Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-09-05 - Orange Coast Pilott IUlll COIT M ONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5. 1983 Onthejob: A personal loo 4 k at the Orange . Coast 's working class heroes By .. e Dally PUot Staff Whether you punch a time clock or draw a salary, work with your mind or your muscles, earn millions or minimum wage -this is your day. Happy Labor Day. And to commemorate the occasion, our staff writers wandered about the area, chatting with local working folks. We asked them what they liked about their jobs, what they didn't like. And for those veterans at their occupa- tions, we asked them how things stack up today as opposed to the eld days. Here, then, is a sampling of comments from the Orange Coast's working class heroes: ··------ Mike Nycum ia a 54-year-o\d construction foreman for the state Department of Parka and Recreation. He's been working the putaevenrnonths~t the new Crystal Cove State Park just north of Laguna Beach. "Hell, I worked constn.lction all my•*# t @ life and you aren't hardly going to catch me behind aome • *# f@ desk 90mewhere. John Price, 59, is a field supervisor in the Irvine Co.'s Valencia orange groves. The oranges he's tended 1942 are eaten all over the world - from the Orient to Europe and, of course, in Orange County. This year, Price says. he will superviae the harvesting of 3.2 field boxes of oranges. It'll be the largest crop he's ever brought in. "1 like my job," Price says. "It's been my life's work and I've enjoyed it very much." Price grew up in Texas. When he came to Irvine, he says, the area was almost all agricul- tural. "It's gone from almost total agriculture to an awful lot of buildings," he says. I "You would think the work would be the samefromyeartoyear-butdifferent~tuations come up which you have to face every year." 1 Faces, like the aeaaons, change too, he says, but attitudes pretty much staythe same amongst the 300 people Price supervises. I "Peoplehaven't changedmuchsinceI I started. People are always going to be people." Because thisyear'scropiuolarge, Price will be putting in long hours until mid-October. And the work doesn't end there. "After harvest, we have to overhaul all the I equipment, check the maturing oranges for size CYNTHIA WADE I Nurse I "There's 13 of us working (construction) in the state parks, and we do anything, anywhere, anytime. Eureka, Santa Monica, Oxnard, here- wh~er there's a state park. "I been at Will Rogers State Park where we put in a trail about a mile and a half long. And bridges. We were there for about a month and it was so•*# t @ beautiful, you better believe it. "Then there was Hungry Valley up by Gorman on 15. We took a whole•*# t @ rnountain i and fenced it off. "Even worked near a•*# f@ nudist colony in Cottage Cove up by Eureka, I think it was. They used to walk down to the beach on the trail. Mt.er awhile itdon'tevenpbaseyou. You hardly even glance at them. "Now we're at Crystal Cove, and believe me, that's golng to be one beautiful • * # t @ park when It's done. "We're putting in 15,000feetofbarbie. 1 fence al~ng Coast Highway. atairwaya to the beach atScotchman'sCove,acoupJeofvistapointsand some of what they call •interpretive structures.' You know, they got th.is plaque on it thatsays, 'This is Crystal Cove and it's been here blah, blah, blah and this is the Pacific Ocean. "Interpretive stuff. "Yeah, we're jacks of all trades and masters of none and that's what's so•*# t@ great about it. We do fence1, lay wire, cement work, carpentry, I blacktop-everything. "U we don't know how to do it, we go to the • * # t@ library and check out a book. I've done that before, you better believe it. "What do I like the beat about my job? Moving around, living out of a suitcase, working outdoors and meeting new people. "U lean meet one new per90n a day, it'll make my life." and keep growth records, chec.king on the progrees of every crop," he says. Every working day is "labor day" for Cynthia Wadeofc.oata Mesa. She'soneof afamilyof nuraes in Hoag Memorial Hoepital'a labor and delivery suite. A registered nune for the past four yean, the 28-year-old working woman grew upon Balboa Peninsula. And ahe knows about delivery from both aides of the bed-she has a nine-month-old daughter. ''What started me in nursing was a tragedy in our family. My great aunt got sick. She came to live with us and I Stan.cl taking care of her. I WU a buainea9major atOCC, but then latarted t.ak1na 8Cienceclaales and was really charged up by lt. I switched to nursing in a four-year school. ''I began as a aurgical nune takina care of patienta before and after~ry butfbecame burned out on all the death dying. I wanted to get on the other aide of life. la a lot of joy he-re. "What'anJcelayoudon'tgetbored with the job. lneeeence, you'retheeLesof the doctor; you have a lot of responsibWty, Thlnp chanae fut. "V ou work with someone for U houri but at the .-ld you have a reward, this marvelous, perfect baby. (Pleue tant to Pa,. A%) Ylll 11111111 llllY NPll ORANGE COU N1 Y C A L IFOR N IA 25 CENTS . U.S. spy plane was ~ close to down'd -jet._ WASHINGTON (AP)-A U.S. reoonnailaance plane was operat- ing near the Soviet coast and came within 75 miles of the Korean jetliner reportedly shot down by the Soviets, Reagan adminis- tration officials said Sunday. The presence of the spy plane last Thuraday raiAed the possi- bility that the Soviets thought they were tracking the U.S. aircraft when they were actually pursuing the pasaenger jet, the official acknowledged. The dilcloaure was made as White Houae aides worked on a presidential addreaa to the nation in which Reagan on Monday evening plans to reveal American sanctions against the Soviet Union. Reagan, saying the United Stat.ea has "definite proof the Soviets intentionally shot down" the Korean jetliner, consulted with congreMional leaders Sun- day about the incident and the respoDBe he plans to announce on a nationwide televiaion and radio broadcast at 8 p.m. EDT. A 80W"Ce familiar with private White Houae diacuaaions said the president told congressional leaden in a rare, two-hour meet- ing that hi.a Monday night an- nouncement will ,.not be anything earth-shattering," and will be limited to actions such as restric- tions on international aviation and cultural exchangee. The source insisted on anonymity. Another adminJstration official said Sunday that "it la pomible" the aircraft was shot down after leaving Soviet ainpace. '1t Yiu very cloee. It may have actually been a mile outaide of their airspace when they shot it down," he said. The reoonnaimance plane was in the area monitoring for possible violations of the U.S.-Soviet trea- ty governing strategic nuclear weapons, one administration IOW'Ce said. Another official said that when the Sovieta first began tracking the Korean 747, they thought it was one of the U.S. RC-135 reconnalaanoe planes operating rouUnely in the area. "A. it came to their territory, they became confused and changed it to an unidentified status," this IOW'Oe said. (See PLANE, Pqe AJ) .,.., ........ _, .... ~ Huntington Beach pier a rea virtually bUJ'8ts at the seams as h uge crowd gathers to watch the finals of the OP Pro Surf Cham pionships. Potential riot quelled Huge H untington B each crowd gets rowdy, cleare d b y police By ROBERT BARUR Police in riot gear closed down the Huntington Beach Pier and city beach Sunday evening to head off a possible riot when one of the largest crowds in city hi.story threatened to explode out of control. The show of force -about 30 officers from Costa Mesa, Foun- tain Valley and Westminster joined about 50 Huntington Beach officers -came at the end of the last day of the OP Pro Surfing championships and at the cloee of bikini competition. The police, armed with re- volvers and batons and wearing helmet shields and teargas equip- ment. were jeered and hooted as they marched down the pier at 6 p.m . following an afternoon of sporadic fiatfighting. Officers said that many of the fiaticuf& were triggered when rowdies pulled the bikini tops Crom girls and their boyfriends fought to protect the girla'honor. Officers said circles would form around girls and males would take their pictures. "And then there were cues where the girls took their own tops off," said one officer. "I'm sure 80l1le of them got the idea from the bikini contest.'' One man was arrested for an assault on an officer and several were arrested for fighting on the beach. But no injuries were re- ported as the result of police and beachgoera being thrown together. The crowd at the pier area was swelled to perhaps about 100,000 by the Main Street Septemberfest camlval being staged just acroas Pacific Coast Highway from the beach. "This la the largest crowd I can remember or anyone I have talked to can remember," said Sgt. Chuck Poe, who is in charge of summer beach enforcement. (See HUNTINGTON, Pase A!) .._ ......... ., ..... ~ Police officers herd visitors from pier while' putting a lid o n a day that simmered with fistfights .. • I . . Orange Cout DAIL v PILOT /Monday, Sept. 6, 1983 Orcinge coast's working ·heroes ~ JIMM,. TURN ER I Barber From Page 1 ...... . "It's creation, You'relnon the groundwork. LE OL A MAE CONNER I Librar ian You have thiaoneneea with your patients, kind of a kinship, becauae when they are in pain, they have to look to 80ftleOne as a lifeline. "What's hard about labor and delivery la you 8ee all these people in pain. For women, It's the toughest pain they'll ever go through. You can comfort them but you can't take the painaway. In aome ways. you feel kind of helpless, but at the end whenthewomansaysahe couldn'thave done it without you, th.atmakesltall the better. "I always tell my patients however you go through it is okay, becauae you did it. I like natural childbirth techniques, but sometimes it makes women feel guilty if they can'tcomplete it. I think everyone should feel positive when they make it through. ·~t's nice about nursing is there's a niche for you somewhere. rm just happy I found my nicheao early. BUDDY BELSHE I Lifeguard Chatty and patient, Leola Mae Conner of Newport Beach~a world apart from the, stuffiness that cha.racterlz..e the st.ereot ypical librarian. For 17 years of her life, she has spent her days fielding trivia questions on everything from obecure historial figures to how to go about finding material for a research paper. In recent months, as the branch supervisor of the Newport Beach Library in Fashion Island, much of the 45-year-old woman's time is spent aiding corporate businesmnen on real estate and legal matters. These aren't foreign subjects to Conner, who took a break from library work to try her hand in those fields. But it didn't take her long to realize that books" were her first love, ''Thia job is perfect," Conner said from her seat behind the reference desk at the Newport Beach Public Library. "It's right in the hub of the business community. When I worked as a legal secretary and a real estate agent I learned that people in business were making decisions without good information. But since I had worked as a librarian, I knew the infonnation was available to them -so I decided to get into the profession to let people know what's available. "I decided to become a librarian in college," said Conner, who received a bachelor's degree from San Diego State and master's in library science from the University of Washington. "I studied so many different subjects that I couldn't pick whatlwanted todo.Asalibrari4Ul, everything would come up sooner or later. People are so fascinating. They have so many things they want to know about and I get to learn about it too." Then thereare the intangibles-working in a building with a gigantic picture window that provides a panoramic view of the Pacilic Ocean. "That is the fringe benefit of this job. Where else can you geta view like that? It's different everyday." Is there anything she doesn't like about being a librarian? "No," she answered with a smile. "I'm being paid to do something that's fun all the time." Jimmy Turner, the proprietor of Uncle Jimmy's barbershop at 18423 1h Beach Boulevard, has been cutting hair in Huntington Beach since 1955. He probably has more longevity on just about any other barber in town, but sometimes he asks himself why he's been at it so long. "I've never liked barbering all these years. I've always wanted to do something else. But you get kind of numb at it," he said laughing, "you get in a rut. "I might find me a rich woman and let her take me on a trip on the Love Boat. I gu~ I could sacrifice.'' HERSHELL HARDIMON I Shoeshine man Turner, the son of longtime Huntington Beach News columnist Jean Turner, prefers to be "39 years old and holding" but owns up to being 58 "I'll be happy if I can work another 20 years. I'll probably be standing behind people's heads and complaining, but I'll be happy to be working that long." Buddy Belahe, a lifeguard in Newport Beach for 23 years, has always loved the ocean. · ''There's just8omething about all that wide open space out there," he says. Belshe grew up in Huntington Beach just four blocks from the sand. His dad was a lifeguard, one of the first In Huntington. For 11 summers, Belshe was a aeuonal lifeguard in his hometown whilegoingtohighschooland then college. Though he originally had ambitions of being a teacher, Be1she said he was never able to give up his first love-the ocean. "It's been pretty rewarding. When you help pull 10IDeOneoutof the water or save a life it gives you a good feeling. "In a l.-ay, there are some aspects of teaching to it.You deal with the public and I've always enjoyed that and you help train other lifeguards. "There have been a lot of changes. We have better communication and bettercoverageon the beach now and we're much better trained in first-aid. All in all, just more prof~onaL ''There's a1ao more of a law enforcement aspect involved. Fights, getting surfers out of the water. It's not always that fun and it doesn't always pay off big rewards." Now a marine safety captain, Belshe seldom has toclimbintotheguard tower. He works in a glass-enclosed lookout at the foot of the Newport Pier but still sports a deep tan and wears red swim trunks to work. "I don't get into the water as much as I once did. I go in mostly to keep in shape, do some swimming. I did make one rescue th.is summer. "For the most part the lifeguards a.re aeaeonal. Faces change ao fast that somedays I walk in the door and am not really sure who works here. You 'U see them for several summers and then you won't tiee them again. "But they're always good kids. I have to say that rve always worked with good, clean-cut individuals. It's a good lifestyle. That'sone of the reaaons I enjoy it ao much." Hershell Hardimon, 45, has shined shoes on and off for 10 years. For the last two years he's plied his trade-more of an art, the way he sees it -at the Woodbridge Auto Wash in Irvine. His wife, Tina, sh.inesshoesatacarwaahon McArthur Boulevard and Bristol Street. "I love my job. I've never worked in a place where I met people who were so sweet and treated me so well. • "Even if I'm kind of down and out when I come in, I meet a customer and start talking and pretty soon I'm feeling great. "I can't wait to get up in the mornings. Sometimes I get up and come in early." Hershell says some of his regular customers come around every week whether they have shoes HUNTINGTON CROWD ... From Page A1 "We moved in becauae we didn't want anyone to get hurt. We showed a lot ot foroe. We didn't want a confrontation. ''The crowd was very hostile (towards one another) and there were a lot of fights. We received lota of calla." Of:ticer Barry Cue, who spent most of the day at the troubled area, said it was the last weekend of summer and the crowd prob- ably wanted to make the most ot it. Lifeguard Capt. Doug D'Arnall said that about 75,000 people gathered on the one mile of city beach and that the parking lot was cloeed at 7:30 a.m. "when we were max," he said. In addition to the police at the scene, 50 officers from Newport Beach and Orange County Sheriff's Department were stand- ing by at the Huntington Beach station in case the situation got out of hand. TODAY'S WEATHER Holiday will end with go~d weather • •• 87 t2 70 t2 71 aa ao .. 70 .... .... ., 11 " ao .. 70 .... .. .. 17 • a 11 • II . .. ,. 70 ., 72 17 70 ., 71 • 72 ... .. .. .. 14 71 14 n . .. 111 .. .. 14 la .. 71 II t i 11 IO • ~-SMwm'J St11lt00ary•• .. 17 .. 71 12 17 74 Q . .. lCIO e7 I04 ,. .. 71 17 " t7 • IURf llPIRT ~ ew aw .,, ·w that need shining or not. ''They just spend an hour or so rapping," he says. Shoe shining is more than just buff and polish to Hershell. "People are very serious about. their shoes. I might work an extra 15 minutes just to make one pair look good." Turner, whocharges$5.50, $7.50and $10for men's haircuts, indicates that the long-hair rage is still a sore point. "It put 200 barbershops out of business in California. It wasn'teasy but I hung in there. Just lucky, I guess, and being in the same location. Hershell guarantees that the shoes he shines will fook better than when his customers first bought them-orhe'llgivethemaahineforfree. "There's not near as much long hair now. I don't knovl if it will ever come back." There isn't a thing Herahell can think of to complain about on the job. "Other people want to steal me away from here, bull won'tgo. I have a good day everyday." Turner indicated he may have been caught for the interview on a not so good day. "Some yahoo stole my barber pole. It's the second time in 10 years that that has happened. They're irreplaceable. They're antiques." NEAL FULTON I Nurseryman Neal Fulton, 18, of Fountain Valley, is developing quite a green thumb after working among the flora at Nursery land for the past nine months. "I love it. I've worked for a grocery store, in construction, and I even worked at De Lorean Motor Co. But this is the best job I've ever had. "I do a lot of yard work-stocking, watering and maintaining plan ta and keeping the yard clean. But the biggest part of my job is helping customers, giving them ideas. "A lot of people come in and they don't know which plants to put where. A lot of times they like a certain plant, but they don't know whether to put in in a shady or sunny area. "I like this job because every day I do something different. It's not like you just water and feed the plants, anri that's it. And I like lt becauseyou'reworkingoutllide.lcan'tsltstillfor an inside job. "I want to work here for a long time. I've worked my wayupa lotalready. When I started, I didn't know anything-rocb and dirt were the same thing. I'd like to become an usistant manager eventually. TI\at's my goal. ''Our job is to help improve a peraon 's yard. We're beautifying the community.•• . End to big park crowds sought By STEVE MITCHELL °' .. Dllllr .... -Members of Laguna Beach's Beautification Council think th.at. perhape, Main Beach Park has become just a bit too popular for the town's own good. And they'll be asking the city council Tue.day to prohibit all major events at the oceanfront park during the summer months. By major event.a, they mean anything that draws more than 100 souls to the municipal beach park for a single purpoee. Events such as the aecond annual Boardwalk Energy Fair, whlch concluded Sunday at the park -right smack dab· In the middle of an already congested Labor Day weekend. ~ the Cuervo Laguna Beach Open volleyball tourney held in mid-.June, an event that drew tens of thouaanda of spectators to Main Beach Park -visitors who cov- ered virtually every square inch of sand In the park. The beautification panel says large f\mCtiom conducted at the city'• ao-called "Window to the See" make enforcement of litter, alcohol and drug ordinances "vir- tually impcmible, and create the potential for explosive riots." And they point to the massive traffic congest.ion on South Coast Highway and adjacent downtown street.a brought about by large summertime events at Main Beach. Committee members will sug- gest tht> council prohibit ma.jor events from June 15 to September 15 each year. And temporary structures, such as food booths, tables and signs should be eliminated from the park year-round. Ben Blount, chairman of the beautification panel said, "We realize that Laguna has a long history as a cultural center of ~ arts and in recent years has a1ao ttied to provide a variety of celebrations and sports events on Main Beach. "However, we are no longer an i8olated small beach community. We cannot be all things to all people. The council will conllider the panel's reoommendationa durinl 'I\ae.iay'a council meeting, whicll begins at 6 p.m. in ooundl chambers, 605 Forest Ave. Bicyclist killed Santa Ana boys arrested with automatic weap~ns A 22-year-old bicycle rider, returning to Pico Rivera trom Newport Beach, WM ltnack by a car and killed Sunday attel noon on Padfic Co.st Highway in Seal Beech, eooordina to police . Two boys were arn!lted Sun- day night In the parkina area of a c.o.ta Mesa theater, each carrying automatic weapons and at feut 2M rounds of ammunition, accord- ina to pol.Ice. . "Sst. George Yeibkk aa.ld the boya, 16 and 10, apparently were running away from their Santa Ana home when they were ap- prehended by an off-duty Anaheim polkie ofiicer who .. drew down" on them. 'Ibey turned over their l'Jnl -one of which wu a aeml-automaUc civ- ilian venJon of the M· 16 rlfie used in the U.S. MWtary -without tnddent. llOC'OC'dlnc to Yubick. Yezblck said the boys reported.. KWed instantly when he WM ly stole the weapons from a stn.ack from behind while ridhw grandfather. hia bicycle aloaa the~ ol The older boy reportedly had an the road new Seal Beech acqualntanceahip wt th an em-Boulevard WM Robert J. DIM. ployee at Edw ... Cinema, 3410 ' Seal Beach Pollot laid the Bril1ol Ave. driver of the car, X...th Yesblck aa1d It wun't clear Hetbnan, 20, of Lona Beech and Sunday night what the boya' PMMnaer John Ptndard, 20, of tntentlona were. He uid they are Lona BNdt, were injured when beina tent to Orange County their Volbwapn &., plun,ed Juvenile Hall on charpe of carry· down an embenk:ment and Weftt 1na 1 ~ gun m pubJJc, of U'Mted at HWltington Humana carrytnc a Conie&led weapon (an ~ta!. automatic NVOlver wu allegedly Pota aid Hellman allo ill ln the younpr boya' pocket) and behind held on ~ of ve- pc• 1•'"1 weepone while a hku1ar rnanllaUlhfef.PoUce W'l'9 minor. wi~tocallthemat43l-2Ml. l t Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Sept. 6, 1983 "I TOP OF THI NIWI 34 dead in Lebanon civil war NATION . Plane crash in Oklahoma kills all 8 passengers BJ fte A.taoc:lated Pre11 BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Bloody civil warfare broke out in the central mount.alna Sunday u 100n aa t,he IaraeJJ army pulled out, and Dru8e gunnen fired on U.S. Marine pomUom ne.r Beirut's international airport. Police aaid 34 people were killed and 71 wounded in the embattled mountains and in the , Chrlatian neighborhoods of east Beirut that were pounded by artillery from the Syrian-controlled aree of the mountains. The rocket and artillery fire aent U.S. Marines diving Into bunkers, once in the altemoon and twice in the evening, said •pokesmen for the 1,200-man peacekeeping continaent. They aaid one Marine was al.lghtly wounded 1n the afternoon barrage. H1a identity was not releaaed. The spokesmen aaid about eight mortar shells exploded near Marine poeitions around the shut- tered airport durfn.I the after- noon. Aa>eiated Preea photographer Bill Fbley reported from the Marine encampment that six more ahella landed in the perimeter later In the day. By late Sunday the ahelling in the airport vicinity had tapered oU . Marine apokesmen said of the altemoon attacks that Lebaneee officers believed the ~ gun~ ners in nearby hil.la were aiming at a Lebaneee Army artillery battery a few hundred feei north of the Marine poeltiona. In Waahlngton, Senate Ma- ~ Leader Howard Baker said dent ~an haa no plans to 1end the 'Marines into the central mountains to replace the Israeli aoldiers. Baker was In a group of congressional leaders who met with Reqan at the White HoWle. The mortar barra8ft foJ)owed a day of fierce fighting among Druae and Christian milltiaa and the Lebaneee army for: ccotrol of the mountainous area the Israelis had occupied for 15 montha. Hundreds of rocketa rained down on mountain villages, and fighting in the suburbs ai.o caught Britlah, French and Italian peace- keeping forces in the exctiange.. Thunderoua expJoeona cast huge palls of amoke over the city's southern suburbs and Lebaneee anny units fought wjth Druae mllitiamen near the alrport. ALTUS, Okla. -A small private airplane craahed minutes after takeoff from a municipal airport Sunday, bursting Into flame9 on lmpact and killing all eight people aboard. authorities eaid. "Everything wu normal" when the twin-eJ'Jgine Ceesr\a took of! shortly after 4 p.m., said Dennis Lee, assistant manager of the Altus Municipal Airport In th.la eouthwestem Oklahoma dty. "He got in bJa turn to the east and then I didn't pay any attention to him until there were 80me people In here. They said, 'Oh my God, it crashed,• and I i.mmediately got on the hornandcalledemergencyequipment out," Lee said. Bergland-Lewis Libertarian ticket Top Soviet olficialS made decision NEW YORK -The Libertarian Party on Sunday nominated a busineasman to share the 1984 ticket with David Bergland of Costa Meu, who became the presidential nominee only after six hours of balloting and the withdrawal of hia major competitor. Balloting 1or a presidential nominee at the party convention took 90 long Saturday that the vice presidential nomination waa put of! a day. The winner of the No. 2 spot on the ticket was James A. ~..ewla, 60, of Old Saybrook, Conn., on the third ballot. Lewis la a lalee repreeentative for a book binding company. Rus~ian source says Andropov was on vacation when jetliner was shot out of the sky Funeral for Marine killed in Lebanon WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. -Marine 2nd Lt. Donald George Loeey, one of two Marines killed J.ut week in Lebanon, was buried Sunday in a military tervice. Hundred.a of relatives and friends crowded the graveside In a rural Forsyth County cemetery to pay final tribute. After a .even-member Marine Corpe honor guard fired three volleys. a Marine bugler played tape. F.arlier, after a 40-minutechurchaervice,eeveraloommunityresidentsatoodbythe roedaide holding small flags or with their hands over their hearts as the beanie drove past. STATE Long Beach officer in fatal shotins LONG BEACH -A police officer killed a Long Beach man who allegedly pointed a rifle at him through a kitchen w\ndow, officers say. Edward Murphy, 57, wasshot todeath in hiakitchen by an of(icer whoee identity has not ~n releaaed, Long Beach Lt. Nonnan Benaon eaid Sunday. He said the shooting occurred about 11 a.m. Saturday in the 6800 block of White Avenue in northern Long Beach, about 25 miles80Uth of Loe Angeles. Police were called by neighbors who reported a man at.anding In hia front yard di8playing a rifle in a rude and threatening manner, Benson said. Lots of help /or 'Migrant Mother' SANT A CRUZ -An appeal for help for the woman whoee careworn face symbollz.ed Depression poverty in a photograph titled "Migrant Mother" has rai9ed more than $15,000 and attracted hundreds of thank-you letten becaU8e "she helped ao many of us by her beautiful face." Florence Thompson celebrated her 80th bUthday J.ut week, stronger but fiill gravely ill from cancer. heart trouble and the effects of a stroke, according to her children. Vowing to do anything in their power to keep from going back to a con.valeecent home, they appealed to the public last month for help with round-the-clock nursing care, doctors and medication that cost $1,400 a week. Now the family lita for hours at the dining room table each night, opening letten. Fire damages historic L.A. church LOS ANG~ -An electrical fire at a hiatoric downtown Catholic church Sunday cauaed more than $5 million in damage to the structure and ltaoontenta, including "irreplaceable" woodwork, fire department offidala aaid. The blue destroyed the roof of the five-story St. Joeeph'a Catholic Church, heavily damaged the sanctuary, destroyed a number of valuable paintings and statues and charred much of the church's ornate woodwork, imported from Germany in 1901, said Fire Depu1:ment spokesman Noel Murchet. WORLD Treasure hunters held in Hanoi BANGKOK, Thailand -Hanoi has con.finned it ia holding a California man and a Briton who were last seen during June when they rented boats on the Gulf of Siam to search for pirate's treasure, a British embaasy spokesman said Sunday. Hanoi 118.id the two men -Richard Knight, a Briton in hia early 40s, and Frederick Graham, 19, of Belmont, California -are jailed on charges of illegally entering Vietnamese waters, the spokesman said. MOSCOW (AP) -Top Soviet military officials made the de- ciaion to shoot down a Korean airliner last week and President Yuri V. Andropov, on vacation outside Moacow at the time, was not consulted, a Soviet souroe said Sunday. The source, who refused to be identified, confirmed that a heat-seeking air-to-air missile shot downblasted the Korean Air Lines Boeing 747 out of the sky. PLANE ... From Page A1 "It is absolutely baffling and puzzling to us that they would not have known what kind of plane it was," he said. U.S . officials said, however, that while the Soviets may have first thought the Boeing 747 airplane was an RC-135, they had enough information and op- portunity before firing at it to realiz.e that it was not a recon- nissanoe aircraft. Another administration official, alao speaking on condition that he not be identified, aaid the Korean aircraft and the U.S . airplane never came claier than 75 miles, and when they croaed paths, they were 300 miles apart. In Moecow, a top Soviet defenae ch.ief contended one of its fighter pilots thought the South Koreen jetliner looked like a U.S. in- telligence plane, and that the pilot waved his wings and blinked hia lights in an unheeded effort to warn the Korean plane away from restricied Soviet air apace. The Korean Air Line jumbo jet, with 269 people aboard. wu loet Thunday from restricted akia near Soviet military installations. U.S. officials say a Soviet pilot shot down the plane with a heat-seek.Ing miaaile. Deputy White Houae praa aec- retary Larry Speakee said Reagan told congrelllional leaders in their White House aesalon Sunday that the attack was "a barbaric. un- civi.llz.ed, cold-blooded act." "There is no excuse that can justify this ruthlees taking of innocent life. It is an afront to humanity. The Soviet& have tried to deny their responsibility, but we have definite proof the Soviets intentionally shot down that un- armed civilian aircralt.'' he quoted the president as saying. Eulola Stillwell dies at age 84 He said Andropov ~turned to the capital on Friday to deal with the growing world furor over the attack, which took 269 lives. The Soviets have not aclcnowl- edged that their air force shot the plane down. The Sunday Times of London quoted unidentified U.S. In- telligence aouroes as saying they believed the order to fire wu given by army Gen. Vladimir Govorov, a 58-year-old member of the Communist Party C-entral Committee. The newspaper identified him as commander of the Soviet Far F.ast region and said they believed clearance for the decision was given by deputy defenae minister and marshal of aviation Alex- ander I. Koldunov, 59. The Soviet BOurce, who is in a position to know but insisted he not be identilied in any way, said the decision to fire on the jetliner was made because the military truly believed the plane was on a spy mission. The source's account of the incident suggests that Andropov, commander-in-chief of the Soviet armed forces and head of the country's aecwity council, would not be routinely consulted before orders were given to fire on a plane thought to be intruding in Soviet territory. WE ASKED:--------- "What does Labor Day mean to you?" MlkeY•t•, atudent, lrvtne "ltmeanaadayoffand It • means I'll be going back to school soon." M8rl• B•nnlater, bllbyaltter •nd atudent lrvlne "It's just another day. I'm not planning anything speclal, just normal ac- tivities.'' ~ 8•tleh Y•yuvegula, atudent, lrvlne "It's real fun. It's a day off that's added on to the weekend -a great day to go to the beach.'' blea.nnlater, hOUHWlfe, ' lrvlne "I don't think anything about It. I'm a Jehovah's Witness and we don't cel- ebrate holidays." tUncy8toll, expect•nt mother, lrvlne "I hope I'll be In labor on labor Day. I'm almost nine months pregnant.'' Wllflllm bndolph, ..... m•n, lrvtne -°ll means the beaches and restaurants around here will be crowded." Begin's party works on coalition JERUSALEM -Members of the governing Likud bloc intensified efforts Sunday to aolidify the coalition after two of its key factions threatened to talk with theoppocition Labor Party. All 64 Likud bloc members in the 120 member P.arliarnent have endof9ed Foreign Minister Yit.zhak Shamir as replacement tor Prime Minister Menachem Begin. Shamir wu elected last Tbunday to suoceed Begin as leader of the prime minister'• Herut Party. But the government was wracked by renewed demands for changes in economic policy by the TAMI faction, which holds three 1eeta in the coalition, and for guarantees of legl9.lation placing archaeological excavations under religioua control by the ultra-Orthodox Agudat l.uael. which baa four eeata. Funeral services will be held Tuesday for Eulola Caroline Stillwell of Costa Mesa, a retired telephone operator, who died Thursday in a Newport Beach ~:::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::=:=:::::::::=:=!:::=:::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=~ convalescent home at the age of 84. She was a 17-year resident of the city and a member of the Gl.asaell Park Chapter 486, Order of the F.astem Star. She la survived by two 11.aters, Bertha Sweet of Loe Angeles and Huel Reagin of Paradiae, Calif. Services are acheduled for 11 a .m . at Pierce Brothen Bell Broadway Mortuary d\apel in Costa Mesa. lnt.ennent will follow at Hollywood Memorial Park. We're Listening ••• What do you like about-the Daily Pilot7 What don't you likt" Call the number at left and your message will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate ed!tor. The same 24·hour a nswerins service may be used to record let ters to the editor on any toptc. Mailbox contributors must Include their na me and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls , please. 842·6086 Tell us what ·s on your mind. D~ 1eo==lMc1 M(WIOty r1ioe1 tt you clo not lll•t yOV• e>eot• Qy •aoo,.. Calo.lot• 7om ~ y~u• cooy ••II O• Setutday end Su<ld•y If 10\I 00 NII 'ltCelVt yOUt ecip,by7 am .,.._, tO 1 m •"4 '°'" -...,. be-.0 -· c~ T1l1ptMMIM OolflQIJ Counly Al-..... ..,,.,_. ~Ofl8"cft •w..i_., ... ,.. L...,..Nv"" ....... • ORANGE COAST D1ily Pilat H. L lohw..U Ill Publllhef ChuJ Oow•Hbr "8Jmond MacLeen Edlt0t end Asalttan Controller to the Publilhw ...,...,,c .... l'roeluClitJll ........,.. ....... ,...,. ~L.--- ,_., ... A__,g C<t-llO't M~ M~ ,_;,,¥----~ C ... lffled edMrtletng 114/142.fl?I AM other d1p1rttMnf9 M2o4111 MAIN °"'9C9 »O w ... ley 81 . Cott• -CA Miii eeldt,_ Bo• 1&e0. Cce11 ...... CA 92921 CCl>yilQ!lt 1983 Ottn09 Qoatl l'UCllln'o ~ HO ne•• tlOllH Uluttot !lone. eo1101lat "''"•' ~ -....-1•,_....,,.....,ber~--..,.. 09' ..... _.ot~- VOL.1'1,NO.• --•. fTo:m our bJys ' d<zpt. polo brusba.d~tland a h~t.u wa.tght Slz.t.l.and cniw thats bruehczd fbr oof'tnll.55 pr00o'tiy thz. moot canfbrt..abla S'Mlata.r hq, U ~r e1~tun 9nz.ot color~ . to chooee <rorn- @)~Q~@)~@ 44 Fothlon ltlond • Nrwport EHoch • 7Jf/644·5070 1001We•twood8ltxl .• We.iwood Vfllogco. 2131208-3273 --~--- I I ~ ( -., A.4 Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Monday. Sept. 5, 1983 Masked niechanic • • assists niotor1sts MIAM.l (AP) -Trying to flag down help after a tire blew on busy Interstate 95, Brenda Duffy aUl'acted the attention of a man w earing a mask, purple hood, green leotards and a bright yellow cape. "I thought he was just another Miami bozo," said M.a. Duffy. But the man who fixed Ms. Duffy's rush -hour (lat Thunday was Kaptain Kendall -a caped crusader cru.i.aing Dade County high ways to help stranded motorists. "I like to give people free service," he said . With the tire changed and Ms. Duffy on her way, Kaptain Kendall paused to talk to reporters from The • , M.iami Herald, which informed readers Friday morning of the d ty'a new doer of good deeda. Kaptain Kendall tools around in a pickup with a yellow-flake paint job, flashing lights and a siren. Dnblazoned on the outaide are the names of the Kaptain .. aponlOl"ll-a car dealer and a radio station . "It'• not really a promotion," said car dealership manaser R1c.hard Buttafuoco. "It's very needed, .amethfng we wanted to do." Searching the ranks of hia employees for one 1 with super-hero potential, Buttafuoco found a • 24-year-old mechanic who he would identify only • Gary. "I don't know of him. Doee he hang out with Batman?" uked Metro-Dade Police Officer Bill Wallace. Kaptain Kendall first hit the streets durina rush hour Monday. He •tarted smtiJ, helping a man who Mdnmoutofpa. RUFFELL'S UPHOl.lftaY,tNC. ................. 1922 HAHOl ltVD. COSTA MESA -548· I 166 Students pass with flying colors Daily Pilot Photos by Ernest Coleman Gymm1stics students from the·Girls and Boys Club of Fountain Valley-Huntington Beach put their agility on display in a recent competition held at the club. More than 100 boys and girls took part in a morning gymnastics show. During the afternoon, the club's top eight gymnasts, the Pirouettes, competed against teams from Anaheim and Garden Grove. The Anaheim Illusions col- lected the most points. At top left, Lisa Robson keeps track of points. At top rfght, Taffy Griebenow displays her skills on the balance beam. Looking on intently, above, with other students is Pirouettes Coach Joanna Mapes. At left, Taffy demonstrates floor exercises while friends look on. 75 YEARS of QUALITY lndlvldu•I Attention By teachers who care. Student LHClenhlp Training Learning to be responsible for others, developing reaourcefulnt!SS and Initiative. Currlculum Providing a strong foundation In baalc lkllls and the "3 R's." Phyalcal Education UnJtlng a strong mind with a atrong body, for a well-rounded Individual. Pre-School Geta your chlld off on the right road, under the beat eupervllion, with the proper toys and equipment. Kindergarten Glvee your chlldren atrong academic training In phonics, reading, writing and arithmetic, to lut them all their nvee. Computer L•b • UCATION • AGE2 THRU GRADEi Computer Aaalated lnatructlon PAGE SCHOOL SINCE 1808 GARDEN GROVE COSTA MESA 12111 8uaro 857 VlotoN St. Oerden Grow, Ce. 82640 Colte ......, ce. 92e2t (714) 871-5533 (714) 842-0483 Other Looatlonl: ORANGE 1810 w. Aamond ar.iae.ce.eteee (11~) t7W07S HANCOCK PARK end BEVIRLY HIU8 OPERATED BY THE VAUGHAN fAMILY Beck/keeps the faith! Millionaire ex-Teamster still going strong at BS. SEA TrLE (AP) -The voice rupe. The Ice blue eyee fluh. The ll1lall tilt thumpe the podium. A harancue by • Dave Beck, Teunaten Union prelk:lent 30 yean aao. can IUD shake dl.Wt from the raft.en. "IAbor will eet militant .,.in when unemployment,._. becaUte there la lt1ll won for unior»to do," Beck called ou& to a pthering of Teanwten retireea. "You've never teen a bual- neem>an agltate for your higher wages and your aborter hours. "We're a militant, fighting orpniJ.a- tion that just played the other aide'• r game. Sometimes it WU rough and tough and bare knuckles and I'm proud of it," he ahou~, whacking the air with hil hand. At 89, Beck ia long gone from the Teamsters Union, but he remains a cruaadlng curmudgeon for trade un- ionism at halls and clubs where he speaks. Beck, who joined the Teamsters in 1914 and was president from 1952 to 1957, once dined with presid~ta and prime rninlaten. A burly, brainy pres- ence, he trod the halls of labor and industry, building the Teamsters into the largest union in the world, with a membership now of about 1. 7 million . M.illiona of Americana first saw him in action on black.-and-white television eets in 1957 when he refuted to answer questions 142 times in two days before the Senate rackets committee. Hour after hour, he glowered at the commit- tee's chief oounael, Robert F. Kennedy, whom he deecrlbes now aa "a lot of bluff." He was never charged aa a result of the investigation. But he apent 30 months in McNeil la1and federal pent- . ' tentiary for filing a fraudulent T__. at.en 1ncome tax return and for~. $1,900 from the ule of a union-owneCI · Cadillac, a count of state grand larceny. t "I never atole one damn dollar frj the TeAmater1," Beck bllLated a recaif interview, ca1l1ng the eventa landed him in prison "bookkeepma ! erron." : His tarnished name WU poUabed ~ when Gov. Albert Rc.Uini pardoned: him in 1965 for the larceny end : Preedent Ford perdoned him in 1975 for the federal offeme. ' "There ia no truth in the world that. the Teamsten go hand-in-hand with, ganpten," Beck said. ''The only{ people I ever knew who were allegeclly' with the llO-Oliled gang were ibe' buaineas people we drove trudm tor." The Teamsters have a "fine com- munity standing, and public oplnkm only reflects the th1np that exdte newspaper editors," added Beck, a member of the American Lepon for se.rvioe in World War I and a s-t exhalted ruler of the Seattle l2b Lodge . ot the mya~rioua 1975 disap- pearance of James Hoffa, who suc- ceeded him as Teamsters pre9ident, Beck said, "I don't know anymore about it than the FBI and they apparently don't know anything either ." He has only passing acquaintance, Beck said, with Roy Williaml, who stepped down as Teamaten pre9ident thia year after being eentenced to priaon foN:Olllpiring to bribe a 9enator, and Jackie Pre.er, the new Teamsters boea, who la under investigation by the Labor Department in an embenJement ca.e. • xourc d betaking in school ·syear? < -~ You're convinced he's using drugs. And drinking, too. He's had trouble in school and scrapes with the law. No parent wants to admit that his child is in such serious trouble. But you're at the end of your rope. You've done everything you ca n think of, and nething's worked. What your child m~oos is help. Prof~ sional help. . And the .Pest place to get help is at the Adolescent CareUniL The Adolescent CareUnit is a short-term, inpatient treatment program designoo to help young people identify the source of their problems. Here at a local community hospital they learn how to handle life on an effective, day-by.Jay basis without the use of drugs or chemica ls of any kind. No one ever said growing up was easy. call the ADelESCENT rAREUNrr A eemee o( Compreh.emi.e Care Corpon1tion. (714) 633-9582 CAREUNIT HOSPffAL OF ORANGE . (AOOll' a ADOl..EKENT PROGRAMS) 401 SOl1rH 1'JSTIN AVE., ~E, CALIFORNIA 91666 C> 1.U ~ c.,.un1• • t ~-NlllOI Cot11cM....,_C...Cofos. i - l t J ---~ \ ~~~~~~~~-....~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~t \I ... Pract icing Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday. Sept. 5, 1983 Al Chad's injured suffer without medical aid N'DJAMENA, Chad (AP) -To be wounded ln Chad's dvil war can mean almost cer1aln death. • Only the most primitive medical facilities are available ln thia detlolat.e, sun-baked country where Lib- yan-backed rebels are trying to topple the government of President Hiaeene Habre. Many of the injured die before receiving any kind of treabnent. Chadian soldiers aeriously hurt in the battle for the northern outpost of Faya-Largeau were flown to the N'Djamena hospital, a near-derelict group of buildings in the heart of the war-shattered city. "They lay in the 122-degree heat for up to five days without any kind of first aid before being evacuated," said Lt. Crnd.r . Rene Jancovici, a French navy doctor who is the only trained surgeon practicing in the Chad capital. "I received 223 seriously hurt soldiers with all kinds of head, chest and limb injuries. · "But there was not a single ab- dominal injury among them, because anyone unfortunate enough to be struck in the abdomen in that heat and filth and without medical attention was dead within hours," he said.' corridors or in the open. Many of tl)e military casual\iel from Faya-Largeau had injuries cawted by pellet, fragmentation and phosphorus bombs dropped in divebombl114'attacka by the Libyan air force, Jancovici aaid. "The phosphorus bombs are particu- larly viciowi," he said. Mohamed Alifa, 20, was blinded and crippled by such a bomb. Three week.I after being burned, he lies in agony from the effects of the phosphorus. "We think he will survive,"' Jan- covici said. "Most of these people never! had any kind of medical treabnent before in their lives, so their systems 1 are not immunized to antibiotics by, years of abw.e at the hands of modem medicine. Antibiotics work wonders h ere." Lt. Cmcir. Serge Resnikoff, a French I navy ophthalmologist recently as- signed to the N'Djamena hospital, looked at Mohamed within hours o( tak.inj( up his new post. "I think we may be able to restore about 10 percent of the sight of one eye," he said. "With luck, he will be able to distinguish between ligh t and dark." Sisquoc, t he first California condor ever hatched in captivity, practices h is ta keorrs and la ndings a t the San Diego Wild Animal Park. Sisquoc, who was ha tch ed March 30, and Tecuya, who was hatch ed Apr il 5, a re still limited to short flights as they learn to use their win gs. The h06pital it.sell is not a model of hygiene. All the toilets are smashed and unusable. Flies and malaria-bearing moequitos hover over garbage and excrement in the yard. There are not enough beds for the hundreds of patients and many people, including thoee headed for the ma- ternity ward, aleepon straw mats in the The wounds of every battle casualty brought to the hospital were badly infected, J ancovici said. "Four of them had amputations which they had performed on them- selves -for example, of gangrenous, open fractures -without anesthetics, instruments or help of any kind,'' Jancovici said. Apartheid's foes mount new effort Groups split over role of !!.hite activists CAPETOWN,SouthAfrica(AP)-gress,aco-drafteroftheCharter.The Enemies of South Africa's apartheid smaller Pan-Africanist Congress said racial policies are mounting what some black Africans should control the of their leaders say is the strongest struggle and that whites, particularly campaign against white rule in nearly Communist whites, were trying to 30 years. But the movement remains manipulate the movement for their divided over accepting help from white own ends. activists. Both the $can National C.o~ The campaign centers around th~ and the Pan-AfricanistCongress were United Democratic Front, a coalition of banned in April 1960 and now operate more than 300 community groups, guerrilla campaigns against white rule trade unions, women'sgroupsand from exile. student organizations including all The "Charterists," who fonn the races. The coalition was fonnally backbone of the Democratic Front . .ee organized Aug. 20 at a rally at a role for all opponents of the system, Mitchell's Plain near Cape Town. including whites, in the struggle for The Rev. Allan Boesak, leader of the equal rights for the nation's 21 million World Alliance of Reformed Churches, vote less blacks. told the rally, "I believe we are St.eve Biko fomled the rival Black standing at the birth of what could Consciousness Movement in the late become the greatest and mostsignifi-1960swith the motto, "Blackman. you cant people's movement in more than a are on your own." He helped broaden quarter of a century." the definition of "blacks" to include A month earlier. another group coloreds and Indians, a view now called the National Forum Committee accepted by most militants. was founded by former leaders of the Biko died in police detention in 1977 Black Consciousness Movement from ·and several black consciousness groups the early 1970s. They maintain that were banned the next month. The whites, however well-intentioned, Azanian People's Organization cannot help lead a struggle aaainst (AZAPO) now holds the Black C.on- white privilege. sciousness standard. The group takes The announced goal of both groups is its name from Azania, which is what it the same -a democratic, aocialist wan ta to call South Africa in the future South Africa with no racial diltinc-Curtis Nkondo, who was suspended lions. But the traditional animosity as the AZAPO leader in 1980 and lat.er between the two groups, personal as joined the Charterists, said, "I find well as ideological, i.s a stubborn barrier there is a contradiction in excluding to unity. A number of black trade people who would like to participate ... unions, for instance, havedeclined to While we are fighting against join either movement because their apartheid and other political problems, members include adherents to both. we should not practice apartheid in our Leaders of the Democratic Front and own organizations." the National Forum agreed in int.er-But Saths Cooper, an AZAPO vice views that despite the divisions, opposi-chainnan and creator of the new tion to apartheid has surged in recent National Forum, argued that only the months in response to the govern-black working class is truly oppressed ment's attempt to draw the Indian and and exploited in South Afrlcil. There- " colored'' (mixed-race) minorities into fore only black workers can lead the the goverrunent. Boesak, who is col-struJUt)e. ored,said the plan would make Indians Whites, he added, should focus on and coloreds" junior partners in persuading other whites that the apartheid," the official government solution lie;i in ending white privilege. policy of racial separation. Cooper, who wauentenced to six The leaders also are conscious that yea.rs in prison on a conspiracy charge previous movements have been de-and was released last December. said stroyed or driven into exile by ban-Black Conaciousness followers a1ao nings, arrests and detentions without reject the African National Congress' trial. alliance with communism. But Dr. Rashid Saloojee, a Demo-"There is no ANC,'' he said. "lthink era tic Front vice president from the it's totally under the beaemony of the Indian township of Lenasia near Communist Party, and in tum Mos- Johannesburg, said the organization cow." hassuchstrongcommunitysupport HelenJoeeph,awhiteactivistand that it cannot be stopped. Charterist who was "banned" by the "The only opposition the govern-government until last year, said the ment has to fear at the moment is the Democratic Fro.nt had much broader UDF (United Democratic Front),'' he community backirlg than Black C.on- said. "Somuortof restraint will be sciousness. Mrs. Joeeph, who attended placed on it. But even if we are not the 1955 Congrem. maintained that allowed to function entirely openly, it Slack C.onadOWll'MSaupport la limited will go on, becal.18e they can 'tsuppress mainly to campus intellectuals, a entire conununiUea." contention Cooper rejects. Boesak, who has become a major Mrs. Joeeph, now 78, aald the anti-apartheid force, said a day before emergence of the Democratic Front has the rally, "It may even be that the left tome white liberala "tom in two." fonnation of the UDF, in lta resistance ''Their conacience makes them be- to govemment polidet beyond the Ueve they should be part of the ltn.G)e comtitutionalchangea, will become in fOt"d~ and justice. But the effect the tn.reoppomltion(party) ln other half of themlllookJ.nlfor an out. South Africa." Deep down in their hearts, they att Boeeak compared the founding of terribly frightened of moving away the Democratic Front with the Con-from \hf;statuaquoand their prM· 1P99of thePeoplein 1955. 'That legedlife,''aheeaid. C.ongreet adopted the Freedom Char-The new organizations have ernerg- ter. still widely regarded u the ed u the wblt.e.-minorlty government blueprint for an envisioned South puta the f:lnllhlnc toucha on a new Africa in which black and white would CONtJtutionofferinallrnlted political llve together equally in a free IOCiety. power to the colored and Asian • Theaplitovertheroleofwhltn mlnortt.lea. TheplanwouJdcreate emef1ed in the late 19~. when a eepanitechambenof Parllament fol splinter group broke away (rom the the two poupa but would Je.ve whites multi-racial African National Con-in eltect.lvecontrol. I/ Your Taking Off This Weekend, Right? Well, We 're Taking Off, Too ••. · •. Tak~ng Hundreds of Dollars Off Name Brand Appliances &TVs . Everything Is On Sale Labor Day Weekend! PANASONIC MICROWAVE • 6 Power Levels • Turn Table • Remote Control •Cable Ready SAVE 150 s5499 -...... , OPEN LABOR DAY 10 to 4 ·Commer e1a11y Prove~ In self.service launaries • Centle en ervv efflcienr O'Yfng • El~. tron1c Auto.cry · or Time Contro1 LABOR DAY SPECIALS One Of A Kinds & Close Outs Whirlpool microwave ............. . REG. 549.95 GE potscrubber dishwasher.............. 329.95 GE 19" color tv ...... 469.94 GE 25" color con$ole ......... . •Litton micro/range. Mitsubishi 50" 649.95 909.95 NOW 329.95 289.95 329.95 449.95 499.95 projection tv ................. save $1,000 Frigidaire elect. drye r............. 299.95 259.95 Roper built·in 1double gas oven..... 999.95 799.95 RCA 13" color........ 349.95 259.95 RCA 25" color console.......... 599.95 419.95 RCA 45" proieclion tv ......... .. RCA COLOR •Auto Fine Tuning a • Auto Color ,_ 19 Olav ~·~ GENERAL ELECTitlC POTSCRlllBER a l • T.mp a.tltor • 3 Level WWI s42995 SAV£ "° -I , \ "• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monda~. Sept. 5, 1983 , 0 Workers niake future of A1nerica bright F.ach Labor Day provides us with an opportunity to pay homage to the workers who have helped make America great. I join with all Americans in saluting the contributions of the nation's working men and women, the most productive workers in the world. ' The endeavors of today's workers and their unions assure that our country wil have an even brighter future. Yet the bounty we have reaped from these labors is n ot limited to mere products and services. Our workers have been one of the cornerstones of our democratic system. The values they have passed down from generation to generation have strengthened America as the land of opportunity. Even though the nature of our labor has changed over the years, Americans still believe that all wo~k is noble. In celebrating the efforts of....American workers, past and present, we honor this fundamental truth as well. · On this day we also reflect on our foremost domestic challenge: providing job opportunities for all Americans who want to work. Through my Administration's F.conornic Recovery Program, we are bringing new hope to Americans. Already this year more than 1.1 million more Americans are employed than last December. The resurgence of our economy is bringing real jobs -jobs with a future -in the private sector. The improved economic climate we now enjoy _promises all Americans a prosperous future. I know that the nation's workforce will play a vital role in h elping America realize it.S full economic potential. -Ronald Reagan, President MAllBDX Wake up, Laguna! To the F.ditor: The recent action of the City Council, denying by unanimous 5-0 vote, a Taxpayer's Assn. request to consolidate Laguna elections with the county election should make Laguna wake up. We do not and will not have represen- tative elections until we change our voting methods. From the refonns of Hiram Johnson Wltil the early '70s Cali- fornia elections were as honest and representative as we could make them. regardless of who won. Not any more. Recent California Supreme Court decisions and laws passed by the legislature to assure "maxi- mum participation" have given us postcard registration plus un- limited abeentee voting and now allows abeentee ballots to be picked up and delivered to the city clerk. Non-citizens and non-residents are now free to register by posu:ard and vote by mail in Laguna. How else could we have 13,000 registered voters with a population of only 18,000? Anyone with a cause can ask anyone in Laguna to sign a petition (and a postcard regis- tration at the same time) and gain votes for his special interest group. And we have a few cauaea being espouaed here -anti-nuclear, save the Greenbelt, save the whales, women's rights, gay righta,dvil rights, minority rights, save the village, etc. -all worth- while, but none a guarantee of representative government. Laguna's registered voters are politically balanced along state lines with a few more Republicans than Democrats, but with a much higher proportion of minority parties and "decline to state" - about 34 percent, 38 percent and 23 percent respectively. One might expect a fairly balanced election here. Not so. All six elected to our "non-partisan" of- fices (five council members and the city clerk) are Democrats. All have been or are active in a .. cause.'' The county seems far more vigilant than the city in purging the voter lists of duplications and questionable registrations. This, plus greater November turnout and lower cost per ballot (70 cents versus $2) was one of the main points made by the Taxpayers Assn. Only one voice was raised in opposition during public input, Bill Buckley, preside.nt of the North Laguna Neighborhood Assn. He did not say so, but he is also president of the Laguna Democratic Club. The council chose to ignore the facts and data submitted by the Taxpayers Assn. and who can blame them? An honest and representative vote might put thei.r jobs in jeopardy. Laguna will have lopsided coundls until there iB a public out.cry for a repreeenta- tive.election. HOWARD D. DAWSON Laguna Beach l.M. BDJd!Here 's to you,Doc No martini drinker of the old school should fail to recognize the name of Dr. Franciaco de la Boe, who was a professor of medlcine at the University of Leiden 300 years ago. In hi.a aearch for a therapeutic compound. he invented gin - clink! -and. indeed, it caught on. One high achoo! subject more than any other changes the course of the students' future classwork. It's Algebra I. Half the students who take it drop out of math thereafter. The world's tropical rain forests are being cut down at the rate of 3,000 acres per hour, I'm told. Q. When are the northbound killer be.el due to get to the United Stat.elT A. About 1988 I.a the lat.est prognostication ln thia matt.er. The Texaa town of Brownsville la su~ to be their first swp Then on to New Mexico, Arif.Ona and California. Q. What'• the difference be- OAANGE COAST llilyPillt l tween "loneliness'' and "solitude''? A. Can only quote that lady poet May Sarton on this one: "Lone- liness is poverty of the self. Solitude is richneg of the self." Q. How fast did th06e oldtimey steamboats on the M~lppi travel? A About 8 mph. Never mind what they tell you in the city, young fellow. In the country. it's good manners to blow youc car horn as you drive up in front of youc girlfriend's howe. U you aay you've got an "armful" of wood, you're fronl New England. If you uy you've got an "annload" of wood, you're from aomeplace elae. Probably. Many a good halrptece la baked ln an oven at 150 degrees F . for three hours before its finally fixed atop the wig wearer. A badger'1 lalr la called a "eett." c....,0ow.-, ,.., ... ~ to~,,..... UrrJD ....... .....,.,_ ANXJEIY. £MeilONAL U~EAVAL-1 ~AVEN'T Sl.f Pf IN ™Rf~ DA'f5. l~E SIX DEMOCl?ATIC PRESIDENllAL NOMINE£S. I NE[D TO INOOCE REWATION BY TMINKJNG Of SOMfTMlt-(1 1\.fAT WILL PUT ME 10 SLEEP. No holiday for the unemployed WASHING TON -The econ- omic recovery• has bypassed the ghettos where the unemployed, most of them restless blacks, have nothing to celebrate on this Labor Day. To look at the faces behind the statistics, I sent a reporter into the ghettos. I also spoke to social and church workers who deal with the atreet people. They paint a st.ark mural: The ghettos are places of ha.rah re- alities; of boarded-up storefronts, padlocked doors and wailing police sirens; of rundown rental properties and public housing projects: of violence and danger, occupied at night by police and those on the far side of the law. These inner cities are populated by desperate, streetwise men, faceless, leaden-eyed women and their listl~. anonymous children. The destitute cannot escape; they have no place to go. They prowl the back alleys -scavengers sifting through garbage. Stereotyped Worrisomely, they are becom- ing a permanent underclass. Yet they are thoroughly human, with the same motivations and aspi.ra· tions as their more affluent neigh- bors. They desperately want to work; they are willing to earn the respectability they crave, social workers plead. Many were once-solid citizens who have become trapped in an industrial society that is changing from labor-intensive to high-technology. They are not yet able to understand how they £\ Sentiments similar "7_ ~ ~ The same sentiments were ---------~---:.,~ heard in other ghettos. Blacks in .llCI 11111111 ~ South Dallaa, for example, may wound up on the scrap heap alter years of productive work. Reeent- ment and cynicism have slowly turned to hopelessness. And the hopelessly poor respond to thei.r economic pUght inevitably by stealing the goods they cannot earn. "We're gonna awvive. We're gonna put food on the table and take care of our own," a Gary, Ind .. steelworker, with no job and no prospects, told my as&OCiate. Bob Shennan, fiercely. The word for this is "hustle." Just about everyone on the streets has a "hustle." The youth hang around arcades and, as they get. older and meaner, move into dingy bars and pool halls. smok- ing. drinking, hustling. In South Dallas, my reporter suddenly found himself in the middle of a chaotic street scene. Police leaped out of a car, cornered two young blacks, faced them against a car, thei.r legs and arms outstretched. They were searched and manacled and shoved into a police car. The scene drew no crowd, just a few casual glances. Arrests are commonplace in the Dallas ghetto. But there is a prob1em. As a hustler on the streets of Gary, Ind .. put it, ''There ain't much left here to steal.'' It means he'll have to do his hustling in Chicago's nearby. alfluent white neigh- borhoods. not have much, but they intend to hang onto what they do have. A bitter black activist, named Bill Stoner, told my reporter: ''There are a lot of angry black Vietnam veterans out there ready to take to the streets .... They're gonna start taking some of th.oee skilla they learned in Vietnam and start applying them in the streets." Here are a few other obeerva- tions: -In the ghettos, there are few unskilled jobs available; precious little job training is being offered: welfare benefits have been slashed; and low-<:OSt housing is disappearing. Neither the federal government nor corporate em- ployers have accepted responsi- bility for retraining laid-off workers for new jobs. -With more emotion than evidence, impoverished blacks across the country blame Ronald Reagan for thei.r de1eriorat.ing economic condition. Under Re- agan, they repeat, "the poor get poorer, and the Mch get Mcher." This perception heightens thei.r frustration which is turning to anger. -President Reagan wants to establiah ucban free-enterprise wnes and offer special concesaion.s to encourage bus:inessmen to set up shop in the inner cities. However plausible the idea may appear on paper, it won't work in the streets. At the same time that the president iB offering busi- Dr. Jekyll or Dr. Hyde? The story of the respected doctor in Columbus, Ohio, la terrible but fa.9cina ting. Dr. F.dward Franklin Jackson was an internist and member of the board of directors of the hospital. Everyone thought he was a good doctor living a nonnal life with a wife and two children. A year ~o Dr. Jackaon made an unlikely house call and was ar- rested in the apartment of two women he had come to rape. He has since been charged with committing a series of 38 rapes and 60 felonious crimes. F.d Jackson had been a very good student at Columbus North High. The editors of the school yearbook had the kind of things to say about him that they always say about bright, likable people. It wasn't until he graduated I~'· -.N-DY-RU-DN_H_...,.~ from Ohio State Medical School ln 1968 that there were any indica- tions 110mething was wrong. That year he was arrested near the echool. The black bag he carried wasn't filled with stethoerope and pilla, It contained burglary tools. Asked to leave The charges against the yoWlg doctor were dropped by the police but the hospital waa not ao forgiving. Dr. Jackaon was asked to leave, ao he jolned the Anny and eerved aa a doctor at Ft. SW, Oklahoma. You wonder what stories there are about him there. When he got out of the Anny, Dr. Jackaon went back to Col- umbus, hoping everyone had for- gotten, and started practicing again at another hospital. In 1975 there began a series of sex crimee that baffled the Col- umbus police. They were obvious- ly committed by someone smart. Finally a man named William Bernard Jackson, who loolu.a lot like Dr. Jackson, was convclted of the rapes and sentenced to priaon. It seemed as though the case was over, until that day last Septem- ber when Dr. Jackson was caught in the women's apartment. After nearly five years in prison for crimes he didn't commit, William Bernard Jackson was releued. Couldn't help it Dr. Jackson is about to be tried A literary labor of intellect On th1a Labor Day, when hardly anyone labors (except colwnnilts and other such low creatures), I thought It might be mildly diverting to devble a quJJ column about dlvene kinda of laboring. Each of the quotaUON below contabu a rererenoe to a dltferent occupation or profetlfon, with the operative word rni.lnl· You a.re to IUpply the vocation alluded to by the author in thla conte>et. A ICOl"e or one-fourth right la not d419pbbt.. 1. "For 't.la •port to have the -----habit with hil own petard." (Shakespeare.) 2. "'I doubt It,' 1&ld the -····- And ahed a bitter tea_r." (Lewia C-arroll.) ~ m--.1-, .. --~ 3. "Oh, l am a ----and • captain bold, and the mate of the Nancy brig." (W.S. OUbert.) 4. '"nley have no ··----among them for they OONdder them u a IOrt of people whoee profetlion It It tq. ~ matten." (Slr TboniM M<Jft.) &. "lf • man doa noi keep ptice with hilcompanJona. perhape tt la becau.e be bean a different ··--."~u.) e. ••A rnani6d -belonp to <Xll"lled,y." (NletJllCM.) 7. "War calk by men who have ~ tn the war it alwt1ya lntorelt· lng: whereaa moon talk by a -·-·-- who ha not been to the moon la likely to be dull." (Mark Twain.) 8. "One reaeon why ··--·-'s howleholda are generally unhap- py la becauee the -·-··· It .o much at home and clOM about the howte.'' (Samuel Butler.) 9. "M)'llelt when young did eagerly frequent ----· and ulnt, anil heard (p'Ut arawnenL" (Ed- ward Fi~d.) 10. ''n\e firlt who WU king W .. a fortunate --·--~ Who aerves hil country well hu no need of ancestaw.11 (Voltaln.) ANSWERS: 1. Eftslaeer. I . Ca'9f'.llter. S. C.. L Lawyera. 5. Dnmmer. t. PlUotopliler~ '1 . Poe1. I. Cleram•· t. Doca.r. 10. Soldier. neaes incentives to return to the ghettos. market analysts are tell- ing them to stay away. -The plague of unemploy- ment falls most heavily on young blacks. Most of them are looking for legitimate means to e.cape thei.r grim poverty. But if joba are not available, they will hustle. Surely it would be cheaper to teach skills and provide jobs than to hire more police and build more jails. -There are fewer jobs for black men, ironically, becal.Ule of the flood of white women into the work force. Openings that might have gone to young blacks have been taken by women. No win -For the poor who live in the ghettos, it's a Catch-22 situation. Either they must put up with deplorable housing or be focced out when it's improved. My reporter interviewed a welfare mother who maintains three chil· dren on an $85 monthly check, plus food stamps. Thanka co a houaingsubaidy, ahe pays $14 for a small apartment in a fall- ing-down, rat-infested housing project. If it's renovated, ahe could no longer get an apartment for $14. So she accepts what she has, plugging the rat holes with cardboard. r The aolution, it seems to me. is for the blacks to take firm eron- omic control of their corrununities. This will require federal help, but it will be a hand-up instead of a handouL The alternative, you can be sure, will be more crime and violence. now for the crime8. He doesn't deny committing them, he simply aays that, while he was a nonna1 doctor and family man during the day, 90mething happened to him at night that he couldn't control. He waa, he says, a different person, and that pel"90n was insane. It would make a good novel. They could call it "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde." We all like things to be aimpJe. We don't want to be confused by details that aeem to contradict the main Idea. If we have a doctor who has cured us, we like to think he's a wonderful penon. U he's a good doctor, we're ready to assume he's kind to animals, good to his family. honest with money and believei as we believe about religion mvl politics. We always make snap judg- ments about the people we mtet "He's a great guy," we say after ten minutes with amneone, or "She's a wonderful peraon." We are ju.at u quJck and definlie when we say "He's a real pain tn the neck," or "She's a ...i bitch." We clualf}' each other With delCripUona that are hastily drawn and too llimp)e for ~ complex each ot ua la. We take one characteNtic a penon baa and d8crlbe bim generally in ienm of that u lf it were the only one he had. We take one aspect of a ponon'• behavior and lnfer ~­thlna about hlm from thaL They are only partly like that. A blend It .eerna more likely that -.di one of ua ha&. aomewhere ln hia or her makeup, • little of !flVt!r)' quallty known '° mankind, aood or bad. &me of ua ;.t have mote of aome qualltim than othen.. md we're u.u.Uy ~ by the most obvioul onea. f } Top 10 ••••fl Orange County Oller a II e ve ...... ..,,... .... '* ... .,........a.. ... ........... ~ .... ,,,.. W.....11271) .... .... \ (M!llM .. '2) s.-. ...... -.....-ct ...... s.w. ..... ... .. ..... High School Football Thie week'• non-leegue echedule (klckoffa •• 7:30) THURSDAY Fountain Valley vs. Mater Dei at SA Bowl Capo Valley vs. Foot- hill at Tustin Pacifica vs. Villa Park at El Modena Sonora vs. Katella at La Palma Gahr vs. Rancho Alamitos at Bolsa Grande. FRIDAY Santa Ana at Newport 'Ed.iaon at Damien F..peranza vs. Marina at Westmina~ CdM at Htn. Beach Westminster vs. La Quinta at Bolaa Grande Irvine vs. Laguna Hills at Miarion Viejo University vs. Wood- bridge at Irvine Bolaa Grande vs. Costa MesaatOCC Calif. at Laguna Bch El Toro vs. Cypress at Western SA Valley vs. Saddle- back at SA Bowl Magnolia at San Clemente Mission Viejo at Tustin Los Am.lgoe vs. Los Alamitos at Vet Stad. El Dorado -vs. South Hills at Covina Stad. Valencia vs. Orange at El Modena Anaheim at Fullerton lk'ea at El Rancho Mayfair vs. Savanna at Western Bellfiower vs. San- tiago at Garden Grove Buena Park at La Mirada Warren at La Habra Rowland at Swmy --~~--------....... Hills. v--,..,... -... CMdl ( ... Utew) " tttc*'v. SATURDAY Estancia VI. Ocean ViewatHB Servite at Colton 'l'roy vs. Canyon at El ·Modena El Modena vs. l..oara at La Palma Kennedy at Western Dana Hills at Garden Grove Like old tiines to John, Sutton John wins old-timers duel By JOHN SEV ANO OI ... D9llJ "91 ._ It was an interesting confrontation if nothing elae. A throwback, of sorts. to some classic pitching matchups of the past. Tommy John vs. Don Sutton. Admitted, two pitchers who have seen ~tter days although they I O• T1' today c ...... el $ •t 4 .-till represent more than 37 major league seasons and ~12 victories between them, a majority of each category coming aa members of the Dodgers. Ironiciilly, Sunday marked the first time John and Sutton had met each other since their exits from Chavez Ravine in 1978 and '80, respectively. And :While John walked away with the upper hand this 11me, the Angels' S-3 victory over Milwaukee was 'neither easy or without some anxious momenta. The only really damaging blow the Angela were 'able to admlnater to Sutton (7-12) was a three-run homer by Doug DeCinces. Just to put that in itself in perepective, the last time DeCinces had a game-winning hit prior to Sun- day the Angels were 2 ~ games in f1nt place. That should give you a good lndlcatlon of how long it has been. Granted, the An8ell did 3111..---' touched Sutton for a couple more IOMN runa later, but that wu· more ,.ttrlbutable to Milwaukee's shoddy fielding than It :wu Angela hitting. : M for the Brewen, who are now six back of IBelt.i.more In the AL FA.at race, they were throttled by .John ainken and cut futballa for eight lnninp ~~one unearned run In the interim) befOfe they ti.eked the 1W1-drenched and weakenina 80u\hpaw J.n the ninth. ' John finally left the pme after waJkJna Robin Yount tol<*i thet..e.wlth two out In the ninth. but 1(8" JOHN, Pa1e Bl) .. DlllJ Piiat The Raiders opened 0 MONDAY, SEPT. 8, 1983 the NFL campaign ENTERTAINMENT 84 with a c onvincing 0 TELEVISION 85 COMICS 88 win at Cincinnati. B2. Ra0>s produce Giant clipping Barber's two touchdown catches cut up New York, 16-6 EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) -Quar- terblick Vince F.erragamo was aurrounded by reporters in the locker room after leading the Rams to a 16-6 victory Sunday over the New Y,ork Giants in a National Football League lleaSOn opener. It was the first time all day his offensive line let anyone close to him. "The line let me sit back and pick out receivers. I had four or five seconds back there," said Ferragamo, who passed for 279 yards and hooked up with tight end Mike Barber on two scoring passes. "I felt (the Giants) gave us some opportunities to get big ones," Ferragamo added. "They started out in double coverage. but when they fell behind they had Sunday's scores Rama I 6, Gian ta 6 Raiden 20, Beapla I 0 Sainte 28, Card.inab 17 Paeken 41, Oilers 38 ( 01) Faleom 20, Bean 17 Colt• 29, Patriou 23 ( 01) Broneoe 14, Steelert 10 Lion1 11, Buea 0 Vikings 27, Brown• 21 Jeu 41, Chargen 29 Cbief1 17, Seahawks 13 to blitz and went into single coverage. That's when we got them." Youngblood, a 13-year veteran at defensive end. "F.verytime I thought we might get going. something bad would happen," Brunner said. "We'd get a penalty or sack or something bad like that." Barber caught seven passes for 93 yards iµtd Ferragamo also found a reliable target in wide receiver Henry Ellard, who had three receptions for 91 yards in the second half. Ferragamo, who completed 17 of 28 passes with two interceptions, flipped an 8-yard scoring pass tO Barber in the final moments of the first hall. He then found Barber wide open over the middle on a 42-yard touchdown pass play early in the second half to give the Rams a 16-6 lead. "We have just a very excellent offense," Barber said. The Rams defense, meanwhile, made life miserable for qua.r:terback Scott Brunne r, who was sacked five times and intercepted twice. Jac;k Youngblood had two of the sacks and Leroy Irvin made both interceptions. "We got some opportunities to pin our ears back and do what we call s~rm the castle," s.<µd Ferragamo completed back-to-back passes of 17 yards to Barber and 35 yards to Preston Dennard to set up the first-half touchdown and his 34-yard pass to Ellard highlighted the 80-yard drive capped by Barber's second TD reception. Curren holds on to claim crown at OP Pro meet A~~lo By RICH DUNN ............ o.ii, ...... Santa Barbara's Tommy Cur- nm held on to a slim lead Sunday In the final heat of the OP Pro Surfing Championships at Hunt- ington Beach Pier, surfing home with the first place trophy, $4,125, a Casio watch and a Dodge vehicle of his choice. Curren fought off Joey Buran in the closing seconds of the 45-minute championship heat by gaining position and priority of perhaps the only big wave of the championship round, and getting the most out of it. Buran, from Carlsbad, pulled off a couple of nifty "360s" in the final round but fell short, unable to get the lnalde connection of the waves, and only man.aged to pare the winner's lead somewhat. Buran took home a second place purse of $2,125. a trophy and alao a watch. Earlier In the afternoon in the Women'• finals, Kim ,Mearig of Santa Barbara beat Liz Benavidez in the final heat, bringing her total first place purse to $2500, which included a Dodge vehicle of her choice and a watch. Benavidez' second place prize money totaled $1,600 . Curren won his semifinal match against Wes Laine earlier in the competition, ending it with a spectacular finish. With under 1:30 remalnlng In the heat, Cur- ren established priority and scored the highest ride of the · afternoon with a 8.1 showing, easily defeating Lai.nit. "I just couldn't seem to find that many good waves," laid Laine. "Tommy seemed to get all the waves. I'm happy taking third.'' Buran d efeated Wayne Bartholomew in the other semi-• final, in what may have been the most exciting heat in the competi- tion. With both surfers answering each others fine rides, Buran, ·· with less that two minutes re- maining, gambled on a "360'' take-off, which worked perfectly. The crowd, estimated at 20,000, and the judges seemed to love it. The judges scored it at 7.0 and Ute crowd gave Buran a standing o~a- tion. •1 "It's one of my favorite moves. The judges have seen me do lt • before," aald Buran, 22. "It was time to do something dramatic. I · was so excited after I dld it that l • fell off my board w~en I was going to the inside." Eric Dicke rson carries Gia nts with him on bi~. gain. Edison High is hack to same old tricks Chargers r egain familiar role as the team to beat in prep football Rankings for prep football in Orange County return today and it's Edison High School which has reclaimed the No. 1 spot-ai;.,uming a position which was almost a foregone conclusion for three years until Servite High knocked the wind out of the Chargers' sails a couple of falls ago. It's an enviable position in one respect, but quite another at the same time since it means just one thing -you're on the spot eJICh time out. .Especially in the case of Edison. Let's face it, most are either for 'em or against 'em, the middle of the road is a very narrow strip and there isn't much room for anyone. -<> Once the darling of Orange County football when they were upsetting the more established and favored Fountain Valley Barons in the fonnulative years. the Chargers have aquired Yankee pin stripes in their unifonns over the years. Everyone would dearly love a piece of them. But regardless of your preference, one thing is for sure -Edison football commands attention. Certainly no later than the third question of any ,,,.....,.... Robert Alexander is swarmed over. I PREP SPORTS ROGER CARLSON morning after in any respectable football kitchen is "How dld Edison do last night." Clare VanHoorebeke and his Anaheim High Colonists of the 50s and 60s put Orange County in the state's map book, but Bill Workman's Chargers these past few years have given Orange County prep football national recognition. Anaheim. too, h ad its share of critics. Although the Colony also had radio accounts (remember Mickey Flynn, the Ghost of La Palma?). questions the morning after then were similar - "How did Anaheim do last rught." This year's edition of Edison football has th<' potential to rival the 1979 and '80 teams, whi<•h swept to back-to-back CIF Big Five crowns. And that's a step up from a year ago when Edison "only'' made 1t to the semifinals. Workman was recently quoted as referring to his 1981 squads as "awful", but that was really only a portion of his statement. in fact, he said it was "awful at the beginning. but we got better and I was really proud of them." Seasoned observers say it w as Workman's finest effort as a coach. Surely. anyone who saw .Ediaon's five-week span prior to league play which produced three touchdowns in four games. would agree some thing drastic occurred to tum Edison into the force 11 became. Tht> Chargers punished Long Beach Poly in the semifinals despite losing, 21 -17, to such an extent that Servite Coach Ron Smeltzer personally thanked Wot kman for the job they did. "l thought he was thanking me for the game films we provided." recalls Workman. "but he said. (See E DISON, Page 8?) A little Rain( es) on Dodger drive Montreal rallies for 3-2 win to take over National League East MONTREAL (AP) -Tim Raines drove in the winning run with a single in the 12th inning against the Dodgers Sunday and aald he hoped that would help propel the Montreal Expos to the top in the National League East Division pennant race. Raines' single off losing pitcher Pat Zachry, 5-1, to score Chris Speler gave the Expos a 3-2 come-from-behind victory and a split of the four-game weekend M!ries with the Dodgers. Left-handed reliever Dan Schatz.eder, 5-2. who pitched three innings of no-hit ball, got the victory for Montreal: The victory moved the Expos within a 1 ~ games of the NL Easi Dlvlalon -leadlng P ittsburgh Pirates. who loat 6-5 to Atlanta . The Expoe are a a half-game behind the second place Phtladel- phla PhWJes. "That's a big game for ua and not just because the two teams Ahe•d of us lost," a&ld RAlnet. .. "We came from behind and its important for us to win that type of ballgame. "It's a good sign, a slgn that we're start.Ing to play well. Get- ting a big hit at the right time tometimes la all you need to get you gomg agaln." The Expos nullified J:lodaer' leads of 1-0 and 2-1 before Raines, who haa a .323 batting averace with men In 8COrin8 position, drilled hia 13th game-winninc RBI of the .euon, tying him for lhe club lead with centre fielder And.re paW90n. Gary Carter had tied the game In the bottom of the eighth for Montreal when he tut a two-out ainlle off reliever Steve Howe to -=ore Brian lJttJe. Dodgen' catcher rookie Jn Fimple had given them a 2-1 leed In the fifth Inning when he drove in Derrel Thomas with a sacrifice fly. Steve Sax gave the Dodgers a l ·O lead in the fint when he singled, stole lleCOnd and ICOftd from there on a ucrifk.'e Dy by R.J . Reynolds. AlOUvertJed ll for Montreal In the fourth when he hll h1a teventh home run of the eeaaon off 1\artA!r Alejandro Pena. ~t ·r . I I ..-------------...... -"' ...... ~ ............ _.. ........ ________________________________ ~----~~----~~~~~~~~~·~~~··-~~-----~ ... 92 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Sept. 5, 1983 '16-year-old shocks Gerulaitis at U.S. Open .. 0• Tt'tod•y NEW YORK (AP) -Sixteen-year-old Aaron Krickstein upeet l~th-.eeded Vliaa Gerulaltis 3-6, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4 Sunday to advance into the round-of-16 at the U.S . Open Tennis Championships. Others capturing third-round matchee on Sunday were 1eCOnd-eeeded Ivan Lendl, No. 4 Yannlck Noah of France, No. 6 Maia Wilander of Sweden and No. 9 Jimmy Arias in the men's singles, and No. 2 Chris Evert Lloyd, No. 10 Zina Garrl.lon, No. 14 Jo Durie of Britain, No. 16 Kathy J ordan and unseeded Ivanna Madruga-Oases of Argentina ~ t9e women's draw. C••nnfJI 2 •' I l 130 •·•· always done well in the Open, ellmlnated sixth-seeded Wendy Turnbull of Au.atral- Ul 7-5, 4-6, 6-2. Joaldm Nytttomagainat.Ariu, Krickatein against Noah, and Wilander against Gomez. Krldsteln, who will begin his · or that wasn't as cloee as the 8core. The New York left-hander toyed with hiaopponent for 1 !,.\ hours before closing out the third-round mismatch. Lendl will mee& the winner of Sunday night's battle between No. 12 J ohan Kriek and Roecoe TarUler. year in high achoof at Crosse Point, ~h., a Detroit,auburb, when America's premier tennis tournament is over, combined his brilliant backhand passing shots with Gerulait.is' inconsistent play to join most of the top seeds in the fourth round at the National Tennis C.enter. Top-seeded John McEnroe easily ad- vanced to the fourth round, crushing Vince Van Patten 6-1, 6-2, 6-1 in a match Twoothereeedsfellon this, Day6of the 13-day tournament. Andres Gornet. of F.cuador upeet No. 13 Steve Denton 6-3, 6-4, 6-4, while Andrea Leand, who has McEnroe's victory 8Chd.t the three-Ume U.S. Open champion agalnlt 16th-seeded Bill Scanlon in the fourth round, while John Lloyd of Britain meeta Mark Dickson, No. 3 Jimmy Connors plays No. 11 Gene Mayer and No. 14 Eliot Teltscher takes on Oreg Holmes in the top half of the men's singles draw. The bottom ha11 will pit u.naeeded ''The first two sets I was thinking of playing Vitas Gen.tla.ltla," Krick.stein said after pulling off one of the biggest upeets of the $2 million tournament. ''Once I won the third aet, I knew I had a chance to win." SPORTS BREAK Surgery is futile, Bejines succumbs to boxing injuries From AP dispatches LOS ANGELES -Boxer Kiko m Bejines, who never regained COll8Cious- ness after being knocked out by Albert Davila Thursday night, died Sunday of head injuries, officials at Los Angeles County-USC Medical C.enter said. Bejines, from Guadalajara, Mexico, was 20, said hospital spokesman Tony Tripi. who gave the ,,,. ... .. . r ~. boxer's birthdate as Sept. 14, 1962. He said Bejines died at 11: 12 a .m. of massive cerebral contusions. Bejines' family was at the hospital when the fighter died, Tripi said. A team of three neu- rosurgeons operated on Be- jines Friday afternoon, remov- ing part of the boxer's brain -~ti B£JINH and skull and al9o removing a blood clot on the surface of his swelling brain in an attempt to relieve the preaure. Bejines had been on a respirator, but his heart was beating on its own until he died, Tripi said. The eldest of three boxing brothers, Bejines suffered the fatal injury in the 12th round of the bout against Davila for the vacant World Boxing C.Ouncil bantamweight championship. The bout, in which neither fighter was able to score any telling blows through the first 11 rounds of the scheduled 12-rounder, ended abruptly 33 seconds into the final round when Davila unleashed a flurry of punches to Bejines' head. A sharp left jab followed by a hard right seemed to do the most damage, as Bejines stumbled backward and into the lower rope. The young fjghter, his eyes eJ.az.ed, attempted to regain hia feet, but referee Wildemar Schmidt declared it finished. ''I hit him a perfect shot, a good sharp jab and then a right hand," Davila said afterward. "When I went back to my comer I said, 'This guy isn't going to get up.' " After attempts to revive him failed, Bejines was taken to nearby C.alilomia Hospital. Shortly afterward, he was transferred by helicopter to the medical center. It was the second boxing death in the past three years for the Olympic Auditorium. Johnny Owen of Wales died of head injuries after being knocked out in the 12th round of a fight against L upe Pintor at the arena in September of 1980. Quote of the day Steve Ovel1, following his world record 3·30.77 1,500-meter effort Sunday in Italy: "So much for those who say I'm finished." Banned poster An out-cry from school officials stopped this post er from promoting Long Beach State's football program. Anthem first to finish SAN DIEGO Roger ·~. MacGregor's 65-foot sloop Anthem from Lido Isle Yacht Club led a 37-boat fleet into San Diego Harbor Sunday in the annual San Clemente Island race co-sponsored by Dana Point Yacht Club and Silver Gate Yacht Club. The race started off Dana Point at noon Saturday and Anthem finished at 10:52 a .m . Sunday, but it wasn't fast enough to save her handicap time in the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet. Twelve boats were still at sea at 7 p.m. Sunday but none of them could save its handicap time, according to race officials. The traditional Labor Day weekend race started in a brisk breeze that took the yachts to the west end of San Clemente Island in record time, but dwindled in the late afternoon and evening to tum the race into a drifter. Handicap results: IOll -A-. MMt and M¥1v VOCMI. LMO llMcll YC, 2 Medk lnot M.8n. Bot> Lant, LBYC; J. Trevlao, Ron Kuni~, OcMn•k» YC PHltF OVERALL -M.811lclan, ~ Wlltt Ill, Coronado YC PHltF·A -M.811lclen, 2. Mamie, It~ Kott, UCI $alllno Au n.; 3. F1ua1, SchulltlGelman, Sll'I., Gate YC. PHllF·B -1 GendaH, 0ouv JonH, Dana Point YC, 2 ltollet, Sttve Frwnte, OPVC, Taf9nlula, Henrv ltllblo. SGVC. PHltF·C -ACIYlla, Ed Cott•, Southwftf9'n YC, 2 S..'11111 11. Joann Wiiiiam.on. Oc.Hn•ldt YC, 3. FlnesM. Pal Atkin•. Mlulon Bav vc. Raiders put on a rush Bengals can't take the heat in 20-10 setback From AP dJapatd1ea CINCINNATI -Cincinnati Bengals quar- terback Ken Anderaon slowly pulled his jeniey over a bloody left elbow that was t.esti.mony to the effectiveness of the Raiders pass rush Sunday. Marcus Allen ran for a pair of touchdowns on the Raiders' first two po88E!Slliona, and the Raiders' pressuring defense took over from there for a 20-10 victory over the Bengals in the National Football League opener for both clubs. "The key to the game was the pressure we put on Ken Anderson," said RaidersC-oach Tom Flores. "We were able to put pressure on their quarterback." The Raiders used a ball-a:mtrol offense to mount their two early touchdown drives. Allen, who gained 47 yards in 17 carries, capped both drives with 1-yard runs That was the cue for the Raider defense to take charge "They came out knowing we were going to throw the football," said Bengals Coach Forrest Gregg. "They came out and got into a nickel (five-defensive-back) defense right away, and we h.ad a little problem adjusting to it. "When we did adjust, it was too late." Elsewhere in the NFL Sunday: Jets 4 1, Chargers 29 SAN DIEGO-Running back Freeman McNeil rushed for 120 yards and 900red twioe, including the deciding touchdown on a 18-yard pus from Richard Todd with 6:43 remaining, to power the New York Jets to a 41-29 victory over the San Diego Charaera. A 64-yard kickoff return by New York'• kirk Springs 1et up the deciding touchdown after the first kickoff wu nullified by a televlalon timeout. An lnt.erception by comerbaclc Johnny Lynn at the New York 23·yard line with two minutes remaining prt!eerved the victory for the Jete and Coech Joe Walton. who w .. rnakinl h.i.I NFL coaching debut. New York'• Mlk.e Auptynlak then 8COred an lnNranoe touchdown on a 1-yard nm. On the oontrovend.al timeout, NBC producer Larry Or1Uo l8ld &he play wu started over becaute the referee allowed \he k.ickof f before ~ necwork gave approval. The bell wu whiat.Jed dead whlle 1till In~ air and It Wiii ruled no play. Then S~ broke Joma to the San °'* 30 with the aecond c~. l • .. Pack ers 41, Oilers 38 HOUSTON -Green Bay's Jan Stenerud kicked a 42-yard field goal with 9:05 remaining in an overtime period to complement a five-touchdown perfonnance by quarterback Lynn Dickey and rally the Packers to an exhausting 41 -38 victory over Houston. Dickey threw four first-half touchdown passes and added a fifth that gave the Packen the lead late in the game, but had to give way to backup David Whitehurst to start the overtime because of a recurring back injury, Lions 11 , Buccaneers 0 TAMPA -Ed Murray booted three field goals and William Gay led the pa83 rush Sunday as the Detroit L ions topped the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 11-0. Murra~kicked a 29-yard field goal ln the first, half and added three-pointers of 48 and 38 yards after intermission. The Lions' defense, meanwhile, con- tributed the game's only other points with a first-quarter safety. Gay, a sixth-year pro from Southern California, harassed Tampa Bay quarterbacka Jerry Golateyn and Jack Thom peon all afternoon, recording 6 ~ of the Lions' seven saclul for 39 yard.a in Jc.ees. Dolphins 12, Bills 0 ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. -Four Uwe von Schamann field goals accounted fot: Miami's 9COril'\8 u the Dolphlna whlpped the Buffalo Blll8 12-0. Von Schamann kk:bd fJeld goa.la of 33. 23, 36 and 50 yarda. The tint and laat flela goals were aet up by in~rceptions by the Blackwoocfbrothera, Glenn and Lyle. Colta 29, Patriots 23 FOXBORO -Linebacker Johnnie Cook.I romped ~2 yard.9 for a touchdown with a fumble recovery on the third play of overtime .. the Baltimore C.olta triumphed 29-23 over the Now J!'.niland Patriots. Cooka eoooped up Tony CoUlns' fumble and rambled untouched doWh the left lldfillne tor hil flnt pro touchdown. h came oav play after Siew Gropn bad hJt Cedric Jone. for a 31-yard completion th.at mov@d ttw ball to the Colta' 47-yard line. Red Sox bleach White Sox Tony Arma1 drove in three run.a with a triple and single and Bruce ~ Hurst pitched a fo41'-hitter aa the ... Boston Red Sox beat the Chlcago White Sox, 6-2 ln American League play Sunday. Wade Bou•. the AL's leading hitter, singled twice for Boston to raise his average to .366 ... Enlle Whitt hit a three-run homer with two outs in the 10th inning, his second homer of the game, to give Toronto a 6-3 victory over .-----:-... ----. Detroit . . . John Sbelby'1 J/t~ two-run s ingle capped a three-run eighth inning as Baltimore downed Minnesota, 9-6. Storm Davl1, 12-5, went the first aewm innings and Tippy Martinez finished up for his 14th save ... Ron Gaiclry allowed eight hits over 8~ innings as the New York Yankees dealt Seattle a 4-3 WMTT setback. Guidry, 17-8, who had pitched nine consecutive complete games, left in the ninth after Steve Henderson'• second homer of the game, a twe>-run blast ... Pat Tabler sent Cleveland ahead wUh a twe>-run single in a five-run fifth and Rick SatcWfe posted his 16th victory as Cleveland trounced Oakland, 9-2 ... Dave Stewart gave up eight hits over 8~ innings to help Texas defeat Kansas City, 3-2. Atlanta pares Dodg~rs' lead Dale Marphy drove in four runs • with his 27th and 28th homers and Cbri1 Cbambll11 doubled home a run in a twe>-run eighth inning to rally Atlanta to a 6-5 victory over Pittsburgh Sunday, cutting the Dodgers' National LeaRue West lead to 2 !,.\ games ... Elsewhere, Darrell kvau and Jack Clark each hit twe>-run homers as San Franciaco pounded PhiladelphUl, 10-4. Aady McGafflgan, 3-9, allowed one run in 4 'A innings of relief before getting help from Greg Minton, who earned his 17th save ... Terry Kennedy smacked a two-run homer to highlight a six-run fifth inning and added an RBI single in the eighth to lead San Diego Padre!! to a 7-5 win over the New York Mets ... Willie McGee singled home Lonnie MUN'HY Smltb from second base in the ninth inning to give St. Louis a 5-4 triumph over Cincinnati. Joluuay Beach &lugged a three-run pinch-hit homer in the eighth off reliever Bruce Satter to give Cincy a 4-4 tie ... Rookie Carmelo Martinez drilled a two-out, three-run homer in the bottom of the eighth to give the Chicago Cube a 9-7 come-frcm-behind victory over Houston. Television, radio TV: Tennis -U.S. Open, 11:30 a.m., Channel 2. Hone Racing -All-American Futurity, 2:30 p.m., Channel 9. Baseooll -Angela at Toronto, 4 p.m., Channel 5. NFL Football -Dallas at Washington, 6 p.m .. Channel 7. RAblO: Baseball -Anaela at Toronto, 3:55 p.m., KM.PC (710); San Diego at Dodgers, 5:35 p.m., .KABC (790). Chiefs 17, Seahawlcs 13 KANSAS CITY, Mo. -San Clemente High and Saddleback College product Bill Kenney and Jewerl Thomas t.oaed touchdown passes and Nick Lowery booted a 19-yard field goal to lead the K.anaaa City Chieu toa 17-13 victory over Seattle. Kenney rut 19 of 32 pa8lleS for 247 yards and one touchdown. Seattle took a 3-0 lead on Norm JobJllOn's 35-yard field goal following rookie Curt Warner's 60-vard run from ecrimmage. Vikings 27, Browns 21 CLEVELAND -Ted Brown ran for two short-yardage touchdowns and caught a Tommy Kramer pa91 for a third TD as the MinnetlOta Vikings produced a 27-21 victory over the Cleveland Browns. Brown ran for first-half touchdowna of 1 and 5 yards in helping the Vlkinp to a 17-7 halftime lead. then caught a 10-yard 8COring pia.. with 4:Sl left in the third quarter. putting Minne.ota ahead 24-14, thwarting a Cleveland comeblCk, Saintl 28, Cardinals 17 NEW ORLEANS -George Ropr1 ran for 206 yards lncludlng a 76-yard touchdown 1ptjnt In the thtrd quarter to leed the New Orleana Sa.Intl to a 28-17 victory over the St. Loult Cardinala. New Orleana tn1Jed 10-7 when~ bunt up the middle, ran ~ha pair of haildl at hll 24-yard line, bowled CM!S' •(tty Benny Perrtn at the 3&, then outraced everyone the rema.lning H yarda f« the touchdown. BronCOf 14. Steelen" l 0 PrrTSBURGH -ReMrve qu.Met"back Steve De.Ber-a. repl.eictr\s batt.ered rookie John Elway, ~ two yardl to daht end Ron EaJoff f« a touchdown with 2:64 \0 play, livi.nc the Dmwr Bl'Obl..'I09 a 14-10 Ytdory over the Pt~h St.eelera. With t.lrne w1ndJna down, DeBeq ,Wded Denver~ ywdl tn 10 p&ar tor the wtruUna llCCft that wipl!Ci out the Steelera 10-7 l4*t bu.Ut on Gary Andenlon'• 31-yard fleJd pl ln the thltd period. EDISON a • • From Page 81 'no, not for the films, for the job you did on Poly." The Workman era began with assistants such as Russ Purnell and Barry Waters, not its with Dave White and a flock of new talent. They seem to come and go, but the quality seems. to remain consiat.ent .. It all begins Thursday night with Fountain Valley and Mater Dei t.angli.ng at Santa Ana Bowl. Ocean View and Estancia mix it up Saturday night. The vast majority take their first swings Friday night. • * {:( ~ There's another aspect to prep football w hich is seldom touched on -that's the parents, many who are experiencing some of the most (frustrating), (anxious), (happy), (disheartening) moments of their lives -take your pick. While the seniors are entering a stage of their careers where it's the final mountain or just the beginning of bigger and better things. it's the same for the parents, who quite naturally are caught up in all of it. Dreams materialize now. Matt Rombs, Edison High's All-CIF defensive back of 1982 was a good example. His mother, Patti Meyers, recalls: ''I tried to tell him not to get his hopes up, but he would just say, 'Mom, I WILL get a acholarship. You wait and aee. You will be proud of me, I am going to save you $30,000." In Matt Hombs' case, he indeed went the distance, with Nebraska, among others vying for his attention. Matt Hombs died while on a recruiting trip to Idaho, a victim of a freak auto aocident. But. you can be assured, that pride remains within Patti Meyers. And, similar feelings are with folka in every direction with a son involved, especial.ly the senior parents. So, should you reoog:ni.zed a senior mom in the stands, give her a big hug. Ar. for dad, well, tell him to cahn down, the coaches know best. * {:( {:( While it figures that most would like a piece of F.ciison, this year there is a slight twist to it -the Chargers have some debts to pay of their own. At EdOOn's preeeaaon gathering for the press, and the quartet of quarterback Jon Nowotny, tailback Jeff Hipp, linebacker John Thomas, and linemen Dennia McGowean and Andy Sinclair present, they were aaked about their own targets. "ViBta," was the first answer, followed quickly from the other side of the table, "Banning." "Westminster," said another, and "Damien, we need the first one.'' followed from a fourth player How about Fountain Valley? The arch-rival which became the blllidingstone for much of Edison's success over the years? "Oh, that's juat taken for granted,'' it was explained. Lady Vanguards open on Thursday Aft.er leading the Southern California College women'• volleyball program to a 10-8 reoord and NAIA District ID playoff berth last year, third-year coach Randy Bu.ah may be in for a rebuilding year. The Lady Vanguards open on the road Thunday aga.inatClaremontCollegeat 7:30 p.m . Gone from the team are a pair of talented freshmen from last year; two of which -Cheryl Akers and Janine Smith - will remain at sec to concentrate on basketball. The team al9o loses the services of two other starters, Kathy Sharp to graduation and power hitter Debbie Joo, who left school. Five players do return to form the crux of Bush's equad. Last year's captain and leading middle hitter, Julie Lemburg, iB back for her fourth season. She i.s a twe>-time all-District m selection. Other probable starters include 5-11 1et- ter-hitter Beth Longfield, 5-5 aenior Mary Hardi- man, junior defensive specialist Ccyata1 Cummings and aenior middle hitter Karen Woodthorp. The only starting newcomer ia eetter Tracy Oglesby, twice an all-Channel Lague choice at Hueneme High in Oxnard. The women's volleyball team will have its home opener on Sept. 13 at 7:30 p.m. against UC San Diego. JOHN ... From Page 81 Lu.I.a Sanchez WU no l.mmed1ate help U he promptly waUred c.edl Cooper to allow one run to llCOnt and then threw a pitch catcher Mike O'Berry oouktn't handle wtth Ted Slmmol'\I at the plate which accounted for another u the ~ttt cloeed the pp to ~-3. Only a sprawllrt.1. divine catch by Ft-s Lynn on Simmonl' erwu1n« Oy bell 1aved the pme and pn!lel"Ved T J'1 ( 10-11) V1ctory. * ....-1.. .,.,., -rrw L-wflo med9 Ille ~-ClllCll Ill lefl*ClllltW, .... II WH ~wel't e '80d ltllft9 IM,_..~"' e ....e ... ('""llN lflem 11 MCOIW •M INt'dl, """1111M, "I ~·t 119,.. eot'911 lo ........ Wiit! Ille ~ 11'111 ..... {Ill " ..... -.. <Mel In. OllllrwM, I "911111 ,_..,. 9"11 tr11 1M ........ "9Ck .. _..,.... .,. extre•Mlt 1111 fl'Of'll _,... Miw-ia t,,_.. Ille ~I. I ,_, hlYf IM"9d u. 11 IWI w tO." l..Yllll M'f he .. -.... rt ... .,,_y ....,_ .......... c:elMf ............ U9 ......... " .,,,,..., ...... ,. ......... c... .............. ..,.. .. ~ Ill"" ........... c.r.. ... "' .... .., ..... "' ""~ el T......_ • , 1"'911 ~ Ml eut ...... IM, ~t ._.,., ..-rlYtn .... .,... ,,....., wt. "l'tn ....... Irv lo 1111 .. ,._ I .... M ...,_ "I'm M not ....... rWll, "**'-...... ~-llllllllttMf\I Ill -. ..._, I ........ ,. -.. ..,. • YOU CM'I 4IO tMI Oii INt tewl." .. , TN A ... d .. ..,. 11w e , """"""' hOnle 11e11 Molldav to fMle Ttt'Olllo • .. ' .. ' . ~ t I ., " MAJOR LE'AGUE STANDINGS Atnel'IUn LHeue WEST DIVISION W L PC1. Ga 77 59 S66 Chicago Kan1uCllv 0.klalnd Tuu ...... Mlnnuot• Seallle 6S 11 .41' 12 66 73 OS 17"'1 64 74 .464 u 63 73 ."63 , • sa 80 .420 20 51 es 315 26 Baltlmor• New York Otlroll Miiwaukee Toronto 11os1on Clevelalnd EAST DIVISION 90 S3 76 sa n S9 76 59 75 64 66 71 61 76 SUIMMV'• Sc-Allelb 5, Miiwaukee 3 Toronto 6, OelroU 3 (10 lnnlno1) lloSlon 6, Chlcuo 2 Baltlmor• 9, Minne'°•• 6 Clevalalnd 9, Oakla nd 2 New York •. Seallle 3 Tuu 3, Kanl!ll Cllv 2 MefM!aV's G.....s ...,,.... (bM 1-10) al Toronto (Goll 7·1J), n 0.klana (Conrov 6·71 el Chicago (Bannl"er 13· 101 New York <R•wlev 14·10) al Mii· WlukM (Candlolll 3-0) BoSlon (Oieda 7·7) al Belllmore (Bod- dlcker 17·61 Ot lrolt (Morrl1 11·1) el Cleveland (Blvlevan 7·9), n s...111e (Beelll• e-m al Kenlll• Cl1v (Gure 10-161, n Mlnnewte (Lv1ande< 4·11) al Taxu (Bulc!Mf S-5), n T~V'• -.,,,_ All9lb a1 Toronlo, n Boston ti llalllmore, n Otlroll al ClevelalnCI, n Oaklalnd at Chicago. n New Vork al Miiwaukee, n Mlnne1011 al Tuai, n. s .. 111e •I Kansa• Cltv, n Nan-I LMeue WIST OlvtStON 0-..,1 Aflalnle Hou SI on Sen Oleoo S.n FrenclKo Clnc:looell 79 S7 77 60 n M 67 71 's n 63 7S EAST DIVlStON Pittsburgh Phlledelohla MonlrH I SI. Louis Chlc::eOO New Yorio. W L 70 6S 69 66 61 66 61 61 62 74 S7 79 Pd. .S19 .Sil .507 .500 .•S6 •19 2'h 7 13 ,. ..... 17 Ga 1 l'h 7'h II'> ll'h SUftda'I'• sc- MontrMt 3, ~ 2 Sen Francisco 10, PnllaOafl>hle • Sen Dleoo 7, New Vork 5 All8n11 6, Pllltl>urgh S 51 Loul• S, Cincinnati 4 Chtc:ago f , Hou1ton 7 T-Y's GamH Sen Diego (Thurmond 6-2) al DMeert (Valenzuela 13·1), (n) ChleeOO (Trout 9-12) 11 MonlrH I ( GullldlM>n 1 )· I 1) Clnclnnell (R11uet1 1· 11 al Sen f'ran· Cl\CO (llrtlnlno I· 11) Pllllt>vrOfl (Mc:Wllllam1 13·6 enc:! Ctnclelerle 13~1) 11 SI Louis (Allen f· 12 ana Forsch I · 111. doub!IMader Hou11on (Niel'.ro 12-111 11 Allenle ( llarller 0-1) Phlledelohla (Hudson 7·7) al New York (Torrez 9· 141, (n) T~V'tGamea Sen Oleoo el ~ (n) Chleego al Monlreal, lnl Phlledelohle ti New York, (n) HOU1lon al Allenle, Cn> PlfllburOh al SI. LOUIS, (n) Clnclnnell el Sen Francisco, (n) NATIONAL LEACiUE E JCP01 3, Ood9erl 2 LOS ANGELES MONTitEAL SS.It 211 Anclftn u RNllvnl" BrOd< lb SHowep Nladnfur o Lndttv oh Zacllrv P MerSl\at r1 Rivera lb Tl'IOmH d Flml>lec Lendrx oh VHOefC APene P BrMm lb OBeker Ol'I ESPYd albrhlll s ' ' 0 '0 I 0 4 0 0 I '0 0 0 0000 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0000 • 0 '0 s 0 2 0 ' ' 2 0 2 0 0 I 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3000 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Raine' H Llllle 2b JWhllt oh Schlzdr o Oewton d Olivar lb GCerler c Wal1ach JD Crornrtl r1 Woh"rd r1 Flvnnn Crowly Pll ASelazr u Burri• o Frencn Pll Jl mt\ I) Slant>os oh Rterdono Sotltr 2b 40272 TMM Sc#elbY ...... elb rl'llll 6 0 2 ' 4 ' ' 0 I 0 0 0 0000 S 0 I 0 5 1 I 1 5 0 2 1 s 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 '0 0 0 I 0 0 0 1000 I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0000 0000 1 0 0 0 0000 1 ' 1 0 • J . J Let .......... 100 100 000 000-1 ~ 000 100 010 001-l N-oul when wlnnlno run scorld.Game-Wlnnlno ltBI -Raine• (13). E-AndtrlOll, lllvera. O~os Anoeltt I LOB-Los Angeles 7, MonlrH I 10. 28- ltlvere, Mer\11111, GC1rter, Lllllt, Sc>eltr 38-Thomll. HA-otlver (7) SB-SSex 1441, Raines CU I. Andtf"son 2 W . 5-Ftvnn, TllOmll, ASelalur SF-llNllt YnoidS. Flml>le IP H I( Ell 88 SO Let ........ A Pena 7 s 2 2 2 ' SHc>we 12·3 1 0 0 , I NOllnfr 1 1-3 0 D 0 0 0 Zacnrv L.S-1 1 2 1 I 0 0 ~ Burr It s ' , 2 0 ) J1mes 2 ' 0 0 1 4 RMroon 2 2 0 0 0 0 Sc:hel19<Mr W,S-1 3 0 0 0 ' 2 AP-oUc:Mcl 10 two Dellers In llh. ladlrY pllcllld 10 two Delft<\ In 12th. T-l:%>. A_...S, 1'9. AMERICAN LEAGUE Anelf1 s, erewen l MILWAUKaa CAl.IFC>aNIA allrhlll u r hlll Molllor 311 4 0 2 1 Wlllono 211 4 1 2 0 CMoore r1 s 1 3 O Sconlra lb • o O 1 Vounl n 3 o o O Benlqu1 If 3 1 o O COOPer It> 4 0 I I O.Cncs 311 • 1 1 3 Smmnsdh 5010 LvMd 40 20 Ro,,,...o If 4 0 1 0 ReJk"' dh 2 0 0 0 Mennno d J o 1 o v ai....lln rf • 1 2 o Readv oh I O O O Ada rm n 2 1 1 0 Edwrd1 d 0 0 0 0 OBerry c 2 0 0 0 Y~SI C 3 2 2 0 Genlnr 21> 4 0 0 0 T...U :W l 11 J T...n 2' S I 4 $UrebYlllWnel Mlwa11llM 000 000 102-) CalllW'llla 000 003 210l1-S Gome-Winning RBI O.Clnct• (61.E-Sconltrl. OP-Callfornla I. LOB-Miiwaukee 11, Celltornla S 28-Molltor, Simmon•. Wl"ono. Valenllne HR-0.ClncH 1171. 5-Adam1, Ollerrv SF-Molllor. ~ H I( El( 8B SO M1Weu11 .. Sullon L.7-12 • 5 Auou111ne 0 0 Gallfernle JOllnW,10-11 12·3 " 3 Senc:llez S,7 1·3 0 0 HBP-Benlquar bv PB-Ollerrv. T-2:20. A-23,970 Aneel aver•91s Carew 0.ClncH Burleson Grich Benlque1 Sconiers Lynn Boone Ro. Jeck'°n Wl~ono Foll Lut>rallch Valenllne Oownlno Clerk Adami Re. Jeckaon O'Berry Totals 8ATTING A8 It H HR t20 St 10 2 797 44 • 17 112 20 33 0 >11 •s 11J 16 261 3' 7S 3 256 42 70 8 420 54 112 21 400 40 104 7 m 36 1s 6 113 13 79 1 330 79 '3 1 111 10 27 0 23S 25 SI 9 323 S9 79 16 111 IS 42 S 17 " 19 1 373 43 7S 14 so s 8 0 ,,727 6751,250 130 PITCHING 5 0 1 3 0 1 0 Su11on, 1(11 Pd . 40 .350 S6 .296 11 .29S 62 m 24 .217 39 .273 71 .267 46 .260 33 .257 12 .2S7 29 252 • 24' 3S 247 46 24S " 232 4 .21' ... 201 2 160 S9I .264 IP H 88 SO W·L ERA Zahn 163~ 170 44 61 1-10 3.41 S.ncr..1 91'/'J to 31 43 1·7 3.4S Forscn 11111'.1 191 S2 69 11·9 3.92 Curll1 ~ .. 35 33 1·1 392 Ktson 12~ 121 43 13 1 l·S 4 OS Slelrtr S2'h 64 14 21 3· 1 4.30 Jonn 191'1'.1 231 41 s2 10-11 442 Wiii 133 147 61 67 7· 11 474 Hes.sler ~~ 39 IS 20 0·4 4 '3 Mc:Lau11nlln 4011.1 S3 16 33 1·3 6 03 Brown 14'1'.1 II 5 7 I· 1 6.21 Totals 1,2761,356 423 SS3 62-73 4,39 Seve1: Sancher 7. Wiii ~. Hauler 4, Curll1 3, Kl1on 2 MAJOR LEACiUE LEADERS Amettcan Leaew IT'llrwtfl ,.,..V's ~l BATTING (l40 el Del1)· 8009s, &oslon, 367; Ca,....., ...,..,.., ..lS01 Trammell, Oe· troll, .m, w nllaker. OelrPll, .l?I; Mc:R••· Kenwos CllY, .370. RUNS: E.Murrn. h lflmore, 94; ltll>llan. Beltlmort, t'Z; MoteC>y, Toronto. 90; Booot. 8os1on. 86, R.Henoenon. Oakland, 86, RBI: COOPer, Milwaukee, 107; Rice, Doi.ton, 106, Wlnflt ld, New York, 9', L.N.Perrlsh, Otlrolt, t6; Arme1, lloslon, '3. HITS: 8009s, Boston, 17'; Whllaker, Oetroll. 170, c-. MllwaulcM , 164, McRff, Kanlllt City, ISi; Rice. 8oslon, 157, RIOl<en, Baflfmore, IS7 TRIPLES Grltfln. Toronto, 9, FrallO). Cleveland, I; Gantner, Mll'weukM, 8, Win· flak!, New York, I HOME RUNS Rice, 8oSlon, 34; Armas, 8o1lon. 31; l(lllle, Chlugo, 21, Coootr, Miiwaukee, 261 E.Murrev, Balllmore. 26, Lurlnskl, Ch1Ga110. 26; Wlnlleld. New Yorio., 26. STOLEN BASES: R.HendtrlOn, Oak· land, 92; • R.Lew, Chlcego, 62; J Crur, Chicago, 49, W.Wllton, Kenl!IJ Cllv. 47, S.molt, T IXI\, 3' PITCHING (13 dKIJlonJ): Hee>. Mii· weukee, 1?·3, 3 .. 17. McGrl90f, Balllmore, 16·S, J.07, Rlghelll, New Vork. 14-S, 3. II, Heaton, Clevela nd, 10-4, 3.54, Morris, De· I roll, ..... 3 n STRIKEOUTS: Morrli., Oetroll, 194, RIOhllll, New York, ISi, Slleb, Toronto, 1SS; F.B1nnl1ler, Chlc:ego, 152; Sulc:lltte, Cltvelalnd, 133 SA VE S: Quisenberry, Kensel Cllv, 36; R.Oavls, Mlnnewla, 26; Slanlev. Boston, 26, CaudlM, s .. 111t, n. LOPtZ. OetrPll, 17 Natklnal LMllUe l~,,...y'.~) BATTING (l40 et tlels): Madlocl<, Pll· tsbureh • .323; Crur, Hou11on, .319; Dawson, Monlrll l, .319; Handrick, SI.LOUii .. 319, Puhl, Houslon, .311. RUNS: MurohY, Allante, 10ll; Ralnet. Monlreel, 104; Oew1on. Monlrtel, 92; Evans, Sen Frencls<:e>, IS; Schmid!, Phil•· delohla, 11. ltlll: Oewton. MonlrM I, 99; Murphy, Atlanta. '3; Schmidt, PhllaOafohle , 92; Gverr'er9, ~' MJ l..aoftlrd, S.n Frt n· c:ltco, 79; T.Kennedv. Sen Oltoo. 7'. HITS. Dewton, Monlraal, 165, Crur, Houston, 151, Thon. Hou11on, IS7; Ollvar, Mont,..al, 156. R Ramlrtt, Allanlt, 153 TRIPLES: llulltf, Alle nla, 12; Thon, Houtlon, 9; Crur, Hou11on, 8; W11hlno1on. Atlenle, I. HOME RUNS: Schmid!, Phlladelphle, 32, Oew1<111, Montreal, 21; Evens, Sen Fra n- clKo. 27; Guerrw1, Dadllan, 2'1 MuU>hv, Allanlt , 26. STOLEN llASES: Relne1, MonlrH I, 64, Wiggin•, Sen Oleoo, 47. S.Su, DMtan, U1 Wiiton, New Vork, 42; LeMe11er, S.n Francisco, 31 PITCHING (13 dtehlons); Or~co, New York, 12-s. 1.26. Otnnv, Pt.Redelphle, 13·6. 2.SO; Mc:Wllllom1, Plllsburoh, ll-6, 3.01; P.Pertr, Allanla, 13·6, 3.71; Rv1n, Houllon, 13·6, 2.36. STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Phlleo.tl)l'tla, 229; Solo, Cincinnati, 200; McWllllam•, PlllJl>urOh, 164; Va61muale, Dedeen. 1501 ltnn, H0111ton, l•S SAVES Le.Smllh. Chlcaoo. 23; Aaaroon, Monlraal, 20; Bedrosian, Allalnfa. 11. HOiiand, Phlla elelc>hle, 11, lellutva, Pit· llburllh. " Orange Coaat OAltY PILOT/Monday. Sept. 5, 1983 BS SCOREBOARD NFLs~ Flrtl downs lluar..1-n •d• Peulno yards 1t11urn v1td1 Pen•• S1ek1 Bv Punt• Fumbles-lost Penalll••·verds Time of Poueulon NY SD 2S 'I.I Sl·2S1 23· 134 140 -354 47 27 17-29-' 20-36-2 o-o 2-20 4·39 2·50 o-o 2-2 S·S9 S-44 36:31 23·29 Del M&r (J.Slll al 4J•dllY ~ !MetfMI $UNDA V'S 1taSUL TS "llST l(ACa. 6 furlonga.. Lucky Lyrics (Sll>ftle) 7.40 4.00 J 20 Olden Age (Meu) S.jl(l 3.40 Ole Gaatlc IH•wleYl 3.00 Also raced: Wicked Hiiier, Fallltr Mee, Pe i's Pel, Klno't Finder, A Jolla BC 0oen NATIONAL CONl'alUiNCE WHt (el Eldcolt, N. Y.) Wl~n.Zw:~io ~~lekleel. w LT Pd. p" I( ems I 0 0 '000 16 Allenle I 0 0 1.000 20 New Orleans I 0 0 1.000 21 S.n Fral\CllCO 0 I 0 .000 17 EHi PhlledtlPhla 1 0 0 1.000 12 0 •118' 0 0 0 .000 0 Wuhlnglon 0 0 0 .000 0 N.V.Glanl' 0 I 0 .000 6 St. Loul1 0 1 0 .000 17 Cenh-al o.1roll I 0 0 1000 11 Green Bay ' 0 0 1.000 41 MlnntlOla I 0 0 I 000 27 Chic.ago 0 1 0 .000 17 Tamoe Bev 0 ' 0 .000 0 AMEl(ICAN CONl'El(ENCE WHI Denver I 0 0 1.000 14 Ken1uCllY 1 0 0 1.000 17 Aaldw1 1 0 0 1.000 20 Sen oi.vo 0 I 0 000 ,, Seellle 0 1 0 000 13 EHi Belllmore 1 0 0 1.000 ,, Miami ' 0 0 1.000 l2 N.V Jell 1 0 0 1.000 41 Buffalo 0 I 0 .000 0 NewEnotand 0 I 0 000 23 c ....... Clnclnnall 0 I 0 .000 10 Cleveland 0 I 0 .000 Hou"on 0 1 0 000 Plll1burgh 0 ' 0 .000 SllndaV'• k -l(ems 10, New York Glenn 6 bldan 20, Clnclooell 10 ,, 3' 10 New °"81n1 21. SI. LOUii 17 GrMn BeY 41, Houiton 3' (oil Afltnla 20, Chlc.aoo 17 PA 6 17 17 n 17 0 0 16 21 0 JI 21 20 11 10 13 10 41 11 23 0 ,, 12 19 20 27 41 14 llalllmore 29, New Enoland 23 101) Dtflver 14, Plll1burgh 10 Oelroll II, Tam1>1 Bev 0 Mlom1 12. Buffalo 0 Ml"°"°'• 27, Cllvtlend 11 New YO{)< Jell 41. S." Ole9o 29 1Can111 Cllv 17, S...lllt 13 T__,.I~ Dall•• al Wailllnglon, <Channel 7 at oJ Tllurt49V's 0-) Sen Frencbco a1 MIMHOle, (n) 541ndeV'• ~ New Orlean• et llamt Houston al llai.n 0.11 .. •1 SI. Louis Plll1burt>h 11 GrMn Bev Tame>e Bey 11 Cl'llceoo WHhlnolon 11 Phlleo.tohl1 lluffelo al Cincinna ti Clevelalnd al OtlrPll New Vork Gl11111 et Atlante S...llle el N1w YMI< Jell New Enolenc:t 11 Miami Denver e l Bettlmor• M9ftday, s..t. ,, Sen Oleoo at Ken'8s Cllv Rams 16, Giants 6 (Sare bv Quer19n) L"...,... J 1. 0-1' .....v-0. 0 o-' LA-FG Na!M>n 36, t-07 NY-<•r-ler 4 run (kick lelll<ll. 319 LA-Baroer I oen from Farra1>1mo (Nelton •Id!), 13:51 LA·B•rtler 42 e>en trom Ferragemo (kick l1lledl. 2:S2 A-76,494. Flrsl clowns Ru111K·n ro• Penlno Yarch llelurn vards PH-Secks bY Punll Fumb!H·lost Penelllas-yarO• Time of PotHnlon It.ams NY 20 13 0 · 116 26-171 279 137 n 61 2'· 17·2 3S· 16·3 s-.u 0-0 4-37 6-41 3·3 4·2 6·40 9·11 :1'2.17 26:33 INDIVIDUAL STATISTIC.S RUSHING-New York, Mc:Nell 23·120, Crulchlltld 13· SJ, TC>dd .-26, Hector 1·42, Dierking •·5, AUOYllvnl•k 4·$. San Olaoo. Munet• 14-SS, Brook• 7-76, Foull 1-(·2>. C•1>11tlletll l·S. PASSING-New Yori\, TC>dd 17-79-1-160 San Oleoo, Foul• 20-36-2-354. RECEIVING-New York, Welker 8·13, Gattnev 2·31, Snuler 2-10, McNt ll 1-11, Crulcllflek' 1·7. Oiefklno 1·6, Harmon 1·4. Coombs 1-1. Sen oi.vo. Joiner S· 106, Duckworth •· 110, Wlnstow 3·42, Slevet1 3·33, Chandler 1·21, Muncie 1·15, Scates 1·14, Carr I· 13, Broolo.s 1·0, MISSED FIELD GOALS-New York. none. San Diego, Benlrschke 46. ll11den 20, taeneala 10 (ken bY Quer1trs l Lii...,_.. 1 10 0 3-20 Clnclnnell 0 0 3 7-10 LA-Allen 1 run (Bahr kick), 7:21 LA-Allen I run (Behr kick), SSS LA-FG Bahr 31, 10:01 CtN-FG BrMCh 36, S:37 LA-FG Bahr 39, 2:3S CIN-Harrls 9 peu lrom Anderton (Breech kick>. 14:00 A-S0.956. LA Ctn Flral Oown• n 17 Rus,....·yard1 40·12' 16·51 Penlno v1rd1 133 203 Return verd1 35 .. Ptl'8S 14-30-1 2'·3S·I S.cks t>v 4-23 3·25 Punls 5·37 S·J9 Fumbles·loSI 0-0 4·2 Pen11tl11-yerd1 •-6S •·7• Time of Pon1nlon 3S,37 2•:22 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS llUSHING-!.o' Anoeles, Allen 17·47, Klno IO·l-4, Pruln S-32. Hawklni. 2-s. Monl!J()rM(Y l·S. Ptunkall S·l Clnctn· nell. Aleo~ 1-19, WHson 4-20. Anderton 4· lt. PASSING-t.os Anoalet, Plunkt ll H-29-l-ISI, Allen 0-1-0-0. Clnclnnell. Anderton 2'·3S-1·226. llECEIVING-t.os Anoetes. llernwtlt S-66. CrlSlensen 3·35, Klno 2·27. Allen 3·19. Brencll 1·11 Cln<ln· ne ll, llon S·SO, Cotttnswor1h S-42, Aleundtr 4·3S, Wiiton 3-21, Merlin 2·22. Curll• 2· 11, Krtlde< 2· 11, Tait 2·11, Herrl1, 1·9 MISSED FIELD GOALs-none HelVWMd Pan SUNDAY'S l(ESULTS (16th al SJ·NIM "8.._s ~) l'llUT l(ACE. One mlll pec:a, tnc:tlan Ch~ IKutC>lerJ, S.00 3 60 UO; Belli· lno !lilly lS.'° t.20, K.B. King 3.IO. Tllme: 2.02 lfS. U EXACTA (10-1) oeld '309.70. HCC*D l(ACE. One mlle lrol. Monlerev Jud08 IGrun<lv) 2• 40 11.00 OD, GOldaft Pride (Meler) 17.00 7.IO, C'-1111 Moose J.00. Time 2.00 3/S. U EXACT A 4•61 e>eld S774 00 THlllll) llACE. One mlle PIC8. Monle r e v Rocl<el (A ubin) 2.10 2.10 2.40, Merkt! Kine 10 00 S.00; Ledv Polndtxler 2 to Time. 2.00. ll aXACTA C3·1) e>eld 131.80. l'OUltTH l(ACa, One mllt PICI. Sams Butch (Valla ndln11ha ml 4 40 3.20 UO; R-1 Mlt 3.40 2.10; No1b4a Te1set UO. Time: I.St 21 S. SECOND l(ACE. 6 turlonltt Sand Cra b (V a l1 n 1 u e la ) 13,40 6.20 3 20 Proud Out.e CBlllCll, S.80 4 20 Famllv FoM IMCCarron) 3 20 AllO raced. Mendert1, Vlclorv S.m· Pie. Bleclo. Sul1>flur, Son Gallalnl, Col· onlelltm, Cunnlno Rooue. Oelawert EXl)fHI. Time: 1.10 3/5. SJ DAILY DOU8LE 2· ll oeld 163.60 THlltD l(ACE. 6 turlomn Prim Dusi (~re) 16-20 7.80 Sto Nexl Come1 Love (He wle vl 17.to UOwe Win !Black) J 00 AIM> raced. Tl'llnlt1 Judge, Terrest1>s Peren , Remember Hollv, Foxv Toy, Nenc:v'i. Babv. Time: 1.11 21 S. l'OVl(TH AACa. One mile. T•• T 111tr (McC a r11on ) •.to 3.00 2.40 Coronalld (Bleck) 3.40 2.60 Overland Journev (McGurn) 2.40 Also raced: Driving FHI, Run The Galtxv. Golden Gold_ Time· I 37 415 l'IFTH l(ACE. 1 1116 mile• on turl Quenlum L••e> (Pedro1e) 10.40 S.00 3.20 Mr. Reactor (Sll>llle) 13.60 6.20 Noell no ( Plnc.ay) 2.60 Alto raced: Thli. Men, Grtal Grend-son. I Bel Otllmll, Ad Man, Rondon. Time 1.44. '5 EXACT A ( 1·21 paid 131100 SIX TH It AC a. 6 fur1onos Swallow• F llDhl (M cCrrn) 10.20 4 20 • 00 soec1acul8r Oner COlod"l 3 to 3.60 Double Enlr'f (Blee!\) t.20 Alto reca<I: My Carmel Cendv. Le Garufi, Dancing Gu..I, Royal Hac:len· da, Calltornla Crn1a1. Time: 1.11 2/S. SEVENTH l(ACI. 7V. turlonos Welhe m Gree n (Fuentes> 31.«1-10.111> 1 • .0 Arrowr..ad (Vaten1uelal 6.tO 6.20 ClenloltY (~tel 7.40 Alto rec.a· TreH urt Trove. Taol11ac11, Demi Mondt, Orlenlal Way, Valtnllne Lew, Tonv Ten Time: 1.30 4/S. '5 IEXACTA (S·2) e>eld 5373.00. 12 l'tCK SIX (1·3·7/112·7·1·1-Sl 11eld '3,76S to wllh 2' wl,...,.n (five llor~). alGHTH l(ACE. One mlle AllllM (Plncev) 2 '° 2.20 2 10 Olacnronv CMcCerronl 3.00 2 10 Vlcloroua Joy (Me1al 2.20 Alto raced L"dlno Leovt>uo, H-v Wino, Cougar's Olflelll Time: 1.36. t.5 IEXACTA (4·3) paid s t4.00. NIN'Tlf l(ACE. I 1116 miles Vorl a ul lr (Sl t>lll •l 9.00 6.0 4,20hsla Flee! (Velenrulfa) 16.00 500 Bunnell (Tetelre) 10.20 Also raced Klno OI Tiie Rench, Cttlllc Warrior, JoNlnnnbtro, Eartv Sellttr, Cap11ln Ooul>le, Bovne Valltv, Jurlscon1ul1t , Marnie's Oancier, French Commender. Time: 1.43 4/S. JS EXACTA (7·11) oald 116'.00. Allendanct: 23,729. U.S. 0oen ,., ..... v_> ,.,..,.,, "~ l(auftd SllllM 2'I Pal LlndHY 154,000 71·64·6S·61 V1 Gii Moro-n 132,400 70-67·61·67 VJ JOhn Adam• $11,400 61·67-70·61 Wayne Levi 517,400 69·70-70-64 V4 Mike Reio Ul,400 71·67·67·69 Oon Poolev s 11 .400 67-66-72-69 vs Pe l McGowan s 10,0SO 73· 70·6S·67 V6 Slaven Utl>ltr Sl,400 70-69-61·69 Sammy Recri.ts Sl,.-00 69-72-67·41 Cralo SIMiiar Sl,.-00 72·61·71·6S Vlclor Ragelaldo Sl,400 67·6'·69-72 'U7 Frid COUPie• U ,lOO 61·72·61·69 Bol>bv Clam11tll 56,lOO 67-71-70-69 Merk 8 roolu '6,300 70-61-71-61 VI Merk 01Meera M,950 63·71-73·7 Clarance ROH M,950 70-61-72-6' Bob Twev M,950 70-72-49-67 Allen Miller M,950 71·71-71·6S Vt Vance Htelner '3,314 11-10-•s-n BuOClv Garoner 13,116 70-61-70-71 ~fk Lval3 ... 67-71-70·71 O.wlll Weavtr 13."6 70-70-69-70 BObl>v W•dklns '3,116 69-n -t9·6t Tim Slm1>'°n '3,"6 6'-72-72-67 Biii Brlllon '3,116 71-77-70-66 -Joey Ru1111 l2, IJO 69·71·61-n Oen Halldorton 51, 130 10·69· 70-71 Mike SUlllvan 12, 130 71-71·6'·70 Tom Jen1tln1 12, 130 69-74-6'·69 Jim Simon> 52, 130 10·72 -69·69 llonnle Black 12.130 66-71-75-61 2111 Grler~-s1.6S1 n -61·67·74 Joey Sif'°8tar I 1,657 67-71-70·73 Nld. Price s 1,657 72·67·71 ·11 Jev HaH\1,657 10-12-69-70 212 Ktrmll ZerleV Sl,410 73·61·10-71 Mike Govt s 1,410 69·74·69-70 Bob E Smllh Sl,410 69-71-73·69 1ll Mike Ool\ald s 1,024 70-69-41· 76 ROA S1teck U,D24 u -10-11-n Mika Mrxle'I $1,02• 73-10-61-n Oeve E~llf 11,024 13·7G-6'-n T ommv Valenllne s 1,024 69·11-n-11 Greo Powers s 1,024 11-71-71·70 Jatf Slumen Jl,024 69-71-73-70 Wellv Armstrong 11,024 70-72·72·69 R !chard ZQkol s I ,024 71 ·71·77·69 Tom Purlzer I 1,024 71·71-73-61 Brad Faxon 11,024 66-73-76-6' 214 Riek Peer ton '7S6 72-11-71·70 as Jatf Mltehell sm 71-69-71·1• JOhnMeua1m 74·66-14·71 TerrvOi.111 \m 70-71·61·76 114 Gar't Helll>ero 5671 •7·69·n -7t * Ken Green 567' 10-13 11-n Oen Forsman 167' 7S·67·72·72 Merk HevH 5678 70·69·1S·72 Bruce Oouvlau 1411 74·69·72·71 llafaet Alarcon '67' 11·61·7'-71 Bl" Murchison 5671 70· 71·7S· 70 :111 Rex Celdwel 5647 71·70-11·7S L .. Trevino U41 11·11·70-15 Eric Balllen u.t7 66·70-7'·13 Garv Koci! "'2 69-74-73·71 David Dorin u.t2 61·74·74·71 -B<>l»'I Colt S61S 61·7•·70-76 Jim NefforO 561 S 61·70-74·76 Tom Llhmen S61S 72·71-71·7• Jim Booro1 U IS 11-70-76-71 -Oevld Peoolet s600 71·70-75-73 1'0 Tony SlNt 15U 10-n-12-16 Bob G lkler SSM 11-11-n -16 Otnl1 w.iton S5M 2'1 69·74·73-74 Bruce Flellher JS70 61·74-n -n RalPtl Lel!Orum sS70 n -10-1•-1s Gavin Levenson U 70 74-a-76-73 1'1 lhomuGreyU~ 72·71-74·7S m Curt 8vrum 1549 74-'9·74-76 BOii EutwOOCI 1549 71-70-79·73 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-!.o1 Anoele1. Olckerton 31-91, Alexander 6·21, f'erre11emo S·(·3). New York, Car-It< 17·113, Woo!!~ 6·6, llrunf*" 2·4. Morrl1 H·ll ""H l(ACa. One mllt PKt. ltusllc Scoll (Grund'() UO •.40 l.40; M.c The Knife (Parker) t.00 6.00; Moody 81ue 3.20 Time: I.Sf 1/S. ll UtACTA (6· ll e>eld 175.30. Aaron Krldlsleln (U.S.l def. vllet Gerulams 1u_s >. 3•6, 3·6, 6·•. 6-3. 6·•. Ivan Lanell ICl\adlOJlovakl•l def. Jonnv Levine (U.S.), 6·2, 6•2, 6-2; Yannlck Noah (France) def. Eric: Korll1 <U.S.>. S-7, 6-3, 6-J, ~Ii Wllendar !Sweden) Ott. llldardo Acuna {Chile). 6·4, 7·5, 6-1; JOhn McEnroe (U.S.) dtf Vince Van Palltn (U.S.). 6·1, 6-2. 6·1; Andra Gomez (Ecue<lor> def. Stave Canion (U.S.). 6·3, 6·4, 6·4. LPCiA tevrnement PASSIN<r-t.01 Anoetes, Ftrra1>1mo ,.,~ .. , 2t·17·2·279. New York, Brut1ner 3S· 16-3· 113 RECEIVIN<r-t.01 AnotleS, Bert>tr 7·'3. Ellard 3-91, Dennard 1·3S, Hiii 3-26, Guman 2·21. Farmer 1-13. New York, Pltlmen 3·74, Grav •·44, Caroenter s-36, Mltlltt' 3·2•. Woolfolk 1-S. MISSED FIELD GOALs.-l.01 .fin· "'81, NafiOll 40. New York, Hell-Sheikh '5. Jm 41, CMireen 2' l kw• by 0Ulr19nl .... y-Jets 0 ll 7 21-41 San 0-.. 1 o 9 lJ-2' SO-Muncie run (Benlr1thlt.1 kick), lS:OO NV-Welker 26 1>111 lrom Todd (Leahy klell), 2:26 NV-FG LH hY 32, 9'56 NY-FG L .. hv 27, 14-46 SO-FG Benlrscnk• 23. l 19 NV-M<Nell • run (Leehv kick), 10-16 SC>--Munclt 7 run (kick felled!. 13 S9 NV-Crulchfltld I run (Laahv kid!), 2,77 SO-Oud<worlh 29 PIH from Foul1 lk.lck felled). 6·21 NY-McNeil It DUI lrPm Tod<I (LH hV kkk), t·17 SD-Joiner 33 PHl from Foul• (Benlrlchkl klcK). t-05 NY-AUIKISIY"l•k ' run (Leahy kick.). 13:CQ A-il,004 SIXTH llAC•. One mlle e>ace. HI c SlllPl>tf (Anderton) 1.60 3M 3.20; Slick Swlk (SPriVOl) 3.40 3.00; Monltrtv Knklhl (CrOQhanl 3.40. Time; 1.59 J/S. U UtAeTA 12·1) oeld 1311.30. HVENTif l(ACa. One mfle PIC8. Liiie Jorey (Aubin) 7.IO UO UO; Cra ry Golla 6.00 S.00; Klno OI Jan 1,.20, Time: 1.Y 4/S. ll EXACTA <•·fl oeld 511.30 EIGHTH RACE, One mllt e>eee. Su Pe r BreOshaw (P a rker) 4.00 3 20 2 10; Sklo11er Young •.60 U O; l(Otwofron (Mlehan) 10.40. Time: 1,56 215. ll EXACTA (3·S) Paid woo. NINTH l(ACE. One mlle e>ec:e Polar Looetl (Sherren) 16.00 6.00 UO, Pivot Point » tO 11.tO; Olllrllillllor (Parker) 12.40, Time. 1.S7 2/S. ll •XACTA lf-2) oald 11.090.SO. U PICK SIX (3·•·2·4·3-t ) Paid S5, 10UD wllh llve wlnnett (six honH). 11 Pick SI• consOlallon e>eld 1213.IO wllh 90 winners ltlve horHl) TaNTH RACE. One mile e>eet llaet Chief (Meler) 6.00 J 60 3.00; Victor r.l'llrles 10.00 t.40. Gribbin <Pierce) 7.IO. Time: 2.00 2/S. U aXACTA (1•4) lleld 513.10. AllenClanCe: 11,003 WMMn U.S. Ot"aN (al New Yen) ,ev1'111 "_,. ~ Chrl• Evart Lloyd (U.S.) dtf. ~llU· eta Me•va (8u!oarle), 6-•. 6-0; An· Cir•• LH nc:I (U.S l dtf. Wendy Turnbull (Australlel. 7-S, 4·6, 6·2 . 0..., ... ..,,..,. Al(T'S LANDtNG (....._, ... OI) -160 •"91tr't. t7 Din, 3 barracuda, 73-4 bonllo, 127 mackerel, 14 rocktllh, 40 V•llowlell. 5 shMpshead, 6 sculoln, 2 fkll>IKll. DAV8Y'S LOCKel( (New-1 8Mdl -m enolen. 3lt bonito, 417 medleret, 3 rOd< fish, 34 land ban. 19S ytllowflfl 1una, 4 velloWlall, • ~. 61 lkto\ad<, 7 CloradO. l.Aurl Pel..-ton Joyce Kazmlerslo.I K•thrVn Young KafhY Postlew•" Velerle~lnner Allee Miiier Avako Okamoto Jackie hrtldl Judy Enis SNYla Betloleec:lnl PalllRlu o Jo Ann WaSl\am JeMI Anderson KaflvFullu Celtw ~nl 8al1y Kln11 Cerol\ln HUI Sanora Pelmef Laurie Rinker Jan Sltohen10n Cathy Hanlon Carole Charl>onnltr lltlh Solomon Lori Huxhold MerlentH-Anne-~rle Pt lll Camel Lights Gii~~~ UGlfrs I 9 mg. "tar", 0.8 mg. nicoune av. per cigarette by FTC method. J Warn ing : The Surgeon General Has Determined CA tow l'AR ME:t l'.'\S7'e That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. /1 61-70--13' 70-6t-139 70-6t-139 70-6t-IJ9 6'-71-139 61-71-139 71·69-140 70-~140 70-70--140 70-71-141 70-71-141 69-72-141 61-7-141 n -69-141 n -69-141 n -6t-1•1 71-l'C>--10 71-70-141 72-70--142 n -10--1•2 71-71-142 70-72-142 71-72-143 71·72-143 13-70--143 77·71-143 I $ ., . ' • IN Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Sept. 5. 1983 Peggy Lee •• Her aut"biography is inform of musical·' Peg' By JAV SHAJ\BUTT Of .. '1111':11 ...... NEW YORK (AP)-About five years ago, a blonde, smoky-voiced. famous $inger from Jamestown, N .D., began her autobiography. Alu, she sighs, '"it ~an to be to long and tedious and" -she chuckles -"grim." "It occurred to me tO take bits out of 1t and do a music.al instead." The singer: Peggy Lee. The musical: "Peg," about both the bad times and tht: good times in her life and career. It's propelled by 29 songs, some her hits of yesteryear. others new tunes written for the show. It's scheduled to premiere in November And it'll be he r Broadway debut in three respects-as a lyricist, co-author and star The star part wasn't in her origj.nal plan. "I didn't intend to be in it at ail originally," says Lee, a shy, soft-spoken woman. "I was writing it for someone else to do." That changed when she invited Irv and Margie Cowan, friends who own the Hotel Diplomat in Florida, to a party at her Beverly Hills home. Someone urged her to sing a bit of the score from the work-in-progress. "They loved it," she reports ... They said, 'We'd like to produce it."' Then they summ0ned Broadway producer Zev But- man to hear it. He also flipped. and asked to co-produce it. All insisted she be the star. Which is how it comes to pass that when interviewed, Lee, clad in a red turban and sunglasses, is busy rehearsing for her debut as the star of a Broadway musical. "Naturally, w e're only touching the highlights because I've lived a very active life and been around for a while," she says with a gentle smile. Once deiCribed by jazz critic Gene Lees as "the most consistently intelligent female singer of popular musjc in Ameri- ca," she's been around since the late '30s, when she broke in as a teenager Jfnglng on small radio stations back ho~ North Dakota. Her name was Norma J ean EgJltrom then. K en Kennedy, a program director on a station in Fargo, suggested she change her name to PelU{Y Lee. She did. 'Naturally, we're only toucbing the highlights b ecause I 've live d a very ac:- tive life and b een around fora while' And as Peggy Lee she became a star in 1941. when she cut her first hit, "Why Don't You Do Right," with Benny Goodman's band. The session only earned her $10. But she has no gripes. '11 don't like t.o dwell on that, because you see what that song has done for me? And Benny taught me so much. Like the value of rehearsing. "And integrity with your music. He really dedicated himself t.o it. l think his whole life is musjc. As is mine." At last report, her life in music includes the recording of 59 albums and 631 songs. Songs like the finger-popping "Fever," the joyful "It's a Good Day," the sassy "Big Spender," the roaring Latino treat- ment of Richard Rodgers' "Lover," the wistful "ls That All There Is," t.o list a few. A gilted lyridat. she aJao has coJ- 1.aborated on aongwriting with eonw- preUy fair tunesmitha, folks like Johnny Mercer, Duke EU.lngton, Victor Young, and Broadway's Cy Coleman -the laat a longtime friend who'eagaln working with her, this time as artistic consultant on "Peg." The show offers a mix of her old hita with new songa she's written with a young English pianist, Paul Homer. She co-authored the music.al's book with playwright William Luce, author of "The Belle of Amherst." She's had a durable career, no question. But it almost came toa halt twice, the first time because of domestic bliss in the late 40s, when she was married to he r first husband, the late Dav~ Barbour, a fine guitarist from the Goodman band. Lee, who with Barbour wrote two hits, 11M&J'• "'\8°1 and "It's a Good Day," was thinking of dropping out of music then, perhaps write a song or two with him, but she was very content to be a housewife, to tend their young daughter, Nicki. Encouraged by her husband, she re- turned to the recording studi08, resulting in "Black Coffee," an album that is now a collector's item, and a resumption of h er career-with the marriage, unfortunate- ly, foundering in later years. Then, in 1961, riding high, in heavy demand at the top clubs of Las Vegas, New York and London, she came down with double pneumonia and pleurisy. Some consider it miraculous that she, Like Frank Sinatra and Tony Bennett, is a middle-of-the-road survivor, still singjng her own kind of music in an age of rock that has ranged from bubble"to punk. Singer Peggy Lee 'The Corsican' ••• William Heffernan \Nrites bloody tale of revenge THE CORSICAN. By William He[(ernan. Simon & Schust.er 423 Pages. $16.95. "In Corsica, vendetta is a very important thing. If a man's honor is attacked, it isa very serious matter. And it requires a very serious action to overcome the offenae. Otherwise the man who is offended is nothing." -So explains a character m William Hef- feman 'stale of blood, betrayal and vengeance. And thus explains why the characters in "The . . Conncan" behave the way they do. They are bound by the traditions of Corsica, even though they are thousands of miles away in a foreign culture. The most famous Corsican was Napoleon who. despite his ultimate def eat, is remembered by history as a great general and unusual leader of men. Young, siclcl y Bonaventure Marco6i chooses Current Best Sellers 4 . F ICTION 1. "Hollywood Wives," Jackie Collins 2. "Who KiUed the Robins Family?" Thomas Chastain 3. "Christine," Stephen King 4. "Poland," James Michener 5. "Changes," Danielle Steel 6. "August," Judjth Rossner 7. "The Seduction of Peter S .," Lawrence Sanders 8. ''White Gold Wielder," Stephen R. Donaldson 9. "The Name of the &se," Umberto Eco 10. "Monimbo," Moss & De Borchgrave NON-FICTION 1. "In Search of Excellence:" Peters & Waterman 2. "Creating Wealth," Robert G. Allen 3. "The One Minute Man.ager," Blanchard & Johnson "THE FIRST TRIPLE CllOtt'N OF MOTION PICTVHES" REIURN~Jgl)I IPGl cx:T--l ···~-1 .. -............. _.. ... _ lalt:\ -;ji/ •U1RN64l'* .,.., ......... rw&•l•--••&AJ• l.Jll'-) • 10 1111 • TRACK DOLBY STEltEO * * * * 4. ''Megatrends," John Naisbitt 5. "Tough Times Never Last." Robert H. Schuller 6. "Workout Book" Jane Fonda 7. "Nothing Down," Robert G. Allen 8. "Out on a Limb," S hirley Macl.aine 9. "Seeds of Greatness," Denis E. Waitley 10. "Ho w to Satisfy a Woman Every Time," Naura Hayden (Courtesy of Time, the weekly news magazine) 1':\'t·r~ d<t ~. a ll <.dong the Onrnge C11:i :-l. wonwn·:-ll\cs a rc made easit·r b~ informal ion and ad\'ice found onlv in I he· Dally l'llnl Daily PllDt EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT Fri. 4:30, 1:15 -ht-Mon. 1:00, 4:30, 8:15 edwards LIDO CINEMA MIWPQaT IOllUY.t.H 673 8350 ... ,., ... uoo - N(W TIAH LUXURY THEATRES 111 J.. Matinu Sllowinu OMLYS2.l§lhtltss0thmriw Mett4 s 113t.Uu•111tl6IM~2Ss1 1 ~~,) s woooy Allen'• FOR FUnt EXCITemenn V1s1tOvr... J.- k;1;{(;1•1G®!t\Uft.11MM M Zelig liE B~~. m Show• al 12:00 2 :00 4 •00 5:00 1:00 10:00 snows., I t II J :IO S:JO 7:•0 .. 1 :10 WAllG'n• m TflfJll W snow1 AI 12:152:45' l :U l !OO 10:30 ----"' ...... .,_ RETURNOFlliEJEDI Bil Showa •I 1:00 )110 11:25 7:4 1 • 1 :10 1i3Q 4 •20 7 1JO 10t11J 70MM o 10 10 Nolllute1 /tl.1•1at~r.0111y 1:1oa11011:ao11s • Ctl' 'ii#u 'as• 2163 .. 9'18'2/~~> ,,~~~NO HERCUlES ' l~:J~~· .. VACATill\ [iJ CJm 11•0 J :IO t 100 1111 , 100J:1111:ao 114& 10100 • 10110 11rnijlihn·1+~1@6l639 e1101~...m:) SU'UC-fliOvndOHcl To"""'((ltllOdlOOr•~toli.r1"°'- ••• ,. ••• m a~::Z--m * ~lut f'l>tl Blood (RI Alto N ltlll Slllft C,_) (,f ei f'111t ll'lre • Ice 1•01 Alto ll'lututal'lot (,_I /'IATIONA'I. lfaftlnftll m l.AN .... H'tl JN/"' 11111 "'u' Ciao (ti) OtlY .. ln• Or>tn •• oo WknltllO I t 1JO Wk•n•h * Chlldrtn Under 12 f rtt UnttH Meted Buonaparte as his new name after he avenges his sister' a rape and death and is forced to flee to the mountain.a. He learns the ways of the gentleman bandita and, after a time ln jail, fights for the Allies. Once the war is over , Buonaparte moves to Southeast Asia and establishes a fiefdom that he wants to leave to his son and grandson. But he is betrayed, h.iuon killed in a ghastly fashion and his grandson sent t.o ~rica. "Is a .film for Jhe entire family .. ~ -KABC-TV A FllM YOU AND YOUR FAMILY CAN wn TOGETHER \ t • I t t 1 "t U • ' ' I ' , t t t °"" t ""' r'19tf• \.t•U ..,...,.till ti~" ANAHEIM Pocrfic's Anotie•m Oriv&-ln 714/879·9850 COSTA MESA Edwolds Hort>ot 7141631-3501 COSTA MESA UA Cinema 714/ 540·0594 U TORO EcJwofdS Soddlet>odl 7141581·5880 IRVINI ~rds WOOdt>lldge 7141551 -0655 ()IANO( AMC 0;1nge Moll C111emo 7141637·0340 I -- ANAHEIM BrOOl<tiursl 71 41772-6446 CYPRESS Cypress Twin 7l4/828·1660 OtlANGf UA C1ry C1rwmo 71 41634·3911 WESTMINSlfR E<Jwords Cinema Wes• 71 4/891 3935 FOUNlAIN VAWY Fom1iy Twin 7141963 1307 fUllHTOH Fox 71 4/525 4747 MAJ I NEES DAil Y SOlllY. 110 PASSES ACCf PIED AT MOST THEA~ES f04I nos EHG.t.OfMENI CHlCK THlATRf OIRfCTOtUlS Ott CAll FOR SHOWTIMES "LOU FERRIGNO IS AWESOME!" -NEW YORK POST THE INCREDIBLE LOU FERRIGNO • G'' • -"" -M·r.MlUA oo aa-". l'Ofrlfit1.'l1;tt1 NOW PLAYING IUOIHAlll fOUllTMI Y4Ull l.AllUllA llACll OIWIOl P.r•t.c s~•P•" EtlWJIOS IW!t,.,.\lllfy (OWJIOS$NlllCo•~ PK•llt ~Otll>Qe tlfflt 111811 IOIO 839 1500 '~ ISl4 (),,..in 6349361 COITAlllflA NMllf lA~ WUTlllllSTCll ldwllOs llnstol ~OS Wooeft)llCIQI Pa.c•llC J l• 1,11'10' (dW~rtb G<ntm.i Wtsl ~7444 ~ 561 ~ 994·2400 1191 393~ ll TOllO!dw.Os ~~Mt 6880 CllWIGl C;tyCf<llet 6311~ I NO, ..... ACCll"TID ~Otl lHlll INGAOIMOO) MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPliE AU M:ll !I A()Mt fl, 0 ~·' AudMtn(.•' 'LL a til ANO (81 fol MS "lC.flV~ !Wl lllt.l Of'l.,I MOllOH l'tCf\;llt COOt OI 'l~f llf(IUl.AllOH The grandson returns. ostensibly to fight America's war in Southeast Asia, but really to vent his Corsican blood and avenge his father' a death. . There is a great deal of violence here, but well-plotted intrigue as w ell and, if anything, "The Corsican'' succeeds as a better-than-average family saga cum thriller. M.R.Aig Associated~ -nMellCf" tt I °"" 100. UO \IO I II, t I\ II GO .,, ..... CJlll. °"" ., .. 0 \ t4\ ._,.. "'' llMt 11' &• IOtO _.._ ____ <"', _,_, 11 l0.1 1~ 4 I~. 61~ I I~ 10 I~ ..;:;;; UO,t JO 10 ~ ' .. I ' Tonight's TV ~C*N!WI ~=ANDM ..... ''Clnnery Aow" (1912) Nidl ~·winow. t t ''Tinwldet" (1982) fr*' W11d, lelndl ..... Cl)MOYIE U "The lrWvnln" (1978) MlchMI ~HeWI. '** "At111ur" (1H1) Oudt.y Moat"t, Uza Mlnnlll. IAUCE -u>- --.~ NEW8 DMGNET MllEON CHAN.a QWilP\JN TAU<B wnl4 IMUX>Ut MCOOWEU ICl807:00- ..CNlWI TWIUCIHT ZONE l='WOMAH THNE'8 O<NIPAlt'f JOICER'8 WLD .... MPORT Ma OMNlaE COUNTY P.M.MMWINE MOYIE ** ''Gr9111 Ice" (1981)Ryln O'Neil, NW'fl Alct.. CI>MOYIE "A SIM Of Low" (1978) Eleni Solo- ¥91, Rodlon Nllthlpttov. -1--• OMNOE COUNTY TOOl\Y -7:30- 1 t ON THE TOWN FMA.YFBJO MOYIE ... "Jumbo" (1962) Oot1s Day, Sllptlen Boyd. I M•A•a•H Cl) T1C TAC DOUGH FALL AMO la Of MOINAl.D ..... ·=PMVIEWI tty, "Olemond Jim" (1935) Edward Arnold, Ml At1flul. CID FMGGCE AOQ<. -aoo--~~P£08 .... HOUIE.: ANEW GMOYIE ..... "The M<Mt Murderw" (1970) At1hur KIMldy, Wttrtn Oet•. i TWIJGHT ZONE ~MNWN ..... ''Gentemln M#rY ~·· (1~ FWel, .-..,. er.in. • DOUaLAll. 8LAVEAMOITA~ !:~ * •• ''Tiit• tw, She'• Mini" ( 1983) ..,. si..wi. Sendr1 Dee. (H)MOYIE *** "On Gddlr\ Pond" (19'11 ~ Fondl, l(ltlWlnl Hlpbum. ())MOYIE ..... "Pet~' (1981) llur1 Aly· noldt, 8Mt1y 0 Angelo. owow * * Y, "fell TllNI Al Aldgemont High" (1982) SMn Ptnn, Jennlte, JllOnLelgtL -t:»- 1 ma11llMW9I AU.ICM= UTT\& HOUIE.: A NEW llEOH•IG -t:oO- l Cl) M• A •a •H ™" INCAED9lS WlGAa WAT~ I F U "SlttltNd!" ( 1982) Jo KtnM- ('%} =·0onov111 • • Y, "Oespelt'" (1979) Dirk Booercle. Andr .. Ferteol. -•.30-• Cl) NEWHART (!)MOYIE • t Y, "The Only Geme In Town" (1968) W11ren BMtty. Ellzabtth Tty· lor. ltll YOU All<ED ~ rT m .N!1fr'f FALWEL.L 8P£CW. -10:00-• i CNW/EY & vat I ~~ 80UND8TAOE 1 :=~TCN)HT • • y, "" Things w.. Olffwent" ( 1979) Suanne Jlteehec11. Don Mui'· CID lAUAENCE OLMBI AMO JAaCEGl.EA&OHMWl ~ N#D MR. JOtNIOH (J)MOYE tH "Jekyll And Hyde ... Together Ageln" (19821 Mertc Blenlcfleld, S... (C)WOW! .. 14 ''Vice Squid" ( 1982) s..o.i Hublty, Olly SwllOll -11:GO-B Cl) MCME ** "LMvt Y1111rd1y lthlnd" ( 1978) Jotvi Ritter, Cerrle Fllhtr. I ==AIMNTTONIQHT •• '4 ··s.y Goodbye. MICIQll Cole" (1972) Su11n Heywarcf," Oerrtn MclGMI. GMOYE * * t y, "Ont Oty In Tht Ul9 Ol IYWl OtnlloYlcll" ( 1971) Tom Courtenay, M*'~HrTWOM NEWS a:I MOYE HY, "The Dey They Hanged Kid Cooy" (1971) Petit lluel. Ben Mur· a ·MOYE tt "A U1tle Sta" (1941) Tim M1lllllOll, EC!Wlld Hemnenn. -1J:ao-.. QI LATE NIGHT WITH DAVIO l.ETTEMIAN I OOUPl.ES lAHE OMV THEATRE ALL IN THE FAMILY l ~AMSICAH&nU •• "Cl\enel Solltllr•" (19'1) Men. Fre.not Ptsler, Rlltget Hlult. {%)MOYE t ** "The Geng'a All Here" (1943) Cermen Mlrenda. Benny Goodmen. -1:oc>- G OOEAUTRY CHANNEL LISTINGS DMOYE * t "P1t1t1111" ( 1982) Ryan O'NMI, John Hur1. CID MCME _ ,~-* • "Low Trap" (1978) Aonl Rich- mond, Robin Atkwlth. -2:00-1 ~ NlWI NIOHTWATCH- -2:30-m MARY HARTMAH, MARY HARTMAH l~OOUNTYJOOAY * * * "Sylvla Scart.11" ( 1935) Kethlrlne Hepbum, Crt Grent. (I)MCME "Scum" ( 1980) Ray Stlnltont, Mick Ford . I) KNXT tCBS> LOS Angt•I(''> 0 KNBC 1NE:}Cl Los Angete., O KTLA 1lnc.J 1 Los Ange1es ;"..;i· t t ~ "Young Ooc:tcn In L~ ( 1982) Mldllel McKten, Seen Young. 0 KABC fV 1ABC1 Los Angeles ((' l\FMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ· fV (Ind I LOS An,1eles ®l KCST (ABC> San 01eg0 -10:*l-I TMATS HOUYWOOO ICl98aHT NE1WOAK NlWI g::r~ ('8) AOa< ON TV -11:GI>- • II 8 Cll all QI NEWS .8A~YNIOHT I i:~ 8PCIRT'8 NIBl£A ntl PAOTIClOM 8TONATat ao ...uT'E8 Of IMllmATM naaNQ (D)MOYE * •~ "Oraignet" (1953) JICli: Webb, 8en AIUMldlt. CZl MCME • ••• "LlgtlttMng SWordl Ot 0..111" (19731 TomlHburo Wu1y1m1. ...... oTomlkewa. -11:»- I I =:.., Of CAMON 41 MC NEW8 N9QHTlM YOU A8KB> FOR IT HAMfO ID KT"fV 1lnd ) Lus Ang!'lt,., Cl) KCOP TV (lnc1 I Los Angeles tt) KCET TV tPBSI Los Anqelt'S m KOCE TV 1PBSI Huntington Beach #1 "MORTUARY'~ <A> Tues-Fri. 9:00 Sat·Mon. 2:00, 5:25, 9:00 "STRYKER" <"> Tues.-Frl. 7: 15, 10:45 Sat-Mon. 3:45, 7: 15, 10:50 I Al l NEW I JlllfS Tues.-Frl. 6:45, 10:30 Sat-Mon 3: 10, 6:45. 10:30 NOW, lliEACS ~~*'0 '\-~~. f !!) Tuee.-Fri. : Sat-Mon. 1:20, 5:00, 8:40 edward~ WESTBROOK CINEMA ;::,::::·~:::." BrCM,llhwr•I SJQ-4401 DEFORE roll\ FUNERAL ... DEFORE 'IOU AAE DUPJm ... DE SURE YOU ARE REAU.Y DEAD! • J ,_-Orange Coaat OAILY PILOT/Monday, Sept. 6, 1983 ""' ExRectations chang.@ .. -: :· •' PBS' 'Mac Neil-Lehrer Newshour' debuts By F RED ROTHENB ERG I NEW YORK -"The MacNell-Lehrer News- hour'' has doubled ita air lime, maintained its news phlloeophy, but changed its expectations. ''The major difference," aaya the sh ow's top executive, Al Vecchione, "is that we're no longer designed to be a supplement to the network news summaries. Now we're going to be a substitute." The gaunt.let is down. PBS' pride and joy, "The MacNeil-Lehrer Report," expands by 30 minutes tonight, beating the commercial networks in becom- ing non-cable television's first hou r-long, evening newscast. RobertMacNeU in New York and Jim Lehrer in Washington will continue as co-anchors, dispensing information, conducting interviews and reading the news. Charlayne H~ter-Gault is the New York-based correspondent. Judy Woodruff. for- merly of NBC News, will cover Washington. The program has received $10 million from AT&T, the lar&est single underwriting grant in the history of public television. In half-hour form, ''The MacNeil -Lehrer Re- port" offered balanced, reasoned and in-depth explanations and analysis of a single issue or news development of the day. The new broadcast will provide similar treatment to several topics, along with a summary of the day's other happenings. "The fonnat will be flexible to be responsive to the news of the day as it'unravels," says Vecchione. "On a typical day, 12 to 15 stories will be on our program. U you watch .the networks or us, you won't miss anything. Our treatment is just different." AB an example : he cited a rehearsal broadcast last month, when a Soviet diplomat's son, who may have considered defecting, held a press conference before returning to the Soviet Union. In its mock broadcast, "MacNeil-Lehrer" showed about eight minutes of the 30-minute news conference, while A.BC, CBS and NBC each offered 30 seconds. In addition , "MacNeil-Lehrer," on th.at day, would have given fuller treatmen t to several stories, including Woodruff's report on an airplane hijacking to Cuba. AB a scheduled piece, Hunter-Gault did a ~Cl _.-1.~--h~" -21st SMASH WEEK! - COSTA WSA I.A llAlllA WESTIMlltll (OWWO\C<ne<mCenlt• AMCFWW>nSQuMe UAl.Ql 979 4141 691 0633 993 <fl46 COITA lllllA(OwW~ To....Ctnter 151~184 llO,.,...t«iCCt:l"tlO'Olll""-flrlOMM.llll.llf1 15-minute mJnldocwnentary on theater for the deaf. "Now, when eomething major happens, we won't have to throw out what we had planned to do.'' aay1 Les Crystal, the program's executJve produoet and a former president of NOC Newa. · The other side of being a aubetitute, not ~ supplement, ts that the network neW9CUts, w hich once whet the news appetite for ''The M~NeU-Lehrer Report," now compete directly with ''The MacNeil-Lehrer Ne_wshour" ln many market&. The commercial networks' three newecasts ~ year averaged 43 million viewers a night, whil~ "MecNeil-Lehrer'' had more than 4 million. A recertt Roper survey noted th.at 15 million viewers watched "MacNeiJ-Lehrer" in a week. ''Many people look at the top of the show and say to themselves, 'I'm not interested in that,' and come back another night," saylJ MacNeil. "That Is inevitable in a program that treats only one subject Ii night. It surrenders the basic premise of variety that all journalism offers. "The new program offers variety. We believe there is a good possibility of gradually moving the nightly 4 million towards the weekly 15 million." If so, it will strike a blow for fuller rontent in TV news. By definition, the networks' 22-minute newscasts (after commercials and promotions) can't be much more than a head.line service. The PBS commitment, says Lehrer, is that each story wi!J "be given more space, more air time, and be treated in more depth than they wouJd in the case of commercial television." While "MacNeU..Lehrer" is providing more news, A.BC and NBC tonight give the illusion of more pews by dropping anchors. Peter Jennings becomes the sole anchor of the previously three-headed "World News Tonight," and Tom Brok.aw loses his sidekick, Roger Mudd. on the "NBC Nightly News." The ABC and NBC changes are, essentially, C06Jlletic, designed to better compete with -and resemble -Dan Rather's top-rated "CBS Evening News.'' At least for tonight, the substantial news in news changes is ''The MacNeil-Lehrer Newshour." · PureGoftf T*1, NIJC·TV ~\\\\~l\tr 1Jw H.... .. 7'1w• -ClllllClfl~·-t/ ....... ~•t11.M .... ._.........,., .. _. __ -. __ .. ____ .. .._._ Zelig .. * PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES * •t.:t:U'.'1•I(•l4] ·:: .... ·") ... "' Borgoin Mot ine~! ':l'l!'ll"l 1 1 • _ _ • MONDAY lhtu SATUAOAY FACUlTY01(ANOHWOOO --NOW PLAYING -- cotTA•S. fO.MO\tWMt '""""' &JI Z.01 mrta•s. , ...... -"""" ~_.WV'' -llllfAUn t~~ .... t D •'lCll IRU UA._,.,.. tto •012 COITAMUA EdwatOt So.All CoMI i'W• 501711 lll!!l'.llmlll wtlf •• n• ~-l'.IC*tl MAMI• to WW ~t '°lelllt I Anallo"" 0.1•1 lo Dtivt .. 191 lltl llttUO ...... ~ .. ~ ............... Michael Keaton and T e ri Garr are the funniest thin& to hapfen i to the movie>-this sun1mer. ~. I! , All '"'o•m•nctt s.1.,. s oo ,M •my WY" (a) ((a s,oc h,...m1on & Hohl 12 JO, l~. u o. 6 O. I~. 10~~ S.O Ooo11 I IS J .ID, H~. IO'OS rr-1:00 "tDCll.ES" (PG) t ·00, 3:20, 5:•0, 8:00, 10:20 "MORTUARY" (R) 12.30. 2 30. 4'30, 6•30. 8·30, 10 30 "ltCMN Of Tl£ .IDI'' (PG) In 70nl ~, St•M 11 lO JOO UO I~ IOIO "STUM ALM" <r'S> 111 70lnllt ~' SI•• 100 JOO SOO 100 tOO 1100 "FLASH DANCE" (R) 11 lO 1JO 1 lO 6l0 a JO. 10>0 "tDCll.~" (PG) 12 30. 3 00. s 30. 8 00, 10 30 ''Fti All> ICE" (PG) 12 30. ns .• IS. 610. B:OS, 10 00 "saaFfNl>M 8MllfT , .. , 3" (K) 11 JO. 2 JO. uo. no a JO. 10 30 "STUNGE BIO" (PG) I 00, 3 00, !> 00. 1:00. 9·00. 11 ·00 * PACIFIC DRIVE ·IN THEATRES * All OPEN 7 PM )1011s DusL "SUYM N.M" (PQ) ,... 'ft!VATI SQIOOL" (It) "M QOUIDI SUL" (K) ,... "STltMll Wll" (K) l. "TltAOllli PlACU" (I) z. "CtlICH • Ct09ll STU SlllQKW' llt) " HUS" (I) llli!lli~:~ "WT llKY" (I) PUii "'fU.lo.oMI" (K) .!llll!liQ . ....... ('PC) .... ..,.n 1: n1 llJT DAr' (I) titult' (I) ...... 111.:.m .... (I) ..,_..(I) ... .._., .. (I) 11A111M t-.n -.nor " "" .. ,. .. PUCD" (I) "SIOCY MD M UllWT PMT 3" """ (l'G) "STPIJ AOC' (PQ) ) " . ' • ~· • Ofangt Coat DAIL y PILOT /Monday, Sept. 5, 1983 JON MU5T 8( CLEANIN& 1~( ~EATING <;R.Al£. J WONDER WM.Al GRAr£ S AP.E FOR, ANVWAY e THE t 'AMIL l ' CIRCl'S by 811 Keane "We're hovin' Barbie cute ribs!" -'l.\R-'I \Bl.kt: by Brad Anderson :1 "Don't worry ... he JUSt ate!" PE,.\:\l'T8 I HEARD '(00°\JE BEEN T~IN6 60LF LESSONS by Gus Arriola OBVIOUSL V. THEY'RE TO Kff P ON£'!> ~OOSE FROM EATINC$ ONE'& CAI ~ tlllJ U..100 I tol"'t S11outo Int BICi GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) .·'I f I 0 "I hate Mond1y1." .r) DID HE REMIND YOU TO KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE BALL ? ·--~­~ by Ferd & Tom Johnson ~----...:..· ~a' ... ANt> I -rµoU<:tHT $~E1D NEVER -ro? LAST YEP.R'S HEl>ff CLIP-PERS ... by Charles M Schulz , .... GOif N ON lllDGI BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF AN8WEl8 TO IRIOOE Q\Jll •Kt OAT OAK.ltN •QJI Tht blddlnl( hat proettded: 1 .. u. Wtlt Nri r... Q.1-A• South, vulnerable, )'OU hold: •,OU <::'JIGe 05 •At'7t6 The bldd lnr ht1 proceaded: Wt1l NorLh E11t 1 .. th I o 1 <::' Pua 1 What do you bid now? A. -In 1upporl or hear LI. your ha nd le worth the equivalent or an opening bid, and partner must have. ralr hand for hie vulnerable over· call. We incline lo a jump lo four hearts, but we would not raull you ir. because you have only three trumps. you chose the conservative jump Lo thr~e hearts. Ir you bid only two hearts. we would bet that you still own the rirst dollar you ever made. Q.2-Both vulnerable, as South you hold: + Q98 ~6 O AIU07S2 +Q73 The bidding has proceeded: North Eut South Wut I t Pua I 0 I ~ 2 0 Pau ? What do you bid now? A. -By making a free raise. partner ha.s shown a hand which. for some reason. ts better than minimum. Uie Jl'D(it; P .\Rkt:R could have p111ed with 1 bare 18 polnta.1 You muat upsrado your queen In part· ntr'• ault, and your alnrlat~n In tht enemy ault la a aolden u11t. Wo would leap io (Ive diamond•. Q.3-Ae South, vulnerable, you hold: t t8$4 ~QI05 07'31 t92 The blddlnr hu proceeded: W11t JtiiorU Eut 8•tll I 0 bbl• Pa11 I t Pall a <::' PaH ' What action do you tak e? A.-You don't have much, but consider partner's bid· ding. His double and jump in a new suit suggests a hand that can lake almost nine tricks on its own. You have two trump honors and a rurf· ing value for him, so it would be cowardly not lo raise him lo game. Q.4-Neither vulnerable. as South you hold: +AQS 'V AKQJ6 0 873 +AJ The bidding has proc:eeded: Soutll Wut North Eaat I i::i Pau I • Pau ? RAYMOND, THIS CHECK YOU • (>AV E ME IS MUCH TOO GENEROUS• IT n ·s FOR t l'°° ANO MY PLANE FARE IS ONLY t 232 1 FOR BETTER OR t 'OR •o RIE Whal do you bid now'/ A. -H you had a fourth epadt . the anawer would bo 111)' -you would jump to rame In apadea. Now you can't be 1urt of the beat 1pol to play tht hand. '° you ahould jump to thrH elube to create a same rorct. Should partner either take preference to hearla, rebid apadea or bid dlamonda, your next action la eaey. H he ralaea clubt. you can correct tll rour hearts. Q.S-Both vulnerabl~. as South you hold: •AQ83 <::'Ql054 o 1072 .S4 Partner opena the bidding with one club. Whal do you respond? A. -We often rind lhal players lend to respond on their stronger four·card suil. That is wrong! Bid four~ard suits up the line. H you res pond one spade you run the risk or losing 8 4.4 heart fit should partner now rebid one no trump. Q.6-Both vulnerable, u South you hold: I 0 Pat1 INT P111 ' What do you bid now'/ A.-Wt vol.t tor \ht prac· tlul action or a Jump \0 alx no trump. Your hand con· taint no tenacea, IO there la no advent.are In having t he lead come up to I\. Partner'• hand probably ha• atveral tenace po1fllon1, and your 1lde might gain a trick by having the lead come up to his hand. You have• balan\'· ed hand. end there is no reason why a diamond con· tract should play better than no trump. Have you bffa rulllD1 lm· to do.ble tro.ble? Let Cllarlea Gore• help Y" Hiid your wey tlarouah ti. aau of DOUBLES for peaaltlea alld lot &Ueout. Fer• "PY el llit OOUBLf:S Meldet, eelld 11.85 to "Cerea·O..b&e1," tare or thla aew1paper. P.O. Bos Z59, Nonroed. N.J. CnfW8. Make ell«k1 peyaWe to New1peperMoll1. by Harold Le Doux WHAT'S WRONG WITH MY DAUGHTER ,RAYMONO? . . I REALLY DON'T UNDER- STAND HER ANYMORE• by Jeff MacNelly ~·''OJ CM'T EAT IT. 'AAJ ~ AJJNW) USE IT TO ~lOO~~ by Kev•n Fagan ------- I'll SA"{I LOOK Al AU-1'14E~E. ~it'OT~ '{ex) 'RE. Ml~~IN(,\ by Lynn Johnston M ICHAEL!-1 ASKED you 10 ~ON, you HA'Jafr CJ.EAN UP YOOR DONE A lHING ~ I 1M CJl)5f GONNA MESS liWPGRtN l~l ROOM 1 F._:~k l' •il~kERBE..\ ~ i.X:)IJ'RE 601~(, ro HAVE ro GET l.JCi.1(. BA~D OFF 1ME FIELD .' Oll.IMOCK WE'RE. ~EADQ lb STA!tf THE t>Ec.oND HALF ! by Tom Bat1u1< NOBOW'6 STMT1M61ME ~D HAlF UN'lll WE FINlfllt 1ME \ EWLW:61! 1·J by George Lemont ..----~~~-~~- "' Ntf!.W CJl\" "eAr...eRSHIP IN veN ice, 1.1"A1,;Y/ .. l1llJPllDI ~ONDA Y, SEPTEMBER 5. 1983 ,.. ANN LANDERS C2 QBIT~li6 •'•'I ,, •It C3 ClASSlfllD LEGALS CS 'Many believe that th• world 11 In lta P.....nt Hrloua atralta, in part becauH of the lack of prudent economic policy.'. -Dr. Delmar Bunn The Newport Foundation Hoping to make a difference at the national level 1::... # By GINNY OLSON DA VIES o.-,,...c., ......... Effective economic policy in a democracy mwt come from the grass roots. This being the belief of Dr. Delmar Bunn, he is hoping the Newport Foundation, which he helped found, is making a dif- ference at the national level. Conceived in the spring of 1980 by Bunn, a family practice phys- -· ician in Newport Beach, and other citi:zens of Orange County, the foundation was assisted by Professor Nake M. Kamrany, a senior economist at the Univer- sity of Southern California. "Many believe that the world is in its present serious straits, in part because of the lac;k of prudent economic policy," said Bunn. Describing the Foun- datio.n, be emphasfaed Its sim- plicity involving on-going study groups "within which business and professional people -some of th08e laboring daily in the economic front lines -may creatively develop their best con- cepts." In 1979 Dr. Bunn had pres- ented to each member of Con- gress and to the administration a plan for national energy indepen- dence. During this time he be- came acquainted wiftl Kamrany who was intrigued by the idea of a national economic plan coming, not from economists, but from a lay citi:zen. Together they traveled to Washington D.C. to discuss Bunn's proposals and "found, ac- cording to Bunn, "that Washing- ton had concluded that nolhinR could be done policy-wise t.O change the economically drai.ning and perilously dependent energy situation of the nation." ''The energy fiasco of the 1970s composed for the United States ... a major strategjc error," Bunn said. Convinced that no nation survives many errors~ serious, Kamrany and Bunn joined with other conperned citizens to found this "citizens' think tank." Major institutions, including universities, the National Academy of Sciences, the Library of Congress, the Rand Corpor- ation, the administration, major oil companies and the Newport Foundation each sent a represen- tative to the first national con- ference in July of 1980. Sponsor- ed jointly on the USC campus by the Newport Foundation and the university's economics depart- ment, resulted in a book entitled, "Alternative Plans for Energy Independence for the United States." Since the summer of 1981, Fol&.ndation programs have been periodically broadcast on local cable TV. In February, 1983, said Bunn, "contribution was made to the development of National Energy Policy IV (NEPP IV)." Although non-partisan and party unaffiliated, individual members can be active in ~­ tions they consider vital. "Much would seem to hinge on our development of effective economic policy -ultimately even world peace," Bunn said. Further information is avail- able by calling 644-4311. Energy battle ••• Russia moving into position to turn off the energy valve By GINNY OLSON DA VIES Delr .... c ... ..., ,.,, Stressing the importance of energy indepen- dence for the United States, Robert Baird told the Newport Foundation "Russia today is the world's largest producer of oil." Speaking at the Balboa Bay Club, Baird, chainnan of the Energy F.conomics Study Croup of the Foundation, said Russia produces "two or three times what Saudi Arabia is producing, and this year they will surpass the United States to become the world's largest producer of natural gas." Rwmia increased their oil sales this year to the West by 50 percent and is increasing their sale of natural gas by 15 percent each year, Baird said. ''The message is clear," he continued. ''They need hard, cold caah ... and if they are not stopped ... they are going to have tremendous cash flow from these sales to keep building this military arsenal." The U.S. energy shortfall, believes Baird, is due to price controls, regulations and mismanage- ment. He said the U.S. has plenty of resources, but we need to free the market place to become energy independent. Dr. Richard Brehm, professor of nuclear energy at the University of Arizona, said "nuclear and coal are our only options." Familiar with all . energy fomlS, he said nuclear power for electricity production is the safest, cleanest and least expensive. "It is al.most incomprehensible," said Brehm, "that a nation which recognizes the importance of energy independence as the United States does, continues to condone the lengthy regulatory process required for nuclear power plants. "With over 73 operating plants in this country and more around the world, not a single accident has resulted in death or injury," he said. "We have a huge myth about the danger of nuclear power." Frank Ducey, secretary of the Newport Foundation and an environmental engineer, hopes the Foundation can tum the energy situation around. "I doubt California will be able to have another nuclear plant," Ducey said, "because we seem to be better at emotionally stopping projects." Noting three links between energy and Russia's military might, Dr. Delmar Bunn, president of the Foundation, said that without energy our military might is frozen. Second, the Soviets are maneuvering themselves into a position where they can turn off tht! energy valve; and third, he believes the only way we can approximate Russia's strength i.s to increase our Gross National Product so that the 7 percent of the GNP we now spend on the military will come cloeer to Russia's military expenditures. Otherwise, said Dr. Bwm, "we may wake up some day and find that the Soviets have outmaneuvered us on this gigantic chessboard. They have created a situation in which they can call 'checkmate'." 'In the decade of the 70. the Soviet. outapent thla country by aome $450 billion.' -Gen. Richard M. Cooke Soviets move ahead of U.S. ~eavy spending on secret military activity By GINNY OLSON DA VJES _, .... c. ..... ~·' ' Believing there is a viable link ijetween the Soviet military threat, U.S. economic policies and energy, the Newport Foundation presented a panel of speakers recently at the Balboa Bay Club. "In every area except one, the Soviets are ahead," said Gen. Richard. Cooke, commander of the El Toro Marine Corps bale. Cpoke said "in the decade of the 70. the Soviet.a outspent thia country byaome $450 billion" and he theorizes that the drive of the Rumianl la toward the world's energy aources. 'Cooke said 53,000 surface to air ee are being built annually the Soviet.a and only 6,900 by BJ aNDY BUIDT ,,.. .... ' the U.S. and NATO. The Russians poMesS the deepest div- ing submarine in the world. U.S.S.R is al1IO producing a loJl8 range strategic bomber capable of striking anywhere in the U.S. from Russian airfields without refueling, Cooke said, noting that U.S. B-52s are being retired because of age and B-1 bombers are still not in produetion. Cooke al1IO expreeeed concern over Ru.saia's involvement in the aouth "where they ae bu.y undermining governments in Central America." Describing how this under- mining takes place was panellat Dr. Nake Kamrany, 1enfor prof.-or of economiat at use. who deecribed the four-atep procedure u explained by hia brother who escaped from Af- ghanistan last month. The first step, he said, was the • eatablishment of a diplomatic relationship between Russia and the country. Secondly, an econ- omic relationship was developed in which Russia initiated aid. Third, a military exchange pro- gram was instituted during which 15,000 Afghan junior of- ficers were taken to Russia to learn how to uae Soviet military equipment and become indoctri- nated in Manci.sm; and the fourth atage was a military coup. ''There ia no limit to the amount of money Russia may apend on teeret military activity," Kamrany said. "Uaing this force, a)ae (Ruaala) ha.a already pined control of Afghaniatan'• natural ree<>Ul"CeS .•• ~ I ( .. ., .. .. (\ • "' Pl ,., ~ ·" .. ... I"! Cl "' .. .. ., -I Cl Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, Sept. 5, 1983 r Allll UNDllS P\B.IC NOTICE MUC NOTICE P\B.IC NOTIC£ -T rou1 HIAl1H DA. PETER.J. STEINCROHN DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I am only ~ and have high blood pressure. Too you.ng for lt? t know the answer. I've had it since 18. When i.mtially dl8covered 1 had been having .evere headaches due to ainuaitis. My blood pressure wu quJte high. rve been on antlhypertensive drugs. At tJmee the pre88W'e is under control, then, for no apparent reaa<>n, It will jump high again. I am 5'3" with a large frame. My weight has steadily lncreaaed from 140to170. I have taken up a vigorous exercise program to reduce. My question: do I need special teats to find the cauae of my trouble? MR. W. COMMENT: Eapecialy at your age, 1 believe that you should have a complete investlption to try to discover the cause. In a youngster whoae pressure rises and falls without apparent reason I'd want to be sure that there isn't trouble in the adrenal glands due to a growth ·called phrochromocytoma. Surgery restores the blood pressure to normal. Or, is there trouble in the circulation of one of the kidneys? This can be surgically repaired, too. You'll need cys~pic exams ~d special X;rays to check on your Kidneys. But chances are that the type of hypertension you have is what at least 90 percent of hypertensive patients have. We call it essential hypertension. Cause is unknown. But we have drugs and other methods of treatment that can control the pressure. This ls why there has been so much in the news lately, advising that everybody have a blood pressure checkup even though apparently well. What I am going to tell you now is undoubtedly aomething you've already heard often from your doctor: "better lose weight." This is an enemy of the high blood pressure patient. In your case it might be advisable to rely on diet mainly, to take off the excess poundage. Exercise is all right to tone up your system, but proper food intake should be your main objective. • • • DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: Will you please NM.IC NOTIC£ MOC NOTIC[ .. explain why the doctor will take anyone off all aweeta because of low blood sugar? I alwaye thought that if one baa low blood sugar that more • •' 1ugar ia neceaaary ln the diet. It ia ve,ry imp_or1ant • for me to know aa two members of my family suffer from hypoglycemia. MRS. D. I· COMMENT: l t seema logjcal. doesn't lt, to add sugar when there is a defidt in the blood? But not until a few yean ago did we realize that taking sugar only aggravatea the hypoglycemia. Thia i.s 90 becauae, after the orilina} pick-me-up that a chocolate bar (for Instance) provides, th.ere i8 the letdown, and symptoms such as nervousness, palpitation, weakness, etc. nag the patient. Why? Because added sugar calla for more insulin secretion from the pancreas. Th.is, in tum. · .. ., produces a lower blood sugar. It iS for this reason we recommend a diet high in protein and low in , -~ carbohydrates. It helpssteady the amount ofaugar . ,. in the blood. • •• DE AR DR. ST EINCROHN: What is meant by "a deformed duodenal bulb"? I was told I had it three years ago. Although my stomach pains have disappeared, I'm curious. MRS. S. COMME NT: What it usually means is that the trouble is due to a duodenal ulcer. Kids' priorities surveyed STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) -High IChool atudenll Mid the top prl0<1Uea In their llvea were the famlly, education and auccesa, with wealth acorlng low polnta, according to a aurvey conduct.ts by Junior Achievement. Neatly 600,000 high 8Ctlool atudenta are enrOlled In Junl<>< Achievement programs. wt\k:h foc:oa on the private enterpriM aya1em, offering economic education programs I<>< the students. New health care jobs seen WASHINGTON (AP)-Job Pfoepecll In health care are bright '°' the next decade, according to PfO}ectlon• reieued by the National Council of Heatth Centet'9. Th«• Wiii be a )ump of more than 40 percent In demand '°' rwraea' aldel and nureee, and a 21 percent tna-eue for joba In the nursing home lndultry alone. the report uld. MOC NOTICE MUC NOTICE •. .. P9ERCEBAOTHER8 FlCTTTIOUllU .... U EactowNo 5214 lyHllla,CA .• Ll09n .. No.21·51oe8 Deecr\ptlon NOTICa MWTl:MTlON STAWM right 10 ~or dwecflonllly BEU BROADWAY NAMI! STATE•NT NOTICE TO CMDfTOl'9 Of' 9ULK 9. 1790 W•1WOOd Boulevard, Loe Amount TO M U MAL HWWMTY AHNDOl..-T Of' UM°" drlll Wld mlM from lenda ~then MORTUARY TM foltowlng penooa .,. dOlng TRANl n" AND Of' INftNTION Angelel, CA .. LIC*'IM No. 21·23789 Cun none NOTICE ....... y QIVIM..... ACTmOUa ..,..... ..... lhOM h«einebove deecflt>«I, oil Of 110 Broadway bualnMS u : TO T"ANlfE" ALCOHOLIC 10· 2320 Harl>Of Boolevard, Cotlt• Check• $lOO,OOO.OO on Auauet 17, 1• ......... of The followlng ~· heYe •bell· ou W911. tUllMll end lhett•. Into, ' NELLIE GAYLE,., Ill. 299 e.veny llW IUQE UClNM(I ) (..._ M .... CA., Lic.t!M No. 21~5 Promluory notes lduce8eft ef tM ........,. ...... doned the UM of the Flctltlout Bual· through'Of ec:l'OU the tublurfllOl4 Costa Mesa ... Legune Beech, CA. 92851 1101 .. 107 u.c.c . ...,., a.on. a 11. 8041 Topenge Cenyon. Wood-demand rype payeble ., cloee of """*' loMol ~ ., or-. -Heme: THE STUDIO ICE the lend hlrelne~ ~b«S. end 642·915-0 Geteld M. RNvlln, m ee-ty I') lend Hiiie, CA., Lk:•nH No. ..crow c...tJ, c•a-....,,.. e ,_. CREAM PARLOR, 3366 Vie Udo, to t>ottom IUdl wtllpa1octled Of t .. Legune BMch. CA. 11265 t Nollce It he<•by gtwn thet • bulk 21-e3a53 $3,900,000.00 oMloft flf ..........,. ..... • ,_... Suite 300. N9wpott Blldl. CA. dhcttooelly dtlllld ..... IUllMle Joel L Zwtcl<. t339 N."Columbu• tre.n•fer of penonel property end • 12. 27341 Hewthorne Bouteverd. Tanglbll/lntenglble property none ., ,.... ,..._., of ..,.allitel•tf 82ee3 end ahafta under Wld '*-It!« Ye .. #325, Ollndele. CA. 111202 lrlll'ltfw of llquor tlcenM(I) ,. •bout ROiiing Hiii• Eltel•, CA .. LlelnM The! Ith .. .,_, egrlld between 2.11 __ .,_._.... ....... cttr Thi Studio toe ~ewn. Inc .• 3355 beyond the uterlor tlmlt• thel'iof, BAL T2 BERGERON Thie butlnMI It c;onductld by: a to bl midi The name(1) m&lllng No. 21·9054 aeJd 1ren1ftnl(1) end Mid ,,.,,._ of c-. ..... °'*'99 c-tJ, Vie Udo Suite 300 N9wpott 8Mc:tl end to rldt111. retunnel, equip, melft. SMrTH a T\JTitlU. ti p~lhlp. eddr-end. ZJP Code Nu~blr ol 13. II t53 WNI Olymplc Boulevetd, leror(1) lhel CON!deretton for the c•ar• HM_.., k ....... h CA. 9~ ' ' teln, r~r. dllplrl end op«ell eny JOll l . Zwtck lhe trantfwor(•) ere: • e.veny Hiiis. CA • lJoenM No. ,,.,.. ..... of Mid bu"'-end°' Mid ...... .., ................... -The Flctl1loul ~ N.,.,.. ,.. IUdl Wilt Of mlnM without, flow· WESTCLIFF CHAPEL Thie 11e1emen1 w .. flied with the VENOOME STORES INC 8t50 21•4ll67ll llcenM(t) 11 to bl peld onty efter ,_1h..W, lnartbed Ill MN....._ i.rr.d to•~ w" ftlld In Ofenge -·the right to dtlll. mlM, "-- 427 E. 17th St. County Ctenl of Oflll'IQI County on Cenoge Ave Woodt8nci Hiite CA t4 t6581 Brookhurtl Street, tranafer hel .,_, ll>PfOYld by 0. ......... County on July l4 1983 1Jq)l(lr1endop«et1througtlthl...,.. Costa Mesa Aug 24 111113 111303 " · · Founleln Veney, CA .. Li09nM No. partment of Aklollollc ~. Tiie ........_ ,. .. d IM .,.w. Thllbull,,...weeoonduotldby • teoe Of the upper 500 teet of the 646-9371 • • · l'IDIOI Thlnaml(i), melllng eddrw end 21-77350 . Controt, purauenl to Sec. 24073 IC -uup...._llld .. OM-.n • oorporetlon. -eublurf-of the lend hlretnebove Publlll>ld Ofenge eo..1 Deity ZIP Code Numl>lf. of thl ,,.,,. ci l5 ~~~tu~ ~:~e En· .,h 1 the ,.,.,.in dllcf1bld Iran T hree H1tndred Tllo1tHnd Thia .ietoment w .. nlld wl1h the dlleribld, u ~In the dOld Piiot Aug. 29. Sept. 5, 12. 111. 1983. 19'11(•) are: no, · .. 0 • • • (11.-.-•> .,.._., ..W. ,.,. County a.rte of Or.,. County on trom The IMne Compony. • oorpot· 494 t,.83 RIDER STORES INC 8150 C 16. 111176 Venture Boulevetd. lert are to bl oonaumetld, MlbJICt .... 1111 -"-Aug. 24 1983 etlon. reoorded Apf11 26. t978 In Ave Woodland'Hme"cA ll1~nooe Studio City, CA.. LlcenM No. lo the •bovl provielona ••• 'fME ~ 11 ,..,, M l:a o'cllootl ~bl~ Orenge Coat Delly book 12tM8 PllQI 1740 Offlcle' ... PAC IFIC VIEW ·• • • 21·53725 ESCROW VILLAGE CORP .. 12402 11'111\M ..._...... tM tMlo el Pio 2$ ~ S 12 9 lllll3 cord• ' ' MEMORIAL PARK tr~h.~~~:~~~r.~~o.:: 17 3727 E.ett Foothill Boullvetd, Venture Blvd., Sludlo Clty, CA ... ....,..._....-:..._Mldln 1 1 Aug. '...,,t. ' '1 492,._83 PARCEL 3: e.eom.nl('e) M .-, Cemetsry Mortuary lnmenl t de .,,;. ...........,n Pn•d•n•. CA . LlcenH No. 111804 on Of etter Sept 29, 1983. tt. ...._ Ofllol ot -..., .u.nen. I(•) IOI"' !*11c:ulet1V .., Ch pel c emslO"" equ., • " n • If""""'· 21·123053 Name and llddr-of llCfOW ,.__. c....::::r.::e, fOf rorth In the Artlde enlltlld .. ~ a • r · , IHH, lee11hold lmpro,,.l'Mf'ltt; 18 3115 Y0<b1 Lindt Boulevard holder· THE ESCROW VILLAGE "_., .. 3500 Pacific View Drive NM.IC NOTICE covenen1 no110 compete. Inventory Fulterton CA Lleen .. No 21•10967 CORP. 12402 Ventura Boulev81'd "!!.._ reooi,t. --... ~.,· NILIC NOTICE ~t~!.. Of...!_~ Dlcler1atlon u~~ Newport Beach of etock end trede 01 e butlnet1 • ·• · " • ,,_, of wl'lt1oft 11n1111-. ...,. ..,..... ..,., ,._..lnO(sl n 8UCfl ,...,._ ITATIMENT °' known H: VENOOME LIQUOR •nd 19. 17461 venture Boulevtrd, En· Studio City, Celtlornl• 91804 fWIPDI• ......... ,..... •• ftCTTTIOUe au..... enUtlld ... fOllowa: "Sul>90" end 644·2700 AIANOONMENT OF UIE Of It IOCltld et· clno. CA . Llcen11 No 2t·77317 Allot'* butt,_. n.,,_ and •d· ttwt "'"9. NA.Ml ITATl•NT S•tllement", "Encro1chm1t11''. flCTTTIOUI autt•tl NAME t 59 W•I Tierra Rejlldl ROid, 20 19t31 M~nolle StrMI. Hunt-dreues ulld by the lren1leror(1) CoplM el ltll ~ IOtUnt The foltowlng ~· .,.. dotng "Common ArN and Community Ftt- The lollowlng f)e(IOOI h•1t• •ban· Simi VIII CA Lk::lnll No lngton Beech. CA • LlolnM No within lhr11 yelrl lat put, IO far .. '°"" IM .__ ... -MlltoM of blJalneel ... CllltllS e-1". "Yard ~ .. doned the UM of th• Flc1ltlou1 Bull· 21·07t 5&0 ft'f, ' . 21..0Mll811 ~nown .. lo trantferM(s), are: (II ltll .... -.., ......... the._.. CONLEY'S STUDIO ICE CREAM, and "Orelnege e-11" • McC ORMICK MORTUARY -Name: HARBOR HOMES RE· 2 729 Eelt Huntington Ot'lve -21. 11114 BllbOI Boull1te.rd, none '° 11at1), -Ofllol Of 1M ..._. Dtt1ttot, 3355 Vie Lido, Suite 300, New1>0f1 PARCEL 4: e-1(1) M alC:h 1795 Laguna Canyon Rd ALTY. 1801 Dove Str111, Sutte 145, Monrovle CA. LlcenH No: Granedi Hllli. CA .. LlcenM No Oaled: August 2• 1983 ............. c.ote ..... Cel-BMch, CA. 92ee3 euernent(t) II/ere pertlcUletly _. L Bea h c 92651 ~ BMctl, CA 926e0 21.()78110' • 2t·28774 VENOOME STORES. INC. ..... DATW! A ...... 1t, 1m Conlo)''1 lclCf1M1 Co .. Inc., '3S5 forth In the Artlcll entltlod "&.. aguna 494 c941ss Hett>or-Peclllc: EQUltlll, Inc . t801 3 22523 Pacific Coa1 Hlghwey 22 t5122 E .. 1 RoMcr1n1 Av· By Emenuet Rider. Pr111den1 JOttll W • ...COU Via Udo, &lite 300. Newpor1 BNch, ment1" of the Dlc:ler•tlon of~ • Dove Street Suite 145 Newpor1 Mtlibu CA L..lcenM No 21-64800 . enue, la Mirada, CA ' llelnll No Trentflror(I) 9octMllf'J el IM ..... CA. 92ee3 nent1, Condltlont end Restncclone 8Mch, CA. 11'2eeo ' 4 2J18 s'outh Herl>Of. Bouleverd 21--03816 RIDER STORES, INC. of E._.... ................ Thia bu_.,_. It condUC11d by• r1COtdld Mey 7, 1978 In boott The FICllllOUI Butlnett N1me r• Anthalm CA Llc1nt1 No' 23. 28733 Soull'l W•tern Avenue, By: Emenuet Rider. Pr .. ldent UftMed loMol DleMot COl'pe<eUon. 11730, PIQll 889 to 7&2 lnau.Na, ferred 10 ebove wu llled In Ofange 21-075519 ·· · Rancho Pelo• Verd11. CA .• LloenM Traneferll(t) ,., puMlootton In ttie OfMttl Leelll J. Lofland end emendment thlr'l1o. of Ofllc6el HARBOR LAWN-MT. OLIVE County on Feb 11. 1981 5 17825 Collmt Road City of No. 21-52297 Publllhod Orenge Cout Delly Piiot C-ty Oei1No4A...-t 22., 19, Thie tlet~ wu nlld with the Roco<dtofMk!County(the"Matter Mortuary • Cemetery Thie busl-wu conducted by lnduttry CA Llcenle No 24 10600 Rclverllde onv.. N<>r11'l Sept 5• 1983· 5055-83 lopt. I, 11a. .za..a County Cler1t of Orenge County on Dlclarlllon") under the Sec11on Crematory COfl>Ol'tllon. 2t-077007 • Hollywood. A U cenH No. Aug. 24, 1983 heeding(•) In IUdl artldl enllttld • 1625 GI 1 A Thll •1etement wu n11c1 with lhe e 841 Beker Strllt Colla M .... 21-17507 nnat follow•· "Own1r'1 Right• and Costas :,.~,;e. County Cl«k of Oren~ County on CA· LtcenM No 21.,o;417 25 134!; Ch1nnet l1l1nd PUBUC NOTICE NILIC NOTIC[ Publlehld Of•noe Cout o.ity Outtee", "utNltlll end ~ T .... 5 •0.5554 Aug 24, 19113. i' 2143 VerduQO Boulevetd Mon-2Bou21e1"5f9d, Oxnard, CA • LlolnM No NOTICE OF DEATH OF Piiot Aug. 29, Sept. 5, 12, 111, 1983. vlalon" end "Community Fedlltl•". .. Publllhod Orenoe Cou1 0 t oM/Gllndele CA LIC*'IM No 1· ITAT'lmNT Of' 491&-e3 YOU ARE IN DEFAUL f UNOEF\ ~ Piiot Aug. 211, Sept. 5, 12. 111. 1983. ;1.a 1250 • ·• · 28. 3201 Norin G11noa111 A8ANDOl.-wl CW: UM CW: MARY JANE MURPHY DEED OF TRUST DATED June~. \._ 0 ~ 41120-83 8 327 North Beverly OrMI S.-· Boulevard, Burt>enk. CA . L1oenM '1CTmOU8 .,... .. ..._ AND OF PETITION TO AD· 1118t. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION ' ' No. 2t·58911 The followlnQ l*90ftl 111rw ·~ S •-IC WITV"r TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY rT ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ a~100T~~~~-d~~~of~~1t~~~HER E HTE N~ ,_ ~•~ MM~OO~~A~OO~~ • Legunt N~. CA .. Ltoenll No. ,_. Neme: AMERICAN NUTRITION A·llHU NOTICE CW: TllUlfta'a SAU IF YOU NEED AN EXPl.ANATIOH"'Of 2t-21795 OUIL.O, ll08 Lomberd. Coete....... To all het.ra. beneficiaries ~No-~ THE NATURE OF THE PROCEE0-29. 23e21 El Tg,o Road. El TOfo. CA. 92628 • T.8 ..... C491 ING AGAINST YOU YOU SHOUfl> CA., Li09nM No 21.24240 Thi Fletltlool au.--Namer• credltore and con tingent uNrr coo. c CONTACT A LAWYER. together wtth 1111 followlng ct. terrod to •bovl -111oc11n 0r8"QI credlton of MARY JANE MAICI« '1NAMCW. CC>tlPOfl· 2e eeinyon Rldol. !Nini. CA. 9271~. •crlb•d elcoho•lc bt•er•o• Countyc>!'10ctob0f25, 1M3. MURPHY and penona who AT10N "(llutreetld~Ofcommon-. llcenll(t). . Wlltlarn O. ~. ll08 Lombard, may be otherwille lntereetedl meppolnted Trwtll under the lgnetton of property II"-~. 1. &9 Waat Tlerre RIJada Roed, Cost• MM&. CA. 92928 f dllCf1bod dMd of trutt no -rent)' I• g111er1 .. to tt• CC>f'P- Slml Vllley, CA.. LlelnM Ho. Thie~ -conducted by . in the will and/or estate: WILL s LL AT PU9UC AUC'TIOH ~Of correctnete)." T1ll 21..071580 tndMdull. A petition bu been filed TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER F~ under Mid Dlld. bf 2. 729 Eut Huntington Ofl\4, Wtlltem D S'-9 by CASSIE MURPHY in the CASH ANO/~ THE CASHIERS OR Tnm. by,_, of• bt..c:t1 «I» Monro•le. CA., llo1nH No Thie 11etement WM ftlld with the S rl Court f Or CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIED IN 19U1t In the ot>llgetiona MGHd 21-078t10 County Cieri< of Of8"QI County on upe or 0 ange CIVIL CODE SECTION 2924h (pey· thenltly. NrotofOfl lllecuted Wld 3. 225:13 Pedflc Coott HIQhwsy. Aug. 9, t983. County r eq uestin g that able et the tltnl of .... 1n tewfut dellwrld 10 the uildllllg111d •writ· Mlllbu, CA .. Llcen .. No. 21-64800 Pvbllahld Or.,. Coell Diiiy CASSIE MURPHY be •P-money of the United St•t•) .. right, ,.,, Dlcllretlon of DolUI end .,.. 4. 2318 South H11b0r ~erd. Piiot Aug. 22, 29, &.pt. 5, 12, 11183. potn~ 61 penona1 repreeen· tlttl end lnt«•t CCllW'l)'9d to end "*"'tor Sale. end written nob ol Anehelm, CA.. Ll~nH No. ,_... now hlld by tt under Mid Dlld of ~end of eloction to'*-IN 21..07&519 . 4748-83 tative to adminiater the est.ate Tru•t In lhe property ~netter 1'1-undenlgnld 10 Mii Mid property 10 6. 17825 Collm• Roed. City of of MAR Y JANE MURPHY ecnbld: Ntllfy llld obllglttlone, end~ tndu"U· CA., Llc1nH No. P\a..IC NOTICE (under the Independent Ad· TRUSTOR: LEOTA s. RAISER. M. 1ner the under'llgnM ceuOld Mid 21:~ 1 ~er Straat, Coste MM&. rnlh111radon of Fat.a tee Ad). =N~ISOR, 0£80AAH RAISOR :'~ ~ t~= I n,,,JJ ••///)Of/ um""""' CA., l~ No. 2 t..01417 ... ...J._TOAll~.NT ,.."!,_Of' The petition la let for heuini BENEFICIARY: FIRST FEDERAL lnetr. No. 82-420850, of Ofllcliel fill. ttfwlM"""''""ro"r,'"'""'"~ 7.2143Verdugo8outeverd,Mon-~.au..tinNAm ln Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIA· cord1lntheofflceofth1Allcofderot 0 11~1'if :::.:,~~~:.~•,7.,.";;,~ rf.:':~~·· CA., UO..-No. The followlng pet10n1 lleY .. ben• c.enter Or., West, Santa Ana, TION OF SANTA MONICA OrlflOI County; tlld Mii wlll bl donld the"" of thl F1ctltloue SI*-CA 92701 Se . 14 1983 t recordld Mey 29. 11N11, • inetr. Ho. made. but wtthOut ccwenent Ot -· a. 3a7 North a.v.r1y OfM, 8-· nau N•m•: HARBOR·PACIFIC on pt. • a 31"9. In boo« 14071, PeoO 267 of rtnty, ~Of~.~ ly H'"'· CA .• Lkllnll Ho. 21·5toee MORTOAOE INVESTORS # 128 9:30 A.M. Ottlctlll Record• tn the otlfce of the ttlll pc 111 Ion. Of ~ ~90c~•= .. ~;3~= LTD .. 1801 Dow Straat. Sult• 145: IF YOU OBJJJX:T to the Rocorder of Of1n99 County, Mid topeythl~~~<Of fo. 2320 Harbor eou....:.,d Coat• Newpor1 8-:h, CA. t2MO granting of the petldon, you dlld of tn111 dllerit>te thl 1<>11owtng the notl(•l 11y Mid de8ll ot · • Harbor·Peclflc Equttlle. 1nci 1eo 1 d Ith th property. Tru•t. wtth 1n1-t • tn Mid ~ MIN. CA.. ~ .. No. 21-89005 Do\11 Street Sult• 145 ~ ahoul e er appear at e PARCEL 1: Unit No. 7&, In the pro\'ldld. edVWICOI, If eny, .... 11. 804 tT09enge Cenyon, Wood· 8-tl CA. t2eeo . hearing and state you objec. County of Ofl!llQI St•t• of c ... the'"'"'' of Mid Deed of Tf'*, ...... '•~d Hiii•. CA.. uo.n.. No. Thi 'F1ctlt~ Bu*'-HMM ,.. tions or file written objec-fOfnle. .. lhown .iid dllcrlbed tn Ch«O• .. nd ··~of"" T~ 21 63853 fl'rld to •l>ow w .. lllld In Ofenge • with th .._f tho Condominium Pfllll r-ded on Wld of the lrutlt eteetld by l9d 12. 27341 Hawthornt Boui.Yerd, Coun J 2 1981 uona e court ""' ore F.otuary 23 tll77 In book 12079 Dlld of Trull. · Aunt Harriet always S\\Ure Rottl~::_: Elt•IM . CA., LicenM T~:!,~ ~ .. ~uctld by• the. hearing. Your appear-pegea 991 to 930 1nctua111o, of Of~ Said "" w111 bl 11110 on: Moftcllty, No. 2 • llmltocl pe11ner1t1tp a.nee may be ln penon or by tlcl8I Record• of llld County. Augue1 19. 1"3, •t 2:00 p.m. et1h a.!!;.~1~~-• ~ ~~· Tlli. 1111ernon1 W.. ltlld wtth tho your attorney. PARCEL 2: An undl..,lded Chepman Avenue to tho Cl...to 21-4116711 • .. . County Clertl of Of8"Q1 County on IF YOU ARE A CREDl·,one-forti.th (1/40th) ln*-1 M • c.nter 8utldlnll. 300 EMI ~ Ila the d Aug 24 t983 .,,.,,, In common In tho IM tntw..t Ave., OfllflOI. CA • , to 14• 16581 Brookhurll Street, · • ' f1lt11'9 TOR or a contingent creditor In lll'ld 10 the Common Aree of LOll~4 At the tlml 011111 lnltlal publlcetlon go ogs. Foun1aln Velt.y, CA .. Lloanle No. Put>llehld Orange CoNt Ollly of the deceased you must file through 9 of TrlC1 No. 9004, u per of lhll notice, 1111 tote! amount Of tn. 21·773&0 Pll01 A 29 s.p1 5 12 111 1N3 ' mep fllld In booll 3'3 PIOM 1110 unpeld belenoe of the ob41o9tlon -t5. 15630 Vent..r• B«Hlterd, En-ug • · • • 49 tt-83 your claim with the court or 21 lnc:Nllve. M~ Mape, cured by the •l>ow doKrtbed ~ ctno,CA.,Lleol»IHo 21-18369 pl'etlent lttothepenonalrep-recordlofNldCounty.•eucntwm Of 1n111 end 11t1motld ~ _.. M'"" ,J..,.,, .. ,., .... 1 .. w1 .. 1. , .. h.11. n .• 1,1011111 18. 11978 Ventu<a Bouio¥81'd, •-•c wiTll'r reeentat.lve appointed by th 11 d«lnld 111 the AJttlcte ll'lll'llld pen11a. end edvencH 11 '"'" " ......... ~ ••• "I '"""'"'"' ""'"'" ,,,,,,,.. " StudlO City, CA., LloonlO No. ,_, "'"~ urt ithin f ..... ~ "OaflnttlOn•" of !he DIGteretton ot I 1&11, 178.62. ""' '""' """'' "'"" '"" 11K"l I "'"'kl'"''" '" 21·53725 00 w our rnon WJ11 Colllnents eon<11tton1 end Aaatrlo· Thi 10111 lndeblldneM blltlo ~"" .1.,..1 .... 1 17. 3727 Eat FoothlM Bouleltttd, '1CTITIOUI 8U-U from the date of flnt llont rmdld on AuO\lll 30, 11171. llmete on wtlloh tho~-n. " '"'"" \""' 11 "'"'"A''"' ..... 1h L,,.11, P•••d•n•. CA., Llcen11 No NAm STATamJIT of letten 81 provided In Sec-In bOoll 1111ee. ,,__ t4t0 10 1w oomciutld may bO ~ _. tl1,1•rw'lll tiM.1i11I tht ''' mm•1I fti"u "'-fM"tt I 10 .. l¥1 r1t nth 21 173053 The ~ ~ .....,._ 7 n.47.oee8 the ~ ~A .• ~"''""''~""",,, 1., ''' '""•'~"" ''"" \ltr• 11.... • "-·'--· ._....."' portont -~"' don 700 of the Probate Cod lncluallle, end emenc:1m1r11 1-..0. lnO I 14) --• I I I ' 18. 3 t t5 Yorbe L~ .........,..,d.1 bu.ir-ee; Calif -.. of --..1 .. ' •~-a of *d Coull"' the Mii. ''"'1 1·"""1 ' 1' '·'' '"'' ''"" ,.,, '" '1"111"1"" Fulllfton,CA., UotnllNo. 21·1otHlr • B·I< LIMIT"'O PARTNERS .. IP, of omla. 1.ne time f (t .... "'.'.'~ .. :;-"".t ..... v"k ., "--1~ •·--t -~_. rt"J•Ml\IMi h•lltttm t••t111( "'if IJ..,.~ llMl."t,I "ltrwl.11 1; n ,,. ..,..,,_. ""' v. -~ -.. ..-. "'°'''"ti·· ·~'ll· 11 .... ''" .1 ••• 1 ......... , 10, t74t1 Ventur• Boulllterd, En-20901 Chlwwood L.enl, Huntington fl.llna ~ will not expire EXCEPTINO TH . REFROM .. , otl. SEASIDE FINANCIAL CORP ... f,, .... ,."'"'"' '"" "'·"' n..-.111 my11 .. ,,.1N .i.. olno, 0A • UolNI No. 21·17311 BllGtl, CA. 11264t prior to four montha from Oil rlght1, mlnor8'e, l'llln4ral rtghte, ATIOH brfl,u. t.."""•"''"""" ... 1h t:\ "'"e "'°""' tt<11orUljl. 20. lt131 MIOf'IOlll atrwt. Hum· Madi Kllfitlere. 20901 awwood date of the .................. no ntturel ou rlghle, and oth9f •Mid T""111 ,..,~,1~ 1lw1 """"-v m!ldu ""°1,,.. •11•111 ln•n ,.,,,1 lnalon Boec:fl, CA., ~ No. uwi., Huntington a-ti, CA. t2t4e _..___ ,_ .. ,. ~bone by wtitteoe. '*"" 8y: T,0 SE.RVICIE COMPANY, ..... "'1lw1 lhM1 t~nl11 \!Irr •II, I ,.,.,.,J,.J ~II tho lwlp I 2f-ote 1ff Medi Kllfflera ......,v..,, known 11\et INlV be within Of \lllder 8y. ClnCfy lcilloof- toUl..i •• .\1KI \uM """"'' i•••~I·~ lwv• lrrlP'..J m•• 21. 111 t4 BelbOe loulwerd, Thie lttt.,,...,I WM ftled with IM YOU MAY EXAMINJ: the tho pet<* Of !lnd ~ CS.. AM1111111t 9ecrt48fY ,.., ... n ..... ll>•id•IO•· .. ''" ·~••11 -~''""' "''"•"k•• Grenade Hllll, CA .. LIOll'IM No. County O..k Of <>renoe County on f''-k'"'pt bv ..... __ , ... If ICl1bld t=t: tt11 perpeMI One Clty8Ml.1~t "' "''""''~l(J( '"" ll11~1 ... ,.,. • ..,,,,.~,.1..i..,11 111 21·2tn4 Aug.18, 1983. ~ "' ""'"' ...,..... right of ll'ltftln9 up1of1ng C>r9n09,CA.t-'"' "'° 22. 15122 Eaet ~11111 Alt· ,,_ Ne lntet8t.ed ln the eat.ate, endoe>«ellng ' enchtortngln (714)-.S~N , 1,,. .. 11, """~'"''"'>''""rd-,,.i.., I·~"''"'"' ~i-L• Mir~. CA.. L-. No Publleflld Orenge COM Ollll)' you may aerve upon the ex· .,,a remcMncl thl ..,.,. "°"' Mid ll'litlfllhld Ofenoe Come o.11y "'9" 1h1t1 .... ~ .,.,.,,,,..,"'""'" '"' 1 .... ~t , •. 11 n .. t ""' 21~18 P1lot Aug, 29. Sept. 11, 12. It , 1183. ecutor or admlniatrator, lerld or eny oft1er latld. lndudlnO tt11 Aug. ti, a..,1 5. 12. 1~ ll"••t •nd '''"" .,.,, ,.,.111 '"'•'""'" ~1•1 "'"" ~"''' Q . 21713 South W•tlM AYllnUI, ~ •t...-... ,,._.., .. • .... _ 4 f""1t1 •~ .. 1 .. ,,,. "'''" .. ,,.,,., llM' "'" Mt., .u .1., A#\Cho Plloe Vl'dll, CA.. ~ upon ..... a • ._ ·-1 .. or w.:: ex-._ __________ ..._ ________ ...... _ ,i.,., ...... 1 •• , ... 1., •• 11 .... io••IC•"•lld•• '"''" .~.-· No. 21-62211 ecutor or llCbnln!ltrator, and 24. 1ot00 Al\terllldtl om.. Nonh ••••• Wit wh.b the court wtth proof ~r.~~S:r'· CA· Llcen .. "0· t ot ....we,• written l'9Q A Flctltlou• Bu•ln••• N•m• 1111'1'11111 '' '°'"'•U•lh•/•1111"""1<"1"11•1•"'"'1" t&. 1345 Ollennel ll lend ••• •f •••• lta'1"'"tfiat ""'1delire -'\rN"•ilr4 "M"n"''"'''"'''''ff"''"'""" "''"'''''' ~-. .,--St•tement fllad with the Countv , • .,,..,,,., ... .,.,,h1•11111m .. ,,1Jrrl"""''"'" ~d.Oxnerd,CA .. UC.-No. f'OtiCl9 of the tulnc of an ln-' 212i~"l201 North o1e11o•k• J wntory and appra.ilement o Clerk la Y•lld for five yeaf'8 •ft•r Bou1ever0 1utt>en11, cA.. uoenoe ettaa ...... or of tht peu-w h I c h t I m • c o n t I n. u I n " • No. 11~11 tloor'8 or llCCOUnU men • &> ~ u . 00100 Town c.nt• 0riw. 1n 8ect1on 1200 and 1200.3 o bu a In• a I• a mu It r • f 11 e . $"'~ ~ Laoun• Nip!. OA .. UoenM No. the CAllfomJa Probe• Code P bll ti I I If ·· ~ ~i 21~~~U21 e Toro Aoed. E T«o. G.UY D. PIDLER u ca on • nec••••ry on Y ~' CA.. LklenllNo. n .24240 utt'I v ... an•'i a.tt there are cha'nO••· C•ll the ' l• menca· • now llelleCI '°' 111c1 ,,,._.., '°' I" Len al ftAAartment •t the DAILY .~· !:-": ~<~-> For a-41W Ad --......1•a-~ 8W1, ,.,.. t llt• • _...,,, ..,., _..._,.....,...,.,_ "--~ .. PILOT for lnform•llon •net· tMt lhe totel OOl...,.,atlOn tot ACTION (Ill) ltl•l HJ , • 1"",,...... ot..., ~ ano of c.11 Publleh9d °""*" neceaury form1. •tn=;-i=--:noc,-:,~•) II 1119 = Of A :a .. ~' Pail P0ot Au,. 20, 30, Sept. 148 4321 1 11. m etlimei• at •e.oo. = ....... 11 a.1~. conetltl Of ttll ~ . 4889-8 \ •"·••••-VA•" PICTmOU• ...... ,-.cmtoUt au ... u '1CiJfiOUI IUINM ncnnout .,... .. NAm ITA,.._NT NAMI ITATl..wf ~ ITATOmff ""* ITATIMINT The IOiloooilnO PtftOll II doing The IOllowlng l*tOll le dolnO The ~ P«IOll II doing The folowtng 1*.on8 1re Oolng ~ M ; butW-M: bull,_ M; bullMel M ' PATTY CAKES. t74 W. 19th 8t., STANS REALTY. 3101 8. F1lrvlew R08 MOCALLl8Tt;R DIA ANO LUMAN, SANDOR ANO OA888 Ooet• ..... .! OA. t 2t27 ,,,.,Ian•• Ana, CA. 92704 N/OIAL·A·8HINE. 4218 Palrlce. co .. 1280 LOQll\ Ave., Unit l!, Cost• Debbie ,_bWQ, 2821 Harbor 81u10fd L•RoV Standley, 3101 8. Newport ~. CA. t2"3 MeM CA tUH IMI .. •H-S. Coll•,,..., CA. t2t28 Flllrvlew 11'9, ••nl• An•. CA. Robttt v.ien MoO•"leler, 42't AndnM' SanOot 2019 Oii_.,. Thie ~ 11 conducted by: llll 2704 PwlOl1 ~ IMch, CA. t2t83 81. •C. Hunllnoion a..on. CA. lftclMdull. Thll b\/11""41 i. CQn<IUCled by: .,. Ttllt -le concluotect by: •n t26..e ~ RM~ Individual. lndlvldulll Chrla O.bba. 1t7t T1.tetln Ave .. n. •t~I WM llteO with the 81111«d LeRoy Standley Robatt Valen McCallllltt eo.1• ~ OA t2628 • CoUlftt ()er1I of 0rllllQ9 ~IY on Thi• llaltm«tl.wu Iii.cl with the Thi• .Ut-t wu fllld with the 8111 Luman, · 416 Leda Lene. Alig. I . 1083. ounty Ci.rt. ot Orllll09 County on Coun~ Cltt11 of Or.noe County on Atcfldl•. CA. 11ooe '22nl1 Aug 16. 1983 Aug. 24, 1Na. Tlllt butlnell le conducted by. a """"'*' Orianoe eo..t Olll)' nm11 nm1• oenerei p111nerento. "" Aug. 22, 29, s.c>t 6. t2, 1983 P\lblllh90 Orano• Cou1 Diiiy P11blllhed OrtnQI Colet Diiiy Andr-SlndOf 47 to.t.3 PUol A11g 29, Sept 5, 12, 19, 1983. PllOt Aug 29, Sept 6, 12, 19, 1983. Thll •tlterntl'lt wM 11tec1 with the 4728-&3 4922-13 County Clerk ol OrtnQI County on -----------1·---:=:"".':'"'::'::-:'."'.:::""---!.-----------Aug. 15, 1983. NI.IC NOTICE Pta.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICC 111:ao11 PICTmOUI au ... u MAM91TATtmNT P1.1bUlhed Or•noe Cout Dtlil)'I '1CTITIOUI •UttNall PICTfTIOUI •u••H Pilot A11g. 29, Sec>t. 5, 12, 19, 1983. The followlng '*'°"' .,. doing "*'-M: NAM«, IT ATIMUfT NA• ITATIMINT 4562·13 The tollow1no pereon I• doing Th• lollowtno '*''°" I• doing 1-----------bu .. neH u · bull,_•... DID•te NOTICE 8 & L INVESTMENTS. 1300 Dove e~. Sult• 200. Newport &eech. CA. t2e80 THE SNACK BOX, 18971 K1w1I FAST REACTORS 2791Men<IOU 1----'"--.-.._....;.;~.;.;;...---1 Ct .• Fountain v111ey, CA. 927<>e or .. Cotti Miii, CA. 92828 FICmlOUt •u ... u LMlle Anne Smhh, 18971 Kawai Edwerd J. L~. 2791 Mllldou NMllll ITAT'lmMT Oon.ict S.01•111, t4 Salzburg, Newpor1 Beech. CA. 92680 Miii• Lennl. 1907 YICh1 Truent, Newpqf1 Beec;n, CA, 9:Ma0 Ct .. Fountlln Vllley. CA. 92708 . Or .. eo.11 M .... CA. 92828 The fOllowlng '*''°" It dOlno Thie buelMM It condUC1ed by. llll Thia bu .. ntN •• conduettd by: 1n ....... • lnd lvldull r · .,...,,_. u . LMlle A Smith lndMdual. FERN'S LINGERIE, 3408 Via Lido. Thia bull,_ le QOnducted by a gel*'ll Plf1nerehlp. OOneld Slgr•1tl .,.1 · Edwerd J. Low.iy Newport 8eteh (iA 92883 1 n I ~temtnt WU tiled with tha Thi.& tlatement WU ftled with thl K 1t1 a.ck • 4 Orlftwood County Clefk of OrtnQI County on Coun~ Clerk ol Orlngl County on lrvt~. ~. 9211Z'll\, ' ug l2, l9S3 n:229ta Aug. 24, 1983 Thia buelntN 11 conducttd by: II\ Tiiie t11ttmenl WM filed with tilt Col.Inly Clefk ol Oranoe County or Aug. 9. 1913. f222ll( p bllltled o c o 1 P2:nUI lndlvldu•I. u r1nge ou1 1 ly PubllJheel Or1nge Cout Dally Krlttll'I Beckman Piiot Aug 29. Sept 5, t2. 1:·7 t9a3. Piiot Aug. 29, Sept. 5, 12, 19, 1983. Thia 1111ement wu ftled with the Publlehed Orenoe Coaet Dill} Piiot Aug. 22, 29, Sept 5, 12, 1983. 4807·83 19-83 492b-83 ounty Ci.rk of Or1ng• County on -----------Aug 1&.1983. Mt.IC HOTICE Pta.IC NOTICE '2211111 Publllhed Or•no• Cout Dally Piiot Aug. 29, Sept. 5. 12, 19. 1983. 4885·83 FICTtTtOUI aUl lNIH FICTITtoUI IWllNl!H NAMI! ITATEMINT NAiii tTATIMINT The followtng 1*'10n1 are doing Th• rollowtng pertont ar• doing ----------- '1CTITIOUI au.-11 lxl1lnHS u · uslneu M: PtMl.IC NOTICC ..._ ITA.,.._NT COIN -OP AUTO WASH, 4400 ART EFFECTS, aa0<> W Werner ___ ;..;;.;;;..;;;.;· ;...;.;~=--- The following !*'ION ate dOlng w .. tmlnater. S1nte Ana. CA. 92703 YI ., 1102, Huntington &MGh. CA. 'ICTTTIOUI au ... 11 ~ u: T .. tcon COl'pofltlon, 4400 w .. 1. 21147 N.u. ITATDIEO' -iAI CORTINENTAL CAR etlHIC; minster, Santa Ana. CA 92703 MlchMI Anthony Eich, 8600 w. The tOllowlng petton 11 doing (8) VECTOR PROMOTIONS. 11661 Trits-~ne .. It conducted by: 8 erner Ave .. 11102, Huntington bu .. ,_. M : w.n-Rlwt Circle, Unit c. FOUi'· COfpofl tlon. Ch, CA. 92847 GRAFFIC TRAFFIC 8128 E 1a1n Valley, CA. 92708 Piulln• S. Dunn. Preeldll'lt Karll'I Roberti Eich. 8600 W. Pueo Rio Verde. Anihelm. CA. Cllw Chlrtea Smith, 345 UnlVlf· Thia atatement wu flled wllh the .,,,., Av•.. II 102. HunUngton 92805 ll1Y Dr .. Coe1e .,._.,CA 92827 County Clerk or Orange County on BMch, CA. 92847 Je<ry O. Clrr, 21303 Norwalk ~IUI Devld Ludgatl , 345 UnlYlf'· Aug. 18, 1983. Thie bullnefl le eonducted by: • Blvd .. I 121, H•wellan Gatdent, CA. llty Or .. Coe11 M .... CA. 92827 n:no-tl general p•rtner1hlp. 90718 Dlavtd Robert Poeton, 345 UnlVlf· Publlahed Or1ng• Cout Dilly l<•1en Robert• Eich Thie butlneN 11 conducted by· 111 eny Or., Cotti M ... , CA. 92827 Piiot Aug. 29. Sept. 5, 12, 19, 1983. Thia 111tement wu tiled With the Individual . tlllt bullnMt It conducted by: • 4850-83 County Ci.rk of OrllllOI County on Jerry D: Carr g1Mt911>9rtnerehlp. l----Dl-.. ,-1-C-Mn-T-IC_E ___ ,July 28, 1983. Thie tllttm«tt wu llled with the CIMI ChlrlM Smith r..-. nu m1• County Ci.tk of OrtnQI County on Thie .,.,_, ... llled with the FICTITIOUI IU..... Publlahed Or•noe Cou1 Diiiy Aug. 23, 1983. Col.Inly Clerk of Orllll09 County on AMI • n•NT Piiot Aug. 29, Sept. 5, 12, 19, 1983. 'inD4 Aug. 9, 11183 " TA 4900-83 Publllhed Or•noe Coa11 Diiiy F222lll The IOllowlng perton It doing Piiot Aug 29 a~t ~ 12 19 1t•"' DUaJn11111· . '...,.... "• ' ' ""' Pu~ Orange Cow Delly HERON'S INTERIOR DESIGN. PUBLJC NOTICC 4884-83 P11ot Aug. 22, 29, s.c>t. 5, 12, 1983. 3 90.J Al C 4716-83 c~. 928~pon Loop, oet• M-. '1CTmou1 .u ... 11 fltllllC NOTICE -----------Luan• R. O.Oroot, 8195 Kirk St.. NMllll tTATl•NT Rlvetllde. CA. 92508 The foOowlng penon la doing ACTITIOUI au ... 11 Thll bualneae la conduC1ed by: en bull,_, u : NAMI IT A Tl•NT FlC11TIOUe llU .... H lndlvldl.lll, (A) HARBOR HOMES REAL TY, (8) The fOllowlng !*'ton It dOlng NA• ITATllllNT Luena R. O.Or001 REO PROPERTY MANAGEMENT bullneN u : The fOllowll'Q pe<aon le doing Thia •lllllM!lt wu 111.o 'MUI tile COMPANY, 4101 W .. terly PllOI, NEW WAVE PACKAGING. 419 tiu.111111 .. : County Clerk ol Orange Cwnty on Suite 108, Newport Belch. CA. Main St.. Suite 148, Huntington • LA MANCHA APTS,. 778 Sc01t Pl.. Aug. 5. 1983. 92&eo Beech, CA. 1121148 Coea1 MIN. CA. 92627 FU:Z. Robe<t J. Sparr, 4101 WMterly Ronald Roblel, 419 Mein St .. luc:llle Pimental, 778 Scotl Pt . 112. PubOahe<I Orange eo .. t Dally Pl-. Suite 108, Newpon Be8ch, Sult• 148, Huntington 8Mch, CA. ~ Mwl, CA. 92827 Piiot Aug. 211 Sept. 5, 12. 19. 1983. CA. t2aao 9:21148 Tl* ~ le cond\lc1ed by: llll 4831-a3 TNe buel""41 le conducttd by: II\ Thi• bulllMll le eonducttd t>y: llll llldMdUll. lndtvtdu•I. Individual. LMdlll Pimental i-----------1 Robert J. Sparr Ronlld Roblee • Thie 1111--.1 wu flleCI with the P\Bl.IC HOTICE Thi• ttattm«tt w .. nled With 1111 Thi• etaiement w .. n1ee1 wtth 111e Qaunty Cieri! Of °'lnOI County on ,ICTTTIOUI IU-•• County Cltt1I of OfllllQI County on Counly Clef1c of Or1noe Counry on Aug.J , 1983. NA.Ml'. ITATW•NT Aug. 24. 1983 _ Aug. 24, 1983 -• "2ZllS74 ,..,.._, ... _ PUbllehed OrllllQ9 Cou1 Dall)' Tl'tl •o1Jowtno '*'°" 11 doing . Publllhld Or•noe Cout Diiiy Publlahed Or•noe Co•t Dllt)' 1111ot Aug. 22, 29, s.c>t. 6, 12, 1983. bu~~ ~EOOING ASSOCIATES, PllOt A11g. 29. Sept &, 12. '!e~~~a Pttot Aug •• Sept. 6, 12, 19. 1913. 4722·83 834 Baker St .. Newport Vlll11g9 4917-83 1oax. Co.ti M .... CA. 92828 ---Dl---.,,.-NO-T-l-CE___ G.V. S1mbvlllll, 228 Lonetown Pta.IC NOTICE ... .._.." Rd .. w .. t Ragging, CT. 08898 ----------1 Pta.IC HOTICE ------"'----------Tttla bualneN 11 condu<:tld by: an '1CTTTIOUI IUllNlll. 1---....;..:=;.;;..;.;.;;.;;.;.;.;;.... __ ftCTITIOUl IW ... SI lndlvldull ..._ ITATllllNT FIC'TITIOUI IUtMH NA.-tTATW•NT G. V S1111bY1nl The fOllow1ng P«llOOI ar1 doing NA• aTATl•NT .. 'TM following pere<>n• •• doing Thia etllement w11 fllld with 111e bv•I,_ u : The lollowlng per.ant .,. doing ....,_ .. : County Clerk ol Orenge County on MAC ARTHUR TRAVEL, INC .. bu .. _ u ; ,. •BUSI NESS HEADQUARTERS, ug 12 1983 4881 81tctl Str•I, Newpon e..cn. EVERMORE FARMS, 2815 6. 2S7 E, 23'd St .. Cotti Meta, CA.. . . '22:a10 CA. 92680 Hlltaday, Untt C. S1nte Ana, CA 9"27 Publl"*I o..81199 COell Delly Orlando Ootta, 4331 Myra Av-92705 8ttt>lr• J. POOie. 401 w LI Veta Piiot A11g 29. Sept 5. 12. 19. 1983. enue. Cypr-. CA 90830 J«Ty L .. Weugll, 20311 s w '61, Cringe. CA 9288e 4729-&3 Mllke.botta, 4331 Myra AYenUe, Birch. S1n11 An•. CA 92707 Summer L SPMf. 237 E 23rd St.. Cypr-. CA ~ C11ol Anne Rob4nton, 2815 S Coll• Mwl. CA 92828 Pta.IC NOTICE Thia lxlal,,_ la conducted by. In· Halladay. Unit C, S1n11 Anl. CA Tllle but!..-la conouct.o by: • ONl<lual• (11utb1nd & wife) 92705 ..,_., plrtnerlh4p °"4MQa COUNTY Orllndo Oolll Thtl buelnNI It conducted bY • , 811bat1 J . Poole IUPINC>fl COUWT Miika Dolle gen«al p1rtner.ri1p Thie etltemertl WU filed with ,,,. TOO CMc: Clftt9f Of. w .. 1 Thl• •11•-t ..... flied with the Jerry L. Waugh Ceunty Cltt11 of Orange County on t.nta Ana. CA. ll2701 County Clef1c of Orenge County on Thie •l•temtnt wu hied with the ~ 8, 1983. Plllntlll: LAURIE BILL. A MINOR Aug, 24, 1983. County Clerk ot Or1nge County on f'm:ll2 8Y ANO THROUGH HER GUARD-F2Ul2I Aug. 18, 1983, Pllblllned Orange Cout Dally IAN AO LITEM. RICHAR081LL Pul>lllMd Oranoe Cout Oally f'22J011 Piiot Aug 22, 29, s.c>t. 5, 12. 1983. Oefendllllt: WATER SLIDE LIM· Pilot Aug. 29. Sept 5. 12, 19, 1983 Publlahed Orenge Coalt Dally 4806-83 ITEO, "THE BIG O" INC .. R. 4918-83 Piiot Aug. 29, Sept 5, 12. 19, 19&3. -----------BLESCH, JR., &ILL SHAFER. TOM 4849·83 Nil.JC NOTICC sccr.;;~~38~~~8JOHN BEST NIUC HOTICE '1CTmOUI IU..... IUMMONI °" flltlT A.MINDI '1CTITIOUt IU..... rt&.IC NOTICE NA111R I TATllllWT COW\..AJNT NA.Ml ITATl•NT T.I . NO. ur7• • The followtng '*"'°" " doing NOTICE Yov ..... ....., euecl ..... ~~~ ... no P«ton• .,. doing NOTICI °" TMllTll'I •ALE ~M' TM~meyd9dde ........ ......,,_ J<RISKOM ENTERPRISES. 778 Al· wttMllt,...,::: = :-:.:: ZOCCOLI SHOES. 211 'A' Merine ~.~rr'~M:~1c!:~ T~L~ 1;~ • ~2.. Ave.. CMI• M-. CA = lnfof'mettoft bllow. .. Ave .. 8elbo8 llllnc:I, CA, 92M2 SURANCE COMPANY, • Cllttornla '1928. _ _.. ,,... f Mlekey Hergenrader, I 19 341h St., tlon .. T I ,J ..... Donald E.lrl Hewmll1 778 Al-tt you With to -the 1dV..,. o • Newport 8Mch CA 9:2ae3 corpor1 rut1 ... .,, QUV -=Y Ave eo.11 M... CA attorney In thl• metier, you 1houl D•Vld HergeOreder 119 34ttt St c111or Tr1111.. or Subetltuted 8 " ' . do .0 promrtly eo lh•t your wrlll Newport &elch CA e2ae3 .. Truet ... of thll oerteln Deed ol Trutlt r-"""M I anu m1y be llled W M I< te' ..;.. • ., executed by ROBERT MOSS ANO ..:~ephanyN011onNewmllll,778AI· t~· , ,, m () enz ........... Haddlngton KATHERINE MOSS. HUSBAND t~ Ave., Cotta M .... CA. AVllOIU•ted h1 lldo dem1ndlde Dr~t l.::n:':·~d= by: 1 ANO WIFE AS JOINT TENT ANTS, •· Tiiie bullnMt le conducted by: 11/l El trllxlm•; lede dlddlr OOfllr• llmlted partnerehlp. and reco<ded Oeoember 18, 19110 N ~:-..:; 11n ~ • -.,e Ud. Mlct!ey Hargenrader lnetrument No. 27376, In 8ooll ~~ Norfon Newmen .... tleflll9 .. IO .... .... Thi• •l•ttm«tt -nled with tl'tl 13879. Ptoe 28, of Off\Clel Recofd• .,, Tiiie t1•1.,.,,.,,t WM ftled with the lllfomlulon .,_ ... _ County Cletlt of OrllllQI County on ol OrtnQI County. callfomll, and ~ Cltt1t of Or1n99 County on If rov wWI to ..-tM 9dwtoe Aug. 1a 19&3. punullllt to thlt oertlln Mollee of Aug. e t983 Ml ...,.., Ill tNe -"-• ' Oeteurt thereunder recorded Mey ' ' F222llO tflouW do eo ~ eo IMt Publlet!ed Orenge COMt 29. 1981 II ln1trum1nt No. 401'2. In Pu...._.._. Or•,.,,., ,.. __ ..., "-'"" w11tten ,....._, If afty, mef PUOI Aug 29 c-1 • 12 19 1H"' Bool< 14079, Plgl 622, Of Oflldll • ,_,_.. -...... .,.,..., ~, ltled lime · ·...,... · "· • 48 ........ Racotd1 of Mid County, w111 under ~,..,.Aug 22. 29. ~t 5, l2, 11183. II~ .... ~ el 11/ld purauent 10 Mid ONd of Trutt r • 4712-83 to ell WI ........ .., Nie ..um Mii 11 publle auction for CM/I, lawM ~· ..,_ "-ti "8.IC NOTICE money ol the Unl1td Stat• of ~. rtalC NOTICE de Mt.a ....,.,._ 111 ,..,,_ Amera. • ouhler'• check Pl)'Wble _.,., el ~-· ,.._. '1CTITIOUI IU-U to Mid Trull• drewn on a t11t1 or '\• '1CT1T10Ua auaMU ,..,_., .. 1 NAiii tTATIMINT netlonal b1nk, • 111t1 or federal .,,, N ... ITA~NT l-TO TMI .,. INoANT: A The IOllowlng P«IOl'I I• doll!Q Clfldlt union. or I ••• ,. or tederrll , The following perton It doing t llM beMI ltled by 1 lxlslMM u . uvlnge 11/ld lo•n ueocl1tlon doml· ~,....,_ •: -llOllNt ,.. If JOU "'-" t BROWNIE BINGE, 91131 Stu ollld In thl• ltll•, It the mlln en· ~ COSTA MESA GOLD BUYERS, 1Mt 1eweu1t. ~ m• OrlYe, Huntington Belch, CA. 92849 ltlnot to Flra1 Al!*'loln Tiiie In· ·~ w. 19th St .. Colt• ~ CA IO dayt efter thlt aummone I Sheron Collell'I °""°' 9831 Siii IUlll109 Comt>lllly located •I 114 ~7 _....,on you, file with thlt oourt Orlve. H11nt1o01on &Moh. CA. 921148 Eul Fifth S11..,, In fhl Olly of Sant• r Gllrln Vttdult JOM(>h, 1803 Chllll-wr111en reaponM to the complllnl Thi• buelneee le conducted by: Ana. C1ltrornla. all tNlf rlgfl1, 1111• ...... Anlhelm. CA 92804 Un"" you do, your default w111 lndlvldull. and lnterMt c;on~ to Ind now ~ Thie butlnMI te conducttd by. 1n tered on IPl)latlon of the ptlln Sheron C. o.mo. held by 11 under Mid Deed Of Trutt In ~ tll, Ind thle court mey entet • Thia 1111amen1 wu 1ltecl with Ille Iha pr091'1Y eltueted In Mid County ,.,.... Gl9lln Vttdult ment 1glln'1 you for the relief County Clerk of Orange County on and St1te ~b.o ... Lot 168 of Thlt 1111emtnt WU llled with the 11\0ed In the come>l•lnt, AllO 18. 1983. TrlCt No 3529. In Ille City of Cott• ~~ty Clettc of Orenge County on Id r.lcift In gernlthmenl o F221214 M .... County of Ortnge, 8tll• of c~Aue 1. 19&3. ION. tilting ol money or pr Publlahed Orenoe Cout o.11) C1IH«nl•, •• pet map reoordld In .. 11221.a other re1191requeeted1n the Pllol Aug 29, &efl. &. 12. t9, 1983. bOoll 125, pegea 34 to 42 lnctlitlve. "' .Pllbllel*S O••noe COMt Ody pt.int. 4857·83 of Mltc*l•neoue M8')9, In the offloe Piiot Aug. 28. ~t. 2. 9, 18, 1983. 0.11<1: Feb. ti. 1983 of tile County Rlc«d« of uld ~ • 4883·83 LEE A. &RANCH. Cllf'k "8.IC HOTICC County. -----------&y: Htllln M. Olien. Oef>ulY Exoept •II oil, g••. hydrocarbon -<1• fltlllJC NOTICE Publl•hed Orange co .. 1 Oelly Pllo ,ICTITtOUt IU'*l ll eub•t•noea •nd miner.it by wlllt· °"" Aug. 29, s.c>t. S'. 12, 19, 1913. NAMI ITATl•NT ...., n1me known belOw. OIPth ot .,. P1CTIT10Ut IUIMU 4aa&-The IOllOwtng '*''°"' 1r• dolnQ ~ =~r~119 vertgr=. ftbutom ...._ tfAT'lmNT butll,_ .. : ,,. ...., The~ '*'°"' .,. doing PtBUC HOTICE ONE PACIFIC PLAZA II. 7400 wl1h0Ut the rlOflt of 1nlry upon 11/ly \l.iilr-•: Cenlet Drive, Huntington 8"Gh, CA. portlOn of 1he IUrleo. of IM ground !• C A 8 E M A R K E T I N G '1CT1T10Ua 9UllNIU 92847 lbove I depth of &00 fMI f0t the ~tHTERPR18£8. 136 Wett 'flle ....._ ITA~ Bredlro C90IU.., Inc .. 2415 Carn-Pllf~ of •~Of, bOtlflO, \.oc9. lrvtne, CA. 92714 The fOllowtng pereon 1-.i dol pua DrNI. M a 20&. """'-· CA. : mart.::"'°"~ Mh lllbat-=~lng • fllot'nel Bfoc*.it c-. 136 w .. 1 ~ u . 02115 .,'t• Loop. !MM, CA. 92714 LAUN ORY ROOM, 2760 Hit~ Jtt.....c En19'prleM, 7400 Cent• file ttreet d• ... or other common ~ lf'IOlll'll C..., 4137 VII 81Yd . Cot1• M .... CA. 92e28 ~Ort... Huntington'*°"· CA. 92847 ~~o ~ ~2 ~~~ M.m.. Mlrlnl 0. A4')', CA. 90292 Sylllte M, Plckltd, 1540 Elm A-.. Tht. ~ II conducted by: a DRIVE, COBT A MISA. OAU,OANIA ~ Art4tW# lnQ!'am c... No. '· II ...... CA. 92829 general Plf1nerehlp, 92920 I 'louttwMd. IN!ne, CA. t2l 14 Thlll bull-•• oonducted by: 1 lhdero Cedlll .. Inc. SIMI .... wtll ti. mtde Without oow- 1'1111 ~ II oonducted by: • lndlYldull. Th19 1t1tement WM filed with the nint or w1rran"', •"-Of._....... 1191*'11 l*tMtlhtp. SvMa M. Paclcerd County Clertc of Or1111q9 Cownty on ., ....,~ ""•'" .... Tllot'nel I. c... Thlt ., •• "'*'' ..... "*' with the Aug. 1'9, 11183. .. to tllle, pa1111tl0n Of WICUm-TI!le llat""*"I _... ftled with the ounty C19rlc of Or~ County on nnm1 brenoee to Ntlef)' the ""91id bal· ,Qovnty Cterll of Qf911g1 County on Aug. t , tff3. . I Publlthed Ofl not Colet Oll'f ::i ~ :::0 t::::; r:.:,:; Auo. 24, 1"3. • '2l:IS7t P1iot Aug at. 1ep1 a. 12. 19. ttN. 125•7a .22• p1ue tM to11owtng ..... , n:lll'8 Publllhed Or1nge eo..t Ollly 484743 mel*S COMI, • .,,.,... Ind .o. "'blllhed °''fr Cout Diiiy Aug. 22, 29, 8epL 5, 12, 1t83. VlnOM et tile t..,,. of tM lnltlll publ- 9'P1. 3, 10, 1 • 24, t~n.e3 472~13 PmtJC NOTIC( ~Ion of tlll9 NoUoe Of a111: ~1!01.46. PtCTT'hout WU ..uTtCI TO"'°""" ~ MMm ITA~ YOU AAE IN M,AUU UHMA A '1C1Tnout .,_., The 1o1owt10 1*1C1ft11t1 DEfDOFTAUST, OATEOo.c.ntier fltC11nout WM ..... ITAW 1>U11MM 99: 4 1tl0. UHl.08 YOU TAKE AC. ""* ITA,.._,. The '*"'"O Ptr90t1 II doing GREAT REPU!OTJOHI , 23 Tlofj fO "'°ffOT YOUR PROP· The tollow!l'lg pereon II doing -11: .-.,., 0'11111! "4 .. L11gun1 Hiiie OA. EATY, IT MAY lie IOLD AT A Pue-~ 11: CAROLYN'S l!NTEAPAISU, 92987 ' LIC8ALE.1,YOU NHOANfXPLA· DALILA MANVFAC'TUAINO. 1211 1281 Loo1n, Unit 0 , eo.te M-, O.~ llklg9nt 14171 llucltlnofWll NATION OF fHE NATURE Of THE "C" Login A'11'9 .. Coe!• ...... CA. • 9288 Pl::, Tldtln, CA t2HO PAOCEEOING AOAIH&T vou.J YOU tatM C...O!yn ~ Robln1on, N11 1tlhel NuQtnt, t417f lllc:klnotlWll 8HOULDCONTACT A LAWY~R. laeq11l1I A•mot, 7 U 8 . A~., •IOO. Cll\009 Piiie, P1, Tuttln, CA. t2 .. 0 "AST AMEllllCAN TITLE IN· ~.Santa Ana. CA 92701 . t1acl4 fhle buelftw 11 oonduCt*2 by: In-8UMNC!.OOMPANY, I ~-Thia """'-11 oonduOt«I 11y. 1n Tiiie ~ 11 GOnducted by: an dMdlJlle (l'llebMd a wtt.l ~ ~ -.JMnn4ne I.. l..ewM, lnOMdulf. Mdu911. oa~ ~t r Autilottli9d °"'°". ~ AM1o1 c.otrn J. Aobin9on llflel ~ DATU>:~ ti, 1913 TNe .....,,.,,. .... fllllCI w4ttl IN Thia IC~ .... fllllCI with the Thie IC..,_.f Ml Ill.cl w1U1 the JiNlnnlMI.. tllttt c-'lly aarti Of Ormnoe eouniy on on of Ofenot COuMy on Collnt)' CMr'll of °'.,. County on , 14 hit a.,_ AMg ••• 1tu. •• 1"3. Aug. 12. 1H3. 8Slt• Anl, OA. t2701 ,_ ...-. ,_ ~~21 1 ,....... o...,. C01111 a., ~ 0rmnoe COMt Olly PvtllleMd 0rmnoe co.e ~ · 0r.,. eo..t Dlltr "°' Plot A11g 2t. hp! 2, I, 11, 1"3. llot Aug n , 2t, ~ 0, 12, 1"3. Pl1ot Aug. ti, lept I . 12, tt, tft3: Sept. 0. 12. 11, llQ • ._ I' •"._., 471~ 4741-13 aoa- Ml.IC NOTICE rta.tc NOTICE _, • --· 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/Monday, Sept. 6, 1983 Cl I A 1 &L ~~a •.a • THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOUR Telephone Service: Monday-Frida~: 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. Business Counter: Monday-Friday 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M. DEADLINE ': PUBLICATION Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursda y Friday Saturday Sunday Sat. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. rri. Fri. DEADLI NE I J:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. CANCELLATION & CORRECTION Cancellations and corrections may be made on same deadlines' as above. Please ask for a cancellation number when cancelling yo ur ad . ERRORS: Check your ad daily and report errors immediately . The DAILY PILOT assumes liability for the fir&t incorrect insertion cnly. CLASSIFIED 642-5678 IHlft fer Salt IHI" ltr Salt Gtatral 1002 ltanal llt2 w.llAllWI l&YflllT Ill UIYH Tr•dlllonll 3 Bdrm, 3 Bath TIWl ... E hom• on ch~ corner TettllY ltllfftltl on Swth S.vtront. Oen 3 Bdrm•.!) bath•. pool end could be .4th Bdrm. 1pa. EleQ•nt. $350,000 Ooubll gerage. 2 1unny 1Num1ble nnencl(IO. Full petloa, plus 1hared pier & price $550,000 . flip. En)oy beech a nd b1y. tunMt•. and light• ,# o l the P•'t'ltllon It night. *Cote Realty 01fe<ed •t Sl, lOO,OOO. & Investment Call MllY Jank lH-llll Ge: 75Q-Q100 ----- Ddebout Bay&Beach Real Estate IHlllEST OeOghllul f1mlly home. Four bedroom•. ThrM b•th1. Comblna tlor country kitchen and dtr .• Ing fOOm Hudwo•Jd floor1. Conveni.nt •••tc. Newly r 1mo de1ed kltef'lan. Chlld1J•led ~ tom pool Ind 1191 1359,000 . 111-1100 It\~~ ~Rea Estate IOYEll lllllEI Exc.ptlonalty 1nracllve lour bedroom, lhrM bath hOme. Situated on 1 taroe lot 78'1144 ... PIMtant un· oti.trucied view 11 .,,. Joyed from vlrtullly Ill ., ... of the hOme. One bedroom and bath ldMlly 111u11ed for QUMt• o~ maid'• ~uan.,... ThrM c:er garege •. .$450,000 111-1100 Mike your thopplnQ .... 1er by uMlQ the Delly PI- iot ClaMlfted Ad• Do it the easy way- advertise In classified. r. "==' Daily Pilat t.••••tf .. a A.cb PhoN .. 1 S.11 One of the ways homes are being boul(ht. and sold today ts W1th Second Mor,&&ge A second mortgage Is a. method of financing whereby the buyer 1s provided wlt.h an addtt.ton&.1 or second mortgage when there le not enough O&Sh to asBume the ex.lat.Ing mortgage A second mortgage ca.n Aleo be t.a.xen when the first mortgage and the down payment ra.11 BhOrt. or the s&les price. A second mortgage oa.n be provided by etther the seller or a lending lnetltutton . Paymen~ a.re made both to the seller or lender on the second mortgage and to the lencler ot the underlying mortgage. Impact on buyer • Down pe,ymen\ me.Y be no&O\l&t.ed • Enable• purch_,.. of home wl\h ex11\tn' mOM.&141• requlrlnfl targ11 <1<>wn Pl.)'man\ • With ... ump\lon of ex11\tn1t fll0t14.P. 1 fa•Or•b1-1n1.eN11\ I'll.a ta pout bl• Impact on Hller • 8m•Utr down pa,ymen\ enrao\a mo,.. Pol.an\11.l l>u~are • Addl\lonal prottL w1~h 1ni.ert1-l r.otl'tld on ~nCI moM.&141• • fteoe1vH 111 f11nd• It J1nC11n• 1ntmut1on provfdll MOOnd mol'1(640 There are a number or 11tuatJon11 In which th• NOOnd mor14114e e&n CaclUtat.e the puroht.M or tale or a property. Con~t your real oar.at.a expert. to aallt. you. ........... I ........ ....... ,........ .• UMllU ....... , ... 101 Ylal.Ne1M4 &modeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath+ Latte rec. nn . beAm ~. fumiahed, pa\b. $420,000. UYlllE PUOI UYFlllT Specu.cular bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 ba up: 2 bt, 2 ba dn. 2 boat lpace8. Reduced -$1,600,000. PllllllU lllE llUIFlllT Ocean&: jetty views. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3 bath, 3700 aq. ft. Xtra parking .• 1.385,000. FlllllUIS llAIOl llU TIP New 4 br, 4 YI ba, custDm French Normandy FAtate l.2 prime acre hilltop. Now $995.000. DllllUll .utl UYFllllT Coronado laland cuat. bayfront lot. 85' boat deck. Plana avail. Now $370,000 w/trade. UllOWIEll lllE Near new 4 bdrm, 4 bath, lake view. 3500 aq. ft. $440,000. Will trade for a local property. IOUI FlllT llOllE llrrl Prime 2 Br, 2 Ba & 2 Br. 1 Ba. Duplex on xlnt. swimming beach good income. $725,000. Best view, tallest ocean front bldg tri-plex with spacious 4 Br. 2 Ba. each level $1,200,000. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR ) 11 R"Y'"'' ().... N fl fl/\ f, Jf, l'LL SHOW YOU MINI, IF YOU'LL SHOW ME YOURSlll PENINSULA POINT LARGE BEAUTIFUL FAMILY HOME Acron from swimming beoch with fobuloos boy view, The kids are grown and gone. Will ___.-.._...... trade for smaller home or sell. 3 bdrms1 den, family, formal living and dining rooms, 3 'h baths, large rooms all. Top q1.1olity. Come se.1 Of)9n Hou1• W•d.-Sun. 10-4 2109 E. Balboa Blvd. NIWPOIT'5 HST IUY AT $575,000 ffff & cl.or E-Z tefmt . Own.,. financ.d~ 644-1642 cw 675-3772 * HIRIOR RIDIE * Come visit the mosl fabulous view. New custom home ln Newport. Nothing to compare with this 4 bdrm. fam \..l'm, 5 bath, formal dining, 3 frplcs. 6 car garage. Large pool & jacuzzi. Come to the ~t.e and ask for 3 Yorkshire, 759-1931. IPD l&ILY ., .. HELEI 8. DOWD IULTll, llC. MUU4 ot1ta•u AnHIAIU 111,100 GrMI location on cul de .. c. ...Y Jogging dlt- tlllOI to t>e1eh. L111ge lot with 2 bdrm home Ind 1011 ol pot1t1tlll. easy to -• Juel c•ll 631· 1400 1 YIEWt 11, 111,tOO HFt .... TIUP View .. View .. View,.. WonderlUI 11rge bl)'front home wltll " bedrooms end 4 be, form. dining rm, brick p1tlo & gerden. Reduc.d 1g1ln·10 tubmlt ywr offer. Thi• I• 1 fine v11ue lor • "wlterlront home" with 11roe boat tllp 831-1400 lor detlll• and• lhowtng. - WATt HI MONT llOMI "> htc. AEAL ESTME 131-1400 llTllTUI UEDOITIYE IEPllUI" Lovely tr1-14M11 home wtlh step up IMng room, fOf· mll dining, huge oountry kitchen OV9r took• fll'l'llly room Ind pool. 4 011111 bedroom•. 3 i..1t11. Neer 2 golf oour ... and pMI. prkled 1t only 1220.000. Clll for .nowtng. tt41t\tl4 111¥111 to thl• lm1NC1Jtat• 3 Bdrm 2 81 home. Well mll11- talned ind tltua1ed on • qulel 1tre1t, th • lldded-on famlly room m9kM 1hlt home 9V9f'I m<Xe attrectiv.. Alklng S 125,000. Owr'9f wtll hel9 nnance. 831·7370 TRADI T 10\, \I. REAi.TY .In atyte, dfarnetlc 4 Bdrm 3 e.. wtth hMvy lhak• roof, cul1om pool and IP• In multfi.v.4 ~ ---._--•• ------ rMr yard. Loclled In -• ._. q11le1 eeotlon of M... ll..-sl v mr d • . 12 2 a . o o o . Sl)IClou• 2 -Iii. 2-ee mobile 761·31g1 hOme In El Morro. • l.ltllMITlllU Lovely 3 Br 2 8a hOme prox. 14-40 eq. ft, eun..t vleww, W9lll to bMdll Al· tr.cttve nnancino 1¥1111- •b ... Alie for At Weinert. 844·7020 L,_IULUTIR w/11mlly rm, 2 frpk:a, RV HU Ill .... KOetl. Located ~ Loe 3 bdrm older fllTlllY Tu1t1n/lrvlne/St1. A.lklng hOme on huge lot. Elli.t· S 179,900. 531-7370 Ing FHA 1oen et only 1.5% TR,\DI T 10:\AI ~L\1'1 y Peoplt wtlO need Peoc>M ll\llt'I wtlll Ille OAILY PILOT SERVICE OIRECfORY la all ebotltl lntere11 769· 1601 or 752-7373 The 111t111 drew In the WHt .. a Dilly Piiot ClllMlflecl Ad. 14~·M78. lln.IU U11Mt Would you Uke to live tn Ba.)'11hore:s? Outacandlng locadon on extra tar~ lot. All new kitchen, 2 aunny petioe. lm- rn.culate & re-ady to occupy. Belt • 'value near the water IN llEWPOllTCENnR 644-9060 ct Orange Coast D~ILY PILOT/Monday, Sept 5, 1983 _,l.-n,_M1 ....... t ....... s.=~• ...... _, .. • ... •-.1t1 ...... tt...,rli ....... l,_• __ 1_,l.-.n,_1t1 ....... f.-tr ... la=I•,___ '"'" ... I.le a. .... ·ran11lltf ...... !afualaW ·!nm laftp!.W ti W-t1, Vil. ;ltaiiiiiitriii1liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilOOiii2I Ct1t1 •na lOH La1aa1 lt11ll 1041 l!!f!!f lffcll IOll 1e:rrt le1tll ZlH c .. 11 ••u lffi lnrrt a.a.-. Ult C..t1 Mna 1124 la1t. ..... 2T4t1,...;:;:;;,;;,;....--......, tmAU l&TYllW OPEN LABOR DAY 10.... Lvty e..tt>Hilmrnac bftght, 2 Br 2·1ty lwMM. Qaf. 2 Bdrm, hi s::conao. IF 26-35 to"" QrMI HIT&ITll &lllllUU From beautiful remod llWPllT Olm 1 -aet • u-53M180 BE.ST tee 38r 2'ABa. 21rplc'1. lrplO. pvt petlo, nu paint. lrplc, dlhWIN. patio~ ~· ~ ::.~t r~°"'rt 9W~ VA loen: 3 Br, 1¥. t>a. home. CIOM to t>eKh. H•H ..._ .-1r11-• Prolfllllonaltydeco<atad 1 a1350, 7119-1341 Agt. = no Pl1• 1615/mo. garage. ~=· t HWpt, ~ 117M204 Elttra llt~ lot. Clean Ind $374,500. 494-8329 $1711,000 ... FIXEA ... ar .. I YI& Ull.. B COnd frplc lcr En Id )ac:uul deoll AV9. 87~1116a depoelt. Aoen • 1-.....:..-----~· 1 neat. Alklng S 124,800 lllll llYI tloOt plan. 3 bdrm• ~ r• Anoual ...... 3 bdrm•, 3 ~. wfcip.n.,' ~ ~ w~k "f.o t>eeut:t" beech 2 81 cottage l'fP4I gar pvt no 1... MIF to lhf C.M 2~ 2 Oii.'. A•n Landlocked In ei.. c anyon, treat olf muter auue, 3 balha, ntcety l\l~nlln.d If>•· 1680/mo. 545-3115 are reuon1 to rent lhlt 4 aml yrd & lndry: u&o + 2 Br. Apt. Cfl>l, drepee, bit •rt :/30poolyr JJ:' 1 -Rid 'V T I ? full bathe. Incl. llnen1. 40 allp. Br 3 B• hM kld1/pet1 MC. ci.p, Reta req'd, no In •love & o~. r9frlge. n *"' r. , • Super lh•rfl 3Br 2b• Harbor ge, or u1t n $4000tmo. WNtllde 3 Br. 2 Be. v~ 11000 539-8190 BEST pe11. 542-0360 No Pit•. 911()-2875 •1un1. nr OC. o. av ho~oncu de••A."-·· Add thlt enchanted •176000 v erw anxloui UMIULn fllce pool dlhwr f · lmmed 1160-7827 d IPUIUll .,~-P•tlo. tro~ -;;;. dwelling by the ... lo • owner m~lt ..11113 bdrm• ft1g. '842-13211 • • ... 2 Bt. Townhou11, V«y 3 Br. TownhOUll 2'h a.. 841-0238 ev/wtlnd D lfll.lJTI YllW den wlw1tertlll. Many your 1111 of collectlblM. + rllt .. t olf muter eu1t1, Ill· 1100 IJ T WI Lg 3Bt. 2~Ba. )aeuu;t, 2 quiet, lrplc, Jac:uul, gar-lrplc, wet bet. yard, l0t-M/F t eh hOu• w/ A cleen Carmel Plltl on eictru. Only $132.500 Spactac1.1lar ocean front br .. kl11t arM & 3 full ~~~~~~~~~ trt frpk:a, 111 new, $1115 mo. age. No patt. S&SOfmo. mal dining. garage, 0 r P...,.. 1 --....A ........... 11,, .. .., IA•• .. _ a•a1n view from coveted bllha. = lrg 26r, Ale. Mitfitonel1, 1150-1225 c.111131-4984 SJ.35/mo. 646-3115 ~··3 f~k•' tolge "" .....,_...,. -'""' _,_.. _.. southend or Morto Cove. lllH e 1 c Cond Ced Olen 111 ..,_.,., "' expended, maintained. 111·1110 Only $150,000 tor fully $180,000 ... JUST RE· d!:c!:p1•1ur~~~~f~~1 111 s~·50m:ll59o0;3 2 Blrl.wl\k to ahopplng2,Oce1dnl2r0Bnt11~oendo,_,!,n,_13_7_5_ut_1_11_1_nci_.8_1_s-,....t_1_,... ltndecaped & rtnaneed. OPEN 'TILL8PM. tranaterrable 16 rr OUCEO .. ,<lhow1 llkl 1 ' ' ' • ' . • Ult .. 1 1 Pl o, tllftlng 11 '625· tan ' ,. 1' ,....,....,•-S 1289 500 "' lrfden, dining rm. lam rm, f l •-567 1430 24 hr aec gated pro)ect PENTHOU E: nNt • • · leasehold & mobl I model. 4 bdrm1 + den. pool/ape Beaut. vu: ocn, tUtl a 4 br, 2•,.; be. din. rm, frplc, • $150/mo 751.5m · Hunt. Bell, p11v1t1 bllh & Ulliljl ()Uf I 1()Mt\ --------home. ldHI Mttlng lor Ocean view from matllt b. y 11 t... Le... Vall~ 1234 2 CIT gar. 90' lot. Submit 3 BJ 2 Ba, E.aldl, yard, . . entrance. $396. Reeri0ti,ll75-eooO lmSTHS personal or corpor•t• aul11 Avail. to ... any· Sl500tmo. 1.997.3ooo Ni!! !!eftE!!I 3 B 2 .. _ onkld1&pat1.S2000mo. trplc, nu P•lntt drapet/ Walktobeacfl. 1 Br.crp11. ROOM: oear Qoldel'Wt U:llllE 11. 714' entertainment. Extentlve llme Owner/agl. ext 19 I dy, Of ti/wtcnd• ~ h~ leOO·. '...1d & LIM IUL n q>I .. $150fmo. Call Dick draptl. 11ove & refrlge. College. ptlv1t1 bllh ' --...,..,.=,.,......,"=""--nnanctng on Meta Vetd• 3 1ky blue d~ka. Stairs to 11 1-111-04211. ..1d k 11 •3,.. ,.190 Ill llOI 9118 7300 dys, 840·24211 $450. 53a-.837 entrance. '250. VIEW OF Br 2 Ba. quiet cul-de-tac the w1ter'1 edo'I,•· Ao of the above have I C• ------ -glf " I o ce " •·o • evHl wtcnd1 53&...()794 llY I PACIFIC home ott Country Club 644-818814 •2285 ::~t~co,~~~~ltyc=:: ltaltl U•lar•itllt4 EST lee 3 Br totally remodeled, Lataal leacll 2141 RHP female rmmete Dr Loaded with N-CustomHome.3bd, ShortwelktobHch. Gtatral 2202 BHt.Lac• 2240 UdoMoblleHomePark.2 brand new. 1Yt B• 28r1fl281,frpk.w11kto w•ntedbtwn22·26tolhr Glotlou1 view extends amenities. BHt buy 2Yt ba. French doort, LIN IULn 2Br 2L frplc giound tlr B r mob 111 home townhouae 1pt1, D/W, town & belch. l800tmo 3Br, 1Y.B1, on the bcl'l In fu~,~~al~a~~~dh~ $139,900. Call Crtlg. Frpl, skyllte. jacuzzi, . *'°'" lllT&l "* se75 m~. Avail Sept l. No S750tmo, 1173-6030 pat101, kids OK. no pett. Incl. Utll. 493-8533 Nwpt. S225 mo. + 111. lncludee MPlr•ll quar· 631-12118 brick & tlle decll and 171-1100 Orta•tfTltt0rtfl Pit 7l'·898·91111,eny-IUI-•• Sept , occup1ncy. Lrge Studio, Ooeen View. li..tl & dep. 1131·2918, ters fOt mild 0t mom. drive s2o9.ooo. A•· Anaheim 2bt 2ba $525 time· 714-848-7838 9VM. -$1195fmo. F0t rental Ii>-Lrge ~ Vlctorl• Bch 841-3659 Setler ual1t1nce offered sum1ble loan 498-1604 llWPHT llTS B. Park 2br. yd, pe11 $.475 4 bd • 2 ba blt·lnt new llSPIT&L pllc1Uon fl.45.U.ll $4'15/mo 714-497-31113 1-S-p_aci_ou_a_N_. -L.agu--n-.-.-n-r In financing. You mu1t BUILD YOUR HOME on • Cyp1 2br, gar, pets $425 P•ln't lrg .Creened' pitlo High level 28r 2 a. condo. $495/mo. 2 Br. 1 Ba. pool. I t le L 2711 beecfl $285/mo ·~ u1111. 999 this for $750,000, --------spectacultr OCEAN 1114,100 F Vlly 2br, gar. yd $510 '$7501 1150-0473 Kitchen hll Htlng 1r11 laundry room, clOM lo t!J!f &C• $276 depolit, 49°7-6239 846-7171 LIWISTPRIOll FRONT 3 Arch Bay, lee Juat fell out ol eecrow & Fulrtn 1br,utllpd$370 room. ae opening to bright P•llo. anopplng. 149 E. Bay St. 2'Tr'."'"h% 61 Studio ept.1--------- THE REAL ESTATERS Meu Verde 3 Br 2 a. simple lot. Call ownet. Fri ownera are motivated Fulrtn 2br, p1t10$400 4Bt, 2Ba, adjacent to Comm. pool, 5 mlnutee to Tll. ..... 142· llOI 548-21182 Step• to beach, M/F to populer "T" plan, lrg cor-10 Mon (714) 499-3070 ot Ch1rmlng 3 Bdr 2 be G.G 2br, g1t, pell $475 etementary tchl & park. beach. Good locatlon. tnr. 3Br, 2Ba. 341h St. ner lot wt P<>talble RV llC· Tue t o T h u r 1 home, lncludea 11p. H.Bch 2br. gar. pat1 $415 $1150 mo. 968-3042 $895/mo on yurly batlt. 1 •ms Fl• 2 Br 2 S., cpt, dre.pea, nr N.B. $265 mo. Call Ana OMl.Newpllnt,towner. (213)7911-11511. guest houee & speclout Slntn2br wtgar $490 M ary Lou Marlon -aa• beech. yrty $750/mo. Ad433,842-4300. $124,900. Call Craig 11-~200 000 yrd. Hurry, It wlll not lut. S.A. Hur;y, 3br.'S350 °:;''~ ~d~~~r2~~ 644-8200 -5-48-9341, 848-2&48 Wal IC Ing dl1t1nc1 to 631•1..... _..". 1 Curt Hetbertt 11, agt Such a Deal 5br, $500 2 Br.Condolrgldecil. 2 Br, 41112 B Seuhote Or. ..._ __ h. Pool, 1~. 1-n11 •-•L--J1lu• l--... vv N I I ,.... 63 ""' gar 4 POPI yd 4 llm rm $850 631-4381 ---· ..._ ._ ew cu1 om ome n ,.., 1-12..., Wstmnatr2b<.~r,$500 ,545 53&-6190 BEST tee ~ 8 · See occupant. $800/mo. court• & ctubh0\111, g1t- 114' Pll UTI II YI ~h ~~!'~~~11/~~~~ Nice 3Br.w huge tenOld Seel Bch 3bt, 2 1• $726 1" 1 84' 528-9090 age MC gated, lull eQCeM No IOan , ... , no cl<>M ald B•y. 4 Bdrm. 4•,.; Ba. yard $99,000. Huge 100'1now'l898-8826tee QrNta1ving12Brwtg1r• $800/mo. 2 Br. p,.; Ba to home. Female only. co1t. Cape Cod reno-Over 4225 aq ft 180• M u R C H I N S O N 2 er oceanfront wl g•reoe lam hm OrtlnglH nr Townhoute, greenbelt. Non-aml<r pref. $280/mo vated, 1hore m00tlng. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' ENTERPRISES 752 8731 $t250fmo "t"' beech $400 Rent lodl y ...--.... ., ... ~ " ~ B llr, C~I. b1tcony. 911()...8246 ocean view Financing • 2 Br 2 .... nr's.'c''. Pt--,-. call 5311~190 BEST fee ·~2,,L.,..... .... '2~bl ..... ock .. • 10":.: • .1·, 2078 Thur1n w,.111_..._ l0t ....,.,11 4Br-t h11 lo So. llUYllllSPIOUL eva ll1bl 1 . Call IOWfll_..M .. •• .,. ~ -,._ ..,......, t•• 11--a M21HI """' ,~ Baylront.Agl840-1538 Thie outatandlng 3 Bdrm 213/592-3747Agl. --• rL&A gate &recc1r$525/mo Herey1gol2Br2Bactpt1 cloee 10 pool & tennll. --.-• • IN NEWPORT BEACH Houeemllll/UnMmlled bea wlll leaae New Ll1tlng. $390,000. t Br baylront 1895/mo thru-out d1hw9hr lncd yd lle2-8883. 11 .. __ ·-·· Slnglel 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart-Eetabllllhed 12 ~. •IWllllOI* 2 UNITS LlfTLE ISL. OWC lge 111 TO w/20% dn. Xlnt local. Super Inc. paten. Aaklng $390.000. Super motivated. Marc Jacquee, Agt 845-9922 llSTllT IYIWllll 2 Br home + gueal unit, remodeled. no qualltytng. 20% down. 1255.000. 675-9058. agt the u~ost P pat lie~:; lnrrrt le1cll IOet Play• R.E. 1173-1900 l••-r I WJ.ttr 4 l1m hm $500'1 & 1.. ,...,_ ...... • mefltl & Townhou .... • 1 In oc 832-413' I •• ..£..t.. 539•11190 BEST H Tll W&Tll 1 Br. Condo, lrplc, micro, So 1 • 818 anti buyer, Beautllu ly land· * lly frtlt OtMt * TIWlllllE ....... 1250 aq ft 2Br 2ba mobile. g1rage w/opeMr, pool & me r ~ Y Woodbridge apt to anr: 3 1c1ped and "tit tin VIE~I VIEWI VIEWI 2 Bt, 2 ba, pool & dbl ~ar-.1&1111 IULn Hun~,?o~ ~~NJc,rm. e1t1n1, 1au 1 ndry rm, BBQ, IP•· 1590/mo. S.5-3115 'o~n~~.X::"'Rd 11 br. 2 ba, c:arpon, tennl1. :::~~Y~h~k:r~~~ .. ::~~~ ~.B~t2tl~; ~v~: age. $128,750. 873-7 70. PllP IWl&IUUl 3 Ba. trplc, dlhw9hr, dbl 2 patio• 1200/mo yrly. Charming 2 Br. Apt, bllln San Joaquin Hiiie Rd. ~ ~5o YOl,!:'b~I, u~~· garage door opener, and By Owner: 1175-8637 ••~ilt 1 .. n 1100 7141111 .. 171 gatage, lemlly rm. Kida. 673•39091880" 1178 dy range. ftplc, new crpt, 144-1... Quiet, non/amokert. c111 cuatom wall un1t1 In fam-pet• welcom. $1150 Sh0teclllf1· lg 3 Br 4 ba prvt patio. $550/mo. 551..3219 Uy room. Reduced to Back S.y, Adil pk, fBr Wt lane •--'IJ, wflttr $1100 dep9slt. 08113-1so0 lam rm, 1;pld1. grt oceen 548-2830 •CONDOS• $1112.500. ~-1 151 &OT llWI turn. $15 .• 000. ownr wtll ••• Jtlrlr ltlltl Agent, no IM. vu, walk 10 pvt bch. 111111 Balboa ind lier-YO\lng M exec loolllng !Of IM opt Comm Pool Spa $ OOI 548 7539 Cottage type ·1 Br, ulll pd, talllee. 831-4980 F rmmte to ahr 3 br, 2 ba VACANT WESTCLIFF -Boh. Bkr. 675-4010. . ... 111111. fr••• llOO Lo 2 tty exec home, 3Btl H mo. • pvt patio. lndry rm, gar. c M $250 + 'h Ill evallable lmmadlately. f SJ:f' t 2'hBa, wtk lo bch, xlnl Slngle levet 3 Br home fOt $450/mo + $450 MC. wCONDOS• 6:to.04' 545-~&Jo Owner wlll carry all Ct•tttry Leta '" ... tr I H loc;. 5975 mo. lle2-~7 renttl .. H . s 13ootmo. dep. Reft req'd, no pet1. 111111 B1lbo1 and lier---------• HERITAGE . REALTORS r;~:~;. ~:!. ;:,~ Crnt• 1229 ·~ .. •&a • ..!!! Ot 538-7.03 Bkr 752-83113. 842...()350 :'~':e.o~tudlo•-1'1-2'1. ltatab ...... not LITTLE BALBOA ISLAND llW llW llW L·--room home. Atklng Fot "lot 1U. ac>aee '!!i, r ... _,_ But. IUMU mt Speclout fl.Im. Ot unf\Jm. Cute Cepa Cod 2 Br. 1 Ba. looldr:O for • hOUM to lit 3Br. 2Ba. 118 Jade. ,.,_ 1229.000. Call fOf more C&B.BlueSpruoeNo.2, r--1111, 1800 aq. ft. C\11-de-W $495/mo. El t l de. 1850/mo. 3 Br. 2 B•. In beach 1tee metut• $299,000. 1173-5858 B11utlful ramlly home, detalll eectlon Harbor R .. t Wlttrfreet 1 ... 1 W1terfron1 TwnhM: 2 br, home cloM to backbay. 545-9828 Uppel' unttoJc1tage, wtd local t~ Xlnt ref'1. • lalMI !~~g~'!:~r~~·~:r. 142-1200 Memorlal P•rk. $500 ltllttn 111-HOO ~:i~~~r8~~~1• S t2o0/mo. 11'42·3672 Ullll YllTUPTI ~~~1~~1~1~1 1 to bMcil, _5_53_-1_1_13_. ____ _ Pnlaiala 1807 roof, lteeh & cleln. 12.26 OBO. (805) 964•7511 t Walk to the belch 4 Br 3 $485 1 Br. t 81 Apt. Ftplc, 208 Lugonle IEU NI 1 -· auumable financing. tellJlerclll lalMa 111... 2211 lnlat 2244 Ba.+ tam rm. 11175/mo. 1kyllght1, patio, all Tll. lplt Ml· 1111 $450-$500fmo yrty. CIMn. ~=,~=~ h':f:. !~~.7 ~.t9~;11 Marllyn Prt"'1! l Ht [rg 1br 261. fll)i. fUrn. fT1 2 to hdrmt. i7SO::i2800 Avall now. 8 . .-o-8208 A.gt. t>ullt-r~;e Avoc.c:to LIDO DELUXE 2 Br. trptc, quiet petl0t1. 941-22111 4B1.Byowner.S175,000. Cennery4i/Glg; lot f0t ~:·:=.·:~~~i~' WESTCLIFF large, brtghl, TSLMgmt 842-IM12 lrg brictl petlo. $1150. WANTED 2br In CdM °' Wiii trade l0t 11eml of llke NO QUALIFYING new Ret./Coml. 30 X 93 ~ lovety 4 Br 3 S. w/pool & 815·11359 B1lbo1 l1l1nd. Oood value. (305) 581-5560 Low down. 3 bdrm +tam· on 30th Street. ll80,000 On S. Baylront. 3 Br 2 Ba. isor c1ban1. S H~mo. Cell Huge Duplex 2 Br 2~ Ba rifer & quiet 536-5850 lly room. Near beach. 673-3777 lower duple• $1400/mo I A n • w • r Ad 5112 , M1ny xtree. lncd yd, pet New everything 1 Br. Stu-" · Ctrtu ••t •ar 1022 $980/mo. Agt 673-8550 •BAYSHORES• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil yearly ~ utll. . 90 ty 6'12-4300 24 hr. ok. $750. 1173·11338, dlo 2 blockt oft Mnd. Young ladyett~lng OCC H b VI d I On N e.yl•ont • Br 2 Ba I C 2271 ••2."""6 $425/yrty 2131534-1695 would Ilk• to llve wftamlly ar or ew up ex PRISTINE 3Bdrm 3Ba, GrHt commerclal lo-S lsOo/m~yeerly. utll ' 651·1177 II lt•tatt ""' """ °' Grandmother. Prcrl Ownet. S-385,000. Belt USTSIDE $475.000 lee 2561 Clrcie cetlon, Balboa Pen et lhe . Hot d;;Ji Flit 1"75 2-3 Br Lrg 2Br 4-pleit. 720a On 25th SI. 3 Br, 2 b•. yrty. MontloallO lwnhM aree buy ln Cdm.8•&-0096 Large3 Br .. 2behomew/4 Or Open SattSun 12·6. tun zone (207 Palm). Ill.Ma Incl l•m rm dahwihr Shallmar. $495 no pet $1200fmo 640·20311 Cotlee1 6 1~&-5330 Of IOWl.llTTTYIEW ~!r,~ar,~.5~~to~ley.'ncd (605) 682-5541, (714) Good Income-price r• Ptaia1a11 2202 app11 view better call 645-3924,8411-21113. PenlnfBey vu. 2Br lbl 8111-433·9992 200 blk. 4o· lot, 3br ~den. owner ~t111tna~ce 646·6325 duce d t o S • 0 0 K IOW flOIT ic-· 10 539-8190 BEST lee MESA PINES 2650 Harle dplx. lfp, 1 car spice. llftl ftr " ~· 673·2943 lMO .,_ -l ot Ofl!VI: $750 ly 675 6160 3ba, yard. compl relurb. ltJ MoOir ... lt, llttr. l&YllOIEI 1t1v-S J C 2271 BEAUTIFUL 1 Br $525tup. yr · • ltat -i• 1539 000 217 Jt1mlne • Oupleic, 3 br. comp turn. 2 aa ••• If. PAV petlo, pool, •P• IP&O II •• • ow;,.,/~1673·5551 . HI· 1721 Can 646·9603 for eppt =--.---.,.,,,,-.,...--....-r-.r.., lrge p1tlo1 nr 81lbo1 LO 1Br, 1Ba Condo at Oct 1 move In 3 Br 2 B1 TOP le I I ---------Ill A••JN IYtWlll Pier 2 bike to b•Y and 111 OrengetrH Terr1c1 In """"' hme 0., kid ,,_11 1re;.:~24~;o pell Completely refurb11hed Biibo• l.i.od: Lg ovrR• ccctl-t-a"""'•=-... ---""'1""0""24""' -shop• $800/mo 11 o' I lne Frplc A.IC """" Ill 2Br. 1Br upatllre I.Pl w/l10tage. Hl-<Sry. N- il '.'. 1032 11% nxed rate 30 yeare. '°4 Eu t ~ ;"on~ ~rid""' & oil'let u.....: $650 detal 1 539-11190 Newly painted 2 Bdrm 1 wtwood burn';, lrplc a roof S70/mo. 54~ 11T Tm 111111 No loan 1-. no clotJng r · ,. · ... -BEST Alty'" 15 92R 12&)aq 11. 2 yr old, costs, Monaco with GC aumable VA Loan, botl'l 673-5081 gradel. POOi, lecunl• & Ba. 35/mo & 1 Bdrm pvt garage 5 II Irvine WANTED· at1op epaaa Of 1111'1 T• OUIOf 2bt, etc, ur1htone dee view. 14 Rue Vlllart unlll newly painted & t• Studio 1450 yrly utll• tennl1 courts. No pett. Wntalaattr 2HI $435-$455. Utlll paid, Ave LM $100 mo. No 11rge garage IOf mlnOf 3 Bdr 2 Ba, dining ar11 + 2 Condo In Cedar Olen de-OP e n wk n d • 1. 5 . carpeted. 1235,000. Agt. pa1d,'p1tklng. 67l· 7954. S800 mo Call 831-1024 1275 uut1 pa crptd Ill garage. pool, no pete. pet1. Agt 1131-5155 iuto body repair. wlll pay car gar. Good tamlly velopment. Owner wlll 640·1536 759-070• 210 4'1h St. reer. Well plenned 3 Br 2 B1 ate bungalow w11ppl1 & 3 1 Avocado 642"9850 WATERFRONT; ~port up to '$200/mo. Coate home. Selle< will lease cerry 2nd. or sh1red l•ct•t Prtt I 5 C i 1 deco. r cr•ckllng lrptc more 539·11190 BEST POOL, lrptc, Pvt patio, l1le 2Br quiet area. 4 yr1 Mna ~~ ~n9t1~gt2on Bch wtoptl0t1 to bUy IOt 111 equity arrangementa 1110HTll OHM _ lfll rllt detux kltch quiet lncd Rlty lee dahwshr, Eutllde, )(lg 2 new USO/mo yrly ..,u.., · •2 1 mos. Submit on Plftl•l 552-6009 Full golf courae view. 2BR lllWPllT IUll leacll 2211 1750 539-6190 BEST ,.. Br garden •pt $595tmo. 650·19'>e OfUct ltatalt ffU s~~~,,:~i~;;,~~~~~ ~~;/0;,r: ~=: ~ IOUlflHT Pall:>edH apHt level Woodb<ldge cottage hm. ,,., ...... ,.,...... 557"2841 Winter Retltlla. Newport 1117 WNtdM. N.B. 278 10 cant. reedy to go..hlJrryl Baat. le1c.. 1040 price s220,ooo. Broker. Duplex & trlplex, lovety duplex, 380 deg. moun-3br 2Ytba F.R nr lake. =La 11 ltacll 2141 Pooltlde condo, 3 Br 2 Ba. Penlnaula 2Br $800, 3 Br 1385 1q. ft. Sult1ble tor Curt H63er1t>en_t2!~1. Agl etm •Tl llll 844_7424 1pt1 torowner Of renter. taln & ~•n view. Lrg pool $1150 mo. 552-1755 _ carport. )ac.. 11un1, $750. Pleya Real E•t•t• medical or dental. Agent VO )(lnlloc& tln.673-7873 lu~. 2bt. 2'hbe. wf appl'•. Wood"",._ E I t "LI n view 2 Bt, bloclc to ..... $675. 842-38611 1173-1800 s.t1·5032 ---,-------13 bdrm• I~ bath•. lamlly utm-WY many xtru . $700 mo. ,:""""' • • .. n-Wood• Cove B .. ch, ---------2 bd, 2 ba, OCMn view room +extru.$121,800. CIOMtow1ttK,3Br,2Ba. Newport oceen ltont 881 ·2871 coln 3Bt2'hba,lamrm, lrplc balcony.881-0eeo. Private 1 Br. lrplc, pool, laatab1 271G *mOITIYt condo. Sec Ota. Qr•1 Call from 9am 10 llpm lot trl·plex, Pflme locetlon. lndty rm, S 1000/mo. ' patio, garage. No pall. Kitchen. 1 yr old. anpt 8"11-7156. MCluded, patio•. •P•· 1173-7873 ce, ...... Lr mt 840-2021 Ownetl ag1 ';;" ...... ... 3911 w. Bay 850-0eOO So. Cout VIII• 1 Br. lllTD* $ OOO $5000 ...-" comm 11nnl1 & pool.-$500/mo. Joyce Waltze. 1 MO FREE RENT 139, . down. Famllyroom,lot1olp1rit· lUllTlllltlSf BaYfront 8™ Place 2 LI lelC~ 1241 N RT PIER AREA 2 Sharp&cleen2Br g1tden 831-1286 Wllhllhorttenn ...... tvH Great 30 yr loin. lmat 1044 Ing. Bring the famlly FORC.M.4-PLEX. Br. 2 Ba. + boat tllp. ~ Br. yrly. gar, lum °' un-apt. No peti. $410/mo •• ~--.... ~-L--,-,-.. -MfV\Ceeult•.Keepyour 673-3777 Priced to H ll FASTI A.gt prlnc only 8411-114114 $1850tmo. 875-8111 t. cy;,r oc.en vu. 4 Br 2 B•. l\Jm, no pel1. 1113-8640 540-9950 ..,u...,1tt..,.i0iiiiiiiiiii•;.,,....;;•iiiiii• ocverheed low & 2BR 1'hBA $98,000 CAllPUS 1205,000. C1ll Surlllne 1 _ I I l ltOO NMrly new 3Br. 3a., 2 gerege, newly remodeled 2 Br, new l\.lrnlture. next to Stunning large 1 & 2 Br. 2 2bdrm,1725/mo; 1 bdrm. prol...tonll l!T'lage high. 243 !-7~2 .. n.,d.,.,.C.M. VIEW 8.45-6080. -ta tr I t frplac. wet b•r. balcol'1y, 2 11000/mo. 844-80711 OClln, winter rntl. Ba. garden apt, pool, $585/mo: Slept to aand. 881 Oovef Or, Sutt• 14. "..........., Canal front duplex. 3 Br S•' or trade, of equal Cit garage, grdnr. LM Moblle home 50 yd• to $1150/mo.4412Seath0t1 '425 lup710 W. 18th. Nu Carpet/paint. 18488 NewpoflBeech. Heh. on lh• water value. lot et Lake Eliz.a-$1400 mo. 551-489'3 ev. bch. 1 Br• p atio, Or. 1150·7073 THE VICTORIAN. 2 Br. 1~ 241h St. 213-692-2725 • ---83_1_-3-311_5_1. __ _ Rare Plan 3. 3 Bdrm•. 2 be, fern rm. One ot 1 kind petlo .,.... $177 .500. On FEE LAND. ............ (lt4aee4111,IOI) Sherp 48r 2~ be. 2700 aq ft OcMn vlew1 MUST ACTNOWI John Zarvoe. Viking R.E s.t0-5583 r•: 7!!0-9869 4 Bt 2 Be attactled gar 80x120 lot. AV prkng, e1C. $91,500 8411-3388 1299.000 Price lncld• beth, S3200. 990•5964 ctlt • UM 1500/mo. 559--0538 4 Br 2 Ba oceanfront upr Bl wtgar 1520. Ctptl, ..... flOi 4 Br2Yt Be + lam rm. walk LI. llebatt (iiO 11200/mo. part f\lmllhed, 1111111lea t ... '800mo. 9112 nr 51it, w/patlo. water pd. 11117 HOUSE Room no kit BALBOA PENINSULA 400 aq "· Pv1 beth. ~ done. S300mo.1175-7904 ltnd alt 5·J ... Ml ~· ·-1 duplx lumlthed winter [)fpee, bltlna. lncd yard cAINX coVe BEACH tobeach $159.500._ 5 Br. 3 B1. pool. pool Xm theM2,..... 645-2117 Vlct0tl1St.6311-4120.Clll l•t&lut.S250i mo.Cali A-Freme 3 Br. 2 Ba TRADE 20"/o o-thlp· l'louee. Call Mary Ann tall newly ,.....,1d 3 Br 2 Bl ..,----..,..---=-=--..., 1 5PM Bayfront. OtTloel, Piiiot, $124,900. 2er 2bl on 'h acrt for 1131-7370, 545·11136 ree. hee l700 ;;;, 2 Br 2 a. Attraiatlvety turn 2 Br. pvt • · 675-4231 tpm-Dpm p1rklng, J11111torl1I. 3Br.3B1,everypo11. new2Dr car.67S.3022 2B 18 h d w t pool gar ,595 deck,1tp11obch,wlntfK. Fumllhed room, cov•ed ___ 11_13_-_1003 ___ _ upgrade,w1lktobeach, IHHI f--l-LN 1,.}· .. 1 .. !_s';2X·~' 539-llleOBESTtee 1150-71184 jarage, ~rlv11e bath Dealgn Prole11lon1I to price lnctd1 ape & land .. .,.. "" " .,... ' 0 OC"' .. NFRONT 190 '" ...... ..... & $299 950 s.t8-8019 HOMEFOR RENT ~ mfe81i8JIU mo. ......-a .. -• IP-MCflllety DOCKSIDE R.E. lllMI l1i.d 21M $385. 1 Br. Trlller, prlvtll MIUlon Viejo 3 Bdrm. L~01 :'~l:i rwntll $800 Lrg IYMY room. l•undry ~II~~· Point otllc:e. 6.0·11208 on RubY St, beluttlUllY & quiet. gll a water peld. 2Ba. Sn5. Fenced yard ' . "..... t1ct1, rltl r~d. Cotti --------&lllllTB. Y Cannery VIiiage Lot tot decorated 3 Br 2 Ba, tit + MC. only. 497-8287 gerege. Kldl ~ta W9I-OCEANFRONT. Bal Pier, IHffl ftr rtlt Mee& S.8·137 ml. Pllf,.,,.. llAIT1flll -•1Cttna011 otWW new A /Com 1 30 x 83 upper duplex $1200/mo a. 5 come. 8113· 1 · Age'11. yrly, 3 Br. 2 be,~. no Ftple, vaulted Ollllng1, dbl M r.relerred. pool, )ac, tan· Courty1td, pvt betfl, wtl 3 bdrmt. 2•.; b1th1, ....._ on301~Street.St90,000. + utll Winter 3Br. 1 1'h650 dptx • .,.:e, Hit, no tee. pet1. $1200.1173 O garage. pool & apa. 2 n 1, cooking, walk 10 bch, bar; 141C'I. btcllpg. r>hont epectou1 Towne Home ---------673•3777 On Opal St, tuPlt wtnlfK ga0r2•0 t .. mo.9 •1 """h 141CS · OCEANFRONT· Sh.,., 2 8drm Den 2Yt Ba $170 $250/mo. ulll1 lncld. eerv Lag. Bch. 494-05SC! 3 I ,. __ .. Tll9t ••-lllLI rental 3 Br 2 ea. 2 "· re t. lif!t ltacL Ult -... 1 Bd 1'' e ......... "~8 only yra new n ._...,. •~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1133 1927 • BR. $875 wtntef. Garage. rm '4 I -..v "" _.290. 993-4888 m---8-y arMl Tutelul decot· Open Sal/Sun/Mon $1000/mo + utll. L0t1 • ,-\4)8A 3fXBA ~ Nopeta 873-781111 81111W 18th St ----------1195 ... ,_ •ting. quality appoint· 4Br + l1mlly rm + 2~e. + BUY DIRECT FROM Vance Rllr 1173-4062 3BRJ2'.;BA condo. •fc, b.: tr ~ 1 ,· . 64s.'.2739 -Am In CM hll. pvt .,,. ..,..., 11&11 rnentt throughO\lt. 2 car 3 ctr garage, alngle level. BUILDER lrplc rett lg wHher om · •m· Oceentronl/vlew, excep-trance. ba. kltcMnette, 1 L new II.Ill eeMcie omo. atteched garage. Conv• $205,000. Xlnt nnanclng. DETERMINED TO SELL I Ma dryer'. 2 car 0g1r1ge wi lfy dWIMlng (old boarding ll0t1al turn 2-3Br, l1ple. Yll lllEllYE ITJ ml 10 bch. '325 +-$75. uxt30-295 eq ft. Some 2 nlentto pool ar11 & gueat By owner. 553-9202. OUR PROJECT BY Ptala1al1 1102 opener. Poot/Jae •ccet•. hou•:J11 s~;oo mo. lndry, gar. Wlnlet from NEW gated 20 TownhOfTMI 1131·112!19 offloetVl1•. Parkin~ On~ 11•2.500 5951St.rraBravo LABOR DAY Conv 10~1&SCPlua. 6-411-8 1 pm. 1850mo.1140·•78' VILLAGE COMMUNITY. Xlnl nrH....,,&bch,pvtent ~-l&Anan~. • 135 000 2Br 2'LB• ..__ WINTER RENTAL lrg clean $ 0 006 N Ltd .... ,_ ' ..... _Ah 2 -----------.. -...... ... 7511·1 1 or 52·7373 (EntfK Sierra Oro) • • • . ,. • ...,.., lb h w lk 1 875fmo. ·1 r o .,,..,..., .,.... n.. 25th SI 2 Bt 1'h b• 3 Bdrm. 2'A a.. 1800 aq. & ba. No 1m0klng, no garden courtyard, I~ luxury condo, cloee to r ouae. 1 0 Br. family rm, nice patio, ~;·11 r ly. • s 8cio1 m 0 · ft of pure lu>tury. Oar· kitchen $300, 8411-103!\ wlndowt Cllt 7!12~. •Haw V"m'D •-J.EE lllYlllITT PUI bch parka •hopping belch. stor• $525 mo 3 Br 2ba. no pat1, kid• all, dbl g1t wtworkrm & laun-1140·20311 ag11, apu In IV9fY ll<>IM --------~ -VIiiage 11 Marquette ope'.nsunt.'5.Callto ... Incl uttl., no Piii. 606 JoannSt.s725imo. dry.$950/mo.Attoavall. • m11tlf •ulte. dtnlOQ ltttb,!ettll 2t04 flllTAllHLUT Realf.ltate Twnhae. 22oo.q It. 111nt other tlmH 1175-4333. 1175·s-t7l c•ll644-lll311 furn. 2131339-11383, Wlnter.3 Br.vtew&dack. room•. wood burnln( Jlottl nnif0trent bYWli'. tlOOaqrt·xlnttorJ)fofofc. grn belt loc .. nr pool, epa, 233 16th PlllCe, N.B. C11lttr1at 3 Br plua d91'1. 2 bl. <Seek, 1173-03'3 Wu1 Nwpt. 11125 flrep11ce1, micro-wave $l20·up w/kltchenette corner locatlon, long .. __ ...,_ be1ut. patio, 3br, 2\o\ba, ltHll 2111 patio, new ctf'. UOOtmo 3 Ml TO BCH. 4 Bt. 2 b•. 1173..0241 or1131.,.502. oven•. private pttlot a avall.1176-1740 term. gro11 IM. tully ~ LR, DR. FR, 2 tplc, lrg LIDO ISLE 2br 35' Sele or Fully !urn. 2 Br, Pvt bNCfi .. clMnlng MC. Avetl hot tub. gdnr, comm pool L.::&-:ah Vaf. Yard•, g ., d • n" t .. ~:~2 ~ ~~~r" ------· ___ mllrtll. $169.500 owner trade by owner. $339,000 cottage $800/mo -+ utll. 1011. 549•3050 101lduee pd, IOl1r w1r ntr ~ , provided. Elegant llvtn( a I I CHARMING 28r, 1Be 552·8428 211VlaEb011 675-8349 Anll 9112_11 11.114. •bdtm,2bah0uee.Large $1700/mo. 7110-81114. lalMa ~~1o!,5111:'~~~~~l~~f:J .. trL 2tol 1.1do P1n1n1ull·wat1r hOuH, Cott• Me11. Univ Pk Terrace 3 Br LIM ISU 861-9058 yrd, dble /"· CI011 IO 906-395-8874 Pllil1ala 2107 to S.C. Plaza or O.C.Alr 4 br, 2 ba. WUhet. dl)'9f, Otl1nt1d olllce bldg $113.000 Termt 548-8680 Dover model, 2 Ba, Kint Beautiful cuttom Cape Ctrtal ••I ••r ll'f4 achoo11 •hopping 4 Bt 3t. Cenll front SfudlO ;;;;iy a;o POtt. JUll ... , of New 1111., etc. $260/mo, ulll1 $800/mo 873-8030 S.C Plaza condo 2Br t'I• 1oc1tlon. welktng di•· Cod hOIN, wtepproK. •• ::~~~ ~v ~~at Ocean 1'~ blkt. ()eel(: itepe ;:'b.ech, •IOfM po1t Blvd. a eo. of Ser 11\Cl, 120 def>. 8411-838e BAYFRONT BL00.11ASe- b1, pool, 1p1. 0wn 1or tancetocomm.pool.F .. 3400 a.I. iltuated onCdM Cl111lclFullyfurn.2 garage.$1300/mo.237 1340 mo. Incl utll OtegoFrwy.11200/mo Balboa lll•ndHou .. :2bt, MENT· 2500 1q 11 cott of rentl $101< or leta •Ind S 1311,500. Jean lerge lot w/IOvely ptlvate br (dllhel. Hnena. etc), Beat price gotnl S300'• Canel. 075-7•&0 1115·6471 1131·5439. 2473 Or~ 1 bl, frplc. 1260. 111 & 50•111.00taq It. C•tl: dn.. By ownr. 188.800, Lalen 752-1414 ueed bf'lek p•tlo. Peg a. MCluded patio. OW. $850 rentt thlt modHI 111 Beck bay .,.., 3Br l•mlty ,.~ ... Li Ii:: 'TU Ave. Cotti MM•. 1111. Nick 873·2148 Mon·Frl 9-5. 5!16-18211 or77!>-2580 WOOOBRIDOE alngl• groove a brick rioora mo. Sej:)t. 15. 54µ939 1b0d1 w/pool & appl1 ph home LM IN tlon _.. -_.. • LU Ptla 842.....,.4 ataty l lrlYm home, 2br. lhruout main IMng .,... IU ..... 1 538-81~ BEST Alty,.. 11200 Av: Sepor 15° 2 er I be OOMl1 I b:, I Jll! Bady & ooeanl vtew. metr NEWPOAT CENTER. Ful You don't r1eed • gun to den. 2ba, lrpl. Melly up c1tm wood 01blnet1, ...... ~~7424 ' ,_: 11' pd 1""2 Spacioul br~I 2 If 1~ b rm, • 1 amentlat, __ ......... r~-·tl-...... _ "d f .. h ><=!! ..... Circle 1ht1 3-4 bdrm h11 '""' .,....... · v-. ut I · v • '..I • • Promont~olnt $450 -~ ""'-... ...,.,_ raw .. , w en you Qr•dH Incl covered crown molding. Chllr rlll ..,......, w , winter, 3 Br. 2'it 1 h 8 .. CK .... Y C0.,.,. .. 0., 875--4174 be. 1t211. 4 -0487 mo ... .,.. •n• "d •"7" ...... 5. e.o.M70 ~ an 11C1 In the Dlilly pello. Loe. end of qu191 & blflnleten, Fr dOOfl , b•. w/d, frple, l)OOI, REFS renta • Cr Pt• 1 ru-out " .... • •" "' v " ,. " .., .,....... Pllo1 Want Mal Cell now cut de MC. sia7,500 w111 mart>M rrplce, 1atne a s10001mo. ee1-ta32 =,::1~fr00 • * Newly' remod. rron1 to :J er. 3 ea. trplo!. vt9w "°"' 1111. ltacll 2741 ·•131. 842-4300 l •iiiiwiii"91Tiiiiiimm1na•- ' '42·5870. carry 2nd. P.P. ~0·21171 plHttf lhru0\11, • Br •• •art -=-.L 1111 baolc 3 bdrm. All new a d. ck I'" !I I m 0 . IUWlll CdM 3 br 2Y, b• 2 1tory mn191111 ~ ea. f0tmel dining rm. Hv-_ ~ • DRAMATIC 3br :zy, be. cuetom kit. bath, lrplc, 1175-1421, 075-1331 houM trplo walk to bctl '' 19' -·-·~1111~ .i h. . .( /)t:~c.· ••u lngrm.tamllyrm &etudy.S mo.YefY"9i!lfir. Jog 10 bch Xlnt area. crpt,l)elntlnlldel.out • ..:: •• u=: ...... YILUIE S300 +~utlla.175-501S Ficu~~4 ~ Smo. "11u• ~ ~~ J:.:.-~.rJ_<r_;:, __ .. _•_• FNtured on Udo ltle 2•.; Be. N4IWpMt Creet '975 84&-10311/845-eot!I Huoe newtv llndecapad -.. ...... ••-,,..._ 1 1 2 ldrm luxury -------------" ... '"-"""""----- Home Tour. Drop down Condo, compllly IUrn. 2 E lldlocvta 1 11 cottage, yard. St2& mo. 5~ 1 ~M apt• In 14 p1w 1 Bdtm WTll"' T-. Oto apeot. 2 NM -+ ~ •::~ ......... -~. :; Nie !>flee '896,000. Of· car gerage, w/d, pool, Yard lduf1• a.711 + eeo ~Cow pnt'1M 3 9, t30 E. 20th. St . .,,.,...., lrorn 15" 2 lklnn from M/F 10 lhr turn. 3t>r, ..... 2 bethl. w9I ber, ..._ •o ,_ •-_ .. -d• lefad IOf .... by Owner. ape, t.nnfe oourt1. Mu11 7M-2o4o · pool• bHOh fiuo~ cute 1 If, neet & cleal1 MOO T~ from 2'Aba. rrplo, pool, l30 at 4ec aq. ft. C."4. Shown by •Pill. only .... CaN for ~t. balconY vu of ' h!WbOf. with frMh paint. PM. ..,211· t PoOI• l91'1nlt clubhH, nu cpt/pnt Avail. lmmed, 175-1t21 I I~ Cl GIA JI G Is I &»-9850 d~•. 1173-3HI TSL.... Ml· 1MI tmrnac rwnh-. 3 Matr Br. s11oor .... f66..2777 161·95a3. . w•tetfllllt, po11o9 Ou b ~. credit k. 1350 + .,., omoe or a10fe. COM. Af)- . . . . . . . ewa~nd1. LIDO ISL! 4 IA. 3~ ... 21.ABe, ~· patio, 2 car I UT1 2 bd. dn1tr1. m· nloe eookl"\. heatlne peld. utMa. '40-f547 tvlwtcnd pt011. <600 eq ft .11 Haq IPll Tll&Y 1·1 Sept. thr" June 11200/ get. II mo.. 183-tJM NWPT ~ADT"'ti~ area. Vlctotla Cane-From an ~~ , K-32 =· to lht 2 tit tt. t13434&. I " A B 0 T I ·1 Ull ••• • ........... 1'(10 No pet&. 815-1881 ....... Lo 48r, tam rm. tome No dOO•· Avail -4. ctm. Not1tl on to hou•. atoe C.M No Otftoe apeoe '°' ..... : 141 I I Ii I ._ ,..... 1 prO\llOe qu.arfted ~ OOMl't vtew Rant or IN U50tmol31"4112 Mcfadden and.,.., on Pit•. c:MdNn. N/tmllr. H ime lllpd A/C ) W.fllt tn 1at• ec.antront-3Bt, 2Be, dbl tp rent yout property. OC>'IOn. Agt. f4.011N 2 Bdnn. OUl*x Wlttl Oet· McFadden 10 SIAWIND S24Q • ut. tit. 842.4QM ~;=t~rut t~IS Ei I: 0 c T ~ I 1-.· '""""""K""" ••. ::::;.'l::=p.i r.'Ooo~ =;,:l""" ~:::=:=:~ ·~'.'!' .. ':!:..'~.~~ nwr. ........ a&1liJ3.&Lt.: 0 ! . M/~::~t=2!1, ~-;1~~ f'ofr'~ . I I I I . ~·" ""'•h typing '"" '•"•' A .,.. llt-1• l, OC!ANFAONT re arm o tt• •hOpt. Dorl. In NWpl Hgta. 2 Br 1 'A la. bltlna. ~tlo. 1udlo apt •l ttovt l ,_., prof. n/amkr to lhr Adema. " 0 0 r Ly 1~=~~7 ... :.~11 •t mao• --fiiiiiii:""f'"--8e111.1tllulty l\lmlthed 3 Bt. :~~u,e~~:::: 11050 mo. Oall875-4333 ~ no pell 1580. =· :14:.!t10Mt3ra: beaUl1 ~ w/lndty on 154-1°'40. Mr TrKY { ' -,..llU 2 I•. trple, d/WulW, 031·12tt ewtomSif.dtft.281.~ 141-'291, ... ~., "ft0.H70 ~boe OOMn ·~ "= • iHO/up, oarpa te, I .. _...l_l__.l_.1 ......... 1........., ! £!;':;.~£.~r::::f 3~:!·.:trte!:·.~ e:i~~.,°':: ~~":; 1ng-. country 1111, 111 2 1r. 1 L . houeu1 bade w1111e to bWh l9CMlof atl300. c.i.Menor Rot> ~r,-~..:.:: s2111 000. 0tta2 .... 2t4 ::":r::.·:"=: =~~~ .,Pl•, o res*, 11ove: •91.•L.~'~ <e-lcwn> °' "'ltonleeotl,Mt~. !";i!W:~>""''"'' I' r I' I' I' I OOOK816!A.8. 11700.tl'WMO HI Vlc1ori• 81. i4te. ~~"· p~ __ .... lpm. =.ier:;:1,to;;:;;'l~•-~.i1~1 ~.'°"~';:,;,,~,,;::,1;=::;l~l~l~~I ~I ~I 1----'-'*-'20-1 -Ullllll MeM V91'd«....,., i tit. i Deconltor 3 Ir. 1\i bll, '51 .. SH · M•I• roomm11e H .. &Mutlfu~~OUYalt-__ •o ...... i:i._11 ... • .... -.,.._oNt ... • ___ _._. ...... .--.,&....1 Find whit you went In 2 It 2 k fr~, gtrage, ba. Cnlldren & "'9 OK. beeutlful DOif 1ourH a.I !'*'flt t• wttl'I Dall)' l'lnd wtlatyou wan• In nMded. tw WMer, N.I . atM ~ Mon-~. -·· t.m ....................... •1 Dally PllOI Clulllled1. Wlntlf 11000 1175-270!1 18H, no 1 .. 7"4004 vtew. LIM• S.•~2 Piiot Want Adi. ~ Piiot Oleaelflede. tsH & .., ltcM>20f t-5 ---·-. ·-· ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Sept. 5, 198.3 C5 !i-lilr 11111 · llre•l•r ' $1.84 per dav Th4t'a ALL you pay (Of 1 30 d•y tld CaWatt ... J!t tealraeten, ladulail ·-·. ·--..... Cloalu -Lubtap11 Pa1atia1 Pla1ter/lo&lr ~I lenUt ;N:W cat1=:-catGt ltatral Ill 1A•~OTconett.a,..~" ... --•.-.a·"----...... ,.,.... pU§ftmtcAINd ~g/WordPrOQ;Mlng feeing, bar. & formlca"°Aemod411 ___ /Repalrt---•oom-m-, pair. ~t wc:n. com--•• by RICPllld 81nor. I.lo. ~tuoco..111t11xt. 30 yrt. uld<, MIY revttlon1 count.nope. 842--0881 & ,.id. Llo'd., ·bOndeci, Topped/removed. Clean petltlve prio.. Jobe lge ........... IUlll'IUlll, 2eoe.«. t4 yrw of happy NNt. Piwl 546-2977 Reuonebll. 851-1041 In IM DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIEC TORY up, new t.wnt. 751-3470, or email. 751-<>870 Jon We dO thrOfough worlc. Re-.......... CUJUtlJ. · lni.For .. t.55M 139• ALOHA Prof GARDENER ll•ble Ind REFS. With l.And~remodellng, 1~:-~~e:s~1 14 Pl ... lat Varab~ Wtrk "mPlm'RY: EJlpert 3 ht lnndat HOITIM a. Apt CfMn.Up, ID&lll * PAll1'm complete oerpet end clean up. Sprlnkler H., D f 141· 'flH HOME VXAf.lsR WORK Pc'!-., a~J1?1~ ~7~9. M:iy dogaf Grooming . YW11Mdd, 1Anogt.o, !,• .. ,• Mtrowlm', Etc. Gary 8-45-5277 PTL ~:."::"b'l'LL ~oi~ tY9ttmt, computer or flll.m PAll1UI WATER HEA TEA Speclal Doore. Rell , Bert, etc. __ .. _ ... __ .., •. _ .... _....., __ .. _,.. edll, •to eny 11. Teeohllr , laallat 540_5054. menu.i. Prompt1 neat pro• POOIPleetlf•*Plirnac. * 20 yrs exp. 876-4318 * Remodell-·'r. Un'"'ue & 21 yra ev"'. 540.28.48 Trun hlul-e-way. --------11 yruxperMlnoe, f .. 11on111. 836-7149 •Faucet1•D1apo1al1• Wla'tw "'Na II Unu•"al ~ 1 t~lllty. i------------=-F-=ree,..,...,..,•...,..,..,t.,...904,...,...,,-=·8=5=85=-=--i DUMP JOBS & HOUSECLEANING Uoenced, lneured. Lloyd'e "1' • ... ....... nded s SMALL MOVING JOBS GOOD REFS. EXP'D. Landcupe. flAUTf Plll1DI Drlllnl cleared from .5 & WHITE wliXRD ~l~bo ~~j G0~-8314 ,.l>rrw.ll'f!11l"'l"""_..., __ ~I AIF~~-~ior.~Attt MIKE 046-1391 Oladya 54g..o759 714/597 • 7822 Prompt. n H t Pro· S25 anytime. Repelrt. WINDOW WASHING --,---------115MXLOXC6UstiCXL •bout our 25,000 lawn HAUL-MOVE-REMOVE --JO_A_N_'_S_C_L_EA_N_l_N_G_ eolllct. feulonell. 836-7149 851·9004MIM432-0500 "The only m'tle 11 DO IT NOWll ~~~~::~neta Small Jobi & Repllrs 1pecl1I. Call anytime, Furniture, Treth, Tr... Cooking • Erranda • & All Renovating • Rototllllng CUSTOM EXTERIORS P1Jt~elttl1. 11 QUALITY" 1•2026 BUI> 552·9582 840.0844 (MlctlMI) 903-S415 NORM Hlhld Outlet. 540-1287 Sprlnklere ·Clean up1 & INTER. Rea&. flt ... Fr.. C.uatllat "Lii the Sunahlne In" &SI Pll l&llllA Panel·Pltlot-FenoM. 35 Dive 842 ... 853 .. t. Steve 547 ... 281 -SUNSHINE WINDOW Your Deity Piiot ynl • ..,. Jerry 54M413 lltctilcal C!Mn Upa -L.andecaplng LT HAULING . MOVING NEWPORT: Exp'd tlou... Bud 5411-5285 INTE"IOR . EXTERIOR Rel•llonatllp recovery, Fie-CLEANING 842-1549 Service Directory .....,.. ---"J b IO.-.-Hauling · Tree Trim Rental Clean Upt, Jon keeper, penonal & lndl-" view, ~. Revllellze1 ________ _ ._.,,,.,,_, 0 •. nn""9W, ELECTRICIAN: Priced Fr~ •tlmat ... 842-9907 AH: 8192/731 2"18 Courteaty .. 11m11ee .,._, I .. I ... .. 5 I'll h very window In Repreeentetlve lhelvea, partition•. Low right, fr" •tlmete on .,...,. • • vlduel leMCe. xlnt rei.. .. DON tM•-47118 .--at one .. pa .,..0...,4 4 wu e i. fr '4t·Mll eat. au ratll. Steve 731-8311 large or tmlll Jobs. Lie. • ... , •••• ! Wlllfff GEORGE'S CLEAN UPS LINDA 840.6581JIHI[ lff••• ltmct youc{aJ~~:· ~~d1~:5 outl ~~~~~~~~~t!~!!i!!J~!!!!!!~= 396621 873--0369 .. owlnQ, Ed~ng. T··•-• & HAULING. No Job too Quellty hou11ole1nlng BRIC.R'\JmRK: Small Jpbi. INT/EXT. CALL JIM,. '"°"~~~~~~~·I·-=::_:_::.:...:....:.:::__:.::..:..::._ = Ctiatat C.ac11tt · m nonln .,.,...., 11 896-000B • N-port, Co111. Me... 111: 1110 -Cuatom reeumea/cover c;m;;t.Muonary-Block LIC'D ELECTRICIAN monl · I 0 to 125· tml · thorOl.lgh. reliable, Pet. lrvtne. Ref1. 675-3175 le1teratJob ... rch ltatt Law Aa~ Wall-"utt. work. Uc. Qulllty wor1c/Reu. rates 54,0.9707 Btalt Cltaallf 494-02~ RALPH'S PAINTING tlpa-Call COS 673-1107 "',_ _____ ""' __ '"""&tYeWto.o--•--""--1 .,._ TOM 631 5072 1 Cuetom Brick.Stone Int/ext. Reu. Llc'd, State law requlr• ttlet all ay-Perklng Lot #381057 Rob 873-8094 • .. APAlllll UIHIEI ROBIN'§ Cl4JING Kea1H1l• ltrticn . Block-Concrete. Llcid. Free eat 841_35a8124 hr l.Hfllt con1r1ctora who pertorm Repalrt-Sealcoatlng 11 •Electrician· New/Repair 039.5035 SERVICE• a thoroughly Ref1. Fr" eel. 549-"92 ·--11111--·-.. ---1 work over $200 Including S&S Aaphlt 631·4199Llc Concrete, muonry, II· All t L . lcet LI lea llou . 5-40--0857 IRONING JOBS WANTED. 12 YRS EXP: Nwpt area Huber Roofing-all types labor and meterlela mull ---------1 worl!, foundation•. Block, ypee. ow pr · c. JESSIE'S GARDENING c n 18· my home. Exca111n1 • .....1 I'm amall my prloel ere New-Recover·Deck1 be ll<*!eed. UnllceNed la~lttlal brick. Llc'd, 530.5013. Free eatlmat•. 831•2!M5 Compl, clean upa & gen'I *BARBARA'S QUALITY work. Reterenoee on r&-h•IL imalll ' 850·6477 Ron Lie. #411802. 548-9734 contractor• etlould 10 ' AtgY IITINO Clall• C ELECTRICIAN: 20 YRS melnt. Free .. 1. 540-8035 HOUSECLEANING quest. Phone 64:i·5470 -ABC JloVtNG-,., I •--t I 1 state In their advertising. In my home near Victoria, l rt EXP. REAS. RATES la.. U Call aft 4pm. 536-0694 anyt me. Qulck·Carelul. Low rat ... P1ptrla1 -" If I Contractort and con· Cott• M.... 642-8-482 cfiild oare, my Mesa Verde 846-7802 • ,. Crpt & Window Cleanlng Lie. 1138048 552--041° Farthing Interior oeslgn ltmcff eumers. contact Mery home, lull/time. Pref. new r i .. Home Aepelr..Carpentry Prof. rMYll• at , .... rates --------•A· 1 llYlll* HANGING/STRIPPING TYPJNG/eookKEEPING Orondl• at 568-4086 with B!0b5}'SIFttlng&ln •• my ~f""'A· born. F\efa. 54S-9231 ara tart flalRilt Cablnet&-Efeo.Plumblng CALL BOB 904 ... 126 IPPllTllITT Beatquallt". 25yr.a>Cp. VISA-MC acou 873_1512 For lndlv./aml bullneu eny questions. Contrac· .. 'WV meQn.,. a. F·--'n"' DON....,.. "14" kn""~I o"tfl wh.,.. you ' H /d /wk ,,.,, ""88 tor'e State Lloenae tun place to play & learn ,. t to 1 ...... r ......-.. • It -.1.1.1.a/-.. ~ ""'" " ·· ,... CompetltlveratM. ''WE G .. LS"'HOULD r 1Y • .....,..,0 Bevetty848-5189. . "e:_rlatcrllr ' AtnrtelqeuepfUlcrnkl·tuuf.reret&todredel'. Home Repairs -Carpentry ff--,_,. UM reault"ilettlng DeUy l.ilc.T-116,428 730·1353 H .. NG,..TOG.,ETHER" Trff i:=iCt Board. 26 Clvlo Center ..,. Plumblng • Carpet. F\efa. R~FS. Becky 841-228 Piiot Cla1tlllad Ada to S G O EGE "' O 9'HTI Plaza, Room 690. Santa ... kl!Hllia• Conetructlon 'R' Us-~5=843-4 •ti 13t·Q!J3 CALL FRED 902-2443 EXP'D HOUSECLEANING reach the Orange Coaat TARVIN C LL 839--073 Anytlmel llf91Yl/Pllll/Ull Ana. CA 92701. jo"i~~~~..-r~~~ A I *R od*Add' CALL MABEL, market. STUDENTS MOVING CO. Free Ml. Ron 645-2537 ---------Full __,.,; my nome or epa ra em n1 All types of Flnllhel your ONE CALL DOES rT ALL 89.._ 1421 or 638-8332 Phone 642-5678 Lie. T 124 ... 38. Insured. Have tomethlng you went your omoe. Retired -35 24 hr emergency eervlce Home or my Shop. Stave We fix 11. breatt II, buy It 641·8"27 10 Mii? Claaatflecl ld1 do Find what you went 111 SELL Idle ltema with a yr1 experience. 540--4002 Lie. 334714. 855-0860 494-8937, Fr .. Ell or haul It. 548·6009 Clllllflecl Adi f5.42~567d WATCH US GROWi II well. &42-5678. Dally Pilot Claaslfleds. Dally Pllol Classllled Ad • la1ilff1!PJ. 4114 Belt Waat.. SIM Belt WaatN Slit Belt Wut!f SlOO Btlt WutN SlOO ltlt WaatN 5100 ltlt WaatN 9100 excn\ng 1oct'1m1th bJil. t>Muty Dellverv per90n for flower HP-11111 IEllUL ISlllTllT llEOEPTIOlllT lale1,.rst1/laucer HOIOSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA Owner moving. Bual. xlnt. EJCCttlng new Salon, open-shop. Over 21. 30+ Now hiring prelllf• for Experienced, for buay P/T evening and wkndt Mature. Full/time, for Mobile u111t loaded:.~,._,.._ Ing In Cofone del Mar, tire/wk. Xlnt drlvfng R• hind Ironing. Mutt be clinic In Newport/Coate New P 0 r 1 Be a ch Balboa l1l1nd atore. 2 way radio, tchool a .... 1. hU poaltlonl to offer. cord req. Apply In per-metlculoua. 1000 No Meta. Beck office, book· Mercedee-Benz Deal-Apply In person only Red~f4.900 Hllr1tyll1t1, Menlcurl1t1, son, e.46-DOll3 Cout Hwy, Lag. Bch. keeping, In au ranee erthlp. Apply In pereon 10-6pm: 226 Merine Av. Ae1thatlclan1 Mekeup DENTAL ASSISTANT 494-4044. llnowtedge a mu1t. Salary only Jim Slemmons Im· .,...6-,-__ ------ swl I POOi C..__, __ , Artl111 A11t11tant1 S.. commenturate wtth ex-· . 0 1 s a..,,, ~But1~'.C:a come 'part of thl .belt. Hun~lo3n31Beac9 h HIT/lllTllS perlenoe. 031-311911. port•, 1301 ua I lreet. Commlulon ealeeport0n Tuesday, September 6 Mua eree, no exper Confldentlal Interview. ..62• Experienced, fM Newport Npt Bell. with trailer boll ac· ARIES (March 21-April 19): New outlook featured in nece11ary, wlll train, 71.C·040·1900Tuee-Sat, DentalA11t Beech Waterfront Re .. llYU/lllYIR lllllPTllllllT ce110ry~exp«le~oe. $55,000 lull amount req. 11 am -1 pm. or HA 10111 teurent. Call 875--0474 ltam11 Atten Phone1, typing, order ~~~~11~ w~~~~ai!~· connection with employment, dependents, health. Romance is Wiii net $40,000 +. Cell 714-676-5259, Mon -Fri, Full/time for fun office. Hooael<eeper, 4 hra per lmii 0., desk. Exper. req. Cryatal 714-840•8805 also highlighted, you'll get to heart of matters with "special" collect Mon-Fri 9-6PM. 5 • 8 pm. Back & fron1 office exp. wk. s5.00 per hr. H.B. Needed 1mmedlatelyl Creation•. Ctll 031-5"4t4 ,,.---.-,:----=--:-:- member of opposite sex. Leo, Aquarius persons figure Atk for Tim (408) Wm ITTLJST Aek for Nancy, 8-45-7580. Mull read Eng. 962-3257 Mutt be rellable, hard aft 6 pm, not before. Sandwlcti Shop, C.M , Prominently. You'll get JO. boffer. 867--0 11 1. Wlfollowln°N To~ Pav ...... llflllTlfFIOI working, Valld Dr.Lie. RECEPTIONIST NEEDED caehler 1 !-~·73wkdys •-t • --404• B B 1 ' 951111 llllllllPll 850-1370 CaJI this wt<nd lor ..... ,.,vet ho•nltal. ~~-M .SO hr. 64tr03 TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Emotions tend to dominate -••ti e -• -••ut. •on. Non-emoker. ExpetlellQI 1 1 ....i N Be "", ..... ""' d d h tow-...J-romanti'c liason. F·-1-mo......, for tet & 844-0861 pref. N ...... t Ctr. 844-0611 Uve n o Y pt. h 11111111 perlence helpful. Part/ Sandwich Shop, Irv. araa logic is pushed asi e an you rus dlwt _,, ·~, -... home nr ocean. Lite time .., .. & weekend•. needs relleble per.on. Protect self in emotional clinches be aware of security and 2nd1. Alto wtll purch di .. Blcycle eerv tech. Mutt be lllTIL IEOEPTillllT hlkkpg end after achOOI Cert. Nu rte , Aldu, Apply within: Newport 955-1247 or 971·1739 ultimate goals. ,., ____ ' Cap"'"""'m pe' rsons ficn1ro prominently .• count paper. 4114-8937 qpaurta11111.~-~"..~1 ," ... w•.2.' Full Time EJ<n.rlenced u-tupervlslon of 13 yr old 3:30-7:30, 3-11.30, 11-7. Harbor Anlmll Hoepllal \.AUMXJ • ...., &---·-_,, ...,.. daughter for working Part-time. Country Club 125 Mt1118 Dr c M ' llORnllY Hunch is valid trtlHff, anty. Apply In per.on 11 •l•l•nt to our rlQtp-mother. Some 111ea & Con11. 5411-3081 Cell " · · 10 yrs experience. heavy GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You'll gain valuable in.for-T.D.'i 4021 2148 Newport 81\'d, CM. gg~t~t. ~= ~-~I~ wknde. Must have car. Mon-Fri, to em-.C PfY't. R.l IALll llDT enorthand required, ex· ~--I I ••ma CABINET Sh 1 fll Y Student pref. Sml lalery. for career poehlon w/amlll treme accuracy. Interest· mation concerning property values, security, possible pure • ...._, • , -op o ce am. 546-<&553 975.2120 •v•. PARl<ING-VALET8 but leadlng commercial Ing arid vtrled work of land or home. You'll be with lively, vigorous people who will ~II• O.. 1H. ~f.P· 8:'g~~1z~r·D':'!tt 1111 UIAlll IHllmPEll F:;:"r':'J'~::. ~ brok•age t1rm. Degr• N • w po r 1 B ••ch help you celebrate special assignment. Sagittarius and another ~re'.. ~~~~tt&2nd oriented. PIT $5 hr. for Sell Beet charter or-Full, Part-time. 41 l'!Mded. be neet. dependable, pref, exp«. not neoesa-_e_1_1>-_J_s_s1 ____ _ Gemini play key roles. R.E. ~r~C: Bd RM.ltora 860-1755 ~lzatlo.n. Experian~ No and So Org County. h•vet<:' driving record. ~l~~~i~:~lttr~~ llORnUY CANCER (June 21-July 22): Individual who !tad been a e.42·2171 5-45-0811 OAllPll llPllYlllll Goodlr:h =: .:e; Car and Phone • muet. ~u~knd~~ ~~:""P~ to Salee Menager. 350Q Corporate headquertera oompetitor could now become an ally. Short tnp may be WI llYTl•t----·-_ __..•nlcal evn·, Men•· Call 750-3954 tor &p· -encour~ to E. Cout Hwy, Suite 1. for •1•te-wlde Investment ..s-_. .,....,, .... polntment . Dana'• "~·~· -vvv Coron• del Mer. Calif. Mrvlcea firm. NewQort necessary, you'll begin rebuilding process and you will be on FOR INFORMATION CALL Mtture. reaponelble per'· ge<lll ex~J pref but Hoollekeeplng Inc. ltPply. FM Interview call 92825. .Bea<:h. ExQ81141r\I cer-lid ti nal f ial d Seo . T Leo Tll lllllllm ton• for PIT employ· not requlr.... ob ref•-on-'ruee Sept 8 btwn Opportunity. •llh di· more SO emo O • mane groun · rpio, aurus, ment. $4.48/?tr. Marlr111 encea • mu.t. 876-9060 HouMWlvee. 1tudent1, etc 10AM-3PM at 658 ... 822 RESEARCH ANALYST veralty and ch1Jleng1. persons play paramount roles. Ul-1111 High Sc~. Huntington -Full time and P•rt·tlme Relldentlal r .... rch firm Mutt po.-. top level LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Be ready for ch"'"""e, travel, variety WIDOW HAS ••• tor Be.ch. 803·8571, Ext lrhtr /Sale Tr•... t«nporary help. Typlalt, Pert· Time Cook· ex-eeek1 lull-time employee, executive aecnitarlal ex· ·---'6 .. 238 Mutt be 18 yn old. Valid cuhler•, ticket tllUlft, 1>8(1enced. Npt Bell Cof-L I I lltll ti ha and major financial opportunity: Gain indicated through T.D'I , 110,000. No credit · Ctllf. uc. Good driving r• llghl conttruc11on. Apply lee Shop. Call e.46-6909 oca " • mu ve perlenoe. Call 553-094o ~1..... · · · t;na 'd to h · tes check no penalty Alto Carpenter Helpef/lebor cord. Meet •n"'"""rance. In naraon, Mon-Fri, be-between 7 • 3 tor Inter-own cu. Med/dental Mon-Fri, 11-5:30. rea ..... ~,. wn~, CO~WU~-f 1 ea:i on':.s ~uf ~pp~ lend On & buy Sl0,000 Cullom H~ $4.50 hr. Fr ... ay St~all for lwff~ 2·8 at 1780 view. g:~J~~. Cotta Mate SECRETARY/EXCUTIVE your uruque ents. em 0 opposite sex Y unp • TD'• @ Denlton A.Noel. &40 ... 3511 appointment. 558-0343 Monrovia Ave, Ste C-2, PART-TIME.COtJnterhelp, Eitper. PIT. Lacuna Hiiis says so and is sincere. 813-7311. Chlld cere/haekppr. DRIVERS full & part-time. Coat• Meta. Call be-, 1-3. Gery'• Oelll, N.B. Aellaurtnt d•Y• 213-666--4000 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Cycle high -take initiative, be Btlr WaatN 1100 Live-In. 1 baby, muat Apply In perton 298 E. tween 2-e, 64&-3966 752•5401 Lori'• Kitchen Inc hit Ille evetwtlnda. 714 ... 92-1494 confident, realize that you will be at right place at right time. f'M 1peak En~ll•h . Ret1. 17ttl St .. C.M. 8.-46-3804 hMHHr/Ollall4Hrt Parl-tlme following opening•! lllllnUY Domestic adjustment is on agenda, you could obtain genuine A Non-tmkr .. B.6l6-l808 Drlvwl Mature, floneet & loving, Exper LEGAL SEC-Baking & Food Prep-"Frlday"type bargain. where art object or luxury it.ems are concerned. Libra ~ Cleanlng People wanted. 111111.. 111 lllYlll Englllh apeaklng, non/ RETARY, 875-0200 eretlon worker•. lO •m • with ttrong typing. spell· l A Great Company, good Mutt have valid Calif Oriv-tmoker. Refe. Own Iran.. PART·TIME FACTORY II pm. Mon· Thurs. 8 tm -Ing and dlctaphone skllls plays unportant roe. -A pay. ahort houre. Cofone del Mer IMO 2308 11:30 am Sun. All appll-ne9cied tor bU8}I medical LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Obtain necessary privacy, real.iz.e AIElH IUllll •'• llo, cl"' 12 lie • ASSEMBLY-ChooMyour canll muet be ne11 clean dl1trlbutor. Mint be well 966-1300 for appt w/IChl bu• certificate. Infant care, oor home. hrt al Hartx>r Blvd & and depandlble Apply that being alone is not same as being lonely. H06pital yisit could Wilt lH'll cierlcal Hewthorn• Chrl1tlan Bick Bey, mature perlOn MacArthur Blvd. Factory. between 10 em . 12 noon c:r,;~d::'d pr:i:ur~o bepa.rtofacenario.Lookbehindscenes,realizeyou arecapableof WHTlt PIT Light Bookkeeping. Sctll, 18835 Brookhurat, w/rafl.545-8815 Goodplecetowork.Clll or 2"" pm. 3077 Sooth Bet\elltt Salary nego· expresaingaelfinuniqu_e,compellingmanner. 1 1m 31 year• old. In my Apply In peraon. FtnVlyll62-3312 lnllde ...... Trade lhow J1nanf0.540.,.777 tor more Harbor, (Harbor 1t Car-tltbla. Phone Ml-2865 SCORPIO (Oc 23 N 21 ). F . bl l t first year Into Health and Marg1rlt111111e, 2332 WMt i•-iw dlapl•ri MJea w--+ rlage Drive), Santi Ana. bet-n 10.12 noon t. -ov. · avora e unar as~ Nutrition lndu1try • 1 Cet Hwy, NPt Bch., -• · ....-979--0747 · highlights emotional fulfillment, romance, outlet for creative made "°,0001 The MC-1:30-3:30 pm, Receptlonlet, Secretary comm 111on. Bright, wlll-PAAT-TIMEpollt1on1av111 11t•lr9llf/llllfO bill end Jr. E.lcfow Otflcief. Ing lo work hard. working w/chlldren K·8 W.U OLlll _, capabilities. Relationship grows stronger, responsi · 'ty in-ond year doubled! I drive OlDl--T Seltrlet cornmenturlle 031·5115 grad .. In before & after . Immediate opening In our and " 'trn t" . part f . O Mo e picture is I new M•oed .. , I h111e 'wr•• with ew"""rt-~•. M•·1t l<lhOOI program1. Call Newport Stationer• hH • purchlllng 41\d dlatrlbu· c:reases a comrru en 18 o scenan . n y two beautiful llomM In S1000 mo. 4 d•S' wor1< A,........... " llYllTllYllST Amy al Orange Cout full time po1111on tlon department for an bright.er than originally anticipated. Cellfornlt end one In week. 714/64M117. Alk hive proln11on11 •P· Alllttlng In operation of YMCA 642.91l1JO. 111alable. Wiii train. Mr. experienced perton with SAGITTARitJS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Finish rather than Hewell. We have • for Sheron. Neer J. peerance. Call 840;-8040. corporate mall/1tock Emmoni. 863-1200 excellent lyplng11<11111nd initiate project Proft;!Sional su_perior is impressed will soon groond floor opportunity Wavoe Airport. alk for Jeckle. ' room. Dellvenea. oper-Pnt 0.ltrtl SALES a pleulng phone per· · f b k·~-h hi h uld nhance' backed by company Olla HlllW ll•rtUY etlon of machlnM, lhlp-THlllltlH Earn $300 to $800 sontllty. Variety of other flash green light or rea uuvUg W C 00 e your training. Call Oarl. 7-3 111d 117 M V de Corona del Mar omc., plng,reeelvtng.Heavylltl-LeadlngPHtControtCo. part-tlmeperwkworltlng generaloffl~dutlee.Ex· reputation and financial standing. Aries, Leo, Libra persons play 714-891-1372 Conv HoeP: 00~ c::ier. bright mature paraon Ing Involved. Eltperlenot l'!Mda route tecl'lnlclan In comfortable air cond oellent benefit• and work· key roles. . . . . . *• * * * CoetaM ... 548-5684 needeaforOrengeCoun-preferred. Newport fotateady)ob.Entrylevel office, 1urrounded by Ing condltlon1 with a CORN (Dec J 9 Tak lin tlea 2nd otoe.t & friend· Beach lnveatment firm. polltlon. we train. No beeutlful glrl1. Aepe Mii growing company. Apply CAP~ . · 22-an. 1 ): . e U:Utiati~e, open es 10 ACCOUNTANT llU.IOTM lest company, type Own carrequlrtld for•· exper. nee. Call Charley advertlllng Item• nation In peraon et: of oommumcation, get started on project w~ch will~~ you a 4 day week. Smell ac-Imm FIT opening evall for 50WPM and have deelre renda. Cell S53-0940 TuMll-12.1179-0021. wtdeovercompanywatt1 THE JOLLY ROOERINC. wider audience. Focus on education, publishing, distribution and counting office often tntl'Oltlc Mlf motivated to tldvanc.. Xlnt beneflt1. Liquor Clerk needed. No PHONE SALES tor car-t llne. Company furnllhel 17042 Gillette Ave knowledge Of 'mte ...... atJ.onal law -·-~~. Leo plays importan• work variety. Attractive Ind. lite typing & good Ring 6"7-5025 Uk for ex...., nee. Pert time Job. ...-leads & dl1trlbute1 caah lrvtne. 714-5"8-0331 • ·-• .. .._...., .. .., • ..Mic I f .. ,d 0 C ' • tttlll .,.ul Id I. ....., cleaner1, 6 hrt per day, 2 bonute1 dally Hlghelt 1 un enpro . .,. g.11r . ape&K1ng Ir • ., r . ynn. h87o5u88re •• negollable lhlftt.980·2310,11-3. comm plld In.town. No lff~ttary/lff,lu, ro e. Airport, Exper. thru trial Selary 1750 to •900 I e.crow -.,... charna backl Comm I Artltt Arm In 'SJC AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You learn truth concerning b•l•noe or I/chg bkkpr. month. No exp ~ llllrt••iu Lit-••-Pllmll IAUI no ,.wv.. · Temp till Feb '84 Pose financial status of one who makes numerous claims. You succeed 111·1111 ary, wlll train. Contact -n ..,. we11 .. t comrnerclll print 1 PIT morn 11 1 • Lynne 556-3110 2 needed for Newport for car rental egency. Cell Ing ,· butlna" for,,; lllT TllY ~~~rl exp only Ty~ through unorthodox p~ures, your interest u:i ~t ma~rs Accoulltlng Cook, relelt poaltlon. Ho1t-Beach Area company. Janet, 85().1180 manufacturer 11 Mllllng Alk for Brian Doyle Ille phoM. M3-WO · is fanned and you real.i.7.e that you do possess ability to perceive ULllA UY OLll P 1t 11 1 x P• rl • n ce Excellent benefit•. Send quallflecl HIM repreeen-(7t4) 630-4140 --·--...,...,,,...--==--- f ture ._.. ds ·Retume to: A. J. s .. 200 IWmUltl 1 ti 11 ted d . secretary, PIT. 70wpm, U ucn · preferred, Appty In P«· No Tu1tln, Suite 200, 1 Vet, r 1 exp. e-Selle-Hardware, FIT poe-dlc1tphone tor 1 person PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Play waiting game. Let others llHllt Ofertl aon, 9·3, M-f!. Me.. Santi Ana, CA 92705 Re-All around malntanenoe ti~ Sen~'~,:' o~ In· lllon In retell hardWard olflOe. Cell •fl 8. leave reveal their hands -someone "lrnportant" is going to provide Pert-time weekend•. Verd• Conv. Heep., 881 aumea mu.I bl recel'Yed manforle~a~ ~ul I t~.Co •PO tf::· •tore. S•• Steve, qu1lltlcaU0t11. 7CI0-8304 you with valuable information. Key is to wait, to observe and to ~;~,~t~p~~nf';! Centef St .. :::.:--· by September 18• 1983 k~ab:!.':n 111 1 ~~r nRlverelda, c: ~~:~116.M~o. 128 plan "master strategy." Legal matters dominate scenario. appointment be1-l II ... _.,._ m1111n llRfTUY bulldlng traclel. Xlnt 92502 • IEOlllm lllll am _ 5 pm, Tuetday Muet apeak Ind reed Eno· Buty office l'!Md• FIT Nlary & benefit•. Pleaal /•-.a.... Stiff Meture peraon fCK rec· Offlc .... tall 2,14 through Frldey, at 11111. nave trentportatlon Exec Sec. Requlrw S/H. donotreptyunleeafUlty Prqr••tr --1•• lllllOlllPITlll rNtlon area. (WMl\ends 11 .. ltrial Lflt I ftui Jl04 8-45-5000, e>Ct 521 end be flexible. Country Stet !yplng and good Of· qulllfled. PleaM call for n-ftnanclll eottWere & only). Call 64&-9142 ----------lfatlll 2t20 C Club Cotw. 549-3001 Call ........ tkllll. s·•ary ..._, 844-0509. development In OIBOL. Mature pertOn wlbu11. deya; 845-2439 evet . ...-... A~ b'""' o c Air Foond: duck In oat• An-Ing <>-·1oe tele-F 0 "' ,,... .. ••-v •• t he-•wp & d--computer exp. 764-4303 ......... """'-ouv. · · • C II & Id ti"' ...... Mon-rl, 1 •m -"pm. Contect Mr. Byfne • .... ui ·~ -· .......... llO'Y/IEOln port area. format dellgn 3975 Bl ch MeN. a en .,, phone operllor. Oreve MAINTENANCE ASSIS· BID Software, 957-4040. •H ••-•••• 1howroom, hlghly up-2.oeo aq n. r ' &42-3839 yard lhlft. Experience 1 66&-3110 TANT· Se If·• tart er -rs -Take cnerge take peraon graded spaoe & IMll ~o~~· !~3:~. FOUND: Gray cat, VIC mutt. 382 3rd St, St• c. ..-.. ····n FRONTOFFICEentrypo1-w/rnech, epltltude to ··-, PPIT,..,1~3 .. PMrvlnd~lltyk,ltcf~ le11lll4l11eltttil11 nMded tor buay reel ... 1vall. upto 4000 aq ft. v Legune ~h. • .. , -ltlon. Looking to be ll•t w me ntenenoe o -.. .. • '""' '"·lff•ff, •1tt ... ate late ottlee In Newport C«ner er .. tol & Redtllll, 541•5032· Harbor & Hell. F. · h II d 1 eople .. water 1y1tam1 & cleanup. 5-48·11 81l 1ft 5. -.. • Beech. ldHI working ..,..... rate. 751·59811. a_ t 3002 548-8284 INIY Local deity newapepw 11 "° 1 ange w P 1 4 oth• faollltle1 11 the PIT ..... p. In • out PhOto. :r, l1ewl1qt tf condition•. Du11e1 In-v--naU81C111tl I FOUND· ... le _ .. ocol•t• Meklng a reeponall>r. typing, & number• llcll I r ,,... .. I a. t. NEWPORT BEACH ..-,... DVISOA* : .., "'" lllllPlllH __,, 10 run ......... ,__.., Call 967-819 t. Kerckhoff Merine Lib. (A lrvlne. Car Required. "ll•ltfa , .,.,,, elude typing, nong, uM of 000 u•; •SPIRITUAL A Lib red collar fem mix Growing rtlln mfr. Malla ....... ~.. ¥" ... ...--.. feclllty of Cal Tech.I c amera knowledQI pr.t Ii-nee, hl·T-ie,· computer. Real Ett11e 1· aq. ft. Att'11Ct • Advtc. In low, marriage & Gotden Retnever recteol· ulea profeulon 11 credit operation. Outlet Full time, 40 hrt. Some OutlH Incl: Cuatodla H0\1'1 1o.4• 867-0161 · •.-12 Ferelt IY·, .. , exp. preferred. sa11ry Wall Maintained, Modern bulllnell. 1175-24115* 1., tern ehep ,.;1x pup w/knowleclge of potting & Include credit epproval, nlghtl a. • .-end1. Wiii work & under water • 41 commenaurale w/ex.per. Bulldlng on Quiet Street. SCR'M·LETS .., blk/wht, male •h•P oeptutatlng to cover So. eollectlon, end ltaternent tr11n. ~any benefit•. m1l11t. Some weekend P/T lllll Uctll ltatlla, Call Bruc. Bar11ml1ri. Al8lgned Parking. Ger; ft Hulky mix. grey/brown. Callf. Polltlon °'*' Im-proceulng. !xper~ Apply In jJerlon only. Mr. work req. Call Luey at 0emon1lret1ng prodUCI• 644·7020 :JI. I Av• 11•b 1 • NumetOUI cat• • kitten• medletely. Benefit• avail-In newtpaper or tldvertl.. Wiener or Mr. Jim HI,,.. 1176-21159. E.O.E. M/f:/H. I n I I 0 r • I . Make your lhopplng .... ------~- 6-<6800/845-3323 'NSWERS 1vall. N-port Beech able. Salary com· Ing lnduatrlH 11 de· teln. Jewel• by Joaeph. Salery/bonuH•. Wiii ler by utlng tile Delly Pl· WANT ACTION? .ul.". ft Animal Shelter. 125 M... meneur•te wl••-· Cell •lrable. Benefit peckage 3333 Brl1tot. C.M. M•n~t train. 903-3107 lot Clu.tfled Adi. Claallfed Ad• 642·5878 J......... Bat Dr C •• u"-3•55 ,....., lnetudel c:omc>atlY pa.lei lll aalAIWlY lntal1 2911 ~Fondr; .. . .... .,.. v Merk et 082-2404 medical/dental Ind Ute Fill TI• PAY llWNIT llAlll 188 sq rt: 2753 e. coeet TODAV FOi.ind: M. Doble. blk/t111. AmlTllll lnaurance. PIHM l«ld PllT·Tm Wiii 11now11\teMewtng for o. Hwy. CdM. Avlll now. 8oM to dumb NOratary: epx. 1 moa .. blue harneea IYI a i••s ~~!:"'~!~~ "-t. Opp.!'rtunltl•• ·~~ pertment Manaigen.. St .. 720..()373 Tuea lhru Sat. "Vou oen ftnllh typing & Ind. 84~900 I ,. " ""' .._.. ...,.. wltn the LOI "'"""'.... tlonery/ Elecltonlca/ th11 letter tomorrow. 5 P.O. Box tlHO T""" Cl~u1111on 0.. M•Jot AP«>llenoee. Fl.x· C...trelal You've med• enough Foond Patakeet. Call to Companyl•h::f 1 girl• CoetaM...,OA.92620 partment In our 11>1e Schedule . TPI• ... 'all -11 mltt•k• TOOAV " Identity. 720-150e ewe. & llUY• 97 over to f!quel()pprtnyEmplyr door·to-dOof' ,,.,...,_ a----offwl excel--· travel US & Hawaii rep-o ....,.,. ' ........ ., --~~"!""'!""'!!'_.-... 1 -a-u-88-T_A_NTI~A-L-R"'"E=w--A=R=o1 Loet: Golden Retriever r...ntlng IPOt1• fllhton Mlle r:::::"'' uwwin-lent beneflte. lncludl~ UAll.. for return of metal eult-Pu PP Y. ''Go Id le''. & e11tert1lnln1I publl· Cuttom C.blnlt Mlktt, =mlleton. H: I:: =~0:::.c,y!. ':',.. Generoue tenent ltT1prove cue containing art ot>-Ad1m1/Lek1 , HB , oatlon1. NO EX· dependable, Plard· • 2PM, or 4Pf;t . IPM. counte. Appty In peraon, mtntl, 050 to 4000 tq, ti. )toll. No QUHtlOn• 536-8703 PEAIENCE NECES8ARY. wortcl~. &co:•· M••• Training 11 provided. Tueec:lll)'·'ricf•y. betweel'I offla.i. t .90/tt. 2488 lltled. 04~ 1"3 Of c.ell Lott· Lrge white Afgllen ntlo --peld training .,.._ 1" 11 Potential to tern taoo t 1· ti end 3-6. EOE Newport Bl. C.M. Ad 1749, 042-432t 2-' vrc·11l1h/MC>nfovle.C.M: program.Muttbealngle, llLl•ZID ptuaper .... Foranln-i-------- 842-3490 hre. Fewlt11Qt.Rwd031-0338 embltlou• & ready to penon. 1~~-tervlew. 0111 (714) -·-SPlop/Store/Offloe co-~ 1 ~t I,.... ,._. tten todtYI Conted Mra I " M ti 1 .... 7 2.., •• -t 1""'· UlllD ,_"' 3llO tq tt or 1eaa "; -_,, REWARDLoetc.itoocet, Hytr 1164~45, TUM., :;:;.;: HI~ UqUOfn •0 -.-.,.,. ~ S.COO-teOOperweelc Coete M. e-2. 54e:7249 ' long Plalred, Newpor1 Wed. & Thu,... 10-& only. 416 e.' 17th St. COeta ....... """' L.Mrn futeft rowtna In- er.et., ... Me-3t20 AUlO body pet9on, eiq>. Mete he Duene. Helplf. Mutt be Met, ov.try In U. , NatTonel l .. utrlal f N 1111\ ADS J ,....... 1112 Mu.t navw own tooll. · t1uttey & atite to th!M. Cell Orgentutlon ••l*ld1~ ....... IHI uunu Buty IPlop. 408-8461 ~ 8andwlctl tlelper. st ..... ?lt ... 22 fltn V•I. ~*'~ ~, .. NewPOf'I Beech Lido Can--ME FREE ~~CCMl'='C" bentctno 11:30 AM • 2:30 PM. 11 _..... M2·8Tlt ~ Vlllege ..... 3250 tq Joy t-40-4710 (24 twa) • lllTI... end over. lud'• Sui>. Imm ,IT ~ IVtLll--m;--·--exp-""'Own_t,_oole.-,-1 t Of commerolal uflll'. Cal: MC -vi.a . Amer. bpteM Poeltton ...,....,.. for ""' marl.,.. Me..a237 Ible. lk"Y office need9 Moe try domattlo l OtOUnd floor. )(lrt wide time exper'd new 90011 DIMwty pereon WflO Ill• to deal Jepeneee mek• Brad door plu• 2 loadlng Mt-1111 DIM-rep, exit wcwtctng con-...... a_t with peOPtl. lntry ~ 042,..115 • dooke, ~ off etreet a.ohefOr/~ect• dltlOnl & ben9fttt. NlerY ""''-l)Olttton, no exp '*· ______ __,,....,,..--1 Pll'lclnQ, u le. 1.50 I IQ OfflOelllt1~Pertlet commenHrate with .. Ill\~ o.ytiw Conteot RouAnn, .... h. Nf'lN. Call SyMe, Tll WT llllAll exper. For eppt call for TN~-· ~ '884110 ,._,gooc;ltl*el PelGan •Propertlet lnC. FOUND· '-bnmhmt • r. Marcla/Arby 494·M7-'. lwW9 ~ WNt ~ WoncJ ~.~Pt. 1141~2-1101 s•; m• bllc I.ab,. 3M53I, IA-INI 10! ::r.,~c!::'-"-· ot 1:opplno, tloM at 41~ WANT£0: lfl09 epec11 « ..,_ bllff & wtlt Cocker iPIAITUAl Ai"AbiHdi O. vi 111 7 11 ~ ......,,lpl ~ lerge gar9 for minor 8PMleil (MMY), Orange AcMOeln .. rnattwa.lAM, Cedlleolto~ .,.::,,.,~~. · • 1 Dall1 frllot OJauttte=d You don't~ I tun to aufo body NC*f, wlll ~ Coun1~ taoa. ~ m•rrltoe a 1>u11neu ~ ttia ,tld ACJe.. To pt• yow ed, "dr .. t•t'' _,,.,, you up to UOO/mo. co.ti lhedl Anlinlll 9'Mittet. Al9o couneetlnQ. 111& Aoll 'trn oft me tnllftt.t Trade your Old atun ror Olll ~MT• • • a piece en ed In tl'll Delly Meet or HUnttnaton acti. t28 Melil Df'lw. O.M. to. El Camino ~1~ With• et.Jiited Ad new ooodlu wllfl • Ctwlfled Ad·V11or 1M1ip Piiot Want Adil C.-no* IMll .... 1~21 ' M+3e58 Clem. Uo'd. 4t2'•7ne. C.-Nowt 142-61T8 OIMelfled tld, 142.atfl yGU, I~. Newapa~r KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! AGES 11-14 EARN lP TO $75.00 PER WEEK . Wt now "'" 15 ~ tor c:irc 111Ctf bu¥1n to •ure rtldtts Tiit a,.e Coast Oeilt '1lot. Our crews stttl •I 3:30 p.m. and wor untM 8:30 p.111. Wlftdays. On Slturdly, wt I work • few lllOft hovts. You wl ttrn meny trips . ' end Ptlt-.s, ~h eertllrw JOUr own m:l -~ . , . llltlt .la !10 rmt or ~n IMol . If fOll trt lnter•ted. plMM Clll Mt. hrl I ~ MIA (714) 548-7058 COD( • I -) I ~ ' -~i - .. Oran e Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Sept. 6, 1983 TODAY 'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1V~ 6 DtlCOlor 10 Entr' - 14 Hewallan city 15 UK money 18 ShlPattta 17 MINC>Yrl city 18 Foretaste 20 Banners 22 Culver 23 Physics units 24 "Mighty Rose" 25 Light color 28 Tender area 32 Craft 33 Shield 35 Probe 36 Biting fly 38 Blase 40 NV°S'E membership 41 Rowing crew 43 Adult llllles 45 Supped 46 Worthy one 48 Variations 50 Oceans 51 Mikita or Musial 1 2 3 52 Rush 55 Aooflng 59 The antis 61 Tobacco kiln 62Glaclal ridge 63 Kitchen tool 64 Ceremonial 65 Skin; pref. 66 Rabbits 67 Once more DOWN 1 Small plant 2 UK river PREVIOUI PUZZLI I OL VED 3 Scotch group ~~~ 4 Verse · 5 Ornaments 6Camplng gear 7 Insects 8 Here: Fr. 9 Honey precursor 10 Soothes 11 Study hard 12 Dorothy's dog 13 Crock 19 Annoyed 21 Region 24 Also-ran 6 25 Summoned 26 Mr. Palmer, tamlllarly 27 Grooms' parties 28 Hindu guitar 29 Beg 30 Roundish 31 Heads: Fr 34 Common- wealth - 37 "Orphans of--" 39 Preordains 7 8 9 a ( ' l CONNELL CHEVROLET '."\.,.ll .1rl••• Ii . .i ' I"' I \ ,, ~ " \ 546-1200