HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-01-16 - Orange Coast Pilot\
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ClllT 1111111
M C1 NOAY JANIJA~Y 11 l'lH·l 0 H At~ GE C 0 UN l Y I . A l I f 0 f< N I A 2 '. C. f "4 ' -
·Coaat
Talk about strange art.
This 'canvas' Is made up
of bullet holes./ A2
In a surprise operation,
San Clemente border pa-
trol agents nabbed 500
undocumented allens.
/A3
Huntington Beach
column ls Biii Harvey
takes a personal Interest
In a heavy breather./ A8
Nation
President Reagan says
U.S. military buildup Is
aiding world peace by
making Kremlln wary./ AS
The Civil Rights Com-
mission says It will be
Independent of the White
House./AS
Calif om la
LA county turned out for
a variety of celebrations
honoring slain clvll rights
leader Martin Luther
King./ AS
World
Authorities remained
puzzled about the alleged
kidnapping of a U.S.
soldier by an unknown
anti-nuke group.I A4
U.S., Soviet leaders meet
in Stockholm with hopes
to strengthen relations .
/A4
Features
Subtletlesabound In the
home soenes created by
contemporary l}rtists in
"Anxious Interiors" at the
Laguna Beach Museum
of Art./A7.
If given a few hours of free
time with her husband,
one of every three mar-
ried women under 35
would rather make love
than do anything else./ A7
Sports
Vail, resting In th~ Colo-
rado Rockies, ls aver-
itable winter wonderland
for skiers./81
John Mahatteywlnsa
thrllllng two-hole sudden-
death playoff at the Bob
Hope Classlc./82
Entertainment
Two more stage pro-
ductions join the January
parade, bringing the total
to 11 along the Coast.I A8
Business
Bank of America fore-
casts an average 1984
Increase of 5 percent In
the price of commodities.
/BS
Financial columnist Syl-
via Porter takes a look at
how tougher new chlld-
support laws will save us
money.JBS
INDEX .
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Crossword
Editorial Page
Entertainment
Hot09COpe
Intermission
Ann Landers
Movlel
National News
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
State NOWS
Or Sttlncrohn
Stock Martceta
Tettvlalon
Th.at era w .. ther
World New•
B4
A3
85
B8-10
810
A6
A8
89
A8
A8
A8
A-4
A3
87-8
81-3
A-4
A8
86
A8
A8
A2
A4
·Teen arrested in killing
By STEVE MARBLE °' .. .,.., ...... ..,
Police caught a murder suspect
near the area of the slaying in
Newport Beach today following a 12-
hour search.
Brent Louis Vangsness, 18. was
arrested about noon today in connec-
tion with the stabbing murder of a 29-
Copters
flying
again
By CHRISTINE DECKER °' .. .,.., .........
Airspur Helicopters Inc. was flying
again this morning between John
Wayne and Los Angeles International
airports after being grounded since a
Nov. 6 crash injured six people and
resulted in suspension of the firm·s
license.
Jade Briggs was one of the passen-
gers aboard the Airspur helicopter
when it crashed near Long Beach.
This morning he said he was giving
the craft another chance as he awaited
a 9:40 a.m. flight
"I have no fears. It's a more
convenient way to get to Los Angeles
than anything else available. I'm
lookinJ forward to it," said Briggs as
he sat m the I 6-passenger helicopter.
Briggs, a product manager for
Raytheon, was heading to Los An-
geles and then on to Sacramento.
Linda Mcintire, a stewardess for
United Airlines, wa1 the only other
passenger on the 9:40 fli&ht.
"It's exciting. It's my first time in a
helicopter. r11 take anything that will
get me where I need to go faster," she
said.
P"asscnger service actually resumed
Sunday with eight flights after an
aggressive public relations and
advertising campajgn aimed at re-
storing public confidence in the
airline and in its British-built helicop-
ters. Airspur had voluntarily
suspended their flight operations last
Nov. 7 after the crash in Long Beach
by one of the company's British-made
Westland W-30 helicopters which
had left Los Angeles and was headed
toward John Wayne Airport.
That incident was blamed on faulty
(Pleaae 8ee COPTERS/ A2
year-old Newport Beach man, found
late Sunday in the hallway of a hillside
apartment complex.
Vanasness is suspected of fatally
stabbing Scott James McNaughton
and leaving him sprawled outside an
apartment at the Versailles, a large
apartment and condominium com-
plex at 240 Nice Lane.
Police combed the neighborhood
near Hoaa Hospital for the suspect
following the 11 p.m. attack. A team
of police dogs was brought in from
Huntington Beach to assist in the
effort.
Employees at the condominium's
sales office found a man fitting
Vangsness description sleeping in a
.,.., Not pMto.., .... .,., Upln
llJchelangelo'• Pleta defaced by dnr;l·painting vandal• at Good Shepherd Cemetery in Bun on Beach. -
Mondale top pick of OC Dems,
weekend straw poll vote shows
Jackson a strong
second; penny tax
for transit backed
From ataff and wire repor11
Orange County Democrats picked
former Vice President Walter Mon-
dale as their first choice for president
in a weekend straw poll. The Rev.
Jesse Jackson made a surprisingly
strong showing, coming in second at
the Orange County Democratic Con-
vention in Santa Ana.
The convention, attended by more
than 560 Democrats, also backed a
proposed one-cent sales tax increase
to raise funds over a 15-year period
for transportation improvements.
The delegates backed the plan 56.5
percent to 43.5 percent. If approved
by county voters, the sales tax hike
would raise about S5 billion over 15
years to pay for such improvements
as new freeways and highway im-
provements.
Of 393 votes cast in the first of its
kind straw poll, Mondale polled 151,
Jackson got 80.
California Sen. Alan Cranston,
who had led Mondale in local public
opinion polls of the last few months,
dropped to third, and Ohio Sen. John
Glenn was fourth in the vote among
Democrats in the traditionally con-
servative county, county Democratic
Chairman Howard Adler said Sun-
day.
Trailing in order were Sen. Gary
Hart of Colorado, former Sen. George
(Pleue eee llOlm~E/ A2
Jailed County man
dies of coke overdose
By STEVE MARBLE
Of Ille o.11r .... It.fl
A former prison immate on parole
allegedly swaJlowed a fatal dose of
cocaine late Saturday in Laguna
Beach rather than be caught with the
drug and risk bein$ sent back to
prison, authorities sa1d today.
Robert Michael Gregg, a 34-year-
old who had been living at a Garden
Grove halfway house, lapsed into a
coma during the booking process at
Orange County Jail at 10:51 p.m. -
nearly five hours after being arrested.
An autopsy performed Sunday
revealed that Gregg died from an
enormous dose of cocame, estimated
to be fi ve times the amount used by
phys1c1ans for anesthetizing patients.
During the autopsy, coronor's
deputies also found a sheet of paper in
the man's digestive system that the)
believe the drug had been wrapped in.
Laguna Beach poltcc officers re-
portedly had asked the Qian hours
before his death if he had swallowed
something and offered to take him to
(Pleue .ee OVERDOSE/ A.2)
closet of one of the complex's model
apartment, sa.id Set. Steve Van Hom
of the Newport Beach Police Depart-
ment
''The caJJed us but by the time we
got there he had left the model. I think
we found bim by the pte. He is in jail
down here now," Van Hom said.
Followin& the late-niaht stabbing.
McNaughton was found ali~ bMl
seriously injured f1om 11.1b WOUDd6.
The Newport Beach man wa
rushed to the Fountain ValJey Com·
munity Hospital trauma oenler wbeft •
be died just after midniJhL
Newport Beach pohoe Detccti ve
Bob Worthen said be is unsure what
precipitated the viciou st.abb~ •
Vandals hit
cemetery
with graffiti
Damage to diocese
seen in thousands
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. .,.., ........
Officials of the Roman Catholic
Diocese of Orange were asking the
public's help today in findini the
vandals who last week spray-pamted
swastikas and bizarre slogans on
more than 40 marble crypts at Good
Shepherd Cemetery in Huntington
Beach.
Damage to the cemetery, owned by
the diocese, could total thousands of
dollars, church officials said.
"Extensive damage was done, and
we hope we can corral the people who
did it," said Paul Holley, a diocese
spokesman.
Holley said the vandalism was
done late Thursday or early Friday,
while the cemetery was closed for the
nighL
A cemetery employee said the
vandals must have entered by scaling
a wall.
Black swastikas and obscenities
were spray-painted on mausoleum
walls and on a religious statue called
the Pieta, which is a replica of
Michelangolo's sculpturc of the dying
Christ in the arms of his mother,
Mary.
One church official characterized
the graffiti as "cultish 1n nature. very
far-out stuff that seems to have
satanic connotations. Certainly 1t is
anti-Christian to say the least.··
The waJJs and sidewalks in the U-
A real cliffhanger
shaped mausoleum wcrc covered by
the symbol of a crucifix crossed with
an in vetted crucifix and slopns,
some with misspelled words. such u
"Bibles full of Liblcs, .. "Sex Gang
Children. .. "Jesus Christ ChC:~& Priced" and "You give away the
you can't afford on bended knees and
pray to the Lord."
Black pajnt was sprayed on the
statue faces and the slogan, "Chris.-
tian Death" was wrinen in Gothic
script at the base.
Church officials are encouraging
anyone who may have witnessed the
vandalism or k.nows who was respon-
sible to caU Huntington Beach police.
who arc investigating the incidenL
Officers said the extent of damage
was unusual for Huntington Beach.
"We have malicious mischief inci-
dents in this community all the time,
but never to this degree." Capt.. Mike
Burkenfield.
He declined to speculate as to
whether the vandalism bad anythina
to do with Friday the 13th. He said
officers found beer cans in the
vicinity of the damage.
Burkeniield said anyone with m-
formatioo conoerning the mcidenl
should contact Detective Charles
Nowotny at S3~59Sl.
Qioccsc officiaJs said experts will
~enlisted this weet to begin remov-int the spray paint
Damage to the marble crypts may
~ extremely difficult to dean com-
pletely," said George Briggs, director
of cemeteries for the diocese .
The cemetery, at Beach BouJevard
(Pleue 8ee CEMETERY/ A2)
Lapila Beach llfecuard Mike Dwinell alowly lowers
hhilaelf and 14-yeu-old Juon Baldwin down a Reep cllff
at the north end of the pd.ate Emerald Bay commmdty
Sanday afternoon. Baldwin, wu stranded balfway a.p the
clllf for nearly two hoa.n while reecuen determined the
beat snean• to aet him down.
Murder spree casts dark cloud over HB
Af\cr thret murders in just nine
days, Huntington Beach homicide
detective Sgt. Ed McErlain was near
exhaustion from long hours of over-
time.
His boss -Police Chief Earle
Robillille -sensed the dark mood
and tncd to break the aJoom with
some pllows llurhor.
"Have you solved that murder
yet?" chc chief asked when he spotttd
McErla1n 1n the pohcc parlung lot last
this week.
"Which oner the urcd detecuve
a kcd.
"The one today," Rob1t.11llc re-
plied.
Acoordina to the chief, McErlaio's
face ttJhtcncd and his eyes widened.
The prospect of yet another murder
was too much.
But 1t was JUSl a anm JOkc, an
attempt to cast more than a week of
tra&cdY that had stunned a communi-
ty and lcf\ police mv~st1ptors rcchna
'
from too much work and too little
sleep.
Just four months ago, Robit.aillt
was basking 1n aood news. A study
had singled out Huntington Beach as
one of the I S safest etties 10 the
United Slltes based on a per capita
crime rat.c. J
Hu nu f\l(bn was the only cityon the
enurc West Coast named in the Fiaie
lntcmauonal 1tudy which examined
enme fiaures from S,000 com-
munit1ei with pc'.)l)Ulthons of at least
10,000 people
The honor wa bolste~ most
rttently -Mth the release of the Clty's
1983 cnme index which showed 1
decline in nearly every area. Murder
wa down .50 percen" robbenes were
down 30 pcrctnt. Out of t1&ht cnm~
catcgoncs.. sill bad declined
But 1n the fint n1nc dayi of the new
year. there hid been nearly as man) slayjnas u there were in all of 1983
and almo~t half the number of the
I
STEVE
Mu au
Focus ON TH£ NB-.s
previou yar.
"A couple of WC'ek qo all the
J>lptR were callina up wanuna to
know why murden Yt'Crc down m
'83," satd Jim Moore. the pohce
depenmcnt's cnmc ao.al)'SL
"Now they·rc all calling back
1sk1!'J why there arc so many.'' he
add . . .
Rob1t.a11lc, while 1dm1ttm.a the
stnnJ o( killin II W\lina and
atyp1cal of the beach city. sajd thctt 1s
v1nually nothing a cu' can do to
prevent murder.
"There JUSt 1s no control over
family, fa~to-faoc, behind-cl~
doors, passion murden.. Then Just
tsn 't. ·· said the chief.
··1 don't think thttt's a pobcman
around who with a strai&ht face could
tell you the police can have an ampact
on those types ofmw&:B.
•• trcct kilhnas maybe. but oot t~
son we've been bavma." be added.
ln 1983, statistics ow there were
four mu.rdca. OM •u a traffic
•CCldcnt th.at Yt'U counted as a
homietdc because of the cin:um-stan~ of the rrush.ap. ·
The f.,-uru. howtvtT, do not in-
clude two UMOl\lcd, VICIOUS $11.=
murders at Bolsa C'1nca tat.c •
wtuch t1 wttb1n the Ctl) litruts but
1>3trollcd by Oranae County bcritrs
dq>UllCS.
So far in 1984:
•A l'tmalc posw
.(Pt ....... --....
Ai * * Orange Coast DAii. v PILOT /Monday, January 18, 1884
Joust a minute, fellows ... obylM 9JM
You never know who you'll run into at
Fountain Valley'• Mlle Square Park on a
Sunday afternoon. Theae medieval
monatera are membera of the Orange
County chapter of the Society for Creative
Anachronlam, who meet there every Sun-
day at 1 p.m. Underneath the armor. from
left. ue Kelly Maldman, Zachary Smith,
John Bevy, Duane Trevtll, Bob Mueller
and Richard Collin.
COPTERS FL YING TO LA AGAIN •••
From Al
design of the helicopter's tail rotor -
a defect that Airspur officials said ha s
now been eliminated. A new alarm
system has been built into the
controls that detects any irregularity
in the modified rotor.
Airspur has flown 25 passengers
since Sunday. The company flies
about a dozen flights per day out of
Oi:ange Co!Jnty which takes only 18
minutes to get to Los Angeles. Two
nights per day will leave from
Fullerton Airport.
"So far. there's a feeling of con-
fidence from our customers. They all
seemed pleased. They like the fact
their luggage flies with them so they
don't have to go through baggage
claim. We've been warmly received,"
said Maggie Garrett. director of
operations at John Wayne Airport.
.. No helicopter has more passenger
space. It's a dream to fly. We've had
no problems whatwever. It handles
great," said Capt. Ted Wise.
Airspur board Chairman John
Gallagher said safety concerns and
noise complaints had caused the line
to make other changes, routing its
flights over industrial rather than
residential areas and operating at
higher altitudes.
Gallagher has published a brochure
ayailable at the ticket counter giving
hi s personal assurance that the proper
corrective measures where taken to
ensure passenger safety.
.. We haven't been flooded with
calls, but we expect things to warm up
in a couple of days-we're still trying
to. get the word out that we· re back."
said Airpsur reservation agent Beth
Murphy today. "The public has been
supportive. People have ca lled in and
have been very sympathetic. we're
very optimistic."
CEMETERY DEF ACED .•. From Al
and Talbert Avenue, is said to be
more than 70 years old. Briggs said
the diocese purchased it about 20
years ago.
Briggs said this degree of vandalism
has not happened before at the
cemetery while owned by the diocese.
He noted. however, that large open
cemetery grounds are difficult to
secure and may be an easy target for
vandals.
Church offi cials said additional
security measures may be initiated at
Good Shepherd but decli ned lo
elaborate on these measu res.
MONDALE BACKED IN COUNTY •••
From Al
McGovern of South Dakota. Sen.
Ernest Hollings of South Carolina
and former Florida Gov. Reuben
Askew. Cranston had 60 and Glenn
got 50. Totals were unavailable on the
others.
Jackson's strong sho'wmg was the
surprise of the day at the first count}
convention straw poll conducted 1n
California.
"Make no mistake about tt. this is
an 1mpress1ve victory," said Jack-
son's county campaign vice chair-
man. Charles McHenry. ''We at-
tribute it to the 'rainbow' coming
together in Orange County."
Jackson refers to his "rainbow
coalitton" of support from min-
orities. women. seniors and others he
says have been left out of the political
process.
"We feel that the coalition is on the
move and growing and it was re-
pesented by that clear message sent
from that convention today," said
McHenry, adding that some delegates
who came committed to other can-
didates defected to Jackson because
other campaigns were "losing steam"
1n California.
Adler noted that of the 606 regis-
tered delegates at the convention,
only about 15 were black.
Adler also said Jackson. who is
black. may have cashed in on the
sentiment surrounding Monday's
state holiday honoring slain civil
rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr
OVERDOSE CLAIMS INMATE ...
From Al
a hospital to hav~ his stomach
pumped.
Gregg was stopped and arrested on
the 2200 block ofS. Coast Highwa) in
Laguna Beach at 6 p.m. for suspicion
of drunken dnving. Police said the
man's speech was .. thick" like he had
something m his mouth.
An initial breathalizer test revealed
the man was intox1ca1ed. police
reported.
The man was transfered to the
county jail nearly three hours later.
Sheriffs deputies said Gregg began
acting "very bizarre" during the
routine booking proCCl'\S. Medics were
called to transfer him to a facilit y
where he could be placed under
observation.
Authorities said Gregg collapsed a
short lime later and was moved to
UCI Medic:al center at I I : 19 pm. He
was pronounced dead at 11 :51 p.m.
Laguna Police Chief Neil Purcell
said offit:ers who stopped Gregg
suspected the man might have some-
thing in his mouth and reportedly
asked him on three occasions if he
had swallowed something.
"At the station one officer asked
him again and told him it would only
take a moment to go to the hospital
and get his stomach pumped." said
the police chief. "He refused and
finall y said. 'Get off m)' back.· ...
Purcell said Gregg, who'd refused
to take a blood or unne test. was
movt!d to the county jail bemuse
officers were worried the city's
breathahzer-was not functioning
~roperly and wanted sheriffs depu-
lles to conduct a test.
The police chief said he has ordered
an internal investtgation into the
handling of Gregg.
"But the preliminal) indication,"
Purcell added, "is that rhere was no
misconduct on our part ...
Records show that Gregg was
released from Lompoc federal prison
1n late November and had been living
at the Mybreak Trans1t1onal Center
in Garden Grove since then.
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• 1 1, lff't?" f thP Daly P 1111 1·111ne11 1mmPd1ate families are 1ne11q1ble No purchllse
neq•<.• ar 1 < ... 0~1pon5 m11v be p1cke~ ui:> al Daily P11.:>1 J.30WPS.I Bay S1ree1 Costa Mesa
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~-------------------------------~
;• ' ,,
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'rides
TODAY
51 32
29 211 113 45
211 21
48 22 311 31
72 113 22 -01 13 11
30 27 49 42
31 19 34 211
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20 03 St Pet• Tampa es 61 Salt Lake es ., San Antonio
29 13 San Diego ae · 44 San Frandllco 18 08 St Ste Marie
20 -01 S..ttl• 43 23 Sllrevepc>n
27 08 S'°"• Falll
37 29 Spollene
211 07 Syrac:u ..
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Second 111911
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3·01 pm 9.33 pm
2, Surf report
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LOCATION Hunllnglon 8Mcll
Al-Jetty. Newpor1 40111 SI.. New1>o<1
22nd St. News>o<t
8alooe Wedge
Laguna 8MCti
Sun 1111 lodly II 5:08 p m . r1-11
6:58 a.m T.-day and .... again at
5:09p.m
Moonrt-1oc:tay113 15p.m .. Mtlll
5:14 Lm. TUMd1y and rt-again 11
4:19 p.m.
San Clemente Water Tetnp·Sll
Jack P!elffer displays bis well-ahot picture of a Frontier 737.
Airline's artwork created
by a real 'big shot' artist
Frontier employee's
wall plaque has
1 ,286 bullet holes
By CHARLENE WHITEHEAD
Delly Ptlol 'Correepondent
Hanging on the wall in Frontier
Airlines· Orange County offices is a
piece of art that can best be described
as. well. unusual.
For one thing, the "canvas" is
made of aluminum. For another, the
outline of the subject of the painting
-a Boeing 737 Jetliner -was
created by bullets shot into the metal
at about two-inch intervals. That's
1,286 bullet holes. if you want to be
precise.
Tom Frye, an internationally
known professional exhibition
shooter, "shot" this wall hanging
from a distance of about 15 feet . He is
listed in the Guiness Book of Records
for a 1959 feat in which he shot at
I 00,010 wooden blocks over 13 days,
missing only 6.
Frye, who died in late 1982, created
the Frontier plane art in 1980.
plunking away for two days at the
aluminum outline on the Crow
Indian Reservation near Billings.
Mont.
Jackie Pfeiffer. a Frontier Airline
employee, who su~ested Frye cr~te
the artwork. said JUSt one misplaced
round would have destroyed the
project.
PCciffer says he paid around $450
for the original work.
When Preiffer was transferred from
Billings to Reno, to San Diego, and
eventually to Oran$e County, he
brought the bullet-nddled artwork
with him and hung it in the office.
He's made color prints of the
original and the first the limited series
was sent off to President Reagan.
Pfeiffer owns the last print.
Not surprisingly. it's NQ .. 737.
1. ftl Clf
-2. , .. d the ~t.,:..·;_---11
-3. ••'" "'*"' 4. read the !"I,. -
It might be a little wet today
Do rainy da.{5 and Mondays always get you down .
While today is definitely a Mon-
day. the National Weather Service
forecast a 20 percent chance of rain. as
well.
Today's high was expected to reach
6 I degrees, its low, a chilly 43 degrees.
Nevertheless, according to the Na-
Just
Call
642-6086
oo:r~•
le Quar11nte.d
M~y·fllelly It ~ 00 nol hive you1 pap11 by
~30Pm etlbelore7pm end you• 0001 wttl 1>.1
dell-td
tional Weather Service, you can put
away your raincoat and umbrella for
the rest of the week. Clearing tonight,
sunny skies and warmer weather arc
predicted through Friday along the
Orange Coast.
Perhaps sunny days and Tuesdays
always cheer you up.
s.~
6. Thi 1111• ~--
7. ------~ 0
What do you like about tbe1 Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the
number at left and your me11age will be recorded, truscrlbed and delivered
to tbe appropriate editor.
The same U-hour answering service may be used to record letters to the
editor on any topic. Contrlbutors to our Letters column mast include their
name and telephone number for verification. No circala&lon calls, please.
. Tell us what's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST Dally Pilat
H. L. Schwem 111
Publiatw
Clrouledon 114/IG-Gll
C'1 "'1ed Nwertllint 714llOll1I Al ol'* d1part1Mft .. ....aat
MAIN Ot'ftce
330 w .. 1 Bey SL Coli. M.a CA
Mt-IO<lt-Boa 1580 Co.ta ~. CA 112828
SlhHdly lllCI Sunoay II
you do t>OI receive y0\11
c°"" by t • rn , Clll btlort
10 • "' ~ "°"" QOOy .... M .,.tel
Clf'CuleUon
'~-
Chazy Dowallby
Editor end Aeslstant
to tho Publlsher
Ro••mary Churchman
Controller
~lllflt 11183 Or&nQI eo.1 PublllNr1a Compeny No new• llOrtH lllu1~r111on1. tdlto•111 m11t" or ~""""'" tlerein mt)' be rlC)tOdUQee:I wttl'IOUI ~ l*l'l!llllOll Of copyrlQht _,.,,,.
VOL. n , NO. 11 . ,.,
I • ' I
, 3 Bu€na PaFK
Free tax return aid k · 11 d . offered in county men 1 e 1n
h Free income 1ai1. return preparation "available from plane crash
1 e Volunteer Income Tall. Assistance (VITA) proaram.
VITA tax preparers will help elderly. low-income.
handicapped ~nd non-English spcakina. individuals in
filling out basic forms 1040. 1040EZ and 1040A. VITA
a~s1stance '" available at various locations in Orange < o unty.
For information on the location nearest you. call the
Volunteer Center of South Orange County at 953.5757 or
855 6772.
Clvic League meets Tuesday
The Wome.n's Civic League of Newport Harbor will
meet Tuesday in the multi-purpose room of Mariners
Library in Newpon Beach.
. .A social hour at 9:30 a.m. wi11 precede a talk at 10 by
f~re1gn exchange students sponsored by the Amencan
Field Service of Corona del Mar.
The public is invited to attend. Call 673-1055 for
funher information.
Supervision semlnar slated
A one-day seminar on "basic supervision" will be
presented Fnday at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel in
Costa Mesa.
John Pearce will lead the program. For more
information or to register, call the Keye Product1v1ty
Center toll-free at 1-800-821-3919.
Back Bay tours slated Saturday
The Friends of Newpon Bay will host a free, guided
nature walk Saturday in the Upper Newport Bay
Ecological Reserve.
Tour groups will start every 15 minutes from 9 a.m.
until 10:30, beginningat the corner of East Bluff Drive and
Back Bay Road. ~
Future tours are scheduled for Feb. 25 and March 17.
\all Fran Robinson at 646-8009 for funher informauon. ·
Hoag asthma semlnar planned
. The American Lung Association of Orange County
will co-sponsor a seminar on childhood asthma with Hoag
Memonal Hospital Saturday from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
at the Hoag Conferenre Center.
Children age 12 or over may anend with a parent. but
the. pro.gra1!' is .designed for parent interest. Pre-
registration 1s required to assure a seat. but no fees will be
charged.
For more information and pre-registration details.
call the Lung Association at 835-LUNG.
Anlmal lovers meet Saturday
Animal lovers of Orange County are invited to attend
a meettngSaturday at 10:30 a.m. at the Fullenon Savings
and Loan in Fountain Valley, on Brookhurst Street near
the San Diego Freeway.
. This month(s program will be a survey of Animal
Assistance league humane education activities in Orange
County presented by Pat Guiver, president of the league.
For further information. call 644-8851.
Alumn~e to-hear travel talk
Cessna leaves Fullerton,
falls into Gypsum Canyon
Three bodies were found Sunday am1d the wreckage
of a hght plane that crashed in a ruued canyon shortly
after takeoff from Fullerton Municipal Airport.
"There were no survivors," said Orange County
sheritrs Lt. Dennis Rohn.
Rohn.said the plane crashed in Gypsum Canyon -
roughly midway ~twe.en the communities of Orange and
Coro~a. He descn.bed the area as "very, very ruued. It's
definitely no plac.c to land a plane."
The Civil Air Patrol and search~and-rescue teams had
been hunting for the craft since witnesses saw a plane go
down about 9 p.m. Friday, Rohn said.
That was was about half an hour after the Cessna 182
took off from nearby Fullerton Municipal Airpon en
route to Bullhead City, Ariz. ·
The plane was supposed to have been carrying three
Buena Park men -Paul Huson Sr., 50. his son Paul
Huson Jr., 28, and Dennis Sander, 25.
··we're fairly certain of the IDs," sheritrs Lt. Bob
Kemm.is ~id Sunday, "but because of the impact of the
crash. tt will be a few days before positive identifications
can be established."
Authorities were investigating what caused the crash.
Visually i1Dpaired
children can now
hear encyclopedia
Br~ille Institute given
'talking' reference set
Visually impaired children will have a new world
opened up to them thanks to the donation of a talking
encyclopedia and year book.
The encyclopedia, which consist of four-track
ca.ssettes containing six hours of recorded material each,
will be housed at the Braille Institute of America, 527 N.
Dale Ave., Anaheim.
The r~feren~ tapes ~re a gif_t from the Orange County
Optometnc Society and its Auxiliary. A demonstration of
the encyclopedia will be held at noon on Wednesday at the
Braille lnsutute in Anaheim.
The Talking Encyclopedia and Year Book are
encased in special volumes with indexes in Braille and
large type. Once the desired cas,sette is found, it's placed on
a custom-developed tape player that 9_uickly searches out
the requested material. ~1s~ally handicapped peopl.e will
be able to find the matenal m the same amount ofttme it
would take a sighted person to look up information in a
regular encyclopedia.
N·B DENTIST ELECTED
Dr. Frank Curry was recently elected as an officer of
the Orange County Dental Society. Curry has practiced in
N~wJ><?rt ~ch for 16 years and lives in Laguna Beach
W1th his WJfe. Joy, and two children.
Oran.ge Co.sat OAfl Y PILOT /Monday, J1nu.ry 18. 1984 AS
-Who do you want to win la Super Bowl XVIH?
Sean McLaughlin
student
Costa Mesa
"What's the point
spread? It'll probably
change by game time
anyway. So, I guess I
want the Raiders be-
cause they·re local."
Bill Thacker
courier
Westminster
"After what the
Raiders fans did after
their last game. I don't
want them to win. Put
me down for the
Redskins."
Ann Brennan
waJtress
Costa Meaa
.. I don't kno.w. l
don't know anything
about Super Bowls."
Denise Gencbi
housekeeper, student
Huntington Beach
"The Raiders are
probably going to win,
but I want the
Redskins. I like them
better. They have a lot
of cute guys.
KdUWade
cashier
Huatloaton Beach
··1 want the Redskins
because I think the
Raiders fans fight too
much.''
Jim Wagner,
sales rep,
songwriter
··L.A. Raiders. I'd
hke to see Plunkett
experience the success
he deserves. When he's
hot. nobody can touch
him."
DoAAA Blnk.ley,
retail sales
Cotta Men
.. Oh. that's easy for
me to say. I want the
Redskins because rm
originally from Wash-
ington, D.C" •
Kim Dempsey,
student,
Newport Beach
.. I want the Raiders
because they've proved
themselves to be a win-
ningo.team and because
they fought so hard to
be in L.A."
Border Patrol nabs 500 aliens
By the A11ociated Press
Border Patrol agents caught as many as 500
undocumented aliens during a special operation at a
highway checkpoint near San Oemente. part of an effort
to ··~1 otr' a route often used by aliens seeking ilJegal
entry to the United States, officials say.
The surprise check at the San Clemente Border
Checkpoint Sunday resulted in the arrests of between 400
and 500 illegal aliens. according to Al Gordon, agent in
charge of the station.
A final count was not immediately available, Gordon
said. He added that approximate!¥ 200 of the aliens were
taken into custody as they fled into fields next to the
freeway, abandoning their vehicles in backed-up traffic
lanes.
Agents used an infrared telescope mo unted on a four-
wheel dnve jeep and a helicopter to round up the aliens
who tried to make a run for it. said Gordon.
The checkpoint, usually closed on Sundays, is on
Interstate 5. the primary north-south traffic artery in the
state.
In order to help ·•seat off the principal corridor
through which the majori~ of Latin American aliens
illegally enter the country.' the U.S. lmmigration and
Naturalization Service boosted the force of Border Patrol
officcrs at the San Oemente station by 50 percent, said
Harold Ezell. western regional commissioner of the INS.
He said the increase would allow the facility to
operate "virtually around the clock. ..
"With our current manpower, we are lucky if we can
sustain an active operation status 70 percent of the time."
Ezell said.
The reason for Sunday's operation was to catch
smugglers of illegal aliens off guard, he said. Celestine Harvey will share her travel experiences tn
the Trust Terntories of the Pacific at next Monday's
meetmg of the Newport Harbor Kappa Delta Alumnae.
The meeting will be hosted by the president, Deborah
Graves. in San Juan Capistrano, and interested alumnae
are invited to attend. Call 640-2348 for funher infor-
mation.
MURDER SPREE SHAKES HB POLICE ...
"They (alien smugglers) know our schedule as well as
we do," he said. '·They just he back and then flood through
the checkpoint when tt's closed ...
Although the San Clemente station has not been m
operation full time. Ezell SSJd it was an important part of
the Borde,r Patrol's effons to reduce the flow of illegal
aliens into this country.
From Al
blud~eoned and stabbed while de-
livenng letters.
this part of the county has always said Robitaille.
been that there's not enough to really "This is a safe city," he added ... ,
find any trends. We've had three but think it's ~etting safer all the time. I
we might not have another all year," finnly beheve that." •A former high school athlete was
strangled and left in a car.
•A computer engineer was shot to
death while sleeping in his own bed.
Monday, January 16 Robitaille credits his detective
team for making or helping make
quick arrests in each case, but
admitted the strain on the in-
vestigators has been tremendous.
• 1:30 p.m., Orange Couty Planning Comml11lon.
Hall of Adm mistration. l 0 Ci vie Center Plaza, Santa Ana.
• 6:l0 p.m., Costa Mesa.City Council, City Hall, 77
Fair Drive.
· • 7:30 p.m .• Irvine Finance CommJsslon, City Hall,
"There's no way we could keep this
pace up for much longer," he com-
mented. 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
Tuesday, January 17
One investigator reported that he
was so exhausted from long overtime
hours that he was stopped by a
California Highway Patrol officer
who thought he had been drinking.
The investigator was just overly tired. • 9: 30 a. m .. Orange County Board of Supervlaora,
Hall of Administration, I 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana.
• l :30 p.m., Orange County Plannlng Comml11ion,
Hall of Administration, lOCivicCenter Plaza, Santa Ana.
• 6 p.m., Lagona Beach City Council. Council
Robitaille said be does not believe
the murders foretell an increase in
violencc or should be cause for worry
in the beach city.
'The problem with homicides in
Valley clerk taken hostage
in $3,500 market robbery
fountain Valley police are search-
ing for two holdup men today.
One of the suspects briefly took a
market clerk hostage and then com-
andeered a car from a woman waiting
for a spacc in a shopping center
parking lot.
The gunman fled with $3,SOO from
the safe at Albertson's market at
18100 Brookhurst St. about 3 p.m.
Saturday. The car he seized, a 1977
Pontiac Firebird. later was aban-
Irvine
A bomb threat was called into a
school at I Smoketree at 9:40 a.m.
Friday. The school was checked. No
bomb was found. • • • A car cover was stolen off a car
parked on Dewberry lane sometime
between 6 P·P'· Saturday and 8 a.m.
Sunday. • • • A video recorder and two video
cameras valued at more than S400
were stolen from Four Star Video,
S317 University Onvc. about 7 p.m.
Saturday. • • • A stereo and other pcnona! prop-
eny valued at more than $400 was
taken from a raidcnoc on Sierra
Palos Road sometime Sunday night
or c~rly Monday morruna. \ . .
Emplo)'etS at an industrial premise
·;.
doned near Ellis A venue and Ward
Street.
The suspect. about 5 feet 7 inches
tall and about 40 years old generally
matches the descnption of a gunmen
who robbed a dispatcher for the
Orange Coast Yellow Cab Co. of
$2.039 Saturday night
Fountain Valley police Detective
Steve Isaacs said the two holdups
apparently aren't related.
at . 1352 Reynolds Ave. reported
seeing a young man, about 17 years
old indecently exposing himself at 5
a.m. Monday.
Huntington Beach
An employee of tht Ctuyburro
Dining CantJna.. 8081 Ad.ams Ave...
reported Sunday nia}\t that $omcone
used a chunk of concrete to break a
window and enter his arecn 1969
Oldsmobile. The loss, estimated at
SI SO, included a backpack containina
his identification and cyeaJasscs. ••• The 5eeunty Juard at a con.-
dominium comple~ 011 1he 10100
block of Holbum Onvt arrived for
work Sunday cvenin11nd disco\·ettd
five tiabts had been broken bv
vandals. The lo was cnim11ed it
S2~0.
He said the: hulJup man in the
second incident probably had to be
familiar with Yellow Cab operations.
The robber hid behind a vending
machine and waited for the dis-
patcher to come out of his glass-
enclosed office before confronting the
victim, Isaacs said. The holdup man
rifled through the victim's wallet after
tying his hands with a coathangar
after taking the money from the offi~
safe. Isaacs said.
A resident of the 7900 block of
Stark Street told police Sunday night
that someone stoic her red 1970
Volkswa&en, which had been parked
1n the street near her home. The los!
was estimated at $2,000 • • • A woman sho~pina at Huntington
Center. 7777 Ed1naer Ave .. reported
Sunday afternoon that her brown
leather purllC had been stolen. She
told officers she put the purse down
on a counter for a moment. and when
she looked back it wns aone. The
purse was valued at S 120. and tl
contained $467 in cash. she rcp<>rtl-d. • • • Someone threw a rock throu.&h a
rear ~hdiOj glass door on the 16800
block of Rhone Lane Sunday after·
noon The damage was ~t1mated at
S200. • • •
A black BMX din bikt> wns ~tolcri
over the weekend from an unlodced
• • c
.,......"""
Jn 1983. he noted. a total of 42.293 undocumented
aliens were arrested and 533 vehicles were seized from
aJleged smugglers who tried sneak through the checkpoint.
Agents at the station also seized seized nearly S 1 million
worth of narcotics last year.
.. We feel that once the smugglers are convinced that
their chances of getting through-San Clemente are slim,
they will seek other entrance areas." where they can be
more easily detected. Ezell said .
1113 1812 ...
4 8 -SO.(}%
3& S6 + S.0% Quake seminar in Irvine
~"28 236 -3$. Registration is under way for an earthquake
preparedness seminar 1n Irvine Feb. 9 where home safety
experts will explain how to safeguard homes. '157 .227' -30.~
2.340 2,737 -14.5% City staffers Harry Huggins and Mike Weiss will
present the informational workshop. to be held at
Northwood Communit> Park. 4531 Bryan Ave .. at 7:30
p.m. The) will explain the ctty·s emergency plan.
4,759 4,785 -o.~
709 828
33 23
-14.3°h
+43.0%
Registration can be made h) calling 660-3814 before
Feb. 2.
garage on the 7800 block ofStarshell
Drive. The loss was estimated at $85. • • • Entering though an open sliding
glass door. someone burglanzed an
apartment on the. AOO block of 15th
Street over the weekend. The loss
included camera equipment worth
$550. • • • A tan 1977 Datsun 280Z was repon
stolen early today from the vicinity of
Cypress Street and Emerald Lane.
The Joss was estimated at $5,500. • • • A woman was arrested Saturday
morning on suspicion of shoplifting
at the Thrift> Drug store. 9861
.\dams .\ ve. Recovered were cos-
metics wonh S 10. • • • By kicking open a rear door.
someone burglanzed a home Satur-
day on the 19800 block of Inverness
Lane. The loss. estimated at $400.
included camera. tclcvis1on and
stereo equipment
Costa Mesa
For the second time 10 a ...,.ed ..
thieve~ havf broken into 3 room at
the Comfort Inn Mo1tl -this time
taking a l 9·inch color tele' 1s1on set
tha1. wa~ bolted to a <.lre~ser Police
said it appears th<' crook~ broke a
window to gain e-ntr) The Joss "u
put at SJ()() • • • ~diamond nni worth s~.000 v.as
taken from a tt~1denet on the QOO
block ofHollo\\brook. Police \aid the
hurglar pried open a kitchen wmdll"
and ransacked the house. upp1na o,cr
beds and pulhng out drt'i..cr drawe1 'i
The onl> item taken wn'i the nng. • • • .\ tno of dmcn left well fed and not
a pcnn) poon:r from Juan fo\('.
Mexican food restaurant at 30 I 0
Harbor Blvd. Employees said the
dinner part) left without paying its
$38.37 tab.
Thomas Moms O'Neill. 43. of
Redondo Beach was arrested at Sears
department store in South Coast
Plaza after allegedly placrng a $37
dnll in his pants and walking out of
the store.
Laguna Beach
.\ 1947 primer gray Ford "Wood-
ie .. was stolen from a residence in the
2200 block of Laguna Canyon Road
by unknoWn suspects. Laguna &cah
poltcc reported. • • • A television valued at SSOO was
stolen from a car parked tn the 400
block of Cypress Street. The vch1clc
was locked. the owner told p01tce • • • Several occupants of a gold Ma1da
reportedly were tossing eggs at ped·
estnam in the 300 block of South
Coast H1ghwa}. They ~e~ gone b\
the lime officen amved • • • A w1tne~ told pohce nn unmarked
van was parked m tbe 100 block of
Laguna Canyon Road and the occu-
pants were tossma trash into a cit)
manhole. That van ~as &one v.hcn
poh~ amvcd at the scene
Newport Beach
Tht' manaacr of .\mhng~ Nuner)
1500 E Coast H1&}\wa}. reported the
theft of a purst" contain1nj S 1 so cash
from the business offiCt' Fnd.a) after-
noon. • • • .\ \an Die-go woman f't'p()rted the
thef\ of a punt con11'10tng $60 cMh
from hct car parked in the 600 bloc._
of Heliotrope Saturda}. • • • '\ Newport Beach woman report
the theft of tools valued at $219 from
her garage in the 1700 block oflrvine
Avenue. • • • .\ Newpon Beach man reported the
theft of a color TV valued at $527
from his home 1n the JOO block of
Catalina. • • • An Irvine man reponcd the theft of
~arncra equipment An<i _clothes
valued at$600from his care parked 10
the 28th Street parking lot Sunday. • • • A Huntington Beach man reported
the theft of a J 974 Opel last parked 1n
the 100 block of l6th Street Sunday. • • • A Newport Beach woman reported
the theft of her purse and $50 cash
from her home 1n the 1400 block of
West Oceanfront Saturday
Fountain Valley ·
.\ Hoag ~iosp11.al nul'S( told poltct
\he left her $1 .000 gold wnst watch on
the counter of her kitchen m the
18000 block of n Fehpe Street ht
said the watch with 10 dlamonds
disappt"arcd while \he hosted about
20 women. • • • A mao reported to pohcc that 20
technical books valu~d at S900 disap-
peared after being delt' er~ to his
~1dcnC'c 1n the 1.,()()() bloc'lr.. of
Wattnon Stretl • • • Someone pned the front door o~n
1n the 9000 block of Starhni A,·cnuc=
and \tole a .25-in<'h Zenith colof
tt'leVtSIOn ~t. • • • .\burglar took a kc) from a lockbox
1n the 10000 bl of Columbta
"'' enuc and 10011. 1ewelt'\ and$ 1..WO .
J
At Orahge Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, January 1&, 1984
NATION AOduct Cl GI treateO;
Army probes incident NASA gets Golden Fleece for flights
-.. ~ Chlneae P remier Zhao Zlyang eee. New York harbor from ferry.
China's chief enjoys
NY sightseeing tour
Zh ao leaves for Canada
after round of meetings
Before leaving tor Canada this after-
noon. Zhao planned morning visits with
Nixon and former Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger. who opened relations between
the United States and China 1n the early
1970s.
Pacifist u p lin ked
to West Germa n y case-
SCHWAEBlSCH-OMUEND, West
Germany (AP) -Police and U.S. Arm)'
officials were investiptina "every poss1-
bihty" today in the rcportc<l kidnaepana of
an American soldier by a group of German
ant1-Qlissile actjvists. ·
The soldier. Spec. 4 Liam Fowler. 21, of
Daytona Beach, Fla.. was tre.ated for
exposure Sunday after a farmer and has
mother discovered him huddled under a
blanket in their barn near Ro~nhcim. in
the Munich area.
In telephone caJls to tflis wife. Fowler
apparently had rcponed that he had been
kidnapped by members o( the Pacifist
ln1tiat1ve Group, a previously unknown
organization.
U.S. Army spokesman MaJ. Anthony
Maravola said military police cooperatin&
with German police invesllgators were
treating Fowler's disappearance as a kid-
nap.
Asked in a telephone interview whether
m1htary police had ruled out the possibility
of a hoax, Maravola told The 'Associated
Press, "We're investigating every poss1-
b11ity."
Fowler disappeared Friday afternoon
after finishing guard duty at his base in
Schwaebisch-Gmuehd, the Army head-
quarters for a Pershing 2 missile battery.
His wife, Nikki, told police Fowler called
her early Saturday and said he had been
kidnapped by six Germans threateni ng to
kill him un less the U.S.-made Pershing 2
nuclear missiles deployed here last month
were dismantled.
8p4 Liam Fowler
A German-speaking man called 1he WeM
German news agency DPA some 11 hours
later to say the soldier had been abducted.
He hung up without giving further details.
pohce spokesman Gerhard Koller said.
Authorities said Fowler telephoned his
wife again Saturday evening to ask if she
had complied with the kidnappers' de-
mands not to call police and to have
relatives in Florida publicize German
opposition to the new medium-range
missiles. NEW') OR).. (AP) -Chinese Premier
Zhao Z1yang pla)ed toumt and exchanged
fnendly barbs v.1th Ma)or Edv.ard Koch
before closing out hi\ ll S. tour with a
round of meeungs to<la~ including a \. IS1t
with former Pre~1dl'nt R1Chard N1-.on
He was also to meet with former Secre~~ ofSra~ ~rus Vane~ former -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
national security ad' 1ser Zb1$n1ew
Brzezinski and the publishers and editonal
board of the New York Times. and to
attend a a luncheon given b} the Na11onal
Committee on U S -China Relations and
the Foreign Pohq. A~soc1at1on.
Through a full round of '>1ghtseeing.
speeches and dinnt.·r., \unda). Zhao re-
iterated the mc\\agc he made frequent!)
sjnce arn,1ng in the l 'n1ted t.1tes a week
earlier that ( 'h1ne!>e-.\mencam should
press for unit) of Ta1"an v.1th ( hina but
that the L .S goH·rnment should \ta) out of
the process.
"We v.ould IX' un"'onh\ heirs of our
ancestors and d1sappo1nt our postent) .. 1f
C\.C~ effort weren't made toward rc-
un1ficat1on . Zhao told leader'I of Nrw
York's Ch1nest.· rnmm un1t~ during a
meeting Sunda> night
Sunday Zhao sav. the cit) as tounsts
t}p1call; do. with a -.1~1t to the Metro-
politan Mu seum of An. a '1ew from atop
the World Trade Cent er and a boat nde
around the Statue of L1beny.
Dunng a luncheon at Gracie Mansion.
the mayor's residence. Koch reminded
Zhao that the mayor of Peking had v1s1tcd
Nev. York earlier and was "one of the best
representatives of the People 's Republic."
Women to study peak of stress
LO ..\l\Gl:.l l~ ( ·\P) -Nmc women
professor!> from the n1ted <itates and
Europe sa\ the) \.\Ill 'itud) the effects of
stress on women b) a-.ccndmg the H1ma-
la}as. wh1t.h thl'\ JOk1ngl ) call the "Her-
mala}as"
··Vve need to du 1t our-.ch es to 'ice ho\.\
we would react:· said Anne Beuter. a
neuroscience researcher at the'Un1vers1ty
of Southern California who 1s one of the
exped111on 's co-organizers
"If we had our husbands and boyfnends
along the) \.\Ou Id be telling us how to do 1t."
said Beuter. 34. a na11ve of France.
Shultz and Gromyko
convene in Sweden
~TOCKHOLM. Sweden (AP)-Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko and
Secretary of State George P. Shultz ex-
pressed hope for improved East-West
relations as they amved today for their first
meeting since arms control talks between
the superpowers collapsed.
Shultz, who spoke to reporters at
Arlanda International Airport, called for
renewal of the arms control talks broken off
by the So Viet Union last year af\er NATO's
deployment of new nuclear missiles.
He plans to meet on Wednesday with
Gromyko. Both are here for the 35-nauon
European security conference, which starts
Tuesday.
··The United Srates hopes that the
conference will achieve measures hm1tmg
the daniers of surprise attacks and m1s-
calcula11on in Europe. by rendenng milt-
~ry act1v1t1es more open. more ob-
servable. more predictable and more
subject to venfication." Shultz said.
But he said the conference "cannot
replace other essential" disarmament
talks, such as those on medium and long-
range nuclear missiles and on con vent1onal
weapons. All are now suspended or in
recess.
Gromyko. who amved earlier at the
airport, said the Soviet dele~t1on to the
conference "will do everything" to solve
problems between Moscow and the West.
He also said resolvmg U.S.-Sov1et dif-
ferences was not up to the Soviet Union,
but "depends also on Sweden and other
nations" takmg pan m the confe~nce.
which is designed to lessen the possibility
of war in Europe.
By tbe .4.11~lattd Pr~u
WA 'HINGTON -Sen Wilham Prox.m1rc, O-W1s.,
today bestowed h1r. "Golden Fleece" award for January on
NASA for spending more than $780.000 to fly ~.228
government employees and private guests to witness
launchings of the space 1ihuttlc at Cape Canaveral, Fla.
"The average taxpayer will never get a free shuttle lo
Florida. but he will be sent mto orbit when he gets the ball
for those who do." Proxmire said in a statement
announnna the monthly booby pnze he gives for what he
considers an e ample of WMtcful federal spendinl-
Shelter for homeless opens
WASH INGTON -A shelter for the homeless billed
as the na11on's largest 1s opening its doors to up to 1,000
people who have no where else to turn for help. Health and
Human Services Sccreta~ Margaret Heckler on Sunday
helped open the shelter. which will operate out of a
goveornment-owned building and be run by the Communj-
ty for Crea11vc Non-Y1olcnce. a non-profit volunteer
group.
Condomlnlum blast Jellis l
BROOKLINE. Mass -An avalanche of debns
crashed down after an explosion in a three-story
condominium !>l't on a fire that roared through the
structure in minutes ..\t leaM one person was killed and
one was believed to be m1ss1ng today. authorities said.
Residents of upper floors 1n the condominium's two
adjo1nmg brick buildings used sheets and ropes to escape
from window~ Sunda) night. More than a dozen people
were treated a1 the :;cent' for smoke inhalation, cuts and
bruises.
Snow covers much of U.S.
A snowstorm deposited up to 8 inches of snow an
'icattcrcd area!> from western Nevada to the~Dakotas today
wh ile record subzero cold settled on the upper Midwest
and the Northeast. At least four people were killed on icy
highways Sunda) in Oklahoma where up to 3 inches of
snow fell and more was on the way. Light snow spTCad over
much of Amenca from the Rock1es into New England -
c' en as far south as Arkansas and Tennessee.
CALIFORNIA
57 Dlablo protesters arrested
SAN LU IS OBISPO-Most of the 57 demonstrators
arrested m weekend marches against the Diablo Canyon
nuclear plant remained in 1a1I today. and a protest leader
vowed "a longer. extended action" to try to block licensing
of the facility. An estimated 1.000 to 1,500 people
,marched on Sunday as 50 were arrested. following smaller
demonstrations Saturday 1n which seven demonstrators ~ere held. sheriffs offi cials said. Other protests will follow
as Diablo Can)on continues through the Nuclear
Regu lator; Commission licensing procedure, said
spokeswoman Mal) Moore of the anti-nuclear Abalone
Alliance
Police spy leak probed
LO~ .\NC, Ell~ -D1stnct Attorney Rohen
Ph1ltbosian \a)S his office "'111 try to discover who leaked
details of a proposed out-of-<:oun settlement an the
Amencan C1v1l Liberties Union police spymJ lawsuit.
But. Ph1hbos1an said Sunday. ··we·rc not gomi to be
spending an inordinate amount of time" on 1t. Caty
Councilman Joel Wachs. who confirmed Saturday 1hat
the council had approved a settlement with the ACLU.
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McDonald flags half-mast
S.\N DIEGO -Flags at McDonald's restaurants
th roughout the world flew at half-staff today in memory of
founder Ra } Kroc. whose decision "to go for broke" with
a hamburger franchise led to a fast-food empire worth SS
billion a )Car Kroc died Saturday of heart failure at
Scripps Clinic's Green Hospital in nearby La Jolla. He was
81 . A natl\.C of suburban Oak Park near Chicago, Kroc
bought franchise nghts 1n 1954 from Maurice and Richard
McDonald. "ho O\.\ned a small hamburger st.and in San
Bernardino. ( alif .. that offered a limited menu and quick
sen ice
Bar fight c1alms 2
LO~ .\NC1f IE~.,-..\ bar fight between two men that
spilled into the street ended in a colhs1on between a car
and a Rapid Tram1t D1stnct bus. killing both men and
lnJUnng 18 others. authonues said toda}. One of the bar-
room combatants was trying to flee in his car when his
opponent reached in through the window and grabbed the
steering \,\heel. sending the auto careen mg into the bus
with the assailant dangling on the outside late Sunday,
police Sgt . Gar) Kirby said. Fifteen of33 people on the bus
sustained minor tnJurics in the 11 p.m. accident. and three
passengers 1n the car were also hurt, fire spokesman Jim
Well~ said.
WORLD
\
OECD crltlcal of U.S. recovery
PARIS -Leading Western economists warned
today that the U.S. economic recovery may begin to
evaporate next year 1fthe Rea~n administration does not
cut the huge federal deficit. The Organization for
Economic (ooperauon and Development said in an
unusually cnucal report on the U.S. economy that interest
rates wall remain h1[.I.. •he economy will lose steam and
uncmplo) ment w1il be a persistent problem unless the
admin1strat1on tackles the deficit. The OECD is an
oraanization of 24 countnes. including the major
indus1nah1ed countries of Western Europe as well as
Japan. Ca nada. Australia and the United States. Its
headquarters 1n Pans issues periodic economic surveys of
its mcmbe~ that include suggestions for government
pohc1c~.
Pole-Vatican ties sought
ROME -Cardina l JoLef Glcmp, the primate of
Poland's Roman Catholic church, said today that cfTons
to establish Polish-V. tican diplomatic ties arc "aoin&
well" but it is too etirly make predictions about eventual
formal relations. C.ilcmp spoke to rtportcrs aner amving
for expected talk~ with Pope John Paul lJ a nd other
Vatican officials A church spokC$man in WHuw
described the four-<lay tnp as "rchaious" an nature.
The Poh~h aovernmcnt bu made ovenurn to open
full d1plumat1c relation' wllh the Holy Sec. The two now
maintain tic' hut do not e\change ambassadors
Husseln appeal• to PLO
.\MM .\N Jordan -Kina tlusscm toda)' opened the
fim re ular Parh:uncnt se1oti1on ancc 1974 with an appeal
to the Palestine L1bcrat1on Oraaniiat1on to help find a
'"prart1cal formula" to rcaoun tht West Bank from Israel.
The k1na dehvcrro a J)(«h openina the se 1on after
lcav1n ho\p1tal out'i1dc Amman where he bu btcn
under treatment for a blcro1n1 ulcer for a week. Mcmbtrs
of the upper and lower house of Parhomcnt were prcttnl
alon' with ~ovcrnmcot (')fficial and forc1an dploma
Outhn1na h1~ foman hey. Cht' k1n1 s{ud Jordan .. will
c.·mhark on contnbu11na toward the rab sohdanty souiht
b) the sm~-cr~· peoopk of our na11nn nnd savin&Joint Arab
at lion lwm 6 ~ 1rcl" ol 1nfr tcd parol)'i1-.."
·--·-i--------
• ,. .
Kingb'day
feted in LA
County workers. students et
ffie day off to cele_b_ra_t_e ___ _
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The memory of Dr. Martin
Luther K.inaJr. was the focal point of activities throughout
the county Monday. Workers and school children aot the
day off an honor of the slain civil rights leader's birthday.
This year marked the first time King's birthday was
des1anated an official holiday in Los Angeles County.
Couru, welfare offices and other aovemmcnt de~
ments closed: city offices and the U>s Angeles Unified
School District also planned the da¥ off.
Mayor Tom Bradley and some City Council members
were slated to attend around-breaking ceremonies for lhc
Martin Luther Kina Jr. Shoppina Center. a $12.2 million
prOJCCt in the Watts area. Actor Lou Gossett Jr. was
designated emcee of the ceremony and luncheon
following.
To start the holiday off, the YMCA planned an early
momma Martm Luther Kina Brotherhood Breakfast at
the Biltmore Hotel with keynote remarks by actor
Demond Wilson. In the San Fernando Valley, the
National· Association for the Advancement of Colored
· Peoplc planned its third annual Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. Awareness Day program.
Los Angeles County Superv1sur Kenneth Hahn and
other officials planned to attend a ceremony at Martin L~ther King Jr. General Hospital, where opera star Leona
Mitchell was scheduled to sing.
On Sunday, the Southern Christian Leadership
Conf ere nee held a religious observance, followed by a
birthday celebration at the Bonaventure Hotel.
The California Legjslature last year made King's
birthday a state holiday, and the Los Angeles County
Board of Supervisors followed suit last month.
Heart attack
cost outlined
ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. (AP) -Heart and blood
vessel disease will cost the country $64.4 billion in 1984,
inclurung $12.4 billion in lost productivity because of
disability, the American Heart Association s.ays.
In the 1984 edition of "Heart Facts," released
Sunday, the heart association says that heart disease
afflicts approximate~ 42. 7 million Americans, including
37.3 million with h' blood pressure. •
As many as I. million Americans will have heart
attacks this year, and 550,000 of them will die, according
to the estimates.
In 1981, 559,000 Americans died of heart attacks -
slightly more than arc expected to lo~ their lives this year.
Heart disease is generally on tbe decline, for reasons
that doctors do not completely understand, allhou$)1 they
believe increasing awareness of the need for exel"Clse and
proper diet may be helping.
Nevertheless, the heart association says heart disease
1s stilJ responsible for almost as many deaths as "cancer,
accidents, pneumonia, influenza. and all other causes
combined.'
Hi'11 blood pressure, by far the most common form of
heart disease, is believed to be an important cause of
strokes.
In 1981, the latest year for which an accurate count is
available, 164,300 lives were lost in the United States as
the result of strokes, marked by a loss of blood supply to
partS of the brain.
The total number of deaths due to heart disease in
1981 was nearly 1 million.
The latest heart association estimates were released in
conjunction with a science writers· seminar that began
today in St. Petersburg.
Civil rights unit
rejects pressure
HUNT VALLEY, Md. (AP)-The U .S. Civil Rights
Commission. its majority expected to su_pport President
Reagan's opposition to busing and afftrmative action
quotas, today declared that "the commission belongs to
no one," including the White House.
The resolution. passed unanimously, was introduced
by one of the new commission members. John H. Bunzel,
a senior research fellow at the Hoover Institution at
Stanford University an California.
He said the resolution was prompted by a news story
Friday that quoted an unnamed ~hit~ House offi~1~ as
saying. "Now that we have the C1v1l Rights Comm1ss1on
on our side, we can make use of them to run some
interference for us."
Bunzel said that i~the remark b)' ~e u~n~med official
is accurate. "the Whtte House offtc1al 1s m error and
deserves our immediate and sharpest criticism." --
The commission directed that a copy of the resolution
be transmitted to the White House.
The resolution said, "The sugestion that the Civil
Rights Commission is on the side. of the White ~ou~" in
any "issue of pubhc controversy 1s untrue and 1s reJccted
out of hand. The commission will remain independent of
all outside wishes or pressures, whether they come from
the White House or any other group.
"Our policy recommendations will be ours alone,
reflecting our own discussions, opinions and positions.
The comm ission belongs to no one, will run interference
for no one. and will serve no political ideology or special
interest.
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tORANC.E ~Ol'""IT\ I
13 TOWN & COUNTRY ~RANGE ~7·827.8
.. .
Democratic debaten from left ue Jolul
Glenn. Alan Crauton. ltrneet BolUnta,
» ........
Oeorte llcOoTern. Guy Ba.rt. Walter Mon-
dale, JMM Jackaon. Rabin Aakew.
Reagan says Soviets won't
underestimate U.S. stren h
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presicknl Reapn. Mid
today that increased fear about the risk ofwarbet~n the
supereower "is understandable but profoundly mi$-
tak.en • and that the world actually is safer now~ th.tee
yea I"$ of U.S. mitiwy buildup becauie the Kttmlin is ae.
likely to underestimate America's 11.rcn&th.
Demo debate brings
gripes and guffaws (
In a fOfel&J\ policy address aimed at aud.lencet at
home and ovcnc,as, Reaaan wet. .. , believe 1984 finds \be
United States in its str0npt position m years to establilb
a oonstn.ictive and realistic work.mg Rlationsbip wilh tbe
Soviet Union."
The president said the Umted States had been in a
state of decline 10 recent years, a.nd ~Soviets .. ma)' have 1 counted on us to keep weakemna ounelvts. .. Bui be said
his adm1n1stration had reversed the decline, and the
turnaround was becornina apparent 10 MOICOW. Dartmoor College candidate
forum serious, convivial
HANOVER, N.H. (AP) -Walter Mondale jumped
to his feet. blastina John Glenn, who jumped to bis, firina
back. Reubin Askew remained seated, but stole his
opponents' thunder. saying, "They're both right -in
what they say about each other."
It was j ust one of many times thata forum of the ei&ht
Democratic presidential candidates brought guffaws from
the audience at a Dartmouth College auditorium on
Sunday. -
The three-hour. nationally televiJcd event was not
typical of traditional candidate forums. and one spectator
said it became a "circus" at times aft.er talk-show host Phil
Donahue took over the em~duties.
The first 90 minutes, moderated by ABC newsman
Ted Koppel, opened with his ~ng warning that the
candidates go easy on the water use they would be on
stage for three hours.
The mood, as candidates discussed economics and
other policies, was serious, but the mood was convivial.
Lots of body language accompanied the verbal
chatter.
Cops break up
brea·k dancers
After the Rev. Jesse Jackson made a point. Askew, a
former Florida governor. leaned over and patted the c1v1l
rights leader on the back,
Jack.son jumped up to intervene as a referee dunng ad
exchange between Askew and Sen. Ernest Hollings of
South Carolina. .
When Askew held up an wrench to illustrate a pomt
about Pentagon waste for the seoond time, Koppel, in a
reference to r:ecenl reports of overpriced hardware. said:
.. You certainly arc $etting your 18 cents worth of that."
Mondale, a former vice president, and Jackson
leaned back and laughed.
During the second half of the program, Donahue bad
barely assumed the moderator's role when be found
himself under fire.
After Donahue pressed Glenn on aid to El Salvador,
the senator from Ohio shot back: "Maybe ydu ought to be
the ninth candidate up here.'' Moments later. Mondale
admonished, "Don't wave your hand at me" as Donahue
tried to cut bis answer off.
Even Jackson, a frequent guest on Donahue's show.
fired a shot. "You bring m two pitchers in the same
ballgame and try lo mtim1date us," he told Donahue.
"Slow down. Amen.''
face.
Donahue spun away from the camera and made a
"This ma)' be the reaton we've been heatio& such
strident rhetonc from lhc Kremhn recently,"~ iaid.
"These harsh words have led some to speak ofbei&htened
uncertainty and an 10creascd danger of coo.flict.
"This is understandable but profoundly mistaken."
the president said.
"Look beyond the words, and one fact stands out/'
Reagan said ... Amcrica'sdetcmoce is more credible and it
is making the world a safer place; safer because now theft
is less danger that the Soviet leadership will underestimate
our strength or question our resolve!
Reagan spoke before an aurucnce of administration
offL<;ials and members of Congress pt.betcd in the Eu\
Room of the White House. His appearance was bctmo.J by
satellite to Europe in time to be on cveninJ newscasts.
Tbc news agency Novosti said that., while .. the
pointedly bellicose speeches of Whjtc House officials arc
giving way to cquaUy pointed peacelovina pbrueoloey,"
lhe president's real attitude is apparent from such moves
as deployment of the U.S.-made Pershing 2 and cruise
missiles an Europe, which led to the break-off of
disarmament talks.
RUFFELL'
UPHOLSTllY, INC. Later, he said he was surprised at the aggressiveness
with which the candidates took off on him. But he added,
"Some of the comments derive from a stereotyped notion
of who I am and what I do .. I have to remind myself it is
probably notappropriate for me to lose any sleep on this.''
The rapid-fire exchanges made for some impromptu h===::;:===--.... ;l"m
alliances during the debate.
~
"" 30.fO Illa
George McGovern. the 1972 Democratic nominee,
jum~ to Mondale's defense when the former vice
LOS ANGELES (AP) -In a crackdown on teen-president came under heat from Glenn. And Sen. Alan
ln•ex•pen•1lve •
"(In lk apen' slv) not hlQh
In price, re1sonable,
clauif1ed ._,..
FAnDS INUAllCE
Gl(U
agers hanging out in Westwood, especially "break Cranston of California went to bat.for Glenn.
dancers" and their sidewalk audiences, a police task force Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado blasted Mondale several
advertising -1 +.1 ow ......... ..,...
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All were later released to their parents.
"We're trying to get the word o ut that the streets of
Westwood are not for babysitting your children at night."
police Sgt. John Bradbury said. "Parents can't just drop
them off there and come back at midnight fot them ...
Some of those detained came from as far away as Simi
Valley and Orange County, Hussey said, including a 6-
year-old boy who accompanied his 14-year-old brother.
The area just south oflhe UCLA campus, lined with
movie theaters and fast-food restaurants, for years has
been a popular gathering place o n weekend and summer
nights for high school and junibr high school students.
Sgt. Curt Hussey, head of the 1 S-officer task force.
said the police acted because street gangs have been
showing up and there have been complaints from
merchants of petty vandalism.
Also. he said. the sudden popularity of break dancing
has so clogged sidewalks that pedestrians are forced into
the street at a time when traffic has been brought to a
standstill because of automobile cruising.
Break dancers perform individual routines, featuri ng
athletic displays such as leaps or spinning headstands. to
music provided by portable radio-cassette players or car
stereos.
Break dancers were featured in a brief street scene m
the film "Flashdance."
Hussey said the weekend crowds "are pick.jog up
more and more, instead of dying down after the end of the
summer. and we figured we had to do something about it
before the Olympics get here."
UCLA will be one of the Olympic Villages and the site
of some Olymt>ic competitions.
Officers picked up 66 boys and girls under the age of
18 on Friday night, and 98 on Saturday, Hussey said.
They were beld at the station's roll call room until a
parent or guardian came for them. None was arrested.
Parents were given a copy of the Los Angeles curfew law.
which forbids those under 18 to loiter on city streets
between I 0 p,m . and sunrise, he said.
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going crazy, many people are giving up on
the idea of ever owning lhcir own home,
much less the chance of buying some in-
vestment propeny. Giving up is lhc worsl
thing you can do. There arc still ways in to-
day's economy to buy propenies, il just
takes some know how.
How Marte Haroldxn Can Help
A f cw years ago, Mark Haroldsen
staned buying income propen1es using very
little of his own money. In only 48 months
he had made over S l ,000,000 through ttal
estate investments. He knows how to make
money in today's market too. lt is really no
difercnt now than it was then. His methods
work. Thousands of people are using them
today.
Btitome Wtaltby or Buy Your flnt Home
Mark Haroldsen wants to share his
ideas with you. He has personally trained a
aroup of inlructors in his methods. One of
these instructors. an investor himself. j5 s<>-
ina to ~ in your town this week. He will
be gmna an absolutely f rce 2 hour ~inar
on ttal estate investing.
O.rt-a UM Two Hours You WW Lam:
• Why real estate in tead of gold.
il"er or stocks
• How to find bargain invntment
properties
• How to buy propeni~ with OPM
(other ~pie's money)
• H.ow to lower )'OU income ta\
to zero
* How innation will help you * Creative Financing Techniques * Should you sell. or keep buying
Pan of this free two hour seminar wtll
be devoted cxclusivcl)' to answering your
questions, so come prepared to ask them.
We will not try to sell you another high
priced seminar. We will teach you how to
"finanClally Survive the 1980's." Over
50.000 people have already attended th~
seminars and arc profiting tremendously.
There is no obligation on your pan and the
seminar 1s open to the publir.
Mark your calendar and plan to attend
one of the seminars in y<'ur area. Bring
your f nends and learn together ho" to
secure your financial future
Free Seminars In Your
Area Are ONLY At The Following
Locations and Times :
Wednesday , January 18th
12 noon to 2 p m
or 7 pm to 9 pm
at the
Hohday Jnn ot Costa Mesa
3131 Bristol Avenue
Costa Mesa. California
for mort btfonnatJoa call: ( I) MJ-llll
--....t.-.--------·-I-•
~~~~~~--------~~~~..._. _________ .._..,.._ ... .._ ............................................................. _.. ........ --...... --........... _..,_.~~~~---,
Laguna taxpayers take notice!
To tht• Fditor
The laguna Beach .. Rip-off' goes
on. This time 11 is being done with m
heu housing fees. The use of tax-
payers' mone) 1s probabl> being used
illegal I) and without ~us11ficat1on.
lntere)t earned an heu hou!>mg ft~!>
should be put 1n a high interest trust
account These funds should be u~d
onl) for housing. preferabl) af-
forda)le Senior C'111zens' housing.
ThME funds should not be transferred
into (_,eneral Funds to pa) other bills
This is alrcad) happening to 1n hcu
parking fees. 111s w1Jhout authont) or
1usttficat1on
Ont·e again in lieu housing fees
should not bc transferred to General
Funds and set up to cover the costs ol
the ot~ council and nt) manager Ken
FranJ...\ inab1ht) to pro"1de sound
financial guidance and management
for Laguna Beacb. In other words 1t 1s
a ca~e of robbing Peter to pa> Paul.
and the Laguna Beach taxpayers arc
the innocent v1c11ms of thti. v1c1ou!I
power play, power polttic!> and the
breakdown of government m Laguna
Beach.
The respons1b1ht)' for this sad
happc-nm~ lies with the Gentry ad-
min1strauon, meaning all five council
members and Cll) mana~cr Ken
Frank (who 1s really the architect and
the person responsible for govern-
ment in Laguna Beach).
Concerned citizens are alarmed
and d1sma)ed. The) demand a full
scale 1nvestijtat1on ofth1s unonhodo\
misuse of m heu fees. The) ul~<r
demand an end 10 the waste of
ta.>.payers' dollars and assurance that
this mistake \\-111 ne\<er again be
repeated. Hopefull;, all future cit)
councils will cease to pla) footloose
and fanc~ free with taxpa)ers' dollars
When thi s happends, 11w1ll1ndeed be
progress an Laguna Beach.
ALAN E. ADAMS
l aguna Beach
Blacks proud of King holiday
Tu thi: Editor
I am "n11ng 1n response to thi:
letter 1n the Jan 6 issue from Jim
Bol ding of Costa Mesa. I wish to sa~
tl> Mr Bolding and all that thank as he
dlk'\. that there are some 20 million
.\mem:an~ of black parentage in th1~
rnuntl") that o"e a great deal to the
leadership and coura$e of Dr King
\.\-1thout his leadership and courage
"'-' "ould st1ll be denied our rights a~
.\mencan~ 1n a largi: pan.on of this
count!)
I might also add that his rnurage
not onh brought blacls out of th{'
chains of b1gotl) and hatred. but
"-hates as well
You ma~ think there arc greater
heroes. that 1SAOur right but please
don't knock mine.
J.\MES HILL
Laguna Beach
Badbm. lWM!rt (..._ f>btrtd.ll).llO lfo""*1 Center Drive~ Sui<i
240. Newport ~ 92660 644-4<MO .
Daaumeyer, Wllllam C39th Dittrict..&) ltlSN~HatborBlYd,, Fullerton
92632. 992-01 ~I •
Laoea. Du (42nd Distm:t·R). SSS E. Ocean Bl'Yd. Suite 505. U;na
Beach -90"80:! .a '9·0~ 19
Packard, Roa (43rd District-R), 28261 Muguerile Park1"1ly. Suik 160,
\.fission V1e10 IJ~69:1 49~·1243
Panenoa, Jerry (38th D1strirt-D). 34 Civk Center Plaza. Suite 9-21.
Santa Ana. 92701 , 835-381 1
MaH ma) be addressed to Holl.SC Offk:t Building. Wasliington, D.C.
20515
STATE SENATORS • Carpeoier, Paal B. 137tb Dlatrfct·D), 5400 Orange Avenue, Cypres~
90630. 952-3201 r-
Royce, Edward B. (Und Dlttrlct·D), 13030 Euclid Ave.,
110, Garden Grove, 92643, Sl4--8Sl0 ~ ·
Seymoqr, JollD (3Stb Diltrict·R), 1360 S. Anw•m Blvd., Anaheun,
92802,999-0963
Speraw, OIUe (37dl Diltrlct·ltH-1\), 2503 EastbluffDrive,
203, Newport Beach, 92660, 76().8833
Dunog ses!ions. mail may be addressed to State Ca]ritol, Sacramento,
9581 4
ST ATE AUEMBL Yid.EN
AlJea, Doris (711t Dbtrlc~I\), 5911 Ceiritos Ave .• C)ptUS:, '°630,
821-1500
Bergetoo. Marla.a (7ttla Dlttrkl-1\), 4SOO c.&mpus Drive, Suite 344,
Newport Beach, 92660 641-7441
Brown. Dea.nit <d11t Dislrl~&), 1945 Palo Verde Ave., t.DA& Beach.
90814, 895-3787
Friuene1 Nolu (""~ft), 1719S Newbopet F-0aotain VaUey,
92708, 662-5,03
Jolul.ston, Rost ("di 1>11111.ec...a). 1S0l N. HarbOr Blvd., fuUertoo
92635. 738-5853
Lewll, John R. (17tb Dtttri~"'Rt, 626 E. Chapman Ave~Onulie, 92666, 997-9270
Robhls.on, Rlclaard ('?tad Dittrtct-0), 11400 StaofOrd A.~e., Oa.i:den
Grove, 92640. 530-7200
During sessions. mail may be addressed to State Capitol, Sacramento.
95814
BOARD OF SUPER VISORS
Sta.atoll. Roa~r -1st Otsuict, 834--3110
Wied~r. Harrle11 -2nd Ditlrict, 834-3220
Nes&alMlle, ISrwee -3rd District. 834-3330
Clark. Batpll -4th Districl. 834-3440
Riley, 'l'Mmu P. -Sth District, 8l4-3SSO
Address: I 0 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana. 92701
''A Jn Vietnam and Cambodia. the bloody nag of Inter-
national. Godless and rlng-around-theooCOllar communism Is
waved to denect us from the ugliness at hand.··
Playing Russian roulette with
the impartial Voice of America
\.\.ASHl!'.(1TON -Charles \.\.1ck.
the 1rreprec;s1blr director of the U.S.
I nforma11on '\gene). was discussing
high stratcg) the other da) with 1us
No ~ man. Leslie Lcnkowsk). and
the former head of French 1n-
1clhgence. Count Alexandre de
Marenches.
It was a most solemn session. dul)
chronicled in a 17-page transcnp1
intended for official eyes onl).
Putting first things first, de
Marenche'> brought up the Soviet
Union. It should not be called the
Soviet l 'nion. he said. He told Wick
the USIA "should always say the
So' 1et Empire." Then the problem
came up of what to call Soviet
lkfense M1n1ster Dmitri Ustinov.
"I don't lake the word ·defense·
""hen ~ou are talking about 1he
Russians ... "said de Marenches.
"Minister of war? .. asked Wick.
"I was going to say that he would be
called the 'm1n1sterofwar, minister of
global aggression."' suggested the
count. "That 1s what he really 1s."
Speaking of "war." he reminded the
USIA pohc~ makers that their agenC)
1s rcspons1bl" for the ··'"ar of ideas."
lkclared de Marenches: "I "ould
sa) that \.\C ha\en't lost the "ar of
idea<, .. We ha' en •t even fought 11 ..
Now. what this kind of warfare tells u~
(le;) don't worrv too much about
h1tt1ng the body. go in through tht
eyes and the ears .... "
But the best place to hit the Poles.
he felt. wac; 1n the stomach. The l 1SIA
'>hould bear down on Poland's food
problem\. he said.
"LacJ... of food should be associated
with communist ideas ... " urged de
~1arenches ··1 thank simple things
like th1~. Charles, arc absolutely of
paramount 1mponance. And 1f we
don't do this. "'h) do the rest? .. This
JACK
ANDERSON
IS absolutcl). I thinJ... vital ... Do )OU
agree~"
L"nJ...o"sl.) qu1ckl) agreed. ..I
think )OU are absolutel} right.'' he
said.
Wick later made a comment "h1ch
canonl) beclas 1fiedasm)st1f}ing. "I
think }OU can without bilaterals be
provocatl\C .. ··he said
De Marenlhes got bacl to
nomenclature The Voice of Ameri-
ca's nam{' should be changed. he
announced. ··1 am not sure I would
call it the Voice of America," he said.
"Too late now." interjected an
un1dent1fied voice.
l 'ndetcrred. tht· count suggested
that the VOA be renamed the"\ 01cc
ol L1lx·rt} ..
LenJ...o"~"' had c;orncth1ng to sa)
abou1 the nature of the So' 1et
advcrc;ary: "I had a friend who said
whenn n \'OU ''anl to evaluate
Ru\'1an beha"wr. }OU need not onl)
a lhCS') l'>.pen but a mag1nan . .a
functional paranoid. etc ..
Despite the perplc\lt) and per-
' crsit) of thi: Soviet l n10n. dcc;p11e
h1\ 1.hs~a11sfact1on "1th U.S.
nomenclature. de Marcnche<, thought
he sa" a light on the hon1on
"One da):· he said "the\ \\111 be
Ru-.s1a again ··
l mden11fied \OICl' ") o u mean.
the h1<,tomal Ru ~s1a ..
TRUE CASE STUDY ON
TELEPHONE MANNERS
Mystery caller gets
a lesson in how
to win new friends
I he ph Otlt' went ping bong. We
ha \<ea phone that goes p1 ng bong
rather than a ringer because the' are
more <,etthng to th{' nen cs. Sonie-
t1mec; I ha"" trouble w11h the phone
because the doorbell also goes ping
bong. but th1'i time I knew that 11 was
thi: phone because I had Just opened
thl' front door and waHtanng rather
'acanth out upon our front vard
when II ~ent pinghongaga1n
.\nn an'tv.l·rcd "Hello'' Hello''"
Then <,hi:callnl me. I ,.,.i:nt to tlw
lotchl'n. "-ht:ri: the phone I\. "'ih~·
handl'd 11 to m1.· "-llhout a \.\Ord I
took t hl' phone and put 11 w m ~ car
"Hello''"
Nothing I listened a httle more
close I) and was able to detect signs of
breathing on the other end.
"Well. 1"11 be damned.'" \atd I. "an
obscene phone caller " Because there
..eemed to be no ans"er fonhcoming
and because there seemed to be httlc
else to do. I hung up
De Marcnches: ··The power will
break.''
Voice: .. We have got to liberate
those people. Let's."
CONFlDENTIAL FILE: Libyan
strong man Muammar Qaddafi
might well be called .. the desen cat,"
considering the number of attemptc;
on his li fe he has survived. The latest
coup plan was blown when an army
general was involved in a car acci-
dent. In vestigating police found
documents 1n his car that disclosed
the whole plot. Sources say eitecu-
uons may already have followed.
-At the tame of the Falklands
1nvas1on. the Soviets were so eager to
win Argentina's fnendsh1p that the}
sent two ~p) satellites up and relayed
1nformat1on to the nght-w1ng m1h-
tar) ~overnment in Buenos Aires.
Intelligence sources sa) the So' 1ets
continued to provide updates on
Briush act1vn1es 1n the Falklands to
Argentina at least as late as last
summer.
-Ignore reports that hundreds of
i\fghan rebels are surrendenng to the
Soviet-backed regime. It's true, but
n's all cychcal. As the Afghan winter
gets reall) rough. man) guernllas
pose as pen11ents JUSt to get food and
shelter until spring. Then they return
to their rebel bands when thmgs
warm up -often bnngin~ va luable
intelligence 1nformat1on with them.
NAME YOUR VOLUNTEER·
The third annual President's Volun-
teer Action Awards will be $Jven out
at a White Houseceremon) in May to
.\mcncans who have donated their
umc to worthy causes. There are I 0
public-service categones. and you can
get nomination forms from the
PV i\A at P.O. Bo>. 37488. Washin$·
ton. DC 10013. Deadline for nom1-
na11on 1s Jan 31
B1u
HARVEY
earhcrth1s time. Hold o n for a
minute. will you?" I called to Ann.
"Honey. it's It. Do you want to hsten
to 1t breath?"
"I can·t right now. rm nght 1n the
middle ofsewing. Ask ft 1fit can call
back a little later ...
"Well. how about 1t lt?Can you call
back a little later1 Say. before I 0
o'clock?"
RICHARD COHEN
Columo.l.9t
R1c1111
Co1u
'WRONG
HENRY'
RIDES
AGAIN
Siding with killers
fur expediency ts
a f amiltar posture
WASHINGTON-Oneofthe
enduring mystenesofWashington is
why !lome men endure. The town is
studded with people who were wrong
on Vietnam. wrong on Ca.mbod1a,
wrong on Lebanon. and who never-
theless get summoned repeatedly to
advise the President. Among the
"wrongest" of these has been Henry
KJssing.er. He 1sabout to keep hts
record 1 n tact.
Kissinger has filed a dissent from
the repon of the com mission that
bears his name. A ma1ont) thinks
m1htary aid to El Salvador should be
"conditional" on human-nghts pro-
gress. Kissinger, although .. strongly"
endorsing condiuonahty, added a
quibble: Human nghts is important.
but not as imponant as the strategic
value of El Salvador.
Immediately. the White House
sided with Kissinger. It said Ronald
Reagan is "'inclined" to ignore any
recommendatjon that Salvadoran aid
be linked to so trivial a matter as the
murder and torture of civilians,
although a spokesman later said the
President would keep an open mind.
Like Kissinger, though, the President
is an exponent of first things first .
When 1t comes toa meeungofthe
minds, th1s1sa LatinAmencan
version of the hat tnck -Klssinger,
Reagan and the Salvadoran killers all
in ag~ment. Nothing is as 1mpon-
ant to the Salvadoran ri$ht than the
eradication of communism-a label
1t promisciously1lpplies to anything
from the genuine anicle to mere
dissent
Whale' er >OU might think ofth1s
policy. It is no1hingifno1 familiar. As
10 Vietnam and Cambodia. the
bloody flag of international. Godless
and nng-around·the-collarcom-
munism is waved to deflect us from
the ugliness at hand. Since Ronald
Reagan came to office. some 30,000
Salvadoran civilians have been
murdered by right-wing death
squads. And until recently the Reagan
adm101strat1on did not. as they say at
the State Depanment. say squat. On
the contrary, it sacked an ambassador
who complained about the death
squads and d1sa' owed a second who
did the same.
Nowt he adm in1strat1on 1s putting
upa fuss and the Salvadorans. who
know a charade when they see one.
are going along. I hree milllaf) of-
ficers 1mphcated in death-squad ac-
t1v11ies have been dealt with -sent
abroad as military attaches.
Salvadoran justice can be brutal
But with Kissinger saying that
death ~uadsare regrettable but
something we may have to live Wlth .
and Reagan sayingjust about the
same thing. there will be no impetus
for the Salvadorans to reform_ And 1f
they do not do 1t now. they wall
cenainly not do it lat~r. if.this latest
war agamst communism 1s won.
Then it will be only a matteroltime
until Salvador 1s in flames again.
Nothing fenilizes the soil ofrevol-
ution like the blood ofmanyrs.
Just one more dream that vanished
l\ltrr I hung up. I began to think
about what had Just transpired. Could
m1. ca ller actuall> be classified as an
ohc;cenccallcr'1 ~f\{'rall. whocverll
'":is who had called hadn ·tactually
...a1dan~th1ng. S1nCC' I didn't kno"' 1f
the pcr5on who had called was a he or
a o;he. we decided to name our caller
The phone went click. I didn't
know if that meant yes or no. so for
lack of information I decided tOJUSt
wan and set whal would happen. For
almost two months. nothing hap.
pened. I began to think that maybe It
was mad at us because A'hn wouldn·1
take tame to come to lhe phone and
hsten to it breathe. Finally.just when
we were beginning to fear that we
were never to hear from It agam. the
phone rang and il was It!
All th ts escaped Kissinger wh o sees
al most evervthmg but his recent
appearance on .. Dynasty" m East-
West terms. He finds the Soviets
um:erevery bed and. to be fair. they
are no1 above some meddling. But
Salvador. indeed all of Central
America, isa problem in and of itself
and for all the lalk of"' exported ..
revolution. the civil wars there are
indigenous.
The death squads. for instance. are
1llustrativeof a society where the
powerful oppress the weak with
impunity, sharing nothin$ with them
-not land, not opportunity, not
educati on, not medical services, not eve~ respect (or human life. Any
Soviet meddhng under these cir1:'um-
s.tancc! would amount to gilding tht
hi)' But aside from that. it is past time
that the Soviet threat -allese<S.
actual or eltaagcrated -is troucd out
to excuse every policy mis take ( Lcba·
non) orto ignore murder (Salvador)
T hr 1 JJ \'1Jhal 1n lnd1:i 1, whnr
marbk The monarlh "ho liu1lt 11.
'ihah khan. though· Wouldn·t 11 bl·
niftv 1f I had another one in contrac;t-
ing hlad, marhk JU'it acro'ic; tht'
Jumma RI\ er'' AnJ thc two LOuld bl·
wnnct tl'd h\ ii \lhl'r hndgc r11do11'
I'll do 11' But hl' nc" er gut around to 11
\omc men nl'\.t'r ftn1\h .in\ thing
r h,11 t \ l ll\ \\ hl·rc in lht• mml
f)\"nplc.-pe1 1. a p1 i.l f(' .ld R• rite ma@cl-
11nr<,1c; De' '-lmne'I lo"'J Orll' out of
n ('f\ I., !'X'<>Pk lhctt' huH t'rthl·r of
thl' t"o lt•Jd1n1 nudr·phn1n puhh·
C•H 111n'
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
<hcrhcard "I oo~. If m~ daught{'r
"ant!. to lcam huw lo drt\l', rm not
going to \land 1n her w;i\ "
D1no,aur\. too had <1rthn11c,
<) V.. hat Jp \old1cr" m<.'an h\
· \\t1IJ...1n~ poin t"''
' .\ 11-.. thl· lrnnt po\1tton 1n an
1nfan1f\ patrol \kn in the platoon
.trl' <l1'lf)t'f<il'd in the 'hn~· ul tt
d1.imond one c;old1t'r ,lt thl' point in
tmnt on(' tmngmg up the l't":lr the
rc\I in two 'ik1rr1w.h rnlumn;, th.11
hul(t<' out 1n 1hc m1ddk hut con' ('fill'
H.L. 8chwer11 HI ""'*-
Chur Dowenbr
,d~O' lrld "-·-to • ... ~
urry D. Spurt
• M IQll'O f:ClllOt
at lront and had Dunnga I 5·second
fire fight in the Vietnam War. the life
e\l'X'Ctanc~ of the man "walking
point" 1n a 1:ombat patrol wa~ 0 8
~i.'1..onth.
C) What'\ ··,m.'ct furn1turt•"1
•\ Tra'ih ha.,~et~. ma1lho\c<,. fire
h"dranl\ In tht• lingo of th1.· l'•t\
pfannt:r\
C) ~hat do ..ardin1.· pat lt·r;, use tu
behr.td th~ ..an.line' the} pack '
.\ \c l\\nrc;
\ re1d10 .announ1.l'r in c >rcgon
1:omphcd "Ith the n-4ucc;t of a high
c;c-hool l'flnc'tf'3I 10 hro&dt'lt\t the
naml"!l of ah\ent \tudl'nh ('\.Cf)
mornina Tht· truann rate droppc"d
"I~ (X'f\\'nt
Under tht• la" uf ldJho fall' Ida .
\OU haH' to c:1op r1d1n(l \our mo10r
t H'll" aftC'r a~c 1<8
In Ruman ta onn· a man had togrt u
gnH"rnmrn1 rwrm11 t1l r.ro" " bt.ard
.. It ...
.\hout o month la t{'r almo~t to the
da' ourphoncmni ltwa~alittlc
aftcrm1dn1ght \1nrc I wuclo~r. I
an .. wcred. "Hello""
'\oth1ng
It had \truck agJin
I 1,tcn rf~ou ah,olutcl) ha' e to
tall I can undcr\tand but ho"' abou1
lalhnga littlctarlicr 1n thl' C\<en1na'1 I
ha\t' tO(lO lO work tomorro"' 'b)t:
no"' "Wrth that. I hung up
Ping hong wen I the phone
\g..11n, nothillJ
.. \111l'I" It. no.._. \ou'"cdone 1\
I'm going to lea' e the phoni: ofT of the hook · .\nd I did
·\i~un almo\t cxnrtl~ one month
lat( r thC' phone ran&, hul carhtr in the
t\ enina thl\ 11 me \gu1n. I happened
10 be t'loscr ~I an~,H·rt·d
'"lfello.,··
No1h1n
"Oh h1 It Ho"' h:tH'\OU bttn"
\3\. I r~oll) app1rrlilh.' ·ou calhna
-.
"My God. II. where have you been?
We 've heen womcdsiC'k! If you
wcren 't going to call. the least you
could havedonewasdropusa post
card. We wertafraid that you were
hurt. or maybe even dead. Honey. at 's
It' Listen It. don't do th1s1l381n. OK?
If you're not goina tot'all. let us know.
Otherwise. ~cjust worry."
Click went the phone.
It ncvercallc<hgain The rea~on
ma) have been that lt).U'il couldn't
face up to thertsp0ns1b1htyofcalhna
c\ef) month on the month. but I
think 1t wa because we got one of
tho~ ta pt recorder5 that an'iWCI"$ tht
phont. Cl-n >OU lrnqJn~lht' ~hfer
frustration of calhna ~meonc up
havinaa machine tell you to leave a
mcsc;agc "'hen) ou hear the tone. and
ha-.anaat>solutcl) noth1natou~
thavcn't g1vton up hope though.
Ma)lx It will bu) 1t'\own mach1nt.
1nd pr91!"m n to breathe 1n1oour
machine \car.
HarH,, 1 sn· 1dcntol Huntm11011
Ben h
--
With El Salvador, K1ssinser hu
told the adm1n1stration what It "'ant·
ed to hearand entranced his con·
~"' at1 ve credentials. J u!t1cc de·
mands that he be rewarded wtth the
h1ahofficchc1ns1stshcd0t notwant.
But thert' 1unother kind Of Justice
and it in 1\ts that Salvadoran ~1llc~
be dealt with. That's not only morally
oght.11's yeasty with Kiss1n1tnan
praama11sm.
lft11 tory1sannu1de. K.J sinicr'\
mol"lllyobtuscpolicywtll not only
mi ·arry. but it Yt'ill be foraouen ~hen
_.nothcr PfC tdent wants 1dv1~.
When itcomts co K1Htnl(r. Wuh.
in11on I likeS.lvndor. Nothing
\U ~ds llkt liulurt..
\ • ·~
Isle nO escape
for non-reader
HONOLULU (AP)-Kevin Walcot
has built a pubhshing empire in Pon
Moresby, but he's not exactly the
press baron of Papua New Guinea.
For one thing, his is a small empire
that Just got smalkr. That's because
his 40-page monthly magazine, 'New
Nation. folded recently when. after six
years. the government could no
longer afford to buy the bulk of the
60.000-copy press run for use in
schools.
.. It peaked and 1hen 11 poo~u:
said Walcot at a conference on
publishing in the Pacific at the
Un1 vers1ty of Hawa11 Graduate
School of Library Studies.
Walcot's Word Publishing Co. still
publishes two weekly newspapers,
Wantok in pidgin. which has a
circulation of 15,000. and The Times
of Papua New Guinea. circulation
9.000.
The newspapers are unhke most
others because the}' cater to a soc1et}'
that has a generally low opinion of
readers.
.. That's the whole problem."
Walcot, 50. an Englishman who has
lived in Papua for 13 years. said. "It's
an oral society in which people aren't
interested in reading, basically. Read-
ing's an anti-social activity that cuts
them off from th e community and
therefore it's frowned upon.
"The only place reading 1s being
fostered 1s in the school. When kids.
after six years of pnmary schooling,
leave school. there's nothing for them
to read. and consequently they lapse
back into illiteracy."
The now-defunct New Nauon was
an effort to make reading fun for
young people, but with its demise
Walcot 1s pinning his hopes on a senes
of story books that are unique because
they describe local. rather than
foreign. adventure!> and experiences.
The books have hegun to catch on.
he says. Two of the eight utles are
going into a second pnnttng. while 20
more lilies will be added next year.
Like other publishers. Walcot
womes about profit s. but not in the
same way as some might.
For one thing. the publishing ven-
tures Walcot ov~rsee!> are not his own.
The Word Pubhshing Co. 1s owned by
Papua's four maJor church organiza-
tions-Catholic. Anglican. Lutheran
and United Church ofChnst.
For another thing. Walcot 1s a
Roman Catholic pnest. who cel-
ebrates a mass whenever a parish
needs him. Since 1976. his principal
mission in Papua has been spreading
the printed word. The name Word
Publishing Co. has a double meaning
for him because his rchg1ous order is
the Society of the D1 v1ne Word.
The publications. however. are
secular and Walcot is always looking
for wa ys to make them as topical as
possible. even 1f11 means dwelling on
fashions and throwing in some ro-
mance.
Walcot is parucularly proud of
Wantok. the pidgin newspaper. He
sees 1t as weathervane of yassroots
opinion in the nation of million.
which gained full independence from
Australia in 1975.
Wantok - a word that describes
someone who speaks the same
language -features local news and
features. a back-page world news
photo page and a generou:. helping of
spons, which sells the paper to people
interested in rugby and soccer "no
matter which of the 700 languages
they read or speak."
Free time wish:
Make· more love
NEW YORK(AP)-lfgivena few
free hours alone with their husbands.
one of every three married women
under 35 would rather make love
than do anything else. But women
over 45 would rather watch TV.
Those were the fi ndings of a
nat1onw1de survey published in the
February issue of Ladies' Homes
Journal, based on responses of86.000
of its readers. ·
The survey found other differences
in various a$e $roups of women, such
as the adm1ss1on by more than 41
percent of the wom en under 25 that
they were regular drug users. whereas
over 90 percent of women over 40
said they never used drugs.
Most women -young or old -
PAPARAZZI
seemed to have a yen for romance. at
least the fairy-tale princess variety.
Women of all ages said they would
pick Princess Diana if they could
change places with anyone fora week:
As for romance in th eir own lives. 1t
was more starry-eyed and passionate
among the young.
The Journal said that one third of
the women under 35 answered "make
love" when asked what they would be
most likely 10 do 1fthey had a few free
hours alone with their husbands. The
number dropped to 25 percent for
women in the 35 to 45 age group and
slipped 10 I 0 percent for women over
45. who were most likely to answer
"watch TV."
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Monday, J nuary 18, 1884 A7
• ---I --
ENTERTAINMENT A-8
TV LISTINGS A-8
DellJ,.. ....... ~ L.-...,...
Sandy Skolung•a color photograph, ••aevenge of the Goldfish" la part of the•• Amdoua Interlon" exhibit.
Reflective 'Anxious Interiors'
I
contain telling art of our time
Any creative peraon can appreciate the predicament In
"Artlat'• Malalae'• by Krlatopber Cox of Laguna Beach.
Chrlatlne Bourdette'• barricaded tableau ahowa reaaone
why aome may believe that ''It'• a Jangle Out There."
BY SUSAN MONAHAN
Dally Pilot Correspondent
If there's no place hke home. there
is also no one wa y h> mterpret this
truism ... Anxious lntenors," an exh1-
biuon of small-scale sculpture ar.d
photography offers some 1d1osyn-
cratic views of life behmd the four
domestic walls.
The works of 28 artists are on
display through Feb. 19 at the La.guna
Beach Museum of Art.
Unlike a candid snapshot.a tableau
is a carefully staged dramatic mo-
ment. meant to convey the photogra-
pher's v1ewpo101 rather than capture
action with a camera
"We're back toa period where an 1s
about our own times and ourselves
rath er than art about making an:·
said Elaine K. Dine~. curator of 1he
exhibit.
.\ few pieces were ere a ted spec1 ti-
c ally for the exhib111on. but Dines
says that a trend she nouced among
contempora11 ar11s1s pro"1ded the
inspiration -and 1he an -for
"Anxious Interiors."
.. Most of the an1s1s arc products of
the ·me generation· and this 1s an
0·<1ens1on of their self-anal\ sis ... The
horn,. is related to the sel(and the'
staned w11h the self." she explamed."
Photographer Lucas Samaras and
Eileen Cowin have apparentl) taken
the '70s sl ogan "citpress }'Ourself' to
hean. for tl1e) both direct and pose m
their own tableaux.
Cowin goes one better b) also usmg
her twin sister as a model 1n the three
untitled tableauA w h1ch Dines calls
'"hH>erboltc soap opera ...
Like soap opera heroines. the
subjects are g1,en clearl~ defined
almost sterotyped roles and the
drama 10 1he s1tua11on 1s lO n'e'ed
through exaggerated C'tpreS'>10nS and
postures.
Some of the an 1st~ af<,o ha\ e used
hyperbole 10 bnng home -.oc1al 1<i!>uc.:~.
5and} Skogl und. tor l'\Jmpk
Jramat1zes the pnsc,1bk con\e·
quences of OH:rpopulattun 1n
.. Maybe Babies ··
The grimacing. blue bab1c\ in the
photograph are actuall' made: ut
porcelain. but their fear and pain are
fnghten1ngl y reahsuc. The infants
float outside a locked home. while the
man of the house glowers at them
from behmd a closed window.
Even more horrifying is Edward
K1enholz's -·Sawd}'." m which racism
is personified by white men who' arc
castrating a black man. The grainy
black and white photo 1s mounted in
th e door of a 1971 Datsun. "Since the
famil) spends so much ttme in the
car. they're more or less domestic
interiors also." said Dtnes.
Despne the tille. however. there isa
hghttr side to the cxb1b1t1on.
"Domestic Drama No. I ... by Nie
N1cos1a. 1s more hke a domesuc
canoon. and Dines compares the
"ork of Bn11sh photographer Boyd
Webb 10 the "h1ms1cal "nun~ o(
Le" 1s ( arroll
'"(arroll hrol..e a"'a' fro m the
Victorian trend oftelhng stones with
"beginning. a midd le and an end. ·So
does Webb -we kno"' there'<. a
ston . but we don't kno"' "hat 1t 1s."
she Said.
mce a tableau ponra~s on l~ the
moment. the plot rernams open-
ended The message. ho"'e' er 1!> often
more ob"1ous than 11 1s in other an
forms
fh" ,., l''>pt-uall~ true of the small-
scak '>l ulpture). "'here the sce ne is
prl'<,1.·nted 1n three d1meno;1on'> and 1
m.idt• up of nhJl'd\ rather than
pll lUrt''
\r11,1., \tala1.,1.· .. h~ "' '"opher
t 1.l\ ~l'l'' .1 'er~ literal meaning to
the term ··an 1st I( hlock ·· The blcx k 1n
this tahkau is a real c;tone and the
truc;trcltl'd '>1.ulptor ,., '1n ualh
'>tra1ght-Jacke1ed b~ his clothing
·I wanted an nh1h111un "here
pe1.1plt• didn't ha'e to under">tand the
e<.oteru. . ., ot tine an .. said Dines.
aJding that the %-page catalog she
ha!> \\ntten lan serH' a~ a guide 10 the
\.\Ori.
Stipporters' r~tio tops l\ome nt 1h1.· tatikau\ '>Cl'm ~l f
l'\planato11 at least on thl' <.urfacc
··Ncl·d for ( ertatnt\ ·• b\ Roland
Reis.<;. 1\ a m101at~c f1,mg room so
chuck full of turn1ture and cluttered
\.\1th the fl()\'-C\\IOOC\ ot lhc 0\\ nC'~
that thl·re"' no room 10 attuall~ ll\c
there
By VIDA DEAN
OftMDellJl'tlotll-"
"The smallest support group that
gives the largest amount per mcm-
be .. r.
This was Vin Jorgea1ea'1 descnp-
uon of the Sandpipers of Hoag
Memorial Hospital as he·was handed
a $73,000 check from _the 32-mcmber
group by Suzy Riley, incoming presi-
dent. , bo d Jorgensen (on tbe hospital s ar
of directors) accepted the money
(results of the Sandpiper's '83 auc-
lion) at the annual prescntauon
luncheon held at al)ta Ana Country
Club. His praise of the small. but
hard-working group concluded w11h
"keep doing it" and director of
development Frank Hall took the
check with a promise to be off to the
bank.
The money will go towfrds t~e
breast imaging machine that 1s
already beinJ used at Hoag to detect
cancer b) hght beams.
Sue Grabam, general manager of
SCP Bullock's (sue of the fundra1ser)
New prealdent SUS)' Riley, right, dlecuMa Sandpiper'•
fandralaint with Sue Graham and Dr. Robert Rarwlu.
was gi ven an engra,ed s11'er frame as
were her director of pubhCll} Carol
Humphries (not there due to a
previous hohda~ engagement 1n the
Canbbean)and Jim Vlllers, VP ofthe
552 Club. who donated his lime as
auctioneer. Bullock's will also host the '84
auction (late September or early
October) with Janet Sawyer as chair-
man.
Guest at the lunch celebrating the
group's succc sful }'Car lthe '83 e' ent
made $20.000 more than the '82)
were Karen Whitaker and Mlcbelle
Vaagban, auction co-chairpersons.
Candy Jackson, outgoing president.
Assistant Adm1n1strator Tlm Smltll,
Dr. Robert Shapiro (he heads the
radiation therapy depanment and
talks enthus1asucall> about new tech-
n1quc' in h15 fitkH and Dr. Robert
H11M¥lt& (he spcc1ah1e'I in bre1nt
cancer \Crtcn1na>
Othcl"i there "ere Nancy Prtller
and EIUe Holtman from Bullock'!.
Hoaa's Kerry Rot~. Emll,y WU1••·
Vlckl Gertn1. Abbie Forster (~nd·
pipers ,ha1rman for the ~S2'\ Jan
29-)0golftournomcntat lnincC oa\t
Country Cluh.> Lila Hartman and
Laraine Egle tOft.
hlly ........... "' ......... ~
673,000 donation to Hoag Memorlal Hospital make.
dh'ector Vln Joraen.en and Candy Jackaon •err happy.
'
\n' 1111l "ho duuht' th.II ma1erial-
1<.m ha' run ramrant 1n th" d"'elltng
has onl' tl1 loo~ at the 11 n' l rl·d1t \a rd
on thl' t)nor
.\nJ "h1lc the l" crall mcc;sage ma~
!:'le clear. that' arc itl o 'luhtlettl'"I that
l .ln Ix' ptl ked up from the Sl'Cn<'
"'The ttun (in the tahlcaul rep-
~"'' '1nlCnle The lamera 11, fnr
rl'l1t<.:t1np U f'lO ont·<,elt <.aid Dme1,
\h· Jn 1 n gs -" 11h1 n -ml' Jn 1 n g.,
abound 1n the ""r: ul Tom Fooh:f).
H1<. ml\cd media ~ulpturc. "Ll\lle
..,lttper ~htt:h ~ho"' a nuM adres
being filmed h\ a mo' 1c crew:. 1., <,('t 1n
an anuquc spotlight hou\1ng.
· '\lo dX"\ nml' 'O\Cuf"\ \\-atrhmg the
1.ltrcctor t.11n-..t. ht' 1cxhnie1an' v.ho
tunc11on _,J\ \C\\rur<. ""'htns the
\U1rlct undre\\IOg -.; 1J 0 1ne\
Fooltf) ·\ 1magen 1s e\~1all \ apt,
tx"\,u tht' tahkau 1~ 1n t u (ro1cn
dB ma Dine., '\ that h~r pp h
to 1t 1\ the \aJTh.' that ,ht bnn to lh~
thc~tu
l 11ll· Jr.1mat"t 1t11: a rtist\ haH'
lft:ttcd their "" n rt'ahtic Or.
I >1ne' t'\f'r'C\\Ci. 11· ··1 h~ arts t
make rhuto\raph' r ther than Lake
J'h11111 nlfthi •
l •
Al Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 18, 19.84
Columnist plays Cupid
DE..\R o\NN
LANDER ham
101 na to a"k you lo
breillt a tona·"ltand1na
polK')' Perhaps when
you hear my tory
you will aarce to do so.
•• lMD£1S
Thiny ycaruao1•••••••••••1 I had an affair with a
woman named Mildred. I was then married and the f1 1her
of two boys. The affair was not one we went lookina for. h
Just happened. We worked 1n 1hc same office, and one
cventni we were the: 10,110 leave. As we moved toward the
door Mildrcdpv<' mea lovel_y smile and before I ktlew 11.
I kissed her That was the bea1nnin1 With in a few mon1hs
we were deep!) involved.
For three yean we were secret love~. Mildred left her
husband after the first year. (They had ~n separated for
~ll monthi. before we had that first k.iss.) Two and a half
yea~ later !lhe lost h<'r JOb with 1he company and ll became
apparent that wt' could no longer sec one another every
day
I knew I had to make a choice between Mildred and
m~ wife and children. To her everlastins credit, she made
the choice for me. I belonged with my w1f<' and sons. she
said. and slipped out of my life by taking a Job in another
cll). She asked that I never try to find her. •
Several months ago I lost my dear wife after nearly 40
vears of a good marriage. I have gone through gnef and
inourningand now realize I must build a new life. My first
thoughr( ~"·re about Mildred. Is she married" Would ~he
HELP YouRSELF
hke to sec me apin 1f shell free? SomC"One told me she was
an Nonh Bay lalM>heardshcwuin Toronto. I wouldgrve
an)1hinatoseeheraaa1n I sull hvc m the same hou~and
have the same phone number. If Mild.red reads your
column daily. as I do, I would be: lhnllcd to receive a call
You said ma recent column you cnJoycd play1na
Cupid. Will you do so for me? I aivc you my word that if
Maid~ aets in touch with me I will wntc again and let you
know how it turned out. Obviously. I cannot sign my
n me, but my aniual is sufficient. -L.
DEAR L,; Y o.r leUer prue•t• an lrreal•tlblc
opportaalty to clo tome Sood ill lite world wltlaool
betnyta1 my prtactplff. I WoaJd be e.plaortc U you found
MUdred ud 1be wH 11UJ waltin& for yoal Goo4 l1ck.
DEAR ANN LAN UEKS: You stated recently thitan
advice columnist should not accept money from readtn.
Yo u saad you always rctum all checks and cash. ifthcrc 1s
an 1ddress. Iftherc1s none. you Jive the money tochanty.
I wntean Action Lmecolumn in Massachusetts and
our services. of course. are free. But don't you f~l lhat a
columnist who JI vcs advice on auto repairs or house
1mprovcments(often nota full-t1meJob. but m~ly a
s1dehne) 1scnutled to keep the small checks from readers
whom they have hclpcd?-G.R.D.
DEAR G.R.D.: Sorry, I doa't a1ree. A service-type
col1m.a la a Dewspaper alloald be Jqt &ht. A service. Tbe
aathr lt paid by ttae paper to rupoDCI to "'e quettlon1 from
readers.
Ube/ 1lae wan 1110 be paJd for aacb upertist, &be
writer oapt to 10 into another field. It l1 called
"CODIUJtlng."
USE A CANE WHEN WALKING
DE AR DR .------------
STEJNCROHN: I
wish ~ou'd help
populanzc the cane p
Not for u'iC b) )'oung ETER
and middle-aged -
..
but for the elderly ST£IMCROHM My father, who " "
1' 78. had been cam-1••••••••••••• 1 rig, a cane for t he past
li'c >Car~ Espccrall> taking his daily stroll around the
block or walking to the corner store About three months
ago one of his elderly pals told him he looked hkc an old
man suppomng himself with a cane wherever he went. He
!>ha med my dad into giving 11 up.
On the second day without 11. he stumbled and broke
hts hrp. Fortunately. he came through the surgery but keeps
sa~ ing he's darn sorry he listened to his friend. Wouldn't
* UmHI az.• 'Tl. a.• UT./IUl./a.I. IT ITllllEI TIDTIU
NEWPORT BEACH
TOWN CCNmt u,.., ..... .. _
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many elderly people. unsure while walking. be better ofT
Wl th a cane? Mrs. B.
DEAR MRS. 8 .: I have theory that the big toe stubs
itself merely to call attention to the feet. Too ofte n we take
them for granted. They arc the forgotten members of the
human frame. Of course, a eane 1s a practical solution for
older persons who arc unsure while walking. Even for
those who think they are .. sure."
Dr. Arthur E. Hclfa nd. president of American
Podiatry Assoc1at1on tells us: "The foot is a complicated
part of the body. It has 26 bones and is laced Wlth
ligaments. muscles, nerves and blood vessels. A health>
person's feet travel 115.000 miles in a lifetime."
Most of us arc aware of the importance o(our feet -
whether we're young or old. But we often overlook the fact
that the foot (and leg) accepts any support It can get. I agree
wi th yo u. Let's be greatful for the suppon of a cane. IJ's like
ha vi n a outhful third le to call on for help.
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Jean Stapleton. Peter l>Yonky ln .. A Matter
of Bez."
Battle of sexism
changed a town
Women's fight for equal job rights
airing tonight in television movie
l--~ ~-
By FRED ROTHENBERG
UT .......... Wttt.
• ~GEL
,..,, H•re A H•w C") ""-•Vice 1•11•41 C"t
Ot •Int 011J111 I JOW .. ttMlt /1,45 WM
ChlWrt1Uldtf12 frtt a.tits• MttH
'La Mancha,'
'Hot L' open
Eight other local-p oducttons
continue along Orange Coast ---------·
rhe sccond1Jroduc11on from Oran~c County's newest
community theater ip-oup and lhe revival of one of the
most j)Opular of musicals take center suiie this week.
Opening Friday at Orange Coast College's Drama
Lab Theater IS Lan-------------ford Wilson's "The
Toi
TITUS
Hot L Baltimore,"
produced by A Class
Act Players. Thurs-
day will sec the ar-
nval of "Man of La
Mancha" at the Cur-
tatn Call Drnner
Theater 1n Tustin. ••••••••••••• Karl Hesser 1s dircctinl "Hot L Baltimore," a
comedy-drama set an a decaflnJ inner-city hotel. Cast
members include Peter Dolan·. Carolyn Sheppard. Tony
Grande Patrick Healey, Steve Grodt, Aaron Charney,
Adair Williams, Robin John Pnce. Juhe Valencia and
Dorothy MacDonald. ' .
The show" ill be presented for thr« weekends Wllh
curtain at 8:30 Fndays and Saturdays and 6:30 Sunday!.,
closing Feb. 4. Reservations 432-5880.
"Man of La Mancha," a frequent v1s1tor to local
theaters brinJS its "Impossible Dream" to the Curuun
Call with Cal Roben son in the central role of
Cervantes/Don Quixote. Susan Hoffman portrays
Aldonza. with Richard Cast as Sancho Panza.
Performances will be given nightly ellcept Monday!.
at varying curtain times through March 25 at the theater.
690 El Camino Real, Tustin. Reservations 838-1540.
The two newcomers 101n eight other prod.uct10n!.
currently on the boards along the Orange Coast. They
include:
•"Becoming Memones" at South Coast Repertory.
655 Town Center Dnve, Costa Mesa (957-4033). playi ng
nightly except Mondays at 8 p.m. (7:30 Sundays) and
w~kend matinees at 2:30 through Feb. 12.
• .. Bngadoon" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse.
3503 S. Harbor Blvd .• Santa Ana (979-55 11 ). on st.age
nJ&htly except Mondays at varying times through Feb. 19.
•"The Pirates of Penzance" at Sebastian's West
Dinner Playhouse. 140 A vc. Pico. San Clemente
(492-9950). continuing Wednesdays through Saturdays at
8 p.m., Sunda7s at I and 7 p.m .. through f'cb. 26.
•"Sugar' at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse on the
Orange County Fairgrounds ( 754-S 159). running
Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:30 untjJ Feb. 4.
•"Never Get Smart With . an Angel" at the
Westminster Community Theater, 7272 Maple St ..
Westminster(995-4 I 13), playi ng Fridays and Saturdays at
8:30 through Feb. 4.
• .. Night Watch" at the Huntrngton Beach Playhouse.
Main Street at Yorktown Avenue. Huntington Beach
(847-4465). on stage Fndays and Saturdays at 8:30
through Feb. 11.
•"Towards Zero" at the San Clemente Community
Theater. 202 Ave. Cabrillo, San Clemente (492-0465).
continuing Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m. until
Feb. 4 .
• .. 6 Rms Ri v Vu" at the Garden Grove Community
Theater, Chapman Avenue at St Mark's Circle. Garden
Grove (897-5122). running Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30
and this Sunday at 2:30 through Feb. 28.
inter wonderland
Bea vefereek.
Vall: 'There's
no comparison·
VAIL. Colo. -Approxjmately 95
miles west of Denver on Interstate 70,
nestled among Colorado's famous
Rockies, lie a pair of mountains
which one brochure emphatically
publicizes: "Anyway yoll look at ll.
there's no comparison."
In this case. the brochure tells the
truth.
With all due respect to Sun Vallt'y
1n Idaho. Taos 1n New Mexico and
A$pcn to the nonh. places with
u•daunted reputations but ones,
admmedly, I haven't visited yet, it's
still hard to conceive there's a better
skier's winter wonderland than Vail
and Beaver Creek.
Although the two mountams are
not adjoining, they are less than eight
miles apart and do work in conjuc-
tion.
Beaver Creek. beginning its founh
season. is the newer of the two and 1s
trying to build a reputation of
e~clus1veness -which makes for
good points and bad.
The slope currently contains 37
~ns and eight lifts with seven
additional lifts expected to be added
once completed (l 9"85 is the target
date). Beaver Creek also has the
capabilities to make snow, although
when I skied there (over the New
Yµr's Holiday) that certainJy wasn't
necessary as more than 2 14 inches of
tbe white stuff, a record for that time
of year. had fallen.
The mountain itself, with a top
ekvation of 11.440 feet and a vertical
dfop of 3,340 feet, has enough
vanable runs to challenge any level
skier although. as a complete com-
plex, 1t still has a Iona way to 10.
One drawback 1s since it is still a
develo{>ina mountain and not as
expansive as it will be, you can cover
the terra1n a'hd get t1red of the slope
rather quicklf
Another is gettma to and from the
resort. Because of it's exclusive
image, Beaver Creek will not allow
visitors up the mountain and in lo the
village by car. InsJead, you have to
park at its base and get bused to
Village Hall. which is yo11r final
destination.
This caused a number of problems
when I visited as Beaver Creek
officials were simply not equipped to
handle the throng (there were S.200
people on New Year's Eve as opposed
to 12.800 at Vail the same day).
Lines were long and busscs slow in
gettin~ up the hill and there was no
organization getting down. G ranted,
it was an unexpectedly heavy day,
their busiest of the season in fact, but
matters could have run smoother.
Transportation hasscls aside. it's
still worth a one-day visit.
As for those who might venture
there. the best wa y to get to the top of
the mountatn and avoid any hft Imes
is via chair I 2. not chair 6.
Despite the crowded conditions,
there was absolutely no wait at chair
12, while patrons spent an average of
IO-to-15 minutes at chairs 6 and I.
Vail , of course. is an entirely
different story in itself.
The mountain 1s so large that 1t
houses two villages -Vail Village at
the east end and L1onshead at the
west. There are 18 lifts, more than
1,750 acres of skiing terrain, and if
former President Gerald Ford can ski
here, anybody can.
Fortunately, I caught Vail when the
turnout was light, making for ideal
conditjons as there were no lift lines
and the constantly groomed slopes
JOHI
Sna10
SKIING
staxed well manicured.
If there was a flaw to tbis mountain,
I didn't find n. An<t yes, you can ski
here for an entire week and probably
never use the same run twice, 1f you
include the mountain's back bowls.
Officials here say the average hft
hne is approximately I 5 minutes on a
"normal" day, with capacity at about
17,000 skiers (although it rarely goes over 12,000).
A couple of tips if you plan to ski
here, takes chairs 8 (at Lionshead) or
I (at Vail Village) and maneuver
yourself around the mountain rather
than using the gondolas. where the
lines aren't worth the wait.
Also, for less crowded conditions,
move yourself east-to-west across the
mountain. Finally, 1f you get an
opportunity, ski one of Vail's three
back bowls, which arc among the best
in the country for deep powder skiing.
Lift tickets. incidentally, run $22 at
each resort and are interchangable.
And, don't get the wrong im-
pression. a venture here will be an
expensive outing. I ran into one
gentleman who was visiting with his
family of five (although his wife
didn't ski) from North Carolina and
he estimated the trip would cost him
$10,000.
Hotel rooms during what is con-
sidered the "peak period" (end of
December through January) ranRe
(Pleue .ee VAIL/82)
Raiders' Jim Plunkett and the Redaklna'
Joe Tbelamann are no atrangers to Super
l#Wlr ..... ••
Bowl competition. Plunkett waa lD XV,
Tbelam•nn in XVII. Both were winners.
M•ndllkov•
1tope M•rtln•'•
win 1tr••k •t 54.
P•g• 8-2.
Comic•
BualnHt
Stocki
For breath-talrlnC 'Yiewa and powdery cond.ltlona, Vall
offers aome of the beat back bowl• in Colorado.
Redskins' staff
is looking to add
a wrinkle or two
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Washington Redskins' braintrust is
looking for a new idea.
Coach Joe Gibbs and his staff have
been working long hours 10 prep-
aration for next Sunday's Super Bowl
game against the Raiders, looking for
a new play or a new formation that
could help bring the Redskins a
second straight National Football
League championship.
"These arc the ~n;i.es t.hat '!lake
coaching worthwhile. said Gibbs.
who was named The Associated
Press' National Football League
Coach of the Year for a second
consecutive season. "Gemng a
chance to prepare your team for the
biggest game of the year."
A disciple of San Diego Chargers·
Coach Don Coryell, Gibbs has per-
fected Coryell's passing schemes and
combined them with a solid running
game at Washington in producing the
most potent offense in league history.
The Redskins' offensive playbook
lists 500 plays and formations.
"That may not be enough," Gibbs
said. "With two weeks to prepare for
the game, your opponents can spot
every Oaw, take away the things you
do ~st."
The things the Redskins do ~st are
to give the ball to running back John
Riggins. who rushed for an NFL
record 24 touchdowns this seaso n.
and ha ve Joe The1smann pass to
Charlie Brown, the National Con-
ference 's leading receiver with 72
catches.
Pnor to last year's Super Bowl
game against Miami . Gibbs and his
assistants spent countless hours for-
mulating ways to stop Dolphins'
linebacker A.J. Duhe, who had been
most instrumental in the victory over
the New York Jets in the American
Conference championship game.
Four days before the game, while
meeting in a hotel room after mid-
night. the coaches hit upon an idea.
"It suddenly came to us to put
everybody in motion at the same
ume," said Gibbs, who presented his
·~xplode pack.age" to his players on
the Thursday before the game.
"The players loved It and picked it
up nght away," Gibbs recalled. "Dur-
ing the game. the 'all-movement'
would f~ze Duhe for an instant.
taking away his quick pursuit ...
The Redskins won the game 27-1 7.
establishing Gibbs as one of pro
football's best coaches. Gibbs has
done nothina to hurt his image this
seaon. guiding the Redskins to an
overall 16-2 record. the best m the
NFL.
"The man we fear most 1~ not John
R1ggrns. Joe The1smann or Charlae
Brown but Gibbs.'' said Raiders' All-
Pro comcrback Lester Haves.
Lake rs
falter
at home ·
Riley not thrilled
wt th team· s eff art ..
ef eat to Sonics·:
INOLEWOOD(AP)-TheSooics
are leanun1 to be consistent, Y)'I
Seattle Coach Lenny Walktns.
The Lakers aren ·,, says Los Anaclq •
Coach Pat Riley.
Wilkens' Sonics, playin1 dogedly
detennined defense, held the -nor.-
mally hiah-scorin1 Laken well .under
100 points Sunday night, takin1 a
I 02-91 National Basketball Associa·
tion victory over Los AnJ«:Jes. It wu
the Lakers' founh strai&ht loss a\
home. ..
··we·re playina better," said•
Wilkens. whose club lS 19-17 andjust
31/J pmes back 'ofP. acific DivisJon co.
leaders Los Anaeles and Portland.
"We're more consistent defcosivdy;
the difference is defense.
"We have ci&ht new people and it
takes time for diem to undentand the
need to be consistent."
Riley said of the Lakers• out.in&,
"We had a real breakdown. We
played scattered and selfishly. We
failed to move the ball to the opeo
man."
The Los Angeles coach also saad
that some of the Lakers' moves
looked strangely familiar.
"We did some bizarre things in the
fim half,.. he utd. -Por awhile, I
thou&}ll I was watchina the Harlem
Glo~trotters. Some of our pane$
were a little ridiculous."
Still, Riley found something to like.
··we're suU in first place. so I'll take
1t. h can't be all that bad."
Gus Williams paced the Sonics'
victory with 24 poants, as Seattle took
the lead for aood at 24-22 late in the
openina quancr.
After the Sonics built their advan·
tage to as much as 13 points. Los
Anaeles cloaed to 68.-63 durina &he
third period. But at \he end of \bat
quarter, Seaule had pulled ahead
7 4-6 s and the l..akers did not threaten
in the final period.
Forward Tom Chambers came off
the bencb to tc0re 20 points for &bi:
Sonics. while Jack s.wn. had '8 and
AJ Wood J4.
JamaaJ Wilkes led the Lakers, who
have now lost four in a row at home
for the first ume sma the I 969-70
season. w11h 26 points.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar added 20
points and James Worthy 17. and
Earvin "Magic" Johnson had 17
assists for Los Angeles, but scored Just
four points.
"Magic has to take the dnve and
shoot more when the others aren't
hitting." wd Riley. whose club
connected on only 35of80 field goal
attempts.
Wilkens. asked about David
Thompson. who reantly was re-
signed by the Somes. said. "I don't
know yet; I'll have to sec him in
practice. There arc four guards ahead
of him now that arc playini good
basketball ... But his return wall gi ve
us an extra dimension at either guard
or forward."
CSFWHIPS
'STALE'
BULLDOGS
$33, 000 is nothing to sneeze at Rose, Expos
close to an
agreement?
FRESNO (AP) -Fresno State
Coach Boyd Grant has seen
problems ahead for his 13th-
ranked Bulldogs and was not
surprised to lose 53-51 to un-
ranked Cal State Fullerton 1n
Pacific Coast Athletic Associa-
tion basketball Sunday.
"I have been scei nJ this com 1 ng
the la!lt two weeks.' Grant said.
"Thert is no way your're aoing to
win playina the way we have been
r.lay1na. especially apinst a team
kc Fullerton~"
"We have been mentally stale,··
Grant said, without puuina his
fin1eronanypan1cularwcakne s.
Fullerton auard uan Wood
1eorcd 26 points to lead the Titans
despite four defenses used by the
Bulldop.
Wood scored two free throws
with I :.5S remainina in the pme
to aJve Fullcnon. a ~2-SO lead
Fresno lite had a chan~ to tic
the pme with 48 ~onds rematn·
ina. but Bernard Thoml)\On only
made one of two free throws.
Wood added another free
throw wuh 18 seconds rtmainina
to .cal the pme. Frc no had a
chance to uc the pme. but Mitch
A mold'• hot bounced off then 111
wHh two s.cconds left to play.
By today's standardS
lt'ssmall, but back
in l 96Titsurewasn't
Money in professional spons bas
turned into an intercsung. yet some-
times disgusuna phenomenon that is
hard for the average person to
understand on occasion.
Forgetting the huae sums top
players in baseball, football and
basketball arc demandina (and get-
ting) these days, let's take a look at the
professional golf tour.
When the 552 Club. the support
aroup for Hoaa Mcmonal Hospital.
presents it's annual Crosby Southern
clambake on Sunday and Monday.
Jan. 29 and 30 at Irvine Coast
Country Club, t0mc $33.000 in pnze
money will be d1suibuted to the 72
pros panicipatin1 with each auanan-
tccd $200 for completina two rounds.
In liaht of today's astronomical
fi1urc1 fQr s~na nan, $33,000
doesn't seem like 11 lot of money. A
quick check of the PGA m-.,or tour
records ho tbauslatca 1961, the
a~craac purx wu only S32.485. The
year's tot.al money f tau re w.,
S 1.46 I ,830 for 45 tour events on the m~or circuit.
Tht winner at trvanc Coast will
rtteivc S4,000 for the victory plus the
S200 auarantccd each part1c1pant
who finiahe 36 hole . lie could atw
pick up an additional Sl~ for havina
the low seo~ of tht final round and a
\
chance at the top money of $800 for
the wrnmng pro in the pro-am team
competition. This makes it possible
for the winner to pick up a check for
$5.250 and 1f he 1s lucky enough to sco~ a hole·1n-one he could w10 a
new Cadillac as well
Remember that Arnold Palmer
was an his heyday on the maJpr tour 1n
the era of 1961 . yet ~t' a $1
million winner. ~o you cafl sec that
the youna pros who miss the cut 1n
San D1eao ns well as the club pros
panicipating, have a purse wonh
playing for in the Crosby Sou them.
Like all aolf tournaments these
days. the chief beneficiary will be
Hoag Memonal Ho p1tal. More than
$600 000 has been raised for the I hospital over the past nine )eaf"'i.
'-•
Enef"lt'tlC t..arry lprash1, executive
ctm:ctor and producer of the Uniden
LPOA lnv1tauonal at Mesa Verde
Country Club March 1-4, never lets a
stone lie untumed.
When the sponsor of a second
t.PGA tour event in Pasadena pulled
out. Larry went naht out and t1ancd
Cana Blanca bttr as a co-spon'°r of
b1s event an Costa Mesa
"I fttl that havina only one
tournament 1n the Los Anacrl~·
Oranae County area for the LPGA
will help our event a JfUl deal and
they ,howcd an interest in women's
, aolf so WC IOl loSCther," lpras~i \I)' "Be Id , the players always look
forward to pby1n1 m Southern Call-
r.
Howuo
HUDY
Gou
fornia and the spectators have onl y
one chance to watch them play in this
area. We'll also have the top players
here from Japan."
lpraahi spent some time in Japan
late last year and as all smile when he
talks about the future of the Un1den
lnv1tat1onal at Mesa Verde CC and
h<»tina a sam1lar event 1n Japan st.aninJ m 1 qgs.
He 1s pioneerina l.PGA olay be-
tween the two countnes and feels It
wall eventually catch on and be the
b1gcst attraction on the LPGA tour
1n both the U.S and an Japen
'\'t The Olive C~t C'eltbnt) C'iolf
Tournament. which 1s co-pon'°rcd
by the Newpon Beach 20/20 Club
and KWIZ radio. will t'lt held Mon-
day, Marth 26 at Irvine Coast
Country Oub
The tournament will be a scramble
cveot. Enlt')' fee i SI S01 whc1h
includes aolf. dinner. auction and
a"ards 1>ro&l"m. Phone 47-0l61 for mo~ 1nfor·
mauon
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Free aacnt
Pete Rose. shoppina for a new team to
continue his assault on Ty Cobb's aJl-
t1me maJor lcaauc hit total. indic~tcd
Sunday that he could sign soon with
the Montreal Expos.
Rose. 20 I hits sh y of Cobb's record.
satd he will fly to Montreal today for
funher nqot1ations.
"We'll probably have to do some
head-knockana. but 1t looks good.
They've aot a aood team and I'd hkc
to play up then:," Rose said dunnaan
1nterv1cw at 1..o Angeles Inter-.
national A1rpon He was 1n Cah·
fom1a for an athleuc banquet at Santa
Mana on Saturday ntJht
Released by the Ptuladelphll
Phillies an October after five ~sons,
Rose. who tum~ 4'3 in April. has held
dascus ions with Montrl'al. Pt.t·
t'lbur&h and the Se.ttk Manner..
But the Mannen. who recently
have addtd the fat ulancs of Gorman
Thomas and Barry Bonnell to their
pay. roll. u1d l.,t week they wCTt no
lonatr interested 1n Ro~ beauw ht
requested too much play•na time.
At Montreal, the 20-ycar "etenan
either would be V)tnl with veteran l
Oliver at firs• ba't or would be
p_layana an an outfield that al read has
T1m Raine 1n ten fitld and Andre
Oawt0u •n ~ntcr
ToplO
Orange County
hlgfi school
basketball
Dally Pilot .elecdona
2 . rtn. Valley (1 1·8)
s. Ocean Vlew (11-4)
5. Sdl9on ( 19-S)
8. Capo Valley (14,.2)
9. an. (13-5)
•
82 Or nge Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 18, UUM
SPORTS BREAK
-----Padres to run •• normal Mandlikova llalt~s ~-AN DIEGO -The hetr!t ot Ill 'M<:Donald's founder Ray Kroc, owner of Martina's streak
two shy of record
From AP dl1patcht1
()~KL.\"' D -r he '>treal IS dead ~
Hana Mandlill.o' a "'on a ma'itcrtul
duel of Jamming servt• anO -.ulle) lt'nn1s
against Manina Navratilova. 7-6, 3-6, 6-4
'unda). 1n the V1rgrn1a ')l1m'> of( allforn1a. ending 1he
wrnning streak ot the \\url<l') No I .,..omen's pla)'er at
54 matche\ -t\\o "h> of< hm ben Llo>d's r«ord
Mandllko\a ranlt·d ....,u 7, had lost her la'lt nine
matrhe'> in a ro" aga1n.,t Na' raulova, a former C 1cch
l"Ornpatriot
Uut thl'> lime !>he '>Un IH'd
three \ct point~ 1n th e fir'>l '>t'I
ucbreakcr. oHrcame a fil'rrc
atl~llk p) Navr;llllova 1n the
\CCond set and broke Na' 1a11lo'a
on hl·r final sen-ice 1n the th ml \l't
uf the t\\o-hour mallh
'I came down lighting,"
f\.avra tllova !.<lid "\ht• won the
matth. I didn't lo~ 11"
In one ot thl· fint'\t matlht''
NAVRATILOVA \\omen's tenni'> ha'i M"l'n 1n \Car\
both pla H'r' \hm' l'd a~rc.,~1' enc'"" l"Ontrol , p<.>.,..cr and
finc\\t' It ""' rcm1n1'irent of thl' \crve-and-volln
matchc\ tx·t\\l'l'll Brll1c Jean King and Margaret ( ouri
1n the I 4hll\
..\\~cd him rt kll to \CC her record bid end JUSI two
\h\ of LICl\d' I Y74 \lreak. l'lavraulova replied·
"Ro11en Thal' ,1 dumb question"
QUote of the day
1.nta McKau of tho lndiaria Pacers. after the
JOIM tnaPl>'--d its 2k.amt road losina streak with a
victory at Denver. "We aot lOtether in the loclcC1" room after \he pine, 1001' tbat moo key off our back.a, a nd beat
it to <Seith."
Hadl expands Express' staff
I O~ ~~(JE:U:S -f-ormer arnMant m
lOa(he'> Ed Lambert of (al and Mike c • •
Adcrley of Iowa 'itate have been added to •
the staff of new l os Angeles Express head
( 1Jal h John Hadl the L'n11ed States Football League
club announced 5unda-.
Lamben 15. w1li coach the E'<press' running
hack'>, the sarnc JOb he held at Cal.
\l'kcrh, 16. will work with the Los Angeles
llnehat ker-.· H t• c;ened ac; dl'fens1\C line wach at (owa
'itJll
l hl' f: \f)rt·,., ahn announted the hinng ol Dick
Rchh<:1n a\ the 1tam'sd1rt·uorof4uali1ycontrol.
the an D1e10 Padres, 54Y the dellth of the
g I-year-old fast -food m in te will not
affect the day-to-day operations ol the National ~ague
dub
··Th1\ doc'>n't afkt t the future ohhe club at all. Ra~
. had made prov1s1ons for operation~ to continue here, ·
said Padres President Ballard Smith followina d1s-
cuss1ons with Kroc's widow. Joan.
Kroc. wh o purchased the Padrt"~ in Janual) 1974
for$ 12 million. died aturda) of heart failure at ScnP,p)
Chn1c in nearb)' La Jolla .
"Joan 1s a~ committed to fieldmg a winner here as
Ra)' was." said \m1th. who was also Kroc's son-in-law
"She has had a tremendous influence on our operations
for -.ever.ii )'C..lr\. '>he has g.iven me her wholeheaned
support.
"It will be business as usual," Smith added. "We
won't be proh1b1ted from doing the things we: n~d to do
to win a champ1onsh1p .. • Kings rally, gain tie with Jets
WlNNIPEG -The Los Angeles ~
Kings. led by center Terry Ruskowska's ,
three-point effort. rallied three limes
Sunday night to gain a 4-4 tic wi th the
Wmntpeg Jets 1n a National Hockey League game.
Ruskowski's goal at 11 :53 of the third penod
knotted the game and sent 1t an to oven1me. Both teams
had opponun1t1es to score in the five~minuJe elltra
penod. but goaltenders Marco Baron of the Kings and
Brian Hayward of the Jets kept the tie intact.
It was the second consecuti ve overtime tu: between
the teams. who share founh place in the Smythe
01 v1s1on. The Kmgs and Jets fought to a 7-7 tie at the
Winnipeg Arena on Friday night.
Ruskowsk1. now with three goals this season. also
had two assists to spark the Kings, who outshot the Jets
38-31. Dave Taylor. Jim Fox and defenseman Mark
Hardy had the other goals for the Kin~s.
Dale Hawerchuk paced the Jets with two goals. his
22nd and 23rd of the season. Center Tim Young and
defenseman Wade Campbell scored the other goals for
the Jets. who led 2-1 af\er the first period but were tied
1-l with the v1s1tors at the end of the second.
Lendl can't catch McEnroe
NEW YORK -Dominating the ~
mun with cat-hke quickness. John
McEnroe defused Ivan Lendl's power
game Sunday and captured the $400.000
Vo lvo Masters 1ennischamp1omh1p with a 6-3. 6-4. 6-4
\ ICtOr).
The triumph over the 1wo-11 mc defending Masters
champion wa-; wonh SI 00.000 to McEnroe. LenJI
collected $60.000 as he rearhed th e final of this scason-
ending tournament for the fourth consccuuve yea r.
For Lend!. 1t was another disappointment The
( 1ct"hoslo-.ak1an right-hander also reached the finals ol
the U S. Open and Australian Open 1n 1983, only 10 lose
both. He has yet to win a Grand Slam tournament.
A new Mahaff@~
on road back
He quf ts smoking an quits drinking
and starts winning ----.
PALM SPRI NGS (AP)-T~rs of
JOY were strcamma from the eyes of
Susie Mahaffey when she embraced
husband John after his playoff victory
1n the Bob Hope Dc~n Golf Clas1ic.
"lf'I been a long road back:," aht
\aid
"And 1t'1worth11." John replied.
The payoff came Sunday on the
second hole of a sudden death playoff
when Jim Simon~ backed away from.
then misstd a little 3-foot par put1.
That miss, af\er Mahaffey had
confidently rapped an 8-fooier in to
the back of the cu p. provided John
with the ~venth victory of bis
troubled. ofHnterrupted l 4-year
Tour career and his tint in 21/J years.
'Tm glad J won. but 1 feel sorry for
Jim. I've been in that situation and I
know how it feds " said Mahaffey.
who lost a playoff for the 1975 U.S.
Open tit It'. "h'\ a very empty ftthng."
he said.
Ht" held the lead for 69 hol~ of the
following U S. Open. then fell befon:
Jerry Pate's last-round onslau&ht.
And he'5 \offered vanous other
advef'\1t1cs, pe~onal problems and a
series of 1n1unes that once made him
doubt he'd ever play aJ.ain.
His la\t pre-. IOlJ\ v1ctorv came m
198 1
years ago.
He quH smokinJ 21/> months qo.
And the abstenuona, be said. had •
du-ect correlation with his victon . .. f'm convu>eed ofit, .. he sa.id;-'·1r1
a matter of trainiDJ. rm JS yatf old
and rm ill better 'hape now t~n t
was when I was 25. I'm stronger and
mr. mind is more clear.
'I've got • new philosophy about
pla.Y.'"' the pme. • I'm tired of layini ~ and
ptayinJ for pan and pla)'i.nJ COl\•
scrvatJve.
··I' vc added lenph ln the last twO
years. AQd that's because l'ra ttrona•
er, in better shape. I've added maybe
20 yar&. Now that I've aot some
extra lenath, J want to uae it.
"I look at Tom Wats0n ud Jtck
Nicklaus .and those 1uya that are
winnini au the tournaments, an4
they're gain& for the par-Ss in two and
playing ~esslvcty. rm tryina that.
And. hell. 11'1 fun."
He went for the JtCCn on the par-$
.first bole, reached 1t and 2-puued for
blrd1c. It was the start of a drive that
broughl him from four strokes oft' the
pace witb a no-botey 66 Ind enablcd
him to compleie the .replalion 90
holes in this five-day e'1t.Dt at ..340. 20
under per. Simons, playina beb1od
hi m. matched lhat total al)d forced
the playoff with a I S·foot b1rdie put1
on the 90th hole, finishing off a 69.
Both parred the firtt extra bole. On
the nex t one, Mahaffey saved par
from a bunker and was beaded
toward the next tee when Simons
failed on hls little putt.
"It surprised me," Mahaffey laid.
"It never crossed my mind that he'd
m1 J it.''
Unranked Lee upsets Slbaon
ATLANTIC' (IT\ N J -Unranked
m1ddlcwc1jlht Don Lee of Gary. Ind ..
stopped Bntain·s 1 ony S1bson. ranked
fourth b) the World Bo>.1n1 Council, in the
t't&hth round ol a sc heduled 10-round fight Sunda)'. ·
Rtfc:rc:c Ion) Pcre.t halted the bout af\cr Ltt
knocked S1b~n down with u left with l. I 3 rema1n1ng In
the: eighth. The 6-2 Lee. who wa$ knocked down in the
fi rst round with a lcf\ to the C'han by Sib~on. knocked
S1bson down three time!. in the third round.
.. , felt confidt'nt in that punch." said the 23-ycar-
old Lee, referring to the left that knocked S1bson down
in the eighth. "I had my feet set properly to throw the
punch plus I saw 1t in h1!. eyes that (11 would be) a
knockout punch "
Sibson rose from the canvas at the count of nine a1
hall comer's urging and began bouncing aga1mt the
ropes before Perez stopped the fi¥,ht.
"I was looking for the ropes,' said the 25-ycflr--old
Sabson from Leicester, England. "I wanted to feel tht
ropes against my back, so I could bounce th ere until I
got a cha net' to bob and weave away. I feel b1ttcrthat the
referee was so keen on stopping 1t."
Lee ra ised his record to 20-1-1 w11h 20 knockouts
and S1bson now 1s 49-5-1 with 29 knockouts
S1bson sustained a gaping cut on his left eyebrow
when Lee tagged him with a left hook in the fifth round.
S1bson said the wound altered his fight plan, making
him anxious to get the bout over with.
Danebo pulls away from field
ARCA.DIA -Danebo, ridden by ~
Laffit Pincay Jr . edged 1n front 1n the final
turn. th en pulled away to a 41/1-leng1h
v1ctory o'er Pac Mania in Sunday·s
S90.900 San Carlos Handicap at Santa Anlla .
Carry1 ng I 17 pounds in the seven-furlong event for
4-year-olds and up, Dancbo was clocked 1n 1 ·2 1.
Danebo was never far behind ao; Pac Mania and
Pole). who "'ound up 21h lengths back in third. set the
pace most of the way
The winner pa id $9.20. $4.60 and SJ. Par Mania.
ridden by Patrick Valenzuela and carrying 118 pounds.
returned SS and S3.20. The show payoff on Pole>. half
an entry with Menswear. was S2 60 Chris Mc( arron
rode Pole)'. who carried 11 9.
C'roeso . ..ent off as the even-mone)' wagering
fa vorite by the crowd of 46,460. wa:> 1n contention early
but faded to finish sixth in the ..even-horse field
Fighting F11 was a late scratch
Danebo. a 5-)car-old son of Bold Forbes-La
.lanzara. 1s trained by La1 Barrera
The victory was wonh $54,900 to Dant•bo's owner.
Aaron U Jones of Eugene. Ore.
~ewsaili1Cr in
'84 World Star
By ALMON LOCKABEY
o.ii, ~ ... ,Me Writ«
Chu1..k Lcw-.adder \\<Ill rcprc">cnt Newport Harbor
Yacht Club in the 191<4 \.\orld ~tJr t hamp1onsh1p. Lew~dde1 a veteran Star s.iulor won a benh 1n the
Star World's Sa'turday by defca11ng nint> rivals in a three
race elimination '>l'rlt!\ ..a1kd 1n the ocean off Ncwpon
Beach
'Tht• l'llrnma11011 wa<, hdd 1n conJunc11on with
NHYC's third Winter ~·ne'> in which small t>?ats sailed
1ns1de the ba> on Saturda) and keel boals sailed ocean
rnurses on ~unda) Lew~dder has been a world t.la~!> Star sailor for many
)cars as \kipper and crew. but became ac11ve as a skipper
about two year'> ago alter several )'tars la )'ofT. He crewed
fo1 Don Bever wh o won the world champ1onsh1p at San
Diego several >er" aKo
Runner-up 1n 1he Star ellm1nat1ons was Ralph
W1ntrode. Balboa ) acht Club l h1rd place was. a lie
between Banon Beck ot 1hc Los Angele~ n cet and his son.
Chuck. NHYC. The star'i also raced in the Wi nter Senes on Sunda).
The winner was Hank Tha)'cr. "'HY<. second was Jack
Dollah1tc, NH YC . and third wa~ I cw..adder •
Troph) winner\ 1n 1he Winter Serie' on Saturda)'
"ere
DEF-l ""DE R -I ~ -I < hm \.\e!>t Mannadel Rc:y . 2
Jack Bent, South Shore \ al'hl < !uh
LASER -Bru re ( oopcr. ( ap1".ltrano Bay YC'.
LASER II -Matt Pa~kenan . NHYC
SAB01 A & B -I K11n C oopcr. Capo BYC'.
SABOT ( -Tom l\11chols. NH\ C. 2 ~usan Minh>n ,
Hah1a \oron1h1an Y<.. 3. Andrena di Donato. NHYC'.
Trophy winners 1rn1s1de clas'>cS. ,
Defendcr-12 -Bud R1chhng. Dana Po int YC; 2 Bob
Melville. DPYC. l Ruland ~ourn1er South Shore YC
50U N(, -Cia'>lOfl Ort11, HYC. 2 Fran!.. Simon. c;syc J Larr) Ha11.crman. VY< ETCHELLS-2~ -I. Rick Hawthorne, NHYC. 2.
\w tt Hayward. NHYC 3 Kim F-letcher. BYC
NHYC 's Mason advances
Scott Mason ot Newport Ha rbor Yacht Club
advanced on the Prince of Wale\ Bowl ladder Sunda)' by
defeating Bruce Humann of Balboa Yacht Club in a best
two of three chm1nat1on series sailed in the ocean off
Newport Beach 1n J/24 -;loops
On \aturda) Humann defeated Le.,..1s Wagoner of
Fresno 't acht Club
The Prince of Wal e'> Bowl 1s tor the United State<;
Yacht Raring Union'<; match racing championship in
which competitors ad' ancc in a ladder'' pc competition
e\Cr) l\\O \Cars
Since then he'<, 1nst11u1ed some
1..hanaes 1n his game -a change in the
swi.na pro .. 1d1ng a nigger turn and a
rc~ihonina of lhe ball in h11 stance
- and made \Ome chan~ 1n
htm~lf.
He quit drinking more than two
Johnny MUlcr, the leader thro•
the third and fourth rounds, ran afoul
of a balky putter and wa1 thitd.
John Mahaffey offers a dlaplay of emotion• after poa-
ttn& a birdie on the 18th hole Sunday. Mahaffey atill
.,.,,.._...
needed to 10 a aecond •udden death bole to defeat Jlm
Simona ana win &72,000 ln the Bob Hope Deaert Clualc.
ved anytime
through January 22nd
' -.. ~-~· .. ,.~
~================-
.,
I I
Tender Top Su10m Steak and two large eggs Served with
hashed brown potatoes and
choice of toast.
West
rallies A friendly get-together .
in Japarl I Raiders· Marvt n
looking forward
to me&itng wt th Butz YOKO HAMA. Japan
(AP)-Alfred Andt·rson of
Baylor plunged for a 1-)ard
touchdo.,..n in the fourth
quarter. capping 3 drive CL SE<i NOO-Mi cke y Marvin
that featured three success-and Dave Butz arc going to~ a lot of
ful founh-down gambles each other In Super Bowl XV III
that rallied the West past Marvin 1s loolong forward to the get·
lht' East 26-21 in the ni nth together
annual Japan Bowl football ''I'm going to ~c No 65 lined up in
all-star µmt' todo) my face. and he'\ going to ~ No 65
Th .. Wt'Sl. With an cm-lined up 1n his face ... ..aid Marvin, an .. offcn~n·c guard for the Los Angclt'\ (lt'nl pa~Mn& offcn\C led by Raiders "I know he\ no1 going to
quanerba'k" ~tcvc Young tnck me and I'm not going 10 trick
of Bn&ham Youna and him.''
Turner Gill of Ncbruka. ~an in believes that Buu. the 6-7.
had taken I 19-7 hafn1mc !95-pound defenSI\.(' tackle o( the
lead. but tht' East oounctd Washinaton Redskin, who will play
back with two key pass ocross from him 1n ncll.t Sundnf\
1ntercept10M and went Super Bowl at Tampa Fla . 1s one ol
ahead 21-19 1n tile first the National Football Lt"aguc's finc\t
minute of the founh quar· 11 his pos111on
ter. .. Dave 1\ a great football pla')er. l
Thc Wc\t then mo.,ed to think he's one of the thrtt bc'lt
the En" 4' wh<'rt C11ll defensive taC'kle in the lea1ue 1ton1
thrr.v thrtc mcomplttt with Rand) White (of Dallas) and ~ ~ But on founh down. Ooua Enallsh (of f>t'trou)."' said
Gill hit (1Cf'ald M' Neil of Marvin. a f>..4. 270.poundcr. "I hkc to
B ylur with an I t -y1rd pa s "-play ap1Mt people likt-him.
for a fim down. "If\ go101 to he a areal challtn e. .
I
He's a throwback to the old da) .,, JU St
line up and get nller 11. I think I'm that
way. too "
Man 1n hehevt·~ that the Red'ik1nc,
VAIL ••.
From Bl
anywhere from $56-to-S 145 a night .
ror one or two bedroom., Con-
dom1n1ums. which 1s the best woy to
ao. run an)whcrc from $70-to-$6 'S
depending on whether )OU need a
one. two or lhrcc:-bc:droom •
There are naturally a number of
vnnou packa&ei available and places
to rc\ldc I recommend. ho"'cver.
that you stay 1n one of the two
Vlllllt' althouan ll IS chet1pcr 1f )'OU
don't
If you ore plonn1n1 a skt 'a\.at1on
there 1'1 no place better than the Vail
Valley 'cs. 1t docs have It com-
mcrt"lll rcpuUtt1on. but 1t 1\ dmna it's ~st to alter n' 1maac from a total ~k1et\ mountain to a fam1l)/Sk1eh
mount11n.
• Plu . 1t ha all the 1ngrrd1cn1 for a
perfect ltllWI) -remotenc s. d1
vcrs1ty. quiun1nc~' end. be l or all.
mort cert.in than )Olol n ak1.
'· . .
Jr~ goin~ to .. ec a much different
Raider.,· team lrom th<' o ne that blew
a 35-20 fourth-quarter lead in drop-
ping a 37. 35 dl•t·1c;1on ot Washington
Oct 2.
"We ga-.c· up -.omc ~cks and had
\om\' tumovcrs in that game." stud
thc SC\.CO·)ear NFL veteran from the
lJn1vcr\lt)' of Tcnne\sce. "We·rc
goin1110 change that.
"We (the I n Angele'! offensive
hne) alwafS had confidence 1n
ourc;clve'I and confidt'nce in each
other; a1 a group. we nevtr lost
c:onfidencc It took time for us to feel ·
comfonahk toaethcr. You have to
have a cohc~1~c unit."
Spcakina of the ups-and-down'I
t'pcrtenccd by the offrns.1ve ltne th•'I
season Morv11\ "11d "We take the
burden on our houldc~ as a aroup. I
think . thnt'11 what scparatc11 tht'
Raidtn from the ~t of the IC!&Ue ..
'l fct-1 111'.t c ch week our ofTcnS1\IC
hne ho aoncn bcttrr. both ind1v1du·
all) and"" o unit," he eddcd. "I think
th1u 'sev1dcnC'fd hy the way we played
oiiam\t P1t1~bur&h ond \cattle.
•• 'rt 01na to M"t the tone for tht
Sufl(r Bowl.'~ iiud 1 r"'"· pc1kan
of the ofTen\1\C hne. 'Tm lbokint
forward to 11 , lo., ) tht• lc:i l.
·:.our ao~I "' nut JU\! to get to l
Super Bowl. it's tu y, in II "
• . .
...
-(__ > .
NBA
WIST•RN GONl'•11t•HC•
"•CHI< Dfvl"911 'N L .. ct. Ga' uhn
Portland
S.t tllt
GOIOtn Sl•lt
Phoenl•
,. 14 611
2S 1' 610
l t 11 S2t l '11 ,, 21 462 6
11 n 436 1
San Oleo<> 12 26 )l6 11 ,
Mldw"t DMtkln
Ulan 2S 13 651
Oalla1 2? 16 S79 J
Kan1as Cllv " 21 ..,2 11,
Danvar 16 22 421 ~
Sen An1on10 16 23 410 91,.,
Hov11on 14 2S 3S9 1111>
•AST•RN CON,llRIENCE
8 0,lon
Phlladtf P'11a
Ntw Vork
New Jer"v
Wuhlno1on
Dtlroll
MllweukH
All1n11
ChlCIOO
Clevelt nd
lndl•n•
Allantlc OtvlMerl
?9 9
26 l1
21 16
19 20
17 21
Central OlvlMell
2? IS
21 16
20 " IS 20
l1 26
10 26
$4HldaV'I Sew ...
s.e111e un, L.all.n 91
Mllw•vkH 106. 8o'1on 17
Della• 12•. Denvar 107
763
703
SU '87
«7
111 7 ,
10 '>
12
1 2 ,
6
11
11 ,
Sen Anlon.o 126 Pa<llend 11 l
Ka nu • Cllv 109, Sen OJ~ 96
N..., Jerw v l.O. Indiana 134 (011
Pt>oenlx 110, Washlnoton IOI
TedeV'I G-
No oemH .c!leduled
TllfldaY'I Gemn
Wunlno1on 11 Lahn
llltw Jaruv at New York
Ottrolt 11 Pnlleatlonle
MllwevkH e l lndl1n1
Ulen 11 Allanl•
Clt vt land et Chk•oo
Botton •I KtnlH City
Oanvtr 11 Houston
Sen 01~ et Golcltn Slalt
0 11111 et Portland
sonic' 102, Lahn ti
$EATTLI -l(lno I , VrenH 2,
Slit.me 17. W1lllam1 24, Wood 14,
Cri.mbtrs 20, Hewes 4, Brown 1,
SundvOlcl • Total1 42·1S 11·21 102
LOS ANGILIS -WOii.es 26,
Wortflv 17, Al>dol· Jebf>ar 20, Johnson •.
McG.. 0, C-r 7. Mc.AdOO 13,
Garrell 0, R1mbl1 2, 5co11 2. Totat1 3S·IO 21·2' 91
k.,-e bV Ouartan
S.•111• 33 13 20 26--102
LOI A"9411H 2S 2S 21 10-91
Foule d out-N o11 1 Re ·
OOUnclt-SH lllt 42 (Slkma Ill. 1..01
Anoe1t1 39 IWorrhv 13) ••·
•lt lt-S.ellle 2t (Wllll1m1 9), LOI An·
oetH 26 (Jonnson 171 To111 loutl~llle 21. LOI A"9411el 19 Tectl· nlc1l1-L01 A11911i lfleQel ~,,,..
A-17.SOS
C ..... Korff
WIST
Cal St Fullarlon S3, Fresno SI Sl
SOUTH
F1orle11 73, llenoert>fll S9
C.torol• T t<h S6. N. Cerollna St 47
5oulh F10rie11 S7, Jeck1onv1lle 48
EAST
Southemplon 122, SI Jo11Ph'1.
Melnt 112
PCAA
c Ollfertnet ov.,...
Ntv•d• LI\ lltg81
C11 Stalt Fullerton
FrH no Sl•lt
UC lrvlne
Uleh Sl•I•
WL
5 0
4 0
7 1
3 2
2 2
2 l
I 2
' 3 0 3
San Jos. St•lt
Ntw Ma•ICO Sl•I•
UC 5anle Bert>ere
LOM 8tacn SI•••
Peclfk 0 4
Sund8V's S<-
WL
14 ' 12 2
II 3
7 7
I S
6 I
5 7
6 7
3 9
2 14
Cet St•lt F'ullarlon SJ. Fresno Slett Sl
T8dlV'• Game
UC S.nte 81rt>are ti New Mt•ICo
Sl•lt n
Thunder• G•me•
Frt"'° Ste le t i UC Irvine
Cel Stele Fullerton et Lono Btach
S1t1t
Ullh Sltlt 11 Nt w Mexico Stale
P•clflc II Nevede LH VaoH
UC lrvlM {7·7)
9l u of Idaho 71
81 Pec>~rdlne 13
79 S•n 01100 SI 76 U u of ColOr•Oo 9S n UK 66
11 U of Sen 01'90 IS
91 U of Monrene 93
6S Weber SI SJ
10 Ult h 84
110 Ntw M,.lco Slate 78 n Long Btacn Stell' 67
68 Ntveoe Lu V•ou Ill
11 Utan s1111 8l
11 Sen JOH St111 72
Jan 19 -Frt•no S11lt'
Jen 11 -unlversllv of PeclOC'
Jan 26 -el Cal Slate Fuffarlon•
Jen 29 -11 UC Senl• 8•rbere'
ITBAI
Ftc> 2 -11 lono 8tac:n Sta le'
Ft D 5 -a l New Ma•ko Sle ta'
Fat> 9 -San Jos. S1111• Fat> II -Utah St111·
Ft t> 16 -at FrHno Slete'
FtD 10 -11 unlvanllY of Peclf•C'
(T8Al
Ftt> 73 -UC 5an11 8art>ar,.
March 1 -Ntv•d• LH VaoH.
Maren 3 -Cal S1••• Fu1ter1on
Marth a 10 -PC.AA Tovrnamtnl el
FOf'um lln tnotewood, T8AI
• -OtnOIH PCAA oame
All 11ornt oama• !>laved at CrewlorO
Hell "'""' olhtrwl11 1no1ca19d All otmH sle rt •I 7 30 unltn other wl" lndkaltd
SoCal Coleee (11-4>
100 Ci t Stall L..A ll lOl LI Verne 78
SI SI Marv'• IO 95 Bt1ri.nv ..
'°' UC Sen11 Cru1 S6 '3 Claremont " 61 Pomone·P1tttr S6 61 Lovota ·Marvmoun1 10
1 PecWlc Chf11t11n !for'''" 0
77 Rtdland' .. ,. Mlu ourl Beot•\I IS ., Lt1ournt1u· Ttan 69 9'.J Occldttt111 70 1• W111mont• 121
92 Cel Btotl\I
J•n 17 -al UC Sen 01100•
Jen 20 -Cal Lvthtren•
Jan 24 -Point Lome•
Jen 27 -t i Arv11 Ptellle'
J•n 31 -8 1olt ' Ftt> 3 -Noire Oemt ICalll I
FtD 7 -11 Cal lhPll\I' II Pm)
Feb 10 -Wt\t Coett Chrlt llen
FtD " -•• Frt1no PeclllC" Ft t>. ,. -UC S•n Oleoo•
Feb 17 -al Polnl Lome' II pm 1
Fet> 21 -Aruse Peclflc•
Ftt> 74 -ti LA 8aPll\I'
F't t> 2S -Atvmnl
IO
• -o.no1.. NAl.t. 01Str1CI II con
lerence game
All oem" t ier I •' 1 30 om unltu
olhtrw•H fncllc11te1
How AP toe> 20 fired
I North C1roU111 I 12·01 t>tel
Marvlt nd 74·62. t>tal Weke Forest
70·67
1 KtnluCILv I 12 lJ t>tel Ataoem•
16·66, t>eel Mlu lu lPi>I Sltlt S1·4? IO'I 10 Auburn t2·63
3 OtPeut ( 13·0) t>UI SI """''" ' Ct l 76· 74 t>tll Alet>am. Blrm1nonem
91-63
4 C.eorgtlown ( 13 21 t>tal M.on·
movll'. N J 14· S4, 1011 10 V1H1nov• 65·63, ?OT
S Marv tend I 11·2> lot! 10 Norin
C•rollna 1'·62, btal Duk• tl·7S
6 UCLA I 10·2) beet Stanford 71 66
10'1 10 Oreoon 62 • s I
1 Hou1ton I 16·21 t>t•I Ttu1 69 SI,
t>NI TtXH Ttch M 66, t>tel TUH
A&M 70·64
t T .. t1·EI Peso I 14·0) t>t•I Se n
Diego Stal• 7S·S9, ., .. 1 Hewell 74·S4
9. llflnol1 ( 11·7) IO\I lo lndlt ne 73·68,
OT. bt•I Ottlo Sta It SS· S3
10. St John'• 111·2> t> .. I Connac11cu1
68·65, lo" to Bo"on Coueoe 69·67
ll Loul1len1 State 19·31 I0'1 10
Ttnne•we 70·69, t>tel Mln lu •Pi>I '3·10
t2 Welle For111 ( ll ·71 t>tel Wllllem
&. Merv IO S3. lo•l 10 Norrh Carolina
70-62
13 Fr"1IO Sltlt ( 11·31 t> .. I UC
San11 Bert>are 69-51. !Oil to Fullerton
Sla te. S3·51
14 Nevada L•t Vt0H ( 14-1) bttl
UC lrvlne 13·6', t>eat Sen Jos. Stell
IOS-77, bttl Utah Stele 93·tl
IS Gaorol• 110·3> t>eel Mln lu loe>I
70-S 1, IOll IO Alat>ama '5·60
l6 Oreoon S1a11 19·2> t>tll Southern
Calilornle 51·0
17 Ollllnome t 13·2) IO\t to tow•
Stell 74·6'. t>tal Nlcnolt1 Stell 107·Sl
tt Boston Cotleoe 111·3) IOlt to
Providence '3·62, beat St Jofln'I 69·'7
l9 MlmDflfl Sltlt ( 11·3) bt81
5out11trn Mln ln lppl S2·47
20 TvlH I lS·O) bee t Oral Ro0trr1
14·71. t>tll Wut TtxH Sle la '9·93
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Or11nge CoutC9-ll Saddleback (6· 10)
68 MlreC011e 7J 76 Sent• Ana IO
U SD MtH lS S8 Ml SAC 49
104 Ent LA 19 9J Fullerlon IOI
68 Imp V alltv 10 Sl Ml SAC SS
67 Ml SAC 68 69 Mt Se n Jae 87
71 NeDe ~ 91 Senta Monie• t?
72 Sente ROH 82 38 Snt 8art>are 36
6.S P110mer '' '1 lono 8tacn 67 74 EH i LA 6S 66 Vtfllvra 67
12 Cltru' S3 13 DtHrt 16
66 Groumont ~ S3 LA Valllv 71
IS lmP Vt llt Y 79 S2 Senta Monie• SO
6S SO MtH 68 61 LA Pierce 71
18 GotOln Wes• 64 12 Pt lomer ~7
~ Fu11er1on SI 69 Gron mon1 60
37 Cvortu S2 71 Imp 11811tv 91
J If-Ml SAC J lf-5outhwettern
J21-et Compton J?t-MlreCo\111
J2s-<:em10, J1S-11 Sen 01190
Jit-Santa Ant J21-SO M111
F+-Gotoen Wt1t Ft-11 Pelomar
Ff-at F ullt rlon F t-Groumon1
Fll-<ve>rtn Fl-JmP Velltv
FIS-al Mt SAC Fll-11 s·wesltr"
F lt-Comp1on FI S-11 Mir1Co1I•
F22-11 C1rr1101 F tt-S.n 01too
F2S-•I S.nle Ana F22-et SO Mell
Golden west (3-10)
6S Snow 71 10 F'utterron .,
6l C•nvon1 69 Jlt-CYPflU
77 Klno1 River 62 J2 1-el Ml SAC
S9 Glenda It II J2s-<:omp1on
61 Pa11dlna 11 J?l-11 Ct rrflo1
67 Saovo•u 90 F4-el OCC
S3 Sen Jott 64 Fl -et S1n1a All•
6S S Mountain 19 Fl l-1' ullerlon
103 C.ltndslt, At 76 FIS-ti CvPrtn
76 Rtver\l<lf 86 Flt-Ml SAC
64 Oreno• C<>4111 71 F27 a l Compton
JS San1a Ane 71 F7~ Cerrito•
South Coast Conference
C..,....tl'C, Ovenl
WL WL
Fullerton
Cve>rtu
Carrilo•
l 0 ti s
1 1 ll 6
? I 14 s
Sant• Ana
Or•no• Co111 Got4en w ... 1
Ml Sen Antonio
Como Ion
2 1 13 1
I 1 9 I
I 2 3 10
0 3 • 10
0 ' , • '8turdaY'S S<wti
Cvpreu 52 Orenoe Coe11 37 Fulltrlon 17 C.Ol<lell Wt11 70
Cerrito\ 71 Ml Sen Antonio '4
Senta Ana IO, Comciton ••
WtclMMNV't GamH ( 7l>O -.m I
Cvpran al Goio.n W11t
Ml s.n Al'ltonto at Orlnvt Coe1t
Comolon et Ctrr1to1
Sante Ana at Fullerton
: •• ¥¥4 a ,...ZS!
SCOREBOARD
P1clflc Cast Confet'41nee
c.MtrMU Over al
WL Wl lm~rtal Vahav l 0 IS 2
~ulflwH1trn l 0 14 2
S•n DllQO Miu 2 l 10 7
S.Odteo.Ck 2 I 6 10
M·raC0111 I 1 9 9
Sen Dl4t90 I 2 1 5
P110mar O l 10 t
Grou mont O 3 S 17
'81VrdlV'• kW9'I
tm~r111 llelltv 91, SeCIOtt!Mlc>. 11
Se n Dleoo 57 Mtr1Co111 SO
!.en DI~ Meu 19, Palomar 74
Soutnwutern I l Groumont 6S
WtdneMlav's Gamn (7:l0 p.m l
Southwe\larn et S11Cldlt0tc>.
Pa lOmer 11 Sen O•tllO
C.roumon1 el Mir1Co111
lmPtrlat V•lltv at Se n Diego Meta
Bob Hooe O.Mrt Clanlc
(II Palm krlnell
340
• John Manttv '12 000 66-70·70·6'·66 Jim S1mont Ml 100 69·63·70·69·69
)42
Johnny Mtller '27 200 67·'9·6S·69·17
l4l
P11ar JICOt>lll ,17,600 70·67·69-n·65
Curllt Strenoe 117.600 70-70·67·61·61
)4-4
C.erv Koen.' 13,400 12·71·61-67·67
Tim Norro1, "l,400 68·61·74·'6·61
Jeck Renner. l 13,400 69·67·6'-61-12
)44
Ronn•• Btec11. s 10,000 67·61 70 13·61
S.mmv Rtt111 ll0.000 61-69·12·61·6'
Mike Reid,' 10.000 73-6'·67·6'· 70
Ooug T1w111, '10.000 69·72·67·67·71
LH Eleler. '10,000 69·61·61·70·72
)47
Tom J1n11fn1, '7,200 61·70·74·61·67
Vence HHfner, 17,200 68·10·69·10·10
Celvln P"''· 17.700 69·11·11·66·70
341
W•yne Levi, U ,200
John Cook. U .200
10·70-70 71·67
7S-66·67·11·69
34t
5cott Hoch. SS,400 72·66·71·11·69
Joev Sindelar. S5,400 10· 10· 73-66· 70
150
Jonn Ao•m•. ,.,'80 71·71 ·73·67·6'
Wllllt Wood. U ,480 66 71·70·70·73
O•Yld EOwre11. 14,4'0 70·61·10-61·74
lSl
Craig Sltdllr . SJ,7.40 61·75-69·69·70
Hat Sullon, ll,2.0 61·76·66·72·'9
Root< M•llt>lt, 13,2.0 70·61·74·70·69
Anclv NOl'ln, SJ,2.0 70·69·61·73·71
Ron Streck, SJ.2.0 70·71·70-69·71 M/jrk Br00k1, 13,2.0 6'-69·71-71-11
lSl
Tommv N•kim, 12,229 7S·66·70·73·61
Cherie• Coooy u.m 12·61·75·61·70
Nlo Fa ioo, s2.m n -11-10-69-10
Jim Tl'IOrPe, 12.m 61·69·71·73·71
DA WelOrlno. S2,:nt 73-69·71·'9·70
Mark lv•. n .:nt 6'-71-70·12·71
Oon Poottv n.m 71·71·74·6'·•7
Pevne S11w1r1. S2.121 73·61· 73· J 1-'1
Tom Purtiar. n.m ll·67·1l·6'-7S
vlbOv Giibert. u.m 75-66·71·69·71
lSl
Howard Twlllv. Sl,366 71·61·67·74·71
Fvuv Zoeller,' 1.366 68·76·10-67·71
Mee O'C.raov '1,366 69·72·72·68·17
Mike OontiO, '1,366 70·10·13-70·10
Brao 8 rv1nt. ll.366 71·69·71·69·73
Br•d Faxon, "·366 73-66-71·14·69 Bruce F1ei1her, ",366 11-71-70-12 69
Lennie C1mn1t, '1,366 73·6S·11·69·69
Bot>t>v W11dk1n1. "·366 67-73-69·10·14
Boo MurPnv. Sl,l66 79-73-66-67-61
l~
C.arv McCord, '9S7 11·69·n -10-n
David C.rehem, S9S7 71·11·69·71·11
Frio Covotn , '957 72·69·74·61·7 I
Mark Pfell. ,957 76·67·72·69·70
Rav FIOVO 1957 72·74·70·69·69 Oollnoe Hemmno. '9S7 74·70·73·61·69
Allen Moller SW
Joe tnmen , ...
Curt Byrum, '88'
Bot> Gllcltr '818
us
Jim 8ooro1 ''" C.toro• Cadlt '8llt
Oennv Eowaro1 ~
JS.
Scoll S1mo'o~ '9«
Peter Oo11ernu'' '8«
Huoerl Gre.n. U«
Brei! UPoer '844
1S7
72·68·6'·73·74
72·61·73·61·74
61-70-73·7)-71 72-61-70 1•-71
71-70·70·73·71
77·67·72·'9·70
11·67-13·7•·&9
10-11-•' " n 1)-15-10·61·11
73·69·73-71·10
14·11·11·10-10
Leonerc:t Tnmo111 '912 76·70-71 67·73
Tim Simoson. '912 74·11·71·70·11
Run Cocnren. U l1 66 7l 69 17·1•
Lerrv Mize '812 11·73 11·69·73
RAIDERS LOG
( 14·4)
20 C1nc1nne li 10
20 Hou"on 6
21 Ml1m1 u n Denver I
JS Wash1noron 31
21 Ken"' Cflv 10
36 !>t•lll• 31
40 0 •111, 31
21 Seattle 34
2t K en'H C 11.,. ?0 n Oenvtr 20
27 ButtelO ~
11 NY C.1an1t 12 41 San OlfQO 10
14 SI LOUii )4
)0 Sen Oll!90 14
NP'L P'layoftt
31 Pl111t>ur11h 10
)() Se•lll• 14
Jan 7'1 -Wt1h1no1on ISuCH:r Bowl
XVIII!
same Ann.
SUND A Y'S lltHUL TS
1111t1 at tl-•v "-'•11_.._. IMtflllte>
"IHT ~Cl. 6'1'l ""1ono1
Calat>onile !Orto) 13 .o 1 20 UO
Neveda s.oe 101nnvl n 60 1140
Prince Roo LH ITorol 1060 Alto raceo DQ·&artar Gold (flnl'11td
..Cond I nd WH Of•Quallfltcl to fourth),
SotratH, Sneek Sov. Slanne Sweot.
Paul'' Grev, So1nf1h Oen D, FrM Oulv,
Goldv'' Comma nder. Pat'\ Pt! Time. I. 17 315
SllCONO RACI. 6 furlonos
Rtbtltt (OtvrH I 6 60 4 20 UO
Felr Mt llHa (01hHv) S.IO 4..0
s mau Hebll (V11an1ve1a1 •AO
Also rac9d. Perllou• Flfoht, See Judi
Run, Lonom1 y1n1wavt, Knee ~la,
Mv Count"'· 81v11dt Slnoar, Nalet'•
Stlnoar, Cenov·• v11an11ne, B tnvlnclblt
Time I ti ?IS n DAILY OOU9LIE (9·21 Plld '47 IO
THHtD lltACI!. 6 lurlono1
M1nnem IMcrrn> 13 60 s .o l IO
Pennv Proflf (Shmkr) 3 IO J 00
Rvcku' Rutar (Ftlll 4 IO
Alto reced llldlnutv• llOC>tl Lennart
Known To Win, C1m1ootc1v. StrtlOhl
Storv Ori1n111 Che mp, 8vrneo Lover
T1,,.,. I ot 4•S
l'OUlltTH lltACI! I I I mflt,
5o Goe' IF1n1 7 60 4 20 2 IO
S.m1<191 IVlnrlt l S 20 3 20
Vt l Ot Roi IOetahOu"IVll 2 60
Alto raceo H•f• Adel C.uacl\an
L1fereoe1. Trlckv Wlnlt, Frlvolln 1mo Time I.SO llS
f'lf'TH ltACI!. I Ill mite• on 1ur1
At>llntln IMeret l9 .0 t .0 4 .0
8rvckntr ICHteneoe) 7 00 3 60
Pair Of Ac.1 IMcCerronl 2 60
Also rac9d Mldford. Ch•nctY Bldoar.
Rao Dod. JOhMl•ble. Papal Bull,
AnW ulhtr, Le Fur
Time l 49 3tS
U EXACT A Cl· 11 peld •l?6 00
SIXTH lltACE. I ll 16 milt•
Cereoor (Shmkr I 10 40 S.60 l .40
Double Cu h IGercle) S.60 3.60
Honor Medal (Hewlev) 3 00
Alto receo· Rive Rive, Tht 8 10 Bird,
P11chtt 8ron11, Trlbel Klno, Lotfler.
Exol01lv1 Pu._r, Shotgun Wiiiie
Tlmt I « 4/S
SIV•NTH RACa. 6 lur1on111
Vmp Svne (Hly) '8 40 It 20 10 20
9rlrtk SIOl'm ICIM) 7120 13 00
Po\ltl._. Tract IMcCarron) 5_00
Also raceo Sri.rt 1111 F'1n111v. G F«
Girl•. Wino Of Frenc.a, Na119n1v Madam
8111 Or1tm,, Lvcll.v Ledy EMtn
Timi I 10 ltS
U EXACT A (3·9) paid U .369 00
alGHTH lltACE. 7 turlonQ1
Dantl>O (Plncavt 9 10 '60 3 00
Pac Manie (Ve1n1eta) S 00 3 20
•·Por.v IMcCarron) 2 60
A-<OUOltd
Also rateo A·Mamweer Rambllno
Netlvt, Snt nekllt. Crotso
Time 121
U l!XACTA IS·J) Piie! 1121 SO
S2 l"ICK SIX (6-3-1·9-3-SI Paid
"0.9~ 60 wllh 11 wlnnlno llckt11 (five
nors.\l lhtrt ware no 1fx wlnnert
NINTH RACE I 1 16 ml1t1
Rel C.o Mn (Htv) 47 00 16 80 6 IO
Le llern't 8111 Mc IM11l I 00 4 00
Tr11011en IMcCerron> 2 60
Alto raced Vlmy ' Champ, Keep Your
Pace. BuMt ll. Clear Verdict, Clllvey,
A1ur1 Tlmt1 M1dnlte Coooer N1flv l td,
Plra1a
Time l •~ J1S
U IXACT A 112 10) oefel '714 00
Alttnoenct ... ~
HollvwOOd Park
SUNDAY'S AESULU
(ht .. 2'-~ "',_" mettlnel
l"llltST ltACI. One milt Pt Ct
Wl11terlo (Sllhl 11 40 ll 00 I 00
Colt.H IV (Parry) ,, 00 10 20
Hl,,Ou At>be (ICutt>ltr) 3 to
•110 raced Ot rt>v lord. C R Farno
Mu Burnt>ro. Not>lt T euti lk" Mtrlne,
Ke11v Ano Ma~ Geme
Ttmt 202
U EXACT A ti 31 oa10 lS99 40
SECOND llACIE Ont m11t pace
S•oux N I Kutdltr 1 S 60 4 20 2 IO B11c" Mark N !Anonon, 9 00 l 10
Hanoovtr I Pteno) l 60
Al•o race<! Doctor Don N R CurH1
YenkH Hell OK • Ru''' Cockv' Otnv ~ov Time 1 S9 215
U IXACTA 12 II Pe lc! '9390
THHllD RACI. Ont milt pace
Dttn Pont ((irno/ 19 60 110 S 40
Ml111r G (Kuet>ltr) 610 4 10
c.11n M1dt>v !Btlllaroeonl S 40
Al'o recto Ct lttntt. Monlerl!v ROC~l!I,
11owdv Sier Pepe Jtrrv
Time 100 J 5
U EXACTA IS II Pe1C1 ")6'>0
111
l"OURTH RACE. On11 m11e peep
Oreo 8rd 11/0ghml '6 00 6 60 l 40
SIH dV l ac:tv N IPtllngl '90 3 40
T"eors Hanover 18ellergeonl J 00 Al\o receo White Vtlvfl Cenoerre
Dai. Min Werm BrHtl
Time I SI J S
IJll"TH RACIE Ont mite Pict
Coln Win IBIOn> 4 l 20 11 •O 4 IO
Merit Streit IVIOQhm) 12 llO 6 40
Vento.M 8tY N !Ptlllng) 4 IO
Also raceo 5o Fe r N A1gn1 Bower N
Etllt BrHzt, Doll Htnrv Wynne Nen
e11n1 Cllu1c Ct N A
Time 200 3 s » IXACTA (1 31 oe1d 13'7 60
SIXTH lltACE One m11t P8tt Vr"v Crt (Anl 60 00 11 to 11 20
Soec1e l Ptltr •S'1rr111, 4 60 l to
JtckuP l811fleroeon1 10 20
A••o raceo S•~•• 8rHit M·11~h1"9
Fellt Creve Olci..le Oovt>lt Deck. Marry
N•relln N True Cn&rlll N TvPiCll
Ttmt l Sf l S
U IXACTA () •1 Pe1CI U6S 60
Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT /Mondey, Januaty 10, t9&4 BS
sav•NTH lltACI. Ont m11e NCI
LOl11nfnSlm(8kr/ t40S90420
Mlllhly Matria (WOI) 17.IO 6 to
Two Oca1111 (Grvnovl S 20
Also racao Junolt L•w At~ Kint
rracf Ml••. Vlnc•o Fu~ P0Cke1 Time 2'00
U EXACTA I I •1 DA•CI s?S2 l0
EIGHTH lltACI. One m11e Peet
Tbtla Seth (Ping) 6 00 4 60 410
F aMlmtttto I Parker I • to 3 40
Smart Koell (I(~ I 3 00
Also ract0 LOOktng C.000 N 8 C
Count, S.m Ltlone Prtvv Council N, S..h~n. Sn\oolh M.ovt N
Time 1S9115
U IXACTA (3·7) pa111 \13 .0
NINTH lltACI. Ont mite P•Ct
Wldwel Flen (Pino) 9 .0 410 2 to
Tact Wave (81llaroeonl 3 20 2 .o
&et Cne mp (Anderson> 2 .o
Also raceo· Aranle Sco11, Nailve HaP,
VHttd Power, Del Cavallo, TebD Hanover
Ti,,.,. 1:~ llS.
U l!XACTA (l·SI 01111 'S3 70
U l"ICK SIX 13-7-l ·l·l II Peld
I 1,259 60 with 12 winning t1c1<11, !lour
11of110 Thtrt wart no 11a or live
T•NTH lltAC•. Ona milt PKI
Wlrt>ro llonoo) 5.0 360 2IO
Moody Btut N (Pierce) 6 60 3 40
H H Tremor (Plano) 3 00 ""° rec9d Direct Ma1111v 8ur111•1 l noaoe 81vnen. Hanovt< TrotlOO Crul .. awav
Time 2:01 llS
U IEXACTA 12-SJ Plld S91 SO Alltn<llnce t,t70
NHL
C~ll!Ll CONl"lllt•NCI!
SmV1M DM.-i w L T P'tl GI"
Edmo111on 34 • 4 72 210
C•1gerv 17 " I •? 1" Vencovver 17 24 s 39 177
WlnnlPtO IS 22 1 37 19S
K'"91 14 22 9 37 196
N.,-m OWISlen
Mlnnesote n ll 4 " l9t
SI Louis l9 23 • 47 170
c,,1c100 " 14 4 40 1S6
Toronto IS 24 6 36 m
Ot1rol1 IS 2S 4 34 lS6
WALES CON,•lltl!NC•
"•trldl Otvblen NY Islet lO 14 1 62
NY Rl"Mf'I 2S IS 5 SS
PhUIOllOflla 23 14 1 S3
wun1no1on n ll 3 41
Pl1111>uron 9 )0 s 23
N-JtrMY 10 33 2 n
Adllmi OM-..
BOiton 29 11 3 " 8 uffal0 2t 13 4 '° Qu9')9( 2S 16 4 ~
Montrut 21 22 2 " Herttoro IS 2• 4 ).&
S4MllllV'• k-K.._ 4, WlnnlPtO 4
Edmc>nton s. New Jar .. r 4
Cttverv 3, Wt1hlngton 1
Chlcaoo 2, P111.our11,, 0
V 1ncouvar S. Har ttorel 0
TadaV'I Gamet
Kine. et Mlnnt10l8 lnl
NV hlanoen e t 801ton (n)
Oetro11 al NV Renoen '"'
Kln91 4, Jets 4
Sore bv ""'lod1
214
179
193
161 13)
12t
201
193
214
169
1 ..
GA
ltl
190
115
220
211
'" , ..
170
715
190
tSI
16'
163
lS6
1'7
19'
ll3
IS)
162
16'
193
Las """"' I 2 I o-• WIMIDIO 2 I 1 0-4 Fin I ,..,.l<td
I Len A"lltit\. TaylOr 10 (Smith Sim·
mer). 4 l9 2 WlnnlP4tQ, Youno tl
(Cempoell, HaywerO). 9 S7. l Winnipeg
Hewtrcl'luk 21 I O.BIOll ) 10 ?4 Penal
l1H-Ru1kow1ki, LA. m11or S 12 Kv1t1 Win meoor, S 11, AnOtr,on LA m•oor
oame mtSCOr\dUCI, s l'2 Ketty LA Ol mt
mltconduct S 12, Wtlltrt Win S 12
Bat>vcn, win I 16. Picaro Win 13 Jt
MeCLten Win, 16 44, Simmer LA 17"
SKlftd Pen.cl
•• Lo• Angele, F O• 19 I Au, .. ow.,,,
KtnntOYJ 1 2• 5 W'nn•oell CemPOt l
Youno1 4 u 6 L°' Anotl4!\ Hero., 4
R ... 1kowu Fo•I l9 ll Pt"
e'lv-Mc8e n. w" 4 S9
Third ,.tr'lld
1 W1nn1oe11 H•wercl'tu" 13 Wallt•tt
507 .• Lo' 4ngelf\ Ru•kOWlkl J tFo, Hen•"•~I 11 S3 Pen111ie•-Oouo•11,
Win 1 4 l u,i.owiCl'I Wtn I 72
Ovtt• ••m-None Penallltl-None
S"O'' on C.oa.-Herttoro 14 8 IS 1 .lt
Vencouvt• 10 10·8 3--ll
Goe11"-Har1tord 8eron Blake van
touvPr Havwero A-ll,SS9
' I
• •• 0..p , .. flM!lng
ART'S LANDING (Ntw-1 lffdll
-49 englert • ""° DIU 4 ShHPhHCI S 'cu101n 43 roe' 11,n 16 meci..ertl
DAVEY'S LOCKER INewpert
8tadll -1l •"II"' 130 roe!\ coo J cow coo 2 lino coo 16 1neeonue1 6
DHI I Domio 162 mec••rt DANA WHARF -11 1no1tr\ ~
oeu 101 roo coo IS I meek ere It
V>ffONIO
Sic I cendlflom
SOUTH•llN CAUl"OttliftA ~LOMtNI -IS-11 del>tn. 6 -
nerd PICktd ...a men·madt, ? clllt<t
-•"no MOUNTAIN HIGH -lt ·24 dtPtn, 12
new nero Pte"td •no men·madt. 2 Chl irt
SNOW SUMMIT -11·74 del>lh, ri.ro
o.ckld end men·m.oe, S cl\aln .
SlllllltA·NIVADA ltANGI!
LASSIN "AlltK -No n•w 71JJ fool
bell herO·PICkld lnCI 9"oomld. One' trlPlt cnalr, two wrlect 1111,,
llOltlAL -NO new 10·12 fool bllw
oroomad Ptclctd oowdar •nd firm oack-
ld Five cneln O•v, '"'" nlot\1
SUGAllt 80WL -No new 7·lS foot
0.11 oroorntd oacluld -oar Incl flrm
oacktd Five doUOle cha l", ace"' chair end KCfll oonoc>ll
NOttTH STU -No new 21)·9 loot °'" oroomao eno tlrm PICkld Nine
Cnaif\
Al..P'INIE MEADOWS -No new s ,.17 , 1001 °'" Dac•ao POWOtf' Teti cna1r, one wrtace t 11
HOMSWOOD -No new 11., •• loot
Otll oroomac:I eno lllltd firm·IMK'lltO
IU<"nlno r.ofl Thr" cllli" thrH Mfl•
SOUAW VALLIY 11.200 f1 I -No new t·t fool oew oroorneo PICked
oowOlf, l~m PKke<I and orafl\Ar Cat>lll
cer. oonoota a no 12 Chi•'•
SOUAW VALLIY 16,200 fl ) -NO
new l·l foot OtM groomed PICktd. firm
oaetteo end granuter Four cna1n , 2 htts
TAHOI! SKI 90WL -No new 2·7 foot
1>111 groomed NCkld oowoar end firm oedl9d Fu" _.,ion
HIAVINLY VALLEY -II lncllt$
man·madt new 4·6 1001 0t11 oroomeo
end firm pacfl.td Tram. S lrlOll t lllln , 6
OOUt>lft, 4 hfll
SKI INCLINI -4·6 1ncht\ man·maoe
new 2·31'> loot oe" eroomt0 flrm-
Plt ktd eno oowOlf SI• cri.ln
MT. lltOH -No new 3·1 loot bes.
oroorneo. 11111<1 ero flrm·oackeo Two
dou~ cri.1r1, one 1rlP1t
SllltlltA SKI RANCH -No new S11>
loof t>IM Oldttd POWdt< Nlnt cl\al(\
KlttKWOOO -No new t· 12 toot DIM
firm oadleo end oroornte1 Fun -•tion.
MT 11taeA -No new 4 ,.10., foot
Ots. flrm oac.ktd e no oroomeo -dar
Six cllllri
OODGI lltlDGIE -No oe.w. l'3 2 toot out flrm Deektd •nd groomao. Fout
CM lrt, lhr .. llfh
9ADGall "All -No new 2'1'J loot
t>aw oroomacs oowOlf Ful• -•lion
MAMMOTH MOUNTAIN -No new I ., tool t>IM oeckld oowo.r t nd ri.rd
PICllld Two vonoo1a I lt d\ltr •, ttw• ltfll
Votvo Masters
(at 1Mw YOt'lll
~l"IMI
John McEnroe IU S oet tven Ll!ncl• 1C11cno110v1~1111 6 J 6 ' 6 •
McE'nroe w1n1 "00 000 L•"ll' win'
U0,000 )
Women's tournament
(et Oelellndl
sin.' f' lnal Ht ne Mandllkove IC1tch0,10v1k1•1
c;.f Mert~ N1vr1111ov1 IU S) 7·6.
) 6 6 4 (MfnelllkOYI Win\ '30,0001
Weetcend tr•n~cflons
l"OOTBALL
Unti.d S11i.1 Foetblll LH_,.
OS ANGELES EXPRESS-S•o~
Cl'lr l F OOIP Jee• Cemot>t• •"O Aenov
D•c>.er\nn 'off•nt,v• 1tnemen 8rao
Ve"•' •"O Aeo11•t w .1 e ml neoeo tr\ Oarrek Pff'' runn1no oac• wenoe•t w11111m1 o~.,,, ... , t>ac:ll.
end J·m T"aver ~ c~••
OKL.t.HOMA OUTLAWS Nemeo
lhlDh ~11u11 oe!e"'1v• "'' coecn PllHBUAC.H MAULERS.-Treeltd • , .. s orell C"O•Cf •o ,,,. LO• An11e1H
E xPru1 1r P•cn•nQI! for 1nl! "on1ng
r111,,ll to Donni,. H·c-mt r\ oll.-.\•v•
le< ~It !>111nee1 H·c •me" HOCl<EY
NttlOnll HOClrtV LH-
l'v' 0NT 11 f A l (AN
AD•E N'> Re<e'lf'O <,1evt Ptnnv 11oa1
'f ndprt trnm H&hf&• ot 'hp Amttr•'-&n
H!" • fv L POUut
COLLEGE
IQWA \ r A fl A"noun<eel II>~ r.,
1gn111on ot Oet>t>•t o.ng wo......, '
DH>.11111111 en• ' tllt •·Y• 11 '"• eno of I,,. KhO<>' •tar
KAN!IA\ -5•11nt0 M·l<t Go111r1eo ro•aO 10010•11 coec• 10 • onl! veer
conlrec• ,, 1,.,, oo
RtHC.E ~\-Annoul'<eel '"'' DIC•
(Jr Of1Pl"I\ vt (t)ir;)'C•rtator-WOu•d ....
rn11n ., a" 1'\\ \len' •ootbal• co.ec""
Camel Lights
9 mg "tar''. 0 8 mq nicotine av per cigarette by FTC method
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That C1garene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
• I
,, ..
M . Orlft09 Colla DAILY PtLOT/Mondty, Jw.y 18, 1914
,.},!!NE 11 WM£N lME
uvvP MOMOR MAN C.OME5
J J LOVl IT
{ WMf N I (,(1
A POP51CL(
116
THE
J',\.'9IL l '
CIRCl'S
by Bil Keane
"You be Honey an d I'll be Sweetie."
'I \R,..\Dl Ki: by Brad Anderson
11h
"Oh, stop looking so smug any dog
can carry house sltppers."
l FEEL LIKE
Jo<N ING A ~OOD
FIVE MILES
NO. MA.AM M'f ~EPORT
ISN'T REAOV 1T FELL
OUT Ot MY 8tNC'ER
~v
Tl'M8LEWEEDH
TME RIN65 WOULDN T
CLOSf SO l TOOK IT
BACK TO TME DEALER
by Gus Arriola
T~ ~
1'(%
~ &fl!
l HATf Ii W~E N
M Y LIP~ 5TIC.t\ TO
THE. tl•,1/ POPSICLE
~
"I h111 Mond1ys."
HE SAID T~E R N6S NEEDED
TO SE REPLACED ANO ~E 0
~AVE TO WRITE TJ THE
MANLl~ACTuf(ER AND 1 r
WOULD r:.k.E TwO WtEK 5
TO 6ET SPARE PARTS
p
Hank'Ketchum
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
WE1R~ W,AITIN~
~~ 1HE FEELIN<J
TO PASS.
by Charles M Schul z
600C' 601N6 SIR THAT
WAS rnE BEST EXCUSE ~
I VE EVER ~EARD l' -. . ,
I Ill VOU OU'f 1l4Efte
SL.t~l*tFW>M IWJ(t(it>
~INVWJ!
l1M NOT SLINKING-,
l1M &t..1"1NC; FROM
FaKfOROC H'!
I l
~ :
' ~~~!~
' .
8RIOC[
Q.I -A' South, vulnl'rithlt',
you hold
•AI071 :JQMSZ 0 J(J7Z
T hr h1dd1nl( hu pl'()C't't"dl'd:
Welt Nena. t.:alt Selltla
l •:; ! • Pau 7
What aclron do you lake"!
A. -You wrrr not 1nv1lrd 1n
lo lhl'l aurl1on had parlnt·r
wanted lo ht .. 1r 11bout your
•padt\ or d11tmond'I. ht' ruuld
havt' douhlt'cl l'artnrr mu'I
h1vl' a good ,u1l for h"
vulnrrablt l wo h·v+'I ovt•r
rall. and you havt' U'>t'ful
valut'\ for hun l'a\\, :and
pan a1e•1n t-Hn 1f 1h1•
oppont'nl'I d11uhl1·
Q 2 -Hoth vulnn1hh·. "'
South you hold
•J6 AQ954 AKJl +91S
Thl' b1dd1nl( liis' pmcl't'ded
North •:11t ~outh Wut
I NT P111 3 Pa ..
3 NT f'1111 ?
What art1on do you 1.ik1·'
A. -Don"t 1(111+' up yl'I tin
~lam Your '9dl' could '''II
have a 4 I d1.imond fit. and 11
a \u1lahlf' trump f11 ''
Jl DGt: P \HKt:R
W HEN SHE1LAS
MQTHEP TELLS
A86EY THAT SHE
MET RA'T'tv\OND
FOR LUNCH SHE
LOOKS AT THE WOMAN IN
DISBELIEF'
SHOE
DR \BBl.t:
'
CllAILES
Go1E1
•.
ANSWER TO IRIOCE QUll.
localtd, you ~hould havr
1•nou1<h lo ronlracl for 12
lrickli Tt•i1t thl' wattrs by
h1dd1ng four d111mon<h. and
~t'I' how part nt'r rurb. H ht'
"mJ1ly ''Kil' off ill four
hurl' or four no trump. pin~
you h• 111• <font• your hit
Q.l A, South. vulnn,.hlr
YIJU hold
"•QIOS AQ3 A9~ +1<765
The bidding hon prO<'rt'drd
North Eatl S.ut11 Wut
PaM Pa.. I + PaN
I • Pa11 I NT Pua
2 PaH ?
Whal do you lud now '
A. -l p to no ... you h111I'
'hown nothing but 1
m1n1mum babanrtd opening
with a rlu h 'u1l In fart. you
havf .1 mu1mum for your
h1dd1ng to this point, and
vour dout>fl' f1l improve\ tht'
\alul' r1f vour hand Taki' a
1ump preference to lhret
\pade~ !'linct your onf' no
tr•1mp rebid hh hm1t1•d your
h;ind 111 15 po1nl\. partnn
r,innot 1•xprrt you lo hd11t·
more than you 1rtu1tly hold
Q.4 -NP1thrr vulnrrahlt. h
So uth you hold
•AQJ IOl ;•)(954 0 8 •?GS
Thr b1ddin1C ha\ prort't'ded
Nertlt •:ut S.utlt Weal
I IJ Pu• I • PaN
3 ''J Pa11 ?
What do you hid now'
A. -Your hand h.a• .. 1an1
po1'9h1l1l1e\, but you havt• no
ron11rn1rnt way t11 bid 1t A
Jump 10 f1vr ht'.aru 1s a
poH1b1lltv. but parlntr
m1icht not rt'ah7t' thal you
ha\l' lhl' J('l' or p1dr1 4nd
l'Xlrrm1• du11nond shortnr~'
l11•rh,1p~ l hi' '"'"'' appro.ach
" lo n·h1d I hrt•r 'Pldt'~ now.
~1th t ht· 1nl t-nt ion of h1dd1nK
hr:irt' ovt•r g.am,. '1l yuur
n•·~l lurn ·1 h.tl will h1ghfl1eh1
tht-11u.lhl11 uf your ~pJdt·'
.inrl put parlnl'r 1n .s hdln
J>O\lllllll lll mJkto lht• rtl(hl
tl1•1"1\1Un
Q.~ -1\\ '111ulh. 11uln(•r.ihl1-.
\OU hold
•fi AIOS AJ984 +1<852
I W~AI E.l~~
' ' '' CAN c,o wRoN&
100~'41?
J'OR BETTER OR t 'OR •ORSE
I
80-IELL f'l'l:,EU.'y'-
VJ-\Al.9 HRffl:Nt~
eE.liJEEN TED
RND C<:>NHIE? c
HeY.'
COME,
eACt<
He~e ,
KIPDO!
J
°",ANNE.· HE:RcWE~ ~N-GOSSIPING ffiOOT'
....___.,.1 ~ OONNIE.
(fl HEA~~ ':;AA
I •
Thf' b1dd1ng ha• prO<'ffdPd
Se•~ Welt N-U Eatt
I 0 I + % 'O Pa ..
I '
Whut do you bid ~w 1
A.-You arr not slronj(
rnough to 1how a new tu1t 11
lht' threr lt'vl'I, and ctrta1nly
you don't want to rpb1d J
ml'd1oar f1vt card 1u1t whrn
you havt' itood thrtt' tard
'upport for parlntr Ra,,., lo
thrl't htart"
Q.6 -A§ '°\out h. vulnl'rablt
you hold
t i · AI OS j AQt84 •KQ~
Thr lndd1nl( hn procrtdtd
i,outai Wot lliiortlt Eut
I I • 2 Patt
?
W h.i t do you hid no" '
A -Th" hind I) ron
,1derably 'trongtr than the
pr+'viou~ t'xampll'. and you
rannot r ult> out ,lam
po"1b1hl It'' You are strong
1·n11ul(h lo 'how your serond
,u1l at tbl' lhrrr level tx>forl'
rJ"1nl( pJrtnt-r'' \Ult hid
I hn•· rl u 11,
by Harold Le Doux
by Jeff MacNelly
by Kevin Fagan
~t~-l 1uNW l
I ~A~E. ~ fEiUNu
~i WE.'f<f.
K'NOlK! c'·~1) AeOUT
KN(,(K I 1_ J 10 ~1NO
, OVT 1
r
by Lynn Johnston
oy Tom 8at1u~
I "
by George Lemf)nt
CREDIT LINE
----
Richard Tayles VP
at Transit Casualty
Richard J . Taylea of llun11ng1 un Bealh ha~ tlCC'n named a!!.~1~tan1 v1c.c
pre\ldcn1 <ind managl'r \}'Item\ and programmina. for Traa11t Casualty Co.,
the propcnH.ai.ualt} ~uh\1d1a') ul Bneflclal taada rd Corp. In his new
P<l\ll1on Ta~ le\ '' 1n1l<>n\lbk for the de\dopm1:nt and maintenance of tht:
compan) \data pro<.c\\lng .ippl1<.iH1un!!.. "ornwrl ~ manager ol \)\tCm'> and
programming h<.• ha\ bct'n ~Ith rran\11 ( 3\u,llt\ for fi\I: )Car\ • • • ( oronu. dcl Mar r('\ldt·nt Holly Billings ha\ bel·n promoted ~o thl' polt1t1on
of senior .iccount l'.\l.'lUll\c: 31 Jun1ea Public Rel1tloa1 d1\11t1on of Jaaaen
A11oclate1 loe., al<.Oallng 10 Jack Vl nceot, 'tC:l' prl·~1dent/direc1or of public
relation\. B1ll1ng~ Joined the 'lan1a .\na firm tn I l.JM2 from Century Data
Sy1tem1, lne. wherC' \hl' \l'r\ c:d a ,11hl'rt1'>1ng and public.' rC'lauon' manager ....
l U'>tin·ha">Cd Tu1hlba Amerlc-a, Inc. ha'> annount·l.'d a rl.'ulignment of
produ<. t mnna~cment. planning and de' d upml•nt ac11 v1t1C''> at 1b information S)~lem\ d1'.i\1on Danlel M. Crane ha'> h<.'l'n named marketing manager. printer~. w11h full dire< t rc.·'lpon\1h1lit) for pnntcr product dc:vf'lopment and
marketing Dr. Sorel Reit man v.a!i naml·d marketing manager. \)Stem\, with
1den11cal rc\pon'i1b1l1t1c\ fur fo\h1ba'\ pcr<,onal rnmputer !.Y!ltcm!I. The new
TAYLES B ILLING~ REISMAI\ CRANE
oqi.an1at1o nal alignment t\ dc\1gnl·d 10 rnntor111 to the current pn.>du<.t
onentat1on of l~D funu1un\. acwrd1ng to r mh1ba 'H.c: pre<,1dcnt and d1" 1s1on
general manager J ohn Rehfeld. • • • The National Guard aod Reserves C ahtu1111a rnmm11tc:c for emplo>l.'r
support. under to the ullile of the Sec re: ta I) uf Defl'll!!.t'. ha' c award<.d Mercury
Saving• of Huntington tkach the cmplu)er \Upport cl.'ndicatc c1f apprcc1at1on.
The firm was commended for adopung perwnncl policies that make 11 ea~1cr
for l'mployces to part1upatt• in the Na11onal Guard and reserves. • • • Kerry Bullock ha'> 101nl.'d Cochrane Cba1e, Llvlog1ton & Co. as an account
rc:prc\Cntat" e in the publu. relation<, di\ 1s1on J lc:r rcspons1b1ht1e\ w1ll 1ncludc
a'lsmance on the agc:n\ ~ ·., h1gh-tc:ch ac<:ount\. A recent JOurnah'>m graduate
from San 01{,'go Stall' l n1\Cr\ll). Bullock'' cxpcnent include'> '>lint\ at ~an Du~gu·ba~c.I IVAC Corp .• me.I the: Gable Agency. • • • HlDes Wholesale Nurseries ha\ av.ardcd its advcn1sing and public
relations anount 111 Crowell McKay, Inc. ol In inc C rowell McKay will
coordinate: all media atll\ 111c~ for I hnl'\, including the production of Hines'
newsletter. ··r-our ~a son' .. H inc'> 1s a wholc..alc grower of cont.a1ncn.7cd plant
products and ''a di\ 1\llln ol Weyerhaeuser Corp. • • •
We.tern Digital Corp. ha'> announted that 11 ha.,entercd into an agreement
to acquire an equ1t) po\lllon 1n Array Tecbaology, a San Jo\C based gate arra}'
and surf au: mount tct. hnolug) rnmpany Western D1gnal 1'> a manufactun..·r of
propnclal) '><'m1Cc1ndul tur dn le\ 1ntt:lhgcnt 'ub'' \terns and advan,ed
d1g1tal S)'\tcm' • • • Bank of America hJ' o pened Jn~"' brJn<h 1n M1))10n Vit:Ju tu be tailed
the 4)addlcbad' Valin \.fain Ollirc I h1'> nt'"' olfat.· 1<, 1hc nudcus of the new
Saddlebat. k Valk> ·\rc:a Managcmc:nt ( 1roup hcadnl h) Joe Arcollo, \ ll'I.'
prt·s1dcn1 fhl· new brand1 "''"ht· lot.;11cd alniss from the M1-.s1on V1cJo Mall
at .U-1991 ( ro.,..n V<sllq Parli.v.a) lht.· South M1\\1 on V1CJO hrnmh v.1fl t>e
con~ohdated 111to 1h1'> mu'h larger foulll\ . . '
Eric C. Pfeiffer ha\ J01ncd Wllllam11-Kubelbeck & A111oclates, Inc. real
estate economic. finanual and financial (Onsultants. a) an cconom1s1 in the
firm\ lrv1nc offit·e lk'fore J01n1ng WK&A. Pfeiffer wa~ a research assornHcd
with Harold Oavld1on and Au oclates, ( entul) Cr t) His rc:'>pons1b1ht1cs at
WK& indudc thl' t ollrt uun and anah"'' of data for et·onomu .. and market
fcas1b1lat\ \tud1n · • • •
Mlrtoae Industries Li mited 111 < O\ta Mc\a ha\ JOIOcd the National
Electrical Ma nufacturers Auoclatloo and ha'> aflihated v.1th the <>1gnal1ng.
protection and c.:ommun1lallon!I '>t'Oll)n dnd the elco1on1n d" 1<i1on The
com pan) will be repre\cntcd 1n NF MA h> 8.E. Roscoe, 'ice prc\ldt.•nt
MUTUAL F UNOS
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE TRANSACTIONS 84
Bof A COMMODITY PRICE INDEX
180~-----------------------------------------
1 r-Strong year ~e~~
for commodities. r-r eo-
1
eo-~-
1
73 74 75 77 78 79 10 81 82 13 84 v .. ,. by Quarter 1171 100
Strong finish gives
AirCal record year
290.368 passengers
fly NB-based a irline
during December
.\1r( al boarded more: pa!!.M:ngeri. 1n
1910 than an) year 1n 11s 17-yf'ar
h1\tory. the Newpon Beach, ba~d
a1rhnc has announced.
Strong December pa'>scn~cr board·
ing~ of 290.368 helped A1rC"al break
11'> previous record. set 1n 1981 .
~rH· our 1..u\lomer'>
.\1r{ ar .. Dt"u·mbcr boardings in-
creased 11 ' pertt.·nt OHr the
prc,1ous )l.'ar "'lt1le rncnue pa~sen·
ger mile'> incrca\l.·d 10 percent 10
111 2 m1lhon Ava1lable-~a1 m1k'i
1n<.rt'a-.cd 14 4 percent and the De·
t·c mbcr load fac10r dropped two
points to 53 3 percent
F 15urt'S fort hefull 198 3 )Carsho"' a
13.2 pen:cnt 1mpro\Cmcnt 1n Air·
Cars load fattor to 58 2 perl·ent. an
increai.c of almost ~vcn po1nh o'er
1982. Passenger board1n~ 1nrrl.'aM:d
4.6 percent for the year. 10 3.566.153,
while passenger miles were up 5.8
percent A va1lal>le seat miles for 1983
were down 6.4 percent
BofA report foreca ts
5 % average prtce rise
( ommod11y pmc\ Jr• t'-'IX"\.h.:d to
mcrc: .. sc b' an a' cragt" of 5 P\'H t.'nt in
1984 follov.1n1 an 8 pc11..l.'l\I int n:a"'4:
1n I 98 l anord1na 111 the U<Jnk ul
Amerila
In ll'>tJUilnl·rl~ report on t.·ommod1·
IJ price'>. prcpart'd b\ thc 1 wnomtt\•
PohC) R<.'\Car1.. h Oc.·p.irtment tht'
bank !WI}'\ th.it the u' l"rall 1 ntrl'J\l'
will c:ont1nul' II> Oc Ice.I b) 1ndu,1r1,1I
commod11~ pnu:., v.hith arl' hul·l a\t
I<> mcrea~ b) an a'C'ragt• uf 11
percent tn 19X4 lndusmalrnmrnoo1 ·
I}' f>rlCC\ will by OOo\ll'd .1\ tht• l ~
economic C.ll.p<.tn\1on hetc>nlr' rnorc
hroad-ba\ed and tht• rt'll>\<.'f\ '>Prt'ad'>
to other coun1n1:\
4ipcc1ficall} the: rl·port \<•} ..
• .\lummum ~111,01111nut' to he lhl'
leading pcrlurm n am ong
metals. v.11h pmc\ lor1..'{t1'>I to rc.tl h
85 cent\ per poun1J b\ lhl' end ul I o,iH.&
• .\n CMclll'nt H:ar " lorct...i \l tur
the paper 1ndus1n t au\1ng thl· l'Hitc.·
of wood pulp to bernml' firm at S ~llO
per metric ton
•In \p11c ot <.on11nul·d high 11\1~11..·'>t
ralC'> the ton'ltrut t1<1n 1ndu'ttr.. .... ,11
cnio> a good }C'ar allo .... ing lumber
pnu·~ 10 1ncrea\I.' h'.-.appro.\1matcl\
25 J)t'rccnt abm c thC' l urtl·nt k"cl\
• Encrg) price' "'Ill remain '>lablt•
in 1984. a\ -world demand fus ml &il'
and coal 1\ expected to '>hov. uni\
moderate 1mpro"l.'mcnt\. ·
• I he result., uf the t•arl~ round' of
iron ore contract ncgot1at1onc, m·
d1ca1c that iron ore pncl'' ~111 dl'd1111:
for the: second )Car 1n a ro°" fh1..· nc:\\
benchmark pnn· ol ahout SV f>\·r
mctnc ton at Euro~an pon\ rdkc.·t~
the slo"' nxo"cn ol thc.· world \11..·cl sndu~tr. ·
-~
• I 1n pnct"\ "'.11 .. urpau the S6 per
pound n1ark 1n respon~ LO m~
demand 1ncrca5e\ I\ well ti l
ton11nul'd \UCce\s of t1n-produc1
rnuntric\ 1n re tno1n1 upply.
PmC' 1mprovt'mcnts for aancu
tur.tl w mmod111C1 in 198.C win core.
11nu1..· to Ix l'On•1derably \Jov-cr ctw•
tut th,· 1ndum1al commodicici Hi"1·
l'• pr itn for4vu:uhural commodi1teoJ
111 I 111n v.:111 ~ts mu late 1ncrea~
plt1n11nJ!I ths., )eu. dampcn1na tt*
J)rn e irnproHmc:nti. th11 otherwise
.... ould rc:o,uh from th<' v.orld econ·
urn It I l'l U\. Cf)
\onH· ol the: bank'~ aancuhural
c.omrnodll' pruJectson' are
• < otlce pnrei.. which JUml)('d
ncarl) I 0 J>('rccnt lasl fall. art ea:-
pcc ted to decline modci.tly in 1984.
Pmc\ row early 1n the 19tl3-84
mar"ct1ng )'car a) the new lntcr-
natwnal C'ofTcc Orpn11a11on (ICO> a~rcc mcnt ~cnt into dfoct.
au1h11r111ng c~pon quotas. Pnccs art
likd\ to ""c:akc:n 1n the \CC'Ostd half of
lhl· rurrcnt mukctuta )'Car ( 1983-84)
a' the Bra11han han·~t approachn
br;wl 1., th v.orld'~ laraest coffee
produler and e~poncr.
• ( uttun pncei. ;,re al~ eitpected to
ha\ c peaked 1n the firi.t Quancr of the
I YK l-84 markt'tm& )Car. Rcdu~
l '\ acreage in 1983 duf' to the
Pa~ ment-1n -l\.1nd proaram and
ad \\.:r"'° world v.cather resulted in
h1ghc:r conon pncC1 throu&htout last
\ummcr and fall ~ow. w11h pnt'C1
up the outlook for 1984 is for
1nlrca\Cd prndu,uon~ This ha-,
dampend the ou1look lor couon
pnc<"' de\p11e an 1ncreas1 na world
dt·mand for fiber
• fkcl prn.:e'> are c~pe<.'tt'd to remain
l1a1 durin~ the first half of 1984
dt:'>J'llt I · 5. producer~· hqu1dat1on of
hnd., dunna the fall of 1983 '
l'rc!l1den1 Wilham Lyon said that
I Q83's passenger traffic record 1s
pan1cularl) )1gnificant since it wa~
al·h1cved with four fewer c111es on
th,•ir 'i}''ltcm than in on.·v sous years.
"In 1ac1 . on a comparable system
bas1\, owr boardings increased 24. 7
percent for the )car." Lyon said. "We
feel thl\ reflect\ a pos111ve response to
the ac11on'i we have takt'n to better
0v£R TH£ CouNT£R
TOKAI BANK'S
EFFORT HELPS
SITTONHOMe
Tbt Huntington Beach branch of
Tokal Bank of California collected
U ,000 lo Chrl1tma1 gift• tor tbt
Albert Sitton Home, temporary
1belter for abused children of Orange
County.
"We had a good response from our
c u1tomera, especially Mc Donald 011·
tributing wbo donated $1,%00 la
ptrsooal beauty care product•," eald
O.J. Gause, campaign chairman and
credit officer for tbe bank.
Tbl1 waa tbe second year tbe bank
collected 11tt1 from Its customers for
tbe Albert Sitton Home, wblch Is
lo<'ated In Orange.
Tougher laws
save money on
child support
II -. o u · rr a ---------------part·nt tr).1ng tu dut. Ii.
t.hrld·\UPPIHI pa\·
m1:nt'>. }OU la{e a
toughl·r and tougher
time during I YR4
undt"r propo\l·d rnn·
gre\s1onal ll'gl\·
SYLVIA
PORTER
la11on. There nrl' I•••••••••••••• fewer and fewc:r folk~
around 10 -.1and up for )OU. In fact . I can find non1:
This whole area of ch1ld-suppon collection effort-. "
an outrage. a d1sgrat·c For man) woml'n and 'hlldrc:n
child support 1~ a promise never kept An <:'>l1mated nm··
quartt'r 10 one-third of lather" -and lather.. u\uall\ pa\
child \uppon wh1lr mothers get custod) -ncvc:r makl'
c.ourt·ordacd l.hlld-,uppon pa)ments
A retent ( cnsu\ Bureau report draw' a dcpr<:\'>IOg
Pll turc ul the pcnlou'l linanltal h\C\ cndured h\ mam ol
the!>e lam1ht''> .... 1th absent parenls ()f the 4 m1ll1on "'nmrn
due (h1ld·'>Upport pa)mcnt'i 1n I 983. le\\ than hall -4'
pcrtcnt -rc<Cl\Cd the full amount due. !fie report null''
The unml\takablc tragic conclus1on D1vofl,l' h.l\
been a financial (alamll\ tor cnormou' tut.ti' ol
def('n'l<.'lc\'> children
But during the Reagan admin1\trat1on. a t hanl(l'
appear\ dcarl} sn the: making. One House bill. .... h1ch had
~•de b1partl\an \upport. pa\\\'d b) a \Ole of4~2 to /l'rll 1n
thr clo\lng da}s of thl' pa\I \C\\IOn The: SC' nail'" ,1,11nl 111
l.Un\1der \l·veral lhlld·\Upport hlll\ \Oon alkr II fl'IUI rl\ Ill
Wa"lhington latl' thl\ month
Thr I luu'l' hill " a )ard)t1ci.... ~1mn\m1.·t..1 '" ~\'P
Uarhasa U K1..•11111..·ll' f>.( o nn 1hc hill v.tiuld 1t.•q11m•
\tDll'\ to w11hh11h.I 1.h1h.l ·\uppun p.1vnwnt\ trum lhl·
pa}lht<.k\ of 3n)Orll' \\hO lu1kd to pa) tor 'II J,1\\ 11
.... ould uncr lcdNal and \tatt• cmplmt"C\ a' "'l'll ·"
cmplo}<.'C' in all of the pn,atl' sndll\tnc'
\tate\ would hc.· 1r4uircd111"'1thhuld t:I' rdund' 11 0111
parcnt\ "'1th d11ldrcn on v.cl laH· "ho al"' v.nc.• dcl1n411l'lll
in ch1ld·\Upport pa\ ment\
~talc\ lo\ould b\• allo\\ed to v.1thh uld ta\ rt'lunJ'i J'
well lrum p:ucn1' .,..ho\C lh1ldrt•n \\t"fl' n111 rt•u•1\10tt.
v.cllarc hut v.ho "'t'rl· dchnqul'nt in 1ht.•ir l hsld \uppon
pa)rnent*.
'>tatt'\ "''Htld he.· t·nal>lcd 111 put 111.'n-. on rc,11 ;rnd
~~onal prop<.·ri.. 111 \nntc -,11ua1wn'
l\ml 'llBIC\ v.oul<l have till' pov.t'f to rt'l'l(1rt J\J ll'nt'
..... ho o-wct.I murc than Sl.000 in l hlld \Upport tu lrcull
twreauc;
Rc.•lord\ v.mdd hl• tompuwn1l'd and .tn 1nto1m,1t111n
deorinahou"K' .... ould tx· ('~tahll\hnl
Ac·rnrd1ng to th" lc&1!1la11on and \lnill~ir hill\ to ht·
propo'>l.'d in lhl' approat·hing W\\1on of ( 11ngrl'\'> tht
ft-dcral govcrnrnrnt '-'<>Uld prm1dc mall.hmg fund' 111
Je\clOp ht1th 1h1..· hardware and \Oltwan· tor thl'\t' cllorl\
The fcdl·ral gm1..·1nmcnt v.ould pn) u \1~n1lil,tnt ll\''
t·e ntaac ot thc rn-st of r unn1na 1nc.·l·n11"t' progran1<1 11111
fhc lurmuln.. ri.tuhh\hc<l would t•nrnurnat· lhl' \tat'''
10 b\•cl up t•nlorn·mC'nt d)ort' h\•\.aU\I.' tht• more thr'
lOllcn. thr mon: thi.'\ -would kcrp-up tu IOl)l·nt•nt ol tht·
(IOlllUl\l lOlll.'t tC'U
Touaht•n1..'<I <hlld \uppon t'nh111..t•men1 ('ffon, v.nuld
loll'<.' money for U\ ;,II "' ta\pU\t'r\ l hett· " a d1t\'l I
rela11on\h1 p betwct•n <hlld·'>UJ'lport cnlurcrml·nt prn·
frurn\ an~ rt<dun•<l t•\pcnd1turr\ in \1d "'I amil1n .... 1111
)..•pendent < h1IJr<'n prnaram' l tah -"'h1d1 h»' ,1
h1ahh rcprdcJ l'nfh1c.cmc11t pro.rum -rcfl()ncd '" l'IMll
1ha1 rnlle<:t1on dforn b) the c.:h1ld ·'lupport <l&cn'' paid tht·
total upcn1t1\C bud1ct ol th;it OIJl.'nt\ plu" ti. 7 f>l'IH'nt IS'
m1ll1on) ut all C\pcnthturc' for thr FIX proar.1n1
The cflt, 11,C' d, w of th, Kennell' h1ll 1" pl;annr,1 hu
<"-1 I 19K' the \latt ut li~·;il \CIH l'IXn I h1
( un1rc\\1onal Hudsct Ot11le t·,umatc' 1mprcM.1H \l '111f'
of S7K m1lhon tor fl\\al H'M IQXt> Sti7 m1ll111 n tor l~K"
and S 7~ m1lllon tor 11.JKl<
Mu\t nf thr-.c '>a' '"I' ~oulJ rc\ull Imm 11nri1u,,·,1
rnlle<·11on dlorh that \louuld rtmOH f1m1li1..·' trom
\\elf arr 'cl c. h1ld \u('lporl p 'mrnt' a' a pcru·nt.1tit' 111
l\Cllll' malt 1moml total a mrh 13 pcrlcflt
Thr pr, ''dent I\ tx·h1n\l th1\ .rnd "'art• 111 "'ht1 h<-111. ',
th11t fam1l11.•\\hould ta kc l arc of thl m'4·f'\ l'\ "ho ,,,1n\ h)
tontrnl "'''II.ire '°"t' n,1 °"'ho krl , h1ltlrt n rnu\t n111 11':
.\llo""' 10 \Utl~r m • d1"0""
•
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UPs ANO DowNs
Pel (P'IU
I I ~~ ~i
I ~ ;: ~~ l~' L I ~ 8~ '1t~1
• •• UP ~
! : 8~ l' I Ur>
t • UP ~ • UP
1 I UP 4'"' I J UP '4 • + I I UP 7:.. + • UP 1 • i •.. Uo
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l I • l~ l= --, . l • t
• • •
On
the
r r
, •
Dow JoNES AvERAGE S
NEW YORK (AP) -Fln•I Dow Jon•• lf~~v for Mond•v. Jen 16
OPlfl Hlth Lew CIO ... Cht
301nd
19 Trn d~t~ llldUl Tr en Ulll~ 65 St11.
WHAT NYSE Om
NYSE LEADERS
----
NEW YORK I API -S.IH , Mondav ptlc.t •nd ntt cha~e of th• IS most aclljvv• N•w York Stock Exch•nge lu ue,, tr ad no
nallonallv at mor• then \1.. l"
A.mer "f&, T 2.~. '\t t Comw Edis 4,631,200 ~,,., --
gomdrelnl s L09 ~ 42 ~ -!11 ~'1 Amer T& T w1 .326, 8 ~;, 7~ lgi111IE0 ,314, it .,..
IBM 1,2~, I ,,. /;
Htwl•tPk s 1.17 , ~44~..._ lt PrlmeCm s 1. 14 • ,... a PubSvc Ind 1,089,7 -+
NttSeml s 8'C7.I I 111 Power 809. 20~• +21 Chrvsler ,7 ~It
Notasl Ulll m·8 712~ -+ ,,. Gen Motors 7 • 7 't ~ Comdisco s '1 , l' -'I•
1 UPs AND DowNs
----
NEW YORK (APl -The ton2wlno ll•t snows lhe New York Stock Excnanoe ,locks 11nd w11rr11nts that have oone up the most and down the most based on percent ol chanoe reoardlau of volume
tor Mondav No securltl9' tradlno ti.tow S2 are 1~1-
·vdeo Net and i>ercentaoe chanoes are 1h• dlffennce ti.tween the previous ctos no
price and todav'' '2 p.m price UPS
Name Last Cttp I AtMoan11 s 21• 1
2 ~1119n Coro 1 • loo 3 1011a1Ea as~ 7 -:i ' enGwth wt 8~ 1. S AmerlcScr 83.. ~ 6 PutrR Cem 1 1~ I 7 Mattel wt 4~ ~ II RovCrown 3~ 2~ 9 Alaska Airt 16 "'• 11 OverS1l1P 21 1 1~ I PrlmeCm s 20 l''• 1 WebO DelE 22111 I~
l vlMestaMch 6'11 "' 4 MesaOfhh n 21/• ''' IS Carter Walt 24 1 'I•
16 RolmCorP 451• 21 • 11 HewlelPk ~ 44''• 2111 1s 9MG Inc p '•
iii ~~Irr .. ~~~~ wt ~ i ': WnAtr 21)1 1' • ~ Gen Refrac 8~ '-4 Limited 2"6 I 'i EaultGas 50 2 DOWNS
Nenie Last Ch~ I Comw Edis 217• -' 2 PubSv~ Ind 9>-• -I ~ 3 Ohio Edison 12~ -1' ~
4 8cq_CQrJ! 127/a -t 5 wt;: 2.J7of 20 -I ', 6 llristian11 5'·• -~ 7 ~nit Htum 21' • -11'1 II omdrelnt s «~ -3''• 9 rlmeMot s 211 1 -1 11 'l Grolier n 4'• -1• 1 ArlzPuD Svc 19~ -11'9 I S~ptflCPI Os -v1RTlnd' 2'•-• 14 II Power 20 -l '• I' NVF Co 2 • -'e 1 CwE I 90c>t 14 -1. t 018nFds s 30 -1~ 19 A.Ileen Inc 41'4 -'• 19 SunstateCo 91. -1 20 Arkl11 2S 1 •
ii CwE 2PI 141 • ->• '1 Tufi Ind ,.,, -l1i
3 Texulnll 5'e -'• 4 Marcade 2~ -'·•
25 Plpn Re1rch 16'·• -l"'
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW YORK !AP) Jan 16
Today Advanced 30'
Declined 2111 ¥nchanoed '2 2
otal IJsues I ' New nl11hs 22 New lows 2
AMEX LEADERS
Pel
p,g li· Uo . UP Uo UI) ,. Uo . UP Uo Up Up UP Uo Up Uo UP Up Uo UP Up Uo Uo UP Uo
4
2. 4. 4 . .s 4 ••
Prev
"~j
'
NEW YORK (AP! -S.les, Mondev orlce and net chaooe ot the 10 most •ct!v• American Stock Exchange luues, trad no nallQnanv 111 more ttw:ln Sl 8A. T Ind l S93,m 2 lS· 16 + .. OomePtrl ~1 31·16
lnstrSyst 352. ~.. I ~ Amd•ht s 296, IOO 1 h 1/•
WangLabB 276,1 -\41 NY Times s 2ff. , Yr U1t1ma1e s I 6, '• I~ Verbatim s I 9, 1 ~ -v• Te•uAlrCP 128, t," + YI
Fotomet 112,600 l~ --
•Wfi 11J1llfombil
NEW YORK (APJ -Most active OVf[• the-counter stocks suJ>Plled bv NASO
Nemt Volume Blf A.•ked Chg MCI s 7.0Sl,900 1 7• 14 --Intel ~ 883.SOO ' '• 'I -'h
Tanon s lli ~ I 18 , -l Pleio S 7 f 11 16 +1·16 Apl)teC , 27' 1 27' • -~
Olvfood 441 lH'e It + 'I\ Triton •~14 11,, 19-\6 +1-16 ~luHs 4 . "''• 11~ iv. 1uonc 700 7 71111 V. PT 3 ;900 IS 15'1• 1\1\
GoLo QuorEs
METALS QuoTES
That's an apt description of both bus tn \ sand
bus iness people a long the Orange Coas t . To k ee p track of
w her e companies are going and which people a r e h elping
the m get there.just watch ·c redit Line· -very day in the
Bus iness section of your n ew Daily Pilat
----·
When you don't know
what to do,
don•t buy
a bigger shoe!
Call classified.
Daily Pilat
642-5678
p~ople r.ad
cla\S•ft~d
Orange Cou1 DAILY PILOT/Monday. January 18, f884
Boy, fathe'r -====~::::::?i~~~~~===
rescued In
icy waters
( HICAOO (AP) - A 4-
year-o Id bO)' WU
submerged under Lake
M1ch111n ICC for 20
minutes afttr he aod bis
father slid ofT an embank-
ment, but rescuers savcti
them with a televisaon
crew's ele<-trical cable and a
fire ~SXlnrnent ladder.
Junmy TontleW1Cl was
m cnt1cal condition today
suffennJ hypo1hermtA. He
also suffered cardiac arrest
while the 32-degrcc
The extreme cold helped
~ve the boy from drown-
ing by lowering his
metabolism and slowing
his body's need for oAygcn.
said Lt. Thomas Luczak: of
the Mei~ Field Air-Sea Rescue unH.
MCmC9 ........ .... .., ..... .. ...........
IUN AMUUCAN 09'AN01 eo.doffdt I dmollWIMM.,_
COUNTY. ~ta H Frenc:;ft. a..ta t9d ~ Dlllt1a II~ c..n-
Ana. CA t270t "~ .. ,.........., ...... S.... I Allad, 8221-C ......,, up to 1C>OO AM ol ... 211'1 _,of
~-.CA. t2ta ..._.,, 1tM, et 1llNcill ._ ...
Ttlie ~ 11 ~by. en bldilwlltbeoutlle:lw .. 19d ... tMd ~ rot II CM*'O .._ --Duct IWd S. Ami WOttl ,_!lament ., OOI !Miene •
Thie ~t WM Ned with IN end~ Ind .. btN 'Mir " Co.int~ C*1I ot 0renoe county on be aottinld • • OMt» of,...,.. Dec 19. 1N3 ~ ~ 144'00 .... c.. ,_,,., ~A~. IMM.~·-'nl9 Pu~ Orenge Coe.It o.lly C*tl1C'l ,_.... "-r1gftl IO ,..._
PllOI J1n t , 18, 23, 30, 1t&e eny Of Ill 8Kll Of to "9MI fllftt Ir•
200-84 reauUw11i. °' lnformillltlM ~ ""1
INde °'if! die ~ ------------i !MM Uftiflld ldtOOI OllCrtc:I "8.IC NOTICE A 8ten19J ~ ----------1 AuthOriucl ~ PlC'TmOU• .,, ,... PublWlect ar.,. COMt Olly Jin:.
NAm STATUllNT t , 18, 1tM The follOwlnO l*90M .,. Oolr'9 ~-~------------~ J N R, INC.,~ M~Nlr BNcl.,
Newpc)f1 8-oh, CA HMO
1tw.f
J N R, lne , A Neov.01 CorporeUon, l'ICTmOUa .. I ... ~ M~ IN\ld NewC>of1 ..... _ ST•T8 W .,
8Mctl. CA t'2tlCIO -·-Thil bu111-. II concl\IC1ed by e The ~ P9'90I\ II 0cM0
c:erpdltlon ~ -,,.,.,_ Q J.... PrlllliOent A!.H EH'T£APNKS, 2tO L tllt
Thie mtement wa fled 1Wth 1M St .. eo.t. ....... CA. 12C7
Co.inty c... of 0renoe Coun1y on Alchlrd l!dnrd *"· 2IO L ·~ • Dec 11 1064 St . eo.ta ....._ CA. 12'C7
' ~ Thll~-condueWd~M
Publltned Orenge Cout O.ity ~ L N4lft f't8JC NOTICE Piiot J1n 8. 15, 22. 29 19&4 1 n. .....,._,. ... .., _... .,.
flCTITIOUa MIU.UI 8&-84 C0unty o.ttl ol Of*9 ~ Of'I
NAM1 ITAftmNT ------------------Dec 11, 1113 ~~o:-'ng per.on 1a d04nG Nil.IC NOTICE PublWled Or"9' eo. ~
01 PREGO'S ITALIAN RES-f1CTITIOUe .,..... Pilot Jan. I , ti, 23, JO, ttM
TAURANT -PIZZA. 2287 FairMw MAm STATUm.llff , ......
Rd., Cotta M ... CA 92828 The lolloWlng pet.on 11 doing -----------Arnullo Herr••· 247&e Lagrlml, buelnMI u :
MIUlon VlejO. CA. t2ff2 FAMILY FILM SERVICE, 2740 8
MIMa Herrere, 247&e IAgrlme, H81'bor Blvd , Sufte J, S.Ot1 AN, 1110nC11 OP
Mlulon vi.10. CA. 92192 Ca 927().4 ~ 8ALS 0/1 Thia~-la con<luCted by: en LeRoy Ramirez, 1391 WM1 Cet-""90M_., ...09 an
Individual. retoe, Unit 73, AMtlelm, CA. 92804 tu.t I
Arnulfo Herrera Thia ~ 11 c:onduc:ted by 111 ~tM
Thia at1tement wu tiled with the lndMdull Notice le hef.e>y 9~ t"-1
County Clerk of OrMQe County on LeRoy Ramlru pu<eutnl to 8ect10n 1HI (ft "-CMI
Ceo HS, 1H3 Thia atetement ... flted ... ,, the Code. State of Cellforr1' .... unmr-
,,,.. County c... of Orenoe County on alQI'*' w11.,.. .. pu1111e .-e., ~
Put>lltned 0r_,. Cou1 Ody Dec: 18, 1H3 p«lttwe bidding on N l4tft cl9y of
Pt101 Jan 9. 16 23. 30. 1984 flDlm7 J-.y, 1Nl, 11 11~ o'doct
197-M PubbMd Orenge Coul Dlllty AM on U'9 pi.,.._.._. .... ------------i Piiot Jan 8. 15, 22. 29. 116' p(~ "-b..,utored. end wNctl NtUC NOTlC[ _________ , ..... __ , .... located., LP-ublc Storlg9. Inc. ----------1 "8JC NOTICE 2099 ~u. "*1Ue, In u.a.y t:11 f'ICTITIOUI 8U ... U Coeta ..._, County t:ll ~
NAm ITAn.Jf'r ACTmOCJl.,_la State t:ll Celtomla. rM IMlldOl..S
The lollowlng peraon IS doing NAm aTATDmllfT good9. c:Nntee or P9t"90tlll P"°'*'1
bu91neea u _ The lollowlng per-.one are doing Oeect1bed l>e6ow. In tfle INnlrl ot:
THE SUB SHACK 7, 704 f.Mt t>u8'nMI.. 9':1ectrum Productl. Inc:. • Com-
Balboe BMI • Balt>oe. CA BACK BAY HOME CARE. 1727 mode, Iota. 4 cNlr, dlnl, ti*. 10
Shenll o.-n, 253 Cemtno Ar· Weetdlfl N1wpoft 8Mcf\ Ca. 92ee0 bu miac; r~. Anehelm. CA. 92907 ~ 1fv1ng GJnattl' 314 t Col--Landlord r~ Ole rlQtrt to btd
Anand S o.-n. 253 Camino Ar· 1ege St Cotti ..._, ea' 92129 11 the ..... Put~ f!Mli' be medll
royo. Anehelm, CA 92807 Thif bu.I..... le conduc1ed by: .,, wtth cee'1 onty end p9ld tor et the
Thll bu11neM 19 conouc:ted by: an lndlllldu8! time of pwc:NM. Al ~
lndlvtctu.! Otlertel Glkulh goodl ere told • la, end n..r be
Shenll Dewan Thi• a111emen1 wu filed wtth the remo¥9d et the time of pwc:flMa.
Thll etetement waa llled with !he County Clllrtl of 0ninge County on S... ll.lbted to ptlol a.......,., In
County Cleric of Or1n99 County on Dec: 16 19&4 1he 9'<41\l of ~1 .......,,
Dec: 19, 1983 . • • fll.D011 ~d Ind ob4lg9ted Pf111)1. 0...
'28110I Publllhed Orange Coul Delly thll tth & 19tti d8Y of .-.u.ry, 1 .....
Pub4tlhed Orange Coaat Delly PllOt Jen e. 15, 22. 29, 19&4 Public Storage, Inc., Landlord.
Piiot Jin 9. 16, 23, 30. 1934 1§4-84 Publllhed °'1lnOI CoMt o.lly P1loC
1tt-M "8JC NOTICE Jan. 9. 18. 11M 1"""
--------~---· Nit.IC NOTK:E NOTICI Of'
TM1aTU'9 9A.LI FICTITIOUI 941 ... U T I NO. NOTICI 0/1
NAMI ITAnmMT ~ l'\a.IC 1M.a
The following per.on 19 doing T ·*11 CW NMOel'-L
bu"""8 U YOU ARE IN DEfAUL T ,.,..,.n
NATURAL WOOO PATIO COV-UNDER A DEED OF .. ..., I
ERSBY MOT,213128antfln.,Hunt-TRUST •2'UI
lngton 8-ctl, CA t2M& .OATW:D .._,,,...._ 12. -. UM-Notice I• hereby G'"" that
'rhomu Paul EdcenrOd. 21312 LAU YOU TAKI Acnote TO ~loactieln lMeoftNCMI
Bantf Ln • Huntington Beiedl. CA. "'°1WCT YOUR ,_,....JY, rT Code. SUM of Calfomlia. the under·
9266e MAY• IOlD AT A PUMJC 9M.a. l9led _. ... at public ... by oom--
Tl\19bu""-t11 conducted by: an • YOU MUD AN OPLAMA110N petltNe tMdcllng on the 24th Olly of
lndMduel. OP T"I MATURI OP THI January, 196(, et 10:30 o'doca
Thomu P Edlenrod "90Cn:DeNO AGAINST YOU, YOU A M .. on the premleae __,. M6d
Thll 1tatement WM !lied wtth 1he IMOUU) CONT ACT A LAWYUl. i>rOC*1Y hM beer\ stored. end wt*9I
County Cient of 0r_,. County on Tlcor Title Compeny of CellforrU. .. located at Pubic Stor1G9i Inc ,
Dec 16, 1883 1 corporetlon, tonnerty Tttle In-~ Placentle A-., In the City of ~ aurenoa 1n<1 Trv11 Compeny Coeta ..._, County ot Orenoe.
Publlahed Orange Coat Dally On Tueeday, ~ 31, 1N4, at Stale ol California. die abenOoned
Piiot Jltl 9. 16. 23. 30. 1984 9 00 A M ' Tlcor Tlt)e lnaurance gooca. c:hatt ... °' per90MI ~
· 19S-S. Company of Calltorrna, a Corpor-Oeecnbed below. In the matter9 of. l------------1 atlon, formerly Tiiie lnaurance end JoM M Ooonelty • Sofa. l\o ...i Plll&JC NOTICE Trwt Company. u duty ~led dlnete wt. chelr. Ible
Tru11ee und41t and pul'IUAnl to Deed LandlOf'd ,..,..._the nght to bkl
OTICE Of' flllNQ 0# ~-of Trull recorded September 25. •t the Nie Put~ f'l'K.ta1 be made
CATION TO DEPARTMENT M 1980, u 1n11 No 35007, In book with caah only and paid b at the
IAVINGI ANO LOAN 13758, page 1088, of Of1lclal A.-time of purcti... Alt puretlMed
Not1<:e la hereby given that en IP· corda 1n the Office of the County good• are aold u ta. and mwt be
pllcatlon hH been filed wt1h the OE-Reoofd,a< of Orenge County. Call-remowld at the time of ~
PARTMENT Of SAVINGS ANO lornla . .wlLL SELL AT PUBLIC AUC-Sale IUbject 10 pnor c:ancelletlon In
LOAN relating lo end appllcatlon by TION TO HIGHEST BIOOER FOR the e¥ent of llltti.rn.11 betweerl
AMERICAN DIVERSIFIED SA VINOS CASH~ CASHIER'S CHECK, (pey· LandlofO lltld ot>lgat9d perty. 0...0
NO LOAN ASSOCIATION, 3200 able •1 time of .... In 18wful money lhll tth' 11th d8Y of Jlnulity. 1984
Pinc Cen1er Oftw, Fltleenth Aoor. of the Untted s1a1 .. 1 11 The IOUth Pul>k Stor-cie. Inc. Landlord
Cotta M-. Clllfornla 92828 lor tront 41tilranc. to lhe Oki Orange Publl<led Orange eo.t ~ F'Mot
pennlalon to lm4ltid It• artlclee of County CourthOuM. tocaled In the Jan 9, 16 11164
poratlon to ctlMQe 111 cori><>r· 200 blocll of W•t S111t1 AM BM!
te n~ to 'AMERICAN 01-(Formetty Wwt 8111 Str_.) Santa ------------
RSIAEO SAVINGS BANK" A Ana. Calltom1a, ell r1gflt. title and "8.IC NOTICE
bile l'IMflng Wiii be lleld II the tnt41t•t conveyed to and no-l*O ------------menra office at 10 AM . on by It under Mid Deed of Trust In the NOnct TO
the 30th of January 1984. II 15ttl property altuated In uld County and COMTlllACTORI ~ eoo S. Comm~tl Av-St1te deecrlbed u ~
enue. Loe Anoela PARCEL 1 Unit 13 .. .,_,and ProfeC1 pt()
The ~ICAllOO •• QPefl for put>Hc defined on ltlal cerlltn Con· 93 SI R •5
1
1napectlon 1n accordance wtlh the oomlnlum ~ recorded Oeoefnt>er Su'9d propoull wll be ~
commltslonef 1regul1t1ona11 etthef 12 1978 In 8oolt 129~ Page 1921 at the ofttc;le of Ptlnt C>perauone •
otfloa of the Department ol Savings of Otflcial Recorc:n of 0r_,. CO-.. CNef of F'tant OpeJeuone HI Flllrttew ~and Loan ol the Stet• of Calltonila ty. Ce11torrw1 State Hoepltal 2501 Hart>Or Blvd .. oc1tad at 600 South Com-PARCEL 2 An undlvtded I/25th Co9ta ......_ CA. 92t.2t untl 2 00
monWMtttl Avenue 90005 (Tel (213) lnterM1 tn Ind to Lot 1 of Trec:l pto p M on Jan 25. lte<I. at wNc:fl time
731-2785), and 350 Sensorne Slnel. 10023, • lhown on 1 map recorded wtll be ......... ___.and Md
San Franc11co 94 104 (Tel 1n book 425, p-29 to 30 of mi.-tlley pu_6 --r -..-tor perfotmlnQ WOf1I .. 557-36&81 oananeoua maps. record• of Orlf'09 Fumiah al labor, meterl&la. t<><*
Written ob jections or other docu-County Caltfomt1. together with ell and eqult)menl ~ to A.-
menta relevant to the appllcl11on 1mpr~t• thereon. ••Cec:>tlng 1Urfacing and ..., aopro&Jmetety
8"ol.lld be filed wtth the Department, lhel'elrom Condominium unn1 1 100.560 ICl " of exlet~ roedwey.
end 1 copy dellve<ed or mailed to the through 25 tncll.llllve, located th«• oonllSllng of 1. 7 40· ,. 32 wide and
plleant, AMERICAN DIVERSIFIED on 2.040' a 22 WICM, at Fairview State
AVINO$ ANO LOAN ASSOCIA· Excepllng t,_elrom an undlYIOed Hoepltal, In IMXOfdanc>e with plane
TION. not tater then January 29. on&-hall lnterMt tn an oll, petr<>*.lm. and mpecltleatlona tl'lerefor
1984 natur11 gu 100 mit!etal right• •n. on Prefefence wtn be granted to t>tO-
At the public hearing. any Pefton or undet tile lt>Ove OMCrlbe<I land. den property lppf'0\'9CI u ··sme11
may 1ppear arid malle an or11 a1at• as reMl'Wd Dy A1e111rd H Cl't~ eu.u-" in ~ wtth S.C.
t during an amount ol time llm-1no Ruth ~ C11.c:.y. huaband and uon l&M. et ~ Tltte 2. Celtfomle
ted by the l'ieaftng olf!Qet, wttldl In wtle, r>y o..a recorded Mey te. 1950 Admmlet~•ttw Code ApplicetloM
he c•M ol any l)efton who hu not 1n 8oolt 2012 page $23 of Offlciel for pr....-enc. muat be aubmltted 1o
lied prior written objecilona or other Record• the Small au--omc.. 1823 -
ment• la to be llmlted to not PAAC£L 3 An udullw -141h StrMt. s 1c:ramen10, C A
e than IS mlnut• In duration. or ment appurt41tianl to MCtl Unit for 95814 not .... thin 11¥& (5) c.liendar
h 1h0r14lt lime as may be lliow.d the uM and occupenc:y ot lhOM POt· days 1n advenc. of bid oe>er*'O oat•
the M8nng offtcer t1on1 of lhe Re&lricMd Comfl'lon Thia Pl.._•ice ~to pro;ecta
t>llltled Orange Cout Dally Ptl01 Area dellgnaled 1n the Decleta11on ,.._. the estmaled profeC1 coe4 u
In 16. 19S. ol RMtrlCllOf'I• rec0tded December c.eds ~ ooo oo
282-84 12 1978 1n 800ll 12958. Pege 1M3 Bod P'~ must be eu0mltt«2 j-::;::;;:;;:;;;;;;;;:;;=:;;;;;;;;;:-i of Oftlc•al Aec:Ofda of Mid county IOI ,,.,. entire WOt1l oeecnbed .,_...
HAM°" LAWN-MT. OUVI
Mor1uatY • c.rnetery
CtemetO#Y
1825 Gisler A~.
Costa M..a
S40-S55'
NRCI POTMERI
alU BROADWAY
M°"TUA"V
110 Broac!Wey
Cotta Mesa
&42·9150
aAL TZ aa.GERON
IMITH & TUTHILL
WllTCUFF CHAPl'.L
427 E 17th St
Cot ta Mesa
646 9371
ltlcC°"MICIC MOWTUARV
1795 LaQuna Canyon Ad.
Laguna e..ctr. Ca 926' 1
404-0415
c
ano 1nown on the Condorn•nlUl'l'I 1n O.-Wtlona from ~ and IP90-
PU.n tor NCtl Unit hcat)Ona .-not be COl..,ed end
Tru11or or record ow ner wtlt be CAU9e for refeCHOI• of b6de
BAR!ARA l GAINES The o..-tment Ilea 1M tight to
The llrMI 114«.. and 01'* waM1 any ~ M'l I btcf Of 10
common deaignallon ii lf'Y of ,,.,. retec1 .,,., or ail bids
rat property o.cr1bed &l>OYe .. pt() bid will be ~eel unlW It
purported to be 1208 Lu Arenae 11 mlde on 1 etancl•d form
Wey Coate M911 CA 92821 lufni&Md by lfle Oec>en!•••t Md ii
The ~ TNllM d• m90e tn ~ wt1t1 the "~ e1111ma 1ny u11>1tlty tor any tncon'eCI • llrvctlonl to e.oo.n·
,,... of the atrMI addrwa and other Proepectl¥& b60der9 mey .. ~
common deelgnation II lnY al'lown and ob1111t1 ~. apec:lftcetlOn& 11141
herein bid ronn. by aell.ng at « malltnQ • Said u1e wtll be meoe. tiu1 without rt1Que11 to the omo. ot 1he Cl'\le( o1
covenant or w1tr1nty. t•ptett or Im-Plant ()pefattona 11 the at>ow eo.
plteO. regerdlng 11111. poae ... 1on, or drua, t~ numl>ef (7 14)
encumbr1nc:ee. 10 pey the unpeld 9117-5212
balat\O& Of the noie(I). MCUted by A payment l>OnO. Slandlrd !form
U ld Deed Of Trull, I 0-•11 807 In IN amount Of Mty peroetit of s 122 285 f5 inetudlng .. or<Mded ,,. oontrec:t pnce Mua1 accon..,..,,
tn &eld no•••>. acfWllOllll, " .,,.,, 9Y9tY oontrec:t ~ an ·~ 11nder the lerma of Mid OMd of Cllture In pce.e of $25,000 00
T Nat, f .... ctlarge& and ·~-of The llYC09l•'VI ~ .. be ,... tM Trwt• ano of the truet. ~ted quired lo _....,,. 1 COIW9Q"'111
b'f &..a Deed of Truet ......_. egi_,,..1, 1n the ~ at a 8\lln-
The beneflctety uno.-Mid ._ Oerd ~..,.,..11. F'Of'tl t " wNOt
Of Tn.111 l'Wt40fonl fl«:Uted and .. "'81 be blndlnO \IPOfJ -St•• ol ._..., to the uoO. ~led • .men Cetrtoma only ~ IPP°* tiy .._
Oec:la euon of °"'*"' ~ e>.NM late
1or Sale Md a wtit,_, NOOOe of 0.. In acoor"9nCe wftt1 tfte pi°""°' 11
1au11 and £1eetion to Se1 The undar• Of e.ctton 11~ at ltle Leor CoOI
..,.,., C8Uled ~ NOtlee of l)af8Uft the 0.0..114'11 "91 • C I • .., ~ C.Ction 10-to be reco40.0 1n the~~,.. o1
the county-'*• the ,.... l)foC*1V ~.., .,_ ~l't 1n "'*" ~led Per1V coM\ICtlnO ..,_ Wbf\ .. to be OOM .,.. T~C,!!'Tc:;.Ll IHSUAA~C •t~ end pullbNCI 0, DI-"'" rector ol ~.......,,. cooi-COMPANY Of CAl.,~NIA ol the waoe ,. • .,. CWI ......
1717 WMl'lu1 Or0¥9 A,,._,. ()f'flcle ot IM QWt of ,._,. ()per
9'0MmMO CA f1T10 ltlOfle f'eirwllew HolDbi .......... lit3)3-..~~.J'OO!.... ~IW1 oC 0..1His: ••• lier.: 0.tfld ....,_,,.,., t ·~ ~ Pleedqv., .. oflce
TICOf Tiiie ln9Urenc» Campen, te lnlC*l'IOn 118 be helllt JrMu.
Of C.IHomla .,., 11 t tOOO AM
I COfpotatlon '°"'*" F..,,.._ 1'*9 fttll lnaurenc» etld TNlt Vlletor I ~·HfR::~:M 0tW of f'lan OcJ9iill•• ff ~bllMcl 0rlnQ& Coeitl 0.dy f"llOt PutM,.,_ Ot .... eo.t ~
Jan I ti U . 1"4 Jen 1 '8 llM
117... '
' -
MUC NOTICl
'IC'Tl1'10U9 IU ... H MAmlTATlmMT n,. fottowlng l*90r1e .,. OOlnQ
~ ..
1.ANt MAKAI. LTD . 13$2? ~ hOC>e 8tt.... Garden Gta¥e, CA
92643
~h ( MltcNll 170) w .. 1
ltwlfon Aoed. a.tit• Ant CA 92706
"-'WI C..-y. 124&t Lee ~
01110tn Otove. CA 92840 1 John crimp. 200e Seed<tfl Drive
Corone !Ml Mw CA t292& Howwd Oevicl, 13"4 Pt .. ton
Ro Suite t t9. Oeltaa. TX 7&240
We~ Enne6clng 120 Lotvvm
L.ene.Anetlelm,CA 92706
Hett7 Ev.ndet 13381 Eton Piece.
Santa Ana. CA 92706
Jo~h OrMne. 10411 Sierra
M.Ore 8t..d . San Merino, Cit 91108
Oeofoe Helllnan t'1111 Salt Lall•
Piece, Northrlooe CA 9 t328
Rk:tletd MklflllCh, 22121 Tul ...
Chat1wor1h, CA 91311
Stuart M c Fer l end . t7
BMclleomW Drive, Corona de4
Mer. CA 9292&
Orent l/ .. le. lite Pettivlew Clrele,
Cotta ~a. CA 92827
Craig M009, 12089 Euetld Str..,,
Gwden Grove, CA 92840
Robert A Nicholl. 1901 Metln«I
Drive. Newport e.ac:h. CA 928e0
Gery Portu. 23372 I/II 09Aldl•
M111ton l/lejO. CA 92811 t
Kenneth Poet 982 t Shannon A"
enue Oetden Grove CA 9264 1
Roben Sp!U 30e 1 t RigOet Roacl
Ag<>ure. CA 91301
J1.0.-1C Wlleon 12« 1 L• Lena
Oat<len Oro"• CA 92840
Pa1 Zetamba, 34&e Plumerla
CO.II MeN, CA 921128
Thll bual~ 11 eon<luete<I by I
gen«al pertnerlhlp
Kenneth E Mitchell
Thtl lllletnenl Wal ni.o With Iha
Coun1y Ci.rk ol Ofanoe County on
Dec 18 19113 'naou f'ublllhe<I Orange Cout Deity
Piiot Jen 9, 18, 23. 30 19114
196-84
P\8.JC NOTICE
~NOTICI
COMPLIANCE NOTICE WITH THE
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICE REGULATIONS
REGARDING TITLE 1/1 OF CIVIL
RIGHTS ACT OF 19&4 AND SEC
TION 504 OF REHABILITATION ACT
OF t973 COMPLETE IN·HOME HEAL TH
CARE, INC 11 '-90y lllllng
( t) No l*'IOfl In the United Stet"
Wlall on Ille ground ol r-colof or
national 0tlgln be ••eluded lrom
participation in be o.nteo the ben·
ef111 of or be aubjac;ted to <111-
cr1mlnatl0f' uno.< any pt,r11m or
K'IMty recetYlng Federal lnanc:ial
et•tenca
(2) No ot,.,.,.,,,.. qualified handl
<.~ tndlv\Oual In Ille United
Stat" .. o.flned In Seic1ton 7(8)
thall. tolely be rMaOll of hie/lier
hand~. be axcll><led lrom partk::i·
p111on In be denied the beneflll of
or be aubfecied to <119Cttmlnatlon under 81')' program or ec:1tvtty rec.Iv
tng f:edel" flnenc:lel .. e1a11nce
CompM .. In-Home "-Mt Cwe
20 Er-vttYa """· l111ta JIO trvlne, CA. m1• Publlllle<I Qranoe Cou1 Dilly P11o1
Jen II 10 HI, 17 1984
1811·11•
P\&.IC NOTICE
K -OtzH
NOTICE OF DEA TH OF
LEONA HALL HUBBS AND
OF PETITION TO ADMIN-
1 S TER ESTATE NO .
A·ll7153
To all he1n, ~nf'f1t1a.nt"S,
u •·d1tors and contingent I
trl'd1t.ors of LEONA HALL
, HUBBS and pe,_,ns who
may bt-othf'rwl.M' interestt'd
in thf' w ill andfor PS1.ate
A peuuon has been filed I
by ROY PERCIVAL HALL
in the Superior Court o f Or
ange County requesting that
ROY PERCIVAL HALL bf•
appom\Rd llB pe,,,..mal rl'p I
rl'lK'nts.uve to odmin11ter th<
«nate of LOONA HALL
flUBBS (under the-Jndept-n
d1·nt Admm1stratmn of Es
wtA., Atl) The J>('t1t1on 11 aet
for hl'.•nng in Dept No 3 91
700 C1v1< C+>lllt-r Dr . We11t,
Sunui Anu, CA 92701 un Fd.1
ru•ry I , IYH4 lit 9 :rn AM
If YOU OBJEC...'T t.o tht'
Hrantmg of the pet1t1<m. you
should e ith ,r appPar at th<•
h«.>ar1ng and slate you OOJ"<.'
uoiu o r file written obJe<.
t10M with the-<:ourt lit-fore
thr ht•anng Your appear
11nu.• IT\8Y bt> tn pt"n<>n or by
your ett.om<'Y
IF YOU ARE A CREDI
TOR or a <.'Onting nt crE'd1 t.ur
of thf' d('Cea.M"d , you must hit>
your chum with thf' murt or
prMMlt 1t lQ thf' prnurutl rrp
resent.at.Jvl' appmnt.f-d by the
l'OUrt within four month'
from thf' date of fir t 1asu1u'K't'
of h·tt4"ril 11.1 provided 1n ~"'<'
uon 700 of th" Pruh111A• C:oclf
of Callfom1a Th•· t1~ for
(llln£ CJ.Im.I Wiii not CXJ.111 •
prior to four monthl from tlw
d 3 tr of Ltw ht"llllt • .C llOUC't'tl
buvt'
YOU MAY t.:XAMINI!: tht-
tllc· kf'µt by tht> et1urt If you
Dr«> lnW-rc1'trd 111 thf' f'9t.att·
you may _.rvl' upon lhr c•x
t'\.'\Jtor or admlnuitratnr. or
upun thr attorney for thP u
C'(UWt' or ..dm1ntatra1J1r, •nd
f1lf' with thf' court w ith pr110f
ol M'fVKl'. a wntt<-n reqw..t
lllihi th4.t yuu d ire •J>t"d•I
notu• of th• hhn1 of en 1n
vrntory end •ppreuwrnrnt uf
1~t.at4!' \8 or of lh,. ix·11
t1uru or ec.•coun\8 ment1t>nt'd
tu St«-tJ~ 1200 end 1200 ~ of
th l'ellfornJa Prubf W" c~~··
LO l A. AUD T
HSI WU1'8n Blvd.. S.Jtt ...
l.o• Aa,~lt11 CA. HtJO 1111
l!UJ I 4 ....
J>ublllhf'd Oran f' CUCl 1
''/ Pilot Jan I . 17, 23."
llHI :too H4
6
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7
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6
4
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...:t.A
THE DAILY PILOT
IFIED (>t"'FICE 110
Telephone ~rvict :
Monday-Frida y
8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.~t.
Busines~ Counter:
Monda v-Fnday
8:00 A.M .-5:00 P.M.
DEADl . .l~ES:
Pl'BL ICATI O~ 1)1-.ADl.INE
Mon<la't "at 11 ~() ., m.
Tu,...dav \J Oil l so I' in
~' t·drw .. det' T1w 1 'HJ p m
rh w .. <l,t\ \\rd l .. ~11 I'·"'
~ rufa \ Thur .. ·1:'HI J'.m.
...,aturda\ hi ·~ 1111 I' 1r1
'-'u11dJ \ Fri ~(II) f'·rn
(:A'.\CELLATIO'\ &
<:OHHE<:TIO'\S:
Canrellation~ and r0r rt>cti<>n ~ rna v
he madt" or1 same dPaulirw"> as
above. Plea!->f' a~k fnr a c·arwellation
number whPn ,·ancPlhng your a<l.
ERRORS:
Check your ad doih a11<.J rr·port
t>rron, 1mrnrd1att>lv . Thr. DA IL Y
PI LOT assumes liall1l1ty for tht-first
incorre"t u.!:>Prtlon <'nlv
CLAS IFIED 642-5678
ln1tt far kl• IHHt 111 alt
-----------------Iner a I 1002 Geatral 1002
Liii ISLE
I Ob V la Lulu Nord Op('11 1 5
Traditional 3 Br, 3 t.; Ba Bayfront, pier &
floet for s~· boet. Priced to tell $1 .2~.ooo.
IRYl•E TERRACE
J>,.,,.,,,.,nw t,.,y & cx·•·:in vww Crom 4 Br 4 &
p.il111 µ. tt1l home.· Prtmf• l<xation $775,000
YllTI Ill LIN IAYnllT
Fabulout bey & mountain view.' 1 Bdrm. 1 Ba
condo co-op. Lowest priced at $29~.000
IA YlllE PUCE IA YFROIT
Spect.acular bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 ba up, 2 br.
2 ba dn. 2 boat spaces Reduced-$1 .~.ooo
PElllSIU llOME OCUIFROIT
Ocean & ~tty Vlews Manne room. 4 bdnn. 3
l.1olh .flllll ""~ f I 1 c M [)ilrkinll $1 iti5.000
0010100 OA YI IA YFRllT
Coronado IJlllllld cual bayfront lot 85' boat
deck Plana avad Now S3 70,000 w/trade
ARROWHW HOME
1 NPar new 4 bdrm, 4 bath. lake Vlew 3500 IK!
ft $440,000 WlU trade for a locaJ property
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
34 I Roy\"I" 01111• N B 67'J 6161
COLDWeu
BANl(C!R~ Takeover FHA loan 3
bedroom with new
c.arp111 1emodeled
kitchen 01k cab1ne11
Micro w1¥e E11eryth1ng 1n
=~~~;;?~uon C111 to I COllOQ Ill IUA
1110,000
THE REAL
ESTATERS
D8
642-5678
'"'" 111 lalt l1a1tt far lalt IH1n FuabW ltaan UalanhW At11ta .. tt4 UaL
......,......,.........,.......,......__111-21 C.naa ••t •11 1022 Inert a..111 lOlt •-rrt hacli 2111 •••rrt hacli 2Z6t Cnt1 ..... 27U ::;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiim;;;ii;I By Owne1 Sandc11tie IAYflOIT inmmo M odern 2 NEVER LIVED IN $48 /mo r 1 ~• api. 'IYlll TlllUIOI condo convenient grnd fir Story B~ Bey, 4 bdrm, Lux condo. 3 er. 3 bl. upper unit pool. 11'
Lo11llly famlly size heme on end unit nloely uP· I WOii UY 3 b• 3300 eq tt. 3 oar gar. lrplc. 233 18th Ptaoe. Npt lm"*!,23°"JV:
ewa 1.,08 101 ,,.., tri. gteded, 2 Br 2 Ba, owner By owner 1•ttlmeotfet9d pool, Jacuul. ''• eeie lot Hgll t1200 07& 4333 " ap
patk In exctualvt INIM wlll help lln1nc e 3 br. 3 ba. den• 2 br. 2 Peetlble unfurnl"*! or TILl&111 1•2·1IOI
T err•ce 3 Bdrm. 2'" ba, S 1119.000 720-1363 be apt (can be eon• option 642-13U PM Mii IA50/mo 2 Br 1 ea-iow.r
formit dining rm . green· neotectl >Cini fin 1v111 11_, -Lrg • Br 2 Be tocet9d In ipt, CION to ator••.
hOUM end room to •• Ull Low low down S9•5.000 a.aeon .,., lov.ty 2 Br prnt1g1oue area Huge
pand Aaking 1347 300 ELllYULI &40 42421875-8069 frple, bttlna, ape, p1Uo lot. nu cpta. gardener & lmmed oocupanci
1ncludlng the l•nd JAllllE OIEEI &t950/mo Dottle A.gt pool urvlc e Incl 22ee Meple t
'71 4J 6n 4400 IAYFllHTHll &75-«>00 s11001mo A.gt 831-7370 Tll l1wt H2·11U ' <1212,000 On land w/t>oel 111P Fixer h I f Lot.-~ "~t-Nll-'-... Lido l ate $586/mo 2 Br. l'A be ll 1 JI Ua.JUI Dirrell PHh Pr"" upper PNQeful atrnoe· 1 .. 1 I l,.n•-._.., ,.. HARBOR Ill 1717 v... P'*•. ptenty Of e>tkg leatraJ 1202 lrg 4 Br Owne< nextble TwnhM,EJajcje Eneii:·
• Newkttehen.2br.2b• • 2Br conao.miny•xtru S1900/mo 875·9103 p11101yd 2348Sant1 ,,. 1Ctr1 rooma $326,000 S700 TSL Mgmt 642· 1803 llllPlll llUtm ~ Mra Long. 850-1190 II I wt.a 1650/mo 2 Br 2 8• ... , "'••tr Gigantic 2 rm ptepure TwnhM pool llr. eov-lll UlfM ltlftl patac.e gour~t kltcri.n
6 br ••ec nouae 8Mt of 1 bfNklaat bar super p1u111 erect patklng
the model S799.000 Lo .IAOlll IULn dee.or trQPIC•f patio g1r-2&8 E 18th.St
down OK Gd financing ,.., IWl&IDllT eo• 111 • amt dep Mov .. TIL .... 142· 1101
C•ll o.nr ... 834· 1157 JH/llJ.1171 you lNI S-450 + 150 MCur---clEAN & SPACIOUS
-lly I• &37-~27 WMlalde 2 Br 1 Ba up· Ill O&lfll-IY IWlll W•lk 10 bMOh 4 Br 3Be gr•d•d drap11, crpt. t w. fixed rate. 30 yre NEW & BEAUTIFUL dtc<>r Femlly room • S 11751mo' r•nna & d•whr, petlo
MonliCO with beat GC In thl1 2-story 3 bednn. · -··-view t 4 Rue I/Iller• ·2b1. Pvt pttlo, pvt entry, Agent 840-8208 er ea No pell 1510 t a. po1t1 & cleentng Open wknda 640· 1538 comm pool hm S860 mo Wented Harbor I/law 650-6723 or 7&e-2399
Acrou from P•rk Spyg.a11. etc lemlly
GE 759-9100
IJ hHr lar~er 111411 NEW P 0 RT SH 0 A E 8 home A.SAP 759-0~0
Sett of popular Miramar Be1ut1ful 4 b d i family I •-2 ....
Greet 111ew 1545,000 rm . wood I glau. aata 11111 MU ---------
Condo 2 Br 2 Be n..,
S C Ptaz1. pool
S595tmo Incl heal I
w1ter No peta 831 ·1478
·' '" ,1 • • ' I
6-44-8231 J1cuu1. muter bdrm •1t•.n•t•1..-oow•n,..3-9-, ""hae----ifi""uoe-
DOYEl IHOREI au11111eoo. llyd bllln• gar $600 Eeetatde 2 Br iea gar. W1terff11t Mt•H 539·6190 BEST '" trplc, beam cell. 1615 +
IEWPOIT HEllHTI
1131,0001
11211111ft111 Ir. 111· 1400 loatla LlfHI 121& 111 1u1 & 1225 2 P«-4 Br 2 •tory exec. hm --_ 1on1. no pets &50-1198 POOi/ape. 3 car gar 3 VETS ONLY. Pt .... call New 2 Br 2 B1 moblle
LOWHI jprlc• In 1h• frplcs $595.000 fee l1nd ma for lrM Info about Mme on beech $1100
Open weekend• Vac•nt buying • hOUM With NO 499 1551 Height• & 10011 whit you "---".iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii-. .... _,
get• 3 Bdrm 2 bath With 1
dooble f1rep1ace 1h1t aei>· IY OWIER
arat .. the living room & Contemporery cherm
famtly room Corner to-•BR/2'~ 011er11zad
cation offer• RV ICClffl Moeaic Ill• pool/)lllCYut
Bkr 644-7424 Money J1eon 966·&U7
lalltea
HWNllT 11101 Ptala1al1 2207
Nice 2 Br 1 ba w/gar w/d
hkup nr Victoria & Ca·
nyon 1595/mo Agt
997-9309 or 631-3187
Hurry• II won I tear 2 story • upgredect Me11
6-46-717 t Verde .,.. 2065 Flam-
Good 3 Bdrm Older home 2 Br 2 61 newer duplex
on l1tg• lot (9011178 ttJ yrty' Meture non-amlva'
$215,000 Loi 11&1ue •tone No peta 1650 12131 arH Sherp 4 Br 2 Ba large
" wortn the price and 799_..,95 or 257_9792 rooma New ·c#pla. ingo Under S250.000 Ph
Call 546 6092 owne< m1y carry t at TD drapes & paint $875/mo fltJ 11011.tle ltffr Long swaitedl 2 Br 2 Ba Cell Lerry 546-5880 THEREAL
ESTATERS Bt ownt 3 Br 2 .-. be 1••·7121 home wl bftln1 crpta --thruout $650 yrly VA homea nomoneydwn,
ondo SkylllH <leek --------· 539_8190 BEST Rily I• ell 1r .. 1 From 170.000
llWPOllT Mm FllH patio 2 cer gar w/opnr up 667 7349
Poot & 1ac St24K will Newpor1 Hgta3Br, trg tol. C.rtaa ••I Mar 2222 Older 2 Bdrm 1 B• home
anuated on a 8000 aq ft
lot Great tocatton ~ak-
1 ng only S t • 5 oOO
631·7370
neo down etc 540-4083 anct y1rd. dbl gar. C'ozy 2 Bdrm college, Dua Ptlat 2221
(,lllE OlllO '225·000 642"9988 ocHn aide of hwy DUPLEX Elttre lge 3 Bdrm 1111,100 IPYIUU 1775/mo 873-1734 28 • 18 1111 rm, 2 full ba,
Walk to anopa on 17th St Spyg1u1 5 br exec hOIJM C I II 2224 bllln kit. pluah cpt1drp1
T raditional
Realty
s:U -7370
2 Br I''• Be lrg pello. gar· Vacant Good financing tptaa fndry rm S895 496-1490
d ... C-' '630,000 Low down or S 1000 "move yew ,1n" F · I l ~lg ~3'1 -~~J'a'.. ··• trade OK Bkra welcome Eaetatde 1650/mo 3 Br ••v•lll a 2,."4
Cell Ofnlee, 834-1157 2'/t Be houae with I ~ -.,. ... 11 B I fAA bacicyerd Av111 now thru •3•9""r.-.2""1~""'ti~}a·.•2•1•10-ry .... con....,d.-o
.... t ••H &VU 4.30 only 185-A M... nee r T •• be r I & 1976 Skyline m. new 12 TIL .,.. 142· llOI Brookhurst "Tiburon"
OQ1r•1FllOIT v X 55' 1 bdrm $21.000, -Dahwr pa110, dbl ger -A homH. no money t>y owner s.nior P1rk 2 Br 1 Ba blo llv rm & elec ger door opnr Kida. IPEOTIOIW down. ell ereat. lrom 2060 Newport Blvd. C M frplc, lncd yrci. huge dbl pell OK $800 • 1600
Voull marvel al lhe con· s70000up 667•73'9 714-787-1778 ger.St150 673•6338 dap Agt no fee.
temporary arch11ecture a .... ltaclll 1040 3 v • ., Old-C:\i'.tom k.ixury •3 bdll b•. lncd yard• 863-0755
and the interesting •-.. -----.. --.. 1 Movenowll595 special interior wit ti 3 Bdrm home. 2 encl Woodcreal Mobtle horn. E.-ecull"• etyte 3 Br 2'~ Ba
P.1101 , P .. I _,. 1 few 11..,.1 from LtdO Mr Wlllt1m1 ~7..0204 1,1_,_,., p-.....i h---_.._..1 angles and level• to en1oy .. 11m ''"' ... ... u.... ............ .... quiet contemplation . 0, 1deel corner 1oce1ton Ex· Bridge Channel In Udo rer 2V:be 2 car ger. lrg kltch ~1n1 fOfmel dln-
lor gracious entertaining cell buy at S 110 000 Call Park 5 year park IMM fncd yerd Gdnr Incl Ing prof deCOr n1turel
01 fnenda A quiet lo-Century 21 Surt Realty ava11 2 Br 2 S. v•ulted S 1500/mo 642-2943 rock frplc huge llvlng
cation with apectacuter 536 75•2 c.llnga 1ot1lly upgt1ded 1525 h lncd 2 B room manicured yard wall c011erlng1, c.rpel, OU" r tat • deposit & y01Jr IN• views Comofetety '1· lniat 1044 levelora. dr1perlH wtger klda P•ll Ok 1675 Agent 537-$027
modeled 2 year1 aoo 1h11 washer. dryer. micro-539-6 t90 BEST IM
3 story home mekea Pllll 2 la¥1th use ot llght oak. wall ,, contlnuoul cs.an •lttaf l114t l~IUH
teak •nd Text• 111ell tn Orange Tree P1t10 gas oven & ring• & Hou'" Apia& COndoa
11one The muter aulle 11 Home• 2 Bdrm 2 De r • 1r 10 • S 6 5 · 0 0 0 Lendlorde A.d¥"11M FrM
spac1ove and romanllc Low m11nt9nance yard 7 1 4 18 1 3 -8 2 6 2 °' 50c et St1Xe1 & Market•
Thll home 11 lhe ulllm11e End unit with llreptece 873-2 l 70 841-4280
1n det•gn w Uh • total or 4 Ou1111nd•no recr•a11on11 ---iiiiliiiliiiliii' __ _
bdrms 11 y01J went 10 111111 fac11111e1 S 121 900 i•E(llW PUI H1l4ICre11 3 br. 2 be. frplc.
on lhe beech '" aplendor ~; " lerge yerd Move right In
you mu'1 see lh11 I i 'fi j SO r Triple wide 30'1180' Large $850/mo 63 t-8499 egl 11111ng dining-kitchen $895.000 Call 6) 1 1400 area 3 bedrooma & Ila 1 condo 111 a duplex.
-
\,\I\ r 11<1 Hf/ ... I 'J ea It y 38atha-bOlh tight & derk· NOi "' a auper h01JM I 2
1111"11 ., hu il 81 interiors Next 10 rec lrg bdrm chef1 kitchen
Rl.t.l r ')TA!{ J, ? uf>' -l l ?2 rm & pool eree Agt. custom decor huge llvlng 831-1400 1 L 0 .~ 5•0·5937 room El !!RMS $475 -•91fr'7T Agent 537-""27 ·.m-,-.. -,-om_Y_C_ll-11 /.>t+IMM~ IEWPOllT IUOH
103 foot front yard on the 3880 M1Cht l10n Drt11e VACANT MOVE IN NOWI
Kida pet• old 2 1tory 5 rm 2
Ba E·Z terma "°°'' 539-6190 BEST fM
gr01Jnds thlS 3 Bdrm lr111ne ·79 dbte wide, 2 bdrm. 1
home 11 <lrameflc. and un· TlllTLlllOQ ba. lrg lndry rm w/waaher LUXURY CONDO NR SC
u1u11 with 1t1 step down I & dryer fenc.d corne< lot PLAZA 2 br 2 bl on
11.,ing room dining room IUIMU•ll with ahed Peta OK Reas lake. wlpool •P• MC
Nr Mite Square Pk btQ 3 Br
2 Ba w/frplc blllna encl
g1r $875 deta lta
539-6190 BEST Ally IM
8Ht.ltacl -1240
1366 buch bungalow
reedy Feb tst low dep
lee 539-6190 BEST
$450 2 Bdrrn wtger neer
beach flat easily youra
539·61908EST lae
Check lhla 3 Bdrm 1825
off Buaherd 4 f1m epot
539·6190 BEST Ally lee
HOMES FOR RENT
Huntington Buch 3 & 4
Bdrm• S 7 75 ·'825
Fenced yards & garages
K•d• 4 pets welcome
863 0755 Agent. no lee
f'aa11ld• cute b1c~or.
v1uttect celllnga. patio.
IA 15/mo Joyce Walta,
Remu 631-t2&e
E·llde troe qui.t 2 bd trlp-
lu nu crpt. drp1 P1tlo,
Lndry S595 873-3600
Large 1 Br. 382 VlctOf'la,
new cerp1t dr1pes,
palnl squeaky cle1n
$410/mo 851 ·9523
Lerga 2 Br 2 Ba pool, lndry
llC. all ulll• paid From
$489/mo 548..0338
"LlKE BRAND NEW"
Sparkllng 1 Bdrm from
$445. 2 $575 Utile pd,
pool, g1rage. no pell
301 A11ocado. &42-9850
24 1 W Wlft0n 831--0990
Lrge f bd, 3 bl, w/yrd,
encl ger W/D hoot(up
1725/mo LM Req. Nr
SA CC 548·1938
MESA PINES 2850 Herte
BEAUTIFUL 1 Br S-495
PAV patio. pool, •P•
TOP area, quiet, no pe1a
5•9·2447
Newer Jt>r 2b• M Verdie
home. etrlum, open
t>eama. $1050 mo . no
pell, gardner wller furn
545·3827 4·9pm & wtmd1
N-l uxury 3t>r 3b• E aide
Condo. lg y1rd, 1.cuzz.I.
lrpl S 1050 851-~228
NICe 2 Br 2 81 Av all -i>-
prox Feb 1at IA95/mo
760-1418 or 842-7528
eves Of wknds
OLIVE TREE AP'TS-
2 Br 1 •..; Ba twnhs style
apta, crpt1 drpa dahwthr
updated kftch C11 ok.
From S605 ~8-7397
HTHILIFFI
Oulel 1 Br. clo" to beeeh,
wlbalc. d1hwr. din rm.
lrplc, encl g11 & c•r 1tall
No pe11 S526/mo COf'el
Tree A.pts 2183 Peclflc,
CM 548-•530. Mgr/Jeff
OITllW&nl
2 Br 2 Ba aplll level. pool,
apa, gerege w/Operl8(
556-9200
an<I kitchen All on the ::i a r r • m 11 y , m IPIC8 rent S36 000 with gatea. lrptc cuatomlzed Walk to und n surf newty
p.atoral view •Id• L•t· Montee.Ho Showa Ilk• 11saum1bte to9n Wiii ~ell S850 545·0230 p11n1ad 5 rm ha• Pvt 1 Br. lrptc. pool, c;uo.
11ced •P• Olfered at a model Counlry French I "•d• S9000 equity tor Meae Verde 4 Br 2 ba lam lncd/pvt Just 1500 a •lee ger"~ 1~0 J;i'~3~7 W
S250 000 decor with Laure Aallley molor .home 838-4212 rm (Part furn?) s ;200 539-8 t90 BEST Riiy IM •Y -142-1200 p•per1 Complete HCUr· a 1125 540-7507 eves & wknd• A...... h r -1 ..... IUIP 2 Ull
A PETE BARR Err
·.. REALTY
lly tyalem SOier hHted nCltlft ·~·· u .. 1. Mode<n 1 bl deci<
apa & water 1y11em Prl· ,,,, A.cr .. 127 000 S Acree N...-..r 3br 2b• M Verde C•tll .... HZ4 garige "f~ No Pel• N;
vat• corner loc.euon with $39 500 t t Acree home atrium open Harbo1 & 19th 49•-7008 .,1ew or liill'"Yon & moun-S33 ooo Bkr 67'· t975 t>eama S 1050 mo . no S450 Dfx mobile home, no
taint f245 000 Lucy pet1. gardner. weler turn p•I• M•ture 1dulte Sharp M ... Verde 28f
Rote lact•• Prtf llSO 545-3817 4-9pm & wtcnds Oulel eecure 2B• $595/mo. 549-5882.
lh &OH
IAOl IAY
Deaperare setter aaya
m1k• offer' Lender 11 ol
ferlng under merket
l1n11nc1ng 4 BR home of-charming Corona a;i a., 1991 Newport 848·8373 att 6 979-38-48 Pam
dupleir, So of PCH Bank lmat 2244 Studio, E'ade. w/d, utll• 2 Br. patio, garege. r• TRADE owned 3 Br 1•,; Be + 1 Br [o:;;ty 4 bd home Unlver-pd. prlv en1r1nce 1275 decor1ted 2 perton1 No
ler1 tP• •P•CIOUI muter _________ ,
Lota ol potenttal herel
Horaet? Unite? Nur&efy?
Allerna1111e l onlng for A· 1
pottlble Owner may
carry 1a1 r DI 759· t501
au1te hardwood floors.
trench door1. 3 fire
place• Cell nnw Vacant •
Hly 10 aeeH
H•-tolO
Dow.I 1 Ba Cell aot Barbar• ally Perk tr111ne A11111 848-3 t17 pets t525/mo 842-0•81
01good 857-2121 . Now unttt Jun• 30 At-I tit Iii Hit Superbdwntirel br,encl
A g1an1 5 bedroom for Univ Pk Terr•~-tCerdlff 634-0432 lract111e price to right !!J!I IC N R f I _.~ ........ llP II perty 2 13-439-2493 IMOllT Tiii gar. o pet1 •rig ...... smaller nome Warm. 2 B•. 2 ba Twnhae l .,. loh range $410 &42·5964 cozy 11111ng & remlly eret> i 134 SOO 55 t 1882 • eve•. 213·697·385 t day1 Furn 2 & 3 Bdrm A.pta
w11h Drtck f1reo11c• 1 1211,000 Lat•H hacla 2" .. I $750/mo up IEIT llY Large country kitchen 1 LIJIDI ltacllt 1048 Sl"larp 1n11eatmen1 w/3 bd _ " Agent 675-8170
Ore11 opporlunity to own bedroom & bath down· Oc.•an/Cil" Penoramlc and 2 bd units 8 yra old 1 Br 1 Ba dplx. tower unit, -
PIHILIFF YllW
Lrg 1 Br w/lofl. encl ger,
)IJC, ulll rm. pYI deck.
blln1, lrplc $750. No your own for 1nve11men1 stairs 4 g111nt bedroom1 11,;w Oor '1toua 6 yr OICI wtS 19 200 groaa income So Laguno fpl ocn 11u Winier Rental·Oceen
or ae e home Ftve )'earl 2 baths up A1t condlltrJn , ,,, level 3 Br , Oen , 1 be "4e11r the beach Approx S500/mo Inc ulll Front 3 b<I. 2 b• 1luCllo
I old2Bdrm1nlulleecur1ty 1ng wtth eleclron1c filler w /beaut yd Jusl $50000 under mrkl 4'7·6021497-1232 $800/mo 714-842-0553
,_. d 1 A p me Mett v d I Good Haum loena Pr1n1 or 213-862-7577 -. eve opment with POOi '1 er e S 2 9 s O O O 1 o d n only Call Lenny •gt Oce1n view 3 Bdrm home.
pall 215 1 Pacific
631-6 t07 855-0665
l and lush land•<.iplng area $189 000 Cell nowl 675 2172 Of 499 3563 840--0341 hot tub. g•rd~r AJ&rl•t1tl, Ual. Pe1nte11ty pr!Ged el only lor 1how1ng 546-23 t3 MIXI,,. 497•2 t23 ....,..81iBJllf
Dciebout 1aegoo 151.3191 lflll11ioa Viti• lM7 1m111T 270I ~
B B I -11111 S---'uded College No l1JM1 lalaai Beautlluffy rendtc1,.,.d
rr1.1 a. """'"'~ !p Like view E·~ Home 3 TU lllL ,...., ,. • ..... , " ~ 1 I SElECT M •'-Ttlt Leoun•. 2 bd 1mmec. 4 Br 3 Be. den. o R. g1r g1rden apta Pool & 19• Reci Estate PROPERTES
1
:; 15.~ D~~2.2 ~~j B• TRf·PLEX FOA SALE BY S850 a •&·963-8846 No pets vrty s 1050 Pauoa/decke No i>et•
•ut nr•ru•c;t1uNC• ,_, .... -OWNER COSTA MESA .,.1 I VI~ 2 .. 1117 213.395.351 t Bach S-450 .-------•II t I L I~. AREA PRIDE OF OWN· "" II HI ~ 1 Bdrm '528 COllOIA Ill IAll IEIT flUIOlll n~r tac. '"' ERSHtP RoUts -It MENf lalMI 131 E 1&1h 9'46·&a1e
At1rec1111e two atory 2 AYAIUILE TOIAYI • FOAECLOSUlt@I 4 B<lr Double Lot Owner-a unit MIMlon vieJo3& 4 89drm, Ptalanfa 2707 181 E 18th &42..0a&e bdrm home on '#911 lend ocean view Wu haa 3 bd1m1. 2 ba welk· •"'""·1850 G1r1get and
tceped R2 101 plu1 n .. t Low down low monthly , ,.. $'42~.900 now S359.900 in cloMt frpl, pantry i nd ~ y•rd• Kldl & pet• 2 bd apt w/'1" 1750/mo. WMllAll YILUll
one bdrm rentet untt peymen11. with a tow Patrick hnora 160·1102 kitchen w/blt·lna thruout OK Agl No lee 113'1) 29th St lipsta1r1 1 4 2 Br apt1 evell pool,
Con.,en1ently toc.ated inter .. t rate• Add 10 thla I lllllffl • . 2 2bdrma Muat ... 10 883_0755 Nu Carpen 213 •33 0602 1p1, l/r, patlolbal No
aouth of htQ.hw•v E.xc.I • ntc;ely upgreded 3 I apprectate Only 3 yeera Ai•t 3 Br 2 ea up1>8f In dPl.x. pell 1 & 2 Br lS06-h10
tent f 111ant.1r1g Bdrm.2b11nfiomaon1 UYCllllTlllU old Wiii conalder trade ltwJ!fthacli 2ff trptc.wathef/d~.cloM TSL Mgmt 15H)081 Of
1279 900 corner 1ocet1on with AV j C..ell ua ro Me 1hll com for condo or ??? CeM 2 • n;fi newtY Jecotei;cJ to be•eh yrly 875 4912 84~>. t&03 lll·lJOO •ccet• You heve a real IT'IAWllHll l orttblt hom1 neer 831 4402, h.m -6 pm, CONDO. eome oceen 8kr HHt. haelli i7a
barg11n et 1 low Sp•c•oua 2 Bdrm den ect1ool• end p1rks 11sk for Jecil or Gert 11tew. 2 car garage '"'
To "'1C41 y®r mMMQe before t"-
r-.flng publlo. pnone
Delly Pll01
c1 .... n.cs. &42-&e1e
St211.000 848·7171 overlOOklng lht CdM •P•C1ou1 famUyroom 3'A S87&tmo 760·8882 Lrg aludlO. b•lcony. 2 Br 18. oair. USO. vrc
Jelly. e1c111ng 11l•w. betha taro• e11ract1111 Lota far lalt 1400 oc .. n/bly vu, 218 211t GotdenWflt & w1,,. THE REAL
ESTATERS
own1tt linanc•no end I flllchen, 2 pa1101 ' ,., •• e f lot. bJllnd Greni •NPT LOW PRICE• SI 732·2598, 838·29&1 •9'-3720 .-v ..
clean 'olld home on • ptece1. h1rdwood llO<lra 9oy•. off Nwpi 8fvd. c M. 2 B1, 1 ba, C\tlt, greet loe. Ctrtaa ••I .II 2721 H60·l 750 2 & 3 Bf. Apte, 45 101 $48~ 000 end • \!Ood 1t1ect yerd 117 Rochuter St. S1t& Mr Miii., 547·0204
100• All 1u11 w1111ng for a s 105,000 975 3099 , Bdr 2,~ Ba. dbl ger. neir on • en ~Jilad• gr.,~k ~P 1 '.
The l11te1t draw In the l J,..,lf.illl l lC i~l \I n1c.elem1ly scnoo11 S1200/mo View Yeer L1e ,
WHt •Dally Piiot Rea1tor1.6768000 Oll11lllrtlt11fftrt ba11iin,far•1 842-1872, 494·7'4 29 $1060/mo Agt873-&3~4 ye1 ~~~'tr•w•t• -'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.~Cl~--1~~1ed~A=d~64:2~-ae~7e 111· llll C1nt1 l 171 1vet Olb Walk., 2 Br 2 Be. den. trplc, 2 car 2420 WNt"8t!d1
, .. ,.',,-,,.' C.11' 0 .• h '"' -fl t: ... c... -· W*Tlf.,.,., Prvt elr ttrlP w/moQ' on seoo ,,., 2 bdrm 2 b• 0•1. •t•P• 10 b .. Ch Newport Beach AMtty ;:;J~ l'GU lV~ 'it i;,~;;, ll•• I • ~ " 2 '~ ecrH Murrieta A11.9ff now 1 1100/mo Oeys 642·1803
........ (LA•. "°'""' ----Dovef ShOfU 60 on the 121 UH PAii lllYI set.500 8kr 819· 1976 :g:.':,~8".t8~' Rt;;f.::1 851-8787 vet HO •814 -
• ._._ -... , ... bay Ch1rm1no •Ingle BHullfull't decoret•d s ud B
,... ....... _,., • t!Ofy 3 Br 3 81 ptu1 bayfront condo with 1 lnlft f11ab~.. BACK BAY 3 br N be ~lk lOt:"tb:~~~~· p:.=nl :~~ll~c'~ =·
..., ........ ,_ ,._.. -'4o F1m1ly room Perquet llghf. bright fttllng a.i-· ••ec: he>f'M on qult1 cul U OOincidutits-._4 332, !3& ,-7 I ( It o f l y I ffOOfl new kttcrw.n •m · Loc.etCKI on flf'1t tloof, -de uc S 1100 16' 1202 "" mecutet• Owner hH 'with a rellxlng . tit· P1aJa11J1 1117 1 I I' I I I •nothef hoome Oflered d of tlM b Bai11 B•y condo. 2Br 2b1.
· • -- -· t>etow m1rllet tor qutcll o;i,n "~ •Y Clffn Ht Bdrm •t• to l&!JO A11 UTlmed Oyt
I I N•• S186.000 F.. Bv large muter IUlte ptu1 beaeh, rent wtcty lt50 Of 0-42 2118 4'YIM 6'8·3060
I C A L C Owner 7 141&4~ ~~ 10 or con"*tl!M den, 2 lull mot\lhty S600 Ult J\IM
Ii 1: I I 7,..1631•7836 b1lh1 S.curlly bldg. 876·6't87 ltACON 8~Y 38r/38• . . . -I IUb pl!kln(I Stlp •v•fl· ' Of 2 yr ...... no r··
Lltlle MIM Muff .... ton. Ible MAK(OfFl!A AP.· --------11900/mo 076·MI . I O C D • C J ,· Tuffel. a1on9 c•m• • ing t 44Ull5.ooo•ULn . I I' I' I J • :::.,•;..-:~ ';'!."'r: ;! tplder and rt•d In the
...--------..,. ,,...., ... ,,_. ... " ,.,, ,_ O.lty Pttot C11111111d 171-1100
I T T C f ~ 11! 1-' MC1ton eboul M• Mllf· 1--------"' fet'a Tuttwt and bou9f11 tt --------•I I I' I I" I 0 ,_ ....... ,.,,. -' I S9 9& v NII _ ... __..___~...-.-_...._._ ... :.•:;;,.,..:, :;.. ~ ,.1.:C y':ur 1urre1 ~d ':1 of Y°" un't mell• II to tl\f
other thtnge 1hrough b•g gem• n•~t w•ll?
• .Delly Piiot C1a11tfted Don't let )'OUr tlclletl go Me Cllll e.2-6t71 to w1l1e b\iy • little ad
f« Ad Ac&n
Cal a
Daly Piot
AD·Vlsmt
64Z·5678
Chin• ~ oceen v..-. 3
8dt wl~ & *"••or
St1p1 to beach
12000/mo Ort.,. by u 1e
Shell. CdM and call agt
700..8702
llUlt-UTI AlttWlll fl ltntfftHffH 1111
lore of PQ'I• fin• retd
ct•tafllft\J 10 171
-,, • ,
•
Orat\Q8 Coatt OAJL Y PILOT /Monday. January 18. 1854 88
Uwettbbi1 IAtH AltUll CarJ!!f2 Ct1ull1 Tile lltttdcal QarMaJ.. laallq LltaJ ... ,&as Pa&atbit fJ.nll/.,... ~--===-;;-; DOV9W•y . Patklng Loie EAC*1 Carpentry s;:;ic:; s,orn ll' lnatlll.1IOM I @ttctRiciXJJ. Prla.d ..,t=!i ... M l T HAUllNO . MOVIJ'ifCJ PERSONAL IHJUAY, co;;: .. ..., .... ..... Pa.ld'lm & :Tedut9 ' $2.17 per day f\epelr1 • s.aic:.oaong ROPair·Remod·Addlllon1 r9C)alrt "'EE EST Low nght, ,,.. atll'llele on MowrlnQ. , T-4c.e 1 ApplllWIQf ~. ~ ttlCh, RMI &ui. Pat· Lok ,26f2j. · M.4-20°'t 7 ~--"•tow,.....
S&SA1Pllallll31•4t9tLIC 0oot ... tc 641-49'0 ,,,.. 499·7210 Jar09"' tmall JObt Lie. mo.l20-&2 6-5737 fObt Jof\&45-1192 rlCk~t.404700 littt ~,._. Ms.GW
Thal'• All r-ou P•y for All Tyl* ~•tr Anvrf, REMODELING All pha... 3NCJ2 t 873-03~ H Col --.r;--lftt.not Palnllno: ,.... .. ....
3 lln". 30 dey1 S.el coat ~SLURRY MIX} AllO custom ctblnett 11 C~W Cart ..... euting th~t. rg ~ -.i & ~ ,_., !;:-;:::-;_~~~'9~ In tn. c . I'll BEAT ANY PRJCltl trucil Reaa. Bdl~. CdM , .... OWi 9'4-7180 ··-!I· •A• .rm omm • Hid . R... )'ft In area I.le. ~. loving chlldcare My Ouallty Eiectrlul WOtk * * ME REPAIR Thank you 759· 183e COr1 ~BC UOVIAd • • • :. ...-, ... DAILY R•t• FrM "tlmetH ln1'd 968 3&64 tnytlme nome Went full umechll· fellmen Electric 3'6-1764 E~Plumb-Cerpentty I -Quldl/cat1'flil I.Ow,.,.. lnl/f.xt aPECIAL: Avg tgl Feumtt W.........,..
845·4209 or 845-0032 REMODEL otf\oe, kit, rm dren 1 yr up Ph 8$0-7109 RE81DtCOMM'L.llNO Retnodel Keith M8·41°72 11tl9 Uc T1380-'t 552"°410 itytJt •tucco$t1t &0 + Orw ~ 110 PIL 0 J I IWd • bey wndYt. Frlf\Ch 20 yrs Do my own WOf1l OHE-CAl..L DOES IT Alli H ltr U f Ml-TUI met..._ .. 2.cM4Z .._.., rauc.lt, dltp, etc -~lttlat dt. P•llO cov/d4.ck• UC C.•t.•ttr ltmcH Lie 279041 AL M&-8120 W• fix tt, brM 11. buy 11 or Furnecee. POQJ HMtert •&-1 ••• Pelflf"'O by W•)'M Lemet .A."Y'lme Ma-.e ... 2·I033 SERVICE PrOF.ulonal fiouu o446485 Steve 647 .... 281 coDPlHERTVTOR P;or haul It 54t-6009 ----Betlqual~ "'3 ~· 10 Y'• of qud1y' Cf•tt .. =
clffnlng by Sue, dey. AepaJr·R.mod .. Rooting to Mor you & your me &.i•taial Hendymen of CdM Mr lnH CIMal~ 1..lc T-118,4 8 30·1 63 men.Np In H.,.bof ar• ~ ~I
DIRECTORY wkly, monthly ee~. 7473 Door1-WlndOM-Ctblne1t Chine ev/wknd 548-01M T-IEI F'l•-il Odd Jobt. P!Mntlng R681A's cliXJUNd STA VINO COlU0£ (IXOY!) 751..f103 Im NN. ~
Want to bebyall 1n my Ptnel·Pltlot•Ftnees 35 & Wtllpap« &40...82~ SERVICE. I thOfoughty STUOEHTS MOvtNO CO QUALITY PAINTING, FAI ~ 1!. ~~
plut tn. IRVINE MIRROR Chr1t111n home for any yra exp J.,ry 54f..4413 Ctah1Ctt11 r <>wedlremov9d Clean· cMe'1 hOUM 5'0-0U7 Lie T 124~ "*'r«I ~· Fr .. 991 Cal e-. •
andtMHUHTtNGTON -0-REF'a 979·46&9 R.,,.eirlS-•ll ...-1.............. Ctural up new lh/11'9 751-3478 AMERICAN HANDYMAN EXP'O HOUSECUANIHO 641-1427 JoM anytime. 53,.2QSO lij;iiUilJt ___ _
C Co ., ..., .. _ ,--· ........... ----Cerpentry, Wlndowt. WATCH US ClAOWI BEA H MBEnevery Wiii BABYSIT tov1ng ~re shelves, ptr1ltl0rtt Low llllm·llll 0HST Clean Ups•TrM Trimming Peint, etc 847-23e7 RELIABLE OWN TRANS. ~ Paln1~-do1M
W9dneeday at in my home, dt19 or eves '''" Steve 731-8311 Remodel Rec>elr ' Verd Meint.•Haullng . 850-3283 p-•-""-job other• p.omltel ___ .,.Bl!l'l'lll"!I,_.--: nc:~tM~~~I ~8-0184 Car t ltmce end r .. ~ LIC'd~ ~I MIKE 650--3283 O~~ F:~r!. HONl1 FORTUN! C~ uauaf Rell 8~ 7-4211
----.... ,, S.nict cAmT ' LINOLEUM In laMtc•~ Malnten•noe OR BUSINESS 751-31eo ev RICHARD SINOR , •• , ..... _,r Int For •t 552-9142 Commwe4tll~tla.t MARK ROWAN 831-487' CLEAN HOUSE. PRIVATE ,. ,.,.. • ·S: Edlt~2
s.rvic. Directory LON wetQht. , ... or••t' yra ••P Andy 845 9031 •lgn Ill lea. Very r ... a~ ~r. ':-:-.,:· Remodel. rOl)alfl a get! JEAN'S HSECL.EANING h&p9y IOeal QUtt°"*9 HANOI /STRIPPING ~™ c 11 I ; Your Dally Piiot s1a11at1on & reptirt 30 PA TIO WORK-Cullom ct.-Reaid/com,,,; 30 yr• ••P ---UcenM 2~ 1' yr1 of F t;G m; E"""
RepreMntellve c:,~:11~1~91 ~~· Ctatal Ctacrttt ~·:'!ieu~I ~":00~ McWeeney Lltldaca.pe ~ Paul 730-0M2 H=~~~~ Thank you, 17M'3a3 VISA·MC Scott 873· 1512 , tdlool 6 W •
H2 .. J21 tit. HI ... ""Na~ Conaete Muonry. Flat-Sequoia Con1truct1on 845-5124 liUj~ MISSY'S MOP·UP QUALITY PAINTERS ~ Wallcovet\ng In-.,..,_.Pf~ 15J·1041
--------· work loundetlon1 Bloc:tc. Quality cuttom remodel-OOMPJOBSi High C1111 HouNkeeptng stlff*tlon Aea&a~ Typlng/Wl'ttinQ PROf Bi<P comput•I bflCk Lied 876-2828 ing & cerpentry Lie TIE GRASS CUTTER SMAl..l MOVING JOBS Call Mitty 761~90 PROMPT. HEAT PRO-ant Aal6gnrnt '· ~.~Md w"'"""""P~'!'!'!"'..,._--1 manual -~odflfete feet • '30617 B111d 906-2423 Mll<E &4&-1391 FESSt0NAL:8 838-7149 'WE GALS SHOULO P.-.onel 78()..1tll que lly ncome FrM 00t.111W 842-7047 Dr1veweya, patios, paths Light Hauling Lttal men 12 YRS EXP I'm email, HANG TOOElHER"
tu work et rau rat" C .._1 II ate No JOb too emtll C1eanup1 HAUL-MOVE-REMOVE bRURk DRIVING l Other My prae ., • .,,,1111 839..0730 anytime Jonn Brown 63 t-6-483 I• Ht a•la1 • 964·0366 or 53e--0553 0..r Baa.Jla.J Reasonable Furniture. T1Uh, Tr... Ser Rau 8~ or HO-MT7 _
• New ce6lnet1. cabinet People llWhO nMd people bOOAf'CiXtoAeil F '" Estimates 993•5415 NORM c~~ Hor= 956-1l92 <Alstom Hou .. Palming Pla1tt1 /letab
Find whet you w1nt In lacing, bare & 1ormlca lh<>uld elwaya °'** tn. R9C)alr or Replec. (714} 970-8792 JWTEJMfcAINd
Dally Piiot Cl...m.d1 countertops 642-0881 Service Directory In tn. CALL BOB &4e--2923 s.tt thing• fut with Dally Want Ad Help? et r9duced winter ret• Aettuccoe. lntltxl 30 yn
DAILY PILOT PllOt Went Adt 842-5878 Fr .. •t Dave M0-6«t up. Neat Paul 546-2977
ltatal1 It 2901 ladatH llfntatat Rtlt Waat.. SIDI lelt ...... H• Mt ...... 11• Mi ...... 119
lbrt ltatah 2tlf Ot!!!_tultin 4011 BKKPR/SEC'V Drl\NI, crott country ln1atlof DMIOMt Mede Now hiring,.,, .. ' a..
lg rm In hH, yd, balCony, Ground hoor OFFICE u~r.sio money ln RE Au1oe.ntar,lneur~blll· Cellfomta l"*1M '*I· FIT ..... tint Mutt do Peopte 8elb09 tlllend
SYDNEY W/O, micro. mull '" Newi>ort Bl. freeway ac-w/your bJQ 11etemet1t No Ing , AIR, AIP. per· MtcOregor Vechta, 1831 tayoutt, meeeurlng, cotor Aellfty. 973--8700
S395 850·8314 ceu 3501q tt '325 mo cut\ need9d 873-73 t t mener'tt 8-5 wkdyt Larry Plaeantia C.M 1>01rd1 Experience ~-E. a .. -~ .._. t 1 1842 994• ---Hunt Auto Center 1825 ~ &42 2.255 ..,..,...., __ ., _.. Lr"'"' Furn Home, "'Iv ba urn lure av • v Pvt party lo lnv•t 15000 I ~ Cen -Rd L Hm11-•-· ton:;&:: wM ~. 0 .. -,.. _ _ _ _ 0 uni y.,., . ~ 1-.; M y.-1..,.1 MARR M•I noo-eml<r F• Pref Ct••trcial • t ,000 tn •l•~t•rd 83 ·896e or 497-2030 Oppty for ldvancement '6lfTll eoor -·-......
'350+ •.i, 643-2497 ltatall 2tll MN 3~1. ret 94 Bebytltter. rny home 2 Must be high IQtll grad, Full/Par1 tt~ E"9nlng ~. C. M.
Taesday, Jaoa.ary 11
l···········••l Ltg hme w12f...-matr Br, __ ,...,_.,._•--'•• t •-·-4014 1 2 over 18 good driving r• Po9111ont evlll lrl the Npt Peri.time '375. own b•. ,..., utll1 *CdM dh1 ault" AC ampl Hf t _.. dyt • wk or toddler'• cord, Mat eppearence 9eh ., .. 937·31M7 (I-&) •Hll Tm_.
Prof me. 22·30 H3-90e0 p1kng from "'°° 2855 JJl5'REVXVXtaet£ Nwpt Ht• 631-W9 Come In tor lnleMew JOIN A SUCCESSFUL. Tlr9d of titting •ound wtttl ARIES (Marc.h 21-A pnl 19) I nformattun ,., obtained that relates
lo propcn}. home. sccunt)' and <.ontcmplatcd JOume). M<'mbcr of
oppos1t<' sex figures prom1ncntl)'. helix outline plan'i and aids 1n gtltlng
ideas on paper Gem1111 r>l:t)'s 1mponant rule
TAURUS (Apnl 20-Ma) 201. DomC'illC adjustment 1s highlighted
and could include \CrtOU'i d1\Cuss1on concerning curr<'nt rM1dence
Focus on relative\, Vl'ill'i, mc<>~jtcs and dealtngs with yo ung, dynamic,
v11al 1nd1 v1dual'i. I 1hra \corp10 and anoth<'r Taurus figure prom1·
ncntly
GEMINI (Ma) 21 -Junc 20): Rec.en! financial Ion 1s recovered
You make comeback. you pcrfe<.:t techniques. yo u correct errors and
you w11l locatc Object that had been m1'1~1 ng orstolen You'll sec people
as they are, not mere!) a!I }ou wish they might exist
CANCER (June 21-July 22). '°)pot hght on money, love. pro·
duction. promotion and vindicati on of views. C1rcumstanc~ take
sudden tum and youi effort'> succeed in "amaT.tnj( fai.h1on You'll be
at right place at right time. yo u"ll be applauded for talent\ previously
overlooked.
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Project will be completed. 1nformat1on will
be obtained from one who "breaks ranks." Anendance at clandeltttne
meeting proves of gr<'at benefit -Ix alen. aware and discreet
Audience will be wider and chance for \uccess will be enhanced.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt 22): You'll make new stan, you'll have
chance for $rcater independence and yo u will get to hean of matters.
Populant) increases. social act1 vme., accelerate and you'll <funce to
;our own tune Leo, Anes. Aqua nus perwns figure prominently
LJBRA (Se pt D-Oct 22) lntu1uon 1s on target. supcnor will be
impressed with your ab1h ty to foretell trends. Dec1\1on 1s reached
regarding d1rrct1on, purpose and uh1mate goal lnd1 v1dual who aided
in pa\t t'i again available -you need but ask.
SCORPIO COct. 23·Nov. 21 ): Forces tend to be 'K:atlered -more
demand' arc made upon your time. focus on travd. education.
publishing and abrhty to communicate ideas to a vast aud1cn<:e. You'll
gain valuable knowledge of 1ntcrnauonal law. customs ';ag11tanan
plays key role
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22-Dcc 11 ): 'urpmt' maneuvrr a1d\ 1n
obtaining needed funds. You'll find wa)'s to hu1ld on more \ohd
st ructure. D•& deep for 1nformat1on. wnccntratc on unorthodox
procedure<,. lntcrtst in occult 1s cit1 mulatcd -you'll ciolvt my•acry h;
"waking up" w11h answers.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)' B{' ready for change, travel.
variety and mc:si.age which relate~ to commun1cauon, crtat1 ve
endeavors. Lunar emphasis contmuec. 1n areas of publicity. partner·
ship, manta! status. Maintain low profile, locate special doc.um<'nts.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emphasis on basic mucs,
cooperation from ont' who shares your concerns. Focu'i al'io on work .
health, dependents. Jmponant domestic adJustmcnt t.alce'i place. helps
resolve famil y difference\. Libra plays s1gn1 ticant role
PlsCEs (Feb. 19-March 20): lmpnnl style. be read; fo.r ,weft
changei and unusual commumcat1on from member of opposite sex
Define term'I. perfect ttchn1ques. s1rcamltne proc.·tdures Pleasurt
gained through hobb1rs and c.h1ldren Virgo plays 1mponant role
LIJHI ltaC~ 2741 SPIC 2 & 3 br 114)11 gar·
Ocean F1on1 Rental• 1 & 2
bdrm& from S300/wk Ill
Jun• or Monthly from
$800 71 4-498-7873 ~ 1049, wather/dryer hook
lA UNA BEACH for renl up Nr oceen 842-4387 Ski Ut•h 4 Bdr hH, trpl or leaM 893 Thell• 1 br. _
111 llr, 1520 Incl u11111i.1 IPlCtOll l.PT 1•.; B•. 20 min to Alla. & "ardener 494·0164 t ml/bch 842•2357 Snowbird. olherl Con • tact Doug 801-556-3211
For rent or le ... 093 Veerly OCEANFRONT or 801-942 3300
Thall• 3 rm1. 1520 Incl Bech apt Mint kllch
utlllgerdener 494·0154 S395Jmo Agt 84S-3883 Yllb OILIUll s ocean law• 2 I 2771 Super tk Ing 2 br condo. ::-r:'':' wtk/bc~ S900 H Clt•Htt emenltla, llee9• 8 NHt
uui •• g'er Incl 494.3044' 2 Br l Be nr bUt i m . Wfflln Hotel 552·4M7
pool & 11undry lac ltatall tt ITJ.irt ltac~ 2711 1475/mo 498·0277 lhll not
l ~a&. 2 bd. 2 ba. BEAC~ Apt 100 yard• to ·'the OriOtn;i" HOO, No Peta. 645-4855 Send, upstelrt" "2br 1oa.
3 Br. 2 be. 11991 10 t>Mch gtr "35 mo 4H· 7151 R ... ll&TI FtlllH
No pelt Qerege Yrly, IN•• HOO Newport Bch &41·1899
S 1000/mo 060-8939. Bdrm In 2 Br hou ... M/F
&45· 14Q 1 Mtft 12.&0. non•1mkr blW 2e--32 prol pref Non
754-7087 deyt. 980-7037 1moklng. No pet•
S795tmo 3 Br. 2 b•. 2 car evN &nd Htly em S250tmo 111 taat • dep encl g11. w/d hkup, up~
unit &took 10 bHCh f"emete. Newport Cre1t. Avall 2· 1 042·4090 Art 0
209 Walnut REF'• req POOi, lennlt, CdM. wllk to~ Shr lrg 3
TSL Mgmt 8o42 1803 tee, neer beech '376 br. 2•.i. t>• hN, tptc;, 2 tty
f I l I Call art 8pm 8&0-54&8 13&0 • ·~ utn• 875·501& Bechetor. re r g nc . S385tmo Alto t 8r, In furn C M home,
1410/mo &48·2M2 12301mo Cell Chrta •lier
CONDOS F'OR LEASE 4pm &45•2435
Furn & Unfurn 1625--S 1500 NB 2 bike 10 ocean POOi•
Ao911t 831·•980 a tennlt WIO, frplc,
ea1>i. 1326/mo Aft 4, NYll/WUTOLI" &4~a&a3 or &48 1003
2 Bf. 1 B•. nu cpf/drapel, Npt, Wiik IO bet\, pool,,.,..
bll-lna. pool, catpot'I. no nit USO tnet v tlt•
pet• te75 t818 a.ct· 54t.42e0 or ",_.ua r«d &4s-ta..8
L.O-tffY MWIY dtc0ral9d NrOOMn Na, n4Mdee0t. ~ tpt ~balm furn, r.rrio, TV Reel).
•-" nda S&OO/mo m la Wiiiy &3&-15 It ....... tu
CM Condo·t•m-prtvat•
epe-lrpl·vlew·nr J>oh..w/d
hk·uP·moral '425'!tutll
979-28001131•.&!0-1331
Coron• del Mer quiet
meturt m.,. &250/mo
ta lat a tso Hpot11
Raf t WO<I< ~•370.
HOtM f.40-7&41 l
Fe 10 thr 3 wteame a
ton, 12 yr E·Slde CM
1e101mo • '" 111111
64&·3433. aft 7
FIM n·atftkr 21 35 lhr 2br.
E Coast Hwy 67~900 l,..!FO ... R2_NF0..!.~:~ ....... B•bytllter~ Mature FIEIWIYITllll NATIOHSIOESALES --to 001 Do you Meture wnf g Fe to thr 2 -v --· ..,_.,,... perton 5 mo old glrl My 08 CM ....... ,.... ..
bd, 2 be apt w/ .. me CORONA DEL MAR home, Mon-Fri, 8 am . 5 27 H.,bof • TEAM like to tnlngte? If ao, Ql\19
8 952 f1 9 550 It ••cell beauty HOME LOAN 556-03e3 Be one of"* 800 ~ UI • png11 at &40-0301 42"4 a er pm U lon, tut food, o"loe &4().7002 pm ~I end cr9dtntlalt Ull mu_., pendent ..... agentsMll-ror an eXdUng job • I
M/F to attr well-kepi home etc Good beach loc _ raq &45-0787 -• 1ng product• Of TM Thoe leilept\One ..-~
w/prof M. 34 E/llde CM 213B Coul Hwy, NB •lltfHH, BABYSITTER Wanted In Guya, gaJt. "°"*"91kertl 0 Mwphy Co We've with the L08 AHG£LE8
Spe S300 548-9219 $500/mo 840-8844 T .D.'i 4021 rrry home One or two SELL 1C KODAK FILM bMl'I In bue1ne1a 9"'Ce TIMES 2 thffta evaflabte.
M 10 thr 4br/3bt hOUM deya I week &42-5181 ~~~':,benefit 1888 IO you know M 're Hourty W9QI + COfn•
pvt beth, M... V.,de: Busy Nwpt Bl, C M. ~ I.I Umll Bar Parton for Beer and here to 11ey frvougri OUI tnluion Loc:ldlon, 1375
C M '350 • 241-H90 retell/office· ale, 1at Nr •rta11t It. l11, Wine Ber Exper helpful ESCROW SEC/OFFICERS ~=1~f.C:· ::.::::-: Sunf'IOwer Ave, C.M.
Oceanfront •Pl rm •v•ll Only 1595 mo &4S..H28 SpeeielTZlng In 111 a 2no but not nee. &4e--9935 Temp ..ion. •xper only .-ialty Item• end _.: PAIT Tm
-. TO'e Sin~ 1949 -UOllW MILIU ..,,..... houaand Tiii -•-tor lmmed occ $325 mo Comm Bldg, C-2 zone 14 Robt Settler NH/CM Bu1.,·a StrMI It remodel· 71.._,.9 .. 2332 tci1tlve glftato I a LAI 1-.5
N/amkr pref. 6-te--9457 ceirt. 2000. aq ft, 50 RE Broker Bd Rffllora Ing Opening• for of bu1lnenH who Reepotlltble for dMnlng ~•P l*ton to sher• 2 ~;~'\1!~ •y''::n ~~~ 842-2171 545...oe 11 HBuo • ti H1 o • .. • ,•ood• • • • ~ Fifing. l)flone. ltt• typing =!'!~ up and animal e«e In bdrm condo In Coste --IMft. uncn Mr Felr wage. Only pereon-f l)flarmec.utic.t R 6 D fa-
MeH 751_86081f1 5pm. stalled. ~8-1303 JUMBO vert. PM Broiler Cook1. able l wilting to work nd yOOf b40 oc>POftunl1y or clllty 3 hourtl day,
-R 1 4500 Apply tn pe<ton Deity, 2-5 epply 89o4-0507, 1()...2 good comm~ and $3. 7&/hr. Applleatlon Taecher wtth blby wanta ett I tpace, apprO)( pm at COCO's 4&47 continued Income rrom eveiteble
temele non smkr to stir :,,~ :1 ~7j;0:e.~c1~ RESIDENTIAL LNS MacArthur Blvd. N B FaL. TM PAY repHt ordert. Com-etrw .. t 18th St
4bd home In C M S276. PAIT. Tm -mlaslon• are p6ld tm· Hftpof1 ~ 841-0574 or 557·2732 Or, Newport Beach. ldul S500,000 mln·nomax Be1utlelen, rent your own Opportunltlea •v•ll•bl• medletety. If you want In-8:30am . 5pm
_ tor antiques. furniture, 75'/o Loan to Value booth or comm w/lollOw, with the Loe Angela ~and• Nlllng
WE LOOK FOR VOUI etc 846-3079 40 Yr Amorltlutlon Nwpt, CM erH 557 ·2234 Tl_..... Clrcul•llon De· c:.r.., cont.ct Bob Pat· Pll't•lllH p.,. HouN /Roommat.. I • 1.1 30 o F _ ... ,;.,,. ...... T..... T"' o Unllml19d 632-4134 a altlui ay Uuu ·..-Beauty partment In our door-t~ tertOn. ,,. ,.09, · M II
liA'll ....... 2120 Pacific F de al STYLIST. With or wlthoul dOOf newepeper ..... Murphy Co . Red Oek. ltataJa Waat.. HVW !A!!!e ""• 3000 1 f, ~Ye e r client ale Top com-program Guarant .. d !Owe 5151& Wllllm c=: !!!!i!!I f vv.• "" .. f' • I mlUlon paid 840-1900, hourty wage ~ c;.om. -;;., ......... needed F'urn ,..,.,,. ,__, Of" pr I I 1005 BrlOIO °' tn30Cl3 9-5. TU99·Stl mltelon. Houre 9AM • K '-""' 'morn-~ 8-c:t\ Menteung
Germen exec & temlty In 844-7269 2PM, °' 4PM • 9PM Inga. L.•gun1 Beach r1rm haa tiavefel ooeolo09
US on 8 month uelQn-I .,..,.,. (l14) 411-0110 CLERICAL Trelnlng 11 provided 4t4-54M tor r~ble and ln-
menl Wiii conaldtf' Win-ttrllt Hali IUT lllW Potentlel to wn S300 LllAL llmTUT dU9t"°'11 peoplle. A Good
ter rental Lisa 281-G122. Storage p;;:;, nlc:eoRJC; on WIDOW HAS HI tor TO'• PIT, etternoon1, temp., ~per ....... For en In· ~ bu8yrMIM1atalttig ~ ...oa a MlJSTI
Mon-Fri, 8 30-5PM Newpor1 Blvd. CM., t2oo S 10.000 up No cr9dll typing, .,,..... phonM tervtew. C elt ( 7 14) firm neeci. mot1vat9d. r• A gr.a way to ina..
11--. ..,, tt 873-1943 Cheek, no penalty Cell Apply In peflOrt 11eo 957 ..... , Ext ,204 YOAJt ~ O<*era W• .. r&fft tr ....., Denl90nAMoc 673-7311 Monrovt1, Ste C·2, CM ·~' =;;'*~~ ~ ci-yf«youttraiNng For ltat 211 Aaataaet•nt1 3 I I W ,.. SIOO btwn ~12AM or 2·5PM General L..abof ~lontor delallof-Int.,,,.~. c:al Mr
' eer gar • NEWPOAT FREE-All Xdesl 1 t . 18 For into caH 848-3966 Many poeitlon• eveltable fart you•~ c.9-BIMmer. 545-5778 M1mo TV COMMERCIAL SEM-Hair o; .. ..,, -Olt1 1 Up 10 S7Jhr ,.., in Calltornia -raw PERSON FRtOAV Hout'I
780·88e2 INAR SEE SUNDAY AO Stlllon tor l .. M Busy Medlce.I r butOf 220' 1520 amell lee ~t required &40--8H2 9 30 • 2·30, 5 d-. 1 """t 213-..os-4~9 1 Heir OetJgner need• a peraon ex-_,_ .....,..
IEWNH IUOll Manlcurlat pe<lenc.d In Cuttomer IEUUL lfflll MAIO/HOUSEKEEPER typing, handle phone, b+IJ.
Ga reg 1 1ox2 o s 9 5 SCRAM LEJS Client .. • nee Service Good gen«al of-Experience helpful. Good Mature, non-amkr. neet Ing, non-amkr. lrvlne 845-~llOO or 845-3323 • Studio FIVE flee skills, lncl'g typing typing eblllty Prollelenc) eppearence. part time 476-0915
Vickie Ask tor Judy &40-8443 and dlctaphone Mull be with figure•. 10-key by wtlndl tor tine Nwpt 9eh PIHi Riii ANSWERS able to work well under touch E11cellent com· Inn Cai 6 phone• must Office laatal1 2914 * * SAUi * * pre11ure and u part ot 1 pany t>en•fll• Cell Miiiie 87,_7300 betwn ~-!!pm APPOINTMENT SETTERS Felony· Ceble E•pandlng Hlff office team Benaflta, 11lary after 9 am, et 846-5800 tor evenings, 5-9 pm 250 aq ft tulle, 1200/mo ""5 aaa•1mu S5 OOthr 11wa1 COtn1 779 w t9th St. 1u11e o. Decoy · Mytllc need• •dcJlttonal 111•• neg Phone 841 "2"" tJe.. General Office. contractor -' T 85 8928 BIFOCALS ,991 In 8 growing com-tween 10-12 only door SeNco Fattener• Two Potltlont avail in mlaalont Contact Bab 11
CM om 1• WhO wet It that u10. "Old merclal mtrk•I Looking OAIYWIRI nMd• • girt to antwet markatJng e1ep1 No ••· :61•1 lOO. 3-9 pm weett-
•1280/up. crp11/drp1 age la when you Q11 a tor e1Cperlenced HIH phones, aJmpte acct'g patience necasury, IYI_· _____ _
ate. ratm 17301 Beach gleem In your eye only people with man8Qllltl 16.50/hour + commtaalon. GrHt etmotphere to company will traln Mutt PllY&TI NIT lfflll
Blvd H B 8o42·283'4 when the aon hlta your potential. GrHI op-Home improvement•. No work &46-68S7 h1ve cer Xlnt Income If Part/time poealbte Ml/ BIFOCALS?" portunlly to perllcl~tte In Nlll'.1 We wlH train Cell qulllfled For appt cel1 • 400 IQ ft, pvt beth, clean, -----h fl JI Kit Oen 32-9350 (10-nOOtl) "--a1-""*'-. nice of· J .... 2 La~3 time NMd atock pertOn. crptd Near Btlboe Pier SPIRITUAL READINGS growt end pro t a ' ..-.-vu...,. Mr °'* "" .,_.. pen/time flexlble houri
SJOO mo 842-4023 Advtce In •II melter• Love. or Mtrk 714"850·2990 OWi TTPllT fices. aniwer phone•. Medlcal A111111n1 10r Newi>or1 549-2287
marrlege & butlneH '-tn-'Mt/Otlltrelltr M-F. 8.30-5 pm Ir" :~ng.~ngh ':*~;.': Phytlclan 1n Npl 8ch l'-llD/ Beyfront Offi<lff. petlos, Al10 countellng 1815 ":'th ~..!'put-ewwltf'lce 7 t4-47e--2176 i .. ._, _.,,. r 08/GVN office exper Piii
pa1klng, Jtnllorlal So El Cemlno ~al. San w ''""' -~....... ~ 7141893--0963 eppt req Good pey and ban· AUL m
873-1003 Clern Uc'd. 492-7296 Friendly, medium-sized OIOIT&ll lllftll ,,__.al Mrvlcee efll• For Info 075-9102 State W'de Al f """-1· rnanulscturing company, .~~ c · --------•Wit A Ftaai 1064 In bualneaa 30 year• Pr• Wlllll 1111 " ARC Amenc• orp In 8-8pm 720-1941 wlldyt menta. fin aervloet rlrm 011 IPFIOl IP&CI 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii NOi controller retiring C'HEERS RESTAURANT Newport e.ech hll 1 fuN ofterlng cnallenglng ~ In batemer'lt A~ 1011 eh., 14 yMra 546· 7101 Enter1elnrnent and denc· time e>penlng In tn. ~ lllllAL II.UH ltlOn for bright Individual
8 tt (J-k Crout) ing we need cocktail eral HrvlCH/prtnllng Pentttme. flexlbte hours to write and ~ tor privet• peUo 4 1 aq •I S ..... E x •• h ood ---·~· ..__.. 83c. South of Hwy FOUND AO Mt'Vert We Iran Stu-dept llpef on 91"0• .... ust eve 0 ...,.,..... T I. 9 9 0 a nd 0 EC
75-dents OK Full, pit Beach 9400 helpful but not ttOn & min 3 yeert ••· POP· 11/34 Mutt have 2 R~~::,:: :ls.:i 1111 ARE FREE l&JIUllC&~l IT & Warner Cao bef noon ~ry Mull h•v• l*'lenol Fountain v11r.y yn •llP41' wtCOBOl b -• n• 752·&955, 847-9988 pm velld Calif Oflver LIC. olflce 55e-4068 cellent carMt C>PC>C)r\llnl·
0 I tome llrtlng requtr9d. Med I.lb In Npl ar .. hat ty Call 553-09-40
Chermlng beck office CaU·. T~e Orange c;i!tnt • ly Compenton. llva-m for good company benefit• e>penlng t()( lull time po. ·--------1pec. ,200 • ,,.. utll• llot has an ex <>P· elderly woman Lite 833-3232. ext 50, Kerry lllon In busy tront o"loe. Pl•OTIOI
monthly Own entrance 142-Hll portunlty for • cerMf hakpp·g Selary. r•t• EOE Good typing IMllll nee 5 L~ Bch Pac: Cat H_, oriented Mejor Account req'd 548-0217 _ C ~' E11ecullve with a proven -Gen Office for Npt Certter day wee6r. 9·8 • IOmt en you , , Cel.lvmete 497-630'4 Hick record Greil COUNTERCLERK Ad Agency Type. Ille. Saturday• we orrer Spere3hrtn1Qhlly'?
IELIH Found COM lrg yng ma potenllal guu1nteed Wiii train Fullltlme 1nw phont1s greet comp Mllry. paid u lery Are you
3 otflcei. La~e r.ceptlon German Shep wlchoke draw 't!"''t com· Newport Beach 646-7621 Cilenti S800/mo Kelh't protlt 1h111ng eno health Well groomed.
I I I lo 0 e -714-553-9010 benefl11 For 1n1ennew. oependabl• area. tiled eek off two chain 4th & M1rguerlte m Hon I re m 11 Dall Entry Operator ror 1 otllc.1 Convenlt1nt Npt 640-78~5 Into management ,. plus IBM System 34 E•· Halrdreaaer wanted with • call Betty &48 '4403 ~dy~ mottveted •
Bch locellon Nt Hoag Send reaume to pe<lence req Perm po. eome cllentele In beach lllT TlllllEE Ent<>Y wonong with kro•'I Ho a p S 1 3 8 I I mo Found F lrl1h Se11e1. red P 0 Box 1580 ltlon in growing lrvtne eree Halr"""'t. &50·5342 If YES
7 14 759.950 1 bendena 6 chein PCH & Colla Meu. 92626 Electrontc Company Call ""'' Loc11 mfr need• 3 people you can an•-
--Sul*IOr 648-0738 IEOE Bunny 81 680-0834 Hair 1tyllstlmanlcur111 10 train tor mgmt ~ Phon46-4e--7021
Exec aulle. OC Airport needed lmmed Some fol· 10on tndtv must be sin-2 30"'6pm Mon thru Fri
area MC Mrvlc.. Incl LOtt Golden Lab/Shep HOHATill/UUI towing pref 636-9392 cere a c01T1m111ed to
1500 1900/mo 762-7787 mix 14 wk old M puppy, Advertlalng Conaullan1 Colorlde~n. wlll 1retn tearn Wiii iNiet In hiring
blk cotler. blue btndane • PIT ,,.11 ?" .. ~.7 Hu Slytialt . Man1Cvrlst1 • training 01 ........... .......,_ !11acu1tve Sult• evelleble. "Winner", CdM Rnard • ,. .,._.. Rental ep11e1e or employ· I '" ...... .....,, ....
Ltndmerk o"lce bldg . 720-1854 PEOPLE IEEIED ment avell HAIR PROS Muat be dependable
S3 00 aq f1 • all MrVlc• -lllEllaTELf llU 1&1&111 18009 Skyperk Circle. EARN UP TO lnctd. prvt entranc. Lost tiny Vorkahtra Terrier • Opportunity ror growth rrv 281-&092. 4"4-9907 11. ll PEii 110111 .. SM Duane 495 Eeet 2920 N9WJ)Ort e1vd N e 1emai.. 3 ~· old ... n1 to Local nutrltf'll manulec· l7th C M HOUSECLEANERS TOP I ~1no on L..,.. 7t4/432·1\01 POOkie Lost nr Alph1 turer footclng tor people WAGE • FULL OR Pn • of Ellpertence
FOR RENT F "Ice Bell In El Toro "8-1998 10 hire and train 1ndlvld· llllYfRf OWN TRANS . PROF CALL
200 aq tt, S2~~~ 111ni or ~04! utlt tor mgmt potltlona Full time 10' local de-EXPER ONLY NEED 111·1111
loc A111l12·1 &56-3900 Per...-Ja fOU No e•pr needed Com-hve<1" XLNT driving r• APPL. y 786-8222 ...,Ooioilliioii~ .... "!-"""""~-I pany wtll train Mu11 htve cord raq Mi Emmons.
Lao Ben, o off•. r~ CIRCUS OF own trE"!'R• N UP TO I Newport s111ioner1 tnc ., .. , cont rm, lrg l>ay. en "' 883 1200
deck tn NP bldg 2600 aq llSSl&E II, ll ,., htlr
.......
want9d tor 3 CdM homM
t0·12 hrt .Wty SS/hr •
tip Jim 875-063&
Atk ror Mr Jon
Modelt AudMlonl 1 17.
Tuesday 8 30 pm at Tlf·
ftny I Npt 8ch 3rd flOOf
Mull ti. Ovltf 2 1 11, empte p«ng, fully e/c, c 11 M w11111m1 I beaut cnyn vu1 13&00 mo 7 19 NO HARBOR BLVD • rt llUYHf I .I.&. TllH
494.9-401 M· Th FULLERTON l 14/ II 1 ·1111 Rout.. now opening In HouMOtMning. expet, pit,--------•]
mutt heve trentp0t11tlon MUL Tl Lewi Direct .....
540 1287 CK 44e-, 1836 opportunity lhll ..,. y0U llWPHT IUCI 110-1112 Answ Mlfv!Qe Tll4~h0r1a I Cotta M ... and Newport
000 t 2 d fl l l&Y l WIU ona111or. ""'°"' 1hltt1 1rea Carty A M Delivery 11trMt\~y taC:ic~~ ATTRACTIVE 3G2 3rd St Leg 8c:h Mon-Fri No ~ndi. h04· •lllllDll ....,_ ..... ss•usses . ldeyt . colltlet or bltlfnO ... bldg, off ttrMI parking, ...,,.. " Apart.,.,, M•naoar cou Cao 6~ 7338 8•5pm Live 1n 2 Chlldren ,.;ngllth
ger •~•II 84&·4800 TO SERVE YOU pie with ••P9'~ tor tpffklng non/1motcer N
Vickie 045-3323 dayt OPEN 2~ HAS Cotta ~ Aptl Setary Tu1ttn erM 73 1·8772
Prime location. 3&0 IQ n llOOITl/IOllLI • bonu• + A.pt No pttta Dentel AN't, FIT front 1 HOUSEKEEPER (Lt\IE IN)
Cell 8-42 4&44, Mon-Fri, ,...·t··•J ONLY a31t .,.1....., &42·o4907 wtld\19 beok office .,.p RD~-Mutt~ Enotlth
achieve you1 llnanc111 goela rapldly 14 yMI'• ••P4" In tri. Min ear• tMrket Our tut Mlli"O
prQducta ere b4laed Ort
Mlnr.. Oii Cett We Care
Cllttrlbutort f~ O..ella
845-t 104 Ult tOt Gaofge ""'..., v ..,.... .. rey tic S11ary 004l"I ..,..... • as• 1487 9•5 ft<A A•aernblen •Ill• Newport Beecl'I Tunterodl .,.
Prlv lull otflce w/wlndow, '""I &• lmmedltt• opening• lor ,,.. Wlldyl 842 eal7 HOuHkffper. reliable SELL Idle ttem1 with •
,..,,.,..,.ouu
A new1y cr .. t9d POeltlOn
hu bec:ome av11•at>te tor
en lnd•vtdual 10· provide
~ IU9C>Ot't to IN
property management
!unction Main d\ltlee _.,.
be t'(i>tng. P<oceeefng In•
v~ updating 1nwn-
t0<y. .cct' • receivable &
P41Y•ble end "*"leWno
Ill.. Two yeat't gen'I of.
lice •XP9fWICI. typing
S5wpm 10...k-r proflct.n·
cy a good communlCe·
tion llCll.. req d P1eaM
apply to
Donni Kubiak
ltld Prop Mngmnt
1 1 ~4A Mein St '"'
863· t t9i
ahr coc>y, ktt . recec>t. Hewlii. UR M PlP ;Jr lull time HMmblerl 173 3A03 evea/..ttnd1 non amo"lng Mtt11re ~ PllOt CIMlitled Ad
N a 11 r po r1 er• 1 (AA) hot .. 1 wtc. 1r1ntfen Mutt heve f1rong back lllT" lllW• parton ror IOI axtcutlve • ~ .. ~Z~-H~7·~;~~~~~~~~=~~=~ 1250/m<> 5"4&-2131 extru &44·1348 ground In tokSerlnO or --- -l'IOIM tAM tPM 6 dY9
-flat cable GOOd oP· Pe<\/tlme fle•lble "°"" 3 S5 oo pr hr to ttart Cell IHlan1 ~unltv 10 get In on YM"I ell~ Foun-4H 3102 II\ So L~• WESTCllff BLDG Waa... ftlt greiwnd 4loot of a tMl tatn V~ HI 40U -& fMril °'*"
1101fTIMlfiiiiri =1='=-= 0£NTAL SECRETARY for '=';".c11tl0f'I p1r11 l fwlt MnMt M4c lu1t1bl• lo• eateflng tot a.11 pr.,.ntltMtpeot*~ M\.let oa tut. llOCurlt• &
L .... ~ 11r1t tea-.771 led practice 2 Y'll otb have good eyHlghl
Aatl ll Doctor or ••P« & organu.atJonet ,4,·04 13 Otltronle
Cl\lropract!Q In t>aeti of· 1k1t11 Mon·Thurt Corp Cotta M-.
111r WJ'<HH Al &C 11 ..... " .. •'" ..... U· TOTE ·l·IAllETS
IOW llll•C
For position• CM'\ I 'leVel• Salary com-utlt pd Ctft 045 1771 Room wl llltchen pr111
Ntet leltx>e * v .. rty 1 adult• only ee2.a1eo Nr
9, tlOVW. refrtge, ,,.. ttut l thop
orpta No "1• 1450/mo Room •lklt, lndry. h<NN
11Mtoe prlvtteol. M/', pvt r..._
2b• apt Fptc, pool, ~. Four lfg privet• onic.
tenn11, etc '3-40 • uttt with lro Mertta11., arM.
C M 648-8007 Iv mtg kitchen end privet•
For Ad Action
Cal a
Daiy Piot
AD-VISOR
642-5678 t
t1ca. W iii train J .4 a31·132t __ ·•-
deyl/wll latery e>pen 1"9Utance ~ ·-• ........ &4~1 ,77 Dl•tttbutor ~ a... ~ S• PU YI... 1t1Uts l pOll tve amtucte
~ mensurate ~ th ••
porience. Up to $7 /hr F'or
Inter-MW. apply II
U-TOTE·M -Market on
Heat beleh, 2 Br. 2 bl
1'790fmo. yrty IM ~ dep
H7-tl85
"""Ol_CMn_.,..tr_on_t_Oft IM Oi
';ft; J 8r 2 a. ~ltd
get. crpl• ltPIO, no .,.i1
I 1315/"'° tH ~
I '
NB PH ........ 0. rem. non-lobby 8'an 9P9Cle 1vell· ...,...., eb4e Ol'I W•tdln d~ &49.o51• amt<r, ocHnvu lrplc, ~Ilion allow•M• 'P•· nr Lido 142&/mo suua1 •m .. 2.a 180
Wllty rentalt now t'llaU
1 16 50/wk I up OolOf Hew ICllNlhlng you wlMrt
TV Phonetlnroom 1274 '°Ml?~ eel• ckl ~tBNd CM ltMlll Mt.atTe 8'0-144&
)
r
•••·1111
I ·'
Altend1114 ~In c M Mate/~ Otstttbut• in-Pro( 67l-tlMl •
Aa.e.1111 teacr. In """9111· torrneuon a.\ new IMOh ctwitt, PIT, l'ltl fie• ~ & tAI produe1 C M P
Bo•rd • tml utary Marlrallng, Ct111tott••·
P,.,., Pam 14~2111 wl , VA Mr H iey, •
(804!07 Hit t•m·tc»m Pi ... tlCWMtNng ~ WW\I
10 .... ., Cl~ .. do H•ve ~Piing to Mil? Wan1 Ad Help? n .... &42·5e11 Q...ifted ao. ckl 14 ,... M2·M?I
•
F\edhlll 6 N In T Un
at 14090 Redhlll on Tuee·
day from 12-1 .m , ... IUU:
{114) lJl·ttlS tr lll-4141
EO
I
810 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday. January 16, 1084
l!la ...... 1111 Hll .tl"JC H/ Aa•, I•,.,.. Aattt, laprl!f !!!!'• lapr!!I
RCR!TARY w/front ono :'r. u y, Pl~ wllltde ·~i-lc..,1111wt_m __ ..,11_1 ... 1 ID 1111 ldan' Hit Ytln 1111 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZI E eicper , rion-wnltr. w/~. tto elO -.her ' 'H give atlchd S 1 lj() ~511 otto If.I»•. mat. bkkpt. you. dl')"tf to go with It, si&rl trait\ COf'l'IPactii. Two '16 Yameha vz. H O I L:AM! SEl.ECTION OF llH .. ,... . ·u Tul110 Wgn, euvme
141-7000 (eYe/'20-1-MO) $185. GE tefrlg/ffeutr, HO. Hlde·eb•d. 150. 121 plut 4 fell trlr, NEW & USEO BMW'S! ·77 wtlt w/blue ln1 Fully IM or payort a1 I 13,500
SECT'Y iiiiUiMoe omc.. $100 545-6891'() 557·1300. Mon-Fri, 9-5 tlelm•t• B••t 011., loaded auto, amlfm 30K ml, ·~· cu•tom
F/T,Exper Farm.1 10-Exlt gat dry•r $125 Vito clarinet. 3 'jft old ~~;,J~ 557•1300• LHllUOll... tt9'eolape.tteelbelt~ ~ nor8UNll
ACROSS $2 8"t product
5-4 Hitch
PREVtOU8
PUZ2ll SOLVED
suranoe631-774Q t-12 842·927tart8PM 1115 MlnOlta Xl!J cam· VOLUME SALES rtdlalt, 11750 p .p 9or7tl0-1tl4
S4IMoe Stetlon AttendMt, FREEZER, lg chelt. s..rt. .,. S 125 8S0-9182 p~ 1 ~P:..~_:74 SEA\llCI! & LEASING Hfr.*7 llJ1t. l 'Zt
PIT Experl •nc•d $100 H2-1003 -361L00~GCB~!YcHAve. '~· tl "' ~ COit dUJ: .......... 5 Werd'1 4 hp rotollll4'<. 'II IH.aa •a.-.a...-IOO ""' • • _ •uv-v..., llll &.PPLIAIOll S200 557·8212 • __. (No Ch«tyult...05) * Toyole {x4 PU M-cond 12SO 6T~ 1,
1 The Sp S8 Batter
4 Umbta 80 Mor°"'°
9 Routing fowl ra~•
14 Total tbbf 61 Hector
&wva Station Attendent l• 951•8133 :n-; warranty·APrll. 500 ml ll H) 111-llM ~ pymn11 ofS181.48 752-4500 tx1 4037
Exp'd DaY1 7-4, Sun oH a1lc1J la1t. $.uf I 1995/obo 64~4 'fract•IN WelcocM No dWn pymnt OAC CaJl -.....------...........-
64 hra wtc FWta reiq Nvtpt Kenmore .-hr&~. ••It HOndo l• P11Ji guitar HONDA MASO $225 Now~ Sun 11-4 Chuek 17e-S553 Agt. l attt, hlan tit
BMch. 644-7161 cond. 1100" 8488. w/caM. Peavey amp, 10" YAMAHA 100 S250 "--*'e.4 Toyota Celllca A .. AllC 1305
16 Whittles 62 lalSMZ -
18 Redeem 6-4 Sound len ltafftt taa...-.a-_. Mayteg wuh• 6 dry9'. 2 apkr. phaM. All $.00. HONDA SL90 1175 All -t1•a aurM pymnta of 1178.36.
Exp'd. APotY: sh:.i98.~. yrt old, S300 4"-3641 5•8-509• gOOd oond. 649·85&3 r--•2,.ao .. z-c"'lA"'ss-i11111c'""""..,. No dwn pymnt OAC. Call 184 Rambler Wgn. xlnt
17 Highwaymen tclef\ce
19 Scatter 68 Aloln aouree
tlon, 17th &-Irvine, N.8. RefrtgeretOf, gOOd cond .. IBANEZ GUITAR Aooottle XL.NT COHO. BIG ENG. Chuck 979-3553 Ag1. trana S600 obO 842·•'7'1'9
wht. s 150. 788-0133 Cutaway. very nic.. aland Mtttr Bean 1020 S3200/0BO. 548-8091 •·e• Toyota p u. AMumt '71 Gr•mlln, run1 but
70 Cant 67 Bull· pref
21 Eur. country 68 Container
22 Spasm 69 lncllnee SHIPPING & RECEIVING
M.chine thop ex~
helpful. Mark $57-3360
•v•l wtcnda & ca.. $300 obo, art., .,, wiNNEBAOO 22 H. fl''84 O.taun 300ZX ... pymntt of 11i1.12. No need• aome worlt. 1450
REFRfGERATOR REPAIR _ 9pm, bel 1 lam 842·7589 Fully telf-contaln•d turM pymnlt of 1~7119. dwn pymnt OAC. Call 494·S05i el1 7PM 23 a.,m 70 Glrl's ntmt
2• MOderated 71 Bhter v•tctl
28 Decipher
29 Coroner·s
Local hOfM fftlmat• '27 Nqr new P .. vey Clatek: Loaded. PrlrM condition No c:twn p~nl OAC. Call Ch~ _07&-35M Agt. luck
Tailor, for alt•atton1 on Larry'• Refrtg. 780-7275 VTX amp, w/4 12" apkr S 1350 548-7800 Ctwclc 97 ·3553 Agt. •74 Ceffca. orig owner. air. •11•0i3.,..iiiU .. i""• ___ .-.-..
abbreviation
31 lug
DOWN ::~i~l~~·trc"M or Refrlgefator. 9lde b-y-~-cab1. 80CM9 caM, misc '8 t Colichman GMC mini '71 Wgn, runa/IOoka good, 84110, fm 12000 •99-2385 ,11 lllll
hke new. almond 1225 cords. 1550 obo 22', root air, gen, am/tm .conomlcal & derc>end· '74 Corolla, 5 apd, am/fm, 1-.._.. ...... -n......, Ltd, 2 dr,
1 '-Theme":
'Zhivago··
lune
TUcn.l ••H 831-9270 ~···and_,.,... 11a 600 able $695. 894-9378 ,.,.,_....,. ·-v . .. 895--7062 -.......... v . nu tran1. clutch, eng AM/FM ttttao ca.. llir
lrvlM Pr•tchool, P/T, WID.St35 ea;O/W,l lOO, Offict f•raltart/ 549-50t4 '72 240Z, xlnt cond In & 11850 857-5817 s81ao+T&Lor1MOAC. )2 She· fr
33 Take
36 Store 2 Love: It
3 Scaffold
13 Novel 42 Coffin
18 Tremble 45 Myatenous
24 Conntcts 48 Went aloft
FIT 79&-749• Elec Reno-. 1150 lt•iptat 1221 frallt n out S4200 850-9182 ·79 c.tlca QT, 1n/rf, 51pd, Oya 973-1345, •vea &
T E C H N I C I A N 648-5848 FIH Pl•F TrHt\ 1024 '74 aoz. completety reblt, new llrea, exit cond. wknda 873-13"4•. Marty
38 Turkish 11Ue
39 Living areas
41 Unique
4 Young oyster
5 Witch
Audto/can •tt• dupll-R • 7& • atrelghl bOd". 4 apd. $4900 844-6087 ...... Bu'-k ~al ...... -cator 11t ihlrt. Call for efrlg '· 1 19 . trolttr ... Fiie cablne1, 4 dr1wer, BUY FACTORY DIRECT $4600553·82S9keepeall . ...., "'f S 10ll•N ... appointment. 28t·8273 S95 & S175. Wuher/gas legal $350 673-5688 Lightweight flb•rglaH '79 GT 5 tpd, fully loaded, pymntt o · · o
25 Medicine 53 Tangled
applier 55 Guileless
dryer. $100 •• 645-9628 Scamp 13' & HI' travel Ft rrlrl 121 xlnt cond $5200 O.B.O. dwn pymnt OAC. Call
TIU 1m11 Washer & dry•r. xlnt 1 2~~r~)( ~t:~rrD~=~~ lrallers and new 19' 5th 78 308 GTB GOid 9766 MUST SELL 983-669<4 Chuck 979.3553 Agl 43 Finial 6 Field
27 Pool scum 56 Movie award
28 Transactions 57 Tries out 44 Mollusk
i6 SSTs. e g
7 Signlhes
8 True copies
9 Per!o<)nee
Dynamic mrktg co. of cond., both tor $300 642-4740 wheel Call now. loll tree, ml Bl1up~nkt Berlin '81 Corolla Wgn, 18,000+ '78 ~al ltd, loaded. full
Olymplc coin deal & 646-8070. 720-0148 st .. 1 c• ..... lcred-~·1d•·L b1r-800oc .. u-3"4re6-4and9&S2 .. vforEI "" Radio, $35.000 obo mt. 1 owner, wtlt, euto. pwr, •xn cond $3660.
30 011 cartel 59 Jumble
33 US rocket 61 Chinese
47 Fishing gear
49 Greek letter
50 local rrs
10 Finery
11 Ceramic
12 Digit
34 Dido dynasty ' m0te 10-30K potential in ....... ........ ... " " am/Im, rr. mint cond. 78&-6110, ....... Sat/Sun :n~a~s ~~~ o:~ ..:i c-~·:r· .... IOll ~;~;~ ~e ~:~1:~50 A••• S.m cn/ ·r.c,~;~!!; ~.if~ 15950 PIP 494-2003 '80 8uJck Ei.ctr1a. ex«: 35 Standard 62 Suet
motivated Ind w/xlnt H 1 P S Pi /Or 6221 Part1 9015 2 o 815 9 7 . o 5 7 o 0 r '81 Teroel, A/T, A/C, 4-dr. car, loaded. 4 dr, 81.000
phone manner apply o entu pot· IHI 11•1 RO: foe steel t>eited., radl-2061323-5879 Jim pert cond $5000/obo. mllea. Hklng S7500
Also Telemarketing matlc! w/zoom. tilters tbo Baby Grand Re-•Is art 13" spoke wheela. r=1=--------...,....,,_,..... 30K ml. Evea 855-4472 875--0695
51 Mars prel
37 water source 63 Stout
40 Drench 65 Old custom
Supervisor needed S150/obo "49"4·6087 w0tked and reflnlal'led Set of 4 $200 548-8091 at •94 TOYOTA CARS & '83 Regal Limited, eJlver,
549-4945 Lelca 1ya1em • all mint. Ebony S3000 obo · · 1~1+1110-e•t0-s•p""j(j .. .,-. •;n"""'""'orliilQ""'. TRUCKS. FINI prlcea. air, powe<, am/fm cua. 4
TIUPHIEIAUI M-5 wJ 1.0 Noclllux ten1. 49"4·3682 alter 6 pm, Aatll W1atH ha1 unique hard top lnel. Immediate Delivery. apkra. $10,500. 8"40·2n5
Canedlan Elmarll 28 mm 213-721-8942 day HIGHEST CASH IMMED. $700. Bortnl• 751·9458 Olan!f:~·5aer90r Ent. ulllac Proteselonals w/3 yra
exper only. Car"' op-portunity In prol. ules.
All pre-qualltled 1ead1
f 2.8, & Summlcron 90 48" Plano, beaut cond In· for your vehicle, dometllc '80 Flat Spid•, navy blue, .,....'"" l•iioiPi~iii.------..,.~
mm. f2, Elmarlt 135mm side & out. tuned, de-or foreign. 551-8285 36,000 mllH, am/fm =-=-----_,,-=-=.,. *'84 Eldo a .. ume pymntt
12.8 ALSO M-3 slngle livered. $750. 847·5672 caat. $4300 875-2813-Vt IWIJI• 17 of $393.98. No dwn
stroke wlf2 Summlcron '57 AUQ. exit cond, orJg. pymnt OAC Call Chuck Sell all • $3500 Firm • BEAUT1FUL Storey & 11-..1-I S $2"""". ,...,.-01.... 979.3553 Ag1. S 100,000 conMrvatlve Cash -494-6976 Clark organo S 1995. Ex· ... """ '""' ~ provided 150 ,000-
esUmate It you can cloM. ~------~~ oeptlonal Wm Kanabe 180 ACCOfd DC. • p;t i '59 Vintage Bug, oorn• '11 IEIAI HYIUE
Call Larry 9-5, Mon-Fri. Famt•H HZS upright $3250 Both ownr gem. 19&1111es In & plete. good body. not Bladt. rull power, new
645-8733 2 unhs 0;J; flnith cabl-bargains l9r musician•. out 11 huma & gets 30 running. 111 $500 takes tires. 1 own«, orig RuN
Telephone work --nets. 'brand n•w with 675-1530, 844-1818 mpg TOOi Mutt teel 548-0922 xlnt. $1500 Call bet. 3 & SS399 Dys 631-8480, 5 T 552 2077 Sl-Sl/lr shelves, glasa drs & detk Mahog. Schaffer & Soni evee 548•7233 '61 W•lfalla camper. 41K pm, om •
No selling, salary, no ex-Sl50 ea. 497-6073 parlor grand. $6000. Alto orig. mt, out1tandlng '76 Coupe de VIiie, eun rt,
pertence nece11ary, Chopping block, oak. on Galaxy organ $1 200. '80 Accord LX, exit cond. cond , factory tent. x-cond. S2995. 842-1234
company wlll train, part castors, $1 50. 548-1946 673-1695 •Ir, am/Im, nu Urea. $2950/obo. 788-6774
time evening hrs. For . . _ WE Ill $5300. 631 -8480 dys. 'll 114er14e llerrttz
As new. low ml, loaded.
$8250 obo. S..: Balboa
laland 873-3830 (7-3)
appt call Jane 662-5844 Desk. antique. 6 X3 • oak Plano, Baldwin Acrosonlc USED CARS & TRUCKS 548-7233 eves & wtcnds /Ith top $3'"'5 548 7827 w/bench. walnut, exll TELLER PIT. 30 hr w.ek. _w __ r ___ .,_ -cond. $1450. 640-4038 COME IN OR CALL FOR '80 Civic 1500. 5 spd, alr,
Cashier or TeUer ex-Dinette Mt $55 Trlple -FlllE ••-•.... runt a looks great d S30 B & 2 Wurlltzer upright, heat .,.,. ... _ $2850 "'3 3018 pertenoe desired. Call for ressef ar bar, $350. 673-2912 C0tmler-OeUllo " 1• I 8 30 1 Kl stools $25 Sml folding _ appo ntment : • m table/chra SS Record Olmll.IT '81 Accord, ale, am/fm Dennis 973-5081 E O.C. Yamaha piano. ebony. 1821 t BEACH BLVD. 11er. caas. xlnl mech player I 10 Vanity ohr $5 ~ $2900 67"7813 TOP SSS OtShwashe< $5. 968-6241 .... w .,.. HUNTINGTON BEACH $5295/obo. 850-9074
Females Pref. Models& -Sptrtia~GMI 6230 Ul-tOllt Nt-1111 l-1a1a ~ 9127 Escorts (213)888-198• Fr. Cntry cupbrd, ctterry, _ '
perfect, $500. 833-8086 12 GAU E MOSSBERG WE··-YHll 11a cMC. ;;;;a, motor. Tow Truck Driver, ex----------puu p ACTION SHOT -1 Be H SSOO I ..
'
F.".ITl"E "" . CLI!•• ISO c••t 11 0 er over · perlence. FI T. days. GUN, $100. 6'2-•740 ~ -548--01'3
968-6505 Les 957 -8133 See Ronald Dace llW PlllE llLI SllS TUIHES MUST SELL! Cornlngware unmounted, 192cm, $450 Btlt WutH SlOO Help Waalff 5100 Btlt Waat.. SlOO Leading Women's fltnesa top stove, aell cleanlng obo. Must sell. 675-1572 -salon seeks hi ghly oven, micro wave top. =-----=---=---p /T &1111 ASS'T llOAIL UUS SaleS person to sell art motivated people to as-paid $2800. aell $500. Rosslgnal Roe 550 1klls, llY. Yflll Immediate opening for work and custom tram-slst clients with our Weather proof complete 203 cm, Nevedaa. Rotl
We need a high "energy full/time sales, with ex-tng Experience In sales. unique exercise program patio set. paid S 1.00, Mir poles, new $425. 14111 $85.
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
10b0 HARBOR llLVD
co srA MISA ()41 0010
person to assist AE. 3 dya perlence only Must be art background helpful. Applicants should be $400. Propane gu BBQ, Kahru FIG X-cntry skll1, O
pr w1<. 8.30-3:30. Mon· energetic and mature enthuslaatlc and helpful paid $785, sell St50 bindings. $65. •9-4-6087 4 ftMI Driftl Ill( WEllA'I
Wed This ts s unique Salary • monthly bonus SALES PllSll regarding nutrition and Other mlac. bring cash. TV ldi 79 Bluer 4x4, pwr steer-SOUTH
oppt'y to break Into the Corttacl Oebbt9 at Alexia w11t14 l••t411t11J fitness Full and pert~ Call aft 5PM, 966-2798 l. 11 lng/b<akes, xlnt cond .•
adv /video industry Natural Fastilons of Excellent opportunity positions avallabte In our New rattan sofabed. pd lltrH 6232 $5900 (714) 650-4242 oou1n
Phones. typing skills LagunaBch.•97-4777 awaltlngyouilyouarean Costa Mesa Salon S900.sellS400 556-1253 2 pair Utra Acoustic , ---------
req'CI Call Jerrllynn energetic, entheualastlc. Please call N ona. Speakers brand new 125 80 Bronco, fully loaded. ISIZI
751-8700 RETAIL IWS hlghly motivated lndlvld-5•9-19• t between 3-5 Sec 7 pc, loose plllows, watt each. Won In game S9•oo obo. 650-3713
l&Clle1' fashion apparel· ual interested In making Tahitian Whl, 3 mo new show Moving mull Miii T L. 35 UWE WILL •IT Real Estate office Man· stock work & sates. Eves nPllT Cost $1600, asking . racu
ager needed. tor the & weekends. Harbor i:;:~1:~:a1nTnogn:l0or~-Need exper. typist abte 10 S 1100 obo 788-0133 Retail S7•0 Sell S 150 "'5""'4""'F•or·d-p'"'u-6"'<)!1--3"'--sp-It: l•IHLI
Hunt Beach • Fountain Center, C M 546-2622 No experience neoeu-work from dlctaphone eves & wknds pair 642-6-438 $1000 548.7916 att 6PM VolumeSalel, Servloe
Valley area Salary plus d tea ***01&1*** Andleaalng bonus P.O, Box 1694, ary Call 651-1100 for In-an 10 rn new w0<d Slr\gle white canopy bed '61 FORD PICKUP 18711 Beech Blvd.
Costa Mesa. CA 92626 SALES tervlew processing system tor with matching night • speakers, AM/FM, turn· $300/obo 64~83 Huntington Beach
llOIP /lu lffitt
Must type (Touch) and Ille
general office 645-78 11
---Newport Beach firm. stand and mirrored table, gauget, and tape I 2 llSPUTUYEITISlll SECRETARY/1 girl office Typing tncl's letters. dresser. s 15olOBO decit Mull aee -Musi '83 Metro Step-van, xlnt (l1•) •2· 000
The Orange County Dally for small construction propo1al etc S1lary 957-8 t65 hear' Complete, $3001 9 cond • 4-cyl, 20mpg, pert I
Pllothasanexcellentop. company 83!·6023 commensurate w/exper am-4pm,Sal/Sun Mon· swap meet t ruck, J11a1r l
porturnlty t-eo•nnlng mid-IECIOUY /EIClllW Please call lor apptm. lltntfltl •• F1ratt.rt Fr•. 12-4 ., Plnecreek s 1200/obo. 966-8324 ·73 Jaguar xJ6 exoellent llCEPTilllST January for career orlen· Opening lor eKcperlenoed 644-5522 MOVING · 644-5319 Apts. 2300 FaJrvlew Ave. ·77 ($3200) and '78 cond., rebullt engine.
Growth Oriented Co Near led dlsptay advertising rndtvtdual Must type 60 TYPIST PIT or F/T Gen-Wine tasting table Oak, Apt 1<·205, Costa Mesa ($3500) GMC l ton rated, beaulllut sliver metallc
0 C Airport Has 1m-sales reps with a proven wpm Rare opportunity er at Office work Npt Bch per I c 0 n d s 2 2 o L 0 c 8 1 e d 0 n 1 a r heavy duty w/pwr air, etc paint, orig owner. $8000.
mediate opening for re-track record Great earn· for right person Benefits Please call 545.4175 786-9744 tett/comple1t, ,..., back ,.. 557-1300. Mon-Fri. 9-5 875· 1723 or 875-5308
ceptlonlst who ls people tng potential. guaranteed C II L I 5 .. 7 5625 BEA-T-IFU -25;, RCA oriented and has 3 years draw against com-a ynn a '" • U L '77 Dataun lngbed, near nu J talta
ollrontofflceexpeflence mission Desire 10 move IECllOUY PART·TIME. Varied hours Ct1tl Mna 6124 color TV 2 yr wrnty. tires. wht spoked whit. •741/2 clean, n;;;;as WO<k
Musthaveapteasanlap-Into management a plus lorMlg ColnCostaMesa to Include early A.M. 3 Wheel adult bike, patio St48 Free del. Open runs grea1 . $2750. &TLC St750orbitofr.
Pro.ch Wllh """Pie Be Send resume 10 1 weekend• Must have d&-furn, card table & chairs. Sun TV John's 646: l786 96•-0937 7an 568 9 8306 .... ~ Xlnl typing sk lls, tight ....-9 /(213)48 -able 10 handle a busy P 0 Box 1560, shrthnd. some mgmnt pendable vehicle (amall smt apples, hand mower, Sac trg 44" giant TV $700 '78 Datsun PU, near new
1elephone and pertorm Costa Mesa.92626 and Word Proc. Ex1>&< truck , van, 1tatlon many other Item• Sat & obo Must sell 642-7579 engS28000b0873-8701 lar•••• ki1 l Z
m15C general office work EOE pref Sal commensurate wagon) to assist news-Sun 9-• 2912 Royal Palm 158 Xtn1 cond $2160. 55 wpm Send resume lo w/e1tper Ask tor Pam paper dealer In Irvine Or, nr Baker & Harbor Teac tape mach, reel to Vaa1 548-5916
Belly Crowl-P 0 Box --831-0700 area Mull be depen-Sofa .. -... ohatrs. dr-~s. reel, 2 track. exit cond 175 8330 Newp~rt Beach. SALH-larlH S ,tJ dable. Contact Greg bed~ bikes. L ";,;Jee S275 obo 83 l-9270 Dodge Van. V. t~. V-8. '73 CONVERT. red, xlnt.
CA 92660 FOR BALBOA SEOllO&IY Hyde Monday thru Friday desk, freezer Reas. xlnt ifft Ge I 7011 '87 C~Van. V-o. Mak• $4350/obo 241·9990
Must have S years sailing General office Typing, between 9:30 and 10·30 cond 2751 San Carlos. I, atra otter on both. 650-9109 llECEmlllST /TYPIST eJCper (Cruising or rac-Jelephones. tight boott-a.m. only. 6•2-4321 sun day . 8. 5 and Sevytor fnn1tabkl wOOd '76 Chev. 112 ton VAN. Mtrct4n .... tl4S
Enthusiastic. career orlen· Ing) PrevJous satesexper keeping Benefits Lag-• Wednesday. 8-5 Bottom & stern. hardly new tires shocks strong 1'1117"'2~2•so"' ... S:C--/bl ... k-l""n·t.~N""ew•
ted person with office ex-helpful Xlnt opponunlty. una Niguel Call between WAREHOUSEMAN used. holds 4. new S550. 250, 3 spd. Good mite-T 1 r • ~ $ 4 7 5 0 .
perrence for 25 hrs/wk to pay, co benefits. Call S 10 & 4 30, 831-0700. Jewelry 6214 $300. 873-0786 :8e. Xlnt work true,.(. s t 875-0547 shipping & receiving. 2 13-7 2 1-894 2 day . start 55 wpm a must 10• usman a secretary Call 642-0880 EMERAlOS. 39 stones. 28 Power Bolts 701 1• 7411 Jim. 494-3882 a"er 8 pm
k83e3y·78h901pl • Non-smkr WHT lllllll Carets Retall $200· ta' LY .. AN SIDE STEER Aa1tia t• 1u PllOHOTS a SECllET&IY arehouse . $300/Caral, Sell $150 M Vl7 ----Typing 35, phones, Ille g.o. Several positions Exper d P/C Lve Message CLASStC· Atomic 4 cy1 '59 Austin Healy, not run-. RECIPTIOllST Sates pers needed for lge Exper helpful but not nee. and Trainees Up to 645_ 1046 · eng, xtnt cond $7900 nlng $500 obo •99-35• 1 needed for Insurance Bro-Antique Store. Exper Victor Temporary Ser-$8.50/hr 540-<4242, 675-8669
kerage firm in NB Duties helpful 3305 Laguna Ca-vtces, •341 Birch St. aotte 220-1520 Small Fee. Wedding set . 1 /2K 25 Wellcfaf1 Nova XL. bt11, l•,.rte4
include telephone nyon Rd Lag Bctt 213, NB. 556-8520 WORD PROCESSOR bSe1000aut10.b m760uat 7aell t973 Twin. Ford, V-8, lllW 1112 answering and hte lyplng o 90 2 For a PP I Ca 11 S&LHPllllll IEOIETHY-Law lfflot For Newport Beach law • Mercrutsers. Tandem *'8' BMW 3181 auume
71 4-644-5522 Be auoclated with the Npt Bch 30 hrs/wk to flrm Call 540-5400 Maclaiaerr &216 axet trailer. S9800. pymnts ot $275.70 No
RECEPTIONIST winning team at Century 1tart Exper not nee. Jo~I WaatH 5105 Bead blast mach Mlg & I 720-1101 dwn pymnt OAC Call
21 Surl, Hunt. Beach's Good typing, good short-arc welders 2 com-Grand Banks 32 '72 Chuck 979.3553 Agt
Full time Please call only Century 2t on the hand 644-5040 Nursing Asalal anl seeking pressers. tbl 'saw, band model. Clean & well '7• 2002 4ap, with '78 rblt 54o-5554 beach We are now up-tong term private duty. saw jointer belt disc equipped. Try S•6M. AM/FM f Ml h RECEPTIONIST-P/1 4 di t ff & I k secretary $7 SO hr Day shift Mon ' ' A Co 675 8990 ' snr ' c · · gra ng ours a 00 • Newpon Beech real prop-· Fri 631•2561 • sander. drill press. 2 cut very · • w/alloy rims. nu shock1,
hrs/da Npl Convales-Ing for sell motivating erty tender needs an ag-off saws, band saw with loltl Sill 70l4 clutch, brakes & dlff•ren-
cent Center 646·7764 successtull lie or unhc gresslve Mlf·starter to o.,1 5510 welder. lathes 12x36 l 11 8 1 w/Weber carb R.(. Ct••I. 1_. or •Lr people who want a handle processi ng. AfGHAN PUPPIES At<C 15x40, surface grinder 18' P Cat. P21S w/ treller $5500/obo 631-8350 -.• -dynamic office wtlh ex-typing & 1119 phones In a •11 1 S 100 1001 & cutler grinder, 2 $2500 6-42-7251 Apts, constr, comml, MH pert training & lull time non-amklng office Wiii "' co ors. ages -lurret lathes. rolery tbl, _ '7• 3 OCSI, e11tt cond.
parks Rent a desk Pro-management Call Biii train Linda 851 _8938 $350 Mu~sell 646-7841 bench mill. tooling, dlgaUI '69 CAL 25. O/B, VHF, 3 &Yropean mOdel, spotter
grsm 8V8JI 720-1133 Rude at 7141536-7542 AKC YORK IE PUPPIES & power feed for mill t>aga ol ulls. compNS. s t6,000 213-545-3482
Sell Idle It.;;-642·567 Ctaastfled Adi 6-42-5678 Secretary/Rec:ept for R E 8 WKS. SHOTS. M&F 714·972-1754 ~;id~d ~=· :'1~1:J· '75 BMW 2002. loaded. Prop Mgmt flrm in Airport S300 & $400 6•6-3853 -. - ---gOOd oondltlon $5650 • • _.. area. exper nee. type ~ ___ Forklll1, tow motor, 8000 II i , 7 II Dally Piia( · ·. ·. · · ..... · · · · · ... I 55wpm. good phone Boston Terrier, M, 4 yrs. lbs capacity, very gOOd Ir •• l • 42-2872 or 732-0603
" manmtr, flllng & must Fam pet $30 8-42-6410 cond $3000 675-6452 '80 320l, Must Mii. $1000 · PART TIME ~ ~;~~57~~r for errands. Jack Russell terrier. train-MlacellHff.. 21 ;2J~~o~=~g~~t•.
___ ed. M $300 640-0276 81 f1 of wrought Iron fenc-
Deliver Daily Pilot by auto in IEOlln&llY /SALES uaaa Apao PUP•. AKC. Ing In various length•. re-R~~e~/~'~C::at -~~~-·~~n ~!!!h!~f~r~pdbelo, .~. :{,
La Marketing company for shot1, xlnt pedigree moved from apt complelC, guna Beach area (2 hours Olymplc coin prog & $250 & S300 848-25~ • tt hl, gel cond St25 551-1662 po .. lbl• xtr11 Included
per day) Weekdays P M _ other promos GOOd with --""" -S ---831-6511 Sll5I A Dtckt 22 S 14.500 Days 759-9531 • • • phonn word proceMOI' Messy U--wsl 10 1ny atze - _ Eves/wknd 548-&41a weekends A.M. Earn about IBM 7S, office mgmt. (GROOMING SCHOOL) 85 gal salt aqu1r w/atand 2S eTieS.upto271.qui.t ---------
$ Start 1mmed High earn-Teectler, 21 yr• exp S300 ob<> Radio cont & ~. lndudM.iec. & ll'!ir .11m.alln 400 per mo. Call Mr. Barrow lngs Salary .. 98191 548-2848 plane. gd tor beglnnert. wlttr 54~1808t>et.Opm ~WLI"
642-4321. EOE comm partictpauon POODLES AREPEOPLE St50obo 631"741 t _ eo· mooring. cholc:e to-Salel..strvb-Laasfng
1~~-·· ···-· •. ··-· ···-·········ii' .•.•.•. ii' ••••••• ii' ••••• ii' ·-.. •••5•,4•9•.4•9•
4
•5••-.I Pups S250 & up 546-2848 All elec Hospital Bed $398 cation Admire! Vachtl of --EXT toilet 1ea1 w/arma Nwpt .. _h 873 5"""' Reg Aultr Shepherd St2 50 549•1477 ""' ' • '"" Newspaper pups, warm lov1ng pals _ Boat dock tor rent-Npt
S99 up. 752-7150 AQUARIUM 29 gallon. 111e Looking tor low
------Stand & all 80C4ttSOl'let profit•. ..u or power Sheltle, Al<C. 1150 I'm Piston pump l1001otter: boat. 20·22' max length KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
UlllllT
llVEITDllY
*'79 3201; 4 IC>d. A/C (99-4X~0)
1t'79 3201, auto, SIR
·75 28-0C. lmmac .. yellow &
tan, wire wtlts, 51K ml.
$9850 780-9278
'IO 1.1. aoou n111
Chrome Wheels, 2 1enk1,
lharp, S22.950 557-3608
eves or 541-4389 days
TOP SSS PAID
For Pampered
IEIOEIES IEIZ
Top Mercedes Prloea Paid
0111 Ptter /lay
DIAL 2 13/7 t4 MERCEDES
HOUSE OF IMPORTS, Inc
'81 3000, manilla
belg•/palomlno Int,
lmmac . 4"4K mi, $20,500.
859-5055
'82 30080 Palomino/
Ivory, air. leather, 32K ml
u new $32.500 760-6992
'82 3000 TURBO OSL
13,000 ml, like,,..__
S25.9QO. N.8. 720-1705
AMI aboUt fl)e moMv we
can uve you thN our
purehH• & !MM plane.
.llllUllll ••ts 1301 OuaflStreet
NEWPORT BEACH
111-1111
• tit
·71 Md8. 21-+-Qi.
S5300/0BO. 862-7473
.
llll lelllll'I SOUTH
COUITY
VOLllWAIEI
"WIWILLHT
IEllHIULI"
Volume Sai.s. Servloe
AndLMSlng
t8711 Beech Blvd
Huntington 8eac:t1
(l 1•) U2-2000
'68 Bug, 11 blue. w/tunroof, rs cond S 1950. Wkdys
52·5522; eves 962-3733
'68 VW convert., gOOd
cond., stereo, gd top &
tires 13500. 673-~12
'69 BUG. XLNT COND
$1500 firm. 968-0112
'89 Pop top cmp<, reblt
·~· nu brka. clean. S 50 obo. e& 1-2220
'69 vw BUG, gOOd cond., iood engine, new paint.
1600 848-5088
'70 SOUAREBACK, runs
great, extras, 15.000 ml.
on rebulll engine.
$1250 OBO. 850-8286
'71 Bug ~ & mot0t,
$650 obo 8944
·7 1 Bus· run1 good.
$1200/ BO. 646-4184 or
6'5-0-414
'71 Bua. strong eng, inao-.
$1500 obo. 540-9144
'72 Bug, enrf, runs gr .. t,
nds body WO<k, auto,
S600/obo.873-7403
I
'80 Sev Elgl, gray ovet 111-
ver, gray teether, mn/rf,
loaded. ci.an $14,500
754.-6700 daY1. 759-9130
.wntngs
THE UlllEIT
SELEOTIOI
of late mOdel. low mileage
Cadlllaca In Southern
Callfornlal See ua tOdayt
IAIEllS
CAllLUC
2600 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
&40-1880
Gnrtltt 1313
t 'Sl cheYY camato ....
some pymnt1 of S 173.52
1110 dwn pymnt OAC
Chuck 979-3553 Agt.
'67 Bel Aire. Ndl little
work. S200. 979-1288 or
545--4688 Aak for Jeff
'66 Corvette Conv, aof1 &
hard top, 4 apd, tOOd
cond $6000 obo. me
494-3072, off 720-7259
'72 IMPALA One owner,
gOOd condition St 500 or
best offer. 968-2272
'75 Monza Vry rel .. run1
good,$1000. 960-0402
'77 Monte Carlo, nu tires,
air, landau. tape deck.
38K ml. 11900 840-7882
SEE IS FlllSTI
We have a good Mlectlon
of NEW & uMd Cti.Y·
role11J S.. u1 today1
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
'.'\,,<I l.1 r I• or II 1 "I
' I~ I \,,I.'-\
546-1200
'73 Bug. llke new, orange Cla~ln t31S
4 -sp, AM/FM can. ·78i6wN 1 CNTRY WGN S27501obo. 851 -t571 13750. 844..a785
'7-4 BUG new eng, trans, "-.J 7 clutch. braket, xlnt cond . .,_,,
1st s2500 ca.ati takes "";""••e. ... •o·o""'3""'g-e-o"'a·y·to·n-•
548-2-4-48 Of 831-5000 Charger uturM pymnt
'74 Ghia, xlnt cond. $3500. of $218.31 No dwn
552· 1808 pymnt OAC. Call Chuek
979-3553 Agt. '74 VW, fire damage, rbl1 -, --------eng $700. 8'2-7449 81 Oodr Air ... 2 dr, red. • aunroo • a/c, w/w radlaJ.
'74 VW Statlort Wagon. lrg eng. • spd $4800
low mlltls. new paint, gd 760-9600
cond •. s 1500. 8•6-5088 r=.-,-=.-----=,=3.,.-,,1
·1s'Buo. nu bait. rbll eng. --=-=--=---·---$ 1500 551-4090 * '78 Granld1. nu tires,
'75 VW RABBIT • dr, r&-~ell malntal~ $2.00.
bullt lne S 1400 OBO 8 6" 7838 ' -A-~9205 *'8' Ford Tempo usume
,77 BUG CONVERT pymnta of $171.48 No cfWn pymnt OAC. Call Blue w/wtlt top, 43,000 ml. Ch~ 979-3553 Agl Great car -mu1t Miii
$5950 650-7777 '85 Muttang coupe, xlnt,
77 D.o"" /f t roe. car-$2995. 842-1234
• ""'"lll• new am m 1 er. ---------1Unroof. Wfect cond. '87 Country Squire Wgn
$3600/obo. 845-0332 Runs gOOd. $395/obo.
8•2·7511 '77 convert., wtll/wtll, orig. ---------Champ. edit. & owner. Lo '89 MUSTANG: 302, new
ml, A/C. t.tf'reo caea.. tires. 1 own«. I 1800.
16900. 840.9315 545-1097 10-noon Sat:
.77 Sdrroco. good body & •·5:30pm Sun-Fri
paint, reblt q & trans. '7• Tonno, exit eng, nu
nu tlrN Need• tome t1re1 S 1000 firm
wot1c. "12300. SST-1300. 8-42-9211 aft 6PM
Mort-Fri, 9·5 '78 T·Blfd. Loaded. $1500
'79 VW RABBIT, 2 dr, red, 850-8&97 Shlrley •
~1onms1·2;:;' .\~es:"· '78 Flelta. 4 IPd. alt. auper ....,"-"_,...,.-=...,...,.·..,.._~--cleln. S 1996. 831-3018
'81 4·dr Rabbit, nke new. "79 Pinto Imm-1 ....... Lo l'J'll AfC AM/FM · ..... ., ...... Abaol~lely ;.,u•t aeti must Ml~ 1 1900, Cun.
15000. 831· 1528 5;,8-6227 1dorable 540-5805 840-0811 e~nlngs Year atound '9ntll. gr .. t
tran SS BrunlWlck poo1 tbl, ll•t• deal for right a1ia. can
Otr hr1. I yr1. iihdi. :fiOW top, all equip, A 1 eond 860-30&4
(488~2) •·so 3201, a IPd. A/C
(5e5ZOL)
*'80 320!; 5 apd, SIR
(2AHF576)
*'80 5281. 5 apd, SIR
PBCV192)
~-------..:T::t .81 Rabbit dellel. • apd, 'llO Fairmont wgn, xlnt
a ir. atereo 13950. i;ond., 13800 5574389
quality '4000 obo Ev" &-450 Aftl eYeS 842-4480 Boat tllp for rent (fixed
s•o-2841. cfyl 842-9643 EJec1r1c 11ove 1op. Pttf =rJ~~~8/:1 Rea qtr horM. e y;,, fs cond s 100 540-1053
hd1 S1200/obo840·9418 King abed~ long Boat allp up to 30', Nwpt
&13 Hlfbor. mo to mo, 1180 Aatl n ,;~ 8~f.;= Frffrtr obo 720·0318 d•YI
Potter w not ----Sllp tor 3Q..3S' and drUHr 300 Megle ltland rMmbefthlp, Mllbo'1 Matnbe
846·828'5 Sa~rif!Ce below COit eJS.fftO y
---·~ 845--7634
~GES 11 -14
EARN lJ> TO $75.00 PER WEEK
1' 'llO 320!. 5 apd, SIR
(1CZXS42)
• '81 3201, 6 epd, S/R (002999)
Wt llO* llltt IS ~ tor you111 e4i«
bHvcrs lo ucure readfra for Tiit Orana• Coast
Oa111 Piiot Ow Uhl mrt et J 30 p m and
•• 11ntil 8·JO p 111 •dayi On Saturdrf w
...rt • "" m0<t IMNl'l You wil urn 1111111 btCIS
DOUGH BIN 1800 Ver• --•latlH IOn. rnont iclnt cond 12000 Magt<: latand Memberltllp 16
875-a754 · s 12001obo 716-7603 scFnn GO; 6Qh cruf..,,
• '8 1 3201, 5 apd, A/C
(1ARM892)
*'&1320li' IPdi. SIA (1DOU'Te:>)
•·111 320i, $~.SIA
W'll!!'..,.'""P' .... 'l""'I'_...,._, (785 t65)
• e 1 633<:el. ti.Ito. lo ml
(11PN784)
• and Pf•tes. llclf1 "'"' at""" 10Ur own 111oney . tlltrt 11 no def,..,.,. °' cohchon involftd tt J'Oll .,, lllttreslld P'fttt , .. Mt hrt
(714) 548-7058
Hand·Pllnted •creen Magjc 19'" Memw.fllp ll2&/obo t31..e215
room dl¥td« &3500 Cutrent /:itoe 13500, win lltttt llln iii
_ Rocky a4&.1eo<) _ .-ror 4;~fc:" Kathy, 1612 V@SPX P2& gru1
OAK ROLL TOP DESK c:ond Low ml W/ldr•
$500 876-1813 Mot)(Je '~· 6>'t· S 10001080 Gr•g ~.,.......,.---com. dlfec:t d . 2 hook 140-1336
Oak Mdebrd. !Mded gl ... , ups S3000 754~ -'"-T------
perlect. St700 133.ao_!! OtcHuh Hutc:tl 1160 Col· lltttrqtln[
SLOT MACHIN( MILLS 1ee1or Pla1• 5'1-40S8 Sn.ttn 1111
19<40, r.OVllt S 1400 obo -1613"' AOSRY if&& 5"18·195~ .... SELL ldl• II•"'• with • 5 mo old, vtlfYOOod cond il!~~~~~~~~~!"!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!~I Ha.,. •om•trt1no 10 ... ., Otlf)' Not Qaalned Ad. It 50 oeo 557-~ ;... Cl9Ulfted adt do It Wlfl 142·5171 ~Of SA 1·"369 o Yt
. ~ l t
* 82 521£; AU1o, I<**! (MM53)
*'13 320!; auto. 8/A
C1FMYe25)
•'83 320(, a lpd. atA
(002351)
•'13 '33ml: auto, to ml
(10RM010)
•·64 ~tll; $9')d, lo ml
(2A~X204}
Ul·l11 1
201 w. 'It. Me
C\OMd Sunday
1M taro-rm JU&; 631-301& Llactla eq'-~g•d Al new • i; tilliPIPoiiofioo .. •P"""!,..._.llijiii• 7 ; •. 7 & • 7 1 o { o, 81 Vanegon, 23.500 ml, 78 Matic V c.rtlet, am/fm,
·714-634-471 , tunroof, eml fm CHI, tape, CS, ltelher Int,
-pettect cond. 19500 many exlru t owner ~ 358C, cte.n tx>Oy, runa &48-.2762. "3-89t 1 58260 754-03-44
good, mult lell. 14900 Ot ----b.t o4'w. 6*-9070 '82 Vanegor\ c;;ttnptr, llk9 Collc1cn 8't1ea M•k v -nu, ~ ue.d, •t~. '1"'-.. xtre, mlnt __ .. '81 912 '4P tape dtek refflg .to Su~ AM/FM "• ·-' ''''""
a.harp oof\d •• P .P : Nw 'riret, 21k ml'. ~~,_._2'::~0burat
S49001obo 14().1293 113,300.133..()f)ll ~-· --
-r,:j 9118 TARGA Ulllf'lll'TllURI tr~
A/¢, Alpine GUI. new Pe, ~ Ed Dex Int 4 7JIQW mm
loo#*ed, benl, IMth«, dr 4,, wnJfmcau..35-+-S1200 ' 142-4Md" . ntW w.11*'91flp ,..,... I ' ~~-..... ,,.----,......,._ ~ faa1. idnt 11 UoO n\90. 41< ~ Of °===~~ ..... ~!!!! ot>o e.so-153A t>ec olr. PIP 1 ... •n m x:u:=
-Sdrocco ·75 ,.... pelnt. -"""''""'-~ 'U POf\SCHE 114 80,400 Int oond Muat MD lat pymntt of 1211.10. Ho
mi. ooo0 oond. '3250. ;2300 ~ 141-091l. ctwn pyrMt QAC. c.1
5'5-iOtO. M 17a.ot2l CM1 ~ 91'-3$U Ao1
·~=~--:;•~1 · t· l I Old• H Regelq ·11. ' iii • "' dOOf. !Oadld, ""'' cond 71k • X :.,WllQOfl. ::::' 188 6(. a dr, ""I dMI\, '2tU C•I 720-10.5' ·= a.t-~.,.. " N'ltUOf, •IC. Ol.upunltt, ~" ffB °"'*• 18500 7fSO.D5N __
'12_. X_. OLWgn, pwtpec, 17 lafie ·~·" c:ona . lo ml '6990 780-&2t1 11200 &44-4100
( •
HIGH 81 LOW45 COAST IDITIOI
M O NDA y JANUArn 1h 1'111 -1 OR AN GE COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 2~ CE:N TS
Coast
Talk about strange art.
This 'canvas' ls made up
of bullet holes.I A2
In a surprise operation,
San Clemente border pa-
trol agents nabbed 500
undocumented aliens.
/A3
Huntington Beach
columnis Bill Harvey
takes a personal Interest
in a heavy breather./ A8
Nation
President Reagan says
U.S. military bulldup is
aiding world peace by
making Kremlin wary./ AS
The Civil Rights Com-
mission says it will be
independent of the White
House./AS
California
LA county turned out for
a variety of celebrations
honoring slaln civil right s
leader Martin Luther
King./ AS ...
World
Authorities remained
puzzled about the alleged
kidnapping of a U.S.
soldier by an unknown
anti-nuke group.I A4
U.S., Soviet leaders meet
in Stockholm with hopes
to strengthen relations .
/A4
Features
Subtleties abound in the
home scenes created by
contemporary artists In
··Anxious Interiors" at the
Laguna Beach Museum
of Art.I A7.
If given a few hours of free
time with her husband,
one of every three mar-
ried women under 35
would rather make love
than do anything else./ A7
Sports
Vall. resting in the Colo-
rado Rockies, Is aver-
itable winter wonderland
for sklers./81
John Mahaffey wins a
thrilling two-hole sudden-
death playoff at the Bob
Hope Classic:/82
:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Entertainment
Two more stage pro-
ductions join the January
parade, bringing the total
to 11 along the Coast.I A8
Business
Bank of America fore-
casts an average 1984'
Increase of 5 percent in
the price of commodities.
/85 "
Financial columnist Syl-
vfa -Porter takes a look at
how tougher new chlld-
support laws will save us
money./85
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Crossword
Editorial Page
Entertainment
Horoscope
Intermission
Ann Landera
Movies
National News
Police Log
Public Notices
Sport a
State News
Or. Stelncrohn
Stock,Merkets
Televlslon
Theaters
Weather
World News
84
A3
BS
B8·10
810
A6
A8
89
A8
A8
A8
A4
A3
87-8
81·3
A4
A8
86
A8
A8
A2
A4
Teen arreSted in killing
By STEVE MARBLE
Of IN 0.-, l'tlot II.lift
Police caught a murder suspect
near the area of the sla_ying 1n
Newport Beach today following a 12-
hour search.
Brent Louis Vangsness, 18, was
arrested about noon today in connec-
tion with the stabbing murder of a 29-
Copters
flying
again
By CHRISTINE DECKER
Of .... 0.-, """' la.fl
Airspur Helicopters Inc. was flying
again this morning between John
Wayne and Los Angeles International
airports after being grounded since a
Nov. 6 crash injured six people and
resulted in suspension of the firm's
license.
Jack Briggs was one of the passen-
gers aboard the Airspur helicopter
when it crashed near Long Beach.
This morning he said he was giving
the craft another chance as he awaited
a 9:40 a.m. flight. "I have no fears. It's a more
convenient way to get to Los Angeles
than anything else available. I'm
lookin~ forward to it," said Briggs as
he sat 1n the 16-passcnaer helicopter.
Briggs, a product manager for
Raytheon, was heading to Los An·
geles and then on to Sacramento.
Li nda Mcintire. a stewardess for
United Airlines, was the only other
passenger on the 9:40 flight.
.. Ifs exciting. It's my first time in a
helicopter. I'll take anything that will
get me where I need to go faster," she
said.
Passenger service actually resumed
Sunday with eight flights after an
aggressive public relations and
advertising campaign aimed at re-
storing public confidence in the
airline and in its British-built helicop-
ters. Airspu.r had voluntarily
suspended their flight operations last
Nov. 7 after the crash in Long Beach
by one of the company's British-made
Westland W-30 helicopters which
had left Los Angeles and was headed
toward John Wayne Airport.
That incident was blamed on faulty
(Plea.e aee COPTERS/A2
year-old Newport Beach man, found
late Sunday in the hallway of a hillside
apartment complex.
Vangsness is suspected of fatally
stabbing Scott James McNaughton
and leaving him sprawled outside an ·
apartment at the Versailles. a large
apartment and condominium com·
plex at 240 Nice Lane.
.. -. . ~ .
.. ·
Police combed the neighborhood
near Hoag Hospital for the suspect
following the 11 p.m. attack. A team
of police dogs was brought in from
Huntington Beach to assist in the
effort.
Empl(,)yees at the condominium's
sales office found a man fitting
Vangsness description sleeping in a
o.llJ Not pfloto .,, Howercl Upln
Mlchelan&elo '•Pl eta defaced by :r:;y-painting vandal• at
Good Shepherd Cemetery in Hun ton Beach.
cjoset of one or the complex 's model
a~rtrnent. said S,L Steve Van Hom
of.the Newport Beach Police Depart-
ment.
"The called us but by the time we
got there he had left the model. I think
we found him by the gate. He is in jail
down here now," Van Hom 58id.
Following the late·night stabbing.
McNauabton was found alive bUt
seriously injured fiom scab wouo&:
The Newport Beach man WM
rushed to the Fountain Valley Com ..
munity Hospital trauma cen1er where
he died just after midnipn.
Newport Beach pohce Detective
Bob Worthen said he is unsure Whal
precipitated the vicious stabbina.
Vandals hit.
ceilletery
with graffiti
Damage to diocese
seen in thousands
By PIDL SNEIDERMAN
OfhDllllJNMIWf
Officials of the Roman Catholic
Diocese of Orange were asking the
public's help today in findini the
vandals who last week spray-pamted
swastikas and bizarTe slogans on
more than 40 marble crypts at Good
Shepherd Cemetery in Huntington
Beach.
Damage to the cemetery, owned by
the diocese, could total thousands of
dollars, church officials said.
"Extensive damage was done, and
we hope we can corral the people who
did it," sajd Paul Holley, a diocese
spokesman.
Holley said the vandalism was
done late Thursday or early Friday,
while the cemetery was closed for the
night.
A cemetery employee said the
vandals must have entered by scaling
a wall.
Black swastikas and obscenities
were spray-painted on mausoleum
walls and on a religious statue called
the Pict.a, which is a replica of
Mfohelangelo's sculpture of the dying
Christ in the arms of his mother,
Mary .
One church official characterized
the graffiti as "cultish m nature, very
far-out · stuff that seems to have
satanic connotations. Certainly it 1s
anti-Christian to say the least."
The walls and sidewalks in the U-
shaped mausoleum were covered by
the symbol of a crucifix crossed with
an invencd crucifix and slop.ns.
some with misspelled words,-such-al
.. Bibles full of Libles;· ··Sex Gana
Children •. " "Jesus Christ Ch~~
Priced" and "You give away the
you can't afford on bended knees and
pray to the Lord."
Black paint was sprayed on the
statue faces and the slogan, .. Chris-
tian Death•• was written in Gothic
script at the base.
Church officials are encourasing
anyone who may have witnessed the
vandalism or knows who was respon-
sible to call Huntingt<>n Beach police,
who a~ investigating the incident.
Officers said the cxtc.nt of damqc
was unusuaJ for Huntington Beach.
"We have malicious mischief incl·
dents in this community all the time,
but never to this degree," Capt. Mike
Burkcnfield.
He declined to speculate as to
whether the vandalism bad anything
to do with Friday the 13th. l{c said
officers found beer cans in the
vicinity of the damage.
Burkenfield said anyone with in-
formation concerning the incident
should contact Detective Charles
Nowotny at 536.5951.
Di~ officials said experts will
be enlisted this week to begin remov-
ing the spray paint.
..Damage to the marble crypts may
be extremely difficult to clean com-
pletely ... said George Briggs. director
of cemeteries for the diocese.
The cemetery, at Beach Boulevard
(Pleue eee CEMETERY/ A2)
Mondale top pick of OC Dems,
weekend straw poll vote shows
Jackson a strong
second; penny tax
for transit backed
From staff and wire reports
Orange County Democrats picked
former Vice President Walter Mon-
dale as their first choice for president
tn a weekend straw poll. The Rev.
Jesse Jackson made a surprisingly
strong showing. coming in second at
the Orange County Democratic Con-
vention in Santa Ana.
The convention, attended by more
than 560 Democrats. also backed a
proposed one-cent sales tax tncrease
to raise funds over a 15-year period
for transportation improvements.
The delegates backet1 the plan 56.5
percent to 43.5 percent. If approved
by county voters, the sales tax hike
would raise about $5 billion over 15
years to pay for such improveme.nts
as new freeways and highway im-
provements.
Of 393 votes cast tn the first of its
kind straw poll, Mondale polled l 51,
Jackson got 80.
California Sen. Alan Cranston,
who had led Mondale in local public
opinion polls of the last few months,
dropped to third. and Oh to Sen. John
Glenn was fourth in the vote among
Democrats in the traditionally con-
servative county, county Democratic
Chairman Howard Adler said Sun-
day.
Trailing tn order were Sen. Gary
Hart of Colorado, former Sen. George
(Pleue .ee MONDALE/ A2
Jailed County man
dies of coke overdose
By STEVE MARBLE
Of IM Delly Pflot ltaft '
A former prison immatc on parole
allegedly swallowed a fatal dose of
cocaine late Saturday in Laguna
Beach rather than be caught with the
drug and risk beine sent back to
prison. authonties said today.
Robert Michael Gregg, a 34-year-
old who had been living at a Garden
Grove halfway house, lapsed into a
coma during the bookinj process at
Orange County Jail at 10:51 p.m . -
nearly five hours after being ar:rested.
An autopsy performed Sunday
revealed that Gregg died from an
enormous dose of cocaine, estimated
lo be five times the amount used by
physicians for anesthetizing patients.
During the autopsy, coronor's
deputies also found a sheet of paper in
the man's digestive system that they
believe the drug had been wrapped in.
Laguna Beach police officers re-
ponedly had asked the man hours
before hjs death 1f he. had swallowed
something and offered to take him to
(Pleue 11ee OVERDOSE/ A2)
A real cliffhanger
La&una Beach lifeguard Mike Dwinell •lowly lowers
himself and 14-year-old Jason Baldwin down a •teep cliff
at the north end of the pri•ate Emerald Bay community
Sunday afternoon. Baldwin~ wu •tranded halfway up_.the
cliff for nearly two houn while re.cuen determtned the
be9t mean• to 1et hJm down.
fE Murder spree casts dark cloud over HB
......, .a After three murders in just nine from too much work and too little prevent murder .
....,. days, Huntington Beach homicide sleep. · "There JUSt 1s no control over
detective Sgt. Ed McErlain was near Just four months ago, Rob1ta11lc family, fac.c-to-faoc. behind<losed-
exhaustion from long hours of over-was basking 1n good news. A study STEVE doors, passion murders. There just
time. had singled out Huntington Beach as 1sn't," said the chief.
His boss -Police Chief Earle one of '\he IS safest cities 1n the "I don't think t~re·s a policeman
Robitaille -sensed the dark mood United States based on a ~r capita MARBLE around who with a straJ.&ht fa4tcould
and tried to break the gloom with crime rate. tell you the pohce can have an impact
some gallows humor. Huntinaton was the only city on the on those types of murders.
".Havt. you solved that murder entire West Coast named in the Fl&&ic ''Strttl killinp maybe, but noLibc
yet?" the chief asked when he spotted lntcmationaJ study which cumincd son we've bttn havms." ~added.
McErlain in the police parking lot last crime ft1u.ra from S,000 com· tn 1983. staUstics show t.bete were
this week. munities with populallons of at least pttvious year. four murdtn. One was a traffic
''Which one?" the tired detective 10,000 people. "A couple of weeks ago all the acx1dent that was counted as a
uked. The honor was bolstered most papen were calling up wanting to hom1c1de bcausc of the arcum·
"The one today." Robttaillc re-recently with the rcltas.e of the city's know why munkn WC"rt down in Mance of the mllhap.
plied. 1983 crime 1ndcA which showed a ~·&.3" said Jim Moore. the pohce The figurn.. however. do not lD·
Accordina to the chief, McErlain's decline in nearly every area. Murder department's crime analysL elude two unsolved, vtaous 5\abblaa
fact tiahtened and his eyes Wldcnt"d. was down SO percent. robbenes were "Now they're nil calhna back murdcn at Bolsa Cb1ca \ate Beach
The prosp«t of yet another murder down .O percent Out of etaht cnme askina why there arc so many." he which 1s withtn \he city limits but
was too much. catc ones. SIA had dechncd. added. patrolled b)· Orange County berift"i
But it was just a anm Joke, an But in the flrst nme <bys of the new Robit.a1lle while admuuna the dcpuun.
attempt to caSt" more than a week of year. there bad bten nearly as many 'tnn& of ktlhngs 1s st.anhng and So far tn 1984:
tragedy that h~d s_tunned a rommun1-slayin~ as there we~ in all of 1983 atyp1cal ofthc beach city, ia'd there ts · •A female postal ~ was
ty and left pohce 1nvcst1ptof' rtt11na and almost half the pumbef of the virtuall)· nothing a city can do to (PS-..e ._ MUaDD/Aa)
•
...
•
. -• '
A2 * * Orange Coatl DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 18, 1984
Joust a minute, fellows ...
You never know who you'll run into at
Fountain Valley'• Mlle Square Park on a
Sunday afternoon. The•e medieval
monaten are memben of the Orange
County chapter of the Society for Creative
Anachronl•m. who meet there every Sun-
day at 1 p .m . Underneath the armor, from
left, are Kelly Maldman, Zachary Smith,
John He..-y, Duane Tr~rill, Bob Mueller
and Richard Collin.
COPTERS FL YING TO LA AGAIN ...
From Al
design of the helicopter's tail rotor-
a defect that A1rspurofficials said has
now been ehm1nated. A new alann
sys1em has been built 1nto the
controls that dett"C'ts any irregulanty
1n the modified rotor.
<\1rspur has flown 25 passengers
since Sunday. The company flies
about a do2en flights per day out of
Orange County which takes only 18
minutes to get to Los .<\ngeles. Two
flights per day w1ll leave from
Futlenori Airpon.
"So fa r, there's a feeling of con·
fidence from our customers. They all
seemed pleased. They hke the fac·t
their luggage flies with lhem so they
don't have to go thro ugh baggage'
claim . We've been warmly received,"
said Maggie Garrell. director of
operations at John Wayne A.irpon.
''No helicopter has more passenger
space. Ifs a dream 10 fly. We've had
no problems whatsoever. It handles
grea1:· said Capt. Ted Wisc.
Atrspur board c·hairman John
Gallagher said safety concerns and
noise complaints had caused the li ne
10 make other changes, rout ing ns
flights over industrial rather than
residenti al areas and operating at
higher altitudes.
Gallagher has published a brochure
available at the ticket counter giving
his personal assurance that the proj)cr
corrccuve measures where taken to
ensure passenger safety.
··we haven't been flocxled with
calls, but we expect things to warm up
1n a couple of days-we're still trying
to get the word out that we're back, ..
said Airpsur reservation agent Beth
Murphy today. ''The public has been
supponive. People have called in and
have been very sympathetic, we're
very optimistic."
CEMETERY DEF ACED •..
From Al
and Talben Avenue. ts said to be
more than 70 year.; old . Briggs said
the diocese purchased 11 abou1 20
years ago.
Briggs said this degree of vandali sm
has not happened before at the
cemetery while owned by the diocese.
He noted. however, that large open
cemetery grounds arc difficult to
secure and may be an easy target for
vandals.
Church officials said additional
security measures may be initiated at
Good Shepherd but declined to
elaborate on these measures.
MONDALE BACKED IN COUNTY ..•
From AI
McGovern of South Dakota. Sen.
Ernest Hollings of Soulh Carolina
and former 1-londa Gov. Reulx'n
Askew. Cranston had 60 and Glenn
goi 50. Totals Wl're unavailable on the
others.
Jackson's strong sho0w1ng was the
surpri se ofihc da} at the first count~
convcnt1on straw poll conducted 1n
California.
"Make no mistake about 11. this is
an 1mprcsSl\C Vll'lory." said Jack-
son's county campaign vice chair-
man. Charles McHenry. ··we at-
tribute 11 to the 'rainbow' coming
together in Orange County."
Jackson refers to his "ra inbow
coalition" of suppon from min-
orities. women, seniors and others he
says have been lt'ft out of the poli11cal
process. ··we feel that the coal1uon 1s on the
move and growing and 11 was Tl'·
pesented by that clear n1essage scnl
from that convention today:· said
McHenry. adding that some delegates
who came comm111ed to other can-
didates defected to Jackson because
other campaigns were "losing steam"
in California.
Adler noted that of the 606 regis-
tered delegates al the convention,
only about 15 were black.
Adler also said Jackson. who is
black. may have cashed in on the
sent1n1ent surrounding Monday's
state holiday honoring slain civil
rights leader Dr_ Manin Luther King
fr.
OVERDOSE CLAIMS INMATE .•.
From Al
a hospital to have his stomach observation. to take a blood or unne lest. was
pumped. Authorilies said Gregg collapsed a mo\•ed to the county jail becAuse
Gregg "'as stopped and arrested on shon time later and was moved to officers were worried the city's
the 2200 block ofS. c·oast Highway in UC! Medical center at 11: 19 pm. He breathalizer was not functioning
Laguna Beach at 6 p.m. for suspicion was pronounced dead at 11 :5 1 p.m. properly and wanted sheriffs depu·
of drunken driving. Police said the Laguna Police Chief Neil Purcell 11es 10 conduct a test.
man·sspeech "'as "thick" like he had said offii:ers who stopped Gregg f somethin~ in his mouth. suspected the man might have some-The police chie said he has ordered
An 1niual brealhalizer tes1 revealed thing in his mouth and reponedly an internal investigation into the
the man was intoxicated. police asked him on three occasions if he handling of Gregg.
reponed. had swallowed something. "Bui 1hc preliminary indication,"
The man was transfered to the "At the s1ation one officer asked Purcell added. "is that there was no
county ja1l nearly three hours later. him again and told him it would only misconduct on our pan."
Sheriffs deputies said Gre~ began take a moment to go lo the hospital Records show that Gregg was
acting "very bizarre" during the and get his stomach pumped.'. said released from Lompoc federal prison
routine booking process. Medics were the pohcc chief. "He refused and 1n late November and had been living
Clearing~colder w ith some frost
Coa•tal
Extended
F.ir111•wit11~lntt._mldW.10
INCi ... l-... i... mid :io. and .a..
Temperatures
._ =--... .......
Ati.n1•
AtlenOc: C11y ..... ..., .....
~'" 20 ·12
lt 23
" " " " ,. " " " " " 31 35
Tides
Snow [ID
" " 25 II
17 IT
" " u " .. " .. u .. ~' " " " " " .. ,. " 15 .,.
22 ..01
" " 21 15
51 21 " ... .. _
8l•rnlngll•m
lllWMICI< ... " " ,. " " " 17 07
TODAY
'1tp m B !>3 pm
TIJISDA'f
1 21 Im
131 1.m
3.01 pm
133 pm
" ,, Surf report
-·~ ltown•~•i. .....
""llnglooi c-ChwtNlon.S.C
Cllw!Mlon,W V
~i..N.C.
" '" ,. " •5 .,
1• ·10
13 -02 ,. 11 .. " 28 25
" "
. ..
" Sutl 1911 IOO•t •t !>·Oe pm . ·-•• 8:54 a.m_ T\1Md1y ....0 Mii 11(1 ... II !>:09pm
Moon.-1od•y1t3 l~p m ,Mltll
$:14 I.Ill. T-a)I ....0 •-~II 4:1lp.m.
Jack Pleiffer diaplay1 bl• well·•hot picture of a Frontier 737.
....
'" •• ·-· • • ,_, ,_,
Airline'sartworkcreated
by a real 'big shot' artist
Frontie r e mployee 's
wa ll plaque has
1,286 bullet holes
By CHARLENE WHITEHEAD
OlllJ l"llOI C•• ; a nduol
Hangi ng on the wall in Frontier
Airli nes' O range County offices is a
piece of an that can best be described
as, well, unusual.
·For one thing, the "canvas" is
made of aluminum. Fo r another, the
outline of the subject of the painting
-a Boeing 737 jetli ner -was
created by bullets shot into the metal
at about tw<rinch intervals. That's
1.28~ bullet holes, if you want to be
p(C(:lse.
Tom Frye. an internationally
known professional exhibition
shooter, "sho t" this wall hanging
from a distance of about 15 feet. He is
listed in the O uiness Book of Records
for a 1959 feat in which he shot at
100,010 wooden blocks over 13 days.
missing only 6.
Frye. who died in late 1982, created
the Frontier plane an in 1980.
plunking_ away for two days at the
aluminum o utline on the Crow
Indian Reservation near Billings,
Mont.
Jackie Pfeiffer. a Frontier Ai rl ine
employee, who su~ested Frye create
1he anwork. said JUSt o ne misplaced
.ro und would have destroyed the
project.
• Prciffer says he paid around $450
for the original work.
When Preiffer was transferred from
Billings to Reno, to San Diego. and
eventually to Oran$e County, he
brought the bullet-nddled anwork
with him a nd hung it i11 the office.
He's made color • .prints of the
original and the first the limited series
was sent off to President Reagan.
Pfeiffer owns the last print.
Not surprisingly, it's No. 737.
' /' THIM08 called to transfer him to a faci lity finally said, 'Get off my back.'" at the Mybreak Transitional Center
where he could be placed under Purcell said Gregg. who'd refused 1n Garden Grove since then. ·----------------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~========= -~~~~~~~~~~~~~-, TOOO
\() I Ill '"
•
Take A Pilot to luneh
and win a luneh on us
The Dally Pil ot w!ll buy lunch for you and a friend up to $20. To win.
you 1us1 have to fill out this coupon and ma1t 111n to P1lol Lunch,
PO Box 1560 Cosla Mesa. Calltorn1a 92626.
A winner will be drawn weekly from entries received the previous
w eek Pictures of winners will appear 1n the Pilot
Winners may choose to have lunch at any o f our par1tc1pat1ng
restaurants. which include The Grinder. Zub1es, Hague's.
Spires A complete lie;! o f par11c1pat1ng restaurants is available to
winners.
1 ~t>P< •11.,.[!,1 ~~ ' 1"~1""'' 'T·'""0•il'Pl.lm•ht>Sat!'f'1t'"9't1tp N purctiase
"C<P~<,ary C ioon~ rnav t>P p.(.O.t>-:: •(· <1! Oa,1v f'•lul JJO WPS1 flay S1•pe1 CO!>!a Mt"WI
I COUPON I
I I I N;irnp Phone I
I I I Add1e ss I
I I I Where you bought I I your lunchllme Pilot ~ 1-
• • • •• ••• •• • • • • •• • • • •• • •• • •• • • • •••
I
• " • •
• .
It might be a little wet today r-----i. read the ... ,..
C--3 •• ,. """" ,-4. re1d the !"I• -Do rainyda1sand Mondays always
get you down .
While 1oday is definitely a Mon·
day. 1he Natio nal Weather Service
forecast a 20 percent chance of rain. as
well .
Today's high was expttted to reach
61 degrees, itslow.a c hilly 43degrccs.
Nevertheless, according to the Na-
Just
Call
642-6086
D~
•• a;;.~
..._Y"F-,. " ,.,.. oo
"01 P\1 .. '°"'' PIP9• by • .JD It ... Qllll Dli'ool ,,~
1111111 ,ou• eop, ,.11 D• -$11.,.do!J 11\0 Sundet H
~~-~ tional Weather Service, you can pul
away your raincoat and umbrella for
the rest of the week. Clearing tonight,
sunny skies and warmer weather art
predicted throuah Friday along the
Orange Coast
------6. Thi ....... -
.--1. -
Perhaps sunny days and Tuesdays
always cheer you up.
~'·-
What do you like about th e Daily Pilot? What don·1 you like? Call the
number at left an..t your me11aae wtll be recorded, tra.nttrlbed and deli vered
to t.be appropriate edllor.
The 1ame !4-.bour an1werln1 service may be nsed to record letter• to tlle
edllor on any topic. Contributors lo our Letter• column must lllclude lhelr
oame and tele~on• n•mber for vetlficallon. No ci rculation call1, please.
, Tell •s what'• on your mind.
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
H. L. lcllwena Ill
Pu-
ClrolilallcNI: 714floll.tllD
C' .............. ~
Al..._. drp& 1uo• ...art
llA»ll OF,ICI
330 Well ...,. SI Colli "'-. CA ...... ___. 9m "80, COl!ll IMll. CA t2tn
~ 11&3 a.-. c-"""*'*-eor,,....,, No n••• ttof-, !lh1tu111on1, 1d•t0<l11 m111 .. o• ...,, ...... ~ • ......, ""Y. ~ --tOtdll
-ol OOllT'ICllll -
,.,.. 00 '°°' •-ell.. rout
OlliCl1 "" 1 • "' Clll Dflot't
•O '"' -'°"' eor»Y ootl M-M ch&Zy 0owa11br Edl10f and Atsillan
to the Publisher
ROHmary Churchmen
ContrOhr -Ck'culeUon T...,.__
""'"" """' --.__ -...,._,,C.... --_ .. _ ........ vs...,. VOL. 17, NO, 11
'
. I
)
CDUIH 1011101
1\1 (l ND Al .I AN u Afl y 'h I I!\ l (IHA N ',f C.OUNT"f rAL IF OH N I A ;'.~fNT·.
Coast
Talk about strange art.
This ·canvas' Is made up
of bullet holes./ A2
In a surprise operation,
San Clemente border pa-
trol agents nabbed 500
undocumented aliens.
/A3
Huntington B.each
columnls Bill Harvey
takes a personal Interest
in a heavy breather .I AS
Nation
President Reagan says
U.S. military buildup Is
aiding world peace by
making Kremlin wary./ AS
The Civil Rights Com-
mission says It will be
Independent of the White
House./AS
California
LA county turned out for
a variety of celebrations
honoring slain civil rights
leader Martin Luther
King./ AS
World .
Authorities remained
puzzled about the alleged
kidnapping of a U.S.
soldier by an unknown
anti-nuke group./ A4
U.S., Soviet leaders meet
In Stockholm with hopes
to strengthen relations .
/A4
Features
Subtleties abound in the
home scenes created by
contemporary artists In
"Anxious Interiors" at the
Laguna Beach Museum
of Art./A7.
If given a few hours of free
time with her husband,
one of every three mar-
ried women under 35
would rather make love
than do anything else.I A7
Sports
Vail, resting In the Colo-
rado Rockies, ls aver-
itable winter wonderland
for skiers./81
John Mahaffey wins a
thrilling two-hole sudden-
death playoff at the Bob
Hope Classic.182
Entertainment
Two more stage pro-
ductions join the January
parade, bringing the total
to 11 along the Coast./ AB
Business
Bank of America fore-
casts an average 1984
Increase of 5 percent In
the price of commodities.
/85
Financial columnist Syl-
via Porter takes a look at
how fougher new chlld-
support laws will save us
money./85
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Crossword
Editorial Page
Entertainment
Horoscope
Intermission
Ann Landers
Movies
National News
Police LQQ
Public Notloes
Sports
State News
Or. StetncroM
Stook Marketa
Tele\ll1lon
Theaters
Weather
World New•
•
84
A3
B5
88-10
010
A6
A8
89
A8 A8
A8
A4
A3
87-8
81-3
A4
A8
86
A8
A8
A2
A4
--'·
Teen ·sought in 'laying
/
By STEVE MARBLE
Of Ille.,.., ,.... .....
An 18-year-old man was being
hunted today in connection with the
stabbing murder of a 29-year-old
Newport Beach man, found late
Sunday in the hallway of a hillside
apa'rtment complex.
Brent Louis Vangsness. 18. is
Copters
flying
again
By CHRISTINE DECKER
Of the Dlllf Not at.ft
Airspur Helicopters Inc. was flying
again this morning between John
Wayne and Los Angeles International
airports after bring grounded since a
Nov. 6 crash injured six people and
resulted in suspension of the firm's
license.
Jack Briggs was ohe of the passen-
gers aboard the Airspur helicopter
when it crashed near Long Beach.
This mominl he said he was giving
the craft another chance as he awaited
a 9:40 a.m. flight.
"I have nQ. fears. It's a more
convenient way to get to Los Angeles
than anything else available. rm
lookin~ forward to it." said Briggs as
he sat an the I 6-pas~nger helicopter.
Briggs, a product manager for
Raytheon, was heading to Los An-
geles and then on to Sacramento.
Linda Mclntlrc, a stewardess for
U nited Airlines, was the only other
passenger on the 9:40 flight.
"It's exciting. It's my first time in a
helicopter. ru take anything that will
get me where I need to go faster," she
said.
Pas.senger service actually resumed
Sunday with eight flights after an
aggressive public relations and
advertising campaign aimed at re-
storing public confidence in the
airline and in its British-built helicop-
ters. Airspur had voluntarily
suspended their flight operations last
Nov. 7 after the crash in Long Beach
by one of the company's British-made
Westland W-30 helicopters which
had left Los Angeles and was headed
toward John Wayne Airport.
That incident was blamed on faulty
(Pleue eee COPTERS/ A2
suspected of fatally stabbinJ Scott
James McNaughton and leaving him
sprawled outside an apanment at the
Versailles, a large apanment and
condominium complex at 240 Nice lane.
Police combed the neighborhood
near Hoag Hospital for ·the suspect
following the It p.m. attack. A team
of police dogs was brought in from
Huntington Beach to assist in the
effort. The unsuccessful search was
halted in the pre-dawn hours today.
McNaughton was alive but
seriously injured from numerous stab
wounds when paramedics were called
to the apartments.
The Newport Beach man was
.,.., ,... pMto.., ltow-.1 Upln
Michelangelo'• Pleta defaced by •pray-painting vandal• at
Good Shepherd Cemetery In Hundngton Beach.
Mondale top pick of OC Dems,
•
weeken~ straw poll vote shows
Jackson a strong
second; penny tax
for transit backed
From staff and wire reports
Orange County Democrats picked
former Vice President Walter Mon-
dale as their first choice for president
in a weekend straw poll. The Rev.
Jesse Jackson made a surprisingly
strong showing, coming in second at
the Orange County Democratic Con-
vention in Santa Ana.
The convention, attended by more
than 560 Democrats. also backed a
proposed one-cent sales tax increase
to raise funds over a 15-year period
for transportation improvements.
The delegates backed the plan 56.5
percent to 43.5 percent. If approved
by county voters. the sales tax hike
would raise about SS billion over 15
years to pay for s\!ch improvements
as new freeways and highway im-
provements.
Of393 votes cast in the first of its
kind straw poll, Mondale polled 151.
Jackson got 80.
California Sen. Alan Cranston.
who had led Mondale iii local public
opinion polls of the last few months,
dropped to third. and Ohio Sen. John
Glenn was fourth in the vote among
Democrats in the traditionally con-
servative county. county Democratic
Chairman Howard Adler said Sun-
day.
Trailing in order were Sen. Gary
HartofColorado, former Sen. George
(Pleue eee MONDALE/ A2
Jailed County man
dies of coke overdose
By STEVE MARBLE
Ofltleo.IJ"9tlhlll
A former prison immate out on
parole allegedly swallowed a f?t~I
dose of cocaine late Saturday in
Laguna Beach rather than be caught
with the drug and risk being sent back
to prison. authorities said today.
Robert Michael Gregg, a 34-year-
old who had been living at a Garden
Grove halfway house, lapsed into a
coma during the bookil\j process at
Orange County Jail at 10:51 p.m. -
nearly five hours after being arrested.
An autopsy performed Sunda;,
revealed that Gregg died from an
enormous dose of cocaine, estimated
to be five times amount used by
physicians for anesthetizing patients
During the autopsy, coronor"s
deputies also found a sheet of paper 10
the man's digestive system that they
believethedrughad been wrapped in.
Gregg was stopped and arrested 1n
Laguna Beach at~ p.m. for suspicion
of drunken driving. The man was
(Pleue 11ee OVERDOSE/ A2)
rushed to the fo"Untain VaJley Com-
munityHospitaJ trauma center where
he died just after midnight.
Vangsness, listed as a Santa Ana
resident, apparently had stayed with
McNaughton and other friends at the
apanment complex in the past. Police
said the two men were seen toaetber
SundJu' afternoon.
Newport Beaeb pohce Detective
Bob Worthen saiJ he is unJwe what
prccipiuted the vicious aabbana.
which was reponed to authorities by
an apartment resJdent.
The waoted man was described by
officers as havtns brown hair and
eyes, standing S feet, S inche5 tall and
weighing about 165 pounds.
Swastikas
scrawled on
HB cemetery
Diocese asks help
in finding vandals
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
OftlwDel!W .........
Officials of the Roman Catholic
Diocese of Orange were asking the
public's help today in findine the
vandals who last week spray-painted
swastikas and bizarre slogans o n
more than 40 marble crypts at Good
Shepherd Cemetery in Huntington
Beach.
Damage to the cemetery, ownctl by
the diocese, could total thousands of
dollars, church officials said.
"Extensive damage was done, and
we hope we can corral the people who
did it." said Paul Holley, a diocese
spokesman.
Holley said the vandalism was
done late Thursday or early Friday,
while the cemetery was closed for the
night.
A cemetery employee said the
vandals must have entered by scaling
a wall.
Black swastikas and obscenities
were spray-painted on mausoleum
walls and on a religious statue called
the Pieta, which is a replica of
Michelangelo's sculpture of the dying
Christ in the arms of his mother,
Mary.
One church official characterized
the graffiti as "cultish in nature. very
far-out stuff that seems to have
satanic connotations. Certainly 1t is
anti-Christian to say the least.··
The walls and sidewalks in the U-
shaped mausoleum were covered by
the symbol of a crucifix crossed with
an inverted crucifix and slogans.
some with misspelled word&. such as
.. Bibles full of Libles," "Sex Gang
Children," "Jesus Christ Checply
Priced" and "You give away the cash
you can't afTord on bended knees and
pray to the Lord."
Black paint was sprayed oo the
statue faces and the slogan ... Chri1-
tian Death., was written in Gothic
script at the base.
Church officials are encouragina
anyone who may have witnessed the
vandalism or knows who was respon-
sible to call Huntington Beach police,
who are investigating the incidcnL
Officers said the eictent of damage
was unusual for Huntington Beach.
.. We have malicious mischief inci-
dents in this community all the time,
but never to this degree," Capt. Mike
Burkenfield. ·
He declined to speculate as to
whether the vandalism had anything
to do with Fridab!.c 13th. He said_
officers found cans in the
vicinity of the damage.
Burkenfield said anyone with in-
formation concerning the incident
should contact Detective Cbarle5
Nowotny at 536-5951.
Diocese officials said experts will
be enlisted this week to begin remov-
ing the spray paint.
"Damage to the marble crypts may
be extremely difficult to clean com-
pletely ... said GC9rge Briggs. director
of cemeteries for the diocese .
The cemetery, at Beach Boulevard
(P~eue eee CEMETERY I A2)
Del!W ... ,......, ............ A real cliffhanger ,
-Laguna Beach Ufepard Mike Dwinell alowly lowers
blmaelf and 14-year-old Juon Baldwin down a ateep cliff
at the north end of the private Emerald Bay commun.lty
Sunday afternoon. Baldwin, wu atnn4ed h•=fu ap the
cliff for nearly two houra while reK11en det eel the
beat mean• to get him down.
Murder spree casts dark cloud over HB
After three murders in just nine
days, Huntfogton Beach homicide
detective SJt Ed McErlain was near
exhaustion from Iona hours of over-
time.
His boss -Poli~ Chief Earle
Robitaille -sensed tbc dark mood
and tried to break the gloom with
some pllows humor.
-.. Have you solved that murdtt
yetr' th~ ~hJef ask~ when ~e spotted
McErlaan tn the pohce parking lot last
this week.
"Which one?" the tired detec\ive
asked.
"'The one today," Robitaille re·
plied.
Aocordina to the chief', McErlain's
face tiahtencd and his eyes widened.
The prospect of yet another murder
was too much.
But it was ju t a anm Joke. an at!~l to case more than a week of
tr y that had stunned i commun1·
ty and left police invcstiptors rcclina
from too much work and too little ~~~ .
Just four months ago. Robitaille
was baslclna in good news. A study
had singled out Huntington Beach as
one of the IS safest cities tn the
United Siates bescd on a per rep1ta
crime rate.
Huntinaton was the onl)' c1ty on the
en ti.re West Coat named1n-the fijgie •
lntemationa1 study which e.umincd crime fiaurcs from S,000 oom-
munities with Populations of at le.a.st
t 0,000 people.
The honor was bolstered most
n:ccnlly with the release of the city's
1983 crime 1ndcx wh•ch showed a
decline in nearly every area. Murder
was down SO pctttnt. robbencs were
down 30 percent. Out of eight rnme
c;ateJ<>ries, sut had declined.
But in the first nine days of the new
year, there had been nearly as many
slayina,s s there were in all of l 9U
and armost half the numhn' of th(
I
STEVE
MARBLE
Fo cu s ON THE NEw s
prcv1ous year.
"A couple of weeb aao all the
papen were calling up want1na to
know why murdc~ were down an
'83," said Jim Moore. the poltct
dc~rtmcnt's rnme analy t
'Now they're all callina back
askina why there a.re ~ man)," he
added
Robitaille. while dmmina the
stnna of killinp is startling and
atyplcal of the be3ch Clty, ld thtre 1
vtrtually noth1na a cit)' c-an do to
I
prtvent murder.
"There just 1s no control over
famtly. fac('-to-facc, lxbind-clo5Cd-
doors., passion murden. There JUSt
isn't," sa_1d the chief.
"I don't think there's a policeman
around who wnh a sttaig.bt ~ oouJd
tell you the poh~ can have an 1mP9(:t
on those types of murders.·
"Sttttt ltiltinp maybe. but not the
son we've been 'bav1na." be added.
l n I 983, s1allsl1ct show there wtft
four murder5. One was a traffic
accident that was counted as a
homiC1de bet~u~ of the circum-
stances of the mtshap.
The fiaures. ho..,ever. do not tn-
t'lude two un'°1ved. v1Qous st.a= murders at Boba Chica Sta.le
which 1s within the city hmi bui
patrolled b) Ora.nae County cn(fa
deputies..
So farin 19 4.
•..4. female postal camrr was
(Pla.M ... llU'aDal/Aa)
' .
1 ___ ._.· l •
A2 * Orang41 Cou1 DAILY PILOT/Monday, January 19, 1084
Joust a minute, fellows ...
You never know who you'll run into at
Fountain Valley'• Mlle Square Park on a
Sunday afternoon.. The•e medle•al
mon•ten are memben of the Oran&e
County chapter of the Society for Creative
Anachronl•m. who meet there e•ery Sun-
day at 1 p.m . Underneath the armor, from
left, are Kelly Maid.man, Zachary Smith,
John Bevy, Duane Trevt.11, Bob Mueller
and Richard Collin.
COPTERS FL YING TO LA .t\GAIN ...
From Al
design of the helicopter's tail rotor -
a defect that Airspur officials said has
now been eliminated. A new alarm
system has been built 1n10 the
controls that detects any 1rregulan1y
10 the modified rotor.
Airspur has !lawn 25 passengers
since Sunday. The company flies
about a dozen fl ights per day out of
Orange County which t.akcs o nly 18
minutes 10 gel to Los Angeles. Two
flights per day will leave from
Full enon Airpon.
"So far. there's a feeling of con-
fidence from our customers. They all
seemed pleased. They like the fact
their luggage flies with them so they
don't have to go through baggage
claim. We've been warmly received,''
said Maggie Garrett. director of
operations at John Wayne Airport.
"No helicopter has n1ore passenger
space. It's a dream to fly. We've had
no problen1s whatsoever. It handles
gre;.it ," said Capt. Ted Wisc.·.
A1rspur board Chairman John
Gallagher said safc1y concerns "and
noise complaints had caused the hne
to n1ake other changes. routing its
fl1gh 1s uver industrial rather than
residential areas and opcra11ng at
higher altitudes.
Gallagher has published a brochure
available at the ticket counler gJ v1ng
his personal assurance that the proper
correcuve measures where taken to
ensure passenger safety.
"We haven't been flooded with
r:al ls, but we expect things 10 warm up
1n a coupl e of days-we 're still trying
to get the word out that we 're back."
said Airpsur reservation agent Beth
Murphy today. "The public has been
suppon1ve. People have called in and
have been very sympathetic. we're
very opt1m1stic."
CEMETERY DEF ACED ..•
From Al
and Talben Avenue, JS said to be
more than 70 years old. Briggs said
the diocese purchased 11 .about 20
years ago.
Briggs said this degree of vandalism
has not happened before at 1he
cemetery while owned b} the diocese.
He noted. however. lhal large open
cemetery grounds arc difficult to
secure and may be an easy target for
va ndals.
Ch urch officials said additional
security measures may be initiated at
Good Shepherd but declined to
elaborate on these measures.
MONDALE BACKED IN COUNTY ...
I
From Al
McGovc:rn of South Dakota, Sen.
Ernest Hollings of Sou1h Carolina
and former Florida Gov. Reuben
SALARIES •••
1FromP-ceA1
fsu~ ... , the highly educated
• ob
\
women in a bi&h-incomc professional
J The leCOnd it the .. underachieving
-.id syndrome." when: lbe hll5·
band. NmS less because of retimnent. P• lay.off or simply lack of 1n'it:W1Ye.
Biaaclri s&id that the two
polli.bilitjes are ,not neceQl.J'ily op-
pmiJa, u ~-pe:r-acbievina.~ft
may wry wdl bavt> demora!Wna
-oD. husbond;.nd ln Wider· ~ llusband may qui'" I'll& ib.l~)K'ovidetbeinct.otive fOr a Wlfe to
Aske". Cranston had 60 and Glenn
got 50. Totals were unavailable on the
others.
enter the labor force and ruscover
ta.lc:nu sht otherwise would not have -
discovered ...
Women who ou\tam their hut-
bands do tend'° have above averaae
educations and to hold higher 1tatus
jobs m,.1 women wbo cam Jw than
their husbands. the report says.
In couples where both earned
income, but the wire had hi&her ea:rn1i1ss, more than: ·h.alf wue c;l.$6
where the hlltband worked less than
full time, of\en because of layoff or
job lost. the uudv .Wd.
Jackson's strong showing was the
surprise of1he day al the first county
convention straw poll conduc1ed 1n
California.
"Make no mistake about 11, this as
an 1mpress1 \'C victory," said Jack-
~o n·s county campa ign vice cha ir-
man, f'harles McHenry "We at-
1rihu1e 11 10 lh c 'rainbow' coming
together 1n <Jrange Count~ ...
Jackson refers to his .. ra1nbow
coal1t1on" of suppart from m1n-
on1Lcs. wo men, ~n1ors and o thers he
sa~s have been lefl oul of the political
process. ·· ··we feel that the coal1 11on is on the
move and growing and 11 was re-
pcscnted by 1hat clear message sent
from that convention today," said
McHen ry. adding that some delegates
who ca111r committed to other can-
didates defected to Jackson because
other campaigns were ··1os1ng stean1"
1n ( ahforn1a.
OVERDOSE CLAIMS INMATE ...
From Al
transfered 10 the count) Jail nearl} Au1hont1es said Liregg collapsed a thrCt' occasions 1f he had swallowed
three hours later r.hon 11me later and was moved tu something.
Sheri rfs deputies said Gre~ began UC'! Medical cen ter at I l: I 9 pm. J-le ··At the c;;1at1on one officer asked
<icti ng ··very bizarre.. dunng the _was pronounced dead at I J :51 p.n1 . him again and told h1n1 1\ would onl y
rout1nebook1nsprocess. Mcd1cs ~·crr Laguna Police L h1{·f Neil Purcell take a mon1en110 go to the hospi1al
called to transfer him to a fac1lll) \aid officer~ who ~tOpfX'.d (lregg and get hi s stomach pumped." said
whe"e he coulc,l be placed under suspected the man might have some-1hc police chief. ··He refused and
Cl earing, colder with some frost
Extended
Fllli .i.1MW1lti i'llgl'lllfl IN""" S0.10
Mid 8'i. LOW9 "' IN moo 309 -.0.
=:: -~.I C -,_,,w"" -__ ,..._
O.non
"""" llP-
,. .. ti.n0-1 .... ---·-_, -" ...... H-1on
lnd1anapoll1 _ _,,Ml .. , __ -KWMM CHy
l M Veg.M,
~ ...... , .. _ ,_
'"--Nonfl "'-n11 """'-""' ......
~~~~~~~~~~-.... ~ ..........
Pt'1Nlp ....
Temperatures
'-IDWll"
Al~--· .. -... ........
.-.11 ... 11
Allllnloc Cny
"'"''"" 81111 ....... 11 .. .,,.
~•~ngll11m
BltomatCll
.. M•
-~ ·-.,, ..
8urNnqlon
8=.1on,SC
CNrllle•on. w v
Cfiarloltll,N C
~" 20 .12
)'i 23 ,. " 33 25
" " " " " " 30 3~
" " 28 18
" " 11 01
20 14
28 11 •I 13
11 ·10
13 -02
18 11 .. " 21 21
" "
Mllw-..
Ml)lt-81 Paul ·--_.,....
-'~ -Tides
-· PMltbulgh
POtllw>lf.Mll.
Poni.na.o... .. __, :::::rc., ...
Porti.wi,Mll "°'111111d,Or1 .. _
TOOAY
2 19p m
8 110 m
,,-
" TUIM>AY
I 2111 m
13Q 11 m
3 01 pm
0 33p m
, , Surf report
" . " " s..n Ml1 lod•y 111 I 08 p"' ·-11
I $41 11.m T...-.d1y --• oOA1n Ill I 08 p.m
Moon-1od11y1111~pm ,..i1111
S.111.m 1-•Y -,_ 1(1911'111
•· 10 p,m
LOC:ATIOM
H...-ionc11on 9Mcll
AJ.....-tty.~
40lll 8 1 ' N9wpol1 22....,•1 .~1 -w-,.,... ..... '"",_ Wllltf Tlll'l'IP:IHI
Jack P!elffer dlaplay• hi• well-•hot picture of a Frontier 737.
.... ••• ••• •• ' ' ,_, ,_,
Snowc;J
32 23
21 11
87 17 " " .. " .. " " .. " ~· " " " " ,, " 21 22 11 .••
22 ~I " " 21 ti
11 21 " ...
c-'*--'* --'* ... s-dlfctJon. -1
Airline's artwork created
by a real 'big shot' artist
Frontier employee's
wall plaque has
1,286 bullet holes
By CHARLENE WHITEHEAD
Ollty,...,,. Cllftttp I ..,,,
Hanging on the wall 10 Frontier
Airlines' Orange County offices is a
piece of art that can best be described
as, well, unusual.
For one thi ng. the ··canvas" is
made of aluminum. For another. 1he
outline of the subject of the painting
-a Boei ng 737 je1hner -was
created by bullets shot into the metal
al about two-inch in tervals. That's
1.286 bulle1 holes. if you want to be
precise.
Tom Frye, a n interna1ionally
known professional cxhibi1ion
shooter. ··sho1" 1his wall hanging
fro m a distance of about 15 feet. He is
li sted Jn the Guiness Book of Records
fo r a 1959 feat in which he shot at
100.010 wooden block s over 13 days.-
missi ng only 6.
Frye, who died in late 1982. created
the Frontier plane an in 1980.
plunking away for two days at the
aluminum outline on the Crow
Indian Reservation near Bi llings,
Mont.
Jackie Pfeiffer. a Frontier Airline
employee, who su~ested Frye create
the artwork, said JUSt one misplaced
r'ound would have destroyed the
project.
Pfeiffer says he paid around S4 50
for the original work.
WhCn Pfeiffer was transferred from
Billings to Reno, to San Diego, and
eventually to Oran$e Counly, he
brought the bulle1-nddled anwork
with him and hung it in lhc office.
He's made color prints of the
original and the first the limited series
was se nt off to President Reagan.
Pfeiffer owns the last print.
Nol surprisingl y. it's No. 737.
'\
THING&
10•b~se~cv~a~1~10~"~·-__________ 1h_'"~•~•-n_h_•_s _m_o_,_1_h_a_n~d_a~s~k~<~d_h~1~m~n~n __ fi_1n_a_ll~y_saJd. 'Get otT my back_:_·_·~--, ·----------------------------v-TODD
-fftlt• --
•
Take A. Pilot to lunch
and win a lunch on us
The Daily Pilot will buy lunch lor you and a friend up to $20 To win.
iDU JUSI have 10 1111out 1h1s c o up o n and ma1l 1t in to P ilo t Lunch.
P O Bo x t 560 Costa Mesa. Cal1 l orrna 9 2626
A ..v1n nt-r -N ill be ljraw n w eekly Irani ent ries received the p revious
Wr:!ek Pictures of w 1nners w dl appe ar 1n the P ilo t.
W 1nney,)n1ay c h oose 10 have lunch at a ny o l our part1c1pa1tng
'r es1~uran1s. which 1r1cl ude The Grind e r. Zub1es. Hogue·s.
Spires A c o mplete l1c;1 o f part1c1pa t1ng r est~ura nt s is available to
w inners
! ,•·• 1"• I II '!'""''' ,_ ·f.<)'fl'p lfl m1!·(",i1•P11'P••Q•1 11' fl0f)lll(r\ii~
,,............,.,, ''"'1,..,...---n~tirt'•t ~"f..,1 i1rJa 1yi:> ,1 )JQ \\IP<;.1 Bav~11ttt Cv<,t.J Mes11
I COU PON I
I I I Nrtrne Phone I
I I I Addres. ___ I
I Where you bou ht I I your lunchtime ~1to1 . __ I
------------------------------~-· --
' '·
It might be a little wet today
Do ra in y da.f's and Monday!lalways
get you down .
While 1oda)' 1s defin11el y a Mon-
dav. the Nauonal Weather Service
fofccast a 20 percent chance of rain, as
well.
Today's high was e~pccted to reach
61 degrees, i1s low. a chilly 43 degrees.
Nevcnheless. according to the Na-
1ional Weather Scrv ict , you can put
away your raincoat and umbrella for
the rest of the week. Clearing tonight.
sunny sk1C1 and warmer weather are
predicted through Friday along the
Orange Coast.
Perhaps sunny days and Tue~ays
always cheer you up.
2.1114 1111"~-
3. wat• pbnh -~ -
-4. , ••• \ttl ~--
I-s.~--
i . Tho ...... --
_1. __
a '· -
\.
Just
Call
642-6086
What do you like about the Dally Piiot? What don'I you 1111.c? Call lbe
numbt r at left and your me111gt Wiii bt recorded, tran1crlbed and dcllvertd
to the 1pproprl11c editor.
o:!2.~;"
te OU81.m..d
MorQ9y J ·~ II I'°" 00
<'141 1'111vt '°"" .PlllH< Dy 5 l0p m Clll bllol11fpm
1"11 ,11u1 C:llPY ••U Dt -. ..
91!~•11•, '"" Su.,1111¥ II
you <10 NII lllCll1¥11 '°"' CCIII' by 7 II "' CM DlllO<t
10 11 m """t<NOOPY ...
~-..
Ctrcua.uon
T...,hoo• -"'-"""" -----
, '
Tltc tame Z4·bour an1wcrlag 1ervlcc may be u1cd to record lctttr1 to the
editor oa aay topic. Contrlb11ort to our Letlcr1 column mu1t Include tbelr
name and telepllone number for vetlflc•llon. No t frculatlon call1, plea1e.
. Tell u.1 wllat's oo yo u.r mind.
ORANGE COAST Clreuletloft 1MIMl"4111
Daily Pilat Cl1rttfted.._... .. ,~ Ml ..... ....,., ..............
hoA1'1-omcl --
H. L. lchw-Ill
»II W... a.y &I . COii• ""-· CA Moo! .. _ Boo IMO, COii• ........ CA tM29
Pu-Copyolf'll • .., °' ..... cc.ti ~ COITIPMJ Ho ,, ••• "Ollllt m~tl!l!la,, •• td•IO• 111 1!111111 • Of
.,...1-41 IW .. ""'' °' ~ Mlf'>Ol.ll tOllClltl
Clll'-114 c...,..,,. -
Chazy Dow•ll~ ROHmary Churchman Ille.,,.. '*" '"*"" plllcl 11• Cm!• ....... ~ EdttOI' end ANltlen Conootl9f t"9 •••«IOI ~ by c.r .... "" '' ~
10 11\e Publlahef "' ...... ti Ml _....,, • ..,..,,,c... "" Or_Mp c-CIMir' ""'°'· """ --• ~ .. ,.._.,,......•~Dy IN Of ... CG9lt ~ -~ f1"0 .... :.e::: =i.: ·-·::i.:... .... -• -';Ill .,..., ,. ,,. ~ ~ ptlrll ... w.-tr!' l ti• ,. 0 !kl• IMO, C.111 ..... o.iom.
QteftlA,.....,. .......... _ ""' --"""""" VOL. n , HO . 11 ...... -' --
/ • .. . -·.-. --
Winter wori.derland.
Beaver Creek,
Vail: 'There·s
no comparison·--
VAIL. Cola. -Approx~mately 95
miles west ofDenveron Interstate 70.
nestled among Colorado's fam ous
Rockies. lie a pair of mountains
which one brochure emphatically
publicizes: "Anyway you look at it.
there's no comparison.''
In this case. the brochure tells the
truth.
With all due respect to Sun Valle~
in Idaho. Taos in New Mexico and
Aspen to the north, places with
undaunted reputations but ones.
admittedly, I haven't visited yet. it's
still hard to conceive there's a better
skier's winter wonderland than Vail
and Beaver Creek.
Although the two mountains arc
not adjoining, they are less than eight
miles apart and do work in conjuc-
tion.
Beaver Creek. beginning its founh
season, is the newer of the two and 1s
trying to build a reputation of
exclusiveness -which makes for
good points and bad.
The slope currently contains 37
runs and eight lifts with seven
additional lifts expected to be added
once completed ( 1985 is the targei
date). Beaver Creek also has the
capabilities to make snow, although
when I skied there (over the New
\'ear's Holiday) that certainly wasn't
necessary as more than 21 4 inches of
the white stuff, a record for that time
of year. had fallen.
The mountain itself. with a top
elevation of 11,440 feet and a vertical
drop of 3,340 feet, has enough
vanable runs to challenge any level
skier although, as a complete com-
plex, 11 stall has a Iona way to ao.
One drawback is since it is still a
develo~ing dl\OUntain and not as
expans1ve uh will be, you can cover
the terrain and act tired oft.he stope
rather quickly. ·
Another 1s getting to aod from the
resort. Because of it's exclusive
image, Beaver Creek. will not allow
visitors up the mountain and into the
village by car. Instead, you have to
park at its base and get bused to
Village Hall, which is your final
destination.
This caused a number of problems
when I visited as Beaver Creek
officials were simply not equipped to
handle the throng (there were 5,200
people on New Year's Eve as opposed
to 12,800 at Vail the same day).
Lines were long and busses slow in
gettin$ up the hill and there was no
organization getting down. Granted,
it was an unexpectedly heavy day,
their busiest of the season in fact, but
matters could have run smoother.
Transpon.ation bassels aside, it's
still worth a one-<iay visit. ~
As for those who might venture
there, the best way to get to the top of
the mountain and avoid any lift lines
is via chair 12. not chair 6.
Despite the crowded conditions,
\
here was absolutely no wait at chair
2, while patrons spent an average of
I 0-to-15 minutes at chairs 6 an'd I.
Vail, of course, is an entirely
different story in itself.
The mountain is so large that it
houses two villages -Vail Village at
the east end and Lionshead at the
west. There are 18 lifts, more than
1,750 acres of skiing terrain, and if
former President Gerald Ford can ski
nere, anybody can.
Fonunately, I caught Vail when the
turnout was light, making for ideal
condi1ions as there were no lift lines
and the constantly groomed slopes
JOHI
SEVAIO
SKIING
stayed well manicured,
If there was a flaw to this mountain;
I didn't find it. And yes, you can ski
here for an entire week and probably
never use the same run twice. if you
include the mountain's back bowls.
Officials here say the average lift
line is apP.roximately 15 minutes on a
"nonnal ·day, with capacity at about
17,000 skiers (although it rarely goes
over 12,000).
A couple of tips if you plan to ski
here, takes chairs 8 (at Lionshcad) or
1 (at Vail Village) and maneuver
yourself around the mountain rather
than using the gondolas, where the
lines aren't worth the wait.
Also, for less crowded conditions,
move yourself east-to-west across the
mountain. Finally, if you get an
opportunity, ski one of Vail's three
back bowls, which arc among the best
1 n the country for deep powder skiing.
Lift tickets, incidentally, run $22 at
each resort and are interchanaable.
And, don't get the wrong im-
pression. a venture here will be an
expensive outing. I ran into one
gentleman who was visiting with his
family of five (although his wife
didn't ski) from North Carolina and
he estimated the trip would cost him
$10,000.
Hotel rooms during what is con-
sidered the "peak period" (end of
December through January) range
(Pleue 11ee V AIL/82)
Raiden' Jim Plunkett and the Redskin•'
Joe Thelamann are no atranaera to Super
"'~ Bowl competition. Plunkett waa ln XV,
Thelamann ln XVII. Both were winners.
MONDAY, ~ANUARY 18. 1984 m
Mandllkove
ato1»9 Martin•'•
win atre•k •I 54.
Page 8·2.
Comic.
Bualn•••
Stocke
84
85 ..
F.or breath-taking Tlewa and powdery condition•, Vall
offers 80me of the beat back bowl• in Colorado.
Redskins' staff ,
ts looking to add
·a wrinkle or two
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Washington Redskins' braintrust is
looking for a new idea.
Coach Joe Gibbs and his staff have
been working long hours in prep-
aration for next Sunday's Super Bowl
game against the Raiders, looking for
a new play or a new formation that
could help bring the Redskms a
second straight National football
League championship.
"These arc the P.".'.es ~hat '!lake
coaching worthwhile, said Gibbs,
who was named The Associated
Press' National Football League
Coach of the Year for a second
consecutive season. "Getting a
chance to prepare your team for the
biggest P.m~ of the ye1;r." .
A disciple of San Diego Chargers
Coach Don Coryell. Gibbs has per-
fected Coryell's passing schemes and
combined them with a solid running
aame at Washington in producing the
most potent offense in league history.
The Redskins' offensive playbook
lists 500 plays and formations.
"That may not be enough," Gibbs
said. "With two weeks to prepare for
the aame. your opponents can spot
every flaw, take away the things you
do best."
The things the Redskins do best are
to give the ball to running back John
Riggins, who rushed for an NFL
record 24 touchdowns this season.
and ha ve Joe Theismann pass to
Charlie Brown, the National Con-
ference's leading receiver with n
catches.
Pnor to last year's Super Bowl
aame against Miami. Gi bbs and his
assist.ants spent countless hours for-
mulating ways to stop Dolphins'
linebacker A.J. Duhe, who had been
most instrumental in the victory over
the New York Jets in the American
Conference championship aamc.
Four days before the aamc. while
meeting in a hotel room after mid-
night. the coaches hit upon an idea.
..It suddenly came to us to put
everybody in. motion at the sa~e
time," said Gibbs, who (>resented his ·~xplode packaac" to his players on
the Thursday before the aame.
"The players loved it and picked 1t
up nght away," Gibbs recalled. "Dur-
ing the game, the 'all-movement'
would freeze Duhe-for an instant.
taking away his quick pursuit."
The Redskins won the game 27-1 7.
establishing Gibbs as one of pro
foo tball's best coaches. Gibbs has
done nothing to hurt his image this
seaon, guiding the Redskins to an
overall 16-2 record, the best 10 the
NFL.
"The man we fear most is not John
Riggins. Joe The1smann or Charlie
Brown but Gibbs." said Raiders' All·
Pro comerback Lester Ha yes.
Lakers_
fcllter
at home
Riley not t rilled
with team's effort
in def eat to Sonics
INGLEWOOD(AP)-Tbc!Sonics
are leamina to be consistent. says
Seattle Coach Lenny Wilkens.
The Laken aren't. says Los Anaeles
Coach Pat Riley.
Wilkens' Sonics, playing dogedly
determined defense, held the nor-
mally biah-scorina Lakers well under
100 points Sunday night, ta.kin& a
l 02-91 National Basketball Associa-
tion victory over Los An..:les. It was
the Lakcrs' fourth strai&ht lo" at
home.
"We're playing better." said
Wilkens, whose club is 19-17 and just
31h pmC$ back of Pacific Division co-
leaden Los Anaeles and Portland. .. We're more consistent defensively;
the difference is defense.
"We have eight new people and it
takes time for them to understand the
need to be consistenL"
Riley said of the lakcrs' outing.
"We had a real breakdown. We
played scattered and selfishly. We
failed to move the ball to the open
man."
The Los Angelct coach also said
that some of the Lakers' moves
looked strangely familiar.
·"We did some bizarre mings in t.he
first half," he said. "For awhile, I
thought I was watching lhe Harlem
Globetrotters. Some of our passes
were a little ridiculous."
Still. Riley found something to like.
"We're st1tl in first place. so I'll take
1L It can't be all that bad."
Gus Williams paced the Sonics·
victory with 24 points. as Seattle took
the !Cad for good at 24-22 la~ in the
opening quarter.
After the Sonics built their advan-
tage to as much as 13 points, Los
Angeles closed to 68-63 durina the
third period. But at the end of that
quarter, Seattle bad pulled ahead
74-65 and the Lakers did not threaten
in the final period.
Forward Tom Chambers came off'
the bench to score 20 points for the
Sonics, while Jack Sikma had 18 and
Al Wood 14.
Jamaal Wilkes led the lakers, who
have now lost four in a row at home
for the first time since the 1969-70
season. with 26 points.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar added 20
points and Jam~s Worthy 17. and
Earvin "Magic" Johnson had 17
assists for Los Angeles. but scored just
four points. "Magic has to take the dnve and
shoot more when the others aren't
hitting." said Riley, whose club
connected on only 35 of 80 field goal
attempts.
Wilkens. asked about David
Thompson, who recently was rc-
siF ed by the Somes, said, "I don't
kriow yet; I'll have to see him in
practice. There are four guards ahead
of him now that are playin~ good
basketball ... But his return will give
us an extra dimension at either guard
or forward"
CSFWHIPS
'STALE'
BULLDOGS
$33,000 ls nothlng to sneeze at Rose, Expos
close to an
agreement?
FRESNO (AP) -Fresno State
Coach Boyd Grant has seen
problems ahead for his I 3th-
ranked Bulldogs and was not
surprised to lose 53-51 to un-
ranked Cal Stat~ Fullerton in
Pacific Coast Athletic Associa-
tion basketball Sunday.
"I have been seeinF th is coming
the last two weeks.' Grant said.
"There is no way yoyr're going to
win playi ng the way we have been
playing. especially against a team
like Fullerton."
.. We have been mentally stale.''
Grant said. Wlthout pumna his
fi ngcr on any panicular weakness.
Fullerton guard Leon Wood
scored 26 points to lenchhc Titans
despite four defenses used by the
Bulldol\S.
Wood ~ored two free throws
with I.SS remaining in the &ame
to a1vc Fullenon a 52-50 lead.
Fresno State had a chance JO 11e
the g.amc wtth 48 second remain·
ins but Bernard Thompson only
made ont' of'lwO free throws.
wood added another . fret
throw with 18 seconds rema1n10g
to seal the gamt. Frc no had a
chance to 11r the pme, bua Mitch
Amotd•s shot hoonced ofTthe nm
w1'h awo seconds left to play
' ''"" ...
'
•
B-ftoday' s standards
it· s small. but back
in 1961 ttsurewasn't
Money in professional sports hu
turned into an interesting, yet some-
times disgusting phenomenon that is
hard for the average person to
understand on occasion.
Forgetting the huge sums top
players in baseball football and
basketball arc demanding (and get-
ting) these days, let's take a look at the
professional golf tour.
When the SS2 Club, the suppon
group for Hoag Memorial Hospital,
presents it's annual Crosby Southern
clambake on Sunday and Monday,
Jotl . 29 and 30 at Irvine Coast
Country Club. some $33,000 in priie
money witl be distributed ta th~ 11
pros participating with each auaran-
ttcd S200 for completina two rounds.
In liaht of today's astronomical
fiaures for SP.Orts stars, $33.000
doc n't seem hke a lot of money. A
quick check of the PGA mlJor tour
records shoW1 that H late as 1961 , the
avcraae purx was only U2,48S. The
year's total money f'lurc was
SI .'461 .830 for 45 tour events on the
major circuit.
The winner at Irvine Coast will
receive $4.000 for the victory plu$ the
$200 auarantccd each panic1pant
who fin1shc J6 holes. He could abo
pick up an add1honal $250 for ha' ana
the low 'Corr of thr final round and a
~-.
chance at the top money of $800 for
the winning pro in the pro-am team
competition. This makes it possible
for the winner to pick up a check for
$5,250 and if he 1s lucky enough to
score a hole-in-one he could win a
new Cadillac as well.
Remember that Arnold Palmer
was in his heyday on the major tour in
the era of 1961, ye t became a SI
million winner, so you can see that
the yo una pros who miss the cut in
San Diego as well as the club pros
panicipatin_g, have a purse worth
playina for 1n the Crosby Southern.
Like all golf tournaments these
days, the chief beneficiary will be
HoaJ Memorial Hospital. More than
$6001000 has been raised for the
hospital over the past nine years.
tr
Energetic Larry lprash1, executive
director and producer of the Uniden
l.PGA lnvitauonal at Mesa Verde
Country Oub March 1-4, never lets a
stone lie unturned.
When the sponsor of a second
l.POA tour event in Pasadena pulled
out, Larry went riaht out and siaricd
Cana Blanca beer a a co-sponsor of
bis event in Costa Mesa.
"I feel thaa havina only one
tournament in the· Los Anactl~ Oran~ County area for the LPGA
wdl help our event a area• deal and
Jhey howed an intcrat in "1omen's
aolfsoweaot t<>acthcr," lpruhi uys
•·Besides, the pla~n alway• fook
forward to playina 1n Southern Cah-
I
How on
HUDY
Gou
fomia and the spectators have only
one chance to watch them play in this
area. We'll also have the top players
here from Japan."
lgarashi spent some time 1n Japan
late last year and as all smiles when he
talks about the future of the Un1dcn
Invi tational at Me$1 Verde C'C' and
hosting a similar event 1n Japan
\tart1n-in I 98S.
He 1s p1oneenng l.PGA play be-
tween lllc two oountries ond feels 1t
wall eventually catch on and be the
b1gcst attraetion on the LPGA tour
1n both the U..S and in Japan.
. tr The Olive Crcsl ekbnty Golf
T oumament, 'which as co-sponllO~
by the Newi>an ~ach 20/20 Club
and KWIZ rJ..dio, will be held Mon-
day, March. "t6 at lmne Coast
Country Club.
The tournament will be a scramble
event. Enlt)' fee is S l SO. whc1 h
1nclude1 aof(, dinner. auction and
awa.rdl proaram.
Phone 547..0361 rot more 1nfor·
mauon
'
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Free agent
Pete Rose, shopping for a new team lo
continue his assault on Ty Cobb's all·
time maJor league hit total, indicat~
Sunday that he could sign soon with
the Montreal Expos.
Rose. 20 I hits shy of Cobb's rt-Cord.
said he wall fly to Montreal today for
further negotiations
"We'll probably have to do some
hcad-knockina. but 11 looks good.
They've 1ot a 1ood team and I'd ltke
to play up there," Rost said dunna an
interview at Los Angeles Inter-
national Airpon. He wu 1n Cali·
fomia for an athleuc banquct at Santa
Mana on Saturday n1&ht
Relened by thl" Phnadclph1a
PhW1e' in October after five tenons.
Rose, who turns 43 in "'pnl, has held
dascu ions with Montrul. Ptt-
t,burgh and the Seattle Manncn
But the Manners, who· rectntly
have added the fat salancs of Gorman
Thomu and Barry Bonnell to then
payroll, said last wctk they ""Crt n'o
tonger interested in R~ bccauK he
requested too much playina time
At Monuut. the 20.ycar vctct1n
either would tie vyana wtth vctenn Al
Oliver at fint b3 or •ould bt
pla)'1f\& 1n an outfield thll alttady ho
Tim R11ne~ in ten field and ndre
Da"' n '" center
ToplO
Orange County
hlg6 school
basketball
Daily Pilot eelectlon•
2 . l"tn. Valley (11-6)
S. Ocean View ( 11-4)
& £dleo (13'-S)
6. Capo Valley ( 14-2)
8 . Katella (12-2)
9. Brea (13-1)
. I
•
'
82 Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday .. Jenuary 18, 1984
SPORTS BR fA K
----
Mandlikova halts
Martina's streak
two shy of record
From AP dl1patcht1
OAKLAND-The \lrcak 1s dead. K;3
Hana Mandltkova won a masterful
duel of slamm ang. i.crw and volley tennis
8i&IOSt Martina Navratilova, 7-6, 3-6, 6-4
Sunday. 1n the V1rg1n1a 'lams of California, ending the
winning streak of the world's No. I women's player at
S4 matche\ -two sh}' of Chris Evert Lloyd's record.
Mandllkova. ranked No 7, had lost her last nme
matches in a row against Na' raulova, a former C Lech
compatriot.
But thai. time she survived
three set poants in the firi.t set
11ebreaker, overcame a fierce
attack by Navraulo'a an the
sernnd set and broke Navraulova
on her final service in 1hc th ird set
of the two-hour match
"I came down fighting."
"la' raulova said. "She won the
match. I didn't lose 11."
In one of the finest matches
NAV RATILOVA women's tennis has seen an years.
both pla ycrs showed agsre'i'il veness. control. power and
tine'isc It wa" rem1n1scent of the serve-and-volley
matrhc'> between B11l1e Jean King and Margaret Court
1n the I %Os
Asked how 11 felt tu \CC her record bid end JUSt two
shy ol Lloyd\ I 974 streak. ~avrat11-0va replied:
"Rotten. That's a dumb question "
&etta McKnM of lhe lftdiina Pacers. after tht
teun ~ iu 2s..tame road losiDa streak witb a ~•t Dcmver: .. we-jot totetherin lite locker room ~ tbcpme. took that moo key off our btcb. and beat it 4o death.,. -
Hadl expands Express• staff
LOS ANGELES -Former assistant [il
coaches Ed Lambert of Cal and Mike c •
Ackerley of lov.a State h:nc been added to II
the staff of new Los >\ngeles Express head
Coach John Hadl. the l 'n1t.ed States Football League
club announced Sunda'
Lambert. 35. w1li coach the Express' running
backs. the same JOb he held at Cal.
Ackerly, 36. will work with the Los Angeles
hnebacker<i. He <Jerved as defensive hnc coach at Iowa
State.
· The Cxprcss also announced the hinng of Dick
Rehbein as tht" team's director of quality control
Padre• to run •• normal
SAN DIEuO -Tht hc1~ of iii
McDonald's founder Ra) Kroc. owner of
the 5'.n Diego Pad!"f~. say the death of the
81 ·)eur-old fast-food main&tl' will not
afftct the day-to-day operations of the Na110nal Lcaaue
club
.. This doesn't afle{ t the future oft he club at all. Ra~
h.ad made prov1Mon., for operations to continue here.·
Mtld Padre!I President Ballard Smuh followinii dis-
cussions with Kroc's widow, Joan
Kroc. who purchased the Padres 1n January 1974
forS 12 million. died Saturday of heart failure at Scripps
Clinic in nearby La Jolla
"Joan 1s a~ comm1ttc<l to fielding a winner here as
Ray was," said Smith. who was also Kroc's son-in-law
"Shr has had a tremendous influence on our operations
for several years, she has given me her wholehearted
suppon
"It wall be business as usual." ~m1th added. "We
won't be proh1b1ted from doing the things we need to do
to win a champ1onsh1p."
King• rally. gain tie wlthiJeta
WINNIPEG -The Los Angeles 'ri.1 Kings, led by center Tefl) Ruskowski's ,
three-point effort, rallied three times
Sunday night to gain a 4-4 11e with the
Winnipes Jets JO a National Hockey League gamr-
Ruskowsk1'' goal at 11:53 of the third penod
knotted the game and o;ent 1t into ovenime. Both teams
..had opportun1t1es to score in the five-minute extra
penod. but goaltenders Marco Baron of the Kings and
Brian Hayward of the Jets kept the lie intact.
It was the second comecuu vc overtime 11c between
the teams. who share fourth place in the Smythe
D1 vision. The K.ingi. and Jets fought to a 7-7 tic at tht
Winnipes Arena on Fnday night.
Ruskowska. now with three goals this season. ali.o
had two assists to spark the Kings. who outshot the Jets
38-31. Dave Taylor. Jim Fox and defenseman Mark
Hardy had the other goals for the Kin'5.
Dale Hawcrchuk paced the Jets w1lh two goals, his
22nd and 23rd of the season. Center Tim Young and
defenseman Wade Campbell scored the other goals for
the Jets, who led 2-1 after the first period but were tied
3-3 with the v1s1 tor'i at the end of the second.
Lendl can't catch McEnroe
NEW YORK -Dominating the K;3
court with cat-hke quickness. John
McEnroe defu.,ed Ivan Lendl's power
game Sunda} and captured the S400,000
Volvo Masters tennis champ1onsh1p with a 6-3. 6-4. 6-4
\ ICtOr)'.
The triumph over the two-lime defending Masters
c.hamp1on was worth S 100,000 to McEnroe. Lcnl.11
collected $60,000 as he reached the final ofth1s scai.on-
end1ng tournamrnt for the fourth consecutive year
For Lcndl. 1t was another disappointment. The
( zechoslovak1an right-hander also reached the finals ol
the U.S. Open and Australian Open in 1983. only to lose
both. He has yet to win a Grand Slam tournament.
A new Mahaffe~
on road baCk ·
He quits smoking
and quits drtn in
and starts wt nning -------
PALM SPRJNGS (AP)-Tears of
joy were streaming from lht' eyes of
Susie Mahaffey when she embraced
husband John after bis playoff victory
1n lhc Bob Hope Descn GolfClass1c.
•'Jt's been a long road back." she
\lUd.
•·And ll's worth 1t." John replied.
The payoff came Sunday on the
second hole of a sudden death plJ1}ofT
when Jim Simons backed away from.
then missed a little 3-foot per pun.
That miss, after Mahaffey had
confidently rapped an 8-footer m 10
the back of the cup. provided John
with the seventh victory of his
troubled. oft-interrupted 14-ycar
Tour career and his first JO 21/t years.
"I'm glad I won, but l feel sorry for
Jim. I've been in that-situation and I
know how it feels." stud Mahaffey.
who lost a plavofT for the 197S U.S.
Open title ... It'~ very empty f~hng,"
he ~id. ',
He held the lead for 69 holes or the
following U.S. Open, then fell before
Jerry Pate'~ last-round onslaug.hl
And he'' suffered various other
advcnitJcs. personal problems and a
..eries of rnjunes that once made him
doubt he'd ever play aJain
H11> last p~vtou\ v1ctorv rnmc 1n
1981
yean qo.
He quit smokinJ 2V> months aao.
And the abstenuons. he said. bad a
dJrect correlaoon wi\b his victory .
.. I'm convinced of it, .. ~sa.id. 0 1t•s
a matter of trainioa. I'm )S yean old
and I'm in better fh4pe now than J
was when J was 2S. rm stronger and
mr, mind is more clear.
"'"'e got a new phiJosopby about pJa~ng the game. •
• I'm tired of layina back and
playinJ for pars and playing COD·
servatJve.
"L've added tenalh in t.be last two
years. And that's because I'm SUOQ&·
er. in better shape. I've added maybe
20 yards. Now that rve · SQt some
extra lenath, J want to Ute Jt.. ..I look at Tom Waison and Jtck
Nicklaus .and those 1uy1 that are
winrung all the toumamenu., and
they· re going for the par·~ in two and
playing ~essively. I'm tryina that.
And. heJI, n's fun."
He wnlt for the Jl"CD on the par·S
first bole. reached ll and 2-putted for
bird1e. It was the stan ofa drive that
brouaht him from four strokes off the
pace with a no-bocey 66 and mabkd
him to complete the ftlUlation 90
holes in this five-day even1 al 340, 20
under par. Simons. playl.QI behind
rum. matched lbat total arid forced
lhe play()ff with a l S-foot birdie putt
on the 90th hole, finishin& off a 69.
Both parred the first extra bole. On
the ne\t one, Mahaffey $8Ved par
from a bunker and was headed
toward the next tee when Simons
failed on his littJe putt.
"It surprised me," Mahaffey said.
"It nevrr C'rossed my mind that he'd
mt s 11."
Unranked Lee upsets Slbaon
A Tl ANTI<.. ( 11 \ N J -Unranked m m1ddlewe1gh1 L>on Lt'c nt Gary, Ind ,
~topped Bnuun·!> 1 on> Sib~n. rankrd
fourth by the World 80~101 ( ounc1I. 1n the
e1ah1h round of a scheduled I0.1ound fi&ht undll)'
Refertt Ton)' Pere.t halted the bout after Lee
knocked S1bson down w11h a let\ with 2: 13 remaining in
the e1a}lth. The 6-2 Lee. who was knocked down 10 the
first round wtth a lef\ 10 the chm by S1bi.on. knocked
1bson down three umei. 10 the third round.
"I felt confident 1n that punch," said the 23-ycar·
old Lee, retCrnng to the Id\ that knocked Sibson down
an the eighth. "I had my feet ~t properly to throw the
punch plus I saw at in his eyes that (at would be) a
knockout punch "
S1bson roi.c from the canvas at the count ol nine at
his comer's urging and began bouncing against the
ropes before Perez stopped the fif,ht
"I was looking for the ropes,· said the 25-ycar-old
S1bson from Leicester. England. "I wanted to feel the
ropes agamst my bark. so I could bounce there unlll I
got a chance to bob an<l wca ve away. I feel bitter that the
referee was so keen on stopping 11."
Lee raised his record to 20.1-1 with 20 knockouts
and Sibson now is 49-5-1 with 29 knockouts.
Sibson sustained a gaping cut on his left eyebrow
when Lee tagged him with a left hook in the fif\h round.
S1bson said thl' wound altered his fight plan. makin&
him anxious to get the bout over w11h.
Danebo pulls away from field
ARCADIA -Dancbo. ndden b> ~ Laffit P1ncay Jr .. edged an front 1n the final
turn, then pulled awa y lo a 41'1-length
victory over Par Mania 10 Sunday's
SQ0,900 San Carlos Handicap at Santa Anita.
· Carrying 11 7 pounds in the se"eo-furlongevent for
4-year-olds and up. Danebo was clocked 1n I :2 1
Danebo was never far behind as Pac Mania and
Pole}'. who wound up 2111 lengths back 10 third, set the
pace most of the way.
The winner paid S9 20. S4 60 and SJ. Pac Mania.
ndden by Patnck Valenzuela and carrying 118 pounds.
returned 15 and $3.20 The show payoff on Pole>. half
an entf) w11h Menswear. was $2 60. Chns McCarron
rode Poley, who earned 11 9.
Croeso. sent off as the even-money wagering
favontc by the crowd of 46,460, was in contention early
but faded to finish sixth in the seven-hors(' field.
Figh11ng Fit was a late scratch.
Danebo. a 5-year-old son of Bold Forbes-La
Zanzara. 1s trained by Laz Barrera
The \ICtOf) was worth $54,900 10 Danebo'sowner
Aaron U. Jones of Eugene, Ore.
BoATINC
Lewsadder in
'84 World Star
8}' ALMON LOCKABEV
D.ety ,... ... tlftt Wrltef
Chuck Lcw.,addc1 will represent Newport Harbor
Yacht Club in the 1984 World Star Championship.
Lewsaddcr. a veteran tar <Jailor won a berth in the
Star World's Saturday by defeating nine nvals in a thret
race ehm1na11on series sailed 10 the ocean off Newport
Beach
The chminauon was held in COOJUnct11)n with
NHYC"s third Winter Senes 1n which small boats sailed
inside the bay on aturday and keel boats sailed ocean
courses on Sunday.
Lewsaddcr has been a world class Star sailor for many
years as skipper and crew, but became active as a skipper
about two years ago alier several years layoff. H.c crewed
fo1 Don Bever who won the world champ1Msh1p at San
Diego several years ago.
Runner-up 10 the Star eltm incn1ons wa!I Ralph
Wantrode. Balboa Yacht Club. Third place was a tic
between Barton Beek of the Los Angeles Fleet and his son .
Chuck. NHYC The stars also raced 1n the Winter Series on Sunday.
The winner wa!. Hank Thayer. NHYC. second was Jack
Dollahite. NHYC. and third was Lewsadder
Trophy winners in the Winter Senes on Saturda)
were·
L>EFENDER-12 -I. Chm West. Manna del Rey: 2.
Jack Benz, South Shore Yacht Club.
LASER -Bruce Cooper. Capistrano Bay YC
LASER II -Matt Paskenan. NHYC.
SABOT A & B -I. Kim Cooper. Capo BYC
SABOT C -Tom Nichols. NHYC; 2. Susan Minton.
Bahia Coronth1an YC 3 Andrena d1Donato. NHYC.
Trophy winners outside classes:
Defender-12 -Bud R1chhng, Dana Point YC . 2 Bob
Melville. DPYC': 3. Roland Soum1er. South Shore YC
SOLING -Gaston Orlll, BYC: 2 Frank Simon.
SSYC. 3. Larry Hagerman. VYC •
ETCHELLS-22 -I. Rick Hawthorne, NHYC; 2.
Scott Hayward, NHYC; 3. Kam Fletcher, BYC.
NHYC's Mason advances
Scott Mason of Newport Harbor Yacht Club
advanced on the Pnnre of Wates Bowl ladder Sunday by
defeating Bruce Humann of Bal boa Yacht Club in a best
two of three ehm1nat1on series sailed 1n the ocean ofT
Newport Beach in J/24 sloops.
On Saturday Humann defeated Lewis Wagoner of
Fresno Yacht Club.
The Prince of Wair!. Bowl 1s for the Unned Statc!I
Yacht Racing Union·~ match racing championship in
which competitors ad,anre in a ladder type compet1t1on
evef) two }'ears
~1nce then, he's instituted some
chan~ in his game -a chan1c in the
swing providing a btger turn and a
rcpositionina of tht ball in his stance
-and made some changes in
himself.
He quit drinking more than two
Johnny Maller, the leader lhrouah
the third and fourth rounds, ran afouJ
ofa balky putter and wat third.
John Mahaffej offer• a dlaplay of emotion• after po•-
tlng a blrdle on the 18th bole Sunday. Mahaffey atlll
Al'Wlretlflet ..
needed to ao a second audden death bole to defeat Jlm
Simona and win &72,000 ln the Bob Hope Desert ClaHic.
vtd anytime
through January 22nd
Tender Top Str1oin Steak and
two large eggs Served With
hashed brown potatoes artd
choice of toast
West
rallies
in Japan
YOKOHAMA. Japan
(A P)-Alfred Anderson of
Baylor pl u ngcd for a I -ya rd
touchdown in the fourth
quarter. cappina a drive
that featured three success-
ful founh-down gamble~
that ralhed the W~t past
the East 26·21 1n the ninth
annual Japan Bowl football
•ll·\tar game todll)'
The West. w11h an effi·
c1ent p3Mlln& offense led by
qu1r1erback Steve Young
of Brigham Youna and
f umer Gill or N1:braskn,
had taken a 19-7 h IR1me
lead but the East bounctd
back wtth two ke)' p3'i\
interception' and -wtnt
ahead 21-19 1n the first
minute of the four1h quar-
ter. •
Thew~,, then moved to
the fa t 4 l where Gall
threw three incomplete
pane But on founh down.
Gill hit Gerald McNeil of
Baylorwathan I I-yard pa
for a fir t down.
A friendly get-together
Raiders' Marvin
looking forward
to meeting wtth Butz
EL SH,llNl>O -~fa key Marvin
and Da ve Bu11 art going to ~ea lot of
each other an Super Bowl XVIII.
Marvin as looking forward 10 the ge1-
1oge1h~
''I'm go1ns to sc1: No 65 lined up in
my face. and he'<, aoina 10 \Cc No 65
hntd up 1n Im fac1:." \a1d Marvin, an
ofTcnstvr auard for the Lm Anaelc\
Raiden. ''l know he'1, not imng to
tna me and I'm no1 ao1na to tnck
him"
Marvin bclil~n that But1. the 6 7
29S-pound defcn\lvt ..cackle of the
Washinaton Rcd\k1n\ who will pla>
acro\S from him 1n ne.itl \unda) 's
upcr Bowl ot Tam pa. I la 11 one of
the National r oothall I e auc"s fine't
at his position
"03VC' 1s a grrat foottlall pla)cr. I
1h1n'-ht'' ontt of the three be!lt
dcfcns1H tacl<lc\ in the league alona
with Rand)• Wlu1c Cof Dalla•) and
Ooua tnahah Cof Oc.-tro1t)," said
Marvin a 6-4.170 pounder ... , like to
play 11at1nt1 J)("uplr like ham.
.. 111. 01n11 to be a areat t·hallenac.
He'!. a 1hrowback to the old day\.J U!.t
hnc up and get after 1t I think I'm that
way. too "
Marvin hchrvc\ tha1 th e Redskins
VAIL ~ ..
From Bl
an)'wltcrr from S56-to·Sl4S a night
for one or two bedroom~ Con-
dominiums. wh1l·h 1s the be1.t way to
&o. run anywhere from $7()..to·S6H
depending on whether you need a
one. two or 1hre -bedroom
Then~ art' naturally a number of
vnnous paclco&C'S available: and pfo(e'i
to re\1dc I recommend. however.
that you tray 1n one of the two
v1llaies. although tt 1s theapcr 1f )Ou
don't
If )OU are plann1n a ~k1 vacation
there '" no pla c better than the Vail Vallcy Ye,, 11 doc'! have a 1:om·
merc1al reputation but 1t 1~ do1na 1t'• .
best to alter 1u 1m1sc from a total
skiers mountain to a fam1l)/,.k1er
mountain.
Plus. ll hn\ all the 1n1rcd1cnt' for a
pcrf; cl &t'llWI) rtmOlt'nC\ i.f1-
VC"1l), qusaintnc ' and. best oi all.
more tcmun than )Ou can 'lk1 .
•
;m· gmng to \t'<' a mulh dtlkrenl
Raider,· team from the one that blew
a 3S-20 fourt h-q uancr lead 1n drop-
ping a 37-35 decmon at Wash1ng1on
Oct. 2.
"We gsve up ~ome sacks and had
\Orne turnover<, an that game," said
the even·) ear NFL veteran from the
Un1ve~1t)' of Tennessee "We're
&oing 10 change that.
"Wi: (the Lo\ Angeles offcn\lve
line) alway\ had ~onfidtnet 1n
our~lve\ and confi4tnce 1n each
other; a\ a group. we never lost
<'Onfidcnce. It took t1mr for Ull to feel
comfortable together. You have to
hnvr I <'OhCSIVC unit ••
~peaking 01' the llP"Hlnd-downs
citD(rienccd by the offensive hne thn
~,ai.on. Mervin '81d: ••we take the
burden on our houldcn DI o aroup. I
think that•s what it'patatei. the
Roider' from the re\t of the lcaauc."
"I ~ ·I like each week our 00cns1vc
hnc ha aottcn bcucr. both 1ndav1du·
ally and a a unit." he ddtd "I think
that'H\ 1dcnt"rd hy the way we play(d
pin\t P1ttsbur1h and ~attic
"We're aoana to t the ton~ for the
\upcr Bowl.'' u1d Marvin. \pcok1ng
Of thf o0cn l\e line. "f'nt look1na
foN-ard to 11. to > tht lea '
..Our aoal v.u not JU t to tt11 to the
Su r ROwl •l't to \.\-1n 1t:'
' . I
I
On
the , •
Dov. JoNE ~ A~ERACf ·,
----
WHAT NYSE 0 10
Oue lo tate transmlalk>n
today's llatlng wlll not
appear In the Dally Piiot.
WHAT AMEX Om
NEW YORK (AP) Jen 13
Aov1nceo
Oect1neo Unchanoeo
To1a11nue' New n19M
Ntwlow'
TOdav 269 3~ in
6
AMEX LEADERS
j
1J u
NEW YORK (AP) -Se!es., noon otlct 1nd ,,., Ghltlge of lht 10 mo\t ICI Vt
Amerlc-1n Stock Exch1nge IUuei, tr1dln9 n11lon1llv a• mort ,~,, sl BAT Ind' 5 t,.400 2"• +3 1' tnitrSy\I rl.~ 3~ + •
Ullimalt ' 1'3,700 19 • + ""' Wanglab8 132,1 JS • + • Folome t ts. 11 > -1. OomePtrl 72. J 1-16 TuuAtrCD 65. I • + e Hollv Coro 64. ll''t -1 • Amdlhl l 54.600 19\'t + "1 E19teCllh n 54,AOO 7~ -•
l\f!l\i il!l1ljj@ll
NEW YORK (AP) -Mq\t 11c11ve over the-counter \lock\ su_polled bv NASO
Namt Volurn' Bl! Asll.f'd Chi! MCI\ 2.0Sl,900 1 111 t• 1"
1nte1 \ 813~ • 1" •I 1 T and,, \ lliS I II > -I Piero 5 7 1 I I I I& t I 16 APt>'fC , 'l1 1 27 • l..,
ilvlC>Od '4 111t ll + l! "'O" •m'• ,, 1,,, .. ,.,, lu~l, ·m " . "~ + • 1u on<. .7 7 7 • + • PT 3 , IS I~ • +1 \
Colo QuorEs
METALS Quor Es
'f(llY V()AI( !Ari '«lo! n(lftf.,,._......., ll'W-
IOdll\' C..... .... Ill •~IS e pouN! U 5 0.-!lf'lahO•>'
C.,... "' ~ I..,,. pet pouno H~ C.-• "°"' ,,.,...,,11..-rr
L..-U lA ~I• • ..-.0 Doc ~I ... ~1e a pc)oll"CI __ ..
""' • 1"°4 *!Alla .... _ _...,...'
~ t•c.,.R•IMIU"d "'"'
.... ti! 000 '4~ a H-t~ d..,. -· .... .. ~ ... '""'0...-"""OoMft ICIO! -"" ~'" ~ •000 QJOOOper rtlD--,.._,..,.
~ »:·oo~~"VJ-,..
Tha t'sanaptdes riptionofbothbu inc a nd
busin s people along the Ora nge Coast. Tok ep tra k of
wh re ompantesaregoingand whi h peopl a re h lpin
them get there.just watch' redlt Lin · -every de y in th
Buslnessse tionofyournew Daily Pilaf
..
r
1
•
•
Richard Tayles VP
at Transit Casualty
Richard J. Tayles of Hunungton Bt:ach has been named ass1stan1 vice
pres1den1 and n1anager. S)Sll'n1s and programn11ng. for Transit Casualty Co.,
!hr propeny-casualt~ subs1dtar~ of Benerlcial Standard Corp. In his nrv.·
p0s111on. T:1yle!> 1!i. responsihlt" for 1hc dC-\'c:lopn1l'Ol and m31ntcnancc of the
c:ompany's data processing a1)ph1;<.il1ons. forrtll"rl) n1anagcr of systenll> and
programming. he ha~ bt.·i:n w11h 1 ranl>il Ca!>uall\ for five )t'<irs. ••• Corona del Mar re!>1den1 llolly Billings ha!> been pron10ll'd 10 the position
of i.cn1or account t'\l'CUIJ\C at Jansen Public Relations d1\'1s1on of Jansen
A11oclates Inc., llll"Ord1ng 10 Jack Vlncenl, v1cC' pr("s1dcn1/d1rcctor of public
rt•lalions. H1llJng!. 101ncd 1hc: San1a Ana firn1 1n 1 ~82 fro m Century Data
Sys1em1, Inc. 1\ht:rl.' shl· M'r1 t•d "'· ad1 crt1~1ng and public relations manager. • • • T ustin·ba"K.·d Toshiba America, loc. has announced a reahgnmen1 ol
product manat!-l'nll'nt. planning and dC'it•lopnlt'nl acti1·1t1cs at 11s infonna11on
systems d11 l!>IUn. Daniel P.1 . Crane ha~ tx·t·n nan1<:"d n1arketing manager.
pnntc:rs, v.11h full d1rct't rr~pons1h1h1~ for prin1t•r product devclopmt:nl and
marketing. Or. Sorrl Reisman wa!> named r11arkt•11ng n1anagcr, sys1ems, v.'tlh
1denttcal rc,r>i1n~1b1h11\'\ fur ·rv'ihtba\ personal computer s~stcms. Thc nc:1'
TAYLES BILLINGS REISP.1AI\' CRA/loiE
or~n1at1onal al1gn1Tll'llt IS dts1gned to conlorm 10 the turrt·nt produc1
onen1a11on of I Sf) functions. according to Toshiba 1 ice prt·s1dcnt and d11 is ion
general manager. John Rehfeld. • • • Tht: Nalional Guard and Reserves C alllorn1a con1mi1tee for employer
suppon. under to 1he-office of the Secrt'taT) ofDcf(·nse. have av.·ardtd Mercury
Savings ofHun11ng1on Bl·ach lhc cmplo~e-r <tupport ct'Tl1ficalt' ofapprcc1a1ion.
The-firm was tomn1cnded for adopting pt'rsonnc! policies 1ha1 make' it t•as1cr
for t"mplo~ecs 10 part1t·1pa1e 1n lhC' Na1ional Guard and rcs('r' cs. ••• Kerry Bullock has;uined Cochrane Chase, Livings100 & Co. as an accounl
rcpresentat11 c 1 n the public rt· lat ions cl 11 1s1on. Her respons1b1II11e-s w1111 nclude
assistance on the agency's high-tech act·ounls. A recent Journalism graduate
from San D1,·gu ~t~Ht' U n1vcrs11~. Bullot'k·s t·x1x:ncnt· includes stints al San
D1cgo·based IVA C Corp. and the Gable Axency. ••• Hines Wholesale Nurseries has av.ardt•d HS adl'crt1s1ng and public
rela11ons accounl 10 Cro\\·ell McKay, In t'. of lr,1ne Crowe-11 ~1cKa> v.ill
coordinate all me-d1a ac11v!ltcs for liinC'S. 1nclud1ng the producuon of Hint's·
ncv.•s!ettcr. "Four Seasons." Hines is av. holcsale grower ofcon1aincnzed plan1
products and is a di' 1s11111 uf Weyerhaeuser Corp. • • •
Western Digital Corp. has announced 1ha111 ha~ entcrt•d 1n1oan agrcemen1
10 acquire an cquit} po!>11ton 1n Array Technology, a San Jo!>t' based gate arra)
and surfacC' mount tl'c hnolog~ t'omran~. V.\·,1ern Digital i!> a manufaclurcr of
propnctary sen11co nduc111r de1 Cl''· 1ntelhgent subs)~tcn1s and advanced
d1g1tal systems. • • • Bank of America has (ipt'nt·d ;1 Ill'" brant·h 1n M1!.s1un \11eJO to bt' called
1he Saddteback Valle-1 ,\1a1n C)tlit·l· I his nL·v. 11tliLt' is tht' nucleus of the nc11.
Saddleback Valk·~ .\.rca Managl'mt•nt (,ru up ht'ade-d b} Joe Arcolio. 11ce-
pres1dcn1. The nc11. branch v.d! OC locatl'd al·ru~s from 1hl' J\11,~1 nn V1c10 t\1all
al 26991 c·rov.n Vallt·1 Parkv.a1. fht: So u1h t\.11 .. s1un V1t'IO hranrh \\'Ill be
consolida1cd 1ntu \hi~ mul'h larg~·r facil1(~ • • •
Eric C. Pfeiffer has Joined \\'illiams-Kubelbeck & Associales, loc . rc."al
estate economic. financial and financial consultants. as an l'Conom1s1 1n the
firm-~ Ir\ 1 ne-office. Before Joint ng \V K&A. Pfeiffer 11. as a rc~t·arch as.soc1att'd
with Harold Davidson and Associates, c·l'ntur. ('H\. Ht ~ rl'SfJOnsib1ht1cs at
WK&A include lht• t·o lll'C\10n and anal\'sis o1 data {or cconomit· and markt't feas1b1li1~ stud1t!' · • • •
Mirlooe lndustries Limiled of Costa J\1t•sa ha!> 101ncd !he Naliooal
Eleclrlcal Manufaclurers Association and has affiliated v.ith 1hc signaling.
protection and commun1ca11ons scc11on and the clcc11on1cs d1v1sion Thc
company will be represented in NEM.\ b} B.E. RuscOe, \'ICe president.
• •
I
Orange CCast DAILY PILOT /Monday, January 16. 198'4
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE TRANSACTIONS B-6
BotA COMMODITY PRICE INDEX Strong year seen
for commodities
Y••r• b)' Ouert.r 1971 -100
BofA report forecasts
5% average price rise
c·un1n1od11\ pn<'l'~ an• t:"-l)Cl'll'd to
1 ncrease h~ an average of~ pcrl t•n l u1
198-l, l6llov.n1g an 8 pcrct•nt inerea:K'
in 19!:13 3l'l'urd1ng to the Ban~ ol
A1ncr1ca.
Strong finish gives
AirCal record year
ln 1t!.qua~11..·tl~ rl•por1 on con1mod1·
\~ pnce:.. prl'parcd b} tht• Ecunon11t'!'o·
PohC') Rl'!>ean:h ~·~r1n1t•n1. thl'
bank stl}S that lhc O\erall 1ncrt·a~ .
will (·onunut• to be Jed b) 1ndus1nal
con1n1od1t} pnC'e!>. 1vh1l·h art' fon.·ca~I
to 1ncrca!>l' b~ an ait·ragt• of 11
pc"rCl'lll 1n l 984. lndu!>lnal con1n1od1·
ty prites 11.ill h} boosted a!> the U.S.
ccononuc C.\pans1on bccon1l"11 ntOtl'
hroad·based and !ht• rcco1 t'r} sprl·ad!>
to other countnl"S.
· Spt•t·1fiC'ally !ht: rl'porl 5a)S:
• -\lum1nun1 \\Ill c1HJllOUl' lobe thl'
leading pcrforn1cr an1ong
nll'lals.v.11h pnces forl·caiot to reach
85 cents pt'r pound b} the end of l 984
• .\n C:\t'clle-nt \ear 1~ forecast fur
the paper 1ndus1r). rau~ing the pnl·c
01'11.ood pulp 10 beron1L• lirn1 a1 SSUU
l)t'r mL·tric ton. 290.368 passengers
fly NB-based airline
during December
.\11-<.:al boarded n1orc passengers 1n
l 98J than any year in its I 7·ycar
history. 1he Nev.·por1 Beach based
airline has announced .
Strong Dccembc~ pa.s!>cnger board-
ings of 290.368 helped A1rCal break
11.s previous record. ~t 1n 1981.
President Wilham L)'On said that
I Y83's passenger lraffic record is
panit·ularl\' significan1 since 11 was
achieved W11h four fewer cities on
1he1r system than 1n prt•v1ous years.
..In lact. on a comparable systen1
basis. our boardings increased 24. 7
percent for the year.·· Lyon said ... We
ft--el 1h1!> rt'nects a posit1\'t' response to
the ac11ons we have taken to better
TOKAI BANK'S
EFFORT HELPS
SITTON HOME
The Huntington Beach branch of
Tokal Bank of California collecled
SS,000 in Christmas gifts for the
Albert Sitt\)11 Home, temporary
shelter for'Mtus:ed children of Orange
County.
"We had a good response from our
customers. especially McDonald Dis-
tributing who donated $1,200 In
personal beauty care products," said
O.J. Gause, campaign c hairman and
t'redlt officer for the baok .
Tbi1 was the second year tht bank
collected &ift1 from i11 cu1tomer1 for
the Albert Sitton Home, which 11
located in Orange.
I
.serve our t·ustomers ..
A1rCal's December tioard1ngs •n·
rrt'a.sed I 1.3 pt'rl"l'nl over tht•
pre' 1ous ~car. v. /,1 le re1 t•nuc passt'n·
ger n11les 1ncrcaSl·d 10 percent 10
l l 1.2 m1lllon. Avallable·scat miles
1ncrca~t"d 14.4 percent and the Dc-
rembcr load fat·tor dropped twu
points to 53.3 pcrct'nl.
• In sp1 It' of t·ont 1 nul'd lugh 1 ntert:sl
rate!>. the t'onstrur1ion 1ndu~1r1 v.•111
enJO} a good ~car. allowing lu'n1bt'r
pnce~ to increase b) approx1ma1el~
25 pt'rccnt above 1hc currt•nt lt•\els.
F 15urt's for the full 1983 ~ear shu" a
13.2 pt"rcept 1mprovemt'nt 1n A1r4
Cars load factor 10 58 .2 pt"rccnt. an
increase of almost seven point~ O\'t'r
1982. Passt'nger boardings 1ncrca!>ed
4.6 pcrcl'nt for the ~·car. to 3.566.1 SJ.
while passenger miles were up S.8
percent. . .\ 1 a1lablc scat miles for l 983
v.'erc down 6.4 percent.
• Encrg} pnCl'!> v.·11l remain stablt'
1n 1984. as 11.·urld demand !Or oil, gas .
and coal as c).pt'Ctcd 10 shov. onl)
rnodcrale 1mprO'<C'ments.
• Tht• re!>ults oftht: earl) rounds o f
iron ort• contract negotiations 1n·
dtcatc that iron ore prices v.1JI dcrl1nt·
for tht• second } e-ar in a ro11.. The ne\\
benchmark pnct' of about S22 per
mt'tnc ton a1 European 1>0ns renl"cls
thl' slo1' rl'Co1cr' of tht• v.orld ~tccl
1ndus1n
_Tougher laws
save money on
child support
I f you·re-a --------------
parL·nt t~ 1ng 10 due~
ch1ld-suppor1 pa~-
n1ent!>. ~ ou facl' a SYLVIA tougher and tougher
11mc during 11:184
und" pmposcd con-PORTER gress1unal leg1s-
lat1on. There art' ••••••••••••••• fewer and fewer folks
around to s1and up for you. In fact. I can find none.
This whole area of chtld·suppon collection effort~ 1~
an outrage. a disgrace. For man) women and children.
child suppon 1s a promise ncvt'r kept. An es11ma1ed one·
quaner to one-third of fatheri; -and fatht'.'rs usuall} pay
child suppon while mo1hers ge l tuslody -never make
coun-ordercd child·suppon payments.
A rccen1 Census Bureau repon draws a depressing
p1• ture of the pt'nlous financ1al li vc:.endurt'd by n1any of
the~ fam1hcs with absent parents. Of the 4 million women
due chdd-suppon payments 1n 1983. less than half --l 7
percent -received the full amount due. lht' report notes.
The-unmistakable. 1rag1c conclusion: Divorct' has
bce-n a financial calami1y for enormous totals of
dcfensc:less children.
Bue during the Reapn administration. a change
appears clearly 1n the making. One Ho use bill. which had
wide b1pan1san suppon. passed by a vote of 422 to zero 1n
1he cfosing days of 1he pas1 session. The Senate is slated to
consider several child·support bills soon after it returns to
Washington late this month.
ThC' rlouse bill 1s a yardstick. Sponsored by Rep
Barbara R Kennelly. D4 Conn . the bill v.·ould require
slates 10 wnhhold ch1ld-suppon payments from the
payl'hl'l'k~ of anyone who failed to pay for 30 da)<.. It
v.·ould rover federal and state employees as well as
emplo~Cl'~ 1n all of the private 1ndustr1cs.
States would be requ1rt!d to w11hhold tax refunds fro rn
parent~ v.·11h children on welfare who also were del1nqu.rnt
1n ch1ld·~uppon payments.
States v.·ould be allowed to withhold tax refund$ as
v.·c:ll from parents whose children were not rccc1v1ng
'4't!lfarl'. but who were delinquent in their c hild·support
paymcnt!i.
Stall'S v.·uuld be enabled to put liens on real and
personal property 1n some si1uations.
And state!> would have the power 10 rcpon paren1s
who owed morC' 1han S 1.000 in child suppon to rredu
bureaus.
Records would be computerized and an inforn1at1on
clearingho use "·o uld be established.
According 10 this legislation and s1m1lar bills to be
proposed 111 tht' approaching session of Congress, the
federal government would provide matching funds to
develop both the hardware and software fo r these t>ffor1s.
The federal government would pay a significant per·
centage of 1he cost of running 1nccnt1vc programs. too.
The formulas es1ablished v.'ould encourage the states
10 beef up cnforccmcn1 cfTons because 1he more 1ht)
collect. 1he mart they would kct"p-up to 10 pcrccn1 oft he
amoun1 collC<'tcd.
Toughened ch1ld ·support enforcement tfTor1s would
save money for us all as taxpayc-rs. There is a dirC'Ct
relationship bctwC"Cn child·suppon enforcement pro-
1rams and rNuced~xpendi1urn in Atd to F1m11ies wi1h
Dependent C'hildrrn programs. Ut1h -which. has a
high I)' rcprdcd enforcement proaram -rtponed 1n.1_980
tJfal'?OltNriMi ltranTb-y1·fic cttna;wpt)On a1encypa1d the
tota-1 operative budgc1of1ha1 agency plu~ 6. 7 pcrt·ent (SJ
million) of all expcnditurc-s for the-AFOC proarnm.
The effective da1e of1ht' Kennelly bill is planned for
Qc1, I. I 98S -1he 1tan of fiscal, year ! 986. Thr
Conarns1o nal Bud gr I Office c5t1 matcs 1mpres11"·c sav1np
ofl78 million for fiscal )'t'ar 1986, S67 m1ltlon for 1987
ind S72 million for 1988. Most of theK uv1n11 \\'OuJd rnult from 1mprovtd
collect1on etlbrts that would rtmovc fim1hes from
wclfart. Yet child·suppon paymcnt!i 1s a pm:entaae of
1vcraac ma.le income 1ot1J a merc I J peran1. The pretidcnt il beh1nd 1hi1and tOart all \\'ho bcl1~vc
!hat flm1hct thou.Id like care O(themJClvt.i;. who \\IOI 10
t:on1ml wclf•~ t"0$1) and ....-ho feel children mu,,1 nut bf
allow~ 10 wfTn 1n I d1\0R't".
•
I -
. ., .. ~~
){) ' 17
•I •1 ' I > 9 •
)) .. I)'•
7•'• 7S ~)l, 71 •
b • 6"' 16 . 16'• y ..
l) 16 IS )6 4l•· ••• 11-. !! .• ,, . ,, ..
bl ' 61 '· 77·, 21.
I , I~
·-.. 11 16
I l , Ii'• 16 16 •
• T1n priL'C'> \\,II ~urpas~ thl' S6 per
pound nl;lrk 1n response to n1odest
dcn1and increases as v.l'll as tht
ronunut'd succe~s of t1n·produc1ng
r.:uur11r11:~ 111 rcs1nc11ng supply.
Pnl'l' 11np1·01· ... n1,·n1s for agritul·
tural comn1o<J111e) 1n 1984 will con·
unul' 10 tx· ton!>1dcrably slower than
tort he 1 ndustn<al t·on1 tnod111es. H i$h·
t'r pnct•s for agricultural t·o~mod111es
11J IQ83 will sumulatc increased
rl:1nungs '1h1 s ~car. dan1pen1ng 1.he
pnt'C' 1n1pro1l'ml"nt\ that u1hcrw1sc
v.ould re-suh from the: ''orld ccon-
onuc rt"CO\ cr~.
")unlt' of ilu· \l;ink's agnr..iltural
,·ornn1od1t \ prU)l'l'llOll~ arc:
• ( oll"c-C pnrcs. v,.tuch Jun1ped
llt'.'arl\ lU JXrl·enl last fall . arc ex-
pl'L'l<'d to dct·hnt' mod<'stl~ in 1984.
Pnl'e.s rose earl\ 1n thl' \981·84
r11arkct1ng \car Rs thc new lnter-
nat11:u1al cOITcc ()rgani1ation (ICO)
ngrt·emcnt v.•cnt into t•ffcct.
au1honz1ng e>.port quo1as. Prices arc
1ikt'1} 10 "caken 1n 1hc Sl'COUd half of
lhl· c urrent niarket1ng )car ( 19~348-l )
a!> !he Bra11l1an harvest approaches.
Hra11l is lh world"s largest coffee
produce-rand C)';porter.
• c·onon pnecs art' also l'Xpccted 10
ha\ c pcakl"d in the firs! quanerof the
1983·84 markt'\1ng year. Reduced
L S. acreage in 1983 due to the
Pa}Ol<"lll·1n·K1nd program and
adl'crse-world weather resulted in
higher cotton prices throughto ul lasl
summer and fall. Nov.. with prices
up. the ou1look for 1984 1s for
1ncrl•ased productions. This has
dan1pt"nd thi: outlook for couon
pn~·cs desp11e an 1 ncrc:a!>1ng world
Jcn1and for fiber.
• Rl'l'fpncC's arc c>.pcctcd to remain
fla1 dunng the first half of J 984
dc~p1tr U.S. producers· liquidation of
ht>rdsdunng the fall of 1983.
*'"•1>eV " '" ll•t•fl H , 11>• ot.r•'OI . '• ' llO•G~ 6f'. ,,,.,
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: UPS ANO DOWNS
UPS •ND DOWNS NEW YORK (Af') -The following u" \l'IOw\ !he Over -ttie -Coun 11r \!OCk' and werranl\ the! riavt VOtMI uo !he mo\I and down lhtt mo\! ~...ci on oercen1 of change for Frldav. No \ecurilh!5 lr•dlng l>tlow 52 or 1000 in.are\ are Included. Nit and i>ercenrawe cnanoe5 ere J"' difference t>etween tf'te or,vlou) cto1 no bid orice and 100.Y'_j iesl bid orlce. U•S Na me L•'' Cho Pc:t l 1mre-w1 l t 1 Uo g ~ ~ir.~!l WI ''I T ~ ~~ : • 5 UnvTr un 1 j Uo , ,1 8ioR5p wl 111~ :tit uo 1 · ArgontE .\\ 5-16 Uo , lnrohrm JM l4 Up .
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'
In a auprlse operation,
San Clemente border pa-
trol agents nabbed 500
undocumented aliens.
/A3
Huntington Beach
columnls Biii Harvey
takes a personal Interest
'In a heavy breather./ Al
Talk about strange art.
This 'canvas' la made up
of bullet holes./ A2
Nation
President Reagan says
U.S. mltltary buildup la
aiding world peace by
making Kremlin wary .I A5
The Civil Rights Com-
mission says It will be
Independent of the White
House./A5
California
LA county turned out for
a variety of celebrations
honoring slain civil rights
leader Martin Luther
Klng./A5
World
Authorities remained
puzzled about the alleged
kidnapping of a U.S.
soldier by an unknown
anti-nuke group./ A4
U.S., Soviet leaders meet
In Stockholm with hopes
to strengthen relations .
IM
Features
Subtleties abound In the
home scenes created by
contemporary artists In
"Anxious Interiors" at the
Laguna Beach Museum
of Art./A7.
If given a few hours of free
t ime with her husband,
one of every three mar-
ried women under 35
would rather make love
than do anything else./ A7
Sports
Vall, resting In the Colo-
rado Rockies, ls aver-
itable winter wonderland
for sklers./81
John Mahaffey wins a
thrilling two-hole sudden-
death playoff at the Bob ·
Hope Classlc./82
Entertainment
Two more stage pro-
ductions join the January
parade, bringing the total
to 11 along the Coa~t./ Al
Bualneu
Bank of America fore-
casts an average 1984
Increase of 5 percent In
the price of commodities.
/85
INDEX
Bridge
BuU.tln Board
Bullnesa
Classified
Crouword.
£dltorfal Page
Entertainment
Horoscope
1nterml11lon
Ann Landert
Movies
Natlonal Newt
Polkle Log
Pubflc Notloel
Sportt
State Newt
Or. Stelncrohn
Stoett Market•
Tetevltk>n
Theltert
WMther
World Newt
84
A3
BS
88-10
810
A8
A8
89
A8
A8
A8
A4
A3
87-8
81-3
A4
A8
98
A8
A8
A2
A4
FIRST 1111111
oast
e ID SUS ect
A real cllffban1er
i..,ana Beach Hf~ Mike Dwinell
•lowly lowen blm11elf and 1 tihear-old
Juon Baldwin dcnna a 8teep c at tbe
nortll end of tbe ~Tate Emerald Bay
cpmmunlty Sanday afternoon. Baldwin,
wu •tran4ed halfway up tbe cliff for nearly
two hoan while reecaen determined tbe
be9t meana to &et him down.
Mondale top plck
of county's Dems
Jackson a strong
second; penny tax
for transit backed
From staff ud wire reports _
Orange County Democrats picked
former Vice President Walter Mon-
dale as their first choice for president
in a weekend straw j><>ll. The Rev.
Jesse Jackson made a surprisingly
strong showing, coming in second at
the Orange County Democratic Con-
vention in San18 Ana.
The convention. attended by more
...
than 560 Democrats, also backed a -
proposed one-<:cnt sales tax increase
to raise funds over a l 5-ycar period
for transportation improvements ..
The delegates backed the plan 56.5
percent to 43.5 percent. If approved
by county voters, the sales tax hike
would raise about $5 biJJion over 15
years to pay for such improvements
as new freeways and h1ghway im-
provements.
Of 393 votes cast in the first of its
kind straw poll. Mondale polled 151 ,
Jackson got 80.
California Sen. Alan Cranston,
who had led Mondale in local public
opinion polls of the last few months.
dropped to third, and O hio Sen. John
Glenn was fourth in the vote among
Democrats in the traditionally con-
servative county, county Democratic
Chairman Howard Adler said Sun-
day.
Trailing in order were Sen. Gary
Hart of Colorado, former Sen. George
McGovern of South Dakota, Sen.
Ernest Hollings of South Carolina
and former Aorida -Gov. Reuben--
Askew. Cranston bad 60 and Glenn
.Teen s ought in fatal stabbln
in city's Versailles complex
BJ STEVE MARBLE
Oii .. .,., .........
An 18-year-old man was being
bunted today in connection with the
stabbing murder of a 29-year-old
Newport Beach man. found late
Sunday in the hallway of a hillside
apartment comp~x.
Brent Louis Vanpness, 18, is
suspected of fatally stabbinJ Scott
James McNaughton and leaving rum
sprawled outside an apartment at the
Versailles. a large apartment and
condominium complex at 240 Nice
Lane.
Police combed the neighborhood
near Hoag Hospital for the susPec:t
following the 11 p.m. attack. A team
of police dogs was brought in from
Huntington Beach to assist in the
effort. The unsuccessful search was
halted in the pre-dawn hours today.
McNaughton was alive but
seriously injured frOln numerout-.b
wounds when~ ~c:aBed
to the apartments.
The Newport Beach mao WU
rushed to the Fountain Valley Com-
munity Hospital trauma cenaer where
be died just after miclnisht.
V anpneu, lilled U a Senta Ana
resident, apparendy bad stayed with
McNauahton and other friends at the
apartment complex in the put. Police
said the two men were seen toeetber
Sunday afternoon.
Newport Beach police Detective
Bob Worthen said be is unsure what
pm:ipitatcd the vicious ltabbina,
which was reported to authorities by
an al)8rtment resident.
The wanted man was delcribed by
officen u having brown hair and
eyes, standing S feet. S inches t.alJ and
weighing about l 6S pounds.
Copters flying
a ain 2 ·months
a ter accident
By CHRISTINE DECKER
OtllleDlllJNllt ....
Airspur helicopters were t'lying this
morning between John Wayne Air-
port and Los Angeles lntemationaJ
AiTpOrt. more than two months after
a crash that resulted m suspension of
the firm's license.
Passenger service actually resumed
Sunday after an awessive public
relations and advertising campaign
aimed at restoring public confidence
in the airline and in its Bntish-built
helicopters.
.. We haven't been flooded with
calls, but we expect things to warm up
in a couple of days -we're still lryinl
to get the word out that we're back.
said Airpsur rcaervation aaent Beth
Murphy today. "The public bas been
supportive: People have called.in and
have been very gmpatbetic, we're
very optimistic. ..
Jennifer Juzzardi. director of~
lie relations and lldvertisina. aid
reservations have been up JO pen:e.nt
compared to a similar period before
the accident ·
"for the past three days we have
averaged about 130 ruervations a
day, it's very encouraging" Juzzardi
said.
Airspur had voluntarily suspended
flight operations last Nov. 7 after six
people were injured in an eJDel"ICOCY
(Pleue Me COPTSU/A2)
President
dismisses
'war risk'
U.S. military buildup
makes ··world safer'
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Reagan said today that increased
fear about the nsk of war between the
superpowers .. is undentandable but
profoundly mistaken .. and that the
world actually is safer now after three
years of U.S. military buildup be-
cause the Kremlin is less likely to
underestimate America's strength.
In a foreign policyaddrels&imed at
audiences at home and ovencas,
Reagan said, .. I believe 1984 finds the
United States in its stronaest position
in years to establish a constructive
and realistic working relationship
with the Soviet Union."
The president said the United
States had been in a state of decline in
recent years; and the Soviets ''maY.
have counted on us to keep weak-
eni°' ourselves.·· But be uid his
admuustration had reverted ~ .de--
dine, and the turnaround was becom-
(Pleue eee llONDALlt/ A2 Pre9ldent Reagan .. ,.. •world l9 A.fer today.• (Pleue Me UAOAJll/A2)
Murder spree casts dark cloud over HB
After thiu murden in just nine
days. Huntinaton Beach bomicidc
detective Stt. Ed McErtain was near
exhaustion from Iona bou·n of over-
time.
His boss -Police Chief Earle
Robitaille -sensed the dark mood
and tried to )reak the aJoom "'1th
some plloW'I ftbmor.
"Have you tolvcd that murder
yetr' the chief asked when he spotted
McErlain in the police perkina lot last
this week. •
"Which one?" th tired detective
asked. .. :r.be one today," Robn.aaUc re.-
plied.
Accordina to the chief, McErlain's
face tiabtened and his eyes widened.
The prospect or yet another murder
was too much.
But at was just a &rim joke, an
•=tcm t to cue more than a week of
t y that had stunned a commun1·
ty and left police investlaators rcelina
from too much work and too little
sleep.
Just four months ago. Robillllle
was basking in aood news. A study
bad singled out Huntinaton Beach as
one of the IS safest cities in the
United States baaed on a per capita
crime rate.
Huntinaton was the only cuy on the
entire West Cout umcd 1n the f'agje
International study which cumincd
cnme flsures ftom S,000 com-
munities with p0pulations of at least
10 ()()()people.
The honor was bolstered most
recently with the ~ of the city'
1983 crime andcx which showed a
decline in nearly every area. Murder was down SO percent. robberies WCTC
down 30 pctttnt. Out of eiaht crime
cateaon ·~ had declined.
But in the first nine days of the new
year, tbcre had been nearly as many
alayinas there wett in all of l 983
and alm01t half the number of the
STEVE
MUILE
Focus ON THE NEws
previous year.
.. A couple of weeks aao all the
papen were ~na up wantina to
know why murders ~ down 1n
'8)." 111d Jam Moore, the pc>hor
department's crime analyst.
"Now they'tt all calhnt back
asJuna why there are so many." he
added.
Rob1ta1Ue, whale admatuna the
stn1' of kalhnas t\ tanlina and
atypical of the beach ci l)'. id thett 1s
vinually nothina • c-ity n do to
prevent murder.
'lbetc Just as no control over
family, fa~t~facc. behind<~
doors, passaon murders. There just
asn 't," said the chief
"I don't think there's a policeman
around who with a straipt face could
tell you the police can bave an im,pect
on those types of murden.
--Street killinp maybe, but not the tan we've been bavina. ••be added.
ln 1983, statistics show theft were
four murdcn. One wu a trallic
accident that was couated u a
homiadc because of the amam·
S\lftCC'S of the mishap.
The fiaures. however, do not in·
elude two unso1¥"'!, vicious •ta= murden at Bolsa Chica taw
which as within the city balits but
patrolled by Oranae County Sberifra
depuues.
So &r tn 19 4:
•A female pogtal camtr wu
.cPl .... -~u,
I
\
Joust a minute, fellows ...
You never know who you'll run Into at
Fountain Valley'• Mile Square Park on a
Sunday afternoon. Tbeae medieval
monaten are member• of the Orange
County chapter of the Society for Creative
Anachronlem, who meet there every Sun-
day at 1 p.m. Underneath the armor, from
left, are Kelly Maldman, Zachary Smith,
John Bevy, Duane Trevlll, Bob Mueller
and Richard Collin.
--U.Jliiiiii!iilli!;lltl,........--------------
aEAGAN DOWNPLAYS WAR RISK .••
From Al
ing apparent in Moscow.
"This may be the reason we've
been hearing such stndent rhetonc
from the Kremlin recently," Reagan
said. "These harsh words have led
SALARIES ...
From Page Al
superstar," the highly educated
women in a high-income professional
job.
The second is the "underachieving
husband syndrome.'' where the hus-
band earns less because of retirement.
illness, layoff or simply lack of
initiative.
Bianchi said that the two
possibilities are not necessarily op-
posites. as "the super-achieving wife
may very well have demoralizing
effects on a husband, and an under-
achievin$ husband may quite poss-
ibly provide the incentive for a wife to
some to speak of heightened uncer-
tainty and an increased danger of
conflict.
"This is understandable but pro-
foundly mistaken," the president
enter the labor force and discover
talents she otherwise would not have
discovered."
Women who outeam their hus-
bands do tend to have above average
educations and to hold higher status
jobs that women who earn less than
their husbands, the report says.
.In couples where both earned
income. but the wife had higher
earnings. more than half were cases
where the husband worked Jess than
full time, often because of la} off or
job loss. the studv said.
said.
"Look beyond the words, and one
fact stands out," Reagan said.
"America's deterrence is more credi-
ble and it is making the world a safer
place; safer because now there is Jess
danger that the Soviet leadership will
underestimate our strength or ques-
tion our resolve."
Reagan spoke before an audience
of administration officials and mem-
bers of Congress gathered in the East
Room of the White House. His
appearance was beamed by satellite to
Europe in time to be on evening
newscasts.
Jn the Soviet Union. government
commentators accused Reagan of
using "peaceloving phraseology" that
has not been supported by any moves
to lessen tensions.
The news agency Novosti said that,
while "the pointedly bellicose
speeches of White House officials are
giving way to equally pointed peace-
loving phraseology,"
MONDALE BACKED IN COUNTY •••
From Al
got 50. Totals were unavailable on the
others.
Jackson's strong showing was the
surprise of the day at the first county
convention straw poll conducted in
California.
··Make no mistake about 1t. this 1s
an impressive victory." said Jack-
son's county campaign vice chair-
man, Charles McHenrv. "We at-
tribute it to the 'rainbOw' coming
together in Orange County.'·
Jackson refers to his "rainbow
coalition" of support from min-
COPTERS .•.
From Al
oriues. women. sen10rs and others he
says have been lefl out of the political
process.
"We feel that the coahuon is on the
move and growing and it was re-
pesented by that clear message sent
from that convention today." said
McHenry. adding that some delegates
who came committed to other can-
didates defected to Jackson because
other campaigns were "losmg steam··
in California.
Adler noted that of the 606 regis-
t~red delegates at the convention.
only about 15 were black.
Adler also said Jackson, who is
black, may have cashed in on the
sentiment surrounding Monday's
state holida}' honoring slain civil
nghts leader Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. Jackson worked with King in the
civil rights protests of the 1960s.
Adler said Jackson's recent trip to
Syria, in which he helped arrange the
release of a captured U.S. airman.
also seemed to increase his esteem at
the convention.
Cranston's showin~ marked
anothcrslapat h1scampa1gn. which is
reported lagging behind Mondale's in
fund-raising in Cranston's home
state.
Adler said it was Orange County's
largest ever gathering of Democrats
and the first such party straw poll in
state history.
Democrats briefly topped the GOP
in county registration in the late
1970s, but now there are 470,000
registered Republicans compared
with about 400,000 Democrats, Adler
said.
landing by one of the company's
Westland W-30 helicopters near Long
Beach.
That incident was blamed on fault\
design of the helicopter's tail rotor.-:.
a defect that Airspur officials said has
now been corrected.
It might be a little wet today
Airspur board Chairman John
Gallagher said safety concerns and
noise complaints had caused the ltne
to make other changes, routing Its
flights over industrial rather than
residential areas and operating at
higher altitudes.
Do rainy days and Mondays alwa} s
get you down?
While today is definitely a Mon-
day. the National Weather Service
forecast a 20 percent chance of ram. as
well.
Toda}' 's high was expected to reach
61 degrees. Its low, a chilly 43 degrees.
Nevcnheless, according to the Na-
tional Weather Service, you can put
away your raincoat and umbrella for
the rest of the wt.ck. Clearing tonight.
sunny skies and warmer weather are
predicted through Friday along the
Orange Coast.
Perhaps sunny days and Tuesdays
always cheer you up.
Take A Pilot to lunch
and win a luneh on us
The Daily Pilot will buy lunch for you and a friend up to $20. To win,
you just have to fill out th1s coupon and mail it in to Pilot Lunch.
_,. I P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. Cal1forn1a 92~.
·' A winner will be drawn weekly from entries received the previous
week. Pictures of winners will appear in the Pilot. .
Winners may choose to have lunch at any of our part1c1pat1ng
restaurants. which include . . The Grinder. Zub1es. Hague's,
Spires A complete lic;t of part1c1pat 1ng restaurants 1s available to
winners
I 1 , ,,,.,.. 11•. ! J.1 iv P 1 t 1 fl ,~.p,, "'"''"C1•.'.l'P far1111e~ arE' 1nptog1blf' Ne' purcnase
11ec .. <,sttr~ Gl1111 •ir "' 1v h» P•Ckej 1Jp ill Da•I) P1t.)I 330 Wes! Bay Streel Cos1a Mesa
I COUPON I
I I I NC-lme Phone I
I I I Address I
I I I Where you bought I
I your lunchtime Piiot. I
--------------------------------· ,-....
Coastal
Extended
Fair •lee with lligha In Ille mlO 50s to
mlO eo... Lows In IM mid 30a end 40..
Albany
Albuquerque
Amarillo Andlorega
Ael-'lte
Atlanti
Allantlc Ctty
Auettn
B.illm«• 8llllnga
91nnlngham
8lamarck
8ol ..
Boeton
Br~
8uflalo
Burlington
CUC* CllMMton,S.C.
l::hetlet1on. w. v
Chatlolle,N.C.
Sun Mii today at 5:08 p.m .. ri-et
8:68 a.m. Tueaclay and .. ,, ageln at
5:09p.m.
Moon rl-today at 3. t!S p.m .. Mt• et
5:14 a.m. TueM!ey and r-egeln et
4:t9p.m
' .
LOCATION
HunllngtOI> 8Mdl
River Jetty, Newport
40tll St., Newport
22nd St., Newport
e.lboa Wedge
l.egllna 8Mcl'I
San et.men•• WatwT1m11:511
omefrost
111 • 10 Alc:itlmond 2e t4 St.Louie 20 03 St.Plll•TlllftP9
e6 51 &Ill Lilt•
86 41 San AntonlO
2t 13 Sen Diego ee 44 Sen Fr8l\Clec0
111 Oii 81 Ste Metle
20 ..01 8"1119 ~n~ 21 oe Sioux F•
37 2t Spoll-28 07 Syr-. ..
33 20 TOl*ta
20 ..01 r-43 23 Tulta
27 O Weahlngton
32 23 Wlc:Nta
32 23
25 15
87 57 29 Oii
44 3?
8A 52
62 44 03 ..()7
42 2t
33 31
12 00
28 22
15 -18
22 .01
63 311 28 16
51 21
22 -o4
.................................................... ~~
Jack Pfeiffer dlaplaya hla well-ahot picture of a Frontier 737.
Airline's artwork created
by a real 'big shot' artist .
Frontier employee's
wall plaque has
1,286 bullet holes
By CHARLENE WHITEHEAD
DeltJ Plot CorraipOlld9nl
Hanging on the wall in Frontier
Airlines' Orange County offices is a
piece of art that can best be described
as. well, unusual.
For one thing, the "canvas" is
made of aluminum. For another, the
outline of the subject of the painting
-a Boeing 737 jetliner -was
created by bullets shot into the metal
at about two-inch intervals. That's
J.286 bullet holes. if you want to be
precise.
Tom Frye, an internationally
known professional exhibition
shooter, "shot" this wall hanging
from a distance of about 15 feet . He is
listed in the Guiness Book of Records
for a 1959 feat in which he shot at
I 00,0IO wooden blocks over 13 days,
massing only 6.
Frye, who died in late 1982, created
the Frontier plane art in 1980,
plunking away for two days·at the
aluminum outline on the Crow
Indian Reservation near BiJlings,
Mont.
Jackie Pfeiffer, a Frontier Airline
employee, who su~ested Frye create
the artwork, said JUSt one misplaced
round would have destroyed the
project.
Pfeiffer says he paid around $450
for the original work.
Cocaine fatal to inmate
When Preiffer was transferred from
Billings to Reno, to San Diego, and
eventually to Oran$e County, he
brought the bullet-nddled artwork
with him and hung it in the office.
He's made color prints of the
original and the first the limited series
was sent off to President Reagan.
Pfeiffer owns the last print.
A man arrested by Laguna Beach
police Saturday died at Orange Coun-
ty Jail six. hours later from a fatally
high dose of cocaine. authorities said
today.
Robert Michael Gregg, a 34-year-
old parolee who had been living at a
halfway house in Garden Grove,
began acting "bizarrely" at the county
jail about three hours after being
arrested in Laguna, according to an
Orange County Sheriffs spokesman.
The man lapsed into unconl!.Cious-
Just
Call
642-6086
D .. IJ. Piiot O..h-r
It Gu.tentMd
Monday·F!IOty II you 00
flQl hive your papt• Qy r> JO p rn cal belot• 7 p m and you1 copy w111 b•
dlllW<td
ne:.:. aml wa:. rushed to Lil. Irvine
Medical Center where he was pro-
nounced dead minutes before mid·
night, officers reported. An autopsy
was performed Sunday.
Gregg w~ arrested in Laguna
Beach for suspicion of driving under
the influence of an unknown
substance. Records show that Gregg,
who. was released from Lompoc
federal prison in late November, had
been living at the Mybreak Tran-
sitional Center in Garden Grove
since then.
r:..
Not surprisingly, it's No. 737.
~
,,,_.,~
Ye6~i?J ~Ouf~.
Daily Pilat
1Mi2-5678
What do you like about tbe Daily Pilot? What don't you Ulle? Call llle
number at left and your me11age wlll be recorded, transcribed and delivered
to tbe appropriate editor. ·
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edltoron any topic. Contrlbutort to our Letters column must lnclade their
name and telephone number for verification. No clrcalatlon calls, please.
TeU as wbat't on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwaru n1 Publllhef
~TWIU..all
Ch111fted ~ 'N4llOoll7I
Al ollW d1pw..nen1a • ·m1
'Saturoay 1nd Sunday It
yo.J oo not rtcaive rc.u•
COD)' by 7 I m C81 l)elOft
10 I m lnG )'OUf CC)py Ml
l>ll~td
Clrcu .. tton T~
ettazr oowetlbr EdltOf and Aaslstan to the Publlsher
RoHmary Churchman
Controllef
VOL. n, NO. 11 ,.
~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~ ..... ~~ ~·~~~~~--.~~--.~~--~~~~~~--------~~--~~------~~--...-~~~----~.~~-----t.l--
l I
On
the
------~-~~...,..._--~~--------------------........ --.... ------.... ----...................... llllllJI .... .
, •
ow ......... Lut at
Due to late transmlailon
today's llstlng wlll not
appear In the Dally Pilot.
NYSE LEADER S
Nt;W YORK ( ) S.le$t daV pr SI
and ntt Cha noe 0 m· '' most actlvt New Yor"-Stodt xcti.1191• luuu. lrtdlng na tion• rv •~ more than SI
Amef T& T 2.'36 ' " +,. Amer T& T wl 3, 1991 ~
IBM 1,7~9 11 -,
AmG-enlCD ' l ~ +
~~~r1 '9i ' ~ -'
~~· 1: :11. ,.~ :!·~
§ulf 0 11 940' • 1/3 t
e11vo11 H'; 1 l71,'a eltaAlrl 15, "tt~ 1 Norlnd PS 1
ForcSMot ' S4. •
UPs AND DowN s
NEW YORI< (AP) -The follOWllMI 11 'hows the New York $t9Ck Exdienoe. stocks and warrants lhat !'lave gone Ult tile most and down the most beMld ~
percent of change reoar4\Hs of voiume • for Frldav. '
No securities tradlno below S2 art 1crr:: -uoeo. Net and oercentaoe ChatliMI are , difference between the previous cao nt11 price and tooav•s t~m. orice.
Name Last Ch~ Pc:tf
2 SunslaleCo 93M Up 1 MnotAut 21~ I 2 Up
3 TutUM n 16~ 1 UP
' RnubSll 5 2Sof 13 S Up 5 Mattel wt •~ 1 • Up
' MGM+UA w t 41h •1, UP
8 ~=~~ , ,m I ~ 8: 9 Tl'lompMed 8l,. 1 Up
10 UnPark M n 2''1 'ii UP 11 Henton er 2034 1 UP 12 Httuton o 21~ l Up
13 GrowGp 19~ 711 UBPg l4 PatrlckPtr S~ ''• S Flowerlnd s 20 t ,,.. 16 Anacomq 5~ 11• Uo 17 vjBaldw Id 21'e 1'9 UP
19 1nsP.irlbc n 12 ~ Uo
20 PhtlaSub 11\\ 3;2 UBo: 21 $abme 21 ~ ~ 22 ln!1Ht1rv S 76Pf 39 l 'h
18 NevP 1 ~t 17 13 l 3" Up
23 PSEG 7 709f 61~ 2~ UP 24 SuorVatue 29'1• 1' • UP 4. 25 ComnwllhEno'r' 19~ + 3, UP 3. DOWNS Name Last Ct1~ Pct. ~ ~~~~m,1.3.e!f ff:~ = t:~ 'if J §avtPL ;a'J 801/3 -1°'" 1 4 3 Inc n 6~-. -lJ.
S enGwth wt 71-. ->.. f: 6 House-war 17 -1''2
7 T acomBoal 123..o -1 .J
8 HetenCurt A 47 -WI .t I 9 8r00kl=ash n 23111 -1~ 6.6 10 Comdi~p s 141• -1 6.6
11 PuerR Ctm 11 -:14 t' 12 HelmrPavne 24' a -l'"l .t
13 PayleuCsh s 27:s,, -1 '" l I 14 '!'.,jHRT Inds 2:\ti -1 e 5. 15 Erbamonl n 12~ -\9 4
16 EIMemMo 7'1 -~ •. 17 Ensource 2~ -8 4 18 Norlin Coro 34~ -~ 4.S 19 StoroeTech 13~ -"11 4-5
20 UldMerMtg 13"11 -"11 '• 21 CampbRs pf 2'e -11 4.7 22 FrMcM OG n 51. -4.t
23 Limll~d 22J• - 1 4.1 24 SearsRoeb 37~ -1"11 4. 25 TransO Fin 11 'h -,,, '·
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW YORK (AP) Jan 13 Prev
Advanced Declmed
Unchonoed Total issues New h1ohs New lows
Tooav 269
352 200 821
19
6
AMEX LEADERS
-.
··~
'
NEW YORI< (AP) -S.les. noon orlce and net ch•nr 01 the 10 most actjvt Amtflcan ~!Jilt ElCCha"i!e Issues, trad no
nationally a~ore then Sl . l BAT Ind s • 55~.00 2"9 + J-6
lnstrSvst lvv,400 3~ f ~ Ultimates 1'3 700 191"t .\4
WangLat>B 132,900 35' • i..
Fotomat 95,200 111? -"" DomePtrl n.100 3 1-16
TeusAirCo 65,600 8 • + ~ Hollv Coro M .'600 11 '• -+ 1 Amdahl s ;4,600 19 • E agleCllh n S4,.00 p , -'Iii
•mli 1t1tli@foMI
NEW YORK (AP) -Most active over· ~me counter slocjl.s \uQe>lled by NASO. Name Volume Bid Asked C'19
MCI s 2.051.900 13'1 14 --Intel s 113.500 40.1.. 41 -~ Tandn s 645 300 18 11 J -1
Pieto 557. f oo l 1 Hf + l-t6
ApoleC s..3~ 27 1 27 " -~ DMood 41 171, 18 +
Triton 41~4 1 3 I 9·16 +1-\1
Gl••H s ·m 11·. ,,~ t "' Dlasonc 4 • 1 1~ CPT 373, IS l51 • 1
CoLo Quor£s
! Mr rnL s QuoTES
I -
Nt W YOl10I 141't -notlf••OUI ,,,.._. P'~
~''°'' c.-1111.,, 61' c~•• • ~ u S °"'..,.uon.•
""""" 111 •~ r.,.-11 ~ OOU"'1 10 C-1011 """''"'"""" , .... \ 0 0 • t · ,. .. ~ ... """"'
l~V-. !)IC...,ltl """"" 0.0--
f., ''~\) -...-1a. ~-"--·•IC> ·-., ...... ~,
$ •-M !'00 "•""• A .,.,.,. .. , .. ,,,'Y f~ C!UOWI
SM-u Oii\ '"'Y ............. eo.... tUO! "IOfl
""'*'° '"" .,_..,,,.,, U U IX' S' DO I* 16 t-,,_ Y
P ,...,..... i,J1$ (II\ O~tlC ~I lf'Ot
\j .
· T h at'sanaptdescriptionofboth bu ine sand
bus iness peop le a long th Orange Coast. To keep track of
wher compantesar gotngand which people are helping
t h e m get t here.just watch 'Cr dit Line' -every day in the
Businessse~tlon of your n w
~--------~------------~----·
"
·:Richard Tayles VP
at Transit Casualty
,, .Rlcllard J, Taylet of Hun1n1¥1on Ucal·h has been named ass1s1an1 \ 1cr
prts1dt"nl and manager. sys1cm!> and progran1m1ng. fo r Transit Casitally Co.,
the: .~ropcny-casualty sub!>id1ar) of Benl'ficial Standard Corp. In his new
pos1t1o n. Taylt'S 1s rcspons1blt• for thl' de' l'lopmcnt and n1:i1ntrnanl'C of lhi.'
company's da1a processing apphca\Luns. l-orn1t•rl) n1anagc r of ~)slerns and
programming, he has bci..'n with rrans1t ('asu11hy for fi v{' ~cat~. ••• Corona del Mar r~s1de111 Holly Biilings has tx·l'TI pron1otcd to thl' pos111on
of senior account execut1 vt· a1 Jansen Public Rl'latloos d1 v1s1on ol Jan1en
A.11oclates lac., aC'c-o rd1n g 10 Jaek Vlnecnt, '1t:l' pres1dent/d1reTtor of public
relations. Billings 101ned lht' San•a <\na fir111 1n 1982 fro n1 Century Data
Sy1tem1, Inc. where she-scr\t'r.l il'· a1l\t•rus1ng and pubhc rclauonJi manager
• • • Tus11n-based Toshiba America, Inc. ha!:. announcl'r.J a reahgnn1l"nt ol
product n1ana~emcnt. pl anning an<l dl'\'tlupn1ent at·11v111cs at 11:. 1nfo rmat1o n
systems d ivision. Daniel M. Crane has bt•t•n na1nl'd n1arkt•11ng managt·r,
printers. w1lh full dtrcct rcspons1b1lit) fur pnntl'r p rodut't dt'VC')opmcnl and
marketing. Dr. Sorel Reism·an "i.l!i nan1l'd markeung manager. S)Stems. wi1h
1dent1cal rt•:.pon\lb1ltt1t"> IOr Toshiba's personal computer S~'itC"m s. The new
TAYLES BILLIJ\'.GS llEISi\1A~ CRANE
orpn1a11onal ahgi:iment I"> dl''>lgni:d 10 tontorn1 10 tht' l'urrl'nl product
onenta1io11 of ISO funct1on\, :1tt·ord1ng to Tu,h1h;i \ ll't• prl'Sldl'nt and d1v 1s1o n
general manager. John Rehft>ld. • • • The National Guard and Rcser\'es ( J)dorrua i;o1nn11ttel' for cn1ployt•r
support. under to the oflic(' o ! the '°)C{TCtary oflk-fl·nsc. haveaward{d Mercury
Savings ofHun11ng1on Ht·ach 1hL' l'n1plu~cr !>upp()rl ccn1fica1c eofapprcc1a11on.
The firm "as comn1cndcd for .iJopung pt·rsunncl policii:s that make 11 easier
for emplo)ec!i. to part1c1 patl' 1n !ht· :'iat1onal C1uard and reserves. • • • Kerry Bullock ha!> JOHIL'<l Cochr·ant' Cbast', Livingston & Co. as an account
rcprescntalt \ c 1n the public relations d111s1on_ Hc-r rcspons1bil1t1eJi w1ll 1ncludc
ass1s1ancc on thl' agcnc~ 0
\ h1gh·tech at'Counl!> . .\ rect•nt Journalism graduate
from San D1c110 Stale Ll ni ~cr'>ll}. liullc><:I..·:-. ('Xpcnenc includes :-.lints at San
Dicgo-lxl scd IVAC Corp. and lhl· Gable Agency. ••• Hines Wholt>sale l"Ourseries has awar<led its ad\en1s1ng and puh!Jc
relations at.·coun! 10 Crowell l't1cKay, Inc. of lrv1nl' Crowt·ll McKa} "111
coordinate all ml't.lla acll\ llll'S fur l-i1n ('<;. 1nt'lud1ng 1hc: production of Htnt·s·
new..,Jcttcr ''Four 'it.·a,un' ·· t·l 1ncs 1s a whole~lc grower ofconta1ncr1Lcd plant
product\ and 1!> a d11 1!>11111 of Weyerhaeuser Corp.
• • •
Western Digital Corp. ha' announcl'd that 11 hasl'nlcred into an agrl·en1t·n1
10 acqutrC" an t·qu1t~ p1J'>J\11Jn 1n Array Technology, a San JoM" based gate arr a}
and ... urfact· 11H1unL ll"l hnulog~ company. Wcs1('rn !)1 g1 1al 1s a n1anufac1urer of
propnetar) \l"rTHrondurtor dt•vces, 1ntell1gcn1 \ub\)\l('m~ and ad\anced
d1g11at sy'>tems ••• Bank of America h;,, upt'llt'd a nc" bro'.1!1th 1n ~lt~.!.1011 \1icJO tu br laltcd
the Saddli:baclo. V:illl"\ \1,11 n I HTicC". This ne" ntrlll' 1' the nut.'lt•us of1he ne"''
Saddlt:batk \',1llL'\ \
0 tl'.1 ~1 anagcmL'nt (1roup hl·adl'd h) Joe Arcolio, v1rl'
president 1 hl· n('" hrant·h v.111 he kx«llcd ut.·rn\\lriun 1h~· M1 !>~u1n V1l'JO Mall
at 26991 ( io"n V<Jlll'\ Patk"a} T'hc South \!1,~1111\ V1l'JO brant.·h "·111 he
con<,ol1dalt·r.J 1ntu th1' n1u, h larger fac11lt\ ~ . . '
Eric C. Pfeiffer has Joined Wllllam1-Kubelbeck & Associatrs, Inc. real
cstatC" eeonon11c. linant"1at and financial consuhanls. as an econom1i.1 1n the
firm 's Ir\ 1f1l' office. Bl·ft1rt• J01n1ng WK&A. Pfcdl'tr "a" a rcst•arch as'"X'131l'd
wit h Harold Davidson and Associates, 'Centur} l 11\.. I Ii' rei.pons1b1h11es at
WK&A 1neludt• lh1· ,ullt·1 t11)n <ind analvs1 ~ of data (or cconor111 r and rnarket
li:a s1b1tll} \tud1c' · •••
Mirton~ Industries Limit~d ul { o:.ta Ml'sa ha\ Joined th(' National
Eleclrical Manufacturers AssociaUon and has afTihated "'llh the signaling.
protection and commun1rat1on' ~cuon and the clcc11on1cs d1\ 1s1on The
compan y will OC n:prC"~n\t•d in Nl·M.\ h~ B.E. Ru1coe, v1cc pres1dcn1.
\
Orange Coaat OAtLV PILOT/Monday, J1nu1~ 18, 111U14 BlS
-
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE TRANSACTIONS 8·8
BofA COMMODITY PRICE INDEX
iso~---------------------. I 140-
1
Strong yea~ seen
for commodities
120-
1 'j
so-l
so-~ I
..
BofA report forecast$
~% average price !ise
('ommodny prices an: CXJ>C('led to
increase by an average of 5 percent 1n
1984. following an 8 percent increase
In 1983, according 10 the Sank of
America.
40-t--+--t---i--+-=-+--i--+--+--+-+---+-... 12 73 74 1s 78 n 78
In 1tsquanerty report on commodi-
ty prices. prepared by the Economics·
Polley Rescan:h Depenmen1. 1he
bank says that the overall increase
will continue to be led by industrial
commodi1y pnces. which are forecast
10 increase by an average of 11
pcrccnt in I 984.1lndustrial commodi-
t ~ pr1ccs will by OOosted as th.e U.S.
eco nomic expansion becomes more
hroad-ba~ and the recovery spreads
10 0th.er countries.
79 so 11 12 13
1m -100
Strong finish gives
AirCal record year
Specifically the repon says:
• .),lum1num will continue to be the
lcad1ng per fo rmer among
mC"tals,wi1h .prices forecast 10 reach
85cents per pound by the end of 1984.
• An ell'.cellent year is forecast for
1he paper 1ndus1ry. causing the price
of wood pulp 10 b«ome firm al $500
per metric to n. 290,368 passengers
fly NB-based airline
during December
.),11'(.·a1 boarded more passengers 1n
1983 than any year 1n its 17-year
h1s1ory. the Ncwpori Beat·h based
airline has announced.
Stro ng December passenge r board-
1ngi. of 290.368 helped AirCal break
11.., prl'\'IOUS rt·cord. set 1n 1981 .
Prc<,1dent Wilham L:~·on said 1hat
198.l's passenger 1rafTic record is
pan1cularly s1gnifi~ant s1ncc 11 "''all
ach1e\•ed with four fewer c1t1es on
lhl'lr Jiysu.·m than 1n previous years.
"In 1act. o n a comparable sys1em
basis. our boardings increased 24.7
percent for the: )car." L)on said. ··w e
fl•el this renects a pos1 11 ve response to
the ac\lons ~·c ha'c taken to better
TOKAI BANK'S
EFFORT HELPS
SITTON HOME
Tht' Huntington Beaeb branch of
Tokai Bank of California collected
$5,000 In Chri1tma1 Sifts for lhe
Albert Silton Home, temporary
shelter for abu1ed children of Oraa1e
County.
"We had a good response from our
cu1tomer1, especially McDonald 011-
lributlng who donatH St.ZOO lo
pt"r1onal beauty care products," 1ald
O.J . Gause, campal1n chalrmu an.d
c rHll officer for the bank.
Thl1 was Cbt> second year t.lle baak
collected gifts from it1 cu11omer1 for
the Albert Sitton Home, wblcb 11
located In Orange.
servc our cus1o mers
A1rCal's De<:ember boardings 1n·
creased 11 .3 percent over 1he
previous yc:ar. while revenue passen-
ger miles increased 10 percent to
l 1 l.2,,milhon. A va ilable-seal miles
inc reased 14.4 percent and the De-
cember load factor dropped two
paints to 53.3 percen1.
Fikures fo rt he full 1983 )'ear show a
13.2 percen1 improvement in Ai r.
Cars load factor to 58.2. percen1. an
increase of almosl seven points over
l 982. Passenger boardings increased
4.6 percen1 for the year. 10 3.566. I 53,
while passt'nger miles "'ere up 5.8
percent Available scat m iles for 1983
were down 6.4 perrent.
• In spite of conunued high interest
rates. the construction lndus1ry will
enJO Y a good year. allowing lumber
prices to increase by approximately
15 percent above the current levels.
• Energy prices will remain stable
1n 1984. as world demand for oil, gas,
and coal is expected to show only
moderale improvements.
•The results of the early r?unds.of
iron ore contract negot1a11ons in-
dicate that iron ore prices will decline
for the second year 1n a row. The new
benchmark pnce of about S22 per
me1nc ion al European pons reflC<'tS
the: slow fC'Covery of the world St«I
induslrv. -
Tougher laws
save money on
child support
1 f yo u 're a --------------
parent lr} lng to duck
ch1ld -!>u ppor1 pa ~-
n1t•nts. you fat'e a SYLVIA tougher and tougher
time dunng 1984
under proposed con-p
S'""onal leg is-OITER
\ation. There are ••••••••••••••• fewer and fewer folks
around 10 stand up for you. In fact. I can find none.
This whole area of child·suppon collc;:ct ion cfTons is
an outrage. a disgrace. For many women and children.
child suppon 1s a promise never kept. An estimated one-
quaner to one-1h1rd of fathers -and fathers usually pay
child suppon while mothers get custody -never make
coun-ordered child-suppon payments.
A recent Census Bureau report draws a depressing
p1l·1ure of1he perilous financial lives endured by many of
these families with absent pare1':ts. Of the 4 million women
due ch1ld -suppon payments in 1983, less 1han half -47
percent -received the full amount due. the repon notes.
The ·unmistakable. tragic conclusion: Divorce has
been a financial calamity for eno rmous to tals of
defenseless children.
Bui durin~ 1he Reagan administration. a change
appears clearly 1n the making. One House bill. which had
wide bipanisan suppon. passed by a vote of 422 to zero in
the closing days of the past session. The Senate is slated to
consider several child-suppon bills soon afler it rt'"turns 10
Washington late this month.
The House bill 1s a ya rdstick. Sponsored by Rep.
Barbara B. Kennelly. 0-Conn .. the bill wo uld require
sta1es 10 withhold c hild-support payments from the
paychecks of anyone who failed to pay for 30 days. It
would cover federal and state employees as well as
employees in all of the private industries .
States would be required to withhold tax refunds from
parents with children on welfatt who also were dchnquent
1n child-suppon paymen1s.
States would be aHowed to withhold tax refunds as
well from parents whose children were no1 receiving
welfare. but who were delinquen1 in their child-support
pa ) mcnls.
StateS would be enabled to put liens on real and
personal property in 50mc situations.
And statCI would have the power 10 report parents
who owed more 1han S 1.000 in child suppon to c redit
bureaus.
Records would be computerized and 1n information
clcanrtK,hOuK would be est1blishcd.
Accordina 10 this legislation and similar bills 10 be
proposed 1n the approaching session of Congrtss. the
federal go.,,ernmcnl would provide ma1chin1 funds to
develop both the hardware and software for these cfTons.
The federal govcmmt'nl would Pl)' a significant per·
centaJC of 1he cost of runnin& lncenttve proarams. 100.
The formulas established would encouraae the states
10 beef up enforccmenl cffons because: the more they
collect. the m ore 1hey would keep-up to I 0 percent oft he
an1oun1 collec1ed.
Tou&hened child-supJ)Ort enforcement e!J:ons w~uld
save money for us all as lax.payers.. There 11 a direct
rt"lauonshfp-bcl~'ftn child·suppon en~mcnt pro-
grams and reduced e:1pcndilures io..Aid lo Famil~ with
Dependent Chiklr-en pr,,.,:amJ.---Ulah---whk'h-has t
highly ft'gardcd t'nforttmcnt PfOll*m-ttponed in 1980
that collection efforts b)' 1he ch"iJd.suppa:rt QtMC'Y pr61d.1ht
total o~rat1\le bud&t'l of that astnC)' plus 6. 7 percent <SJ
million) of all e:1pcnditure1 ror the AFOC proaram.
Tht' etTectiive date of tM kt'nnclly bill is planned for,
Ck1 . I. 198~ -the s11n of fisc1l yca.r 1986. The
Congres!1o nal 8ud1tt Officcntimates im~ive Nl\linp
ofS78 m1lhon for fiscal year 1986. S67 tr1illion for 1987
and S72 million for 1988.
Mos1 of 1hnc u v1n.11 woukl ruulr from improYtd
colltt11on C"ffon1 1h11 would remove famihet from'
welfare. Ye1 c.hi ld·suppon paymen11 as a pc~ntaae .. of '
avrraat malt income 101111 men: I J pcR."C:nl.
The pf6idcnt s behind this and so a~ all who btlicvc
that ram~lln should 11kt..care of 1hemtclvn.. w~o wan110
con1rol wt.lfaft..tMti Bd whO fttl c:bildml mu1LnoLbe.
allowed to i.uffcr 1n • d1 YOl'\"f. •
I '
•Tin prices w11I surpass the S6 pl':
pound roark in rc!ponse to modt'sl
demand increases as well as thl'
continut'd suctcss of 11n-produc1ng
countries 1n restricting suppl)<.
Price improvements for aincul-
tu ral commodities in 1984 will ('On-
tinuc 10 be considerably slower thun
for the industrial commod1t1es . H1~h
erpr1ces for agriculturalcommod1t1c)
1n 1983 will stimula1e increase~
planungs 1h1s year. dampening 1hc
price 1mprovemen1s that 01herwisc
would resull from the "'ortd tcon-
omic recovery.
Some of the bank's agr1cuhural
commodity proJection~ art':
• CofT« pnr es. which Jumped
nearly 10 percent last fall . are CA·
pected 10 decline modestly 1n t 984.
Prices rose early in the 19d3-84
marketing year as 1he new lnter-
na1ional Coffee Organi1ation (JC'O)
agree ment went in10 cff.:ct.
autho rizing export quo1a.s. Prices arC"
likely to weaken 1n the secuud half of
the current markeling year ( 1983-84)
as the Brazilian harvest approache~.
Brazil is lh wo rld's larges! coffee
producer and exponer.
•Collon prices are also expected to
have peaked in the first quancr of the
1983-84 marke1ing year. Reduced-
U.S. acrttge' in 1983 due to th.('
Payment-in-Kind program and
adverse world wea1her resuhed 1n
higher cotton pnces throu~toul. ,las t
summer and fall . Now. wnh prices
up. 1he outlook for f984 ts for
increased productions. This hai.
dampcnd the outlook for cotton
pnces despite an increasing world
demand for liber.
• Bttf prices are eJ1.pected to remain
flat dunng the first half of 19!14
despite U.S. producers' l1qu1dat1on of
herds during the fall of 1983.
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