a year while charging slightly under $8.000, much of that for hospitalization. "There's no fiJwldal gain in it for him at all," Fairs tone says. "He does it for love. He's not in it for the money," Mfnlllnl with the partygoen were Han1et • Nelt0a (honoree of the evenJJv), her eon David and hill wife, Yvone, and Doll Nel1oa, brother of Ollie (who dJed of cancec In Jg?~). Rick Nelt0• anived later at the party and waaon the at.age with mother and brother durinC the program. Guest.I dined on ,..,out of lobster and wild muahrooml, sauteed veal rib eye and finiabed the meal with white chocolate rnou.e In a chocolate cup. Centering the black •tin covered tablee were floral arranaementa ln atar-ahaped containen on mirrort to refiect the votJve candlee. (Chria L1ndaay dJd decoration..) Nelson with Burton Deane Doolin and Shirlee Gq-- seaheim check out auction itemt. A. we arrived aaneone whiapeftd, "Every- body that ill anybody. la here tonlaht -and what a aood look1nc bunch... The ball gowns ~ outmtandlna with eequlnned numbers winning harMlf down. Thc.e attendinl the ball in .upport of the OC Unit of the American Cancer Society included Vtrpda and PHI Ba•er, alrke and Bob O.UeUet•, 8Herl1 and Horace Ceil, Mr. and Mn. J. ReMrt Piiier 0. Belle and Stu Bettol', Artttte and llutaa Rell (the ..... c.haUman). the ~ T.alen, a.tit aJ\d IAdl Gee Dtq, Mary Am and Loll Welh, MU"aH P'l80r lleedJ.Jlm and Mary RMHHll and Jo.U.. and Geae Mii. Stars were a1lo lw\aina from the oeil1Jll over Mary Beaty and Peter LIH Bayes u they enter1a!Md (Mary M1J6 "SW"dwt" to H.rner with good-humored hecldmg from llAyetl). The entertainers flew out ftom New York apeda) to do the ahow -left the Newport.er the following day forLuVepa. • Dtck Natbat01t, auctioneer, kept the Uve auction lively, but the bidden (they lutd •tar ~bid cardll) hMI ~ to rhin dJonJy be/Oft mJ ht and no one purc.h#ed the Stutz wk donated by the ~Jkn. It'• Rill •vailllbl•. fi Suaan and Ste•e Nelton (no relation to Harriet), lert, chat with Nancy Zin1meyer Ottins. .............. Soeial hour talk by Gene Mix, lelt. Dr. Thomae and Alice Fotter. ~. .D • ----- ' Bl Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 . Brides Medication: Know facts about the drug before taking it Ochoa-Goodfield Frances Goodfield of Newport Beech and John Ocha J r. of Pasadena exchanged wecidinc vows on Oct. 8 in Our Lady of Mount Carmel -Church in Montecito. Mn. Carl 'ln>yano of Newpor\ Beach and Llewellyn Goodfield of Carpinteria are the parenta of the bride, who graduated from Newport Harbor High School and attended Santa Barbara City Col- lege. The bridegroom is the aon of Mr. and Mra. John Ochoa of Covina. A graduate of Royal Oak.a High School and The University of Southern California, he i.a em- Fraacn Ocboa ployed by Xerox. Aft.er a wedding trip to Tahiti, the couple will live in Pasadena. Lindholm-Regnier Trudy Regnier of Costa Mesa was joined in marriage with Harlan Maxon Lindholm of Diamond Bar in a Sept. 24 ceremony in Waverly Church. - The bride, daugh- ter of Marion Hixon of Costa Mesa and Carl Regnier of Tucson, graduated from Estan- cia High School and attended Orange Cout College. She i.a em- ployed by the Fluor Corporation in Irvine. The bridegroom, aon of John and Elvira Lindholm of Anaheim Hilla graduated from Norwalk High School Trudy Ltadbolm Juan C.apistrano. and C.al State Fullerton. .... He ia an employee of For Better Living Inc. in San The couple are residing in Diamond Bar after a week's wedding trip to Jamaica. Shedd-Jones The gazebo in Laguna Beach's Heisler Park was the setting for the Oct. 22 wedding of Bobbi Lynn Jones of Costa Mesa and Rick Shedd of Garden Grove. The bride, daughter of Robert and Mary Lu Jones of Calta Mesa, wore a Laura Aahley style white cotton muslin gown with a ruffled off-th~ shoulder neckline and a flounce at the hem. She was attended by Sheryl Middleton, maid of honor, Penny Jarris, Susan Mihaylo and Nancy Hauaer. The bridegroom is the aon of Bettye Roest of F.acondido and Todd Shedd of Garden Grove. C.aleb Howard was h.ia best man. A luncheon reception, attended by 80 pelt&. lmmediat.ely followed the cereinony at the Villa Sweden in c.oron. deJ Mar. The couple plan to make their home in Huntington Beach. Shedd is employed by Rock and Wat.er Scape Systems. .~Weddings & -~--· _E_ng~ements The Daily Pilot wants your wedding and engagement ne ws. To help you submit the required infor- mation, forms are available at the Daily Pilot office, 330 W. Bay Sr., Cost.a Mesa. For weddings. only a black and white photo of the bride is acceptable. Snapsbota, Polaroid and color photos can't be used. The photo must be su~tted no later than three weeks after the wedding, other- w1ae it will not be published. Engagement information is to be sub- mitted at least seven weeks before the wedding. Forms and pbotcs can be dropped off at the office or mailed to the Wedding Depart- ment. Daily Pilot, P. 0 . Box 1560, a.ta Mesa, Calif. 92626. U,HOLSRIY, INC. .... ._ ...... -4 .... 1922 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA -548· 11.S6' ,.,. <OltA-55 BABDEaf'B t714> 7-284] PEBT CONTAOL IN ltanootOnA¥t. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Since more people relld your colwnn than the newa -.-dona. l bcipe you will print th.la vital infonnadon -especially for older folb. A lawyer, Paul G. Ropra. who wu for many yean a congremnan from Florida, hu started a ''Get the Ar.wen" campaign within the National Council. on Patient Informadon and Education. The purpoee la to ltimulate d1alolue between physidam and patienta about drup beina rec- ommended. Even though complete lmtructiona and much infonnati.on 8COOCDpany almo9t fJVerf drug told in phannaciee. a great many people do not read them. Thia relUlta in the wute of many billlona of doUara annually becau.e paUenta do not wie their medication properly. RotJerw aays, "Every patient lhould uk hia or her doctor, pharmaciat or nune five que.tiona about any clrua that la preacribed." 'nle9e are: ! (l ANN UIOflS 1. What la the rwne of the drug and what ls it supix-d t.o do? 2. How and when do I take it -and for how long? 3. What food, drtnka, other medicinet or activities should I avoid while taking th.la drug? 4. Jue there are side eUecta, and what ahou.l.d I do 1f they oc:cur? 5. Ia then any written information available about the dn.ig? 'I'hanka for caWna th.la to the attention of miDJona. -HOLYOKE, MASS. Holiday heBrt: AlcOhol to blame DE.AR DR. STEINCROBN: I look forward t.o holidays and yet I don't. There im't a Thanbgiv- ing, Chriatmaa, Labor Day or Fourth of July weekend that I don't get into trouble. rm not an alcoholic, but I go overboard on holidays. There's something in me that uya. "Celebrate!" and I drink too much. I overeat, too. But it's mainly the drinkina· It's like eating too much chocolate candy or cake when you have a sweet tooth. Then when it'• over, rm back to my regular diet and not more than one highball a day. Although rm celebrating on holidays, I riever feel good. My heart keea:i-running away with itaelf. At times I think I'm having a heart au.ck. I suppoee it'• the alcohol. im't it? Mr. c. DE.AR MR. C.: Looking for a a:apegoat? Pin u on alcohol Too much of it im't aood fot anything, including the heart. In aome im1ancM, over- drinking can actually cawie death. In othen, it can weaken the heart mUICle Wllg after the holiday is over. A recent study of the effect of alcohol on the heart la interesting. It la called the "Holiday Heart" ayndrome and WU repor1ed in the Journal of The American Collese of Cardiology by Dn. T.R. F.ocel and J .C. Luck of the Medical Collese of Philadelphia. 'lb.ia will explain why your heart "nma away with ltlelf," Mr. c. They found that even in the abeence of heart dbeue, exceeaive consumption of alcohol produced either atrial fibrillation or Outter. Your de9crlption: "Heart nam away with itaelf" ii cloee to explai.ning the thwnp{nc of the pounding pulae in the neck and chest, and the feeling you may be havinc a heart attack. Fortunately, the symptoms disappear after c:lrinlPng la di8oontinued. Moderation in the future, Mr. C., ta the answer to more enjoyable holidays. • • • DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: My doc1ot tella me that my 1088 of bearing i.a due to trouble in my middle ear. WW you explain "middle ear?" Mr. B. DEAR MR. 8.: Prepare for an anatomy le.on. The ear la divided into three regions: Ext.emal Nr, middle ear and the inner ear. 'n. external ear corm.ta of what you can .. an the outside and the audit.ory canal lelldlna to the middle ear. At the inner end of the audit.or)' canal ia the tympanic membrane (ear drum) which U. the boundary line between external and middle ear. In the middle ear are the c:miclea: the malleus, incua, and 1tapee, which allow conduction of 80UDd vibration to the inner ear. The latter ia encued in a bony capsule which conaiata of the vmtlbule, three aemidrcular canala (for balance) and the chochlea (for bearing). The chochlea convert. the aound-premure energy t.o electrical IJtlmuli that are tral'lllmitted to the bl'aln. Your middle ear trouble, Mr. B., can often be helped by an operation on the omiclea which no T f OUI HIAl 1H . DR. PETER J. STEINCAOHN lonpr normally oonducta the aound vibrations to the inner ear. • • • FOR MRS. Y.: Ulingmoiaturiz.eradoes little to prevent ~ea. Theee are cau.ed by redundant, non-elastic skin. Staying out of the aun helps. Wrlnltled akin can be treated by the plastic aurpon U8lng medicationa applied locally, de- mabnslon. sursery, or U8e of injedible collagen implanta and medical-grade silicone. • • • Dr. Steincrohn we.komear reader mail, but is aorry he c.annoc amwel" penonaJly. Letters of widest intl!ft8t will be~ in hJa column. ~your ~om to him, in care of Che Daily Pilot, P. 0 . 1680, a.ta Mesa. CA 92626. r---------------------. 11 EVERYTHING YOU'VE ALWAYS 11 I WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT / < 2' I PATIERN FITIING ¥ ~ I ANDWERE "' ./ ......... I I AFRAID / ~I I TO ASK. /PATTERN I i /. FITTING ! I CLINIC I I I I DAYS I •• ONLY ~=N~;~ 11 ATTEND ONE 3 HOUR CLINIC I FOR ONL y ss.oo I I N PAOFESStONAl DESIGN CONSULTANT 11 Learn how to make p111tctly fttttng 1tacka ~· I I · tvety time • How to buy your contGt tin • I How to MW lltlvtt and coll8n Miity • tf9w to tnd I p1nn1ng 1nct bitting • s.w 11pp1r1 qulctdy • s.w I might lllfn• anc1 many men lhOf1CUtl to •1" and I I tun In llWlng. L.Mm amatng piftlfn mlldng method that lltows you'to orwte untlmttld dtligns. eontouNd I II to your own body requlrtm1ntl. I I NO "lSlRVATION HECWAAY .• Wl.Y,. ••T SEATS. I I J Clip •nd receive baalc dreu, alllCk p11ttem •nd eult : 11 I ,. dr... p11ttern you can draft to flt you~ menu,. " _ ment1. Aleo • p11ttem fitting lrwtrvctlon booklet. l I I E Classes -Morning 10:00 a.m. Evening 8:00 p.m. E I I j Tell your friend• about thl• Ad. c ..... 1 ldentlc•I. 1 I I NO EVENING Cl.AsSES ON SATURDAY. BRING VOUA PRESSER FOOT. I I ONE DAY ONLY IN COSTA MESA I 1 THURS., NOV. 3rd I I AMBASSADOR INN-I II 2277 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa I ---------------------~ ------··--_, _______ . ___ _._ __ .._. ---------· DEAR ROLYOU: ftaak9 fw apreadJ,q SM wonl. It'• ao 1uprtae so me cut &M lda orWaaaed wUll Palll.Roaen. HedW a,pl..WJ9b u etLalrmu of SM Siabeelllllllttee • LUer, Bealtll ud Rusu 8enteet ud Ed11eadoa Appropriatleu. hd W~e l'ID pa11lq •t NMI, die praeot claainnaa, BW Na&eMr of~eatecky, cu• step rtpt •P ud 1•t Wt. Be's utremel1 competeat ud a real 5"daen 1nt1emaa. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband and I have1.hree children between ua. My aon has never made any demanda on ua, but the other two are aomething ellle. His daughter (aloohol.lc) calla collect and talb for an hour. Her only aon was taken away by the oourta. We paid the $1,000 fine when she drove through the plate-glua window of a storefront. We alao paid to replace the glua. The worst problem la my husband's son, who recently left h.ia wife and two. small c~. He has decided after aeven years that he ii not the type who should be married. They live 100 miles fromJ\ere. When it ia h.ia tum to take the children for the weekend. he dwna:i-them on ua (me) and goes to play golf and visit with frienda. Sometimes he comes without calling and we have to cancel our plans at the last minute. My husband ia a peach, but he puta h.ia aon ahead of me, and I re.ent it. You keep saying in your column that no one can take advantage of another peraon unle9I it ia permitted. Pleue tell me how I can help my.elf. - PUSHED AROUND IN BALTIMORE DE.AR PUSHED: People wllo eater a aecoad mania1e tlaHJd take a cine look at tile ddklra of die 1poue. Wlaaa yo. picked tile pead, Y• also got a co.pie of lem••· Yoa cu rehate so caaceJ yoar plus SO accommodate you 1tep10D. Let yoar llubud atay ltome wtda tile lddt. AH U die cll.lldrea are too ma work, ~re some llelp a.ad let you llaabucl pay for It. • • • There is a big ditference between cold and cool. Ann Landers ahows you how to play Jc cool without freezing people out in her boolclet, "Teen-Aae Sex -Ten Ways to Cool It." Send 50 centa and a lOIJll, !lelf-addre..ed, stamped en~lope to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, DJ. 60611 . . .. , r Orange Coast DAILY fl LOT /Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 'St. Elsewhere.~.' Series has new coat of paint, new lease on life By FRED ROTHENBERG Of ... .__.,,_ NEW YORK -"St. Elsewhere" has a new coat of paint and a new lease on tile. In tonight's first epi.aode of a second season that nobody thought possible, Ed Flanders. who plays the chief of staff at the decrepit hospital, says the hoepital's chairman ordered a ne w paint job because "he thinks brighter walls will let our patients live longer. Maybe he's right." Bruce Paltrow, the show's executive producer, called that line "our inside joke to Grant Tinker," NBC's chairman. In not canceling the highly regarded but low-rated "St. Elsewhere," Tinker and other NBC executives suggested a cheerier at- mosphere to go with the heavy doses. of medical reality. "Grant said it would be nice if it was a lighter, brighter place, with the possibility that more people could leave we ll," said Palu-ow. Brandon Tartikoff, president of NBC Entertain- ment, said the network wanted "more simplified storytelling and more upbeat stories. Some episodes last season were mood pieces, and they were a little weird.'' Tartikoff also suggested developing more romantic interests inside the hospital. Last spring, just before NBC announced its 1983-84 prime-time schedule, Tartikoff had the uncomfortable chore of playing the doctor who tells the patient the prognosis is gloomy. He told Paltrow to expect cancellation and reluctantly turned down his request for $100,000 for future scripts. So P.altrow went to England to be with his wife, actress Blythe Danner, and he started research for a new comedy show . In the meantime, the last episode o( "St. Elsewhere," competing against CBS reruns, attracted respectable ratings. That Tuesday night, NBC's program executives were in New York -two days before setting the network's new fall schedule. "It was the finest hour rd seen on television," said Tartikoff. "I said to my wife that it was tragic that such a fine show wasn't being w atched. I wondered what I was doing in this business if it wasn't to do that kind of television." The next day, Tinker , Tartikoff and other NBC executives agreed not to cancel "St. Elsewhere" unless a sure-fire hit -"a perfect pilot" -could replace it. "It turned out our pilot development didn't measure up to 'St. Elsewhere,' so we renewed it," said T8l'tikoff. Call it a medical miracle, but "St. Elsewhere" ~dn't deserve to die. And, based on tonight's first new episode, which has a nice blend of sensitivity, zaniness and reality, it deserves a long and happy new lea.!IOn. Alan Arkin, in a continuillR guest role, drives his PG! "The photography Is excellent. the filmm•ker has c•ptured the beauty and tlte fury of the•••·"-L.A. TIMES "No one who lo'llet tllm1 of sailing, ship• or the sea can miss 'COASTER'." -THE OREGONIAN 11 JAMIS •OND I• ltldlS~l'OA• \ r t"\ • • • t.• \NlllA'N€A W'tOS 0 . .,... ---...... . ---·-· ...... ,." .. . No m atter what you're doing , your hometown newspaper The Daily Piloi fits In. car into the operating room. His wife, played by Piper Laurie, has just suffered a stroke, and Arkin, as the intense, fervently devoted husband, acUI with emotional frenzy. AJan Arkin (center') guest-stars in tonight's season premie re o f "St . ''.\ \ 10\ 11-. \\ ITll .\I.I. ·n IF RIGI fl sn ........... ,, .. , .. , , A. BIClllT l THE. ST!ltl'tl' · f ji>e;j • OOoou v suAco • • • -· 0 i1rr.:wa -· .. "•• .. .,._ .... II~ -_ ..... _, t ~'"'it!W1ili':rr• I I : ,,.._ ....... illiljliiiil• •C-·--··M ....... 1 c .. ••••• • SAO OSM ARCADE of GAMES -----TIO: J'Cl 1 2 00 " 00 BIOH'i' • 0°'9~,~~ wru»'I'' u .-"' -·-.......... ., I 1 00 1 JO !> 00 1 .ao 1 0 I!> ---ITA"-WAar--RETURN OF IBF JEDI T IN IOMM I I!> 4 IS I IS 10 I S \.l 1S I \t Showing O nly R BIGCHILL Show\ .tt 1 20 J 30 S •O 1 SO I 0 00 ~ In 70MM • .., I 30 l 40 S SO I 0 0 I 0 10 '"•'~ -. tt lfmt! tof O'"•'"fJ 11 .,.,, ""d" '""" 10, l<-4/J' 73 ~ ........ -I§ 12 00 l •o 1 20 Stayrng Alrve PC I.SOS lO t ·IO CITY centeR ~ 63~ 2ss1 I ·-:,.~,.;:· ..... RI I SAT I SUN OCTOBER 28th 29th 30th MIDNIGHT HORROR SHOWI lltAI> 'W"WI:" W RITA (JIG) _.,.., 1111-e' m I EDUCATING U'1'& "i;. snows •• '-hOw\ •I 1 20 6 9 .30 1 30 6 t .•O ~ITfleRflt1MtNtS Cl•u Reunio n IRl PG· .,,.,Kina ... lltAl>PE rn Frld•y '"' 'J tn (R I BIGCHILL R Ptu~ T ne: Surv1VOr\ ( R J * ..... i:.. ll Oea1n W11h TT IR I "-"ITll>NAt 1f11~An1n11 m t AMI'_ .. ., '""; Ull ~ Ptus T r•drnt Plu es CAI 6 E u y Mnney (R ) 1<~73~·· ..... 0 • Romanttc Comedy (PC ) Com e and experJence the all new Ancient M ariner. Fresh New Look • Fresh New 'Feel Fresh New Fun Same Great View • Same Great People Ark.in'& hard-driving character refuaes all pesaimiatJc outlook.a, and hia optimiam ia contagious. Thia aymboliz.es one subtle change ip "St. Et.ewhere." Last lle880n,' for example, several Elsewhere," a t 10:00 o n KNBC ( 4 ). * PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES * Bargain M atinees! •t21~A'~~·Iil•l4 J·~~-t15): * MONDAY Thru SATURDAY FACULTYotCANOlEWOOO All r1<1orm1ncn 8tfo11 !1.00 rM ((& S,tc. (~..,ti & Hohl GMQ6f71;o. ... ) LA Ml!!AQA Al ROSlCRA!IS "TlAOING rt.ACQ" (I) J 00 S 40. 10 JO "NAR LAll&'OON'S VACATIOIC" (I) I?'.> SOC "TOOCtlD" (I) J1CS 14S U S 64S l 4S IO •S "All Tl£ ltlGHT l*>VES" (R) lllO 1 )0 I )0 B l l lO 10)0 "llOMAlfTIC COIE>Y" (P'G) I 00 O S H S SAT .oniL H S 6 10 IT IS "flAStl>MCf" (It) H~ 6 SO. 10 SO S.1 ooty 11 lO 4 IS '" I 00 "Tl£ DUD Z<K" (It) 11 JO 130 O S ~40 I 0 IOSS "11£1\U Of Tl£ E>I" (R) In 70 MM ()oCby Stereo 17l0 JOO Bl I~ 10 40 "'M llGHT STllT" (P'G) 1n/O *°""'S11110 II ;IC 4 lO llS "BaUCSTOIM" (P'G) 1" 1()1111 Doll>r 100 no S4o 100 1010 "Tl£ DUO Z<K" (I) 1110.1n u o 64s.a so Joss "STAYING AlM" (P'G) 1130 0 0.1 30 s.i ...i, 1130, 1 30 '"a JO "EASY MOE" (I) l lO 6 30, 10 JO. Sol t#f Z.30. 6 lO 10 40 eatfuA3te~J fACUltYot DEL A "flASlllAla" (R) HS 6l0 101'> "£.DO( MDT~ CUSW"(P'G) 1110 4 ~ l lO "TOUC1£D" (It) IHO HO ·~ H O 8SS 1100 'Ulnfm" (It) JllO JOO SlO I~ 1010 * PACIFIC DRIVE -IN THEATRES * "IWlllG OUT" (I ) ,,., "MUGHTY flDHMM" (R) "fl.ASK)MC[" <•> ,,.,. "ICNl" {PS) • ....... (PS) ""' "P(mY'S I: 'M IDT DAY (I) eplaodes on Legionnaires' dt.eaae were more like BOmber medical IChool lectures. None of the characters bad been developed enough to be worth saving. "We had all this expaaitory material with no dramatic impact," aaid Paltrow. "Now we try to let you kno'tV why you should care about theee people." It woru. A very good ahow, with three bnmy award.a in lta black bag, has become better. However, "St. Elaewhere" has the miafortune to now be on Wecjne8day nights, when ABC offers the immenaely popular "Dynasty" and "Hotel." Viewers may prefer sugar-coated pUla to real medicine. "We're gonna get our brains beat in," Paltrow predicted. Tartikoff, who showed class by sticking with "St. El8ewhere," said the program merely haa to maintain most of its lead-in audience to reward the network's faith. "If you watch the first episode, you'll be compelled to look at the second, the third, then the fourth," said Paltrow . "If you watch the fourth (which will diamatically re-create a heart trans- plant). you'll watch the next 400." '°"" ctNfb u1..,-•-7Sl-411.t YOIN CbiTb u 1..,-"-751-4114 TOWN CUfTU u 1.,_ ·-751-4114 SOUTH COAST .... ;iiiiiii!iftllr--.....;.;...;;;.;..;....-.;......,. :=.. SADOU8ACll l!IAAlfll S>tlH lt ,.., •• t>«&TorK-"41 r.ll< 0 ..... ·1i. OUO IOlf (II !lll·SUO """T .... 110 , 10 SADOl£11ACll 'IOllCIC " 10 T.," "'°" fl• 9 10 1MI 01•• •• 1U111C rua:r ~1.suo i~ IO 'S ~· S.·2111 McOASf --lflt11 cilW m. -· -t7t-4141 CIO&A CTl. -· -t7'-41tl :~1::c:.~· UO·Hto wtJO T• so ,., "h ,...,_. llO·Hto VlJO MALL SO lwt It "-'*' os.m o VO> MAll • 10 '"' •• C-••· •ts·'1& ViiO 10 ,., ,. ~COllUT ~I I ,, ....... "'' I 0C 10 •: ''11£1\M or Ill 1111" (l'CI 64: '30 MARlfl Sl<tt• (J!lllSIOhil,R WAlllL~ "II( lllJf ,_. (•l 111oo 1""'1 I OC 900 11U1M1 IUI 109 •llllCl. "M • Clal.. (Ill ~ l,,.,1 I JS.!IS ·-SMaS ll'Cl ..._, '""'' 6'S lO •o '11 & "" lllM "'1 '*"' T•ol\ ~QC, 1 ,,. Cl\.ISI .. Ill Ill_, IQ(S" t•> lie•'""' I JG ,00 _.lfi S.CI• c-:C'l<I• ""''1~ MDUOlOll'. ftl ...,. ,..,, llS !JCi ll..111 CllllNlr> lnCll YI fOJ AUii'' {PS) IOO ')0 1()11 (~~ &1.1 Ti. w n IDO" (I) 1.._, I JS ! I~ -Tll S>([~ tH'MIOl'•O ~~[~ 'flf. 000 ,.. (I) ...,, """' 100 t oo -----1()11 .. (IQI SAOOlCBACll .,. • Clal." Oii ~Mll.Tl iimiiiii 10 ,., .. Clli( llACIUWI II 1•• t• "\la~ la(" (I) ~l ·SllO Mo• ,,,.,, 100 910 SlAHCXllfU t SOUTH COAST W>o Al1l• l llltAlll:S ,....SAi (_,.., AHR 14110<00. S "°° acMf' 11'1 .......... ..... _.~, lloo l~••I IW ~J\/ 497·111l ... fl!otl\ 100 910 "RISTll IUlll'U' (II SOUTH COAST 1()11 Cll\,ISj lloo Tllol1 640 10 •O , .. .,., "" Tit IGll "'f!&MMll' (I) ......... 1 ~' (•l -.. 1w1 I JO 4'7·1711 l>•n I TO 900 i l j M OrtngeCout DAILY PILOT~td~. Oot. 28, 1983 GORDO IO·l.6 l K.N E.W A OOC1 WMO WA'!J REALLY e,TOPIO ••• HE WA"!:> 50 5TUPIO, WHElll HE. TURNED AROUND TO LIE DOWN, HE HAD TO STOP TO A5K PIREC:TION5 / THE t':\~ILl' CIRCl'S Bl(; f;t:ORGt: '1 1 ~ ~ 1 by Gus Arriola by Jtm Davis "The good thing about long hair is you don't hafta wash your neck ." "Congr1tul1te me, Wilt. I got the promotion." by Brad Anderson I -(\ = "Don't give me that famished look ... I know ._ it's feeding time!" Tl' M BLEW Et:os - !~AT'S WHY W~'Rc INTERE~T~D r ~ • I -Mr 1140 IS PRETTY OU>, BUT .¥00 IS AAXJNO MY Ae£.. • by Char les M Schul z r by Tom K Ryan ' I I ·~· _g GOif N ON 811DGf BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF Hoth vulnerabll•. North deal~. SET UP VOUll TRICKS WHIU: THt: GOING' ' GOOU llridgt• is oflcn a rte<' I><-ace and rnn th1· n1n1• of tween dl'clarer and lh1• diamonds 10 Ea~i's t1·n. 11unn. 14nd dc•rlnror n11d no rnu1111•t. lfr l'c.111ld 1uL roml' 111 111111• 1r1rk'I w1thoul lrlting lhl· 1foh·nd1•r, rr11isin the lead 111 d1.1111011d:>. llut onr1• h1• did 1h.11, th\•y 1·uuld rn\h two dub tmk' ,1nd thr 11r1· of 'l'·"h'' tu I:" with tht•tr tw o d1,11111111d trwk~ down on t'. NORTH •7 ~K 10 0 A J 8762 •Q832 Wt:ST tASl' +J108 4 +A 93 v 9763 'V Q82 O KS OQl03 •Jl04 •K 976 SOUTH •KQ652 'AJ54 0 94 •AS The hiddinw North E11l South Wu t l'an Pass I + Paa. 2 / ... Mii 2 t'H8 3 / t'1b11 3 :'\T t'ass Pabs Pai.i. Oµt·ninl( lt:id: .J,11·k 111 + snot: ' DR:\BBLt: V0U KNOW. AAYM()NO . l THINK A CvP OF COFFEE WOUl.O GO REAL NICE ' defonders lo set• who can icrl ~ast cc;uld Kl't' t h:il th1· lhcir lrirks fir t. You musl defl·ndl'ri. would h11v1· 10 Kt'I take advantage or evc-ry op their lr1ck~ 11uirklv Thi· '"·' porlunity you are offered. mond su1l wa~ Ku1n,i.: lo ht• South might have done cstabhsh1·d :1111! 1r 1h1· ~Ucr to pass three din ddcnd1•r!> did not Kl'I v. hut monds. since he had a near w11s d111• lhl'm, rl1·1·l11rn minimum opening b1rl and would ha\1\' Im 111111· I mk'. It 1he re wa s no good fit did not ~t·•·m to ~:."1 that h1• available. At u diamond con t•ould l'xp1•rl mu1·h h1·l11 from lracl North would ulmosl his partru•r, "' lht• 111aior surely havr come to nim• suits w1•r.-nut 1(111111( tu 111• .1 tricks. South madt> a fine 1•f sour<'t' of trirk' fur 11t1· forl to score his no trump ddt'nw Cluh' \\ii' th1· 11nh l(Uml'. but 1-:n~t's rnreful hu1w. dd1•ns1• provt-d dl'l'i~ive. Thi• l•·n ul 1·l11h' 111 p.111 m·r'' h,1011 "'·'' .111 th.11 I ·•'t Wl'st It'd thl• Jlltk uf duhs 11 nJ d1•rlar1'r did nut mah th1• t•rror of cuH•ring v.11h dummy·l> IJUl'cn. Ill' won lh1• ~MM ... 606'~ A ~Al.l>A6l.E P~Rll£>1. 'foo. OON "f ~fN ,l'u. ~ANO\.£. 'f~t~~ n1·1·tl1·<1 ,inti I h1· 111 ... 11101• lt•ad pr1·11 \ '"'It 111.1rl.1 ti \\ ,.,, IOI th.it t,1r1I \ "" dulf..tu I h1· lt•n lun 1·11 I ho· Bl& DEAl I so WE'RE A urn...£ OVEKR1PE I ... l'M JU.ST FHLIN0 MIStRAl';lE tCAU?£ I KNOW IT WON'T LA?T. .. llan you bten runnlq In· 10 doublr truublt? Let ('harlf~ Gortn help you find your way throu1h the man nf UOI 81.ES for pualtiea and !or takruut. f'or a copy of hi~ UOl '111.t:~ booklt t, wad $1 KS lo "(.orea·l>oublu." rarr of th1~ ntwbpaper, ... 0 . llo~ 25!!. \ur .. ood. S.J. 071) II\ \1akl' .cht'tlU1 pay1ble lu \.,w.papt>rbookb. by Jeff MacNelly by Kevin Fagan 11W..1 ONE. RARf. ~1'1\ AMUZ1~~ PM~~T ~~O ONE. O\JMS lc'.10' "RWAAO ~OR 1~~ f) P>~~ot " }M ~ ~~(J~ by Lynn Johnston I 'LL DO IT!([ rr Jl..61 IMfJ:.S -:- iHAT ~ OOER F-0(?. lb TO BE CARVED! JMA1 WA? OONN~ & l1W 5f(CWP OUE?? ... ~Tl MAKE ~l.VES COMFOm· .-.eu!' WHll.E l 00 INTO THE KITCHEN -'NO ef'EW SOME 1 JVST BEFORE MOTHER OLIVER AND 1 LEFT FOR THE AIRPORT, SHE TOLD US SHE WAS OOlNG TO T.-.Xe A SLEePING CAPSULE 1 I I . Tonight's TV EV£NIHG -l-00- IJ CJ llHEWS I CHIPS PATROL FAHT ABY ISlAHO G» THAEFS COMPANY G) HAWAII FIVE.O SI MACMEIL I LEHRER NEWSHOUll G) OCEANUS' (l)CISNEWS =~=Q 6D 0tCK VAN DYl(f (.C)MOVIE • • •1-t "Gloria" (1980) Gena Row· lands, John Adames. C 11' F\.ASHBACK: THE GAEA T Pl.AGUE 0 NOVEMBEA PREVIEW -1:30-m AUCE G) FACES OF CULTURE ())NEWS @) BARNEYMILLER ~WHEEL OF FORTUNE 6D DRAGNET 0 INSIOEOH S MOVIE • • • • 'II Came F1om HollywoOd" (1982) John Candy, Dan Aykroyd 0MOVIE * * * "She1locll Holmes And The Pead Of Oealh" ( 1944) Bas.I Ralh· bone. Nigel Bruce -7:00-fJ CISNEWS GNBCNEWS 0 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN DA!CNEWSo 0 AOWAH & laRTIN'S LAUGH-IN i:.sCOMPANY 41) JOKER'S WILD &;) BUSINESS REPORT ~ MAGIC OF DECORATIVE PAINTING ()) P.M. MAGAZINE ({)) ENnRTAJNMEHT TONIGHT Qt LOVECONHECTIOH H ONE MAN'S FIGHT FOR LIFE 0 MOVIE * *'1 "The Pursuit 01 0 B Cooper" (1981) Trea1 Williams. Robert Duvall. l lMOVIE "Story 01 A Love Atta1r" ( 19SO) Lucia Bose. Massimo Girolli -7:05-m ORANGE COUNTY TOOAY -7:30- IJ 2 OH THE TOWN a a FAMILY FEUD 0 THE CARE BEARS IN THE LAHD WITHOUT FEELING II EYE OH LA. O SOAP G»M'A'S'H ti) ~ PEOfllE'S COURT EEi TO THE MANOR 80AH ~ MARK RUSSEU COMEDY SPECIALS TIC TAC DOUGH C:) MOVIE • • "Can't Help S1ogtng" (19441 Deanna Durbin. Oavtd Bruce -8:00-tJ ()) WHIZ KIDS a a REAL PEOPLE 0 MOVIE • • •11 "Jezebel" (1938) Bette Div· is, Henry Fonda. I @) THE FAU GUV LOU GRANT 80AP G» ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT eMOVIE • • * •.; "Stagecoach" ( 1939) JOlln Wayne. Clalrt lrtvor &ll NATIONAl GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL G) LIVE FROM THE MET MOVIE * * * "Lost Honzon l1937) RonaJO COiman. Jtl\8 Wyau lH MOVIE * * '!\ "II Came From HollywOOd" \ 1982) JOhn Candy, Dan Ay~royd lS PAPER CjlASE 0~ • • • "Yanks" ( 1979) Richard Gere W1"1am Devane. -8:30- C!HOVEBOAT CD P.M. MAGAZINE -9:00- IJ(J)MOVIE "Happy·· (Premie1e) Dom Deluise Dee Wallace G ~THE FACTS OF LIFE Q @)DYNASTY ONEWS CD THE PROF£SSIONALS fD JUNIOR HIGH 10' THE OTHER CAFE'S COMEDY SHOWCASE S MOVIE **'~ "Taps (1981) Geo<ge C Scotl, Timothy Hu11on Z MOVIE * * ''The Toy" ( \982) Richard Pryor Jac~le Gleason~ -9:30-0 ~FAMILY TIES (!J MOVIE * * t "Assault On A Queen ( 1966) Frank Sinatra. V1rna L1s1 C:) RACING FROM OAK TREE IH1 HOT NECESSARILY THE NEWS -10..ilO-a ~ST. ELSEWHERE OCDtl)NEWS D ®J HOTEL 0 POllCE WOMAN C:)MOVIE * • "Return 01 Jae~ Slade I 1955) J_ohn Encsoo. Angie 01c~1nSOf'I C'MOVIE • • • 'Richard Pryor Live From Thi! Sunset Stnp" ( 1982) Rich1td Pryoi ltt)MOVIE **'> "Taps" (1981) Geo1ge C Scou. Timothy Hut1on. OJ SANT AHA I HEART: CONCERT FOR THE AMERICAS -10:30- CI) INDEPENOEHT NETWORK NEWS fD MARK RUSSELL COMEDY SPECIALS 0MOVIE * * • "The French Lieu1enan1 s Woman" (1 981) Meryl Streep Jere-my Irons -11:00-e Cl D (]) ®l ~NEWS 0 TAXI OGOHGSHOW m THE JEFFERSONS Cl) 8EHHY HILL · CHANNEi. LISTINGS ' 8 l(NX I (C8SI C!) KN8C IN8CI 0 I< TLA fl no I G> KABC. tABC.1 Iii KFMB IC.BS> 0 KHJ l\I !Ind I CD KCST !ABC> .., K TT\/ l lnd I tlfKC.OP TV ( lnO > m KC.ET IP8S> C1) KOCE IPBSI o On TV 1 l TV ~ HBO t IC•flt:lmo•t ' IWO RI N Y N 'f 11 tWTBSI £ IESPNl S IShowt•mt•I 0 Spot119ht (!J t(dble New \ Nf'two rk 1 Is motherhood second oldest profession? MOTHERHOOD: Tbe Second Oldest Pro- fe11lon. By Erma Bombeck. McGraw-HUI. l 77 Pa1e1. SU.ts. Erma Bombeck fans, and they are legion. know from her newspaper columns and her books that she can be depended upon to deliver the laughs. And deliver them she does in her latest collection, "M otherhood; The Second Oldest Profession." There are 42 pieces included in this book and they all dea1 with mothers in one way or another The approach to the subject differs from item to item , however. Some deal with advice to mothers. "One of the biggest complaints about motherhood is the lack of training ... I was one of the luckier women who came to motherhood with 90flle experience. I owned a Yorkshire Terrier for three yean.' • Among these is a suggested courae of study for mothers. One such ooune would deal with the lega1 rights of mothers and answer such questions as "Can you abandon a child a1oog a public highway for kicking daddy's seat for 600 miles.·• l\nother deals with mothers as depicted in television series of the '50s and '60s. Says Bambeck of these women of the flickering screen, "They looked better cleaning their houses than most of us looked at our w edding." In a very well done article, sh e wonders what would happen to a father of three young children who gave up his job, .ent his wife off to w ork and became "the first suburban mother in Rochester with a mustache who waan'ton est.rosen ." In a aort of revel'11e article, she deals wt th a mot.her who ls newly divorced and returning to the job market after a lofll abeence, a woman who puts wrinkle eradicator under her eyes "in an attempt toerue ihedamagescau.ed by teenagers.'' Phil Thomaa AP BoolcsEd.Jtor NEW BUSINESSMEN Contact the DAILY PILOT for Information regarding th~ county requirements for using a Fictitious Business Name. 642-4321 EXT. 332 &;) JACKIE OLEJ.SON Z MOVIE * * ·•five Od;~ Ont Su1llfl1e1 I llid21 Sean Connerv. <$y fir .inlley -ti 15- 0 1 MOVIE • t * "'Tne Veep. 11~77) r1ooort Shaw, Ja~queltrie B1sse1 -11·30-e l l POLICESfORY G ~THE BEST OF CARSON 0 SATURDAY NIGHT IJ ~ ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE 8 IN SEARCti OF ... QI THICKE O~ THE NIGHT 0> STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO &;) UNO£RSTANDINO HUMAN BEHAVIOR C";) 700CLUB IC ALBUM FLASH S MOVIE • *... TllP K11n1ucky f •11td MiJVtij' ( 1977) Evan K1111. Mas1e1 Bo11q '..oo Han -1200- 0MOVIE * * '• TM Olll Man Who (,rilld Woll f 1970) Edwdr<l G Hob1nson Martin Balsam 1l'1 INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS C MOVIE • •" The Kentucky F11t!d Movie I 1977) E•an Kim Master Bong Soo Han -12~05- H MOVIE t • • First Blood 119821 Sv1veswr Slallo11e n1t.1 ard trenn11 -12:30-0 39 LATE NIGHT WITH 0-'VIO LETTERMAN 0 TWILIGHT ZOllE OMOVIE * * The P11 Ano 11111 Pt!11<.lulum ( 196 11 Vmcen1 Drice John K•" 1 J ROWAN & MARTIN'S LAUGH· IN (!) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE 10 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT @MOVIE -123$- • • Olltlt r UI r ou1 11&821 M1k11 Pr1111on U.wr111 C1len10 -12.40- t)I MOVIE /Ir*'• 'Cover! Achoo 11978) David J1111a:ie11, AllhUI Ktnr!C'dy -1:00- 0 CHILDREN THE WORLD'S MOST FABULOUS RESOURCE f l MOVIE * •' 1 "A Soulllurn Yankt.11" ( 19481 Red Skell on, Arl81W 011hl (I) ALL IN THE FAAtlL Y Q)MOVIE • • • 'TtlB Ul)lOSlve Gene<allOI\ (19611 Pally McCormack Wdltam Sna1nei IDGENESCOTT S MOVIE t * •' • My Favo111e Year· (1982) f'iltet 0 Toule. Jessica tlorl>IJr l MOVIE * t V1olelle ( 19781 Isabelle Hup- i•etl Stephant! Audran -1:30-0 1,)91 NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT (I) NEWS C MOVIE * "Se~ With The Stars · 11979) Huck W~son, Mart1n.B1Jrrov.s 0 MOVIE • • • .. T~ PllOe 01 The Yan~ees f 19421GaryCOQDer Tt!resa Wr•ghl -1:45- H MOVIE • • Love Ch1ttJ (1!182) Amy MAd•Uon Beau Brid~~s -2·00-0 e CBS NEWS NIGHTWA TCH OMOVIE • • V11y1n1a 1t9411 Madeleine Carroll Fruo MocMurray O NEWS -2:10- (:)MOVIE • • • ',1n• ~ 1 l~i'l1 R.~na1d Gere W1111amQe,J..,. -2.30-m JYINEWS -2;.0- S MOVIE **'• Gatuv 01 fniroi tt'Jll t) EdWilld Aloert. Er111 Moran -3:00- 1 MORNING STRETCH CD MOVIE • • • "lhi Couf1 M1r11a1 Of Biiiy M1tcht ll f 1955) Gary COO!*. Char'-S B.cfllord iZ MOVIE • • * • "The Stunt Man ( t980) Petei O'Too111, Sieve Railsback -3:06- tC MOVIE * • Sw1ng1og Clleetieaoeu ( 1974) Jo Johnston. RaJnt>eau~ Smtih -3:25- li NOT NECESSARILY THE NEWS -3:30- l.tJ FAITH 20 (!) MARCUS WELBY, M.O -3:55- H MOVIE • * 'l II Came From HollywOOd'" I 1982) John Candy, Qan Ayk1oyd -4:00- TOP O' THE MORNING 0 MOVIE * • '1 'Tiie Purso11 Ot 0 B Cooper ' 1198 t) Treat w~11ams. Robef1 Ouvatl -4:05-s PAPER CHASE -4:20- OMOVIE • t · Leave 11 To The Marines·· I 19511 S10 Melton. Mara Lynn -4.30- 1 t t BULLWINKLE 0MOVIE • •' • 'Ea11ng Raoul ( 19821 Paul Bartel Mary Woronov -4:40- C MOVIE *. * LOS( HOllZOn I 1937) Ronald Colman Jane Wyall I Orange Coast OAILV PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 BS. FIRST UNITED PRESENTS The Portfolio Selections CALL NOW FOR MORE INFORMATION (714) 720-1704 Calif . Tax Free Bond *9.273% 13 Year Maturity : AA Rated ~; ~. ~-..•yt ...... ,~1r-=::::::::~~ FIRST UNntD SECURITIES CROUP OF CA NAME: __________________ _ ADDRESS:----------===----~~ CITY: _________ STATE: __ _ HOME PHONE :_ OFFICE PHONE: ____ _ CITY OF COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA COMBINED STATEMENT OF REVENUES, EXPENDITURES AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCES/RETAINED EARNINGS Fund No, Fund 01 General 11 Special Gas Tax Str. lmpr . Sec 2107 1 12 Special Gas Tax Str lmpr -Sec. 2107.5 13 Special Gas Tax Str. lmpr -Sec. 2106 14 Traffic Safety 16 Federal Revenue Sharing 17 Community Development Act 18 Park Development Fees 19 Drainage Fees 20 Bicycle & Pedestrian Facllltles 31 1974 Open Space Bond Debt Service 41 Capital Outlay 42 Land Acquisition 44 South Coast Drivti Construction 51 Landscape Assess. District No. 1 52 Landscape Assess District No. 2 53 Sunflower/MacArthur lndustrlal Area Constr 61 Golf Course 71 Equipment Replacement 81 Expendable Trust 96 Vehicle Parking Dlstrlc1 No. 1 -Improvement 97 Vehicle Parking District No. 1 -Acquisition 98 Vehl_cle Parking District No 2 • Improvement 99 Vehicle Parking District No. 2 -Acquisition TOTAL CITY OF COSTA MESA Community Redevelopmen1 Agency • Tax Iner. Fund Community Redevelopment Agency • Redev Proj Fund TOTAL -COMMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY CITY OF COST A MESA, CALIFORNIA STATEMENTOFREVENUESANDEXPEND~URES Flaoal Y•ar End•d June 30, 1983 GENERAL FUND JUNE 30, 1913 Fund Balance•/ Retelned Earning• July 1, 1912 $22.261,416 1.124.025 -0· 786, 168 2,291,828 4,81 1,233 3, 190 967,087 527.401 56,D46 76,626 3,394.050 l ,579, 196 510,992 414 804 693,520 2,783,528 1,401,029 1.357,728 5.474 7.233 2,677 8,241 $44,649,906 86,934) 1,386.410 $1,299,476 Expenditure• General Government Capital Outlay Total Expenditures Trenefen In (Out) $(571.600) ( 173.000) 744,600 $ -0- -0- -0- $ -0- """Revenues/ Receipt• (Exhibit "B" $28.113,080 730.534' 7,500 692,789 644,724 1,694,410 368,486 129,590 17,682 6,978 277.410 72,809 105,855 4,657 2,260 1,247 19,077 1,330,026 510,445 326, 149 138 275 92 184 $35,056,397 $ $ 632.~9 1,522.:l80 S2.l54.729 125,099 192.206 317.305 Expendtturn e • .,... .... (Exhibit "8") $(27,386,074) ( 357,446) ( 7,500) ( 381 ,802) ( 1,203,355) I ( 1,598,590) ( 317,305) 264,079) 852,335) 3,870) 3, 156) 648,046) 1,028,626) 344,040) 60,778) $(34,457,002) ( 917,894) ( 2,036,694) $( 2.954,588) AdJuetmente $ 382,781 .. (5 15,649) 650.546 $517.678 ·0- -0- $ -0- Loss on u1sposa1 0 1 Asse1s ln1erest on Lease Payment Interest on Inter-Fund Loan Fund a.tencn/ Retelned Eamlnge June 30, 1112 $22,416.822 1,497,113 ..(). 1,479,936 1,733.197 4,907,053 54,371 923,677 545,083 63,024 89,957 3,359, 124 1,685,051 *0- 1, 196) 1, 105) 64,551 3,735,474 1,567,434 1,623.099 5,612 7,508 2.769 8,425 $45. 766.979 372.479) 872,906 $500,427 7.889 14,2 11 105,855 Total Non-Operating Expenses 131,246 Revenue• Taxes Licenses and Perm11s Fines and Forfeitures $20.191 ,012 326.728 118,394 3,493.604 1 43B,233 2, 170.602 PARK DEVELOPMENT FEES FUND EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT FUND Use 0 1 Money and Property Intergovernmental Charges for Serv1ces Other Total Revenues Expenditures 374.507 $28 113,080 General Government $ 9.460.445 Public Safety 10,517.913 Public Works 4.345.483 Parks and Recreation 2.606,048 Debt Service · Principal Retirement 299.3 13 Interest and Fiscal Charges 156.872 Total Expenditures $27_386.074 SPECIAL GAS TAX STREET IMPROVEMEN_T __ FUND-~2107, 1 Revenue a Revenue• Charges for Services DRAINAGE FEES FUND Receipt• • Oper11Ung =$==12~9•59° Charges for Services ExpenM• Operetlng • Revenue• Charges for Services \ $ 17,682 Loss on Disposal of Fixed Assets Automotive Fuel BICYCLE AND PEDESTRIAN FACILITIES FUND RevenuH Use of Money and Property S 6.978 1974 OPEN SPACE BOND DEBT SERVICE FUND Revenue• Internal Central Garage Depreciation Total Operating Expenses EXPENDABLE TRUST FUND Taxes $ 277.410 R•venuH Use of Money and Property Other ExpendlturH Debt Service -Principal Re1irement $ • Interest and Fiscal Charges 90,000 174,079 Total Revenues Total upend1tures $ 264.079 Expenditure• CAPITAL OUTLAY FUND s $ $ $ $ $ Use of Money and Properw lntergover nmentaf $ 149.519 Revenuea General Government Publlc Works Total Revenues Expendlluree Capital Ou11ay 58 1 O 15 Use of Money and Property 01'1er 730.534 Total Revenues 357.446 Expendlturee Capital Outlay SPECIAL GAS TAX STREET IMPROVEMENT FUND-~2107.5 Revenu•• LAND ACQUISITION FUND Revenue• Intergovernmental $ 7.500 Use of Money and Property $ $ $ 69,788 3.021 72,809 852.335 Total Expenditures $ VEHICLE PARKING DISTRICT NO. 1 • IMPROVEMENT FUND Revenue a Taxes $ VEHICLE PARKING DISTRICT NO. 1 • ACQUISITION FUND 105•855 RevenuH SOUTH COAST DRIVE CONSTRUCTION FUND Taxes $ Expenditures Capital Outlay $ 7 .500 -SPECIAL GAS TAX STREET IMPROVEMENT FUND· 2108 Revenue• Use of Money and Property tnlergoyernmental $ 326.192 366.597 Revenue• Use of Money and Property $ 4.657 LANDSCAPE ASSESSMENT DISTRICT NO. 1 Revenue• Charges for Services 2.260 VEHICLE PARKING l>ISTRICT NO. 2 • IMPROVEMENT FUND Revenue• Taxes $ VEHICLE PARKING DISTRICT NO. 2 • ACQUISITION FUND Total Revenues Expendlluree 692,789 Public Works $ 3.870 Revenuee ==== Taxes $ 510,445 9,033 82,917 138,963 113, 127 344.040 17.536 308.613 326. 149 11,478 49,300 60.778 138 275 92 184 Expenditure• General Government Capltai Outlay $ LANDSCAPE ASSESSMENT DISTRICT NO. 2 7 .097 Rnenuee COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY Total Expenditures TRAFFIC SAFETY FUND Revenuea Fines and Forfellures lntergovernmontul Other Total Re'Venues Expenditure• $ $ $ 374,705 Charges for Services 38 1 •802 Expendllur•• Public Works $ ·TAX INCREMENT FUND 1·247 RevenuH ==== Properly Taxes $ $ 3.156 State Subventions -Business Inventory Tax ==== -Homeowners Relief 558.882 69.786 5,044 ~ Collectlon Charges ( 1.363) 532,824 SUNFLOWER/MacARTHUR INDUSTRIAL AREA 62 •339 RevenuH 49.561 Use of Money and Property CONSTRUCTION FUND 644,724 Expenditure• Capital Outlay I $ 19,077 s 648,046 Total Revenues s 632,349 ExpeedltuN• Interest Expense $ 917,894 COMMUNITY RIDEYELOPMENT AGENCY • REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FUND Capital Outlay $ 1,203,355 FEDERAL REVENUE SHARING FUND Revenue• $ 539,681 GOLF COURSE FUND Receipt• • Operetlng Charges for Servfoes Use of Money and Property Intergovernmental 1, 154.529 Receipt•. Non-Operellnt . $ 1, 114,820 ReYenue• Interest rents Property Taxes 0 1her Revenues s Ge,762 ; ~ 125,468 11,849 1,288.301 Total Revenues Expenditure• General Government Public Safety Capllol Outlay s 1,69•.410 Int rest Rents. Royalties and leases $ 128.143 1.470.447 ·O· Total Non-Operating Receipts Total Expenditures S 1.598,590 ExpenH• -Operetlng Admlnlstra1ion Costs Maintenance Goll Actlvlllts Non-Construction Jobs Depreciation COMMUHJTY DEVELOPMENT ACT FUND Reven UH use of Money and Property lntergovernmentl\I Other To1arRevenuo1 $ 8,239 349,000 Total Operating ElCpenses 11,247 ExP9nHt • Non-Operetlng $, 368 486 Losa on Sale of Atse1s s $ $ $ s 141.859 73.347 T otel Revenues 215,206 E='1's':~~orw Leger Services ' 143 295 Pl•nnlng. Survey and Design 816•304 AHi Estate Purchases 105•085 Acqulaltlon E11pense 3°920 Operetlon of Acquired Properly 28•876 Aefocatlon Costa ' Relocatlon Paymen1s 897 .380 Site Clearance Costs Fl><td Aaeet Acqulalllon 3.291 Total Expendltur.s ---$ 1.522.380 l I , 135.105 1 25,961 ' 99,3 t 1 \ 1,558,4&0 23.3&5 l 1,729 l 1, 132 I 12$,774 j s1.eso · 1 1,017 ' I $ 2,038.694 -·- .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct 26, 1983 Ford, AMC new car sales up DETROIT (AP) -Ford Motor Co. has an-American M otors Corp.'11 aale. w ere up a.n est.I.mated nounced that its sales of new cars ln mid-October 4l.2percent. increued 36 percent from the same period last year Ford report.ed 55,658 autos shipped from Oct. .Gy l.vl.'MlllTI 11-20 compared with 40,922 last year. AMC estimat.ed 4,800 autos sold, compared with provided by JET WIND SYSTEMS, INC. 3,400 a year earlier . Investment provides. ' · Last year's mid~October domestic car sales were FEDERAL-Investment Tax Credit... ......... 10•10 the lowest in 24 years, baaed on daily sales. Business Energy Credlt.. ......... 15% In a statement, AMC said more customers were ST ATE-Solar Energy Credit... .................. 26% m Its showrooms because of the recent debut of the TOTAL CREDITS ......................... 50% Renault Encore, a hatchback derivative of the Depreciation and Long Term Income popular Renault Alliance. Ford did not comment FOR INFORMATION CALL: 714/760-9509 immediately. 11 Mainsail Dr., Corona del Mar, CA 92625 So far this year, Ford's sales are up 15.5 percent, Ol1t1t<J only Dy Olllf•rlQ "''"'"""n"'"" lo Cal•I •oK•\IO~I~ who Ul>sly ""'''""'"' from 1,070,549 to 1,236,628, t SY11a1»1<1y ~"•Nl4•a~ '"'' wo<1" --~••111•' 01 r.on .. '"'''"'1''''11 & ""'omoou.,. '' •1 Alliance sa.les have helped boost AMC's • ~ 11y lttaSI l2!>0 00 6 Q•OU oll(iOlllO "' ••Ce .. "' S6~ 000 "' 198 1 82 8) Qt ha' " ~., ~ DRUGI COUNTY BUllllll Jim Winchester appointed product manager at Emulex Emalex Corp. of Costa Mesa haa announced the appointment of Jim W1Dclae1ter to the position of product manager, subsystems, according to Sol Zecbter, vioe president, marketing. A Santa Ana resident, Winchester will be responsible for marketing and sales product-line management of Emulex disk and tape subsystems products. Prior to joining Ernulex, he was with MSI Data Corp. ••• S:.:.':;~~·~~~~~~~~1;,o;,~~m s c,...,,, E><i c""18,.,tl0 "''""'"' 91.2 percent above year-ago levels, or 151,515 ~·~~~~~~6~~~·~·~~-~1~-~·~o~,~~~"~'~~=~~~~"=~~·~~~m=·~~~~~~~~~~m~~~~~~w~i:Lh~7~9~,2=5=3. ___ ~--------~ The~x&BurcbAdverdslDgCo.ofN~~rt I Beach had annou......t lhe promotion of Kar .. ~".. WINCHEITIR -.. REAL ESTATE PROPERTIES TOBE AUCTIONED Back By Popular Demand!! The Easy Trouble-Free Way to Acquire Real Estate Your Potential Savings? Minimum Bids 60%. of Retail Prices. First Time Buyer to the Seasoned Investor! ~OtlER of l'"41TS .iO )0 .. ~ ~ 6 Take a Look at a Few of the Potential Bargain Al CTIO' 'Hl~l'Hl'M Tl'PE LOCATIO~ BID LAST U IU'G PRICE Condominiums "nahclm ~ -tS,000 S 8l.OOO Condominiums f'ontana Condo•lnium1 Sunset Buth Houses Huntina•on Reach HOHCI Ra ncho Cucamonga Office Condominiums Santa Ana luldcntial lot Package Redlands Co•dominium ~~port Buch Co111mcrc:ial Bldg. Buena Park Exceptional Financing Packages For Ownt.:r on:upkd and inn :,tor Condominiums .i6.000 ll",000 122,000 H9,000 H,000 198,000 H0,000 •9~.000 l)')"{, Fin:m cinµ :ll l :li .O" .. 1APH . 15 M"' .. ) 110 'ictr Fi~nJ l)O'Y., Financing at 12.'l "., (AP!~ I~ OI ''.,) 110 'ic1r Fi xnl Houses 9 'l% Fin:rncing :It I :\" .. (A PIC l.~.'lH " .. ) \() )(_·ar Fixc.:d 90 1Y.1 Financin~ :ti 12 .=)% (APR . l 2 l) 1",,) ,\0 'l::tr FiM.·<.I C.0~1~1ERC IA l.. OFFIC E (.ON DOMI:\ ll '~I ~. I.A ~ I) and I.< >T~-< >ht:1in ~upc.:r t\u{;tion < ::it:tloµul' for <.k 1:11b. 60.000 •9~.ooo lOt,000 119,000 71.000 HO,~ HO, 818,000 Don't ntiss this opportuni-ty. Call today for your FREE Super Auction IITM Catalogue It contains full detail. on property lo<.:ations, maps and financing. Orange County Area Anaheim Area • San 6ernardino Area (7 1-i) 640-4954 (7 1 ) 670-2999 (714) 877-0151 INFORMATl()N OFFICES ()pen 7 days a week 10 :00 A .M . to 7:00 P.M . \111 1 tt "' , • 111d1111nl '" '''" 1'' •l'I 111'.1' Ii ( .\ I lth•r """ '' lwn ptuh1h11,•1I "' l.11< < .H,11""'" "11111111 h< m.11lul 1" 11·"111 '"' "' "" •1.111 111 "ltu II 1111' !\·~I• •IJh' ulh·r11111 '' 11111 111 • 11mpl< u· • omf'ltJ1l~1· "•lh lh" n•JI < •t.111 "r "' '" r I.I\<• ul 1h.11 ,1.11\ • · flNANCI Madiey to the position of coordinator , client services from the position of traffic/production coordination. The announcement was made by John C. Cox Jr., agency president. She will assist account executives on the CIE Sy1tem1, CIE Termlnal1 and B utterfield Equities Corp. ac- counts. • • • Art Manufac turing has purchased a 9,600 square foot industrial building located at 623 Young SL. in Santa Ana. The building was purchased for the manufacturig of lighting fixtures. The purchase price was $441,600. The property w as sold by John Mueller and Cbarles Cbristen1en of Norris, Beggs & Slmp1on of Newport Beach, a commercial/industrial real estate firm. The Newport Beach architecture and plan- ning firm of DeRevere, Wlte, Garaklu ud A11oclates has annQ.Ul'lOed the ptomotion of Irvine resident Keuetb L. Paddock to an a.ociated in the firm. ln this position, Paddock is responsible for master planning and design of retail centers, office developments, R&D facilities and industrial projects. • • • Ern1t & Wbllllley, a Big Eight accounting firm, has promoted Jeffr~y J . Ml1aer and Carol A. Jones as managers in its Newport Beach office. Also at E&W, Steplaen P. Blydle, Joe ~tt1, Robert A. Blake and Diane Laaol1 have been promoted to supervisors in their various departments. The firm has 300 offices in 70 countries, with more than 100 employees in its Newport Beach office. • • • The Tran1pacWc Development Co. has nam~ Ken <;tlowackl as construction manager for the fmn's SOutl1em California office. Glowacki brings to the post construction and facilities management experience with such companies as R&B E nterprl1e1, Homart Development Co. and IBM Corp. MUTUAL FUND LISTINGS NEW YORK (AJ>I CarOnl 11 '3 11 71 ,., .. , 13 '6 NL In• 80$ ll.2S 11 ll MidAHI •.n U0 IMOl 10 S4 "IL In•\! r 7S CD 7S .0 -Tne following auo C•nlGr 1199 t) 10 Bond 6 70 NL ln•ttlon Group M$8 Fo 11.03 NL Funcl t n NL SIHGman F\"l'11· 1~:··~:1~':°~-:!:r Cll,:~ gr~~4 t• ~~1~' ~rn ~t :g~ ~~' rn =~ ~:G~ '.3o~ tSNI~ Pi:1a1 I·~ NL ~~~ncl '1) ~t e•oon ol Stcurlllu Cnt SM 13.47 NL 01ln• 1190 tOS Grl 17 S6 ll" M<ilu•I o1 Omalla Eaull• 14 It IS n ln•ttl I 6S NL Oto••·· Inc .,. 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Fl~ll~v(;r!.~1 •. ,. ~~ 'l:;d'k 11(6~ t~OL Mrd A/J1 1 Proa ~lcff N ~~11 r SO u ~t ~!!:_r;,!~'.°" OVER THE COUNTER llAID ITOCll Ul181GI WSAl9DO ... , STOCKS Wedadda •1 11 •·•· PDT Prie.. _____ ,,. Orange Coast DAILY PIL01'/Wedne1day, Oct. 28, 1983 -S7 ------------------------------------------------ NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS OUOTATIOfllS INCLUDE TAAOfS OH fHI! NI W YOl\K, MIOWHT. PACt'IC, PBW, BOif OH, OEfllOIT AND CINCINNAll STOCK EXCHANGES AllO MPOllTf.D BY THE NASO INSTINET •1111•11 Greyhound workers reject wage cuts; talks continue By IM Aaoda ... Pnet SCOITSDALE, Ari%. -Greyhound Linea Inc. neao- tiato:na met again~ with repreeentativtw ol the bua line's unionbed WOl'k.era, a day aft.er the rank and file overwhelmingly rejected demanc:b for pay and benefit <."Uta. The 12,761 workerf abo authorized union leaden to call a strike. Inflation reaches 5. 7 percent WASHINGTON -lnflation crept up to a 5.7 percent annual rate last month. The government reported Tuaday that higher pricel for can. food, and houling in September puahed overall consµrner ooata up 0.5 percent in the bigest one-month lncreaee since May,. Prices had risen 0.4 percent ln July and August. Dollar 89'lJ'll but gold tumbles Oil firms' profits soaring WASHING TON -Exxon Corp. and Standard Oil Co. of California said higher profits on oveneaa operations contributed to an overall increase in third-quarter eamlngl. Exxon, the nation's largest industrial concern, aaid Tuetlday its earninp jumped 20.5 percent in the three montha ended Sept. 30, to ,1.23 billion. Standard of California, wbicb sells its oil products under the Chevron brand name and ranks as the fourth-largest U.S. oil company, said ita profit n:.e 11 percent to $509 million. . , U.S. Steel earns $52 million Pl'ITSBURGH -U.S. Steel Corp. aaid it earned $52 million in the third quarter, compared with an $82 million to. in the period a year ago. The nation's largest ltee1maker attributed the eaminp turnaround to results from its oil and gas operations. Factory goods orders decline WASHINGTON -An unu.sually large drop in the automotive category prompted a 0.5 percent decline in orden to factories fOI' big-ticket durable goods itema in September, the government saya. But private analysts, noting that orders would have ri8en by 3.9 percent from August if the 14.5 peroent decline in transportation equipment industries were excluded, found the report heartening for the economy. Dollar rises but gold declines LONDON -The U.S . dollar edged higher apimt most other majoc currencies in early European trading today, while gold price9 turned lower. Despite the dollar'• rUle, traders aaid foreign exchanae markets &bowed surprisingly little reaction to the U.S. invasion of Grenada to protect 80IDe 1,000 American dtizem and restore order and democracy on the Caribbean island. Home resales up 1.1 percent WASHING TON -A real estate trade group says reulea of a1ngle-family bomea roee 1.1 percent in Sept.ember after falllna for two months. The_ i-eport from the Natioftal Amociation of Beal.ton aid Tue.day that reaale9 were at a 8eUOfUillf adjust.ed annual rate 2. 74 million units last month compared with 2. 71 million in Al,AgUSt. GOLD QUOTATIONS WHAT NYSE DID NEW YC>alC CAP) Od. fl WHAT AMEX DID NEW YC>aK \AP) Od 1S METALS Pr•• dey W1 "'5 ,,, 1"3 12 1S HlW YOM (AP) -SCIO( nonltrrow ....... ~·ooev: c...., . ""'1' ..,., • PoUftd. u.a ........... C...., •la.IO -per _.o, HY Come11 tPOI -"" -Tiie &.Mil. H-27 -• pound, JIM· "-41 oent• a poullCI. ~- '111 • •·4'M --W..~IC> • .......... 11 _....pound, lt..V • ...._, • UM.00 .. MCUIO .... ?I lb llMll • ..._YOR. ....... • '3to4.0043M 00 ~trOOt-.N.V. Sil YER SYMBOLS DOW JONES AV£RAG£S NEW YOltK (AP) -FINI Dow ~ ~ lO lftd 20Tm ISUH ffSlk llldul Tr en Ulh 6S$1k 0 I I ...a..c:ii. ltsl.M l~•I 1245.2112Sl.M+1M 5'U1 "'-" •1.1s •51-i.n IJt.16 ltO. IJ IJU4 llUO+ A.SJ JOUI "7.JJ fOU2 91J.D+ U2 t.¥17» t,111,• 2,161 .. IJA55'- AMlRICAN LlADERS '°'"°° •IO,• 311.1• IM,1• U6,.• 154.JOO , ..• 115,100 111..eoo '7,100 • .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 l WE HONOR . YOUR CREDIT! BEST of nATURE 0~1'm~~ Vitamin C & E BOTH IN ONE CAPSULE SOO mg C" •OO I U "E" 50 CAPSULES VrtammC ~· b.,4"'""·-·~· -.Q.l""" \ -."'O • \0 • ..,-w.... REG. 0 &·tu c,,,~,,,. ''"• 14.79 Pl U •6118i PRO VITAMIN A Beta Carotene 15 mg REG. '3.89 100 TABLETS NATURAL Lecithin 19 GRAINS -. 0 L Tryp'.!:!J~tai \O,.l tn.:_ \ll ••"'"' L-Tryptophan SOOmo 50 TABLETS REG. • '9.29 ·o '-''•I•"' \t..,<··· .... I•••• NATURAL Calcium Magnesium Zinc REG. '4.49 250 TABLETS "LU •6888 8-Complex WllH VtTAMt"' C: REG. '3.49 100 TABLETS Vitamin 8-12 SOO mcg. .:0 Vitamin C 500 mtt w11h Rost> H1r' 100 1.ablth 0 Nc11ural Vitamin E d -Alpha 400 11 NATURAL ·o L-Lysine :.IE~ soo mg. ·o Vitamin c 100 TABLETS Vitamin E 100 CAPSULES '"~'·' Lecithm REG. 12.99 100 CAPSULES ._ ___ _ REG. 13.39 REG. '4.15 100 TABLETS WITH ROSE HIPS 500 mg. :\ REG. '2.77 PLU •5881 -QtJAl:ffY VITAm1ns Vitamin E 400 l.U SUPPLEMENT IW•••rJ ' FOR ADULTS 100 CAPSULES Vitamin C ASCORBIC ACID SUPPLEMENT FOR ADULTS .. 500 mg. 100 TABLETS REG. '3.39 REG. 12.39 Stress Formula · WITH )RON REG. '3.79 ' t ---- ----- Multiple Vitamins WITH IRON FOR ADULTS AND'TEENS REG. 14.79 Multiple Vitamins MULTIVITAMIN SUPPLEMENT FOR ADULTS AND TEENS 365 TABLETS Stress Formula WITH ZINC TIMED RELEASE Vitamin C 500 mg. SUPPLEMENT FOR ADULTS 100 CAPSULES Vitamins PLUS MINERALS MULTIVITAMIN ANO MUL Tl MINERAL SUPPLEMEN1 200 TABLETS REG. '4.39 PlU •6696 REG. '6.29 ADVANCED FORMULA MULTIVITAMIN AND MUL Tl MINERAL SUPPLEMENT a-ALPHA 400 l.U. REG. 'e.59 Brewers Yeast DIETARY SUPPLEMENT 7.5 g r. 250 TABLETS TIMED RELEASE Iron Capsules ANIMAL SHAPED CHILDREN'S CHEWABLE Vitamins WITHJ AON REG. '3.29 REQ. '2.41 Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1983 MEAD ON WINE SLIM GOURMET Fast, fabulous foods real trick for treat Conjure up a Halloween party menu that looks and tastes fabulous. yet goes together in the wink of a blackcat'seye. Today's busy lifestyles need not preclude a fun and festive party. Even dual-career households and active families will find these menu ideas easy to fit Into crowded time schedules. The featured concoction is Chill Con Carne that combines ground beef and pinto and kidney or p ink dry cooked beans. This old-fashioned dish is ideal for informal meals, because It can be prepared in advance and reheated just before serving. Accompany the chili with cool. refreshing Grape and Green Salad. Lightly tossed with a well-seasoned Vinaigrette Dressing, this salad balances the flavors and textures of juicy fresh grapes with mellow avocado. Treat little and big goblins alike to individual packages of pistachios. Fun to crack and eat, these memorable treats also are a great snacks to pack into lunch boxes and brown bags. Another idea for a party entree is Halloween Bean Platter, an array of assorted cold cuts and cheeses served with satisfying portions of a bean-vegetable salad. A quick-to-prepare accompaniment Is Toasted Frenc h Bread With Pistachio Butter. CHILI CON CARNE 2 pounde ground .,.., 1 cup choppM onion 2 clowM prtlc, minced 1 tebl11poon ell 3'1a cupe dr81ned, cooked or canned pinto be•n• 1 cen (14Ya to 11 omtOM) tomtitoee1t,\ cupe dr•lned, cooked or canned red kklnef or pink bellne 1cupwater 1 cen (I ouncee) tom.to uuce 1 t8b1Hpaon chtll powder 1 teMpoonult 'la te•poon ground cumin (optional) Comtor1111M Brown grouna beef, onion and garlic In oil. Mash and reserve 1 cup pinto beans. Drain tomatoes reserving liquid; coarsely chop. Add whole beans, tomatoes. reserved tomato liquid, water. tomato sauce and seasonings. Bring mixture to boil. Simmer 30 to 35 minutes; stir occasionally. Add additional water during simmering, if necessary. Stir in mashed beans; mix well. Simmer 5 minutes longer or until slightly thickened. Serve with tortillas. Make 8 ( 1 cup) servings. GRAPE AND GREEN SALAD I cupe torn lettuce 2 cupe h•lved gr•pee, Meded It nece ... ,, C3 C7 1J.r cup dlagon.111 •lac.cl green onion 2 medium avocedoe, peeled •nd cut Into chunke Vinaigrette DNMl"9 Combine all Ingredients except avocado and Vinaigrette Dressing; toss lightly. Just before serving, add avocado and dressing; toss to coat mixture. Makes 8 serving. Vln•lgr•tt• D,..elng: Combine ~ cup oil. Y3 cup wine vinegar. 2 teaspoons Dijon mustard. 1 teaspoon salt and 'I• teaspoon e.ch pepper and sugar; mix well. Makes 1 cup. HALLOWEEN BEAN PLATTER 1 ¥1 cupe drained, cooked or canned great northern, navy, •mall whit• or kldner bean• 1 cup allced zucchini '"' cup chopped onion 'I• cup d~.green chlllff 1 tomato, cut Into wedg•• 'I• cup ollv• oll 3 tablffpoon1 llm• Juice 1 table1poon honer 1 clove garllc, minced '"' t ... poon Nit '14 tNapoon chlll powder Trio's brew: course, all this comes with either Gorilla Banana Bread or Killer Bee Honey Rolls. Sounds like a nightmare of the digestive system or perhaps the menu at Dracula'scastle. But it's not. These, and other scary-sounding recipes are all part of The Monsler Cookbook, published this month by three local school teachers. • Monster cookbook By CHRISTINE DECKER Delly '9ot COIT .... -! For this evening's menu our chef is proud to present: Brontosaurus Salad, Carrot Swamp, Screamed Com, flaming Dragon's Breath as your en tree and Vulcan Vudge for dessert. Of The 77-page book, designed especially for children, second through eighth grades, has been in the works for three years. "We were at a convention and noticed most of the children were either buying monster books or books about children," said Barbara Rainet, Newport Beach resident and fourth grade teacher at Taft Elementary School In Santa Ana. "We also found thatthecookbooksout today didn'tappeal tomodemkidaand most of them were not written for little boys. So, we put all these feelings together and started making up the N!<:ipes," said Kay Pence, alto a fourth grade teacher at Taft and resident of Newport Beach. Kathy Philipeon, Barbara'uister, iaallo author of the book. She live. in Laguna &ach and teaches at Esperanza in Mimion Viejo. All 49 recipes with such names as Creepy Crawly Limey Sllmey, allme flavoredcreem deteert, and Rattler'• Revenge, a cheesy bread in the shape of a snake, have all been taste-tested by volunteer net'ghbort'!ood chll- dren or by some of their students. Despite The Monster Cookbook'• newneM, the trio already has earned a gueet appearance on this morning's" AM Los AJ\aeles." Ther allO have plans to come out with a whole line o chUdren'1cookware,achildren'1Chrl1tmas book and a children'• party plaruili)g book - with lots of monstrous Ideas. Their book, which has been ornately illustrated by art student Scott Ol.IM of Sant.a Ana, isavailablot UpetartCrow, SouthCout VUlage;TheChildren'aBookShoppe.Newport Beacn;The Wrapper, Lldo;The Kld'1Place, lrvine. or by writing: Trio, 18 Wild Gooee, Newport Beach 92663. ' ~ Versatile pumpkins delicious in' soups as well as desserts. See Page C4. ,,. t ... poon pepper Lettuoe 12 to 11 ouncee cold cute: Niemi, ctlHH, bologu Combine beans, zucchini. onion, green chilies and tomato. Combine remaining ingredients except lettuce and cold cuts; pour over bean mixture and mix well. Marinate at least 1 hour. Spoon mixture into lettuce cups or lettuce-fined platter. Arrange cold cuts around bean mixture. Makes 6 (!14 cup) servings. TOASTED FRENCH BREAD WITH PISTACHIO BUITER Ya cup butter, IOftened 4 blblHpoon• ftnelr chopped, •helled plet.chloe, divided 1 tablffpoon lemon or llme Juice Ya twpoon each oregano, cruahed and pepper Daeh prllc powder 1 '-f French brMd Comblne~utter, 2 tablespoons pistachios. lemon juice and seasonings. Halve bread lengthwise; spread both cut surfaces with butter plxture. Sprinkle with remaining pistachios. Broll 5 lnches from heat until bread is hot and top ls lightly browned. Slice and serve. Makes 6 to 8 servings. DRAGON'S BREATH 1 cup all purpoae flour ~ t.ablespoonsa.lt ~cup butter, softened 6 ounces cream cheese, softened 2 red hots for eyes 2 peppercorns 1 egg (save egg shell) 1 tablespoon water ~ pound ham, sliced thin 'h cup of your favorite cheese, cut in chunks 12 almond slivers 11\ teaspoon lemon extract 1/e teaspoon sugar Have ready: Pastry brush, rolling pin, knif~. two bowls, measuring spoo'ns, measuring cup, cutting board, serving spoon, oven proof platter, matches. Mlx flour and salt in a bowl. Add cream cheeeeand butter. With hands, mix well and press together into a f inn ball. Put Jn refrigerator for 20 minutes. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Put ea in small bowl, add water, and beat well. (Save half the ea shell.) Take douah out of refigerator and roll out. Uaeabout l /4ofdough tomAkebottomputof body. Bnaah bottom pert of body with eg. Stack half of the ham in the middle of the draaon'abody-leaveroomonlidee.Plaoe chee.e on top of ham. Stack the remaining ham orttopofcheae. Cut about 1/4 of the dough and place on top of ham. Presa both pi~ tosether with fork and cut of exc:eaa. Make tail and attach to body. Make four lepand attach to body. Add almonda for toenaila. Make two small wtnpandattach to body. Form dough around euahell, leaving mouth open. Make two noat.rllsout of douah and place peppercoma ln them. Attach to body. Make two eyes out of dough and place red hota in them. Attach to body. Takeld9onand make Uttle cu ta alona dr.,on '•tail and back. Brulh dr-aon wtth911. Bake at 400 degrees fro 35 to 40 mlnuta. Puuugarand lernonextnctindracon'amouth and have an Id ult light \he fire. • Kathy Philipson Kay Pence Barbara Ramet r C2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. Oct. 26. 1983 Raisin bread • • • ' ra1s1n appetites Nothing heartens the appetite like the rich aroma of bread in the oven. And nothing enriches an autumn meal or snack like whole90me homemade raiain bread. Raisins, apples and honey lend natural sweet- neaa, fiber and texture to this nutritious recipe. The hearty good grains of whole wheat and bulgur enhance the crusty texture of this fruit and fiber-packed bread. AB lightly buttered morning toast, this raisin bread is a champion breakfast in it.sell. In the lunch box, it's a natural match for traditional peanut butter or cheese sandwiches. For trouble free storage, wrap the loaves tightly in foil or plastic and then store at room temperature. Th.la bread will stay fresh for two to three days thal)ka to the added moisture from raisins and apples .. RAISIN APPLE WHEAT BREAD ~cup milk \4 cup cracked wheat bulgur 2 packages active dry yeast Yi cup warm water (110 to 115 degrees) l egg 2 tablespoons vegetable oil 2 tablespoons honey 2 teaspoons salt 1 cup chopped tart apple 1 ~ cups whole wheat flour 2 ~ cups all-purpoee flour 1 ~ cups raisins Heat milk to lukewarm in small saucepan. Stir in bulgur; set aside. In large mixer bowl dissolve yeast in wann water. Add egg, oil, honey, salt, apple and milk mixture. Beat just to blend. Add tile whole wheat flour and 1 cup of the all-purpoee flour. Beat at low speed just to blend, then beat at high speed for 2 minutes. With wooden spoon mix in ~ cup of the remaining flour and the raiains. Tum out onto floured board and knead 8 to 10 minutes, working in enough of the remaining flour to make a smooth, non-sticky dough. Place in greased bowl. C.Over and let riae until doubled, about 1 to 1 Yi hours. Punch dough down, divide in half and fonn into 2 loaves. Place in 2 greaed 8 x 4-inch loaf pans, about 45 minutes to 1 hour. Bake in 350 degree oven 30 to 40 minutes until tope are browned and loaves sound hollow when tapped. Cool in pans 5 minu tes. Tum out onto racks. Cooled loaves may be wrapped and frozen. This bread makes excellent toast. Makes 2 loaves. .. \ Harvest the moist goodness of raisins and apples in this wholesom e wheat and bulgur bread, a natural for the brown-~agging crowd . 1 IT WILL HAUNT YOU ·TILL IT'S GONE! ' Baked 30 hours! Splral sliced for easy serving. • Honey n' spice Glaze • Whole or half hams • Futl service Delicatessen • Old World Cheese Shop • Nationwide shipping service • Party trays llOllW MllEIJ NAM CORONA Dfl MAR -31001Coo1tHI0'1wov•(7lo&)673 9000 ANAllf /M -Th• v1noo• Center • 1222 So. l100lthunt (Al IOll Rood)• (7"> 63$· 2.461 f l TOR0-1e11 towet PIOzo North•2'601 Aoymond Woy (At fl Toro Rood) ~ •en•> u1 3122 llUNTING TON BfACll-19069 leach llvd (At Gatn.id ne xl 10 Aalc>f\'1) _ ........... . • ( 11<•) ... 1$75 .. lllJ#IY ORANGf -1419N Tu111n (Acroutrom ToyotootOfonQe) •(714 ) 991 9960 ... NAM ALSO IN LA HABRA LAKEWOOD. WEST COVINA. NORTH HOLL YWOOO. WESTLAKE VILLAGE. PASADENA. SANTA MONICA, WOODLAND HILLS. NORTHRIDGE SAN JOSE. SUNNYVALE. PALO ALTO. SAN DIEGO. UPLAND. VALENCIA. TORRANCE. SACRAMENTO. ENCINITAS. RANCHO MIRAGE. RIVERSIDE. AND FRESNO Copy,,gnt •9& ~~oney 8al\e<l "•"" inc ,------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Black-eye . peas g iven . new t wist 'wtr" to n ow , dry black-eye peas were mart often used in a traditional way cooked with rice and pork to make a delicious Southern dish. In recent years the peu have been gjven wider use -in fritters and croquettes; ~ stuf- fing for tortillas; in casseroles; and in salads. And now an enterpris- ing cook has added them to a stir-fry dish. BLACK-EYE PEAS STI R -F R Y VEG- ETABLES 2 tablesp oons full-flavored olive oil 'A cup parsley leaves, finely chopped l clove garlic, finely chopped 1 medium (4 ounces) onion. thinly sliced ( 1 looeely packed acant cup) 1 medium ( 4 ounces) sweet red or green pepper, eeeded and thinly sliced 2 7-inch long zucchini (each 4 ounces), thinly sliced (1~to2 looeely packed cupe) 1 large (8 ounces) red-ripe tomato, cored and cut into 16 wedges 1A teaspoon crushed dry thyme 16-ounce can cooked dry black-eye peas. drained ( 1 ~ cupe) • .ee Note Salt and pepper to taste In a 10-inch skillet over moderate heat. heat the oil. Add the parsley, garlic, onion, red pepper and iucchini. Cook, stir· ring often, only until the zucchini is crisp-tender -a mat1er of minutes. Stir in tomatoes and thyme and hea t, stirring often. Fold in the black-eye peu and the aalt and pepper; heat, stirring carefully once or twice, 10 M not to break up the peM. Serve at once. Maka 6 eervingll. Note: You may want to cook a batch of dry bl8Ck-eye peu and '* 1 ~ cupe of them for \hla ltir·fry diah -they ahould be tender but not ml.Wly. One cup of the dry black-eye peu will yield 2 to 2~ CUpl Of cooked peas. The lef- towl' peal wW taste good edded to rke and auch cooked vegetables u 1plnac h or collard ,reena: SAVE asc Tastes better than ever! I Plumper Raisins I Crispier Flakes SAVE 2Sct ~ RalSIN BRIN "The Fr.ilf and Cereal Lovers Ceteaf'. -----------------------------' , MANUFACTURERS COUPON ExpiresNcwember30, 1983 , \ I MANUFACTURER'S COUPON ExP1Rd MARCH 31. 1984 I 1l4rj ~!~.~~.~'~'"~~:"~·I SAVE254 ~isfBRaN I I m utu\ lie "•"OMO p•ov.oeo •<•u ~"" 1n11 ~ur••um41t nave C0"11>1ttcl ""'" I 1•to t• ~~~ I 1ne '"""' r.t "'" ""~' CHn •••uo 1 •OO•n 0, le 1 """' 8rOlllers O O This tou1141n 9..0 tnly tn r,urclllH ti pttcllltl lllftc11•.; :_ -I rompany Bo• tl8' Clinton "'"H !>11'• Coupon f'•O<•H 11 l08\ I Any tllltl UH constihlln rtvd I COU'l!N NOT TllAN5't11AllE llMIT -ON( COU'l!N Plll PUllCKU( Limit one coupon per purchaM To lilt ttltlltt ()I 1. w111 "'"'tlu•~e you IOI Ille t.1<e •alllf ot 1t11s cou~ I Good only on Wisk. 5 oius 8t 11•ubm111eo 1n complo.tt1<0 w1tn GfC RtOeMOhOll PotlCY C t 1n (2) 32 01 • (1) 64 oz. or (I) 121 01 I lOll>Ofdltld nerem Dy "lutncp V4h(! on•y 11 rtO~l!ltO Oy 1eta11 I Any othef uM COrtSl"UWS fraud ~ ~ 01)lt11\ul()I\ nt Out mertMl\01\t OI 1nyOnt \(}t(1hully ,1utll0f•tl'G A ne 4cr n~ (Jll CA)ll Vdlut ' /()c M;11 10 r~llf'ldl fOOO\ r(lfl)O(AllC)tl I -.U 11111 322589 ro eo.1uJ K•n•.ihtt 11 60907 25' h I 4 300 , , 4 2 5 OENEAAL FOODS CO APOAATION I --------------·---------------. . . . ~ ~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. Oct. 2G. 1983 C3 ~~------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~ Lake County vineyards producing award-winning wines h 's difficult to keep up with all the wtne· growing regions m Cali· fomia. but if you're not familiar with Lake County, plan on making Its acquaintance in tht! near future. More than a few award-winning wanes are being produced by wineries within the county, and even more by wineries located elsewhere working with Lake County grapes. More people are fam· War with the county's major geographical at· tractions, Clear Lake, than with its vineyards, but in coming years that is likely to change. Fetz.er and Pardut.'Cl in neighboring Mendocino County have been using Lake County grapes for years, as have a legion of famous names in Napa Valley. Turner Winery has extensive vineyard hold- ings in Lake County. and while the wines are produced at the family winery in Woodbr idge, alm06t all bear the Lake County appellation. Withm the (.'OUnty's boundaries. Konocti (members of the P.arduc- ci family recently purchased a major interest), Lower Lake and Guenoc have been winning a disprupor· tionately larg~ per- centage of medals in the state's major wine com· petitions. There is one o ther Lake County winery that is beginning to be heard from, and It looks Like 1983 will be its corrung-out year. CHATEAU DU LAC I -Almost ~ured to confuse prospective cus· tomers, most of the I wines of Chateau du Lac will not be labeled that way. Only the most lim· ited releases will bear l the winery name. The label that you will most often see. and the one that has already started wmning awards 1 Is Kendall-Jackson, fam. 1 i l y name o f t>he proprietors, J ess and Jane Jack.son (Kendall is I her maiden name). I The winemaker of re· cord is Jed Steele, for- merly with Edmeades in Mendocino County, a winemaker of consider · a ble s tatu re. For - tunately, Steele's wine- making style JS more Muffins enhance any meal As the falling leaves fiU your yard, let the wonderful a roma of fresh-baked muffins fill your home. Double Com Muffins are a deUghtfuJ addition to breakfast. lunch or dinner. Serve the m hot with but ter and honey. DOUBLE CORN MUF'· FINS 1 package frown com souffle 3 tablespoons granu- lated sugar 2 '~ teaspoons baking powder ~ teaspoon saJt I cup yellow t.'Orn meaJ 1/J cup aJl-purf)OSt;' flour ~cup milk 2 tablespoon butter Defrost <..'Om souffle, overnight in the re- frigerator or 10 to 15 minutes in a 200-degrce oven . Preheat oven tv 400 degrees. Sift flour. s ugar. baking powder and salt Into a mixing bowl. Sur in corn meal. Blend com soufflt', milk and melt.ed butter in a small mixing bow 1. Add to dry ingredients. Stir with rork ju.st until thoroughly moistened. Fill greased muffin tins 2 /3 full. Bake 25 minutes Make 12 muf- fi.na. For Ad Action CaD a Daily Pilot AD· VISOR 642 -5678 subtle than his rustic "1nounta111 man" ap- pearanL.'t! might mdicate the vineyards a decade ago, and I mean planted in the literal senae of the • word. The Jacksons are not absentee owners. Mead on Wine from well kno wn vineyard.a all over tlle 1tatet to come up with a part.icular balance and atyle evidenced 1n the t\n.lahed product. The wine ii crisp, leaning toward austerity, with just a touch of oak show- ing to interest without overwhelming. that 1 most frequently recommend. It's not grassy. The wine has good varietal definition, never-the-less, wHb super balance and a pleasant, round, spid· little coarse in its overall impression. Not a bad wine, just not as nice as its stablemate. Consu l ting wine- maker is Ric Forman, the talentt-'d wine man who built hts reputation at Sterling Vineyards prior to its purchase by Coca Cola. By Jerry D. Mud Kendall-Jacklon I H t ''Clea.r Lake" Cbenln Blue ($5.50): Th.is wine will have many f ans. A very fruity wine, with a melon quality tha t i5 so intense as to be almost perfumed, and a residual sweetness of 2.5 percent that isn't really a1J that sweet when crisp Lake County acids finish ha~g their say. While the first Ken- dall-J ackson wines are just being released, the vmeyard opera uon that s upports the winery is anything but new. The Jacksons planted Jess flinches at the term "gentleman farm- er," being the sort of fellow who gets dirt under his fingernails and works up a sweat every time his schedule per - mits his escape to Lake County. Homemade wines were made by the Jacksons prior to com· merc~ial production, I ~H llAl.LO \\ EE' MASKS Chardonnays produced all over the U.S. The wine's reuonable price makel it all the more interesting. ltendalf·JacklOD ltH Cllardouay (about $8)i This wine has a bro.cl . California appellat.lon, becau1e winemaker Steele has blended winee lteaclall-Jacuoa ltH "Clear Lake" Saavlpon Blue ($7): The Wine I liked better than the medal winner and the kind of Sauvignon Blanc oesa. Keada.ll-Jacklon NV Saavtpon Blue ($6): Less money, but a less successful version in my opinion . Thi s non-vintage selection is a blend of wines from 1981 and 1982, shows much more acid, and is just a 1n11~ r01i5 VOliS VOHS vo~s VOllS VOli~ in~'. •'·~ ~c-----------------------~c-----------------------~ , ~ , lli\ rOli~ r OliS VO~~ VOii', V01i5 •Oli S IQliS .011s I OliS votes VONS VONS VONS VOHS VONS VOliS I ' 'I Ill-R \(; AT \'O~S 1 .K -..ny '°' ~ tJ·nc•t"ll1 ... ,~ ot tiaHoween m~? 4 ff•lln._o.een pro1ttt t 1nat s 0"1at tun tor schoot ~ l>Ol Bl I ~ I I I I ~ l>Ol Bl I ~ ~ DOl 'BLF ~ ,_ ··--··--· 1 I ~o:= :: ;c::.o~ -:.:: ~-:~-:.:. :o~:c~. I 11 I = :: ;--..... --z.-:.;: ~-~ ~~.:. 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VARIETY Bl'NS CANO\' OR CARAMEL APPLF-"i FRF.SH'WHOLE PINEAPPLE .95 MEDIUM SIZE TROPICAL rAE.AT GROCER\ 1/ t)l JAA AAH(;MfA,A OR VICfOAIA I 11 \'ic1oria S1ls1 , ''"' 0~1•••( \on' Liquid Bleach \pplt' I Im~ Apple,auce tt OAto Hi 1 llY\f WH''' .lnll>fTimc Popcorn '111 ... ~ f HU jl,Atif Sun \bid Rahin_s •I '11 U td, U.K 4 l 'wll Yf 01 fUl \'un' •\...,,()fled Re1era11e-. t.l r)t ~\.t-lH)ffU \'on' Tomato Kec c:hup t 111 (;I'< RlllULA~OU.AAl(AS !'-llm Price · \1araarlM tt4't..11,..o\H°"' IOTtU \ hit't'O'U Jerwymald t-'rull Orink ""' t (IAl 'U.. C.Alil,0 .. C.fft\LCO l ropkan• Oranae Juict ~ lO tAn f~ "f0 0\JA.f'tfl"S I .1nd-O -l.akt'I Bucttr .89 . 49 )36 .79 .99 .79 )09 .39 .4S )59 2·~ I It-\ I I II &. IH \ l I ' •t 01 Ml! 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Mois1 Muls '' o~ to• 2 lS Puro Laundry Otfttltflll UO-C()Ut{I ••O • 85 ltt Eanhfont Napkins I· ROZ~.'\ •01·0l •O• •·u~•ot QA PIPP!llO... 99 J~nM C-omblnatlnn Plzu • ·~Ill 80• )09 Ore Ida (;olden 1'111lt\ .W IM)1 -• IONf O ,,_.,.Oil f-ICAI I MM 10 9 \. 1n dt K1mp fl'lh flllttt .,Ol llO•'llO"" 99 Ortton firm~ Pound C"1h • 10 Ol •O• Oil ··••Nf ~, I •A •• ., 011 .. ,. 98 Bink •..Yt Blnrtan \I~ • ,, ....... o •1'11\f '""' -0 J 19 "Oo.t 011•" Callt OOMt1 t • "OvNO 'OAf 87 t-:11 Twl\I Bru d • 139 EAD .89 1\768.Y IVORY SOAP 4-PAC K PERSONAL SIZE 6 ~OUNCE CAN f RESH 1n.Bf.R(; t.tT nn S.AlAO 1-A\o'C)Allt .89 PROl>l 'CF LIQUOR l C»tO SUCINO Sile fresh Cucurnbn's 8Afll.( ()fll! tAf Russel Polllot'll f~~·~ fA(~1 P11pl)I l[NOEA OHtC;•ll Pomt'l(rlnlllt'' 10 •·OUNCE P•GS IN 11•0 ('h1mplon Rai~ln' OAOCftl!IS C..ttUK. f hull Roll\ •t..OOt.i·Non 4-IMh Z yan c·accu-. 4 gioo lA .33 '" . 89 •• .29 Py 3 ~J OO I~ I ¥1) '-.0 "'" l•l1•tn. fh 11 •u .\ndn• \\ hir1· Ch.-.mp9jln1· ..... . l'ulh•r\ I 11nadi11n \\ h""' •t •'·• ... \h•i'lt'r Ur•u U.-1•r I fl H 11 t l-1111.• I lm1•, Huurhon • t 1111 I UI ~,l"t-11 <ll;"•f !I.. 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NOT All ITIMI ANO PllllCU 111 THIS AO l:,,IC TIYI AT YOMI, tMt W. ll'tCO el.YV., ltPI W .. TM IT , 1.01 ANGii.ii, IAll 01100. rlll lflO. LAI YIOAI A"O TUU"8 COU•T'f. IAl.U IN llllTAll. OUANTITlll ONL 'f MOIT tTOlllU OHN r AM TO tt li'>M r OA'fl A WllK, lfl\INI 41MlefttMI M . 'OUNTA• YAUIY ,.,...,... .. ...., rOUNTAIN YAlln ,,.. .... ,.....,...,.,, 1.AOUNA ... Lt ""'' ....... '"'••J • ...., •v• C~ITJIAMO MAC" ... tntM ..... MOit DeMllJ l"wtl Of. & Vletwle •• ·I l C.f Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 Versatile pumpkin delicious in soup, souffle, dessert By TOMHOGE ........ ~ .... lone before the white man arrived in the New World, .cooping out the teed.I and filling the cavity with ~ teaspoon Italian aeuoning golden pumpkins brightened the fields of North m1lk. honey and herbe. They baked the pumpkin in 2 cups beef 1tock The American poet, John Greenleaf Whittier, once uked "what calla back the past like the rich pumpkin pie?" And how inany Americans can recall wtndini up at least one holiday meal with this rich, cumrdy deelert? America. hot uhee u long u teven houn, then ate the 2 ~ cups pumpkin, peeled and cubed Soon after they arrived, the Pi1grtma were bubblinl fillil\8 with a 1poon. 2 ~ cupe potatoes, peeled and diced growing pwnpkina and depended heavily on the A. the piee improved and crust wu introduced, Salt and pepper to taste vegetable for food. A. one conunented "we have theybecameabuk:element oftheNewF.nglanddiet. DustbeefcubeswathOour.Inpot.,brownmeatin pumpkins at morning and pumpkins at noon. U tt Durtna the pumpkin aeuon, IOC'Oe f.annen ate them 2 tablespoona bot vegetable oil. Remove meat cubea were not for pumpklna, we would be undone." for breeldast, lunch and dinner. and add ~oil to poL But far fewer of ua have tried this robust vegetable in lta many other roles durini the meal, from IOUp to IOUffie. The Indiana taugh t the white man how to cook Here'• a recipe for a 1t.ew that aettlera ate in Add onion a'.ild ~ery pieces and saut.e until the pumpkin ln many forms; to prepare lt with meat, aomewhat simpler form. vegetables are tender. Ret urn beef to pot, add tomato fiah and other vegetables; to add it to aoup and grind P UMPltIN BEEF STEW puree, Italian aeuoning. Add beef 1tock and stir until The pwnpkin, like it.a couain the squash belongs to the gourd family, remlnda most of ua of the early Engliah .ettlementa when friendly Indiana in- troduced it to the coloniata. the pulp into meal. 2 pounds beef round in I-inch cubes mixture la blended. Bring Uquld to boil, lower heat But it was the eettler who learned to make a wide 1 cup flour and llmmer beef, covered, for 90 minutes. variety of demerta, from the clwic ple to cake to 3 ~na vegetable oil Add pumpkin and potato bita and limmer stew aouffle. 1 medium onion, chopped about 30 minutes, until meat and vegetables are Actually, the pumpkin goes back to primitive times in Mexico. Eventually it made ita way north and In the early days, the Pilgrims made a primitive ~ cup celery, chopped tender. Seuon with salt and pepper. Good with aort of pie by slicing off ..:.;th;;;;;e~to:;.ii:p~o:;.:f~•::.......cpum=:..c;P.::::kin.:::z..... __ 1_~_cu__.:.;ps_torna_. _to.....:puree~ __________ c_hWed __ bee_r_. Se_rv_es_4_. --------- Favorites scaled down When there is one, or two of you, it is hard to imagine making a large CU1erole or preparing a time-<x>nswning n!Cipe. We have adapted some favorite recipes, very quick to prepare, easy to make, and 80 delicious to eat. Relax, and enjoy a traditional beef meal made for the two of you, or limply you. N OT -TOO-S PI C Y ENCHILADAS ~ pound lean ground beef 1 tomato 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 'h teaspoon e.ach mar- joram and thyme 1 can (16 ounces) tomato sauce 4 com tortillas 'A pound Monterey Jack cheeae, sliced Sour creem (giunish) Avocado slices (gar- nish) In skillet, cook beef, tomato, Worcestershire sauce, marjoram and thyme until beef is browned; drain off ex- cess grease. Spread small amount of tomato sauce over bottom of 1-quart ~dish. Dip 1 tortilla into re- maini.Og tomato aauoe, place in baking dish. Place 1 slice of cheese and 1/4 of the beef mixture on tortilla. Roll tortilla around mixture and place seam side down in dish. Repeat with remain· ing ingedienta reserving aome tomato sauce for topping. If desired. sprinkle with additional grated cheese. Bake at 375 degrees for 30 minutes or until hot and bubbly. Top each enchilada with a dollop of 80W' cream and a few aUcea of avocado. Makes 4 enchiladu (2 eervi.np). BEEF STROGANOFF FOR TWO 'h pound beef lirloin or top round boneless 1 tableapoon butter 1 tablespoon veg- etable oil l s mall onion, chopped ~ pound fresh mush- rooms, lliced (1 cup) 2 tablespoons sherry 2 teaspoons prepared horaeradish (or mus- tard) 'h cup 10ur cream (at room temperature) Salt and pepper to taste Hot, cooked noodles 1 tablespoon chopped parsley Cut beef into thin strips. Heat butter and oil in large skillet. Add beef and onions; cook and 1tir until beef is browned. Stir in sherry, honeradiah and aour crum. Heat gently over low heat. DO NOT BOll... Stir ln Mlt and pepper to tut.e. Serve over hot, cooked noodles. Sprinkle with parsley. Makee 2 8el"Vi.n&S· A aplnach aa1ad would add color and Vitamin A to th1a tne*L Frsh Of• ance lelJDefltl would be • nice finiah to this tpeclaJ OCCMiorl. Tip: Y OIUrt can be 1ubsUtuted for sour cream. Make Nre that the YOfiW1 ii at room temperature before add· lnl to the recipe. Grad- ually •tir Yoturt tnto the aauce and gently heat. Do not overcook. Y oguri separates more euily than IOW' cream. \ \ Switch 8r Save Ralphs Ground Beef Halloween Pumpkins Approx. 5 lb. Chub Pak per lb. IJnUt 10 lbs. per customer per lb. While Supplies Lost. Lean Save .30 per lb. Fresh Ground Chuck Save .50 per lb. Ground Beef I or 2 lb. Chub Pak Not to l>Cc:eed 22% Fat 1>9r lb. Oscar Mayer Wieners Meator ... t lib.pkg. Pqrkay Margarine 4-stlck I lb. pkg. II Ralphs Orange w•th J I Coupon In Ralph& u ce Ctrculai Frozen-From nortda 12 oz. can n o-Thru II 59 Save .40 59 Save .22 Save .60 Golden Premium .,.r lb. Joy Liquid For Dishes 22 oz. btl Plain TM Wrap Ramen 3oz. pkg. 69 Save.34 19 Buy11-:1av * "Oret i.od&.D9 -btand 10.1 oa. pllgs. Fs 0 R wtth covpofl II\ •atphs Cbnlar and ~ of -GI repklT pnc• (P1oduce Dept) Lipton Tea Bags Deodorant 2 09 2 Ply 'a:;>.~ • Brawny Towels ~~ .65 Coast Bar Soap 56 North•rn $..:. • Bathroom Tissue ~·:: • 99 Fresh Swttch •Save Mushrooms loz. pkg. Mild Brown Onions II sweet II .,., lb. Ralphs Old Fashioned Donuts Reg. or Chocolate Glaze II pkg. ot 6 Piiisbury With Pl Coupon Us lnllalplu Clrculai Cake Mix Assorted Vc111ettes 111/J oz. pkg. 8o th Size 801 II CamaySoap Auorted Colots 1;wttch • Save Save.26 Save.SO •01 56 ""' . Camay Bar Sob:p I or -.39 Don't Miss Ralphs ''Special'' Halloween Circular with 3 Double Coupons plus 3 Super Coupons! If you don't have a Ralphs circular pick one up at your nearest Ralphs. While su lies last! Prices Effective October 27· thru November 2, 1983 ,._. .. ,,,, "" •• ~ ..... o. ... ., c_...., "" ...,." --...,... Wf' ,.,.,.,. M• t•t~f 10 h"'tl Of'•'"'•, ... , It l_...M4Wl1 .... II.fl ., •"9ff'~•Jit,. M•••••,•d 1t•~\ '" thtt. .fd •tf' 0\f' U "'f lh('• 0' iGWtt '" 111 tlO••\ llM •t. Rt"•''"•" tdOiHHf tt't~tt l"lt'f ,...., """~ ...,.Jlt(! .. tlt~•lh~ t•tt fHtOf\ °" ... .,. •• l'\.1ff •not., ..... •AC:H , UlrllJ • n• "~ com Illa *' wi . .._, MlU ,.., w . ..,.. IUOI IM7l 1. .. ,.,, mwra IUl'tmlCM llACM ,UIO OI Wlt.tJa, l ... .,!.LS llM ... 7M1-._ .-.aa1 T I .. aw UI ll lOMA, ..... -tMl -., IUftlWtOll •ICM Sfcm IQM; f.lt NJ, t-t Wey Ql.Wll Ill., Af M 9', ..... I It 1,., S .• IWlll ....... I ...... R9YMI Wilm .. - ... Freeze cookies for another day Now that achool is in aesaion, appetites seem to increase. A combination of rowdy recesses, intense concentration and cooler days seem to all oontribute, mak- ln& cookies disappear fast. llere's a hearty batch that freezes well, 90 they don't all vanish the first day. Packed with fruit, almonds and oats along with whole wheat flour, Spicy Almond Mounds add lota of nutrients to the diet along with high energy satisfaction. With a glass of milk, they will even make a nutritious breakfast for finicky eaters. SPICY ALMOND MOUNDS 3 cups chopped whole natural almonds l cup butter or margarine 2 cups (l pound) finnly packed brown sugar l ~ cups whole wheat flour 2 cups white flour l lh teaspoon cinnamon 1 teaspoon each eacll salt, baking powder, baking eoda and grated orange peel 2 largeeggs 1 can (16 ounces) applesauce, about 2 cups 3 cups rolled oats . Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Spread chopped almonds on bak- ing sheet and place in oven while it preheats. Bake until touted (10 to 15 minutes). ln a large mixing bowl. cream together butter and ~~ aeparate bowl~ stir together whole wheat and white flour, cinnamon, salt. baking powder and eoda. Add orange peel, egp and.Applesauce to butter mixture. Stir in dry inlredienta. Add oats and 2 cups almonds (may still be warm). Drop by tablespoonaful onto grealed baking sheets. Sprinkle each cookie with a few of the remaining almonds. Bake for 15 to 20 minutes, until well-browned. Remove onto a Oat surface (do not stack). Letoooloompletely. Mak.ell 6 ~ dozen cookies. Veal: What it is and how to cook it OnceconsideredaspecialityintheUnitedStates, a pan juat large enough to hold them without high-quality veal is now readily available in tnOllt overcrowding. There should be enough butter or oil supermarkets. Although many of us buy and cook to generously cover the bottom of the pan. Before veal regularly, we still may have questions on what frying, the veal must be completely dry. When the veal is and how best to prepare it. veal ia done, the pan can be deglazed and a tasty sauce Veal ia the meat from young beef animals prepared for the final touch. uaually not older than three months that have had a Many cooka pound veal a::allops or cutlets before diet of milk and very little, if any, roughage. cooking them. ThJa breaks down the connective tiaaue Certain characteristics of veal make ita cooking and tenderizes the meat. However, ovenealoua principles differ from beef. Veal has very little fat. pounding can tum high-quality veal into dry, lilelesa Although it I.I tender, it has considerable connective meat. tblue. · Gently pound veal, prelaing to smooth it out 90 Unless veal ia sliced thinly or pounded, larger that it will lie flat in the pan. Thia will ensure even cuta usually will require long, slow ·cooking. Veal cooking. Before pounding veal, trim any fibrous becomes lighter in color when cooked, and has a fine connective tiaaue which would shrink on contact with delicate flavor. It should be cooked well done, but not the hot fat and caUle the meat to curl up. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 Cl Pancake puff breakfast treat Since colonial daya, pancakes to 45 minutel. IA cup brown sugar. Cook, stirring have been favodte moming·fare FRUITED PANCA.ltE PUFF often, until most of the liquid h4a and now they have hit the 4 medium-firm, ripe pears evaporated and the pean begin to aounnet ranks takina on new (about 2 pounds) peeled, cored, cannellze, about 15 to 20 minutes. flavon and new faces. and cut into 2-lnch alioee Meanwhile, preheat the oven~ Fruited Pancake Puff la a 4 tableepoona (th stick) butter 425 degrees. ln a mixing bcw.1. delicious blendlna of freah pears 1.4 cup, plua 2 tablespoons, combine flour, milk, egp, nutmtfg and a U,ht and airy batter that granulated sugar and the remaining 2 tableepoons l>Ufb durina cooking to a IOU.ffle. 1.4 cup light browp sugar of granulated sugar until 11DOOth. [n aJ1' ovenproof akillet, aaute 1 cup unbleached all-purpoee When the pears begin to the peer aUces in melted butter, flour cannellze, stir in the vanilla. Pour and brown and granulated sugar, 1 cup milk the batter over \he hot peen and until pean begin to cannellze. 4 large eggs . bake in the center of a preheated Then add vanilla extract to the ~ teaspoon nutmeg oven for 20 minutes. Lower h~t mixture, although maple or 1 teupoon pure vanilla extract to 350 degrees and bake for ap almond extracts ·would be tasty Confectioners sugar additional 15 minutes until puffed substitutel.11\e batter, made with In a 10-inch ovenproof akillet or and lightly browned. flour, dairy-fresh milk and eggs, ia gratin pan, melt the butter over Remove, dust with confec- aeuoned with nutmeg, then moderate heat. Add the pear slices tioners sugar and serve immedi- ..--ba.k_ed_in_a-'p"_re_he_a_ted __ ov_e_n_tor __ 3_5_.;;;and=--'--\.4 cup granulated sugar and=-_a_te_ly_._M_._ak_es_S_se_rvmga_· _.;..__. __ _ The Straight lAI Detergent •• Fresh Start 'I I ' . Report Card MudSlaiis ........ Pll . KetdqJ Stails ..... I r..,. Stails .• Blood Stains I •••• I • Look! Just one bottle of ~ ------------ - - - - - - - - - - - - -~ Fresh Start was enough to I rn·=> The Straight t Detergent I cleanup128kids.That's I ----..,.. ... p.~ ,.,.... I because Fresh Start is super 1 -;. ~~-...,_,"""' .! ~= I e ........... ....,~.-.c..--.. ~ concentrated and packed with 1 -:.:-: '!". ~.::-, !' ~":' J..~":'. ·::... I extra Stain fighters tO Clean ~ scr ON a::.-::::._.---..r---o-.::':;'..~,.!'.':"'..:':',~ .. ;'.' m. any tough stains and dirt. T~y 11 ii; ~~ ~r..+ I ::;~~~(ii. .~i::; ~ 11 Fresh Start today and watch 1t ~ -.... J ... ~~ .. r•·•· ......... ""_. .. .... .. .......... """"~l~CM.,~~~ I get straight A's on your tough I ~... :;-:;::n ... "'!==:..·~= laundry problems. I Fresh Start• .~... 1 .~~ :::-: ... !".:·:er-;.~ !IO' I I LAUNDRY DETERGENT .... 11 --~"';."'.'.: ;~~: ':'." .,! I C·llS -----------~-------------------------:.. overcooked. ~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Retail cuta of veal resemble miniature cuts of beef. Carefully examine any veal you buy for quality. Meat that ia a pale pink-white color indicates that the calf wu milk-fed. The creamy white fat and fine texture of the veal are signs that the calf was young. Thia means that the meat will be tender. Veal should be treated~ntl r.f roasted, it ahould be cooked in a moderate JUat until well done. Delicate and fine-text , veal should not be overcookec\ or lt will dry out. Like many leaner cuts of beef, veal frequently is wrapped in additional fat to protect it from drying during roasting. Pan-frying iB the most popular method of preparing veal a::allops, cutlets and chops. Veal ia not eerved rare, therefore, the temperature and time for pan-frying are determined only by the thickness of the meat. Veal chops, usually 3/4 to one inch thick, should be quickly 9ean!d fi..l"lt over high heat. Then, reduce the heat and cook the chops slowly to prevent the outside from becoming.dry and less tender before the inside la done. Thinly aliced 9Callops or bonelem cutlets, not more than 1/2-inch thick, can be pan-fried quickly over moderate heat. Becau.e of the thinnees of the cut, the veal will cook through before it hu time to loee ita moistnw OI' become -tender. Both thick and thin cuta of veal should be fried in PEOPLE TURN TO CLASSIFIED BECAUSE THEY KNOW OTHER PEOPLE ARE SELUNG. S.-lhnt •vrrv1htnt hnm mouxrvt Ir' 10 p1an~ 11 • ,,,. na1 ur .. nf P"lllllt 1n d1vard old hnbbor• and takr up nf"w nn,., fnr f1mtlW-' 'n '"'"'" And (rn1o1 Anti 1 h• pt~,IW'"~H'>f\' th .. t ,.,,f ,. v nrtt lhrm W,.11 hHfhYI' thl'tr 11~f11h\~,, fh11t ~ •l'Wltt ,. .. _, fm vmt whrn c h•nc" 1n vnur tltfl' n1•q•"'tl•t" I .,.,,, hav nr twn 1"'1•• k f ....... ,.,, II 1llh m~k• lh'>"' 'hMttfifl'll a llttlr mni• •ltnttl•ht• CIH11ti.. ..... ,_...,,.,. Daily Piiat NEW FLEISCHMANN'S®UGHT. THE PERCENTAGES ARE IN YOUR FAVOR. ' For healthier eating, consider our very impressive percentages: 0°/o cholesterol. 1 OOo/o corn oil. 25% LESS SALT When you begin to add them up, 25% LESS Fii' ~ the more impressive the percent- ages get. 25% I Fss CALORIES In fact, ~o regular margarine comes close ... ~1 C Nt1b1sco Brands. Inc 1983 r I 100% DEUCIOUS After all, it's Fleischmann 's. ------------., . . 25C• -~ ON JEW FLEllCllUfltS.UGllT .. .. TO ACTM\Ull \41 11,~.. * °"" ,.,..-... ,,,,,,,. ( "" 'lofl"""Q ""O""· P•11it" ' -'-q ,.,,, .~,,..... ·~, "'' .. ,.. •" ...,,..., ............. ~..-_.wt. H"' 't l""l" .. .,'""•'N~ ~.~''•l -~· ... ~ ......... .,., 'tit 111.,.., .. .,..,''",,_,,...,.'••fl'•""'" ,...r.,~ . 'i&.10.:J&mtmrn~t~-.. .......... ..... 1,. ••llj,rtt ••"'-•l>"~~",.. '"'"""'~1,.,.,,..,.,1~+r ,.. f'· ... ..,. ' ,,l'!Jl\#l'ti•l'r lt/J•·'"'•ilttJl•f\•ot '•1l'9Wt"af~•IY\fl"t '1.e•t ~..l•.nt ~ , i.'l ()1"""1, •('Ii" , ""m""''"' • w...., "i;1w 11.1 '"'"""'" I I rO't.cM:.i~";-6.:!' ""':~:~"'"~' ·.,;:~,'' 2ct000 &404bl. ~ .,, y. ... ~ ,, •• , •1¥1• ~,,, ~rt•r.,...,.... .• I l'*~A1n~1~1t u-.t ti 1"¥1t ~------------------~------~ • • C• Orange Coast DAILY PILOf/Wednesday, Oct. 26, t983 . In a hurry? Whip up some rice Rice is ideal for meals that have to be prepared in a hurry . Here are two recipes featuring it - both are nutritious and can be prepared with minhhum e ffort. SHRIMP RICE SALAD 3 cups cooked ric.-e, cooled 8 ounces froze n cook ed s hrimp, thawed 1 can (8 ounces) pineapple chunks, halved (drain , reserve juice) 1 tart red apple. cored and chopped 1 cup sliced celery ~ cup seedless green grapes, halved ~ cup sour cream ~ cup mayonnaise 1 tablespoon sugar l tablespoon lemon juice ~ teaspoon salt Combine rice, shrimp, pineapple, apple, celery and grapes. Blend re- maining ing re dients with 2 tablespoons re- served pineapple juice. T<m lightly with rice mixture. Chill Serve on salad greens, if desired. Makes 6 servings. QUIClt 'N' EASY DIN- NE R IN ADISB ~ cup chopped green pepper ~ cup sliced green onions, including tops 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 3 cups cooked rice 1 can (17 ounces) whole kernel com, draied 1 can (1 4 \11 to 16 ounces) tomatoes. crushed and drained Cho wder's a hit as a hot lunch New England and M a nh at t a n c l am chowders make delicious hot lunches during the fall and winter months. I NEW ENGLAND CLAM CHOWDER ~ cup ( 114 pound) diced bacon l CU.J> finely chopped onion -- ~ cup finely chopped celery 2 ~ cups water 4 cups ( 1 Yi pounds) peeled, diced raw potatoes !4 teaspoon thyme lea ves ~bay leaf 1 teaspoon salt 'ta teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons soften- ed butter 2 cu ps (two 8-ounce cans) minced clams I and juice ~cups nonfat dry 1 Paprika Cook bacon, onion and celery in 2 'h-quar t saucepan over medium heat until onion is ten- der. Add water, potatoes, thyme, bay leaf, salt and pepper. Heat to boiling. C.over and boil gently 15 minutes or until potatoes are tender. Remove from heat. Stir in butter and clams and juice. Grad- ually add dry nonfat milk, stirring constantly until blended. Remove bay leaf. Heat to serving temperature. Do not boil. Sprinkle with paprika. Makes 7 'h cu ps. MANHATTAN CLAM CHOWDER !4 pound diced bacon 1 cup chopped onion I ~ cup chopped raw I carrots Yi cup chopped celery l ~ cups (14'h-ouncc' can) whole peeled tomatoes 1 cup (8-ounce can) tomato sauce ~ teaspoon pepper 'Z cups (two 7 or 8-ounce cans) minced or chopped clams 1 cup clam llquJd 1 cup water Fry bacon in large •ucepan. Drain off all but 2 tablespoons fat. Saute onion in fat until transparent. Add car- rots, celery. tomatoes, tomato aauce and pep- per. Stlr to break tomatoes. Drain clams; •ft 1 cup liquid. Add ihe clam liquid and water to tauoepan. Keat to boiling. Re- duce heat; boll gently, covered, 30 minu~'ll Add clama. Heat to 1er- v l n1 te mpe r a t ur Malas 6 cupe. ' . 1 Y'2 cups (ti ounces) gratl'd Swiss cheese 4 eggs. beaten l cup cream style l'Ot- tage cheese 1A cup milk 1 !"i teaspoons salt 1 teaspoon marjoram leaves, crushed \11 teaspoon ground black pepper Paprika In large sklUt!t cook green pepper and onions in butter unllJ ten- der-<:risp. Stir in rice, corn, tomatoes and Swiss cheese Combine remain- ing ingredients ex<.-epl paprika; stir into rice mjxture. Turn mto buttert.'d 2-quart baking dish. Oust lightly with paprika. Bake at 350 degres for 45 minutes, or until edges arc firm and center is slightly soft. Let s tand about 5 minutes before serving. Makes 6 servings. Microwave Method: Melt butter an 2-quart microproof dish on HIGH (maxim u m power) l minute. Add green pepper wid onions. Cover and cook on HIGH 1 minute, or until tender crisp. Stir in rice, c.'Om, toma toes and Swiss cheese. Combine remain- ing ingredients except paprika; stit into rice mixture. Dust lightly with paprika. Cook at 70 percent power 20 minutes, or until edges are flnn and cen ter is slightly soft , rotating dish V. tum every 5 minutes. Let stand about 5 minutes '?:e_!?r~ serving. - a ·• " I . HA--r5FOR . . . HALLOWEEN PLAY IT SAFE! DON'T LET YOUR KIDS OUT ALONE . CHECK THEIR TREATS WHEN THEY GET HOME PROVIMI SLICED VIAL FORSCAllOPINI 5 99 PARMIGIANA 0 11 'NIENERSCHNll Zfl L•. • Provom• Breoded o• Pfuon lB 4 .99 LEAN CUISINE CHEESE CANNELLONI STOUFFER ~ FROZEN Q 1 OZ PV'(, A "" 11•<.I I I v•\I ,r)lly "'''-'PP,.cl 1.39 1.29 • BRACH'S BULK CANDY "" lB 1.29 BO-PROOF COVENTRY VODKA I 75-LITER BOTH E 6.49 --S -1 PLAIN LABEL •-LITIR \..-: l/JJI WINI IN A BOX .1\:' -/ CHABLIS · I .,. RHINE 3 49 17" VI N RO SE e GROUND BEEF DOES NOT EXCEED 30% f AT LIMIT 2 PKGS. FROZEN NORTHERN FISHIRMAN'S BAY SPECIAL! CENTER CUT HALIBUT STEAKS LB. LB. Poc1l1c, F11feu FRESH RED SNAPPER Jimmy Deon K1efbo'o or HICKORY SMOKED SAUSAGE LB 1. 99 lB 2 .19 SHASTA SODAS _ REG. OR DIET -ASSORTED FLA YORI ~-l:1 !:if.\\~itN,~11~ .._ ~ "''39 <-~ 2 r;,, e.111 "Jl .-::. ~- "J k!1 ~ LITER , ~ . i~~UJ l~~~.4'. • \ \' '·~ c ~ j '1r-~ ------~~------------------------------------------' KING SIZE TIDE -.TREETOP APPLE JUICE 8 4 01 IN(l 2 99 .50 OH • 1.79 .16 IJ1 ""0' leu va .... 1.e• -8 11,,y D0l1< VLASIC PICKLES SPARKLING EVIAN WATER NORTHWEST -FRESH JONA THAN APPLES Anorled ' 1n Poi Ruh'I' R,-.d EA 1. 98 TEXAS GRAPEFR UIT ZYGO CACTUS PLANTS . '' 'J ii~LB:0SACK0•••NT ~· _; ~: J BOT AN RICE l1c;h l11•p 7 Ount~.Bo• NAPPA CABBAGE 18 .25 UJl·NO-SATO TEA .89 l\j1nomo10 Hon D1Hho 2 2Q 0 1 Bii SOUP STOCK Mo9en Dov1d I 2 0 1 1.99 KOSHER SALAMI CHUB EA I F1190 1 '2 0 1 Shrf!'<ld"t.I Cheodd or o• 1.99 MOZZARELLA CHEESE fA 8 O"nce GALLO SALAMI CHUB fA 1.99 1 18 PACKAGE WILSON MIA T FRANKi Wei Poe Sobo Te11yu~1 3 ~ 0 1 (csn BROILED MACKERAL RANOOM WEIGHT (HfD[')<\R 8 0 1 !luft <,p1rotJ WISPRIDE CHEESE CUPS I.I (.)1 ~<'ljUim flnh) 81•1 Bnnbor.o ,,, BONBEL CHEE SE Hiirm .. 1 10 0 1 CHEESE & PEPPERONI fA {A (A 1.59 LB. 1.89 .59 1.69 1.99 1.99 .99 CENTER CUT CHUCK ROAST ,.,--_...._,.,.....,_ BEEF 1 29 L•. e USD A (ho"<'~'' CENTER CUT CHUCK STEAK B 1 .39 Vun(ump• 16 oz PORK & BEANS .39 Fre1t-. C1•sp ROMAINE LETTUCE EA .39 HEAL TH 6 BIAUTY AIDS VIDAL SAllOON SHAMPOO OR RINSE 8 O Z REG OR EXIRA G ENllE EA 1.69 YOUR CHOICl-VIDAL SASSOON APPLIANCE SALi FROll N FOOD SPICIALS LOWIR YOUR TOTAL FOOD BILLI MRI. IMITH'I ~ SPRINGFllLD \(~i) TOP91NG PU~!o'!'~!1:' Pll ~. w~~:'° • 5 9 DOWNYFLAKI WAFFLll 2.39 We •CC•ftf cet1ft••H f,om ALL ethe• ................ . ..... ,. ..... ....,, .. le-41-....-... •••h IR••• A1te.te1, ............... ~ I I tt1U'• t'Q1ttt11111H10r\\ ..,h,,~ fltt 1t•tf •t·• ••111# Of '"'" 1i..,"" ttv1t,h.,f(i nctl otupflrd 1 £•p11fd lni" M)t ,,H•11••t.1 ] '-'->"' ''" '• llltl•"''"'''"''' 0"d !Jft.C•,, J!Vf(ho~ {f:PVJHH'' n()t "''~t..O ' ,, '• •' •1•• h.1•••, 1 tt•·lH''"' t '1 OU 1,• ••o 10 " tut llU11bl•tf , ~.ht,t•t\tl•ori of 1tf'ftt'lt &fll MO" t,' • (Q ,p• '0~···1•1,fhy ljl• 0 "•· ··~""' ...... , ..... ,,...,'-t,tck4>0"'~~by 0Vf • ••t ••' • I 1• •• t u• \ttd 1• • ,.,.. "f\" I ••f 011: o ht·I••' •'""90~ •tt •"' ~,t1tv ... •"' t~ ,,, ~v·.,·11•"' .,.1,,,, I l•fJ.,,th tobo• ., .\ lkl•'• 'uodve~ •u~ 9 \v~I N ~h 11w11H.-J on ...... ,.,,,. • ., •o '"' .. QOOd Oct ,, it.tv No• ,, IH:t TRIPLI OR UNLIM~TID DOUBLE COUIJOll OFFl•I NOT ACCllJllD PRICES ff,fCTIVl 7 DAYS, I A,M THUii., OC1 17 THRU WED .. NOV. 1, 1913 --.-.----·-.. ·-..-·-""~ -··~·"" ....... ..,_, ........ a_. .. ..-.....··--.. . .,.. ............... _ ... ._ .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 c-/ Use olives instead of oil for Spanish fla Vor, fewer calories The flavor of olive oil cooking apray. Add'lhe deaired. Makea ti adds distinction to Medi-onion and olive liquid main-course servings, terranean cuisines, most (from the jar"of ollvee.) under 200 calories each notably the food of Cook and stir unUl liquid (with tuna, 16 calories Spain. One way to bor-evaporates and onion more per aerving). row Spanish flavor -juat begins to brown, without incurring the Stir in water and heat caloric debt of olive oil -to boiling. Stir in rice, is to use olives instead of tunneric, peppers, celery oil. and bay leaf. Lower beat These Slim Gourmet and cover pan tightly. recipes, translated from Simmer 7 to 10 minutes, the Spanish, illustrate just until liquid ia ab- my point: aorbed . .-Stir in thinly YELLOW RICE WITH SEAFOOD AND Olr sliced olives and seafood. Cover and heat through. Remove bay leaf. CHICKEN T HIG HS CATALAN 6 frying chicken thigha 2 large sweet Spanish onion, halved and thinly sliced 1 sweet red bell pep- per, thinly sliced 1 green bell pepper, Sl im Gourmet By Barbara Gibbons tomatoes. undrained 8 stuffed green olives, thinly aliced 3 tablespoons olive liquJd (from jar of olives) 1,4 cup dry sherry wine Salt (or garlic salt) and pepper, to taste Preheat oven to 450 chicken thigha in a single layer in a nonstick bak- ing pan. Bake, un- covered and unseasoned, for 30 minutes, turning once, until akin is crisp and well rendered of fat. Drain and di8card fat. IVES 1 cup sliced onion Sprinkle with paprika, if thinly sliced 1 6-o u nce degrees. A rrange Combine remainlng ingredients; spoon over chicken' thigha. Lower heat to 350 degrees. Bake 2 tablespoons liquid from jar of olives 2cups water 8 ounces uncooked rice 'h teaspoon turmeric l green bell pepper, diced 1 red bell pepper, diced ~ cup minced celery l bay leaf 8 green s tuffed Spanish olives, thinly sliced 1 cup diced small cooked shrimp (or 7-oun c e can water-packed tuna) Optional: paprika Spray a large , nonstick frypan with Sweet po tato dis h plays <l ual role Richly flavored Harvest Bake is adap- table; it can be a whole- some vegetable side diah or a dessert. LARGE END RIB ROAST Bonoeo Beef LD1 88 FRYING CHICKEN Wl'IOle BO<IV SOUtllefn GrOllCle A T·BONE STEAK aonoeo ettf Loin .~.56 TOP SIRLOIN STEAK eone~s Bol!Oed Beef l04n WHOLE BEEF BRISKET &onelen Bonoeo Beef Texas StVIP 1 9 lDS uncovered, baatlng often, until chicken I.I tender and sauce is thick. (Cover looaely with foil or add a little water if sauce threatens to boll away.) Mak es 6 main-course servings, 260 calories each. TUNA PASTA SALAD 7-ounce can water-packed 10lld white meat tuna, un- drained, flaked 3 cups tender-0>0ked macaroni lhella 1 red (or green) t>P.Jl GOLDEN PUMPKINS Assortto SIZ~ pepper I minced l larp (or 2 small) rtbe celery I chopped ~ cup thinly allced IC&lliona (or chopped red onion) 2 tableepoona minced fresh panley Pinch of dried (or 1 teaspoon fresh) thyme or oregano leaves 3 tablespoons tomato juice 2 tablespoons cider (or wine) vinegar 3 tableapoona olive t \ liquid (from ~ of olive.) 1 tablespoon olive oil Salt (or prlic ult) and pepper, to taste 2 yine-rtpe tomatoea. cutinwedae- Combine .lngredlenta, except tomato wedges. Cover and chill thoroughly. Add tomato wedges just before .er- ving. Makee 4 lunch- eon-size aervinp. 250 calories each; or eight buffet serviJlp, 125 calories each. ... 06 JONATHAN ... 39 APPLES NOrtnw~t Fo~t CANDY •• ".39 ROMAINE •xo e39 APPLES LETTUCE H<llOWHn TrPat A S;itaa Fav0<1tt This sweet potato dish complements roasted meats or concludes a lighter menu as a hearty dessert. HARVEST BAKE 23-ounce can sweet potatoes or yams, drained• OUARTER PORK LOIN tncluO~ 1110 l04n B~<» ano s1r101n cnops RIB EYE STEAK ao~s eonoto aee1 Spence< .. 298 LADY LEE 119 ~~'!~~!:! O< TMk 1 ;: GOLDEN ... 29 RUSSET ... 29 BANANAS POTATOES ll1Pf' lltaav to eat u S No 1 8a~1n9 S1zt 7 tablespoons butter, melted l apple, cored, thinly sliced ~ cup firmly packed brown sugar l t e a s p oo n all-purpose flour "4 teaspoon cardamon 1 tablespoon cold but- ter 2 tablespoons chopped pecans Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In 1-quart round casserole maah sweet potatoes until smooth. Stir in melted butter. In small bowl cut 1 tablespoon cold butter into brown sugar, flour and cardamon. Stir in pecans and sprinkle 112 mixture over potatoes. Arrange apple slices on top; sprinkle with remaining mixture . Bake for 35 to 40 minutes or until apples are crisply tender. Yield: 6 (2/3 cup) servings. • 18..ounce can vacuum packed sweet potatoes can ~ substituted for 23-ounce can sweet potatoes, drained. Burgandy adds zest to beets An excellent way to use one of the best of canned vegetables. BURGUNDY BEETS l&-ounce jar whole beets 2 tablespoons butter 1 tablespoon corn- starch 1 tablespoon sugar IA cup burgandy wine Drain beeu, f'e9erving ~ rup of t})e liquid; reserve beets. In a 1 ~-quart saucepan over low heat melt the butter; stir in the cornstarch and sugar; add the ret1erved beet liquid and the wine and over moderate heat, stirring constantly, cook until b olling and thickened. Add tlle beets and reheat. Makes 4 9ervings. For CW.In.ct Ad ACTION C.IJ A DA .. Y N.01 AO·YKOI .., ... ,. 1uov Lee cn•CkPn Boiogn.i LD 99• FRESH GROUND BEEF l ll\ Cl" tiOtf 000 "°' f lilCUO JO J.a 1 •• 1 .09 CORNED BEEF BRISKET ~•cu•'"'''' 1 79 UU,."\CQH.l08lU l'O\MO ll :,-, \" • LADY LEE TURKEYS tOHO 11011" GH Ot: A lO :'?LI\ ••• 69 ===--======-~' t1 Treats from thP Seven ~s ·1)~ FRESH.BEEF LIYER \lt<tO ""'1"lH CMUJllr 90l~ ll t '' BONELESS WHOLE HAM --Al lf AOOIO \ 1 ~\ 1ICJNld \\ WAT(I AOOfO 1 88 \)1 1.a\HAMMM-J ll~f't lA. ~~~~,IDAHO TROUT .. 1 .59 l FRESH REX SOLE 1 2 .59 ~'!,~.~!C RED SNAPPER 11 2.19 ~~;_SH PERCH .. 2 .69 r.!~HLET OF BUTTERFISH •• 1 .69 FRESH LINC COD •ft 2 .39 Groceries Name erand Favorites ENJOY KEY BUY SAVINGS ON FAVORITE BRANDS r TOP HARVEST239 I CIDER (;al 8tl rKRISPY 75 ~~fKE~~z eoxe r GREEN GIANT 45 PEAS 11 oz cane !~!,~~~~~~£?RN 1101 tAH.45 r~~.E~~~ C~~~~"'' •lOI C•••41 r~!~cS!~ST MIX 1101eo•.79 r f!.~~PKIN PIE MIX '°o' <••. 9 7 !LARSEN'S VEG·AU ••ote ... 43 r~~;~!.t;!.. ~01 ••• 1 .89 r ~~~~ .. ~.~~Rs •P I0.1 .19 r ~~~~~~~~~~TATO~~o, IO•. 77 r ~~!:~1~~.4\ • ..,°' '°' .85 r FROSTINCS lflh (IOUU otAO• 10 \,.caO 1 2 3 , 4 Y_,...,,, • t6\0l (AH e r~~~~v~~,PICKLE~01 1A* 1.29 l ~.Too.~~ MIX HCI I0• 1 .19 l ~~.J!,'~~~M 1 39 Ol tllOIH' •t Ol tM • f IM LuOy 10111 l6t &I ,,,. IO!fl e1 lllt otr11r eupu ,,..,_,, Ol'I '"' .. ,.,.. O< "'"'Pl••al<t ....... SfteO '"IMti•*' SflOt•fl'O• JO •M.:) pt WISHBONE 119 6 ~l~~F~~~NG~ 01 er1 0< 1 ooo tslano pt HEINZ 119 6 ~aToCHUP l' 01 Btl r ~~~OCC'S CORN~~~ 1 .4 9 r ~!s·.~~IX CANOY r ~~r~ CRACKERS ••Ot ... 1 .69 .. 1 .19 ''°'~.1 .39 DELICATESSEN ITEMS r ~;.OlA ,,., ... 29s pt MOZZARELLA 229 & Stt!~SE 16 oz eau . f~~y ~E SALAMI 110""' 1 .99 I ~~~,R~~~-ST •nOI ,., , 79 l ~KEY BOLOGNA •101 .. , 1 .09 f ~~~.~i KNOCKW~~~~ 1.59 °"' .. t(t .. Olt<loOn llowy CIU"''"'"' fllt\t l)tO I 10 "'t l'"'<t•W W-rt 0<100.. 16 flW\I T-"Cit-I 1 .. 1 ,,_ Otl(~ "°' tfllCI'"'"' JM\11 .,,,,., Ot ... l\M> ~ (_, ... , r ~~~; .. ~KE FlOUR • . w, .• 87 ·r A.f.~E CIDER , .. , •· 2 .59 r~~~S CANDY BAR~ • .,,,. 1 .99 r~~~IE ROLLS •ri•• .89 r ~~~!,~~~~.~!UNCH · 01 ,., 1. 99 r ~~('AFT CARAMELS .. 01 "t 1.19 HOUSEHOLD & PET Liquor Compare our 1ower·prices r ~~~!E'~" "' 6 99 r~~~·s 7 CRO~~''• 7 .39 DAIRY & FROZEN r ~_!~~~ET CHICKE~ 01 ea• 4 • 79 ! l~.~~-~~~.1APPLE JUl~:EQt , .. • 79 • r ~~~,WAFFlES .. ,,, .. , .99 !~~~_:~~ POTATOE~"••n.1 .09 !!~~PED TOPPING •ioi ci• .75 BEVERAGE ITEMS r SUGAR FREE 3s9 LIKE COLA 12 Pack ()< Olft 7 UP 11 07 Can~ P' COKE OR DIET COKE i c .. ""'''1rc0o1 ""''°'' 1 25 Ol \l' .. tl H _, lf1 • BAKERY r SEAGRAM'S 1599 v.o. Ca na<11<1n I 7S ltr 8tl WllKkV 80 Pr«>\ r~~y SCOTCH'~'"''' 10.59 rCOOR'S LICHT BEER ., .. "4 69 UOI(~ • £~~ENT AGE BOU!!!~S .39 r !.~!°!~J~~~RB~ .. "' 8.99 r~~ER'S SCO.TCH .... n 6 .99 DAIRY & FROZEN r 7.~~.~ KING ECG R~~~ .. t 1 .15 !!~!?~~~TOS .. ,o, .. t 1.15 r~~,~~ .,Ol .. t .99 r ~~~ E~ NOOOLES "o1 .. t . 79 HEAL TH & BEAUTY AIDS r ~~~.~~~l~,~~;~IX •01 1 .79 r ~l~~~Ffi~.ENCE 'OJ 1 .79 f•'••<oi.teQ !SINE·AIO TABLETS lt\1 .69 r ~~ .~!!;RENCE "01 1 .89 O•lll•U O 09• r ~~ .~l~~~~~CA~~' •011 .59 r COMTREX TABLE TS .. ,2 .19 r C~MTREX TABLETS '°~3 .99 I~~~ ~ESH WIPES ttO 1 .19 £CUTEX NAIL POLISH '""·99 !~VER ,GIRL MAl<E·~PtA(>02 .39 .£w&m. Fiim Developing ................ -----........ ~-·. ·~ ..... .,.l'ftt .... .... f'I NrOt\•# •"....-W'OU&tt""'I '"'" ,,..,.. tll fit"' n-... 6_ ..... ... -.. .,.,.,,, .... ......... , ...... • ' ... ca Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednelday, Oct. 26, 1983 ' Whoo-00-00 wouldn't like this cake? ( ......... ; ~-1\-"\.-1.1 ..... 1.j. tl•ll <>--+--~ •·• vh h tu, ... .,, ........ A acary cake? Why not! If you're going to have a really great Halloween party, shouldn't everything -decor- ations. mwdc, food -be strange, weird and uncqny? Of courae it should. What, then, could make a better centerpiece for your table than Peanutty Owl, staring fixedly through marshmallow-peanut butter chip eyes accented by red licorice, plua a beak fashioned from a carrot? U he doesn't aend ahiven of fear down the back.a of young fry, he'll certainly aend quivers of anticipation through every hungry guest. Thia edible owl ia fashioned from tempting peanut butter cake covered licorice, carrot for decoration Combine peanut butter chips, milk and butter or margarine in a medium saucepan; stir coNtandy over medium low heat until anooth. Remove from heat and aet aside. Beat eggs until foamy in large mixer bowl; gradually add sugar and vanilla. combine Oour, baking powder and salt; add alternately with peanut butter mi.xure ot egg-sugar mixture, blending well. 11 7 • with chocolate fl'Olting. The cake ia a cinch to put together with the help of the diagram shown. Pour into two greased and floured 8-inch round cake pans. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 to 35 minutes or until (. cake teet.a done. Cool 10 minutes; ' remove from pans~ cool completely. Cut, uaemble and frost cake as follows. . Pumpkin loaf quick 'n' easy What can you do with that half-cup of canned pumpkinole~tover from pie baking? Make pumpkin. bread, of·course. Pumpkin Walnut Loaf is a simple quick bread that's delicious spread with butter, cream cheeee, apple butter or peanut butter. For a demert, it can be topped with ice cream and appleuuce or buttencot.ch sauce. Or, just slice it and lerVe it with coffee. It will keep in the refrigerator a couple of weeka and be a welaJme gift from the kitchen. Perfectly flavored for this time of year ta a sumptuoua. Pumpkin Parfait made with a spice pumpkin fillfng, graham cracker and whipped cream. The filling would alao make an euy, no-bake pumpkin pie with a prepared graham cracker cruat from the supennarket. PUMPKIN WALNUT LOAF 2 cups all-purpoee flour (unaifted) 2 teaspoons pumpkin pie spice 1 ~ teaspoons baking powder ~ teaspoon baking aoda V. teaspoon salt ~ cup butter or margarine, aoftened ~cup sugar 1 egg V. cup milk ~ cup canned pwnpkin 1t'l cup chopped walnuts Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Greue and flour an 8x4x2-inch loaf pan; aet aside. Combine flour, pumpkin pie spice, baking powder, baking aoda and salt; set aside. In a large mixing bowl cream butter. Add sugar and beat until fluffy; beat in egg. While mixing at low speed add one-third of the flour mixture and then one-half of the milk and pumpkin. Repeat, ending with flour, mixing just until combined. Stir in walnuta. Spoon batter into prepared pan. Bake until a cake tester inllerted into the center comes out clean, about 45 minutes. Let stand in pan for 10 minutes. Looeen edges with a metal spatula and tum onto a wire rack to cool. Yield: one 8x4-inch loaf. PUMPKIN PARFAIT ~cup sugar 1A cup cornstarch 1 V. teaspoons pumpkin pie spice, divided 1A teaspoon salt 1 cup milk 1 cup canned pumpkin 3 egg yolka, beaten 1t'l teaspoon pure vanilla extract 1t'l cup heavy cream V. cup graham cracker crwnbe In a stainle99 steel aaucepot combine sugar, cornstarch, ~ teaspoon of the pumpkin pie spice and salt. Gradually stir in milk and then pumpkip, beating with a wire whisk until blended. Beat in egg yolks. Bring to a boil over medium-low heat, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon. Boil for 1 minute, stirring constantly. Remove from heat; stir in vanilla. Spoon into a medium bowl; cover surface with plastic wrap. Refrigerate until cool. In a chilled bowl with chilled beater blades beat cream until stiff; fold into pumpkin mixture. Combine graham cracker crumbs with remaining ~ teaspoon pumpkin pie spice. Alternately spoon pumpkin mixture and cn.unbe into parfait glu9es. Garnish with addition.J whipped cream, if desired. Serves 6. Send your recipes for cook series II you 've been enjoying our Cook-ol·fM.. Week #l'les md would li.lce to join in, the DaJ.1y P1lot wani. to '*"bun you. Send us .ewtal ol your t.vol"lte redl'f!9., we can pJck a couple to .hare wirh our ~n. The tw1e1 aJlo lndudes •photo Mid mo11 proltJe of our .,.aaJ coot MCb week. .. Send your recipe to tbe 1'ood Ed.It«, clo the ,, = Phoc, P. 0. Box 16'0, a.ca Mw, OUI/. , md t» ~ IO Jndude your rwne, Mldre. ,,. and phone number. _ PEANUTl'Y OWL 1 ~ cups peanut butter chips l 'A cups milk cup butter or margarine 2 eggs 1 cup sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 cup unlifted all-pw-pose flour 3 teaspoon baking powder V. teaspoon salt Cocoa Frosting (recipe follows) Marshmallows, peanut butter chips, 1!!oK OF .tlLCQUPO~.!_ $3.00VALUE LB. To Make Owl: Following the diagr~. cut cake layers to fonn head, body and ean; 8!18emble as shown. Frost with Cocoa Frosting. Form eyes and beak with marahmallows, peanut butter chips and carrot stick. Uae licorice to outline eyes and to indicate wings. COCOA FROSTING ~ cup butter or margarine ~cup cocoa 2 ~ cups unsifted confectioners' sugar •BEEF LOIN • 5 STEA.KS OR MORE IN ONE PKG. ECONOPAK T-BONE STFAKS •LIMIT 4 PACKAGI S \II cup milk 1 teaspoon vanilla Melt butter or margarine in small saucepan over medium heat. Add cocoa; stir constantly over medium heat just until mixture begins to boil. P our into small mixer bowl; cool completely. Add confectioners'. sugar alternately with milk, beating to spreading con- sistency, Blend in vanilla. 34! ·~~~ NORTHERN HALIBUT STEAKS 4-ROU.. PACK • NICE 'N SOFT BAnlROOM TISSUE ZEE• PRINTED PAPER TOWELS 111, 111 •f •, H I• :l , .I'• H A •101 •11 I\ lf 1''1 ALPHA BETA/PEPSI-COLA 5Kl10KRUn Pien:e College November 6, 1983 • 8:30 am Woodland Hills, California "'""'•' Ctun 1tl Mk~ 19\,"'"I '""' ''" ,., t(.,J t ),\1H\ '"'' '·" ·"''"'~tf\o\ .~ . ..., P~unt•d b)' , StncO•-r ' ~porh Clo•k • Proceeds hel fi \JJtH•""Al 1nfl~M.ft,.._" •"J ,,..h h-'f'h 41,,.,, ... ""'' "'¥' ""''"~,.hi."" Atrtu "'" "•" .. ..... 1t1.'IH"AA J11V. Coo7'l'fl"' 1993 AtOM 9••• Compa"v An '•qt\ta '"'~'W't'<J .,.,,. ,.,M"f"~ rt•· •·'l"'' •o ,.,..._,, ,.,....,,,, ,., •l•\ fjto 11 ltf'l'l 1,,..~! '"'""'• ''"'" t-t w ..... 1 .. _,.,~ ...... .,.,W\._ .. -;to••"'' Price• Effective at ell Southern Celltomla Alph• Beta Markets DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPONS Puddingpumpki_ns Fun to make, eat For children of all ages. sneaky black cats, dancing skeletons, brightly lit jack-o-lantems and flying witches llCUIT)'ing acr06$ a full hJuvest moon signify American's spookiest holiday -Halloween. Celebrate the spirit of make believe with a Halloween party in your home, especially planned for pint-size ghosts and goblins. And invite a few adults to attend to help cope with excited young guests. PUDDING PUMPKINS 1 pack.age (3%-ounce) instant vanilla pudding and pie filling 2 cups cold milk 10 (~ cup) pastry tart shells Apple Raisins 1 package (3-ounce) orange gelatin 1 cup bolling water ~ cup ice cubes Prepare pudding and pie filling according to pack.age directions using 2 cups of milk. Fill tart shells ~full. Decorate surface of pudding with apple pieces, cut into small triangles and raisins to form Jack-o-lantem faces. Dissolve orange gelatin in boiling water; stir in ice cubes. Chill until slightly thickened. SpbOn a thin layer of gelatin over faces. Chill until set, about 1 hour. Makes 10 tarts. ... --- 1 6L~ • llLEF HOUND BONELESS BEEF ROUND STFAK 20-0Z. PKG. OREO COOKIES Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 C9 •CUT ll"jTO ROAST. CHOP& & COUNTRY •BEEF ROUND BONELESS RUMP ROAST 30-0Z. • ORVILLE REDENBACHER'S POPPING CORN FEATURING: KODAK, FUJI AND POLAROID INST ANT FILM 1.Y'."V •..,,~•fl "• '"ll ftol"I"'' rnv~ ,,.. f,,, .,. ' S\f')(.'la1v•lP\U • ,,.,,.,,. ""'o"• ,,,,,,, 1 f.f4Jlll •)U~'-\ ~r< t J •ii ,II\ ~.t"' ftrJ'°IU\, et•• l'O"W' ,,..,..., f I "t•t ''I'll• t~' • "'f0,.-f'\ ., 'f' >\I . ,. 0"111 0000 THllU JAN 11. IM• Harvest buff et perfect for party Play it safe th.la Halloween. Invite the neigh- borhood gobllna to an old faahioned coetume party. A little kitchen witchery tranafonna ordinary hot dop into feativeHalloweeen Com Dop. and your buffet can be kept simple yet aea10nal with Harvest Moon Salad. HALLOWEEN COR~ DOGS 1 cup all-purpoee flour ~ cup yellow cornmeal 1 ~ teaspoons sugar 1 teaspoon onion aalt Duh pepper 2 tablespoons shortening 1 egg, slightly beaten Spicy mustard ~cup milk OU 1 pound frankfurters Wooden skewers Combine flour, cornmeal, sugar, onion salt, baking powder and pepper in large bowl. Cut in shortening until particles are the size of coarse crumbs. Combine egg. 1 tablespoon of the mustard and milk; add to dry ingredients and stir until blended. Heat 3 inches of oil in deep saucepan to 36[> degrees on a deep fat frying thennometer. Dry off frankfurters with paper towels and inaert a skewer in I each one. Hold by skewer while spreading with batter. Push off skewers into hot oil and fry 2 to 3 minutes or until golden brown. Remove from oil and reinaert skewers. Serve with mustard for dipping. Makes 8 to 10 eervingil. HARVEST MOON SALAD ~ cup wine vinegar ~ cupwate:r 1A cupoil 4 teaspoons sugar 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce ~ teaspoon aalt ~ teaspoon celery seed ~ teaspoon pepper 3 large tomatoes, alioed 1 small cucumber. sliced 1 small red onion, alioed 2 carrors, cut into matchstick pieces Combine vinegar, water, oil, sugar, Worcestershire sauce, aalt, celery seed and pepper for dressing. Pour over vegetables and marinate in refrigerator 1hour.8to10 aervingii. 1' ~ ' <. Green tomatoes make a tasty pi~ Autwnn after autumn American cooks have used green tomatoes just plain fried to enjoy for breakfast with ham and eggs. Green tomatoes have al8o been popular for relishes. mincemeat and two-crust pies. This year we made a change. We worked out a lovely recipe for a one-crust pie-a deep-dish deMPrt -and we added apples to the tomatoes. GREEN TOMATO APPLE DEEP-DISH PIE Cream Cheese Pastry, tee recipe 3 mediwn (1 pound) apples 4 small (1 pound) green tomatoes, see Note Grated rind of 1 lemon lcup~ 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon ~of a ~-pound stick butter ("' cup), cut into thin pats Mlllc Make up Cream Cheeee Peatry and chill as directed. Quarter, core, pare and thinly slice the apples - there ahould be 4 looeely J>!ldted cups; tum into a medllum bowl. Core and thinly alJce the tomatoee - there should be 3 Ioo.ely pecked cupa. Tom with the apples, lemon rind, qar and c:lnnamon. Spreed over the bottom of a buttered 2-quart oblong bU:inc d1ah ( 11 ~ by 7 ~ by 1 ~ lnche9). Arranp butter pa ta over mixture. On a prepared pMtry cloth, with a prepu-ed atoc:kineklOYer roWnc p6n, roll out the Cream 0.... PMtry to a 12-by 8-lnch rectancJe. CUt four 2-tnch-Jonc lllta, for venta, at equlcliNnce In the center of the J)Mtry. Fold pMtry over roUJna ptn and p1-ce OYel' apple-tomato mtxture. Wlth tinemOl a fuit, pr9I pMtry --1nlt the .. of the dWl. Bnaah putry with milk. · :Bab on the middle ndt of a preheated fSO-cleiree oven for 15 mlnutee; continue t.Jdna at 350 decrw until t.omatoee and applet. when p6erced with a fork throulh the .Uta. are tender, and the putry la browned -30 minutm Jonaei'. Serve ho\ or warm. lpool'\ln8 the unthk:bned Ju.kel tn the bakina dish around eech portion. The pe wW not come up blah tn the dish. Maka 8 .ervtnp. Nete: In order '° have *int at their ~t. -.-peen tomat09 tl..t are about to bec1n ar an just ~to be dnaed with pink tn one or two.-. -CRE"AM CRBl:SB PAITRY: With a wooden epoon beat 1opther a W -pound 1tictuoft butt.er and 3 ouncealoft cream cheeee unUl blended: IJ'fldu.-Jly lt1r ln 1 cup unbleeched all·purpme Dour unUl blended. Wrap dahtly, lhapld Into a thick rectancJe, ln -.ran and Ch1l1 until ttnn enouch to roll out. .. l t - I I I I I t' I r C l e Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 • Pork soup dish wel l Oriented U your entertaining planl call for a light luncheon, relax and aierve an Oriental atyle meal with eue. Oriental Pork Soup features an artiaticcombtnation of pork, cut into thin atripe, and aliced carrot&, mushrooms and green onion. Gingerroot and IM!IMUDe oil di&- tinctly pronouce this light 90Up .. Oriental. Crunchy Chineee Pork Salad and Chinese-Style Spareribe tastefully complement an Oriental menu. The salad features cubed cooked pork, lettuce, water chestnuts, and green onion llghtly toeaed with a soy sauce-honey dressing. Thanks to a flavor-rich marinade, Chinese-style Spareribs are especially appeal- J.ng. Marinate the ribs for 6 hours or overnight. ORIENT AL PORK SOUP 1 tablespoon sesame oil 'Ii pound lean pork, cut into "' x 1-inch strips Yi teaspoon finely grated gin- gerroot 6 cups water 2 tablespoons instant chicken bouillon granules 2 tablespoons catsup ~ cup sliced carrots l teaapoon dry mustard ~ cup al.iced fresh muahrooms 1 3-ounce can chow mein ~ cup aliced green oniona noodles Fresh cilantro aprigs (optional) In a large aldllet, cook bacon till Heat leUme oil in a medlwn crisp; drain and crumble b8con. In aklllet. Add pork and ginaerroot; a large bowl combine bacon, pork, saute over medium heat till done. lettuce, water chestnuts and green Drain pork and 1et uide. onions.Cover and refrigerate 2 to 3 Bring water to a boil in a 4-quart hours. Dutch oven; stir in bouillon gran-For dressing, in a acrew-top jar ules. Add carrota; reduce heat, combine oH, toy sauce, honey, cover and simmer for 10 minutes. catsup and dry mustard. Cover Add muahrooma, green onion and and shake well. Chill. pork. Sinuner for 2 minutes. At aerving time, add dtt9Sing Ladle in individual 1erving and chow mein noodlee to aalad, bowl.a. Top each 1erving with a 'atirring llghtly to coat. Serve sprig of cilantro, if desired. Makes inunediately. Makes 4 to 6 aer- about 6 ~ cu~. vlnp. CRUNCHY CHINESE PORK CHINESE-STYLE SPARERIBS SALAD 4 to 6 pounds pork spareribs. in pound sliced bacon • "' cup hoiain sauce ~ to 1 pound cubed cooked ~ cup water pork 3 tablespoons dry sherry 8 cups tom iceberg lettuce 2 tablespoons honey 1 8-ounce can sliced water 2 tablespoons soy sauce chestnuts, drained 2 cloves garlic, minced sauce, water, sherry, honey, soy marinade. 350-degree oven for I in hours. in cup sliced green onions Cut spareribs into serving size sauce and garlic; mix well. Add Uncover and brush ribs with IA cup salad oil portions; set aside. ribs; cloee bag tightly. Refrigerate Drain ribs, reserving marinade. the reserved marinade. Bake un- 3 tablespoons 90y sauce Place large plastic bag in large 6 hours or overnight; tum bag Place rib& in shallow roasting pan; covered for 30 minutes or till done. 2 tablespoons hone bowl. In bag, combine hoiain several times to distr ibute cover with foil and bake in a Makes 6 to 8 servinp . .----~~~~~~~~~;;;_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Pabst Beer Scotch l11y. Frozen Bl11e llbbon ~.79° Con DI> Detergent ~..; 'i:v lJ" Dl>N1blets Corn t:; 2 'c~ 89' 0 !I& ()I• lk 1• !> "' ~Glad Bags:;:,~ •• 8f!; ;'Vu•1 •• ""2lt. Hash Browns~!"' ~o 89' ~ ~ nol'•i)ltiin /~· 9&v1 11H ~ or ~ ""O 99• Sta Puf Softener Ot• S.1• ~Corn "• Cob a.., o• • f'Gltf\ "'"'" 1. ,)/ 99' ~ c 0 6 "' 111• Liquid Oeteroeni ~ >" ...., hill 1p L• '"'~ • '"" l :V~ c 76• '-~ .......... ; . ,.. <Hld•n G•o•n Not.It<• ream Libby's Corn luce•ne Homeolyle Ce H e I AllHK••• e Gt-n ... "' • SwHI ... ot Tailg ating p icnics score a touchdown 2~~5 ~.e.9c. 5~;.•2~ Gollon1 Con Con '~'..~139 r .. i.. Tailpting picnica-ao named becau.e the picnic table ii the lowered t.ailpte of a station wapi - require food that la ·e.y to carry and .erve, yet substantial enough to keep you warm th.rough even the nippe.t f.all daya. Thia football picnic menu fits the bill, and, u an added bonus the IOUp and pita sandwiche. can be aerved either hot or cold. .. , CHEESY CARROT SOUP IA cup butter or margarine 2 cups ahredded carrots ~ cup thinly aliced leeb or green onions IA cup water l can (11 ounces) oondeNled cheddar chee.e aoup l ~ cups milk Shredded carrots or celery sticks for garnish To Serve C'allled: 4 hours before .ervinga, in 2-quart saucepan over medium heat, in hot butter, cook 2 cups shredded carrots._ leeb until tender, about 15 minutes. Add water. Reduce heat to low. Cover: limmer 15 minutes or until vegetables are VERY tender. In covered blender container at low speed, combine vegetable mixture, aoup and 1h cup milk. Blend until smooth. Blend in remaining milk. Cover: refrigerate 4 boun or more. To terve: Ladle soup into chilled bow la. Garnish with ahredded carrot, if desired. Makes 4 cups or 4 1ervinp. Recipe may be doubled. To Serve Hot: Follow same procedure, but do not refrigerate. Into 2-quart saucepan over low heat, pour 90Up mixlure. Heat thoroughly, atirring occasionally. Do not boil. Ladle into toup bowla; gamiah with ahredded carrot, lf desired. STADIUM TURU:Y PITA POCK.ETS 1 can ( 10" OWK9) condeNed cream of celery IOUP IA cup mayonnme ~ cup chopped dW pickle 2 tableepoona finely chopped onion l tablapoon chopped penley 1 tablespoon cider vinegar Oeneroua duh garlic powder • cupm diced cooked turkey breast 1 cup al.Iced celery 2 hard cooked esp. chopped 8 pita brMda. cut in halt ·Lettuce, If delired Sliced tomato lf de9ired To Serve CMJled: At leaat 6 hours before 1erving, in medium bowl. combine IOUp, mayonnat., pick)e, oNon, panley, vinepr and prlic powder unW well blended. Tom wtih turkey, mlery and tg1. Jtefriaerate 6 houn or more . tfpoon about ~ cup mixture into MCh p(ta halt. Serve with )ettuce and aUced torllllto, lf dellred. Mabe 5 cupm fil1ina or 16 .andwtch halves. To Se"' Bot tn 3-quan aauoepen over low beet, heet fillinC thorouchly. Serve u above. ~Del Monte Un•w••'·~ ..... 99' ~ l'ln•oppl• Ju•<e Con MRice-A-Roni 3 7,~~:· s2°0 mm>Jolly Time :;~:: ;~ --~~" Green Onions l2:•• 89' Su• mor>PopcornRt!,'~~""~~12°' Sklnless Frankssm.~·•·••mo •·•b s 1" ""°"'" O 0o v••lr ~Mell,. 17 01 1 J Jt M..,1 er a.ef !'lot ..,.,.., II ,.,. Pooc:Oln Bonlr D1> ro1a1 cereal ·~~ l1 " Flshsllcks "~::t, :=;·" ::; 69c - ugn1 lb lmper1alSor••d 3 P•q 11" H T k . 79 en Ur eys Monot Hov•• rrO••" C ~ p 1""'" JJ 01 69' lull•• ao1ted lb ..,.,.., opcorn ...,,.., s." Ifft .... --.. /":: .. f ~ . I '9ttle1 '_-.:: ~ ·~ ~. ,. .. ~ •ot..t•• • ·-. l'f> >. ; • \ \ G*'•~NI a..f , ' ~ ... ~~· .. / ~ 4 ' ~. . \.; l· G~oufct~~;,' •• 1..1 lodilhe1 Solod Sta• •IM leM • Clt .. lt1 llonc 4 .~1 ~.79° ~3!9 Nied Apples,~::·~:~·,y flesh Carrols c ... p n'esh Crisp Celery Pinto Beans :~:o~··~~~:: 3 1b •. s1 2 ~b. 59' l unch49c 3 1~. 99c ::_;i:::.-·. ~ ._ -...... -:" .. ,__ --.... Ao._ :-. .. '.: •..... • • Iii AJJ, [ '"' 3 'I> 7nc 5.l'""'"Y Ou.ll•f\ Yellow Onionszl'\• & ,.,,,. B.ici ., Round Steak B•e• Bot'"" l•t1a 4 'l S·•'"""v011.1111v Valencia Oranges l .. il" ·~ Rib Roast &.•• •• ,.,,,, 1 .. ,, I ''" I ,._., 2QY\ ~'""° Fresh Lime ' .. ·•'"' ' Beel Liver ,,.,'"'"·' tJ A\w_•IN PV"" l '' Sun Maid Raisins 8.oo 14 r,o\ 111' Porl< Chops E•'<l & lf"'"' Cut tttoo\ JO,.•• I~ M 89< , Pitted Prunes """'t 8"9 Fresh Sole Fillets u .... e.i~ S•Ot House Plants Aw•"o 31 ~:"' 100 Cooked Shrimp O:~':' .. Beautiful Baroque Ston .. •re ~Sat .. •v • · I c ( ( ~, ni.w .... ·, ...... ) ~, F .. tUN .. . ( c-=--, I S.ucet . -. ~,,; Eacll~·----- SAFEWAY AMUUCA 'S FA\40R.llt rooo S10lll -L.: 1to0 ..,,Ide Ot .. Newoof1 l •Ntl · llt No e o .. 1 H1911wey l•IVfl• I•~" • 2• Moft•teh •n 9'1 .... 1011111 Le911ne • lente Ane ,, .. ,,,, et l e ,a,, MIH6on Y ...... • •• .. l ftetOI. lente a .. ,, • IUH Culvtt Dr .. et WlllHll, !twine • Vikings: Are they for real? By CURT SEEDEN Of .. .,.., .... 8tMI The Sunaet League football race is evenly split down the middle at this stage of the 11eUOn with three teams sporting 2-0 records while the other three teams have the nwnbers re- versed. Obviously, something has to give. Friday night, two teams from the upper echelon go at it when Huntington Beach High hosts Marina (7:30) in a contest featur- ing two talented quarterbacks, and two explosive rufuling backs. Huntington Beach, with a 6-1 overall record is the epitome of obnfidence ever since the Oilers (iilled off a long-awaited victory aver F.dison High two weeks ago. f Marina is just 3-3 overall but that mark doesn't concern Coach Dave Thompaon or Huntington Beach Coach George Pascoe. l "Th.is team has a real good attitude. We didn't get down , when we lost before and we could have," says Thom.peon. "We've' played hard all year." I Paa:oe agrees: "Marina is much Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY, OCT. 26, 1983 SlfllD 05 An ullsung· hero Marina's Karman does his job quietly BJ JORN IBV ANO ............... Marina High'• Pztc Kannan 1a not the kind of penon who openly eeeka recop.Jtion. And it'• aaooct thing, too, becau.e he ham'taotten much th.la -- De.plte the fact the 5-9, 165-pound running bllCk baa ruahed for 682 yarda in 80 carriea, whkh computea to a whopping 8.53 averaae, Kannan baa had to take a bacloeat to beaclline grabbera Steve Brazaa (1,064 yarda) of Newport Harbor and, in particular, Danny 'nM:lmpeon (1,052) of Huntington Beach, a Swwet t.ea,ue rival. Karman ia understandably experiencing an ''identity criaia," which is comparable to the problem running bllCka in the Southeaatem Conference were subjected to when Georgia'• Henchel Walker WU a.rowld. "He doesn't get a Jot of ink, but all the teama we play certainly know who be ia. I know other coechea reapect him." often Vildnga c.oech Dave Thompmon. .~e:a~t kid. A super kid. He'• just depeni;i.abJe, always there, doma the right thfna. There'• never a lack of effort on hia part in pnctice or games. He'a just a good, gutty little player, the type of kid you like to have on your team." U a lack of indentification UUlOys Karman, he doesn't abow it. !Pu YER or THE WEEK I pointa in a 19-9 'Suneet League victory over Westminster' lut week with a pair of touch- down runs (of 14 and 4~yatda), a pair of field goals (27 yards each) and a TD conversion. "Brazaa and Thcmpeon are good backs who are having better 1euona. I feel I've gotten more than my fair aha.re (of recognition). A lot of people don't even get what I've gotten." Coincidentally, Karman and Marina will meet face-to-face with Thompeon and Hunt- incton Beach Friday in a big Suneet League matchup. It'• interesting, too, that the aame parallels that hold true for Karman's lack of attention abo hold true.for the Vlkinga in that they've anuck up on the Sun.et field with a 2-0 league start after a 1-3-1 pre-leUOD campaign. 'Ille Oilers. meanwhile, 2-0 and 6-1 ove.rall, could aire.dy fill a acrapbook with the pret8 noticee they've recelvecl. "U we can beat Huntington and Fountain Valley we'd be on a pret_ty big high. I mean, they're the only teams we've heard about all year looc." aaya Kannan. "Some teams haven't pven ua much credit. U we could beat them, it would help ua to get that." Actually, It haa reached a point where Kannan feels the anonymity might be working to Marina'• advantage. better than ita record. They have Marina's Eric Karman is the Prep Player of the Week. (lee VIK.U, Pa1e DZ) "It doesn't bot.her me too much," aays Kannan. who accounted for all of Marina's "I feel it pves us an advantage becauae (See VIID, Pase DZ) Robinson: Rams • must continue to get better Newport cli01hs in poll Newport Harbor ffiCh WU the lone area team to make a 81 CURT SEEDEN to an NFC West rival in four move in this week'a CIF foot· °' .. ...,,....... outings. ball rank1np, u the Sa1lon Uthe Rama have any thoughts The second half of the season jumped from fourth to third of winning their division or earn-opens Sunday in Miami when the p1-ce in the Central Con· ing a wild card berth in the NFL Rams meet the Dolphins in the ference. · · playoffs. they can't afford to Orange Bowl. • The SaUon, who defeated .i.,nate over the final eight "Our team has proven a lot -Saddlebldt, 21-0, improved pmes of the leUOD. durin& the first part of the aeaaon. their record to 5-1·1 and ~nt-t>,y Coac~ve, &l:u>Yffi..lbe abilil)'_t.Q_com:_ µ·~~ar:c·1Javer~[_J4lunbea~l11~t.nµI.i1..a4_,.:'--__:~r"llP....,.~=.;.,..r:a:::....._:.....;~ .. .-.,.._. John RobiNon at the halfway pete in every situation. Thinp Minda Into third p&... O.· mark of the NFL 9eUOn -a oer\ainly get no euier for ua, but den Grow lAICU8 NP I ata- &mpeign which baa .een the we'll be reed_y for the~~ of tlve t.o.Amtaw heJdclown the 1 Rama win five of eight gamea -another eight weeks, Robil180n runner-up .iot In the Central only three of which they were says. with a 7-0 record. favored to win. Through the first eight weeks, Meanwhile, Corona del "We have to control our own the offenaive heroics have been Mar,.allo 7-0, oontinuelt •the future," cautions Robinaon. "The equally divided between quar-unanlmoua cbake for tint key to this team is that we have to terback Vince Ferragamo, who place in the Central after continue to improve. We atW have haa pueed for 1,868 yarda and 13 edging c.o.ta Meaa~-14. to attempt to get better.". touchdowns, and rookie running CdM meeta Unlveni , while The Rama. picked by many to back Eric Dickenon, who is en Newport will face Meaa tiniah last in the NFC West, are route to making NFL history Friday ntcht. 0on an upward awing offensive-with 995 yards and 12 touch-In the Bia nve Conference, ly" and "playing over their heads downs. Fountain Valley (6-1) kept it. defensively,'' in Robinson's Among the unsung heroes who hold on the eecond apot after words. have supplemented the offeNe lta 33-7 tril.imph over :Edi8oo. ' "'There hasn't been a stinker are tight end Mike Barber, who The Barona continue to trail yet," Robin8on continues. "U has al.ready caught 38 passes for Loyola. which received all 13 you've aeen the first eight Ram 428 yards aod should surpass his tint-place votes in the Bia pmee. you've aeen aome exciting best seaaon When he caught 59 for Five. football." 712 yards, and youngsters like Huntington Beach (6-1), on The excitement came to ita peak Gordon Jones and Otis Grant the heels of lta 49-8 romp over on Sunday when San Franc:iaco who have come up with some Ocean View, remained In the Eyeing his target at.aged a fourth~uarter rally to pivotal receptions and provided fourthpoetioointheBiCFtve, 8COre a 45-35 victory over the great depth among Ram re-traillna third-place Fontana Jtams at Anaheim Stadlwn. The ceivers. which ii unbeaten. Golden West's Eric Lund fires a shot during a water polo match against Santa Ana Tuesday. GWC won a thriller, 11-10. See 02. loee marked the first Ram defeat (See RAMS, Pa1e DZ ) ·now about FV vs. HB at Anaheim Stadium? Will there be a SUNet League title 'decider in football at Anaheim Stadiwn between Fountain Valley and Huntington iBeach Nov. 11? That question and answer won't really J>e addreaed until Saturday, according to IHuntington Beach High football coach t;eorge Pucoe. ' But the odds don't look good, despite ~e potential glamour. 1 First there are the Marina High Vikings ~deal with, who are a1ao 2-0 in league. e Vikings meet Huntington Beach day night, then battle Fountain Valley ov. 4 before Huntington Beach and ountain Valley duel. Marina'• speed may give both more ~ they could handle, but aaauming PREP SPORTS ROGER CARLSON Huntington Beach is successful againat Marina, there are still major hurdles ln front of the Oilers, according to Pucoe. "It's still in the air," he says. "But I've been µ> Anaheim Stadlwn a lot of times and to the C.Oliaeum, too, and I've seen what happens to kids. "I know it'll be a shame for the fans, but Fountain Valley has played at Anaheim, they know what it's like. You get there for the first time and you're in awe of the place. "Our thoughts are to bring in portable bleachers (which would presumably in- creaae the 5,000 e circuit televiae the game into our auditoriwn, which would ac- cornodate another 1,000. "But it's not in stone yet, and really, I didn't want to talk about th.is at all in the paper before the Marina game. "We drove by Anaheim Stadiwn (on the way to the Fullerton game earlier ln the year) and I told our kids we're going to play there, but I was t.alk.ingabout the CIF finals. "But right now, we 've got all we need to worry about with Marina. Their speed and talent really worries me." Fountain Valley c.oach Mike Milner has voiced an affirmative response to the idea of moving the Barona' game with Huntington Beach to Anaheim Stadiwn, which of coune can aocomodate as many fana aa you'd like. Somehow, from this angle, I'm unable to quite viauallze a bunch of sb4king Oilen against a band of calm and veteran Barona ahould t.hinp work out for the two and they do play at Anaheim Stadium. Two years ago the notion that Hunt- ington Beach might be playing for a SUNet League crown at Anaheim Slad.lum in 1983 would have been a certain ticket to the fwmy fann. The only pomble way that could (See BIG A, Pap DI) ne says nothing been settled Aaiord.i.ng to Angela Dlrector of fublidty Tom Seellurg. the club Dull Series teams equal low TV ratings tential free-agent catcher Boone have apparently agreement on a new year oontrllet. "The American League la now l\Udylnc the contract. A.mwning ~ approve the wording, Y!e ~ we are very cloee to an nnouncement concerning ' •• aald Seeburi Tueeday. Jb)ne, however, from h1a home Medford, N.J.,'lnallted nothinc been aet1..led. "I can't aay what the atatua is," Mid. 0 All I can aay 1a I haven't anything, and until l do, I ven't qreed to anything.'' Nobody came in on the noon balloon from Saakatoon and uked me, but ... •Uthe televtalon ratinp of the World Series hit a 15·year low, it waa becauae the Oriole. and Phillies were dull teems and a five-game leries doean't pve the viewing public time to warm to dull teen». •Really now, a Rama-Raiden Super Bowl xvm i.e not entirely out of the question If the injury factor tuma out well for both aides. •The really aood polo player can ba.lance a matt1n1 while the hone la aoinl at full pl.lop. •I would not .,_y to hear O.J. Slinpeon in a one-~ poetry recital. • U the National BMketball .A.oc:lation hu to go with aumtitule officalls, the intimidation f~ would be unreal. • SPORTS COLUMNIST BUD TUCKER --{: . • •If you don't think the USFL can influence NHL aalaries, check buketball and hockey where new lequea survived just long eno\&lh. •The wile of a major leegue player llvina in Southern Calif omla 1a a IOd.al nerd if her huaband does not have hia own golf tournament. •Fonner Rams running beck, now bro.dcaater, Dick Bua uya, "An old coach told me many yun ago that he couldn't- guarantee qie glory OI" fame or money playing th.la game ... the only thine he could guarantee me wu that I would get hurt playing this pme ... •The· ~ble on the pro football bbulevard 1a that a former au per, super aw 1a about to emerae trcm the cloeet. •If eome of the major leque ma.nagera -take San Dteao'• Dick WlllJama •one example -deserve their mulU-year con- tncta. the ~· Tommy Luorda de- lervee • lifeU.me dOc:ument. •It Ml been aaa-ted that if Pete &. rM11y wilha to my in bueball, he ahould becomee rnanaaer but hi.I cut in aalary would be devutattna. - •All tb1np ro~ered -from a (Sff TUC&.Bll. P ... DI> , • ~whalers slow down Kings, 8-5 INGLEWOOD (AP) -Rookie Sylvan Turgeon and Bob Crawford 9COred 28 seconds apart ln the final period to trigger a five-goal Hartford outburst Tues- day night as the Whalers beat the Loe Angeles Kinga. 8-5. The teams were deadlocked 3-3 going into the final period when the Whalen cashed ip on Turgeon and Crawford'• pow&play goa.1a to tak~ the lead in the National Hockey League cont.eat. The Whalen m>red five of their eight goa.1a while enJoYtna manpwer advantages apinlt tile K.lnp. Ron Franm stretched the Hart- ford lead to 6-3 at 4:59 of the period, and Blaine Stouahton drilled h1a fourth and fifth pla of the 1eUOn tw> eeconda •part " .. aiNt the beleeguered Kines pile, Mario Le9aard. Bernie Nk:holla ICOred three goa.1a for the King, in the leCOl\d period to keep them even. Nlcholla' third pl of the ntaht, an unamiated ltU'e, came wtth the Kinp ahorthanded. He beat Hartford pile Mike Vei8ol' from in clme on a c:Uaputed aoai. That .. Ye the Ki.na. 8·2 feed, bu\ Hartford pulled-tO--l tie with 3:53 remaining ln the 9a'Ond period on Norm Dupont11 power-play pl. DS vrange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, Oel. 26, 1983 SPORTS BREAK Cy Young to Hoyt; Quisenberry finishes • • runner-up 1n voting From AP '11patcM. NEW YORK-LaMarr Hoyt, the II baqel-beJ.lied Chicago White Sox right-hander who led the major leagues with 24 victories this year, was named the winner of the Cy Young Award in the American League on Tueeday. The previoualy Wlheralded Hoyt, woo has won 43 games over the past two teaaona and led the White Sox'a aecond-half romp to the AL West title, received 17 first-place ballota and was the only one named by all 28 voters on a special panel of baseball wrt ters. He had a total of 116 points, easily outdistancing re- liever Dan Quisenberry of the Kansas City Royals, who fin- ished second with nine HOYT first-place votes and 81 points. Quisenberry, a product of Coeta Mesa High and Orange Coast College and who aet a major Jeague record for saves with 45, was named on only 23 ballota. Jack Morris of the Detroit Tigers was third with two first-place ballots and 38 pointa. Quote of the day Rams Coach Jolla Roblllsoa on the club's tum.around from the NFC's wont record in 1982 to a playoff contender this seuon: "There's no sense doing penance for aomething that happened in the past. I think that's very important. You get cateaorized as a player or as a coach aa a winner or a to.er. This team has been told that they were loeers and they're not. They wanted out from under that. Something new has given them that chance." Monday signs one-year pact LOS ANGELES -Veteran out- fielder Rick Monday has signed a II one-year contract with the Los Angeles Dodge.rs, the National League Western Division champions announced Tueeday. Monday, 38, baa played with the Dodgers for aeven years and haa completed 17 eeaeons in the big leagues. He wu Los Angeles' top left-twlded pinch hitter this year, collecting eight pinch hita and driving in seven runa in that role. Playing in 99 games overall during the aeuon as a pinch hitter and part-time player at first bue and in the outfield, Monday hit .247 with six home runs and 20 runs batted in. He had four game-winning RBI. Tollner pondering QB change LOS ANGELES -USC c.o.ch Ted Tollner ... ytna be la .. k>okina fot m•m llOIDeOOe to &et hot W live UH spark," lm't sure who the Trojana will start at quarterback for th.la week'• Pad&· 10 Conference game at Califomla. Junior Seen S.llabury. the atarter for the tint eeyen pmee, wu replaced by junior Tim Green halfway through the Trojans' 27-6 km at Notre Dame last Saturday. Saliabury completed ~ of 10 pu9e1 for 34 yards and wu lntercepted once, •ttina up a Notre Dame field aoeI. Green wu 7 of 16 J--'na for 80 yards. and led use, 79-yard ICOrinc drive. But be wu ahlo intercepted twice, one of t.hoee leading to an hiah touchdown. ''I don't like to make dwiaee at quarterbeck. •• Tollner Mid, "but two-thirds of the way ~ the11eUOn we're atill inconslatent. Notre Dame wu the aecpnd atraight pme we didn't put any polnta on the Doud in the fint half. We had to try to generate 80rne offeNe. Holly park to undergo face lift INGLEWOOD-A total of about !!J $100 million will be spent over the next several yean to build a new race tnck at Hollywood Park and totally revamp the entire facility. The first phue of the four-phue project will begin immediately, Vernon 0 . Underwood, Holly- wood Park's Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, aaid Tueeday The first phue, eetimated to cost $30 million, entaila construction of a 100-foot high, heated and air-oonditioned building juat aouth of the exlating clubhowie and enlargement of the track. The new building will contain luxury suites. u well as 13,000 aeata, which will increa.ae the total seating capacity at Hollywood Park to more than 50,000, Underwood aaid. Al80, the one-mile track will be enlar~ to a distance of 1 Yi miles, fint of that distance in California, with the finiah line moved eouth. The extension of the track ahlo providee for a one-mile turf OOUl'le. Holmes, Frazier fight set LAS VEGAS -Larry Holmes, m the Wol'ld Boxing Council heavy- weight champion. will make hia 17th title defeme Nov. 26 at Caeun Palaoe apinat Marvis Frazie~r, e son of fonner heavyweight champion oe er. promoters announced Tue.day. - 'The bout will bebeldou~ooniri 15,000-.eat arena and be televt.ed live ln p · by NBC said co-promoters Robert and Murad Muhammed. The fight will be acheduled or 12 rounda if the WBC aanctiona the bout, but could be eet for 15 rou.nda if the boxina organization follow. through on ita threat not to aanction the fight, said Caeu.n executive Bob Hallonn. WBC officiala earlie.r threatened action against Holmes if he did not defend hia title against No. 1-ranked Greg Page. Television, radio TV: No eventa acheduled. RADIO: No eventa scheduled. A tale of two teams lrYine looks for consistency, Estancia looks for win FAtancia High will be looking to get into the win column in league play, while Irvine will find out whether ita for real or not u Sea View League action continues this week. the bell game against all of them. But like molt of <JUr league games, except Newport, the team which plays best will win. "U we play well, we have a chance. U w~ play poorly, we're going to to.e.11\at's iL" Irvine, after no1Ching ita fint league win laat week, will meet El Toro at Mlaaion Viejo High ThW"tlday night, while &tancia goes up against Eatucla va. Saddleback Saddleback at Santa Ana Stadium Friday night. F.\anda'1 roster count la 25 ... and dwl.ndling. Both games start at 7:30. "We've. Sol a couple of more IUY9 hurt," aaya lrvlae v1. El Toro C.O.Ch Ed Blanton, whoee EaaJs 9Qwid bu already After giving top-ranked Corona del Mar all it been crt~ by injuries. "Both (Aaron) Dowdy, a could handle in a 21 -7 la. two weeka ago, and beatinl guard, and (Sandy) Fates. our ftartina noeesuard, F.tancia last week, 34-20, Irvine Coech Terry broke their hands last week. Henigan ia understandably pleued by hia team'• "Heck, with our in.juries, and we were hit by the progress. nu hue last w~ we Nd 19 guyw out for pnctlce one "We played Corona a good game and we day last week. improved again this past week and played better "We can't afford to~ anybody ei.e, that'• for against a real fine &tancia team. We'll just eee if we sure, or I'll have to ault up." can improve for the third week in a row," aaya Aaked what pmition be mi&ht rlay. Blanton Henigan. laughl and aya. "Aa big and fat u am. I would Irvine will enter ita confrontation with the probably be a guard." Chargers 1-3 in league, 3-4 overall. El Toro is ~2 and In the Roadn.anners, Estancia will be fadnl a 3-4. teem that'I 2-2 in league, 2-5 overall and pc II Ell !9 "We're 1-3, 10 we're not doing anything but tremendoua team apeed. ta.king one game at a time," sayw Hen!Pn. "We've "I'm very lmpte•ed with their team speed. played two good football games, but we're atill trying eepecially on defenae, •• aayw Blanton, whoee J!'.aclee to be a halfway decent football team. are 0-3-1 in leque, 2-4-1 overall. "Plua. they're much "We have juniors now at all six of our akllled tqaer than we are ... but then everybody hu been positions. It's ta.ken 900le time, but I think we're blaer' than we are th.la eeuon. playing at little bit better -at leaat we're "It would be euy for a team like thla to pt competitive." dilcouraged, with the way we're 1ostna playen and Just how competitive the Vaqueros are, bow-all. But we've got a good group of guyw who are ever, i.s a mystery to Henigan. h.anilncin there. They'vegotbighearta. I'm proud of "The big question i.s have we become fairly good them for that." offensively? Or was last week a fluke," he aayw. "I don't mean we have to acore 35 points, but can we move the ball conaistently? I think that will be the DeCinces officially signs pact key. "If you look at the opponenta we have left - Univeriaty, Saddleback, El Toro -I think we're ln VIKES' KARMAN ... From Page 01 -teama don't look at ua aa the team to beat," he notes. "We're ln a aituation now where a lot of people don't expect ua to win our last three pmem (aplnst Huntihgton, Fountain Valley and Ed180n). Well, we plan on winning them." Kannan. like the V i.k.ln8a. started slowly. la.lnlnc 76 yards ln the VlkinaJ' flnt outinl and only 13 in five carries (al~ lt ahould be noted Karman .uttered 91!!parat.ed rtba uwt • concumon> ln a 6-0 w. to Servile. Since, he'• ruahed for bet1er than 100 yarda ln four of five pmes. the eiccepUon betnc an 87·yard. eil)\t-carry performance aplmt OcMn View 1n llmit.ed playing time. "I'm a SoOct beck. but rm not a sr-t t.ck," •ya Kannan, who hu tallied five touchdowm, three field aoelt out of five attempta Md la a perfect 17 of 17 on ldckinc PA Ta th.la year. which llOOOWltl for one-third of the teem'• point producU.on. "I hit a hole (ln the offenaive line) q~, (But) when It ooroet to rwminC OYel' ~. I there. When you're 16& pounda, you jun don't run over too many people.'' Third bueman Doug DeCincea hat ailJled • three-)'MI' contract with the Anp.la. DeCincs. who waa eligible for free aemcY, of&lally ligned the contract agreed upon aeveral days ago which had to be reviled allghtly to JMiet the American Leque'• approval. Tenna were not announced, but the contntd It believed to call fOf'. f2.25 ml.Won guarantee with. liberal achedule of &ncentiva. SHARK FISHING 3 TRIPI DAILY e40 PIR NR80N (8 person maximum) •I em· 11 •m •1pm-lpm •lpm·1em 41•sft<>RTFl8HIR .. BALBOA DEEP SU FIStMG CHARTERS BALBOA(714) 675·2960 ln•ex•pen•atve• •(1n lk •f*l' llv) "Of lllgll In pr1c•. re,.oneblt . CIHtlf'-d ..... ---------·----- Barons, CdM triumph I FV shares Sunset lead; Sea Kings roll past Mesa Fountain Valley maintained a share of the------------------ SUNet i.e.,ue lead with We9tm.lnster, while Corona u:o~ WLEYB' ~LL ... del Mar stayed unbeeten ln the Sea View ln pl.a' " 1 '.LJ n r.111 hfch IChool volleyWJ. action Tue.day. The Barona. 6-1, stopped EdilOn, 15-12, 16-14, 14-16, 1~3. md CdM WU a winner~~ Meu, 16-8, 16-14, l&.9. We9tminater kept pece 1n the Sumet by tw'niJl8 t.c:lutubbom Marina, 14-16, l~-3, 17-16, ~1~. l~-'1. .. third-place F.dbon with a 3-4 record. We.tmlnater and F.daon tangle in a c:rudal match Thunday. CdM is 11-0 in the Sea View following ita sweep of Coeta Mesa. Chrtaty Svalat.ed had 19 killa u the Barona improved their loop mark to 6-1. The key game WU the .econd, u the Barona overcame a 14-12 advantage to win the next four point.a behind the aervtng of Julie Meyen. _ Kara McGuineea played well for the winnen, who started quickly, 1truggled a blt in the aecond game, but fi.niahed strongly. The Sea Kings have a date with the CIF's top-ranked equad in 2-A, Rim of the World, tonight at 5. Edi8on, meuwhile, was sparked by the play of middle blocker Pam Lance, who had nine blocb, the ,llel"\ltnl of Laura Encdall and the all'-al"OUDd play of 9l!!tter Inn Tomblin. In another Sea Vlew matchup, Newport Harbor swept past El Toro. 15-11, 15-10, 15-0 behind the back-row play of Sara Alliaon and Annie McCray. Contributing from the front row were Laura Aaper and Julie Evans. The Charpn fell to 4~ in the Sunaet with the aetbeck. Marina gave Weetminater a big aaire before falllna in five games. Playing excellent defeme, the Vi.kings aplit the fint two pmea and had a 7-0 advantage in the third before the Llona clawed bldt. Marto Kuestner was the oUensive ie.der for Marina, providing 18 killa. Newport Christian had little trouble in an Academy League match, dispatching Leffingwell Chris~. 15-1, 15-0, 15-11 . Meanwhile, Weetminlter was paced by Melodie Heximer and Jackie Mendez, who were each credited with 16 killa. For the CIF Small Schools aecond-ranked Conquerors, Stella Berkebile and Chris Y earley were the standouta. In a South Coast League match, Dana Hilla outlasted San Clemente, 15-10, 6-15, 10-15, 16-14, 15-6, behind the play of setter Lara Epperson and middle blocker Jody Conners. The Lions trailed in each game but the second, but managed to drop Marina a game behind VIKES .... From Page 01 aa much talent as anybody. Their quarterback (Bill Marler) is a very aood runner, a great pamer and be haa 80IDe very good re- oeiven." Marler haa completed 55 of 111 pu9e1 for 1,062 yards and 12 touchdowns this eeuon. More im- portantly, he has been inter- cepted jun once all aeuon. Huntington Beach counters with Eric Lawton who has hit 60 of 120 pea.es for 969 yards. He, too, hu kept interceptions to a minimum with three. Neither quarterback figures to upstage hia reapecUve favori1' running beck, u Marina'• Eric Karman has carried 80 times for 682 yard• for an 8 .53 yards-per-carry average, while Huntington'• Danny 'Thompeon hu now sooe over the 1,000-yard mark (1,052 to be ~) on 89 carries. Hun~n Beach has been on an emotional high ever since a 2.4-10 win over F.dilon two weeks •80· "We didn't have a letdown last week (in a 49-6 romp over Ocean View), but then, Ocean View didn't play• well M they have in the pest. 'Ibey (the Seahawka) played p.t ap1mt Marina Ob film and looked 1lke they oould do IOme thlng9 aaainft ua. letdown or no letdown," aya Pa.coe. ''Our tMaest concem (apinat Marina) is stopping their outside veer. U they pt that wound up and going, they're golna to run up and down the field on ua." Paacoe adds. Notes Marina'• Thompeon: '"Thit will be the best football team we've played. You know, their deferwe doem't pt a lot of rec:opiticl\ becaUR their offerwe playw IO Well. They do a aood job of not liv1nl up the tHc one." The Vildnp will ptobebly be without tbe aervica of both start- ill8 aafetlea, BW Craft and John Wblt.eman. both of whom have ahou1der injwiea. On ltOppina Danny ThompM>D, Marina'• Thomi-on aaya: "We have to be a little lucky and just puraue and tackle and not let him break.'' lndMdual 8Wlng An~ UllnQ Large &;teen Televt9ion Former Head Pro BIG CANYON C.C. Nl•ILLlll'I .. -. 11111 ..,,.,. .. 11t.M!t111 RAMS' ROBINSON ... From Page 01 Dickenon, meanwhile, ranks third on the ~-time list for most touchdowns by-a Ram for a aeuon with 14. Elroy Hinlch (19!H) and Wendell Tyler (1981) share the record with 17. The rookie out of SMU has already carried the ball 203 times leaving very few opportunities for other Ram running backa to join in the fun. "Barry Redden gives us great depth at running back but I've done a lousy job of getting him the football," admita Robinson. Redden. the Rama' No. 1 draft plclc a year ago, has picked up 149 yarda on 22 carries. Among Robinson's other thoughta at mid-season: eOn Vince Ferragamo: "l th.ink Vinnie has really improved. I just feel badly about the way Sun- day's game finished up (Fer- ragamo fumbled in hia own end zone to give the 49ers the go-ahead touchdown). He is real- ly coming into his own. He had a hand in all seven touchdowns Sunday." •On the inside receivers: "Barber, (Mike) Guman and David Hill have all been very effective. We haven't been able to pt David the ball much. He'• a little frustrated but hla attitude ll great. Barber's having an outstanding year." eOn the defenae: "We have an excellent group that goes to the ball and tackles well. I think we were ranked fourth in the NFC last week but I'm sure that's changed now. We have estab- lished an effective defenae." eOn the special teams: "Our punt returning has improved dra- matically. We don't have the numbers yet, but I've been im- pretaed with the kind of effort we're getting. Our kick coverage teams have al80 played well." eOn Sunday's km: '1t wu a game where you. had to come out swinging. You've got to give the 49ers credit for hanging in there. We had them on the rope1 for ahwile. It was a helluva game." eOn San Franci9co's con- troversial TD after Ferragamo'a fumble: "I don't think the official •w it. He juat aaw the end result. It could have been called a safety. But I really don't have a quarrel with that play." eOn how the Rams rate in con- trast to the rest of the NFL: "A top three would be the Redskins, the Raiders and Cowboys. You can put San Franci8oo up there, too. u •. Minne.ota. Miami and New Orleana are the •wboopae1' and 90lne whoppeea have pie on to win super bowla. So w~re within strild.n& distance.,, Rustlers take polo lead Golden West College took a giant step toward annexing another South C.OUt Conference water polo championahip Tues- day, knocking off Santa Ana. 11-10, in a battle of co-leaders in the Ruatlers' pool. Elawhere, Orange Cout loi.t by the same 900re to Cerritos, and Corona del Mar High welcomed the retum of Jeff Oeding. who Nd been lidellned with a noee lnjw'y, by beating Downey. 11-5. Golden West and Santa Ana entered the conteat with matching 6-1 conference marks and the Dona. who handed the Rustlers their lone conference 9l!!tbeck in the flnlt round, 16-14, rallied from an early 4-0 deficit to take an 8-6 advantagoe late in the third quar\er. Matt Karl and Tom Hermstad brought GWC cloee in the third quarter and the teama traded goals in the final stanza before la.on Crow knotted the acore with 1:05 remaining. Crow then took a feed from Henmtad and pwnped ln the game-winner with just 8eVen aec- onda remaining. In ~ Cout'1 narrow de- feat, the Bucs' fourth-quarter rally fell one goal lhort u Mlke Ure tallied to make the acore 11-9, and Eric Norton netted a lhot for the final marsfn. Mike Ure led OCC with three goal1, while Norton, Ed Skowronald and Mike Alexander Nd two apiece. .......,.. ........... ,. ... ~ , ........ ~ .... -..... .. , ....... ..._ .. And when you're thatamall ~··a tendency to ~~ a crowd -or not pt the recocnJtion one edveftlllnQ -· CltHlfled Advertlalng e.2-M78 11tu 1i ,...,... ,, ho .. 11..11w """" 1tu1 ..o "" • rtttfl"",,.. ... ..,..,. -- 1-11 ... of!"" .. pNllt 1t1J1 Jlt ..., ... _.._ -.......... • Orange Coas1 DAIL V PILOT /Wednesday, Oc1. 26, 1983 D:S fDR THf Rf CORD NFL NATIOMA'-CO-IJa llENCa WMt W L T IJct. ,., ,.A San Fr•nclsco Ram' NawOrlH n• All1nla • 2 0 1SO 24' IS7 s l 0 62~ 117 170 s 3 0 .us 112 176 l 5 0 l7S 171 166 Minnesota GrHn Bev 0.troll Clltca90 Tamoa e .. Central 6 1 0 ' ' 0 3 5 0 3 s 0 0 • 0 Eu t 7SO 184 soo 226 37S '"' 31S IS3 000 129 184 133 171 160 210 Oellu 1 I 0 '7S Ul 17S Wes!llnoton 6 2 o 150 267 111 Plllla<le!Oflle 4 4 0 SOO 117 14S NY Glanl1 2 S 1 .313 1'6 116 SI. Louil 7 S I 313 1$7 238 AMERICAN CONl'ERENCE ltMdln o.nver SH llle Kansa1Cl!v Sen 0 1990 Pllta1>uro11 Cleveland Cincinnati Houston WMt 6 1 0 s 3 0 ' 4 0 ' 4 0 3 5 0 Cantrel • 1 0 ' 4 0 2 6 0 0 • 0 Eut 750 221 62S 126 500 18S soo 15' 37S 197 170 123 llS 133 22S 1SO 210 IS3 .500 1S6 117 2SO 136 167 .000 13J 221 Buttalo Ml1ml Beltlmota New Enola!ld NY Jell S 3 0 .62S 1'6 161 S 3 0 .61S 169 133 ' ' 0 500 144 176 4 4 0 .SOO 116 16S 3 5 0 37S 161 1n SVndeV'l c;."'" 1t1nu el Miami (Cn1nnel 7 a t I om ) S.allle al Raiden NY Jell al San Francl1co New Orlean1 al Butt11o Ntw Enolend al Atlante Detroll at Chlcaoo MlnnHota 11 St. Loul1 Temoa Bav al Plth l>uroh B1lllmore at PhlladliOllla (Cnannel 4 at 10 I m) Oellat at NY Glant1 (Cha nnel 2 al 10 e.mJ Houston al Cleveland KanH ' Cllv •I Denver GrHn Bev al Clnctnnal) MendlV'1 <;ame Wulllnolon al San 01990 (Cnannet 1 at 6 p,m,) Odets Ml'L llMlaml 3 over RMM llR-*'5 6'h over S.allte llAllanle 3 over New E nol1nd xllufhllo 21'> ov.,. New Orleans xSan FrancllCO 6 over New Yor~ Jell Dalles 7 ov.,. .11....-. York Glanll llCh~ 2'h ov.,. 0.troll Mlnne.ola 31!S over aSt. Loul1 xCi.Yallnd 911> over HOUSIOll .11.Pllt.OUroll Hiii'> over Temc>a Bav af'flllade!Oflla 5 over Baltimore xClnclnnatl 1..., o,,er GrH!l Bev Kensa1 Cllv 711'> lbv•r xOenver Wallllnot011 3 over xSan oi.oo ~(A,. ..... , I. Naelrasl(a vs . .11.ICa nsas State, no odds 1. xTe.11.u 2911> ov.,. Taxu Tech l . Norlll CarOllne 4 O¥ar XMMv1and '-•AUC>unl 21'> over FlorlOI 5. Flor!A 2112 under •Auburn 6. 1tGeorola 24 over TtmPle 7. XMlaml. Fla., 7 0¥9" Wnlglnla a. Mlctlloan and •IMlnoi1, even 9. xtllnol' allcl Mlchlo1n, even 10. So, Mltlllocllll 1 over •Texas A&M 11. Wa"'1noton 111> over •UCLA 12. WH I Vlrolnla 1 under llMlaml, Fla. 13 llMaryle!ld 4 under North CtrOllna 14. xOltlahoma v'-K1n115, no Odeh 1S, .11.Brlgllam Young vs Ut•ll Stele, no oOdl 16. •Dfllo State 12 over Wllconsln 11. •Iowa 23 over lndl1na It. llAllbame II over Mlu lulPOI ~tlf• 19. x9o1lon CotleOe 111> u~ Pe11n Stat• (lie) xNotre Dame 77 o.,... Navv -~·"-'""' From H.arral'I'• R-Soorh Boal. C-... ...... schecMe w•n WHll!nlnoft v-.. UCLA at It-9oW1 (ci-.n.! 1 a1 12:30 p.m.J use at C•ll+ornl• Cel State FullenOn at 1491'1<> St., n ~-at WaSl'llneton St. Stan!Ord 11 ~-St Cal Potv SLO et Fr""41 ~. T••••-EI Pa.o 11 Hawaii, n s.n DleOO St. et Navacsa Lu' vaou Ida"<> at Pacific llldland' at Claramont·MUdcl (1:30 o.m) San Francl.co St. al UC Davis. n Humtloldl SI al Havward St Cat Stale Nortl'lfklQa at Portla!ld $1 • n St Marv'I al Santa Clara ROCKIES Army at Air Foret FIOrlOI SI. el .Arlrona SI , n New Mealco SI al Coton oo St OkllhOme St. at Colorado Utah St. at BYU Monllne 11 Montan• St N1v1oe R.no at Nort~rn Arizona, n Wvomlng 11 New Mulco 9olse SI el WtOtr St 10UTHWEST K.anH1 al Olltanoma Tau' Teen 11 Tettu SMU al THH A&M Tu.lane al BavlOr Rice at ,.r~anu' HOU,IO<I al TCU 1..oul1lena Ttch ti N 'l'exn St WIChlla St •• Tulsa MIDWEST w 1scon,ln et Ohio St Mldll111n et tUlnol• (Channel l •• 9.30 a m) NorthwHtern at Purdve lndl•"-al Iowa Mlnnnota ., Mlcnloan SI Neot:lfl!• •I Kanus SI MIUO<.trl ., Iowa SI Naw Mltxlco SI at Soutllafn llllnol• Central Mlclll111n at Bowling Green Eastern Mlchlo•n at Ball St. WHlarn Mlchloan et Ohio u Kent SI. at Toledo Nort~rn llllnoh a t Miami, 0 Indiana St. et Eastern llllnots IHlnoll SI at WHltlfn llllnol• SOUTH Mlu lu lool SI •• Atat>tm• Florio. at Auburn Taml>le 11 Georola Furman at Oavl<ISOfl Waka ForHI al Clam•on En t Tann SI .•• EHt Caro4in• G-ol• Tech at Duke Cincinnati al Kantuckv 1..SU at Mlulu lool SO<.lthern Mlu lu tool 11 1..oulsv111e North Caro41na al Ma.rvland MemPnls St. I I Venditrt>lll West 'llrvlnla et Miami, Fla IUC:M IOl\CI et VMI • McN .... 51 •• NE Loulsl•n• Norin Cero41ne St, 11 South Cerollne Jack.son st, •• SE Loul1lana WIHt1m & Marv at Virginia lacll EAST PtM SI al Bo•ton Cotlao<t SvrtcuM al Pllt r-w. al Ru1111n H1rver<1 et Brown L.eflloll •• 8udl~ Coteete 11 Lelavelle Colurnbl• 11 Holy Cron Ml•HClluHlls et Con,_11,1:u1 0 1rtmou111 at Vat• Pr I noel Oii al Penn Cornall al Bo,ton u. LOI Alamltot TUH OAY'S ltEWl.TS (2nd " 13 ....... , .. w mMftM) A,.,.ALOOSAS l'IRS'T RACE. 4 lul"lono• otvmola UI' Bro (McC~) 2.eo 210 2.10 Prtmedll•llon IAoulnoJ 2 60 2.10 Bo Brown (White) 2 10 Also raced· Haoov Lind•. Olll• Ooo Time :S2 1/S. 12 EXACTA (3·1) oald l 5.80. QUARTERHOASU SECOND AACE. 350 Vlfd& Bendolantv (Hart) UO 7.40 2.10 Loolcal Lub !Adair) 3.40 2.40 Trulv ShH IBard) 2.60 AISo racll<I: Chaoerrel Jet. Sudden Siege, Tinn Zar•••. SUll Flrll Rebtl, Nol>la Oahu . Trulv SwHI PH n,,.,. 11.06 12 EXACTA O·fl oeld sa60 THIRD RACE. 3SO verdl. Euv M•neuver (Creaoer) 910 Anotller Atlon 8uo (Garcia) Crlm•On Cedlllac (Harl) At10 raced: Magerlus Copy, Around, Cro Bar Moon Time: la.JO. n EXACT A (1·S) oalel 111 00 THC>aOU!;HIREDS ,OURTH It.ACE. 6 furlong' u o 3.40 uo uo • 7.40 Sir .-llrtln Abstrectlon (OeloadlMol 13.40 610 •.40 Avenger MISI (McCormick! 1S.IO 1 90 E CCll\ll>UmP I Rond) 3.40 AIM> t1Cld: Colorado Ro... Corvea Ke<lt, Pronto Miu, Blnoo DaY. Cutwln, Jacket'• Doll, Time: 1:13 2/S. P:lfTH RACE. 6 lurlongl. 1r1111 F11llv11 (Drlt0al 1,40 4.40 3.00 All Arla (Pedro11) lUO 4.40 MY Donna 8. (Cet!arul) 2.40 AIM> rac.d: Siient ar .. H , Pataca Kiiien, Curl• In Whlrll, Gallant Tele, Monl1ne K•lt, Mariko San, Ml. Carot Timi. 1:19 2/S. 12 llXACTA (5·6) oal<I 1107.IO. SIXTH RACE. 6 furtonos War Allied IUnche1) UO 3.IO 3.10 B•lllvmetrv (Crur) 9.00 S.40 Racing Bold (Estreela) 9.60 AIM> t1cad; FIHI B•ck. Grend Ptt· lormenca, Pin a Pie. Vk'• Orphan, Travel· lno Grounds. War Hou1t, Tonv Teen Tlmt; 1:12 llS. n •XACTA 17·1) oakl ~.20 SllVINTM RACE. 6 turtonol. Swltlty Mine ICu lanade) 4.40 3.00 2.40 Whal Mlolc (Pedroza) 3.40 2.IO Serenade R-• (Holllno1worth) ?.60 AIM> rac.d. Pura Plrau , Akaroa. Ptauure Victim, Miii St Len . Queen ot Oarkntn , Huml>le Attelr Time: 1:12. 12 lllACTA (10-6) Paid SlS.00 l lGHTH RACE. 6 furtonoi-Tlarrt De V110r (Slt>llle) 21.00 9 00 1.00 c1111vera Too !Sellers) I 20 S.40 Hloll Maaclow (Miiis) 6..20 Allo raced: Pr~ll•, IUslno Yukon, G•l>lfl Love, 01,lant St1t, Cam08'llne. Mountain Of Fire. Time: 1:11 115 S2 EXACT.A (l ·Sl paid 1167.40. NNCTH ltACll. I 1116 mllal. t HIOc <OllvarHl 29.20 11.40 7.40 Fedllndon's Bov IN\af\ll uo S.20 Mallellora t.stbllel 6..AO Allo reced: Dolltlle Gfttura, FullV Ves- ted, Decide Wine, ClllrP. L.ove Markel Time: 1:45 l/S. '1 •XACTA (S-3) oeld "'l .60. n ~K SIX (7·S-7·10·l ·SI o•ld 110.2u.eo with two wlnnino ticket, (live "°'"'). C1rrvo11er 0001: 170,419.91 TENTH RACE. 6 lurtong5. Patrick M c:Flo (Sl>oema ker) 6 IO 3.60 3,00 An1w1' To M~IC ISlbHlel 3 60 3 00 C~ Frencnv !Rond) l.20 AtM> rlCICI: Junola Blaoe. COUPOn Ty- coon, Total 0.01rlure Time: 1:09 4/S. n •XACTA 14·1) oald 11960 E LaVllNTH RACE. 1 1116 mites Soanewev (Kress) 92.10 15 40 6 00 Water1or<I BIMV ICHlaneel1 ) 4.40 3.10 Ultr1charo1 (Mena) 410 Also r1ced: Chartv N' Harrloan. Soec· tacut•r Beeu. SllOe In, Mr f>hllaelelollla, Eeotas FIYU Time 1·45 l/S, n EXACT A 11·6) Paid '3t5-60 Wetw'*O COMMUNITY COL'-EGE C44'11m 11, 0.-1"98 CMll 10 Orange Coa11 3 3 2 7-10 Cerritos 3 3 c 1-11 Orano• Coelt scoring: Ure 3. Norton 2, Skowronski 1, Alaitandlr 1, Shoat I ~ Wffl 11, Sanl9 AM 10 Santa Ana 0 S l 1-10 Go40en Nest 4 t 1 +-11 Goklan we,1 'coring WllSO!! 2, Harm111<1 t. Karl 1. Moreno 1, Lund 1, Hamdor1 1. Crow 3 HIGH SCHOO'-C~ dll Moir 11, DIWMV S Corona Cltl Mar 4 • 1 2-11 Oownev I 0 3 1-5 Coron• dll Mar 1corlng, Morrow 7. WHner 3, Sff4y 2. Oedlno 2, Tomlin 1, Rol>ef 11 I CIF football ratings ,. ... ~ I. LOvOla t. ,_"'" ... 3 Fontana 4. H"""""9fl ... "91 S. 'Sin Gortonlo • Lono e .. ch POIY 1. Lek-ood I Co410fl t 81shoe> Amel 10 SI Jotln Bo~ 1 N Torraoo• 1. Harl ). Channel l•lands 4. Muir S W. Torrenc;a 6 Schurr 7 Newburv Perk I San Marcos 9 Burrouon1 I B I 10 S. Torrance I Lvnwooo 2 El Mod41la 3. Pacifica 4 Santa An• s. Foothill 6. Kennedy 7. El Ooreelo a, Ceolstreno Vallev 9. VIiie Park 10 LOt ra Bi2 F ive Confer ence L.....N R_. ....... Dal ltev 4-0 130 S-.. 6•1 Ill Citrus Dell 7-0 UM ,_., 6-1 u Citrus l elt 1·0 7' f<MOTe 3-1-2 51 ~ 5·0-1 so Cltru1 hit 4-2· I-49 Antlllu• 5•2 33 Oat RIV 4·3 C Coastal Conference a av 1-0 n Fool~IN 6-1 61 Marmon•• 1·0 '4 Pacific 7·0 S2 8ev 6-1 49 FOOlhlU 6-1 '3 MlrmOii•• 6·1 27 Clllnnal 6-1 24 FootlllN 1 s-2 21 Bev 5·1 11 I H I ltOlllnll HUI•, 31-12 Beal Athamlll'a, 21•0 Beal $1ml. '3-0 Beet CrMCl<ll• Valley, 26-0 &Mt Centennllll, 24-0 Beet Burbank, 41• 14 tlMI Wttlleke, 20-9 &Ml Santa Bar1'are, 15-14 laat San Gallrlel, U-7 a..1 Torr-. >2·10 Southern Conference San Gabrial venev 1·0 eo Centurv 6·1 n Empire 6•1 61 Century 5· l· 1 ~ Centurv S-1 41 Emolre 6·1 46 Emolre 5·2 JO South Coast S·2 11 Centurv 4-2· 1 10 Emolre 5·7 9 Baal Oownev, 42·• -SHI FootlllN, 13·7 laal El Oorldo, 9·7 Baal Canvon (A.l. 11·12 Lost to Et Modena, 13·7 Beet E.-•n11, 23-19 LOii 10 PIClf"9, f · 7 &Ml Laeuna Hiits, 13-10 ... , SA Vallev. 45·20 BMI Cvoren. lCMI Northwestern Confe re nce I Monrovia 1 Santa Marl• ) Bl•h. Montgomerv •. Canvon (SJ S LompOC 6 Temole Cltv 1 Antelooe v ati.v I SI. Barnard 9 Outrll HIU 10 Blair I Riverside POlv 1. Clartmon1 l Bell Gard•M 4 (lie) Gi.ndora 4. (lie) Damien 6. Ramona 1 Covlne I. La S«na 9 Norte Viste 10 Rut>ldOult t.C ...... CMIMlr 1 1..0' Amloos l. Haw-1 HartlW • Le Mirada S. La Qulnte 6 Sunny Hll" 1. Valancle I Sonora 9 Le HaDta 10. Artale Rio Hon<IO 6·0 70 BHI RotHno Hlll1, 31-12 Nor1hlrn 6·0-1 .0 llMI Cet>rltto, 3S·21 Camino Real 7·0 59 !Mat 5aletl1n, 5'· 14 G~ 6·1 ... BM I Palmdale, 21·7 Northern S-0-2 39 Beat San Lui• OblsPO, 21-4 Rio HOlldO 4·1·1 34 &HI &lair. 21-7 Golden 6· 1 13 Baal Sauou&, 4'·7 Cemlno RHI 7-0 17 BMI SI. Anthonv, 36·6 Golden 6· I 13 Beat Burrouoh• IB.l. 36-34 Rio Hondo 4·3 10 Lost 10 Tamole Cllv, 21-7 Easte rn Conf ere nee Beat Arllnoton, M-6 Ivy 1-0 10 Basatlna 6·0-1 60 Wnllmont 6·1 so Baseline .S· 1-1 ,.. Bawllnt S·2 '6 tvv 6·1 47 Valla Vllla S· I 26 Whllmont S·2 19 IVV S·2 14 Sun Bell l·2· l 1 Cen tral Confe ren ce SN View 7-4 70 Gu clen Grove 1·0 63 SN Vllw S·l·l SI Suburban 7 ·O 4t Garclen Gron 6· I 47 FrHwav S·1 31 Or1no1 S· 1· I 30 FrHWI V S·1 11 FrHwav S·2 12 Sul>urt>tn S-2 I Baal Don LUOO, 27·0 "" Baal Calllornle, 13·6 BHI Pomona, 10-9 BH t Alla Loma. 33-3 BHI Le Sierra, 35•7 Baal EOoewood, 7·3 Baal El Rencho, 10-6 Baal Jonn North, 26·22 Beal Palm Sorlnos. 36·7 ... t cene Mtw, 11·14 Beet Sanll190, 30·21 ....,~dl,21·0 laal latlflowtf, 10-0 BHI Garden Grove, 21-7 Beet Fultarton, 10-0 e..1 An•helm, 3'·14 Lo't to Buena P1tk, lt · 11 Baal Trov, 21-12 BHI Mavlelr, 29·6 Southeastern Conference I Bei<l'#ln Perl< 1 Rowm11d Montvlaw 6·0 IO Beal San Olma1, 27·7 Min ion Valley 6-1 11 9aat OU8rle, 7-3 3. Diamond Bar 4 C1lor1 HKlanda 6·0·1 62 IHI Monldl lr. 40-10 San Andrlll S·2 49 Beel e1nlow, 41·12 S. San Oimu 6. Duarte Monlvlew S· I 4' Lost to Bal<lwln P1rk, 21·1 MIH IOll Vallev 4·3 '3 LOii to RoMmH d. 7·3 1 Indio OHarl Valilvl S·1 ~ 8MI Palo Verde, 10-6 I . Aoole V 1»ev t Gana511a San A!ldrt es 4·3 33 a..1 San &.rnardlno. 36·0 Haden<I• 3·3· 1 25 \.Ml 10 SI. Josapll, 21· 14 10 Charter Oak Monlvlaw 4·2 t 8MI Glad1lont, 23· 12 Desert-Mountain Conference I AIHCldero 2 Harvtrd LM PaelrH 6· I '° Baal P1l0 ltOCllet, 21· 17 P'-r 7·0 6t Beet Redol!do, 21·7 3. Rio Mesa Frontier 6-1 '1 9aal C•l•baM•, 41·0 4. Parris Sunkll! 4'2 5' Baal Rim of World. 22·21 S (llal Mira Coile Plonffr 3·1-1 40 Bv• S. (tie) Rim 01 World 1. O.k Park Sunkll! s-i 40 Loll 10 Perri,, 22-21 Trl-V1ttav S·2 Je Beat Carolnlerla, 24· IA I Chamlna<le Santa Fe 4·3 13 Baal Call'ledrel, 26-10 9 PHO R~I LOl PldrH 3-3·1 ll Loil lo AIH C:ldero. 21· 17 10 NorClllOtt Frontier •·2-1 7 BMI Santa Paull, 21·0 Inland Confe ren ce I Maranallll 7 San J acinto AIOl\a 7·0 7' Baal 1..A Lutlleren, 6·3 8Mt 1t Palm•, 75-0 BM ! Ontario Chr., 36·6 \..411 to Martnelh8, 6·3 8Mt Boron, '.XI· U Beel 8ou10er City, 41-14 Lott to Melodvland, 71·9 Baal V11111r Cllrl1tl1n. 11·9 De A1111 6-1 70 3. Whittler Chrlsllen 4, LA Lut,....an Otymotc 6-1 67 AIPlla 6· l S4 S. Tr-0.-l-lnyo S 6-0 ~ •• NMCl!e\ FrH lence 6· I 32 1. Vallev Cl'lflsllen Olvmotc S-2 16 a. Malodvtand Ol""'C>IC 5·2 75 '· 29 P11ms 0. Anra S• I ,. Lo•I lo San Jacinto, 75·0 ... , ••"'°t>. 21-14 10. P1ractete 0.-t-lnyo L 4 l I Hkltl sd!MI wemen _,_u,w...-•l ~ CrlSlll (Ml dtl. Belkin. 6-0, def. Brown, 6•0, dtl Ails, 6· l; Llano (M) toil, l·t . won. 6·1. 6-0. Albert& (Ml loll. 0·6, won, 6-0, 6· I °""*' Harrh·Cllurcll (Ml def Sharo·Antonlo, 6·0, oat Pamese·Feton<lo, 6· l, def. Macera·/11\arllner, 6·2; Lollto·Stanftel<I (Ml won, 7·S, 6·1, 6·1, Fentor1·RO()artson (M l won~ 6·0, 10,1 1 ·6, won, 6·0 E•&an 10, ,.,.,..In Valley I SIMtet t(noy (FVI IOll 10 51111erv, 2·6, def Smlln, 6·2, clef Htemllold, 6·2, WHvar IFVI won, 7·6. 6•1, 6-0, Oerctl (FVJ won bv default. tost, 0-6, 2·6. ~ Llollt Yff IFV) IOSI 10 Klr~·JOhn1on, 0·6. '°" to Sl.mo,on·Klut>nlk, •·6, dtt. Trullllo·Banks, 6·2; Cadllll·Gorumba !FVJ toll, l·t. 5·1. won, 7-S; Solll•~-SMllon IFV) toll. 0-6. 7-6, 4·6- C«-dll ~ 11, c .. te Mew 7 $INiet Tu«tf !CM) toll to Harrlnoton, 0-6, def Panon1, 6·•. dtl TYier. •·2, Hanson !CMl IOst, 1·6, wOfl, 6•4, 6·2, Wull ICMI IC>&I, 1-6, , ••• 2·6. ~ Sollrt·Cl'la no ICM) Iott to Glanullul•Gat>rlellen, 0·6. O•I HovH ·Van St"nhuvte, 6-4. '°'' lo RobOohem•WOOCI, 0·6; Jonnar·Btnae:tlct (CM) won, 6·1, 7·S, loll, 1·6, Ouran·Van kovoc. (CM) IOsl, 1·6, 4·6. 4-6 '"""' 10, u.w.nitv • ~ lh~ar IUI dtl Mani.¥. 6-0, def Pham, •·l, dtl Low••· 6·0, Conmen (Ul won, 6·4. toil. 4·6, won, 6·0; Tllals (U) toll. 3·6, 2·6, won, 6-1 ~ MllllY·Oraotr (U) to•I to R•- vnolels • P1 vonerlus . I ·6, IOll to Truono·Mlchaelson, 3·6, 1011 lo Benedlct·Senler, 6·7; Br•nda·Mll~ tUJ '°''• 0-6, 4·6. S·7, Murnene·M•ceelo (UI loSt. 1·6. won, 6-4, 6·'· ...._,......, 12.•I T-S a.. Cr~ (NH) clef. CaM, 7·$, loll to Cerls..on. )·6, Clef. LIM•, H ; It_, (NH) IOtl, 3•6, won, 6•3, 6·0; S.O.sllan (NHI IOtt, l·t, 1·6. wor1, •·3. ~ e unn el ·R v a n (N H J <let. CamPDlll·C-'1nllh, t·4, dtl Dear· 1-·SltVenl, •-2, def. Fo.cht-Villas, 6·1; Ev1M·McCtallan INH) won, 7·S, IOll, 6·7, won. 6·4, Nlblo·W•vne INH) '°''· •·6, ""°"· 6·2. 6·4 llMtw Dal 17, St. ,.._,, I SltlMt uv .... <MO) cllof. Brown, 6-1. def. Podftta, 6-J, del. llra1elton, 6-7: PYlallo (MO) won, 6·1, 6·0, 6·0; Crewtord (MDJ won, 6·3. 6-0, 1o11, 2·6. Dlillllles Spinner · Akin (MO ) Clef. Slrebat-L avteou erre, 6·0. Clef Lula·Stoewer, 6·1, dtl. R110f1·8H-. t ·O; Wlnoafl·Wrlter IMO) won, 6·0, 6·1. 6·0. $aunoen ·5anlon (MD) won. t-0, 6-0, 6-0 Gll1s ........ ,..'*11'91 HIGH SCHOOL 4-A - 1 Mlfllesl•. 2 PalO' Verdel, 3 Santa Barbera, 4, Do' Puebtos, 5 •• ._. 6 S0<.1111 Torr1nca, 1. Rolllno Hiiis, I. LA- ... CI\, 9 Palm Sorlno•. 10. levertv Hill&. >·A -1 San Marino, 2. Maler 0.1. J. RIO Mew; 4. WH ll1ke. S. Lono Baich Wiison. 6. Riverside Polv; 1. C•lab4UH; • L• C•,,.cla, 9, Claremont; 10. Kalella. J·A -1 C1llrlllo; 7. L• Quinta, l. Lomooc. 4 G•roen Grove; S 1..os Amigo\, 6 La Sama, 7. Arroyo Grande, I. Victor v 11iev; 9 Keooai: 10. It oval Oat\ l·A -I PasaOeM Poty; 2 Olamonc:t 8M; J. C•te. c, Cllamlnaell; S. Loul1vlllt. 6. LI Reina, 1 Rim Of the World. I, Morro Bev, t. Thlchtr; 10 Fllntrtdoe Sacred HH rl Deep ... fbNM DAVllY'S LOCKa• ,...._.,, ... Clll -J7 envier•. 2 calico t>au. 7 sand beu, • 1 rod< flSll, 225 mecilaret. HAM LANDING IMol Oitl9a) -92 •nolt,.. 2S vt11ow1,11, 131 Yetlow11n 1un1, 20 s~IO(.ck tuna, lS bonito. l l blutl1n luN, 97 roc!I 11,h. NHL c~au. CC*IJHaNCI SMYtllt ~ w L T~ Edmonton 7 1 I 1$ Vanc;ouv..-4 s 1 ' "-2 s 7 • Winni-, s 2 6 c .... ,.,, 1 ' I ~ '"'"'~ ClllQoe 7 J 0 14 SI l...OUll 6 3 0 11 Toronto ' 4 I ' Mln-18 3 s 1 7 Detroit 2 3 ' • WAI.SS CO..,IRUIC• htnclt~ NV R8ntMrs ' I 0 " Phliao.tPlll• 1 2 I 1S NYlslat 4 6 0 • W1slllnttlon 2 7 0 • N-J-y I 1 0 7 Pllllburell I • 0 , ...,,., OMillft QueOK 1 3 1 15 Bolton '5 3 I 11 9uffal0 5 3 1 11 Harttor<I 4 3 I ' MoolrH I 4 5 0 TIHlldaV'I "\<-• Htrtlord I. Klllel 5 Mln/la•Ola '· MontrH I 3 Phlla<l4llOllll 4, OueOec 7 Winni-4, NY lslandlr1 2 WeSl'llnoton I, Plllsburori o ChlCIDO 5, 8o5ton I Vancovar 7, SI. L0<.tl1 1 T-...r•G- euttalO at Oalroll Winni-•I NY Ranoan WHhlnolon ., New JtrHV EelmonlPn •I TorQtltO St, 1..oul• el Celoarv WNlen I , Klntn S Score bv Perioctl ., SI " 36 ,. 25 44 l3 4l )7 27 '3 41 ,, 20 " " 63 31 34 31 '3 (;A ,, "' ,, 42 37 JS 31 47 .. 32 ,6 27 44 33 41 31 40 27 31 JO 40 I t 5-1 o J 1-s "'"' ,. ....... I. Heriford, Zukt 1 (JOll/ISOfl, Ouoonll, 1:•1 (PP). Pan•lll•s-Anelarson. 1..A, 1:22, Quennevlllt . Hert, 2:11. SaClfld hrild 2. Los Anoe••'· NICl'IOll• 9 (Fo ... MacLlll1n), 2:51 (po); 3. Lo• Ano•la•. Nltl'IOlls (Kelly, Anderson). 12:34; 4. Hart· lord, JOl'tnson 4 (SIHananl, 14:10 loo); 5. Los Anoela1, Nlc:hOlls 11, 15:41 Isl>), 6. Hertford, Duoont 7 (NIUlekl, JOllnsonl. 161>7 (pp). Ptnalllel-KOIMIPOUIOI, Herl, 2:10; Suutman, Herl, 7:24, Malone. H1tl, 9:36; Anderson, LA. 13:08, Hardy, 1..A, 14:51, Weis. LA. malor, IS3ll; ROl>tflson. Harl. IS1>1 TNrd J>.nect · 1. Hartford, Turgeon 3 IDuPOnl, JOlln· .on), 2:24 (pp); I. HarttOfd, Crawford 5 (Malone>. 2:52 loo); 9. H1rtford, Franc!• 1 <Dunn). 4:59; 10. Harlff>rd, Stoughton 4 (Fr1ncl•, Turueonl. 9:06; II. Hartford, Stouehlon s IFr1nct1, Turoeon), 9:56, 12. LOI A"OllH, Simmer S (Nlelloll&, Dionne), 16:S2 (PO); 13. \..M Angete1, LIVetlM 6 (RUlkoW'lkl), 17:51. PenaUIM-HOIPO<ltr. Hart, 1S:SO. Shott on QOll--+ilflford •-1S·20-41. LOI ,._... •·11·7-21. ~ GoallH -+iartlord, Vet.or l..M A"OllH, LAllMrd. A-1,474. • .> '-• Women's vttevbel HIGH SCHOOL SWIMf L.M- Founleln V1llev def. Edison, 1S· 12, . 16•14, 14·16, 15·3. WHtmlnslar cllof. Marina, 14· 16, IS•3, 17· IS. S-15. 15··7. SM View L.a11we Corona de! Mar def. CMll Mela, IS-•. 16-14, 1S-t. Ne woort Hart>or def. Et Toro, IS·ll, U ·IO, 15-0 Sautll CMSt '--Dana HIMI cllof. San Clemente, 15· 10. 6· 1S, 10-IS, 16· 14, 15·6. A~VLM- Newoort Chrl1llen def. Lefllnowell Chris· t11n. IS· I, 15·0, IS· 11. T""411Y's tranuctlens a ASEaALL Al'MncM~ ANGELS-Stoned Ooue O.Clnce•. third bl_,., to • thrH·YMr contr•c• MILWAUKEE 9REWERs.--Named 800 H~a·o coordlnllor ot Plaver <1av81oP-men1. TORONTO BLUE JAYs.--Named Clovd 8oY8f' minor tMgua Pllchlno Instructor .. ......... LMtUa LOS ANGELES OOOGERS-Slone<I Rick Mondev, outfielder. 10 a one·vear contr•ct. aASKE'TllALL ................. AIM(l8- CLEVELANO CAVALIERS-Slonld J°"n G1rrl1, forward. INOIANA PACERS-Cul Hank McDowell. !onward. NEW JERSEY NETS-Acquired lteoole JOl\n.on, forward.· from the Pflllaeltlp/111 168r& In exch8noe for Eddie PhlNlo&, lorwarel, Horace Owens. guard, • 1911 sacon<1·round drelt olck end cHh. Cul Dirk Mlnnltllakl, guard. PHOENIX SUNs-f>lecad Chari11 Pit· Iman, IOrwtrd. on the lnlured rtStf"Vt 11&1. S,4N DIEGO CLIPPERs-<:ul ICevtn Figaro, guard l'OOTaALL NatlaMIP..-..L-CtNCINNATI BENGALS-Pieced RO<IMv Tait . running t>ac,k, on 1111 In· lured·raserve 1111. Slona<1 An<lv Gibler. 1191>1 •n<I. """" Sla'91 F ...... Llleue LOS ANGELES EXPRESS-Signed Darrell PettillO, dtlen1lve back, DIV• Ramona. llnal>acker and G1rv Furnln. 110111 Ind. OAKLAND INVADERS-Slonad Arthur Whltllnotor1, runnlno l>ac~. 10 thr" -·vffr contrac:1•. S'9nacl Tom Newton, tun1>1ci.. Cllll• Llnnln, dtlan•lve tncl, Fred Worlhv. llohl encl, and Miii• Wllllttlde. wide recelller, to -·n ar cor1trac1, HOCKaY ... ,..., Hadlev '-- NEW YORK ISLANOERS.-C•lled uo 8ruce Affleck 1nd Gord Dineen dl- len111man, trom lndl1neP01ls of the Cantrel Hockey LMaua. Sant Oarcv lteoler, d•· lentoam1n. to lndl•naooll1 Distance runners not lonely in this race 1 There is an old saying which conoems •the lonelinetaof the long distance runner. Well. in the case of Saturday'• Foot 1Locker Parthers. competiton wtll be runn.1.na as teams. The event, w hich begins at 8 a.m a l Grlttith Park ln Loe Angeles. ia a 5 and lOk relay race which makes it posable for it.he two runnen on the team to be on different levels and sUU race as a team. That's bec:ause one member runs the 5k while the other tackles the 1 Ok loop of the nle'e. The two ti.me& are combined for their owra.11 team acore. Any two-penon team, male, female or one of each. can enter the Partnen race. 1£ntcantl wm be classified in either the Family Division for related runners l.n any lfamlly combina\lon or the Open Dtvi.lion tor two non-related runMn. Over 108 awatde wUl be prftented to winners from elcl\ category, division and l_,e 8J'CK.IP lncludlng two $100. ~and $1 ~ ' RUNNING DENNIS BROSTERHOUS Foot Locker gift cet1ificata to the firat • through third-place partner te~. The flrat-place husband and wife duo will be awarded a tripfortwotoJamaica forelght days and 1even nighta. Additionally, winning partnera ln each of the eight family combinaUona and the fint tlrdahing lndlvidual ma• and rema1~ will be pre9ent.ed a Foot Locker partners trophy. All entnntl will receive • free T-~J.rt. are eligible for a drawing for gift oerUflc.tes and can panicipate in a pomt-race pim.lc. Runnent may enter by pick.ln.g up an entry form at thefr local Foot Locker store Of by calli.Jli (213) 471 -2492. .. The race is aanctioned by The Athletic Congress. • • • AT THE AGE of 17 ~rld-claa runner Jlm Ryun competed ln )he first of hla three Olym~ic Gamea. Now. 16 years and three world recorda later. Ryun plane to ~mpete in the Leukemia Society-Coronado Bridge lOk Road Race ln San De,o Sunday at 7:30 'a.m. In the put three yean, Ryun has run more than 30 raos for various chuit.able cawies and has achieved a penonal best of 31:36 ln the lOk.. T h is year '• L e uk e mla So- ciety-Coronado Bridge lOk ii &xpectecl to 1U.ract eddltional record-holdina nmnen ~ute it has been aanc1.loned by TAC ae the 1983 Men'• National lOk Cham- plonahlp. A two-mile walk will ~ held In conjunction with the race. For lnfor- mation on ~ ~ftAtr1Uon ~nd fomu, oon tact the Leukemia Society at (6 19) 283-6131. It's a drag: O CIR's last race set Orange Cou_nty International Raceway will st.age its final drag racing event when "The LMt Drag Race'' is held Saturday night. OCIR will join LiOlll Drag Strip of Long Beach and the Irwindale Raceway as a former drag racing arena after Saturday when land- owners take over the strip fo.r other developments. Promoter Charlie Allen has lined up a star-studded field ln funny car and top fuel competi- tion to pe.rfonn Saturday, includ- ing NHRA Top Fuel champion Gary Beck of El Toro and fonner champion Shirley Muldowney. ln the funny car field will be former champions Raymond Bea- dle of Dallas and Don "Snake" Prudhomme of Granada Hills. Beck , the top fuel expert who won four National events this · year and won his first NHRA championship, established an elapsed time record for OCIR at the recent World Fln.als in a time of 5.391 aeoonds. He is the only driver to dent the 5.4 or 5.3-seoond bracket and has run the 15 quickest elapsed times in the history of NHRA. Shirley Muldowney. a per· enniaJ favorite and the 1982 Top Fuel champion, was the winner at the World Finals in the same car that gained her the title a year ago. She is also the leader in posting runs of 5.9 seconds. or better. Gates will open at 9 a.m. Satur- day with qualifying all day long. Final eliminations begin at 7 p.m. BIG A . • • From Page 01 happen would be for Edison High to fall into the Santa Ana River and all the football pl.ayers were transferred to Huntington Beach . But times have changed. The Oilers are for real. They're ranked No. 2 in Orange County and have th e best back in Orange County (Danny Thompeon). The transfonnation of the Oil- ers is another story in itself. Right now the top is Anaheim Stadiwn. a showc:aae for winners. If this game comes about with both teams spo~ 4-0 records and the title u p for grabs, it'll be the cri.me of the decade i1 it isn't available for everyone -the players and fans, not to mention the additional income. There'• a sciH fee to pay for rental at Anaheim Stadium, but that hasn't stopped F.diaon' and Fountain Valley from earning big dividends. The thought that the Black Bandits of Huntineton Beach would actually be psyched out by Anaheim Stadium is a litUe far fetched, in my opinion. If they do meet at the Big A and Fountain Valley wins it won't be because of the field -any more than it would be at Huntington Beach High. Marina. of course, may well tum all of this into a moot point Indeed, but the fact that this is within range is certainly a story within itself. It wasn't too long ago that you could count on ·at least one phone call or letter a week asking why we were so negative on Hunt- ington Beach and to please cease mentioning such dire facts. Well, it wasn'tamatterofbeing negative. Factsarefactsand when you've Jost 30 or so straight league games, it's pretty hard to ignore such a statistic. It's also pretty hard to ignore the current band of Oilers who have helped a lot of ex-Oilers forget about all those 1088eS. It may be asking the Oilers for something extra -but that's the price you'reexpected to pay when you make the grade. TUCKER . • • From Page 01 standpoint of coaching football - John Robinaon i.s better off where he is. •The upcoming movie on the life of drag race champion Shirley "Cha Cha" MuldowneymayRrVe as an educational film for the other lady race dri~ who have ao much trouble finding tuC!Cal. •Aa for NBA ~ I like Tree Rollina and Combreed Maxwell ... and Maurice Cheeka, which Jm't even • nickname. •Sporta ruuatrat«t doe!I a 1tory on former Tun~ Bay Buccaneen quarter'beck nou, Will1ams at home Cbeeri.nl while the Buca are ~dl\8 beat up, which thoWI the guy had roJ feellnal for hb tMmmatee. ·~ Vemela, Sr. and Jr .• muat be aplnnlna ln their snrwia at the news the c:hannbw nee facility they built at Loa AlamilOI baa been IO&d to a p-oup of "foreip invetrton." •An lnten!lltlna .. 1\aUtUc would be a check of attendance fllurel around Southland Trojan Cfube. . ' ,_ • D4 Orange CoHt OAIL Y PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 Rustler takeaway Golden West's Jason Crow (right) takes ball away from Santa Ana's Mark Terry during a South Coast Conference water polo match Tues- day. The Rustlers won a thriller to take over undisputed first place. Ml.IC NOTICE ,.ICTITIOUS IU ... H NAMI ITATIMINT fne folloWlrig per.on• tre dOlng bUlllneHH CAT ALINA CRUISE FROM NEW· , PORT BEACH, 400 Mlln Str .. t, Bllt>O•. CA 9288 1 Catiline PeaMOQer Service, Inc;., '400 Main s1r .. 1, Belboa, CA 9288 t Thia bualneH I• COlldUCleel by • 110<ooretlon Robert Black This atarernent wet rneo with the Counl:f Clerk ol Oranoe C0wnty on Nl.IC M>TICE l't&.IC NOTtCE PUBLIC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS IMJ..... 'ICTITIOUS IUllHese NUii ITATIMINT "' NOTICf Tn. followtng pe<ton It dOlng NA• STATIMINT <..HE VRON us" INC ,, ... ,, 8P· bullneN" The lollowlng penon II dom11 Plte.atton 1A111u11ig belo1e ttl• t .ii· (Al CONSUMER GUARANTEED bup•tET~u" A 0 a ~ OE IUt1tl• COHUll ConlfntUIOll 10 com RESEARCH ASSOC (81 CON· "'L M II. II A"' n1et1<..e OOlll<;t18I , .. ,n up OfA'• SUMER GUARANTEED RESEAl\CH vELOPMENT COMPANY '4000 ~11011~ ul 1,1.,1111 (~1t1<1< IOceted l'A CO (Cl CONSUMER GUAAANTEEO MacArthui Btvd · Suite 3SOO Nllw m1lin .111 '''"'" lrom Seet BHGh, CA RESEARCH INC (0) CONSUMER port BNch. CA 92660 . C..nev1o<• plant to d•Jplace •ubble 20 GUARANTEED RESEARCH (El Wllllam W Jonnson. lJ7lll 111U11 loel bolo"' meen tower low walet GUARANTEED CONSUMER RE· Knoll Rd ' lake Ar•owheacJ C..A OJlCllPI lor well n11eds nnd conouc;. SEARCH HMO S ~ Blvd 92352 tOlt Fulthor 1nfbf'ma1100 ma1 be ob· •27, coa'te ~ ... CA 92827 . Thia Duamen '' conduc100 by o11 111111•0 ''""'the Coeatal eomm1sa1on Oevld W1yne Hanaon t6'0 S Individual 111 53 l Howart.1 St 4tn Floor San "'-PO t Bl d 1127 co'e1a Mela· Wiiham W Jonnso11 r11nc111Cu CA 1• 1515•3·8555 f'~ CA 92621 v ' · ' This llltemlt'lt wn 111&<.t wim me Pul.ii!Shll<l Orange Coasl Dally P1101 Published Orange Cout Delly Thi' bullnett 11 conducted by en County Clttik of Orange County "" <>• 1 22 l".l :>• ;>S ?fl 27 28 t983 Oc1 20. t983 Piiot Ocl 26, Nov 2. 9. t8. 1983 lndlvlduel Oct 20, 1983 ~743·83 5801·83 Oevld w HenlOll FUllOOT n1118llC NOTICE Thia 1111ement wu llled with the Published 01ango t:oatt Uully -----------____ n_iu _______ County Ctetk ot 01ange County on Piiot Oct 26· Nov 2 9 t5. !983 PUBLIC NOTICE Oct t2 t983 :1798·83 ------'----'-'----'---- NOTICE :,-=SOLUTION . F2272.20 NOTl('E OF DEATH OF OF JOINT VENTUM Publl1hed Orange Coast Dally VIHGINIA ROSE OLSON NOTICE 1s HEREBY a111EN Piiot Oct 26. Nov 2. 9. l6, 1983. PUBLIC 'MOTICE ANU OF PETITION ·ro AD· pu1auant to Section t5035.5 of tn. 5708·83 'MINIS'l'Ell ESTAT"" N' O Celllornla Corporations Code thel NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARIHO ' ""' . OCA OF NEVADA. INC .. a Neved• MLIC NOTICE eY THE COST A MESA Rf· A· 120226 corporation. and ZELLNER COM· DEVELOPMEN.T AGENCY, CITY OF '1'11 oll h1•t1'>. l)(!nd1c1ar1es. MUNITIES.INC .. aCalllornlecorpor-FICTITIOUS•U•INISI COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA ONl'1t·cl11 11r!> ;.111u rnnllngent atlon, formerly doing buslne11 u NAME tTATIMINT THE PftOPOlfO RULES GOVERN· G I ven1u1e<s In a joint venture known a1 Tn. lotlowing peraon Is doing ING PARTICIPATIO N AND ll l'<I 1 l<ih ,,f V I H IN A PINE TREE VILLAGE ("Joint \/en-business as· .... !FfRENCES av OWNERS, OP· H< >SJ'. CJLSI >N .ind persons lure"), with a principal piece of bull· STARWARE SYSTEMS, 3100 Alf· ERATQAS OF BUSINESS ANO wli11 111;1v 111 otherwise ness OI 1555 E Flamingo R~d. way Suite t22 Cost• Me ... CA TENANTS IN THE COSTA MESA 111\ .. ft•-.tt·d Ill t lw "'111 and/or Suite t58. Las Vegas. Nevada. 92626 • DOWNTOWN REDEVELOPMENT 89109, nave dissolved th• ololnl llen· P1ul Elllon Kaylor. 18699 San PROJECT • L..I• lure IS ol June 30. 11183, by their Mercos SI Fountain Valley, CA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV[ll ltltl ,\ )Jt'llll1111 h.i.~ lx't'n hied mutual consent The buslneu ol lhe 92708 the Cos1a Mesa Reoevelu1>111e111 I iv .I"""'' I) Ul..cm m the Su- Jotnl Ven1ure will no1 be continued This bullneu 1a conducted by an Ageoc:y. Clly 01 Coaia Mas 1 G11h I , l , ( U . '°'· and tne above pe<sons nave no 1nd1V1dual • fo1n1a(tne 'Agency'.,w111nott.1apu11 1~·n '1 •UI 1" 1<H1ge'-.. oun- autnor1ty 10 1ncu1 eny furttier Obll· Paule 1<ayto1 He hea11ng on Novembe• 9 f~83 al \'\ fl·•1Ul"\ltll~ 1hat Jamt-S D ga11011s on behall 01 lhe J01nt lle11-This statement was flled with the the hour of 630 pm or a' soon (>I .1>11 l1t "lll"lllltl'<l as per- ture County Clerk ol 011nge County on therealter as lhe ma11e1 '"" Le l>'lll·•I r• """"lll.JllV(• to ad-OATEO June 30, t983. Oct 20 1983 heard, 1n 1neC11yCounci1 C..nomt1er5. ,. OCA OF NEllAOA, INC , . '22900I City Hall 77 Fair Drive Costa Me:.11 n1111"lt I llu· t•!>l<l\l' 1Jf VIR- a Nevada Corporation Published Orange Cout Dally Cat1forn1a 92626 pursuon1 IC• 1ne (.fNIA HOSE ULSUN By S1even I Engel P1101 Oct 26, Nov. 2, 9, t6, t983 Calllornla Community RedevtMOµ· (u11do ·r 1h, lndqx mlent Ad- lls Vlce-Pres1den1 5799-83 ment Law (Health ano Safety Colle f L· Pubhshed Orange CoaSI Delly Pilot Sections 33000 el seq l tor 11111 m11 11'1' •1111111 0 r.'<t.<ltes At·l) Oct 26, 1983 purpose ot cons1de11ng tne appruva1 Tlw 1x·1111w1 •··.,. .. \for heanng 5812·83 MLIC NOTICE of the Rules Governing Pa111c11>at11Jn 111 Ll\ µI N11 :1 ut 700 C1v1<· ------C--C----and Preferer>ces by Owntus l11J••· ( ···nh•i L>r Wt·~l. Saou. Ana. MU NOTI E FICTITIOUS IVSINEll ators ot Buslr>eu and Ten1mts In 1t1c , A 1 .,-1 N Ix 2 NAME STATEMENT Costa Mesa Oo"'ntown ftet.levelo1>· l " I~ Ill 1111 1>vem •r . U.S. 1J:.~['~~llN£SS The following pe1sons are doing ment Projeo1 Area tthe Hull's ·1 1 !Ill:~ .1t !I .lll A 1\1 ADMINISTRATION •r= Ventu,.. business es. These rules are 1>romulga1uJ WI I~ YUll O RJI-.(. vi' lo lhe SNO WAY TRAVEL 2600 E Coast 1mplemen1 the provisions ol lhu Re t h lncorpor1ted l cenee No. 203 C · · deveropmenl Plan for me c,0518 1:ra111111j.( •> I l' i.wuunn, you Ollot-517t 9~~~Sey. I/ • oronadel Mer. CA. Mesa Oown1own Reoeve1oprnen1 ~h<1tdd l'ltlwr •ll•fJCdt .. t the Notice of l~lng ol Appllcatlon for Stever> Solomon 2600 E Coast Project Area regaromg pan1c111a11onl 111.,., ,,.~ ,111d ~t,it•.· you ub.)E!C· ~~~~le~u~:ne:s"'~~~.~11~e;ic~::. Hlghw1y. •203,Co;onedef Mer,CA. and the e~e1c1se ofrpreterence lJdy \IVll'I ''' l1h• \\tttil'n ob.,ec· 92825 owners. ope1ato1s o t>ustness. nn pany Peter Johnson 2600 E Coast tenants In the p101ec1 Those Ru'"' t11111\ with tlu• '•JU/"\ bl•fore Notice is hereby given thet an ap-HlghWB" 0 203 Corona del Mar CA set I01th the procedures govern•r>g th• I u .. 11111)' Your apix•ar· Plication has been llled with the " • ' · h n•-1 ti d th S B d 1 1 1 92825 sue PB "'pa on an .. ey su1.1er .11w1· 111ow Ill. 111 µ..·rS1m or by mall uslness A m n atr11 on This bu1lne11 Is conducted b a ~e the Aulea Governlr>g Ow111Jr pursuer>! 10 Section t07.601 ol the 1 . t hi Y· Participation '" itie Redevolopmeru \our .11111111c·v Regulations governing small bu••· es~;=~~o~~o:· of Project Area NO I anll 1he IF' YOl' AHF /\ C HEDI-~er 1ivestmen~7ctl:,mp•~: (l3 Thia atatement was rued with the Preterence Rules tor Re·En1rv ul 'I'< >I! 11r .1 l U11tlnj.( .. nl l'red1tor R ectlon 1 s' t (t )), to County Clerk ol Orar>ge County on Persor>s Engaged In Business Wllhin 111 1lw d " "a.,."tl vuu m~I file transler control ol pace Ventures Oct 20 t983 Project Area No t prev1ous1v '· Incorporated, (Spec;e) 3931 · · F2llOOI adopted by the Agency on Sep1em \11t11 d .11111 IA.l\h the t:ourt or Prep f oothall players of week Mike Newton, Fountain Valley A three-year starter, the 184-pound seruor defensive back intercepted two Edison passes, and made a 32-yard reception in the Barons' 33-7 win over F.d.ison. H e also had 5 unassisted and 6 assisted tackles. Sean Carran, E d ison A 5-11, 170-pound junior, Curran rushed for 98 yards on 16 carries, the most by any F.dison running back this season. He also caught 4 passes for 21 yards. Erle Lawton, Huntington Beach The 6-1, 180-pound senior quarterback hit 7 of 9 passes for 97 yards and two touchdowns in a 49-6 victory over Ocean View. Law10n also connected on all seven PAT kicks. John Spoor , Westminster addition to blocking a CdM field goal attempt. Don Pryor, Corona del Mar The 6 -3 , 185-pound senior wide receiver caught four passes for 115 yards in the Sea Kings' 17-14 victory against Costa Mesa. "He caught some crucial passes for us at crucial times," says Coach Dave Holland. Casey Swanson, Eatucia The 5-11, 190-pound sophomore offensive guard graded out "at about 90 percent for us," says Coach Ed Blanton. "He did a h elluva job for us. He made about six outstanding blocks.'' Je11e Hartz, University The 5-10, 180-pound senior line backer had six assists and seven unassisted tackles, including a quarterback sack, in the Trojans' 17. 3 loss to El Toro. MacArthur Boulevard, Suite 212. Publls/'ted Ore Cout Dall ber 18. 1973 tor tne Pro18l.t µ11·w11t 1t l11 th•· J>l'f~ti;,I r"°p Newporl Beach, Calllornla 926&0, • 11 ,...,.,. 26 nge9 9 Y Al lhe above staled oa• huur a11Cl .. ...1 b • '-Federal Licensee under the Small ot ""' . Nov 2, . t6, 1 83. , n ~ 111..111\• ,•µpvintn.i v uie 5797 ·83 plaoe any and all persons n11v111g any . h f • ._ ~ Business 1nvestmen1 Act ol 1958, u obfec;tlons to the pioposed Rulos 0, ~•1ur l .,..1l in IJUr mont • .,. amended (AcO. to the reguletlly of any ol the pt10• ri 111n lh• d.i\t llf first ISSUancc· Space was licensed on Novembe< PUBLIC NOTICE proceedlrigs, may appear belo1e 1tie ul 11 1 t"r' ,,., µrovrdtod m &-c:-1 1974, and hes prtvete capttel of Agency and snow cause why the _, ( ., ba (.' . ...1 $ t,O t0.000 The pre>pOMd transfer FICTITIOUS •VSINESI propo1ed Rules snoutd no1 "" ap. llun ',1(1 '' llw .-ru le oue of conirol will be acc;omplls/'ted by NAME ITATIMINT proved ul l .1hf111 nr.i Thl' lime for me purchase ol St percent ol the The following persoos ere doing Al any time nollaler man me 1tou1 I i1111g d .11111" "'111 nut l'Xp1re rnen outstanding stock ol Flret Call-buslr>ess as: aforesaid se1 lor neanng any i>e•sun Pl '"r ltl f,,llr inonth:, from tht-lornia Business lndualrlt l Develop· REA TA PARTNERSHIP NO I. objec:tlng 10 tne propoM!cJ Rules may ment Corpo1at1on. First Cal (Bldco), 28811 Ortega Highway. San Juan me in writing with the StKrt'tary ol 1fat1 11f lh1• h••oring nomcd owner 01 all the outstanolng stock ol Caplsfrano, CA. 92693 the Agency a statement or ""or ner "'" '' • Space Ventures. Inc. (SI/I) by UF Gllbell G. Aguirre, 288t1 Ortega objections the1eto Any IJilraons or YUU l\IAY 1-.XAMINEth•' Service Corporation (UFSCI UFSC Highway. Sen Juan Caplalrano, CA organizations deslrrng to be tieard et ( I k I 1 h . t If Is the wholly owned subsidiary ol 92693 the hearing will be alloroell .. n op 1 ' "Pt •V 1 l••lll you United Fedetal Savings and Loan Antho11y R. Molso. 288t 1 Ortega portunily to be riearcJ Al 1he .1(1• 11111 •1•"•"~1 In thl' l'l!tale. Association Highway, San Juan Ceplslrano, CA. aloresald tiour ine Agen<.y 511e11 ~·iu 111.1\ M 1 v( uµ11n tht-l•>- Tne proposeo 0111cer1, dlrec:tora 92693 proceed to near and 1>ass uµ1;i1• all l'\'Ul"I or ulmt11t::.lrawr or and stockholders will tie: J Jerome Molso, 28811 Ortega written and oral obJe<:llons ' ' Chairmen of The Board Highway, San Juan CeplStrano, CA. A copy ot the Rules are avall1tble u1,..m th1 .1ll••t 111•v for th1• t•X· James RooHvell, 1901 Yacht Resol· 92693 tor public Inspection ono co11y1n11 '' 111 .. 1 "' .,dm1m~lr«tor and ule, Newport Beach, CA. 92660 Al•ce O'Neill Avery, 288t t Ortega <luring regular office hours f8 00 am 1111 "'it It th•·, ourt w ith proof Presldenl Director Highway. Sar> Juan Caplstlano. CA 10 5·00 pm Monday lhrt1u911 f " A 6-1 senior wide receiver and defensive back, Spoor caught 5 passes for 60 y ards and a TD. and intercepted two passes. On the year h e has caught 20 for 366 yards and 4 TDs. Leslie R Brewe1. 10012 Meirlmac 92693 day) at the oltice or the S1K.•e1arv u1 u l '1'1\11 ' '1 \\ rttt,.n fl'<jU('Sl 011ve. Huntington Beach. CA. 92646 Richard J O'Neill, 288 t t Orteg• the Agency, City Ii all 11 Fatr Ortve I ~t;1t 111i; t h,11 ''"ll dt•-.1n · ~IJ''<.'1&) S!"retary Highway. Sen Juan Cap1strer>o. CA. Costa Mesa, Calilorn1a 9262& 11111 11 c· 11! flu 111111~ 11( .. n in R R a. t II I ,_ S1<1ney Nadlu, :l2 t2 Arslla St , New• 92693 . Put>hshed Orar>ge Coast Odil~ l'ilul \ 1 ,111,.t \ ,If 11 I •'l•lll •rn>1:mt•n t of emy aama U a , rv ... e port Beacn. CA 92660 This bu11neas IS conducted by a Oct 26 Nov 2 1983 The senior runnin back rushed f r 195 ds , Director general par1nersn1p . 5•74 111 l"•t.1ti ·"~'t.' ••( .. r th•· JJt.'U · . . . g O Ya.i: OO C Dean Olson. 521 North Arden Antnony R Mo1ao, as a Penne1 lll•lh i1r .tt\ 11u11L' lllt>ntwned 23 carnes: mclud~gTD runs o f 1 and 30 yards. m the Duve Beverly Hiiis, CA 90210 and as att0tney-1n-lact for eecn or 111 s1, 111,11 1:!1111 .iiid !:WCI 5 of Stefu Seanoa, Ocean View Vaqueros 34-20 vtc tory over Estancia. More inan 10% md1rect1y the Partners. DIDLIC NOTICE I <, I ( p '·"t • <.' ··' 01rec1or This statement ... as llled with the ~uo I 1' •1 1 urlll.i r11u..o 1 '"'~ The 6-0, 185-pound senior linebacker recorded 13 tackles, 6 unassisted, in Ocean View's 49-6 1068 to Huntington Beach. "It's the best he has played all year," said Coach Steve Colflesh. Steve Brazaa, Newport Harbor Tim Codde, Woodbridge · Says Warrior Coach Gene Nojj o f the 5-11, 205-pound offensive center and de fensive tackle, "H e's been our most consistent offensive lineman. Week in and week out h e's graded very high." Jonn J Tullle, 200 Via L•do Nord, County Cle1k..QI Orange County on OTICE OF DE Tll L' Jl 'l>ITlf A PILGER N-pert Beach., CA 926e0 Oct. 19, 1983 N A u.-\Attorney ror Petitioner Firs1 Cat e1oco 1'227M1 A L P ff 0 N S J N E 3631 Atlantic Avenue ~~~~~ Corporetlon. 130 Mont· LA~=· DUMM a CRUTCMllt G A U 0 R E A U .' 8 k a Looit Buch , Calif. 90807 gomery S1reet. Sen fr9114;i1CO. CA 100 ~ Ceftt« om. A L p H 0 N S I ro; E F · Puhh:.htod OrangP Coast 94t04 P.O. lo• 2490 GA U DRE A U , • k a U.111\' !'11111 l tobc•r l~. 20. 26. Mo<e tnan St\'.1ndlrecUy Newpon leech. CA.121to ALP H 0 N S I N E M . 1!:183 56~8-83 unned Fede< al S1vings and Loen Published Orange CoHt Dally GAU DREA U A ND Of' The 6 -3 senior rushed for 290 yards on 37 carries in a 21-0 vic10ry over Saddleback, scoring all three of the Sailors' touchdowns. On defense, as a linebacker, he bad a qb sack, recovered a fumble and had a quarterback ha.rra.ssment and a stop for a loss. Chris Bunce, Laguna Beacb The 6-1, 170-pound senior free safety had two interceptions, o ne of which set up the Artists' only touchdown in a 14-7 setback to M ission V iejo. Assoc1at1on. 130 Montgomery Pilot Oct 26. Nov ~ 9, 16, t983 PETITION T O ADMl"''l . ----------- 1 St1eet San F1anc11eo. CA 9410'4 5796-83 ,., • PU8LIC NOTICE More lhans1•1.1ndlrecuy TER ESTATE l'\O. A-120443 ------------ 01rect0< nem•tC NOTICE To nil twus. bcndll'Wll•"· K 0~99;, Ben l Hom , Villa Tltfrace, San rUIK. . ' 1 l('L" ( f' oc-Art~ OF Fiancisco CA 94114 creditors a nd t·ont1n~1·11t NO .,, > r. 1 Scot Hagey, Coala Mesa Cbrla GUI, Mater Del The 5-10 safety s pearheaded the M onarchs defense to a 33-0 victory over Serra, Mater Dei's fourth shutout of the aeason . Gill had an interception and ran in a fake conversion for two points. I More 1han 10•101ndlrec:t1y NOTICE OF DEATH OF creditors uf ALPHUNSINC: KEl'\'\'ETll \. HROW:\ AND ' 01tector Artbur A. Gustafsoo AND G A U D R E A U . .• k ,, OF PETITIO'\ TO ADMIN· Harold S Cnarney, t436 Vallefo OF PETITION TO ADMIN· A L p H 0 N S I N !!: }o' I S TE R E ~TATE :'\ 0 . St1eet.SenFr~7r~'fg;cA 94109 IS TER ESTATE NO .GAUD R EA U. .1 k ,1 i\·120409 The Mustangs' quarterback-linebacker com- pleted 9 of 17 passes for 140 yards and 2 TDs and was in on 11 unassisted tackles and 3 assisted stops, in Toughest challenges await league-leading Monarchs ,in Angelus The meat of the Angelus League 9Chedule Uea ahead for the Mater Dei High football team, but M onarch Coach Wayne C.ochrun can look at the bright side of the challe nge. ''We have our own destiny in our hands," he said looking ahead to the trio of league games which includes St. Paul this Friday night at 7 :30 and Bi.shop Amat and Servite the following two contests. "The way we look a l It, w e're in f.int place right now,'' C.ochrun added. "And If we keep playing well, we'll be all right." The Monarchs are coming o ff a pair of shutout victories to open Hobie-14s ·duel Monday More than 500 Hobie-14 tailors from throughout the U .S . are ex- pected to be on hand for the national championship starting Monday at Ventura. It will be the first time a Hobie Cat national championship has been held in Southern ~omia ln more than a decade. The Hobie-14 la a popular sail- ing catamaran developed ln 1968 by Hobie Alter of Capistrano Beach. h was the firlt catamaran deltgned by Alter and la a slnCle-hander wt la popular ln ~. South Africa and the Mideut M well u ln the U.S . SaOon ln the naUonal cham· pionahlp et Ventura Include many W'ho have won regional cham- pionlhlps and other important ~ pttlll. the Angelus campaign, 18-0 over Serra and 33-0 against Pius X last week. But for Mater Dei to assure it.self of a post-season berth, It will have to win at least one of its last three games. And the fint Is al the Swordsmen's field in Santa Fe Springs, not a pleasant pros- pect for any visiting squad. "I don't remember the last time a Mater Dei team went there and won," said C.ochrun. "They're es- pecially tough at home." S t. Paul is 1-0-1, having beaten Serra last week after tying Ser- vite the opening game of league play. "They have a big offensive line, one that I think will be the best o ne we've faced all year," said C.OChrun. "I think they have a betier running line than Fountain Valley." But St. Paul has shown it can &blo throw the ball effectively and C.ochrun has respect for the Swordsmen's balanced attack. "They have a quarterback who Ls a fine football player and they al80 have an excellent receiver.'' says the Mater Dei coach. "They dllcovered he could throw the ball right after our game laat yea.r." Richest contract for Miami's Shula? ,.;. NEW YORK (AP) -Joe Rob- bie, owner of the Miami Dolphins, Nid 1\Jeeday that he hat offered Don Shula a contract that would maU him the h1lhest pmct coech ln Natlonal Foot6U.l 1Alpe h• t.ory. Bob Carolan Carolan named NOSA chief Bob Carolan of &lboa Yacht Club and South Shore Yacht Club was elected president of the Newport Ocean Sailing Aaocla- tion at the o rganization's annual meeting. NOSA la the organization that atages the famed Newport to Enlenada yacht race, the Cabrillo Beach Arpy and the 14-Mile &n1t race. Other officers seated at the meeting were J erry Brame, sec- retary; Jim Emmi, treasurer; and Rod Lippold, judge advocate. New dittcton elected were Ron DNcon, Jim Nuaent and Odin Btaathen. A feature of the meeting was the Inauguration of NOSA into the IntematJonal Order of the Blue· Gavel, an organit.ation of put commodores of yacht clubs throughout the world. NOS.A ia not a yacht club, but an exception wu mad becawie it la supported by and exlstt through the ®Operation of all y.cht clube ln Southern Call· fom.la. Winfred Tom. 2632 La Honda Av· All4859 ALP H 0 N S I N E M 1\1 .ill h1·11~. ~·1w!ll·1anes. enue, El Cerrito, CA. 9•530 To all heirs, beneficiaries. GAUDREAU and ix•rc;1m~ll 1•·llit11r-. aml contingent Kin.Wai M ~~::•0;80 CrH tlak• creditors and contingent who may be nthi>rw1~, 1·11•d1t111' of KENNE.·n1 A. or1ve,SanF1anc1.Co,CA.Ut32 creditors or Arthur A . interested in the wtll and1t•rlHIH >WN n11d 1"-'''SOru. who Olrec:tor Guatafson and persons who estate: 111;1\ lie .,th1•1w1!>t· interested Jellery L Green, 43 Cemeron Court, may be otherwise interested A petition h as lx'c•11 hll'd 111 llw will nnd or 1•su11e Danville. CA. 94526 h U d/ ' ~ Otrector Int e w l an or est.ate: by BARRY ROOER SAVIN /\ pct1ucm hns oo•n filed ~oMPtl R M91clnczylc. 306 ~ A petition h as been filed in the Superior Court uf Or by fl{ANK M CAHELL in Ave11ue. San :r~ncl'fo. CA ~4118 by Aletha Howard In the Su-ange County requC'Sting lh.11 tlw ~111x·rior Court of Orang e 51~~:~~~.:=pl~~~~= perlorCourtofOrangeCoun-BARRY ROGEH SAVIN Ix• l'1111n1v 1t•qut">l111g that the genltfal business repuietton end ly requesting that Aleth appointed as personal rc·p-f. H1\NK l\t Ct\ RELL be ap- cnarecter or the proooMCI own«a Howard be appointed as per-resentative lo admuuster the prnnlt'\I -''I JX't''4•n<1I rl•pr~n ano management, end the prob· 90nal representative to ad-estate of ALPllONSINE t.1\ln \1h1dn11ntsll'I thet.'St.ale comoeny undet their m1t11Q811'*ll. minister t he estate of Arthu GAUDREAU (um.for thl• 111 u( Kl',NNI'. fl I A BROWN ablllty of succ;enful ope1atlon of tn. • I . _ 1notudlng edeQuete prorttabltlty end A. GustaCson (under tlle In-dependent Admin1stratt1111 of 1und1 r the l11dt•p<'ndent Ad- flnanotal 50\lndnen. In ec:c:oroance dependen t Administration o Estates Al't). The' pN11u1n 1s,in1111i:.1r .. tt111\ "' Est..1tl.'S Act) with the Small Business 1nvee1men1 eo. A l) Th till · · · n.., N · Tl f h Act 01 1958. 81 amended, end 1n. "'°tales c . . . e pe on JS set for h.l'armg m v.:pl o .~ •t· µ.•11u11n ts Sl't or t>anng SBA Rules and Regutetlona set for heanng tn Dept. No. 3 al 700 Civic Center Dr , Wc'!ll, Ill ll.•pt No 3 at 700 C1v1c NotlGe 1a tieret>y gtven 1ne1 111y al 700 Civic Center Dr., West, Sant.a Ana. CA 92701 on Nov <..1·n11•r Dr , Wt~l. &int.a Ana. PlllSOO mey. no1 later 1111n n11 .. n Sant.a Ana CA 92701 on Nov. 16 1983 at 9·30 AM <.'A 9'>7()1 on Nu\• Hi 1983 at 1151 days trom tne dare of oubll· 9° 30 ' · • · -. ceuon of th•s Notice, submit wtllten 9, 1983 at : · IF YOU OBJE<..'T tu llll' 9 .Ill A M comments to tne 0eou1y Auoc:111e lF YOU OBJF.CT lo th granllng of lhl' J>l•l1tm11. yvo IF YOU U llJE(..'T to the Administrator ror Investment, Sm•H granting of the petition, you should either apJ>l'UI' I.it thl' 8rant111g o( tlw pc.•1Jt1on. )IOOU ~~,:~" NAt''n!X~!~?~gt~~4 1 ~·~· should ei\her appear at the hearing and st:ilt• y1Ju vl>Jl"''-l>h11ulu 1.:1lh1•1 uµpPar'11< 1he 20416. ' hearing and st.ate you ob.Jee-lions ur file wri11e11 1•b1'' lw.11111i.: u11d statt' you objeC'· Published Orange Coast 0111y Pltot lions or lile written objec-tions with the court h..fori· 111111'< 01 Cilt• wntu.•n objec- Oct 26 t983 lions with the court before the hcarmt,:. You1 lllJ~~::ir l1 n11'• with tilt' t'Uurt before 59 l3·93 lhl' hearing. Your appear-ant-c may be m p1.>rso11 ur liv th• hr•unn~ Your appear- ------------fance may be In person or by yourattomt•y ,1111t" 11111y 111. "' pt:rson or by PACIFIC VIE MEMORIAL PARK Ceme1ary Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach 644-2700 McCORMtCK MORTUARY 1795 Laguna Canyon Ad Laguna Beach. Ca. 9265 1 494-9415 HAAB<>f' LAWN-MT. OUVE Mortuary • Cemetery Cremato1y 1625 Glsler Ave. Costa Mesa 640-555-4 PIERCE 8ROTHERI aELL MOADWAY M09'TUARY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 6•2·9 150 IAL TZ 8IAOIRON SMITH a TUTHILL WHTCLllP CHANL 427 E 171h SI Cos111 Me" ~6·9371 A your attorney. . IF YOU ARI·: A CHElJl y11ur .1tll•r111•y lF YOU ARE A CREDI-TOR or 11 eonting1•nt t'l't'<hl••1 IF YOU 1\HF. A CREDI- TOR or a contingent creditor of the dc-ccaS<'d, you mu~t f1h• TOH or .1 l'lmt1ng1•n1 C'rechtor of the deceased. you must rile your claim with tlw ('0\lrt 111 11f llu• dc'<.'C'll'<t'd , you must flle your dalm with the court or present ll to thl' pt.•1'Son1il ro·p v11ur 'Imm with till' court or preseqt ll t-0 the personal rep-resen1a11ve appointC'<.I by I h1· 1 •1 l·-.p11t ti t•H lw pt•rsonal rep - rcsentlttive appointed by the court within fou1 ino11th-< 11"·•·111.111u1· 11p11tl11Hed by the court within four months Crum th£' dale n f £11 s11S.'lt1,111t't' llllll t v. 11h111 four months from the date of Cirst issuance of letters as provtd1'<l 111 & .. : fr••m llu d11tt• 11f ftrst lssuanet• of letters as provided in Sec-tion 700 o ( th<> Probatr Codi' 11f l1•ttt•r.. .il> 1mw1d<'d m Sec· don 700 of the Probate Code of Califorrua The th11c for,11om i Otl 11( lhl' Prubate Code of California. The time for filing claims will nvl l.,'1.11rc· 111 l 'nlt(11rnia 1'ht> 11me for filing claims will not expire prior l-0 four mon~s from till' hh11~ d lltlll" will nnl exp1rt> pMor to four mon ths from th date of the heari~ 11011tl'<.I prior to four months fl'()lll t~ date or the hearing notlced1 above. d(lh' of tht• hearing notit'N! above. j YOU MAY EXAMINE tht• ohvvr YOU MAY EXAMINE th ftle kept by the court If you YOU MAY EXAMINE the rtle kept by the COW'\. It you are interesll'<i In thl' {'Sl$11.{•, f1h • kl'pt by th,• l"OUrt. If you are intemted In the estate, you may serve upon tht-l·x .1rl' mtt•rt"<led In thC' esuitc, you may aerve ueon the ex ecutor or administrator, or y1111 may ~rvt' upon th<" ex- ecutor or adm.iN.ltrator, o upon the auome>y for lh1.• 1•x 1'(·t11or or 11dmlnL'ltrator. or upon the attorney tor the ex· ecutor or administrator. (Ind upon thC' ottornc-y for the ex- ecutor or admlnlAtrator, and file with the l.'OUrt wllh pruo( t.'<.'Ulur or odmin1strntor, ancl fUe with the court with proo{ of service, a wntten request fill .. • with the court wuh proof of service, a written requet1t stating that you desire spccml or ~·rvtl't'. n writwn request stating that you desire special nolice of the fllln(( of 11n In t11.At111g thot you desin• spt.ocial noUce of the flllng of an in· vcmlory nnd appralsemcnt of 11utll't' uf thC' filing or an in· ventory and appralsement of c..'!ltatc t\88<"\I or o( tht• ,,ell· vcntory 11tl 11pprol~mcnt of estate aueta or of the pell· tions or oc-rountll m1•ntlc111l'J t'!ll'11t• ~'lt.'\8 t•r of the pett· tlon1 or at"COunta mentioned In 54.."<:Uon 1ioo and 1200.!'i or tum~ or lll-t"w1\8 mentlont!d In Stt11on 1200 and 1.200.5 of the California Prol>llt<" Codr in 81'\'tltin 12011 and 1200.5 of thu Callfomha Proba~ Ccd.e. GALLIVAN, CHMIES· tlw Collfomtn ProblJtc Code. Wllllam S. Caeeb ING It BLIED JAMES A. H MPHREYS, '7M N. M1l1 Street, S•lt BY: TIMOTHY J. 81.IF.D JR. LAW CO RPORATION '35 'I t71'7 BrlUol, Suite 100 23211 Soutb Politte Drlv~ Santa Aea, CA. H70l Costa MeH, CA. ttU6 L1tf{UnA llllh1. CA. ltlU (710 t53-Sl88 ('714) HO·tOto 17HI 581·1300 Published Orange .CO.St PUbllllh<'d Ornn1tr• Cornu l'ubh!!hl't.I Or11ngl:' <:oast [);ally Pilot OC1 2~. 26. Nov t. Delly Pilot <xt 26. 27. Nov 2, 0.1llv P1h•t ON 2:;, 26, Nov I, 19R3. ~809·83 11>~3 580f1 fl~ Hl83 ~769·83 NlltC NOTICE Nit.IC NOTICE PICTITIOUI llU ... 11 flCT1TIOUI IUltNEIS NAMI ITAftMINT NAMI ITATIMINT Thi lollowlng C*tOn Is doing The lollOWlng l*tOh 11 d04ng bu•l""s 11 !>ualMU IS ENTERTAINMENT ENlllAON· BINFORD MILLS. 12.3 E e>y.<, MENTS 363-B 16ltl Ptac.. Cotta Senla An&, CA Mese. CA 92827 Robert L Binford. 1016 Perk Thomt a Hvgh McClaln, Jr .. 383·8 Sprlngt LI,,., Otamond Ser, CA. 16th Plec;e, Cotll Mete, CA. 92827 This bu1lne•• 11 conducted by an Thi• bu1lnees le eonduetad by: an lndMdual. 1ndlvlClual. Roberl l . Binford Thornu Mc;Ct11n. Jr. Tf'll• 1111.1men1 wu filed with the Thia StlleMenl wu llled with Ifie County Ci.ttt of Orange County on ~IC NOTICE flCTITIOUS .. USIHEH HAMI STATEMENT Tl\t IOllOwlng ll•flont or• dUHl\I bualnNs H JOHNSON HIGHMAN & DILLARD. '100 M1tcAr thur Bfll<l • Suite 311<1. Newpo11 B"8<;t1. CA 92680 SttMfl L Johnson. 1116 Wetl Las Petmat Or .. l'ulh111on. CA 92632 David A Highman, I I W11tporl Avenue.1rv111e CA 9'714 ft1omn S 0 11101 u 2 7951 Catacabtll M19$10rt Vle10, CA 9269? Ml.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUllNIH NAME I TATl!Ml!NT I nu lollowtng p.irson 11 dOlng ooa111N1 11 AURORA ENTERPRISES 2424 Newpo11 Blvd • Hl5. Cuete Mua. CA 92627 Rury Wllll1ms 416 Eroe•llOf\ St N11w111>11 Bench. C..A 92660 Tiiis DuSlr•eu 11 'onduoted by can lntJlv10ut1I, Rory Wi111sms County Clerl< 01 Or1nge County on Oct 13. 1983 Oct 70. 11183. Fttnn This bu,111t<ss 15 condvc100 by a F229CIOI Pul>ll~ O.e~ Co111 Dally generel p111nc11sh1p I hla ~l11tem1t11t w" filed with 1h• t;ountv Ctork or 0111rio• County on 0t.1 ~o 1993 Publlshe<I °''~ Coeal Dally PllOI Ocl 19. 26. Nov 2. 9, 1963 011v10 A lttgh111a11 Pilot Oct 26. Nov. 2. 9. 16, 1H 3 568~63 This su;tt1me111 was tiled with the F22IOOS Pu~llSllllO Orange COllSI Daily Pll<1I Oct 26 Nov 2 9 16, 1983 SS02·83 5800-63 •un•ic NOTICE Countt C1111lo. or 0111nuu Counly on -___ r_~-------S.pl 27, t083 F229011 FICTITIOUS IUllNHI Jo HHS ON, tH OHMAN & NAMI ITATIMENT DILLARD PUBLIC NOTICE Nit.IC NOTICE The loflowlng person 11 doing Anorn•r• et Lnt FICTITIOUl llU ..... 11 business H lulte S!O, 4100 MacArthur Blvd. NOTICE NAMI ITAT'PltlNT (A) SHORELINE SPORT PROO. Newpott 8Hc:h, CA. 929e(J INVITING 8108 The lollowtng person 11 doing UCTS (8 ) SHORELINE DESIGNS. PubllsMd Orange Coa~t Cally Notoce ts hereby given that tne 1>u1\nen H . 27000CrownValleyPkwySulte 710. Piiot Oct 5 12 19 26 !983 Oc..11on View School Dlslricl or Or· PA R A 0 I S E N U R S E R Y . Mlsalon Viejo. CA 92691 • · 5450 83 1 ange County will recelve up lo. Dul I PRODUCE, FLOWERS & LANO. T11omas Euge,,. Aman, 26921 no talet than tO 00 a m Thutsday. SCAPE, FARMS & CONSTRUC· Venado Or.. Mlulon Vlelo, CA. the 3rl.I day ol NovtMber, 1983 seal- TION. 3362 Tempe Or , Hunllng1on 92691 PUBLIC NOTICE <'d bids tor lhe lurnlsh1n11 OI carpet Beach, C!I. 92649 This bu11neu Is <;Onducled by an cmty and also sea1e1.1 Olds tor the Chrltlopher Jason Burke & or Individual. FICTITfOUS BUSINESS 1Mtt11ta11on ot carpet only to be use<! Alley, 3362 Tempe Or . Huntington Thomas E Amen NAME STATEMENT ,,, Y81•0U5 SChOOIS m lt•e 01st11ct Beach, CA. 92849 This stetement was llled with the Thd hJllowlng uersons are uo11111. Suen bias ~111111 be re"11ved m me Th11 business Is conduc;led by: an County Clerk or Oronge County on t>usinen as · Hustness Olltce ol ltle 01s111ct tndlvlduel Oct. 12. 1983 SHEER DEltllMINATION. i006 lo<.Bled at 16940 B Street. Hunl- CMatopher Jason Burke & or F227271 Court Newpo1t Beacn CA 92Co63 111gton Beach Calllo1n1a 92647 ano Alley Published Orange Coast Oally Cathleen Lyn McOonell 1010 snail be oµene<J BIUJ µublicty read This 1t1tement was Iliad with the Piiot Oct 19. 26. Nov 2 9 198:? Sandp•~e• t.;mona del Mar CA .;loud JI the abuv" l>lateo lime and County Clerk or O•enge County on 5683-63 92625 place Sept 28. 1983 Bradtoro Ardell Schw•m ?OUt. • All 0,05 sholl hl' m~tJe on bio f2211•7 Nit.IC NOTICE Court Newport B,;ach. CA 112663 jrurms lurnosne•I tly lhe O•Mrtct. and Plio~~~t~ ,f.r~~;6, ~~;3• Oalty FICTITIOUS BUSINESS ge;1~1r~lb~:;;:~:,5s,'•~PCOnc1UCl@d Dy .. =~~~s~~~ .~~r~! ~g~:~;;; :"~~::.~- 5460 83 NAME STATEMENT Cathleen Ly11 Mc.Ot1nell OJ' • The following per&OrlS are domg T 1 1 t.u111es or the carµe1 nnll 1nl1101ta11on his ~1111em11111 was 1 e<J Wiii\ "'" l'"~t1llca11ons ate now un file on the ----.-.. n-•1c_NO_Tl_C_E ___ business as County Cll'tk <JI UrAnge County u11 Uus•f"leS" Ort1ce o~cnn V111w School .-~ A CHICK IVERSON CHEV· Oct 13, 1963 ' ---_..;~--...;..;.;;-..;...--. ___ ROLET-PORSCHE·AUOI B CHICK F227375 IOostrici FICTITlOUl llU .... 11 IVERSON CHEVROLET C CHICK Put>ll~ht•l.I Ordl•tJ" c.01151 U1<olv I Tile 01sl11<.l ruwrve~ the rignt to I NAME STATEMENT IVERSON PORSCHE-AUDI 0 ITAL· p,101 Oct t!I 26 Nvv 1 9 t98J ••'re< t any or all h1ds or to waive any The lollowlng person ii doing IA AMERICA YACHT IMPORTS 445 5684 ·U l or1egu1nr1t1es or 1nro1ma1111es 1n any buslneu H . E Coast Hwy N-port Beach CA U•tlS or m tile l••d<l•ng ARTHUR'S OTTO. 2853 E. Coast 92660 . For lhe IMtallallon of Ille ca1pe1 Hwy .. Corona del Mar, CA. 92625 Chick Iverson. Inc. 445 East PUBLIC NOTICE the CJ1st11ct has ob1a1111>d from the Susen S. Baker. 3424 Seabreeze Coast Hwy., Newport Beach, CA D11e.:to1 ot the Oepor1m11n1 ol Indus-Lane. Corone del Mar. CA. 92625 92660 ORANGE COUNTY 111a1 Relahons tne guMral prevatllng This business Is conducted by. an This business 1s conducted by. a SUPERIOR COU. RT I"''" or per <1111m wngo 111 tno locallty Individual. corporation. 700 Civic Center Dr· W11t tn w111c11 1111s wurk is to ho performed Susan S. Beker O.A. Charlton. Asst Seer Santa Ana, CA. 92701 • lur each crall ur IYll<' or wo1kman This statement was fifed with the This statement was tiled with the Pla•nt•fl LOUISE B Mt.C.~ AIN 11N•tled to e~ecute tno contract County Cfe(k ol Orange County on County Clerk or Orange County on Trustee for !he l OUtSE B M< C.t AIN The~ rates are on f•lt' 01 tile Olstrlet Oct 1'. 1983 Oct 3 1983 TRUST Oll1ce at 16940 B Struet Huntington Ftt74&7 · F22t413 Oelenoont :.HAUON lEf PAPA Do;ach Ca11torn1a 926~7 Coc:nesmay Publllhed O•enge Coest Oally Pubhshild Orange Coast Cally and all l>(lrson:. un~nown ctaimon11 tor outa1ned un 1equoS1 A copy of Pllol Oct 19. 26. Nov. 2. 9. 1983. Piiot Oct 19, 26. Nov 2. 9, 1983 any tegot or OQultatile right. title es 111ese rates Shall b" pns1ee11tt tne 1ob 5686-83 568 Hl3 tete. flen 01 interest 1n the property sile> ------------~ deKrllle<J 111 the complfllnt a!Jvt<15e lnl) 1orego111g schc\lula ot per Nit.IC NOTICE Nit.IC NOTICE to P1111n1111·s 1111e or a11y LIOull on I.Mm Noyes Is oasea u1100 a worklrig ------------___ ...;..._..; ...... _..;_--. ___ Plolnlllfs 11111 ll•e•elo. named os d"Y of eight 18) hours Tt111 rates ror NOTICE OF PU9l.JC HEARING av THE C08TA MESA OOES 1 through 100 lllCIUSIYU hUllClay and overtime work shall be CITY OF COITA MESA• CALI Claiming any legdl o• equ1ta1Jlu at least time anCI une·hall MDeVEL OPMENT AGENCY, ..., • right, tnle us1a1e, lien. or 1nte1est tn 11 .shall oe rn11noatory UPOn the fORNIA ON THE PROP08ED LEASE 8Y THE AGENCY OF the p1ope11v descrtbed In the 1..om-CONTRACTOR IQ. wr1om tne con- CIRTAIN HiCftllT•I ..,.... THE C08TA ••A RE· plaint. lo w11 common!~ knuwn as t•act 15 awaroeo an<J uoon any suD- NYELOPmlfT PRCMECT AM.A NO. 2 TO C08TA MESA unit 101 of 1550 Tustin Village w .. y. wntractor unoer him. 1o i;ay not less fAlllLY VILLAGE fOR THE DEYILOPMENT OF Tuston. Cahtotn•A logally desi ••tltl<l 1111111 tne sa10 spolc1f•e<I rates 10 all llUL 1'M'Aa. y M.NTA HOU81NG AND ON THE PROPOSED as IOI 101 one an 11n<J1v1ded 1 1181h iwor1.man employel'I t>y them 1n !he Dl8POarTION AND NYELC>PmNT AGREE•NT (INCLUD-Interest In lots 119 0110 120 or 1rac1 e•t1cutoon 01 the cout1tlct ...... --· __..._ Ll'"Ua) __ .. .....,,. THER.,.O 4854 assnow11 011 a map rec.,•<1 •111 on Charles Osterluno ,.... ,,__. _ ~ rsn•~ 15' Book 174 paqes 3 anl.I 4 nr mo~ t;lerk or me Oosrd or Trustees NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Costa Mesa Redevelop-celle11eous ""'"s ot Orange 1-ounty. Ocean voow School District ment AQ«1CY. City o f Costa M .... California (the "Agency") Wiii Celllornia Orange .(;aunty Calilornoa hold a public hMltng on November 9, 1983 at the hour of 6:30 Case No 311 ~8 56 Puo11st1etl Orange 1-oost Dally P1101 p .m ., or U IOOf'l ther•her .. the matter can be heard, In the City SUMMONS 0C1 19 26 1983 Councll ChM'lberl, Ctty Hall, 71 Fair Drive. Costa M .... Call·. NOTICE! You have been •u•d. 5694-83 fomla 92626 pur1U811t to the California Community Redevelop-Thi court mar decl<M "9"ln11 1ou '------------ ment L8w (HM!th and Sat.ty Code Section• 33000 et .eq.) for ~c!:,h~~~~~~r w~~~~ ;::~~.~~':::1 POOLIC NOTICE the PUfPOM of con.idettHhe approval of a pr()posed Olsposl-the Information below. ------------ tlon and DeYei<>pm4wll t, Including three Ground If you wish to 5Mt.. lh8 all••te ot on FICTITIOUS BUSINIESS L .... attached th9reto (t "Agreement,"), with Costa Mesa attorney 1n this !"alter. you sho111d' NAMe STATeMENT Famtly VIiiage (the "L .... ") which provldee for the lease of do so promptly sn tha1 your written I Tn.i tollowmg Ptlrson 15 doing Parcel• 1 2 and 3 to the Leeeee for the development and response 1t onv mnv be t1100 on busin!ls0s as ' ' time 5 5 INVESTMENTS, 505 operation of muttl-lamlly rental housing unite. AVISOIUsted 118 sitJo demOll<IAdo Mt11gu11rt1e Corona del Mar, CA The Redevelopment Plan for the eo.ta Meta Redevelop-El trlbumo t.cM dec:tdtr contra Ud. !l/!.25 ment Project AIM No. 2 provtdee for the development In the t in audlencla • meno• que ud ,.. Susau S Bake• 34;>~ Seabreeze Projeci ar• of multl-fM'llly rent• housing. A total of sev-1ponda dentro de JO din LH la l<>n~ Coron~ 1.101 Mar CA 92625 enty-two (72) muttl-famlly rental houllng unite are proposed to lnlOf'maclon q~ 1lgu1. This business •s conduc.ted by an be conatructed by the L .... on the three Parcels along with the It you wit h lo ... 11 lh• 1d•tc1 01 "10r• Clual I "'•"-Inn and 1anct9caplnn en allorney In lhl1 matter. you Susan S Ba~dr ~ ~" '.. ''•' C elw>uld do 10 promptly ao lh•I your tr11• stotemMI w<is fill'<! "'''" tne The location of Parcela 1, 2 and 3 with the osta Mesa wrtllen reiponH 11 an, m•y .,. c..ounl) c1.,1k c.r oronyl1' County on Fledewlopnent Projeci A,.. No. 2. Is shown on the map n1ec1 on time. ' ' •ot1 14 1983 accompanying thll Notice. SI Uetad deH• aollc:ller 11 conN-1 F2'7~ The purPoM of the pubtlc hearing It to consider: ct. "" ebogado en HI• H unto, 1 Put>hahed ?• ango Cou1 Oally t. Thepropoeed leueof Parcels i, 2 and 3 In the Costa Mesa deberla hec:erlo lnmedl•l•m•nl1.ll '1lot Oct 19 2€. Nov 2 9 11183 Redevetopmem Protect At• No. 2. by the Agency to the L~ 11t• m-r-•. eu '"P.,.•'• 5687-83 for lt'9 ~~t and operation of eeventy-two (72) •actll•, al h•l,. •leune. s>uede -1-------------~ rantal houeln9 unha with the~ pwlllng and ''r,.'o~H: tDEIE°NDANT: A chit I PUBLIC NOTICE \8ndeeaplng. omp4Mtlt .... been nlld by lhe FICTITIOUS 8USINIEll 2. The proPQMd document• Pf()Ytdlng tor auch ...... p.lnllft 19alnet '°"'It JOU.,.., lo MAMIE STATEMENT Including the propoeed Dllpoeltlon and Development Agree-t.nd 11111 lawault, you mvet, The tollow•ng pe18ont ore ooono ment wltt\ the following attached thereto: within 30 d"Y' alter this summons •S but1ness as a. Parcel 1 Grouncfl..MM. served on you , 11111 With lhlS cuuit. 1A8 TURF PROOUClS 17335 b. Parcel 2 Ground lelllle. written response to the comp1a1n1 Skyoarlt C1r '"'""1 CA c. Parcel 3 Ground L..... Unles1 you do. your dela.ull wlll lou Gary TeOD 62 Be<.on Bay. Now 3 .. 11 _,....__ d t ti f d al t th 1 f entered on eppllCAhon ot the 1i111111 vort Beach CA 926GO . " ....,,...., """an • mony or an eg ns e approve 0 1111 and th•s court m1>y en1er a 1u11g., · the document.I listed above and the propoaed lease Of the ment egn111st you tor lhe re11el 08 ¥,~1': s~:~etimunt Wll > fifed with Iha Parcels to Costa Meaa Family Vlllagtl. mended 1n Ille compla1n1 wh1cn l.ovnt CIAtk of O•anoe County on I Al the above etated day, hour and ptaoe any and all persons ou10 resu11 1n garnishment or Sept ~8 1983 having any objecilona to the documents lilted above or the wages taku'g of money or 111111• .. rty F2:291U proposed teeM of the Parcels or to the regularity ol any of the o• other r.,llAI reQ1Jes1eu in the ' <>m l'u1>11slled Orange t.oes1 Dally prior proceedings, may ~r before the Agency an d show pl~n: 0 r b 2 t963 P1101 Oc1 5 12 19 <6 1963 cauee why the doc;urnent1 llated above or the proposed lease of LEEaAe en!Nc t1• Cle•~ 5•62·83 the Parcel1 lhould not be approved. By GAIL CAAPENrEk. Dt<puty At any time not later than the hour atore1ald Mt for hearing, DAVID L. CAOCl<ETT or SILVA & any person objecting to the propoeed teue of the Pa,cels, or the CROCKeTT NJllC NOTICE Agreement or the three Ground L.-. may flle In writing with 10 N1wp0rt Center Orin , Sull•1 COSTA MESA SANITARY _, ._.,.~, potth ch CA 92MO COUNTY,CALIFC>ftNIA the ~et"'"' of the ,..........., a 1tatement.of his or her objections 1U5 DllTfUCT ORANGE I thereto. Any petlOnl or organlutlona dealrlng to be heard at the (7 ,:, MMO:O . . NOTICE IN¥1TIHG M>I hearing wtll be afforded an opportunity to be heard. At the Publlshed Ot nge <.oasl (Jelly P11<1t NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhal aforaeald hour the Agency lhall proceed to hear and pus upon Oct 26. Nov 2. q 16. t!i83 5981ed proposals lu1 furnl9tllng all all written and oral objections. 579<1 83 labor. materials, equlpmen1, trens- The documents referred to above are avallable tor pubic pon111on. end aucn other lecllll1es Inspection and copying during regular otfk:e houra (8:00 a.m. to PUBLIC NOTICE s~R~~T~Nr~i;~e'fo~~~?N~ I 5:00 p.m .. M onday through Friday) at th• office of the Secretary PROJECT AOAMS AVENUE PUMP· of the Agency. City Hall, 17 Fair Drive. Coata Mesa, Callfornla ORANOE COUNTY ING STATION PROJECT NO I 92626. MUNICIPAL COURT t 112100·75 ( M the Agency responllble for carrying out the Redevelop-CENTRAL JUDICIAL DISTRICT I Sida wltl be rec;etved by lhe Costa ment Plan for the eo.ta MMI Redevelopment Pro)ec1 Area No. 700 CMc Cenlat Or WHt M1111 Sanll•ry Otttrlc1 at the ontce 2. the eo.ta M .. Redevelopment Agency, City o f Costa Mesa. Santa Ane. CA. ll270l ollhe city Ctetk, 77 Felr Drive, Coste California and the City of Colta M..a hU prevlouely conducted Piaontoll CRAIG SNYOEH Mese Calltornle untll the hour of an Initial Study to ..._.~lne If the ~ment Plan will have Oelendanl TOOLCOA t OAP • 11 00 am . Novt'lm~ 14, t9113 OI ..... ._......"""¥ A D c E N T E R p A Is E s a ti a wllleh time they wlM be ~ pub- llgnlflcant effect• on t environment. A•. reeolt of the Initial TOOLMASTER. SHOPMASTEA, llCty and rHd •loud In lhl Councll Study the Ag«1CY and the City determined that the proposed RON TIMMONS anCI OOES 1 Ch&mt>ets Selfed proposals 111•11 d~t und« the Redevelopment Plan would not hae a through "°· 1nchJ~•ve beer the t111e 01 the wor~ and ""' slgnlrtc.nt effect on the environment, and that the Negative Crosa·Complalnant TOOLCO/\ name 01 11 .. tJldder but no olhtl• Declaration tor Specific Plan SP-79-01 was applicable to the CORP and AOC ENTFllPfllSE.5 •ltsllngutlhlng mark Any bid re- adoption of the Redevel()prnent Plan. Among the Implement&· Cr~s-oorenon .. ts no N l IM celvt'ld alter Iha !ICnecJul.O cloelng t•--1vtt..__ ...._ __ -vtron-tal lm"' ........ I are a ........... .,. In the MINS'. DOES 1 1111r;ugll 10 tnLlus.,1•· lime for the receipt ul Dlda shall be ""' -· -..,..,.. -· ........ .,_, ......, .. ......, Case No 14 11 112 rutuined to the bidder unopened II tnltlal Study and NegatlYe Declaration Is the developme'11 s u M M o N s o N shell be tne ao1e respont11>1111y 011ne propoeed to be ac:compllthed under the Agreement. In connec· CROSS-COMPLAINT uldder 10 -•Ml his bid 11 r-119<1 tlon with Its conlidefatlon Of the Agreement, the Agency haa HOTICll You have ti..n tulil In proper tlrne determined that environmental lmpacte of the proposed tie-co11•t miy deckM llG•lnel 1ou A set ot plans. Spec111 Prov1110ns Yelopment under the Agreement will not have any significant without you• being hHrd unleu end addlllOns to Gunerll Provisions -"eots on the environment u previously concluded by the lnltlal YthlHI ,r", pondtl wllbhln, 30 d1y1. RH dl to the Stend1rd Spoct11e111on1 may • n ormt on •ow. 1111 oblalned 11 the olliee ol the 01· Study and Negative Oeclaraton. II you wish 10 seek"'" 111.tv1t-11 •11 "" •oclor of Publtc Services. Room " t9, attorney 111 thl' m.1tft" y1111 ~huu111 77 fatr Orlve. Colla Meta, Celtlornta oo so promi.>llV 'o 11111 your w11t1t'11 upon 8 non-refundeble peyment ot respunse 11 any m~y Ill' lilod on s 10 oo. An lldOlllonal cherge ol time $:> oo wlll be mtde 11 nandled by ··~i= ~: ':::I,_ ---. r I I~-=:-___j --...4-. ---; • ---• -·-.-. t ~· ... -. -- --=1 :==~ .. .-=: ~r---: -. ' .. --~ • --· I-' --l .--f-.1 .___.., _ -• 1 "~t:=; :: l :=::::J~ ~~ .. ·-, _ _J~ 1-=-=1"--:-: l ~._L._ ... ~ .. • H' ' "' .. • . . .. ' .. AVISOIUsted ha sodo Otim1111tl111re mall El trlbumo !ff• dec:ldl• cont•• Ud Each bid sh•ll be made on the aln audi.ncl• • met!OI qu1 Ud re-PrO(>OMI Form, shee\S P· 1 through 1pond• d1ntro de 30 dl111 Llf 11 P-7. provided In th41 contract docu· lnformKlon que •lgv•. man11, and sholl be_,ccompanled by II you •l•h to aHll the •dwlc1 of 11 ceflllled c;heck ol'c•1hler'1 cllecl\ n •llorn11 tn lhla m11ttt. you o r 11 hid bond lof not iess lhtt 10% of t hould do ao promptly 10 th11 your Iha amount ol the bid. mt1d1 pey&bte wtllten tet ponH, It 11n1. m11 i.. 10 thl Cost• MeH Senllery Olllrlet lllact on time. No propos611 1hntl be confldered SI Ueted n..e aollcll1r al conH unleu 1ceomp1nled by 1ueh )o de un abogaclo *" Hte 1eunto, ouhler'1 Ch6Ck, c1111 or bidder'• la ~rlo IN!tedletarMf'll•, bot'ld de eete menera. w r919U1tla No bid then bl c:onel<lerld vni.tt ha. 11 hey 11'9Ul'e, ~ "' 1111 rn1dtl on 1 bl•nll lotm f\irn~ , .... .,_. • ti.tftpo. by tile Coeta M ... S"111ery Olttrle1 l -TO THE DEFENDANT: A <ilYll end 11 mede In llClCiorde~ with lhl eomplelnt he• bMn nled by lh• provision• ol thl PropoHI requlr• pelnlttt .. lln•I you. It you wit h to menti defend 11111 law1ul1, you muet, Eaeh bldd~t must be llotnMd and Wllhlll 30 days 8fler 1111' SUMl'IOlll II AIM>-j>requ1llH8d 11 ftQulred by ll W safveo on you. Ill• with thll 1.wr1 • A clU9 'A' or 'C42' con1•actor'• WTll1tn r•ponto to the c:ompttlnt MeenM 11 required Unle11 yov oo. your delauo WIN be Thi Boerd of OltectOtW of the ler.O on 1pptlcll11Qn of the pleln· Cutll M... &enttary D111rk:1 r• lltt, end lhll coort m•y Mier• IUdOe· l«VM 1,,. rlghl 10 reject .. ny or en lllltll IQllntl yOI! IO< Iha rllfflf 0.-bldl . mended 1n Iha eomp1a1n1. wnieh Thi con1r1C1or ahllll c°'"1)1y with could r .. un In g1rnlshmt'lf1I or the provllllOnt or s.cuon 1170 10 wag9e. 1•-•no or money or prop11•1y 1780 lnclul!Ve. of thl Calllornl• or ()O'lt• rt)ll11'f rllqt.rfllltd In tho com l 11bor Code, the prevelllnQ rtl• tnd p1111n1. tc11le ot w-oee Ht11bllthed by lhe 0Dlld. Aprlt IJ. 198:> Coste Mt .. $1111111)1 Oletrlot wtlk:h ROBERT 8 KU) tE:l. Clar~ i re llled wllh the At•ltt1n1 S.Cre1.,... 8~ A PERI . Deputy ol Mid 011tric:f •nd t!IAll IO<lalt pan • LAW OPFICl l OF l"IAN " •lli.t pr-rlbld lt>ertf0<1 !Of non· CA .. ff" tomotlene. of Aid Gode 1 Cl.tc Centet Orin Wnt ti'!' OROEA OF THE BOARD tNlttl floof lull• OF DIRECTORS Of THE lent• An•, CA. 92701 COSTA MES!I 8ANllAIW C7'•) Ut-IMO OISTAICT Jlul>llSl'led Ortr'IQ" Cu1111 P~llV f111Qt llubllentO OrlltlQll Coell Dally Pilot Pub411Nd Orange COMI O.lly Piiot Oct. 28, Nov. 2. 1983. Oct :>6. Nov ' II Ill. Hla:l Oat 28. NOv 2. 10113 518 t-&3 1> r1ii, UJ ~M6·11.1 • 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ' ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct 26, 1983 8S I 1• .... Clllllfllll 642-5811 1 I CLASSIFIED INDEX To Place Your Ad. c .. 642 -5678 'REAL ESTATC •"!"''' A,., • .,. Ut1 lhl~ lti.1lh •• ht'!f!MI tt...H~•• V1 t1Ui+41a.... l'w~"'' '"'' '"·wh t•ut .. 11• th'I Miu t'.:~t.• Mi" IUll/ IOOH IUOti l•ltll IVI~ llll.' lill~ THE DAILY PILOT Cl.A SIFIED OFFICE 110 fl Telephont> ervice: Monday·Fri<luy 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. Busine~~ Count1·r: Monda ·-F~rday 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. DEADLINE leaffl fn lalt ..... 1002 ...... ~ .... """......,. __ ... .,... COLDWC!U BANl(eRO UllllllHUlll 1141,HO U. •• h.t PulHt II lw11 :~~~ P ULIC\ T ION ()EAl>l.l ''H·: Why would a seller fist lhlS 3 BR home 1n exee11en1 condition. with a spa & securlly system, tor such a low price?? Becauae he's servJous, that's why! Great e•lstlng loan toot Come and get Ill J uw1t.11U V .&111 ., Uuuw1~•· t1 u,,.. h lfu111 It 11h.l\1• ""'" .. IUJ~ 11.,f J llMU ll ()fl Ii)' "at M on. Tuf'!-. WrJ. Thur .. Fri . Fn. I I .;rn J .111. 4:~~1) p.1n. i:~rn p.111. ·k:m I' 111. •l::il) p.111 .5:0!) I'· 111. '.3:00· , •. 111. I 1aH•o• tt, .. 1. l.1."•t1• fMh ::~!! 1'11t>s<la v '"'• ntf I I IU .. 1 \I\ ('t IW'>I ,I) IU-tolO 1 ,,.un.• "-'1.:1..i I l •• , • lfl •t Mo ..... .,., \"t N1 ,.I•"' I .... h ,,..,. t !• Hll llh -,,01 J•ltU' l 1phtii1tm '•(ltl\.t \1111 ..... ·•' ·~ ,11h :::~~ l'hur.,da \ ::~v ~ ridav :::;~ Sa ltu du' :::;:i: S1uuLi ~ "'-i 1111 t • ..,111 ... ... 111 .. 1 ''" .. h 1 •• , ... "' l111o11 >f'j \1 j I llt-O \•It .lflt \i•fllfltl•I I\!•. h i•H h•• 1rn •·u ;•h .. ,,,. .. , .. , 1.!0i ., .. tA'.\4(:ELLATIO:\ CORHE<:TI O~. Canl'f•lbtion::. ar1d t·0rrt·c1io11~ rna' br 111adP 011 !>arrlf' df•aJli11e!-> <1!. 0 TIE TtWHI" Spec tacular New potl Coop Apt. rare ocean. harbpr and c11y views. 2 Bdrm. 2 Bath at $325,000 ' •ll+lld • '-•I,. It\ ' '''t•f••t llllhll~ ,,, ti•' t 1• H1,h·* t11h f\t,.,, I h "'' l 'i ,,. .. li-••·" .111'11·111 ....... 1 ubovc. Plea~e a~k for a c·anc'(·lliltio11 I"' I "-'H.,I I l ·C ~I\ Realtors, 675·6000 ::~. nu111l1Pr whc>n l'anl't"ll ing \our· ad. " j .,1 I' '•I "l.1 • .1 •I• ft .o I ''"°' ,1 •• 11\f Ull I• .. ti ::~· ERROHS: 81llto1 Pt1iaHl1 1007 I ... Ulj ( I M1i I I tt••I• ._ •.• '..,,,1. h, 11•l1t • 1011 It.""''" l1111••·rt\ 1'ry-.. Sh.i.nf\;t It t, l-..-1 l11~HM1 l•ti W11u1l•·•• 11'" Ch eek rnur ad d<1 1lv and r·rpurt , . Prror. irnmedi tt trlv. Tlw DAIL Y :~P l LOT a:;~urne~ lial1ilit y for tlw fir !-11 I I . OPEN HOUSE 11-4PM Fro-Sun 2109 E Balboa Blvd Lg lam hOme, uay vie w , $575 ,000 Sell/trade. I.In E-Z terms o w e . PP (71 4 ) 644-1642, 675-3772 1 ~~ 'ntorrecl ir.sertion L·nlv. RENTALS. It •I• t uMo•lo<tl ti '. '111 ........... . ft ... , •.••• , ""'' I Jlt\llf 1 l4+f I Vt I I t '"'1 \ -rd 1 I I I I "''H·• ..,, '"'" I "'"'·11•1 • t'i.t l111j I+ 'II .1110 lh1plt•'1•" I 11t ,\jt.tlltHI 1101 .. llfflltoh1"J ,,, .. 111m1 H\,I \lul \th t wtt "' \'uf I(• •O .:l•)tt 't!l UI :!"I•·· ltllkl :700 iKIO\I ZIHlfl J~I.' .!11111 CLASS IFI ED 642-5678 CtroH ••I Nu iOH JASlllE CIEH Houn •• , Salt I a ..... ftr Sile Probate sale. Cheapest on ----------------1-00-2 the market $275.000 Geaer1l 1002 Ct1er1I 851 -8767 .......,,..._ _______ _ OCEH I inn YIEW LIDO ISLE Bay fronl Villa 6 B.r, 7 ~ Ba on wide lot, pool, spa. dock for 120' yacht. Exch IJ\COme prop or lease opt $4,850,000. 200 Blk. 40' IOI, 3br • den, Jba. yard, comp! relurb $499,000 217 Jasmine Open Sat/Sun 1-5 Ownerlagt 673-5551 It • ', f"w I to .... "t ll•hl M•11l ........ , It '""' 'HlllllW I lt•tt&..1 .. \ w .1h• ti '41 ul.11., •tt• 11\.11' h• 'ih.111 •tt0 11t.1I v. 0111 .. 1 t ... rh11• .. ti'f H.• 111 tltl••· u. Ill ti Uu'\i111~H1 otul"' '"1111111 lt•r1"'4I ... l111tu ... 1 lt1 l\101h = TradJtional 3 Br, 3 'h Ba. Bay front, pier & ~'14•7 Cloal for 65' boat. Priced to seU $1.250,000. TllPLD South ol 1he Hrway• Lge sepe1ate Iron! house w/4 bdrms & 3 baths plus two 2 bdrm, 2 ua units Steps to park & beach 759-1501 '.!tll"M ;,t•t>(t1 .'~IJ VISTA IEL LIM UYFRllT j~:.'. Fabulous bay & mountain view . 1 Bdrm, 1 Ba. ;~!~ condo. Lowest priced at $295,000. """• ·1)(.1 ,,, .. "' "' .. ' ANNOUNCEMUHS \I tt• •IU•• 1111l., M"'-1•"'' ,... •• ,,, ... , ....... I•'"'''' 1\ ~11 • I• I••',, ..... , ... , COii .... ~..... .\ 10 ... tru. ,~.,, Jttlh It . I """' BUSINESS & FINANCIAL ft ,. ·~ ..... t •I '-'I• 111 I J •t1.,,,," t ''•1•·1luu1lu ·hll_. Ou 1n.-\\.thlt•I '"lfl •fu..,t "" lfl ' .. tl•.f lYllll•• IOl'f Jn·,. •t• u• \.\ .. u11 .. 1 lllJJ .,, -. .. , "· t.-w11 ~v:• .I\, '" \ ~ '''""'' 111.:tJ \1 •• 1,i• I I• IH.! CMPLOYM£NT flt I \.\ mh"ll .,,,,.. v.. ....... Ai.ALS .... MERCHANDISE l\ul••tY• m11u t\.1,1h.01t11 '"'' t \•., ti;u1 f.t••: Ul•h' M '" ,, .. 1-. ,r(JI_. t '"" 1 , -. t-•11111111" • r.ttto t .... , ill ..... ~ ••• I I ' ........ .: t ,1111101 Mf}'\ ••• , ..... 11 •1101 H • .,.,.,,.,,,,, •• ,.., n.lli J.-..." .. : ... "'"' .,,. hitt1 M1 .. 1·11.111 .. •H 111Ut Mi .... Yt.1111111 1\11• M11""'' fh.,Udll•••l\lJI fll1°' Uj11• t u•IHIH'• Iii h4111j·Hlf II ·~~:U I 1.tt1 "t .. .,i~,n •l~.1.tt ··i• ltifh I, •• t, 1.:t1 I\ h.••'" '" ,,. t+.• t..: BOATS f l•I•• lh I 1110 .... ".. , , I ~1••: ii•'• J•Hf ..... 1lllf1 \1 1• 111o ~"l'"t :1111~ \l 1·•!1l ~ ...... ,11.'0 .. ·~ .... I• .. ~ .OJ,J , '••' ·•1.!I '••tt11• II I II,,,,, ':11.'.I• '•· ,.. .~ .. TRANSPORTATION \ ,,ft M llil ,,, ... ~· ,.., ~: ..... ,.' lW''' M l •I Ill• "''''· "hf, It.ti\ If' "'-i••h·r IMfltl ~t •• 11., ll••llh tc•1Jt1 h\ Hun I o•f1 I 1ti1 I 14,1,1• I , h ' 1,\,1 tto.:·tt AUTOMOTIVE \11 tUlll • •rt ""' , .. ·' ••••• ...,:If , .. t• It .01 II ti ,,.,.•, I \\h•~ flt! I '"lfll ""'lo, "'" " •'' kltl! \I I"' l 1 II kit AUTOS IMPORHD · 'II ,, ,, ' lt\11\ I If • l•tl 11 '"'" 1.t11 •• II ... II · .1. s "' .l.1,Hhlf ~ ·'•"'" '"''"''•lff(htn1 ·-··" ... L••h.t'-t.t..,11 .. M1 ... -.ec. M·"'"''' l~1t1 M1t.1ult>t•l1t MIO 11,.1 ...... •10. llJtN .. , , ! ,,,. '" 111• ~,,, Wt.' I Hll'I Vlll WIN Wl.'..l Yl:f\ 81J' iltn 11141 tlO tltU wtH .... 91)1 VI)~ UYSllE PUCE IAYFROIT Spectacular bayfron l dplx 2 br, 2 ba up. :l br. 2 ba d n . 2 boat spaces. Reduced-$1,500,000. PElllSIU IOME OCUIFROIT Ot-ean & jetty v iew s. Marine room. 4 bdrm. 3 balh. 3700 sq. ft. 4 car park.mg. $1,385,000 FAIRIAllS UICH HILLTOP New 4 br, 4111 ba, custom French Normandy Estate 1.2 prime acre h1Utop Now $995,000 COROIADO CAYS llYFROIT Coronado lsland cust bayfro11t lot. 85' boo t dl'<:k. Plans avail N ow $370.000 w/trade WALKER&LEE Real Estate ~. Coiillii..--~1024 2 Br. 2 Ba. 2 Story Condo 100/o ·down Now orily $103.000. Dock side R.E 640-8208 HUT FAllLY Mllll 5 BR • deo. hreptadlii~I garaue Needs some !ouch up Owner t•ans- lerred $123.500 Rer loCar•to Rltr. 18 10 Newport ~I. CM 141-7721 ARRIWllUD HOME 4Br 2Pa. 60x 120 IOI, •I· Near new 4 ·bdrm, 4 beth, lak e View. 3500 sq teched gar. RV pting, Ct $440,000. WW trade !or a local property S9e.500 call 646-8386 ULNA CIYES Tradtttonal Bay front 3 Br. 3 Ba, remodeled 2,000 sq. fl. furnished & boat. $600,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 8oy\•d•· 01 "" ,., B bl'.> blbl : OPEN HOUSE REALTY / ~ .. , / Dalebout Boy&Beoch, Real Estate AUit. Uftf( t •CEllfNCf &H+iCC !Uf lllVEllSln PARI Greet for the growing tam - 11 y. Four spacious bedrooms Fealures In- clude atrium, patio. llre- plt and leneed yard Backs up to greenbelt • JUST REDUCED S6000 NOW $239,000. 131-1300 4Br 2ba eul·d~sac V.A terms. S 11'.900 Bk• 9&3-8377 UITSllf • Wl91 3 Bdrm. compl. remodel Close lo shopel&tehls $129.900. Ag1. 646-3627 UITSllE -Wiii 3 Bdrm, eo111pt. remodel Close 10 shopsl &achls S 129,900. Agl. 646-3627 PRESTlllOIS E'slde cul de sac. across lrom country club Luxury accommodations. 2Br • den condo. 2'"' ba, pv1 patio. ftplc. w11t ber, mle<o. also apa, pool. BBQ en1enalnmen1 area Outstanding Value at $117,900. 760-1515 Broker SC Plaza condo 2Br 1 •1, ba Jusl No 1n Santa Ana 5-10'~ dn. $87.500 Discount pis or price 556-16261775-2580 ....;-.---•-IDH1 Poiat I I IRYllE ltlUCE OCEAN VIEW Townhouse. BETTY BURK.ART hap- ptly sennng Your ~al Est.ate needs for 12 years in the Coeta Mesa. New - port area S he is alwayw ready to help you with your properly. 645-9161 ........... Y'EW t"-a-R 3br 2'~ba 1750 sq It + n 11¥1115 S 156 500 Xlnl l1nanclng a rar1ty over .,., ecre nr owner 714-240-3102 N e w por t Center . bay1ron1s & ell shopping. H•at. lt1ell 1040 yet this home Is unus11al --------- with a fantastic view ol l1a• lwao• Ro,., larid. sea & fights nr the 2 Bdrm. 1 story condo yacht elubs. Completely $82.500 remod 4br. 3•.o, ba home l l•r•. 1111,000 lor 1599.000 lee Call tor on cul de sac. 3 balhs. 3 FllllD llllL showing. car garage 11._..1 IDOi oenAIE _ e~R 963-8377 • Plan C". Ne-er -pool and ., .. , tt 1221 000 IU. II PHI a UH Clubhouse. Well decor-n • r &led. Air conditioned and " "doll house" w th pride Lovely 4 br. 2 ba, lrplc oreet starter. Ovt ol aree 01 ownership & warmth S 129.500 Msg 962·0268 anxloua owner needs Jvst ''I blk to cx:ean TakeoVer S70K 8''t'~ VA • orrer Ask for Marilyn Adorable 2 bdrm ' loll LOAN 4 b1. 2 Story, 1''> ml Bulkley 644-7020 garage 1 parking lor 3 to beach Marcelle agt LIMO IUL HTATI cars Great tor rentols or 840-2678 or 968-4'33 sum m er house tlYllE 111,000 831-1400 Greet condo tor young -\\ \I I HI Ht!'\ 1 couple or single pe<son. 110 M1 ... ""'· Loc111ed In Ora099tree REAL ESTl<T this 1 Bdrm has a loll 131·1400 sullable lor den or otttce. ••••••••••I Hurry on Ihle onal 631-1310 --.. -UL-IU--m-=--- TR\DITIO\ \I ~I .\I I 't And a gr•tt lociatlon atiould put thla propetly high on your lilt of mu11 -· Single level 4 Bdrm 2 ea on •very large !Ct. In lmat 1044 FlllTISTIC Waldorf MO<lel In Tur11t Rock Vista. 4 Bdrm, 2'.'i be In TOP CONOITION. Cenl AtC, decorated In ear thtones. Bacl\s to gorgeo 111 graen i,elt 1288,500. J>ftHhl f """'•w••1• ... ,, ... ·~' It• n •uh ti)) VJ ~7 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil •l~O Vitti tt83 Viti) Vlft? • 'I• mllllon dollar neigh- borhood. Rock bottom price S 176,eoo. 751-3191 ~isor ·Realty 651·1177 Uoll• Huvt• ftuY•I :-. • ._.11 ~"' ... '" t l\t.W fltV'fHf•fl \0011 • IKI '' \1 ''"" ~". AUTOS. DOMESTIC AMI l hlH .. 1 ... 1111 .• \ht \'.U .. t '"''".,., ••••• t .. ,. lm .. ,.,.1 ''"' .. ~ h\H•Uf\ t Hit-.1•• .. ~h t'l~ttw1111h •·u1m.-~ ..... , ... ~ llUT llY1 C: SElECT Wall tocated 2 bdrma. a~ ... PROPERTIES 1>9th Co.ta Mtaa oondO -------------• =zcu:W~ri':.:r'l IDMllll,lll oar g.,. lot• of mr1 0CMn lllew duplex, upper itorage Wood burning unit, 3 Bdr 2 ea. iowerl.;••iiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;; flrtpla'e• and bltln unit 2 9dr 2 Ba Both kllctlan Ouallfled buyer have 11r~ac" Ind .,. e For Id •ctinn cian!'l'1~1nwtthJUS11°'4 yHrl Old. Large II· ft ft Mt Gown Full prtot ta only eumable 1081'19. Now Hk· Cal a s1oe.Ooo., 1ng 13os.ooo. 631.1310 CJ 14'61l·4400 Daly Plot lllJI UWlll lftVIS()R I H\Dt TIO\ \I Ill \I I \ HARIOR nu- 642 ·5671 f -- ' , J ) •. f. -- IN Orange Coast DAILY flLOT/Wednesday, Oct. 26. 1983 ........ ,.........,. ....... ___ 1 Ian•• P11r 1350 lta111Uafuall~t4 Atartant1 fual"t1 Atut ... tl, UaJ. AprtPal1, Uaf. otffct lnta11 Hl4 I Mt 11 Ttrt 2232 1111. ltac~ 1140 C..ta •na 27U lhr!!rt ltacti l'llt 11 ... T IUOI • ........... U .... YIHl---n .......... ,;;;j I 11n1 HOME FOR RENT YOUR OWll PENTRtOOE COVE. 2 Br 2 NO FEE Apt ' COndo ren-DIOITIYI MITI 645-t812 648-9603 Super elghtplell, N th with El Toro 4 Bdrm $825 B, co N O O near tals villa Refltall lfflOll 3 Bdrm. 2'1\ ba. double Fenced yard 4 garage COUNTRY Baker/Brletot, lnctda 875-49 12 Broker BELOW MARKET RATES HOIOSCOPE llt O&IYH IY .... garage with garage door Kida & pets welcome waaher/dryar. relrige. GOOD SELECTION 11.,,. lhctd rate 30 yeers. opener $700,000, , as· 863-0755 Agent, no tee EST•TE micro-wave, elec gar v E R s A I L L E s 7141760-8070 BY SIDNEY OMARA Monaco wlthGCvl-.14 sume llnanclng 12,..~•· • door opnr. trplc , PENTHOUSE2Br.2 ba. 1617Westclllf,N.B.27810 Rue Vlllart. Open wknde. Terrific Investment a ...... ,~ 2240 Beautltul & park like dahwshr, patio. 9111 & oce•nvlew, turnl<ey llY· 1365 sq. It. Sullable tor Thursday, October !7 640-1538 S795,000. • wllh terraced pool water paid. No pets tno. Sec. comm pool, spa medical or dental. Agenl. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Changes occur a t home baae-110-1100 I + 10111 HH * P1111ate Patios please. $850. Agt, no lee. etc $890/mo Bonnie 541-5032 111 IAIY• Fully equipped kttch brktst •Covered Patios 863-0755 Barrington agt, 87S-.6000 -=---=--------one who was not talking becomes responsive, affectionate. Thlt "'8Qenl remOdeled 4 bar. custom decor. large •SpactousApts Super 1er, enct gar, no or 644--0462 2 Oetuu Offices , Security improves -long-distance call aid.a in clarifvl...n plans. ~IA (le Plen IV Bt<*i d •OI 1 At Furnished, Secretarial J""e :!,"'on a eu~uc ,0: ~~~v!~~ ·, o;:~1.:~~-*w~1~?in-c~sets r.~~ ~~r1g42~5~~ange. S1111 Aaa 7 0 area. patio deck, ocean Restrictions are removed, needed backing is received. Gemini C9tlon o,,.,. ,,.. very• ltylee.537-5027 •Home-llkekllchens p la 2721_ 2Br c ondo. 11.>\ea, 2 car v1-Fashtonlstandlfee. playssi~'ficantrole. A 1 bl L 1 H 11 1 & D I I Contact Bruoe Charles TA US (A ril 2n M 20) M •tt · ed ,__, fl,_i of appolntmenll. 4 Br 2 Ba, pOOI, trplc. near oc" o un ng on 181 t attached garage, pat o, 759--0700 p . v-ay : essage or gJ. rece1v uvln twge vttw lot only ateplo Ti n . 1590 Goldenwest Col~ F"rwys IOWYllW pool & spa areas S960 relative who is ln midst of journey. HighligM diplomacy, from a pattt. Welt pficedl at anai $875/mo 968-0547 or UTILITIES FREE Only 10 mlunU1M from mo. 549"9213 wkdya. Baylront. Ollloet, patios. r · bas' al actual · tal Im rtantd · at $760,000. Danny Bibb• Tlme share 2 wks. dls--aa parking, Janitor lat ec::ogruze IC v ues, or sennmen · po omesuc &«-e200 count s 1000. 1ocat1on. 241-9489 1 Bdrm From $585 Laguna, your own private S111tl ltac~ u 673· 1003 adjustment takes place, works to your advantage. Libra plays ~Macnab· Irv me •UYIMIEI• lmmac. 3 br. 3 ba corner home on extra large lot. $25.000 under appraisal. 2569 CIRCLE DRIVE (805)969-28751646-6325 -LA QUINTA HERMOSA ocean view from Dana Del Mar. CA 495-9637 HOME FOR RENT t. Point's most seoluded IBR $550 mo + S250 sec. Eastside Costa Mesa key role. Huntington Beach 3 Bdrm West or Baacn. 3 bl s scenic blull like newt 2 Steps 10 sands, fresh GEMINI (M 2 J y IE EJCC"'••I• 160G & 90 tholEdlnger 1ox10x24. $85 180 E. ay l· une20): oulocatelostarticle,termsare • • · • $775 Pencedyard gar-u · Br with de;1• J(tra large paint, new carpet. 16466 age Kids & pets wet 9•7 1• .. 1 "4th St (213) 592 2725 2 lst. 646·4262 defined and income potential increases. Judgme.nt, intuition are Peninsula Pt-custom 2-sty · • ,. • ,.,. prl11ate patio. $825/mo. ' · • Cape Cod. bulll 1981. coma. 863-0755 Ageni. --OP7'l. Celt Mon-Fri. 9 .5 28R s695, 5.,.2.,,.50.,..-5-e-c. Fur11tshed olllce35o sqtt on target -you will be at right place at "special" moment. quality throughout 1531 no lee. Llt•H ltac~ 26b 6 4 3 • O 2 1 2 Wk n d s Steps to sands. new Newport Bllld C M. toe nr Scorpio, Libra, Taurus persons figure prominently. Separate E Ocean $395.000 Sale Lovely 4 br:" 2 be, frPlt. 1 er trailer at Treasure 661-6441 carpet. ~ara~e 18466 freeways, >Cira parking, fact from fantasy. N $450 9 25 avail Nov $450. 642·8946 or trade tor income prop fenced yard, dble gar r Island. ocean 111ew. E·l T-trt 2732 24th St ( 13) 2-27 CANCER (June 2l-July 22).· Make thlS' a power play day'. or beacn lh<er 65 t-1112 park & take $825 mo. 213-433-99l}1 2 llWNIT IDOi Ownr/agt Reis Lve msg, 962-0286 N 1 I k 2669 Serrano Woods 2 Br. t•4 Rtt•• 1.ooo· 2nd llr. quiet street. Spotlight on individuality, unique talents, intensified rela- WILL E"CH"N~ o -,--t o on ••rr HC B11 Condo, dsnwshr. BACK BAY, NB. S200lncl nicely tndscpd bldg 011 tionship and activities which promote business or career. Past " .., cean ron con ° OCEANFAONT-wntr class pallo, slngle garage 1 uuts Young woman. non/ $450.000 6 yr otd sand 2 Br. hide-a-way in stree1 parking. garage experience can be utiliz.ed in manner which leads to promotion, C luxury security bldg. A exec. qu1e1. turn, clean child, no pets $700 plus smoker 646-5559 avail. 645•4800 Vicky SUYllW·SIH,000 Pasadena ustom nome pool, sauna s1ooimo. s1000-St100 6_75-4688_ S500 sec dep 863--0755 --645•3323 dys. production, additional funds. Bar Harbor-Must sacrifice ~~,;:"]~ar;g~~ 0'o1,~s~;! 1s1.59a9 OCEAN VIEW Agent,"_:>'~-6i[~,1~tfe~~~~fisht:i~ts~: LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22): C.Ontacts are renewed with wllrg lO¥.% 181· For County location. 1 s 1. h 2 Br· Total Lux4ryf Haat. ltlC~ 2740 546-5522 individuals who aided in past. Reach beyond current expecta-detalls 640·8227 (2131 798•9005 S1eps to sano 1y11s L s 1500 A 1 63 1 4960 HWNIT 1001 2~bonus room. Chets 58 9 • 2 Story 28R 1'\BA. 2 BEAUT MS-TR BR NU Oltlces. near City Hall. lions -you're due to obtain story behind story. Visit one llY Tiii WEHEll k1tch super plush decor Ocean View 2 Br. 2 ba on blocks from beach. gar-FURN w I e A . N. B . 268-1050 sq 11. 85¢ sq 11, <.'Oniined to home, hospital. Secret is revealed, you feel more ... IN BAYCAEST FROM 8tlltl faraitilH all ullls PAID 5395,.550 greenbelt. Tennis, spa. age. patio $600 mo., no $350 l $3!> utlls 720-0375 utilities & fanltorlal Incl. secure as result. Aries plays important role. OWNER. 4 br, 3 ba. lam· I t lta•L Zl69 security tee. 537-6027 pool S 1300/mo 675-6488 pets 645-1682 -c ••.In 3 br, 2 ba home. LllO a•&Ln uy room. olflce. pool. l!J!I ... ------.... 5 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You could fall madly in love! $320.000. Open Sat/Sun Winier On Seuhore. 1 •-·· 1 2244 AtarlaHll, Oaf. SEAWlllD Near OCC. All prlvllegt». 171-7100 Lunar, numerical cycles highlight "sentimental journey," You 11·6. 1924 Holiday Ad. Bdrm, den. yard. utll Incl. u•I• 1-1 .. _ · YIL• U!E $250/mo 549-3674 1~~~~~~~~~ Owner/egt 955-0809 $500/mo. 213 446-1639 2104 Bdrms $725.$1360 I-~ 2707 ..... Furnished room nr sci -get to heart of matters, relationship proves stimulating and Peaa111l1 New 1 & 2 Bdrm lullury Ptaza. le male pref OC AIRPORT AREA creative juices flow. Stress independence, new starts, courage of .IASllllE OIEEI a ..... 01larailkt4 1Br ·~ blk to bay • ..., blk tb apts In 14 plans 1 Bdrm $250/mo 556-1737 New corner ott~ bldg convictions and willingness to pioneer a project. REDUCED to $279 000 ~i · · trom $565. 2 Bdrm from (90% leased) Wiii build to LIBRA Se 23-0c 22 F 11 hro h t · 2Br + den, assu,,.;able Gfatrll 2202 50r bch S450 mo 650•2493 $660 Townhouse from Newpor1 walk IO b each, suit Up to 1000 aq It. ( pt. t. ): 0 OW t ug on irst 838¥·1"'"83108an. 640-6188, 2 Br. Penn. s7001yrly ealty CortH •el 11111 2722 $725 • poolF, tennis. pool. face . tennis. furn $.90 NNN Corner Redhill impr~ions; you are on right track, superior will fl.ash green .., · l•••trlWltftr 2 Br 1 Ba 5650 avl now water1alls.ponds.Gaslor or unlurn .. avail now &Bristo~~ lightforuniqueproject.Youarebelngpulledintwodirect.ions- 6511177 cooking & heating paid 548-4260 or 1·993 .. &888 0111 1 1 h f · · d ds famill' d ltltfalt .. see Sat 2:00-4;00 only f'rom San Diego Frwy ca spaoes or ee.M . c oose course away rom mt.rigue an towar ar groun , Ull ISU .IAOllS HAL n 11~~0P~~if~~~~~~~: no pet drive North on Beach 10 w~1EAU1H1 •OTELalt ~'::nt~';enn9!.~~la ~~~ including family reunion. . . '-Corner of Via Lido Nord & I McFadden and west on ~ yren as now av · A/C. ground llr. 1055 El SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Diverstfy, sha~e off lethargy, Mentone. Shows beaull· PllP IUlllE•E T 2 Br 2 Ba Opl~. bay view, McFadden to SEAWIND 115.50/wk & up Color tin f . . F · ased ·al · · fully & lettures 3 bed· 714/171-1171 -IKHELM*DNW new paint, crpt, drapes. v 1 L L A G E TV.Phoneslnroom.2274 Camino Or, Costa Mesa. open eso communlcaUon. ocusonmcre SOCl acllv1ty. rooms. 2 baths, family ..vw. Allall now. s 1100/mo. (714)893-5198 Newporl Blvd CM. 3 Blks E. of Fairview & possible journey and renewed faith in your own potential. rrn.Frenchdoorsopento CtrtH ••I Mar 222 WOODBRIDGE Lg •8, lease Scott 720-l105 646-7445 Adams. G · · S · · •~ 1 y 'U lovely brick patio, large CHARMING 28r. 29,, gar-2,.,Ba. lam rm, lrpic: Spacious quiet 2 Br $515, _ 754-1040, Mr Tracy erruru, ag1ttarius persons p ... y paramount roes. ou deck otl muter bed· $95 Been.so ol hwy Wet bar. 2 Br Twnhse $585 Walk SU I Ill LtHE Prime toe OCAtrport. become more aware of body image. room. $470.000. age. grdnr O mo patios ollerhang, nicety no kit. Quiet person only to beach 960-8656 $90 wk up. Cable color TV Ne address. 1800.,.. 11 SA GITT ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Do some research in U ... UL" 644-2311, 6-40-7085 lnOscpd, pool, lake. prlv 5350 incl utll 673 3415 3026 w c ast Hwy ..., s1200 mo 640-1327, • L1~1 ltae• 27tl NEWPOAT0B .. ·CH Make oller 752-0855 connection w ith one who makes financial claims. Dig deep. don't 17".JHO Charming 2 Br -loll, i•;, 559-6188, olc 720··6897 C I M 2724 ""' d b lls bel • Ba. pvt patio & yard. ti I Ill 2Br ba. den w/lrptc. sep. -• $340/up, crpts/drps, sign papers which woul permit you to pay i on.ging to new t y c er pated LllHI lli••l 2252 1 Br 1 Ba roomy, n-dining rm & sep. break· XLNT nr Hoag. Pvt enlr & ate, rstrms. 1730 t Beach someone else Protect your own interests read small print and iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml $950/mo 833 8 t62 - -p t d p r eah last nook. Sino'-gar lnci. Ba N·smok/no kite $300 Blvd H B. 842-2834 . . · • • 2 br. 2 be condo. Goii c ar e • " es. r s 1200/mo, 2 bl .. ks 10 bch. 646-t035. 645-9095 insist on evidence, not hearsay. ---------paint 382 Victoria. btwn PAllUlllO YllW WATERFRONT 4B's :gg course vJew at West 9 Harbor& N-pon $425 494-3023 Bttelt,.ltttll "TIE" CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Lunar emphasis on public S:ar:::g-:1~~~1 ~~~ :~~ ~~,:~ ,:O~aJ~;-~~132 ~:sh:'.11~ry~~~'j·c:r8~~~: 851-9523 2 Br apt. near beach. utll LAMNA BEACH Nw;:.~~rUTIVEi~ri~~470 relati?ns, possible par~ership, legal affairs and marital.s.tatus. prestigious Dover Shores Nr new 2Br 2ba, 2 car gar 1st class! $800. 499-2989 pd $700/mo. No pets. MOTOR INN' ---Spotligh t also on heightened sense of perception, ability to home. Complete privacy Balcony Lease $850/mo. N It ~ 2269 1Br unlurn. S475 mo -499-2690 Wkly rates $105 & up Ctaatrcial articulate views. Important changes and special relationship. with beaullfully manl· 551•4693 111 7pm. ••rrt IC dep Newfy decorated. L II I 2752 Delly/Wkly/Monthy ltatala 2911 S . . f ' · 1 cured grounds. Ell· 2 bd condo, \(I. ba. pool. stove & relrlg, ott street IL181 t•• Kllch's avail Color TV, agittanan igures pronunent Y · pensive open floor plan Ctatl Mna 224 trptc, dl w. fst. ts.st & dep parking. Quiet neigh-NEW OCEA"R Vu Condo heated pool & steps to By Owner. 2856 sq ft. AQUARIUS (J an. 20-Feb. 18): Moderate pace is necessary for gracious llvfng and 3 bd. 2 be. w/tmlY rm. $695 213-596-1498 borhood No pets To see 3Br 2ba. frpt, pool. steps ocean 985 N Coast Hwy. Costa Mesa shopping ctr. -focus on employment, pets, health and change of diet to entertaining 4 large S 00 ------call 645-9604 bcn $950/mo 551-0585 Laguna Beach. 494-5294 $1100/mo 731· 1616 f . h . . al eeds Famil be talks f 'bl Bdrms each. with bath. Comp Aeturb 11 . No 3brl 2'J'Jba condo In Nwpt con orm wit nut.rt lion n y mem r o possi e ' ,·dll di Pets, Water and Gatd Hgts S1350/moLeaseor HLFOltlSEotlH Motetrmsto1rentby wk,Olllce with showroom h f .d Be .ti di 1 ti d d mak orma n ng an llge turn 545 36 27 or 1 / 1 851 9020 2 bd apt, dwnstrs. lncd $95-up w/k1tchenette 1200 sq It located on c ange 0 rest ence. recep ve, P oma c an ° e lamlty room An excellent 6 2 873 • ease op ion • d Upper end unit. 3BA. lrg busy street, corner or intelligent concession. value Including land 4 .4__ ---3 Br 2 Ba pool nome.1542 yrd enclose gar poretl. w/d, relrig etc avall 675-8740 P & W 7 894 CE h Wha be " 142 1200 3 BA. 2 BA, IMMAC, v1v1an Ln. $1000/mo $500/mo 754-0986 Aedec . new carpets. new V1ulita wom~~tn S11 "'c M . pl JdS " Sul(Fdedb.19-lMa:c 20): . tar_petJ.ars~ F.ma ~=tic • rrptc, dbl gar. small yd. Anne M cCastend 2 Br 111 ea new p11nt 4 drapes, 2 ca1 wtopener, I 2_7 $SOOt mo. Call 645~811 inter u e co eve opmtoasenousre ... ons1up. p on $925/mo Agt 759-1341 631-1266 carpet, patio. garage. No sott water paid No Pets. Ital• 1 -biwn 8:30AM to 1 ·30PM romance, variety, specuJatlon, charisma and element of luck A PETE BARRE Tf ORAMA TIC 3br -2'hba nr l&fflllT IHI pets s550tmo 548' 1377 5875 mo. <7141 110• 1950 Palm Sprlnoa . Beaut. Apt, Ottlce/ShoplStore apace which could enable you to be a contest winner. Another Pi.aces bch J<lnt area S975. 2 Bf 1 Ba. Apt encisd gar-l~rt hack 2711 Holt!, 3 nltes for a price tl 64e-1035 0f1MIS-9095 FOR LEASE• age. crpts, drape•-ot 2 Sat g uarn. 300sql1ormore.reetC. figuresprorninen y. 6Br, 8Br, 6000 aq ti $S50/mo. 241•9806 1 r, ik to OQMn, pool, 619·327-4000 Meaa C-2. 548-7249 •----------+----------+--------- --------· ~p~~.~~.t. ~~c~.:· ~a~~: :;~ rs~-~o'fs•1 s~;.5535 2 Br. 2 full ba. nice. quiet. ~~-5~~11 • 375 tmo ....... •• l .. 111rlal PtlltUlt 3012 1•11 Waatt4 SIM ltlt ...... HOO dswhwsr $525 NO encl gar. 622 Hamilton. Sbrt 2tOI lutala 2t20 EICOITS/IOISLI Account R9Celvabte & Companion & II hselteep- . REALTY Penln'4Jla Pt-cuttom 2-sty PETS. 329 Untverslty Dr Big Canyon townhome, 3 548-0477, Aon • B " B h W/D 1260.U46 .,, A W Irvine O t II ONLY 835 199 Payroll Clerk, property Ing. llve out Cape Cod. bullt 1981. 548-0648 eves blwn Br 2.,.., Ba, S1500t mo 26 .. r " a OUM, • ,.... • u ca • mgmt Must be able to 548-0270 quallly thruout. 1531 e. 7-8PM Canyon Island. 640-5274 k1tch. etc $2SO/mo ~ area. lnclds ottices. from EXOTIC DANCERS M/F uae IBM Plll'aonal Com- Ooean S395.000. Sate or ---Dover snores VI-Hm 2Br apt, 2195 Miner st.. UNT Y CLUB LIVING $20 d~p 646-8386 _!504/mo. 851-8928 __ Fof Bachelor(ette) Par11M puter. Send resume toAd Coolc B-1est. pit. Pit en· trade IOI lnc,ome prop or N-delu11a Condo. 3 bd, 3 3500 sll, S brs. Poollspa. New cpts, drps, paint IN NEWPORT BEACH Balboa Island 2Br, female, 2500Sq11 warehouse lnctt +stripper grams 826-494) ir59. P.O. Boll 1560. vlComalt 3··a5t. r.:.·6e;r{~"'-b .. ch fl•er. 87~. ba. Belcony, patio, L.rge 3 car oar. $2500t mo. 1 yr Oshwhr. stove & retrtg. Singles 1 & 2 Bdrm Apan-10 share no pets 5395 2 oll & lg mezzanine Costa Meea, 92627 ~ 651-1112 Ownr/Agt lrptc etc ag1 673-5354 lse, 673•7499 No pats $650 mo . ., sec ments & Townhoutes mo 673••8293. 675•2209 3042 Enterprise. C.M. et UITIO IAIOllS A c c 0 u n 1 s R e • Ml .... 11, lta" 1100 NEWPORT HGTS 3Br. --dep To see call 645-9604 trom $660. (Ask about --Pautanno btwn Bristo! & Bachelor/BachelOfette eel able/Payable/Payroll E1Cper1enced. Convales-.., 2,.,81• ram rm. lrplc. Harbor View 2 Br 2 Ba designer lurnlahe<I unlls). Exec SC>lll level condo. 3br 55 Fwy 54¢ sq 11 NNN Otltce & Birthday PanlM v oent Hospltal, Npt !kh •• -••• p••• bttns $880 mo. 548-0397 Den. Format Din Am, On Jambor .. Ad at 3ba. tennis. pOOI, nr bch 957 ·273 1 546-8g85 TllE I •Sf Illa•• ci•rk lor smt OOM!ructlon Full Time retlel •hllt ~ _. lrplc, commty pool NEW 2 br downstalrs. garage. San Joaquin Hiiis Ad. S395 lse opt av 953-9600 ..,. """ company. Min. 5 yrs. 3 Beautiful 2••60 Home. Lg llWIPAOlllS CARPETS. Avail Nov Vlc1or1a/Canyo n. No IU-ltoo ext 208 or 857·4063 eve 2.660 sq 11. 3975 Bl~h. 738-8538, 55&·8538 dy1 pr n . Some MC· XLNT benefits. 642-80« llltchen. & lllllng rm, din llHll I lst.Sl2SO/mo. dogs 5530.631-6812 NB $1330 M1A zoning. H nd 2~ old•"'"' retarl1I duties. Salary Cook ellperlenced for rm, lemlly rm. 2Br .. Ollll-4 • BYOWNER 873-3251 * 2 Br 1 Ba. pv1 patio, e. 3 Br. 2 ba, beach 2 blks. Fem.toshrnew2br,3ba, Agent ~1-5032 a aome .. yr _,..,a negottable. C •ll br•klut luncn & din· ~:~~~tarro,~tC:.!rs: 2~0::\~. 2N:.:;, ,f:~i~: Lg 2Br, 2v1ea. ocn view, 2 gar. O/W, lndry rm, $500. Ir pie. ~ar No pe1s Av all ~a~.tl~~i~~-1~ ~SM. $350 RENT MG 600 sq/It. =~~~;~o :;C: 831-7191. Atldor Cheryl. ner. Apply In peraoo or Agt. $40-5937 11250/mo. 831•1054 car garage. 1860 mo. 548-9084. 540-5446 Nov. S 75. yrly. 645-1682 S2601mo. 2944 Randolph new horizons. Picture actreaaee cell P1t10 Cele. 1900 W •-~-..___ tJ•• Nov. lat.Shrplrg • Br2 Ba 557-6689 alt &PM 11tSmall older c·lean 1 Br 3Br $850 mo. 2Br S725 Fun. resp F 20-25 wanted No 5, CM. 876-5116 yourMlf with the atten-mlll&Jll Balboa Blvd, NB ._ .... ., -.. S 5 mo Sleps to the bch, to shr 2 br, 2 be •Pt In •--tlon, fMltnga Md deYo-a--•i 873-1401 -;;;:=iiiii=iiiii:::::::;1 Din Am & Fam Rm, quiet Lrg 5 Br Harbor View, nu ~lon~tso~~g.:.275~~~8~~ ltplc, 111-898•2801 N.B $300. Toni 875·0230 na11t1ac1a11t1 tlon of a aenetttw, funny, ••-COOf< & HOUSE MGR • cut-de-1ao, trg yd •PpfiallC)es, cpta. paint ,.... LAGUNA BEACH 20r 2ba TllllLETOWIS ~t unpredictable 8 It, F•Pllll for small family board & Ulll llAL w/grdflr · pool prlvl non S 1100/mo. 1938 Port llW I llH... 795imo 3 Br. 2 Ba. wlprl entr & ba canyon 160 Iba blue eyed toftle. FAITUY SUYllE care. C.M. 548-0795 TRIPLEX ... EAS'T COSTA smoker, ohltdren ok Ctarld&e. 494•1840• Em· Totally remodeled 3 Br, .ue:r unit, garage. w/d lliew, woodsy 111ea. prof Get solutions to all 50 Attrecttw, &Ingle white Must be creetl,,. end tm-1--------- M ES A •. RE OU CEO S9SO/mo. ~6-2336 er aid ay Ally 1•~ Ba townhouH apta. h ·up, 3 blocks 10 beach, decor $475 497-5331 puzzles from prelllou• temete need only re-aglnatl ..... Up to S100 a •lllT 1111111. S 100,000 .. E11tra deep Slngtes dellghtl 2• huge Nf Lido shops & beach, 2 DIW. patios. klde OK, no 111 bit-Ins. contat winner Send S5. l90fld. 998-4728 aft 5pm day commtuton pon· lot, 50ll200'. One 2 bdrm bonus room large mod· Br, lam rm. nice patio, pets $695/mo For rental 208 Lugonle Mature rmmt ''" lux •Pt nr • SASE 10 PWP-2, 3857 Aidt Ible. 954-8937. Ive mag Loan. fin8flC8, bank or nouM wlth den, nrec>lece. em kit-.. brklat nook cus-dbl gar w/workroom & ap 11 ti 845 "'"•8 TIL ... t 1•2-1101 SC Pit, pool. l•c. rec rm Blreh St STA 434 N-· S 0 8\lto dealer experience. & t d "'' P ca on -~ $240 ~ 432-8797 Mark """Beacn Ca 92860 HOLIDAY SINGLE EXP A8SIST.t.NT MANAGER Pleasant ~Ing con- :: 1 lr~~;,,v•~~1r!1 ..1t~ ~LY°:8:,~ $'~ us'!ir~ ~~'li I $~~0/~~~ h :l~o $425 1 Br. relrlge, no pell, BEACH VEA ALY dh• 2 Br 2 MIF rmmte nMded for lrg .,...., • • DI s n e Y tan d Hot• I sett-atorege, wknd• only. dl1ton1. Newpon Beacn peUot. Rents are low. fee. 637-5027 213·339·93839·5wkdys. pello. 731-C 18th. St Ba, trplc,stepHobeach. 3 bd houM on Ball•le. I.oat Ftaa• 1t I 2 5. 2 7 , A I . reqa working wi the pyb-area R.C Werner PreHnt Gt S15.600 673--7787 .~;~~20~~ $790/mo LOGlled Ger S283/mo. Found· 2 keys on plain tend t E,. h I b I t . lie 4 II paper worll. Call 1 Priced 10 sett at SomerMt City Home On the Penlnsuta; 3 bdrm, llTAIT l•I 673•3711, 213-449_1755 ring. Magnolia & Hell, on 213/986-9255 957-8191 MOfn• only. lll-7111 $179,000. EXCELLENT Baker/Bear, beaut. 3 br, $1~213395th St. Yearly 552 .. 1 1 2 B l B I NEWPORT HEIGHTS Monday. 848·8013 PHONE FANTASY Bab""'\tlll' 3-4 days per ...... -....,,..-.,..--.,.----.t.SSUMABLE FINANCE. 2'h Da, 2 yrs Old. $900 Buu/mo. 6 0·7281 " mo. r 1· poo • Brand new 2 master suit· MIF to shr 2 Br 1 Ba 25 Ladlet to shate your ~k my home 8 mo DELIVERY MAN: Ask 'lor Stephanie 642-8663: •v• 544·9658 PENINSULA. 2 br. 2 be, laundry room, close to "· each with lull bath & h 9 u • • • d e c k . Fantastesl 828-7182 old g' lrl grandmotherly. TV & Appllances. FIT, Bernardy, W/lide 3 bdrm. VACANT. n-paint Inside 4 0111, 1 •hopping. 149 E. Bay St. mirrored Wlfdrobea, Leg Bch.$325..-'It ulll. 642 9386 benefit•. 811ab. Co. Oavta Home 645-7050 Walk to •hopping. Crpts. blk from ocnn & bay. TIL •111t. 1•2· 1101 c;eramlc Ille kitchen. brick 491-2967 el1• 7PM Mike. fQUND ADS TrHtl l type. • · Brown411E.17th St. CM Ult IW.n lge !enc.cl y•rd $750 $850·$875 mo 2 br. 2 ba. $675. 2 story, Z.Br. Eteoe11t lrplc, large sundeck. MIF to shr 4 br, 2 be house SPF Travel pre>Ydty an-Babylitter, m1ture woman OemonatrelOfl IJl-71tt mo 955-0177 2 blks from oc.an. S 1000 twohrne. Go9d location. laundry nk up.S800 No on the beach In N B.1300 IRE fREE nounoes the opening ol for 1 c:hlld on OCC4Slonal FUii J mo. BIG CANYON· 3 br, 2 Near new. Pell& children 1>819 769·9194 mo• utlls 673-733" n their Orange County weellenda. REF's. No. 01 ~~~~~~~~~The fastest draw 1n the ba, $1500. Fergueon & Ok Agt 645•9850 11111_/_ITOLIFF CaH·. branch office at 3545 Laguna. 497-5518 ••• e ·Im We11 . a Dally Piiot HatinReatEst 642-1183 _ -Y5ft "5 Newport Bch Penthouse. Harbor Blvd, Co•I• Bet>yaltterneeded. -CtMllfled Ads 642-5678 Clutllle<I Ad 642·5678 Bac;hetor apt. S350/mo.1n-2 Br. 1 Ba. nu cpl/drapes, lull ocean view, 2br 2ba, Mesa. 432•9631 PIT f~ .. mo 0 .... vie l9lh Are you adventurous. Split level 4BA. 2',.,BA. In eluding utll. Female pref bit-Ins, pool $695/mo S625 mo 673-7550 142-H71 "' " "' need money and lo,,. to ••Mt ftl lalt~ ltllff fer Salt Eastblufl. Obi gar .• nr 777-3325 645-6646, 9.5 I I "-4114 & Herbor B~. Call travel? SC>Ythem Call· comm pool $12SO mo Mr New Tn Level In Lag Bch, •• aftl '7t before 8prn 846-3117 lornla Marketing com· If!!!!! ltac• llll 1 1t!J!!t ltack IHI Harrls660-t895wkdy Condo, park setting with OCEAN VIEW panoramic view, to shr OILMllllll.TAIT panyl'l.,<>P9fllngtlor 10 ---------•---------SPYGL.t.SSA1dge6Br,vu, ·~1T1~s.~p~~,~~·r~'~·,:.~~~· 2Ag~~~m, s110~31'.~99s~ ~{ft'of,;g;n11noS::~r~~· Found bllocal glanes, Prolttat>letSctenUllcdrep· F/l,~-6973 who are 18 Of'~ to VILLI BALBOA Professionally derorat.ed, furnished & uniumished units are now being otcered for sale. Prices range from $189,000 to $195,000. If interested, please call 645-6459. JRL PROPERTIES 3300 sqlt, $2500 mo. From $700. ISi & S300 979-1850 or 497.4595 vie. Merguerlle & 5th St. Ing. stein care, mak•up, attar 9 am. Jan travel with dynamic 644•49ooor64o.1136 Pnsula x1ra lg 2Br. Coronada1Mar640-7532 nutrttton &wardrob&.We young marketing team sec dep to move In No sundeck, yrly. S745 mo. <Betwn 12•1• alter 9pm) Found F blk & wht train. 545·4 137 Buay Aedlology office In demonstrating • revol- The Bluffs 3 e;:-2•/i' ba, pets 63 t-6 l07 552-0853 or 675-2536 Npt Bch. p rof parson .to Siberian Huslly puppy. Franchise Siie• Avalleble Mlulon Viejo needs lull utlOl'lary new product. 2 story Twnhse, 2 car gar Frpt pool prvl patio OUiiit 29,, 1 be, patio, gar. shr wtsame, 3 Br 2 •ea blue eyes. H.B. 963·9211 IEURE time rront ofllce/m9dlcel Travel LOI Vagaa, Palm S 1200/mo. dshwahr X·LG 1 Br on pool. no pets. 160 l·C home. cornpl furn.. ell Identify tranlCflber. 495-4700 Springs, San Francisco. 650-0504 720-1566 Eastslde $510 557-2841 amenltlea. gar S575 -ICE CRUI and all 11 Weatern Open House dally, 5.7 15th St, Nwpt Hgts. 720·1623 Found Men's Glassu, Career Opportunity In statee. Mull be brlghl 2658 Vista del Oro llSTAIT Ill $600/mo 645-7355 brown plestlc In brown growing color anatyal• and welt groomed. High -..,... 5465/mo 2 Br 1 Ba. pool. -iiiii.iiiiimmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Prol mate will ahr lrvtne case Vic nr Hamilton &1 ITALIUO and coametlc busln .... H rnlnga. Training ••· S.111 Aaa ~HO • tndry rm. close 10 shoos. liil S 2BR 2BA twnhm wlth M/F Meyer CM 642-4073 C Otfl We trllln. 848-9725 penae• paid. Transpor-3 Bd 2 9 POOL be 111 pac1ous single, on~ 35• Gar, w/d, no kids, Ofporate oe tatlon lurnllhed. Start rm. a am22ce72 !."Paple St I. two bedroom apts pet S375 mo 786-382 t Found· Rabbit. VIC1orta & 819-942-0192 lllertlt IMtlltlM lm---'la1.w.., ~~ Inter· home . near W&ll· ..., or _ Federal, Costa Melli Lowpay .. gr .. tMUte.1m-.,..., .. , ""' mlnster/Newhope, lncd TSL Mgmt 642-1803 Resp le 10 1hr furn COM area. 962-9971 T-Slltrt Printing equip· pro,,. wtllte you ha,,. 1 lllew, cell June Pridgen yard & garage. Kids/pets 2 8 2 B Twnhse. S425 + ulll. Nr ment. Like new with aup· lob. Cell In peraon 11 648-3337. 11 • 4. Parents ok. S775. Agt. no, .. Large & 'd a.,~ ocean.Noger.8758041 FOUND;Smor,whtremate pllet. Training avatl. 1451 trvlne Blvd. Tuetln. we4c:omeat lnt1Mft. 863-0755· ~!~~~' 382 ~1~:~i ~:n Room 1n 1rg houte in Nwpt ~og;, .""~0 1~1 '::a ~vdc ~ ,..1,_29_50_·_1_·3_0_5_4_8_6_·7_0_32_ Alie for Dept. 1 Person· Drvatt~ Cleftc wanted. Atlftatlll fanli•t4 Harbor & Newpo(l. S526. Bch, $2$0 rno. 1111ta1t, 645.9032• 950.83ge '!1 .... , nel. (btwn 1pm & 10 prn) Calt 873-i&eo. EllP Pref. ~=======================! -85 t-9523 utll lnct. 642-681 1 T , r. .... Cleric.I Alie fOf Jectc or Cortina. ...... ...(ge--1-=-B-r.-O,,../.,..W-.-,,.c-.,-p-01-t. LOat 10·14 sl1meee Cat.,,... ........... ___ ........ , T U I If Y I I 11 I C A U S H I I' I I WOtt .... , rrrrr1 I I I I I I ~ ............ lfflt ..... 1111 ... Pnia1al1 2M7 Laundry rm. Avell Nov 21. FURNISHCO Or s~:'.',, ~~p~.~ms28s.· UPI~:~.· Vic HVH, Port Manlelgtl.,wlbOw RX§ m ,Of' Tb'a. &rn.mTlll WY ... UNFURNISHCD, .. "' REWARD 760·8139 1 S10,000up. No credit lflUtll We nMd atudenta or Mrect bacfi conv ioc. Ci> 1460, 64S.6626 ALL UTILITIES 111, l•I, dee>. H6·8479 • Loat; BMX/Motorcyclt t checlk. no ptnllty. A~ TEMPORARY llouHwlfH for tooat lullkllc $375yrty,lnclullt, LIOHT 4 AIRY 3 br, 2 bl WE LOOI FOR Helmet,Whlte w/redvlaorl IMld on A buy TO a CHRtSTMASOPl!NfWlS phone wont. No exper. desire quiet, rn/n·lll'\lcr upper, bU lna.j)OOla, aec. PAID. HEALTH 6 blue face gulrd. on 110.000up to Jumbos. tor credit eatd eut~tU-nee .. tin to IUit you. 5:30 873-5804 ouard. Nr SC Plaz1 $875 CLUBS fENNIS YOUll Saturdly Oct t5 •t DenlsonAl80C:. 873-7311 •ton C*lltf Dutltl In· to 8:30 ~ Top ""eA_Y.,.._,F,..,.A""'o --NT'AOE beach. mo. 6-45-3868 SWIMMING. plu~ IRVINE BMX TRACK. tit .. =~-:'1 :~!.~ com(i1=1~2Terry ~h!i':&.2~~11!8: Jg~ Utll• ~~~;a~:~~~~. no '"~~:r~~~;; '"';l:..'!'!'1 .. 1 Ptea:r.-~ir'd. XccoORflNd CliMk: credit . c.d PUtcNaet. Hr4 IOfnelnlr~. yay ..,,t EE......_. t 11811·"188 d 'I 9 l .. .._ :---:-----.,.--,.--Relld«l1111 de\lelopef has WIN train on CAT fw· to.-... C'---' ....._ .. _ vvv~a er ... pets. open Ill Y 0 " " 1 In Orange Co Lost Patrol. i..11 ...,, lmm9dlate opening for a mlnal. Mutt be lvalllble " .=;: r •~ ~1 ..,. "" COZV t BR 50 2 Bdrm !Ba S535·S555 0~1:...··ood Eat1btl1hld f2 yearal Newport Duoet area . ..e. clefk to aMISI In IC· •ettctnd1 .. rr extble -··_, • ...,I. 1st & tall t dep. Ref• 1 Bdrm S45!5 •l\W Pt10101 ttken/~trs ~hkd WARD 873·0321 c<>Ynta paytbte. Primary schedullno. PleHe aP9fY USI THI 673-5489 wknd or eves 30 1 Avocado. 642-08SO Girden Apartments 6 mo Ouarnted Servlol lbllltt 1 1 I pet'IOl'l \4-' S.-4 ----•C.,.,.lt•• E-w11-PtrHal 1 reepona •• no n · "-1•• •-· :7 s ..... ,-,..,.. .;..;.;~~""!"'!!!"""!!"~-1 typing, llllng, posting of •1nt11tal....,... DAILY "LOT -.. ·-,. 1 Od~4 1 w w111on 445 Ntwport Bodi So. Newt. Time Mag&rln•. OIROUS Of aecounta. Entry lellel po.. 1700 &. Oany, INlne "P ... ST DUA H Ill 631-0g60 1700 16th Street l<NX A•dlo. ltlon rsqulr" IO key by ff7•60t8/H7-3121 "' Newl>Of'I Ole 832·4134 llSIAIE touch. wlHlnffl to acc.ept 1!01! MFIH llSUL T" C ALL '!_~UI PAID 011119 Tree Aptt (al Onvtr) 1.to11toall dlverH 1ntonmente. • SllYICI ompart .,.,,Oft yov ttnt, 2 Dr 1'1\ Ba TwnhM. ~rota, 642 5' 13 wflo ltt relocltlng 710 NO. HAAllOR llLVO Miii rn1.1me lo: Con• Cuttorn dealg~ fe1tur•, drtpee. dahw•hr, up· Tuatln Olo 832-4134 f'ULLEl'ITON trolter, Citation lulldtft. To pllOe ~ ,,....._ DlllCTOIY poot..:...~~~~e-r~ dattd kitchen. Staf110Q 11 Ntwpoft BtM:ll No. llM111 17731 lrvlnt llYd. ate .-,,.. F'or R .... u ll "''·-...-_,,., Prv.,, &605/mo 7141548-73U 880 Irvine Avenue Olfltt lntal1 Hlt l •ay ·--201, Tu111n. CA 112t80. ·-:ow public;, ~.,. tandeceplflo, No 1>8th --"... ~ Ser vice Call a.ch. Fum 10 Mlllle your lh<>C>Plno ...,_ (al l61hl Nl!WPOAT CENTER. FUii ATT~CTIVl SELL Idle ltema with a o.ity Piiot 2 Bdrm Furn 70 lef by utlng t,.. Dtlly Pt-645-ll04 MtYlot Eic.cull\19 SUltff. MASSU6S£8 OaHy PllOt CIMelfled Ad. Cl.-.d. 142.a.U 642•16 71 366 W Wilson 642·11171 lot Clutllled Ada. 15754625. 840-5470 TO SERVE YOU. 842·U7& bt. JU -,- ' . \ \ -----· --__. ______ _ -----· -.- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Oct. 28, 1983 8 7 ~ ler 11111 llr11111•r M!!1!t9 ..... ~-s.9'et ~. C..b...... ........ •w C..W.. ...... Pala!l!t f l..W. Tnt ltniet =======iiiiiiil'l:rtR; your t:0m: or otc: A:IC>&A1teratJOnl ....... ~ W..W R8alN'8CiANINd •&· 1...... RALPH'S PAINTING bOOdA@Mff 8N6ffi@Q $217 per dat 1 !let ... lnctudel 11th. ~Wlnd~a~e ~· c:omm Mow! Twtoe SERVICE: a th<>fc>ughly Beatquallfy 25 yr axp lnt/aJlt. Rau, Lle'd. ~~~!1:s~~I Treaa,tandeeaO!no&deen • lank, dee« & WMlcly Mf• P8tlel-Patloa-Fancat. 35 & rtelcl. Llc'd. ,bonded. ~ I ;o·to 125• claen hOUM. 540..01157 Uc T. 111142S 7J0· 1353 Fraa •t. M 1--3588124 hr POOi hMtwa•Furnacae upa. 21 )'fl ..P. '42-3667 That'I 'toll:;' ~ay a =·=:= 19!i':.' *· )'fl ••P· J«ry 546-4'4 13 Ina. For aat, &a2·9142· • ~~5737 . --lllPIJ ;TARVl~G COLLEGE Cu11om Graphk:a/Murala •FllUQet1•Dl9poui•* ~ lenlet In the MARMIE AQUARIUM Rac*r/11'1\all )obi. F9nclee, fil!la -IW lll''M STUDENTS MOVING CO. Quality lnl/axt ptilntlng 1U1f fl-a MOtcfPtmng DlllY SERVICE &42-5405 ~I~~~ 1 ~ ....... Tllm W• dO thotOUQtl WO(l(, Re-Uc. T124-43'. lnlYracl. tor your home or buelnaea HEATING· HMiif-is*1a1 Air ~..,... ICtlool' P«· " Aa~t ..... 'rllelW'r Rg~ .. (~T)2e:l:,~~: ttable& REFS. With com· 641·8427 Fraa•t. Randy 9t2·7519 Replpaa.' Call 842•11989: tonal p<oleCte. 1151-1041 Cl. M-,~~t piece carpet & hOU .. • WATCH us GROWi , ~ PR.OT ay-Pa&ing lot V i; :U I 950.&300 .... ~ c:teanlng, window• dona Pal .a1, •~!f Drain• clear ''om $5125 Wl .... Cl..U.. Rac>alr1-Sealcoatlng rt:" av Of ... FREE. CALL TODAYI auat Fart ng lnlerlof DaalQn Rapalr lauoet1, dlep, etc. wHiff WiZXR6 SERVICE sas Alphll 631-4199Lk: p~ part ·4~~1·· KITCHEN DESIGN: Naad PliR~clAP@NTRY 540-5954 ffll Plllfmt HANGING/STRIPPINC 1151-~M&M432·0500 WINDOW WASHING All T Repel Reaurf w nlYranc:e. • plan1 tor ,_ or ramod. REPAIRS-Gary 645-5277 by Richard Sinor Lie VISA-MC Scott 873-1512 It taJ ltnl "The only magic II NDECTORY Sea~t <~lU~RY Mrx) ctMat c.ntf k~~~~A~=· PTL c~.~~E-~Ai:,~;a~~. 280644. 14 yr1 or 'happy BLACKWELDER Paper-J c~ QUALITY" as1-202e UI\ Comm. AHld., ReH. Conc:r.ta maaonry ffat· ' · la Ua Frea e1tlmata 850-44811 local c:u11omera. hinging a removal. Oual. Utldlofdll Wa II eacura l tatt Llw Ptua the IRVINE MIRROR Rat• •• FrM •tlmatn. wen. toondatlona. Biocti. It;~~ • ~ Thank you, "3-4114 WOfk only. 494-3618 ~ntSe,AflnRalR~~~-~7ng•. --------· .... •2•" .... ""32 ---• BUMP J68S l HOUSECLEANING ._. lT ........... 71 slat. law r-ulr .. that ail and the HUNTINGTON .,..._ v• Of'.,......,., btlek. Lk:'d. 875-2129 IAN: Pr lead EXP'D. GOOD REFS. QUALITY PAINTERS EXPERT Walk:overlng In·•---· --------. BEACW~~!l!.R.everyt ~~ ctraail Tut rtgtlt, ,,.. •tlmata on SM~l~~~v~~~;~ss Gtadyt s.46-5471 (4·9pml PROMPT. NEAT PRO-11a11111on. Rau. ConlUlt· ....... =:::c.:;~0,:~ .......... , taroa °' wnall Jobe. Uc. FESStONALS. 636-7149 ant AUlgnmt. 581·11590 Aube:lfuOilng-aii rypaa labOf and material• muat niA~r:=~·~mtNG ~~~TOM~~=~ 39'4121. 97~359 ~~r~~~~.~~~~~~.: ~~:!:~e~~.c~~:!~~ 12 YRS EXP: I'm 1mat1, we GALS SHOULD HANG New·RaGOWf·Deck• be llcenlad. UnllcenMd ••• .. ••-• In my hOma, nr Victoria. ~ay s..7-8322 . RESID/COMM'L/IND. 9t3-s.4t5 NORM •673•7012 ill. 5 . My prlc:ea are tmalll TOGETHER ... Wallpaper l.lc. #411802. s.411-9734 contractor1 should IO - -C09ta M.... 642·8~2 20 yra. Do my own wot11. 650-64771850-8648 + uphot. wa111. 839-0730 1tata In their advertlalng YourDallyPllot baaffnr UC.278041. AI MM128 LTHAULING -MOVING ltutllttlat ---0<angecoutl Con1raetor1 and con-Servtc.Dlfectory ,._ ..... __ 1 ~ _ Dava'1 Cu1torn Painting Plaattl~~1. ~'!-• .. Repr_..tatlve ---. dUllC 1920 Ford WOOdY ~~ Rental Clean Upe, Jon Prof. mature. reilabla, lnt/e10 Highest quality, · " ~· r'83~97• aumari, contaot ... ary •••-11tl ut. a•z "'i"'N:W--c-.-,,.,-•• -c:bl--net-1Chautteur '°' weddlnga, 845-31921731•29 '8 pet/plant c:ara. Local r•C.. 1own1 rat••· 640-5449 Ptls fcAINd ~~yonc:tq:!t'~~g:,~ _. • llcing, bare a fonnk:a proms. etc. S501hour. ARDf:NINO COiiege 1tudant, 1ga truck. Bob 546-4856 wkdys Raltuccos. ln!lext. 30 yr1. ~~~~~~~~~! countartopi. 642--08111 957..e<>7l Ganatal malnt. C~UPI. IO rat ... CdM. Thank you. PAINTING-Carpentry, Neat. Paul 545-2977 lecrtlarl&I tor's State Llcanu i~ . ...i-aJ Fraa •tlmata'I 548·8519 759-1936 Court ··~ drywall. plumbtng. Free ED'S PLASTERING ltnlctt Board, 211 Civic Canter _,.. Cabinet• & Carpentry Ck!W Cut ifld(.fij est. 12 yrs exp. 659-0887 Plaza. Room 890. 5-nta 11-111-Small fob1 and repairs Gatdanlng & malntananca, GEORGE'S CLEAN UPS Br • ock-Conc:rate lntlut. Petehlng/teictures TYPING/BOOKKEEPING Ana, CA 92701. 1 -ulaJ! Frea M tlmate 645-2003 CHILD CARE. my home, trea trimming, mowing, & HAULING No fob too Low ptlcel .. L.lc, bonded. •PlllT I IEPllll• Raltuc:cos. 645-8258 F0< lndlv./1ml bu1lneae =I _,.y. m . I Nwpt Hgtl. FuK/tlma. 111 c:laan-upl a hauling. Wa small.119s.6ooe Bob 673-536711131-1161 Carpentry a Remodeling ..... '--Hr/day/wt<. 6'40-08811 carpentry. Lie. #341012. =• mos & up. 850-7188 do 11 all. 73t-638e •ma Lie: 4439011 JOhn661-31891..,. .... ...,,..,.,. ____ _ Ablllty Bklr1 730·19001 2 . Tlll'I U .... I. Buying and 1alllng at a ELTNG: all ph ..... Maka your enopping..... JESSIE'S GARDENING l'iautanythtng. &45-7331 -Ale UoVING· Oualll)' painting. lalr No Bou to Support. Self rauonabla prtce-thet'• CadHlac:a to Go-Cart1 What...,., the F.cS Roll 'wn off Iha martial With a ClaMH\ad Ad call Nowt 642-54178 Have IOmethlng to Mii? 18 yr1 In area. Lk:, bond· ler by ualng the Dally Pl· Clean-ups, yatd malnt. Qulcktc:arelul. Low rates. prices. Frea .. 1. Call emp. St lie #319450 Joe what c:la11lllad 11 all Clalelfled ad1 do It well. ed. 988·35&4 anytime tot Claaltled Ade. Fraa •tlmata 540-8035 Want Ada Call 642-5678 Lie. T138046 552-0410 JOhn anytime, 631-2050. 5«·8444 no fob too small about. 64J-541711 ltlt Wa t.. St• ltlt Wut.. SIM ltlt Wu... st• ltg ..... 1111 l tlt Wut.. SllO ltlt Wu... SIOO l tlt WHtt4 SIOO l tlt Wut.. sa• ltlt Wut .. mOll•nllY GaneratOtllce Houeectuntng ,halp iii11t .... M... MARKETING 111/lllT/AT/lfO NOWHIRING.OttehoreOll PUT/Ml Roofing Slot ........ .. Slll Perm PIT mornlnga, 20 • needed for Robbie s Reg F0< lndullrlal pn, ex· SECRETARY FIT 4 days. 2 to 3 yr• drllllng. Overseas and Ideal for Semi-Retired UPERlllMI hrs +_ lrvlne. Computer Ill.Ill llY OLll A Mop Cleaning Servlea. perlence In alactrloal & Exper flextble marketing exper .. some baok office domestic:. Wiit train, Estimates ~or rain guttere. Hot tar worker• needed. IEOllnUY knowledge helpful. II Good pay, good hrs. Call plumbing required, own eacretary needed to c:o-preferred. N.B. 642·3181 $35,000-S50,000+ poa•· Guaranteed per~tage Must have driver'• llO• bkpg, etrong SH, type Ol.111 TYPIST 548-0757 hand tool• a plu1. hard ordinate high energy Ible. Call Petroleum Ser· on estimates done. ..... an1e, permanent raal- Good typing and lhort· hand 1k1t11. Banking, Finance, Auto agency background. Small of. Ilea. Pleasant working c:ondltlon1 In Newport area. 6 SW PM. em office. Kitchen & counter help worker, dapendeble, per. marketing team In young. Me11enger alternoon1, vice at 312·920-9364, ext bonus, mileage allow· danc. & phone number. Mature. 261· 1818. Temporary polltlon In our wanted. Novak• Place. manant. 642-4483. growing high lech c:om-4·6 hra. Reliable person 2239. Also open ave· ance. Wiii train. American ~......... 63 t-400fl membwehlp dept. Must 644-0210 What 8 WonderiUI World pany. Marketing exper w/def.endabta Insured nlng1. Fea lor Directory. Gutters 953·8014 ~i orange c:oatt Exparlenc:ad :-alter/ typa 55wpm+, detall ol Shopping, right at r .... Muat ha-ft.""'" or-c:ar. .00 per hr + 23c 01'\A et I hilt --rooting waltreH wanted, day orleotedwork. PleaMcall Lab pick up a dellvwy. full 'f04K flnoartlpe everyday! g~-;,lutlonal ;'llIThlgh per ml. 640..e<>40 David {;;.,~r:r' ~.~ 1~~ln.• Cati Part-n.t Ptl'll Sales shll1, c:toMd Sundayt. for appt. ~VM, time. benaflt1. Celt Ric* Dally Piiot CIH1lllad lnhlatlve. For appt. call Models, Act0<1. pit XtrH; 540-1777 ~ * * * 1140-8152 Mon-Fri. &45-wowrxt or Jim 646-0218 Ade. To place your ab, Norma c:ommerclats & TV Show· ---------1.0.w.,.., 955-7089 Fut Food Operation 521 call M2·5e711 and let a CASCADE 5511-3316 c:ae, 778-FILM kid• too. PAIT TllH Newpor1 Beach Ollie• 01 111 IOIEY Full Of part time, Cuhlw. Guatdl UllllY Plllll CIM8lflad Ad·Vlaor helCl Earn up to $400 par National Matketlng firm Sacratary/Rac:epllonl1t needed tor growing c:o. beach area, memory typewriter, 1horthand, R.E. background nae. Sand reeume to Ad •59 P.O. Bo• 1560. Coela Meaa.92627 Sandwich Mekar or FIT unarmed eecurtty of-Ideal for Mml-ratlrad. Full ~· Ctutllied Ads 642-5678 MODELS IOI' llngerte ahop month. Retlr .... House-ta e•pandlng and need•' SllOllT HOURS ,. _ _.. 0 ,,_ not nee wlll _ ___.__. .,_, 1 fashion ahows. Exp. pref. wttes. Col ....... Stu"'--ta. adaptable, lndu11tlou1 ~~. td. •I 1'0 r. =tl~~e:.-;:-v:nt~ t~~~~ = I a1·1y p·11D1~ ................... ~ ·.. C.o•tma MeaalUI. 54ou8-&.4·4·4 Need d~;ble .-;;~to people wllo enjoy public • ~A.MIO CopNy NSupplles hOUMWlvn. Ask for Fred ..._,...,,.a mu1t. Call Thu,.. 494-8450/494-7177 dallver Dally Piiot In contact. Good epeaklng e v • NOO btwn 4-llPM M 1-8209 .,.~-L 9eae11 (2 h voice a mu1t. For Inter· •No Eq>er'~ -----·----day ONLY before 2 PM, LEGAL SECRETARY. • : with good salel ebllity and /,gl"aw kd r; ~ view appt. Call Linda. • Extanalvetralnlng FILL Tm PIY 736-7405 Mid-sized Npt Bch law • • front dealt kn~ 10< ay . ae ay, . .• ~5-5776 program ,•-.--......... ftrm Make axp P.t. Legal : l&ILJ PILIT : resort motel In outh :.:::'d~~:~32~~ll ~:i PART TIME SECRETARY •WaaktyPayGu.,antea -· ·-...__.Ct s-·-I Sectetary Muat type 80 ....... _ .. IEE Laguna Beech. Mull 343 EOE • I. Pteuant. Profaulonal Opportun111aa avallabla ·~,..... • r ""'"'•ran Of w P m . · M e 1 I n d a • ....,. 111a1 have experience end rat-Your HOf'T\9 Ole In Corona Del Mar ~~t'b1r~i:11:n~ % M-C..oee1/540-&5412 213-624-3431 (c:otleot) Now accepting applications for ~ erencn. 213-925-11491 Want Ads Call 642-5678 780-11304 II you're bright and sl~arr.:tal ::= ~ mtal/.-J PARTmME LIBRARY Dis · M · PtnffFrt4er"""4 energetic:, •II Mr BMc:tl real estate otllca. ~:;~.~~~ ~ p=~~~i::r~nt~1:.:.-CLERK '· aubltltute ctert< trict anag.er to supervISe : Da1·1y P1·1a1~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~-HH ri:: betwMn 8 am & Must have •11oel. typing ..... p<c>gfam. Guatan· posltlOn neaOed for New· newspaper earners. Salary com-'. ". ,...... 113•0111 (minimum 75wpm) a dlc-teed hourly wage pk'9 HOUSECLEANERS, TOP port Beec:tl Publlc LI-ur te "th · · . 1•11 taphone 1kllll. commlaalon. Houri: 9PM PAY, FULL OR PIT, OWN brary, entry lavel poa-mens 8 WI eXpenence. : . Exper .. AB Dick 380 opet'· ---------Tr!fn~ng orl:p~r;vl~~: ~E"s~,~~ALL ~ RE~P ~~er1!~·~!1h~· •• ?,=~ CompanY_ benefits plus bonus : : PART TIME ·~0~~ 11~:~ ~':r's:~~~~~, s~IOl•YFllU :=:,~~:~29:~p·g Potential to earn S300 ONLY NEED APPLY. Mu1thaveonc:aHtlexlblll-opportunity. Must have Van,: Call 714/631·7156 No e11perlenc:e. Wiii train. aklll1wantedlormfg. llrm plu1 per weak. For an In-831-11222 ly and min av .. labllly of station wagon or pick up : Deliver Daily Pilot by auto in Rec:ep11on1st1Sec'y . PIT Chrl11mu work In In Huntington Beech tar.view. Call (714) Houaecleanlng, pit or flt, ~-20hr!~,d~yt,...,..& with/shell. Mileage allowance : Laguna Beach area (2 hours Typing, dictation and Interesting, enjoyable 8411-1552 957-~381, Ext 1204 mull enfoy c:leanlng. ata ....... .,.teat one may : good telephone 1tyte re-place to earn •Kira In· -Sec--1-ty--rt-11-....:.....-af_ Traneport1t1on needed. g:.,~!!~'i:c~'. ~ included. Apply in person, : per day). Weekdays P.M. -quired tor satung ctub or-~~~·· Awi•Y In ~ao;,rJ retl;ed ·,:•grave"';ci :1tt: ~· =': ~~~~ wuttra1n. 99s-7108 Clement• Dr, Newport weekdays, 3PM to 5PM at 330 '. weekends A.M. F.arn about ~11cs~71~~~~~~~ Pa~' P1~:'tPt8~.' to :nc:. 5 _9_7_s-_e_1_0_1 ----- year. II you hava a Have eomathlng you want Beach. CA 92680. M .. 1 West Bay St Costa Mesa $400 per mo. Call Mr. Barrow pm for appllc:allonl. No ••mNIT-c:ampet that'• not gatttnv to Mii? Claaalflad ad• do appllc:atlona to Library ., • Rec:ept1onl1t1Sacre1ary phone calls. Mature. ra· needed tor lndultrtal ... =.::: :d now with • ~2w~;111 Call NOW. ~,:',~latratlon. same ad-., :· ........... _. . • • . . • . . .. . . . . . . . .. . -or Mr. Bush 642-4321. IDE ~~~,:~g ~~n ~~ aponalble per10ns. curttt firm. FIT. Salary -----·----• · -· -· -· · · · · · · · · · · • • • · · · · · · • • · · · · · · · · · .. · • · excellent communication SALES c:ommenaurate with ax· akllls & telephone volca. -· otlflnll perler>ca. Mull have valid Front office appearance Prof per90n w/Nles bull a guard llc:enM. s.tld ,.. It typing & llllng. Wltl ' computer exp. 754-8383 :me4~n Dc:;I~ ig: M t.IC NOTIC( rta.IC NOTICE NOTICa °' COWUllOlt OF A ..... ...,,,.Al Aennoua .UWal 'ICTlTIOU9 IMIW.H DRAFT IJl"llRCll MTAL. .. ACT MPCMIT ,OR ntR MAim ITATl....-r NAMI ITATDmfT PWGI• PCMMTA81 YALUY ..... caNllh .M)9fl' The tolto;-tng '*'°" le doing The IOllowtng per90n9 .,. dOlnQ ~ AU n VP1.....,... nlS M· ~r~:·a ASSOCIATES, S303 bu=N~3RD PARTNERSHIP ~ Pt.All POil TitR lllDUeTRIAf.. AMA M• Hertlor J.1, Coata MeN.. CA. 92t2t Two Corporate Pica. Su"• 290: ~ ~. NdWdW. Foatar Jr .• 1824 Samet Newpot1 l!lw;ti, CA. 82eeO NOTICE 18 HEMBY GIVIH ttwt tha City of FountM't Veltfr/ Dr .. Col1e Meea, CA. 92t2t J-R. GrlMI, Two Corpotate ~ for Community 0..1lopment l'IU comp11•ed a aup-Thll ~la eoMuc:1ed l>Y: en Pie.la. ~te 290. Newpot'I Beedl. ptam1ma1 Drift enwonmarut 1mp11ct R1pori for the propoeed lndMduel. CA 92eeo Founwln v..., ...,,_ Center loceted wtttlln the lndultl19i R. W. F01tw Jr. Mathet Conatruc:tlon Inc., a Call· Ar.a Aedl• .. ~' Prottct. The ICtlOn wt'6ct\ ..... be IUbjact to ~~ ·~·::;i~:: eo:~ ·: r.:: ~r.:~· ~~ the Drllft enwonm.nt• tmpeot Rlport la: Sept. ~8. 19113 CA 92880 1. ApprCWlll of a Joint O..llaPfl*'lt Agreement for the ,_,. Thi•~ ts eoncluc:1ed by: a redeoi .. opment of tha cMYllopmlnt ._ purWt to the ,. Pubtllhed Orange Coelt Deity 1181'*11 partnerah'9. dl\llapnwnt Plan for the Prottct .,.._ PllOI Oc:t. 5, 12, 19, 28, 1983. J-R. Gr1Nt The propoled de¥1lapme11t .,. la located In the Ctty of ~58-83 Thi• 11a1ement wu n1ec1 With the Fountain V-""" Ind l'IU the boundartea lltuetrated on the map ·-.,. llftn.-r County Cterll o1 Or•noe County on ecoompenytng ttlte Notice. The Pfopoeed dellllopment wttt ..--nu1iw. Sept. 28, 1983 ll'ntMI contllt of • --of lntarretated publtc Ind prtvlt• ecttona '1CTITIOU• IUIMH Pubtlllled Orange Cout Diiiy 1almed "the 1tacMcatlOn of bighting lnftuencel llnd reoycllng of NAm ITATl•NT Piiot OCt. 5, 12, 19, 26, 1983. land pr ..... tly containing t,. bllghtlng lnftuencel to UNI Tha lollowtng pareon II doing 5459.93 contlltent wtth the envtronmtntal, economic Ind IOdal goa of bu'"-•; the community. Said actlonl Include tl'la acqullltlon of land, the CONCOURS WHEEL COMPANY. DI-IC &lftTU'lr' ln8tlllatlonofpu*~owemertt1.llndretumlngthalandtothe ~;~7VkltO<ll llC, COiii Mw. CA. l'"UIK. nu1iw. prtvllta wtor for ~t. LoulM Ellubath Hudton 1525 n<:TITIOUI llU ... U The City of Foun• V~ ~for Community Dewlop-Ptacantla, Newport Beach, CA. The I~ aTATUllEfT dot~ rnent II the Lead ~with ~ to preparation of the 92828 "II'*'°"' are •• .,, En¥1ro11mant.i Impact "-Port for the propoaed Fountain Vdflf Thia bulll,_. I• conducted by-'" bu~=o~~RIGA TION SALES ANO Bullnw C.tlt Joint Dawtopmant A.Qr9ement. A copy of the tnt':'.:!'ttudton SERVICE, 34295 Doheny Pll1t Or. Or8ft Emlronmantal Impact "'°°'111 ~for pubic r9lllew Thi• ltitemant wa• tiled with Ille Capl11r1no BMc:h. CA. 92821 blltWMn the hour'I of 8:00 AM 8nd 5:00 PM Mond~ through County Oerlc or Orange County on Dougtu A. Ruatt .• 33171 O.Solc Ft1d8y It tN folowtng locatton: Sept. 28, 1983. Way. 0ena Point. CA. 92e29 City of Foum.ln V..., ~ k>f Community Dew1op-'1ala E. Melody Rush, 33171 O.So11 ment 10200 8e8ler Awnua Foum.in Vet./, Ca'"omla 92708 Publllhacl Orange Cout o.ity Way, Dani Potnt, CA. 928211 ~ wWllng to comm..,, on the bran EtMronrnental Ptleit Oc:t. s. 12. 19, 28. 1N3. Th11 11>ua1rtne11~~ c:onduc1ed by 1 lmpect Report mlY do eo by euommino wrttt.n comrneni. it the 5457 ·83 ~.: R~ p. ~leted add,.. on or b.rOf'I Novwnbar 30, 1N3. "8.IC NOTICE Tl\11 1t1tement wu filed with "" QlntOfl Sherrod County Clerk or Or1nge County or Ellacutlw 04rac:tor, ACTmOUa ..,._.. S8$1t. 28, 1983. Fountain Veltfr/ = for ..... ITAT1lmlff F'Dl1• ~ ~1t Tha tonowtng pareon1 ara doing Pubtlahed Or11109 Cout Oell'j K.ltl'llMfl A. Atwood ~-: Piiot Oct. s. 12, 19, 28. 1983. 9ec:f91ary, (Met.) PROPERTY BANKERS. 2915 54&1..e.:: Fount.in V··-~or Radllllf. Ste C· 107, Coat1 Mala. CA. _, ~2828 Communtty t Eugel"!I Tnl>Ole1, 11 Roc:kroee Way. "8.IC NOTIC( Pubtllhad Orange Cou1 Ody Piiot Oct. 25, 19e3. rvlna, C.. 92715 ,ICTITIOUI llU ... H 5772-83 GatySmltti, 1827 Port Seabourne, NAME ITA'n•NT hi/ iN-POtt 8"efl, CA. 928e0 d_, ~ EUf&M Trll>Ole1 fhe lollowlng penon1 art ..,.ng '" SLATE A <ii AVE Thll tlltament WU filed will\ tl'la bu:~·H"bmes BOXING CLUB . . "9itl~~:-------~~.-...... '1'----County Clerk 01 Or•nge County on tNC., 9191 Pioneer Ortw, Hunt· • . c ~ $ecn. 29. 1983· ,.,a ton Belch, CA. 92848 ~ "" ~ Pubtllhed 011rige Cout Otllty 'i:act1 Cttlaa eo~lng Ctub, Inc: .. ~ • Piiot Oct. rs. 12, 19. 20. 1983. 19191 Pl°""' Drt11e, Huntington .... 5454.93 Beech, CA. 92848 -~r""'~,.,,.· ... ~--..,..~ Thll bu1tnea1 II COnclUClacl by· • ALBU!T AVE borporetlon. ~ "9t.IC NOTICE Mlcic Hurlhar1, Prellldent Thia 1t11ement wu llled with the '1CT1TIOUI ..._.. County Clerk of 0r•l!G9 County on ..... ITAT'lmNT Sept. 28, 1983. The foll0wln9 petton 11 doing "19141 ____ _,,,.,. bu.._ u : Publlahed Orange Coaat Dally l' ; ROJAH ENTERPRISES, 8332 Piiot Ott. 5, 12, 19, 29, 1983. Arnett Or., Huntington Beactl. CA. 54&3·83 92147 -------Thotn8e F. Pappar1, 8332 Arnett I Or .. Huntington Beactl. CA. IM-47 Pia.IC NOTICl "8.IC NOT1C[ Tllll llu.lk1aae le oondueled t>y: an f'tC1mOUI...... ..... ~Pepper• ~ ITATlmWT 'tcnnout W U Thie"'""*'' -nlad Wlll'I Illa file fottow1ng par'IOf1I .,. doinO MAm SfATlmNT =i CWt of Otanga County on ~ •. The ·~ l*'IC>nl •e doing s.ot. •. 1"3 .... .KARMAN ASSOCIATEll. 4150 but1r191e K: Publlltlad Orano& COMt Delly Von l<annen, S\Jlle aoo. N9wpor1 SUNSET SPA AND DfCt( MAIM-P1IOC Oct 9 12 1t 2t 1983 ...... CA 12MO TIHAHCl. 3018 Jeffery Dr .. Apt. A. . • . . . Ma&·., RIChlrd J, Ren9er, 2101 (P.O. loa 2t17) COlta ....._ Ca. W-1 Orl¥e, Corona del Mar, '2$20 CA. t2t26 Kavin Wlndlt, )() 18 Jeflwy Dr, -----------I JoAnn Cowni., 31 Nev.,,., lr'YIM, Apt. A. Co.ta ftaJC N0T1C( CA. t:t11e Thie bulln9e 11 conduCted by: en ...ennoue .,.. .. • ,,::..~ COf'KJVI01ed Dy: I ~~WtNOLE NAMSSfAT'llmfT NcMrd J, AMgar Thie 91 .. _,1 w• filed with lite Tiie roilowli1o ~ II doing Thie ""'° buell"'8 ... ~to=,. wlttl Iha Coullty Clat'k of 0Janoa County on AMPlCAN • SWISS IULUON =i7• iea°! County on leptembar 19, tH3 .._ E!OiAN&l. 4029 w .. t«ty "*'· ~ Pubtllhed Orange Coeet Ot1tY Sutt• ,,,, Nawpon leactl, CA. Publllllad Ottt\Of ~ Delly Pltot October 19, 28, November 2; f , '2:'m.n Wtman 414 ANIO A Piiot 001 5, 12, 19. 2t, 1113"-..H 1"3 tnua, Hewpof1 a..im, OA. 9H23 y. r============::1!i!!!!i!!:t;:========l5418~· ~7r,;;43~1 TNe ~ 1a oonducted Dy: en lnCIMdwal. 642-5678 Put a Jew words to work for you '"the Daily Pilat -~========:='.'::========-=====:-----' NorfMll Wymeri ,,. ........,,. .. tlled .tttl tM eoumy a.r. of Ortnoa County on 9-.tl, 1113. ,..,.. ~ Otanga °*' Delly ,.... Oet •. 12. 1t. "· 1"3. &4M-t> ''Othr Pwi.lk411lfHH ,,,,._.,,, -- ftlflfalU. •• I ,_, th~ ad ta d11t D.lly Piiot ••d a•• leu of tall• wltll 1t.ree •• 16¥• 41itallflo4 P"PI-. 0...,1 ~It~ 'Y,.,..,. a.w• get cash q~ickly with · an ad ·1in classified liilyPilat Clutlfi.d Advertlllng 842-5878 train on word proc:. Salea _,ton needed luN so.• tseo. Coat ·~ Non-amoktng otllQe ,....... • e · Call Katie 714.8ff-e6n. or PIT. Commlulon. Call CA, 9282&-0580 1150 .... 124 a Iv mtg. SHIPPING-RECEIVING 1191fl•IT UU1 P1UN WllTD INVENTORY CLERK Full time poeltlOn. Mull App 1 Y 1 n P • r 1 0 n: for Ei.ctronlc9 Compeny. type, Front office llPPMI'· Roth1Ghild'1, 2407 E. Futl Tlma poaltlon With ance. 841·3080 Alit lor Cout Hwy CdM. good opponunltlae. HMf Karen ' OC Airport, 540-9284 SALES R~tlonlal/Secretary to Sateeperton needed l0< Statton«y Stora tn Coron. work In animated 81· Import bullnaea. MUST del Mar naedl FIT ex· mosphere of dynamic: haw proven tl'Kk racord parl911ced H leeparaon. Costa Mesa Martletlng In tales Up to $20 000 675-1010 Co. Buie otttca 1111111, · • 1---------typtng. S4.75 to begin. 1st year c:omml11lon ITIOl/IMIL II.Ill Call Fred 631-7342 polllble. S35.ooo 2nd N I .. _ .. R/E firm .._.._._ year comm1 .. 1on poaa-P """'' · • ._...... REOln.IT Ible. Ground noor op· •Ible 10< Procaaaing malt. FuUIUmedays. 540.5554 portuntty. 850-1370 :~~~.' ='t.,p°:'. Reception/Typist Salel Heavy lltttng Involved. Newport Beach R.E. olflce Prof sales person wanted Call 553..()g4 looktng tor a per10n with tor IHhlon1ble tadlaa -·-.. •••• good olflc:e skill• type ahoe salon. M/F Apply In ·---· -65·70wpm. 851 -16St par1on Lanz. FHhlon For Coeta M ... Haad lslend. Start. Spanllh Blllngua.I REST AU RANT Attendant: preferred S8se mo. Call Mon-Fri 7-3. Apply In Seam•treaa trainee. FfT 631-8803. E.O.E. person Wed-Fri be'-1 Perm. Above min wage. 8-11am only. Alie for Finn Apply at QUILTMASTER, TU.a at the Towers Rea· 1671 B Ptacentle, C.M. Pre-achoot. parlltlme. taurant. In the Surt a fhe fesia1t draw In Iha S41hour. C.M. 642·9181 Sand Hotel, Leg. Bch. Walt ...• Dally Piiot Seti with EASEi retell Clalallted Ad. Call Today 11'1 a BREEZE UST STiil 11111111 M2·5e711. Clualfl9d Ads 642-541711 ....... ,,......., ...,.. Need eitperlenced, career oriented aares paraonl with some management background to become assistant managers for women's better speciality stores. Salary + com- ml1Slon with excellent t>enellta and room 10< ad· vanc:ement Call for ap- pointment or send fe- aume: MARSl's s ......... ,. .. . IHllrltfttlt .......... 11111 11 .. Ml-0114 Trade your old 1tutf for naw goodle1 with a Claaalfled ad. &42-54178 Newspaper THllllll ABOUT I IEW OPPORTUlln'I A local, well organiz.ed and long estab- lished real estate office has opening)!! for 3 qualified salespeople. This office has momentum, strong staff support, central location, ample parking and an excellent reputation. It offers a liberal commission split while conducting aggressive advertising and promotional programs. O•••••t '" '"" 1t 111-1000. ,,., l•••••tl ltl ff'• I ''" ....... •ffl••I KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! --......... [jgfj r lillli • J ~ , ... .. .... v :: • v . -. {....:,;, ~. .._ ~11 ... AGES 11-14 EARN ~ TO $75.00 PER WEEK We now have IS Ol*liftll -~~ • beawtn lo Meure ''*' for The °'• Cont DlilY Not. Ollr crlWI lteft at 3:30 p.m. llld work unlll 8:30 p.111. wteMep. Oii Satny, " J •nd pr1tt1, ~ w.111 111111,. 10ur own f!IOlllJ , • •.• tlieft ii no dtllm1nc or eolltctioll illwoi.td. WO<k I few fllOte houts. You wtll ttrn tMny t(tpS ~~ J' : . ~ H 10" tre llltlftsltd, plt1141 Celt Mt. [lfl, = (714) 548-7058 ~ ,r-~-..... --~u . -j . •• Orange Cont DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. Oct. 26. 1983 hraltan MU m...i111.... 1111 n, WM, Tralltn~ 411t1, laJ!!!!f Al•· .. ...... ~ ~ lbl FIREWOOD: Quality mix... ..,.. IUIJ11• J!!4 ... 1111 ....... .... & 4 ctn I 150. Couctl & IH '.t cord Mllwr9d Ir .. TV RENTALS 120 per mo. 1HI IOMI, 23' wt~. LARGE SEL£CI>ON 'OF loveNat 1 17p. Dbl oven anywher•. 136-4MO 19" color TV1, w/~ Ft.My 9fld, Shower, heed, NEW & USEDaMW'81 TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE reno-1125. reo.ea39 HonMI C.emlca bullMel to buy M0-3191 lull kit. I H ut. In t. & Sofa 9' cotduroy, Aini Klln1. 1utom11lo sllp .... ...... fill 11400/0t>O. 6'0-74at. • L--------------------------' cond.1 150. 87~ pour.,, 30C)..38() moldl, m ' l ate ""'"7 ·ea p~top ca mper. etc. •tc. E\09fYttllng vou 1:;1-y UNI' Ship, could .,. p Mll Liil llAll .. -EVIOUS llmT .... Ill.I nMd to m1nul1ctur• ldMI Mlllng yacnt !Of utl ., .. , .,8 f9ft'lg. • 11~. nu eno r-n Fine FurnllNftOI. French. cer1mlc1. Mull Sell. thole with dolllt• Ind Im· PAlNT AND LldRf IOBY VOLUME-~ ·eo 3000, anrf 1 cond. & paint, 12400. 842-&N3 ACROSS 55 Drain 1 English sire 6 Struck - -blow 10 Passage 14 Alert 15 Displeased 16 Czech river 17 Ran easlly 18 Base 20 -hat 21 Observed 23 Sees 24 Flower 26 Most bitter 28 Of teelh 30 Turf 31 Contract 32 National leader 36 Hole-In-one 37 Exploits 38 High priest 39 Perceivers 42 Compact 44 Chances 45 Consecrate 46 Drives mad 49 Elec tric unit 50 Regions 51 Cistern 52 Border 58 Please muc h 60 Slave 6 1 Seed cover 62 C09nomens 63 Pea, e.g. 64 Flogs 65 Conveyance s DOWN 1 -Alto 2 Absent GI 3 Astaire routines 4 Increase 5 Mars 6 Turkish coin 7 Forsaken 8 Krone constltuenl 9 Unite 10 LPs 11 Marble 12 -and bounds 13 Forced 1oan 19 Accustom 22 Flsh 25 Man's nickname 26 Strtkes 27 Equine food PUZZLE SOLVED EnQllall. Rare OtllneM O'fl'ner Pregnant. Wiii 1gln11lon. Hank De8oer WORK: Saw U & In-s:olCE~INO LO ml. 118, I off. '811 SOUAR.EBACK. reblt Collectlona. Screen, tt1ln buyer. 11e,OOO. (10tl 378-2199 Cf .... your car'• value LO~ BEACH ve, 540-0985 ctya, e 18 eng. 11100. ~2t00 28 Twosome 29 Noun ending 30 Movie greals 32 Looks for 33 Stage fare 34 Stepped down 35 Nest 37 Clutch 40 Invented 4 1 Rid of suds 42 Reptile 43 Eggs 45 Keep back 46 US Vice- president 47 Cancel 48 Intermediate 49 Gas and oil 51 Rotate 53 Thing 54 Service meal 56 Opportune 57 Biblical ruler 59 Household god Delk•. PorQllalna, 011· 496-0384 ... 'lll l by II. 8111 M9·1221 (No Cfletry extt-405) evea/wknda. .811 VW 8uQ. Sn rf. Maga, den Fine Wrouotlt Iron, L.,oy Neiman (Satctlmo) ,...,.. , ... ..,._,...__ t l1•)111-llll '83300SD,new.8500ml .. 11300 4"42-8879 or ·~~ing~~~,!!,'~\~~ 11600. Prv Party. 12" 5ervll0f innatable AreyoudlU1tl•l~he l'rlde-lnaWelcome 1uo-r .. (altver,metll1C, 557-e191.Bob mite 492_.588 llTI & eve 71Mt51·5155 with O/B & lllla, many Nf'Vlce on your car? Now °'*' Sun 11-4 blac«). eunrl, e1ee1ronle -. ----....---,,_.-...,....., ••tru. uled e ll!Mt. PIMM call & talk to ua. radio, fully loaded. e9 BUS. no wlndowa, xlnt w 111rt;;d;klng,boo1111ne11 ~2~";=:;:,:,= S375. 87$-8731 or Weh•v•o...., 1oyri.e•-Dlbu ttU 134,900.540-3500 c;ond.•:,.cr~:-1otr. tldbrd. rllaed pedMlll chaiM t 1SO..cn, writing 762-5282 wtcdya • P•rlence wllh Brltlah '731286, 2 dr.1 i:ay ownr. Alk •bout till monay wa "'• ----=--,...---..,- '!11e501d0rwbora, · ... ~2 Incl. deak 190. 2 antique fire-2e.3' Sell Ray Dancer 79 Cera. Conllnenlll Car 4 apd. 11095. 945.7579 can aave you thnl our 72 Su1>« Beetle con\1911, • .,,. ... ...,., aide chalra $125 NCh, 325 hra. alp1 e . Incl. ttall,.-. Cllnlc 751-8880 ~rch ... a. leeM piana. look1 & runa Ilk• n4t'W, r9d Whit• g1a11 top din.ill 5'118' Pl•yhou• $85 yoll cover 1111ru. $23,000. a W .. 11u '73 1200, 2dr. 1 lldyownr, • •lllU w/whlt11op & Int. $5900 Mt, match end lbll100. 3 haul. 2 Wrought Iron 894·1'103; eve 991-8592 aat" HI -hpd. 11095. 845-7578 -obo. Mual Mil 554-19n bakll't rack•. brown tone Patio table• with chllra 28• Ca11f0tnlan. ,, cruldr, AlgQi cUtl lm;;;;cJ. lor .. 2 IATlll 130~1'r .. t ·71 SUPER BEETLE 125-45. Cordoroy ltudlo $150 Heh. 83t-2 t91, Nwpt Sllp. 111,500. iour vehicle, domeallc or 2mJ ll NEWPORT BEACH New Oefman ang. w/1 yr couch 1100, Wtlt deak, 780-9209 760-8361 780-8381 orelgn. 551-1285 1 Ill t•-t2M ml gulf .. new 40M matching lamp $100. Pr • AHume p1yment1 o • ... 11, .. , new blacl< paint, Deni.ti auy ohrt 150 ... Rolex Prftldent replica ·77 25'h II Wellcren, ••II WI llY $ 2 2 8 I m o . O A c CLASSIC '59 MBZ 1llOSL B11upunk1 am/Im cut. 557-3119 watch. $345. Giant pro-cond. 113,900. 842-4e75 OLl.lll IAll ( 1EJH534) Xlnt cond. e7,500 orlQ. ml. tow bar Incl. All reoelpt• White R•tt•n Couch S50. ject TV. 11595. Ma-2855 '80 Aluminum boat, Ll&ll·A••llA Hardtop, manual•. White avlll. $2900. 497-1971 Chell of Or1wer1 125. Rolex Prdldent repllcl GregM t2'. 10 hp tlond1 111111111 II 1· 1111 wired Int. Beaulllul to '79 llW Osl Rabbit, dh1, llr. women'• 10 apd blk• watch. '345. Qlant pro-motor. 11200. 49S-3711 .... 115,500. 499·4131 4apd, 4<1r, atareo. idnt. S75. Women'• 5 apd bike )eel TV. 11595· 54&-2955 ·91.1e· Sell'Wlrl. extru, ·;~P~21~~ wh~al~~tl~;t (South L1g1.1n1) 24~ ml. $4700. 851-3922 !~~~r= :u,:::.: SCRAM-LETS 7011P. 18100. 493-1865 AM /FM cua. orig . I 4 vw DHher •74 auto. $500.873-3031 EMict>aybo11,1e'h11,nw $~~/000.~r.;;97car '53 MG Rapilca. xln1 , 1m/fm & air. 75,ooo ANSWERS gllU, lmma.c. nu bOllom MUST SACRIFICE mllel.11650 548-7249 Cnta •na 1114 paint, canv111 cover, In ·77 280Z, 38K orig ml. wire $5000 obo. 840-4568 V l 7 oXY YXRB SALE.tlpm. ChOMn . Unity 111 p 15 2 5 0 0 b 0 . WI"' will•. Hpd, xlnt cond. • " t17S 1,,.82 Char.... St .. (btwn Sumac· Auburn 548-6322 USED CARS & TRUCKS $8500. 642-5255 '88 MGB Conv .. nu 11rH. ·75 s/Wgn aulo p:/pb "' ... MONTH COME IN OR CALL FOR removable hardtop, run ' ' ........ j Bernard & H1mlllon) T ty cent• 19 Ch .... " 10 Wellc:rafl Scarab 38' 1981 . '78 280Z, aunrf. mega. xlnt 11400/obo 540•8299 sttreo. white, runt -C.M. Perla & ICClllOrlet wen _,. S50.000 Xlnt cond. FIB 1PP1A11AL am/Im, 5 apd, Jtlnt cond. $2850, 54~451 S tOtup. Blk•• $50 up, m•O 1 letter acrou lhe 7141752-1400 ext 2320 Cormler-DeLlHo 898-7288 PP. Ptat"I l I 'It --mo1orcyc1M uree will• country. It only adds up .vlk!T _ •-•• 11nk1, ftlfld~ra. gliH loP to• nickel • MONTH. IMb, ll 1 4 18211 B"' •CH BLVD. '12 HOD Tllll '78'A Dal. Sunrf. aulo. llr. IL W&m · ""' cua, Great 1h1pe. 11\0W CINI. mag truck Speed Queen wahr & dryr, HI' Hobie Cat, new .. u. & HUNTINGTON BEACH AHume p1ymen11 of $3500 Clll 541-8451 Anum• p1ym•nl• of wheela, llrH, n-mag 1 yr old. Hou .. pl1nt1 In 1r1mp, 11500. 533-8884 141 ... lll Mt-1111 1 3 3 6 /mo. 0 A C . ' S 3 3 8 /mo. 0 AC . 10 11 12 13 whl• ___ b11ke11. 983-8386 26. Folk Boat. perfect (1EOH031) PtrlC t (1EHH008) MO\/INO SALE Cane Wlndaurfer, 1 yr old $450. wHkend 11ll1r, 11.lnt WIPIYTW.W LIAll·AmllU 173 914 U App. group. LUll·AllllU ----~2--.~3~~4,..-~5,,--~6-....~7,......~8=-r.g=-- dlMlll Ml W/gleH lop, 4 2 Yin Malt trom new cond. 111 l9000 bUyl. • .... Ull II 1• 1111 runs great, lookl grut, II 1• 1111 swlvel. cuahlone<I ch1lre \/1n1gon, brn cord. Ben P.P. 846-4497 Al.All IMAM ,1 •• , __ 110 many xtru $5000 .• 1•• llt? S700 Ral11n couch, large 1250/obo.645-5268 & -•-• 842-1591 an. "' over1tuffed ?>wtvel Pap· 11'4 * R•:J.ar 24 aloop, PllTIAl/1111111 A11ume payment• of ·79 911.SC. aunrt, lthr, air, •c·o·me-1."'n·&-... -.. N"'ewpo--rt pah .. l• chair wlottoman, M11lt1l la1t. • load . 17850. Muat Mii 2410 H1~r Blvd. S 1 13. 8 5 mo. 0 AC. 11 blu. ~talllc .• 17•200_ Belch 1 llnut Mlectlon "*Y 11roe wtcker chair, EtecTRic PiXRo UOO thl• week. Dl•tr ... 111e. COSTA MESA (9236). ..... • 1 10 11 d and more. 432-0942 or beat offer, 720-94Q5 22K boall 675-8939 Ul-4100Ul·1•1l LUll·UllllOA 675-8638, 845-2374 ~or::~: •. u A~dl:w~~d _....__+--+--+---1 S 11 1 Sun 2 9 I 3 O I h Good copy of 0-2e Martin CORONADO 15. Com-WI WAIT YHI II 1· 1111 '11111 Nl•I Votkawegena. Furnllutll, art WO<k, etc. eciouallc guitar. w/caM, plete cover. tr1Jlef In· 11• OAllllLO ....... Laurel Point lwnhm•. Jdnt s 180 873-5186 eluded. rHdy to .. u ILIAl llD IUI renarl .1 Auum1 payment• OAC co••'lr Newport/Monte · · $1485. 873-8877 Sea Ronald Dace 185 F.,rarl 330Gf 2+2. CEL. ( 111808) Viti• 7& tll Alder Lane. Ludw1, drum HI, xlnl lllander 30 Mk 11 '73-'74 lmmac. 39,000 ml. Bor· LUll·Ullllll 455 E. Cout Hwy. j I }eM~ oon .. Hklng S 1200. lmm1c. crulHr' xlnt ranl wires, AC, elec win-111 1llO N-port Beach ~ 848-l3112 mllnl, many xtru. Sllp dows, factory conv to • 73-0900 ~-+-+---1 w:FnUFain 161. p:a,, 8 PEAVYT80Gullarw/cue. 1v111. Nwpt. $35,000. Ford Pintar• V8. ltlh~I llli ___ 8 ____ _ Chra. dinette Mt. e chra; PEAVY Cl1ulc Amp Owner/agl, e75-50e1. $13,000. PP 497-4128 , .... Dnlntic coffee & end tbla; patio w/pt\IM dlat reverb '80 SI WrMth II, blu __ ..,, _____ _ .... bulle t; p icture•: Mualc Man cab. Total Sidney ~~5~~5svery ll3i flat H U w/vlnyl top, 19K ml. AllC HIS ~~~~~·: 1~': •• ":r.·~ ~r ~::-k:ra~~ .:: c . • ~~p "J!'Ok.. s. ';!p~~~a:Jo. r:~: }2":2 nu ~;o~,h~s-4-9800. Ask '80 E:G' 4114 wgn. 11110. train•. S.turdly, XI t dltlon r ""lg XI 1 cond l/c, crulM cont. am/Im. c11e. n oon · 1:.:::1 a.. I~ TOH "" · ownw. n · '71 24 S"""<lar. lmmac. low $537°. 0 79-2450 Bobelle 1800 Lincoln Ln 11 $795 OBO. 850-5135 ~ • $2900. 642-30011111pm. 1 S3fr-" 49s-2497 "' "' Hampshire 549""32e PEVEY Studio Pro 4 Amp. n • IUllll·Ull.. '74 JEEP J 10 TRUCK .. m '• ..... ~ CARVER lalck HIT Jnt~ ~1~4 Llkl new with Electric 130 Volvo. 50 ti,.., trlf. Auto, PIS, air. 1hell. 79 Flat Spyder 2000· con-f'L....I I '80 Sk;tatlt [OT 8 c;t Toui RINES. 1 1 Guitar $350. 557-8393 1nido u1, offer. Bkr 1tareo 13700. 873-2912 ver11ble, dl~Wbll ue ~ ~ l C-~ 41M lh•rn $4950 pp "' "' 960-9003.evea980-1725 tan Int & top. re ... _ 1'L.)L.l.....:J l'L.../l~L · -... · Pl• .. ch. only 1201. Oflln F•raltu1/ '79 CJ7 DREAM JEEP. cover•. auto tr an a, _,.-IOQll r.o "4'IPJl"t"·"'· 494-7754 840.·88118 di-I • ··-19 II Sleakcr111. 455 Old• $7000 O.B.O. AM/FM c•H•ll•. very ~-..... ,""°,,..... 1•"=· .. ~·~=---_.:!:·=-~ ._ eng. New Berkley Jet. Nu 642-054e morning• low mu ... excellent cond. ~ .. su1o1oos •M 1:0-IC _. ... laery 18 rm hi f ype-p11nt1upho1, tandem trir. s5800. 850.5115 dy•. . • 171 coupe O:VIU:. run• 1211 0: wait A:diei saw writer $900. )(Int cond. MSOO. 760-8582 759-0932 -· l aMn llif lllnt, new llr•. very Clean 1eo 2v. H.P. 2 Carbide P.P. 720-0932 .75 Cllll. Bow-rider. 17,,..., Track.§. I03S HU .51 Subaru dlF g ;pa, :Ir. Int. 11000/ofr. Must Mii Bt1del metli tllnd 1450 Mlnolt1 RE300 plain paper In-out drive, low hra, xlnt I 7 2 #( • n c fi • r o GT. ltdl xlnl $5500 82&-3202 or _84_5....,-8_2_80 __ _,, _ __,...,. 20 50 SS 60 63 16 llke n-. 548-1501 copier. 4 moe old. only cond. $4000. 851-1842 $1500/0BO. 982-5810 ·78 Civic fitchbk 11000. 213i592•14sa ·111 Sevllle, loaded, drk I-::~===~:::~~====~=~~~=======::: 3 HP 10" Rockwell Un· 2500 copies uaed. Aa-M rhi g.i Ti ll '73 Ford courier w/cmpr Aunt gd. 642-21 l4evea T l lll gray. blk roof. $7800 . .::: ltaw, $800. 5 HP Rock-aume leeM. 752-0603 1 t J. ah•ll. rune good. body ·77 Wgn, dlll, llr. atefeo, ~II 983-8712 ltlt WutN 11• Pttl 1131 Frft tt lea IOZZ well 1h1p1r, Y•·W•" WANT ... CENTER great, nu tires & b~•. top anape s2e95. Roger 17iCEUCA iOW ml .. new ,.,7,.,.9-c,_A....,D,-:-E""'L00=-=--11:-1n-1-con-d,.. .. -arbor. $800. 2 HP double flaa"/~UI 1••• BOARD FOR KITE Ste50. 650-3186 840-9008, 983-0902 paint, clutch, brakM, 1/c company maintained. ,.......,.... Blue & gold Macaw, tame, Free Med R male Shellie d tl hlne 1800 ·-•-BOAT Rich 551 9382 $4000 beat offer Pre-qualttleriwa,~. 111rtlng to talk, Incl. lge mix. very playful, IOVft Af~ ~~It~: houi. trim: 1880 s RE GRANri IN • l · '82 Isuzu PU, dal, Kint '80 4-dr Accord, A/C, CUI. 646-7820 ~·;2•~ ~~~~8~08mPl•1•d Prof .. relaxed atmosphere. Cl~ w/pl1/:pen top... klda, 645-2987 15t-50t II 545.5357 88 key•. $9200, 759-1009 I I at. cond, lo ml. $7500. AM/FMc.... P/S, xlnl llTl ---·~..,..--=_,...,=,...._ Pl.a .. nl .urrou.ndlngt, S8 · 559-e 39 Ive mag _, h · CE T P f _ _. •·-'ce 70IO 548-1721, 873-3074 cond. $5500. 968·8919 VtlklW"ta '79 CUSTOM PH.AETON 1,..,-..,..--------Large p .. nted dog OUM, m Ila "·' l CON A l1nlsl or..... llfiTI 4 d l Iles 18750 Salary + comm +bonus. Yellow nape amazon par-great con d It 1 on , ICI • to aell. Spinet piano. PA&. BOAT FJNJSH '80 Prelude. 5 apd, am/Im 186 VW ug. orig owner. r. ow m oo9 · ser1oua flnlllci•I poten-rot, 3•,c, yra old, 40 word+ 675-3485 eves * llTAn "1111 * Black, orig $2200 aacrl· CUSTOM VARNISH Aati••n, cus. sunroof, red, runs gr111. good body 759•1 1111. Opportur'lity lor •<I· ~~~:gb·~ ''sloo1b'BmO~ ranitan H IS Wheel cut leld crytlll flee 11000. 432-9681 Free est. Dive 840·5449 Cl111lC1 t04S $4400. Great cond. $1900/olr 842-2730 '82 Eldorado. Immaculate, ~~1ih~~=Nl~~O~ 650 7 39 sherry ~111 ... s45 ea. Mual<:l1n/compo-mov-Slip I Deeb HU 159 MGA. good cond. 642"1714 '67 Squar1b1ck, aunrool, !~~-3~9 S17•500 obo LAWSON. 497-7501 -3 Pc; bdrm comer group Calm r Prov. tutted Ing East Y1m1h1 -$4,500. 645-393-4 '82 Civic 1300 Hlichback 8000mlonr1blteng. n---==-:-:=-=-===--- ---------Aatlsan 10 twin beds. tloreJ print. 11-channeled beige ChllM 0 5_6.5.. Grand ebony 36' powel' boat lllp. Av1ll ,87 DAMLIER Royal M•· 4 spd, 26,000 ml, xlnt tires. rune & look• good. TIE WIEST TelephoneSllel 2 (£163i)Widl tach. booster, ator. unit $525. 4'1\ yd• gold allk megnllic«lt lnttrumeni' Now.$250/mo.NptBch. l•lllc. Appral .. d cond.$4600,673-8448 $1000/obo.494-0647 ' ·-·-.-1Wl>C811d ,. __ C"'--... 9!.· gd cond.1200. 780-1179 '45. t<erutan ruga: 3x5 15000 firm . Alao'. Call650-8148 ti" d llLUTlll -•-• ............. ·-,...... 1250. 4x8 $400 (aqua), Oulb1'anMh Rllllo II, w/2 Balboe ca-: Slip to 40'. $19,000. S15,000 or lau• •• ·el81.,,.V,.W. e'73.~30007~ con . of lat• model. tow mileage m'111 11qu.. e73-<>825 3 ~. C:.~ S::::. .!:':; Xlnl oond. CUil orny. lel6ey c:atJinet•. perf9ct MHT b .......... clearance trade. BelUllful cond. ~ .. C1dlllle9 In Southern Mull be creative, Im· IMO HALL MIRROR $795 S7s-e888 &48-l l22 condition, $4500 firm. 1211. S22~. 549-3547 Maroon color. 530-1528 '89 SOUAREBACK Good Callfomlll See ua todey1 ~~~:v~ho! ::.:..~ lO' high. Sl500. 759-l009 8FT~STOM SOFA, hand * Ulll Uff * el9-2e 7°"974 SIDE TIE $200 mo. 30tt .lalll, laJ!dM f>e'8·s4~~'7tor l350 1111111 Immediate earning• up lo tied. coral/beige, belutl-Moller 2 dr, 4 hr fife, 3'e " Pl1no-H1mllton Baby mu . power. B1lbo1 - -•• .. WO $500 weellly commlsalon * WUTll Tl llT lul $300 080 M0-6931 X 2'3" X 5' hi. Ideal for Grandi $2800 value. wlll eo-850-7737 Adi llt'I '71 Bui. ~ood cond ._. ponlbl•. Management * ......... •ntlq·--alnuttble,$180. gun. coin collectlon•. 11cr.lflc1 lor $1700 w edd k New 17J A di m clMn IUIO 12195. 50-912evea 2500C·OsHf.°:EBIYSAd openings 1111ll1ble. ....-"" -~ Jewelery. allvet" ~. 780-8702 an"'lme ant oc apace, : u • • • ·71 vw CONVERT "" 9 5 4 • 8 9 3 7 , 1e 1 v e Large oati dreuer. $275. Owner moving mu•t Mii ,. port Harbor ar11 '°' 20 I 1800. e3 -6390 dye. 140• 1 llO meaaage. * IUT Alllelll Contemporary din rm aet. $3000 obo e15-1888 · Story & Clartc Plano Con-power boat w/11' beam 492-0525 ev••· ... ..U.'I XJL1NTn .~o1_f!7D.;,.'4d~· An1werlng 1ervlc1 Of 1wltchboard operator. axperlence raq'd. Day atiltt 11 local exchange. Call 845·2550 $375. Matching I ' couch. · sole walnut xlnt cond ASAP 714/645-8100 or . S 1 SOUTH vv "' "" , • ........... M $300. Mllotllng tblH. 2 TWA rnd trip tlclltta any-$1470. 642-4901 1173·1187 Clll 1nytlma. 75 Fox Ill. Wgn, 11 nt •72 VAN 11000 C•-ltt 1313 S 00 845-7313 wllere$2000pr 495 2497 Irani, 12000/0BO. ou1n •••• ............. 1150 & 1 . -Wurilt:rer Spinet Plano li~ln All 548-4652 '" 3. c 780-3885 111. 6 '72 cheV lmp811 l dr 1750. 111 laMla CWll Apt full of fine turnlahlnga, Be1utlful h1ndp1lnted $800. 5411-7272 -T Ila tlot lllZI .72 vw, rblt eng, good '68 Buick Electra 4dr lit-Ml• all under 1 yr old. MUST NATIVITY SET. 175. WJ 7 ay yard Nie 9-4pm. aal cond., looka good H new $550. Offer 780-3e98 SELLSaletobetleldFrl, M0-87091YM n, •, New & uHd blkH: XOsf lR-AEXLEY 3066. --·-S2000.839-11501118 .. 7,,.c•M•RO,l-.lo THINK YOU CAN DO IT S O"' 720 ""32 !..: t-1••• orul1er1, min b lkea 1,,...5 "'•bit ---., ... _, ., ,.. ,.. .,..,_ Sat, un 1 • .,. """' CAMPER SHELL: paneled •• ..., -• $50 $400 TlrH wttla IJV • .,.. ~" ,_ • ..... 13995 845-7578 ~~.~~11p~• ~d; Amer. Olk T1blel. round Armolre: Edwardlln, IOlld lnalde. Illa D1t1un, BEA0TIF0 [ 2511 RCA part 0 a, ace...oo.;.. 1ee:i clutch, lacqer pant, new VolumeSalM.Sefvlce '110 Sctrocc:o. lo ml, AC, ,,,m=-:I ,,..,...,":'"!".=-:----:-~ I dHk-aome collecllon & aquara. Oood cond. walnut. m1gnlllcent Mazda & LuY truck•. like Color-TV , 2 yr wmty Charle st. c;M. e50-7079. ct1rome,e7~1~~9 17000. And Laaalng AM/FM. 111n1 c:ond. Super '79 CAMARO. 1 ownar, IO calla-llgtll typing & !Hing. $400 Heh, 979-21190 $3100· Love ... , 3 moa new. $250. 848-0881 $148, Fr .. del. Open • 18711 BMch BIVd. buy 11 M500. 559-8112. ml 13995. 845-7578 Good lelePhone voice, Antique flreplace mantel, old $300, 983·1311· CEILING F.AN with Tulip Sun. TV John'a 84&-1796 M::~:n';:;'.1 ::~T. ~Ol ~ 10 fill Huntl"il~ Beach 538-fi35 • 11111 fliilt good perton1llty re-tolld megany. $300 obo. Beaut. 4-pc Jiving rm Mt, llghtt, oak b11dee, nev9f Hard to find: IOlld welnut MC 1325, e15-:T&e IVI 172 2002 4 ....,. bQ nu (l 1•) 141•2000 We h .... 1 good eelec:tlon quired. You mua1 enjoy 556-49112 only 1 wk old, lull paid uaed, Ilk• 195. 652-0798 atereo cabinet, $399 or • .......,, 335 ... YW IUllTt of NEW & ul9d Che\<- lllklng with cuatomera on b"'.---~=.-------.. .. cr.-1•1 •.a95 MUtll Mtl s2e5 coco co·.. ly 50' bell offer. 87~10 SchWlnn Cruller 2e" Olrll paint, $4000. 980·8 lanaaaa "" tUI __ .......... ,_._,.,See UI f ..... .... • --t 1 -· · · """ ..,. • cu11om s1so. e73--8728 • -.,.. ,,,_ ....... ,. phone. ,,_ emp 0Y" 213-402-8408 upright model good .. 11'1111 IYITlll 75 530!, p/a, p/b, ale. 113 WHITE GHIA ml llW'I •ll'/9d 5 yra. Hiid 10 leave R AREA .. ~.,, almoat new Whit• cond. 1350 'o .8 .0 . .,_y ----a ..... ,. cua,.. .... !!5002 21'001BO 831-e280 or o~. owner. atereo. xlnl ..... -·couNTEDI for peraona reHona. APPLIANCE SERVICE ,,_, ... ,,. 2•79 ~· ..--.·-'"" ..,,. -uv • d $3100 e75 ,..18 °"" .,,.. Salary compen1ut1t• we Mii recond., guar. knobby a. Oak aol1 & ~·· • celver, tape deck FIClory dlr9Ct lhelll a con · · -vv ll•IAWIALTI w/e11per. Fringe benefit• retrlgefatora. ~9-3077 loftMll $310. 842-<>870 ESCA LIFT chair elevator. w/dolby and po-1\ll llleaperl from 1225 up. '75 BMW 2002, xlnt cond. '71, 2nd ownr, IUP« deen. _ •1WA111 incl'• 2 Mi• paid va-BUY DIRECT FROM Ilka new 1750. ~8-1501 apeakera. $450. Clll Paul 556-4289. mull tMI Showroom run• el(ll, nu Int, 1 yr •- COMHEll C HEVROLFT .... -... f I I• I r ' \ ,, • \ Ion hOlld lion & W WEIT M&IT 714-556-7278 cond: red w/11n. S5000 Aal t whl/ ed ~II SINCE 1963 cat . ay,pen MAN~Ac.:~:EA FIREWOOD for u le. ... .... .. •• ObO. Jay 844-9111 d1ya; ;-,;~ ... $3 ~50 . Miki Ul-Ull ........ ::'1ca1 ~~~ .. T ·C:. IPPUUOI ~op-quallty ~ ..,:" T': cheap, es'" 1200 1YP91F · c~ Hc~~ngdo1ft =:1 uc o , x nt 499--3593 evea &45-6374 or942~199 ~ ,..,---.----~--iir.111,.1•1 paid. WI., •• wtlolealle NOW 2 LOCATIONS ........ _, 189.95, fui1 NII Bobby 1-ree ......w.--. .. 1350/obo. Muat '77 BMW 32()1 A/C, llloya, /10 "' .. _ ...... H_ .... __ ....... CM -· .... ··2 2123 '73 K Ghll, 1 owner. 75K • exit • Co. w arn.,.oy .... """' lvvv .,.,.,. """"" · jult $79.95. Save _, uv • f~ht•. Am/fm cue. ml. xtr• c1een. gd ahape by ownar. 52K ml. 11495. S4b-l 200 C::~d,,0 ~e!~-=: 13~5to~~:S~o:.<:. more on q_, Ind king '80 Puch Moped, xln1 15 ·Brad 848-7201 J4200 oao 845-5508 ~· 846-1125 ...... 8-39f2 111a. Free dellvery oond.. $350/obO. Mutl ,83 BMW 320!, fUll ..... 1141 ~ • for Matt Oentry. 834--4200 or 558-3 2 836-4195 Mil 882•2123 Europaen upgrldea, ~ ~ .'78 L• Baron. low mllelge. =!=~:-Drywa DELUXE WATERBED Granelll mo-peel -I.I 2 quality c;arrled through to 179 MUd1 o(c H11Cfi-.A. • 13()()(). e7s.2 184 TUil 1111 3 Monttla warranty, Pana King ea•. with canopy & people blue gr•t oond the •m. 1llHI data II. bactl. Dix, aunroof, 48M a ..... 1311 .. TlllU &Labor,OellvwyAYlll. mlrrOfa.$400.844-2815 Q4'MI g•• ~liege $450. Mellcvloutly mllnlalned m l. am /Im ou1. -'ll•TSl•/..a.... d MIC & VIM Mon-S.t 9 e . 984·3"8 1tt epm'. • by I determined $2300/obO, 842-5051 -H .. p gllre them• hM . . • OlrwttleMl,brUl/amoked DIMES per11C1loril11.11e.ooo. '82 6""" • d ..... It• xlnt ....... ,. 4SPEED. 983-e059 alert. Earn top llS part 20 cu n Admiral 11<1e by gl ... l300Contampturn. Honda &pr-SR, only e y 1 p o l n t m • n t '"J..~.:!· "" · SOITH time evenlnga. Only tide whlle retrlg. I 145. acceu $10-30 720-9405 ..,.,,, mlln. Wart1nt... 71 ••• 4 1 P282 cond. ~. 538-8 t55 '78 Ood;. Colt, 48,000 ml. Ill d d1ble """ ... .,.. .c>: Xlnt cond. Muat NII. poa va, •P•n · 953-131e or 953-84e7 Drexel dining room table elec •tart, compl111 B.,W ,8• 3181 5 • ...,.,. ·e2 RX7 GS. stereo, tnrf. OOlln SHOO. 852-0840 outgoing adult• need d w/helmut. 1400/0BO. "" • • .,,....., mega. elllru, 211< ml, apply. Phone 84e-7021. 8 mo old Colorlc gH w/4 chalrt. exit con . A 833-8277 or 851-1932 tunrool. redlo. 1/c, llm-11.lnl cond. 19800/obo. vu1w••n ........ 1111 2:30 to 8 p.m. Monda~ range. 1300 o bo . $400obo. 55e-4982 ltedlllpdllf.PP.$111,000. 780 3884 -IW ttlru Friday. 55i-l 170 Ethan Allen bookcaM 1c1n1 i t ttrtytl"/ 213/377-9827 • .... KL Ill 1978 Fl•t•. great trana. Freet.er. dlx lroau .... 17.5 cond. $250. Evening• lcMttrl 1111 Convenlen1lyLoc1ted l erc•n Ital 1141 ._. ..... ,, car. $150 below whole- PART-T•ME, Verled hourt cu II upright. xlnt cond. 559.7417 LINE 8 motorcycle•. 8 mini &CompellllvetyPrloed 172 220. N;W eng. auto, VolumeS ..... h!Vlc4I 111eB11~.720-4712 to Include Hrly A.M, 1 175. 769-0$83 111 &pm Kg az bed sso. Dr...., & blkll l50·S400. Tire•. & ale, llefeo, bllut. cond. And LMSlnQ dya, 55 • 72 •1111. weekends. Muat have de-R1frlg. $250. Wuh-nlte tbll25, 850-1529 whls, 11nk1, fendera ate. $5000/obo, 839-2880 1871 t Beech Blvd ·e7 Mu1t1ng, 1eK on new ~=~"v:':~.~~'r::: !'~"s~:,5~::5~~:-K::'a~.s~-~·:~C:. WANT ADS ~~:m.~';;.':o1:t· c M. s11ea-Serv1oe-L11ling ·1~:c,~.s~~1~1~·~~~::i~ (lH1c)iG4 olo ~·.,~':!11!:.°1·m~ wagon) to •Nl•I ,,.,,,... ,,,_, __ _,,......,.-.,.---:-:--::-:-S.__...... ........ Simmon•. '71 S"•ukl 2""'. ~ •'tl low mll~• • on rblt ....... CHI. new •hMpakln A•...... dealer In lrvlne Retr"'. 2 dr, froat tr ... like ..........., ....,, -vv "' rYV CARVER ... ,. 11~"5 5•• •12e ;;;;:' Mutt be ~ ~~ s 1e5. 893-9080 E 1 r t ht on•• 11O0. blke.1200 obo. 31-427 l'l.J 1 hl·compr on ang. new · .... · .. v-v d bl C I I •"' 857-5703 IY'll t c n...._-oc,m,A\Ai llfM, wheela, paint, upfl, ® m '73 PINTO W.AQON, IUto. • •. on I (; r .. REFRIGERATOR $100 '73 Yarnahl 80 , .. IOfed "'-IUJ l"LIR.i;;. IJIVIH I I I b lk .. llC • Hyde Mond~ thru Friday 14 CU FT 850-1529 Mu1Uell brand new queen $275/obo. '64&-02i7 ...,.~~:~"'. ~~·· l'f i ,oro~'io ~ o . pp '~•"' llOOO or offer. 848-5641 ~~.9~g.ra~110'301"w,.,_ .. __,.,lngholJM_.,..--g-.. -d:-ryef-. ~:,.~~~·8:~~ IMPORTANT NOTICE TO lll-lllUD ..,,,,.,,. .nm.an t139-0333or 962-2238 ~ " ·~~:~~In-= -• workagd,175. 873-207e PRIVATE PARTIES New paint, 131 kit. rigid, ~·~ we'llM11et1Y°"'Oown ~oncU3000b054&-l277 X-Raytecttle:lan. PIT Whlrlpool S uperem• M~~':':.~'!11 ~~~= 11" over Olf'der, lots ol S....~t....inG PIYIT*ltu.>Tol1500 °'· offtcle, Coat• lliMM. w11Mt&g11dfY9f,emo. cabinet. 1500ob0. Sell your lt«n• for $60 or'"" In ~:":~ ':.~.oJ~ UlllllT 1~1':;:oc.11 549.9319 old l500. e 73·3031 N0-8164 982-2488 ""'r f•mou• O/MES·A.-LINES pub· ·11 Mu11ana Htctlt>k w/T-top, AIC, AM/FM 1-trti, look• OOOd $2900 . .,.. trlCM. 8111 9"•1221 11111¥DITNY I I. W·Pool, 17', ice male•. ijft mattr ... aet• twin ll•htKJ each S•turday In the D•lly "" 13.~APA ""anclnO J• ..... 122$ W-Pool bottom l80 Ml 1915 qn 's100 PJlgt. '80 ODYSSEY. modified. *'78 3201: A/T. A~onA• .. 1 ................ ,, ™ Xldr companion, fnr, 117~. Me-0792 kmg 1120. 7s0·5832 • 1 newperfrn motor & Irena. (K7\J0D) S/A ·79 2400, lmmao. cond. VW't& llUIU'•OAC l'Wy~lo~Mual CflaUftet, tnopptng, loCal .... ilttdailH if NEWPORT BEACH OIMES-A.-LINE ads muat ba ~·=·=1':".! ~~~tv~; 4 apd. 88.000 mllel. S1UH. IU 1111 lllil55t6/~. 7et-1143 4M-n57 , ~:., ~;.. ':,.:O:,~· LOOiti 2x1rmM: 1· brown leatl'lef 10t1. p,.._pald •o m•ll or bring th•m Into ,81 Honda CR250. MUOtn •'79 320!: 4 ac>d. SIR c 111 e75-1387 21ow.1<a1•a. <>range u.li Ult ....... Frorn "'*'" '* "· 1275; Oenlln ~t DR the D•lly Piiot offlc•. Be •ure to kit, •tru l '150,..IN-t704 (88621 •ic .... 1 llU r •·t tllJ seer.car; temporary OR? i~clng alao. Harbor ..,, 1350: •tre long 1 /nclucH your phOf'l(t numbflr or •d-*'79 320!: 4 apd, .. ,.. .. ·n Marti v. xlnt oond, rully Varlacl expet .. aupenor AaOWOOd 714/~1-1317. boll IC)r'lng, ml11r... drna ,,, your ad. h•WI. price on '81 t<awuakl KZ.305. xlnt (994)(EQ) , ... o,,, .... N c~• MA•n• !zqulpp•. ~-2 ... ·~2soo . qulollflcatlon. 840-1897 f ._.. frlrne. 175": 2 deCOf, tfld _..,.h lt•m & no abb,.vl•tlons. cond. M50. 751-4288 '*'19 320t, 4 apd, SIR v • .,. ,. 3-0340 .,,~ ..... ,.. --tablet ~/c.ervM detllll. _.. (7289) -um -Ill 1110 itown dC19 4 Y" J lll0\1 S150 pr; aold lntlque d 'll1 ~WI ~?.~ ;~~k:lnt '*'79 320!; 4 apd, 8 /A .._--. -....., ! Uifi Pd" M <N:UtJ & neut.Ncl ~ OOOd mirror-. S125. All •Int Sorry. no comm~cl•I ••• oar•oa ~=rC.CS.~MUST SELL (Ot1YPZ) ~ ·o, ~,I ~ V-4J, MO. '80. etio11. h .. btttn. A1.0 with c;Nldr~. Lo«* Ing tor ~~. 8~~31 ~~~H uh11, produce, plants or animals 1750. 540.1139 dey1, * '79 5281; A/T. AIC running oond, bodyWOttl. 81'1e!fle. Male, 2 yr SBO: a OOOd horM. Own« di. -v7•• ' •re 8CCflP•tllble. 842·2131 ..,.., (286ZCE) UH. l&0-12'3 Ptike )( ltoodle Fe(8')) 1bl9d&una1>1etocaref0f ""o""'R""IE""N'""T="A""'L--,8:'.l""k-C~O~lle=• 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil*'eo 320t: 5 apd, A/C '76c.ptlV .. 4-epd.anrl, 16(),lhOtl, .. c. 774·9640 him. ~4843 tebte. 30X881l19" 1100, 11 (585ZOL) 8 .. __ neN'"ULT SfK ml, run• 9reet1 •1•,.2•• ........ •'11 320!: 5 apd, '" ---· " .. -1 1 ......... "'7418 AKC COCKER SPANIEL FREE AKC Aluk1n v ""' '"' DE a.OLINE Good tor ~Ina°' for (1CUT943) · ......... __,... . PUPS. 1 wh. Bult 1250. Mll•rnute. 1·~ yr all ~O-U_,.A...,.L'""'1T"'"v,.,..-.,.c,..,.u.,..,s<""T:"'.:O:".M:-, "' : pane, MW knobblee 16() *'12 320t; 5 apd, 8/A Fiii ..... --= OYI 840-2201, 91191 ' enot• To IO\llng home FURNITURE: 9 ' 1011 3 p'.m. Thu-.... v ....... 121 ett.1o;;; (11Vl"4&3) ...... ... ........ ... ...... ·-•net• 551·&577 with room to run. Cati '300. e· coffee tbl 1280. ~ , ~~=~~~==~I *'N 320!: 5 IPd. 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Ml·212t Want Ad• Call 842-'978 Sell Idle ltetnt 842·517111~~;;;;;~;;;;~;;~;:;;~~~.i.:;~~~~~==::.t.=~~==~~=:l:================:L:========:=. , ( .. l \ Lebanon: • Vice President George Bush. standing before the mountain of rubble where rescuers were still looking for bodies from Sunday's Beirut bombing. said: "We're not going to let down friends because of terror." Page A6. • At dawn, the Marines were fired upon with small arms, mortar and bazookas and fired back. • The death toll from the suicide bombing is 219 dead and about 70 wounded for the Americans. with French casualties fisted at 48 dead, 15 wounded and 10 missing. BATTLEFRONTS U.S. troops fighting in Grenada, Lebanon By Tile A11ociated Pre11 <:ombat involving American troops continued today in both Grenada and Lebanon, with cas- ualties mounting at both sites. In Grenada, U,e United States landed about 800 paratroopers in today to reinforce the almost 2,000-atrong U.S. invasion force and began evacuating American citizens. Pentagon aources re- ported six U.S. troops killed, eight missing and 33 wounded in fight- ing ao far. In Beirut today, American troops returned fire at dawn when they were fired upon with small anns, mortar and baz..ookas. Vice President George Bush inspected the devasted Marine base and said "insidious terrorist cowards" will not change U.S. policy. American casualties in Lebanon are now listed at 219 dead and about 70 injured. (For more on the Lebanon crisis, see Page A6.) In Cuba, a government an- nouncement in Havana said six U.S. helicopter gunships attacked Cuban positions o~renada before dawn today,destro · gthe Cubans' main building at the Point Salines airfield. It said the "caaualties are numerous. But survivors will continue fighting." White HOUie deputy press aec- retary Larry Speakes told re- porters in Wuhington that 61 Americana were en route to , Charleston. S.C. on the first evacuation flight from Point Selinet. There are about 1,000 Amert~ on the ialand, many of them medical studen~. Pentagon aouroes, who di.a- cloeed the caaualtiee and the number of 82nd Airborne reln- forcemen~. said the Americana were enooun tering stiff ree.i.atance from hundreds of Cubans and (See AMERICANS, Pa .. A%) • .... : "' .. -n:llei • 'fflllltlon: 110 111e11NM e lncl1111'lff: Te11tlll'll, IM~nN. -· n11t"'91, "'-· ,.,,,,11-n1111 •More than h•lf of those Americans who had heard of ·the U.S. Invasion of Grenada on Tuesday approved of the action, according to a poll conducted by ABC News. • Six American servicemen have been killed and 33 wounded, Pentagon sources say. U.S. officlaJs also said three Grenadian troops were killed and up to 600 Cubans captured. • President Fidel Castro vowed today· that his countrymen on Grenada would not surrender . • Some members of Congress, many concerned that U.S. forces are stretched too thin around the world, urged quick U.S. withdrawal from Grenada. THI ORANGI COAST COAST IDITIDN WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29. 1983 ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA 25 C~ NTS Missing car link in Irvine murder By ANDREA ADELSON Of .. ....,,.....,, Irvine police hope a missing car and a business associate can help lead them to the killer of murdered tire store president Boyd W. Finkel who waa dead eight days before his body was found. Sgt. Dick Bowman said today investigators hope to question an unidentified Maryland man be- lieved to be Finkel'a financial backer. In the next two days, police hope to ask the man about previous business associates of Finkel who might shed aome light on a motive for the homicide. Police also are looking for a miasing silver Honda Prelude with California license plates owned by Finkel, which is ''unac- counted for," Lt. Bob Lennert said. The car may have been loaned to a friend or may be a link to Finkel's killer. he said. Meanwhile, autopsy results re- vealed Tuesday that the 39-year-old Irvine man, reported missing this week by his co-workers. died Oct. 16 after being bludgeoned over the head with a blunt instrument, police said. Fingerprints were used to positively identify the partially decompoeed body found stuffed in the trunk of a car Monday, Le.nnert said. (See MISSING, Page A%) Some ki.nd of hero .......................... Firemen battle major lire at paper reeycllng center In Santa Ana Tuetday e•ening. I . \ . By KAREN E. KLEIN Of .. 0., ......... Bob Heber wasn't aup- poeed to be on patrol that Monday. But since he'd lost his regular job, Heber was able to substitute for another Costa Mesa police officer who wu a~nt. u it hadn't happened that way, 13-month-old Kevin Elliott Y oches miaht not be the happy, vtvadou.a little boy he ia today. And Heber. a 28-year-old reeerve of- ficer and a aa.lee rep- reeentative with a pub- lishing company, would not have made a new friend. It was that Monday, Sept. 26, when Kevin fell in hia backyard pool and nearly drowned. And it was that Monday when Heber became involved with strangers who would juat a few weeks later consider him a "dear and special" part of their lives. Heber was patrolling the aoutheast part of Costa Mesa when a medi- cal aid call of a drowning in progress came in about 1:40 p.m . Heber re- membered all the kids he'd taught swimml.ng leseona to in junior high and high 1ehool and aped to the address that came over his aquad car radio. "l went emergency lights and sirens. You're really suppoeed to let (the station) know when you do that, but I didn't care because it just struck home with me aince there was a kid in- volved," Heber said. (See OFFICER, Page A!) Fire ravages paper plant in Santa Ana BJ STEVE MARBLE °' ................... MARGE BITETl'I ......... C.Wu S fl I A welder may have· acddently · eet off a spectacular fire that roared through a.sAnta Ana paper recydln& plant Tueed.ay night and shrouded a five-block area in thick, black anoke. name. ahot 20 feet ln the air .. police offken went door to door in • surrounding nel&hborhood waml.na reltdenta to stay lndoon or evacuate the area becauee of pcmible toxk fumes from bumina plaltk:. Flre lnve.Upton were d.lalna throuah the remainl of the SAnta Ana Recycl1nc Center, 2~38 s. Main St., today. AuthortU. ~ while they hid no ettimate on the amount of damage they edmitt.ed (Set PAPER, P~ Al) ~ Speraw maY drop out of Senate race By JERRY BIRSCB ud ROBERT BARK.ER Of ............... A bitter flaht for the local at.ate Sena1e .. t may be evaporatina to the deliaht of local RepublJcuw. State Sen. Ollie Speraw, R-Newport Beech, will meet with hia staff Thunday mom1nc to decide u he will drop his challence to Aaaemblywoman Marian Bergeeon, R-Newport Beach, for the 37th Di.strict Senate eeat, Speraw'a aides said today. Meanwhile, Auemblyman Nolan Friz.:zelle, R-Huntington Beach, said today be has no plans to enter the Cray. "I'm happy where I am in the ABllembly and there's no virtue for me to be ln the Senate," he said. ''Thia i9 wbeJ'e the main battle- ground ia to support the poaitians of the aovemor and the Re- publican Party and it's where I want to be," the two-UJne •- 9etllblyman said, hoping to end speculation he might challenge Bergeeon if Speraw withdrew. Speraw, who is beeet by a variety of health and peraonal problems, may want to avoid the bitter fight and devote his time to (See SPERAW, Pace AZ) Winds tangle south county power lines Power to nearly 4,000 homes and businesses was restored Tues- day after Santa Ana winds wreaked havoc on power lines in south Orange County. Meanwhile, the hot and gusty winds were expected to diminiah today, making way for aomewhat cooler temperatures Thunday - if you can call temperatures in the upper 70. at the beaches and the 80. inland cool for late OctOber. "The wind blew trees into the wires in Capiatrano Be.ch and took out power to 3,860 cus- tomers," said San Diego Gas & Electric Co. spokesman Tom Larimore. He said the 6 a.m. outage affected homes from San Juan Capistrano BOUth to Capistrano Beach and parts of !lOUth and north San Clemente. Power was restored by 8 a.m .. he said. The National Weather Service is predicting a cooling trend Thunday under sunny skies. "It won't be as warm as today," said spokeswoman Pat Rowe. ''Things should cool down to the mid 70s near the coast to the low 80a inland by the weekend," she said, adding overnight lows will be in the 60s by thia evening. The dry winds prompted Or- ange County firefighters to go on alert, patrolling the county's brushlanda for signs of smoke or flamell. Kudoa tor Kermen . Marina High running baCk Eric Kann ,. o hu gone about hi• bu81neea wtthout a lot of recognition, 11 the Dally Piiot'• prep football r I I ,, I: ' ' I. $2 :w+ U 1t Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 I_ c_oN_1_1N_u_1_D_s_1o_R_11_s _I Bullet train 'fired on' by analyst MISSING AUTO... Tustin consulta n t assails 'infla ted ridership projections' of $3 b illion p roject From Page A 1 Investigators have ruled out robbery. burglary or drugs as a motive in the murder. No weapon was dlacovered when polic:e searched Finkel's blood-spotted home at the ~ of Lockhaven Circle. Police refused to say if any evidence was con- fiacated in the three-bedroom home. Police forced their way into the home Monday after two co-workers reported concerns over....,.... Finkel's unexplained absence from Superte<' Tire Center, the Irvine tire store of which he was president. FinkeJ's body was found in the trunk of a dark blue Cadillac parked in the ~arage. A burglar alarm in the house had not activated when police arrived, according to Lennert. Finkel was last seen alive al 10: 15 p.m . Oct. 15 having dinner at an Irvine restaurant, Lennert said. Long-time residents of Lock- haven described their neighbor as a recluse who owned expensive cars and rarely had visitors. Bill Julian, a former business partner, speculated Finkel may have made enemies in the tire bUSine$. Julian said he and Finkel in i\.pril were foreed to sell their nearly bankrupt chain of six discount tire stores. The stores in Orange and Los Angeles and counties, had debts of $2 million. By ANDREA ADELSON OllMO.ily_ .... The proposed multi-billion dollar Los Angeles-to-San Diego bullet train is a "house of cards" buill with inflated ridership pro- jectiona, underestimated costs and overly roey expected revenues, according to a critic, Jonathon Richmond unleashed his critical analysis of the $3 billion train system Tuesday in Tustin, after concluding a three-month, $10,000 study for the city. The 132-rnile route proposed by American High Speed Rail C.Orp. for Japanese-style high speed trains slices through Orange C.Ounty. It's been opposed by Tustin residents and some home- owners in Irvine. SPERAW MAY BAIL OUT OF RACE ... From Page A 1 Republican efforts to change the reapportionment system, accord- ing to Jack Gennain, an aide. Bergeson said she would be pleased if Speraw dropped out but ·added "it would not change my plans at all." "I don't know whether there will· be any opposition. My race has been run from the start as if there would be opposition. We have the staff, volunteers and f i.n.ancing to run a campaign against opposition;' Bergeson said. his intention to run for the Senate seat in 1984. Bergeson, a three-term as- semblywoman, had already said she would run. Political analysts expected the battle would be one the most expensive and bitter in Orange Coast history. With the primary nearly a year away both can- didates already were sparring over pledges to run a clean campaign only last month, The e nd to the Speraw-Bergeson fight would help local Republicans concen- Speraw. who lost his Long trat.e on unseating Democratic Beach senate seat to reapportion-office holders in the area, said ment, gained the Legislature's Tom Fuentes, a vice chairman of approval to represent the 37th the Orange C.Ounty Republican Distict in January. The aeat was · Party. left vacant by fonner Sen. John "There was some speculation Schmitz last year. that perhaps $1 million would be Soon after, Speraw announced spent between the two sides. Those dollars not spent on a inter-party fight could be used by other Republicans against Demo- crats," he said. The prime targets would be Rep. Jerry Patterson, D-Santa Ana, and Assemblyman Richard Robinson , D-Garden Grove, Fuentes said. Bergeson acknowleged that the campaign would have been hard fought but now "I am optimistic that we will avoid a divisive primary." she said. The winner of the Republican June primary is virtually guaran- teed the seat because of the conservative makeup of the dis- trict's electorate. The distict stretches from Seal Beach to Oceanside and reaches inland to the C.Olorado River. Its most heavily populated area is the Orange Coast. OFFICER SAVE S MESA BOY ... From Page A1 The precocious toddler had slipped away from his mother, Toby. who was talkin.g to a neighbor at the door. A couple minutes later, Toby returned to Kevin's playroom to find it empty. Her son was at the bottom of the swimming pool in her backyard. Heber was the first one to arrive at the Yoches' home that day. Kevin "was blue. His Ups were blue, he was bloated and there were food fragments around him on the floor. His mom was doing CPR' on him but she was pretty panicked. I just looked down and said to myself, 'l can't mess up on this.' In business you can screw up and it's not !IO bad. but here I had a human life to think abou~." Heber said. He took over the CPR and noticed Kevin respond1ng with gurgllna llOW'Mia. ''It iteemed like an ~temity," In the few minutes before the fi.re department and paramedics arrived on the scene. Heber said. CPR was not a routine procedure for Heber. "It was the first time I'd ever done it in my life. In my claM I always had trouble with the baby doll because I couldn't get my mouth over the nose and mouth like they showed me. I figured it was no ti.me to experiment on Kevin. I just plugged hls nose and breathed into his mouth like he was an adult." In the hours after the boy was taken to the hospital, Heber called Kevin's doctor and his house. A doctor who treated Kevin told Heber the youngster would live but would almost certainly be brain-damaged from lac:k of oxygen. "It was so tragic. He hadn'teven begun to live his life yet," Heber said. "I thought, 'Why did we work so hard for that, why did Kevin work so ha.rd?"' Heber .. who had been depressed since losing his full-time job anyway, was devastated. But he got good news the next day, when all the signs that pointed to brain damage turned out to be negative. "l just couldn't believe it," Heber said. "Everything had gone from so bad to so good." In the days and weeks that followed, Kevin's recovery wbuld be complete. But Heber's interest In the boy didn't flag. "He hM been 10 dear and 80 1peclaJ to ua," Toby Yoches said. "l think he felt responsible. He called every day to the hospital and to our home." One recent evening. after Kevin was released, Heber paid a visit to the Yoches' house and brought along a teddy bear for Kevin. "We were so touched by his sense of involvement with Kevin," Toby said. Heber's actions went beyond the nonnal call of duty, she said. But Heber said what he did was just routine. "I did what any other officer would have done. I guess I'm proud because I handled a crisis situation well. rve been scared many times, but ttus really involved somebody else's life and the responsi- bility of that is just overwhelming." PAPER PLANT FIRE ... ; From Page A1 it would be "considerable.'' "The fumes were just tremen- dous. It was very difficult to breathe," said Art Levitt, a spokesman for Pacific Telephone C.O. which has a service yard next have a fire," said K eller. "But it could have been worse if it was really blow\ni." plants likely would smolder for hours. "Because so much of that stuff is in bins or in bundles you just can't get it (the fire) out until you bulldoze it.'' said St.eve Bunting, a Newport Beach fireman who spent six hours on the 90ene. to the recycling plant. The fire burned three buildings at the two-acre recycling center and destroyed 14 vehicles parked at the ielephone service yard. No one waa injured in the 6:41 p.m. blaze. Santa Ana Battalion Chief Richard Keller said it appears a welder who was working out- doors at th~ plant may have triggered the flre when sparks from his equipment were swept into paper b~dles. ''The Santa Ana (wind) con- dition didn't help. It was dry and hot and that's not good when you We're Listening ••• • 642·6086 Deity Pflot Defty.,., .. Querenteed Mondey F110•y 11 '°'' f1t1 not tta.-• Y°"' per•' IJy $ 10 p ....... ~ c.-•&~ 1 " "' •no .,,,.,, r: r,,"' • 11 O• _.., A thin layer of smoke was still visible over the recycling center early today. Firemen said paper and plastic items stored at the Rapist hits at CM store A 26-year-old Costa Mesa car and drove her away, said Costa woman was raped Tuesday by a Mesa Police Sgt. Bill Bechtel. man who grabbed her ._.hen she \ The suspect drove to an un- tried to get into he r car in the known loca\Jon, sexually aa- Von's parking lot on F.ast 17th saulted the woman and then Street. police said. dropped her off near Palmer The attack occurred at 8: 12 p.m. S~t and Westminster Avenue, when a man described aa white, 20 Bechtel said. to 25 years old, 5-feet-10 with a The unidentified woman's car, medium build and reddish-blond which the suspect stole, was later hair, pushed the woman into her recovered. Whal do you hke about the Daily Piiot ., What don·t you like" Call the numbt>r at left and your message wall be r~'Orded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. ·Thc !lame 24 hou,. answerintt servi('e may be used to rt>C'ord lt't lers to the editor on any top•<' Mailbox contnb~tors must 1'1Clude their nc:anw and tcll'Phone number ror verH1 C'ahon No c1rculal1on l'all11, please Tl'll us what's on your mind ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. lchwert1 Ill Put>hsner . CleHifled edvef'lltlno 11.t/142-54171 All other department• "42-4321 MAIN OFFICI \ lO Wot! 0•y SI Cmta M""' t.11 M11t O\Jt~•" Ou• t••OO C.1,.t• M••• !,,II 01&16 ("! yugnt tJt&:l 0.411'0" tll9•1 PllOM.""'IJ ~at•y fol(/ f'Ultw ~Iott•• 1Uu•h•l1ur1t •O•lt'U Al m•tt•t Ot t lvll'lll .. fWY'WN'lta l11t1f"I', m1,. b4t ftipfOdVc.0 w t~t "4M'(:~I ""'"11• ,,,.,fl of ((l(1y1igh1 1JW1wit1 1•tvnJiy Hl'ld ~'"""" 1 0 '"" 00 , 01 fftr'•••• '""' 000f ~ t I I~ C•• ~·7flt ,0 • "' ,.,.., •"' <""'y • ., 0.-Cheiy Dowellby Aaymol\d MaoL••n EOllOf nnd Ass1s111n1 Cof'ltrotfn1 5H «"1 11115 r-<1!1agtt Pl "I et C.C"I• "-'"'• (olol<•n.• ,, .. 1 .... 900) ~•lJM..tC)t1111of1 fr~ (•fltllf \<4 r!. ftllC."10•.fy l'r MA• SfJ ~ m<tr'ltNy Clfculetlon Teeephc>Me MW O.M\Jf C.nun!Y "'-~' Nofl1'Wftl """""'lllDll !IHtn A Wto!Mtll.I• .... , ... llOY'le~ ..... to the Publlshcr 11~ '· e.,.eo "'~'·"' Mtnaq.oo Olofl• ... ~-... tliifi• A..t ... t.....tliU IA " Ill"' Oofte141 L. Wlttlllf'llt (•<·••inn Mt<1•111" VOL. 78, NO. 219 I The plan Cor a priv1ttely financed rail line, whose rolling stock would whip by at 130 mph, "will inevitably be bankrupt" because underlying planning is based on "totally false" assump- tions, Richmond said aft.er a two-hour press conference. Rich11ond said he obtained feaslbLity studies, which were prepared r or American High Speed Raj] by conaultants. The studies are biased and incomplete, he said. "I checked every single detail down to the cost of credit card transacti,ons. They didn't even include costs ot credit cards, or liability or a reservation system," said Richmond, a rail analyst and fonner Fulbright scholar with the Sen. Ollie Sper aw Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology. John Lagomarcino, the vice president of American High Speed Rail. responded in equally vitriolic tem\S. "Richmond's data is out of date and l.ncomplete. He used this same miainformation before a (state) Senate oornmittee. ... 'We stand by our marketing analysis. It's accurate," he said. "Stonewalling" by American High Speed Rail officials is why the city undertook the study, Tustin C'ity Manager William Huston aaid. "We got nothing but generalized information to qus- tions we railed.'' The project "wW have a very aerious impact" in Tustin aa the propoeed llne9 run behind two large subdivisions, he said. Huston aaid the names of ex- perta who have reviewed Rich- mond's findings will be revealed soon. The intent ia to derail the bullet train. "We can't do it. But we can alert other decision makers," he said. Santa's entrance not for Placentia youth By The A11oclated Pre11 A 10-year-old Placentia boy has learned the sooty truth about his chimney. St. Nick would stick, the same way Justin Bayless did when he tried to get into his locked-up house after school. And laYing his finger aside of his nose wouldn't get him out, either. Firefighters had to cut a chunk from the chimney to free him. It was a bad day at black brick, all around, for Justin. His troubles actually began about noon when he was sent to the principal's office for disciplining at F.astside Christian Elementary School in nearby Fullerton. police said. Ap- parently he left school early after that, they said. But no one was home and the doors were locked. So Justin climbed to the roof of the two-story house and lowered himself feet-first into the chimney. Justin apparently lQSt his grip and fell nearly 25 feet, finally coming to rest on the flue at the top of the fireplace, about three feet short of his goal. About that time, Palmer said, school officials searching for their missing student arrived at the house and heard his cries for help. "I want out! Get me out!" the boy hollered all the while. He was freed, uninjured, two hours later. Overflowing toile t wreaks havoc in N B While it took l~ than an hour to fix a leaky toilet in Newport Center's 17-story Wells Fargo Building, repairing the damage it caused took considerably longer. AMERICA NS FIGHTING ... The toilet, in a 1 lth floor men's room, leaked water into the build- ing's electrical system shutting it down wt Wedneday-. From Page A1 Grenadians. The military sources. who spoke on the condition that they not be identified, said U.S. forces were being sniped at and that fighting was continuing around both of Grenada's airports Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberge r declared earlier In the day. "There will be some more casualties because the price of freedom is high.'' Jamaican Prime Ministe r ·Ed- ward Seaga said he was told 12 Cubans and three civilians were killed on Grenada when the invulon by Marines and Army Rangers began Tuetlday, On Tuesday, the Pentagon said two members of the invasion force had been killed and 23 wounded on the Caribbean island. President Fidel Castro vowed his men would not surrender, and Cuba's Prensa Latina news agen- cy said sending in 82nd Airborne troops ''gives an indication of the disorder and hysteria provoked in the high command of the United States by the heroic resistance of a fistful of Cubans who were still fighting at dawn today alter 24 hours of intense combat in which imperialism has made use of all its technical means of conventional warfare -a really humiliating and demoralizing development for Yankee imperialism," Weinberger told NBC-TV's ''Today" show that "with the airborne and the other units in there we would hope that aome of the pockets of resistance would be reduced today.'' He said the landlng fc;>rce had taken about 2~ Cubans priaoner, including 200 "armed oomba- Ill. llD mu flllf tants." He said the balance of the Cubans had some sort of reserve training. "Those operations are proceed- ing there probably will be more before the day is out," Weinberger said. In addition to the Cubans, about 30 Soviet advisers have been seized by the invaders. Castro. Marxist-led Grenada's staunchest ally, acknowledged today that an undetermined number of Cubans had been killed and wounded in the invasion. but vowed hla countrymen would not 1urrender. He alto raised the poaaibillty of evacuating the Cubans, who have been helping build a new airport that 'Was one of the (irst areas seized by U.S . Army Rangers Tuesday . The building's owner, the Irvine C.O., hoped to have it fLXed by Monday. but temporary repair measures did not work and elec- tricity was not restored until 9 a.m today. said Bud Dobyns, the Irvine C.O.'s director of facilities. Repairmen had to drill two holes in each of the top 16 floors and run temporary cables through the holes to give each floor electricity, he said. "We probabb' put a mile or two of wire in there. It may seem like a long time but the guys worked around t.h,e clock to get \hat bulldinggo\ngagain. ltoould have ta.ken two weeks," Dobyns said. The building will U3e the tem- porary cables until its main elec- trical system dries out, he said. About 1,000 profeimionals work in the building. THEFT VICTIM ... From PageA1 ly taking a 1-'onche 928 from a Newport Beach car Jot. "For a guy with ao much money. he sure isn't f1aahing It now," qulpped Anaheim Policede1eetive Al Brubrink. "Riches to rap." Booth made headlines this month when he called police to Bobby McGee'• restaurant in Newport Beech to report that someone had taken his gold-trimmed briefcue that he said was stuffed with 470 $100 bil.IB. He said he carried the briefcase into the restaurant becau.ae he was to meet a client to purchaae a Ferrari. The briefcue, he told police, was left with a hoet at the restaurant. Police challenged Booth to take a lie-detect.or test but he failed to show up. Booth waa arrested late Thurs· day. Police in Anaheim allege Booth took a Mercedes for a test drive and never returned. The car still has not turned up. police said. Meanwhile, police in Newport re~rted that Booth "fraudulent- ly• rentedaPonche fromaPacifk Coast Highway car lot by using a friend's credit card. Officers said he al.so failed to return th.at expensive car. Police have hinted that other charges against Booth still may be filed. SPECIAL TY MEATS IDEI IOIE ROAST ........................ • 1 •• L•. PEIOER ROAST ............................. 1411 u.. LEll 1110111 IEEF ........................ 1121 u.. JOlll THiii APPLES ... 3 i...• 1 mu FAICY OllDY APPLES ......... 3 ,., '1 I.I. #1 IEW OllP lllY WILllUTS ........ 39• Lii. • , Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Ool. 26, 1983 * A3 Lieutenant governor to speak at UC Irvine Jury condemns slayer of newsboy Thompson should get gas chamber, panel decides in second penalty deliberation Lt. Gov. Lw McCarthy wiJI meet w ith UC Irvine students at a forum open to tht.' public Thursday at 4.30 p.m. in the Heritage Room of University U.11ter The meeting will have students an opportunity to question California's top Democrat about his support for higher education. McCarthy 1s an cx-offlt.•10 member of the UC Board of Regents. Balanced Living workshop tonight The se<.'Ond installment of the eight-month-long Balanced Living Workshopsscrtt-s at St. Joactum's Church in Costa Mesa will be held tonight "Getting Rooted" 1s the topic of the 7:30 p.m. lec ture at 1964 Orange Ave .. Classroom 6. For more information, call Sister Christine at 645-4945. 'Power Places' lecture set in Mesa A one-day le<.·ture titled, "Powt!r Places of the World," will be given Thursday at the Umtarian UnivcrsaList Church, 1259 Victoria St. in Costa Mesa. The great pyramid of Egypt. the Taj Mahal. the Parthenon and the mountains of the I hmalayas and the Alps will be discussed. The fee ts $15 For more 1nfonnation, call 241 -6186. Brush 'painting series offered in Mesa Chinese brush paintmg will be the topic of a lecture series running from 9 a.m. to noon on Thursdays beginning this Thursday at the Mesa Verde Leaming Center, 2990 Mesa Verde Drive East in Costa Mesa. Registrauon fee (or the series is $24. For information , call 241-6186. Motorcycle swap m eet at fairgrounds If you've got a Harley or any other chopper you want to swap, show up at the Orange County Fairgrounds Friday. The Motorcycle Swap Meet will be held during the evening in Building 10. Tickt'ls are available at the fairgrounds. By JEFF ADLER Of .. o.llJ,... .... T he man convicted of aexually molesting and kll.llng 12-year-old Anaheim newsboy Benjamin Brenneman in 1981 should die in California's gas chamber, an Or- ange County Superior Court jury recommended Tuesday. After only one day of delibera- tion , the 10-woman, two-man jury returned to Judge Fra.nci8co Briseno's Santa Ana OOW1.room and recommended 35-year-old Robert Jackaon Thom peon receive a death penalty sentence rather than a lifetime prison term. For- mal sentencing is aet for Nov. 21. The decision marks the first time a penalty phase proceeding has been retried in Orange Coun- ty. An earlier jury, which voted unanimously toconvictThompson of Brenneman's murder, dead- locked 9-3 on the death penalty question. The jury's verdict Tuesday was greeted with a cry of relief and tears from Brenneman's mother, Kay, who testified at the protracted proceedinp and at- tended court virtually every day. She tearfully hugged friends as well as Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright, who hand.led the prosecution. "I'm pleased. It was a right decision by the jury. I believe the case called for the death penalty," Brenneman said. "The people sent Bandit hits gas station in Mesa A convenience store at the Harbor Chung Texaco station on 300 1 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mes, was rob- bed early today of $60 cash and $30 groceries A man described as a Negro. late 20s, 6-feet-1, 200 pounds, came Into the store and put the groceries on the counter. A second man. wearing a Halloween mask and carrying a pocket knife, then entltred and demanded the money and goods. The pair were fast seen traveUng northbound on Harbor In a black-topped car Two suspects arrested on burglary charges by Iha Tustin Polic41 Depart- ment have t>--. connected by In- vestigators to 30 burglaries of storage garages 1n Costa M"8 over the last three months Harry Wood. 30. of Santa Ana 1nd wnnam Deeter. 36, eddreea unknown, admitted to breaking Into the storage areas at 2950 Bear St The Sweet Cream Shoppe, at 1170 Baker St . was burglarized over the weekend ind $1,90 1 In cash and merchandise was stolen Among the Items 1ls1ed as missing· a microwave oven. candy. football cards. meat and 18 three.pound tubs or ice cream. ~ewport Beach A Newport Beach man reported the th8t1 ot tools from his car parked 1n the 1400 block of Superior Tues- day morning The value ol the loss was estimated to be $440, police said A Newport Beach man reported the theft of his 1977 Mercedes 450 SEL Monday. Thevalueol thecarwas estimated to be$ 19.000. potlce said A retired Newport Beach marine colonel reported the thel1 of a car stereo and other Items valued at $630 trom Is car parked near Superior and Placentia Tuesday morning. A Newport Beach woman reported thethehofa 1966VWbeetlefromthe 600 block of Promontory Drive Tues.- day Tile value or the car was es It mated to be S 1, 700. pollce said. A Newport Beech businesswoman reported the theft of $80 In cuh and a $40 mullc box from her Pwk New- port apartment Mond1y night. Founta~n Valley · Burglars forced their way Into 1 home In the 16000 block. of Mt. Hutchins Street and stole lewelry, a TV Mt and an Atari computer wonh St,700 Vandals caused $2,500 worth of damage when they puati.d ovtlf and broke an eight-loot lawn fountain In the 8000 block ot Hummingbird Avenue. Someone stole a S 130 QQ}ta' five-speed bicycle and Ila lock and chain from a bicycle rack at Fountain Valley High School lluntington Beach Police were called to a Paclflc Coast Highway shop In the downtown area when a person reported eeelng an Individual who resembled draw- ings of one of the men who shot television anchorman Je<ry Dunphy. Police. though. said the man pointed out to them was the keyboard player In a local band. A woman. who told Huntington Beach polloe lhat someone had broken Into her Toulouse Drive home and ransacked the place. late< told offloers the mesa In her houae had been created by he< daughter who waa having trouble finding something to wear to echool. A briefcase. a set of golf club and a wallet _.e stolen from a car locked In a garage on Alplne Lane. The total lose WU $1,000. Laguna Beach A blcyde valued by Its owner at S100wu stoten In the 1200 block or Sooth eo.t Highway, Lagun1 Beach police reported. A man seen peering In a window of a houM In the 200 b&oc;tc of Ruby Street pounded on 1 dOOf before dlMppeanng at 1bout 10:30 p.m. poltce said. A fire believed cauMd by clotn.t Igniting In a dryer was quieidy put out In the 300 bloct< of Magnolia Drive. Irvine A man wearing nothing but a hood covering his faoe streaked twice through the 3000 bloct< of Claremont Street In lmne abOUt 8 p.m. Tueeday night, obMrwd by a glrf IM1ed In a parked car Waiting for her boyfriend who wu Mlllng dOOf to dOOf. Robert Brown, 18, wu 81T98ted on tusplcion of lheft TIJeeday morning, after pollce found the bit<• tie waa riding had been stoten In ttle last week. Jacil M1nclel, 24, wu taken Into custody for allegedly potMUlng marijuana and contributing to the dellnquency of a minor In an erreet about 9:30 TUNday night. Fair skies with cooler air due Cn•rletlon SC 72 57 Coastal c.n .. 1a10 .. w v l50 41 Cn.,1n1tttNC 72 45 t n•v••""" 87 37 Rslnr.::J SnowD Showera €[) Flurrle•b Fair TnurlOay P•tcny IOQ •IOflO 1ne C!llCaQO 58 38 oouth eout aa11y Tl>u•tO•y m0<n10Q Cll'C'nn111 54 3t COOie< T hurtd..,, HIQll1 T1>11rtd..,, et C-end 52 ,3 _,_74to71 l-1ton191>Hl21olle Colvll't>!e.SC 74 50 HIQl\4 T""'td.yW\tl'lelnlandvelleyo&41o Colvll'l>ut 53 33 .. LOW. IOfllOhl &4 to 1111 0..u fl W,,..,h 67 45 o.... .., __ ,., .... .,. lrom Pom1 0.ylCHt 54 34 Concec>tkM1 to Stn C......,,t& "'•"" to o.n-10 " IM liolftleen 6ofcl« touln-t wtf'O 8 lO 0.MQOM\ se 39 n 1tno1a 1on1g111 ~ -1 10 0.lfOll 5e 3" toul-n to II kr>Otl Tnurt01y 0v1u1t1 '° 39 •nemoon Wind wev.1 2 10 3 '"' Et PHO &.c so Sollt"-1 ....... 1 10 3 ,_. flllfbln" 15 01 On< OUt• c.o41t t.i wot.,,, lrom 1>..w.1 f Ofgo et 34 Conceptlorl 10 Sen C.....,,. lllend -flaoetan St 43 .,.,, eo ,,,... 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"'"•.= N 17 ::.1.: .. ., POtl .Me 4t 28 17 $2 POtllend.Ore .. 46 ""*-.. 4$ Pr~ 64 a3 •YI'-&5 44 ="Clly 83 40 T~t " M 72 SI T-74 .. -.. a1 T ... .. 42 ~ 17 ... w~ .. 47 St~ t i 41 WleMa IO S7 Tides SURf RIPORT a meaaage to other people not to tou.ch children." She added the verdict came two years and two months after the day her son d.laappeared while working Q1l his newspaper route at an Anaheim apartment com- plex. Thompeon, his longish blond hair neaUy combed, sat quietly as Across the nation on Just 15 gallons? By STEVE MITCHELL Of ... o.IJ ......... Jerry Greer and Chuck Guy figure they can drive across the United Stat.es-3,14~ miles from Los Angeles to New York -on only 15 gallons of gas. If you don't have your calcu- lator handy, that's 209.66 miles per gallon. They'll be taking turns riding a 246-pound motorcycle that is en- caled in a fiberglass shell resembl- ing a squashed teardrop -or maybe a special effects prop from an old Flash Gordon serial. Okay, so it's ugly, but boy, is it fuel efficient. The fiberglass fairing, still in need of a paint job, encloses a 185 cc, single-cylinder, four-stroke engine, unaltered by Greer or Guy. What has been altered are the fenders and the aeat. They're gone. The pair alao dropped the front forks., installed a smaller 1.5 gallon gas tank, smaller wheels and changed the gearing for better mileage. The purpose? "We want to show that it doesn't take a great amount of money or engineering skill to improve fuel efficiency," said Greer, who operates Greer Sport Fairings out of a 5,500-aquare-foot factory in Costa Mesa. That may not be an easy task. For on e thing, the two middle-aged cycle enthusiasts will take turns squeezing into the the jury announced the verdict. He removed h1a glaales briefly and turned to look over at h1a mother. Later, he aaked to be taken from the courtroom as Brenneman con- gratulated the proeecutor. Thompeon's mother sat silently as the verdict was announced, cloeed her eyes for a short time, and then hurriedly left the courtroom before the jury wu dlsmia8ed. Jury members all refuaed com- ment on their dedaJon. Several jurors left the 11th-floor courtroom with eyes \hat were noticably reddened. Judge Briaeno, in acceplin8 the jury's decision, said only, "lteeema the verdict is proper." O..,l"let,._., ........... Jerry Greer tries out the controls as Chuck Guy watches. The pair plan to cross the country on 15 gallons of gasoline. incredibly cramped shell every couple of hours during the seven -day trip. --Once inside, they'll lay nearly prone, their chests, beards and elbows resting on the padded gas tank. For another. they'll have t.o maintain speeds of between 55 and 60 mph to get the most fuel efficiency from the renovated cycle, which, in its original con- dition gets only 81 miles per gallon. "There's never been a vehicle of any kind that has run this di.st.a.nee and maintained anything like 209 miles per gallon,'' Greer said of the pair's cycle challenge that begins Nov. 2. Cos~ Mesan Tom Heyaer donated two standard motorcycles for the economy run -one of which will be canniballi.ed for parts as needed on the trip. Rider Magazine is sponsoring the run, providing a mobile home to trail the bike and, of courae, the 15 gallons of gasoline. ··w e want this run to encouraae the riding public to get interested in fuel economy contests rather than just speed competition," Greer said. "Yeah," hia41-year-old partner said with a laugh. ''That's becau.e we're old and fat." Sheriff's survey under fire County manager labels Gates' quiz 'emotional and redundant' By JEFF ADLER Of ... o.IJ __ Orange County Sheriff Bead Gates has attempted to sway public opinion in his favor by circulating a survey to 5,000 county residents that raises ques- tions about the levels of police services they are receiving, a top county official has charged. County Administrative Officer Bob Thomas, in a letter to super- visors, characterized the sheriff's survey as being "leading, emo- tional and redundant." In addition, Thomaa questioned the technical validity of the survey and informed supervisors the sheri!f may have violated board policy because neither the swvey nor its methodology was cleared with the county's program planning division as required. Gates, who aides said was in his Gem Talk By J.C. H UMPHRIES Certified Gtmologiat. AGS PLATNIUM the enhancer la more precious than Well, platinum for one thing. t la heavier. tougher and mor valuable than gold. A cublo foot of platinum wefgha about 21 times u much u a cubic foot of water. Platinum does not corrode or tarnllh. It 11 lmpervtoua to the atrongeet acids. It 11 uMd In the belt eurgleal Instruments, In key parts of automotive catatytlc con- vertera, and ... yea, In jeweery. Why 11 pletlnum not aa popluar u gold In jewelry UM? Bee6del the' coat, the only apparent drewbeck of ptatlnum ta that people tlmply are noy accustomed to thl1 bMutlful metat. It II llfghtly whiter than lllver, and a bit softer than gold. Fuhlon experts con- tlder It the per1ect eettlng tor dlamond1, bec•uM It• soft patina and leek of color reftectlon make a perfect "neutral" companion Which allows a diamond to 1tand out In atl 1t1 natural beauty. The Mme qualltlel make It atao Ideal for Mttlng of color9d gems, auoh u emerald• or eapphlree. Top world producera of platinum are, In order, Rullla, South Africa and Caned a. office today, could not be reached for comment. But 8ClCOrd.ing to the Thomas memorandum, the sheriff has asserted h1a right as an elected official to independently survey his constituents without first clearing it through the CAO's office. The survey questions residents' attitudes toward certain rec- ommendations made by a private consultant hired by the Board of Supervisors to review sheriff's department operations. The con- sultant's study was submitted to auperviaon aeveral months ago. Thomas found four areas of concern with the 17-question survey: •That it is be biased because it is a mail-in questionnaire anci "those who will respond will have some self-interest." •That the cover letter signed by Gates "raises-fear of change." • That the word.l.ng of the survey is "leading, emotional and redundant." • That most of the questions were asked in such a way that they don't really fit the survey'• response fonnat. Thomas also said the questions in the swvey are posed aa i1 in a vaccuum. f aillng to take in to account the financial impact of certain actions. The responaes, then, "will be of little or no value." School slates sale The Newport Elementary School PT A plans a Nov. 5 rummage sale to raise money for equipment and 9Chool projects. A wide assortment of"gooda will be 10ld. For more infonnation, call 760-3454. W•'lt give JOU rmmedl•t• c••hl With today's skyrocketing gold prices. It pays to Cash·ln on your unwanted, outdated gold jewelry. Bring us your old gold chains. bracelets. pins. earrings, rings, etc., and we'll give you Immediate c11h. That's rlght ... Top Dollar for your old gold! MEMBEA AMERICAN GEM SOCIET'< 1809 NEWPORl BLVD .. COSTA MESA SINCE 1946 BankAmer1cerd-Maattr Chargt PHONE 548-3401 ,_ Tonight's TV EVENIHG -1:00- I D•NEWS QIPSPATAOI. FAHTASY ISl.ANO m THAEE'8 COMPANY I HAWAII FM~ MACIE!l / lEHRER NEWSHOUA m>OCEANUS Cl)CISN£WS 1:::::Q ~~AN DYICE * • • •.; "Gloria"' ( 1980) Gena Row-lands, John Adames. \ R) Fl.ASHBACK: THE GREAT PLAGUE 0 NOVEMBER PREVll'W -1:30-ID AUCE 6!) FACES OF CULTURE Cl) NEWS ®l BAflHEY MILLEA CB WHEEL OF FORTUNE mOAAGNET ©)INSIOEON MOVIE • •~ "It Came F/om Hollywood" ( 1982) JOhn Candy Dan Aykroyd 0 MOVIE * * * "Sherlock Holmes And The Peart O! Deatll" ( 19441 Basil Rath· bone. Nigel Bruc;e -7:00-IJ C8SNEWS D H8CNEWS 9 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN UA8C NEWSo G AOWAH l ~TIN'S LAUGH-IN (f)NEWS G) THREE'S COMPANY ti) JOt<ER'S WILD &l) BUSINESS REPORT ml MAGIC OF DECORATIVE PAINTING Ill) P.M. MAGAZINE ®l ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT Qj LOVE CONNECTION CID ONE MAN'S FIGHT FOR LIFE (O)MOVIE *•'It "Tiie Pursuit 01 D.B, Coopef'' (1981) Treat Williams. Rober1 0u¥all. (l)MOVIE ··story Of A love Affair" ( 1950) Lucia Bose, Massimo G1rott1. -7:05- m OAANGE COUNTY TODAY -7:30-IJ 2 ON THE TOWN D Qt FAMILY FEUD 9 THE CARE BEARS IN THE LAND WITHOVT FEEUNG U EYEONLA. G SOAP G) M•A•s•H ti) ®l PEOPLE'S COURT fD TO THE MANOR 80RH ml MARK RUSSELl COMEDY SP£CIALS Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH mMOVIE * * "Can't Help Singing" 119441 Deanna Durbin, David Bruce -1:00-8 Cl) WHIZ KIDS Qt REAL PEOPLE 8 MOVIE •••1~ "Jezebel"' 119381 Berte Dav- CHANNEL LISTINGS tJ KNXT ICBSI 0 l<NBC INBCI 0 KTLA uno I I) KABC IABCI 0 l<.FMB ICBSI 0 KHJ TV llnO I D ll>CST IABCI • i<nv lino 1 Cl) KCOP TV 111\0 I fD KCET tPBSI '9 KOCE ( P8S1 Is, Htnl)' Fond1 8 0 THE FAU GllY ~~OAAHT G) ENTEJrrAl ... EHT TONIGHT e MOVIE ** *i.i "SllgtCOaeh"' (19391 JOlln Weyne, Cfllre T rtvOI &;) NATIOHAL GEOGRAPHIC 8P£aAI.. ~ LM FROM THE MET (C)MOVIE • * * "lost Hamon" ( 19371 Ronald COlm811. Jane Wy111. (HlMOVIE • •'It "ll Came From Hollywood" (1982).John Candy. Dan Ay't(royd. IS) PAPER CHASE 0 MOVIE • • • "Yanks" (1979) Rk;hard Gere, Wllllam Devane -8:30- lf) LOVE BOAT G) P.M. MAOAZINE -9:00- 0 CIJ MOVIE "Happy" (Premiere) Dom DeLU1se, Dee Wallace. D 3 THE FACTS OF LIFE D ®J DYNASTY G NEWS G) THE PAOFESSIONALS &l) JUNIOfl HIGH 0 THE OTHER CAFE'S COMEDY SHOWCASE S MOVIE • * ·~ "Taps (1981) George C Scott. Timothy Hulton z•MOVIE • • "'The Toy" (1982) Richard Pryor Jackie Gleason -9:30-u ~ FAMll Y TIES MOVIE * * • "Assault On A Queen"' ( 1966) Frank Sinatra. Vtrna Lisi. m RACING FROM OAK TREE (HI NOT NECESSARIL y THE NEWS -10:00-D Qt ST. ELSEWHERE oma>NEWs U ~HOTEL G POLICE WOMAN m MOVlE * * ''Return 01 Jack Slade" ( 1955) John E/lcson. Angie Dtck1nsoo CCJMOVIE • • • "Richard Pryor Uve From The Sunset Strip" ( 1982) Rk:hard Pryor MOVIE * *'h "Taps" (198 1) George C Scon. Timothy Hulton. 0 SANTANA I HEART: CONCERT FOR THE AMERICAS -10-.30- .., IHOEPEHOENT NETWORK NEWS fl!) MARK RUSSELL COMEDY SPECIALS 0 MOVIE • • • "The French Lteulenanl's Woman" 119811 Meryl Streep. Jefe· my Irons -11:00-IJ D D Cl) ®J CB NEWS 9TAXI G GOHGSHOW G) THE JEFfEASONS ti) BEHHY HILL Q On TV l l TV 14 HBO G ((•n""'"• I t IWORI N Y NY lT tWTBSI l IESPNI S ISNIWl1mc.-1 U Spolloghl 8 ICaDle N ew \ Network 1 Is motherhood second oldest profession? MOTHERHOOD: Tbe Second Oldest Pro· fe11lon. By Erma Bombeck. McGraw-HUI. 177 Pages. $1 Z.H . Erma Bombeck fans, and they are legion, know from her newspapercolwnns and her books that she can be depended upon to deliver the laughs. And deliver them she does in her lat.est collection, "Motherhood: The Second Oldest Profession." There are 42 pieces included in this book and they all deaJ with mothers in one way or another. The approach to the subject differs from item to item, however. Some deal with advice to mothers, "One of the biggest complaints about motherhood is the lack of training ... I was one of the luclcler women who came to motherhood with some experience. I owned a Yorkshire Terrier for three years." Among these is a suggested course o( study for mothers. One such course would deal wl th the legal rights of mothers and answer such questions a{l "Can you abandon a child along a public highway for kicking daddy's seat for 600 miles ... Another deals with mothers as depicted in television series of the '50s and '60s. Says Bombeck of these women of the ruckering BCreen, "They "' looked better cleanini their houses than most of us looked at our wedding." In a very well done article, ahe wonders what would happen to a fathe.r of three young children who gave up his job, tent hill wife off to work and became ''the first suburban mot.her in Rochester with a mustache wbowun 'ton estrogen." In a aortof revene article, ahe deah with a mother who ta newly divorced and returning to the job market after a longablence, a woman who puts wrinkle eradicator under her eyes ''ln Mn attempt toeruethedamagescawiedbytee.nagers." PhIJThomu AP Booka &litor NEW BUSINESSMEN Contact the DAILY PILOT for I nformation regardi ng the county requirements for using a Fictitious Business Name. 642·4321 EXT. 332 Daily Pilat &;) JACKIE GLEASON Cl ) MOVIE • • "'Five Dar' One Summtf" ( 1982) Sun Conneiy Betsy Brantley -11:16- 0 MOVIE -12.35- 0MOVIE t t 'Duel ror Four I 1982J Mike P1e~1on O.ane Cilento -12'40- 0 l MOVIE -2:30- G) QtNEWS -1:40-1$ MOVIE • *''t "Gllla•y 01 Tetro!"' (11181) Eaward Al'*1, Erin Moran Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT/Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1983 * .. FIRST UNITED PRESENTS * U "The Deep (1977) ROllwl Shaw, Ja<:quellne 91s~1 -11.30-IJ POLICE STORY • •.., "Covert Action 119781 DaVid Jansset1. A1111uf Ktnnedy -1:00-0 CHIUWN: THE WORLD'S MOST FABULOUS RESOURCE <TI MOV1E -3:00- MOAHJNG STAETCH G)MOVIE • • • ··The Cour1 Mlttlll O! 8Hfy Mllchell'' I 1955) Gary COOPtr. Chatles 81Ckl0td The Portfolio Selections D ~ TliE BEST OF CARSON 9 SA TUROAY NIGHT. U ®)ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE G 1H SEARCH OF ... CD THICKE OF THE NIGHT Cl) STREETS Of SAN FRANCISCO &l) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN BEHAVIOR ~ 700CLUB 'CJ ALBUM FLASH CS MOVIE • • '·• "The Kentucky Fried Mo¥1e" {19771 Evan Kim, Master Bong Soo Han -12:00- OMOVIE **'"' 'The Old Man Who Crte<l Woll' ( 19701 Edward G Rooinson, Mart111 Balsam (})INOEPENOENTNETWORK NEWS C l MOVIE • • 1'1 'The Kentucky Fried Movie ( 1977) Evan 1<1m. Master Bong Soo Han -12:05- H MOVIE • • * First Blooa ( 19821 Sylvester Stallone R1cll8rd Crenna -12:30-u ~1 LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTF.RMAN • • 1\ A Southetn Yankee"' (1948) Red Sk~ton. Arlene Dani G) ALL IN THE FAMILY ti) MOVIE • • * "The Explosive Generation"' 11961) Patty McCormack, Wilham Shatner , moeNESCOTT IS MOVIE • • • 11 "'My Favorite Year" {1982) Peter O'Toole, Jessica Harper Z MOVIE • • Vlolette" {1978) Isabelle Hup- pert S1epnane Audran -1:30-u Q~ NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT Q)NEWS C MOVIE * 'Sex With The Stats" ( 1979) Thick Wilson, Martm Burrows 0 MOVIE • • • "'The Pride 01 Tile Yanlees· 119421 Gary Cooper, Teresa Wright -1:45- H MOVIE * * ' Love Child 119821 Amy Madigan Beau Br1d99s -2:00- f) 8 CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH O MOVIE <l MOVIE • • • • "The Stunt Man" ( 1980) Pet11 O'Toole, Steve Railsblc:lc -3:08- ICJMO\llE * • "Swinging Cheerleaders" t 1974) Jo Johnston, RaJnbeaux Smith -3:25- (~)NOTNECESSARILYTHENEWS -3:30-C!l FAITH20 Cl) MARCUS WELBY, M.O. -3:65-(HJ MOVIE • *!II "U Came From HotlywoOd" ( 1982) John Candy, Dan Ayllroyd. -•:OO-(!) TOP O' THE MOANING @ MOVIE t *!II "The Pursull Of D B Cooper" (1981) Treat W1lllams,ROberl Duva.II. -4:05- 1$1 PAPER CHASE -4:20- O MOVIE * • "leave It To The M111nes" 11951) Sid Melton. Mara l ynn • CALL NOW FOR MORE INFORMATION Calif. Tax Free Bond *9.2733 (714) 720-0704 13 Year t• Maturity ~: ~~,~~!l!JJ~ FIRST UNnm .SEaRTIES _, OF r.A 610 Newport Center Drive, Ste. 1425 Newport Beach, CA 92660 0 TWILIGHT ZONE U MOVIE • • V11gtn1a 11941) Madeleine Carroll Fred MacMurray -4:30-C!l BULLWINKLE 0 MOVIE * * '> "Eating Raoul.. 11982) Paul Bartel. Mary Woronov NAME: ADORE-SS-:------------------ • • 11 'The Pit And Tne Pendulum (1961) Vincent P11ce. JOhn Kerr O NEWS -2:10--4:40- CITY; ________ STATE: _______ _ (f, ROWAN & MARTIN'S LAuGH·IN m LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE 0MOVIE c ,MOVIE HOME PHONE: OFFICE PHONE: ____ _ @) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT * * * .. Yanks ( 19791 Richard Gere. W1ll1am Devane * • * "Lost Horizon" ( 1937} Ronald Colman. Jane Wyatt. CITY OF COSTA MESA. CALIFORNIA COMBINED STATEMENT OF REVENUE&. EXPENDITURE& AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCEl/RETAINED EARNINGS Fund No. Fund 01 General 11 Special Gas Ta.11. Str. lmpr .• Sec. 2107.1 12 Special Gas Tax Str. lmpr. ·Sec. 2107.5 13 Special Gas Tax Str. lmpr. • Sec. 2106 14 Traffic Safety 16 Federal Revenue Sharing 17 Community Development Act 18 Park Development Fees 19 Drainage Fees 20 Bicycle & Pedestrian Facltltles 31 1974 Open Space Bond Debt Service 41 Capital Outlay 42 Land Acquisition 44 South Coast Drive Construction 51 Landscape Assess. District No. 1 52 Landscape Assess. District No. 2 53 Sunflower/MacArthur Industrial Area Constr. 61" Golf Course 71 Equipment Replacement 81 Expendable Trust 96 Vehlcle Parking District No. 1 -lmprQvement 97 Vehlcle Parking District No. 1 -Acquisition 98 Vehicle Parking District No. 2 • Improvement 99 Vehicle Parking District No. 2 -Acquisition TOTAL -CITY OF COSTA MESA Community Redevelopment Agency· Tax Iner. Fund Community Redevelopment Agency -Redev. Proj. Fund TOTAL -COMMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY JUNE 30, 1113 Fund .. l•ncee/ Retained E.,..lnge July 1, 1112 $22,261,416 1, 124,025 -0- 786, 168 2,291,828 4,811,233 3,190 967,087 527,401 56,046 76,626 3,394,050 1,579, 196 510,992 414 804 693,520 2,783,528 1,401,029 1,357,728 5,474 7,233 2,677 8,24 1 $44,649.906 86.934) 1,386,410 $1,299,476 EJCpendlturH General Governmen1 Capita! Outlay Traneler• In (Out) $(571,600) (173,000) 744,600 $ -0- -0- -0- $ -0- Revenu .. 1 Rec•lf.t• (Exhibit • 8" $28, 113,080 730,534 7,500 692,789 644,724 1,694,410 368,486 129,590 17,682 6,978 277,410 72,809 105,855 4,657 2,260 1,247 19,077 1,330,026 510,445 326, 149 138 275 92 184 $35,056,397 632,349 1,522,380 $ $2,154,729 125,099 192.206 Expendltu'" Expen ... • (Exhibit "8") $(27,386,074) ( 357,446) ( 7,500) ( 38 1,802) ( 1,203,355) ( 1,598,590) ( 317,305) 264,079) 862,335) 3,870) 3 , 156) 648,046) (028,626) 344,040) 60,778) .$(34,'457 ,002) ( 917,894) ( 2,036,694) $( 2,954,588) AdJuatment• $ 382,781 (615,649) 650,546 $517.678 -0 - -0- $ -Q. Loss on lJ1sposa1 ot Assets Interest on Lease Payment Interest on Inter-Fund Loan Fund .... noee/ Re~ned lamlntl• June JO, 1112 $22,416.822 1,497,113 ..(). 1,479,936 "1 ,733,197 4,907,053 ~.371 923,677 5'45,083 63,024 89,957 3,359, 124 1.685,051 ..(). 1, 196) 1, 105) &4,651 3,735,474 1,567.~ 1,623,099 5,8 12 7,508 2,769 8,425 $'45,766,979 372,479) 872,906 $500,427 7,889 14,211 105,855 CITY OF COSTA MESA, C ALIFO"NIA STATEMENT OF REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES Fl1cal Year Ended Jun• 30. 1113 GENERAL FUND Revenues Taxes Total Expenditures S 317,305 Total Non-Operating Expenses s 131.2'46 ==== $20.191,012 326.728 118,394 3,493.604 1,438,233 2.170.602 PARK DEVELOPMENT FEES FUND EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT FUND Licenses and Perml1s Fines and Forfeitures Use o1 Money and Property Intergovernmental Charges for Services Olher 374,507 Revenue• Charges for Services DRAINAGE FEES FUND Revenue• Ctlarges for Services s s Receipt• -Operating 129•59° Charges for Services 17.682 Ex pen Me· Operating Loss on Dlsposal of Fixed Assets Automotive Fuel s 510,4'45 s Total Revenues $28. 113,080 EJCpendllure1 B ICYCLE .AND PEDESTRIAN FACILITIES FUND Revenue• Internal Central Garage Depreciation 9,033 82,917 138,963 113, 127 General Government $ 9,460,445 Use of Money and Property S 6,978 r:otal Operating Expenses s Public Safety 10,5 17.913 1974 OPEN SPACE BOND DEBT SERVICE FUND EXPENDABLE TRUST FUND Public Works 4,345,483 Parks and Recreation 2,606,048 Debi Service· Prlnclpal Retirement 299.313 Revenue• Taxes $ 277,410 RevenuH Use. of Money and Property Other s -lnteres1 and Fiscal Charges 156,872 'Total Expenditures $27,386,074 ExpendlturH Debt Service -Principal Retirement S 90,000 Total Revenues $' 17,536 308,613 326,149 -Interest and Fiscal Charges 174,079 ----SPECIAL GAS TAX STJ'EET IMPROVEMENT FUND-~2107. 1 Total Expenditures $ 264,079 EJCpendlture• Revenue• Use of Money and Property Intergovernmental Total Revenues Expendlturea Capital Outlay CAPITAL OUTLAY FUND S 149.519 Revenue• 581.015 Use of Money and Propeny ----Other $ 730,534 Total Revenues $ 357 6 EJCpendlturH ===·4=4= Capital Outlay SPECIAL GAS TAX STREET IMPROVEMENT FUND-\2107.5 Revenue• LAND ACQUISITION FUND Revenue1 Intergovernmental $ 7.500 Use of Money and Property $ s $ s 69.788 3,021 72,809 852.335 General Government Public Works Totol Expenditures s $ VEHICLE PARKING DISTRICT NO. 1 -IMPROVEMENT FUND Revenue• Ta.xes s VEHICLE PARKING DISTRICT NO. 1 • ACQUl81T10N FUND 105,855 FtevenuH 11,478 49,300 60,718 138 SOUTH COAST DRIVE CONSTRUCTION FUND Taxes s 275 ExpendltlJrH Capital Oullay $ 7.500 Revenut• Use of Money end Property s 4,657 VEHICLE PARKING DISTRICT NO. 2 ' -IMPROVEMENT FUND SPECIAL OAS TAX STREET IMPROVEMENT FUND-~2108 LANDSCAPE ASSESSMENT DISTRICT NO. 1 Revenue• Taxes $ 92 Revenue• Use of Money and Property Intergovernmental To1a1 Revenues $ $ 326.192 366.597 Revenu.• Charges for Services ExpendlturH 692.789 Public Works $ 2,260 VEHICLE PARKING DISTRICT NO. 2 -ACQUISITION FUND S 3 .870 RevenuH ===== Taxes $ 18~ ExpendlturH LANDSCAPE ASSESSMENT DISTRICT NO. 2 COMMUNl1'.Y REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY General Go vernment Capital Outlay Total Expenditures TRAFFIC SAFETY FUND $ s 7 ,097 RevenuH 374,705 Charges for Services 381 •802 Expenditure• Publlc Works $ ·T AX INCREMENT FUND 1·247 RevenuH ==== Property Taxes $ $ 3 •156 State Subventions · Business Inventory Tax ==== -Homeowners Re4ief AevenuH Fines and Forfeitures Intergovernmental Other $ 532.824 SUNFLOWER/MKARTHUR INDUSTRIAL AREA Collection Charges 558,882 69,786 5,044 (1,363) 62•339 Revenue• 49.561 Use of Money and Pro1>9rty CONSTRUCTION FUND Total Revenues s 644,724 Expenditure• Capital Outlay ExpendlturH Capltal Outlay S 1,203,355 QOLf' COURSE FUND Recetpt• • Operating FEDERAL REVENUE SHARING FUND Revenue• Use of Money and Properly lntergovernmen1a1 Total Revenues EJCpendlturea General Government Publlc Safety Capital Outlay $ 539.881 Charges for Services t, 154,629 Receipt•. Non·Operetlng s 1.694.410 Interest Renta. Royaltlea and Leases $ 128. 143 1,470.447 -0- Totsl N'j'·01>9r1t1no Receipts Total Expenditures $ 1,.598,590 E•pen ... -Operating Administration Costa Maintenance Go lf Activities Non·Constructlon Jobs Depreciation COMMUNITY DEVl!LOPMENT ACT FUND AevenuH Use of Money 1nd Proper1y Intergovernmental 01her Total Revenues s 8,239 349,000 Totll Operating Expenses 11,247 • 1.,,.., ... -Non-Operating !_ 368,486 LOii on Sale of AeNta Total Revenues $ 632,349 $ 19,077 EJCpendlturee -==-==== Interest Expense S 917,U. s 648,046 COMMUNfTY REDEVILOPMI NT AUNCV • REDEVELOPMENT PAOJI CT FUNO Revenue• Interest $ 1,114,820 rents Ptoperty Taxes Other Revenues $ 141,859 73.347 Total Revenues S 215 206 E•pendltu,.e ===' = Administration $ $ s 143,295 616,304 105,085 3,820 28,876 Legal Services Planning, Survey and Design Real Estate Purchases Acqurs1t1on Expense Operation of Acquired Property Relocation Cost• Relocation Payments 897,380 Site Clearance Costa Fixed A ... t Acqu111t1on 3,291 Total Ex1>9ndltures I $ 98,762 125,488 11,849 1,2M,301 $ 1,522,380 I, s 1315, 105 25,M 1 9t,311 1,554,480 23.365 1.729 11132 121.774' 57,ISO • 1,0t1 s 2.034.194 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wed"elday, 001. 26, 1983 NB 111' .-----------------------------------------------------------------------------STOCKS WEDNESDAY'S CLO INC PRICES ).41"'' N•I \•I•\ N .. I ~, net' (iO\.f' \..h.Q P r "!1' c •o"' c "<1 NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTIONS OVOTAllONS INCLUDE fRAOfS ON HIE HEW VORO.. t.AIOWE6 T P4'Clf II... t>BW BQS ION .Olf flOH /INO CINCINNA II ~ IOCK U CHA...OtS ANO REPORTED 8V IHE NASO INSTINET S•"' N~I P I "°' l lu"' Cl>CI "Wlf'\ NPt •" t "'h (10\• t hQ ~tn ""•' P t ,,,., tlu.... C~ \,Alfll\ Nrl P t f'ttJ'\ f ll)it.t I nQ ... ,,. ~ .. , I • no t •l • 1 hQ No matter what you're doing, your hometown newspaper Thellllllll fits In. Dow Jones Final Down 8.84 Cloelng 1.243.80 IUlllEa IRIEfl Greyhound workers reject wage cuts; talks continue By tlle Aa1oclate4 Preli SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -Greyhound Lines Inc. nego- tiators met ~ain Tue9day with reptt!9entativea of the bus line's W'Uoniz.ed wor kers, a day af\er the rank and file ,. overwhelmingly rejected demandl for pay and benefit cuta. The 12,761 workers a1ao aulhoriz..ed W'Uon leaders to call a strike. Inflation reaches 5. 7 percent WASHINGTON -Inflation crept up to a 5.7 percent annual rate last month. The government reported Tuesday that higher prices for cars, food, and housing in September pushed overall consumer costs up 0.5 percent in the biggest one-mo., th increase since May. Prices had riaen 0.4 percent in J uly and August. Dollar soars but gold tumbles Oil firms' profits soaring WASHINGTON • Exxon Corp. and Standard Oil Co. of California said higher profits on overaeaa operations contributed to an overall increale in third~uarter earnings. Exxon, the nation's largest industrial concern, said Tuesday ita eaminga jumped 20.5 percent in the three months ended Sept. 30, to $1.23 billion. Standard of California, whJch sells its oil products under the Chevron brand name and ranka as the fourth-largest U.S . oil company, said ita profit l"09e 11 percent to $509 million. U.S. Steel earns $52 million PITTSBURGH -U.S . Steel Corp. said it earned $52 million in the third quarter, compared with an $82 million le. in the period a year ~o. The 1'.'3tion's largest steelmaker attributed the earnings turnaround to resulta from ita oil and gas operations. Factory goods orders decline WASHINGTON -An unusually large drop in the automotive c.ategory prompted a 0.5 percent decline in ordera ta [actoriea for big-ticket durable goods item.a in September, the government says. But private analysts, noting that orders would have riaen by 3.9 percent from Auguat if the 14.5 percent decline in transportation equipment industries were excluded, found the report heartening for the economy. Dollar rises but gold declines LONDON -The U.S. dollar edged higher~ mDBt othermajorcurrendes in early European trad.l.J\I today, while gold prices turned lower. Despite the dollar's rlae, traderuaid foreign exchange marketa ahowed 1urpriaingly little reaction to the U.S. invasion of Grenada to protect 80f'De 1,000 American citiz.ens and restore order and democracy oo the Caribbean island. GOLD QUOTATIONS WHAT NYSE DID NEW VORIC IAPI Ocl 2' TOcla~ 650 m ~ '"' ,, 23 WHAT AMEX DID HEW VORK (AP) Ocl. ?• METALS TOdav ns l'4 111 I07 s 'O Prev 110 2M -no 112 , 21 STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT SYMBOLS DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW VOlllt IA!"I -F-Dow -mm- JO '"° 20Trn UU!I •SSI~ lnd\.lt Tr en Utfll 6SSI"- 1"3.0S lUf.lS 123U2 12G.IO-t-"I '9Q.SJ 9M,U S77.AS •U-10.J2 1:JU4 ltO.IO llt.07 t•.22+ U2 S«Ul §GUS 4'6.S4 .... ~ U3 1,m ,1• 1.-i.• U57,1'0 14,"2,tot AMERICAN LEADERS NEW YOllK (AP) -S.., 4 P.tn. prlce end "•' chent• 01 •~• 10 ,,.,..., ~M ~"*' SIOO. Ex~ le· auu . tre dlftt ne llo"•"• e l ,,_.theft "· ltn11C'*'I OomePfrl ~=u~ T9'KOnall" TIE Comma El~• R-llnlWl Kevl'!lerm ,.,,,.,.,,.. UP