HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-02-16 - Orange Coast PilotHIGH 73 LOW49 COOT 1111111
THUASOA Y FEBRUARY lb. 1~U4 OHANGf COUNTY. CALIFOHNIA :•'> CE: N 1.
Today's
complete
Olymplc
results
Newport oil firm defa·ults
-Page• 81-3
Coast
Final sponsors are being
sought for the Orange
County portion of the
Olympic Torch
fund-raising run./ A7
California
What's California's latest
way to get romantics out
of their shells and into the
fast lane? /C1
A Fullerton grade school
principal is cleared of
charges he molested a
student, but still doesn't
get his job back./ A7
Nation
Experts still can't explain
cave-in after nuclear test
blast in Nevada desert
Wednesday./ AS.
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::·:!:::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·
World
. The Red Brigades
claimed credit for Rome
assassination of U.S.
multi-force leader .I A4
At least 24 nations In
Africa are facing a grave
food shortage due to
drought and other natural
causes./D4
Living
The panic of AIDS may
have subsided, but the
patients still need under-
standing./C1.
While a husband feeds
his desire t o eat, his wife
starves for affectlon./C2
Sports
Bill Johnson of Van Nuys
captured the men's
downhill in the Winter
Olympics today./81
UC Irvine's basketball
team seeks Its first win
ever at Selland Arena
against Fresno State./81
Area community college
basketball teams find the
road not to their Ii king, as
Orange Coast, Golden
West and Saddleback
lose./82
Entertainment
Despite ABC's coverage
of the Winter Olympics,
\mderdog NBC ran away
with the television ratings
for the week ./CS
Business
Varl-X relocates Its cor-
porate headquarters to a
new building In lrvlne./85
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletln Board
Business
California News
Clasalfled
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Help Vouraelf
Horoscope
Ann Land••
Living
Mutual Funds
NaUOMJN.a
OplnlOn
Police Log
Public Notlcee
Sport a
$took Marhta
T ... 'ltalon
Theetera
Weather
WortdN.ws
' I
.
C3
A3
04-5 A4
01-3
C3
03 a.
C2
02 ca
C1-2
85 .....
A8
A3
D4-6
81-3 ee ce
C6-7
A.2
A4
By JERRY HIRSCH
OfllleO.., ..........
A Newport Beach oil and ps
exploration company with a repu-
tation for aggressively seeking ac-
guisitions defaulted on more than
S 15 million in loans from First
Interstate Bank and is seeking to
restructure the debt.
Transierra Exploration Corp. said
it has an unpaid loan balance of$ I 3.5
A first
on Coast:
Olympic
plates
CdM resident gets
his off t h e top
By lt.AREN E. KLEIN
Of ... 0.., ..... ·-
Mike Meade didn't know his
belated Christmas presents would
attract so much attention.
But the 44-year-old Corona del
Mar resident found out Wednesday.
when he showed up at the Depart-
ment of Motor Vehicles in Costa
Mesa to pick up the five personalized
license plates he had ordered -two
for himself, one for his son, one for his
daughter and one for a former law
partner.
When Meade got there. he found an
American Indian in full dress. a
government representative and re-
porters and photographers all on
hand not to watch him hand out his
Christmas presents, but to witness an
event of historical significance: the
issuing of the first sets of Olympic
license plates.
At OMV offices around the state
Wednesday, the collectors' plates
were distributed for the first time with
varying amounts of fanfare.
Meade spent $500 for the com-
memorative license plates he ordered
last November as Christmas lifts.
But while he is an Olympics
million plus interest considered in
default by the bank and that Trans-
1erra 's subsidiary, TEC of Texas Inc.,
is in default on an upald balance of
$1 . 7 plus interest.
"Declining oi~ prices is the main
reason. But we have not had as much
success in drilling as we bad hoped
dunng the last year. I guess that is the
011 game," Transierra spokesman
John T. Clark said Wednesday.
The company's audttors. Arthur
Anderson &. Co. have inserted a
"going concern" clause 1n thls year's
financial report wamj04 that Trans-
ie~ is in serious financial trouble.
But Oark says he does not beli~e
the company 1s 10 any immediate
danger of going under.
The default put on hold a Trans-
ierra plan to trade $4 m1lhon in stock
for nearly aJI the 011 and gas assets of
o.., ......... ., ....... "'-
Mike Meade •hows offblanewOlymplc-theme per-
aon•Htr.ie:d llcenae plate. -the ftnt in the ata~
supporter and has ordered tickets to
this year's Summer Games in Los
Angeles, Meade said be really wanted
lhe plates because they gave him a
chance to get letlercombinations that
were already taken on regular plates.
Devon, his daughter's name. was
unavailable when fie tned to order it
befott. he said. But the Olympic
(Pleue eee OL YllPIC/ A2)
Palo Petroleum Inc. of Dallas.
Transierra's stock swaps have
pined it ownership of four other 011
companies during the past year and
boosted the com~ny's reserves 10
more than two mdlion barrels of oil
and 16 million feet of natural gas.
But the worldwide oiJ glut that has
steadily sent petroleum pnccs down-
ward apparently resulted in a cash
crunch for the company.
C\atk said Trans1ena did not make
it January s-yment$ to fint lnler-
state and told the bank it COClld ft<M
meet il February obliptions.
Howevtt, the company is P*id up
with its suppliers and sut><.Ontne10tl
tcavina first Interstate a. Trus-
1erra's only creditor, be said.
Oatlc said that in 1982 the com-
pany "hit" a lot of oil wells but that
(Pleue aee 00. naM/ A2)
PilgriID due
to shove off
Skipper tells c ity
he'll move clipper
The Pllgnm of Newport, Dennis
Holland's handmade l 00-foot clipper
ship. will leave Newpon Beach's
Rhine Wharf soon for a private dock.
Holland said Wednesday.
The 37-year-old Holland, who has
been issued $17 tickets every day for
the past week and a half because his
boat is docked at the city wharf
without permission, agreed at a
meeting with city officials Wednes-
day to move the Pilgrim.
"I'm going· to try and stay untJI
Sunday, when there's a good high
tide," Holland said.
Holland will take the boat to a
temporary dock at Art's Landing,
where he was offered shelter a week
ago, he said. Earlier. he decided not to
move to Art's because he felt the
docks, undergoing demolition and
remodeling, were unsafe.
Now, Holland said, be doesn't have
much choice.
last week.. city attome~ Robert
Burnham filed a complaint io Orange
I
County Superior Court askina that
Holland be ordered to move. Ajud,t
denied that request, but told the city it
could request a temporary restraiJUJ'll
order against Holland if the boat were
not moved by today.
Mayor Pro Tern Phil Maurer laid 1f
the city's diffcn:nccs with Holland AR
settled today. lbc city will talte no
further action against him.
.. The meeting went really well
(Wednesday)," Maurer said. City
officials told Holland he could anchor
in the harbor and tie up at Rhine
Wttarf for lbc four-hOW' time limit
when be needed to make repairs.
"We'd even extend that to 12
hours, ifhe needs.it. .. Maurer said.
The feud between Holland and t.be
city erupted over the Pil¢m•s nearly
month-long slay at Rhine Wharf.
Holland was onJy authorized lO dock
at the wharf for four days last month.
Holland said he is ti~ of fiahtina
city haU and is suffering from t.6e nu.
"Now, I'm going to relax and get
some time to work on the boat," he
said.
Holland built the 18-century
replica of a clipper ship by hand over
13 years in the yard of bis Costa Mesa
home.
Nuke foes stage own show
By MICHALENE BUSICO
Of .. 0.-, Not ·-Delegates attending a defense in-
dustry convention in Costa Mesa
were offered an alternative Wednes-
day night by several peace groups. but
none came to Usten.
The alternative conference, held at
the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel,
consisted of anti-nuclear lectures and
films and was originaJly aimed at
delegates attending the WINCON '84
convention in the hotel.
But the audience, wtuch ranged
from 14 to 30 people, was composed
Airport
proposal
endorsed
By JEFF ADLER
Of the 0.., "°' 918"
The Orange County Airport Com-
mission - a body that advises the
Board of Supervisors on John Wayne
Airport matters -Wednesday en-
dorsed ratifying an agreement with
the city of Newport Beach that is
intended to quell the long-standing
furor over the airport's proposed
expansion.
Airport commissioners concluded
a tw<>:hour meeting by voting 2-1 in
favor of a proposed leaal agreement
between the county and tbe city. The
agreement now goes to supervisors.
who are expected to consider it in the
next several weeks.
But the airport commission voted
to endorse the plan only after •JtCCin&
to change several key provisions of
the plan approved by the Newport
Beach City Council Jan. 23.
Commissioners reworded sections
of the plan concerning the size of the
expansion project the county would
empowered to undertake at Jobn
Wayne Airport and how a search for
(Pleue .ee ADtPOaT/J\2)
entirely of members of groups spon-
soring the conference -the Aero-
pspace En~neers/Workers for Social
Responsibility, Occidental Coll~e
Peacemakers, Los Angeles Cathobc
Worker. and the Computer Pro-
fessionals for Social Responsibility
-and community members. Win-
con delegates did not accept offers to
attend.
Jonathan Parfrey. a conference
organizer. blamed the hotel for
prohibiting the peace groups from
distributing literature on the con-
ference.
"We've had some difficulty reach-
ing out tQ the participants of WIN-
CON. I know of no other way to reach
them than through the hotel...l have
to admit we've been ticked in that
way." he said.
But J.W Wilson. a WINCON
spokesman had a different reason for
the non-participation of the del-
~wes.
· ''The points being raised here are
nothing new. peculiar. or unique.
They {The delegates) know the
negatlVlty they'll probably feel here
(Pleue eee NUKE/ A2)
Doctora. technlcluaa, and ataff of Coeta
Meu.'• Emeratcenter Walll-ln Medical
Center poee C-or plctme before palndna
.,.., ............ .,Molw'd .......
over •Ian on b alldlng'• wall. Coeta Me.a
counclf membera ordered the remo'Y&l,
u ytn i the aymboi. 'riolate atan ordinance.
Phooof!
Fated
fin~er
finished
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of ..,. .,.., ""' ....
The huge. bandaged finger that
pointed the way to Costa Mesa's
Emt'rg1ccnter Walk-10 Medical
Center was amputated this morrung
b) tht' Cit) 's order.
Tht' Costa Mesa Cny Councal last
month decided that the
714-square-foot grapbicon the wall of
the medical center's building. at 131
E. I 7th St.. Vlolated the city's sign
ordinance U nder the ordinance. the
Emcrgicenter is allowed a sign of
I 3 \ 5 square feet.
The Emergicenter staff had a coffee
and doughnut "off the waU" pany at 8
am. toda). the deadline set b) the city
(Pleue eee on/ A2l
Medics bridge refugee cultural gap
Communication
lack impedes
proper care
One prqnant woman won't take
vitamin because ahc believes they
will cause her baby to grow too tarac.
aausina a dtfficuh binh.
A man ref'u.ses to submit to a simple
blood test bec:a\lJC be believes lht
blood will OC\iCf be replac:ed.
A mother refuses to 11vc her son 1
prescription -au bccautc the doctor aavc her child a friendly pat on the
head.
•
The don't seem hkc normal
medical prob•ems. but for doctor
who are trcatina Oranr County's
growing population o Southeasl
Asian rtf\aace$ a lf'8t cultural gap i
creauna dil'ficulttcs There are between 50.000 and
60.000 Southeast A 11n refugees ""· ma in the coun t). according 10
Nampel Pan1 chpant-m
spoke man for the Rcfugtt As-
s1staMt ProJttt of the count) 's
Health are A&cncy Mo t hvc 1n
Sant.a Ana. G•rdcn Gro"c and West·
min1s1tr, but rcfu cc populations alw
are cxpandtna 1n lluntinaton 1k.ach
and Fountain V llcy
'While 1t 1' unl1 cly t-flc rcfua,cc, wilt
JERRY
HIRSCH
PERSPECTIVE
tran ml\ rare . c•ottc d1 to other
1'1lnic County rcs1dcnt1., they ha'c a
vancty or health {>"Ob•cm ad the
cultural .PP somcllmc ma~e<1 treat·
mcnt difficult.
Reru eescommg 100l'in C'ount~
\
I
now art" different from those who
camt af\er the fall ofSa.taon in 1975,
according to Dr. GttaJd R. Gn:enc, an
1nfoct1ous disease expert and direaor
of pcchatncsat the UC Irvine Medical
Center 10 Oranse
.. The first waves were fairly~
ticated The)' wctt IO"emmeot of-
fiC1al and South Vietnamese "'°"
fe 1001.I .
.. Tht mo"' rettot amval ut
t0ptust1ou~ Ma.ny ha~ been farm.
en or pusant Man)i '*bO have
~ulcd here art bill people and hl\t'
never sccn a car or a pb ioan
before," Greene Cllptiincd.
·• llhough the) arc more hkcly to
(Pl ... w.RUUOU/A;al-
A2 ••Orange CoMI OAJLY PILOTIThureday, February US, 1984
Transi~t tax pushed on cable TV
Oranp County Traruponation
Comm1s ion Chamnao Thomas F.
Riley and Exccut1ve Director Stan
Of\elie will appear on ~ble tetevis1on
systems throu,hout the county cx-
plai01l'_l4 thc commiss1oo's amb1t1ous
St 2.S billion I S·year Transportation
Investment Ptan.
The proaram, "Life tylcs," hosted
by Phil Blauer, will eumanc the
development and financtal impact or
the plan which will be pmcotcd to
Oranae County voters m June.
The tr.uu.it plan asks vote~ to
approve a penny sales tax incrtase to
raise funds for casing traffic conaes-
t1on tbroughout the county b>-' widen-ma c:\tcry Orange County freeway,
crcatina three new frcewa~s. improv-
ina mass transil and providing fund-
1n1 to cili« for local improvement .
Times Mirror Cable will air the
proaram at 6 p.m. today; Community
Cablevis1on Company, at 7:30 p.m
toda)'; California Cablesystcms. ai 3
~.m. Sunday and Feb. 26 ; Storer
Cable at 6:30 p .m. today, Saturday,
Feb. 23 and 25: Group W Cable at 1
p.m. Feb. Monday. Wednesday and
Feb. 24 and Century Cable at 7 p.m .
today.
GADFLY GUILTY ...
Prom Al
Gabriels, who previously has
fought with police over an assortment
of alleged infractions, including viol-
ating the city's leash law and carrying
beer on the beach, was arrested in late
OIL FIRM ••.
Prom Al
1983 turned sour for lhe company.
Most of the company's exploration
1s in western Texas.
"We drill only domesticall y and
then only shallow holes. Everything
under 7,000 feet," Clark said.
Transierra. which is traded as an
over-the-counter stock, reported a net
loss for the year ended Oct. 31 of$ I. 7
million compared to a loss of $2.8
million for the previous year.
The bid price for the stock today
was I l/a -down •;, from the close
Wednesday.
December af\er the verbal confronta-
tion.
Police said Gabnels and another
man yelled and cursed at the meter
maid as she was wnting a ticket on
Forest A venue. Officers dcscn bed the
disturbance as "a real nasty scene."
Because the ciay's holding cell was
being remodeled at the time. Gabriels
was taken to Orange County Jail - a
fac1li1y he had v1s1 ted earlier.
Gabnels later denaed the police
version of the brouhaha and insisted
he gave up swearing when he lefi the
Army.
"I'm not the obscenity type of guy,"
he explained.
However, Gabriels entered a plea
of guilty in court Wednesday to a
single count of disturbing the peace.
Judge lies, in a unusual move,
continued sentencing for an entire
year on the condition that Gabnels
"not initiate or have" a conversauon
with the meter maid during that
penod.
The second man was ordered to
write a letter of apology to Miclette.
"I'm not suppose to talk to her and
vice versa. That's JUSt fine with me,"
explained Gabnels after the court
hcanng. "We ain't talking."
Although it was hardly the court
decision of the year, word of the
ruling spread quickly in the Art
Colony. A group of merchants who
followed the events were raising
money today to buy flowers for the
meter maid.
··1 think that's great. We're putting
in $1 0 for Rosie," said a clerk at
Hardware Affaire, a Forest Avenue
business.
For Gabriels. the court appearance
was just the latest time he has
wrangled with the law.
Last year, he was arrested for
possessing a muscle relaxant. He was
released. though. when he produced a
prescnpuon for the drug.
NUKE-FOES ST AGE NO-SHOW ...
From Al
and there's nothing goang to be
presented here that'~ not already
known or discussed. The) arc not
operating in a vacuum."
The program was a pan of the
• ongoing protest of the defense indus-
try convention. The protest began
Tuesday night before with a
candlelight v1g1 l, and continued
Wednesday morning with a passive
resistance protest. resulting in 28
arrests.
Last night'~ conference. called an
"alternative program'' to the conven-
tton. included lectures by members of
the Aerospace Engineers for Soctal
Responsibility. who told of their
personal cns1s that came from work·
mg an the defense industr; and led
them to their subsequent acuv1sm.
The Rev. Doug Gregg led the
Occidental Colleg Peacemal..ers. who
along with the Catholic worker. gave
a Christian perspecti ve on arms
build-up. and asked such questions as
"ls it a sin to bUlld a nuclear
weapon?"
Both groups stressed the need for
better communication between the
polanzed peace groups and the de-
fense representatives. companng the
separation to the current relat1onsh1p
between Russia and the United
States.
··we must stratcg12e on how we can
be more effective in estabhshing a
dialogue." Rev. Gregg said.
Alfred Beebe, a former sofiware
engineer for Hughes Aircraft. said the
'aJue placed on the final product -a
missile -rather than on the theoreti-
cal and mathematical insight gamed
1n the product's development caused
him to leave the company.
He said the system, beginnang in
colleges and continuing into the job
market. fosters a disregard for the
human impact of the technology
being developed.
"We have to ask now what the
social implications are." he said.
The WJ NCON convention con-
tinues through Friday
OLYMPIC PLATES .•.
From Al
plates include vertical "U.S." or
"LA .. letters on the left side that
change the official reading of the
personalized numbers and letters.
Meade said he read a flier about the
Olympic plates when his registration
nottce came m the mail in November.
o he ordered "Devon:· "Joe D"
for Joe D1Vmcenzo, his law partner.
"The l" for his 1952 boat trailer. "Big
l" for a 1950 truck his son owns and
"The 47" for a 1947 Ford he has.
"BMW." for another of his cars.
hasn't come m yet.
··These are h1ston c, unique," said
Meade. who admits to collecting
antique cars and most everything
else.
The commemorative plates -red.
white and blue and featuring the
progressive Olympic star and five
mterlockang rin~ -will be available
to purchase until Dec. 31, 1984.
Betty Nims of the Costa Mesa
OMV said the S 100 fee for the plates
1s di"1ded. with S65 going for securit y,
traffic control and law enforcement
dunng the Summer Games, $25 going
to the Environmental License Plate
Fund, and $10 to the OMV to
manufacture the plates and run the
Olympic License Program.
Souvenir plates, reading "LA
Games ... can be purchased at any
DMV office along with personalized
and non-personalized Olympic
plates.
REFUGEE TREATMENT PROBLEMS ...
From A l
have infections or parasites because
of where they h"ed. the hkhhood of
transmitting those to other people in
Orange Count> is extremel) shm,"
Greene said.
<\nd they have completely different
concepts of health care.
"Communications. perhaps, has
been the biggest problem w1th de-
Ii "en ng good health care to the
ref ugces." Greene said.
Refugees may make it appear that
the doctor 1s understood and that they
agree w1th me treatment when neither
may be true.
"They won't say anything 1f they
don't understand the treatment be·
cause they don't want the doctor to
lose face. They won't question the
doctor but they m1jtht ignore the
treatment ... Greene said.
Refugees may reject treatment or
think the doctor 1s not a good
phys1c1an 1f he:
•Does not give an Injection.
•Asks a patient to take off his or
her clothes for an examination.
•Mentions that folk remedies 31e
1nefTect1ve.
•Pats a child on the head which is
demeaning to Southeast Asians.
Refugees' primitlve
beliefs pose pr:oblem
"Most re<.'ent arrivals have no
concept of body organs or the West-
ern concept of medicine. For exam-
ple. they won't submit to a blood test
because they feel the blood will not be
replaced." Greene said.
"Trying to do surgery requires a
~eat deal of education and convinc-ing. ..
llJ ... YHIMCH °' .......... -
Just Call
642-6086
Refugee woman often will not take
vitamins 1f they are pregnant. They
believe the vitamins w111 make the
baby too big and cause a difficult
delivery. according to G reene.
Most of the illnesses associated
with the refugees are a result of life in
crowded. unsanatary conditions. It is
not unusual for an entire family to
have lived in a 10 to 15-square-foot
area, Greene said.
The refugees often come to the
county with a variety of intestinal
ailments which are corrected with
treatment and the use of proper
sanitation facilities.
"People have e~pressed worries
about epidemics but nothing has
occured since the mid-70's when the
refugees first started to settle here,"
Grttne added.
"I am certain that there have been
isolated incidents of transmission but
that was going on before the refugees
arrived." Greene said.
"Most of the diseases ~uirc close
contact dunng a prolonged period of
tame." Green said.
The Health Care A&cncy sees about
15,000 refugees a year. according 10
Panichpant·m.
"Our goal is to help them take
better care of their health and help
them become stlf·sufficient. We tty
to bndgc both sides." she said.
A lot of that work involves trans-
latina for doctors treatin1 patients
who don't soeak Enalish and writina
pamphlets about American medicine
1n Southeast Astan lanauascs.
"We want to help local docton
undcnt.and about the rcfusce Pl·
tic:nt," Panichpant-rn said.
Whal do you like abou1 tbe Dilly Pllol? Wlilat dOll'I )'ff Ilk~? Call "«
nombtr al lt fl and your mtua11 will bt' recorded, trantcrlbd uct dtUvtrt'4
to t~t 1pproprlalt editor.
Tbt same U ·ho•r 111wtrJti1 uvlct may bf •ttt1 to record lettttl to ah
edllor on any toptc. Coatrit>.tors to our Leuen col•m• m•1t l~h•de t.Mlr
name and tel1 pbont namhr for v rtflcatlon. No clrnlatlM calls. please.
Ttll 111 wbat'1 oo yo•r mtnd.
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TODAY
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Sun 11t1 loder 11 5:38 p.111., ru.. 40tll St.. NNpof1 fi1d9Y M l:M Lm. lll1d Mle 10M1 11t 22nd St., NNpof1
1·2 POOt
2·3 POOt 2-3 POOt
2... POOt
1·2 POOt 15:31 p.111. a.lboe Wedge 1·2 POOt·falr Moon,... \oday llt 5:30 p Ill . .... ~ IMcl1
Flldey .t 1:42 a_m lll1d ,_ egM1 11t Sen Cllrntnt.
1:44p.111. W .... Tlfl'l9" 51-11
2-3 fair
8 ... dlrlC'llon -
AIRPORT PROPOSAL BACKED ...
From Al
an alternate airport site would be
conducted.
The advisory panel decided there
should be no restraints on the size of
the new terminal to be constructed as
part of the proposed expansion plan.
Any decision on the size the terminal
should be left to the supervisors,
according to the draft of the plan to be
submitted to board members.
In addition, commissioners agreed
the county should not be required to
select an alternative airport site in
three years and begin construction
within I 0 years on a new airport.
They amended the agreement to read
that the county must make "best
efforts" within those time limits.
· Supervisor Thomas Riley, who
represented the county in the nego-
tiations to frame the agreement,
termed the commission's action "re-
sponsible." He added he hopes the
approval "can gain the support of the
Board of Supervisors."
Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn
Hart, who represented the city in the
sensitive negotiations, also said she
was pleased by the commission's
action. She called the action a
"positive step forward," but noted
the important approval. that of the
supervisors. might be more difficult
to obtain.
An aide to Riley on airport matters,
Ken Hall, likened the commission's
approval to ''getting into the playoffs
with the championship game yet to be
played."
Deity Piiot
Deltvery
11 Querentoed
Monoay F •>day II yoo do
no1 "•vf' rou, r1 apet Oy ~)()om ceR bet01e 7 pm
JnO ~ou• copy "''II be
~hlol-ttA\1
Approval of the agreement by
supervisors is expected to be difficult
to win. Board members have ex·
ptessed their reluctance to sign an
agreement limiting future actions by
future supervisors.
Also, supervisors have adopted a
s~tement, as board policy, that no
alternative airport site exists in
Orange County.
If approved by supervisors, the
agreement then would have to be
resubmitted to the Newport Beach
City Council for concurrence.
Provisions of the proposed 30-year
agreement would require the city to
drop a lawsu11 challenging airport
expansion plans and would permit
the county to expand the ai~rt to
accommodate 55 commemal jct
fl ights until tec hnologically quieter
jets are introduced. With the in-
troduction of new aircraft that could
satisfy airport noise guidelines, the
flight lid would be removed.
OFF THEW ALL .••
From Al
for removal of the offending finger.
Doctors, X-ray technac1ans, medi-
cal assistants and assorted friends
with paintbrushes and rollers in hand,
collaborated to bury the bandaged
finger and Red Cross mural under a
new coat of paint
Dr. J. Brennan Cassidy, who
founded the clinic in 1982. said he
plans to repai nt the sam e.
copyrighted logo on the wall but in
smaller proportion.
"The new one will be only about 16
percent the size of this one," Cassidy
said.
"I was disappointed that they
wouldn't Jct us keep (the origrnal
sign). I've gotten a lot of positive
comments about it being pleasing
aesthetically," he said. "All over L.A.
they're putting up murals on the walls
to clean up and improve blank walls
for the Olympics and I thought this
was really an improvement on a
blank, bare wall ...
The sign requirements for the
Emergicenter came to the attention of
the city after the mural was put up
illegally. according to Clarence
Clarke. vice chairman of the city's
Planning Commission.
rhere was no question about
whether the graphic constituted art or
commercial. Clarke said. The sign has
to comply with the city's ~uired
square-footage allotments, he added,
because it was erected after the sign
ordinance went anto effect in 1973.
Last year's City Council decision to
"grandfather" in non-compliant
signs that were up before the ordi-
nance was passed did not apply to
Emcrgicenter. Clarke said.
ORANGE COAST Clrculetlon 7Wla-4m
Daily Pilat
H. l . ~wertz Ill
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Cl111tfled edvwttelit• 714110-1111 Al°"* ............. ta-4121
MAIN OFFICE
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new\ storie5 1llustrahon' ed1tot1al rn111 1r or
a~t_,_IS hereon mey De tep<OO..Oecl wilhOJI ~
pet~ OI COOyllQl'll °"""" Sa•u•<l~y """ Sunoay 11 you do f\OI 'K••"e yout
eooy by 7 • m u.• l>efOte
•O a m ano ~ COP'f ••
be-...~
Chuy Dowellby Roaemery Churchmen SeconCI CIHS POSleQe peoe) 81 Coele Mftl c.f~
!UPS I H 9001 S<ll>ectic>tlOI\ by cttr• '4 7S montllly
by mt• Mi 50ITlOttl"'v Clrculatlon Tolephone1
Editor and Assistant Controller
to the Publisher
l tepMfl F. C•HIO
PtOductlOI\
Maneoe<
VOL. n , NO. 47
Clothing, To Be Valid,
should be a natural and positive
extension of the wearer. We 've
designed an entire collection with
that in mind.
The Nines Collection, by South-
wick, a carefull y tailo red edition of
slightly updated traditional clothing.
A collection that makes the quiet
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Irvine Art Center
explores Passover
Irvine fans embers of energy policy:
The Irvine Fine Ans Center's April schedule of an
workshops for children beains with an e~planation of the
Pusover holiday.
Children panicipatina in the April 7 wotkshoe will
prepare sedar plateSi practice "the three quesuons"
included in the Jewish holiday ritual and make homemade matzo.
On the same Saturday, clay..<fabblina children under
age 8 can set their imaaination to work on creating fann animals.
More clay adventures follow on April 16, 17, 18 and
19. An easter eaa designina.session is scheduled for April 17.
further information on registration can be obtained
by calhna SS2-1078. The center is located at 4601 Walnut
Ave. in Hcritaae Park.
Irvine job .ee~en clinic •lated
A four-week job seeker's clinic bejins Feb. 27 for
those who want to explore career opuons. The career
assessment and exploration class is being offered by the
Women's Opponunit1es Center of UC Irvine.
fifteen professionals will be panelists. The course
combines 44 class hours with career research and job
interviewing.
Registration information can be obtained by calling
8S6-7128.
HB Africa photo sat arl outlined
A pre-orientation meet. ing and film concemini ·this
summer's 17-day Africa Big Game Photo Safari will ~
conducted Tuesday at Golden West College in Hunt-
ington Beach. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in
Conference Room 107 of the Humanities Building.
The summer trip to Africa will be sponsored by
Golden West ColJege Community Services. Speaking at
the prc-oncntation meeting will be Limo Kollum, director
of the Africa Tourist Board. Also answering questions will
be tour conductor Al Jackson, a Golden West photogra-
phy instructor, and Linda Chartier, a representative from
a tour operator.
Refreshments will be served, and admission is free.
The photo safari, which includes a weekend in London,
will leave Los Angeles on July 13 and return July 29. For
more information, calJ 891-3991.
Infant Survival group meet.
The Orange County Guild for Infant SurvivaJ will
hold its ninth annual brunch Feb. 2S at 10:30 a.m. at
Johnny's Restaurant, 2250 E. 17th St., in Sant.a Ana.
The group is comprised of parents who have lost
children to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome and more
information is available by calling Lynne Trujillo at
551-1634.
Dlabetlc tests scheduled
Diabetic screenina tests, sponsored by the American
Diabetic Association, arc being offered free this month at
Mission Community Hospital !
The tests arc conducted every Tuesday and Friday
afternoons and Feb. 2S, a Saturday, by registered nurses at
the hospital.
Com Hance voluntary
for builders of new
home tracts tn city
By ANDREA ADEUON
Of ..............
Irvine City Council mcmben hope to
li&ht a fire under developers to have homes
in the city'' newest village built with enef1Y
conservation mea1um.
But don't look for a conflaaration.
Compliance would be volu,ntary.
And, the city bu talked about im-
plementina e.neray aoah for the past
decade.
The Cit~ Council ttltindlcd the issue
Tuesday m&)lt, ultimately callin& for an
outline ofineentives that would encouraae
developen to use passive cnerJY-savio&
devices but exclude any mention of
mandatory standards.
Streeta well 11eouted
The council re,J«ted an enef1Y.policy tet
out bY city staff callina for mandatory solar
devi~ one that infiamcd anti·reaulatory
p&s&ion.s and neatly let the steam out oflhe
measure alt91tthcr. Instead, the council
asked for advice from the lona·suffcrin1
chairman of a citizen•• committee, whose
wotk aioce 1972 has yet to be woven into
city J)Ohcy.
After the lenathy debate, Roland Schini· inter. chairman of tbe Citizens Ene'I)'
Advisory Committee C)adly •arced to take
the wk. However, there was some ques-
tion as to whether the oommltlee sim
exittcd.
04We were never notified we were
abolished " he said, after Councilman
David Silis told bis colleagues he thought
the committee's funds had been cut
followina recommendation of an un-
satisfactory encfJY policy.
"For a planned community, we sure
tcrewed this one up," said a frustrated
Mayor Larry Apu.
.. The ciuze111 have showed more ~
termination to see th1.1 throuah than we
have, .. Afran said.
Councilmen S1Us and Bill Vardoulis
ariued qain t a resulatory policy that fails
to keep peQC with chanaina tecbnoloSY and
circumvenu pul>lic demand& in the 11111-
k.et}!lace.
• We can't project acowately what the
future will brina. Vardoulis tatd.
And Silis added, that the thrust of
previous energy proposals "ia always to
require technology that the public doesn't
want," such u pulse beaten and electric
piJot lighu.
Schinzinger said "I sugest offenn&
certain tradeoffs to make desian more
reasonable... As an ex.am~le, he said
builders should consider nOtJUS1 installin1
heat-apturin1 devices but implcmentina I
sun-shielding arcbitechtural scheme u
wcU.
·rd like to make sure we do this witb
before we build anotber S,000 homes in
Coastal
hotels
honored
By JAMIE SEELEY
Of ... D.itr Nol .....
,. .
' I "'
Four Orange Coast hotels have been
named wtnners of the American Auto-
mobiJe Association's Four Diamond
award for quality, one of the highest ratinp
a hotel can cam. •
The Westin South Coast Plaza in~
Mesa, the Airport.er Inn Hotel in Newport
Beach, the Irvine Marriott and the New.
pon Beach Marriott were among the 63
Southern California establishments bonOfi
ed. I
"The Four Diamond rating is awarded!
only to those establishments Which si~
candy exceed AAA .requiremenu in most
physical and operational categories,•• said
Clarence M. Garlough, accommodations•
manager for the Automobile Oub of
Southern California. •
·Those selected were chosen from amo~
more than 15,000 AAA-approved facilitict •
in the United States, Canada. Mexico and
the Caribbean," he said.
AAA field representatives conduct su~
prise visits to the hotels under consider-•
at ion, according to Bob Allen, a spolccsman
for the Newport Beach MarriotL ··They•
have a chock list of over 100 items such U
cleanliness, the quality and the scope of the
services offered, the staff's attitude, the
decor and the recreation facilities avail-
able."
The blood test. conducted an hour or two after a large
meal, is by appointment only. It 1s open to both adults and
children. Appointments may be made by calling the
hospital education office at 49S-4400, ext 391. The
hospital is located at 27802 Puen.a Real in Mission Viejo. ~le Scoat candidate. Chuck Remley and Don
We'bb of Co.ta Meu Troop 106 are painting etreet names and numben on Balboa laland u their
community eerrice project.
The hotel checkers do a lot of loolcin&
around before they expose their identity to
anyone. he said. 4 "We feel ifs quite a prestigious honor;
Allen said. "They don ·1 give out many Four
Diamond awards and this is our fourth
year as a winner."
Meu hosts whale watching day
The recreation dcpanmcnt for the City of Costa Mesa
is organizing a whale watching day Feb. 25 at a cost of
$8.SO per person.
Buses leave from the Costa Mesa Historical Society,
595 Plumer Street, at 8: 15 a.m. and return at about I :30
p.m.
Candidate calls for creativity Another four-year, Four Diamond win-
ner is the Airporter. "I'm very happy to
hear 1t," aeneral manager John Moffa said.
. He said AAA hotel guides note the award
and arc relied on by AAA members. For information. call Craig Anhur at 754-5300.
Laguna Beach City Council candidate
Paul Munoz says the city needs more
"creative and efficient management" to
face f uturc challenges and preserve the
village-like atmosphere.
public transpon.ation arc major issues this
election year.
project, for instance. would include solar
energy as well as flower and food gardens.
For waste management. he endorses a
curbside dropoff recycling program and
suggests Sycamore Hills should be de-
veloped into county/city environmental
park with organic gardens and a
mini-amphitheater for drama and music
events.
The Four Diamond hotel rating goes
beyond impressive. In terms of business.;
H's a substantial bonus for the hotels.
Thursday, February 16
• 6 p.m., Laguu Beacb Sellior Citi&eD Committee,
Community Center, 3841..egion Ave., Laguna Beach.
Munoz, 27, is a partner in Organic Man,
an "appropriate technology firm" special-
izing in solar heating, landscaping and
energy efficient construction. He believes
low-cost senior citizen housing, more
effective waste management and better
Munoz and six other candidates will
battle in the April I 0 election to fill two City
Council seats. Munoz will vie with incum-
bent Neil Fitzpatrick. political activist
John Gabriels, educator Sinclair Jones.
businessman Paul Christiansen. Realtor
Manha Collison and maintenance worker
Ricky Slater.
Many of Munoz's proposals have an
environmental swing. The senior housing
In addition, he proposes that funds for
parking structures should be redirected
toward public transpon.at1on programs.
"There are some professional mceti3
planners who will not meet in an i
other than a Four Diamond hotef.f sai
Maris Brenner, sales director at the Westin,
South Coast Plaza Hotel. Only about 12
percent of the country's hotels tiave bee9'
ajven a four d1amond rating, she said.
Two years ago, after a $2..5 million
remodeling job, the Westin South Coast
Plaza went from a Three Diamond to a
Four Diamond rating..
• 6:30 p.m., Lapa Beach Board of Adjutmeat,
Council Chambers, 505 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach.
• 7 p.m., Lapu Beac~ Cable TV Committee,
Community Center, 384 Legion Ave., Laguna Beach.
• 7:30 p.m., Foutain Valley Scbool District Board of
Tnt1tee1, 17210 Oak St, Fountain Valley.
Jury to tour Scene of Mesa slaying "It means we're consistent wtth the top
hotels across the country.'' Brenner said
The Irvine Marrion. 1n its first year of
operation, picked up its first FOU8
Diamond award. "We think it's a quaJ1ty
rauoi, but that's what we strive for,"
resident manager Steve WinniDf said.
Friday. February 1 7
David Carter. resumes after a week's delay. an June 1983. Goldncr's trial on s1m1lar
cha11es is set to begin later this month.
No meetings scheduled.
Saturday. February 18
Orange County Supenor Coun jurors
considering evidence in accused slayer
Richard James Wetherall's first-degree
murder trial will visit the Cost.a Mesa home
in which the defendant is accused of killing
26-ycar-old Patrick Scott Miller.
Caner agreed to postpone proceedings m
the trial. originally scheduled to resume this
week, because one of the jurors was 111.
according to a coun officer.
Wetherall, 26, and co-defendant Arthur
George Goldner Jr. are accused of beating
and strangling Miller. the son of former
Orange County Supervisor Edison Miller,
Miller was found lying dead ma pool of
blood in the bedroom of the Costa Mesa
home he shared with his girl.fnend, their
infant son and her daughter.He had been
hogtied with towels and the house had been
ransacked.
Winning, who hadn•t been notified of the
award. said "if we got it, J think ifs great.
Obviously, we·re very pleased ..
The JUry wtll tour the Hanover Street
• 7 a.m.-4 p.m., Oran1e Couty Swap Meet, Orange home next Wednesday along with
County Fairgrounds, Costa Mesa. Wetherall when the trial, before Judge
Lagunaboy,14,nabb~d
in snakenapping caper
A five-foot-long boa constrictor is
slithering safely back in its old home
t~ after a police investiptor p ed out a snakcnapping incident
mvolving a 14-ycar-old boy with a
penchant for reptiles.
Detective Dave Williams said a
14-year-old Lagu~a Bea~h boy, who
lives near the lrvmc Animal Shelter
on Laguna Canyon Road, admiued to
t.akin& the snake after slippina in a
Huntington Beach
A resident of the 9400 block of
Nautilus Drive reponed a buralary
Wednesday at her home. The 1ou,
estimated at $'400, included a pitar case containina a rifle, a lbo'lun and
a revolver. • • • Someone stoic four bu~ps
Wednesday from a brown 1978
Dod&C Maanum parked on the 9800
block of Adams Avenue. The loss was
estimated at $420. • • • A resident of the 19700 block of
Providence Lane reported that his
silver 1979 Puch moped was stolen
Wcdnctday momioa from Hunt·
inston .ec.ch HlaJ\ School. The los
was esumatcd at l300. • • • Someone broke 1n10 a home
back window at the shelter earlier this
week.
Williams said the boy, who was not
identified because of bis ap, kept a
menagerie of animals in a 1Af1C yard
ofhis home, includina three small boa
constrictors.
"The othen were babies and he
wanted a larger one," Williams said.
The snake, named Thulsadunn and
wonh $400, was returned to the
shelter Thursday. after beioa put in
Wednesday on the 21600 bl0ck of
K.anakoa Lane and ransacked IL
Entry was made throup the Jocked
fronl door. The loss included SJO in
cash and a $750 camera. • • • A resident of tbe SOO block of 17th
Street reported WednetdaJ' tbat bi1
blue and white Cbevrolcl Bluer •ll4
was buralarizcd. Someone smashed
the left windwin1 to enter. The lo
included a stereo and CB system
worth S l. 700. • • • Someone stole a yellow l 97S Cbev·
role1 Luv pickup Wednesday on lbc
7'400 block of Slater A venue. The lo
was estimated at $900.
• • • A resident of the 600 block of Utica
A venue rcponed the theft Wednet-
day of a blue 1983 Murray bicycle
from Dwyer School. The lo was
the safekeeping of a friend of the
al~cd snakenapper, the investiptor
saia.
Three teen-agers, including tbe
youth who lived near the shelter, were
seen playing with the snake the
afternoon before the break-in oc-
curred, he said.
The youth was arrested for bulJlary
but released to his parents. Williams
said counseling would be rec-
ommended.
estimated at S7S. • • • Usina a lock punch to enter,
IOmeone burglarized a silver Datsun
2802 parked Thursday in an apan-
meot stalJ on the 4900 block of Heil
Avenue. The loss included a $200
leather jacket and tools worth SI SO. • • • A resident of the 200 block of 7th
Street reponod Wednesday that
someone 1tole bis 1972 BMW The
lou wu estimated at $4,400. • • • Four bubcaJ)S wett stolen Wednes-
day from a 1979 brown Buick Rqal Pitted in• drua Jt.Ore Jot on the 10000
bloCk of Adams Ave. The loss was
estimated It SlSO. • • • A raident of the 9400 block of
Ncolani Drive reported Wcdne~y
that someone hid tolen a black 198 t
bwinn bicycle wonh $250.
••
Wetherall's trial began Feb. 7 in a Santa
Ana counroom.
Only luxury hotels with golf courses and
several restaurants win AAA ·s Five
Diamond award.
Irvine
A 27-year-old Santa Ana man was
arrested for suspicion of ~nd theft
Wednesday, when a SUSPICIOUS con-
struction worker called police after a
repairman c-ame to inspect an imga-
tion system. Police said Steven
Mirtmez Lujan admitted steatmi to
at least 30 of the water control devices
to suppon a heroin habit. At least six
of the devices have been stolen in
Irvine in the last three weeks. one
worth $3,300. • • • Jewelry and cash wonh $I ,300 was
stolen from a home in the 14000 block
of Doheny Coun. A bathroom win-
dow screen was removed to gain entry
and the house ransacked. • • •
Bur&lars punched in a wall to
tunncf into a doctor's office on
Barranca Parkway overnight
Wednesday. Thieves $lined entry
into the two-story building by pT)'ln.g
roof hatches. Taken was a S300
sterilizina machine.
CoetaMesa
Ch11sc lounses. tables and chairs
were stoJcn from the pool area of the
West :J, ApanTents, 126 E 18th St .. Tu y niaht. The pool fumuure
i valued at $600. • • • A p~ on the 1200 block of West
Baker trttt was bur&lanzed Wednc·
day and $960 wonh of prdC'nma
equipment was stolen Thieves cut •
padlock -off the praac to teal a
lawnmower, tnmmcrs, air blo\tier,
ed&er and several cans of motor 011. • • • A copy machme was rrponed
stolen thlS week from Compro Elcc-
tromcs. 36S Chnton S1 Businc
offic11Js. who rtpa1r the ma hmt'~.
said they dad know when thr S 1.500
copier was stolen. • • • A ponable rad10 was reponl'd
stolen from a home on the 100 block
of East Bay Street Tucsda' The
resident told police he left a ~rndo"
unlocked and suspected w meonc had
reached in and lifted the radio • • •
Newport Beach
i\ retired Newpon Beach man
reported the theft of a m1crowa' e.
two televisions. a camera and a
jewlery box from h1s home in the
1700 block of Centella Wednesday
The value of the stolen items was
placed at $1 ,200. • • • A Newpon Beach woman rcponcd
the theft of an auto stereo valued at
$548 from her car parked m the 1700
block oflrvine Avenue. • • • A Palos Verdes man reponed the
theft of a bnefcasc valued at $200 and
a microcassette recorder valued at
$2 O Wednesday durina 1 banquet at
the Newponer Inn • • • A Newpon Beach woman reported
the theft of clothing and 1cwelr)
val11cdatSl,lOOfrom her home 1n ~
2700 block of lillltop.
Fountain Valley
An trate dnver kiclod a dent an the
naht front fender of a wh1tC' 1984
Oldsmobile 98 after a minor colh4'1on
m the park.Int lot at the Fo untain
Valley Post Office. 17127 Newhopc
St. OamagC' was estimated at $200 • • • Burglars flncd. Optn a bedroom
Wlf\dow 1n the 11000 block ofOalena
A \'Cnuc and took a teltvis1on set.
$terc<>. video pm<' and Jtwtl') af\cr
ran5aclung the humc Lows were ~t
at S t.5Q8
)
Someo ne stoic $800 m power tools
from a truck in the 16000 block of Mt.
Gustin Street. ".l
Laguna Beach
Jewelry valued at S6.000 was
reponed stolen from a house m the
700 block of Manz.anita Dnve aJ
about 4 p.m. Wednesday, tbe owners
told Laguna Beach polioe. ••• A stray skunk discovered m the
1400 block. of Glenneyre Street was
relocated by animal control officers
to Sycamore Flats in Laguna Canyon
Sergeant nabs
heist suspect~
on lunch houi;
I\ Los Angele couplewhoalleae<Uy
held up a fast-food restauiant in
Lquna Hills Wednesday ~ ar-
rcstrd Just minutes after the robbery
when a police ser&cant oo his lunq
break sp0ned the actaway car.
The lunch-bound scrpnt re-
portedly radJocd 10 tus si&htina and
an Oranac Count) Sheriff's dcpucy
pulled o~r the suspcaect bandiU o
the San Diego Freeway nnr I.ht
Beach Cmes offramp. ,
t.ou1 Lovell . ~-l 21. and
Cork.nt) Ann Taylor, u.. ar-
rcste<t on uJpiaon of t"ObbinJ• ca.rt
Jr re tau.rant at 23002 Lake Fora1
Orivt.
Potioc claimed a man v.•Jl.cd into ·
the rataurantat 1·30 p.m .. pullC'dout
a revolvu and nrdtted the ma r
to OJ>tn t~ • safe. The b&n.4.fo wa
handed about SlSO in cuh.
A• .Orange Coat OAILY PILOT!Thur9day, February 18, 1984
II
starts Friday, 9:30 a.m.
many limited quantities ... not all sizes may be available
in each grouping ... colors and styles limited to stock
on hand, so shop early for best selection!
~~~--.....-~~~-.i
• 1n our
Huntington Beach store
women 's sportswear
NOW
82 ACTIVE COOROINA TES ................................ 98c
MISSES' TOPS
Assorted Styles 98¢ Machine Washable ............. .
36 JUNIOR SHIRTS ...............................•............ 1.98
199 JUNIOR TOPS ............................................. 1.98
JUNIOR SWEATER VESTS
V-Neck Styling 1 98 Assorted Patterns .............. •
181 JUNIOR SKIRTS .......................................... 3.98
19 MISSES' COOROINATES .............................. 3.98
57 MISSES' SKIRTS ........................................... 3.98
78 JUNIOR BLOUSES ........................................ 3.98
167 MISSES' POL VESTER PANTS ................... 4.98
34 SKI JACKETS ................................................ 6.98
women's dresses NOW
25 HALF-SIZE DRESSES ................................... 9.98
30 MISSES' DRESSES ..................................... 19.98
large size fashions
NOW
LARGE SIZE TOPS ' 1 98 Assorted Fabrics, Styles ... •
38PANTS' .............................................................. 1.98
19 BLOUSES ......................................................... 3.98
women's accessories
NOW
89 FASHION HOSIERY ...................................... .28c
73 HAIR ACCESSORIES ..................................... 2k
.,41 WOMENS' SHOES (ACCESS. DEPT) ........... 48c
37 LEGWARMERS ............................................... 48c
119 MUSICAL CHRISTMAS CARDS ..............•... 48c"
29 CHRISTMAS PLAQUES ................................. 48c
63 TIGHTS ............................................................ 48c
27 WOMENS' TIES .............................................. 98c
41 FABRIC HANDBAGS ..................................... 98c
43 SUNGLASSES ................................................ 98c
35 FASHION HATS .............................................. 98c
31 NOVEL TY MUGS ............................................ 98c
33 UMBRELLAS .................................................. 1.98
29 FASHION BELTS ........................................... 1.98
23 LEATHER CLUTCH HANOBAGS ................. 2.98
29 LEOTARDS ................................. -................. 4.98
lingerie, loungewear
NOW
20 BRAS .............................................................. 5.98
13 S'LEEP TEES ................................................. 5.98
31 BRAS .............................................................. 7.98
17 TEDDIES ......................................................... 8.98
73 LONG GOWNS .............................................. 8.98
30 LOUNGERS ........................................ ~ ........ 13.98 l
infants and toddlers
NOW
79 TODDLERS' PLUSH ANIMAL SUPPERS .... 98c
buys for girls
NOW
107 PANDA BEAR FIGURINES .......................... 98c
111 PANDA BEAR MUSIC BOXES .................. 1.98
25 BIG GIRLS' JEANS ....................................... 1.98
87 SLIPPERS (GIRLS' DEPT) ........................... 2.98
21 BIG GIRLS' JEANS ....................................... 5.98
49 JUMPSUITS .................................................... 6.98
buys for boys
NOW
133 TEE SHIRTS ................................................. 48c
124 CAPS ............................................................. 9k
36 UTil.E BOYS SWEATERS ..... ~ .................... 2.98
99 LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS ............................... 4.98
42 SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS ............................. 4.98
79 BIG BOYS' SWEATERS ....... -...................... 5.98
41 BRITT ANIASHIRTS ........................................ 5.98
68 BIG BOYS' JEANS ....................................... 5.98
54 HUDDLES JERSEYS ....................................... 1.98
buys for men NOW
39 BEL TS ............................................................. 98c
157 CAPS ............................................................. 98C
143 SHORTIE P.J.'S ........................................... 1.98
64 S/SLV. OIANAORESS SHIRTS ..................... 1.98
41 LJSLV. QIANAORESS SHIRTS ..................... 1.98
96 ADIDASACTIVE SHIRTS ............................... 1.98
67 TANK TOPS ................................................... 1.98
88 SUNGLASSES (MEN'S DEPT) ..................... 3.98
49 SWEATERS .................................................... 6.98
31 DRESS SLACKS· ........................................... 9.98
shoes for the family
NOW
29 BOYS' LEA THEA SHOES ............................ 1.98
36 GIRLS' SANDALS ......................................... 3.98
37 CHILDREN'S TENNIS SHOES ..................... 3.98
43 WOMEN'S NIKE ATHLETIC SHOES ........... 3.98
21 MEN'S WORK SHOES .................................. 5.98
45 WOMEN'S CHEROKEESANDALS ............... 7.98
81 WOMEN'S LEATHER CLOGS ...................... 7.98
37 MEN'S OEXTERCASUAL SHOES ................ 7.98
51 WOMEN'S CANDtE'SORESS SHOES ......... 7.98
59 WOMEN'S LEATHER DRESS SANDALS.11.98
(or your home
NOW
187 WASHCLOTHS .............................................. 48e
135 HANO TOWELS ............................................ sa.
60 BA TH TOWELS ............................................. 1.98
20 BODY TOWELS ............................................. 2.98
19 SHOWER CURT AJNS ................................... .2.98
86 SHEETS .......................................................... 4 .98
40 KrTCHEN CURTAINS .................................... 4.98
91 PRINT BLANKETS ........................................ 5.98
16 KITCHEN CURTAINS .................................... 6 .98
78 SHEETS .......................................................... 6.98
65 BEACH TOWELS .......................................... 7.98
15 COMFORTERS ............................................ 19.98
housewares
NOW
139 OISHES .•..................••........................... 48c·5.98
43 SERVING BOWLS ........................................ .2.98
69 GLASS PfT'CHERS ........................................ 3.98
15 DINNERWARE SETS. 20-PC ...................... 21 .98
17 INFANTS' SWEATEAS ................................. -2.ie 1·ewetry buys
19 TODDLERS' JUMPSUrTS ............ ~ ............ .3.11
29 NEWBORN DRESSES ANO PANT SETS ... 4.98 Now
buys for girls NOW
4CJC> EARRINGS ···········································-······..-4ile 5dO EARAlfitOS ........................... -.............. --..... Nc
80 NECKLACES._ ............................................... 98C
289 PANTIES ........................................................ 5k 20 WATCHES ...................................................... 1.98
263 SOCKS .......................... -........................ ~···* 70 BOXED PENDANTS ............................. -........ 98c
21 s.sLv. TEES. ux ......................................... 98c 100 ROSE PtNS ...•. -.......................................... 1.98
Huntington Beach• 9811 Adams Ave.
at Brook h u rst St.
,,, .........
Shllte Moelem tean down po9ter of late
Lebanon preeldent Bachtr Oemayel
Lebanon OKs
pull-out plan
Latest offensive threatens
to topple Amin Gemayel rule
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Anti-government mili·
tiamen captured two Christian strongholds on the coastal
highway south of Beirut today, broadening an offensive
that has shattered the Lebanese army and threatens to
topple President Amin Gcmayel.
In WashinJtOn, U.S. offietals said today Gemayel has
accepted an eigbt-point Saudi plan calling for a pullout of
all foreign troops from Lebanon and canceling the May 17,
1983, Israeli-Lebanese troop withdrawal agreement.
The officials, who insisted on anonymity, appeared
skeptical about the plan's suc:ccss. One official said 11 ··was
essentially a statement of principles, rather than a plan of
action," noting it would have to be approved by Syria and
its allies in Lebanon.
Police said army troops fought off overnight atlacks
by Druse insurgents on the key hilltop town of Souk
el-Gharb, which overlooks the U.S. Marine base at
Beirut's airpon and is the last position Gcmaycl's army
holds in the central mountains near Beirut.
Druse communiques referred to the action as
"routine exchanges of artillery and small arms fire,"
suggesting there was oo full-scale attack on the town.
Druse and Shiite Moslem militiamen have advanced
about 14 miles on the southern highway from Beirut. They
took the Christian coastal town of Damour and the
neighbonng hilltop Mishref barracks of the rightist
Christian Lebanese Forces militia at about 2 a.m. today,
communiques from both sides said.
The Marine base was not affected by. today's fighting.
Preparations continued for the eventual pullout of the
1.200 Americans based there.
"There was silence overnight," said U.S. Anny Maj.
Don McClary. "No U.S ships f'lred and there were no U.S.
planes on military reconnaissance flights."
Stormie's critical,
but in good spirits
BJ ~ AeHClac.d Prat
PITTSBUROH -A f>.year-old airl w~o ~iv~ .the:
wortd•s fint heart and liver tran1plant remained 1~ cnucal
condition today, but Kerned co!!'fo~ble Al:'d an Jood
1pirita according to her mother. ~he s noddina yea and
oo to' questions,·• Lois Jones .wd Wednesday of her
daughter, Stormie. "I asked her tf she was IC&tCd ~use:
we had to put on (face) mask;_ and she nodded y~s. The
blond, brown~yed girl from L.umby, Teua, recetyed ~c
biJtoric operation Tuesday. Docton at Children s
Hospital said her donated organs appeared t~ be
functioning normaJly. "Stormie appears to be f~llowina a
standard course for both liver transplant. pa~n~ and
heart transplant patients,.. said Dr. Basil Zttelh, her
pediatrician.
SIJattle repaln UJJder way
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fl.a.. -Technicians .~ve
discovered that one of two compart~ents cc;>ntanuna
space shuttle Challenger's maoeuvenna engines "'.&J
damaged durtol its return to earth last. ~k. but repai~
aren't expccte<f to delay the next rruss100. Houston s
Johnson Space Center, meanwhile. has beaten out eiJht
otherccnten for a chance to manage NASA's space stabon
program, officials said. The final choice of Houston, ov~r
the other finalist. Marshall Space Right Center rn
Huntsville, Ala.. was announced Weqn~)'. by the
National Aeronautics and Space Adrn101s~uon. The
left-hand pod contaimng the Orbital ManeuvenngSystem
will be replaced with one . from the newest shuttle,
Discovery and the work 1s not cx~ed to affect
Challcnge;•s ne xt launch April 4, Ball said.
Robbery by hellcopter
LEESVILLE, La. -Five stylish ban~ robbers
remained at l~e today after sw~fing down ~n a ~tolen
helicopter, robbing $163,000 and. ng off again witho~t
firing their wca(>OnS. It was a heist even policemen said
they had to admire. Authorities had "a behcoptcr and two
fixed-wing aircraft plus all the troopers on the grou~d
involved in the search," Trooper Bruce Havens satd
Wednesday after the speedy holdup at the Merchants and
Farmers Bank branch. It was payday at the Fort Polle
Army base. j ust a few hundred feet away, and police said
the holdup men probably knew the bank would have a
large amount of money on deposit.
Photog Gjon Mill dead
STAMFORD. Conn. -Loni-time Life magazine
photographer GJOn Mili. who pioneered use of the
hi&b-spced electronic flash and who published two photo
collections of painter Pablo Picasso at work. has died of
pneumonia. He was 79. Mil i's death Tuesday in a nursing
home t>cre was announced Wednesday by Time Inc ..
publisher of Life. Mili, who had worked for Life since
1938, photographed Picasso drawing a picture in space
with a pen light. a knuckle ball leaving the hand of pitcher
Carl Hubbefl and Mili's own version of the Duchamps
Cubist painting "Nude Descending a Staircase."
Convict •ae11 dlet plan
VENTURA-An imprisoned child molest~r is suing
the Cambridge diet plan for S 12.5 million. contending be
was convicted because a 40-pound weight loss in two
months caused him to lose bis memory the night of the
crime. Daniel Ybarra Garcia, who prepared the Ventura
County Superior Court lawsuit himself, claims he ~
accused of committing acts he would never have done
while not under the effects of this diet plan." The swt
contends Garcia. 50. serving a 12-year sentence at
Vacaville state prison, was unable to prepare an adequate
defense because of a total loss of memory about the
incident.
Kld• get Jnto computer
SAN DIEGO -A group of students used home
computers to break into a school's computer sytem and
electronically altered or destroyed grades, teachen' files
and other students' homework, officials say. ln a scene
reminiscent of the movie, "War Ga111es," the students
used a phone hookup known as a "modem" to gain
computer aCCC1S at Gompers Secondary School, attended
by pupils from seventh-to 12th-grades, said Greg Volger.
chairman of the school's computer science program.
Reagan leads Jn poll
~ SAN FRANClSCO -President Reagan holds a *-substantial lead in popularity of 17 peruntage points over
fo rmer Vice President Walter Mondale, according to a
survey of California voters released today. Sen. John
Glenn of Ohio trailed the president by 22 percentage
points, while Reagan enjoyed even great« margins over
other Democratic presidential candidates. These were the
findings of the California Poll, a survey taken in the first
week of February in which a reprcscntauve cross section of
California's registered voters was interviewed.
BRIGADE ADMll'S
ASSASSINATION
ROME (A.P)-A bard·linc faction oft.he ldtist Red
Briodes bas claimed rerponsibilicy for the 1111-ination
of l..eamon R. Hunt. the American bc9d of the
multinational fi>n:le in the Sinai peninsula whO was
unbUibcd outside bis home. Tbe alayina;liu aiVC1l invatipton •·ctear indica·
ttons" of• comet.ck by the feared Red ~•Police
IOUR:e N id today. Abo Wdly, two Red 8,;pdes ICn'OrilU
shouted .. We claim the attack in Rome" durina a court
bc.arina ID Qenoa..
Tcrronstubotout the bulldPJ"oofwmdowsofHunt•a
car wilb submacb.inc pm Wcd.nesday"Diabt. killina him at
point-blank ,....
Tbt anKt was claimed by tbe F'~tU'I O>mmuniA
Piny, a Red Bri&ades facuon: Police Mid they coolidered
the claim cn:di~ · · •
Huet. tbe S6-)'e&r-okl civilian dfrec:tot-ttnetal of the
Mllki•tional FOtte and Obecm:n thll petroh tbe inai,
..a pronou~ dC8d 11 S.o Ot0va.nni HQIPiw an hour
afttf the•
' \ •
Dancer Powell gets star
LOS ANGELES -Dancer Eleanor Powell bas
posthumously received her star on Hollywood's "Walk of
Fame" as celebrities James Stewart, Gene Kelly, Debbie
Reynolds and more than 200 others looked on. Miss
Powell's star, placed Wednesday, was the I, 776lh to
decorate Hollywood Boulevard under the "Walle of
Fame" program of the Hollywood Chamber of Com·
mercc. The film star bad appeared in such movies as
"Born to Dance" ( 1936), "Rosalie" ( l 938)and ''Broadway
Melody of 1938."
&rael patrol• move nortlJ
TEL A VIV, Israel -Israel wiU act to prevent
Palestinian fucrrillas from establi1hin1 positions in the area north o its frontline on the Awali River in Lebanon,
Israel Radio said today. Quotin1 unidentified defense
sources. the radio aJso said Israel would continue sendina
p1tr0ls farther north to prevent Palestinian• from
rctumina to the areas Israel evacuated la1l September
when it withdrew from the Chou( Mounta.in1.
Brltl&IJ lllnder IRA now
BELFAST, Northern Ireland -Britain hu blocked
three roeds inlo the Irish Republic lo hinder the now of
IRA terrorists across the border with Northern Ireland.
Army enainctn, guarded by heavily armed troop& and
Polic::e.z...cemcnted ooncrcte-fllled met.al tank1 lnto the road1
near Koala. in County Fennanqb, where the Jri1h R~blkan Army bas killed ICOra ol soldic~ police and
civilians in recent~ The mainly Roman Catholic I RA
is fi4btina to un1te the Prbteatant-dominated Britilh erovuace of Nortber11 lrc1aod witb the neiahborina ~blic and to let Ul> a Socialist aovcmment over both.
lf•YT.. s~u·~ doYnJ at._
SAN JUAN. heno Rico -A Navy A4 Skybawlt
with one Pilot aboard wcn1 down at te. olTt.be island of
Vieques and ns stall miuiq some l 2 hours la&er, 1 Navy
sP<*aman •id today. Lt. John Tull. public a&in om.tr
at tbe Rootevclt Rtiedt Naval Bate at Ceibl, said lbe
mi11ina plane "' attached to Acct Com00$lte Squadron
10 at Guantanamo Bay. Cube. Tull said the plane went
down al aboUt 10 p.m. Wecinaday, 1' ml~
eoutlHou\beut of Vieques, off Putcno Rico's east cout.
He said theft "' eome oommun.ication with the pilo1
before the plane went dovm.
Injection
murder·
suspect
•guilty'
GEORGETOWN, Texas (AP) -
The victim's relatives wept with joy
11 nune Genene Jones was convicted
of murdering an infant &irl by fatal
injection, and said they'll be back in
court to bear whether she gets the
maximum sentence oflife in prison.
.. h's over, it's over," sobbed Petti
McClellan, whose I S-montb-old
dauahter, Chelsea, died in September
1982 after receivinJ what were sup-
posed to be routine immunizations at
a Kerrville pediatrician's office. "I'm &lad we won. At least now this won't
happen to an,yone else." Mrs.
McClellan said.
Other members of Chelsea's famil y
-including her wandmother, aunts
and .,-eat-grandmother -hugged
and kissed prosecutors following the
verdict Wednesday. ..Thank you,
thank you so much," they said.
"Now maybe my daughter can
bury her. She's ne ver, never buried
her," said Chelsea's grandmother,
Robin Alexander. '
_..;I I
GeneneJonee 80be lD back of police car after plltynrdlct.
One prosecutor said Ms. Jones had
killed Chelsea "for her own enrich-
ment." A witness bad testified that Ms. Jones wanted to "find" enough
dead children to justify the opening of
an intensive care unit for children at
Kerrville's hospital.
Six other. youna.patients at Ms.
investigation into deaths at Medical
Center Hospital's pediatric intensive
care unit, where Ms. Jones worked
before coming to Kerrville.
Wednesday's verdict drew tean in
the courtroom and cheen from
demonstrators outside the
courthouse. Ms. Jones' quiet sobs
heightened as jurors were individu-
allr. asked if they though.t she was guilty.
• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT ntwrtd~. February 18, 19&4
Nuke blast cave-in a mxster_y
LAS VEGAS. Nev. (AP) -Federal ofticiall say they
don't know why an undtrpwod nucleat bLut collal*d a !>if chunk of a mountain more than J ,000 feet above,
lf\Jurlna 13 atomic ..orkm who ~on the ,round, on
ladden or iil a trailer moaiuwi.oa .tbl test;
One man wu in critical conc.titioa today with iajuries
be tuffemi wheft the 60-by· l ~fOot piece ofllaioier Mesa
caved in.i droppina I 0 to 30 feet aDd 1w1Uowin1 several
trailers. Eiaht wort.en were h<>tpitalQied.
The cave-in Wedpesday oocutred about three houra
after technicians at t1Je aovemment's scnwlina Nevada
Test Site detonated a nuclear devicie of ''teal than 20
kilotons" said Jim Boyer. a spokeaman for the U.S .
Depenmeot of~.
He said the blast wu considered .. very small."
The atom bomb that dettro~rosbima in World War ll, leavins 130,000 people injureci or misaina,
was 20 kilotons -the equiva.ltnt of ,000 tons of TNT.
"The only thin& we can say with certainty is we bad a
subsidence and a subsidence means that the surface of the
canh dropped down over the expl<>lfve site," Boyer said. Orel Cook. another spokesman, said late Wednes-
day, "We don't havcanythinaon t.tiecause yet. There will
be a full investiaation."
No radiation leaked from the cave-in or from the test
tunnel, &yer said. The blast went off in a tea.led chamber
about the hei~t and width of a tw<Kar aaraae but several
times longer, 1n a tunnel 1,168 feet u.nderlrowM:l. be &aid.
The injured workers bad returned totbesiteiand were
checking data recorded on instruments at around uro,
directly above the point of the blast, said another Enersy
Depanment spokesman, David Miller.
"Some had the ground drop out from under them,"
Miller said. "Some were shaken off' ladders which led to
the top of trailers, and one man apparently was still inside
LOS ANOE125~ -C'.onVii:led killlrt>U White
is not liv~ in Bel-Air with a movie produiget Wbo bu
advanced him SS0,000 fOr the riaht.s IO bis ..ay, stale
officials aod Lot ADldet policie, rebu.ttins • allDIDtf'•
assen.ions.
"It's not truewha. tever'a beint_putout, "saidOftic:er J.
Beson of the Los An.ielcs Police ~t·s Weal Los Anaelesdivision. "They would tell us ifbewu hett. As far
as we know, be's not&bcrc." ..He"s aot livi.Qa in a Bel-Air mansion and to our
k:nowledle tbere'a no subltance to aay of thc.,atory," said ManbalfLuodbera. deputy region.al administrator of the
state DIJ'O)e division.
.!ut in Secnmeftto, Assemblyman Art Apot, D-San
Fraocilco, uked the district attorney Wednesday to
invcstipte the report ofWbite's whereabouts, and to s~
him &Ont ipendina any money he miaht receive for bas
memoin.
Jurors deliberated for about three
houn Wednesday before agreeing
with testimony that showed Chelsea
had died of an injection of suc-
cinylcholine, a powerful muscle re-
la.unl Dr. KathJeen Holland, Ms.
Jones' employer, bad ordered the
nurse to give routine immunizations.
Holland's office suffered~ merious seizures similar to Chet 's after
receiving shots from Ms. Jon , who
has two children of her ownr and the
nurse faces charges of injuring a child
in those cases.
She faces a similar charge io San
Antonio, where there is an onaoing
Kerr County Oistrict Attorney Ron
Sutton conceded that he bad pres-
ented mostly a circumstantial cue,
but said, "Yes, but then: were an
awful lot of circumstances."
a trailer when it toppled over." ·
"I was learning how to walk on air, but the around a<>t
me instead." one injured worker, describing the accident,
said as be arrived on a stretcher into Valley Hospital in Lu
White was paroled to Los An,elesJan. 6 afteuerving -;
five~ U. prison for the 1978 slayinp of San Francisco
Mayor Qeorle Moscone and homosexual Supervisor
Harvey Milk.
• I
A Sate
5 DAYS ONLY!
SAVE AN DITIONAL -25°/o
ON EVERY CLEARANCE AREA RUG IN OUR STOCK
ALREADY PRICED AT SAVINGS OF 25°/o-60°/o AND 'MORE.
. DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN. NO PAYMENT UNTIL JULY, 1984*
FROM NOW UNTIL MONDAY, YOU CAN SAVE AN ADDITIONAL 25°/o
ON THOUSANDS OF AREA RUGS FROM AROUND THE WORLD.
THIS CLEARANCE INCLUDES SELECTIONS FROM CHINA, INDIA,
BELGIUM AND EVEN KARASTAN. ALREADY PRICED AT 25%-60°/o AND
MORE SAVINGS. BETTER HURRY BECAUSE QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED,
ALL RUGS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE AND OOR SELECTJON WILL VARY
BY STORE. NOMINAL CHARGE FOR DELIVERY.
An t:xAmpkf 0.-r .JI fllOOl J,.nJ./ttnottttl Chin~ •ru "'& 41 x 6'. O,,g. S/,JjO. S.l.t 1491. j.J.iy s.lt pnct. IJ1J.21.
Rolnmon's Af\"A R"f'St 90, till stom attpt Mission Vatj<\ P•lm SpringJ •"" Sbmra.n Qsh •No p.ymtnt 11ntil /11/y. 1984, on •II
•m1 "''1t r4rpttini, fam1t11rt •ntl m.cttms f"'rtb..Jn of 1100 or mort on Y"'" Robinson 's ch.rgt (SMb/«t to md1t •ptwr1l>tll)
A ROBINSON'S CHARGE? IT'S EASY!
...'" ...
THE OUICKE T WAY: JU T PER NAL LY PRESENT AN AMERICAN XPR VISA. MASTERCARD, DINER CLUB. OR RTE BLANCHf. t ARO AND l D TO <.'\\ff OUR
SALE PERSONS AND Wl:'Ll OPEN AN COUNT YOU CAN USE IMM EDIATELY. THE EASIEST WAY: PH NE US TOLL FRl-F 1-8 ~'422·041 FROM 7 AM 10 P\1 ANO
OUR OPERATOR Wilt TAKE YOUR APPLICATION INFORMATION
..... -I
I ! I t
I I
A8 Orenge Coat OAILY PILOT /Thuraday, February 18, 1984
Hollywood
coIJJes to UCI
Veteran actor PeterO'Toole wu ln and aboutUCI
CampaePark thta week for fllmlDC of theapcomtnc
1110.te .. Tbe Creator," wbicb a1110atan Martel
B~y. Vincent SpuaoandV~lladaen.
At left, O"roolela ahown walkl~witbaotor Jobn
Delmer and on rlahtbe reluee the~~; Below, O'Tooleponden lhe mcenewhlleetan behind
camera men. Theftlm, 110meof wbicb waaabot at
Cryatal CoYe8tate Park, le directed by lftD PUMr.
The uecatl•e producer la Stephen J'rledman.
0.-.,....~llf....___K~
Your Family Financial ·
Centers in
BadhaID sets Friday press conference
Rep. Roben Badham, R-Newpon Beach, plans a
Fnday press conference where he will announce his future
politic.al plans.
luncheon meetmg of the Badham Boosters Club at the
Registry Hotel in Irvine.
In a related matter, Badham was awarded the Golden
Bulldog Award by the Watchdogs of the Treasury, Inc., for Badham's office did not release anx other infor-
mation about the press conference. which will follow a his efforts to re.duce government spending. ,
Orange County
for Savings,
Checking, Lending.
Plenty of free parking •Free safe deposit boxes with qualifying
balances •Convenient Saturday hours •Funds insured to
$100,000 by FSLIC.
WESTERN FEDERAL SAVINGS
NEWPORT BEACH
4 Corporate Plaza
1.11 Pacific ~ H ighw.iyl
9!b(,()..798i • (il4) <>44·72S~
\f.,n.·Thur;. 9 AM·4 PM
I rJay 9 AM·6 PM
'\arurday 10 AM·2 PM
,
COSTA MESA
14SS &ktt~
92626-19\'IA . (714) 549-9141
Mon.·ThUt!i. 9 AM·4 PM
Friday 9 AM ·6 PM
Saturday 10 AM· 2 PM
erving Southern California Savers for nearly 50 years.
Fashion f ahrics
and other things
Assets over $1 billion.
Th 8ALE
thru ~ llrsday, Feb
ednesday F,~ary 16th
Sale: 25% to 60% Off Our
Plush Pima Patrician Towels
And Martex® Atelier Sheets.
• Originally '4 to '42, Now 2.90 to
27.90. First-quality Patrician towels by
Marte~ of pure pima cotton in
beautdul but now discontinued
colors -tiger lily, adobe, bittersweet,
marine blue, amethyst. ruby and coral.
Not all colors available in all stores.
• Originally '24 to '108, now
11.90 to 47.90. "Battersea Rose" from
Marte~Atelier, our exclusive
200 thread count cotton blend
sheets with an embroidered hem
• Now in the Linen Callery.
Some mtermro1ate p11ce reductions may
ha~e been taken poor to this sale
South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol Street Costa Mesa
IEDUCE TODAY'S HIGH COST OF DYING
CREMATION -BURIAL AT SEA
.FACTORY
SURPLUS O ' euruar 2 Utstandin V Y 2nd
Large Se/ . 8 alues On A
Open to
the Public
ill
f• 0 ••• I •• • t I' •• . .
ect1on f D· Sli h 1 ° 1scont: ... B g t y Irre" I ~1ued And ras SJ' o u ar Style ips p . ~of ,,
Ve/our R be an11es SJ
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1982 graduate of Fountain
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been elected president of
the Trojan Squires, a
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organization at the Univer-
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Abrahams, who is at-
tending USC on a full
academic scholarship,
hopes to receive his
bachelor's degree in ac-
counting in the spring of
1986.
In addition to being
president of Squires,
Abrahams is an active
member of the Sigma
Alpha Mu fraternity and
has been honored by the
Future Business Leaders of
America.
Abrahams. 19, is the son
of Pa uJ· and Sonia
Abrahams1 who have lived
in Fountain Valley for 10
years.
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P.riDcipal demoted after
being cleared of charges
Fullerton board
makes Roseman
'just a teacher' .~
FULLERTON (AP)-An elemen-
tary school principal has been de-
moted even lhoqh he was cleared of
sexual battery and child annoyance
cbataet filed after be helped clean up a
S-year-old gfrl with soiled underwear.
The school board demoted John
Roseman after the little Jirl's parents
said they still are not satisfied with his
explanation of what happened last
fall.
Unless a coun appeal is successful,
Roseman will become "only a
teacher" effective July l and will be
reassigned Feb. 21 to administrative
duties away from the district'• cam-
puses, said his attorney, Paul WaJlin.
"He's in shock," Wallin said
Wednesday. ··No ooe expected them
to take this action." •
"I've been here U yearJ., and every
single year-it is In my file-it tays
I was exceptional," Roseman said.
"Then this one incident happens and mr who_le caRer is wiped out."
Board P1Qident lrcne Armstrona
cited a "lack of confldence" in
Roseman stemmina from .. Mr.
Roseman1s witbholdin~ of infor-
mation from the district. •
Armstrona. reading a one-~
statement explainina tbe action, wd
Roseman. questioned by Johnson,
bad .. denied that he touched" the
child, when in fact be had. However1 Roseman said Johnson had askeo
him if he bad "molested" her. not
whether he bad touched her.
Wallin said Superintendent Dun-
can Johnson had .. Jot bts nose out of
joint" be<:ause Roseman, 41 , had
failed to rcpon the incident immed1·
attly. The principal was suapended in
November.
However, criminal charges of sex.-~ ~ttery and child annoyance were
dismissed Jan. 12 after Roseman
exP.[ained that thekindergartener had
soiled herself and .be had merely
cleaned her up. ·
The parents remain &nary over tho
incident and say the child never told
them 1be had soiled henelf. The
family has not been publicly ident-ified.
The father 11id be would pull his
dauahter out of the Valeoeta Park
School ifRoseman returned to his job
there.
,. , "If they send him back over there, it
is a slap in my face," the father said
last month. "I can't afford a private
school, but I will somehow."
Final sponsors sought for
Olympic torch fund-raiser
BJ CHRISTINE DECKER
Ot ... Dllr ........
Organizers of the 1984 Summer
Olympics torch relay arc off and
running. · ·
One hundred kilometers in Orange
County have been purchased for
$3,000 each as part of a fund-raiser.
That leaves 150 kilometers still
available.
Run organizers arc confident they
will be able to sell the entire route.
"We're working bard to gain sp<>n-
sors. We're countine on continued
supp<>r1 from all civic and business
groups as well as individuals to bring
this once-in-a-lifetime event to Or-
ange County. By sponsoring kilo-
meters, yo u s~pon the very foun-
dation of our country's athletic pro-
gram -our youth," said Donna
Ranney, rac.e sp<>kcswoman.
A group of Orange County business
and civic leaders fonned a group
called. .. Legacy for Youth," to bring
the torch run through Orange Coun-
ty. The group hopes to raise $750,000
to fund sports programs at local Boys
Oubs of America, Girls O ubs of
, America, Family YMCA's, the Boy
Scouts and the Special Olympics.
Contributors wiJI be allowed to
keep a torch for every kilometer they
sponsor. Only the flame will be
passed between runners. The exact
route through the county will be
mapped out when more kilometers'
arc sold, Ranney said.
The I OOth kilometer was
purchased by Nason Media which has
selected Carol Schuller as its runner.
Schuller, 19, daughter of Garden
Grove minister Dr. Roben Schuller,
lost a leg five years ago in a
motorcycle accident.
Other Orange County sp<>nsors
include the Mission Viejo Company,
the Irvine Company, Santa Ana
College, Alpha Beta, Knott's Berry
Farm, players and management of the
California Angels, Disneyland,
Denny's and President Ronald Re-
agan's son Michael Reagan.
The torch is scheduled to leave
Olympia this summer and will be
carried across the United States
before coming to Orange County.
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I
·'Our foreign policy Should be determined by one consideration only:
What serves the best Interests of the United St.ates?"
Defense is insane;
defendant may be
We arc told that two wrongs don't
make a nght, and I believe It; but,
oddly enough. two rights can com-
bine to make a wrong -as I thmk
they have m the mattt'.r of"insanity"
plcadmgs 10 escape pnson terms.
This winter, the House of Delegates
representing the Amencan ~ed1cal
Association voted overwhelmmgly to
abolish the msan1ty defense m crimi-
nal trials, which 1scenainlyw1thin the
rights of this body.
At the same ume. both the Amen-
can Bar Assoc1auon and the Amcn-
ca n Psych iatric .\ssoc1ation
strenuously opposed this action. the
latter condemnmg it as a ··punitive
stnke agamst the mentall}' 111, and
inconsistent wllh se' eraJ centunes of
Anglo-Amencan crim inal law."
These confl1ct1 ng rights add up to a
wrong. in the sense that. over the
years in Amcncan JUrisprudenc~. the
insanity defense has been twisted.
perverted and abused by both the
legal and medical professions for
their own gain.
SIDIEY
Hu11s
auction block. or even made a part of
the adversarial system in tbe courts.
A panel of experts should be
appointed by the AMA, in concert
with the APA, representing pro-
fessional opinion that 1s not bought
and paid for by either side: 1f such a
panel differs in its conclusions. then
the differences should be explained
dispassionately before the Jury.
The present charade simply con-
fuses the public and diminishes the
layman's confidence and respect for
the confrontational "experts." There
may never be a unanimity of opinion
about some defendants' mental state,
but at least the views of a dis-
interested panel will be held as honest
differences. not as op1mons for hire. L.M. Bovo Lawyers have employed ll on
behalfofthe1rchents. usually as a last
reson. when all the other e' 1dence
was clear!)" against them; and psy-
ch1atnsts havo.sold their services to
tht>~ lawyers. tcsufymg on opposite
s1de!I of the same case. and being paid
for their "favorable" opinions.
Attorneys obviously have a right to
defend their clients as vigorously as
they can, and testimony by the
medical profession is just as obvious-
ly legitimate. while those defendants
who were not resf>.2nsible for their
acts deserve a different judgment
from the rest. But when these rights
collide. they should be evaluated by
an independent body of authorities.
not used as a football by opposing
teams of mercenanes.
Napoleon'shoneymoon w as a Water loo
Understandablvenough. the public
has become di°sgusted and dis-
1llus1oned with ··expen testimony"
that can be purchased b} the highest
bidder. Adm1ttcdly. there can be
diffenng vu:"'s on the mental con-
d1t1on and capacll} of a defendant
(espec1ally since ··insan1t) ·· 1s a legal,
not a m edical, categof} ): but these
views should not be put on the
S1dne) Harris
columnist.
IS a
Sir. docs your wife at times refuse
to let you be the master in your own house~ Ignore that query. Too per-
sonal. But it is a common complaint
even among the most macho of men.
Take Emperor Napoleon Bonapane.
You'd think he'd have had his own
way. He married Josephine, a widow
syndicated six years his senior. And on their
' wedding ntght, according to the
h1stoncal footnotes. she refused to let
him push her dog out of their bed.
Q. In the U.S. flag, the stars
represent states and the stripes rep-
resent the 13 original colonies. What
do the colors stand for, 1f anythins?
A. Red, courage. White, punty.
Blue. justice. That was the ongjnal
plan, at any rate.
Most common cosmetic surgery on
men now is the hair transplant.
Remember. "Swahili" is just an
anglicised corruption of the real name
of that Afric an language,
"K.iswahili." One who speaks same, a
''Mswahili," told me so.
L.M. Boyd is a synd1c~ted columnist.
U.S. can't bring peace to Middle East
.,..,..,....
An American Marine watches for aign• of trouble near the Beirut airport ln J anuary.
The Middle East has been m
ceaseless ferment for 6.000 years. We
will not end it.
Now an ugly-ugly spinoff of that
centuries-old hate threatens to spread
it.
A ~roup in Beirut representing
families of people kiJJed by our
Marines threatens revenge against the
families of those Marines in the
United States.
President Reagan says we must not
let terrorists determine our foreign
policy. Amen.
Our foreign policy should be de-
termined by ooe consideration only:
What serves the best interests of the
United States?
Sentencing United States troops to
si t there behind sandba~ and get shot
at did not fit that critenon.
Twenty-one Arab nations stretch
from the Atlantic to ancient Babylon.
Those nations are ho me for I 20
million. mostly Moslems. and three
million Jews.
lfwe arc trying to "make the world
safe for democracy." not one Arab
country holds regular, national.
honest elections without reprisals
against the losers.
Arab-Israeli tension is a c-0nve-
nient excuse for anything Arab rulers
choose to do to one another and/or to
their own people.
But while lsrael is divisive, it is also
the one consistent catalyst -the one
unifying force -the one stabiliz.ing
force in the area.
The confrontation is not "racial."
Both Arabs and Jews are semit.eS,
but they are in diametrical disagree-
PAUL
HARVEY
mcnt concerning the occupation of
Jerusalem's holy places.
In other words, people arc killing
people in the name of religion.
Israel has fought for its life ft ve
times since 1948 -and won the wars
-but suffered the horrendous econ-
omic debitjtation wh ich wars impose.
United States presence in the
Middle East is sometimes justified on
the premise that if we move out the
Soviets will move in. That is unlikely.
Soviet atheism is as rejected as
American capitalism 1s envied.
The most d1abohcal source of force
in the Mideast denvcs from the Shiite
Moslem convictions that to die in a
holy war is to go straight to heaven.
And for this they will march into .
Iraqi mine fields ...
Or drive dynamit~ladcn auto-
mobiles into American m ilitary com -
pounds ...
Or sabotage airliners while riding
in them ...
Or even seek out for revenge the
families in America of American
Marines in Beirut.
Paul Harvey is a syndicated
columnist.
Yuri Andropov: An enemy of freedom
Reagan· s refusal to attend funeral
sends correct signal to Soviets
WASHINGTON -About ) un
<\ndropov. 11 may be said he "'as a
devout Leninist. an uncompromising
and hfelong encm} ofhuman nghts.
of freedom of the\'. est
In 1956.asambassadorto Hun-
gary. he persona II} double-nossed
the Hunganan patnots while
Khrushche" marshaled his tan~ ar-
m1es to re1nvadc. When Bre1hne\
ousted Khrushchev to end the
post-Stalin .. thaw." Andropov was
h1scho1cc to head the Soviet C 1cs1apo.
the KGB Aswonhysuccessorto
Ya~oda and Bena. '\ndropov
re-mstlluted the u\C of insane
asylums to deal with political dissent.
and handed his grateful Bulganan
subs1d1ary the honorofletting the
contract to murder the Pope m ~t
Peter'sSquare DunngAndropov\
15 months m power. the Soviet :ur
force massacred 60 A.mcncans with
thedownmgofKAI 007. the Soviet
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
m1htarybegan the terror bombing of
Afghan villages to depopulate the
country. and the Soviet propaganda
machines sought to destabilize the
Western allian ce over the issue of the
Eurom1ssiles.
Yet. upon the death of Yuri
Andropov,Jesse Jackso n sent a
message of'"personal regret" to the
Soviet Embassy and George McGov-
ern was well nigh inconsolable:
'"It is a modem tragedy that one of
the Soviet Union's most intelligent
and realistic leaders has served and
died during the administration of one
of the most ill-infonned and danger-
ous men ever to occupy the White
House."
The former senator from South
Dakota then u,.ro Americans to ask
God's 1ntercess1on to save us from the
"1ll-1nfqpncd and dangerous"
H.L 8chwet11 m
~
llvDl>""'41 _.,Cle, ol .,,. ~ •I no W•t a.y St <AMI••,,._ 4'ctdf-cor•--0.0'<• 10 lo• ·~ Cot1a .,_.. c~ .,.,.
Ronald Reagan. and. please Lord.
send us another Yuri Andropov:
"We can only hope and pray that a
realistic leader will come forward in
the Soviet Union and that the
American people will end Ronald
Rcagan'srcign oferrorin 1984."
Almost toa man, the Democratic
candidates implored President R~
agan to go to Moscow. to send a signal
to the Soviet hierarchy that we
Ame~cans arc ready to talk., that we
Amencans, too. seek peace.
No one seems to have considered
what son of message it would have
sent to the Afghan rebels, to the
incarcerated feaders ofSolida:rity-to
the widowofConaressman Larry
McDonald-bad Ronald Reagan, the
great antagonist of the Soviet Empire,
shown up to pay his respcctS at the
bieroflbelatecbieftanoftbe KGB.
Had Rould Reapn appeared in
Moscow-as his aides M ichacl
DeavcrandJamc Bakcrurged-it
would have made a mockca of
everything he had been prElchina for
20years.
PAT
BucHArwt
Arc there any serious men at all left
m the West? Calling this
arch-terrorist a "man of great
authority," whose death is "sadden-
ing," Francois Mitterrand ofFrance
bemoaned the fact that "his activities
were cut shon by illness and then
death when they had only just
begun." What "activities' docs Mit-
terrand have in mind7U.N. Secretary
GcneraJ Javier Perez de CUellar
provides us an answer. Aodro~~, he
declared in a pcrsonaJ eulogy, had a
fervent commitment to work for
· world peace and an end to the ann
race."
(At AndropOv'swakc, the whole
P "I must havejoined in howling
r---------------------------1 I "'en ec11tor111 ~ ... ....., °" declWllO ..-of P11t11C I ~ 111 ~ ..:::.: Ille ptOOOMd ,__... Md ~ IN I ~ OOyou.._ tftt4ioftloM1G-...1oN1,...,,..,.? I
T°lllttol,tpOll .. ~ -..., 10 INlcMe "'41 teMllorl II you ... to I I .-.-... ..,..,..... .-. .. 'fOAll ,..,._
I I' I YES NO I
I ...... ..,...lOU' NllP'ON9 •• ldllor. TM OWiy Pio«. ... '"°·Colla •• I ...... OA.tM'f" ~---------------------------·
when Konstantin Chernenko read
that one.)
Has the secretary general lost the
limited number of marbles he
brought to bis Position? It is the
Soviets who walked out of the
strategic anns taJks. They walked out.
because Reagan deployed nine Per·
shing missiles to offset the 370 SS-20s
the Kremlin had deployed inside the
Soviet Union.
Rather than counterattacking, and
casti,ating these blubberina
apologists for Yuri Andropov, the
administration has joined the chorus,
declarin' that the coming of new
leadership in Moscow represents a
"great ~pportunity" for the reduction
of tensae'h.
This is the same old self-delusion
apinst whjch Reaaan warned in the era of detente. There are two funda·
mental reasons for tension between
the Soviet Union and the Wesl. The
first is the ruurrinaclamorwithin-
from BaltsandSlavs, PolesandJews,
Moslemsand Christ1ans-forfrcc-
dom, forhberty, foresca~:
better life. Thesecood is 's
resistance to the Soviet Empire's
,expansion. The o nly way to "relieve
tensions" between u1, then, is tocca
resistina the cmpLte in Central Amcri-
ca, Africa 1nd A(Jhan1 tan,andccasc
supportioa the clamorous elements
inside, 1.e., throuah appeasement and
oollabontton at the expense of the
best and the bra vest of our friends.
Patrick Bucb.an1n isa syndicated
columni t.
PAUL llARVBY #
cobumdat
JACK
AIDEISOI
LIES T R IP
I N DIAN
AUTHOR
Writer tells tales
with forked tongue
WASHINGTON -One of the
country's most celebrated Indians has
fabricated much of the background
that made him famous. Jn fact, some
Indian leaders doubt that he is an
Indian at all.
The name he goes by is Jamakc
Highwater. He has written several
books and academic articles on
lndjan culture, detailing the pajn of
his life as an Indian. With his dark
hair, sculpted profile and majestic
presence, he appears to be the very
model of an lndjan. And his creden-
tials as an Indian have been accepted
without question by TV personality
Bill Moyers, Who's Who, The New
York Times. The Christian Science
Monitor and other leading news-
papers.
Highwater has produced record-
ings and television programs; 30
years ago, he founded a dance troupe
in San Francisco. The Corporation
for Public Broadcasting has put up
$250.000 for a TV show now being
·produced by his non-profit corpor-
ation. C PB and the Public Broad-
casting System have offered him
$600,000 more if be can find
matching funds for another TV
production that would cost more than
$2 million.
Yet under persistent questioning
by m y associate Les Whitten, HiJh-
water finally admitted that he hashed
repeatedly about many details of his
life. Asked why someone of such
genuine and extraordinary talent felt
he had to concoct a spurious back-
ground, Highwater said he felt that
doors would not have opened for him
if he had relied on his talent alone.
"Society puts certain pressures on
people," he explained. At one point,
he said, "Maybe I should have been
more forthright."
Although he still insists be is an
Indian, Highwater has dropped any
claim to lndianhood from his ap-
proved press release. "I'm not going
to sa y I'm an Indian any more," he
told Whitten. "But {expletive de-
leted). I'm an Indian .... I've taken a
lot of {expletive deleted) being an
Indian." He has also made a pile of
money as an Indian.
Here arc the highlights, culled from
various sources:
-Highwater gave Who's Who his
birthdate as Feb. 14, 1942. But when
confronted with an old ne'l(spaper
clipping that named him as founder
of a professional dance company in
San Francisco in 1954 -when he
would have been 12 -he said he had
guessed at his birthdate, and could be
as much as 10 years off.
-His place of birth has been listed
variously as Los Angeles, Canada,
South Dakota, Montana and Nor-
mandy. France -though be said be
was misquoted on the last sjtc. Told
that the place he gave Who's Who -
Glacier County, Mont. -has no
record of his birth, Highwater said he
picked it "right off the top of m y
head."
-He has claimed a bachelor's and
master's degree from the University
of California at Berkeley. and a Ph.D.
from the Univcr3ity of Chicago. In
fact, he admitted he never got any
such degrees.
-Highwater claims his mother
was a Blackf ect and hjs father a
Cherokee. But be)'Ond iln affidavit in
I 974 from his adoptive mother and
another from his foster sister, attest-,
ing their belief that he is an Indian, be
has no proof. He is not on the official
Blackfeet tribal rolls, and such re-
spected Indian leaders as Vine De-
Loria Jr. and H".lnk Adams say flatly
that Highwater is not an Indian.
-High water's father was either an
..illustrious motion picture director, ..
an "alcoholic stunt man" or a rodeo
clown, and died when the boy was 1
(or 9 or 10 or 13). His mother,
according to Higbwater's promo-
tional materiaJs and published inter-
views, either married a rich man or
was destitute -or wasn't a Blackfeet
at all, but a Cherokee who ran away at
l S to marry a Grcck:·bom circus
aeriahst.
· -He bas claimed fluency in 11
laDJUllCS -including Nahuatl, the
Ame tonaue. Yet when questioned in ruaimentary French, German and
l&alian -three of bis supposed tana~ -be could replf only in
bad French and finally admitted that
he speak! only Enalish fluently.
Footnote: One of Hi&hwatcr'1
proudest mo ments, he said~came in
1979 when Ed Calf Rope, a tslack{eet
ekler1 conferred on ham the name
Pi1tat Sahkomupii, or Eaa1c Son.
HJ&hwater wd the name's ccr•
eraonial mean1n1 is "He soan h~t
and catcllcs many truths, whicli he
canits to many lands."
Jack And~non is 1
Coh.imni t.
•
I _l
. , I
\
11
(
John80D of Van Kaya holcla the
erlcan nag hiCh In the air today after
'
...
.,, .........
wlnnJ.na the aold medal In the doWDhlll
ran In tlae Wl.Dter Olympics.
Sumners falls to second
~ast German figure skater
in first after short program
SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia (AP) -East Germany's
Katarina Witt skated a flawless short program today and
jumped into first place ahead of U.S. world champion
Rosalynn Sumners in the Olympic figure skating
competition.
Witt, an 18-year-old high school student, earned a
majority of 5.8s for technicaf nferit l\lld four near-perfect
S.9s and four 5.8s for presentation in the two-minute
routine to leap from third to first in the standings.
Sumners, 19, ofEdmonds, Wash., one of the handful
of U.S. medal prospects left in these Games. was marked
down on technical merit with 5.3s and 5.4s for two-footing
a double axcl in the combination jump -one of the
required clements. .
She did better on the presentation, including four 5.8s.
but still placed fifth in the program and lost the lead she
built in the compulsories.
"I was focusing on the combination jump and when I
did it I got a little happy JOing into the double axel. I knew
it was too slow and that 1t was tipping, and when I landed
I two-footed it," Sumners said.
"This is where I like to be (after the short program).
..
4 .. •
..... . " '
Witt, who was radiant in a fairy princess outfit
sparkling with sequins, leads with 2.2 factored placements
goi"t into the free skating finaJe Saturday.
rs surprised I came up to first place. I felt confident
or 1 wouldn't skated so well. I'm going into the finals
feeling calm," Witt said after her performance.
Chin, a willowy Chinese-American, soared from 12th
to a sixth place tic with two other competitors for her
spark.Jing spins and feathery jumps.
She was given five 5.6s, one 5. 7 and a 5.9 for technjcal
merit and even higher marks for presentation, including
three 5. 7s and a 5.9.
The U.S. skater was tied with Manuela Ruben of West
Germany and Sandra Cariboni of Switzerland going into
the finals.
Elaine Zayak, 18, of Paramus, N .J ., the 1982 world
champion, placed sixth on the short program, and wasn't
able to crack the top I 0 overall. She was virtually
eliminated from medal contention after placing 13th in the
school figures Wednesday.
BACK-TO-BACK
HOLES-IN-ONE!
Under normal circumstances,
the presence of Milwaukee
Brewer pitcher Don Sutton on the
golf course would be cause for
commotion.
But Saturday morning on the
11 th hole at El NiJUel Country
Oub in Laguna Niguel, Sutton
took a back scat to two members
of his foursome.
Peter Genovese ofl...aguna Hills
and John Bcetham of Mission
Viejo pulled off a one-in-a-billion
golf possibility -back-to-back
holes-in-one on the 154-yard
hole.
Genovese, 30, and Bcetham,
34, used six irons to score the rare
consecutive aces.
The 11th hole had recently
been renovated. The green had
been moved about 20 feet behind
a lake and additional sand traps
added. according to club pro
Mike Nichols.
Both players are scratch golfers.
Genovese finished with a 75 and
Bcetham a 77. For the record.
Sutton had a 79 and the fourth
member of the quartet. Sam
Murad, had an 86. it wasn't the
first hole-in-one for Beetham,
either. •
·'
UC lrvln• product
SIM• Scott atlll
bitter •bout 1llO
bOycott. 82.
Johnson's boast·
•' becomes reality
American captures downhill
to snap long-time U.S. jinx
SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia (AP)-Downhill skier Bill
Johnson won the gold medal in the men's downhill today
at the XIV Winter Olympics, ~ving the United States its
best showing in Alpine skiing in 32 years and a
badly-needed boost from one of its wont medals
performances in two decades.
Johnson. who a month ago became the first American
to win a World Cup downhill race. had brashly predicted
victory after dominating Olympic traininJ runs. He came
through, and gave the United States its tint gold ever in
men's Alpine racing.
"I put a lot of pressure on myself," said Johnson, 23, of
Van Nuys. "If I had gotten second I'd be a real bum."
It was the first time a member of the U.S. men's team
had finished better than fifth in an Olympic downhill.
After conquering a case of prcracc nerves Johnson
confidently exploded over the bottom third of tlte course.
"I was nervous 20 minutes before the race, but I
started to cool down. In the startingptc, I just said, ·Relax, relax. you've got it.' I feel fantastic. '
Beating Europe's best at their own game, Johnson
capitfllized on his gild ing prowess in flat sections of the
course.
"This 1s my course. I cap go straight faster than
anybody here," he said.
The victory, coming four days after Americans
Debbie Armstrong and Chnstin Cooper ran 1-2 in the
women's giant slalom. lifted U.S. spirits.
Until Johnson produced gold, the United States had
managed only three medals in 24 events.
His timeofone minute, 45.59 seconds was .27 seconds
faster than Peter Mueller of Switzerland. Austria's Anton
Bill John80D •peeda down the downhill
coane on h1a way to winning the Olympic
Steiner won the bronze at l :45.95. franzKlammcr, the
1976 Olympfo downhill king from Austria, finished 1 Otb.
lt wu only a f cw weeks ago that he became the first
American man to win a World Cup race, a pedormance ,
that brought a sullen look from Klammer.
Johnson, rccognizcd as one of the best .. gliders" on the
World Cup circuit, trailed Muc;ller through the iniermedi-
atc clocking on the Mount Bjelasnica course, but made up
the time on the bottom third, which is flatter and better
suited to his specialty.
Last year, Johnson became the first American skier to
win the Europa Cup, both the overall title and the
downhill. He picked up his first World Cup points with a
sixth place at St Anton, Austria, and was the U.S. National
Downhill Champion.
Switzerland got its second Alpine gold when Michela
Figini, just 17 years and. 10 months old. "9ld the
women s downhill -the youngest ever to d it. Marie
Theres Nadig. another Swiss, wu one month o when
she woo the women's downhill at Sappord in I 2.
Teammate Maria Wallitcr was second Figini.
Olga Charvatova of Czechoslovakia prcveo re Swiss
Jweep by edging Ariane Ehrat out of the bronze. best
American finisher was Holly Flanders of Deerfield. N.H.,
in 16th.
Figini won the race in one minute, 13.36 seconds., just
.OS seconds faster than Walliser. Charvatova cloeked
I: 13.53 to ta.kc the bronze by .42 seconds.
a old medal today. m•lrtnc h.latory .. tbe
ft.nt American to flnlah better than fifth.
All-Star choices on hold
But Giddings has
a very longlist
of blue chippers
Selections for the South All-Stars
figure to go at a rather slow pace for a
while, according to Newport Harbor
High football coach Mike Giddings.
F'irst, there 1s considerable time
bcforethcJuly6 kickoff at Orange
Coast College.
And, until Giddings returns April I
from the National football ~ue
meetings in Hawaii relative to his
scouting business, there really isn't
much he can do.
What he is doing. however, in order
to ~et ready for Valencia High Coach
Mike Marrujo and the North. 1!.
laying the ground work for what h~
considers his "blues". a dcscnpt1on
for the cream of the players
"We have to get the blues. then find
out where you have a real need in
other areas," says Giddings, who c
selections are Ii mated to no more than
three per school.
With a 30.man squad and 31
schools to pick from, it's obv1ou~
there is plenty to pick from. ma) be
too much to pick from
''l'm asking ~ch coach to ltst his
No. l for me," says Gidd ings. ··1 want
the most deserving player and 1f there
is two, frankly ifthere is o ne Wi th a
better character. that's th~ one l want.
"This game 1s a rewarofor players
ROGEi
CARLSOI
PREP SPORTS
wbo did the best for their coach and
school."
There is still some q ucstion
whether those selected for the Shnnc
Game in Pasadena (July 26) an
eligible to play in the Orange County
game, and until Giddings gets the
official woro, he is limited in commit-
ting himself.
UC Irvine enters Bulldogs' den tonight
Assisting him will be his two
assistants-Bucko Shaw and Mike
Ashen, in addition to newcomers
Peter Helfrich. Al Gaddis and John
Camey.
Helfrich (Redlands) and Gaddis
Anteaters winless in Sellanli Arena;
Fresno State still smarting after upset
FRESNO -'It bad to be on the
schedule some day and today is that
day. UC frviJ!C faces the unenviable
ta.sic of meetma Fretno State bcre
toni&ht at Sci.land Arena (7:30,
KWVE-FM, 108)-where the Ant-
eaters have never won a basketb9ll
pmc.
To compound matters, the boat
BuUdop of Coach Boyd Orant are
comina off an embarrassina defeat in
which lowly UC Santa Barbara pulled
off a SS-SO double stunner.
h's the fint of 1 short t~me
road trip for UCI. whicb left home
with a firm hold on 1eCOnd plloe ln
the PCAA standmp. The Anteaters,
10.3 in PCAA play, will be at Pacific
Monday before retumil\J home for a
thftC1ame home finale.
Fresno State, 16-7 on the season111
tied fOr fourth place in the PCAA with
a 7-S ma~\ 2Yl pmes behind the
Anteaters. Nevada-Las Veps is still
comfonably atop the pack at 12--0.
Tbc 8ulldOlo' have lost only twice
at Selland Arena thi• year. Purdue
beat them S6-SS and Cal State
FUUcrton IOOttid a Sl-S l victory in
PCAA play.
Fttsno State is led by senior Ron
Anderson who has a l 7. 7 sconng
averqe and Bemaro Thompson who
eaten the pm~ with a 16.3 average.
Thompson bad his streak of 45
straiaht double-figure pmcs stop~
in the loss to UCSB.
Meanwhile. UCI center Tod
Murphy bas now scored in doubk filures in nine straighJ games. and
senior luatd George Turner bas
ICOrcd 10 or more points in his last
ci&ht11mes.
Senior forward Bc:n McDonald
leads the Anteaters wnh a 14. 9
1corin1 a veraac. Senior Bob
Thornton is averqina 12.8 points per
pmc and ci&ht rebounds per outma.
UCI i lackifll in the depth dcpan-
mcnt, particularly at auard now that
~rvc Ocmck Johnson has left the
squad. The transfer student from
Skyline Collcee was unhappy wtlh his
playing time (or lack oO and quit the
team last week pnor to the Anteaters'
''1ctory over Utah State.
UCrs 10.3 mark in PC'AA play tied
a school recoro fo r most coofcrtncc
WJns in • season. ln t~ 1981-82
season, the Anteaters finished PC AA
play with a I G--4 record.
The last time UCI and Fresno Sa te
met, the Anteaters pinned a 63-57 loss
on the Bulldogs at Crawford Hall. In
that game. Turner led UC1 W1th 17
points and three other Anlcaters
finished 1n double fiaum
Stilt, th~ Build arc 14-2 aaainst
UCt dating back to 1968. But the
Anteatcn have won two of the la t
four conte5ts be-tween the teams.
( Pnnccton) are wraeping up tbclf .. ooU~ate careers lhts sprina. llVlQI •
G1ddmgs foureA-Newport H.arbor
stars oo the staff.
Camey comes to the Sailon after
three years ro<oaehma Wlth Jim
Hagey at C ta Mesa.
"l want to ma.kc sun: we have \be
four top leagues -Sunset. Sea V .cw.
Century and South Coast -rep-
resented well." addsGiddinp.
Rt&ht now the o nly thlD& sure u
tcve Braz.as and Brett K.acura from
Newport Harbor have bttn cbotCD b)'.
th:c1tcoacb "Tbc rest. opt now, as
rcally_a p1ecemeaJ satuauon.•· rys
Giddings.
E . . ~ tr 4': ntncs a.re RI ta CthOf ••Alb·
lctcs Helpina Alhktes Celebrity GOif
Cl ic" at Irvine Coast C"ounmi ~-CAltl.eQlll I
#
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Steve Scott won't
vote for Mondale
after '80 boycott ·
From AP clUpatckt m
SAN DIEGO -Besides beina Ameri-
ca's best middle distance runner, Steve ·
Scott is an amicable fellow, not the type of
person you would suspect of holding a grudge,
especially for four years.
But Scott, who hopes to capture an O lympic gold
medal this summer in Los Angeles in the l ,SOO meters,
says he won't v,ote for Walter Mondale. no matter what.
"He was in the same administration as Carter,"
says Scott, referring to the U.S.
boycott of the Moscow Olympics
which President Carter or·
chestrated in l 980.
Scott, a former UC Irvine
runner, bad won the U.S. trials
that year and be calls the boycott
which denied him a chance at a
medal in 1980 "a joke."
"It was the bi&aest . . .
mistake they ever made in their
lives and it did absolutely no good
Scott at all," says the 27-year-old run-
ner who has achieved 82 sub-four-minute miles in his
career.
Looking to the future, Scott says the Los Angeles
smog will be a definite advantage for American athletes
who are used to below-par air quality.
"They (foreign runners) are really not going to
know how it affects you. lt is going to be a real
advantage for us," said Scott, who claims to know a
little about smog. having grown up in Upland, east of
Los Angeles. ·
"A runner from France, Germany, or Scandina·
vian countries won't be familiar with that (heat and
smog). Even in England there is not the type of weather
there is in Los Angeles. They're really not going to know
how it affects you. It is going to be a real advantage for
us."
Yankees' protest thrown out
NEW YORK -Lee MacPhail, direc-Ill
tor of baseball's Player Relations Commit-
tee, threw out Thursday a protest by the
New York Yankees and ruled that pitcher
Tim Belcher belongs to the Oak.land A's, who picked
him in the free-agent compensation pool. ·
Belcher was taken under the provision in the
contract that ended the 198 l baseball strike. Any team
losing a player designated as "Class A" is allowed to
select another player from a pool made up of all but 26
players designated as "protected" by every major
league team.
Simon adds name to Indy list
INDIANAPOLIS -Dick Simon of Ill
San Juan Capistrano was among five
drivers for whom cars were eiltered
Wednesday for t he 68th running of the
Indianapolis 500 on May 27 at Indianapolis Motor
Speedway. officials said.
Among the other· drivers named was Michael
Andretti, son of 1969 lndianap0lis 500 winner Mario
Andretti. The younger Andretti, of Nazareth. Pa., was
named a teammate of three-year veteran Geoff
Brabham, an Australian who Jives in San Clemente.
Both will be driving for Kraco Enterprses Inc. of
Compton, which also entered a third car with no driver
listed.
Sale of Los Alamitos approved
ALBANY -The California Horse
Racing Board has approved Hollywood
Park's pending purchase of Los Alamitos
Race Course by a 4-3 m~n with
Chairman Ray Seeley's vote making the difference.
The action came after a 3112-bour bearing on
Monday, the second in which the board beard
contentions from Santa Anita, Oak Tree and Del Mar
that Hollywood Park would have a monopoly if it
owned Los Alamitos.
The purchase of Los Alamitos plus an adjoining
golf course for $58 million will give Hollywood Park
control of facilities that have about 70 percent of the
thoroughbred, harness and quarter-horse dates in
Southern California,
Conno~ breezes at La Quinta
LA QUINT A -Top.seeded Jimmy EJ Connors bad no trouble Wednesday in
breezina past Glenn Micbibata of Canadll,
6-2, 6-3 1n a second-round match of the
Congoleum Classic.
Connors seemed pleased with his second-round
performance.
·•1 onJ)' missed three or four shots." he said ... He
(Michibata) is qwck, and he gets to a lot of balls he's not
supposed to."
Second-seeded Yannick Noah of France had a
much more difficult time advancing to the third round.
needing to overcome a first-set loss to eliminate Terry
Moor, 4-6, ~ 6-2.
Moor, who never trailed in the opening set, held
service to take a 5-4 lead and then broke Noah's service
to win the set.
But Noah, 23, took command in the second set and
won the fin&l set easily.
"When you're in that position, there are two
solutions," Noah said, referring to losing the first set.
"You can lose the second set and go home. or win the
next two and play another match.
Shelton, Williama sus pended
NEW YORK-Lonnie Shelton of the m
Oeveland Cavaliers was suspended for two
games and Buck Williams of the New t
Jersey Nets was ordered sidelined for one
by the National Basketball Association Wednesday as
the result of their second altercation of the season.
Neither player Will be paid for the games missed.
and each was also fined $2,500.
The two ~werforwards clashed twice in Tuesday
niaht's game m Richfield. Ohio, once in the first period
and again in the third. Shelton
and Williams each were ejected
after the second alterc.ation.
.. I'm a little bit ... very
surprised that it wasn't at least an
equal fine," Shelton said. "I'm
also looking like the bad guy when
th.is happens. I thought he was the
instigator, the aggressor. He hit a
teammate of mine in the head."
On Nov. 2, 1983 Shelton was
fined $2,500 for throwing a punch
8beltoa at Williams during the previous
night's game.
"(was fined more the last time because I threw the
first punch. I guess I'm the bad guy," Shelton said.
The 6-8 Shelton, who is the same height as
Williams but at 255 pounds outweighs him by about 40
pounds.t said he "probably" would file an appeal "if one
can be nled."
Three USC cagers out
LOS ANGELES -Three Southern m
Cal basketball players. including starting
forward Derrick Dowell, will miss the
Trojans' trip to Northern California for -
Pacific-I 0 Conference games against Stanford and CaJ.
The Trojans, 9-15 overall and 4-7 in Pac-10 play.
play at Stanford tonight and at Cal Saturday night.
Dowell, averaging S.8 points and 4.5 rebounds a
game, returned home to Indiana for bis father's funeral.
Freshman Rod Keller will start in place of Dowell.
Also not making the trip are guard Cedric Bailey,
who has a lin$ering case of bronchitis. and guard Ivan
Harris, suffenng from a bruised thigh.
Last week, Southern Cal announced that junior
center Clayton Olivier was out for the season with a
bone spurs in his foot.
UCI adds volleyball standout
UC Irvine head volleyball coach Mike m
Puritz has announced the signing of Dori
Bowman to a national letter of intent.
Bowman, a 5-11 front-line player, is a
senior at Torrey Pines High in Del Mar. She was a
first-team All-CIF (San Diego Section) and
All-Palomar League selection this season.
"Dori is an outstanding student-athlete." Puritz
said. "We are looking forward to her bolstering our
front line, as she can play both middle blocker and
outside hitter."
Road unfriendly to JCs
Oran ge Coast, Golden West,
Gauchos fall in enemy gyms
Craig Johnson. wbo had 17 points, sent the seesaw
game into overtime by netting a l ().footer with three
seconds remaining, but MiraCosta outscored the Gauchos
12-5 in the extra session with eight of the Points coming on
free throws.
The road was anything but pleasant for area ---------------------
community college basketball teams, as Orange Coast's
Shaughnessy playoff hopes were deaJt a blow by Mt. San
Antonio and Golden West's woes continued to mount at
Cypress.
Here's bow it went:
Mt. San Allto.D.lo H, Oruae Coast '53
Jeff Stephens capped a last-minute raµ>'. with a 20-.foot
j umper with four seconds to JO to ~nd it mto ove.mme.
and the Pirates nearly pulled 1t out m the extra ~s1~n ..
Down by three (S4-S1) with 28 seconds remam1n• in
OT, Brad Guess narrowed thegapto~neat 54-53 by hittJ~g
underneath and Mt. SAC gave the Pirat~s a chance to win
it by missing a subsequent free throw in a one-and-one
situation. . However, aftercallina time out with 14 seconds left to
set up the final shot, the best OCC could do was a long
j umper, which failed at the buzzer.
At the end of rqulation the Pirates overturned a
three-point deficit in the last hAif·minute as Brad Ouess
netted a free throw and Stephens hit his jumper.
The verdict drO~ OCC into a tie for the final
Sbauatmessy spot with Compton, a team the Pirates meet
Saturday. Each is 4-7 in the conference and a pme behind Santa Ana. a surprisina winner over Fullerton Wednesday.
CJpreu t l, GoNea W11t 7S
The aw.en shot a 1izz1ina 69 percent from the field
in the fint half in manufacturina a 48-31 lead at
intermiss•on en route to droppina the Rustlers into las1
place in the conference.
The two teams were lied at 11-11 when Cypre~ went
on a 22· l O run to .. umc a 1 l·point lead. Andy Maru5ich
had all 16 of his points in the first half to spark the Ch&JJCn. who plaoed five pla)'cn in double flaurea.
M1nCeda ,., ~ u
The losa was .-nicularty mutratin. for the Gauchos
in that they could have moved into a tte for the Pacific
Coast Confe~ce lad bccaute pace.setter Imperial VaJley
WU bel&cn ll 5an Dieao City.
Basketball scores
c ..... waST Ctartm0nt·Mudd 90, Celltcti SS
Wtlllll« 13, R9Cltanch 67 Seattle 74, St. Mllrtln'• ,,.
ROCKllS
Air FOl'CI 70, Adam• St., Coto. 41
OenYtr 62, s. Colorado 46
W. MOnt1na 99, Rocky Mount1ln
19
Rockmont 109, ColorldO Coo. lot (ot)
IAST
9\ICllMll 14, Otlaw1re 62
Connecticut 79, S.ton Halt 57
Ot11tll 6S, Hofatr1 47 Falrfleld 79, Armv 7l
Georoetown st. v1111nov1 46
H1rv1rd '1, 8r1nc1111 Sl
Ion• 90, Hotv Cross 79
I.a Stitt 71. Menti1ttan 62
New HelMthlre 77. Boston U. 70 Stena 90, Long tlllnd U. 16
SI. ~·a, N,J. AS. Fordl'IM\ 42 SOUTH
Oukt IO. 5ttf'°" 6'
,llmft Mldlton S3, TOWM)ll SI. J9 Memohts SI. 7$, FIOl'lda St. 67
"MW '7, 0.0.-... St. 17 N. Carollna SI. 11, Nor.,,._twrn
74 V!fvlnte Ttel'I U. Vlrtllnt. S4
Waite l:ornt a, ClernlOll 57
MIDWllT
loWllne GrMn 71, W. MlcttlMn 53
Cttvlltnd St. n, W. llllnola 1'
Devton 77. lulltr 1' (01>
Otl'luf n, l.OVOll, I• 71 I!. Mlchteen H, llll SI. jl
KtnMt 61, ~atlll ~
KtnNt St. 7•1 Colorado 6'
.w.ml, Ottle '°· No. tlllnol• " MlllMtOl1 .. Wlticonm 61 Mluourt M, Iowa St. • 1 Cltllo 76, Ctnt Midi'-" eo •
"" .......... "· ...,,.. D.cN " r-. 11, t<ant St " TUllM 11.t..~lnnltl .0 ~"WIST
ArbMn IS, TCU •
Okletiom• S1, Oktatiorne St. SS
SMU 1A, 91VIOI' 57
Tent 61, Alce S7
communnv c .....
SOUTH COAST COMl'UI NCI Mt. Sen Antonio S4, OCC 53 lot)
Cyprus 91, GOiden Wflt 73 Cerritos 19, CotnPlon IO Senta Ana 11, Fullerton 79
l'ACll'IC CCIAST ·COMl'IRI NCI Mlr1Co1te 70, Seddletleck 63 lelJ Sen Dleoo u. tmperlel '\lalllv 6)
Paiom.r 71, Gronmonl n
Southwntern as. so Mesa 76
Hltlh KMill C., 4•A Wllf C:.. Cent~ n, IMf'V Stlf 70 l6 ob CM' l •A WM c:.r.
L.vnwood 6t, IC~" CWJ·AWN~ Duarte $6, Monttl:llllo SS COYll\I 51, L.a Mlreda 53
S.ueu1 94, S.n Merino ..
Trov loO, V11tnG11 53 , • ...,. ... 41, kl\11 Mllrle '7
Glenn IS, C1lextco 71 .. ratow 71, GtMtl'le '7 Cll' SfNll ktlMa Wiii c:..I
HOlv Merlvrt 63, lndltln H .. ft PaNdlna Polv W, Avttoft ..,
S..llld\9n IO~r ttep. loO
• Cele 63, St. V '' Q
TrONI '°· Inland Ctll'lati.n 52
Weimen
Mt4'M ICNOO'-C~4~A WMCen
RotllM HUit 49, Simi VllllJV Q
Ctl'J·A WIN~
It TOl'O 62, Q.111 Hiiie fl c.,, .• -.cn
,.. Verdi JI, Yue.IN 11 ..-.wer tS, RWftO AlemllOI G
CellfOrnla 47, e.r-. JI Fullerton 41, '/Mncle •
ctl' 1m11 Sdle4llt WIN een
&Wron 4f, s.rr-30
Sin Jee .... w ....... C:hr. Q
XIV WWW 01VMPk1
(1t~Y~I
TODAY'S ltllUl.TI Min'• dewrlh• t. M ,,...._ VIII NW.. Cllf., IN ITIMutt, 4Uf eec--.
2. P.t., Muttltr, Swlt1., 1.0.N.
3 Allton Steln.r' Auttrl•, 1:4US.
.&. Plrmln Zurbf'IOotll, Swlta .• 1;46 OS
S. Un RHC!er, Swltr., 1.46 .. U.
(tit ). Httmut Hotli.tlner, Au1trl1,
1:46 32.
1. S.00 WlldOruDer. W Gtrm•nv. 1:46-53,
I Sttvt Podbor1kl, C1N1d1, 1.4'.St.
t Toeld 9rooktr, Ct ntO., I 46 ~
10 Fr•nr Kltmmtr, Au1trle, 1·•7 0.
II Erwin ltntll, Au1trl1, 1:4106
I,, Kleu1 G11ttf'm1M, W Germanv, t·•T n
13. C.unt11tr Mlrxer, 1..lecll., I •1.43
14 CONedtn C.tl'IOITWn, Swltt , I 47.61. 11. MlalHI ,....,,, ........ 141 70
16. Vi.dlmlr Melr.ffv, Soviet Union. 14717
{tit) AJberlo GllldOnl, ltt lV, I 47 17
11 Mlrtln e.u. 8rlreltl. 1:4 00
19 Sttven LM. A.u1tr1lle, 1· .... 02
10 F"ndl Plccerd, Fr.net, 14.106
(tie I Oanllo S1>erdtllo1to, ltalv, I ·4.1 06
72 Htrt>trt Renotll, E Gtrmenv. I. ... 3'
l3 V•l«v T1l91nov, Soviet Unton, 1·4 ....
14. °"9 &..wll, ~. V1., 1141.4'.
,S Michel Vlon, F"nce, 1:4UI
l6 Gtrv Athant, Ctntdl, I 41 7t.
21. Jenu Pltttr1t«, Vuoo1t1vle, l.'8.'1
2t Shlnv• Clllbe, J•i>en, 1:49.02
19 Phlllppt Verntr•t. France, 1.49.JO.
30. Tomu Jtmc, Vuoo11tvla, 1.49.61.
31. 8ruce Grent, Ntw Ztelend. l.49.t4
Jl. Grt"-m 8tll, 8rlt1ln, 1:50.06.
S3. Connor 0 18rltn, 8rlteln, l.S0.34.
JA. All1tt lr Gun , Aultre~•. l:SO.S7.
35. Merkus Hubrlcll, New ZHlend,
l:SO.n
34. Hubtrl Hllll, Lltch., l:S0.94.
37. Frederick Burlon, 8rltaln, l:S1. U.
31. Hubtrtu1 Futr1lenbero, Mtxlco,
l:Sl.57.
39. Dieter Llnt\tOtro, Chllt, l:Sl.61.
40. Pltrrt Cououtlel, 8ttolum, 1:52.40
41 Andres Floutroe, Chllt, 1:52.97
42 Hens Koumt1111, Chht, l:S..34,
(I Altn S.nchez, 800vl1, 1.S..75
44 MloU411 Purctll, Cllllt, l'SU 1
0 . Joroe 81rkner. A.roentlM, 1:S. 92
46 tt.nrl Mo411n, e.+olum, 1:ss,n .
•7. O•vkl 1..•loux, Moneco, I 5'.ts '8 Albtr1 LIOVtf'I, ~re. 1:57 •.
•9 Nlcot.s Vandlt""r. Aroentln1. 1:51.U
SO Jorell Torru, ""°°'"· l.St 06 SI umlne Gutve. Seneo•I. 1:59.64
52. Bvunoro P1rk, s. KorH, LS9 74. S3 EtVIQut 0-ldele<, Aroent1111. l:S9.7•
54 Amtrlco Alttlt. Aroenllne, ,:OUO
SS loannl1 St1mellou, Grttet, 2:01.19.
S6. AndrHt P1ntttldl1, Grteet, 2:01 .• S1 Jlnt11t Kin, s KorH, ,:01.96.
SI. Woovoun Eu, $, KorH, 2:02 67
S9. uzaro' ArhOdoPouto,, GrMH. 2-03.93
60 J1mll Et RHdv, Eovot, J·IJ.16.
61 Ptter Outrr, W Germ1nv, Clld nor
llnl'h
W~'$ doWnhll
l. Michele Flolnl, Switz .. ont minute.
ll.36 seconds.
2. Marie Welllser. Swill., 1:13.41
3 Oloe Cllerv1tov1, Crtch., 1:13.Sl.
• Ar lent Ehret, Switz , 1: 13.95.
S J1111 Gentnerove, Cttcll .. 1:14.14.
6 Marine KleN, w Gtrmenv, 1:14.30.
(tit ). C.trrv SorenHn, Cen1e11, 1:1UO
I LH Soelkntr, AU1trl1, 1: 14 39.
9 EllHbtlll Klrehltr, Avstrl1, 1:14.SS.
10. Vtf'onlk• Welll~r. Au1trl•, 114 76
II. L1urlt Gr1"-m, C1nee11. 1'14.92 12 8rl11lllt Oerlll. Swll1 , 1 103.
13. Sylvia Edtr, Av1trl1, 1:14 97. 14. Heidi Wltsltf, W Germenv. l·I• 98
lS C.rollne Alll1, F"nct, 1.15 04
1'-HtlV l"llftdtn, DMnleld. N.H ..
1:11.lt.
17 Rt91ne MotsenlecMtr W Gtrmenv
l.IS.1'-11 Lllse S.vflarvl, Cenede, 1 15.32
tt. Ma111 Maricld\, SUn Vllev, ldlllt,
l!IS..SS.
20 Marle·Luct W11dmele<. Frenct,
1:1S.S6. II. ~ Am\llnfte, S..ftlt, Wa"'-.
t;ls.s7. 22. Karen Sttmmlt, Ctnede. l:IS.64.
23. lreot EPPie, W C.trmtnv, 1.15.65.
24 lvene Veltlova, Crtcll . 1:16.43.
25 Jot1nde Klndlt, Lltctt .. 1.16.19. 26 Chrl1tlne orant, Ntw Z1tlend, 1 17.S:l 21 Mlcnei. Oomt>erel. ee1111um. I 11.tt.
28. Marlll• Guu, Au1trell1, 1 19.7S. 29 Kiit Retlfl'f, Ntw ZHlend, 1:20. II
30. TtrtH 8u1tamentt. A.r0tnJlne.
1:21.62
~1 Clere Booth, Britain, dlel not flnlsll
32 Ell1ebtth Chaud, France, CllCI not
llnl1h
Men's l,SOO-meter
sPMd skatln9
1 Geelln Boucher. Cenaela. ont minute,
SI 36
2. Servel KllleC>nlkov, Soviet Union,
1:51.13
3 ~ Bovlev, Sovltt Union, 1.Sl.19
4 H•ns Ven Htldtf\. Frence, 1:59.l'
5 Andrees Ehrlo, E. Gtf'menv. l.S9A1
6. Andrees Olett4, E Gt rmenv, 1.59.n
7 Hllbtrl V•n Dtr Oulm. Nethtrlend1,
1:59.n .
I Vktor Cnecntrln, Soviet Union,
I 5911
' Perlll NllttYI•, Flnlel\d, 2-00.01. 10 Friis Scllllll. Nttntrltnd,, 2-00 14
II. And" HoffmaM, E. Germenv.
2-00.23.
12. Kel Arnt Enottsteel, Norwev, 2:00.S9 (tie). Httn VtrOttr. Ntlhtrtends, 2:0C>.S9
14. Nldr ~ Mllw1tl•lll1, MW!.., ,.,n.
IS Werner Jeeoer, Austrle, 2:0t.03.
16. Hen• Maonuu on, Sweden, 2:01.76
11 Ro" Fellt ·l..aru•n, Norwev. 2:01.65
II Clets Benotuon, Sweden, 2:02.0..
19. Blotrn Nvtend. Norw av, 2:02.0S
20. MICllH i H•dKhlt ff , Austria, 2:02.06
21. I! 1111 Htnr'llrsen, CllamP1'9n, L,
2!0UO. n . TlbOr Koo.er. Romenle, 2:02.31. 23. Vounoha LM, S. Korte, 2:0'1.45.
24. h n Gunner Junell, Swteltn, 2:02 SS.
2S Wolfo•no SCllerf, w Germany.
1:02.M
16 Hen1 Baltes, W Gtrmenv. 21>2 68
27 Andrt11 Ltmtkt , W Germen\',
2.03.13. 21. Ct1rl1tl•n Emlnoer, Au1trle, 2-GJ.11
19. Klmlhlro Htmeve, Jepen, ,-cn.n.
JO. Yoon·Soo Re, S. Korte, 2113.tO.
31 Rlbln Im, N Korte, ,:03.'3
31. KllH 8H, S Kort1, 2-o4 11.
ii. Mllrtr IWkMI, Mllwitl"'*'· MM..
2:04.2'.
:M. Mldl1tl Richmond. Aullrella, 2:0t.6l '
35. Otoroto P101nln, llelv, 2:04.97. U. Gwenonvun Kim, N Korta, 2:0uo.
J7. Colln Coe Its, Au11t1tl1, 2-ol. 13
31 Wtl 1..1, Chine, 1'°' JI
>9 Irvan Cart>ls, flrlt1ln, 2-13.25.
40 Bahudln Mtrdovlc, YU90•1•vl•
2.ltU
Men'& 4K10
cr.s1 countrv rNY
1. Swtdell (Tl'loml' Weul>tt'o, 8tnnv
Kontbtre, Jen 0t1011011, Gu/Ide Svanl, one
hOvr. S5 rn1nv1es, 6.3 MClond1.
2. Sovie! Union, l:5S 16 50.
J. Ftnlend, l:S6:3UO.
•. Norwtv. 1 57:27.60. s. sw111er1enc1, ueio..oo. 6, West Ctrmanv, 1:59.30.20.
1. ltalv, l:SUo.JO a. U1111M Stllllfl CDI" srntnelu,
lueeM. °"" T1"I c:Mdwtl, """'"· Vt .. Jllft ~ are ...... Vt,. a• Kedl. llf99M, Ore.), tr:Sf';SLJO,
f EHi CtfmlllV, 2-0 IUO.
10, eu ... rl•, 2:03 l7 60 ti Au.trla, 2"°4.Jt,00.
t2. Yuootlfvle, 2-0.•41 M lJ Jao1n, 2:06.4250.
''· ar111111. t 10'09 '° ts. MoMolle, J-16.-0l 60
l6 Ctlh\t, , 16J2.40
17. Anleftllne, t 21'07 IG.
W..,_,t fllUre 1b1tnt
,,....,....,~,
!NOTE The flnl two ciotllon. .c<OUftt
fOr so -~· of "" '°''' ICOl't af the comHllllon) I Kllttlllt Wiii, I G.rmenv, 0 • fllCl~ ~I t2
1. "nlMWI ~ ........ ••""-Ml u.. ) Kirt IV91'11Ya, Soviet Unlofl, l 2: 4 2.
'-!19M VOOOfllOVI, Soviet Ulllon, l.2; u S AMI K~. Soviet UnlOll, 1 6; u ...... Ctrlbofll, $Wiil., s '· 1.0 1. Menu.It "UOtll, W Otr!NllY, '4, 1.0.
t. ftlMot °""-T-.C. Laite, c.aM.. Ut u. • \tn<M Dut>ravk . VU00$11Yll . h ; I ..
I
,, lO \IOll ~-. W ~ • ._
11, ..._ z:n-. hnorlM, H.J.. ~
1"1.
lt. KIV T~, ~. •I; It.I
t) ll&tbttll ~nlev, Cen9dl, U , tU.
14. Kllfln TllMt, llllV, to, 124.
t1 Nlvri.m Otlerw'Rtr'!.~· 1.2; IU. 16. K1trelfl ~.. ,.M; 14.1.
17 klhl\ AM JadllOll, arttaln, Us ll.J.
le. Atnn Gostallfl, Fre/Q, 1-'1 ti•.
lt. C.~rlna l.lllOl1ft11, Swtcltft, I I: lt.O.
20, MaMtco Keto, J1Pf11, 7.2, lfA. 21. Vldll ,.,..,.. Holland, AuSl11e, U ;
20.0. n. lrwMUI •10. ~111111. U : 12.2.
"' H11tuno l(lm, s KorH, f.21 22.4
tee hoetcev 1tandlnll
11-Sovltt U11lon
x-Swtdtn Wt1tGtrmenv
Pollnd , ......
Yvoostevle
e>reu11 A W l. T
'0 0 3 1 I J 1 I
l 4 0
1 ' 0
1 ' 0 ~·
.... o .. 10 .,
7 33 1 21
2 " 2 15 2 I
OA s
" 17 ,,
SI
37
x-C 1 ICflOllOVekla 5 0 0 10 )I 7
x-C.flldl 4 I 0 I 24 10
Flnlend 2 2 t S 27 It
Ulllltd States 1 2 2 ' 16 11 Auslrle I 4 0 2 U *1
Norw.v 0 4 I I U • 0
1t·CllftCIWCI btrth Ill MtdAl NIUtlCI. S'Wldtll
eelvlnc.t lo IM tneCSel round Ovtl' Wett
G«menv on tllt bllls of • belltf' _,,
tor·•oalnsr dtfl«t11t111
WNnttclllv't Sw.t
Unlttd Slltts ), Finland 3
Austrl• 6, Norwtv S
Polend I, Vuoostavle I
Soviet Union 10, Swtdtll I
WHt Gtrmenv 9, llltv •
C19Cll01tovekl• •· Cenecse 0 l"l1dev'1 Gemet
ltventtl Plac-
U nlted StelH YI. Poiend
"""' Plac-Wtsl Gtrmenv 111. Flnt1nd
Med.i It tllfld
C 1ec"°4slov1kl1 "''· Sweden C1nad• vs. Sovi.1 Union
SUncllv'I Ga!MS MN11 RIUflll
Sweci.n vs.. Ce111d• Soviet Union v1. C1tch0110vakle
WIDNl!SDA Y'I llllUL TS la hodrlY
UNted s ..... J, pt11119nd J SC.. bV ,.,...
Flnltnd 1 I 1-l
Unlttd Stetes 0 2 1-3
!"Int ~ .......
1 Flnlll\d, Summenen (Skrlko), 1:52
P•neltles-S. Fu.co, USA, 2:SO, Tekko, Fin,
.. N«I by J1v•nelnen, 12:59.
s.and~
2 UnlttO Stites. Vtf'cllote (Simpson,
H1rrtnoton), 6-01. 3. United Stetes, 9luolltd
<BrOOke, Verctlote). 11:39 (PO). 4. Flnlend,
Skrllto (M. Lento, Summtnenl. 13;St (PO).
Ptneltfft-Tuonlmee. Fin, 2:04; 8tuested,
USA, 9:09; Flni.nd btll<:h, served tr; L.elnt, 11:00, Guev, USA, 12:04; Unlttd Stilts
btnch, wrved by Miiien, 15:11; Guev, USA.
16:51. Tlilr~ ~......, s. United Stetts, 8rooke, 19:22. ..
Flntend. Mtlamtt.. (M. Lento, Sum· menenl, 19'.lf. Ptneltles-Jullle, Fin, •:03;
T 1..11110, Fin, 17:25; Herrlnoton, USA, 11:25,
Sflo" on Goet-Flnlend 12· lt·t-39.
Unit.a States 14· 1S· ll--..O.
Goelln -Flnllnd. Teltko. United Sl1les.
Btnrtnel.
Women's l,OOO·metet'
IPMd stcattnt
I AndrH SChotne, Ettl Gtr'l'fltny, four
minutes, 24.79 seconcb; 04\'rnolc llec;ord.
Oki record: 8lor11 Eva Jenten, Norway,
•:32.13
2. t<erln Enkt. Eest Gtrmanv. •:26.33.
l G1bl SChOtnt><unn, East G«manv,
4:33 13 4. Otoe Pltchkova, Soviet Union, ~42.
s. Vvonne GennlPvan, Netherlends,
4:34.IO
" Mat'Y o.dw. Mll<IMfl. ~ 4-.J6.25. 7. 8ioro Eve Jensen, Norwev, 4:.J6.ll.
I. V•lentlnt utenkov1, ~let Unloft,
4:37.3'.
9. Ntlelve PttruteYa, Sovle1 Unloft,
•:39.36. 10. NeflCY Swider, ~.,_ ll'-• L
4:40.10.
11. Ellubtlll Cerlen, Swtdln, 4:40.36.
12. .llMI GGlclman, ~. L ~2M. 13. Thee Liml>eth, Ntlh«1•nds, 4:42.14.
Olympk scMcMe
ptRIDAY
Mldnl11111t -8letllton (4x7.S rt41v)
l a m -Women's st•tom A-30 e.m -Slnglt enel CIOUblt bot>tled
tee Htd!tV
7:30 •.m -Stv1nth Place Game
8 a.m. -Medel Round G•me
11 a.m. -Flflll Pleet Gome
11:30 p,m. -Mtdel Round G1mt
SATUlllDAY
Mldnlot11 -Women's 20K crou counlry
Mk:lnlolll -Men'• 10,000-meter 1Pte<I
sketlno 3:30 1.m -90·mtter 1kl lumo
•:30 • m -TrlPlt •nd que.druolt
bol>iled 10 1.m. -women's flour• slr.atlno (frM
sketlnol SUNDAY
11 p.rn. (Saturelev) -Men's SOK crou
countrv
1 •.m. -let hOckrt Madel Rouod Geme
2:30 e.m. -Men'• sltlorn
4:30 1.m. -Ice noctltY Madel Round
G1mt 9 e.m. -Fi9vre 1kallno txPl1bl1ton
11 1.m. -Ctoslno ctremonlts
°"" sea """"' DAVEY'S LOCKaR (NIWllWt ... ell)
-42 •noters. 210 rock c:Od, I COi" cOd. 2
SllHPSMtCI, 103 mecllertl.
This week's trout &Nnti
LOS AN~El..IS -C.'t1lc Lekt, Ell11·
beth Lekt, PuC1C1lno1tone L•k•. S1nte Fe
Reservoir, San Gabf'lel River (Hit, west
end north forks).
VINTUllA -Plru 1..elt.t, Reves CrNk,
ROM V•Aev l..lllH , S.spt Creett (UPPtr).
SAN BIRNARDINO -Cotoredo River (Netclles), Cu<amone• Gues11 Perk l..elet,
Glen Htltn Perk L•kt, l..vllt Creett (mlddle
1ne1 north torkl), Molevt Narrows Park
L•kt.
RIVl!RSIDa -Even1 l..11\t , Ptrrl1
L.elr.t.
SANTA 9Alll8AllA -Oevv erown
Cretk, Manrana Creek. S.lllt Vne1 River
SAN LU.I OatWO -AltlCICltro Ukt,
L•llUllll L1kt, l..00.1 Leltt.
SAN DtaGO -San v~·· L•k•
a.vs~
NISIASOH aANtCINOI °""'" c..-v I. LH Ulll ... ell; 2. FOU111eln Vtlltv; 3.
Minion Vt.lo; 4. E•le11c:la; S. Marlne1 6.
EdllOll; 7. Corone dtl Mtr, I. Sa11 Cltmtlllt; t. Dtnl Hln1; 10. (tit) Irvin. enel I.A Quln11.
Cll"
l. S.1'11 Monlcl, 2 Mire Cotti , 3.
l..AIOUNI hectl; '-Senta 8eroero; S. Foun-
leln V.ilev, 6 ~rl111, 7. Do& ~. l
E1t111el11 t Sen C*'*lt•, 10 '-tOOMO
~ t • f I ., "
c .....
r ' UC nw t, Cal lelltll U 1 UC Irvine 021 000 002'-9 IS J
Cat Slit. I.A 101 0.0 010-7 It 2 o.M, Tito (1), Klllf (I) end /MnJlll; Holmtt, ~t!MI Ill. Ofdtl (6), ~
(fl, .JoflMOn (t ), Ml'l'I <f) allCI LovelldV,
Mullo• l•l w-Ktn1 J•l 1.-fl'tlvffo ... ,
21-Anderson CUC1). Sueer lUCll H1t-o.11i. (UCO, Ct moo.G (LAI
'°''°" Pfllltde4eflle
N-Yont H.-wwv W1111lnetOl'I
Mllwe.uQe
Detroit
Allen!• Chlcaoo
CleVtlallct lndlane
.765
.627 .620
. 491
Mi
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
7
7~
14
15\'J
\!'»
2
7
' ··~
Mt. S.n AnftNO 54, Ort"9t Coa1t SJ
(led! C.1t C.lttt-> ~·NO• COAST -Porter o. $hllllucll 1. Sr~• 10. Outo 9, 8trrv 14, GoudOt 2. Toti~: 23 7·12 S3.
MT. IAN ANTONIO -Remlrtl '· M 11, Rlcherel 10, UOl\lrd 2, 8r•oo 10, WPlllfno I.
8rown 2. Total•: II 11~23 54.
Helfflme: Orerioe Coest, 24· II. Reou·
letlon: 47·C7.
Total fOU11: Or•no• Coast 22, Ml. Sen Antonio 14. Ttctlnlcat. Gueu (OCCJ
CYPf'ftl ft, Odden WMf 73
(leutll , .... C.••IC>I)
GOl..DIN WllT -Riv•• 4, SIDer 20.
Love 4, O'Connor 6, Mur"v 10, D1meron 12, Jud9e 2. R•SITIU$Mfl 2. Smltll 7, eruce
2. HlleY 6. Tot•ll: 29 IS-26 n.
CYNISS -O'Htrn II, B•lltv II, Marusldl 16, Connors 14, Goodlell 1•,
Rooers f , Ferrin 2, 8tevtoclr. 6. Goodrlcll 2.
Malson •. Wear 2. Totels: 31 1S·72 91. H11f1lmt: CVWtH, 41·31.
Total fout1: Golden West 20, CvPl'ftl 23 Fouled out: OoodMll CC>. TtcMlcal
Oemeron (GWJ.
Mlrac.tta 70, SHcllbecll '3
(PecNlc C:...st C~)
SADDL18ACK Adem1 10,
Arceneeux 10, Ollvltr to, Jonnson 17.
O.C1111 I , Muleltr 2, Carr 3. Montell 3.
Totals: 2S t3·2' 6),
MlllACOITA -Mendoza 2, erown 11,
8ull't 16, ltoblm.on 6, Medrld 3, Wll1on 4.
Turner 2, flovtr I, Brvn 6, Speers 12.
T 01111: 2' lt•20 70.
Httftlme: S.ddltbeck, 30-29. R99ut1tlon:
Sl·SI. Tot11 foul•: Seddi.tledl 23, MtreCoste 23.
FOUied out: O.C1111 (SI, Tutner IMC ).
T echnk:al: S.ddlet>edt bend!.
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
South Coelt C•lferencol
C.IM! MCI O¥wllll
W L WI..
Cerritos 10 t 22 s
Futl«tOll I 3 16 I
CVPrfls I 3 17 t
Salllf Alll 5 6 16 ll
Oreaoe C~s• 4 7 12 13
C-ton • 7 11 14
Mt. Sen Anlonlo 3 • 11 IS
Ootdtn Wnl 2 f 4 17 w ....... v'•SC-
cvoreu "·Golden Wat n Mt Sen Antonio S., Or•not Coest S3 Cotl
Cerritos"· Comolon IO Sanle Alli It, Fullerton 7t
lllvr*YI 0--(7:JO p.m.)
Comolon et Orange Coe11
Ml. Sen Antonio 11 Golden Wtsl
Cvprns at Fullerton
S.nte Ana al Cerritos
Padfk Coast Conf9renc• c .. , ... lllCI Ovtr•I
W L WI.. lmperlel Vetlev 10 2 22 4
S.ddltbltk 9 J 13 12
Sen 01990 I • 14 7
Sen OltOO Mell 6 6 1' 12
Southwestern 6 6 11 I
MlraCoste S 7 13 l4
Petorner 3 9 13 14
C.rOHITIOlll 1 11 S 19
w.-...v-.~ MlreCoata 70, S.Cldle~dl 63 loll
Sen Dleoo 16, lmperlef'Vettev 67
P•tomer 71, Gro"rnont n Southwestern IS, SO Mese 76
SIM'19itv'1 Gemes ( 7:l0 11-11'\.)
Sen Oleoo et Saeldltt>eek
Petomer at t~l•I Valltv
Sen Dleoo Mell 11 Groumont
MlraC:osl• 11 Southwt$ltrn
HIGH SCHOOL WOMEN
El Twe 62. Dana Hlh 23
(Cl, 3-A Wld Cent)
al.. T~O -OennlM>ll 12, Vines ,,
Utckl 4, Mlllelt ll, TeYIOI' II, Movnlhln 6,
K. Nlcktt 2. Duke 2. Totat1: 29 4-6 62.
DANA HILLS -FOl"flfYI, Mc:Cl"IO 7,
Sdw'Otdtr 6, Fuell• 2. Qultl11 O. Tollls: 10
3·S n.
kwe bV Que"'" Et Toro 16 14 11 l.,_.2
OaNI Hllll 2 12 6 J-23
Toral fouls: El Toro 13, 01n1 HIU. 10
NHL
CANU"Hl..I.. CONl'ElllNCE
SmvtM OMu.n w L T f'ti
Edmonton 40 14 s ·as
C111>1rv ,. ,1 II S9
Wlnnloeo 20 26 10 so
vencouvtr n 32 6 so
Killlll 11 ,, ,,.. 4'
Neml~
Mlnnesot• JO n s 65
St Louil ,, ,, ' S2
Chlce~ n 31 1 SI
Toronto 21 » ' ..
Ottrolt 20 32 7 " WALIS CONl"IRaNCa
~ltrldl OMMeft
NV R•llOtf'S l3 11 I 74
NV lsltneltrl lS 27 , n
WHhtnoton 33 21 • 70
PPllledtlPfll• 29 11 9 •7
Plttsburoh 17 40 s 79
NtwJtrltY 12 •1 s ,,
AC1em1 DM.llell
Butftlo 37 16 6 IO
e oston 36 19 3 7S
Qu.ott 30 ,, 6 66
Montrtal r. 27 s 61
JO • 4' Heriford w....-v-1~
NV "'llfff'' ), NY 1"-nden 1 SI. Loul' 4, Detroit l
auffeto 7, lotlon •
Mlnnesol• 3. Toronto t
CPll'CffO 5, Outc.c 2
ldmOllton 7, Wlnnloeo • T ..... tC.-
W1"'tneton et ~
Hertford el !'MW WM'I
SI. 1..oul' 1t ~
"""""-" ., C.toer'Y
.... Mec.t
...... ICMOO\.
GF
327
213 , ...
m
236
259
209
20S n4
215
2JI
25S n• 244
17'
16'
240
2SS 263
2JO 20S
•
GA
2•1 m ,.,
2'9
261
253
230 ns
211
254
n• 2(11
115
204
260
2U
tt3
ltl
205
219
736
"""""""' .... J, fl .... v...,, liunflnehllll 'a.di acorlt'le· ~• t
Mlrl!Mt \. tometk!ll. I
w........,•~~vw•
• .. f:#
1&• MNa WIONHDAY'S ••su1..n . ................ "" ....... ,......,..,
,lltJT tlACL 7 futlolltt
Petrlot Jot (Oar(lel 4110 2000 IUO
ltovet SI OtorM CLIPMm) 12.40 uo
Ttie hMI l(ld (Veten1u.lll) S 20
AllO rKICI lobrtflOmb(•, told n' let~
ltf', Rv, Inside Mov ... LUClledor. GOldell
Mlnttrtl, l11c:1v1lvt I.Intl Time· 115
llCOND ltACI. • turton01 Ft1t Tlllno iGutrrtl llAO UO 4.IO
S.Cond Its! (OrtJCltrl I 40 '60
Corkv Mto CO•rcl1) 3.40
Also reCH· Troolc:el, Glad to Peu,
...trounothetloosll, Junoi. Lace. Mll\Of
LMOUI, 81adl F•ntttv. Fort!Ofl $tuelfft
!tuth•dl, Alebel'll• Leelv
T1Mt. 1 12 4/S •I DAILY DOU8LI (1·2) N ICI '3tHO
TI4NtD RACI. • fur'°"9s lrlil\ S'C.111 CPlnc.evl 11.40
Ovit to ltlct\ts (Vlltna~I
Miller GtMaro (Shoemelr.trl
Abo receo Toe11 Mlsttf',
JOUl'ntv. Tom'1 lllelect
Time 110
"outtnt RACI .• turtonos
520 )IO uo no 400
Over11nd
Fill Club tSlt lntrl 1UO •to UO
Geml>Mr'• Deuonttr (Pine.vi 4 20 2.IO
lkle 81dtlt CGutrrel 610
A.ISO rec.a PrOC*' Ptr'90tlon, Fotll'I
~. Cecneoue, Two Mtedows, 1..•uf Ganoo, CllttaQuot, leMvolenttv, N1tur11 Finish, F1temour
Time 1'11 l / S
pttl"TH RACI. 6 lurtonos
Prtmlerslltp (Metal 7 40 • 40 3 IO
Or. Rt1lltV CPlnc.ey) 4,40 3 20
lnMarC:hOI (Slt>ltle) 3.60
Also rec.a Honto, Stiff Commarldlr,
Prte>rlnt, Or Vlctorle, Hen<11omt Petk•Ot,
Caruso.
Time: 1:09 3/S
U IXACTA (9·J) Peld $13.00
SIXTH RACI. ' furlono1.
Le1tro Prlmero (Slblll•) S 90 3-'0 3 00 Thi 810 One (Mell) 7.00 5.00
WrHlll (V1ten1U4ll•) •to Also raced· Ptnln1ul1 Prince, Elli
8r1vest Sono, The Crowd Roers, Power Hltttf', Time tor Mu1lc. Noble Putt, l..ovt to
Rece, J1m ShOt. Time. I 10 2/S
SIVl!NTH lllACI. I 111' miles.
Cse Slit's a l..dv (McCnl HO HO
Proml1lno Glr1 (Plnc.ev) 3 oo
C•mPec:lllto (Va1tnzue111
2 20
2 60
3 00 AJ&o rectd Fln•f Aueult, Mer are.
Yours or Mine, Scrtenet>te Time 1.43 2/S
U l!XACTA (7·1l Pelo l27SO
alGHTH llACL 1 II ,. mllM.
S.lft 8ut1t1l11 (MCC•rronl 11 00 4 40 3 40
$orlno l..OOM CShotmlli.tr) "00 3.00
Aoll•ttd Miu (Slblllt) S.00
Al'o receo Wondtrbuo. K•nnt<lv Ea·
PftH. Tlclr.Y Tee, l..ln<11'1 1..tldef. Oen11<11r, LaPldlll
Time: 1'44
U ~ICK SIX (S·6+ l-7·1) 111ld
&26,179.20 with tour wlMlnG tltlr.tll ('IJC
11orW1l. n Pick Six conso11t1on Paid un IO
with 2SS wlnnlno tickets (flvt "°'"''-
NINTH lllACI!. I 1116 miles
FMtl'ltf R-lrd (Ollverts) S.10 3.20 2.40
Plluslna F (Metal 6.60 4.40
Qu"n Mini Htw Hew IC.alll!eno) 3.IO
Also rectd: Mlululppl Girt, Not a
Str1w, C1ntllt, Gold Countv. Sun J ell",
Momcet, Georvt's Flirt, Ramblln' Luv
Time: 1:44.
tS IXACTA (9·4) paid $11050
Allenelenct 20.216,
Men's tournament
Cat u Oulntll
sec.Id Reuftd S1M1e1 Jimmy c--s (U.S.) def Gltnn
Mlelllblla (C.ntdll, 6·2, •·3; 800 l..Ull
(U.S.) def. ROK.Oe TaM*' tU.S I, 7-6, 6'-3,
Hen« Pflsltr (U.S.) Otf, 8ruce Menson
(U.S.), ,.,, 6· 11 Tim Mevottt IU.S.I def
8trnerd Miiion (Soulh Alrlte), 7·5. 6·4,
J~n LIOYd (Brlteln) Otf Robtrt Van't Hof
(U.S.), 6·1, 6·3, Ernie FtrMncleZ (Puerto
llllto) Clef. VIies Gerulellls IU.S I, 7·6, 6·3
Shtomo Gtk:lllleln (11r1t4) def. Grt9 HOimes (U.S.). 6·4, 1·6, 6·3. David Pett
(U.S.) def. Bred Gllbtrl IU.S.J. 6·4, 7-S,
Jimmy Arla1 (U.S.) Otf. Cl1udlo P•n•ll• (lt1ly), 7-S. 6· 1; Eliot Ttllsclltr (U.S ) dti.
Ill• N11ta11 <Romenle). 6·2. 6·2, Mlkt
01Palmer (U.S.) dtf. Mark Dickson IU S ), J·6, 6-3, 7·S; 8 rl11'1 Tteclltr (US.) de!.
!Cldl• Edwards (Soutll Alrlc•). 6·4, 7·6,
V1nnlcil Noeh (Frence) def. Ttrrv Moor
(U.S >. 4·6, 6·4, 6··2
Fletd Mckey
Cl' ~LAYOl''S
NeWPWt Harber t, Awse 1
(N•WJ!Wf 1C1¥ancn en 1tr911", 2-t)
NewPOrt Harbor scorlno Ev•n' I
AIUM «:orlne: For1111 1
CM'1W Oelt 4, f_..t11ft V ... V 1
Fountetn Valltv 1COrln9: Rosa I, H11111 1
C"-rltr Olk 1corlno. O'Connell 1. t<lloe
1, Vtrd~ 1, LOOft I
..
Wednesct.V'& transaction&
8ASl8ALI..
Amenca" 1..Ntue BOSTON RED SOX-Sloneo Glenn Hott
min, "'°'''loo. W•Ot 80001. 1nora 1>11tmen, Gu1 Buroes1. outfltldtl', t nel Al
Nll>Pfl'. O.nnl1 8urtl end Brl1n Denman
pltcners.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Sent Jerrv
Koosmen. ollcner, to the PhlladtlPll•• Ph1111ti 11 the Piner to bt nemecl let« for
Ron Rte<t, oltdllr Slont<I Greo Walker. flrfl bl1tmen. to • IWO·v•er c:ontrtct CLEVELAND INOIANS-Announceo
111111 Gebt P1ul, Of'tslelenl Ind Cllltf .,.
KVtlve. lies tall.ti! on the edellllonet outle•
of lrHSurer N•mtd JalO<l Rosenlh•I IUil·
la11t tr1tsurtr
MILWAUKEE 8REWERS--SloM<I Tom
C1ndlotll •nd J1lme Cou nowtf', Pild•n
MINNESOTA TWINS--A~ttd 10 ttrml
with Kent Hrbttl. flnl bl11men on a
one-vtar, '375,000 contrlci
Nl*"-4 LM9W
CHICAGO CU8S--S19ntcl Garv Wood•.
outfleldtr. to • OM·vMr c:ontrtet
MONTREAL EXPOS-AorMCI to '"""' wttll •rv•n Llltle, lnffelder, 1nd Joe
Htllltlh t nd Dlc:tt c;,.pentl'lln, oltcflerl, on
ont·v.er conlract1.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Announ<:e<I
111111 F"n• "oolnton. meneotr. 1111 re ct Ned • two·vMr contract u ten1ton
"00T8Al..L ,..IMMI ,.....,. L.eewe
PHILADELPHIA EAGl..E~Stonecl Ron Onnot, Ql.llf'ltf'IMldl. Wllllt Tolbtft, run·
nine Den, l..vnnerd Grou, ottemtve 111uerd,
enci l.IOll l vlll$, ~''"' nnemen UNfM S.• .,...... ~
MICHIGAN PANTHIRS-Watvld Doti
arect>.tll, P\lftttr AMOullCH 11\11 1 111'1'
WTllll, rurmlne btck, tin lef1 cemo
OKl.AHOMA OUTl.AWS-At oulrtd
k-111 .... rvmlftt tlM:'I, ott ••l•tr• ~
Ille Ut ~ EIDl'tH, Clift Ole,,_ ouetftrMCk•llUl\ttr, .,., l..el'rv McCrlm "'°"• wldt ~, oft walven from tfle
MicNMll "'"'tNl'S TrHecl ~ TOll>ef'1,
~MO., 10 tN ~s ~"to
Clllf'Nllel• trede tor 0.-V Mc(le•" llNMdl•. ~ i""-Caf\well de
........ lleek, Of\ wel'"" PITTS8UlllGH MAUl..C'U-<ut Doc
~v,cor~
WASHINGTON fllDeRALS-Cut leuv
TOltlvtr, •1-...Ctl•• $IOntCI Wener l ulll1, wide receiver
IOCCla ...,..,.,.,.,_.. .... ~
SAN DIEGO IOCKa"~MCI o.rrr o·rt.•,.~··•w. """ Coler•-°' "'9 W1ltl LONUt for '" v11 • di~ ""'°""' .,. Cltift CO\.t..l•I
AltllONA ST A Tli-Nemect Sllell• *'llltrllY wOMlft'• ''""'' (Qe(h
Orange Cout OAl~Y PILOT/Thutld1Y, F.t>ruary 18, 1884
Grunion '84 debu~
slated for Marcb 4
Slippery little fish
run late at night
in precise manner
Tho~ slippery little fuh, k.nown for
their silly mating habtts, ret urn
March 4, much to the dch&ht of fish
Jovcn.
Yes. it's the season for aruo1on
runs.
C aua}lt under the spell of the moon
and the tides, thousands of female
&JUnion Wlgle o ut of the water and
onto the beach to des:><> it their eaas .
h's late at ni&ht and romance is tn the
au.
Out of nowhere, a host of cacer
suitors will arrive to fertilize the egs.
The grunion may even hana around
for awhile before shthcnng back into
the water, leavmg the qgs heh.ind.
This little ntual may sound fishy,
but it does serve a s a basis for grunio n
hunting.
Succeeding lower t1dC$ may leave
the eggs covered by 8-16 i n c hes of
sand, which protects them for about
I 0 days, at which tame the next series
of high tides erodes the beach and
washa them out of the sand.
Two or three minutes after the CJ&S
are freed fro m the aand, little infant
grunions hatch and arc washed out to
sea.
A year later, they will be sro wn up
gruruon about five inches long and
ready to spawn.
Grunion have April and May ofTto
spawn in peace. But there are many
days in March , June, July a n d August
when grunion hunting is allowed.
Grun on run up on tM beect.el only 1t niaht after DC'W or full mom
dunna the hither tides of spnftl and
1ummer monlh 'They have ldlapccd
to tht tjdaJ q'Cle in a mnarbbly
precise mlllner.
Thttt art 1 few lh1Q11 I.tie oovit'll
lf'lntOn hunter should k.riow.
Fint.. puni01' can only bt cauaht by hand. No pall:l. no shovca.,.oo Jletl
and no vunion vacuum clca.ncra.
Secondly, aruoion buntm mUl1
have • fi1hin& L&ttnse. The ex.oeptio"
ii for children undtt the • or 16. Here are some ups for sruAion
bun ten.:
Keep noise to a minimum. Bnna-lni an S.track stereo blastina Michael
Jackson's .. Thriller'~ will not be to
your advantlle. The same aocs for
ba}llS.
Don't wear your best slacks and
win&ed tips. Old clothe1 will do ju.a
fine. A small aunny sack makes 1
sood grunion creel.
Here arc the dates and times when
grunion runs arc ex.pected during
1984:
MArao 4 -10:26 11.m. • 12:2' un., Marell ~ -
10·41 P m.-n ·• e.l'T\.: ~reh ' -ll.13 11.m.-t.U 1.m , Mlretl 7 -11;AS lll'll,· l~S f .1'11
Meretl It -10:•5 P.m. • 1?:A.S a.m.; Merdl 20
-11'.23 o.m.· 1:23 a.m.; Merell 21 -12:07 e.m,·1:07 a.I'll.; Mlrcll 22 -I~ e.m.-3:06, a.m
June 1 -f:42 11.m.-ll:.G o.m.; June 2 .-10'.27 11.m.·12:27 a.m.; June 3 -11:20 p.m.-1:20 •.m.,
June 4 -12:27 1.rn.-1:27 e.m.
June 15 -f;AI PJ'l't,•11;AI p.ffl,· JUM I' -10-.30 P.m.-12.30 e.m.; Juno 11 -l i:l1 11.m.· I 11
1.m .. June II -12 e.m. "2 a.m.
June 30 -t:3f PJTI • ll:lf o.m.; J'tJ/IV I -1°'27
PJTI • 12:27 1.m.; JUIY 2 -11:20 11.m.-1:20 1,m,
Jutv 3 -11:23 a.m.-2:23 1.m. Julv ,.,_,..JS 11.m.-11~5 cun., Mv IS-10.11
11.m ·11-11 e.m. Jvlv 1• -10-M o.m.·11-M .. I'll ..
Julv 11 -lt:2S P.m. -t :25 un.
July lO -1Cl:22 o.m.-12:22 a.m.. J\llY Jt -
11 IS o.m.·1.15 •.m.; Auo. I -1~11 11'1'1.•1'.fl •.ITI.. Aue , -U3 Ll!'I. • 3'.33 1.m
MIDWINTER RACES
BEGIN SATURDAY
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY °""'...., ...........
Five Orange County yacht clubs
will be heavily in volved when the
53rd annual Southern Caljfomia
Yac hting Association M idwinter Re-
gatta gets under way Saturday for a
three-day run.
In Newport Beach, Newport
Harbor Yacht Club and Lido Isle
Yacht Club wilt join forces to conduct
races for JO small boat classes inside
the bay and Balboa Yacht Oub and
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Oub will
host seven classes of keel boats racing
in the ocean .
CARLSON. • • From Bl
O ub in Ncwpon Beach Feb. 2 7 with a
shotgun start at 11 a.m .
Proceeds of the tournament. which
figures to be filled with SPortS per·
sonalitics. arc geared t o ward the
Todd Hart Foundation to assist
disabled athletes such as Hart. the
formerServite High and Long Beach
State football player who suffered a
broken neck in the 4 9ers' game with
UCLA in the opener of the 1982
football season.
Cost o ftbe tourney 1s $I 75, which
includes golf, cart, tee pnzes.. refresh-
m ents on the cou rse and the awards
dinner.
Limited tee sponsorships arc avail-
able for S 150 each. The tourney 1s
limited to 104apphcants.
A m o ng those expected to be in
attendance are Isiah R obenson.
Vince Ferragamo. Carl Ekem. In
Pankey. Leroy Irvin. M ikeGuman
DeaconJones,JcfTKemp. l"o f)
Sully, M ike Landsford, Ccdnc k
Hardman. Art Powell. Maritn
M c Keevcr. M yron PottJOsandJe~
Quarry.
-::; -:... °fol
Apphcataons forthe vacant football
coachingjobatOcean V iew High \.\Ill
be taken until Tuesday.
The Sea hawks are seek1 ng appl 1
cants from inside the Huntington
Beach Sch ool D1stnct and 0( 'T')/[)f;
the district. accord in~ to P n n c 1pal
JollDMyers . Ed1sonH1gh'str:id ;
and field fonunes appear to h a' c
taken a tum for the bette r"' 1th the
emergence o fFred Marquez a s tht·
Chargers' head coach. M arquez '"'II
have two assistant s. tncluding Tony
Ctarelli .. Former Westminster
H tgh and Orange Coast C o llege
quanerback Biiiy Wblte returns to thl'
~ne tn the form ofh1s son. Cauy
Wllite. a 5-9. 165-pound d e f e ns\\ c-
back . . Gary Bobay a former
Fountain Valle) H igh ( IF champtlln
wrestkr and'an NC.\~ runner-up as.1
!tCn1or at Arizona tatc. 1s a m e mber
o fthe Canadian national team at
135.5 pounds. He 's the favonte 1n ht\
clas.s1ficat1o n to bcco rne a member ut
Canada's Ol)mp1c team . to bedt>·
c1ded later
SoccER
' -~ -- -----=--=.._ -=----= - -
Dana Pomt Yacht Oub will con-
duct races for four PerfonnanCIC
Handicap Racing Aeet classes, the
M idget Ocean Racing Class (MORO
and a c lass of Catalina~27s.
The "Midwintcn," with upwards
of t,000 boats in 100 classes. tn·
ditionally heralds the the st.a.rt of a
new yacbtini season in Southern
California which this year promises
to be the the busiCS1 in nearly a
decade.
Things will start popping in camCS1
the weekend followina the Mid-
wintcn when Long Beach Yacht Oub
renews its annual Dou~up match
racing series for co · IC sailo~
from &II over the U ... a.nd Los
AOJC'es Yacht aub kictsoffns ooean
racing series with four of the most
coveted trophies at stake.
The LA YC dnsic includes the
Whitney Trophy series for Inter·
national Offshore Ruic yaehl&.. I.he
Los Angeles Times Trophy series for
the Perfonnancc Handicap R.acan.s
Fleet, the Little Whitney Trophy for
>-achts 30 feet and under, and the
Todd Pacific Trophy for tower rated
PHRF ya chts.
Later this spring. Olymp ic yachtina
hopefuls from all over the country
wtll be competing off Long Beac h to
become the U.S. representative in the
01) mpic Games which get under wa)
ofT Long Beach July 28.
Long Beach Yacht Oub's Con·
grcss1onal C up match racing senes.
featuring I 0 o f the top match racina
teams in the wo rld will _get under way
Marc h 15 and continue throu&Jl
March 18.
UCiwalks
to 9-7 win
LOS ANG ELES -UC Irvine's
baseball team captured its third
straight victory Wednesday at Cal
State Los Angeles. but not before
lettin g a 7-1 lead evaporate.
The Anteaters pushed over a pair of
runs tn the n m th mning to sever a 7-7
tie. the wmning tally com mg over o n a
bases-loaded wa lk, as they posted a
9-7 ",ctor) O\"er the Golden Eagles.
l'\Jo w 4-2 overall, l!C l manufac-
tumi a 7-1 lead with two runs int.tie
seco nd inning and fi ve more m the
third One of the ke' blows in the
seco nd was a solo h o mer b\ Don
Da' ll> •
1n the ninth. the .\nteaters parla~cd
four ingJes and two v.alks into cwo
runs. w1th the ttc-breakcrcom1~ona
bases-loaded pass to Mike Shield .
U C I bcnetittcd from eight walks 1n
the contest.
Steve M organ went 4-for-5 and
tnfieldcr M ikt Sugar was 3-for-5 to
account for seven ofJh e Anteaters· IS
hit~
Oilers qualify for CIF
8" virtue of \\ cdne\da\ after-
noon·, l-:? \"erdtct O\er Fountatn
Valle~. Hun11n ton Be c h H&a}\ hG
quahfied for the Ctr pla"off in bo ·
o;()("ttr
Thl' Oilers. v.ho finishl"d 4·1-'i tn
unset Lcaauepla" dtd n h no 1<:hin1
the first thrtt aoaJs oftht' contest and
h.1f\&Jn& on H untu'JtOn Beach -.ill
enter IS the teasuc s ~nd pla«
rtprescntatwe. v.ith Octan V1t"' th t'
champton and "-~tm1n\ter tht third
plttt team
West min''" {'4·2·4) handed ~'tan
View a I ·O St"tb:ad' &Qd th.us no\Cd out
fountain Vallev (4-4-2).tbr tht tinnl
pla)<>fTbenh from lhC UR~\
In Buntin to n Re;ich ' \ u:tun
'
\ tOl't" Duke o ixned the sc:onna an the
first half wnh a so.I from an w1a
from T u~en PhAm
In the 'ccond half Jai.on
Mnrt1nr1's penalty k.1c mack at 2-U.
and Dtan Tuma!t1c k fotlov.cd mo-
ment later wnh an as"$t f mm Du.kt
lOiol\C Huntingto n Beach a ~mmtJ)
comfortable l-0 ad"ant.qc.
But tht' Barons ans"ved wtlh a
pair of goal 1n the final fh e minutes
to make 1t intercsuna.
CA-can V1ew. which suffncd ill Um
lou of thC' ~~n apuut WC$\•
min~tcr. fell to > 1-4 in loop acuon
Rut tht' Stah1w\ alrad · had tht
lt.i ue lltk \.IU~ entenna Wed
da' ·, c tton
t
..
1M * Orangtt Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Febtuaty 16, 1984
I
Lewis s~t~ sizzling pace
TomLewb
4-A wrestling
set for Cypress
The CIF 4-A wrestling championships
are on the ltne for 13 levels at Cypress
College this weekend, a 1wo--Oay meet
begjnningFndayandculmmatmgat 7 p.m.
Saturday. . .
Five wrestlers from each weight d1v1s1on
will qualify for the C'l F Masters Meet, to be
held Feb. 25 at Westminster High School.
Among the competitors are the top three
individuals from the Sunset League m each
weight class. including Kyle Hansen of
Huntington Beach wi th a 36-0 re<:ord at
129 and once-beaten Fountain Valley
heavyweight Russ Abraham.
Other Sunset League champions slated
to compete include Fountain Valley's Scott
Hamson ( 194). Bob O'Conner ( 157). Troy
Kenm (115) and Mile Stevens (155);
Huntington Beach's Mike Escobedo ( 178).
Jon Westerman ( 168) and Ken Beck (I 01 );
Edison's Don Asel1n ( 148) and Wayne Guy
( 122): and Westminster's Mark Ramirez
( 141 ).
Fnday's schedule begins with weigh-ins
at noon.
After the masters m~t at Westminster.
the state finals at Independence High in
San Jose are scheduled March 2-3 with five
wrestlers from each weight division quali-
fying from the Masters meet.
Monarch continues
assault on records
with 32.9 average --=-----
By ROGER CARLSON
Of Ille.,..,~·-
Mater Dea High junior Tom Lewis
continues his assault on the all-time CIF
Southern Section scoring record with 824
points through 25 games -an average of
32.9 pointsa game. ·
Assumin_a the defending CIF 4-A cham-
pions contmue their success through the
playoffs, into the state regionals and
eventually to the state finals, Lewis may
have as many as 10 games left in order to
surpass the all-time scoring record of 1,259
points by Crescenta Valley's Greg
Goorgian.
He is 76 points shy of No. 10 on the
all-time CIF list (Bill Kllmer's 900 ~tnts
within 34 games while at C'11rus High in
1957.
Lewis is also the area rebounding leader
with 13.4 per game.
Aro top 10
Tlnnev. Fovnttifl Vattev l3 147 •. J Crowtev. Mwlne t 5' U
Sllow, HunllntfOft 9MCl'I 21 126 6 0
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Bolell, Hunllnvton Bffch I 1 :U 3.0
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S.. Y1ew LHVU•
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I Walton, S.cklllbaek Green. Corona de! Mar Shoc:kev. El Toro Judel, Co1te ~ l ulhmen, HPt. H•rbor ....... lr'lllnt
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()y ....
• "' •YS. IS 313 20.1
• ti> ave. 25 t24 32 9 n S33 231
22 .,, 22.3 24 251 19 0 21 360 17.1 IS 313 20.1 11 421 19 0 21 360 17 1
?2 376 17.0 25 421 16.1
21 353 161
1111 Dunlap, lrvlne
53 Lockwood, E1tancl1
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23 214 12.l 20 2'3 12 1 12 2SJ 116 23 26S llS 2S m 112 24 2SS 10.6 23 239 10.3 2S 2S7 102 24 27S 11 4 24 m 92 24 220 91 21 IN II 22 193 17 22 112 8.2 23 187 9 I n 119 e o
24 191 7.9
I. Lewis, Miter Del 2 Baldi, WOO<lbrldl>e 3 Gerrett. Sen Ci.mtllre
4. Otte, CaPO V•ll•v S. Eeilln, Wtslf'1ln1rw 6. Arnold. EI Toro 7. Curll1, Eltanc:la I . Eastin, Wellmln11er
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37 McGavren. NPI. H1rbor 37 Furln, Estancia 27 Arnold, Unlver1ilv 30 E vtf'tll. Unlversltv
31 Deal, S.cklltbeck 34 COOk, Costa Meu 30 Caldwell, lrvlne 27 PtllQowskl, co,ta Mesa 26 Gr_,., Coste Mese
37 Kimme. Co"• Mesa
LHtut
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OVtral
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T-. LHU!llt 8"dl 22 365 IU FortUM, Lll9Unt 8Mch 22 329 10 Carter, La911ne Hlltl 24 3S2 IU McSwMlllv. D-Hilts 22 )(11 13.t B. Call, CaPO Vallev 24 31S 13, 1 Greenbur9. S.I\ Oemente 6 '5 13.0 Muench, Mlulon Vltlo 24 300 12.S Lllfln, LllOUnt aa.ctl 23 m 12.1
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Camobtll, Dent Hiil 22 113 U Mathieu, Dene Hlh 22 179 1.1 Jeffers. D111111 Hiib :n 171 l.O Brick. Mission Vlelo 24 116 7.7 Clezadlo, San Clemente 19 141 7.7 PWMI, Uoune Hiib 13 I.. 7.1 Blanton, Laouna hech 20 143 7.1 S.111119. Llt!IUM Hiiis 25 170 6..1
Ment, Mtulon Vlelo 24 159 U
O.lleoo, Mlulon Vlelo 22 147 U ~. Dene Hiil 20 131 6.S R""· Sen Clemlnte I 48 6.0 Rlnollr. UoUllll Hiib 17 97 S.7 Jordan, Levune 8Mdl 16 19 S.S BonUk, Woodbr~ 21 111 S.2 M;Jrphy, WoodtlrldOt 23 114 U Aoullar. C•PO Valley l9 94 4.9 Bulnovskv, CaPO Vallev 17 81 4.7 Moomaw, Dtnt Hiiis 17 '73 4.2 Slfsteri, LllOUllll 8Mdl 11 75 ._I KarPln111, Mlailon Vlelo II n 4.0
Sheenan, Mlulotl Vltlo 16 62 3.1 W.O.. Sen Clemente 19 74 3.1 Halklev. L•euna Hilts IS SI 3.1 RNd, C•PO Valley 18 67 3.7 Davi•, Leouna Hiiis 19 69 3.6 Mowrv, Ml.sslon Vlelo 12 43 4.S Brown, Lll9Ullt Hflls 21 n 3.4 Lukes, C•PO ..,.,...., 23 IO l.• Anterinvccl, Dent HUii 11 S9 3.2 Arndt, Laouna 8"cll 21 .. 2.9 McGreth, Luone 8e8Cll ?2 64 2.9 Barnett, Woodbridge 20 S7 2.1 Welford, Laoune 8"cll 21 43 2.0 C,,,_..k, Dant Hiiis 20 31 1.9 Crvar, Woodtlrldllt 20 31 I. 9 ToblalOll, WooctbrldOt 11 33 I.I
L-11 8"vW~I JacklOll
Mlldlell Molli
Fletdar Dwvw
IMt.rO.. o..n. • -a'"" 2S 12• 32.9 2S 389 IS.6 2S 212 1.4 2S 196 7.1
" 93 S.I 2S 119 4.7
22 103 u
ran en.
On February 18, 1984, twenty-four new
condo minium homes will become available
for purchase at Villa Balboa ... the lowest
priced community in Newport Beach.
See for yourself why ·218 h omebuyers
enjoy the value of Villa Balboa ... every day!
1 & 2-Bedroom Luxury Condominiums
from $129,900 to $399,900
Dre~~~~?ung 11l
220 Nice Lane, Newport Beach,
CA 92663 (714) 645 -6459
Sales Office Open Daily 10 a.m.
to dusk.
VILLA BALBOA
PHASE IV
...
I I
12 " 12 4 11 10
11 t7 I
14 u ' 11 u •
12 2 0 ' 12 u 4 11 1.S 6
100 11 ' f 1.9 4
LMtue
• ''"" Ill 12 23.5 37 12 ?2.S 37 12 17.1 27 12 lU JO 12 1'.1 24 12 13.1 27 12 21.2 34 12 u 19 s 13.0 20 12 12.6 24 12 11.0 21 11 11.1 22 2 4.0 11 1 u 21 12 11.5 23
0 0.0 20 12 12.7 23 12 IU 2• 12 t.7 17 12 u 20
12 t.O 1'
12 .., " 12 u :n
12 t.3 lt
Kurt Blanton Scott Po.rtane
Volleyball
outlook
1~ ~ :: Area high school teams look 11 6.0 " l~ ~1 l! _f o_r_b___;ig;;..._t_h_i_n__;g:=._s_t_h_i_s_s_e_a_s_o_n __ _
11 S.9 16 1~ tl :~ Laguna Beach
• s.1 11 The Artists are in a familiar position -OranflC :~ ~: l~ County's No. I ranked team with the 1984 voUcybalt
10 6.1 19 season approaching.
1; !:: :; It starts with a banJ on Feb. 27 with a visit from
11 4.7 1 Estancia, the Artists' foe 10 the CIF 4-A finals last year.
6 3.1 12 The defending CIP 4-A champions of Coach Bill l: ~! :g Ashen have a ~und look for now and for the future with
• 3.s " four juniors in the starting lineup. 1 2.1 12 Scott Fortune and Kurt1Blanton are the keys up front 9 4.0 12 s u 12 with their 6--6, 6-5 look at middle blocker.
11 3.s " "They're going to hun people," predicts Ashen about :~ ~.! :; his front hoc.
12 1.9 10 Fortune. a senior. 't'as a big key in the Artists' success 12 u 10 a year ago and is considered a l,..,1timate maior coll-,. 12 3.7 I woo ~ w-12 21 11 prospect.
10 14 6 Blanton is one of four juniors with the others being 6-0 1~ U ~ hitter Mark Draper, 5-I I Chris Whiting and 6-2 Mike
Stafford.
l..effUe • a'"" Ill 10 )3.3 S3 10 IU 2S 10 1.3 16 10 12.6 20
1 6.4 • 10 6.1 12 10 S.9 10
Also a first line player is senior Chris Bunce. a
hitter-setter.
"Draper is a tricky outside hitter," says Ashen, and
Bunce is experienced at setting and bitting..
"Stafford could be the next Leif Hanson for us and
Whiting is a craft y player," continues Ashen.
Marlna
Three returning starters, including AH-Sunset leque
and All-Oran_ge County selection Mi.kc Crowley, makes
the VikingsofMarinaCoach Tim Reed the early choice for
lca$ue honors with the season opening Feb. 29 against
visiting Estancia.
"Mike's a blue chip player," sayd Reed. "As Mike
goes, so J.oes Marina." Other returning senior starten are
setter Make Casey and Brad Dannettell.
"Casey has great court sense," says his coach. "and is
a year better with good hands."
Other second-yea.r varsity mem-
bers a.re seniors Kevin Asato and
Alex Stephens.
Rounding out the squard are
seniors Tom Churchville, Craig
Tobin and Daren Levis and juniors
Rob Rosenblatt. John Lcnnerts and
Randy Smith.
"We have some cit{>Criencc and
this is my talles1 team tn my seven
years at Marina." says Reed.
The Vikes' general look is in the
5-10 to 6-2 range, with Smith at 6-4 Crowl.,.
and Churchville and Levis at 6-3.
"I feel our program is going nowhere but up,"
continues Reed. "We have 39 players in the program on
three teams. including 16 freshmen.
Fountaln Valley
Coach Gregg Svalstad's Barons approach the 1984
season with an optimism seldom seen from a Sunset
League entry -ranked No. 2 in Orange County behind
Laguna Beach.
Reasoning for it, however. is obvious with presence of
6-4 middle blocker Scott McKeoujh and two other
talented returning starters -6--2 senior Tom Power and
6-2 senior Brent Hanson with the season starting Mar. I.
McKeough was a third team AJl-CIF selection as 1
junior and Hanson provides a double combination at the
net. Power is at the all-important setting position, so the
Barons enter with what a baseball coach would consider up
the middle strength.
Also looming big in Svalstad's plans are seoion Steve
Gottlieb, Scott Motherhead and Eric Risner, and juniors
Carlos Briceno and Craig Stead.
Rusty Marsh, a senior outside hitter, is tentative
because he is recovering from an ankle injury.
Gottlieb, a 5-10 senior. is a possible starter for the
Barons and Motherhead, a football-basketball standout,
offers strong hitting from the outside.
Estancia
The Eagles lost plenty to graduation and there is a new
coach (Tom Pcstolesi) in place of Mike Pomeroy, but
Estancia figures to again be the team to beat in the Sea View
League with several players with proven skills.
Amona Estancia's arsenal a.re six seniors, includina
setters Jon Wallace and Tim Mclaughlin, middleblockers
Scott Garmon and Sherman Dick.man and outside bitten
Dave Ross and Steve Conti.
That's enough in itself for a very respected first unit,
but there are several others in the juruor rank.a who may be
working into the startina lineup with the season slartil\I
Feb. 27 at Laguna Beach. 1
M iddl«L_blockers .Ted
Smallcomb, Brent Prouty (Irvine
transfer), Ad.am Lockwood combine
with outside hitters Paul Waldron.
Bart Conroy and Brian Ross, in
addition to setter Phil Horpn.
"Wallace is a great all--around
player, .. says his coach, ''and Oar·
mon is a good blocker with excellent
skills.
Wallac:e Most, however, are simply con-
sidered hard workers and court smart by their coach.
Among the junior cl~~ those who could become v~ry
instrumental are Loclcwuuu, the all-league basketball stat,
and possibly Smallcomb and Ross With their sheer athletic
ability.
lrvbJe
The Vaqueros fiJure to be in the hunt for the Sea Vie•
Lcquc championship and a CIF ptaroff' benh under the
band of veteran coach Mark McKtrme. althouah the wt
is admittedly to. within 1 struct\lrc incl= defendinl
champion EstanC1a, runner-up to Laauna io tb.e 4-A
finals, Corona dcl Mar, Costa Mesa and Corona deJ Mar,
amona others.
The Vaqs &"Ct It started March I It Capistrano Valley.
However, the Vaqueros are No. IOin OranaeCouaty
1& the outlet with only Eatanaa (No. 4) and COrona dd
Mar (No. 7) rated ahead of lb.em Jarad)' due to fi
retumJna lettermen and transfer Tim "Murct, 1 ten.lot
~te~ '
Seniors Keith Purctll and Chri1 Mullins ~ lJM
mtddle blockers, Monty John1 retums u a tenior tcttcr,
and senior outside hitters Orea Ou.nlap and Steve Batel
form the nuclcut of the unit •
The rest ot tbe squad la made up ofjunion-bJuen Shawn C&rvcr, Mike KOICbel, K.eo Tamura, Ron Lee,
Orq Ben and Mite Corlett and ICttcr Jobn VotL
J
•
Vari-Xrelocatesin Irvine .
The VarJ-X Corp. bu completed us
national headquaners relocation to
Irvine, 1t was announced recently b.)'
Lawreace Pendletoa, Vari-X presi-
dent. The firm markets cine imag.rng
products and services for hospital
cardiac catherizataon labs. The new
41,QOO..squacc-foot headquarters in-
clude administrative, productiQn and
warehouse facilities and arc 2 'h times ~r than the company's previous
facility. The new corporate add ress is
17601 Fitch Ave., Irvine. ••• Robert S. WlA1tea, aeneral agent for
Ku111 City Life Iuarance Co. in
Newport Beach, has been named a
member of the company's prestigious
Century Club. Membership in the
club is exclusively for general agents
whose agencies have met high pro-
duction and commission require-
ments. This year, 45 of Kansas City
Life's approximately 130 general
agents have qualified as Century Club
members. Winstcl) bas qualified for
President's Oub three time and llas
received the national sales achieve-
ment award once.
• • • R•dolpll C. BaldoDI has been
elected chairman of the board of
0raacancorp and its subsidiary,
ne of Orange Couty, an-
nounced Lawrence R. Holmes, presi-
dent and chief executive officer.
Baldo ni, an origJnal founder of the
bank. is a doctor who has been in
practice for 22 years. He is currently
medical director and anesthesiologi~
of the Foutaia Valley Oatpattedt
Su1ery at Foa.atala Valley Medical
Putt. He is also a member of the
board of directors of Fouatala Valley
Comma.alty HoapltaJ. • • • William H. Ncama.nn Jr. has joined
Santa Ana-based lnfoacrlbe, Inc., as
eastern regional sales manager .. In-
OvER THE CouNTER
Mew Vart-X headqaartera bulldbaa ln Jntne.
foscribe is a manufacturer of dot
matrix printers for computer sys-
tems. ••• Daalel J. Harrison has been hired
as media sales manager, a new
position created at Commulty
Cablevl1Jo.1 Co. of Newport Bea.ch.
Harrison will im~lement a program
of commercial insertion on four
major satellite stations offered in the
compants expanded service. Har-
rison will be rcspoinsjbJe for the
development and sale of commercials
on MTV, ESPN, USA and CNN.
Before joining Community
Cablevision, Harrison was vice prcs1-
den t and managJng partner of
Aardvark Advertiata1. Community
Cablevision is a subsidiary of Tile
Irvine Co. and bas served the com-
m unities of Irvine, Tustin and New-
port Beach since 1966. • • • Steve.a B. Kocb bas been promoted
to national accounts manager for
Pertee Compater Corp.'1 System
3200 family of microcomputers, ac-
cording to Lawrence P. Ciaffltelll,
vice president, North American sales.
Koch. who reports to Ciuffitclli1 is
responsible for developing vertical
mark.et. private label and retaH dis-
tribution channels throughout North
America for the Pertee product. • • • B.J . Stewart Advertt11D1 and Pab-
Uc Relatlon1, 1Dc., of Newport Beach
bas been chosen by Profeatloul
Dealp Reao•rcet to direct the firm's
pubhc relations activities, according
to an announcement made by aacncy
vice president of public relations
Geoffrey It. Graves. Professional
Design Resources. based in Costa
Mesa, is a design consultant company
which develops and supplies ad-
vanced coputer aided design systems. • • • Frederick R. Port of Laguna Beach
has been named chairman and chief
executive officer of Suta Aalta
Developmeat Corp., a subsidiary of
Sula Aalta Opendla1 Co., it was
recently announced. Port was a
general ~ner of the Somerset Co.
before Joining Santa Anita. Santa
Anita Development Corp. is a com-
mercial shopping center and indus-
trial real estate developer. • • • Betty Hyde and Slleri Overby have
moved their design studios, Ultimate
Detlp and Detlp Medlod1, under
one roof at I 8019 Sky Park Circle,
Suite J, Irvine. The firms offer a
complete commercial and residential
interior design.
NEW Y~K IAPl = Illa f \la Dewey • 10'1) 11'4 GyrOCIYll .._ ~ MGFOI MedlGE ll-16 _., ~Tt u ~
'" "" -.\I~ NASDAQ quotelloN ~30 ~~ ss .... 5''1J H~ 4\'t 4\to ~ 20lll A tllOwllle """-'' bldl a..co 1914 20 .... """ 11\la
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end lo ...... ~· .,., a1rd111C 10 10141 Dolr'Gn • 11141 11111 Hrp(;p 21~ 29141 ..... ·~ 23111 2A ~m.k9"Hof4 llr1chr 4~ 4,. 0ovto• '~" Hw'tN t 24,. 25141 11::}«1 ,. 1 ~ ,,_ lN r,·m. Prlcltt do not ...,_ mo\I~ on.Kn 14111 U¥ Hedl9 ' 1~ 17\6 IL.it 4Wa &S ,..,Ml l~ 17 ndlM ,.. .. meni..-=·· ~ 13·16 D\lftkO 1.-"~ Heivdf" )6\to J7 MevPI 6 6141 .....ent Jlllo ,__
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A •w ElllConv )4 l4'4 ln'90fl • ,. .... ""' Mldlatl "" '5 411'> "2 EnrMel , .... '~ lntmlG• 17\la IN wa. = 2'14
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Ano I f 'tt~ FornlO 24'1· 24'MI IClnotnl 514 SYa HYAlrl SYa S-. Sat.co ~ 511' ~ :no 1w" 1n~ FrenkCP 1~ 17 l(loofG •111 •¥ NldtOO 4-... StHt!Gd 1.~ 36 FrriEI 11'4 II~ KnapeV 251/• ,, NleltA I 2'\4 30 St Paul "" 5'Ya ~· ~~~ FrMSG ll..., ,, ICrelOt • 41Ao Hi::• t 2t1Ao ~ I!. 26 2~ r ,,_ 13,. Kuldlt t I~ I I!~ Ii~ A~n t t • ~~! • ::ft" = '~ t " I 1 ii !more ~ ~.~t ·I~· I· ln\"r'o • !m,m ~sa . . ~ y 111 11~ ~rn W'*11 ~ ~· ~ • ro v ~1w· It.'l Yo n.a.· Not .........
I '1
Orange Coat DAILY ,,,LOT/Thunday, f~ 18, 1164 •
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE TRANIACTIONI ....
IRS labels some pool
tax deductions all-wet
EDITOR'S NOTE: Tbt1 is I.be fillh
articlo m a 11-pan .eries in which
Sylvia Poner describes ways tax·
,,.yen can save on lbeir 1983 Ind
1984 income We$.
Swimming pools arabbed the se:ot-
ligbt again in l 983 as a possible
medical expense deduction -and
the tips you'll read below apply to
medical expenses that so far beyond
swimming pools and to almost any
treatment you undertake under a
doctor's orders fo r your health. Be
alert.
The cost of building a swimming
pool is a capital expenditure. Under
the tax rule for capital expenditures,
the taxpayer who pays the cost of a
medically necessary swimming pool
can deduct as a medical e-xpensc tbe
amount by which that cost exceeds
any increase in the value of your
house because of the pool. If, say, it
costs $10,000 to build the pool and
the addition of the pool hikes the
market value of your house by only
$8,000. you can deduct $2,000 as a
medical expense.
Assuming a doctor prescribes tbe
use of a pool as a specific treatment
for your health, the Internal Revenue
Service is wiUi ng to accept the pool's
cost as medically occessary -
provided the pool is specially de-
signed and equipped for treatment or
alleviation of a disease and isn't
suited for general recreation. The lRS
applied this test in an '83 ruling that
involved a taxpayer who suffered
from d~nerative osteoarthritis and
was adVlscd by his doctor to swim
several times a day to slow the effects
of the disease.
The taxpayer built an indoor
exercise pool attached to his house, 8
feet long, no deeper than S feet and
equipped with specially designed
stairs that arc wider and with
smaller-than-usual rise. The pool was
not suited for general recreation.
The IRS ruled the pool's cost was a
medical expense to the extent that the
cost exceeded any increase in the
house's value as a result of the pool.
Also, the cost of operating and
Sn111
Po1TE1
ExP£R T Ao v1cE
maintaining the pool was a medical
expense.
Contrary to the IRS, a 1983 Tax
Court decision held that even a
reaul.ar-type swimming pool, suited
for recreation and diving, could
qualify for medical expeote p~
iflhe nature of the taxpeye:r:•1 disease
didn't require any 1peciali%ed con-
struction or eqwpmenl This case
involved a taxpayer who suffered
from severe emphysema and
bronchitis. His doctor recommended swimmina as the best exercise for
retaining and · · aa breathing
capacity. He co%-:1find any pools
where be could exercise before or
after work. He bad a new boUJe
constructed with an indoor pool
becau~ bis old house was too small
NEW YORK l~P) -The follo}!Vlno Nit shows the Over the counter stodu .•nd warrants that have oone uo tne most and oown tne most beMd on oercen1 of chanoe tor Wed. u,.f l ' 1J~.
i~
ll/4
l/4 1 14
'I• i~ v •
111 .. 1/4
21-16
Pd ~! t HO Ho uo ~i H: Uo 8: UP Uo Uo Uo
The pooJ WU 20 feet by .W feet. with a
divina boercl He used the pool tft:lea
day. never for entenai.nment. (Kil
fa.m..ily swam occasionally.)
The lRS &flued tbc pool WU for
personal. oot med.ical, PUllK*t boo
cause at bad oo speci•lir..ed equipment and bad a divma board.· The Tu
Cou11 duqreed: All this ~yer
needed to e:xercitc bis lUGll is an
ordinary pool. The faclS show that the
pool is wed primarily for medical
purpo1e5, and rccrca11oaal ux wu
only incidental.
A 1983 IRS private letlCf' nilina
dealt with the cost of IC'llioa to and
usina a public swimming pool. Here.
the taxpayer's youoa son suffered
from rheumatoid ar1hriti1. A doctor
recommended the son swim t.bree to
four times a week in addition to other
exercises. The t.Upeyer dido•t have
bis own pool and couldn't find oae
near bis bome. He therefore~
for his son to swim at a pooJ l S miles
away, at an annual fee of $100. Tbe
IRS ruled both the fee and the cost of
transportina his son to and from the
pool were medical expenscs.
Next: CMJd aad ~
Cred.Jt.
- -• -• Great American Investor Series~ Bonus Coupon • - - - -
Open a Great American Investor Account
today and receive from $25 to $3,000 ...
Open your account today for as little as 2 years or as long as 'l> years at
Great American Federal and lock in a big interest bon us. From $25 to
$3,CXX> in cash, if you like.
Depending on the term you choose and your deposit, from $5,CXX> to
$1X>,CXX>, you11 receive a guaranteed bonus ofl/2%, 1%, 2% or 3% on your
principal balance. --=--
Take a look at how bonus interest adds up to much higher rates. ESUC '-.-:..-:-::.1
Invest today. This offer is limited and may be withdrawn at any time.
GREAT AMEJOCAN BONW RAJ( YIEW• INVt:STa. TRM INTEafST EXAMPlfS Of BONUS INTEREST
lyein YI% I0.617'l 11.400'*, I. If vou depcllil it.~ 1m011rtt ol SS.000 lor it.
rrWrWrium w.m ol 2 ~ ;.. ~ SS.000 b'( "°' ,_ <S.000
I0.9M' I 11. 700"«i>
, .oos\. 'b.w boru ~ ru.
S yeMS 1'9 2 . ._, _,, • boru o1UOObl-~S15.000lor6 ~
(I S.000 ' .07).
6 yeilf'5 2'9 10.953~ 11.850' I l. to~ lht m&UTUll boru ol Sl.000. s 100.000 nut bt
~ lor"'""' ol 10 ~ llwl\ Sl00,000 ll'diplfd
10 ye.in )" 11.115% 12.~ b¥ l' (100,000 \ .Im.
COASTAL ORANGE COUNTY
" .......... tlll MllllS ....
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lthfllt11: 67S-W
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INLAND ORANGE COUNTY
le1A1illlt • uzt ...,,.._. """
......... : mall
t..-•·ll&lll,._ ......
ll111*1 1: --
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NYSE COMPO SITE TRANSACTIONS
Olv ,.. s-, 1-a\I Ole
THIRSDArS CLOSHIC PllCES
Dow Jo~E s A ~ERAGE S
WHA T NYSE DID
NEW VORK (AP) F9b. 16
UP s ANO DowN s
NEW YORK (AP) -The followlng llst shows the New Yorx Stock E•ctianoe stocks and warrants tl'lal have DOM uo 11'1• most and dOwn the most based on perce111 of cha"98 revardleu of volume for Tl'lursdov. No ~urines tradlno below S2 are Incl· ·1,1ded. Net and percentaoe chanoes ere ll\e difference between the prevle>Us clos ng
orlce end today's t~f'· price.
N•me Last Cttgi Pct
I UnP•r• Mn 2l't ~ Up 1s·1 2 MlulQ.nlns 2~~ 2~ Up 4 ..
3 MesaOffsh n 'h 'I• uo i· • ToroCo I 14 IV. UP .
J E nSQ.urce 23'& 'I• Up , KN Energy 26llii 2 Up . Playboy En 11h ~ Up . ~ CNS8r$Wld 10~ lJi !J.P .4 Evans Pd 7112 1h ...,p .1
I LIL CCI 7l\ VJ Up 6., Nat Homes • 'I• Uo 6.
12 WnAlr 2of 16 1 UP 6.7 3 Masonite s 24 1~ Oo 6. I ll So~t 33~ 1~ uo i·o Pl'I I l.21pf 91
h
1
h UP ·1 I Le. v Str wd J™ Hi Up . l ~SHome s 9~ 112 UP . acom o.t 1 ~ Uo . Ian f.srcl'I 1i~ ~ Uo . QMI.! Pow 1°'1.1. lh Uo . ly ~e~o11lrWk 16l'e i t UP 2· EO Intl I '/• + ,UP 4. J r FHh n 22lll I (Jp .6 4 et ducat s 26 I~ UP .S 5 Fedder$ 5-,. 14 Uo 4.•
DOWNS Ne me l.,ast Chg
1 ReoubStl 5.2Sof i9'h -14 2 Mattel WI .... -.,.., 3 ApechePt wt ~ -1/• 4 Super,cpe ~ -'I• S TullJM n 1 'h -I 6 Mattel 2.SOPf II~ -11/• 1 Betdg Hem 143' -I ~ PacGE ' 13 -~ GtWnFln 1~>.4 -11/• 1 Mattel Inc I -'h 1 l Corelndu. st 11'1• ->.4 1~ Rons~n 31/• -1/• l. ~~w1'~~ ls~ = ~ 15 d l.IOc>f bih -J,l, 1.t ~~rScl s ~ -1\1 l r~~~f 8~tg I~ = ~
l Tl'lermoEI $ 11 -~ 0 KOi Co 7'11 -~ I Re1>Ubtl~ Sil ~ -I 2 ~Pw J.60Pr 21'/• -1 3 ascoCo s 111h -~ 4 exeslnll ~ -Vt S Torchmark 3J1;. -13'
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW VORK l AP) Feb 16
Advanced Declined ¥nchanoeo otal lu ues New nlons
New tows
AMEX LEADERS
l I 13
• '" ••• # • • •
price end net ct\anoe of !tu! ,~
most active American Stock E~Jiange lssuu. t r edlno nallonellv at
more then 'I WenoLabB 4" 21'1• -~ OorntPtrl I 3'h -1-16 TIE comm s 1t 19~ -I/• ~.°=~o• n m· 1I~ ±:1r:
KevPherm s 19· 161/• t •r. Perk.El s • 39 2\.'t Nat Patent i , 23 -1' Alla•Vens • 111/• +I/• lrllnl ~ 9 3~ -~ ~t:~1Jil111MM;+
NEW VORK (AP) -Most active over-·t'1.f,·counter stocks SfiPlled DY NASO. Mer~· 2~~~~T 18·1. A'~ ~"!1 FMI , 11/• 6'h -... (;,f~ t: i I/• ~·~ = ~ PnllGI , I 3' ~ Kelv J[j: s , ~ ~ -2~ ~ce d • IJ'h Vt M~wt s 364~. 2 s! 6 +1·16 Convgt 32>. I ,_ -1'1'
Go Lo Qu orEs
M£H\L S Qu on s
That's an apt description of both busine~s and
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
where companies are gotn~ and which people are helping
them get there,just watch Credit Line' -everydayi11 the
Business section of your new Daily Pilat
.. •
I
COAST
Old rnovlM k-.
celebrH•,
IUlpHM•llve.
IMP'9•C2.
AIDS panic drops, deaths go on·
By KAREN ZAPPE
The calming of last summer's AIDS hysteria may
have led some people to think the disease has disap~
or a cure has been discovered, Randy Pesqueira said.
"AJDS still kills," the administrator of the
Gay/Lesbian Center of Orange County's AIDS Response
Program said.
Bill and Steve know. For nine months the program's
volunteers have been visiting a slowly dying man. The
Costa Mesa residents help the nearly blind Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome victim around his home,
make sure he's oomfortable and cared for, and, most
importantly, listen to him.
''He needs someone who listens and cares, a shoulder
to cry on," Steve said. "He needs someone to listen to
things that may not be important to other people but are
important to him."
"We're just being friends to him," Bill said. "When
you have AIDS, you don't have a lot offriends."
Bill became a friend because he wanted to help victims
of the dreaded disease. Steve said he joined the suppon
progJam because he thought it would be a &ood
opportunity to do somethina practical with bi$ Christian
faith.
Both completed a four-day training session in which
they learned about the disease and death and dying. But the
lessons didn't stop there.
"I've gained a lot of insight from him (the victim),"
Bill said. ''lt makes you look atJour own life and not take
things for granted ... I was afrai of AIDS, but now l see it
as a disease, not some big dark thing."
"I'm learning about death-how natural itisand how
isolated we usually are from it," Steve said. .. It's not an
awful thing. I'm also learning about the love and sacrifice
of the victim's family and bow to listen and relate to
somebody who I would not usually have come into contact
with."
Pesqueira said the center's volunteers work with five
patients directly, phoning and visiting them weekly,
transporting them to the doctor, making sure they have
food and listening. They assist families of AIDS victims
indirectly with education on home health care and support
groups.
"It's a very powerful experience to look at a person
who is d ying and think that oo one has any idea where the
GOODWILL'S
SPREADING
Fine and Dandy
DALLAS(AP)-Wheo the Texas Department of Highways opened
bids last year on contracts for picking up trash along Dallas County highways.
the low-bidder was a surprise.
It was the same subcontractor who was doing sorting, collating and
packaging chores for Mary Kay Cosmetics, Apple Computer, Texas
Instruments and Xerox -non-profit Goodwill Industries.
"People think ofGoodwiU and all they thinkofis old, dirty clothes," says
Rodney Ginther, 35, executivedirectorofGoodwill Industries of Dallas.
"We'vefound reccntlywecandomore1and we have to. We'rea business and
we've got to conduct ourselves as a busmess."
Faced with budget cuts, rising costs and even bankruptcy~ local Goodwill
organizations have jumped into the business world, competing for jobs that
will put wages in the pockets ofits handicapped beneficiaries.
disease came from and wonder why that person bas it and
you don't," be said.
The center has assisted 20 AIDS victims since the
program began last summer and about 31 AIDS cases have
been reported to it. Pesqueira said very few cases 10
unreported.
.. The word 1s out that you have a rcsponsibihty," be
said.
The disease can take several months to diaanose, he
said, placing a possible sufferer 1n a very difficult "limbo"
stage. Loneliness and frustration then set in to accompany
the physical pain of AIDS.
"Some people have no one around them," Pcsqucua
said. "Everything has suddenly been taken away from
them. They ve lost their friends and their jobs. They need
understanding."
The "worried well" -people who fear they may nave
the disease or are concerned about friends or relatives -
need underst.andtng too, Pesqueira said, and a weekly
group is being formed to meet their needs.
"So many people are worried that they have AIDS",
Pesqueira said. "Maybe they've taken a little longer to get
over the flu. They need someone to listen to them, to
remind them that this is the flu season."
The AIDS Respoote Protram also educates the public
about the ailment l.nd dispellioa such myths u the idea
that AIDS is hiahly contqious. Pesqueira said tbo rate
disease, discovered about 1979, is most likely transmitted
by the blood. and .. there's only been 3,000 cues in the
United States."
Pesqueira said the Orange County bcteroteiuil
community has raponded "peally" and secs AIDS as a
disease, not just a gay d.ilcasc.
"They see that there will be more of an impect oa the
heterosexual community if the disease is allowed to
spread," he said.
Althou&h there is a lot of interaction between the Los
Angeles and the Orange County py communities,
Pesqueira said the number of AJDS cues bas riten much
more slowly than predicted.
.. In Los Angeles, the disease was there but they let it So
until there was a crisis and then responded to the crisis." be
said ... But there isn't a crisis in~ County and we are
beginning a rcspoDJC to the disease.
For more information on the support groups or AIDS,
call the center at 534-0862.
By Katy Brooks
In Dallas, Goodwill handles the state's highway trash contracts and
operates an in-house subcontractinJshop staffed with disabled workers. lo
Washington, Goodwill handles janitorial contracts for some federal
buildings. In Denver, Goodwill runs one of the country's most sophisticated
clothing re-sale operations.
"In 1979, the board said it was considering filing for bankruptcy,"
Ginther says of the Dallas chapter. "So we had to find some other ways to
generaterevenue. lt'sancxcitingchange we'regoing through."
Been driven to distraction?
Through the litter contracts and subcontracting work, Goodwill pays out
$218,000 in wages to 96 handicapped people who, Ginther says, would
otherwise be institutionalized or completely reliant on public welfare
~:iwilliams, 59, hadnowaytocam moneyuntilajobopenedat
Goodwill.
"I was in Terrell (State) Hospital with nowhere to go and no job," she
says. "It's been a lifesaver. for me." Ginther, an accountant by training, read about the state's highway litter
contracts in a Dallas newspaper last year.
"It sounded simple to us. We said, 'This is something a handicapped
person cou1d do,"' be says. "Then when we actually got the first contract, we
really got scared." . _ .
Other contractors complained that Goodwil~ a non-profit orgamzat1on.
had an unfair advantage. But the uproar has since subsided.
"Yeah, it cut into my pocket," says Ray Woody of Pride Maintenance
Corp., which lost out on the Dallas County litter contracts. "But I don't have
any bard feelings." .
Ginther says Goodwill's bids on contracts arc ba~d on paying
competitive wages. Each worker is then evaluated to sec what he or she can
produce compared to a non-handicapped laborer, and then paid according to
that percentage.
"We actually lost money last year on it bccciuse they picked up more bags
oftrasb than we thought they could," he says.
Karen Wade of the highwayde"partmentsaysGoodwill'sinitial bid was
not much lower than otheroontractors.
"We're pleased with them," she says. "It ~ves their people work and
maybe keeps them off welfare r~lls. So 1t certamly saves tcupaye.rs' mone.y."
In addition, Dallas Goodwill has boosted revenues by seeking out higher
quality castoffs and higheri!lcomc customers. . .
Ginther has put collect1on centers and stores into ncher Dallas
neighborhoods. He now uses a stock control system developed by Sears.
Roebuck and Co. and is currently working to improve the physical
appearance of Goodwill stores.
AdYlce on warcliobe?
AbtPU Vaa Buell (Dear AbbJ). riOt. and Iler friend lllrl&iD Groman ca.me from BentlJ Silla Tuecla.J to~
u aftenaooa of ataOODID.I at AJDea Wanl7'• at Fula.loia
lalaad. .......... a momatlo claat. •laeJo'inCJ7 prom•eed to
uunrer oar letter wla" we ~e4 oar reel ~e.
'
.,..,-=-
Ruth Gulllou of Bu.ni:m.rton Harbour helpe people looklnC
for romance in the fut fane -Freeway Singles.
Behind-the-wheel
romantics get new
way to signal love
By Tlae Aaeeciated Presa
A freeway is: I) a wide highway; 2) a
traffic jam, or 3) a place for budding
romance.
The correct answer 1s all of the
above, according to Ruth Ouillou,
founder of the Freeway Singles Oub,
California's latest way to get latent
romantics out of their shells and into
the fast lane.
"The idea came one day when I was
stopped at a red light and saw the
perfect man in the car next to me,"
said Guillou, SO, a widow and real
estate uent in Huntington Harbour.
"I turned left and he was going
straight or I would have followed
him. He bad blue eyes, gray hair and a
tremendous smile. He was driving a
cream-colored C.adillac.
"We both kept looking at each
other and smiling. It's a dumb way to
meet because you can't shake hands
or say hello."
Not wanting to miss such ~n
opportunity again, she founded 't'he
club in Scotember for members who
receive a numbered decal.
Would-be paramours can jot down
the numbers without risJrina life and
limb by speeding or waving out the
window to attract attention of a fellow
motorist.
t'TlJc club's replacing oyster ban
which replaced sushi ban as a way to
meet people." she said.
"Everybody will be driving the
freeway on their time off. Gas stations
wiU Jove it and the auto industry, too.
Everyone will want to be seen in a
shiny new car."
She doesn't know if any romances
that have started on freeway lanes
have led down bridal aisles because
the club's involvement is limited to
forwarding mail. Nor does the club
eliminate the awkwardness of blind
dates because generally only one
person has seen the other.
But there is a measure of safety:
Initial contact is through the mail to
Freeway Singles Qub, P.O . Box 2705,
Huntinston Beach 926-49. Lct-
ter-wrillnJ is likely to deter all but the
seriously intrigued.
Subsequent contacts depend on the
member-somel,OOOofwhom have
paid the
35 annual FSC dues to date for the
decal and introductory cards to
distribute like business cards.
Childhood pairings worthwhile
lOOpatronesses of
Big Broth ers, Sis t ers
feted at lu n cheon
Big Brother Mlcllael Ben lley was
passing around pictures of his little
brother (since 1981) and Darrclyn
Carpenter. a Big Sister since 1980,
talked briefly of activities she and
her little sisters share.
"It's very rewarding. We don't
have big excursions every week.
Sometimes we go grocery shopping
or do household chores," Carpenter
explained, adding that both of her
.. girls' are m foster homes.
The two were guests at the
patroness luncheon of Anaelitos de
Oro. a support group of Big
Brothers/Big Sisters now cel-
ebrating its 23rd year of being
instrument.al 1n the organization
which makes matches between
adults and children (most in single
parent homes).
Jan Taylor, immediate past presi-
dent. was in charge of the luncheon
held at Newpon Harbor Yacht Oub
with more than I 00 an attendance.
"The outao1n' president is alwa~
in cbarae of this annual affair," wd
Betsy Stodda rd, the inoomina presi-
dent. Ourina the social hour Hele•
CoffeJ (she's in to prescrvina cn-
daQ&Cml animals) was talk.an&
about her namesake - a monkey in
the Sa.n Dicso l.oo. "rm 101na to
bave I pany for ber when she FU
out of quarantine. The talk about
I
~ .................. Utlllll
Dorothy Yardley. left, and Mrs. Terrell Root AD&elltoe president Betsy 8tod4a.nl at wltJa
lanclll.D& at Anaelltoa de Oro aanaal nent. Roe E4Warda at 1'ewport Barbor Yacbt Cl•b.
animals stopped though when
someone found out that Helen reads
palm s for fun. Hands began to
stretch out
Lunch {Cobb salad, popovers and
the club's specialty deep fried ice
cream) was served at 1ablcs Wlth a
Valentine theme-pink cloths and
burgundy nal>klns with IUTlll\gC-
ment of pin\ hyacinths. cherry
blooms and pink and~ tulips.
Amona tho cnjoyuig the affair
(and the &OllCOUS view of the bay)
~ IMJ WM4wanl, Doretlly
Y.,.._, (so man looking an black).
Jeu Leeea, Deli DeKnlJ, Jue
U.,, Jme 0....., Jae ~.
Manu er.ner, SilllJ J•.-(in
ct\arac of decorations). MD4rell
Mead, Helen LeMay, Beuy Rtpley,
Pegy Cotton, Doretlay Reid.le
(arriving a liule late because she
decided to come by ferry), Jue
Berle, Jo AJe~er(director of Big
Brothen/Bia isters of OC) Lee
Gormley, oe E4ward1 and
CatlaerlM nyea.
The aux.altary will have its Gold
Book. a ptctorial calendar that bu
already acneratcd nearly $700.000.
ready 1n time for the annual ball tel
for May l 2 altbc Westin utb
Coast Plaza tiotcl. • • • Dlue Calff of Corona del Mar
celebrated her 30th b1n.hday aboard
the yacht Stafattr durina a party
hosted by Lava and~ Crou01l.
About 50 fnends JO&ned the cd·
cbrauon and supplied the honoree
wtth crazy cards and lots of sifts
(including bottles of bubbly).
The pany departed from Balboa
Bay C ub about 7 o'clock Saturday
cvcninaand lhccruisccoot.anued till
11 with the sh.aring of a decorated
cake 1nscnbcd with the u uuaJ H'8
wishes plus Lotus I 2 30 {Diane is a
sales engineer (softwcar) for Lotui).
Fnends of the birthday aUt
aboard mclµded Dr. Relil and TerTJ
Brewatet',J• and A.a &Jae..._.
l.aber, CW, kett Ut* .,.0 and ~ AaU..y, a.. a;d
MuJ c.tn \r.:ou) and btother .... C.Uf, ~ ........ aad
Bob and Juice J-...
C2 Or11n99 Coat DAILY PILOT/1lwfeday, February 18, 188'
~i~ weight eats away sympathy
DEAR ANN potato chips b)' the hour. lktorc he tu ms m he is in the LANDERS~ l sugcst fridge lookina for leftover dC$Xrt or 1oe cream.
you rethink your at· The man wei&hcd I 851n collcac and looked temfic.
Utude toward fat All Today be ref uses to act on a scale. but f'll bet he's over 2SO people. You arefar He's 36 years old.
too&enerous. The Iba~ no sympathy for him. He 1s flu because he'd
truth is that they I .... DEIS ntbcteat than do anythinaelse in the world. -choosetobefat. LAii DISGUSTED IN ARlZONA
Conadcr, DEAR ARIZONA: Youllubud 1oudslllea
please. the problems C.DlpllbJve eater-ud W1 l1 •ta matter of cMice. Re
of the spouse. lam mamed toa livioabrealhinatu~oflard. 11 .. tof coatroJ. Lec'1 a.C>pe1tereh 11dlof klmttlf 10Nud
The onl y subJ~t on which be can speak eloquently is. ' 1et1 profestloaal belp by Jolala1 Welpt Wac~en or
"hunaer." You and I both know he is not hunpy .. He Just Overeaten Alloaymoa1. \'09 can't do a ~1111 for llJm. U.
wants to eat AGAIN. The feelings he isexpenenc~nJatc mutdotkl1 llllm1elf.
anger. fruJtrauon or boredom. Consequently, h~ 15 an no DEAR ANN LANDERS: You have never been a
shape to deal with real problems such as a finannaJ cnSJs or wa1 tress. or you would not have taken the side of the a sack child. I must do these things wbtle Fatso cats.
Because ofhas obesity I am denied sex. I used to en1oy
s1ttmg on his lap. Now be has no lap. I can't even ~ct a hug.
H1sarmsdon'textend beyond his belly and I can tget close
enough. Thisdoesn 't bother him at all because be has no
energy for sex. lt'sall be can to do waddle from \be dining
room table to t he bigcba.ar an the library and watch TV.
He drinks a six-pack ofbecrevery night and eats
parents who wrote to complain about being barred from a
restaurant because their child threw a spoon that mjssed a
patron and hit the window. The owner had every right to
tell them not to come in with the child ever again.
I have been a waitress for 22 years. The worst
experiences I had were caused by children who were
permitted to run wild while their parents sat unconcerned,
as af th('y belonged to someone else.
One ''family restaunnt" I worked i.n cloted down
bcca'* they couldn't keep help. I quit after two weeb.
Screamma kids ran into food caru and tackled waitteMet
carrymg heavy traya. The yellina wu unbelievablt. After
that experience I became a coc~tail waitresa. The howw
were tcmbl!r but there were no brats to put up with. Ju1t
sian me -1 HREE OF MY OWN AND HA VE NEVER
BEEN BARR.ED FROM ANYPLACE '
DEAR NEVER: Many readers &lfM wldl yH. I wa1
fatdaated by dte fact &Uc almost au wlM wrote were
waJten ud waltreaset.
I still feel die pareatl IMllN uve bea p\'ea a tttOIMI
cU.ce. Tobe baned from~ bet& rttlauut la a small
Iowa 11pretty1ttff puJ&mtt1t for a flnC offeue. B•t I
udenta.ad wltere yoa are comia1 from, a.ad I tlaaak YOll
forwrlUD1.
• • • Discover bow to bedatebajt without fa1Jj'}1-book, line
and sinker. Ann Landers' booklet., "Darin1 Do sand
Don 'tJ. "will help you be more poised and sure of yourself
on dates. Send 50c:cnt.s aloas with a long, st.am~.
self-addrc$$0denvelope with your request to Ann Landers,
P.O. 8oA I /995Chia1.go. Ill. 60611.
E111
BOllECI
SUSPECT MS? GET MEDICAL OPINION
FABRICS
ANNOUNCING
the GREAT
''98C''salel
VALUES TO $6.98 YO
• COTTONS • LINENS
• PRINTS e PLAINS
NOVEL TIES TOO'
GIANT SELECTION s 1 aa
UP TO S 10 VALUES YO.
SALE
Final Mark Down
50°10 -75°10 OFF
Including Shoes
Last 3 Days -Ends Sun., Feb. 19
#29 Fashion Island
' I
--'
the flight bearable? Mrs. U.
DEAR MRS. U .: Don't overeat or ovcrdrink before or
during the fligh t. Have yo ur doctor suggest an anti-motion
sickness drug and take it an hour before flying. Aying at
night decreases motion sickness by reducing visual
stimulation. Sit in a reclining position, as far away from the
engines as possible to decrease vibration.
• • • • DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I admit to being foolish.
I'm recovering from a coronary attack and haven't the
nerve to ask my doctor bow soon it is safe to have scxuaJ
relations. Can you tell? Mr. V.
DEAR MR. V.: Why does at take nerve? I assure you
your doctor would not be upset by such a question. No
more than if you asked him if it was all right to butter your
bread. Only your doctor can give you the specific answer in
your case.
However, doctors believe that (for at least 80 percent
of pauents) it's safe to resume sexual relations within six
weeks to three months following the attack.
• • • FOR MRS. 0 .: Doctors arc becoming aware of the
need to prescribe antibiotics with care. For example, "five -years ago one-fourth of the physicians in eastern
Tennessee were prescribini tetracycline for children under
8, although health authoriUC$ have warned for years that it
damanges the development of permanent teeth." accord-
ing to a Vanderbilt Universjty Medical Center release. But '
by last year only one doctor was still giving the drug to
young children.
DIVORCED? SEPARATED?
1111 jlst CO Tnllllit. . . nr.p it!
DIVORCE RECOVERY WORKSHOP
SbTMMlyE~
February 2ht -Morch 27th
7130 P.M. -9130 P.M.
St Antews Presbyterian C•urch
Ne•rt Baell
St. A"4rewt ad-et 15th St.
AcroN freM Ne~ HertHtr Hip
$2o.oo le9l1tratlon
for more Information calh
631-2115
9r00 -5.00 Mon.-frl.
Muon-Dam
Irvine Presbyterian
Church was the scene of the
Feb. II wedding of
Kimberly Davis of Irvine
and James R. Mason of
Huntington Beach.
The bride, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald B.
Davisoflrvine. wore a long
ivory gown of silk organza I
trimmed with schiffi i lace
and embroidered with seed
pearls. A pearl-trimmed
headpiece held her finger-
tip veil, and she carried a
bouquet of white on:hids
and pink' roses.
Laurie Fi scher was
matron of honor, and maid
of honor was Audrey
Wilson. Other attendants
were M~e Daw and Judy
Mason. sister of the bride·
groom.
The bndcgroom is the
son of DT. and Mrs. James
W. Mason of Hunti ngton
Beach. Douglas Fischer
served as best man, and
ushers were David Over-
·Inventory Reduction
Sale
40o/o off
This will be selected merchandise
from our own stock
•Chains
•Rings
•Pendants
•Pins
•Earrings
•Watches
•Bracelets
•Necklaces
•Charms
•Mountings
One Week Only
February 20th through 25th
UM your Visa or M11ttrCard
No houte char1•
All ult1 final
CHARLES H. BA RR
........
A•ai&• ... S.C...,
Mcu•s4._ .. ,, ... , ..
-·
118'1 ..... ........ . ...........
Kimberly Ma1oa
beck, Jonathan Moses and
Brad Van Patten.
A recepti on at the home
of the bride's parents in
Irv ine followed the ccr·
cmony. The bride is a
graduate of University
High School and CaJ State
Long Beach, with a dcvee
in business administration.
Her husband, a music
major. also is a graduate of
Cal State Long Beach. He
was a member of the Uni·
versity's Wind Symphony
and top jazz band and plans
a career in music per·
fonnance.
Nel80n-R.ayu.ford
Kathy Raynsford of
Costa Mesa and Mark
Nelson of Lake Elisnore
were united in marriage at
the Community Church
Congregational, Corona
dcl Mar, in a Jan. 22
ceremony.
The bride, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Ray·
nsford of Costa Mesa, wore
a white gown made in Italy
that featured a Iona train
and a hiah collared bodice.
Canni bynsford, Sandy
Freeman and Helen Phil·
lips were her attendants.
The bridearoom is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Oeorac Nelson of Costa Mesa.
Bruce Nelson, Bob Phillips
and LL Jim Barnett served
as ushers.
A reception held im·
mediately followin& the
oeremony at the Shatt
Island Yacht Club wu
attended by 2SO ~
After a wcddina trip to
Puerto v allana. the couple
are re1idina at Lake
EJlinorc. He 11 emplo)'f;d
by the Mission Viejo C.O. in
MiMion Viejo and lhe
worki for Clark Kennedy Floriau in Cotta Mesa.
I
f9AR t 'l t:l .lt
I WA! WONPERINCY, GA~FlfLP. •.
THE
f',\MILl'
CIRCL'8
"Grandma's toilet is real pretty! The water
is BLUE!"
by Brad Anderson
l~-1 1
)
2·1~
f1"I 14illW I ....,,M ,-,.AV • ~~'9 lnC
"Do you rAind getting out of the way so I
can kiss Dottie good night?"
fllG G•:ORG•;
~
'
by Gus Arnola
by Jim Davis
WMAi PO YOO ME.AN
"'WMAT IF, "&oZ07
t ·•I.
"11 'Home on the Range' the ONL 'f iune that you
burrows know?"
o•:,,IS THt: .'IE' \('I:: Hank Ketcham
~~
'2-()
• I • IF 1 STm'ED TO '?WINK WORE 1 010 5'WCTHIN I 1
WOULt)fT HAVE 11ME TO 00 ,Ji{'(!Jl!#G.'"
llCH,, '9l'1.1.1 ~S
f:'EEC>BACK ... I CAN Jusr P1cruRe
eMMA JOYoUSLYTHROWING
Hffl AflMS AROUND ME
WHEN l GET B,ACK .
...,--~--r
_... -_.__ ~ ~ -,---·.
I
...... , . , . . ....... ....... ~
°™E SECRET OF LIFE
IS TO ~AN6 AROUND
PEOPLE WMO DON'T
KNOW T~E DIFFERENCE!
) ,
by Ch ar les M Schulz
by Tom K Ryan
WHILE I WAS CAP'fAll'J OF ~f GA'v'~L SQUAP Ai JIFFY 'P':
JU~E 1NS1)1Uil:. --
,,
No rth !ioulh vulnerable.
Soulh dul~.
ORTH
•t7
~:>QUU
0 A10•
+J U
WF.ST £AST
•QI0832 •Kt54
/A :i K 7
IJ 873 v 952
+10963 +A8H
SOl'TH
+ A J
JI0943
11 KQJ6
+KQ
The: h1ddin1r:
South We.t Norlh EHt
I ~ I • 2 ~ 3 •
4 ' Pa11 Pa11 Pa11
Opt-n1ng lud. Thrt>e or •.
lnttrnatwnial l'1111ulor
UrtdJ('f' Monthly I" .JA vt•ry
rl·adablt• brtdl(t• m.tl(J11n1·
publi11 ht'CI 1n ~:ntcland und 111r
mailt'd to lht• l I nit.I'll Sta lt''i
1$21 J>t'r 1nnum. .iv111l:ihl1•
from fir1dl(t' World M11ic.-
zin1i. ~ We11t 94lh St .. Nc•w
York. N.Y 10021i l 'J'ha' h11nd
•~ from a runnanl( 1wru·' hy
1>1v1d Hird. Ct•aturanl( ;1 , .. "t
or l'haral'lf'r' who pluy 1n th11
A rriun Champ1t1n"h1p
The htr0t-~ of Hird\, "'rll''
art tht' Ucn:wamha tt-Jm , who
were ~1llanl( Eai.l \\ a•Jo.t ht n•
Their oppontont .... who v.t•rt·
at tht' top or tbt· ~tund1nl{'I.
ruched four ht.>arti. on lht•
aut'lion shown. Wt-st ltd h1~
fourth best spadl' Thi·
declarer did not fan<') h1o;
chanres. In addition to l ha·
•·oft BETTER OR t 'OR •URSE
~'/ Mr.N.T Y0J
~CHING IV
WITH Df\Doy?
)lr1• und lttnl of trump • two
• .cuioJC al "urc loMr n
JI de-11 nft rlubit.
Mln AOtnt• lhuuihl. btt
t•lt'f&.c-d L.o try a 111r111d~. Hr
won llw ff' of 11padt"I, trOll
t•d to lhl' arc• of dill mond and
trit·o .o ittt tht• dd•ndt-re to
rradi lhtoir trump honora by
lt•<1d1nic the tfUttn of Marts
from lhtt t.abl.-Rul Ea t
play1-d low Weal won the al'•
und took has spadtt trK'k, and
th1• d .. r .. ndt'N rould not i,.
-.L1111J)4•d from icrLLinJC two
mori· Lri<'kt1 down ont'
In tht• o\hPr room tht> Hoz
wamhi tfltm rt>:ichtd four
h1•.irl<1 without any 1n
tt·rft·rrncr W1•<1l found a
~padt• lt•ad and Sou th w:u
r.m•d Vt 1th lhtt li:lml' problem
J' h1~ 1·ounttrpJrt an the
WHAf5 11E WffiCttlNG
-~~'Z
MOVtE?
othfr room.
••or a motMftt 'ht,. &et,
'4.'mpt.fd to t,., &.o eot Uit =
pon.nll 111\o u'"'"ll
lH trump trku IM.o .. ,
llowtver, futl•n •l11d1
rrvHJtd that tlwn •at I
i.,j(itima&r llrw for Mt ~
lratl Ar~r w1nnlni tht ~
of ~ ht ran (our "*wl.f
or d~mondl. diat.ans~.
padt from dummy.
ft made DO d rftrtlft
whith ddtodf'r rufft4. U
Wttt trumptd.. ht would '-
doinJ so wit~ a multr: Jf
f,11t ruffed, he .ollld Mo ~fl.
w1lh a elnslfton ltllmp a•
tht act and king would cH tJ
on tM fl11l lrump lead. No
matter what the dtftndera
did, they coul4 not eo.tt to
more thu lhl'ff trick&.
by Lynn Johnston
bv Tom Bat1uk •·t .,K ,. "''Kt:HB•;A'
SO THEN THE GU':J SR':JS.
"IJH'.J RRE '.JOU BUR'ilNG ':JOUR
COf'IPUTER?"
RNO THE OTHER REPLIES . ~'i OUJ.. U5 ... W€'U.
CALL <.oJ !
\
I
"BECRUSE IT HRO R TERf'llNRL
ILLNESS .. GET IT? TERf'llNRL
ILLNESS ? \
OKAY , \
SHOW H IM \
wHeRe -ro 60 I 1"0 PUI" O N
i"H6 PAPe~ ~0 1 NC t..O "fH
ANc::' "f'HeN
seNC' H IM
IN .1
._._.. ..
t
--
Ct Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Thu'11day. February 1e. 1984
Sb.lrley MacLalne, Debra Wlnger were both
nominated for 'Term• of Endearment.'
'Endearing'
lot of Oscar
• nominees
'Terms· heads Academy picks,
scoring with 11 nominations -
By BOB THOMAS
Of \tie 11111 cfJ1 d "'-
BEVERLY HI LLS -"Terms of Endearment." the
funny-sad story of an eccentric mother and a willful
daughter. scored top honors today at the 56th annual
Academy Award nominations, placing in 11 categories.
"The Right Stuff." a panoramic view of the America's
first space tra velers, followed with eight nominations.
"Fanny and Alexander," which Ingmar Bergman says is
his last movie, placed third with six.
As expected. "Terms of Endeannent" dominated the
nominations, collecting for best picture and for four
perfonnances Stars Shirley Mac Laine and Debra Winger
will be competing against each other for best actress. and
Jack Nicholson and John L1Lhgow as supporung actor.
The film also was named for best d1rect1on and wnt1ng by
James L. Brooks
The other nominees fo r best picture: ''The Big Chill."
"The Dresser." "The Right Stuff.'' "Tender Mercies."
Two-time winner Meryl Streep was agam nominated
for ~t actress for her performance as the doomed nuclear
plant worker in "Silkwood." Other nominees beside
Macl.alne and Winger were Jane Alexander of "T esta-
ment" and Juhe Walter\ of"Educating Rita."
None of the best actor nominees has won before They
are. M1ctuael ( aine, "Educating Rita". Tom Conti,
"Reuben, Reuben", Tom Counenay, "The Dresser",
Robert Duvall, ··Tender Mercies", Alben Finney. "The
Dresser ··
8e'11dcs N1chol\on and L11hgow, nominees for
supponing actor were ( harles Durning. "To Be Or Not
To Be". Sam Shepard. ''Tht Right Stuff." and Rip Torn,
"Cross Creek."
No minees for suppon1ng actress: Cher, "Silkwood";
Glenn Close, "The Big Chill"; Linda Hunt, "The Year of
Living Dangerously", Am> Irving. "Yentl"; Alfre Wood-
ard. "Cross Creek.··
Nominated a' best director of 1983 are Brooks, for
"Terms of E,ndearment". Peter Yates. "The Dresser".
Ingmar Bergman. "Fanny and Alexander". Mike Nichols.
''The Dresser". Bruce Beresford, "Tender Mercies."
"Fanny and Alexander" was one of the surpnses of
the nominallon'i since fo reign-language film s rarely score
in several categones. Bc'itdes Bergman's direction, the
movie was cited as best foreign-language film, along with
"Carmen," (Spain). "Entre Nous" (France); "Job's
Revolt," (Hungary). and "Le Bal," Algena.
A prominent om1ss1on was Barbra Streisand, who
received no nominations for her produci ng, directing,
co-writrng and stamng in "Yentl." The film drew five
nom1nat1ons, incl uding Miss Irving as supporting actress.
as well as onginal film score and for two songs.
The "Yentl" songs were ··Papa, Can You Hear Mc?"
and "The Way He Makes Mc f-eel." Also nominated were
"Flashdance What a f eeling" and "Maniac" from
"Flashdance" a~ well a!> "Over You" from "Tender
Mercies"
Jack 1'lcbolaon Meryl 8treep
f
AD STAITI TIVIS.
GOOD TllU FD. 22
Haul the whole gang down to
th-National· Lumber stores
on Saturday, Feb. 18th, to see
SHORTY & CHEAP CHICKEN
SOUTH GATE/DOWNEY
9:30 to 12
BELLFLOWER 2 to 4:30
BYBllD LILY .
TUB EIS
76~.
Nice border flowen
in a variety of
colon. ( George
Wuhington wu a
gNAt general. but
not much of a aailor. I
mean, nanding up in a rowboat?)
ELLWOOD 4 PC.
PATIO SET
aa·~666
The homey look of redwood in a Mt with
2 chain, a chai.M and a 8ide table with
pad.. Un&aembled. choice of yellow or
brown pad..
'
SUNBEAM DUAL
BUDER GAS GRILL
848.!
H.u Lite -A-Matic ignitor, 2 utensil
holden and 20 lb. tank. 24,000 BTU unit
with approz. 225 mq. in. grill.
Come 'n get it .
RUBBERMAID
SHELF LINEI
79:0LL
12" wide ll 10' long or 20" wide ll s· long.
Buncha pattern.. (Inanity i.8 definitely
hereditary. You get it from your kid..)
lDIDDJ
IliU
NOW
OPEN IN
CULVER CITY!
FOLDllll. S'l'EEI
OHAIR
B:row1L chair with front and rear i._ hrac•.
Standard equJpment for 11ehoo19, clubl. ancl
m08t any hlg group Of humane.
OMll 5-PC.
WHITEHALL ~ dA~J~ f.{i'ii:i
Take it eaay in thia patio Mt with 4 vanilla
•ling chain with st.el blue/vanill& stripe
and one 42" vanilla st.el table. Umbrella
eztra.
IWllSET ftLO
EITIY LOCISET
j 59!ror
Okay. you bought
t.he door, now here'•
a PoU.hed Br ...
f iniah loca..t to 90
with it . Don't forget
the hinge•. Fred.
A quartz hal09en yard light that instantly
turn• n ight into h igh noon, with no
warm · up time required.
FILOI ..
COUUGATED IOOFllG
26"z8' ..... 2.59
26"zl0' .... 3.29
26"zl2' .... 3. 99
An old favorite for the patio roofing, in a
choice of white or green.
BAUN
CAI MASIS
SALE PRICE 27u
LESS MFG. MAIL-IN REBATE • 3"
YOUR NET COST AM'ER REBATE M ..
The deal ia on our in· stock model..
Who wu that muked car?
TELEPHONES .
OIE PIECE ELECTIOllC
I
4•9
I'd call thia •
d.al. Our baJ'9ain
talbr ha.I 1ut
number NClial
and mute button.
ELECTIOllC llVP
llllOTE FOii 44n
IRFlOOO
I
BOIAPAITE 4 II I LIGHT 4•• SHORTY CLUB
CLU · LSY
Thia 4-way light com• in handy in
emergenci•.
(Napoleon could have UMd thia
Bonapart.• at Wat. _ _::r.:.loo_.. . .._ > __ _
e "'1101 AllLJ
~ELICTllC II
llT WITH Fl
BACl-TAlll
9'.
139
You get the mod.el 390 8Pl'llY91' which
ac&'7lic/lata palnta, deck~ ei
and lacquen, plus the Back-tam.
holcla up to 8 quarta for big Joi
O'SULLIVAN FURNITU J
TV /VCI CAllll1
548.!10-
The O'Sulli•an boy. rnaa 90
good on•. Hu twin "in -lin
doon and Bartonwood finiah
Getting it
tovether ia your job.
COMPUTER WOU
CEITD/BUTCI 149,!!~
I I • ~
fGI
l -:·-·· ...... ----
GUMODT CAllUIETOl I '
llJECTOI CLEUD
8 oz .
12 OZ.
79
99
Th., -Y it doee all th.ia: Clean. the
Nduc.e .talling and l'OU{lh idling&
the fuel ~m ftom ru.st. Worth a
DAftlOl/POITLdD TILR
13" POITOLI COJ.01
CJ~J 1a7••
....... Good little T•V• with eolid .tat.
circuitry, quick 8'tart piot\U'e tube and color U&•
It'' POITOU COLOI
WITllmOTI
·27777
a.me t .. tw. plu. • w..,... llCIMa\ aftd N:mote '
won't ha" to pt up to ftritch oft the ooaun..-ol
OUN. of ooww).
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT fThurtday, 'M>tuarr 181 1864
ATI ~/PUT ANOTHER CANDLE
I
• • ..,
ON HIS BIRTHDAY .
CAKE tJ
GAIDEI lllTE
STEDllDUIE
c
P.ck a !ew ~into the tl'W\k and put thi8 .teer Stuff to
goOcl u.-In the garden. a.ta the aoil ln ahape for the
Sprift9 ""*· (Would we give 7ou a bum stMr?)
0 0,
·AaalCU.. ...
rlltlrt
/
W:. I
r
m• •
c '•
IRACO STEIEO
CASSETTE
ADAPT El
13!!.7
Install. i n a jiffy
without tool. and
turn• that outdated 8-track into a more
convenient caaaette player.
llACO DI/I'll STDIO CASSETTE
PLAID WITI
AUTO IEVDSE
59~!--
S" 2-WAY SLIM 1997
.LINE SPEAKERS ' PR. tCX8 • 125
Car steNO ha. auto· N"Hl"M, locking fast
forwa.rd and rewind, fader control, local/
di.tance nritch and other .tuff that you
usually pay more for.
,
MURRAY 3-BP . · M 20'' CUT SIDE
• '.?-· DISCBAIGE W
• MUNtAV MOWEI
14-20011
Get mow for your money with ita Brigp and ·
Stratton engine. tunnel style deck.
fiucl 0 A" loop handle and
manual height adjusters.·
Thing• aure have
changed. 0.01'9•
chopped dowri the
cherry t .... and
couldn't tell a Ue. Th ... day• you can't
find a politician who doem't.
OIWALL 4 LB.
SPLITTllG WEDGE
2~1~ ~ Taaa aome of the grunting
____.._. and groaning out of
llTCBEI DECI FAUCET •4331
OR BATHROOM FAUCET
WITH POP-UP 14201
· TheN non -metallic faucet• go in without
tool.. Corro.ion-f.,.., ao they're great for
n hard water area.a.
c eplitting firewood. Jun gift it a amack
with a aledgehammer.
cub,
~t.ata
try.
ISIOlll
t
:&mg.
t
TURTLE WAI
SUPEI HAID SllELL
CAI WAI
180Z. I" LJOUID IT -123
14 oz. 22• PASTE IT -222
Thia la the Tul'tle'1 l"Mlly tough finlah.
Qi._ y4u a ahine that'll hold up lon9er
than the quickie .tuff.
1 i;, "x2'1"x6'1" HOLLOW
COU SUI DOOU
PRIMED
HARDBOARD 10.59
LUAUN .....
BIRCH 11.79 ~'!°"( _ _. W.t WI .,Uf'-t ....... itut tMy .. tM jeilt.
-~ (TlwJ .... tlwy ..... ~till tM .... 11\tM~~.J
. ..
•
..
MOD IY STAIADYIE
FAUCET IEPLACEJIEIT
CAITllDCD
SINGLE HANDLE 5 97 11228
1WO HANDLE 2 97 11224
COLEllAI COOOll
TUILll
29997
I
l?!OF4BA~
Piela up a Four Pak of C , D or
AA and Nve a bunch. Buy
the AA Four Pall now and
you e&n mail off for a $1
REFUND from Evel"Mdy.
BOMELITE 20'' HEAVY L.. DUTYCAS
• iiiign~ lit~ c~:
' 229~! SHORTY CLUB
TLRO II H
Hefty NW with 90lid .tat. ignition,
Yibration ~lation. aa.fe -t -tip anti·
kickback device, front handgua.rd and more.
EASYDRIVEI
RATCHET TOOL
SYSTEll
2 6!.2
Good idea. thia ratchet driver. Giv .. you a
lot mor. power when drivinq screw• in or
out.
Th ... wrench .. do the job of a bunch of
aocketa by adju.tinq to the bolt at hand.
EVEREADY ECOIOMY
FLASHLIGHTS I
BATTERY OFFER
I ~!BP-2 SHO RTY CLUB
CYO LB
Eveready'• come up with a hot package
deal: Two fluhlighta and four "D " aize
batterie1 for 1 ... than two buck..
4 FT. FLUORESCENT TUIE
84:. SHORTY CLUB
HR S
Hey. that'• one hecku•a price for a
fluoreecent tube, isn't it?
( An..w.r on PAO• D42. in
the Traftl Metion. ) -QUAID STATE
NOTOIOIL
i-~~?
" li. ~~~
30 WT. 69• OT.
20W/80WT. 79•0T.
Y o\a can count on
Nation.al Lum.her to
Nft a clM1 on oll most
&nJ time JOU drop bJ.
'n\le Sa • eood on..
WIAICLD SEAT
COVDS
177!
Got one for staru:l&rd or
mini pickup., high bucket
or low bucket ... t . Colon
are blue, brown or black.
.. ~ ~~.1
Not only stopa J'U8t on
wood.~and
ma.aonry, but p~ it from wat.1' .
wind, fum•, and weather h.atinga .
FNEllCB
CUSTOM llSTALLED
RAii GUTTER
ONE OR 'IWO 167 STORY
100 FT. MIN. LIN. FT.
LESS THAN 187 100 FT.
50 FT. MIN. LIN. FT.
Brown or white en&m•led aluminum.
Pricff are for normal re.id•ntial
installation and dowtUpouu are eztra.
ANCO WINDSHIELD WIPEI
ILADE OR PAii OF
-WllDSBIELD -~~ WIPEI REFILLS ~~~" /199
,, /''/ YOUR CHOICE
If George Wuhinqton wu alive today,
there's one thmo above all el.e he'd be
known for his age.
I
J ,
J
re
'"
I
r·
, , ... •1
11!
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.
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lf,I
4 1 ••
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I ·
--
C6 * Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thur.day, February 18, 11tM
---------------4
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ____________________________ _
'Game' trails after great start
Sidney Sheldon's soapy yarn becom es
a bit seedy toward the waning hours
lund. T he machma u ons of the two
principal characters make the conni v-
mg J. R. of"Dallas" look like an office
cleric and Alexis of "Dynasty .. a mere
nin. The real game here is
mean-spinted people, who infect the
miniseries' fi nal three hours. By FRED ROTHENBERG
NEW YORK -CBS' three-pan.
nine-hour ''Master of the Game" can
be categonzed as the Good. the Bad
and the UgJy. T he miniseries covers
almost 100 years. the last 80 of which
are the dregs.
The Good. with picturesque.
on-location scenery from Kenya. 1!>
Sunday 01ght's ti~t !>tgment. Set an
South Af n ca an the late 19th century,
1t'!ii an exciung adventure yam. with
prospectors, black hats, revenge, der-
ring-do. horses and a honky-to nk
brothel. This is the ki nd of nostalgJc
Western the networks don't make
an) more.
lan C'harleson, as Jamie McGregor.
1s a Scotsman seeking a diamond
fortune. Naive and trusting. he's
duped, cheated and left for dead b>
the town mogul (Donald Pleasencc).
UllNtV •RaAL a TUOIOll TOU• Sil'"" MCA ~,, • U111t cw.• 'Ol 11111<1 c.... It.a'! u ...,
Jamie survives, acts nch and 5Cl$ out
to w reak vcnacancc o n the
double-deale r and bis daughter
(Cherie Lungbi).
Part 11, Monday night, is bad. as an
awful. CBS has ventured slowly into
doing miniseries,' prcfening b11tori-
cal tales like "The Blue and the Gray"
and the u~mina "Gcorse Was hini·
ton." TJus is C BS• bi(Jtst foray into
trashy novels, and pnme time defi-
nitely doesn't benefit from another
nine hours of mindless wallowma.
In this episode, Jamie's corporate
empire has bei:n taken over by his
daughter, Kate (Dyan Cannon). Her
obsession is to keep the business
within the family, and she•n try every
undernanded tnck to make sure her
son (Harry Hamlin) gives up a
promising art career for the company.
Tuesday night's final installment
reOects "Master of the Game" author
Sidney Sheldon's ugly view of man-
The most treachero us is Eve Black·
weU, Kate's IJ'llnddauabter and an
identical twin. Both the devilish Eve
and the anaehc Alexandra arc played
splend idly by Liane La~and. Eve,
like her grandmother. Wlll do anr-
thina to get what she wants, which, tn
this case, means inheriting the family
business.
Perhaps, one reason why the quali-
ty of "Master of the Game" de-
generates from good to bad to wo rse is
because two directors and three
writers split the work. And , then, the
writers were saddled by Sheldon's
woefully sudsy book.
The constant theme of "Master of
the G ame" is that you can contro l
your destiny only by excessively
pulling everybody else's strings.
Miss Cannon, who aaes from t 7 to
90 in the miniseries, said in an
• , • J\ r4 • 1 ' 1, ,.. t ' •• ,.,, ' , t\
SCAAMCE ·• YENTL ..... IMPAC!' , I " ( ' (.I .. t I • I ••....C..C-.-...C:~~ ... ....0-t•A•t C."•.-o.· •11at .... .»>J
LUX URY THEATRES
interview that she was reluctant to
play Kate. "I read the book and didn't
want to do it. She's homblc." Mia
Cannon said ABC bad first crack at
Sheldon's book "but didn't want to
build a miniseries a.round an un1ym-
pathetk character."
Miss Cannon should have trusted
her first instinct&. ln her desire to put
a belier face on the despicable Kate,
she creates an overly broad, 78-rpm
cbAJJcterilltion, in the manner of her
comic pefonnance in "Heaven Can
Wait." Kate's toughness as down-
played, so what's left are evil deeds
from a sli&htly daffy character It's too
paradoxical to be credible.
Miss Langland ste a ls the
black-tinged spotlight by playing
viciou1ness sans moderation.
Sew what's aezt?
A blt of knlttlag?
Actor Ben~eley, who
learned to epln forhta role ln
•oandhl' WW take up wea•-
1.nM for title role 1n '8llu
8arner,' an upcomlnc
made·for-TV moYie. ,., ........ ,.
NBC upsets the Olympic ratings
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Underdog NBC, benefitti~
from its top-rated "The A-Team" and its "Celebrity
minisenes, rolled to its first victory in the Nielsen rating$
this season, as ABC drew d isappointing audiences for the
Winter Olympics.
S. "Magnum. P.l.," CBS, 24.3 or 20.3 million.
6. "Riptide." NBC, 23.5 or 19.6 million.
1. "Knots Landing," CBS, 22.9 or 19.1 million .
8. "faJcon Crest," CBS, 22.1 or 18.5 million.
9. Movie-"littJe House o n the Prairie: The Last
Farewell," NBC. 22.0 or 18.4 million.
1st 2 Ma tinee Showings Only $2.75 Unlm Noted
•3tai34•111il6)6J~ 2553/~c;:y )
NBC. which has been third all season except for one
brief fli ng in the second spot, outpaced second-place CBS
and ABC for the week ending Feb. 12. Based on A.C.
S Nielsen Co. ratings results, released Wednesday, NBC had
an average prime-time rating of 17.5. CBS had 17.3 and
ABC had 17.0.
I 0. "Remington Steele." NBC, 21.4 or 17.9 million.
11. "TV's Bloopers and Practical Jokes," NBC, 21.3
or 17.8 million.
12. Mi niseri~-"Cclebnty" Part 1, NBC, 2 1.2 or 17.7
million.
CRAC KERS
The comedy that dreams the 1mpos.s1ble scheme
fPQ P-. c ~~~ #\~ .....
STA RTS TOMORROW
COSTA MESA
Edwards Town Center
751 -4184
LA HABRA
AMC Fashion SQuare
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MONDAY Timi SATURDAY FACUlTY otCANOHWQOD
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l'\US
"DIUSS LOVE" (II)
The networks say this means that in any given minute
in prime time, a n average of 17 .5 percent of the nation's
TV homes were tuned to N BC.
13 "Knight Rider," NBC, 20. 7 or I 7.3 mill ion.
14. "Barbara Walters Special." ABC. 20.6 or 17.2
mil hon.
In all. NBC placed four shows m the Top IO and nme
in the Top 20. All three of its Tuesday night shows were in
the Top 10: "The A-Team" first, "Riptide" sixth. and
"Remington Steele" 10th.
15. "Facts of Life." NBC. 20.4 or 17.0 million.
16. Mov1e-"Arthur," ABC. 20.1or 16.8 million.
17. "Hill Street Blues," NBC. 19.8 or 16.5 million.
Here are the week's top shows:
I. "The A-Team," NBC. a rating of 26.8 or 22 4
18. "Winter Olym pics:· Sunday, ABC, 19.3 or 16.1
ma I hon.
m illion households.
2. "Simon & Simon," CBS. 26.4 or 22.1 m illion.
19 ... Winter Olympics." aturday. ABC. 18.8 or 15. 7
ma I hon
3. "Dallas," CBS. 25.3 or 21.2 million.
4. ''60 Minutes." C BS. 24.S or 20.S m illion.
20. "Winter Olympics." Fnday. ABC. 18. 7 or 15.6
ma I hon.
-t.'00-
••• NEWS
8CHIPS G EIGHT IS ENOUGH
I TMREE'S COMPANY
HAWAII AVE~
9 MACHEL I LEHRER NEWSHOUR
~ AMENCAH GOVERHMEHT
Cf) C8SNEWS
(tl)ABCNEWSQ
QfJNBCNEWS e cm COLL.EGE BASKETBAU
®MOVIE * * "Stroker Ace" (1983) Burt Rey-
nolds, Lon• Anderson
-8:30-
CD AUCE
Ci) FACE.s Of CUL~
Cf) NEWS
O TAXI
QfJ WHEEL Of FORTUNE
(C)MOVIE * * • •,; "The Day The Earth Stood
Still" ( 1951) Miehael Rennie, Patricia
Neal
COMPANY Ci> MASTEAAECE THEATRE 8 9 '!JV WWT9' Ol YMPICS m DRAGNET m PEOPLES COURT CZl MOVIE
• Wll.D, WILD WORL.D Of * * t,; ·Angelo, My Love" ( 1983)
ANIMAl..S Angelo Evans, Mlchael Evans
Ci> NEW TECH TIMES -t-.30-
(1) TIC TAC DOUGH D QfJ BUFFALO BIU
-8:00-(!) MOVIE
8 ~ P.I. '* * * .. Jugoemaut' (19741 RIChafd I OMieE .. ~~ ... , Hlfns. Om., Slllnf ~, .._._ G HORSE RACING D POUCE WOMAN CID THE GREAT ST AHO-UPS
Cf) SOAP CJ) BIZARRE Q m ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT -10:00-m MOW 8 (I) KNOTS 1.AH01HG
"Benny Hill Festival" (Volume 1KNo D QfJ HILL STREET BtUES
Ottt ) g e ti) NEWS e MONTY P'fTHOH'S Ft YING G LOU GRAHT ~ORANGE COUNTY e NAT\JAE
-QED ltlYSTEAYl G ~AN DYKE C3 AHANCtAL INOEPENOENCE (C)_,..-~ TODAY * * "k:e castles" (1979) Lynn-Holly (C) MOVIE
Johnson, Robby Benton. * * * "Seven Thieves" ( 1960) ~~ G. -Tht Assaatmation ~~~=· -1:00-Game" (1982) Robert C8rrldlne. Lin-Cl).....,.~
I C8S NEWS da Hamtlton * '* "I'm DanMO A$ Fas1 A$ I Ctn'
e ~~YS AGAIH ~~es OI Penzance· 119831 ~82) Jiit Clayt>urgl'I. NICOi Wtlham·
8 ABC HEWSO Ktw1 Khne, Angela Lansbury. _10:30-
0 FANTASY ISLAND (l)MOVIE -n.c"'""N""'.n ~" (!)NEWS **'n "Daffy Duclt's Movie Fantas-..,, IH~~ ~· "~'""""
CD FAME lie Island" ( 1983) Animated Voices :ws MONEY: HOW TO KEEP IT
• JOKER'S WILD by Mel Blanc. CID VIDEO JUKEBOX e BUSINESS REPORT -1:30-_ 11:00-
CO MOTORWEEK D a FAMILY T1£S • DD (I) OJ a NEWS CJ) P.M. MAGAZINE (!)LOVE BOAT e TAXI 9 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT tD PM MAGAZINE a UM CONNECTION • MoNrt PYTHON'S Ft YING a AOWAN & MARTIN'S LAUGH-IN
(I) FAERIE TALE THEATRE CIRCUS CD M•A•s•H CZJ MOVIE Q1D SNEAK PREVIEWS • TOP 40 VIDEOS
t * 1,1i "How To Beat The High Cott C3 THAT GIRL !! =SG=
Of Llvlog" (1979)Susan Saint James, t:OO -
Jessa Lange. • Cf) SIMON& s.;o.. ~~NECESSARILY THE HEWS
-7:30-!! !...,..CHEERS *** Tickel To Heaven" (1981) 9 TAKIHO ADVANTAGE -,.;"~ Nick Mancuso, Saul Rublnt6t. D a FAMILY FEUD m MERV GRIFFlH -11:30-
:.•::::LA=VERNE==' =SH=IR1.EY:;:::::'===..:;:;:MY::::;ST:;EA:;T::;'I =====;i 8 Cf) TRAPPER JOHN. M.D.
''THE .
BEST PICTURE
OF THE YEAR~'
"O E OF THE YEAR'S 10 BE T"
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CD THtCKE Of TME HIGHT
Cl) STREETS Of SAN FMHCISCO e LA TENIGKT AMERICA G 100CLUB
®MOVIE
"To Catch A King" (t983) Robert
W1gner, Teri Garr
(Q)MOV1E * "The Pink Ladles" ( 1980) VentlU
Del RIC>, Samantha Foll
-11:56-
(C)MOVIE * * * * "The 8ndgt On Tite Rlwr Kwal" (1957) Wiiiiam Holden, Alec
Gulnnels.
-12:00-
• ALFRED HfTCHCOa<
PRESENTS I~ NEWS HIGHTUNE * •i..; "Cancel My Rel«vatlon"
(1972) Bob Hope, Eva Mtrlt Saini.
(!) INOEPENOEHT HETWOAK
HEWS .
())MOVIE * ... "That Champlonettip Season"
(1982) Bruce Dem. Stacy KNC:tl
-12::30-D QfJ LATE HIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAH 8 GREAT RECORD ALB4M
COUECTION DLA. TODAY
(f) AOWAN l MARTIH'S LAUOK-*
.., LOVE. AMERICAN STYlE
• GROWING YEARS 9J ENTERT AIHMENT TONIOHT
-12:40-8 (I) MOVIE * * "T npte Play II"
Johnson, John Amoe.
-1:00-
8MOVIE
(1972) Artt
**Yi ··Tite P90Plt Next Door"
( 1970) EM Wallach, Julie Harns
DMOVIE ••Yi "Doc:1ors· Wrwd" (1971) Dyan
fD~ Ridlatd Crenna
•*Yi "Hudson's Bay" ( 1940) Paul
Munl, Gene Tierney.
• AU IN THE FAMll. Y
a 11>\0!\ a KUIM/10 10 uum IWOln cum
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NOW P.LAYINQ
KIPtlT KACI 673-1350 llMll 634 2553
'1>WARO$ U>O SV\JfY CNOOMC
t Ulm .W • LAClMA t1U.S MALL 7ffll
• ..._ TlllHii IT TU llUTE
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STAATS FRIDAY
Mlllll 17998SO
PAC!Ft AIWflM OR If
.0529 5339 ..,,... 911(.A
CllTA IUA 546 2711
EOW.UOS SOOTH ~T PUlA
celTA IDA 97Mm
f.DWAAOS IXIM COOO
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COWAAOl FOUlllMI VAl.Ltt
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EOWAAOS W0008RC)G(
LA ... (2131 al06ll
NI( (ASJO SOtM
...._ IUCI 497 1111
cow~ SOUTH COAST LAGl.N
-'342SS3 sYUNIXDM
...-10 ftl·l93S
lDWUOS CIOA Wf.Sl
lllt•'fll 891 9693 ,~ ll*AY 39 I» IN
IN TERMI SS ION
Saddleback College
'_Birdie' takes fliglit
beginning Friday
T:wcoty _yean ago "Bye Bye Birdie"
played at Ora nae Coast Coll~e with a
female lead by the name of Diane Keaton.
It was local audiences' last look at this
musical ~bout a rock singini idol whose
draft notice sparks a fantastic publicity
stunt (more than a little inspired by the
induction ofEJvis Presley). Until this
weekend. that is, when "Bardic" reappears
on. th~ stag~ <?fSaddlcback Collcac in
Massaon VtCJO.
Brian Donoghue is directing the show,
wruch features Bruce Bierman and Deena
Driskill in the leading role$ with Steven
Clifton as the title character. Other princi-
pal players are Katherine Jensen, Troy .
Maddo-. Don Formaneck and Suzy Bailey.
Terry Newman and Rick Allan handle the
musacal and vocal direction with Patti
H ublcr doing the choreography.
"Bye Bye Birdie" opens Friday for a
two-weekend run with performances Fri-
day, Saturday and Feb. 23-24.2S at 8 p.m .
and matinees this Sunday and Feb. 26 at 3
p.m. C.all 831-4656 for ticket information.
Complctin'1 theirengaf,emcnts this
wcekcndarc' Brigadoon 'atthcHarlequin
Dinner Playhouse, "Terra Nova" at the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse," A Streetcar
Named Desire" at Golden West College
and "Starting Herc, Starting Now" at the
Gem Theater.
Toi
Tnus
Sunday at 3 p.m. 10 the Actors Playbox.
Reservations 895-8378.
"Starting Herc .. concludes tonight
through Saturday It 8 and Sunday It 7:30 It
the Gem, 12852 Main St., Garden Grove.
Rcservatfons 636-7213.
Other productions continuing their re-
spective runs at local thcaten are:
•"Mass Appeal" with Martin Milner at
the Grand Dinner Theater, 7 Freedman
Way, Anaheim (772-7710), runrunJ niJbt·
ly cxc:eit Mondays at varyi· na curwn umes
throu March 4.
•" e Pirates of Penzance" at Sebas-
tian 's West Din.her Playhouse, 140 A vc.
Pico, San Ocmcnte ( 492-9950), W edncs-
days through Saturdays at 8, Sundays at I
and 7 p.m., until Feb. 26.
•"Man of la Mancha" at the Curtain
Call Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino Real,
Tustin (838-1540), nightly except Mon-
days through March 25.
•
Thriller of a doll
Ot~ Coast DAILY PILOT!Thuf'ld•Y, Februll)' 18, 1084
Moore comed;y
tops box office
on 1st weekend
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -.. Unfa.ilhfUlly Yuur1,"' a
ncwQOmcdy stamna Dudley Moore and Nut.a.ssaa K.inlki, 1 topped box office charts durinJ its tim wttkend. ,
A remake ohhe Preston Sturges-Rex Hamson film,
"Unf&ithfWly Yours" grossed S3.8 million in it rclcUc
last weekend. 11
The 20th Century-Fox movie topped Lbe hiahly d
succes ful "Terms ofEndeannent" in poss reccjpt for the
week.
But ''Terms of Endearment," after 12 Wttkl 10 ..
theater1, C()n.tinucd to abow strongly. It earned $2.)
million durina the weekend for the No. 2 spot and has
arossed $72. 7 million m 12 weeks.
"Silkwood" was iM week's third-highest srossina
mova~ eamjna S 1. 9 million in its ninth week..
Kere are the top-gro ina films of the past weekend,
followed by tbe weekend's ~•PU. total r~1plS to date
and weeks in distribuuoo:
J, .. Unfaithfully Yours" (20th-Fox). $3.8 m1l1100, I
week.
2. "Terms of Endearment" (Paramount), $2.3
million, $72. 7 million, 12 weeks. 3. ''Silkwood" (20lh-Fox). $1.9 million. $27.7
million, 9 wecka.
4. ·•Never Cry Wo1r· (01sncy), $1 .6 m1lhon. $1 8.8
million. 12 weeks.
S ... Reckless" (MO M-UA), $1.6 m1U1on, $4 7
million, 2 weeks.
6. 0 Angcl .. (New World), Sl.3 million, $7.3 million. 6
weeks.
7. "Sudden Impact" (Warner Bros.). S 1.1 million.
$63. 7 million, 10 weeks.
Nuy a movie house in town
BURBANK (AP) -You can make a movie 1n
Beautiful Downtown Burbank but you can't su down and
watch one.
Indoors, that 1s. Burbank. a major movic-makmg
center, docs not have a single movie theater altho \.l&h it
does have several drive-an screens.
"Brigadoon" stars John Culver and
Cheryl Crandall and runs tonight through
Sunday at varying curtain times at the
theater, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd.just oonh of
Costa Mesa. Call 979-5511 for reser-
vations.
Dou~as Rowe is direct mg "Terra
Nova,• a drama set in the South Pole,
which Jives its final performances tonight
through Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at
2:30at the Moulton, 606 Laguna Canyon
Road. Laguna Beach. Reservations
494-0743.
•''A life in the Theater" at the Irvine
Community Theater in Tunic Rock Com-
munjty Park, Sunoyhm Road offTurtle
Rock Drive, Irvine (857-5496), Fridays
and Saturdays at 8 p.m. through Feb. 25
with a 2 p.m. matinee next Sunday.
•''Deathtrap" at the Newport Theater
Arts Center, 2501 ClifTDrivc, Newpon
Beach (631-0288), Fridays and Saturdays
at 8p.m. through March 10.
•"Chekhov in Yalta" and "The
Chekhov Sketchbook" at the Newport
Harbor Actors Theater, 390 Moote Vista
St., Costa Mesa(63 l-5 l 10). "Yalta" plays
Thursdays through Saturdaysat 8, Sun-
days at 7, through March 4; "Sketchbook"
runs Mondays and Tuesdays at 8 through
Feb.28.
A new lllcbael Jackaon doll,
ahown here bl front of b1a
""Tbrlller" album CO'Yer. la OD
dlaplay at the annual lnter-
nadonal Toy Fair ln New York.
Manufacturera un•ellecl 4 ,000
new item• they hope wU1 cap-
ture the fancy of children and,
ln the caae of the doll, lllcbael
Jackson fana.
The last walk-m theater, the Cornell, was com down
about 1975.
Burbank is the borne of the Burbank: Studios, made
up of the merger of Columbia Pictures and Warner Bros.
and probably the busiest movie studio in town, the Wah
Disney Studios, and the NBC Studios.
Golden West brings its "Streetcar" to the
end of the line with final performances
Thursday through Saturday at 8 p.m . and
642-4321 •
Direct or collect,
to sub.!cribe to your
hometown paper, the . . Daily Pilal
THE BACKLUND FAMILY
<Owners)
Villa __ Swedet)
Swedish
~Smorgasbord'
& Bakery
SINCE 1961
BANQUET FACILITIES
UP TO 100 PERSONS
538-3033
122 IWI ST. AT a. llnmtll IOOI
VISIT OUR OTHER LOCATION
873-4091
Jiii f, OUST IWY. lllHA IEL U1
, •
Call 642 -5678.
Put a lew words
to work lor ou.
A 'NOtU.D WIO( l'ICT\.JRL.S WlASl
llU §29-5339 IPGe».
IUICI 63H553 • MMNBMAPWA
ctsll IUA 979'141
£0WAROS CllEMA C£N1ER
ll TMt ~15880
£DWAROS SAOOl.lBACll
lJClll lllCI 497 1711
£0WAROS
SOUTH COAST I.AG~
ANAHEIM l3t-l770
SYUFY Stadium Or. In
9UENA PARK 121-4070
Pacific Buena Ptt. 0 I
COSTA MESA 711-4114
Edwards Town Center
EL TORO 111*lllO
Edwards Saddleback
SYUfY CNOOMt
Sii aaon 492-0056
MIRAMAR MATR£
llSmlSTU 8913935
£DWAROS CNMA W£Sl
llfTTIU (liJ) 943·6402
PACIFIC'S WHITlWOOO
FOUNTAIN VALLEY a-1500
Edwards Fountain Valley
llltSIK>N VIEJO 415 9220
Edwards MiSSIOn Vie10 Mall
NEWPORT BEACH 144-G7IO
Edwards Newport
ORANGE 137-o:MO
AMC Orange Mall
ORANGE 134-3111
UA City Center
"'Broadway Danny Rose' gets the new year off to an
exhllaratln& start:' Vincent Canby. New York T1m95
·: . .It's a dandy
entertainment'
-Gene Shallt.
NBC ·TV. The
Today Show
·: .. hilarious ...
one of his very
best..'.' -Janet
Maslin. New
York Times
--·-Susan lltne ,........ ... ~.
Md lloorrl ... ,."" ........... ,
Glm!WilliHSC
iuc .. 11n n~1
~rekJotte
'MHCllt•
ROOert Greenhut
"11tf• .... Mt:tlll •• Woody,.
··OICiOl'f '"CIUlll'i 11,, ,,~_, ·---""'---. -·'--· IPGI~
NOW PLAYING •
COSTA IESA -EDWARDS SOUTH COAST PLAZA
8RIS I Ol " SUllH()W(R S4~ 2111
IUITllCTOI IEACI OUICE
EDWARDS HUNTINGTON 8'8·0388 UA CITY CENTlR 634·3911
8001 Bl.VO AT MAii I (ll IS IH It« CITY SIClf'l'llC COO f.R
AND OPENING FRIDAY AT THESE THEA.,_.
lACUU WCI GUICE
EDWARDS SOUTH COAST AIM:. ORANGE MALL
497 1711 637·0340
SO l:Oo'$1 HltY A I lllOAOllA I JUSTIN SO Of LllCXO
0tz& Served 3:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.
Sunday 12 Noon to 10:00 p.m.
ntS IS TK SJOQV Of A SMAU. TONN
THAT LOST ITS DREAMS. A1'0 A BIG-CITY KD
WHO BROUGHT 11-IM 8.ACK
STARTS TOMORROW
MIU
~8'ul'lll~
~S338
COITAlllUA EOWlnlsHnor ,...,
631 3501
COSTA~
["'*J<ds low~ r ..,..,
,~, 418'
El TOM ..._...,
EOwll'Cll ~· [OwJnll ~" • 511S8IO .... ~ ""'°"'"* NACM • DMm EO#ltdll HunllftOIO'I C"'ldome Cft!N l4l-O:l88 63' ~
~
( 0-Jtc!S WoootlnOQt
C<Mma S5' 066~
•·@&ij _,..,.._
OMllGt
Pacific l ClrlftOI
~ l'l 63'19361
wun.sTEll
Pac* l Ml Wir l9
°'-"' .,.,.,
• l'IU'SDl1T.I) IPI en--
DINNER SPECIALS
Atjust $7.95, nowS
the time for prime.
FRIDAY
New York
Steak*~ -..;;:==== SATURDAY
Filet
Mignon*
SUIDAY
Teriyaki
.Brochettes*
4.45
4.45
3.95
...
,
-=~===
Prime Ri1> Dinner " pccial.
uart Anderson• complete Prime Rih dinner
cry ni,tht of the week for ju~ i.95 .
• We•re cck~ratinJ \"alentine' I l. oll •
~-..-ck. Fcbniary 12-18. ome join UA!
I
C8 Orange C"C>ut DAILY PILOT/Thursday. February 18, 1~8-4
..
Soft pack or new Flip-Top box.
Either way, you get a lot to like. -
... , ___ --.::a
~-··1 U'
!
i
·---·-) -..........
. ...._,_,__. -----
ar oro
L IG1-r rs
The spirit of Marlboro in a low tar cigarette.
Warn ing : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
't ..
11 mg "tar:' 0 8 mg nicol!Oe av per c1gare11e , FTC Report Mar '83
Box 11 Jng "tar:' 0 8 mg mcotme av per cigarette by FTC method
: .
.. . .
~------------
CLASSIFIED .
INDEX
REAL ESTAT£
""'ortel Analwtvn HU.lo
•1-. la.lalld a.ii:-P.n1,_i.
~poaltano Beot h
Qwono dotl M~t
0-U M-Dana l'l>inl •T""' t'Wn\a>n V•IW,.
H\11111~ S...·h
Hun1 tt.n-r ltvuw I.Acuna 8orwh l.lcunA H 111.1 ~N....-1
lAJ.to """'"' M-V~JD
14.wponS..l'I s..ncw-n ...
S.n JUAI\ C.•P""''""" s.n .. /VIA
9nl....,
Soulh l...ic\I,,..
SU.-. lliNm n-n
Wee\l'Nr:.-t.t Mob~HAn-..,..
A~\t ...-h Ptoport) ...... ,_ Pt-opty
°"""'IHY Lo\t Comml Ptoi><'ny
CondommJ .. ITII
0upi. .... , UNU
"-w be Moved
'"""'""' l'ropoort y lndua1r1al Prupty
l,oU 10< Sal~
Mubtl~ Homr I'•~
... oun1-1n I~• ar..,,..c..
Ou• ol Coun•v
Ou1 ol St.au. "-"""'"' ,..,,,,..
='~y
LI!.~ Ill.I!. Wani.d
RENTALS
ttou.e~ ~ Unlu""61wd
~rum..-.,,
Unlu......i.d
Cando rum
o..>do Uni
T-""°"'"· lum T-n"°"'" Uni
o...pi... .. '"""' Ouf>Mus Uni
~1.tf\unlolwd ~1.t UnJ ~"'Vnl
"-" .. ao.ni
Kol.ola Molooa c.-. Homft Surnn>H~t.ala v .... uon R.nt.ala
•II.mt.ala ID Shan
'~IAIA Wan...S
Oar.,. '"' Ren• Off..,. Rent.ala
... .-!Wnt.ala
Comm! Renl.<
lodual R<ont.ab
Sier or
M,. Rent.ab
BOATS
Chartr< Rl-nl c.;_,..1 ,..,.,,...
S.11
511""'1 Siu Man~ Equip
M•1nt 1,SrrvK?
Shi» 4t °'"•·a..
SIDr• Supph•"I-lrulru!"U<ln
Sail-rd•
'l .
7(110
1011 1111J
1nu
7018
7018
1020
7012
7024
102e
7028
tHURSOAY, FEBRUARY 16. 'BM
642-5678
ON THE CANAL 38r 2be.
$1200 ..... cpt&. 2 lrple,
~~ar. no pet•
PlRI MEWPOAT
lPlRTMUTS
""'°"~~So.
170016 Str"1
(It l)ot,e)
MZ·SUl
J
I
$2.17 per day
J h•I e All yow pey fOt
3 ~ so de'yt In,,.
DAlY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY ""a lhe tAVl~C. MIRROR
111'4 H• HUHTtHOTON ur .AUiCOM8 R 9¥., I
Wet!neitd•t 11
"'~ ..,,,. ctlat~'
t,All. TOOA'f'll
UI f•Llll
(•.NI 0..ly P 11(,I
~ 1~ 01recti,ry
~r..etil•llvl
142-4121 td. IOI
Aar~•lt
Hr1 ....... 1, • 1S,,e1no lo"
J~'""' .,..l(hl llll(j
befl•c·UI U1·41H
: HOROSCOPE
MOln.t wlll ~ In ,,.,,
C M hOtnl "9i•aete Md
teec>Oflllb61 ~
rel•• M11 Llllleton
-4e0-t01t
SYDNEY
0MARR
., I•• llr••l•r
2'11
•G!H~* A4141•ble • ...,.,, ,, .....
C1tOI ~ eeo..3213
lo Go-Cet1a
WMS.V. !tie '*' Aol4 'em off ttt. tMfll-' Wlthl~AIJ
8£LL 1011 111m1 with 1 ~-C_tlM_How1 __ 64_2·_H_7_1_
D..iy Pttot ce.Mlfted Ad Cl......_, Ada, your on.-
142·N7t tt~ ~ c.nw
PtrNUlt HU ltl Waa... 1111 1111 Wf!... llM •11 Waat.. llli ltl1 WHt.. 1111 ltlt Wut.. 11!1
Clloul IF •Lm• .... * oo kk••P•'. tull PIU/.-PIY ••••• ••--uy
CompanlOn/HOYMtlMPtf Utlfge/JunlOf AOCOIHI· llJLY PILIT PUT/TiilW•I Npt"::A rm:.:.,.-. 1111111 ~~rt~n~y~·r Xl~~t~ ~ ~e.'Zt= Now 1cc1pllng appll· Opportunlllea avallabl• motivated, tJCP~•I 7 '" HO HAAIOA BL VO catlOn• IOf OtttrlCI Man-With the lot Anoti" Sec'y Thi• ch FULLUtTOH wom.n who le le>c*lniJ for ment fltm, 11~'-'~ ..,,_ to tuperv!M Mlln-T'--C1r-·"'1tlon ........ po.ltlon r-ci\Jlr.. rlct I r:;mlt*'t llVe In tlltU· with ~lted K · -..--,.,,.. ...., .,.. 1 ""--" & of .lM 1" pee>« cetrl«• l lW>uld p 1 r 1 men t 1 n 0 11 r attent on to ..--• . II In Newj)Of1 llieictl 5 COYntlna pref Pie... h...... ,.,.,.... .................... ........ •• o d~ ---,.,. potentltal fOf .O· l IAYl I Wiii 09Y wortc -ti lnol9 911 a Miid reeurne lo P 0 8oJ1 _... .,...._._ .. , VVV" """ ,_......._...... Offtcl Mot
aq &Yn Othlt dayt Ria.Ible I 7 0 I . '2 I . H ••PO,' l'IMt ec>PMtenc:. a entoy ..... ptogt•m ~.,.,,.. ~· :o.e..2 '° eo aq tt ATTRACTl\I! Time on )Ob for hObbtM ~.CA t26M-t1ot wor1llng with Younott•• teed hOufty WIQI plua f' rlda~. f'r·bruary 17 t 641·8032 M.\88LWl8!8 "A 11 o-n ,.1 no MwltleYel/an, Weoortor edmmlM'On Hourt tAM "'-r11-.
h ' I I c f) d f f f TO &EAVE YOU :..!' .... ~1 ... :_k :..1.1• r..,, llllllDll Pletc ~ Ho comi:>.ct 10 2P"', -"P"' to tP"' -~-' T ... AH.ff'.~ 1 "'"''-I i\1ir1 11 •& ecp cir 1n 11rmat1on 1 2280 aq " watlhou .. / .,,..,,._ .,..,., .... ... -··•---"" "' '" .., ... r ,, .. ,.,,,(.111 '"'II I 'ln1r Ufl Wllh complclt' \lCJ~ lnd1v1dual who had ....,.,.,ttor ..... -.oe an. OPEH2•HOVM 1ngll1h •P••k lng IT , to •one with accoun· Ctalt OOd Nltaty. ~ helnlng It provlO•O aw El omo. ....-
II f • • I j .. ..,,... _... ..... -714/155..ato.c. 8-6 tant, 10 m.intain inor.... 909 lllowanee, COfl'IC>"'Y Pot4Nttlat 10 Mtn l300 Y oro · --1,.·1·11 ··~ ·'"' •· ;.. Ill 1111w "' \It or 1merv1ew 11u c..ou < rnc~ ext 1t1ng pro1 1v. of 1110-C M ....... ..._.... In Olvmt FlexJbtt h beneftta ancJ bonu• ~ ~·Pl'_...-FOf.,, In· typing a nd dictation
P'''"''' ;.. h tl• 111 111111 r" •ii rr\C',tH h 111 while c..hrtktnK out lttnllry l><>'1k warehOUN 30t per aq t1 WIOfWORLOtif'-tt t7 Aceount.m "-' &tit• F~ .pptm 642•27~1 port11ntty APC>fy Jn pet· lll'vilw call 1q u l PP mint •k 1111
'f A I f\I \I J\ pr ti 11 I Ma) llJ> Ue pcllt'ftll ve. re<..(: pl Ive ;ind IJVe full ulll paid (800) 531·07'7'5 ~11101 OrM Maq 81113/3 Oevalopment firm fl· eon 11 Dally Pilot Cltt411• '714,1957 23e 1, E.ct 1204 n1c11ury Call Toni ,,1.,, ,,, ,,,,, 1111tu;il,1Jrtt1\1 lfi \<.t'n;.r111 c..onu11n\ 11ur11 uf romanc.-~, tt lnCNd• omc. Qul111 lndlvlOual to kMc-. 8ecletaryfor t1on Offlcl 330 w e.r 768-5571
II II I I • d • I f> 7th • "'a.....t•· ••• •111 handle • variety of IC· 0 1v1loper In C M 8 1 C M Mon thru Fr UTI WI ••tv tr-•..._.. 1• ,,,,. JIH• .. , ,,.,.. ·,•1u c-r m11rr v11a nrc<J<" antJ a 1vr IMC'\ ~" ..... __ • ... _.6 .. ..... ... ...........
121001 ~1114 COUfltlno .ctlvl111e, Com· ... eture, 1ap1111nc:eo 3pm to Ol)tn No phone Mldntghtto a 30am ... /hi Pll •tlll '• ryr, 11.111"•<;\ plJ 1 111r1rr1111r111 r11lr\ mo pvttf bated Ql account· only Send rMUme wtth c:en. Mr HOiiand ~ 8ch 848·~ •
f,f'.MJSI l \1.1·, 11 111111 ]IJJ f u<.u\o n pnut11 al11y m1mc)' futurr CM ec>PfOll 3000 tt lneid• flOllTl/llllLI 1no, caeh ptannlng, A/P Mitty ttq\ilt"'*"te 10 EOE G .. Earn '300-1700 W.-ly "''''IH 1, .111c.J c ,,(,1;u" w11h .,,,~,.rnmcnu.I aicnt1e\ I mpha\J\ <Jn 500' office Oht llW:lttrt P"' Outceu ONLY 13a..8199 A/A Poaltion r-ciulr" 393 Ham#lon, C2, Coa1• .,,.,., OnlOe/MCret1ty CMh plkS deity Ho Clf'I·
(·.rrr11rt"• 1;,111'\ \<J\1nu\41cu11Jnl\i1lld<atnhtytr1knowwhcn11 "deal"ha, a t4e<>1mo ~·1269 •'coutlng <11gr .. or MtM,CAt2827 wteome eccto U4' for vaMlng P'-MGal
r • -T= _. :ifif1 9*11 P1"M MtlO llU 1111 WllTD atnl manuf11C11Mlng flfm In 56•·2031 Of 054-<t&U ,,, •11.111~ c ,,,.., d I'''" t c1'vt'J\li.1) )''>Ur wcl<.c1mc' ti Jilt I.~.. ~ 10 Dile....,..._ SM. 'ult/time ctayt a.. OultOI 11V1ne Mu11 bt gOOd bef tam or 1:>91 l-7pm (A'( f':R tJuttr ll J ul ~ 221 Ani111c method\ \uc.u·cd -mram n y04JI -• Mc L.eOtllan inv .. tment need• COUNTER"' HiiJI. 11 495 ! 17th St c M tyP11t w/aorne computer
,, .. ,,.i 1,. 1111( lilw11 , ,,..,..,. 111 l flit\\ I ocu' on fltx1h1ltty, vrna1il1ty and thla ..-try .... 111-1212 Co 1400 Oo¥a St ,..,,. prt4• cu• cttc:or110< • · ••P Mr1 Witt 978-tOIO llSllllllT
1111111'11 I 1HI. 1 •11nrr~t11rm hr1nii\ l l1"\lru<:t1vc re•ult\, ptn\ you an lllAIJ&rr• 111 Whit• ma'9 -..._, o•Y POf19etcitl. t2eec> ~~ ... :;::JU: flurnttur~=YI war• ,.. __ lllllAL""" ~~·~~
11q1• .r t.11il J1 lm111·1 Artro. I tl'>r<f nllllVt."\ fi"ure p rominently W1f1t .... 1..... t11en01 &U·HOO or 1191 hfl MOn/tmOket hOuN htlpef Mu .. bt vvwtl MtM. Aec>ty to AO
l.f',O I liJI . .'\ '\ uv 1.11 I 11llow thruu&h on hrttl 1mprcuiuni. Luruir "Un Petit o.tourne au 1.11 637,.ne U. :1111111 ~2eN 1tt e 30pm ,,..,, nu~ a ·~ to • 111 , O.itv '11101, 8o• llLlll
',, I 1yhl1vht\ t1nW1((. 1ntu111nn &nd c;.onfidencc Somc<1nc behind ~VIC Ou Vin !t 0.. m...,. o······ t~lnll Cell.,..,., 15e0, c M ~282! !icp'd Mdregof Yaontt,
•1 • ,,,., ... ,,,~ f,,, •'"" he \t intrrt\I\ D rama11c. <..<1nfron1<1t1cm fcaturu Aotee" c a11 tor r1Mr 4112 The Otano• COP' Ollty ... 75t·M22 llllUl .,,.. tht PtlC*ltta, C.M
1111 1111>' r 111 r1pp11\11• \rX lt'ndi. lljll<C' lO life "'•tlOna 841•7335 ett I Ptlol NII en ~t ~· Petllllmt tvtf\l~e "f:l. OILIVEWV' petlOn Apply 8ecr1tary 10 work In 11111• -
v Ute.o I" Ulf. } \ \r1.11 n J M oon In your ""' emphatl/C\ SCRAM LETS Of pcttuf'llty fOf a '*.., •• OIPreoo'•. 2 17 elf· AMen e.ctc l'IOfllt. 209. IMMMltlful congenial oftlet •
f)f l'V1ll.1lr1, ·.pH111L 1ppt•M4(1(1"'\ t1minaandelcmentofluc k \cn~of • Ol&TAllUTORIHl,8 ori.nled M•IOf A(.(:ount IAlwAd.Cott•~ 17th8t.C M ,8am-6pm If! HI With lf'lttf .. flng C!M'HUMllAloe.8
L f I d . c. .. ,, eualnlH w. £.11.Wlllll wtth a proven o······ ... ____ worll Type 80 •Pf'll 7•m·3 aoc>m & pan time <Jirrr t1vn 1\ ,, ,,,,,rcJ .,,,u m<1ir.t' \U~" u new atan 1n neow 1rcct1o n ANSKDS provio. money fC>f •~ track racoro 0 ,.11 ..,. ~ttretor• Saleiy corn,,,enaur•t• 31)m·7PM ~MM be-
e .i!IO•C'r l•t1 l\qudrtu'./"'Y1n\play "&n1fit an1rolet """ penalon Ill '°''Ilona po11n1111. gu111nteeo PUT/Tm "'"' wllheap Hl-2000 t-..ntOWn&&om.Mon
1.J81tA l\q>I 21 >•I 71) It 1• ltnlt' to d1 Vt'rt1fy -outmoded Hurrah ;~t training & 1 SONOCO Or aw 1g1(n11 COM· S~l9tly Orug 9tore It AAI! YOV ectventuroua. .... .. ---lhlu ,,. &.49·~1
111111 r d 111• 111 •\I Y.'• 11111 <trr ready to t>c "modern " P opularity ~ ~ .. t>te tteff 10 Wei you In Mt rn1uion e>.elr• 10 move Mliklng matUfl euhlet/ neit1Jmon.y,10V1101r•v· r ..,.... --i~---•
111• ,..;,...,' "''''''''11111111' molt1ply and key I\ to De !W'lrc t1vc l..1in1 M .. b8~,1L,OR1 -• ting up OUR OWN Into man~t • C>tlJI NIM ~k to WOfk on • et? A ctllf0fnl1 manvfac-5 dayt, OOod Ol)p()ftunlty ~ ~
I ... 1 Y ,.um .,, "' • .. wey• PAJllT OR FULL TI ME 'eno reevmt 10 permanent p1rt/llm1 turlng 00 hU °'*"""' ~~9-8181 Mr Hall Pert/time lv1nlno• I ,,.,,,,,, • ;,II ,, ild 111 .•11.o· r>'1011'>lr travr . ecluc;.atwn pu,, 11h1na, bflliJ'1 lng abC/u t her BUSINESS p 0 lo• 16&0 bnle. 30 houtt/W.-10 . .., WMkend• Good phOne
\( ORl•Jo "., t }. I • •• ,..,. l I J lk' rc;:idy ''' rrvtll<', review and tx>yfrfend &•y• ha rwv11 INVEST ,3,996 10 l &O.OOO Coet1 MtN. 92828 for 1 Otal• a guyt, '1 a Hen• Chrtatlan Yacht• vOIC4 Al6c tor Kath'(.
r• 1 .... 1r1 ''" .1111•" • 1111.11111· \1111111rrr l 1iri;u ()(J\111110 h1Kt1l1u~1111 friend\, te1• grut grow ufldet hit w1nat.on·&e.lem·KOOI• fOf Tll lllU 1111 over, to travel Callf0tnle, ..-1ng • ..... I man· 751·8t22 .. I Th , , te 10 Sen M,~IVI Laa VegM, Haw.it & t 1 egernent train.I for Long ---1 '•l"" .1'.Jlll·lll•1l1' ,1htl1l / l•· w·t )'f)Ur ''"""way . I lr m cnt\ ,,, Vlll<1ry .., ., I becleuN,,. I 1 &00·:241 228& N9wport w"tlfn ...... with <XII ~office Muet be••· ......
,,, 1111 wn1 "''" .• 1i ... i11 "tx.und from rcu·n1 \Ctl'>-'11<.k •SAILOR litlannfl 4014 """'* .. 1up1rvlHd martcatlng Plfl•ne.d 11uor Call 8uay l)hOMI, Ofcttr I.Ming \A(,fT1AIUI'i 1•~11. 2L l>cr 21) f'<KU' 11n pr<JmutHin, d1.u11'C, SPIRITUAL REAOIHOi -: E.11p needed In ., ... 01 WI t..m dttnonatratlng • a.offat213/434-20780t and wrlttno. vtatllty )Ob
t11.1l• •Y•1• ,. 11 t 11d . 1d 11.11 "'"" lt:n .Jtultl y tt>''pull urin~\ " If ;ivc lat t\i1t AOV1C41 In .,, m.iter• Love. * AJ * 0111 Input benk rte1 PIT 8~ drug ltOfe revolu110nary n9W prod· 213/'23· '290 Qood phone manner,
11.111•1 ' h• l ~ ·,1111,., 111.11r 11,1I vt 1dca• on P•pcr Mcm~r of uppc>\lle ;1:;,r'~·n!.:.i1..,bual~e•1•6 10 w9)'1 to mt61e mon.y • •uto A1P
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AOdltlonai ~'...=!:f.. 1 c.::1u~: ~ M~ a '::e!..'°":,j ........... math ~udl Ind '*1
.,. , 111 · ••,11 w 1111.111•rn r11.iny arca,th;,1hadt>ccndr,.l'>w1lln11wht 8o E•"""'cA-... _ .1 .... blnlflta CellH3-85TO <luti.. wlll be fifing/in. 11tqto ""'" ,...._ handwriting req Ptwl •"""" -· Hon 1c ef WOfk on• P9'tn"*'t Pll trllnlnO ••.,.,,._ .,.io Pwt/l~ wt11 wortc Into aubmlt 111ume ano • r I'' ~ II ,, ,, •.I , •< 11rmr111 Clem Uc o 482 72" E1ec:utlv1 ..-1 3 k9)' ~:1:np~7.1282tm~11i>f beala 30 Na.-Trantporlatlon fyrn· full/I~ a.n.nte & gooc1 Mlary requirement.I to
CAl'llHOltl'fl ,,., 'J'1. lJt1 11>1 lnw·kcy:.pp10a<hb1111 ... dn1rc-<J Wttlf al .... ~for bullneN IA· ' JmlllUllll lthed,teturngyttante.d w1Q91-~lhepeeklng Kon~ Mtdlcel Corp
I • r I.,.,, •111 dl\l.1111< (l/U1111Ull1(4110rl, J;in&U41¥f', f;,m1ly Ile\" P•fl•on a ..... ~lf'~ell &llTMl.DI., 111011nMICJull01,H8 Hlgtl ..,,,.'1: ltart Im-OWn ra;:y,runnlng yt. 5452 8wlntM 01 Hllnt·
r n1.11 1,.,,111•.r1 i.11tlrh11ht\ l>'"''lilr 111urnry. '''mprchen,uin r>f t,ptrttual r~ 2~:.fr ~':'.~ ~':v• ':.~~ ,~: :~~=-, .. :.:.an~':. t 11.,.,1c,_ -~:f .. =
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.d ,, I 1 o '" I 1>.r ''-\I •1rp11q><'IWJn\ figure p11,m1ncntly p 0 m 0 n 1 9 1 c M c a11 fOf lnteNMw tnmar 11,v•c• Qooo lb perlenc.cJ ~ In .,. .. , -"
A(ll AH II \ 1 r.,,.-,,, I d 1 I ~> Be wary where crrd11 '' c.on«rncd lt3· 139 1 nt 30e (7141432·1784 mec,h aptitude required Newport ~ ""· lull -Hl!l!OIO towortc In orewt Part time CL!AK with
lr11 ~ r.t11• fM ,rrw11I\ .111il 1 ~1unt your l hanar fnd1v1c.Ju1I who Found 21'7 1 mo fem IL.111 PAoullll wa wi11 tr ain Pey oom· :!:'!C,:" 7141432·118t ":~~ltt ~~11!i. ~ =. ~~ ~~:::!. ,~~*:'~
'''""""'''"''''II 111.1. ,1• 111.111. lw-f1u;u111;1Jly rm~rrntcd Know 1t, ht-btn/wt'll tebby c•t, _,,, IUYlll lll .. l•I men1Yrat1 wlff•Pft' Call Nl!WP--1,~H ed,ln.ured Ctllforappt C)Oft hac:tl ., .. H lhr
·•II rtl1.1111,111il ~··•p•1pl1•1r1,oprn J>unlcp1ct e\willfall1nto plac.e tac.. a..cti a W1trw • M~H8'1rom9to 4for Deer l ube Grenctma We.,. looklnil tor two ~,H2·8207 Call 7 141432-1191 fOf
f>l\f f'.\ 'I• I I / \1.111 11 }llJ i\lfccment' \hould h(' 1n I.cp l fufrn HO 8t3-1311 eltl 30e ln&ll. n• M an tn..,VllW :i:-.... ~ .. M~.,~hfl: enthue4Mtlc, frlendty. tJI• llllllllPll Oelalle
1.1> • 1 r.it, "Y ,,,, yr.111•• ti whrrr )11ur M'CUflly 11 c ont crncd f (J(.;u• o n Found 2 "'°'Old fem pup Al>Mnt .. owner/men~ 1n111no mom wortc• 1 am cud· perieno.d people to join and cart '°' e6dtrly cou· PART Tl~I!
rr\p• r !111111 .111111111 11 1 .u1d • h,111tr llJ lfllfCll~ tn<:ome polent11J In Frern;h P1n1, 8 A mutt .. 11 1pecl1lty UOIPTJlllll d19y, ~and Mey to our IMtn WI ofttt I fUI pie, 5 OY9 pr wtc Mutt Computer Tetmlnal &
\:11.r ,,1,1 ,, ••"''I'"''''' rrl;ilrrill\ 111ope1a11vc rfforta t>uatneH partnt'r 8 1k/lan, Dtnl tall women• appar .. lhoc> 1" mrntdl•I• OPlf'll"G for love Cell Wiiiiam'• paoeo. ~Ing Pol-h•V9 reft e,.u..1421 P1lnttt leNlOe treH\M
• r• ·"' • ~ prlme CdM loeallOn frl•f'l<lly w~rOOl'llld mot,,.," M2·71H Ilion with·~ pcty' fringe with lhl~no a reoetvtng
1 111111 llAL.n petton In q u11t•• ChlrtvV-ctlO .... , wanteo. blnefl1• Hon/tme>ket ltt4tltt .... .._ • ~Ille Mutt heve CM ltoaa 2t00 ltatala tt Otfltt lntal1 lilt 111-1111 offlee of bu•Y wMOI' no ex~ needed 644"°"5 n .. opening• for anlP9lno 28t-t177
--------IL 2111 fOlfl) ADS 11•1111-~;--.a loen QOOd Lellptlont I t73 -·-... clerk and warehoutt Pwt/tlrnt ll&u•r Mll(l •Ill •COM di• eult .. AC= ... IHft '"""''' ~P'"(f., 1111111 r~ulted 860·2 3 ....,. ' mr trainee, ··~help-" 111 t 7•• t I 01111 Progr1Hlve 1rch/con1t fu , ..-...... II tr••n c ••t ....... lfPlll ' 'hi N~ I, ,,,, ( r,11,1 I I l'trtl f lt1 lltlr 7 bf, ' bl l)rilnQ from '400 28 5 l11lan1 )' .,.. .. ., ..., .. .. .... .. ID£ FREE Mil ~· ,,..,, ...... 111N•ra1, com, . • ... c2805 frOtl'I 9-4 for In· L~ht ~r"'" Cit n.c ,., ,,,.,,. ,,, ,,,,,,. r, M , ... ,.,. .. PQCA. '--' E Cout Hwy 8'16-e900 M . W ... 4111 ,.--.en " lnamtn or n-'".,.. ··• ,/l~r .. .,,,,,,,,,,1,,1'.M "'' •1• t 47•1 lnGt ulll• f fiO I Q 11 up1111r1 aa 1700 Att1m1,eo.11M... TYPISTS hou11 ,;.ICOf'Mfl. PfO. tervlew Hon · ',.'.:'2e·!!.~r
1,.v, 144'. 1,,~ .,,,fff 1 rnv11 Deya Cal•. P1lnclp11 .-. operallno tor i-., hnd reeume Incl lr1l1ttt !Jr""'•"' '"'°'*· 1WPor ""'" .,.,.__ l •,4 •,IJAll .. , .. ~d "'41CI l)ffc/etll>{> IP.C. lhtat.O bualflell In lo Or"'QI ,_, ....,. P'""T/Tl .. I • 1 I\•. i•i '•'•'•' ,.., • 11tu•ll<m wtother tan• Co PrtnG Of'l"'PleaM Ctall aummun AIAT Wl!.ITIAH 8 AV· lll~eq to Chrlt _. PIT, IT, 0t Cty .,.. "'" "" It WOtlt • , 1 .. ~ .. 1• A__.. a""t• c •• ...,.,,, 1276 mo M•·llll ., INQ• le ...... pt .... -to 11ar1 8 • 1-tl221 w Own tren1. Atllenl8pen ,...., I Pft'IOn•~ for r .. • ... ,,, ·""" / ~,,,, ri<>f• efflpf • -• " .... ......,, • 81rry Cf111c;t1vn, MatlOll Han1 fJf r~ 'I. ~alhk>n "' ,.,. _,..,. ·-, I , A• 1 .... lb c •• ,.,..,,, ••• 0 11• your career with • u -n. •• _ ..... , -·It• 0 , • p II o h • I p I u I 1111 op1rat1on Qooo . I .•••• ''"'' •• ,,. ..,,..1,., ,..,, .,. • .... f7VV ,,.,..,, " ,..__..,...I Hl)lel MO 4000 lel•nd ., .. 84•~1 -""'"''" -
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• • 1 • --~ o-am1e. "'OW'h Ot'i.nteo 11...tne CA 82714 Pr1 1ot100110 D wortc hra/pey Chltle 780-1122 ""1 """ ,,. '"«> ~ • t.c.c;utl\tl oft~. gre•I '•b 17 18 onty ,.. •·
IHtah 11 •.l••• "4~ • uttl tttllut llX ~· '~tonlat, 'OYnd ~/Huelly .,._11H" NIT lllYNll ftf!Wlel IMIHU110n llf aUllll t:.'120~•or1t pref
liieu 2t01 ,,,.,, ''''"'H ~74 HIOIW 1111phone . Hcretarv. Ilk/ten, llfv ~. no T.D r.. ' 4021 ~~1 ~~!',:,::~. e tate ..-1ng lndMdutlt ,wt/time counttt Ml&, LAMlno t MeOtd '"' ,~,.1=e v;:: ~·
>.tlA x,,. ''• , •.. 'I ,,.., '· l•mm11 ,,, thl 2 °' hll. bOoltllAMplng evlM '. 0. ..~. 0 0 l!.:' tine a or,eventlve ..,. o'o,.,. ""u!!..,"' ... ~~rrt~t Legyne leectt 4f4.IA ,.~,. ~... ...., ec>m· ....,.,,o. Muet h•VI ct. ,, '•, , " ,. ,, • 111 ''l/J(), 1/, \Jiii neect9d Frorn 12&0 ~ enweef/..,.111' 141 2~ ... um11 "" ,,,.....,, ..,. ,,,.., """° ..,.
t .1,1 .. ,t 831 .... 71 Tom, -14' 1eoi OUf'td" VIC4nQ active ctiartlf .._. ............ ,...... 1e of Oty 06Mrnng help, a.aPM, plu, mu11 be ... l*ld•btt veftlOl9 (tmell ',;..,,,.,,, '·''· 1·;:11 '1 .,., / .. , -, Mr-·,.. ..__. ... •1100 .,....._. ... 8 d 1 ·~-.-..in 1 k t t1 .,...,. ...,.... • IM ·-· _.,.. 2.00PM ltlfu t() OOftM. ye, 1roetrom pet_.._. 1Me1no.pv1>-ru~ . van, e • on , • ,,,.,,.,, N'•"''" , / 1,, 111r.1e tam 24 30 Y" '"'" ~ a...outiv. wirtv et ..,,, on 8 iecianiw'• 1 •1 a 2• d 1 wNh«, fn Ac>OtY 1n 0uu .. w111 1~ llllno. Cfttntfe, CdM Uc rtM1tton1. pegboaro •aoonl to ...... ,_....
,,..,,,,.y 1,.,,,.w. ,,:,,,,,,.1,. \,_'il'ltmo A111t1 )/t , NI lolt•~~~IC4nttf 218 &3-4..et 5 ~O't~f~4t n peraon '200 W 00.,1 P't9efl"Grteltetateloan Ull .... a~ ay .. tm, knowledge In paper dMltt In lrvlnt
"'' 'I ''' 'I ''' ·~·1 r,1A "'"" F'Olly 876 9670 "' ---,OYl'ld M OtY Afg"*1. ' Robt e1111tt NH/CM Hwy, NftP<Jrt e.acn oocumentt, enew.,lng Mn• ...... , 111\dlOfd teruant faw • 11••· Mu•t bt ~
,.,. •·••• ,.., '"'~'""''~ •",, ,.,~, '1421 ... ~..... bltt/bln Oobll rniic, M Al! Drotltt Bd AitaltOfa i:>nonet, Md cMcklno ~~.k~~·' muet. Hlgtlly motivated Oabl• Contaot Oreo ~,411 •, 1 ';1 'lt•ere h .. In l..llQIJnl kh a--.-. 1 t1a·U 13 Olk/ten th9C>f*O H I 147·217 t IM6.ot 1 I 84* with f.A8 I doeumef'lle Md lnvtn• Mff lttlftf needed for Hydt Monday thru ,rldey • ., 1 di V ._, ..... _,, • .._.._ 12'" M.... lt'e 1 IREl!Zf ,~ ...... r 4• WPM II cout)Ont, Chutctt btnlflt. ..,•oortlllve ooml'Vloulpany, between t:ac Md 10:30 I 11• '"''' ,,, .• ,.,I 1•, 1r, •• r ,.ellir fl(I e!tnee tO It ' ""'"' ---" "'-11 2_." ""27 I m ,... .. , ._.2--' .. 21 11~, ~''" ,.;,, • ,r,.. ~,,;,1 1~ & bMeh Pvt beth LIDO VILLAO .::c;.ont Or, 64._MH :IMllfitd Ada 641 IMl71 Cluelfled Ad• 142 N 71 r-ciulr ---~---~~ llnd FZ'.,.. ~•
, .. , ._. '"' .,. 'w, ,,,,, ' '"'" •e7 '771 :=. ;'ff ::w4/m<I l'ound Oldet M wNte Poo-a11 ... 1 0,,. tilt l11lan1 Ott. 401 Wt o fter compellt1v1 , '!'J. MY~.!. .. , rt1ume to ft O lox PUT/TI.---
,, ''" ' "' •,Al'I i:;.4() r,fA<.le1 rmmte fOf 9C)ICllel dl9, vie IN., & HWOOI -Mier .... IN&O/mo ltart· OI ":::J!..•, _ _, _.. ..,.,. 1101· 12&, Newport
hM c,,()M ~ fUfn trptc Rtei.bt•tt O..~ eind Cel C M Mltnel C<lf'trOI Ing). Ind eJtUlttnt Wt• Clef.!'""" _..,., ...,.,., ... IMCl't, Ct 12161· t70I -··-
1 "'''1' '"'r' ••11•••11••1 "' f''"' Bdrm IMO 42fi lrott., looking l<>t a ,ountJ tml I* c=oc:.--. t4rt1 '°'WI lntMWlwaip-~. ~ •· --· _, , II t ,,,,,,, ...,,,,tJ,.1 ~ ,.., -.t• , ... \Id _......, ~ L£AS£ Of polnl1T19nt SJIMN call l*1enOed oer9mlo CMt· LIU&. llTIY ~ ._.,,..,_ cat·
,,., .. ~ 1•1 '''" l hllfll W111,t1 1ha OO•t• 90 b'fl 10 •h•rt oompl•t•IY AJOOnquln/WiWtW HI bit • 00AM·4·ioftM ., •. lttrtlnO Mitty .... fOf ~ IMdt omo. n.te M(ly motnlng 4MI
,,,,,., ~4'.-0 1~0 tlJ4CI ,.,,.,. M" •a tflt 2 •. 2 be furntened ofnC*t In Cot· 14-Utt CITY PROPERTY Mondty thr11 'rlOty. ' tiourwlth btMflt1f0t ltllll lllCtlllant .... wtth die-·10&m let & tun. Mutt ,,,,,. l 11'fJ lt•yft(lnt hf'M pot ... PIUA lnol OOMrt L09t• ~ & .... levtl. Ctll l.JO·lt>m onty, !)tty wt11tt ..,... Md NW! VIII, ltltlOn WlfOtl r 1'• 11 ' ;. 11' , he J4ar.r,h<1 t11~ltn'J IJ1' Ot&l 1'hfl vlftl, b~. ~ rm , _ _.,_, ,~.,d ..I. •--'-...... .. .... 6711, .... for ltett. abrllt" 10 WOtkund•t Of Imel! f::"P· HouflV '11• ,.,,,,,,,, .,,, l 'JV6 7"0 .... ---..: (T"'· u ... ........._. Ml-.... , ,. lleat AOPfY
,,,, ,. 1iai1 ·111•, M•nt ""' L ''"" '014 Youi ~ 11-17 .......... ,... (11•> 711..t7U., PIU IUll -:"1.!...•1,tnutt, ··r-"'e1 ·c:;~ :!.crlh~· ,. QIS: ""' ,,,, /'iJ', lll)Af H•11111/Rotlf!'lme1.. ......._._. •• ,....,. d __ ..., ....., cv&llM) .,,.)ta.a • .,.. ""' -•·t1t0 IJnlftnlled IU 4 1a4 ................... ...... OQ, ,,_, -· ..... <· .... LIQttt ~. fMlnO, IOtt"'9 It . co.ti .
wt ,,,, """" ,,..,,, ,,,,.,.. t MO"" I MNT .,._d tnl,1, VIQ ..... I melt, ....., offJce Cklt ... Tlllnlliftt o4 1 MW hOlftf Ottno-C0Mt Dtly Hot
'"' "-''1f I J 11 • lntali W11tel IMt W/""°'1 ,.,,,, .._., Ml M~ l'V 142'61N The City of Huntington Beach ComrnYnl· llUT Hwpt ldl r.., tete .. co '°' eiptlnf? a. the meny IOI .,1 n-ri tin '1'1& n;;a .. room ·""' ..,..,tult4M NI 00-0r ott ''•fll•n P•HPOft 11111--, Otil Lott, IU·2t00 Mtlntl In IOd~·· ... tuH. t4, Ha Ut t 1tiou Cell Horii. ty -·io. o.p.,,,,,.,., la currently ac-WllTlll ood 6 __..,~ --e, w ooMMI M2•M71 .,,, Adi ce11 _., ... ,.
•.Ari ,,, er.• 'I trt If>' 1 .. dr1 e>rhr, "'' prcrf C M . ------c.ptlng i.u.,. of lntetett for lhe IMM o1 ......., ""' ----~-;.";··~;,~~!·, '4~~r;:, c11M H• 7J0.1n2 c.r:-..t-1 2911 :.!:...:''i.town a ~~:,::~~n~i.;,,.c~:f.:·m~~ 11¥1111 ft~:=~ PlllJ Piiat •••••••••-..
•1•111 e1ht>it.g , .,, •• ''' Pit'Jf~, m•tw• t.o, ¥ wtltte, Ytc 20th It 1 i.t tor the purPoN Of conouet~ a ~... ,,..... TtMt 1...rt ~ ~I ~ ,,.""1 ''"" 1 9' 11eh 1tr1ell (lbd1m, flOAOHwbot' !MfW,NI M2-•t2t k--fl I 1 t QUaf i1t,M~ ~~f!'.'L 'a.'• _ :. PIRT TIME • , ,,.,"'' tn ,, , ..,1;.i f' , llMVAO '(91dl ~ tn 12-40 -ci fl MINd hllrit ~Uid P'OOrtm """ .. c I o the turrou Ing """"" .... _,
, ,,11.01 ,,.,,.."' ,,11 eo.i• MtMl!wm .._. ... ~ M t.eo» Chelt. ¥lo Huntlntton community The ctubhf,uM hH tPPtOIC· "''''f v;ii .i, t V.IOtmo ., .. Wlfl t•h~w• ••~cm .. ,. IMdi _., ... ,12 lm1tety 1.1&0 1quar• fMt of u11bte .!!:!1 •.1/',l'!L .... ''!!11 rMT•,. :• I '"'I •1111 ,,4,1 II I.. ,,. ~""' hOute • 1·0 .... ... l • ·"ICil u;hlAh , ............. lilnA ..... ,no _.......... .,. .... I .......... _... ... ..... '° '·'•1 101 •~~ ... 2.1~ eoo aq , l'ound rNJOf, ""* 4900, bnwntMI lftlttl9 -• ..,,_,, '-""" -.. _, contUltlM ""Joy t•i>-°' -....... o ··-"'
n ewly r•lftOd e l•cl ty p•, l'f, Hlll'V fOOfTI , kitchen, llOt•Q4t toom •nd fMt ufoutinool'M ......... h':::' ..... :: "~ ~-::t : llv r DaJly Piiot by auto
'''" ,., •• .,,, M t f AJf•-:: •= 1 ... ,~ MGHWI "-"Y MMt3"4 .., ''°' 2f ..,_..., room• Letteta of lnt.,..i rnYlt be tub·
&11'''""' •:a ,, .. ,.,... 111 "' '" .... ta a .... • l rtMMl!e cffll . mlttec:f to t.he COmmunlty hMcef a.. -64M 7 • (approx 2 houn per day),
i.-h 17& ,,.,~ fi881h0f<:IJ:09~t0 ..... drw., ""*"' e•· C.~' p o.eo. 190, Huntlnoton ,.,~ ,..,,,,., taftt OfflCi .,._ • We kd•y• afternoon w k·
,.,.,.." H 1111r1 r AP w C M uto At• ~ 110t , CA t1&41.AttentJon· n ,owtet, tant••~• .....-toOO =.i .. "1'.S·~ 0o • nda arJ1y momlna . .,:). __ Ap-1 s~w!lletw"u..?lloa ftl>w 1 41·t417 or .-.·---·----by 'ebtuary 19, t084• p...,_ 1~ ... ..,,. • • ~n
..,, •1..,,.. ""° "11 tM "°' WMt • w~ wonc1 tefttenQa llld brief flnenoat ltat 11\Mtnte 2•11" I prox . $400 per mo. Call 1•en "' t;111 tJ<."'tJ•t •em 1tt7 °' H ( •• 1"e"'"' '''"t •1 ment. r=.= 1nqu ,,.. can be made • ftf14 nll'M 1 "''""e ltt I t.JO IQ n ,_, ,,,,..,.IOI~ 10 (11') &4te Ou•11f.-... .... uf Uetd 1 p •
1100•111u11 ao11 Matt AQ4lnt Mt ton ~'r,:•~•;::'~ t>t uhd 10 .4J1>mit ';"f;:;';'J;, : IKCULATION DEPT.
"'~ tem .._., '"""c. to • M 'IUIMe.~C 11 10-Mft Ml 1tt t prQOOUI, e 6",,·"3,,1 'Ding e
'"' ,,.,, """' 1n <-oM, r; ,_, ''°"' 1 w # 0•11....., 44 viaor ..., bA , • .o. 1110/M , " "' • uu ... ~!!~."'1 ~ .. ~~~~ tt&.-00 ' •••••••••• , ••••••••••••
i
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZI I
ACROSS
1 8•11no
5 AnlllyH
10Cott• -
-· fOQy
59 Pawed
,,_VlOUI
"1ZZLI IOL YID
14 -tboot
15 A"*lnd1
18 P1~1y, once
17 AdMtnt
19 ReUnqu1ifl
20 Accelefllt
21 Ador~
230rtekgod
25 l111Qlf10fl
28AmHMd
JO Cudgel•
34 OltN p1net1
36 Sulk
37 Flabby
38 8u~rtaUvt
endtno
39 Ctrinlno 111 •
42 Prtfhc for
meter
43 PartlCI•
46 UK native
48 LOlftr
48 F .. 11
50 ToPklck
52 Vouc.h1t
54 Spllt
66 Slick
2 3
03 Add uonal
64 &matt
O<ganttm oe lyrlc;t1t
87 OrMkaege
88 One of
trtpi.11
89 BeotehllMI
70 Otd ehtflOI
71Ptw
DOWN
I 8tol4tt
2 One
3 Me1h0d
4 Mtke rHdy
5 l.oott9d llyly
8 Curve
7 Iran money
8 TraU.rt
9 Supporter
10 Mutic evtnt
t 1 Don Juan'•
mother
12 Canon
13 Frtohlen9d
18 Coercion
22 P1r111tlc eoo
e
~ tOf'Mthma you want
10 Nll7 CJaMlfled Ida oo
11 wlll I C11t HOW.
M2·H7t.
IC*
24 Sino-<
Ymt -
28 Weapon
27 Elegance
28 At the peak
29HOfM 1nd
walet aportt
3 1 tnttrument
32 Getman city
33 Fun
38 -out lade
40 Ctlculatlon
41 Wlgweg
I
~ Httvyknlle
41 8ubtraett
49 Pronoun
51 Or<* back
&3 African etty
55 RoQu"
68 L.unch arH
67 Ctrd
58 Darken• eo Enta
81 EHay111
82 Bang In ee"' s1oooe
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS ANO PRIZESI
; AGES 11·14 I EMN tr To 175.oo '° wm . IW. ... llttt It...,. let,...._.,
...,. " .. .,.. , ..... "' JN°' .. c..t ,o.;, Ntc °"' CtfWI ttMt .. 3 JO , Ill Ml .. """.JO, .. ......,.. °" lttlff•'Y· .. wont 1tw IMft llttlf• Ye. .. 111111111111 If" Ml ,, I ... tllUI .. ,_. ,.., IWll NlllJ
U.t .. 11111 .....,,,. tf CAlecbM ill ... ",.... ..... ... Ult.., lM1
'Mu ;cca (714) 141·70ll
•
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OLUIOlll
lllTIHll
COMNfll
CHEYllOUT
~ ')o fl If f • I f' 1
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\46 1100
WINY UHO CAM I TAUCl<S
COMI 1114 0,. CALL 'OA ,... .........
C«mtcw-OeUllo ...n tt211 llACH I LVD HUHTINOTOH HACH .. , .... ,, ....... , ... .,,.. ...... um -.. 1'onaHI Oeot
-
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a11m YILllWllll
•WILLlll ···~ Volut'N ..... a.vtce
117~.~
Hunt!ni~ IMd'I (114) 142·2111
··1& 2400. lmm.c am/Im
air, IYIO, btk w/bl~ Int Me<<.. CaQrl Cullom 7' 4
Qflg own 171&0 131 02 l 1 cyl 4 IC>d ,.,._ paint ""'
or 720· 1210 •ti 4 30 '"" reblt at'O 12900 vw 7 l Spec. a-tie ,_
'71 JOOO 8 /", ale. "'" Mw lf'ltr 10 ml MW a.ctier. X-tenk '9400 br•kM Ilk• n.-S 11
H I U&-tMt Hondl Cl'YIG 77 l/fffy gd
• .. .'lo. con<! S 1 soo 7, 4ou LC, .. It eond Audi F ow n.-9"G ,Int
801( ml 124 &00 bOdy new 11, .. tit&O
Mon-,r1, I ·&, 7to·IOOO CAll 03 l •tU tat 213 ... IOf lally
111 aeo . to.a.o. ~ Ill II FlllTI
oondltlon 131,IOO Call we r11Y1 a QOOd Ml.ctlon
wtekdl yt M 4•&UO of NEW ' uMO C~
2 , white w/bl* roi.tal he ~ tO<layl
leilther, 2!~.:..potltMCI al io,-e N.4 . .w l4f.t2 72
'
COMMHl
CHfY•OlfT ... .,. I' t. I '
' ' ( I ,, I
~o 1100
~ ,._paint.~!~
S075 HI 8034
r... Ult
6
4
2
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5
6
7
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D4 Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT /Thursday, February 18, 1~
MUCNOTICE
P'lllt11 Publllh«t Oreno-CoMt Deity llOtJan 2t,Feb. 2.9, 1e. 19&4 644·84
ACTmOUI ........ NI.IC NOTICE
NAm aTATUSNT
The follow4ng pet'IOnl.,. do6nQ fte~A=I
butlneM•· TELECOfW SALES BAOKAGE, bull'":-~ penona are dOlng ~~~~ 8IYd I 1, Coate M--. APEX PACIFIC CONSTRUCTION
AalphJ. Blenc:hl, 3701 AwatoleCt, ANO MAINTAINANCE. 295 Or .. Plano TX 16'>15 Bloaeorn. Irvine, Ca. 92114 fhii builneu la conduat9d by: an MlchMI St....,. CrC)Nley, 295 Or· lndMdual . anoe BloNom, Irvin.. Ca. 92714
Ralph J° Bianchi Thia buliMM 11 eonduc:19d by: an
Thi• ltalement wu m.ci with the lndlvldual.
County Cl«lt of Or1nge COunty on ~,::.t~u tiled .tth the
Jan. 5, 1984 ~ County Cl«tl of 0rMQ9 County on
Put>lllMd Orange Coat Deity January 13, 19&4
Piiot Jan. 29, Feb. 2, 9, llS, 1984 PublJahed Orange Cou~
_________ 58044 __ 1 Pllol Feb 9. 18, 23, March 1. 1984
Nil.IC NOTICE 82s.84
PtllUC NOTICE AC.11TIOUI ._,..._ ..
MAim aTA'RlmNT
The tottowtng peraona are doing RCTTTIOUI 9UllNEll
bU11neM u: ...,_ ITATDIENT SOLARSOFT, 2327 Rutgera Dr., The toOowlng ptn0n9 are doing Coate M.a, Ca. 92e28 bUstneu u:
111C~eu111•M MAim A Tl' •IT
The fOll0'4MQ l*'90ft la ...
~ ..
(A) NATIONWIO£ t:INANCIAL & TAX SERVICE AGENCY, (I) NA-TIONWIDE AOVERTl81NO AGlNCY IC) PAOFE8810NAL COM·
ftUT!All!D 8EAVIOI CENTEA1 400 W. Baket t•7. FUl!ttton. CA. 92932 Hoang Huy Nguytn, 400 w ...
18·1, Fullerton; CA. 92tS2 Thie bulll1elll la conduCteCI by. .,.
lndlY!dult. HoengHuy~
Thie ttatemetit WM nl9d Wl\tl the County C*1I of Ofenot County on Jan 24, tta4 ,_
PubllWled Orange Co.t o.lty Pltot ,eb. 1e, 23, M1tctl 1. I , tN.f
94144
NI.IC N011C(
l'lCTmOUI .......
NAm aTAftlmNT
The followtng pet90ll .. dOlng
bullMNU: WHITE HOUSE ACCOUNTING ~ERVIOES. 192 Eat 18th SttMt. Cotta Meea, CA. 92t27
Wiima Houaton Whhe. 1t2 !aM 18th Street, Coate MeM. CA. 92127 Rlcrlard C. White, 192 EMt 18UI
St .. Cotta Mau, CA 92827
This~ II condUcied by..,
lndlvldU91. WI.Ima H, White Thi• 1t1tement wa1 tiled with tfle County Ctenc ot Oraf199 County on Jan. 24, 1984
Pm111
Pu1>111Md 0ranoe eo.t DtllY Piiot Feb 18. 23, Maret! 1. a. 1N1
94544
Now TBA T'S a whopper! Robert 8. Galtw. 2327 Rutger1 FOUNTAIN VALLEY COMMERCE
Dr .. Coat• M .... Ca. 112828 CENTER, 1072 S.E Bn1tol. Sult•
MUC N011C[
FICTTTIOUI IUaMll
NAm ITATllllNT Tlt'o unidentified patrons of BUI' a Place reataurant ln
San Francisco take a bite out of a 360-pound
cheeeeburger. The owner of the eatery created the
huge burger aa a func:lraJaer for the American Heart
Auociatlon after the former owner died of a heart
attack last week. The burier contained 200 pouncla of
beef. SO pouncb of cheeee, two caaea of tomatoee, one
ca.ee of lettuce and a 51-lnch sesame seed bun.
Thl1 bUllMal 11 conduc:1ed by. an 102, Santa A"', CA. 92707 lndlvldual. Taylof 8. Grant, 3300 ll'Ylne Av-ROBERT S. GAL TEA enue. Suite 101 , Newpott BMch, Thia ltatement WU llted with the CA. 92eeo-3198 County CMrtl ot Orange County on Thll bualneA II conducted by 1 Jan 5, 19&4 general pertnenhlp.
The following perlOnl 1te doing • bullne11 as: COMMERCIAL CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, 18811 Miiiiken AV9., ll'Ylne, Ct 92714
FDIOll T ay1of B Grant Publtlhed Or1nge Cout O.tly Thi• 1tatemen1 wa1 flled wt1tl the Piiot Jan. 18, Feb. 2, II. 18, 1984 County Cler1< of Orange County on
557-84 Jan. 24. 11184 1~----------f'Dl19Z PlBLIC f«>TICE Publllhed Ora'3: Cout Dally
ftCTITlOUI ._,...... Piiot Feb. 18, 23, aroh 1, 8, 1984 M~ ITATIMINT ll43--84
Eat your vegetables, avoid cancer?
Hennen Cat1 Rltehle, 9822 Savoy Clrci.. Huntington Beectl, Ca. 92847 Thia bualnea II condUCted by: an lndtvfdual. HERMAN CARL RITCHIE f'hll llttement WU flltd with the County Clerk of Orange County on January 13. 1984 New study doubts vitamin
theory, but says veggies.
fruits may cut disease risk
But Dr. Walter C. Willette of the Harvard
School of Public Health said, .. This ccrtamJy
does not cast doubt on what your grandmother
told )OU to do about eating your vegetables. It
may well be that there are things in those
vegetables other than the things that we've been
measuring that are good for you."
based on the best available information. but
added that no diet can guarantee prevention of
cancer. The Nat1onaJ Cancer Institute and the
National Academy of Sciences have issued
similar guidelines.
Vitamin C. one of the nutrients rec-
ommended by the cancer society, was not
covered in the new study.
:~~ peraon• are doing ___ NIUC ___ NO_TICE ___ _
ACTION CONCRETE CORING, ___ .....;. ______ _
~~29~bacl, Huntington e.ecn, ~~A~M
,..,.,
Publllhed 0rMQ9 Co.t Delly Piiot Feb. II. 18. 23, March 1, 1984 824-84
Christopher Allen Lou~n, The followlng per80nl we doing ~~~~~lbacl, Huntington h, bu=~: CYNT ANIA. 340 N. PtllJC NOTJC[ .
BOSTON (AP) -Although a study today
casts doubt on theories that people can lower
their cancer nsk b) consuming vitamins A and
E. often found in 'egetables. the stud) 's director
says some other ~ubstance in fruits and
\egetables might help prevent cancer.
Last week, the American Cancer Society
urged peo ple to eat foods high in fiber and
vitamins A and C. such as fruits. whole grain.s.
cabbage. broccoli. Brussels sprouts and
cauliflower.
Earlier research suggested that people who
eat lots of green or ) ell ow vegetables have lower
cancer rates. And much speculation recently has
focused on anttcarcinogens -subsuinces that
prevent cancer rather than cause tt.
Thll bullnest la conducted by: Newport #5, Newport BMc:h. CA l'lCTmOUl .,_M Jan. 5. 1984 92663 MAm aTATllmWf CHRIS LOUGHRAN lm.aglnatlon Unlimited, Inc:., 340 The followtng peraon 11 doing Thll l11tement wee flied with the N. Newport •5, ""-P«t BMc:h, CA bullnesa •: County CMrt1 of Orange County on 92663 (A) COMFORT INN (8) (PANDA Jan 5. 1984 Thll bu91MM la conduc:1ed by I MOTOR INN), 2430 Newport ISfvd ..
F2J1017 eorpoflllon Coata Meu, CA. 112929
Publllhed Orange Cout Dally Cindy AlhmNd. Secretary Chin-Sung Chen, 2985 ~ The stud~ found no link between cancer
and blood levels of the vitamins or another
highly touted nutrient called carotene. which isa
source of vitamin.\ and abundant in carrots and
green vegetables
The society's nutnt1onal guidelines also
suggested low alcohol 1ntakc, a fat.free diet and
moderation in smoked and piclcJed meat and
meat cured with salt or nitrite.
The society said its recommendations were
Accordmg to the theory. vitamins A and E
act in the body as antioxidants, trapping
damaging forms of oxygen called free radicals.
Piiot Jan 26. Feb. 2, II, 16, 11184 Thia llatemellt WU flied with the Piece, San Marino, CA. 91108 581-84 County Clerk of Orange County on Chlo-Yuen cn.n. 2985 SornerMt Jan. 24, 1984 Plaoe, S.o Marino, CA. 91108
l'tllJC NOTICE '2Jl1l5 Thll buslnea 11 conducted by: an Publi.tied Or .. Coat Dally lndMdual. FlCTITlOUI 9U ... U Pilot F•b. 18. 23, Maret'I 1, 8, 1984 Chin Sung cn.n
MAim STATDIDfT 94&-84 This 111tement waa flled with tM
PlBLIC *>TICE The followtng penona are doing ----------1 County ~ of 0rang9 County on
----------bullneu u : PlBl.IC fl)TIC( Jan. 23, 1984
Good ol' cow No. 289
hits the record bOok
FICTITIOUllU ... M AUTOTECH, 1371ndultrlal.Cotla -----------1 ~
NAME •TATEllENT doing M:8.rlc Caci~~ •. 216 Knox Pl.. ir~:A~.. ~~:.-;'6, ~~en~. ,r:f DE LANEY b ~he ~o:!aowlng peraon Is Cotti M .... Ca. 92627 The following peraon II doing 937-t4
HARLES 0 . DE LANEY uT~ ROBB REPORT OF Thle bullnea Is conducted by· tn bUslnMI u .
Passed away February SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 85 Individual TONY'S TREE SERVICE. 450 -----------. Mark Moore Cambridge Clrde, Costa M .... CA. PtBJC IC)T1C£ 12.1984 after 88 years of an Br00khollow,Sant1Ana.CA.ll2705 Thia 1tatemen1 wu n1ec1 with the 92627 ---;....;..;~~~.;.;;.. __ _
active hfe. He was born in Shtron Jonea. 30801 S. Cout County Clerk of Orange County on Anthony Jonn Pomo. 1150 Cam-FICTTnOUa ..,... .. Hwy ~61, Laguna BMch, CA. Jan 5 1984 ortOge Clfde. Costa Meaa. CA 'U. ITllmNT
DEATH NOTICES
HANFORD (AP) -The co" that holds
a record for producing the largest amount of
milk doesn't even have a name.
No. 289 at M.G. Maciel & Son Dairy in
Ha"ford has produced 458.100 pounds. or
53.267 ~lions. of milk. That's nine ttmes
the ltfeume productton for an average co".
Part of No. 289's secret 1s her age
The 19-vear-old Holstein has lived about
three times longer than average She 1s
gelling a little cantankerous and has a
labored gait. but she still produces almost
seven gallons a da)
Cows usually produce 40.000-50.000
pounds of milk in a hfe11me. No. 289 wa)
the first to pass the 400.000-pound mark in
1982, according to national sta11st1C'i ma1n-
ta1ned b)" the California Holstein .\ssocia-
uon.
··we have an offi cial testing organ11a-
t10n." said spokesman Pat Sil\-a. "These
records are calculated monthh Those are
considered official within our lndustr. ..
The cow was 1n tight compct111on "ith an
Ohio purebred named Breezewood Patsy
Bar Pontiac until that cow died recently.
No purebred. No. 289 is a commercial
grade cow born at the dairy in 1964. said
Manuel Maciel Jr. It was such an in-
auspicious start that the fam ily didn't
maintain records on her lineage.
She gave b1nh to 13 calves. but only two
arc cows.
"She was sick once two or three years
ago,'' Maciel said . "The vet came out and
did a whole bunch of tests on her, and then
the nt·xt da) she started eating. and she felt
line She's never been sick again."
Her longe" 1t} entitles her to a pnvatc pen
and a gentle milker.
"She's an old rascal." Maciel said. "The
onl} thing that bothers her is her feet."
No. 289 also has earned a death benefit
given to few other cows on the farm.
Mac1el's wife. Shirley. insists that the cow
will be buncd at the dairy instead of being
turned o 'er to a tallow works.
Camden, New Jersey De-92651 · · f'2llOM 92627 The tollowing peraon 11 donO
cember 14,1895. He was the Thlsbustneulsconductedby·an Publllhed Orange Cout Daly Thllbullneatleconductedby.an business a:
beloved uncle of Grace De Individual. Piiot Jan 26 Feb. 2. 9 1e 1984 Individual LANGENWAL TEA DYE CON-
Lan L . d l Sharon Jones . . ' . . 584-84 Anthony Jonn 'mo CEPT OF SAN GRABRIEL VALLEY. ey uctano an ovmg This statement was filed with the Thlatat~t w•• ti'--' ~ .. th ,..._ a•o2 T c 1
f h f h D C C•~ f o eou _,..,, -_, .. , .... .. ern lrcle, Hunt ngton at er o t e late r. ounty ._1c 0 range nty on PlBLIC NOTICE County Ci«k of Orange County on Beach, CA. 92648
Charles A De Laney a Jan 2'· 1984 f'Dl19Z 1-----------Jtn 23, 1984 Bruce H Bartlett. 8402 Tarn Cir· noted radiologist. Mr De Publlshed Orange Cout Dally FICTmoul 9UIMH ~ cte. Huntington BMch. CA. 928441
Lan Piiot Feb 16. 23, March 1. 8. 1984 N~ ITATDIENT Publlahed Orange Cout Dally Thll butlMU 11 conducted by: an ey restded in the New-948-84 The following peraona are doing Pilot Fat> 18, 23, March 1. 8. 11184 lndlVldual.
port Beach Perunsula area -----------bullneu u : 9311-84 Bruoe H Bartlett for th~ past 30 years after PlBLIC f«>TICE ANODIZING LTD. 3178 Pullman aHHJC 11nncE Thi• 111tement wu tiled with tl'le reunng from the profession ___ .....;._.;..;.....;...;....._.....;.. ___ St .. Colla Mela. Ca. 92826 ,..~ "" County Clerk of Oreno-County on
f N . __ , Engi H FICTITIOUl IUllNEll Warren Balley. 18427 StudMlakw FICTITIOUl IU•-aa Jan 23. 198-4
0 autl\.4.1 ·neenng e NAME ITATEMENT Rd, Cerritos. Ca. 91706 -iri.111 was a member o( the The foflowlng person Is doing Albert Hiii, 24982 Leto Cir.. MAMIE ITATEMENT Publithed Orange Cout Dally
Kiwanis Club. Mass of business as: Mlatlon VMIJo, Ca. 112811l bu~oltowtng per'IOn 11 doing Piiot Feb. 16. 23, Marcti t, a, 1984
Ch THE PLA TI LEASING COM· Thi• bUakleu It conducted by n · 938-84 risuan Suriel will be eel-PANY, 7 Sunlight, Irvine, CA. 92715 Warren Balley GREAT LOOKS, 1001 W. Ste11en1 ebrated at Our Lady of Mlchael and Kathleen Heap. 1 Thll 11atement wu flied w1tt1 the n59. Sant• An1, Ca 112101 -----------
Mount Carmel Catholic Sunlight. Irvine, CA. 92715 County CMrt1 of Orange County on Min .. Wllaon Palmef. toot W. rt8JC IC)TICE This bullne11 Is conducted by: an Jan 5, 1984 Steven• #259. Santa Ana. CA ---;....;..;~~~.;.;;.. __ _
Church, Newport Beach on Individual irDSOU 92707 flCT1TIQUS ~•• Friday.February 17,1984at Mk:tlaelHNp Publllhed Orange Cou1 Dally ThllbualMalllconductedbyan ~ITATlmNT
11 AM . Entombment will Kathleen Heap Piiot Jan 28, Feb 2. 11. 18. 1=-84
1~~:~ Palmer bullThe~~ peraon 11 doing
follow at Pacific View Mem-This statement was filed with the .._----------1 Thia 1t1tement wu flied with the CONSOLIDATED PROJECTS,
onal Park. In lieu of ~:n'n~~ ~~~~of Orange County on PlBl.IC f«>TICE County Ci«lc of Orange County on •32, 2600 E. Coul Hwy. e. Corona
flowe rs, family suggests · ' f231311 Jan. 30, 1984 del Mar, CA. 92925
d Published Orange Coast Dally FICTITlOUI 9UIMSI fU1'm Jame9 F. H«old, 1H7 Port onations be made to Or-Piiot Fet> 16, 23, March 1, 8. 11184 ~ ITAT!MeNT Publl•hed Orange Cout Deify Chel1ea. Newport Beach, CA.
ange County Cancer Fund. 91344 The following peraon1 are doing Pilot Feb 18, 23, Mardi 1. 8, 19&4 112ee0
Baltz Bergeron/Smith & -----------buslneu u: 96G-84 Thll bulineel II conducted by: an Tuthill Mortuary, Directors P\111.JC f«)TIC£ BAYSIDE ELECTRIC CO. 2571 :ndlvldu11. ta, El Toro, Ca. 112630 Jamee F. H«old HOPKINS F1CTITIOUl IUIMU Donald Eugene Brothwell, 25715 __ _.;..;Pt..;Jll;.;;;.;;U;.;C.;..NO.;..;...TICE-.-~--This 1tatement wu flied with tfle
African nations facing
grave food shortages
NAME ITA'RWNT lepolnte, El Toro. Ca. 92630 County Ctenc of OrMQ9 County on EMMA L. HOPKlNS, a resi-The lollowlng person 11 doing LMtef t.Moy Brothwell, 1047 High· ~~:A=-Jan. 111. 1984 dent of South Laguna, bullness u : 1nd Circle, Preacott, Arizona 8~2 11111117 passed away February SWISS CLEANING SERVICE, Thi• bUli,_ la conducted by: I The lollowlng per90M are doing Publlahed Orange Cou1 Deity
14,1984. She was born Feb-2135 President Place. Colla Meaa. .. partMfShlp. ~~ K'i*nENS FOR MITTENS, Piiot Feb. 18, 23. March 1, a. tlNM CA 92627 Donald E. Brottiwall 472-14
ruary 12,1892 in Winterset, Mary-Lou Hunztkef, 2135 Pr-. Thll 11atement wu nled with the t521 Seecrnt Dr · Corona del Mar, -----------
Iowa She is survived by her ~::;:.,;:\! ~~ ~~ .n~ ~ of Orange County on c8M~~s c BaM, 1521 SeauMt ___ .;..Pllll.IC=;;.;...;.NO;.;.;.TICE;..;;.;;; __ _
sons. Howard V . Hopkins of lndlvldual. FD41S1 Dr .. Corona del Mer, Ca. 92625 South Laguna, California This bU1ineu 11 c:onducted by: an ITATl•NT °' UAMDON-
Drought. fires, pests,
animal diseases blamed
for woes in 24 countries
NA IROBI l\.en~a (\Pl -Twenty-four
.\fncan countrn:s, nearh halfof the nations
on the continent. face :.grave food short·
ages" because of drought. bushfires. li ve-
stock diseases and pc'>ts. a U.N~a ency said
todav.
The Food and Agm:ulturc rgan1zat1on
-;aid in 11s latest continent-wide 'it1ua11on
rcpon that a "s1gmficant proportion" of the
24 countne<;' combined populallon of 150
million 1s ··1hreaten(·d by massive hunger
Jnd 'itarvatmn" due mainly to the drought,
rnn•11de~d the worst in a centur) 1n some
areas
The Rome-ba!.ed l lnsted Nations agency
-.aid the 24 affected natJons of western,
eastern and sou them Afnca need to import
a total of 5 3 mtlhon tons of grains for
1981-84
About J. 7 m1ll1un tons has been secured
either by commercial imports or pledges of
food aid from donor nations or agencies,
the F.\O said. leavmg a shortfall of 1.6
m1lhon ton Of this. the agency satd,
700.000 tOM of cereals 1s needed before the
end of March
The task force confirmed ca"1er warn-
tng.'i of a sharp decline 1n cereal production
by the affected countries. the report said.
Production for 1983 for the 24 nations was
about 16.2 million tons. down from 17.6
milhon ton'i m 1982 and 19.7 million tons
1n 1981. it ~1d
"In Wc"t Mnca, the producuon of cereals
dunng the 1983 arowinf season was
considerably below norma • and drouaht
extended southwards in Sahchan and
neiahborin.a countnes:· the report '31d. It
'81d noodin.a of the rcgJon's main n vers, an
amJ)Ortanl water ~urcc: for the crops. "was
far below normal ••
"ln southcm Afnca, crop cond1ttons arc
currently uncertam." the repon s.:ud. "Ory
condttions prevail 1n some are.a~. while the
nuns hive so fer been 1ufficicnt in others."
In ~( Aftica ttfC" f 0 'Ulrd. ''OVC'T'lll
cond111ons have improved tn Ethiopia," Mary Lou Huntlker Publlahed Orange Cout Dally Individual •NT Of' UIE Of b •. f od h . and l. Warren Hopkins of This statement wu flied with the Piiot Jan. 28, Feb. 2. 9, 18, 1984 Martha c. Ball FICTITIOUI IU ... H MAim ut severe o s ortages continue to Las Vegas, Nevada; six County Ctenc of Orange County on 566-84 Thia •t•tement was flled with the The following P'QOnl have •ban·
threaten sections of the population in the grandchildren and four Jan. 23. 1984 ,.,_.. P\llLIC NOTICE County Clerk 01 Orange County on doned the uee of the Flct1ttou1 au..
northern regions. where drought has great grandchildren. Fu-Publllhed Orange Cou1 Dally -----------1 Feb 3. 1984 -""'JoYNCameE .SELBY suoES, 3'""" pre, ailed for two consecutive years." neraJ services will be held Piiot Feb. 18, 23. ~arcti 1, 8. 1984 '1C11TIOUM•llE IT•.~• ... ,..,_ ..., ~ _________ 9_34-84_ .. , .. _ .. , Publ~ Orange Coul Dally 8<11to1. Costa Mela. Ca. 92t29
The report said ··crop condttions have Fnday, February l 7, 1984 at 111_ 1,. unTICE The fo!IOW4ng '*''°" 11 doing Piiot Feb 9. t6. 23, Mareh 1. 1984 The lldtloua bullnea name ,...
detenorated in Somalia," and "in Tanzania 2 PM at Pacific View Mem-__ _.;,..;..;;.;UUU\I~;..."";.;..;;...;.;.;...;...._ __ ~lllle.M u: a11~ l•red to1bovew.aflledon0ctober
h I · bo · . ona] Park Ne t Beach ...,.TITIOUI -·-II J AND 0 SERVICE. 3001 · 7, 1983 In the Collnty of OfMQ9, t e arge grain rer (an insect) continued · wpor • ""::: • .-IT ... :..-..-ook• Ln .. Cotta M .... CA. -----------1 Orlglnll Fl-. No. F~2et63 t t le d d · · CA. PaciUc View Mortuary, -"""'-' 2 28 PlBllC NOllCE Stan Lewy, lno., 2113-4 Nor11I • o a tac crops an store grains m many Dir The , ..... ........,, peraon• are doing N·--• s ir-, Burbank,,. ..... 11'""•
areas." ectors. bu11.....,'::"'u-· ... .,, JOM F. Gaitan, 3001 Klllybrool<e -'At• """''" -· ......, ...,.. '........ ,.,... M CA 11282" AC''' ""'I _,..... Thi• bullnMI w._:onducted by 1
Of the 1.6 mil hon-ton shortfall of food 1-------------l HUSTON MANUF~CTUf!!~ Th;'°'~i. co'nduct:CS by: an MA• ITATIMINT corporation. Stan Lewy, Inc..
for the affected countnes. the F AO said co .. 840 Production ,..,..,., ,_.... lvtdual. The followlng peraona are doing Stan Lewy. Preeldent port Beec:tl, Ca. t2e&3 JoM F. Gaftan bUtineu u : Pul>ll9hed Orange Coat Delly Piiot
885,000 tons arc required tn West Africa. Ronald H. Power., 2035 Baltr• Thl:l 1tetement WU flied with the DENVER 1LIMITED.301 E. 17th Feb 4, 11. 18. 25. 19&4
430,000 tons in East Afnca and 290,000 MARIO.-LAWM411'. OUft ~~-:8~2:60....:.,, ty aent of er.no-County on St .. Sult• 214, Coat• Meea. Ca TMa le • ooneoted 1MH11t1ett
tons m southern and central Africa. 1-... L~~··• "7• an. 1'1. 1984 92927 "°"' Dec. n. •· 1111, ,,__ t. 1a. Mortuary • Cemetery ·~·H POWW"I '2M117 ~ w. Batley, 23" E. 17th St .. ,...
"The outsui nding deficits arc particularly crematory Thi• 1tat9ment wa1 flled with the Publlehed Oranoe eoa.t oe11y Sul ri:. ~ ~!r~1
• 959743
large in Chad, Ghana, Mali. Mauritania. l625 Gisler Ave. County c1«11 of Orange County on Piiot Jan. 28, Feb. 2. 9. te. 1=.a.. 11n11ted pertnerthlp, -----------
Senegal and Upper Volta in West Africa. in C~~~s~::a Jan. 13. 1984 ~ CAAIO w. B~TLEY PlB.JC NOTIC( ~hiopiab~nd SomdaliaZain Eab.st ~frica ao,d in PubllsNd Ofange eo..t Qre.lfy PtB.JC NOTIC( C<MJ~ ~t~tlled~t~ flCTmOUI ..,.. ..
ozam 1que an m la 10 sou em Piiot Feb. 9, 1e, 23, March 1. 198-4 rtennoue .,...... Jan. ts. 1984 ..... _ •=~~ .. ~
Africa:· the report continued. n 544 MAm 8TAW nw ,... --· -"'
"First pnonty needs to be given to NRCE UOTMERI PlBJC NQTIC( The roiow,no per.on 1a doing Publlllhed 0rMQ9 Coeat ~ '(=~H(l)INTOUGHCOM-
Mozamb1que and Zambia, the only two IEU. IROAOWAY -----=;;;.;...;.;.;;;..;..;.;;.;;.... __ ~ -Piiot Feb. 9• 16· 23· Merch 1,;~4 MUNICATIOMS, 3U7 llrch It ..
countnes in southern Africa which still MORTUARY ~:A~ 1~EWCE~A~A=R ~~;s~t: -----------• Sult• 311, Newpor't Beectl, CA.
have large unmet food aid requirements 110 Broad•ay The fottowl"" penon1 la -. .... Coat• w... CA. 12e2e ptBJC NOTIC( 92MO until the new maize crop is harvested ill Costa Me.. ... .•• ~ u.: . .,, ....... .,, '-" E. HWiey, 1923 Republtc, Mk:Mel Wiiiiam Baalnllll, 2000
8-42-9150 .,,.__ eo.ta Mee&. CA 92127 PlCTmOUe ..,..... Petton&, Coate Meu, CA. May." the FAO said. THE FLOWER PLACE TOO. 9110 TCVMO ~ 1923 Republtc NAm ITATDmMT Thlabuelneaaleconducted by: In
"In the Slhehan zone of West Afi~·ca. the Ecttnoar,Founte1nV*1,CA.92108 Coeta .....a. CA. tiw · TN ~ l*'IOn 1e doing WjM~W. •-i Kehh lAOft Aeneeu, 2116 Herbot. Thll ~II oonducted by' buelMaa ee: ,..._ --food aid shipments s hould arrive be ore the eoau Mee&. CA. '2127 lndMduat. an L.P BY T.c .. 2270 H9wpcw't ltvd, Thie etatement..,. flied wttti "-
1984 rainr season. which st.arts in IALTZ llRGIAOH ~~tecondlleledt>y. an Lee HecNy Newpor1 e.c:h. CA. t2tfl0 ~Clerk o4 C>fange County on
May.June: the report said. W~f~L~rr.::~~L ~h L Aeneeu Thia at~t wu filed wtt., tM Kim~ A c..na. U10 .....,.. Jen • l914 ,_,.
The FAO task force called for $97 .86 427 e l Tth St Thll ttatemant nt ftled wft.tt tt1e County aent °' Orange County on ~ 8tvd • ~ 8Mefl. CA Publllfled Ofenot COiet o,1r
m1lhon m aid to rehabihtate the affected Costa Me.. ~4l ~of C>fange County on Jen
24' 1964 ,._.,.. Thia butlneu ltconducted,by 111 Pltot Fe«i. 1e. 23. Fe«i. t, 1. 1114
Afncan countries' food crop and livestock 646-9371 · • ~ Put)llltied Orange coaat o.11y lndMdUel. ......,.
production. The money would be used for Publllhed Or~ .~ ~ Piiot Feb. 1t, 23, Merdl 1. I. ttM' Kfmberty oauna seeds. fertilizers, farm implt'ments and Piiot Fet> 11• 23• di 1• 1:.~....... 947..,.. Thll •tatM*lt ... llleO wtth tM -----------.. _ M' -TIC( County Clett( of Ora191 County on __ ...... -....-;;.;...;.;.;.;..;.;.;;.. ..... _ vaccines apmst livestock diseasu.. rtaJC M)TlC( nmul# nu Jan 23. 1964 ACJlhOUI •PH•M
The 24 affected countncs named m the ftAC..C V1IW "°""°"'WM Pub!Wled er eo..i ": NAm aTAW
FAO report arc: MDIONAL ,.,. ACTmOUt ..-.. MAim STATWNT P'lot Fe«I 11. 23~ t, a, 1"4 ~ ~ '*'°"' II ...
Angola, Benin, Botswana. Cape Verde, ~~ c,=._";l The ,:::r::::-: ..... ~ ~ l*90fl .. ~ 93M4 DAN'S LANOSCAPI a 00., 111 \cn1ral A fncan Republjc, Chad. Ethiopia. 3500 ldftc VleW Orive ~ •: OAANGI COAST PSYCHOLOGI· _________ __... Qewbrootl ....,. ••• Coat• .....
Ga mbia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea Bissau. Newport 8Mcl'I 'ALCOH laAVICI. 1005 lrl08o CAI. SUMCO. 14 Bluff View, I ~ CA. t2t2t Lesotho. Mali. Mauritania, Mozambiq"... e.44-2700 Dt .. c-. M-. CA t2G1 ln'lne, CA 92715 ~ Daniel Jam•• Miiter. 11a.1 .. ~ U.~lllC:On. 210 .. tltti Pt....... "°'"' w....-n ~. 14 ~--~,J ~ ~ Coa1a ...... CA.. Sao Tome ind Principe, Scncpl. Somalia. eoete Mee&. CA '*' eiunv..w. tNtne, CA. t211a fllfNlllf'V If• t2e2t
Swa.nlaod, Tanzama. Togo. Upper Volta. ThilbueiNetltoonduCHdbren Thlla~luonductedby:an \l'.ll'nA'Vf ...h. Thlebuall*91t~111y. ...
Zambia and Zimbebwe. indMOua&. lndl"......., , "°rv• '1 1(1 indMOual
Th F 0 d U V l · ~OMltCK llO-.TU~Y 9119 'lllC:On Aaoer W ~ ()J/ ..... ..4 ~;.: ... fll9d _. a. e A 111 pper o ta and Guinea 1 S LllauN C.,,on . Thie .. .......,. -. lllitcl """ IM Thia 8'aitement ... fled wtth tt1e ~ (::(A • ~ a.ti _, Or-r.--_ Bissau. both in West Afnca. were added to L.agufta 8Mdl. 01. tMS1 County ewtc ot 0r.,,.. ~on County c.. of Otano-County°" ... -....-........ ", -·
h l. th . ,-. .a~ .. ~1& Jer). U , 1"4 -Jan 14.1114 1111 BIW J • 1914 t c lSI since c agency's pcoal wk 1otce -·-"' ... _.,. ,_,. J""" ,_
on the conu~nfs food crisjs mucd itJ last c Publflhed ~ eo.et DtltV PublaNO OrtfJOe eoui ~ Pvt1t1tNO Orwlot COMI ~ ~,, ~. 30 P.s&ol.&0. ta.23.Waa:b 1r\,.~ '90tNi. e.n M#ctH.•-= -· ··-642-5678 H114"F-. ..,.~,._. t.~ •
J __
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ThUttday, Febf\*'y 1t, 1914 De
NlJC NOTIC£ NlJC NOTIC[ NI.JC J«)TIC( -PlBJC lilt\_, -• .,..,. W\r~~ - ---~ -~ " co ~.-e . rtemeou..uw11 """"'· -'"-"" ~ __ "8JCflOTIC( -r PWUCmTJCE __ - -• ftllJC_,.,_ --
MAMlaTAm.wr ,~~A~ ,icmnoua....... '1CMM>Uaeulllllu --PIOnnouttlUelNI.. PtcltrlOUI..... -"9CnnoUeai-,.____: PICmlCIUI ..... ---"
TM f~ng petlOnl .,. esotno The toltowlnfl '*'°"•.,. dOlnG The ~ITAfW . MAmtTA~ ttAmftAW ---nAm-n -~1• ._-11AAi'F i-;..--ITATFWU , bUllf*I •· ~ aa; ~"""'""ft"' Pli"'ION.,. dOlng T'-'010W1110 perecin, •• doino The f~ C*'IOl'9 .,. doing n.. fOllOllMQ ....,.. eta.doinl; The follawlnt ,...... .,. dolnt n.. ..._... f*IO'!I .. **"
THE lOINATU COMPANY, t70 GRW £NT!APRISH 1 ... bullneel a buttnt. a.: ~ .. : ~ K ..._ _ •
N.wpol1Cel'lterDl' .. H-00!1 Beecn, Iceni.. Av.., Suite 202 H • ~00 L ~~ A8SOCIATE8. 27216 8U$Y IU'8 WORKSHO,, ..S C<..-f"1fD ACCOUNTING S!A· ArlH OOHl"'-T!H(l. 161'8 81#· OOUHT8\' llNTINOU JV PAM Q I llflll'fY COLl,ICTIONI.
C• taeeol#_·I ... Beeoll.Celtt. t2847 I un Ol'1 v: CA t289~utt· roo. MIMIOn !!~ Or .. Costa ,....., CA.~~· .... ~~~ St., ..... bei .. ~V1119'1,Cellf t210I "'lUEH ........... t.l!'Ylne.Ca. 1ll01 ....... :~~ ~ Devld ,_.., n .,,,.,, •8 Canyon Gayi. A Trlti, 7400 Cel'I ~ ' .... ea . __.,,-.. .... Mf I ldw9rcl w. ~ 1NH ..... t211.. lleedl, c.llf NM1
1t1and Ot .. ~ a..cti, ca. SuJ1e202:Hunungtone..J:~:;· Rambl:dt!tt:f411200t~1-~?~5v~• ,..,.Kiii ..... ~ta~rco1 ~,!tl.Kf'OO ~Allonwt.M, &ctwtten, Jr., 545hCt.,,oun1M'IYllllt.Cellftf7ot ,..,....,,...,, .. ,f.IOlllPGMI, QIOIOn eroe ~ . ...._
92880 12847 • · • • _,.,,,, .. ;,v • ..,.. " """ • -"-.,....,..., .. t., l.aQvne 8-on, CA. I Robert £, ~ .. 16118 et.-· lr'VIM, ca. '21 f4 Caflf. tM01 lurti.-t.... . ~
Ro'*1 Fr .. Agam11a 239115 ~ e Sl)lett 7400 CA. ~2ett l.lnde I . 8tellw, 1l2" Undl t 1 ll"°C1 FountelnVlle)',Cellf t210I Thia bua1Maa la conc1UC*1by.811 1naton ...... Calf llM7
Ptov« ln., t..egun• Ntouit. Cattf. !"It• 202, ~unu'noton i:': ~· Ptl"~,!,°!h'r;~ ~:~~al w:,~oa0A~, ~. WTM 20 ....... ..~.~ la oondllct.cl by: an ._!rte 'J. ""1r9tta. 1Mee it«lnt lndMdual. ' T" l'hM ~ la oondlAMd bt • 92871 ..-2&47 ' ' it.' -· V· ._ • ...,_., ..,.. at .,.,.. .. ..,, • ....,., ~•., Fount.alill V~, c.llf, t27ot PAMELA l'fUEIEN CIOtPO'~ m. t.tnw" COndueted by:. Wtt10y8wrlth, 1400 c.ni.. A w.;1.s:::.:::: ... CA ~!,25 SM! 8-:tl, OA. 90140 At.HAT M.8CHULTEl'f, .If\ Thia bu9MM .. oonoucted by.. Tiiie ~ "89 flaCI .. -J.lt·<Mlleon,. Ylal '''-'''"' ~al pertnettfllp Suhe 202. Hunll.ngton 8eectl c:t· ti ....... ,..,.., .. oon.....,,ed by: a TIW ~ 19 conctuoi.d ~ a Thia •tatemtnt WM lllecl wlfrl 11'\e g.n.11 P«tneraNp County OWtc of OrMge COUllC'1 on TNt ltili•••l4 Wiii ..... h OaVld Utt• t2847 ' · 911'* ...-• ,.... Qenerll Pltt1Wll'llp. ~nty Cletil of Ottn09 County on Edwvcl w. H«Wtll Jan 5 1NA ~ Cltr'lc of ~ ~ Clfl
Tlllt 11..,_,t wu ftled With the This butlnMa 11 <lO'lduc:ted b ~d R. Stenlon I(..,, B. Cutto Jan 5, 11114 Thie IWternent WM med ~th the . • PmtJI 09C IO, 1~
county Clel1C of Ofa.nge County on ~al r>ortner.nl y. • ltatemenl wu filed wttll lhe Thia 1tatem«1t wu lffed wtttl the '2111to leounlY CWtl Of Ofanee County on Pvbllthed Or9n91 e<.1 Delly ,,....
Jan. 5. 1984 oayi. A. Trill P ~~~~=of Orange County on County Ci«k Of Otenge County on Published Orange Cont Dally b9c. 2'1, 1NS Ptlot Jan. 2t. Feb. 2. t. 11. 1"'4 Pubtlthed °'** OOMI DiallJ l'2MM °Tlllt atatement w .. fli.d wtth the an. , Jan. 23, 19e.t Pltot J1111. 2t. F.O 1. 9, 16, 1t1M ~ -.... Nol Jan. 2'8, '4111. t , t , 11, 1114
Publi.hed Orange Cout Dally County Cieri< of Orange County on Publlltied Ot Cou nJl1a P 1 ,..., 571-IM Publllf'led Or~ CoMt Dellr ea..
Pilot Jan. 26, fleb. 2. t , 18. 1984 o.ci. Z7. 1983 PllOt Feb. 18 23~rcfl 1 ~ IDellyt·~ Pllo~~~ 1~ange23 M eo..h t Deity" ~t Jen. "· Feb, 2, •• te. tNA Pl8JC fl)TIC( -593.94 ~ • • • • .... ...., .•. v, ' If<: 1, 1118' 650-M -- -ftatJC llJTIC(
Publlafled Orange cout Dalty M4-84 I05-IM NlJC NOTICE NOTICE OF DEATB or--.....;..;;=~;;.;..;;-.......__ ---Pllll--C-*>_T_IC£ ___ Piiot Jan. 2e. Fet>. 2. e. 19 tlle.t .. _IC 111\TICE GARY G. OOLLIE& AND ncnnow .. ~.,
' 149.11-4 •--•c 111\TIC( ,._ """ 'ICTmout 1U ... a1 l'tll.IC N()TJC( OF PETITION TO 4.DMIN· um ITAR 11 IT
ACTmOUlllUINll r-.i nu · NAMllTATIMIHT ISTED EST TE 0 The f~ .,.,_..,. dolnig NA.Ml T ----------AC'nnou9 IU ... H T'he fOllOwlng P«lon• .,.. doing n A N . ~as:
I tloWI • ATUllNT PllllC NOTICE ~TmOUe IUWH NAm ST'A'T'llmf'T butl'*I .. : ~='Of A·ltlH'I AM> I.AHO ~ ,/Jn. bu~:...o u: ng l*'llOfl le doing NA.Ml STATIMINT TM foltowing S*tona .,. doing CARROLL MOUl.OING CO, 5382 COUNTY Olf ~ To all hftn, beneffdanea NEAS, t30t Dow It., ... •i
MEGIRDICHIAN ARCO, 3838 FICT1'T10Ul IU8MH bu~he following P'f90n• .,.. doing bu:.~ i;ACIAC. 2tH ~ lnduttrlal Drive, Huntlnglon 8erecitl, In ......... "' .. .......... .. credit.on and contingent ~ ~~-: ..... g::.t9~rsway, Corona del Mar, Tile IOI~=':!!!':':! dot B~S~~GE ENTERTAINM!N'T, Drift, Coet• M .... Ce, t2t27 c~:~lt2e::TERPRISlS, INC,, =~~:~V:.':!:.J.": creditors of Gary G. CoWer Ot., H~ ~ c.. .....
Herant H. Meg«dlclllan, 3453 buelne11 u : ng « ~~:rf\I~, £a:·1t2M7ll1• 0rt~9?c!ta~. ~ .. ~2~andt 5382 lnduttrlal Otlve, Huntington M8Y IOY MAIM, 1 --tot and perlON who ~)' ~ Thie le~ by. e
Fuotilll St., Cotta M.... Calif, A E GI 0 NA l REPER T 0 Ry Drive "F" O.::a Pol, t C llf ""'811111 Tl\11 ..... a 1..._.. •· ~ .... .,..__, by·. .... 9eedlT I , Cetlfornla, 112849 ,,..._ ,,.... .._.., ~ o~rwi.e lntereaiecf in the Nmtt~~
92628 THEATRE 1907 Deerpark Place • n • a · .... s2t ...,.,,_,.,...,,.v......... -· ht bullnau la conducted by•...,..~ will and .., ,,,......
Thia buelneta Is oonduc11d by: an Suite 520 'Fullerton Calif ttl31 , Daniel 0. °'*°"· 44 Fallb<ooll, ln4Mdual. corl)Oratlon. CAM NO ~ /or estate: Tlylt etatement WM ll9d _... flie
1ndl111dual. Howard T. Mango, 20181 Marina lrvtne. Caltf.11271• Gery s. K•IUI WllUam w. Hom, Vice Preeldent CITATION ... -M .... A petition has been filed County Clelil of Of'M09 ~ Oii
H H. Megerdlolllan Ln., HunUngton BelCll Calif 92148 Mack KrouM, 2080 South Orand, Thia statement wu filed with the Thlt ltattment was IOed with the THE PEOPLE OF TH'l'OF CAl.f. by Barbara A. C.0Wer ln I.he O.c. 2-'T. 1113 •
Till• statement wu filed wtth the Pi!:''ru,~'~~11:~~ ~pw11 s.;~r, =nC::i:~~ed by: an ~;:::, ~'r,~:~4°'.,. County on ~~ .~ 0' Orange County on F~i~~RRY o. PROTZ: , Superior C.ourt of Orange Pvbllnef ~ eo. "-=: '4 g:~~.~~ of Orange Cou= 11,,,1;~~ ~~=-~~ <:O~ucted by. a r:~~=lll~atlon other Publlthed Orange COM~ PubHtlled Orange Cou~ her~=.~~~·~ :: ~~ ~~t:~~~·~ t~ Piiot J#I. 2t, Feb. t . 11, 1:... r:
Publlthed Or~ Cout Dally Howard T. Mango Daniel o. DtlKOll Piiot Feb. 9. 18, 23, Maren \;~ Piiot Jan. 28, Feb. 2, 9, 18, 1914 pear &.fen the = l)t'Mldl~ In pointed u penonal ttp. ~·
Pilot J .... 28 Feb " 1e 111•~ Tiiis atatetnflnt wae ft'--' wl'll t ... C· This statement wu filed witll the &40-14 this,.,.. .... on ua-... 111•" at ..... -n•au've •-_ .... _,_, ___ •'--P\a.IC 11Jl1C( " ..... • · • •· · '" County Clerk 01 Or•...,,., 'Cou~ty on'.. ounty Clerk of Orange County on • .,IC AM ~t 37~ ,._,,,'" ...__ ........ """ -... -.unu:1.1iHcT WJC 848·84 o.c. 27. 1983 -.. -.t111. 30, 1tM .-~ NOTICt • " .._ · • .,_, .... "-•to estate of Gary G. C.oWer n.tm-n GI' 116 ----------,_.10 ~ ,icrmoualU ... H Ml.IC NOTICE =y~~~ :!,~~~ (under the Ind=t Ad· u.-om BllTOllU.Oll ,to "8.IC NOTICE Publlaned Orange Cout Dally Published Or•nge Coast Delly NAm ITA,._..,. FICTrTIOUl IUl-11 declared fr.re of"""" cwt-end miniatration of •-•-)~ FICTITIOUIT"-f~I!_*!'!__ ~ Piiot Jen. 26, Feb. 2., 9, 16, 111... Piiot Feb. 2, 9, 18, 23, 199-4
7
.... ·~ ...,.. ,~ ~, ...,. ~~. ,,. __ .. ,tcTITIOUI IUllNlll 95"1~ •• ...,..... The loltowlng pat'90nl are doing NAM! a-TATIMIHT control for the j)Ul'P08ll of frMlng The petition I.a 9et tor hear-donadthe~ theflollllOut ....
N .. _ IT'"._.-._ butlneu a : The following peraon 19 doing BABY BOY NASH tor placement for · De ,_. Name COA8TUNa PRO-.. .. , .. _NT LAGUNA PARTNERS, LTD •• Call· b<ialnesa u : adoption. mg in pt. No. 3 at 700 : w...-
bu:r:.::no l*9on .,.. dOlng -----------PlllJC NOTICE loml• c:orp«atlon, 610 Newpo(1 BKS ENTERPRISES, 1835 Ohms The following Information con-Civic Center Dr., West, =~82~ t2IMO °'"
CAR COVER'S UNLIMltED, 7 • .,, ____ Pl&..;.;;.;;;.;.IC;;..;.;NO;.;:;.;,.;TIC,=:£:____ -Center Drive, N1147, Newport Way •B. Cotta M .... Caltt. 92827 <*nt rights and Pfocedurea whlctl Sant.a Ana, CA 92701 on Feb-t:1#rW ~ c AoOd ~
"" r ... TITIOUalUIMlll Beecti,Ca.92MO Bengt Kaleb Svenuon, 25-4 relatetothltPfoc;.aedlngfortt'9tlf· 29 ll!Ml" "30 M Ocea.nct.-DI' w..:....--·llMdl
liA Shallmet Ot .. Coe1a M .... CA. '1CTITIOUl IU ... ll ~ ITATl .. NT Hunter Eneroy Corp., 610 New-Magnolia St., Costa Meaa. Calif., mtnatton of custody 8nd oontrol ot ruary • U'C1"W at .. : A . · t "·-·-.. -· •
92626 NAME ITATIMINT The lollowlng 1*10n1 ate doing port Center Otlv., 111•7. Newport 112827 BABY BOY NASH ae Mt forth In in Dept. 3. c~::Hloua ~Hime
Otho M. Behr Ill, 735 #A Shalimar The loHOwlno peraons .,. doing bualn ... u : EM&ch, ca. t28e0 Thia bualneu It conducted by an Section 237.5 of the Civil~: IF YOU 08.J!X:T to the fer eel t ~ fled In~
Or . Cotta M .... CA. 92628 bualneu as: CERAMIC CUBBYHOLE WORI<· Ralph E. Phelan, Jr., 810 Newport lndlvldvet. (1) At the beOfnnlng Of the gr tin f th titi C:U o a ~3l 1113
lndTlhvll•dubua1'. 'nen I• oonduc:tld by. an DUCK INVlSTMENT CLUB. 102 SHOP & GIFTS, 18820 Mt. Center Drive, # 1 t•7' Newport Bengt Kaleb Sven111on pt"OOeedlng tM Court wlll eonllder shanould ge·'other eapl>!.. .... 011at' ythoue r:: i:..n.. ~ ...
Scnoiz. Plaza. Suite 141, Newport Hutolllngs, Fountain Valley. Ca. Beech, Ca. 928e0 T1111 atatement wu flied witll the whether or not the tntereats of ~ r-WM . "' ~"r: .~.t::,~11wu flL...oo Wltll t"A 8"<:11, Ca. 92683 92708 Thia bulin ... II conducted by: • County Clerk of Orange County on BABY BOY NASH r9qUlr• .,... .. hearing and atat.e you objec-an R~Aooct ....., ,..., Jonn Edward Otake, 102 Sc:lloll lteee McDermott, 9"62 Skytartt, oen«al pvtneral'llp. December 27, 1983 polnttTMtnt ol oounMI. " the Court tions or file written ob· Thl9 tat flled wlttl tfl9
County Clerk of Orange County on Plaza, Suite 141, Newport a..en. Garden Grove, Ce. 92841 Carl HUNTER ENERGY CORP. ~ tlnda that the lnter .. ta of BABY · 'th the Jee· Coun •ci:::;t W9l
Jan. 3, 198-4 Ca. 92663 McDermott, 16820 Mt. Hutonins, Ralph E. Phelan. Jr. Publlalled Orange Coas1 Diiiy BOV NASH will not be pt"llMf1t In uons wt court before J ~ 1_.. °'*108 ~ °"
'234147 Walter Miiion Drake, 10200 So. Fountain Valley, CA. 92708 Prealdent Piiot Jan. 26, Feb 2. 9, 18, 1984, COVl1 unleN he eo requeets or the the hearing. Your appear· ~· ' F201720 Published Oraoae Cout Dally Orange Grove, Suite 12, Puadena, Thi• buelneu 11 condu<:ted by: • Thia atatement wu nted with the 641..u Court 10 ~ ance may be in person or by ~no Or · Piiot Jan. 28, Feb.~. 9, 18.1984 Ca. 91105 general partnership. County c1e111 of Of•--County on (2)1fapVentofBABYBOVNASH your at•~-... y . Pllot~~e ..,.Wt08_...eo.M1 8 1~ 822·84 Tom Walter Drake, 6851 Edge-Cart McDermott Jan. 5, 198• .. ,,... IPPMI'• without oounael and .. un-""•""' ....,. ' ..... Met .... • ' _..
----------mont, Huntington BMcti, Ca. 92647 u ... McDermott f211121 Pl&.IC NOTICE able to afford c:ountel, the Court IF YOU ARE A CREDI· W-M "8.IC NOTICE Rlcllatd Lee Drue, 220• Dudley, Thia statement wu filed with the Yat.e and McKM must appoint counMI for the TOR or a oonti.ngent creditor ••.,. MftftN:
Pasadena. Ca. 11110• Coun!Y Clerk of Orange County on Attorneys at Lew F~~~: au ... H parent, unleu tl'le parent knowingly of the deceased, you muat ___ r;..;;;-=.;..;."";.;;.;1.;;;,;~;.... __
FtcTITIOUI MllNEll This bu&loeas la conducted by: • Jan. 3, 1984 868 North Main Street, The IOI owl ATIMENT and lntelHgently dlvel 1he right to file your cla.irn with the NOTICI 01f ..... MAnc.I NU. ITATIMINT general pertnerahlp. F2M7M Suhe 1000, Sana Ana, Ca. 92701 b I 1 . no person ta doing repreMnted by counsel. The Court cw •GAlWW ~,,_
Tile followtng person1 are dOlng John Oralee Published Orange Cout Dally 835-3742 °• nna a.s. lit not appoint Ule NIM eounae1 to court or preeent it to the per-
businesa u : Thia statement WU filed with the Piiot Feb. 2. 9, 16, 23, 196-4 Published Orange Cout Dally SUNSET DIAGNOSTIC, 6400 Ed· repretent bOth BABY BOY NASH aonal representative ap· ~m:=.~
THE OAKS INVESTMENT COM· County Ci.tk ol Orange County on 553-84 Piiot Jan. 28, Feb. 2, 9, 16, 1984 Inge< Ave., Huntington Bea<:n, Calif., and Illa parent. nnlnted by the court within IJHIROl!?R'MTAL .. Aet.-
PANY. 1833 Eut Fourth Str•t, Jan. 13, 1984 570-34 92647 (3) TM Court may appoint either r--· Santa Ana. CA. 92705 F235750 Clluok Mullr. 6400 Edlnge< Ave., the publk: defender or private ooun-four months from the date of fllllOllT
G L. Argyrot, Gene<al Partner, PubUthed Orange Cout Dally Ml.JC NOTICE Plate NOTICE Huntington Beach, Calif. 92847 eel. If private oounM1 l1 appointed, first issuance of letters as The lrvlne ~ w .. DIMttct
505 N. Tuttln A~ .. Sulte 150, Sant• Piiot Feb. 9. 16, 23, M•r<:ll,1, ttlM FICTI'TIOUI llUWll Tiils business la conducled by: an lie or she wlll r~v. • reaeonable provided in Section 700 of ~o~==
Ana, CA. 112705 774-84 NAME ITATIME..w f1CTITIOUl llUl•ll lndlvldual sum for compensation and ... the Probate Code of Cali-..., tM Callfoml 0.0.. Of Dudley B. Frank, Genef'al Partn«, ... NA.Ml ITATIMINT Chu~ Muhr pertMI, tile amount of which wlll be VJ a 1fttlttl'1"*"
505 N. Tustin Avenue, Suite Hl1, 1-----------00~he tollowlng persona are doing The following persona are dOlno Thi• statement wu filed with the determined by the Court. Thet fomia. The time for filing ~~:;~r~t~ •;!,i~1=
Senta Ane, CA. 92705 PlalC NOTICE OA~M-:: OF SUMMER 3,.571 bullneu u : County Clerk 01 Orange County on amount mutt be paid by tile reel claims will not expire prior Ana Freeway (1·5) Int~
Thi• bualneu lt conducted by:. OAAHGE COUNTY Calle lo• Robles "B" c.P111rano FOUNTAIN VALLEY MUSIC Dee. 27· 1983 par1ies In lntereat, but not by the to four months from the cl.ate dated October 1, 11112, In ... .con.-lm~ted ~artnerthlp. MUNICtPAL COURT Beach, CA. 92624 . CENTER. INC.. 18932 Broo«hurtt. Publlehed Orange Coaa?'~~ ~~. i:i.:: fo'~':"11 u ~ of the hearing noticed above. tlderatlcWI of the eftecte on IN ....
T .• ~· rgyroa 11·-~ °' OlllANOm c........... K•tharyne Hatleberg 34571 Celle Fountain Valley, Calif. 112708 Piiot Jan, 26, Feb.2, 9, 16, 198• eu-, t"A Court find• , ... tan' y'of ,... YOU MAY 'O'V .... rnn:-vlronment of the ~ deecl1bed h .. ata1ement wu ,... wltll tile "'""'' LOI Roblee "B" Caplatrano 8eeell Fountain Valley Mutlc Center, Inc. '"" ,,. ,.. '"" ~~u.n~ belc>w. 5ucn EIR coillldilla the.,._ County Clel'k ol Ofange County on 4901 ":::w JudlcW Dtehtcl Ca 92624 ' · • Calltornle corporation, 18932 843•84 real parties In lnt...et cannot atford the file kept by the court, U vtronmentlll .n.ctt Of the ~
Jiii. 23. 1t8• ....._port :::,.ams..c ~ 211 .. ~~ w--... G Hat•-.._..., .,.571 Cal .... BrOOltllurtl, Fountain Valley, Cell· c:ouneel, the amount will be paid b)' · •-._.... · the ,,...,,. wNoh the Dllltr1Gl'a ov"'-" Wiii ~ ..... .. --· LOe R~b~'---"B""'c""'"..; t.,... n--A::' foml• 92708 Plate NOTICE the County.(•) The Court may con--you are m .... resl.CU Ul ~ MNa, wNch en.eta ... ~ to JACKIOH, K~lll a IUCKUNQ Plaintiff: HERITAGE BANK • Cal\.. .... • .... rano .._..,, Thlt bual I d ed . tlnue the pt"oc:.aedlng tor not mor• tate, you may serve upon the --0 CMo ................ ..,. ~orni• corporation. . Ca. 92824 .... ,_,,... • con uet by. a T th 30 d t to ...1-•-•-•-tor be the Mme • tlloee of the 0. ne .. __ .. -Oe1endant: E. B. SPIELMAN, lndl· Tlllt bullneu 11 conducted by:• corpor.,...,,Fo'·uNT•1N V'"LLEY Ftc l~I •UIMll an •YI u neo.aery o liP" execu r or a"LAnwuawa •or trlet'• protect eac:ept for the Newport...._, CA • ....., gene at artnerthl . " " NA..-ITATIMENT point counMI and to enable counMI upon the attorney for the ex-1t10tMerm CClnltrU<:tlon lrnpecU. Publltl'led Orange Coast Delly ~ldualty, and dba AN ELCO, and Kar Ill p lebert p. MUSIC CENTER INC The following pert0na are doing to become 90qualnted wltll the fhe8I w111 be edd,.....S
Pilot Feb. 18, 23, Match 1. 8, 1984 ~ES O~E t6~r~2 n TEN, lnQlutlve Thi~ .~~!wn_,,1 wu filed with the Claudl K. Nlocola: Sec:1y b<islnesa a.s: caaa. Dated: Jan. 2•, 199-4 ecutor or administrator, and CoplM Of Mid EIR II on er:=;
931-84 ase o. IUMMONI County Clerk of Orange County on Thi• statement WU flied with tile OASIS ICE ANO SANDWICHES By: L .. A. Branch file with the court with Olatrtet OfTloe and.,.~ lor
-----------NOTICEI You haw b9ef'I eued. January 24, 1984. County Clerk of Orange County on TOOi, 105 Main Street, Balboa, County Clerk proof of service, a written publk lntpecilon.
111.,.,,. unTICE -.._ oowt mar decide ....... At . FZll11• Jan. 5, 1984 Callfornle 92681 Cll~bo1tt1.!~ooll0«r~1!A_ """'ty request sta. tinB. that you de-. The lrvtne Ranc:h water Oletrtcl 18
.--..""" II... ag-191104« p bH· .. __. 0 c o-•1y F21112S Pamela J. Smith, 4t21i't Eut ..... ....... -··-.......... ..,.. --"""" • -.. .... ~------------i...1tttou1 "OUf ._.__ lleefd un-. u '"'"""' range out .. p ........ __. o o Piiot Feb"'"'"' 2, 9, 16, 2·31 1"'•~ sire s......,;a,1 notice of the fiJ. r....-.. ,. ·-v---....,....aoi, .............. c,........, ... ' ~.. Piiot Feb 2 9 18. 23 1984 u........... range Cout Dally ceanfront, Balboa. Caillornla ·-1 ~ ~ . tcw ·ttle projiect deactttled blllow. A ...,._ """' • you re.pond wltt\ln JO dey.. ~ · · · · • Piiot Jan. 5, 198-4 92661 7~ ing of an mvent.ory and ap-llllUNIC•AL COUtn' the ln1ormetton a.tow. 750-84 568-8• Linda Martinez, 412'A Ealt ft•-• f dtaft Negative 0«::6eralfeln .. OM OP ORAMQa COUNTY """"'•wlal'ltoMek theadv!Oeotan pr......::men.o es1ateaaetaor ftleattMOletf\ctOfb, 1M028er-Hettlor Judliolm Dtetrlct ,__ Oceanfront, Balboa. California •-ic NOT11'c of \he ti ti •• dMrl AV'8nU9, !MM, CA. end la attorney In this matter. you ahould •DtfC 111\f•rt:: 9268l l"UIX. 11~ pe ona or accoun.. available tor pu.bllc lnepecUon. A
_, ...,..., .. IMI., 9o1 2110 do eo promptly to that your writtlfl r-VIX. nu iw. Pla.IC NOTIC£ Ttlla bullneat 11 conducted by. a .,,....1 NOTICE W'"I -c--.. mentioned in Section 1200. :::: o.cs.-......., ..._ __,_ Newport9eech,ca.--.1M7 retpense, If any, may be ftled on '"' "' ,__..and 1200 .. of the Calif ....... , -... -~ Plalntlff:HERITAGE BANK. a Call· time. NOTICE TO UCOAOED Jen.17, 1.. general partnerthlp. ON JANUNIY 1, , .. Al ... TIN-,.J onua . for ~OVlll 0t l'flf\SlP10lillll
lornla oorporatlon AYllOIUsted Ila atdo demandede. CONTRACTORI INITRUMINT NO. M021A1 PAMELA J. SMITH MENT NO . ..._.. .. THI Of· PrQbate Code. by the ao.d of Oir.aon of UW
Defendant:JAIREMARIE A. e.1 trlbume· lede dec:ldtr contra Ud CALUNO FOR H>I T.I . NO. Thi• •tatement wu flied wttll the f1CE Of' THI MCOM>«lll CW OA· Steven J. Feldmu Olttriet at 1tt meeting to be held•
POMO, and DOES ONE through eln audlen'.cla • menoe que Ud. ~ Sc:llool Ol1trtet: Irvine Unlfted VlllM/1SS7t County Clerk of Orange County on ANGE C°"'!!!:~ONiltA. %5401 Cabot Rd. SaJte 109 the ot.tr1c:t Otfloe on F.twuety 27, TEN, lnciuttve. epond9 dentro de ao dlee. lee la Bid Deadline: 2:00o'el0ekof the 11t NOTICE Of' DefAUlT AND ILIC· Jan. 31, 1914 ......-r-19e.t. Cue No. 5-4327 I f Ion elt day of Match TION TO HU UNC>elll DeED Of F2S7140 NOTICE Of DIFAUU Laguu Bills, Ca. 9H53 Pro)ee1: .Alton Parkwey O..·
8UMMONI n :":u11Gw1ett '': _. ~ advtoe of Place ol Bid Receipt: District Ad· TIWIT PuOllahed Orange Cout Oalty AND EL.ECTIOt;f TO Published Orange Coast c:rotelng at 1·5 FrMWay, Oomeetlc
NOTIC•J y ....... _ ......., ~ ........ -•"tt-In ...... -----, _. ministration Center, 211-41 Alton IMf'OlllTAHT NOTICI Piiot February 2, 9, 18, 23, 19M . IELl UNOElll DEED CW Dail Pil F b 9 0 6 Wale< and A«lalmed Watar Fecll-., ............ ---· -··-· ,,_ .. _..... ,_ A I I c 927 736-64 -u1T ...--T ...... NOTICE y ot e . . l • 1 . t ...... ·~..... .... .... The cout1 iney dectde 1911Mt you ehould do M promptl'f eo that yow ve., rv ne, •· 1• IF YO\M PRONllTY 11 lfif fOlllE· , n .... rvn ..,. , ""' ........,,..,. ..-.thin t ... ~Old!
without '104M betng heerd vn6eel wrftten reeponae tf any iney be Project Identification Name: Equip-ClOIUREMCAUIEYOUAftllE· -----------IFYOUlllPROPllllTYlllHFOM· 1984 819-84 rampa and b<ldge struc:tur• °'the you rMpOftd wtthln '° dap. ...ecr ftled on ume. • ' ment Storage e.nd Shelter, 1.teoo HIND IN YOUR PAYMINTl, IT MAY PlBLIC NOTICE CLOIUM MCAUll YOU AM •-te 11nnrc Alton Parkway 8rldge at the Inter·
the lfttonnetlon a.tow. SIU.tlddeeeeaoflctter .. oon ... Sand Canyon Ave .. lrvlne. Calif. IE IOLD wtTHOUT ANY COUlllT aewto IN YOUR ,AYMENTI, IT r~ nu w. MctJon of the i.-5 Freew111 and tu.
II you wtah to Mel< the advk:e of an lo de un abogedo .,. •te eeunto. Place Plant are on flle: The Bluroett ACTION, and you may have 1he legal T -~ MA y M IOl.D WITlfOUT A1fY ture A11on Paritway.
attorney In this matter. you ahoul<I debefte ~ lnmadletMlente, Partnerahlp, Architects, 2300 N-· right to bring your a<:e:OUnt In good NOTICE Of' COURT ACTION, and you llave the NOTICE OF DEATH OF Irvine Rench Water 06etrtct will
do '° promptly to that your written ci. .. ta "**., au ,..._... port Blvd.. Newport BeeQh, Calif. standing by paying all of your put TlllUITIE'I IAU legal rtgllt to bring your ac:count Into MYRON L. HOOVER AND follow the recommended mltlglldon
respon ... tt any, may be flied on 1MCtffa. 11 hay e1guna. IM*M .., 92663 due paymenta plua permitted eottt T.I. No. -PR good standlno by paying a.11 ot your OF PETITION TO ADMIN· IMMll'• contalMCI In the Anet BR
time, Nflelradaattempo. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that and expentet within thr .. month• YOUAllElfifDll'AUlTUMDElllA palt due payments plus permitted ISTER EST TE O No_ FHWA·CA·EIS·81-03·f.
AY&IOIUtted na tldodemendade. 1.To TltE DIFENOAHT· A ctwtl tile abO.....nemed SclloOI District from the date this notice of default DEID Of' TIWIT DATED .NM 21, <:01t1 and expenMt wtthln tllr.. A N · PMIPlted by Cettrent to mltioate
El trlbuma; lede deddlt contr• Ud. loompletnt hae b9ef'I ttt.c1' by the for Orange County, Cetlfomla, act· was recorded. Tiiis amount It 1tl0. UNUl8 YOU TAKI ACTION month• from the abOve recordlnQ A· 1Z170 construction level impects.
iln eudlincta 1 menoe qua Ud.,.. pelnttff aoelnet rou. "'1°" wt.ti to Ing by and tllrougll ltt Governing $2,634.81, u of January 12. 199-4, TO PROTICT YOUR PROPIRTY, date. Thi• amount la $3,874.32, aa To all heirs, benPfu 1 •rl'"' Deted: FeONaty 13, 1914
11ponc1e deMN di IO..._ lM la~ ~ leweult rou ,,,...t. Board, hereinafter referred to u and wm Iner-until your ac:eount IT MAY IE SOlD AT A ~ of tile above recording date, and creditors and Betty J. Wheeler
lnfonNclon qua....... wtthln JO days after tllia 1Ummont 18 "DISTRICT", wtll receive up to, but becomes current. you may not 11ave SALE. IF YOU NEED AN ~-wlll lncteaM dally until your account creditors of M" 1 Secretary "'1• wtell to..-......... of MtWd on you Ille wltll thla court 1 not later tllen the al>ov9-1tated to pay tile entire unpaid portion of NATION OF THI NATUM CW THE bec:omM current. You do not have "'JbllAtllld Orange eo.t o.tly Piiot
an an...., lft tNI """"' 1CMI written respor;te to tile complaint time, INled bld1 l0< the award of• your aec:ount, even though lull pay-PROCEEDINQI AQAINIT YOU, to pay the entire unpaid portion of ver and persoru .t.. •t> i e. 1ts.4
ehcMltd do 80 ~ 80 "'8f '104lf Unlele you do your default wilt ~ <:entract for the abOve pro)ee1. ment wu demanded, but you mull YOU IHOUlD CONTACT A LAW· your account, even tllougn tun pay· otherwise inter "-837..M
wrfttM ,11,1,.., " •'1· "'11'1 be entered on application of the plain· Bids tllall be received In the place pay tile amount stated above. Yllll. ment wae demanded, but you muet ·u and/ ftled on ttme tiff and till• court may enter a judge-Identified above, and shall be open-Atter three months from the date On March 7. 198• et 10:00 A.M pay the entire unpaid portion of Wl or est.o PtaJC NOTICE
81 Ueted .... aoktWf el conM-ment alnst you t0< the relief cs.. ed and publlety read aloud at the of recordetlon of thlt document VERDUGO SERVICE COAPOR· your account, even thQugh lull pay· A petition h.a.'
Jo de un allaildo.,. .... aaunto, mand!J ln the completnt. which abov•ateted time and place. (Which date of recordatlon appears ATION u Ill• duly appointed tTMtnt was demanded, but you mutt by Park E. H oover ,::,1 ., ,
debef1a heoefto ~. could result In garnishment of There wlll be a $10.00 depolit hereon). uni.as the obligation being Trustee under and purauant to pay the amount 1tete abOve. Ann Neiman in the Supenor
de .... --, IMI ,.._.ta weges t&klnQ 01 money or pt"operfy required for ..en Mt of bid docu· l0teel0Md upon permits a longer Deed ol Trust, Recorded on Juty 7, Atter 1hrM monthl from the Co Or Co
MCttta, .a ~· puecte .., or ot~ relief requested In the com-manta to guarant .. tlelr return In period, you hev. only the legal right t980 as Document No. 5573 Book above recording date. you have tile urt of ange unty re-,.....,.. a plaint good oondltionwltllln 7 days after to stop the forectoeure by paying the 13656 Page 1250 of Offlolat R• legal rlgh1 to stop ttle forec:tosore questing that Park E. Hoo-
1·TO THI Dir ' ANT· A cfYll Oat~· Oct 7 1983 tile bid opening data, entire amount demanded by your cords In the office of the Aac:order only by paying the entl,. amount ver, Shirley Ann Neiman be ~ Ml ~ ,..d i.y the J PETERSON Clerk Each bid muet conform and be creditor. ol Orange County, California, ex· demanded by your <:redltor. ted nal
petnllff ....,..t 'ICM! If '1CMI wt.fl to By· SUSAN MOSER Deputy reaponllve to the contract doou-To find out the amount you must ec:uted by: HARVEY DORLAND To nnd 911t the amount you must aresepponintativeasto apedmi~rus-terrethp-e deMftCI thla ~ '1CMI muet. lllOotlll A. IAEVIO ' menta. pay, or to arrange for payment to WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION pay, or to arrange for payment to
wltNn IO days after this aummons la 2082 Mlct*eon Dr Suite 100 Each bidder anal! aubml1, on tl'le stop the loreelOau,., or It your prop· TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR stop the foredoeur• or It your prop. estate of Myron L. Hoover
9MYed on you nte with thll court 1 , 0 9o• 1-·• form turnlthed with the c:ontract arty It tn foreolotur• for any otller CASH. (payable at time of NII In arty II In foraclotore for any other ( d th Ind d t Ad
written reap00M to the oomplalnt ~· CA. l2'11S documents, • llst of the proposed reason. contllC1: lawful money of the United StatM) rea10n, contact: RAYMOND L. un er e epen en •
Un .... you do, your default will 1>4i (714) ia1 -aubcontr11C1or1 on thlt project as AMERICAN SAVINGS ANO LOAN at The North tront entrance to the WORSLEY and HELENE C. mirustration of &t.ates Act).
entered on ei>Pcication of the plain· Publlaned Orange Cout Dally Piiot required by the Subletting and Sub· ASSOCIATION. 15725 E. Whittler County CourtllouH, 700 Civic WORSLEY The petition is set for hear.
tiff andthlsc:ounmayentl!'a)ud~ Jat1 26 Feb 2 9 18 lllM contracting Fair Praettc .. Act. Blvd., Wlllttler. CA. 90607, (714) Cen1erOrlveWest,SantaAna.CA. BENEFICIARY:Huabendalldwtle ing 111 Dept. No. 3 at 700
ment egalntt you for the relief de-· • · • • · 687•84 Govt. Code Sec. •100 et teq. 773-7134 B1-t93927 79 (E) 92701 ell rlgllt, title and lntll'eet aa Joint tenants clo Security Civic Center Dr.. West,
manclecf In tM complaint which Eactl bidder mutt tubmlt with If you have any question•. you conveyed to and now held by It TruttM SeMoee. Inc could rMult In garnltll~t of eacll bid certified or eunler'a clleck anould contllC1 a 1ewv-or the gov-under teld Deed ol Tru1t In the STREET ADDRESS. 14561 Ven--Santa Ana, CA 92701 on Feb
wagee, talclno of money or property Pta.IC NOTIC£ payable to the DISTRICT or • bid ernmenl agency which may 1111ve In-property altuated In Hid County, tur• Bl."..~.r-~~~man Qua, CA. 29, 1984 at 9:30 A M.
or other relief r9quetted In the com· bond In the form aet forth In the ~l"f(t-yOUrloltlr. C.llfornla.-cleac:riblng tM-land-91400-T~;-(21a) 783-7770 IF YOU OBJECf to the plaint ORANQI COUNTY contrac:t dooumantt In an amount Remember, YOU MAY LOSE tllereln: II you llave any qu .. t1on1, you
Oat9d· Augut1 4 1982 IU..llllOA COUftT I.not .... than 10'~ of the maximum LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU DO NOT Lot 19 of Trac:t7177. Uehown on tllould contlct •lawyer or the gov-granting of the peution, you
J PET~ON. ~ 700 CMo CeftMr Dr. WMt amount of bid u a guarantM that TAKE PROMPT ACTION. •map recorded In Book 273, P~ emment egen<:y wnldl may llave In· should either appear at the =~~'i= Deputy P•ll=r~~:-A~RRES ~~~<Ser oon-:~!c. ~t~he1~me'': s~N°K1~£ ~~~S~~e~g~,;:~?~~ ~e61:.~r~ti'.~~ag::: su==~'.''\ou MAY Lose hearing and state you objec·
llMotl II Drift autt. 100 NICHOLS awarded to IUCll bidder. In the now duty appointed TruttM under a aald County. LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU DO NOT tions or file written objec· =. c;e:;~. . Aeepondent: MElVINJ. NICHOLS event Of lallura to enter Into Mid Deed of Truat dated Febniery 11, Exe-s>tlng all oll, gu, m1ner111 TAKE PROMPT ACTION. lions with the court before
J14/M1.-. c ... No. 0.22~9-03 contl'l!Ct, IUCtl ee<:urfty wlll be IOI'· 1977 exec:uted by. WILLIAM W. FIS. and llydroeart>on IUbttaneea tying NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: That the hearing. Your appear·
Publlthed Oftnge Cout Dally Piiot IUNllONI (FA.MIL Y LAW) flit. CHER & LINDA A. FISCHER, hut-below a dept" of 500 feet, but SECURITY TRUSTEE S.Ef\VICES. be · b January 2e. 1ee.. Febrv•ry 2 9 19 NOTICl1 You haft b9et1 auN. DISTRICT reaervea the right to bWld and wit. u Tru1tOI', to aecure without tile right ot 1tirfac. entry to INC .. e COfporatlon, le Subltltuted ance may m person or Y
1984 • · ' ' The oourt mey dectde agalMt JOU re)ect any or ell bid• or to watve any obl1Qat1on1 In favor of: AMERICAN lake, market, mine, •iu>lor1t or drlll Tru11 .. under a Deed of Trwt dated your attorney·
eet-M without pw IMlftg hNl'd unleM Irregularities In any bldt or In the SAVINGS, & LOAN ASSOCIATION for tal'ne u r....-ved In the Deed September 2t, 1t78 executed by IF YOU ARE A CREDI-'°" t..,oM wttltlft JO .,.._ "8llCt bidding. A«iorded on Fet>nwy 26, 1977 u from Cua De La Cueata, a Mmlted JOANNE E. MUNDON, u Truator. TOR or a contingent creditor
-----------the lnf9nftetlon beloW. Purwant to th9 prOV1110n1 of Sao-dooumant No. 32022 bOoll 12082 partnerllllP. recorded May 26, to MCUr• oougatlOn• In favor of Pl&.IC f«)TIC£ It you with to M8k the advlol of an tlon 1773 of tM labor Code of the ~ge t of Offtolel Recorda In the 197 I, In Boole 9852. Paga 809 of RAYMOND L. WO RS LEV and of the deceased, you must
-----------attorney In thl• matter. you ahould Stat• of Cellfomla, the DISTRICT otflcle Of the Aeoofder of Orange Of11cl•I RE.cord•. tiELENE c. WORSLEY, hutband' file your claim with the
.W.llllOR CCMMT do eo promptly eo tnat your written h .. obtained from the Olrac:tor of County, California, Including 1 The str .. 1 eddr ... and other and wife aa Joint tenants, •• court or present 1t to the per· M CALi'ONIA. r91PQnM, If eny, may be ftlld on the Dlpanment of lndut1rlal Alla· note(•) t0< tM aum of 163,800.00. common detlgnatlon, If any, of th9 t>eoetlclary recorded on OctOber 1 -
COUNlY Of' OAMGI time. tlone the geMral l)rellalllng ra .. ot That the benetlclel lnt.,..t under real Pfoperty dM<:flbeCI at>ow 11 2•. 1t78 as document no 317-40 In so~a representative . a~·
In the M~• oftM AV1101Ut1.cl na lldo delnandacM. per diem •aoee and Ule G'Mf•I Mid OMd of Truat and the obi•· purported to be: 13&52 Onkartia. boOk 12811• page tot o1 Offlciat,. pointed by the court within Aw!tc:etlon of El 1rlbum1: lede deolidlf ooMf'e Ud. prevalllnQ rate fOt tloffdly and 0\19f • oat1on1 MOU red ttl«eby.,.. .,,_.,,,. IMne. CA. 92teo cord• In the offi09 or the Aeootder four months from the da t.e of
VAl£RIE 8LAKf SANTORE ........ no .. a .......... Ud.,.. tlmeworfilntheloeelltylnwtllchthla ty lleld by the~~. ---t. The underalgned Truat .. dla• of°''""' County Clllfornl• 0. ..,._,, . { l t•A for Change of Name .,..,_ dlfttro de 30 clee. Lee le work It to be performed fOI' eecn t>rMch of, and ~In.'~·~~ c1a1m1 any llabllTty tor any lncofNCt· 1Ctlblng land ther.in ea: -UA •~ • t.ss~ 0 . e ... rs as
No. A 121eoe 1n'°""..aon .-...... craft or tYP9 ot woricl!' ~ to gatlon tor wnleh .. Id o...o of Trutt 11 ,,... of the .. ,._ eddr ... and other l.ot t 14 of Trect 2t77 u permep proVlded m Section 700 of
OROER TO SHOW CAUSE "1CMI WWI to_. tM liftloe fll exeoute the oontrllCt. TheM rat• MCUtlty haa OCCUf'l'ed In that the common dMignatlon. It 1ny, ftlO'WTI r-.oorded In boOk et, pegee 47 to 50 the Probate Code of Cali· ~R CHANGe OF MAM! en 1ttorMJ In INe metter, 'I°" ere on fife at the DISTAICT otlloe payment hu not ~ made of: ~ldn. Mle .... n ..._ _& ...... , ...... lt~o.:!.,. °1, ~~-~ 01nf fomia. Th, e time to. r filing (Sec. eoe-4) llMIUld dolOPf°""""M "'-«,.., loeated al tt.41 Alton Av.., lrvlne, Flllt.lr• to mete• the H9Vember t, ... ... ...... ...,.. ..,..., ......... "' .... ~ ... , ,_,_ cl will
VAl.E.AIE 81.Al<! SANTORE nu w""8n ,. .. ,,,..., If eny, .., Ille Ce. 9271•. ~ l1\llY be obtained 1983 payTMnt of prlncfpel at'tdfOf wllhOIJt coven.nt 0< warrenty. •· Uld county Mid~ lncM.td· aim., not expare prior
fllld 1 petltton tn thle coun tor an tied on HIM. on 111q\111t. A ClOt:'Y of.,,_. ratM lnter-1 and 111 aubeeQuent pay· pr ... or Implied, regtfdlng tltte. lno on9 note tor 1119 eum of tO tour months from the da~
Ofder allowing petitioner to chenge 91u.ted .... ......., .. ..,..... IMll be SM»ted et the Job llt.. manta. t()Qether wttll late ctllfo-, Po1...alon. ot encumbninoee, to Sf,200.00. of the hearing not.iotd above.
hit/her name from VALERIE BLAl<E fe de im ........ en _.. ....... It ah.it be mendatOty upon Ule Impound-. imex>und dtipoalta, It,,,,,, pay the remaining prtnclpel tum Of That the beneflelll In.-ut\der YOU MAY .,.v • ••1NE SAHTOAt to II.Al<! d9 MARIA. ...... Noerto 11111 ............... CONTRACTOR to wnom the con· under the terme of Mid not• Ot °"° the note(•) MCUred by Mid Deed °' auch deed and the obllgatlonl ... ~Y.l
IT 18 HlAEIV ORDERED that ell • 11ta .....-., .., 1 .. uut8 tract luwarded, and upon anyeut>-of Tru1t and all eube9quent PlY· Ttutt, whh lnt-.et thereon. u cut9d thereby .,.. owned ~ the the file kept by the court. U '*"°"' lnt••ted tn the matter wrtta. al :-:.,.~• .., contractOf under aucti CONT RAC· manta wtttcfl t>ecame du. t'*-fter, PtOVlded tn Mid note(t). adVanOM. und9rllgned: 'fhet • bf'MCfl of, end you are i ntete1ted in lhe es·
a1or.a1c1..,.,.., beforetNaoourt In , .......... • iOR, to PtY not leea than the Mid lnofudlng any lit• cn11gee or other If any, under tM tenn. of the OMd d9tault In. tM ObllOelloM t0t wNcf\ tat.e, you may 1erw upon the
Oecwtmenl No. 3 et 100 CMc l·TO T'Hm M TM ~ rtt91 to ell woncwe 9tn-tuml payable uf\Clar the _,,,. of of Truat, leM. chergee and ••· aucl\ deed II l9CUlltty t1u ~ _..i_,_, __ c.nw DrM w .. t. Santa Ana, Call-,.. .. -... • .._tied•,...._._.~ by tMnl In ttlp ex9CUtton of utd NOt• 0t Deed 01 Tr\llt. PllilMf Of the Trust• and of the 1n th9t P«Y"*'1 haa not been m.o. executo~ or ew•llllJ6.W•tor. or fornta. on March 5, 1te.'4, at t : 15 ........,. ,_, ..,..,.-_ • ,.,_ tal .. the oontrect. That bV fMtOn ttier.of, the preia-ttWtt cr•ted by .aid Deed of of. A o.f9ul1 e.xlltt on a ...-.,... upon the attorney for the ex·
o'clock AM .. and then end tiler• fle•1M11•Wwtlllllll0.,.fllh NobldNrl'Ml)'Wlthdrawanybl<I antbeneflclalyundet~O...OOI Tru:tt, tor the amount r....onebly C1U1nbrenc.. ecutorored.minisU"ator.and allow 08iUfie, If any t!MIV havt, ~ ...._ tMt We......,. ........ f0t a P9f'lod Of fof1)'·flve <•S) d.aYI Ttutt, l\Uexecuied anddelN9red to •tlmated to be: $33, 188.12 That by r.-aon thereot, tM rllt" with t.hf court W\lh
llld petition tor chang9 of nMM 4111 ,_. ,._ ...... IMf N aft• ~~•for the 0P9nlng of Mid Trutt•, a wntt.n Oeclatatlon Of The bfltllf'loWy under Mid OM6 un<WNgned1 ~ ~ • f ~"-........ .. ltlould not be Qrant«t. ~ ...... -1 IRilJ....., e bl<l1. o.fauft and D9mend tot hie. and Of Trut1 llerttofot9 Mecuted and under llUCtl oeecl,,,.. enotJted and prooi. 0 --• "~"'• I ........ -n
IT 18 'VAT!i!A «w.d that • ......... ......... • A PllY"*lt bond and • f*• ,,.. ~ed wfttl MIO TtuttM, del!Vered to tM undenlQned. Wf'lt· OllMlled to llld Ti\lltee • wrfnen reques' a.tatinfl lhat you d~
oopy ot tt11e Otder to etlOW OMIM be ....., .,..... .......... ....._el t~ bond • be rtqUlired aucti Deed of Tut9t and tll.,.. doOut-t9n Oeclatatton ot °"-* Md 0.-Oec:ttntton of o.e.uit and Demand sire speclal noti~ of the fil· ~blllhed 1n the&-. eoaat Delly -. ••• ......., ......,.. eNld Pttor to •llCUtlon ol the OOf\u.ct 1Mnt1 evlClenCfno the~ .. .., mend tor tele. end • "'1tterl NoOoa lof S.. and hM depoeited Wfl" >f an t: Pi.ot, a ~''* ot oaneraJ :. , ....., ......,., ...._, and lfllll be In the bm 1111 f~ In cured~. and,,_...,_. ancl Of Default and Ei.c:tlorl Sell. The Mid Tru:ttee Mlft -.ct and all 1"8 o an tnwf ntory and •P-•cu&a11on. publlehed In thlt oounty ...., ...... ..-..-...., flllllf • t"8 oomnict clOOl#nfir'I~ do. ~ ~ II aurne a. ~ cavaed Mkl NOtl09 ol doeum4lnt1 ~'II OOllQaUone pnjtitmtnt o esiate ~u or aa leMt onoe • ...-f« tM oon-M Ille .,...... -, • ...._ T"8 P\nuwlt to Secflon ~ the llUN<I thereby 1mmedlltaty du. Md Oetwet and Election to a.II to be MOured ttw90y, end hM --.CS of \M pcrbllona or ICCOW\\S
a.wt!W ... pt10r to the d"Y of el ...... -... el GoverNMnt Cod9 of the &tat• of peyabl9 and 1'111 -.c:ted and dole racoroect In tM county _,_. the Ind d09l hefet>y dlader1I .. """' mentioned i.n Section 1200 Mid....,... ~. •, ,.. ..,. • ... _. leallfori'Ma. the oontteGt .. contain twaby .iect to cw the w.t ptOt)-,..., prOl*'IY II toc:eted llCUfed ~ ll\'WP4dl .. .., ~ ~-..a 1200 .. of ... _ c.u•-i-o.e. Jen. 24, 1te.. ,.., 11 eklf' .._ .... ~l*mlttll'IOtheeuo;wtul .-tv to Cle IOICI to .. tlefy Wle ~ DAT1£: JlnUw'Y 2$, 1M4 Ind~* and hat --.:t end .... ..J uft' u.Tu.w fAAHt< DOMINICHINI ,._._ bidder to ~ ~ fOt oat\onl aecu,_ lfleroatiy. VIAOUOO SEAVIC CORPOA>-doea ~ *8Ct to_,.. tba tNlt Probate CocW. ~ 0( the Daie.e 0-. 1\ -any "'OMYI ........ b)' h DIS-DAT'f. January 11. 1NA ATIOH PfOif*1Y to be tOllCt to ~ "9 h&ier SUahy 6 SMA)e' .... CcMI LaA.~Clarll TAtCTto .... ~a~ Aloft~N SAVIHOS AHD LOAH ••eklTtuet• ollllget\Oftl-.,,.Stl....o, PO Box·n· ft.UM1 IC.~ llrl II.IC ... .,_,. a.-r ~ oont~. ASSOCIATION -401 H trend IMS Oet.O: ~ 2. ,... • • -~ c.. .... A iALMA T~UllCMCll.I ~ IMrcl ly \lltalnll M. Sllck•. Aaat VP ~.CA t1tol AMn1 H. Rub. .. fl9f"' fqr M•l~ Ca. tlttO
..._CA. Ion M. .... ..., ....... C1 1y A .~ ~ 1y "°* c. Mall!Wd, r .... (tt~ eoo.~m • ~ t WOt:flll1f tnd P\.lblisbed On.np CoMt ...... AN. CA..,. ~ A.ut. SecntMy ly Pit follnd ~ ...,_ C ~ Dail J>Uot fi b 9 tO 18
°'91Qi ~ Delly PllOt PvblltMCS Orange CoMt. 09lly Pilot PubMtlNd er.,. Ooeet Oallv Piiot Pu'blltNCI Or.no-<:out Deity PllOI ~ Or-. ~ ~ Piot ~ Otangit ~ ~ "°' Y e • • •' .-llf~A-t. lf. ~ ~.ff. feb.-t.• . .-ttM F9& I , M. 1M' .ien. 2t, Fell 2. ll, ta, 1914 Fft tt. ». ~ 1, fM' f:eti.1&. n, Maidt 1.4. t~ l984 ...,..... ~ 11244 w.... -.M ft7~ 820--84
·' .
' l
MOTICa Of MCON>ATIOM
CW MaallUUff MD OIA~ aTAT'llmWT Of
OFAHaHUEfT
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to all
owner'I of ~ property llabCe to be
UMIMd to pay the c:oetl and all·
penlll8 of the ~ 0.
aerlbed In Aeeolutlon of lntentton
No. 83-127 ad09teef by the CITY
COUNCIL of tM CITY Of COSTA
MESA, ST A TE OF CLAIFORNIA. on
the 19tll day of December. t983. for
the owrke Of lmprOV9f'Mnt In a apeelal U94Mtment dlstf1c1 known
and designated u
ASSESSMENT DISTRICT NO
82·2
(SOUTH COAST METRO
CENTS\)
(hereln1lter referred to 11
'ASSESSMENT DISTRICT"),
You are hereby notlfted that on
the 7tll day ol Febr\My, 1914, the
As ... arnent and Oteoram to pey the
cost• and expenaea of Aid ecqu&tl--tlons and lmprowrnent1 ...,. ,.
corded In my Otftca.
Seid .......,,... .. .,. now due
and payable Immediately et the Of·
floe ot the Tr...,,.,, and must be
paid within tM period uiMr1na on
the 8th day ot Matdl, 1 ..... ae60
.....amenll may be paid In _.,..
or In pvt dllrlflG Mid period.
OR
In tM ewnt of IM~ to~
before the expiration of Mid per1od,
ter1al bond• to ,..-eeent the unpeld
portions of ••11ai11911t1 and bW·
Ing lntereet at • rate not to Pceed the cur,.,,t letgal muJmum ,.... Of
12% par annuft\, wlll be ,..,.,
pursuant to the "lmpt~11
Bono Act Of 1915", ~ 10 ot the Streect and
Cod9 of the State of and
the iu1 tnttan!MM Of 8'ICfl ~
thell mature not to ellOMd FOUA-
TUN ( 14) YEA."5 trOl'll the 2nCI -or July nm ~ * (10, monthl frl>m U. dat9
NOTICE. Aner bOi* tlaW be9\
INued. .. ... r-enta '"9'1 Cle .,.
and propettlee ~of--al the followtng airna (•) l"'1 .......
"*''of~ end,,,_,_.,.
11u been poeted to the tu roll I«
the ClUn'Wlt fleGlll yiew; (b) .. ~
paid bllanoe of prlnolpel pt.II ~ t~(<:)IMamount al..,~
quencl... ln<:ludl"g "".,~
lntlrl8t and oo::;Jd>tflll .....
coet of CallnQ ; Md~'"=:lo the ct.te of oalt, ~ 1111 <•> atlOft. HO ACTION OR ... ~ IY
THE PAOPUITY OWNE"8 &I
N£C£SSAAV AT TWtS r,.., P QI.
SIMO THAT TH! AUl91f'IMT
8t PAtD OVf.A THI~ VIAi'
ffRIOO T'Mtnt ......... 11 .... ~I 111111 .,._on ..
, ..... till .......,,._ ~1'1!>
'*'*11 .... ~W1111im
8'atnltatldllnt ol ~
Cfty of Coe&a .... ~ Or-enee ~ 0... Noc t:eo. lO, II. t"'4 ......
' "'t
'
D8 Orengo Coast DAIL y PILOT /Thur6day, February 1e. 1ea..
___ rtet ___ te ... NO;,,,;,;;,,;n_CE ____ , ___ MU __ C_fl>_11_1Cf ___ ~ r.::;..:,o;,,-._:., :: "8JC NOTU ment ot ptlnc;lpal, lnt .... t. and all Olher Chatgte With r~ to
'1CTm0U1 .,...... nonnou1••••11 .nv •hefetnat>ov• HtcitlOect '' ---....._----""'""' ......... --.-...---1• loen unct. ttll• e>tdlnenc., any s>toceed• received by the City
(I) The proc:iedur•, If any, by wnk:tl the terms of any oonltao
with bond~ may be amended or abrogtted, the amount o
tuch bondt me hokSera or Which mu.at eon.Mnt t~o. and the
man,. In ¥rhk:h auch content '"81 be gtwn; Ind
~ &TATDRNT NAm aTAn.wr =c: IO br 121 40th ev..c. ~ from mortgage. haz.ard Ot other l~ranoe on or with '91C)eCt to
The toftow1'1g l*tOnl et• doing The fOl1owlng l>W9Clnl .,. clCMnO' a.en. CA. HotlOe II hlr9by ONtn Ul&t tlW tuch e loen, elt Ott. twit.a. Chatget, r .... Income 4lnd ~ta
bUtlntu u. • ~.. ' The ~.,.. tww4iby ct1eo-~llQMd -1ll noc lMI '-Pont1t11e dettWd by the Ctty from m. fln•nelng or reflnanolng of a Matth
8 E cu" IT v 0 p e RA TI 0 N s NEW p 0 RT oc AN," 0 NT °'lim:!.. ~.~ tor any ~ fot any Ottlt• Of WHllU. oon-fedflty under tl'll• OJdln ... any amounta recelvtd by tM Cl~ ..
(J) AnY other provlalon.a wtt1clh the Council mey deem reaon
1ble end proper fOf the purPQNI of thl• ordinance and tht
MCUrlty of the bOndholdera. O~OUP, INC . 7390 Centtt Avtt!Ue HOT£L, LTD . ON~ p,,__ ,.. '"..., ltt991 ~ °' ouw neote.. .. Eoo• 0 ln.,,...tment ..,.,,lflg• on rnonevt d---lted In a.---•·n or
HunU"Oton BNclll Calif 112847 Sulle 150. N9wpon hellft. Ca common deelon&llon. suee14;'21 Md~.!,"':.! anv atmllar fUnd MOUrlng bond•, amii.Joh ottiet'~~ the
SOO. Inc, t3'0 Center A"-'u. 112eeo 84llld -. wtN be m.o. ~t Pe# WOril done at rny bU9lneee on or Counoll may, ln Ill dl.acretlof\. lawfully o..tgn•t• ea r~ 5.~0I~
H~ntlngton BMCh. C&lil t .2647 Mca.. & Paul, Inc, a Ceafornle wwreniy, ~ or lfns>lled, ,.. etter ..-. date. 3.28.CMO ,OW9f'9
Thia bulln.• 1e cOf\duct.o by 1 COfPOfatlOn. One ~P«1 Pttlce, g#dlne tttte. po11 •'M. °' enoum-Oat~ lNe 13th dey o4 FebNaty, The City Council eheJI, wtthln the eontext or thli ordlneno. COrPQtatiQn S~•· 750. N~ 9-ch, c. btancea, to Mu.fy th9 ~ blll-1914 have the 1...ai-.i-.........,.. . J•tfery l Miiier Pr~ 112eeo .nee o4 the Not.• Of ottiet ~!ton John Paul 80fllc __....." 'V ,.. .. -...
Any pledge or '9Venuee, other ~ or .... ta, or an)
oentraltzed pool or .. Id revenuea, th.ii be valid and binding frOfT
the t1me auch ~ i. made. ~uea. mOMyS and ueet• ac
p49dgad and thet•tter rec:.IV9d by the City lhall tmmadlatety bt
aub)ect to the llen or •uch pledge without any phytlcal deflVW)
ther9of or f\Jrther 801, and the llen or any auoh pledge lhall be
valid and binding .. ag1lnat all pattlet havtng olalm• of any kind
In tort, contrec:t, OI othetw!M agatnat the City, lrreepectl\149 oc
wn.ther auch part• have notice thereof. N.lthet the r..OWtlon
nor any lndentul'9 by ~lch • pledge It erMtad need be tlled or
recorded except In the record• of the City,
Tl\11 1t1temen1 wu fl~ wllh th• Real &rate Prope«lel Inter• MCIJf~ b)' Mid Deed of fruet. with 2tOO Newpott llvd. (a) Loen '°' HiNtth PecNtty ·
CCNnly Clerk of Orano-County on n1oona1. tnc • Calllor~ COfPOr· lnt••t and othef IYfN 1a Pfovtded Coell MeM, CA fl2t27 The City may make, purohue, or Otherwlae contrec:t for the
OtlC 21. 1•~ 1t10n, One Newpot'I PlaQe, Sult• lllef .. n, PIW ldvencee, If any. under Publlthed Orano-Cout o.11y Piiot mak:f.tot, • MC:ur9d or un..cured loant, upon tuch term• and l'na80I 750. Newport Bet.oh, Ca 92MO the I~ l'*->f and illtw.t on '-b t&. 18, 22, 198-4 dlt .. _ ,.,, ... ..___ Puottshto O'•"r co.at Daily Thi• t>utlMM "conduGted by • IUCfl lldV~. and """' f._ 930-64 con na ea t ... vlty ... 111 ..,_" prQp4tr, to any pertlcJpatlng
Puot Jen M Feo 9, t6 lfl9• ltmlted Partnertl\tp cneru-. and ~ of the hMtth lnatltutlon for the cott of acquiring, conatructlng, rehet>Ul-
9A7-&4 McGee & Paul 1nc lrwt. I/Id orthe trueta cire.1~ by "8ltC NOTICI: tatlng or Improving • hMlth fec:mty or financing th-.of u or
NI.JC NOTICE JamM F M~Gee. PrMldent UICI DMd of Tru.1. The lotal wooing capital therefor, Including relmburaement to tuch Pat•
Tht• ttatement w•• filed with the •mount o4 Mid ot>Hoetton, lnaNdlng 'tcTnlOUa 9UIM,..I Uolpatlng hffJth lnatttutlon ot coat• air"""',..., exnAftdtd for eoc:tl e. Ueblllty of COUftCll end Off1oer. Covnty Clerk of Or111ge Councy on reuon1bly •tlmated r.... Oflarv-t NAMe aTAft-..T purpo.ae. -··'7 ~··
'1CTITIOUI •USINIH Jen J. 1984 ind axpen ... of the Trutt ... at the The IOllowlng l*'IOn la doing (b) llooen to ~nd °' •-----...__ .... F--•u... NAiii! ITATIM NT ~ Orne of Initial publloallon of thla No-bualneee.. ._...__ ._'" ....... .,
The lollowlng per.on I• dOlng Put>t~ Otaoge Cout Dally ttoe ... aao, '" 12 SMA SUPPLIES. 214 Al>oleN. The City may make, porch .... or OthefwlM contract lor th•
t>uaine.a 11 l'tto1 Feb 2 9. 16 23 1094 752-4.4 Dated FttbNary 14. 1864 Bllt>oa llland. CA t2M2 rnaklng of a aec:ured or unMCUred loan, upon IUdl term• and
Neither the meml>er9 of the Councll, the ott!Oera or employeee
or the City, nor any per90n executing any bond• thall be IJable
~ly on the bond• or be aubjec:t to any paraonal llablllty °'
aecountablllty by reason or the laauanoe thereof
BURL PATROL. 135 E Wiiton REAL ESTATE SECURITIES Sh•una Marla Rocl'te, 214 condition• as the City shall deem Pfe)p4tr, to any participating
Coat• M .... Calif 92827 SERVICE. IAPoleM. Datbol ltt•nd. CA 11m2 hNlth Institution or exch1nge Its bOnd In order to refund or
Paut L .. 1i. tielm•. 13~ E Wiison MOC NOTIC( • C11tfornJ1 C~tlon ndr;!'l!u~11• ,,.. 11 condUOled by: an refinance out1tandlng obllgetlona of tueh partlclpattnn health Cos1a MeH, Cellf . 92627 u T t y"' .. I tit ti 1 ed t fl th · ·• Thi• bullln•n ts conducted by ar ....__ Of or..... a~-,,. 0~ • Shauna M. Roche na u on ncurr o nanoe e coat of acquiring, constructing, Individual. 1 .., ..... e ' -.-... --. (~l O.J Morger, Ila Pr..ictent ... ...'.!"' •tatement wu 111eo wtth the rehabllltallng or Improving a health faclllly or flnancl~ of
P•"I l •llte Helms C011nty of Of'MOe 2020 North Broedway, Suite toe, """'nty Clerl( of Or-County ..... working capital tor such health faclllty, whether 8Uch obllget on• .... HOTICI! 0, IAL( UNDUt Senta Ana, C. t2708 Ui 2 t -..,.. "'' 11111 ata1emen1 was llled w1111 the DICU£ OF ,OM.CLOIUM 1~ (7141 !153-6' lO an 4, , 84 were Incurred prior to or aner the enactment of thl• ordinance, It
County Cletk of Orange Counry on VERSAILLES HOMEOWNERS AS-P\.tbl'9hed Oranoe Coul Dally fl'2:lf171 the City nnda that 9UCt'I refunding or refinancing I• In the pybllc
Dec • 27 t983 SOCIA TION . ett .,. JUAIJ BO<>-Piiot Feb 18. 23. Maren 1, 1'64 Pi~':!~e. ~~ro~'. ,~:r Interest •nd either allevlatee a flnanclal or operating hardship of F2Ut?O NAR. etal. Delendanr No 40-81-16 H2~ V50-9A auch panlelpatlng health lnatltutlon, or la In connection with Pll~~~6• ~~~ng~. 9c~:~\9~!11Y I. 1he undersigned. Brad Gares. 1,.."IC unTICE oth•r financing by tho City for auch panlclpatlng health lnstltu-
642 84 SherlH-Coroner County or Ora~. r~ nu l't&JC NOTICE tlon or may be expected to result In lower charges or contain·
Stale or Calllornta. do '-•by certify ment of the rate of lncreue In hospital rates and Nvlng1 to lhlrd
that by virtue or Decr11 of For• ORDINANCE NO. M-4 partlel. Including government. and to other• Who mual pay for
Closure and Sale tn the Supe.-tor AN ORotNANCE Of' THE CITY OF NEWPORT 81ACH care. or any combination thereof. T~t4t Court 01 the County 01 °'~· AMENDING THE MUNtc•AL COOE 8Y ADDIHQ THI HEALTH (c) Sale or L .... of Health Feclllty by City
NOTICE Of' State of Catllornia. entered on -FACtLmE8 REVENUE 80NO LAW, (CHAPTER 3.29) THEREBY The City rnay acquire, construct, enlarge, remodel, ntn""ate,
Ti.UITfE'8 SALE ~<:~r '1.1.4·19189383,.n•tnhdereoorabo·~· -Ocllt~ EST.UUIHINQ PROC!DUMI WHl!-•v REVENUE .,,...o• a VY T.I . Ho. llS·12U ,,., .. • -· _, "5 .vn v lter, Improve, furnish, equip, own or lease as leaaee a health
IMP<>f'TANT NOTICE action. wherein VERSAILLES MAY 8E 188UID BY THI! CITY FOR THE PURPOSE OF faclllty for the purpo19 of aolllng or le&llng such health faelllty to
TO "OPERTY OWNER: HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION. a PROVIDING FINANCING TO PAlllTICIPATIHO HEALTH CARE a participating health Institution and may designate such partlcl-
YOO ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A Calllornta Non-Prollt CorPQfatlon FACILITIES FOR 8PECIFll!O PURPOSES patlng health Institution as lls agent to undertake to construct.
DIED or: TRUST, DATED MAY 20. the above named plalntltta, 01>-Section 1. The City Council of the City of Newpor1 Beach, finds enlarge, remodel. renovate, alter. Improve. furnish, and equip 1aa. UNLl!ll YOU T AICE ACTION rained • 1udgement •M dec'" ot and declares as follows: such health faclllty ~o .. T~~~c~o~~u:t:~:[J; ~o~~o:Ar~:re~dS:~si~n~~;~~ The City Councll or the City of Newport Beach Is empowered. The City may sell or lease, upon such terms and conditions 88 SALE. IF YOU Neto AH EXPLA· or One thovsaM seven hundred pursuant lo the provisions of Section 200 of Article If of the the City shall deem proper, to any such participating ~alth
NATION OF THE HA TURf OF THE founeen & 041100 Dollars, lawful Charter of the City of Newport Beach and the provisions of lnalltullon any health faclllty owned by the City under thla
Pi.OCE'EDINO AOAIN&T YOU, money or the United S111es, Ind by Sections 3, 5 and 1 ot Article XI of the Con1tltutlon or the State ordinance, Including a health feclllty conveyed 10 the City In
YOO SHOULD CONTACT A LAw-1111rtue or a writ or enforcement In of Calllornla. to authorize, lsaoe and Mii revenue bonds for the connection with a financing under this ordinance but not being
vei.. aa1d 1c11on 1PYod on November 23. purpose of providing financing, or refinancing, to certain health financed or refinanced hereunder.
0'1 March • 198• 11 tO oo A M t983 I am commanoed to 1111 111 care facllltles localed within the corporate boundaries of the City (d) Aecov...., of Coat• and Ex-... -Cl ... GATEWAY LAND SERVICE INC as tile property In the County of ()(. of Newport Beach· and T c -·, ...-·· _, .,
duly substituted trustee unde1 and aasng10e110Swta1te or Cattlornta. deacrtbed The City Councii. by th .. adop he lty may charge participating health Institutions appll-~rsuanc ro Deed or Trust recorded ., Ion of lhl1 ordlnanoe, Intends to cation, commitment, financing and other fees, to recover all
May 21 1982 as ""' No Unit 43, Lot 1. Tract 10587, re-establish a procedure for the ISSYanoe and sale of bonds for the admlnle1ratlve and other costs and expenses Incurred In the
82-176799 or OH1c1a1Records 1n the cotded 1n Book 13226. Page purpose of providing financing to health care Institutions; and exercise ol the power1 and duties conferred by this ordinance, or
0H1ce or tne County Recorde1 or 76 t 15 Off1c:tal Records or Orange The City Councll. has determined that, In exerctalng Its powers Impose fees. charges or o1her financial commitments to ensure.
Orange Counry State or Calttornia County California under this ordinance. the City will, at no time, be obligated, either that the exercise of such powers Is In rurtherance of the public
executed by NORMAN CAMERON Real p10peny 1s more commonly directly or Indirectly, to repay any money, pledge or encumber health, safety and wellare of the cltlz""ns of th• City or N"'...nnr+ THOMPSON ano JENNIFER IRfNE known as 300 C L 106 t I I f f ., ., ..... ,..,,.' THOMPSON husbano and ...,11e agn-v ane • · any asse s, or 0 evy any orm 0 taxation or assessment; Beach The City Council la also apeclllcally authorized to require
Newpon Beach. Calllornta Because the exercise of powe s under this ordinance wtll have the pa nt r ch f 11 d 1 1 d wTOILL GSELELSTATB PDUBLIC OAUCCTtOSN Propert~ to be sotd <JUblect io 1he no flnanclal Impact the City Council finds that Its exercl ..... or th d t ymert Io aut ees a,,s I ee'.!'..S appropcr ate nor er to HI H I DER F R A H right of redemption . 729 020. powers S""""lrled wlll promote t """' e e ray ce an cos • annua y ncurr....., by the lty In providing (payable ar 11me or sate 1n 11wtu1 729 030 725 !al CCP .-~ he health, safety and welfare of emergency health care.
money or 1ne Umteo States) 11 lhe ·Prospective bidden should the residents of the City of Newport Beach and County of Orange (e) ln•urance or Ouetant" of Parrnent
Nortn rron1 en1rane11 to the Covnry refer to Sections 70 1 ~ 10 to because City-assisted financing enables non-profit health care The City may obtain, or aid In obtaining. from any department
Courtnouse 700 C1vtc Center Dnve 701 880 CC P 1nctu11ve, for facllltles to borrow money at lower Interest rates and those or agency of the United States or of the State of Callfornla or any :n':,51111~8~~~~ ~~~11~~ a;~,:~~ ~~: provltlons governing Iha 1erms. savings are then passed along to the publlc In the form of lower private company, any Insurance or guarantee as to, or of, or for
ne10 by 11 under satd Deed 01 Trusl conddnhiont'i· an11d ettects 01
1
111e sa11e coats/and or better medical care, the payment or repayment of, Interest or principal. or both, or adners !. • abl ty 01 default no b d-Section 2. The City Council d---ordain as follows·. a 1n rne property situated In 11ld """' ny part thereof. on any loan, lease or sale obligation or any
County and State described u PUBLIC NOTtCE tS GIVEN that Chapter 3.26 Is hereby added to the Municipal Code to read Instrument evidencing or securing the same, made or entered
Lot 20 or Tract No 91~2. aa on Frtd•y. Mareh 2. 1984, at 10 30 as follows into pursuant to the provisions of thl1 ordinance: and may accept
shown on • map recorded tn Booll o'ctoc:k, A M or that day al Maln Chapter 3 26 payment In such manner and form as provided therein In the ~a~ M!~s a~~~s 0~, M~~-~~~ D~~~rW:.~e611;~ ;~:; ~~:.~ ~~ ~h'c,~E .fiti:IUTY AEVl!NUIE 80NO OADtNAHCE event of a default by a participating health ln&Utution and may
ange County ca111ornia and cor-Ana 1 wtlt 1811 the above described assign any such Insurance or guarantee as security for bonds.
reeled by lhe certain Ce'1thca11 or pro""'rly under said writ and 3 26.020 Purpose The City also may provide for the maintenance of letters of credit C ed n.--.. v 3.26.030 Definitions o oth c edit h t d I f he f f orrectton record """"'mber 6. d&efM. or so much thereol u may 3_26.040 Powers r er r en ancemen ev cea, or I guarantee o , or or t977 in Boo!< 12482 Page 397 or t>e necessary to satisfy utd lud-the payment or repayment or, Interest or prlnclpal, or both, or
omc1a1 Records ment w11h Interests and coa11 10 the 3 26.050 Bonds any part thereof. of any series ol bonds Issued pursuant to this
The street address .ino other h1ghes1 bidder. lor cash In lawful 3.26 060 Purpose ordinance.
common ~lllOn 11 any or the money of the United Staree 3 26.070 Liberal Constucllon (f) Fl•lng Rent•, F ... , Ret-. Etc.
real propeny detcrtbod above 15 Daled 11 Santa Ana Calt1orn1a, 3.26.080 Etfect of Omission or Delee! The City may fix rents, payments, fees, charges and lnt8f'est purponed to be 6 Ticonderoga, January 20, 1984 3.26.090 Authority f fl 1 d I Irvine CA Landgren end Belz rates or nanc ng un er th s ordinance and may agree to revise
The underalgned Tru11ee di•· 17321 1r111ne Boulevard 3.26. 100 Provisions from time to time such rents, payments, fees, charges and
claims any ltabillty lor any incorrect· Tusun. ca111 92680 3.26. 110 Inconsistency with Other Statutes Interest rates to reflect change In Interest r4,1e on bonds, losses
ness ol the slreer address and other BRAD GA TES. Sherltt-Coroner 3 26 120 Partial lnvalldlty due to defaults or changes in other expenses related to this
common designation. 11 any shown County ot Orange c. 3 26 010 Short Tltle Thia chapter shall be known as the ordinance. Including City administrative expenses
herem By K Brown. Sargeant Health Care Faclllly Revenue Bond Ordinance" of the City of ~) Deed• of Tru•t or Motfn....-" •~urlty Said sate will t>e maoe but P bit h..,. O Co 1 D JI Pll N B h ·---o... w11hou1 covenant or warranry ex j F~b ~ g 1;•~4 u 1 Y 01 ewport eac · he City may hold deeds of trust. mortgages or other security press or 1mphed rega•dlng 1111e 740_84 3.26 020 PurpoM The City Council finds that the ordinance lnatrumen1s as security tor loans under this ordinance and may
possession. or ern;umbrances. in-codified In lhls Chapter Is Intended to establish a procedure pledge or assign the same as security tor repayment of bonds.
cJud1ng tees. charges and upenaes whereby the City provides assistance in the llnanclng of Im-Such deeds of trust. mortgages or other security Instruments
ot tne Truacee and 01 tile trusts Pt.ellC NOTICE provements to non-profit health care facllitles located within the may be assigned to, and held on behall of the City by, any bank
creeled by aaid Deed or Trust to s TA TEMENT OF WITitOfllAWAl Clly of Newport Beach. By providing such assistance. and In oft rust company within any state of the United Statn of America ~:: ~:~:;"=~~~~~ = ~: FROM PAi.TMEi.SHJP reductngfltthhe co1tshl or fln1an1c111~~1mp1rovements, the City will enable appointed to act •• trustee by the City In any reaolullon or
Trust 10 wit 146 203 97 this be lance OPERA TINO UND£i. non-pro ea care ac t~ to ower coals ol medical 98'Vlces Indenture provid ing for Issuance of bOnds.
11 e>1cluallle or Ftrsl Trusr Deed bal· I FICTITIOUS •UllHEH NAME and to provide better and more efficient service than would (h) Employm.nt of Experts and Coniuttanla
ance with accrued tate charge• Tne lottowtng person hu withdrawn otherwise be avallable. The City may employ such engineering. architectural,
plus to1eclosure lees and cos11 lat 8 generel partner lrom the part-The City Cou...cll also declares that the slgnlllcent publlc financial. accounting, legal or other services as may be necesa-
plus Interest on advances nershlp operaring under the Oc-benelll that derives from the exercise of powers described In this ary In the judgment at the City for the purposes of this ordinance.
Tht-t>eflehc:1ary under said Deed uuous business name 01 SOUTH ordinance wlll not result In any adverse flnanclal Impact on the (i) Do All Thing• ~..., and Convenient ol lflist heretofore e•ecuted ant! COA~T CONDOMINIUM SALES, City of Newport Beach nor Wiii th c I • , delivered 10 the undersigneo a writ-1800.i Skypark Ctrcle Suite E • . . e ity lake any act on wtllch In addition to all other powers specifically described In this
ter Dectarauon 01 delautt and De-1rv1l"e Ce n714 , would create any debt or llabrlrty on the part of the City. any ordinance, the City may do all things necessary or convenlenl lo
mend ror Sal!' 111111 a wrmen Notice 1 The : c:1111ous bus111ess name obllgatlon to levy or Impose taxes or asaeaamenls or otherwise carry out the purposes of this ordlnanoe provided, however, that
ot Detautt and Election 10 Sell rne statement tor !he partnership was, atfec1 ttle finances or credit of the City of Newport Beach at no lime shall the City Council take any action which would:
undersigned c.6used said Nouc.e or filed on Juty 14. 1980 in the Covnty The City Councll alao declares that. In order lo ensure that the 1. Constitute a debt ol llablllty of the City;
Delaull and Election to Seu ro t>e 01 Orange FILE. NO F l39571 participation of the City In financing Is for a publlc purpose, the 2 Constitute a pledge of the faith and/or credit of the City;
recordeo In the county where the Full Name and Address or the Pet-City may Impose fees charges or llnanctal commitments on the 3 Obligate the City, directly. lndlreclly or COfltl"""""tly, to real oroperl~ is 1oc11reo son WnhdrawWlg Danlel Rot>ert part of the participating lnstllutl ..._ ... -· · Date February 3 1964 Ketcnam 1101 w MacAnhur on, as may ..,.., necessary or Impose any form or taxation or assessment, or to make any
GATEWAY LANO SERVtCE tNC j .:215 Santa Ana Ca 92707 appropriate lo recover administrative costs and expenses In-appropriation for the payment of any bonds or Indebtedness; or
as said tru5tee
1
Signed Dan1et Ke~ham curred In the exercise of the powers and duties conferred by this 4. Obligate the City to pledge or otherwise encumber any of Its
2050 South Bundy OrtYP Suite 280 Published Orange Coaat Cally ordinance or to defray certain coats annually Incurred by the City asse1s.
Los Ange1ei. c..11 ~25 P1101 Jan 26 Feb 2, 9. 16, 1994 In providing emergency health care. 3.26.050 Bonda The City may, from time-to-time, issue bonds
2111826 8148 558-84 3.26 030 O.f'lnltlon• Unless the context otherwise requires. for any of the purposes specified In eubaectlons a. b or c of
By i:r;;.nte, f El~"' the terms defined In this ordinance shall have the following section 3.26.040. Bonda shall be negotiable Instruments for all
Vice Pres1oer.1 Pt.et.IC NOTICE meanings: b' 1u he 1 Publlsneo orange <.,oas: Daily p11,,1 (a) 'Bonds' means any bOnds n purposes. su 1ect on.7 to t provla ona of such bonds ror l'l!b 15 23 Marc;h 1 t984 STATEMENT OF WfTHDAAWAL , Otes, certificates. debentures registration.
836.84 FROM PARTNERIH9' or other obllgatlons Issued or entered Into by the Cl1y puraoant 1. 111uanc. of Limited Obllgetlon 8ond9
------------OPEAATIHO UNDER to this ordinance and payable exclusively rrom revenue1 as In Every issue of bonds shall be a llmlled obllgatlon of the City PU8LIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUlfHE8S NAME this ordinance defined and from any other funds specllled In this payable solely from all or'9ny specified part of the revenues and
Office Of TIM S!Mrltt-Coron•r 1 The tollow1ng person has ordinance upon which such obllgallons may be made a charge the moneys and assets authorlted In this ordinance to be
County of Orane• · withdrawn as a general partner from and from wtllch they are made payable. pledged or assigned to secure payment of bOnda. Such rev-
H O Tl CE OF SALE UNDER the parrnershtp operattng undt1t the (b) 'City' means the City or Newpor1 Beach enuea, moneys or assets shall be the sole source of repayment 01 DECREE OF FORECLOSURE hctillous business name 01 H & S (c) 'Coal' means the total ol all coats Incurred by or on behalf such Issue or bonds Bonda Issued under the provisions of this
CULVERDAt r COMMUNITY AS PAINTING & MAINT 81 J002 of a participating health Institution neoeuary or Incident to ordinance shall not be deemed to con1tltute a debt or llablllty of
SOCt.A !ION .,,c vs RICHARD IFernnealh, Colla Mesa, CA 92826· carrying out the purpose, as specified In Sections 2-1. 2-2 and the City or a pledge olthe faith and credit of the City but •hall"'-AL GIN fVERMAN atal Defendant I Tile 11c1111ous bustne11 name 2 3 f hi h •-f b d .. .,..,, No •O 71 OI statement ror the partnership wu -• or w c 11 ser~ o on 9 Is Issued, as are approved by the payable solely from specified revenues, monev-and assets. The
Ptlll.IC NOTICE
1. Pwd\eM of londe by City.
The City ahall have the power out of any funds avaJl•ble
therefor to purchue 111 bonda. The City may hold, pi.dge,
cancel, or r ... 11 auch bonds. aubJeot to and In accordance wlth
agreements with the b0ndholder1.
8. ComP81Hftg P~.
Any holct.r of bonds l•sued under the provlak>ne of thl•
ordinance, and any trustee appointed pursuant to any reeolutlon
authorizing the ISMJance ot bOnde. except to the extent the right•
thereof may be r"trlcted by auoh re.olutlon or any Indenture
authorlted thereby to be entered Into by the City may, either et
law or In equity, by suit, action. mandamua. or other proceed·
Inga, protect or tnforoe any and all right• apeclfled In ltw or In
such reaolutlon or Indenture, and may enforce and compel the
pertormanoe of all duties required by this ordlnanoe or by auch
resolution or Indenture to be pertormed by the City or by any
officer, employee or agent thereof. Including the fixing, cilarglng,
and collecting of rat ... fees, lntereet, and charge• authorized
and required by the provisions of auoh reaolutlons or Indenture
to be fixed, char~!nd collected
9. Refunding -UM of Proceeda.
The City may laaue bOnda for the purpoae of refunding any
bon~• then outstanding, Including the payment of any redemp-
tion premiums thereof and any Interest accrued or to acc:rue to
the earliest or any eubsequent date or datea of redemption,
purchase or maturity of such bonds.
(•) The Pfoceed• of bonds laaured for the purpoM of refund-
ing any outstanding bonds mey, In the dlacretlon of the City, be
applied to the purchaae or retirement •I maturity or redemption
of 1uch out1tandlng bond•. either at their earllelt or any
SUbMQuent redemption date or dates or upon the purchue or
retirement at the maturity thereof and may, pending aooh
appllcatlon, be plac.d In escrow, to be applied to such purctiue
or retirement at maturity or redemption on such date or dates ea
may be determined by the City.
(c) Pending use for purchase, retirement at maturity or
redemption of outatandlng bOnds, any proceed• held In escrow
pursuant to aubdlvlalon (b) may be Invested and reinvested u
provided In the reaolutlon or Indenture. Any Interest or other
Increment earned or realized on any such Investment may be
applled to the payment of the outstanding b0nd1 to be refunded
or to the payment of Interest on the refunding bOnds. After 'he
terms of the eacrow have been rutty satisfied and carried out, any
balance of such proceeds and any Interest or Increment earned
on sucil proceeds and any Interest or Increment eatned or
realized from the Investment thereof may be returned to the City
to be used by It for any lawful purpoae.
(c) All bOnds lasued pursuant to this section aha.II be subject to
the provisions of this ordinance In the same manner and to the
tame extent as other bonds Issued pursuant to this ordinance.
( 10.) t~t VaUdltJ of Bonde.
the valldlty of the au1hortzat1on and Issuance of any bOnds 11
not dependent on and shall not be affected In any way by any
proceedings taken by the City for the making or any loan or Ule
entering Into ol any agreement, or by the failure to make any loan
or enter Into any agreements, ror which bonds are authorized to
be luued under this ordl.nance.
Secilon 3.26.070 Llbefel Contruc:tton
This ordinance, being necessary for the well are or the City and
Its Inhabitants, shall be liberally conatrued to effect lta purpoees.
Section 3.26.080 Effect of Oml .. ton Of Defect. If the Jurlldlc-
tlon of the Councll to order the proposed act Is not affected, any
omlaslon or any other defect In the proceedings shall not
lnvalldate such prooeedlngs or the bOnds Issued pursuant to thl1
ordinance.
Section 3.26.090 Autttortty. Thia ordinance 11 full authority for
the Issuance of bOnds by the City ror t"e purpoaee apeclfled
tiereln.
Section 3.26. too Provlalon• of tht• Ordlnanc:. .,. ~,.,
A.lt.,nattv.. Thia ordinance shall be deemed to provide a
complete, additional. and alle<nallve method tor doing the
things authorized !hereby, and shall be regardtd U IUPP*nan·
tat and addltlonal to the pow.< conferred by other laws. The
Issuance or bOnds under the provisions of thl• ordinance need
not comply with the requirements of any other law applicable ;to
the luuance of bOnda. The purposes authorlz.ed hereby may be
effectuated and the bonds may be Issued for any such purpoaee
under this ordinance notwithstanding that any other law may
provide tor such purposes °' for the lssuanoe of bonds r()( llke
purposes and without regard to the requirements, restr1C1lon1.
!Imitations or other provisions contained In any other law.
Section 3.26.110 lnconelatenc:y with Other 8tatutff.
To the extent mat the provlalons of thl1 ordinance are
lnconllstent with lhe provisions or any gene<al statute. a special
act or parts thereof. Including the Newport Beach Municipal
Code provtsk>na for Revenue Bonds, the provision• of thl1
ordinance shall be deemed controlllng.
Section 3.26.120 Partial lnvatldtty. If any section. subsection.
sentence. clause or phrase of this ordinance 11 tor any reason
held to be Invalid or unconstitutional by the declalon of any cour1
of competent Jurisdiction. such decision shall not affect the
validity of the remaining por1lon1 of the ordinance. The City
Council h«eby deciarea that It would have puaed this ordinance
and each aectlon, aubaectlon, sentence, claute and phrase
thereof, Irrespective of the tact that any one or more aectlona,
subsections, sentences, clauses or phrases be declared Invalid
or unconatltutlonal.
Thia Ordlnaooe was Introduced at a regular meeting of the City
Council of the City or Newport Beach '*d on lhe 23rd d.ay of
January, 19~. and was adopted on tl13th day of FebNary,
1984 by the followtng vote, to wit.
AVES, COUNCILMEMBEAS Hart, M ur«. Cox, Heather.-#"
StraulS, Plumrn.r, AgM"f •
NOES, COUNCILMEMBERS None
ABSENT COUNCILMEMBERS None 1 "'" , .. 0,.1,,gneo Brad Gaies filed on July 11 1983 In ttMI County City as reasonable and necessary for carrying out all works and Issuance of bonds shall not directly, lndlrectly. or contlngentty sn .... tt l orc•ni•r .ouut) 01 O•angfl or Orange FILE NO F220331 undertakings necessary or Incident to such purpose. 'Cott,' as obligate lhe City to levy or pledo-any fOf'm of taxatlof\ or to ATTEST:
Statt< o• Laurr,r •tt Jo herflby certity Full Name and Address of ttMI applied to a project or portion thereof financed with the make any appropriation ror their payment. All bOnds shall Published Orange Coast Dally Piiot Feb. 16, 1984
tna1 by ,1rt1;p '' Dec:rM or Fote-1 Person Withdrawing David Corey proceeds of any series or bonds Issued hereunder means and contain on the face thereof a statement to the following effect:
clo'>'''" al'ld Sa1e •n Iha Superior Cag.gas. 3002 Fernhellh, Colle tncludes, without llmltetlon, all or any part of the cost of Neither the faith and credit nor the taxing power of the City of ~~:: ~: ·~:111~?~'.~'Y 8~,.,?~~ng0en M~~g~;,A J;!~6caglga.s conatru~tlon and acqul1ltlon of all lands, struc1ures. real or Newport Beach. the State of Callfornla. nor any pollllcal sut>-
Augii<;t , 19111 •n•l recoideo Published Orange Coast Dally persona property. rights, rights-of-way. franchises, easements division thereof Is pledged to the payment ol the prlnclpal of or
AuQt1'it .. 1,181 r .~ .. atir,ve 811,. P1101 Feb 15 23 March 1 8. 11184 and Interests acquired or used for soch project. the cost of premium or Interest on this bOnd
ttflll , , ~n wM•"•' c111 VERDA F 940-84 demollahlng or removing any bulldlngs or structures on land so 2 Amount of Bonde. c A.J.V N 1, A.,soc A· •ON 1 acquired, Including the cos1 of acquiring any lands to which such In determining the amount of bonds to be Issued, the City may C~h' rr11.:i ·~on Pror11 C.w~o1a1u1n Mt.IC NOTlCE buildings or structures may be moved, lhe cost of all machinery Include all coats ol the Issuance of such bonds, reserves tor debt
the .1 .. ~ .. ··~med 01a11111tts ob and equipment. financing charges, reserves for prlnclpal and service and ror repairs, replacement, additions and Improve.
rau•(!(l n 1uOg6men1 ana dec1M ot YOU ARE fH DEFAULT UNDllt A Interest and for extensions, enlargements. additions. replace-ments, and Interest on the bond• during the conatructlon period
torec.1os11r" and Hie against RICH· 1 DEED OF TRUST DATED March 4, menta. renovations and lrnprovemen11, the cost or engineering. and ror such period thereafter u the City may determine.
ARO Al I.IN E'Vl:RMAN delendants 1ee1. UNLH& YOU TAKE ACTION reasonable flnanclal and legal services. plans, specifications, 3. Tv ... , Form and•• of Bond .. lo• the ~"'" or One lllousand twen TO PROTECT YOUft Pf'OPEi.TY, I di I d I ,,..-
ty nine .\ ')() •OO Dollar5 1awtu1 " MAY BE IOLD AT A PU9UC s u 81• surveys, est mates, a m nlstratlve expenses and other Bonds may be Issued 88 Soerlal bOndl, term bonda, ln1tallment
monev nr she u1111eo States ano by SALE. tF YOU NEID A.N n~-expeneea nec:euary or Incident lo determining the reaalblllty of bonds or passthrough certificates or any combination thereof.
virtue ot • w111 ot 81'llorcemen1 1n NATION OF THI NAT\ME °" n. conatrucilng any iwch project or Incident to the con1truct1on or Bonds shall be authorized by reaolullon of the Council and shall ~ .. mi action issued on October •. 1 PAOCEEDtNQ AOAIN9T YOU, acquisition or financing thereof. 'Coal' alao may Include relm-bear such date or dates, mature at eucil time or tlmea, bear
11183 t am commanoeo to sell all YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAW-buraement of any such coats Incurred by the participating health lnteresl at such flxtd or variable rate or rat'8, be payable at auch
'""' prop!lrly in the County or Or YER Institution prior to or after the enactment of this ordinance or time or times, be In such denomination, be In aucil form. ,. ... ry ar"J" StatP or C..alltorn1a. dtnerlti.d NOTICE OF TRUITEl'I IALf "'" t ft the t r I I f C _, as rollnw~ r 1. No. 41450 ,... .or o or a er enac ment o a reso ut on o the ouncll with such registration prMleges, be executed In auch manner, be
I <•t 43. 01 lroct No 6869 as re NOf1CE ts HEREBY GIVEN. thet respec1 to the Issuance of tuch Mrlea of bonds. payable In lawful money of the United Stet'8 of America at 80dl
c:orded 111 Soot. 255 PaQe5 39 on Wednesday Mardi 7, 198-4. at (d) 'Cooncll' m$8nl the City Council of the City of Newport pteoe or pieces, be eub}ec1 to auc:tl terms of redemption and
rnrougn •J 1nc:1u,1ve or '41s 10 oo a m or saio day. tn ttMI room Beech. have such other term1 end condltlona u auc:h reeokrtlona or •ny ~aneou' M11p~ 1n •tie Office 0111111 ,.,, ntde for cooductlng Tru1lee'1 (e) 'Health facility' means any faclllty, place or bulldlng Which Is Indenture authorized by auctl ret04utlon to be entered Into by the
Orange Coun1y Record11r Ca11 Sales. w11111n the omcea or REAL malntaln9d and o~ated for-the dlegnoal1, care, prevention or City may provide. Bonda may be aofd at either a publlc or private
fornin ESTATE SECURITIES SERVICE. treat~nt of human lllneu, physical or mental. Including con-aala and for IUCh prlcee u the City lhall determine. Ptndlnn
Reat property " mor .. commonly located 11 2020 Nor1h 8'01dw•y. valescence, rehablllt•tlon or care during and after pregnancy. or "'"""'&ration of d4tflnltlv• bonda, the City may , ........ t-.vv.:~ known es 1758! Leb8t•on c 1rclfl Su11e206,1n 1heCttyolSantaAna. t t h ,. . ..., ..... ..,,,,. __ ,
1rvme ca111rnn1a County 01 Or&nge. •t•t• o1 Call-or any one or more o t ae eervl<:et. and Which provides to bond1, Which shall be •xch~ tor auch definitive bondt When
TogetMr with att 11no ~1ngutar the rornta REAL ESfATE SECURITIES residents Of the City health ewe MrVloea d.algnated IS Such In prepared.
tenements t>ered1111men" and 1p SERVICE 1 c a111om1a corPQfa11on, an agreement ~ the City and the participating health 4 T.,m• end Condftlona of 8ond9.
purtenances thereunto ~o,..gong or es duly appointed Tru1111 under Institution prcwldlng Ot e>peratlng auch faclllty, place or bulldlng. Any resolution authOflllng any bond• or any laau. of bonds, or
In anywise 11pp11rt11intno and purau1n1 to the 1>0W9f of .... 'Heatth laclllty' lnciudel a portion of the above types of any Indenture authorl%ed by tueh raolu11on to be ent«ed Into
Prol)4trty to be 1101c1 qoti1ect to fht1 c:ont&Hed In thll 0«1aln Deed or facllltl" and lncfudes facllltlel operated In confun~lon with one by the City, may contain provllk>na reapecilng 1ny or the
right of rlldttmpuon 729 020 Truar executed by ANTHONY JOHN of the abOve types of facillt ... and requlr'td or useful, as foOowlnn term• and --""1tlon1, ,...,...., -a.-•1 .._ • ,,. ..... of t .. _ 7'Jfl 030 725(1) Cc;P DllOA. a wide>W9' Ind GALE CO'· d 1-_.. ··• """"" .., .. ...,, .,_ .,. -' ,,. P101~Hbte b1dd .. rs 'hould FMAN & PRISCILLA l. COFFMAN, eterm '""" by reeolutlon of the Cooncll, ror the oper•Uon of. contrec1 with the hOlders of IUCh bond•: -
rel•t 10 Sacttons .. o 1 510 10 huabl!ld end wtle, recotded Mareh health facility, Including bu1 not limited to· a laboratory, • (I) The tenna. condltlon1 and form Of SUCh b0nd1 end the
70 t oeo CCP 1nc1u11v411 lor 10 rne 1 l'\.,Book 131178 Of 01f1c1a1 laundry. a nurees' or Intern•' reakSanoe, a houllng faelllty for lnterat and prlnclpal to be paid theree>n;
prov1e1on1 governing th& ttrm1 A.cord• of .. ,d County. et pege petlen11, 1tart or ~and the famlllel of any of them, an (b) Llmlt•tlona on the uMt and purl)OMI to Which the
condlllona. and t1ttte11 or th& aa11 18~7 Aecofder'• 1n1tru~1 N<>. admlnl1trat1on building or bulldlng1 to houae offloea of the proc:aed• of .... of auch bonds may be applied, and the pledge
11nd 1"41 ll1blll1y of d•faulltng btd 14007. by r11.on of 11 breech of participating health lnalltutlon, a ,....,ch, maintenance, or uaign"*'1t of IUCh proceed• to MCUre the pa~t of~
dert " Oefeull tn P•yMent of Pl'rlorrnence 1tor'"""' utlflty or perking facility end all at"""IU"'N or f..,.llltl" bond PUBLIC NOTtCC tS OtVEN tn11 of the obltg11tona MCUred ther9by. __., ,..,. ,. ...., t ; on Frld•v M11c;n 2 1994 at 10 30 tnc:tudtng the1 btMC:rl « Cl9ftllill, No-related to any of lhe IOt9gO!ng. (c) UmltetlON on the leluanCe or addlttonal parity bonda, the
o'clock AM or 1n11 d•t at Mein lie» of which wu recorded October 'HNlth fadllty' ah.ii not lndud• any bulldlngs uMd or to be tannt upon Which addltlontl perfty bond• may be IUQ&d Ind
Lobby Courthouta 100 C1111c 12. 19&3 N F\ecOfder'• 1nttrumen1 uMd primarily for aectltl•n Ntructlon or •1udy or u •place for teeured, and the '9fUnd1ng Of outstanding bonds; ~ter Of1ve w .. 1 C11y or S•n11 No 83-45033I. WILL SELL AT devotional ec1Mti. or ,.,lgloua WOtahlp. (d) The Mttlng eaide of reeervea, atnklng fund•, and~ oth«
An• I wlll Mii IM lbovll dlll(rlbed PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGH· (f) 'lmpro..,.,..,t of a hMlth f.clllty' lhall ~. without fund• .. .,.. ~ry and the r-oulatlon .and dllf>Olltlon
properly. under Hid wttl 1no EST OIOOER FOR CASH, lewfui llmltatlon, the addition.a to or ~t ot a helJth ftOlltV °' thereof; dacrM. 0t eo muCft lheraol .. l'l\ly money of the Unttea St•t .. , or 1 the~ ltltlon ~ u1 11 tlon ..... th .. _ Ion be ~ry 10 .. 11~ aald lud· Cbh•'• chede drewn on 1 •t•t• °' .....,.u "' eq P"*1 n connec "" t ... ~•t Of C•> The pledge or ..-gnmtn\of ell cw any part Of the r~
"*'t With 1ntern11 and coa.t• to tne n11t1ona1 benlt. 1 1111te Of r.cMrat aueh heeJth tecillty. and the uee and dlllpoeftjon theteof, tubjtet to 8UCh lg!...,_ 1tt
,,ig,,..t bldd. ror C41111 1n lewful credit im1on. or 1 11at• oi: federal (g) 'Pertlclpatlng heelth lnstttutlon "*"' • private nonprofit With the holdert of bondt u may ''*' be out1tandlng; rnon.v of the Untt.a Stet• Mvtngs """ 1oen IMOCletlOn domt oorporetlon or attoclaUon a.1thott14'd by the lawt the State of (f) Limitation on the "" of r~ for ·~~ tor
Dated •t San11 Ane. Cal1IOMla ei1ec1 1n thlt •••t•. 111 peyeble 11 the Callfe>tnl• to provtde or operete • "-'th f Klllty u ~lload In thla oe>«•llng, admfnl .. rttlon or othtt IXPen ... of the City;
Janu&l)I ~. 18' time of .... 111 rlahf. title anc1 ordlnanot and Which, pl.ltauent to the provtalont Of thl• Ofdl· (g) Spectbflont of the K1• or omtNIOf\t to .cit wf'6ch ahall ~ ..... a V111a.Mr1 tnt••1 ri.ld by II, at f r\.fei .. , tn ll'tlt n1noe, undtr1ek• the flnan. clng Of the aequltltlon. oonatructlon conatlMe a dtfldt In tM duttel of the City, e pert~=heahh
1ff7 WMCM Df" 14'1 .. * , .. 1 P'oPef1Y lltuet• "' Mid County or lmpr~ of I heetth tecWty or u~--the r•fund"'-lnlthutlon 10 ....,.__.,of aa:h .._...... and ~-t r t• __. NiMrpof1 '-di, C• --•n<I St••• OelCrl~ .. tOllOwl ----· "'V ·-· .......... ,... .. Y ... ""lf ...... BAAb Oli ES S,_,,. Coroner Lot t4 In DIOQ 4G of fV\W s.c,. °' r .. 11-iung of obigatlona lnc:un9d to ~ the acqultftlOn, t9medi. of l&dl hc6dlnl In fhll WWII of defWt, My
County 01 Otenge c. hon.~ o..cti. "'the City o1 conttructlon or Improvement ot • hMltl'I fedtlty, °'any corpcw-UmlteOone on the right Of KtlOfl by lndfvtdUm bot~ ay K arown. l •QMnt Newport u '* rnep t'**>f ,.. atlon whldl It • non~ofH COtJ)Ofetlon tn Calffomla « 1 .,_., (h} TM ttppOAntrnent Of • oorpor•t• trwtea co Kt on bet1t11f of
Pvbt•IW Onm09 Coui 0 lfy Piiot COfded In BOOll 4 Pege 2& of Mii-at.re of tht Untied 8ttt• of Amertca which II the .ole rNmber the C.ty and the Holderl of ti.a bonds, the pledga 0( Mllgtll'Mnt
Hti '· 9 11. tfl• e.llaneoua mllf)I teoo<O• 'bf uld of 9UCh a oorporauon 0t eeeooleUon of loent, dMdt of "'*• rnortPI" Ind any contr&1a or
7:l9·.,. Orange County fhJ 'Revenue' mMM lmouftll rec.IY9Cf by lhe City .. f1C)ay~ 80'•ntnll to II.di \rwt.e. llnd Int rlgflt• of IUCft truater.
' ' ' ..
I
Pllll.IC NOTICE Nil.IC NOTICI:
ORDINANCE NO. 14-3
AN ORDIMANCI! OF THE CITY OF NEWPORT HACH
AMENDIHQ PORTIONI OF Dl8TIUCTING MAH NO. 41 AHO 50
10 Al TO MCUllFY 8AID "'OPEJfTY FROM THI UN-
CLAlllFIED DllTNCT TO THE PLA..-D COMMUNfTY ~
VELOPMENT ftlAN FOR BLOCK 400 OF NIWPOftT CINTlfl
(PL.ANNING COMMe88tON AMeNo.NT NO. •>
the City Cooncil or the City of Newport Beach DOES OROAIN
u follows:
HCTION 1. The following real property loc.ated In the City of
Newport Beach, County of Orange, State of California;
Paroet No. t Of Parcel Map 01-19 (ResubdMalon No. 524),
Pare.ii No. 1 and 3 of Paroel Map 3 7 .23 (Ae.aubdlvlalon No. 297).
Parael No. 1 of Paroet Map 34-30 (Rasubdlvlalon No. 226), and
Pareel No. 1 of Paroet Map 81·10 (Ae9ubdlvlllon No. 4t7),
loclted at 400 Newport Center Drive, on the eaaterly Ilda of
Newport Center Ortve between San Nlcholu Dr1¥t and San
Miguel Dtlve, In Newport c.nter.
As thown on Olatrtctlng Map• No. 49 end 50. referred to In
S.Ctlon 20.01.050 of the Newport Beach Munlelpeil Code. and by
auoh reference made • Ptrt of TIU• 20 of .. Id Code i. hertby
~ to rcone Mid property from the C·O-H to the Ptann9d
Community DfatrlC1 and adoptfng • new Planoact Community
DeV91opment Ptan Ind Oewlopment Stendarda.
AC'nON 2. The Pi.annlng Dlrac1or ot the City of Newpor1
Beech la hereby ln.atrvoted and dlr.ct9d to change Otttrlotlng
Map.a No. 49 and 50 to retteet Mid Change .. dtaerlbed In
s.ctlon 1 hereof, and u uld Dfttrlctlpg Map9 h•ve ~ IO
amended, the Mme lhall be In f\Jll foroe and eff.e1 and be• pat1
of Title 20 of the Newpott Bnctt Munlctpal CO<N •
llCTION a. The entire territory known • the 8'octc '400 Plat'lrMd Community, mort fulJy deecr"ib9d In s.ctlon 1 of thl•
Ordinance Whk:h It zoned P-C. 11 hereby amend9d to .adopt a
PlanMd Communfty ~t Plan end~ Stan,.
darda, Amend"*'t No, 598; attacf\ed het.on q Exhibit 1.
aacl'lOft 4. The Planning Dlrecior of the Chy or Newpor1
Beaon It Mo Mreby lnetruct9d and dlr9cted to lhow Mid
Ptanned Community Oavetopment P1en on Mid proptrty and
,,..,,,,., Community otstrtct u d11Crib9d In S.C.lon 3 above; the
Nmt Iha» be In fuQ toroa and 4lffect and be a pa11 of Tttte 20 of the~ &wit Mun6cfpeil Code.
MC I. Thi• ordin.nc:. wu lntroduold at a regular
,.,_.Ing of the Clt1 Council of the City of Newport 8eactt held on
the 23td dJY Of .i.nu.ty, 198'C, and•• eoopt«J on tl"le day Of ,
1064, by tl"le toaowtng vote. to : EXHIBITS ON ALE IN THE tl'T'Y
CLERK'S OFACE. AYU, COUNCILMEMBERS Htt\, Maurw, Heather, a..,._,
Ptumnw, ~! Agee. NOES, COuN<rlLMEMBERS NoM
A88EHT, COUNCll.Ml!MBERS NOHE
ATTE8T:
E¥1fyn A. Hen MAYOA
I
HIGH 73 LOW49 COU NTY 1011111
THURSOA 't', FE BRUARY 16 1984 OR AN GE COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Today's
complete
Olymplc
results
.FV council term limit hit
-Page• 81-3
Coast
Final sponsors are being
sought for the Orange
County portion of the
Olympic Torch
fund-raising run./ A7
California
What's California's latest
way to get romantics out
of their shells and Into the
fast lane? /C1
A Fullerton grade school
principal Is cleared of
charges he molested a
student, but still doesn't
get his job back./ A7
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
Na tion
Experts still can't explain
cave-In after nuclear test
blast In Nevada desert
Wednesday./A5.
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·
World
. The Red Brigades has
claimed credit for Rome
assassination of U.S.
multi-force leader .I A4
At least 24 nations In
Africa are facing a grave
food shortage due to
drought and other natural
causes./04
Living
• The panic of A I OS may
have subsided, but the
patients still need under-
standlng./C1.
While a husband feeds
his desire to eat, his wife
starves for affectlon./C2
Sports
Bill Johnson of Van Nuys
captured the men's
downhill In the Winter
Olympics today./8 1
UC Irvine's basketball
team seeks Its first win
ever at Selland Arena
against Fresno State./8 1
Area community college
basketball teams find the
road not to their liking, as
Orange Coast, Golden
West and Saddleback
lose./82
:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·
Entertainment
Despite ABC's coverage
of the Winter Olympics,
underdog NBC ran away
with the television ratings
for the week.IC&
Business
Varl-X relocates Its cor-
porate headquarters to a
new building In lrvlne./B5
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Bualnesa
Calltornla News
Claaalfled
Comics
Crouword
C>Mth Notices
Help Yourself
HorotCOPe
Ann Landert
Uvlng
Mutual Funda
National News
Opinion
Pola Log
Public Notices
Sport a
Stock Mark.ti
TMvtllon
Thelt.,..
WMther
WorkSN.wa
C3
A3
84·5
A4
01 ~3
C3
03
04
C2 02
C2
C1-2
85
A4
Al A3
~-6
81-3
88
C&
C&-7
A2
~·
Mayor protests
plan that could
force him out
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of!MO.., ..... a\lllf
---
Fountain Valley Mayor Marvin
Adler has launched a counterattack
A firs t
on Coast:
Olympic
plates
CdM resident gets
his off the top-
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of ... Oellp Plot .....
Mike Meade didn't know his
belated Christmas presents would
attract so much attention.
But the 44-year-old Corona del
Mar resident found out Wednesday,
when he showed up at the Depart-
ment of Motor Vehicles in Costa
Mesa to piclc up the five personalized
license plates he had ordered -two
for himself, one for his son, one for his
daughter and one for a former law
partner.
When Meade got there. he found an
American Indian in full dress, a
government representative and re-
porters and photographers all on
hand not to watch him hand out his
Christmas l?resents, but to witness an
event of historical significance: the
issuing of the first sets of Olympic
license plates.
At OMV offices around the state
Wednesday, the collectors' plates
were distributed for the first time with
varying amounts of fanfare.
Meade spent $500 for the com·
memorati ve license plates he ordered
last November as Christmas gjfts.
But while he is an Olympics
a~inst a proposal that could proh1b1t
ham for running for re-election in
November.
This week Adler made public an
interoffice memo from Councilmen
Fred Voss and Ben Nielsen, asking
that the Feb. 21 council meeting
include a discussion of a proposed
ballot measure to impose a
three-term limit o n council members.
The mayor already had announced
plans to run an November for a fourth
four·year tenn on the council. No
other council members would be
immediately restricted by a t~·term limit.
In their memo, Nielsen and Voss
said they had been approached by
several residents who wa11 an in·
1tiative placed on the ballot, ask.ing
Fountain Valley voters whether a
three-term council limit should be
0-. ..... ,._..,.._...u.-
Mlke lleade abowa off hla new Olympic-theme per-
IOD&IJaed UcenH platee -the flnt In the atate.
supporter and has ordered uckets to
this year's Summer Games in Los
Angeles, Meade said he really wanted
the plates because they gave him a
chance to get letter combinations that
were already taken on regular plates.
Devon, his daughter's name, was
unavailable when he tried to order It
before. he said. But the Olympic
(Pleue aee OLYMPIC/ A~)
1m~. The councilmen said the
residents wouJd be present at the Feb.
21 meeuna to publicly discuss the
proposed three-term limit.
Voss and Nielsen aJso asked the
city attorney be prepared to answer
l~I questions on the proposal and
S&Jd he should prepare a draft
resolution and ballot measure in case
the council decides to act on the
proposal.
The mayor said he has attcodcd
numerous commuruty meetinfi in
recent months and has heard no
complaints concemma hi• plans to
run for a founh term. He wd Council
members Barbara Brown and James
Neal told him no one bad approached
them about a three-term limit.
"Since I am the 011ly counciJ
member who has served three t.crms..
(Pleue 1ee V ALLSY I A.2)
Pier warning
aired early?
Counciiiilan vows
he'll get to boffOm
of building flap
By ROBERT BARKER
Of!MDellJ ..... •tMt
Huntington Beach city officials
received word by Feb. 8 at the latest
that a proposal for a two-story
structure at the end of the city pier
faced stiff opposition. a state Coastal
Commission analyst said today.
But City Council members, meet·
ing Monday night (Feb. 13) spcc1fi·
caJly to address the issue. weren't told
of the commission's stance by city
administrators.
Instead, the city's elected officials.
receive<i a city staff report dated Feb.
10 which stated the Coastal Com-
mission Staff re vtewed the proposal
and would recommend approval of
the project subject to addittonal
parking and other minor conditions.
City Council members. however,
contend they didn't receive warnina
that anything might be awry with
commission approval.
C aty Adm1n1stra1or C harles
Thompson Monday said be received
an unofficial telephone call about 90
minutes before Monday niabfs de·
liberations but didn't have time to
check out the facts and Public Worts
Director Paul Cook said he received a
copy of the state report from an
unofficial source about the same
umc. Neither provided inklings to
counctl members of developments.
The confusion and the apparent
contradictions over when word was
received and why city decision
makers weren't informed prompted
Councilman Don MacAllister to an-
nounce today that he intended .. to get
to the bottom of this.
"I'm very surprised if the staff got a
call on or before Feb. 8 that they
didn't get information to us. I'm very
disappointed that infonnauoo seems
to have been withheld ...
Coastal Commission analyst Pra-
veen G upta said today he "distinctly"
(Pleue lee PIER/ A2)
Nuke foes stage own show
By MICHALENE BUSICO
Ol1119Delly ..........
Delegates attending a defense in·
dustry convention in Costa Mesa
were offered an alternative Wednes-
day night by several peace groups, but
none came to li sten.
The alternative conference, held at
the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel,
consisted of a nu-nuclear lectures and
films and was originally aimed at
delegates attending the WINCON '84
convention in the hotel.
But the audience, which ranged
from 14 to 30 people, was composed
Airport
proposal
e ndorsed
By JEFF ADLER
Of .... 0.-, ...... , ...
The Orange County Airpon Com·
mission -a body that advises the
Board of Supervisors on John Wayne
Airport matters -Wednesday en·
dorsed ratifying an agreement with
the city of Newport Beach that is
intended to quell .the l<?ng-standing
furor over the airport s proposed
expansion.
Airport commissionen concluded
a two-hour meeting by voting 2-1 in
favor of a proposed lepl agreement
between the county and the city. The
agreement now goes to supervisors,
who are expected to consider it in the
next several weeks.
But the airport commts ion voted
to endorse the plan only after a,.,-ceing
to change several key provisions of
1he plan approved by the Ncwpon
Beach City Council Jan. 23.
Commissioners reworded sections
of the plan concernina the size of the
expansion project the county would
empowered to undenake at John
Wayne Airport and how 1 search for
(Pl eue aee AlllPORT / A2)
entirely of members of groups spon-
soring the conference -the Aero-
pspace En&!necrs/Workers for Social
Responsibility, Occidental Colle1e
Peacemakers, Los Angeles Cathohc
Worker, and the Computer Pro-
fessionals for Social Responsibility
-and community members. Win·
con delegates did not accept offers to
attend.
Jonathan Parfrey. a conference
organizer. blamed the hotel for
prohibiting the peace groups from
distributing literature on the con·
ference.
"We've had some difficulty reach-
ing out to the participants of WJN-
CON, I know of no other way to reach
them than through the hotel...! have
to admit we've been licked in that
way," he said.
But J.W Wilson, a WJNCON
spokesman had a different reasoh for
the non-participation of the del·
egates.
"The points bemg raised here arc
nothmg new, peculiar, or unique.
They (the delegates) know the
negau vity they'll probably feel here
(Pleae eee NUKE/ A2)
Docton. tecb.Dlclana. and ataff of Coeta
lleea'• ltmeratceiater Walk-ln Medical
Center poee ror picture before paintma
0.-, ............ .., ...............
o•er atan on bullcliDC'• wall. Coeta Meea counctr membcn ordered the remo..i.
aaytn& the •ymbol• Ylolate •tin ordinance.
Phooof!
Fated
finJet
finished
By KAREN E. KLEIN
OI -CWl't "91 ....
The huge. bandaged finger that
pointed the wa) to Costa Mesa's
Fmerg1ccntcr Walk-in Medical
('enter was amputated this momiag
hy the cit)·~ order.
T he C'o•aa Mesa Cit) CounCll last
m o nth dtc 1dtd that the
714-square-foot graph aeon the wall of
the medical center's bu1ld1ng. at 131
E 17th St.. violated the city's si.gn
ordinance l 'nder the ordinance. tht
E:mel"@.tcentcr 1s allowrd a sign of
I 'lJ 5 square l~t
The f mcrgaccntcr ~taff haa a coff~
a nd do ughnu1 "offthc wall .. party at 8
a m toda ... the deadltne 5et by the city
(Pleue Me OJ'P I A2t
Medics bridge refugee cultural gap
Communication
lack lmpedes -----proper care -----
One preanaot woman won•t Ulke
vitamins because be believes tht)'
• will cautc her blby to arow too larsc.
causint 1 difficult b1nh.
A man rcfuac1 to submit to a simple
blood test btcautc be., believes the
blood will never be ttplactd.
A mother rcfu · to ajve her IOn a
prcKnption -all bec&uJO the d tor
.. vc tier chdd a friendly pet on the
head.
These don't seem like normal
medical problems. but for docton
wbO are treatina Oranat County's
growina pc:>pulatton of Southeast
Asian ttfulCC' a lfCll cuhuraJ pp 1,
crcat1n1 difficultie .
There arc between S0.000 and
60.000 Southc~st A~1an refuitt h'· ina 1n the coun t)', acconJma to
Nampct Panichpant ·m ,
spokeswoman for the Ref~ As-
mancc PtoJCCt of the county'r.
Health Care Aacncy. M t live in
nta Ana, Garden Grove and c t·
mini ter, but rcfuacc population al o
arc upand1na in Hunt1n1tolf ~ h
and Fount.am Valley.
Whtie it I unlikely the rcfu cc v.ill
f
JERRY
HIRSCH
PERSPECTIVE
tran mn rare. e'ottc: di\Uscs to other
Oran e County mid nt lht) b \ta
vanety of health probkm and 1hc
cultural pp som<"t1me' make-\ treat·
ment difficult. •
Rcfugcc1comin1 to Oran County
now u c d11Terent from those wbo
came after the fall of Sata00 1n 197.S,
accordina to Or. ~raid R Greene. an
mfm1ous ~Sl"npcn and di~or
of ped1atncs at the UC Irvine Medical
Center tn Orange
"The fiT'\t WIYC v..erc fairly soph1s-
l!c.aicd They ""<'tt aovemmcnt of·
lk 1al and South Y'1ctnamese pro.
fttSJonaJs
• '"Tbt mnrc rrt'tf\l anivats m k
sophi tica\Cd. Many hue bttn fann·
tn or ptuants Man} who have
settled htrc arc hill pcopk and have
never xcn a car or ·a ph cian
before ... Gttene e plained
.. Althou&h the)' arc anorc lik.dy to
f Pl ...... asruo / u1 ,.
'/
'
A2 * Ot~ Cout DAILY PILOT /Thurtday, February US, 19a.
Transit tax pushed on cable TV
Onnae Coun1y Transportation
Commission Chairman Thomas F.
Riley and Executive Dtrcctor Stan
Of\elie w1ll appear on cable television
systems throuJbout the county e" plain&~ the commission's amb1uous
S 12.S baUioo l S-year Transportation
Investment Plan.
T bt program, "Lafe~tyles," ho ted
by Phil Blauer, will c"amane the
development and financial impact of
the plan which will be presented to
Orange County voters an June
The transit plan a ks vote~ to
approve a penny sales w 1ncrea~ to
ra1se fuods for euina traffic coRjcs·
llOn throughout the county by widcn-•na every Orange County frttway.
creating three new frccwa¥s. improv-
ing mass tr.tns1t and provtdi~ fund-
•n& to cttaes for local improvements.
Tames Mirror Cable will air the
program at 6 p.m. today: Community
Cablevision Company, at 7:30 p.m.
today, Cahforn1a Cablesy~tems, at J
p.m, Sunday and Feb. 26 ; Storer
Cable at 6:30 p.m today. Saturday,
Feb. 23 and 2S\ Group W Cable at 7
p.m. Feb. Monday. Wednesday and
Feb. 24 and Century ('able at 7 p.m.
today.
VALLEY COUNCIL TERM LIMIT ...
From Al
three-term hmll
Councilman Voss, however. said.
"l would be m support of placing such
a question on a ballot to let voters
decade."
He said the council could order that
such a question be placed on the June
primary election ballot.
1t appears the proposed an1t1a11ve as
intended to prevent me from seeking
re-election," Adler satd ma prepared
statement. "This leads me to believe
that the initiative is politically
motivated and that the so-called
•concerned citizens' are perhaps those
who will be workmi for candidates
runnina for office this November.
PIER PROBLEM ...
"I f this is the case, Councilmen
Nielsen and Voss seem anxious to
help them get an init1auve on the
ballot to accomplish their goal.··
.. All I can say 1s that the mayor 1s
overructing," Nielsen responded
Wednesday night.
Nielsen said he and Voss were only
responding to some residents who
asked the three-term li mit be dis-
cussed at an upcoming meeting. He
said the proposal was not specifically
targeted at Adler, and noted that an)
new hm1t might not affect council
members already in office. He said he
has not reached a dec1s1on on a
From A l
recalls discussing developments with
Cat} Engineer Les Evans either when
the Coastal Commm1on staff report
was prepared on Feb. 8 or before. He
said he does this to keep staff
members abreast of developments.
Gupta asserted that he told Evans
he intended to recommend against
the second story of the building on top
o f a fast-food restaurant. He said he
opposed the project on the grounds
the second story meeting room was a
low prionty use under the Coastal
Act. because there wasn't sufficient
parking and also because the
two-story building tends to block
ocean views.
City Engineer E' ans said he under-
stood the concern deaJt only with
adequate parking for the meeting
place and that he passed that concern
onto Thompson and Cook.
"But I thought the whole thing was
negotiable." he said. "l didn't under-
stand there would be a denial of the
second story. I thou~t it would be
OK'd subject to parking."
City Council members Monday
night called for the architect to
redesign the bu1ld1ng that has been
cnt1c1zed by pier visitors. But they
endorsed a two-story concept.
NUKE-FOES ST AGE NO-SHOW ...
From Al
and there's nothing going to be
presented here that's not already
known or discussed. They are not
opera11ng in a vacuum ...
The program was a pan of the
ongoing protest of the defense indus-
try convention. The protest began
Tuesday naght before with a
candlelight vigil. and continued
Wednesday morning with a passive
resistance protest. resulting in 28
arrests.
"We must strateg1ze on how we can
be more effective in establishing a
dialogue." Rev. Gregg said.
Alfred Beebe. a fonner software
engmeer for Hughes Aircraft. said the
value placed on the final product -a
m1ss1le -rather than on the theoreti-
cal and mathematical insight gamed
an the product's development caused
him to leave the company.
He said the system, begjnning in
colleges and continuing into the job
market. fosters a disregard for the
human impact of the technology
being developed
"We have to ask now what the
social 1mphcations are," he said.
The W INC'ON convention con-
tinues through Frida).
Last mght's conference. called an
"alternative program" to the conven-
tio n, included lectures by members of
the Aerospace Engjneers for Social
Responsibility, who told of their
personal crisis that came from work-
ing in the defense industry and led
them to their subsequent actavasm
OLYMPIC PLATES ...
The Rev. Doug G regg led the
Occidental Colleg Peacemakers. who
along with the Catholic worker. gave
a Chn stian perspective on arms
build-up. and asked such questions as
"Is it a sin to build a nuclear
weapon?"
Both groups stressed the need for
better communication between the
polarized peace ~oups and the de-
fense representauves, comparing the
separation to the current relat1onsh1p
between Russia and the llmted
States.
From Al
plates include vertical "U.S." or
··LA.. letters on the left side that
change the official reading of the
personalized numbers and letters.
Meade said he read a flier about the
Olympjc plates when his registration
notice came an the mall an November.
So he ordered "Devon." "Joe D"
for Joe DiVincenzo. his law partner.
"The I" for his 1952 boat trailer. "Big
I" for a 1950 truck has son owns and
"The 47" for a 1947 Ford he has.
"BMW." for another of his cars.
hasn't come an yet.
"These are h1ston c. umque," said
Meade. who admits to collecting
antique cars and most c' ervthang
else
The commemorauve plates -red.
white and blue and featuring the
progressive Olympic star and five
mterlockmg nnis -will be available
to purchase until Dec. 31. 1984.
Betty Nims of the Costa Mesa
OMV said the S I 00 fee for the plates
1sdiv1ded. with $65 going for security.
traffic control and law enforcement
during the Summer Games. $25 going
to the Environmental License Plate
Fund. and S 10 to the OMV to
manufacture the plates and run the
01) mp1c License Program.
Souvenir plates. reading "LA
Games." can be purchased at any
OMV office along wnh personalized
and non-personalized Olympic
plate~
REFUGEE TREATMENT PROBLEMS ...
From Al
have mfecuons or parasites because
of where they laved. the likhhood ot
transmittmg those to other people an
Orange County 1s extremely shm,"
Greene sa1d.
And they have completely different
concepts of health care.
"Communications, perhaps, has
been the biggest problem with de-
livering good health care to the
refugees ... Greene said. .
Refugees may make 11 appear that
the doctor is understood and that they
agree wnh the treatment when neither
may be true.
"They won't say anything af they
don't understand the treatment be-
cause they don't want the doctor to
lose face. They won't question the
doctor but they might iF,nore the
Refugees' primJ:tive
beliefs pose problem
treatment." Greene said.
Refugees may reject treatment or
thank the doctor is not a good
physician af he:
•Does not gave an injection.
•Asks a patient to take off his or
her clothes for an examination.
•Mentions that folk remedies are
ineffective.
•Pats a child on the head which is
demeaning to Southeast Asians.
.. Most recent arrivals have no
concept of body organs or the West-
ern concept of medicine. For exam-
ple. they won't s ubmit to a blood test
because they feel the blood will not be
replaced." Greene said.
"Trying to do surgery requires a
~eat deal of education and convinc-
ing."
Refugee woman often will not take
vitamins if they arc pregnant. T hey
believe the "itamans will make the
baby too bag and cause a difficult
deli ver;. according to Greene.
W EATHER
Fair skies, gusty winds due
Coaatal
Enended
F•wtlll_ ... ~
Hlgtll In mid 60e lo mlCI 70. LOW.
ln09tly 40 10 52
11 .,
44 H
44 St
S1 20 n .. eo ao 81 ,.
21 oe eo ,.
.. S$
4t 21
10 S4
N ~ 74 45
M ~
3t 19 t6 47
63 2t ,. S4
• 30 02 _,,
SI 3-4 63 ,.
42 30
50 4 1
40 21 ... u 70 51 eo 3t 75 55 73 41
31 37 51 ...
57 35 N 41
75 53
t2 SI 80 2S 72 S4 71 ...
-...w......s.-10
HOM US l)lcll ol C:-ce
Rain 11 Snow mJ
~-Flurri .. l!!)
Fronta:Cotd ~ Warm ..., Occ~~
Mllwaull• &I 32 Reno 5 1
Mple-$1 PMll 41 S7 AldvnonCI !It
NUhVllM ee 41 SI LOult ee
N9w0r1Nna 70 eo SI "-!•Tempe 71
.... York SI 44 81111 Lek• 37
Notfolk eo 51 San AntonlO 82
N«th Pl•tl• •5 31 8111'1 Oleeo 72
Olll9he>mll City ee 42 San Ffendiloo 55
()Mella 52 3t &tSlew.te )t
Ortendo n S2 8Nute 51
Pllm~ 71 41 :.:.1.: 71
PhMOelpNa 57 45 47
Phoenix 71 47 5'><*-41
~Me S2 31 Syrac:vee 40
41 40 Tooek• SI
33
51
4t 57
30
" 55 ..
21
37
43
35
32
27
42
~ 53 42 r.-N " PrcMdence SI 44 fulU 17 47 =lly 117 31 WlleN<1gton ~ 411 Temperatures Tides •• 21 WIClNt• ee 4 1
411 31 Seoond '-
52 22 Second hlgll
TOOAY 3:17pm
11:41 pm. ,,.,AY
2:53a.m
11:02 •.m
S:5& p.ro.
1C)'t_3pm
8Q2 COMDITIOM
1·2 poor 2-3 poor
60 25
22 111 ee 21
t7 44
57 45
12 41
53 '7
42 25 N 41
37 22
42 27
50 42
Sun Mta today •I 5·3a p m . rlMe
Frldey It 8.3t a.m. llnd Nl1 lgalll et 5311pm
2-3 poor
2.. poor 1.2 poor
1·2 poot.f111< Moon n.. lodey et 5·30 pm , ... ,
Fncsr, el 8.42 a.m llnd rlMe lgalll et
l44pm.
2-3 , ...
$ ... Olfecllon -
AIRPORT PROPOSAL BACKED •..
From Al
an alternate airport site would be
conducted.
The advisory panel decided there
should be no restraints on the sire of
the new terminaJ to be constructed as
part of the proposed expansion plan.
Any decisio n on the size the tenninaJ
should be left to the supervisors,
according to the draft of the plan lo be
submitted to board members.
In addition. commissioners agreed
the couQty should not be required to
select an alternative airport site in
three years and beg.in construction
within 10 years o n a new airpon.
They amended the agreement to read
that the county must make "best
efforts" within those time limits.
Supervisor Thomas R iley, who
represented the county in the nego-
tiations to frame the agreement,
termed the comrrussion's action "re-
sponsible." He added he hopes the
approval ''can gain the support of the
Board of Supervisors."
Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn
Hart, who represented the city m the
sensitive negotiations. also said she
was pleased by the commission's
action. She called the action a
•·positive step forward," but noted
the important approval. that of the
supervisors, might be more difficult
to obtain.
An aide to Riley on airport matters.
Ken Hall. likened the commission's
approval to "get1ing into the playoffs
with the championship game yet to be
played."
Dally Piiot
Delivery
11 Guarantwd
Mcm1Jtty ~'•<Jay 11 you do
, •'1 "a•P r ur PtlPI!' b)I
' )0 L ,,,.. t.a' t>Ptnire 1 p m
l "O , ur op , ""'11 Dfl
hl· .. ~•l
Approval of the agreement by
supervisors is expected to be difficuh
to win. Board members have ex-
pressed their reluctance to sign an
agreement limiting future actions by
future supervisors.
Also, supervisors have adopted a
statement, as board policy. that no
alternative airport site exists in
Orange County.
If approved by supervisors. the
agreement then would have to be
.
resubmitted to the Newport Beach
City Council for concurrence.
Provisions of the proposed 30-year
agreement would require the caty to
drop a lawsuit cballengjng airpon
expansion plans and would pennit
the county to expand the airi><!n to
accommodate 55 commcrc1al jet
nights until technologjcally quieter
jets are introduced. With the in-
troduction of new aircraft that could
satisfy a1rpon noise guidelines. the
flight lid would be removed.
OFF THEW ALL ...
From Al
for removal of the offending finger.
Doctors, X-ray technicians, medi-
cal assistants and assorted friends
with paintbrushes and ro llers in hand,
collaborated to bury the bandaged
finger and Red Cross mural under a
new coat of paint.
Dr. J. Brennan Cassidy. who
founded the clinic in 1982, said he
plans to repaint the same,
copyrighted logo on the wall but in
smaller proportion.
"The new one will be only about 16
percent the size of this one," Cassidy
said.
"I was disappointed that they
wouldn't let us keep (the ori~nal
sign). I've gotten a lot of positive
comments about it being pleasing
aestheticaJly." he said.·· All over L.A.
they're pulling up murals on the walls
to clean up and improve blank walls
ORANGE COAST
for the Olympics and I tho ught this
was really an improvement on a
blank. bare wall."
The sign requirements for the
Emergkenter came to the attention of
the city after the mural was put up
1llegaJly, according to Clarence
Clarke. vice chairman of the city's
Plannang Commission.
There was no question about
whether the graphic constituted an or
commercial. Clarke said. The sign has
to comply with the city's required
square-footage allotments. he added.
because it was erected after the sign
ordinance went into effect in 1973.
Last year's City Council decision to
"grandfather" in non-compliant
signs that were up before the ord1·
nance was passed did not apply to
Emergicenter. Clarke said.
Daily Pilat
MAIN OFFtCE
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
330 West S..y SI Cost• Mes.a CA
M•~ •OOr-Bo• IMIQ Cost• Maa CA 92626
COl>Y•'!llll t983 O.enge Coest Publ!SIW!g Comc>eny No o•ws s1or1es 11ustra11on1 editor.•• mau~r 01
a~1_._11 ,,.__, may oe •9P'OOUCll<l ""'1"<>ul IC>eCte!
!>e<""'5'0" OI Coe>yrrot'I -
!)AfUI .,,. ... uri(J Sur·d•r II
t J not t~C.e•vl! 1'0Uf
COily D• 7 • "' ca• Dl'!IOt~
10 • "' l"O V°"' COOy ., .. C:,.-~1iofl"Pf'J Chazy DowaHby Ro•emary Churchman SKono ctess postege PM:I •• Cos11 Mes. C.~t0tnoe
IUPS I U 8001 Svotc•C>hon by cem .. S. 7S ITIOtll!Vy
Dy me~ $6 ~ ITIOtlft\ly
Moel
Clrculatlon
TelephonM
Oranoe County
Arees ~
Laguna NiQuef .......
Eduor and Assis1an1 Controllef
to lhe Publisher
St..,_, F. CefHO
PfO<IUCloO!
M~
Olotla A. Powen
Olrec:tor Of
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L•,t.•'48hOO
Mn~•
Tl>e OteOQe Coest Delly PrlOI Wtlh wlloch IS~ ll>e
News Pr~ ,. pulllt$NO Dy 1r.e Oranoe Coe51 Pvolosi>ong
Compeny Two IKl!hOM ••• pVOleShed Monoay '"'ouot'
FrlQay A single •eQOONI eont0n rS pu()llSlteO Se1uroaya
and SunO•Y' Ttie 1><1ne-I publrshong 1'4an1 rS el 330
West Ba, StrMI p 0 ~ •560. Cotta ........ C.Mtorn.a
926:>6
VOL. n , NO. 47
Most of the illnesses associated .-------------------------------------------
Just Call
642-6086 •
I
with the refugees are a result oflafe an
crowded. unsanitary conditions. It is
not unusual for an entire family to
have h ved an a 10 to 15-square-foot
area, Greene said.
The refugees often come to the
county with a variety of intestinal
ailments which are corrected with
treatment and the use of proper
samtation facilities.
''People have expressed worries
about epidemics but nothing has
occured since the mid-70's when the
refugees first staned to settle here,''
Greene added.
"I am certain that there have been
isolated 1nc1dents of transmission but
that was going on before the refugees
arrived." Greene said.
"Most of the diseases require close
contact dunng a prolonged period of
time," Green said.
The Health Care Agency sees about
15,000 refugees a year. according to
Panachpant-m.
"Our goal l!i to help them take
better care of their health and help
them become self-sufficient We try
to bndge both sades." she said.
A lot of that work involves tmns-
lalin& for doctors treatina patients
who don't speak English and wnting
pamphlets about American medicine
in SoutheM t A•nan languages.
"We want to help loc~I doctors
understand about the rcfuscc pa·
tient," Panachpant-m s~11d
What do you llh aboul Ille Dail)' Pilot• Wba1 don't you like? Call lbt
number at left and yoor mt1saat will~ r~rdtd. transcrl~d and dellnred
to the apptoprlate editor.
The same U ·llour answuln& urvtt't may bt IHtd 10 record lt Utn t.o tilt
editor on any topic. Coacributon to our Lelltn colamn muu lnch1de melr
1>1mt and teltpboaf' namber for yerlOtatlo11. No rtrrulaalon calls, pita e.
Ttll u what't o yOPr mind •
I I I
Clo thing, To Be Valid,
should be a natural and positive
extension of the wearer. We've
designed an entire collection with
that in mind.
The Nines Collection, by South-
wick, a carefully tailored edition of
slightly updated traditional clothing.
A collection that makes the quiet
yet firm assertion that clothing
should be seen and noted, but most
of all appreciated and enjoyed.
119 F11hJon bland
Newport Beac h
(7 14) 759-1622
4728 dmiralt y a1
· ~1arlna del Rey
(213) 823· 7955
Win $100
In the Piiot's
Socia I
Security
Sweepstakes
• -PageB2
Coast
Final sponsors are being
sought for the Orange
County portion of the
Olympic Torch
fund-raising run./ A7
California
What's California's latest
way to get romantics out
of their shells and into the
fast lane?/C1
A Fullerton grade school
principal Is cleared of
charges he molested a
student, but still doesn't
get his job back./ A7
'Terms of Endearment'
sweep Oscar nomi-
nations for 1983. /C4
·::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
Nation
Experts still can't explain
cave-In after nuclear test
blast In Nevada desert
Wednesday./ AS.
World
The Red Brigades has
claimed credit for Rome
assassination of U.S.
multi-force leader./ A4
At least 24 nations In
Africa are facing a grave
food shortage due to
drought and other natural
causes./D4
Living ,
The panic of AIDS may
have subsided, but the
patients still need under-
standlng./C1.
While a husband feeds
his desire to eat, his wife
starves for affection./C2
.::::::::::::::::·:·:·:::·:::·:·:·:::·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::::
Sports
UC Irvine's basketball
team seeks Its first win
ever at Selland Arena
against Fresno State./81
Area community college
basketball teams find the
road not to their Ilk Ing, as
Orange Coast, Golden
West and Saddleback
lose./82
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::·::
Entertainment
Despite ABC's coverage
of the Winter Olympics,
underdog NBC ran away
with the television ratings
for the week./C8
Business
Varl-X relocates Its cor-
porate headquarters to a
new building In lrvlne./85
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Bullness
California News
Classified
Com tea
Crossword
Death Notices
Help Youreelf
H0«>9COP9
Ann Landers
Living
Mutual Funds
NatlonaJ News
Opinion
Ponce Log
Public Notion
Sport a
Stock Marketa
Tetevtaton
Th.at eta
WMlher
WortdN4"#9
C3 A3
64-5
A4
01-3
C3
03
04
C2 oa
C2
c1~2
BS
A4
A8
A3
0..-8
81-.3 ee ce ce-1
A2
A4
f 1111 1111111.
ORANGE COUNTY 1.ALIF0f1NIA ~~CENT _1
ilr's
e
ID en's own e
1
Johnson tops Olympic skiers
By the Auoclated Presa
SA RAJEVO, Yugoslavia -Bill
Johnson gave the United States its
first men's Alpine skiing gold medal
in Olympic history, winning the
men's d ownhill Thursday at the XIV
Olympic Winter Games.
It was the second gold medal of the
Games for the U .S. Debbie
Armstrong of Seattle won's the
women's giant slalom on Monday.
Johnson. 23, of Van Nuys, had
dominated five training runs held
prior to the weather-delayed race. lo
today's final, he was clocked in one
minute, 45.59 seconds.
No American had ever finished
higher than fifth in this event.
Switzerland's Peter Mueller.
another of the favorites, claimed the
silver medal in I :45.86, and Austria's
Anton Steiner took the bronze 10
1:45.95.
Austrian Franz Klammer, the 1976
Suspect faces conspiracy charge
after arrest by federal drug agents
Olympic downhill champion, look
too much air in his run and finished
10th.
Johnson, rapidly emergjng as one
of the World Cup's top downhill
competitors, won a World Cup down-
hill at Wengen, Switzerland, on Jan.
15, becoming the first American ever
to win a men's World Cup downhill.
He followed that victory with a
solid fourth place finish in the most
recent event at Cortina d'Ampezzo.
Italy, then immediately found the
Mount Bjelasnica course to his liking,
winnin' two of the five training runs
and finishing second in two others.
Mueller, the 1980 World Cup
downhill champion, had been con-
sidered Johnson's chief rivaJ here,
since the course is relatively flat and
both Johnson and Mueller arc among
the best in the world on such terrain.
Johnson had only the third fastest
intermediate time, .28 seconds slower
than Mueller, but he made up time on
the bottom third of the course by
staying low in bis tuck.
Before Thursday, the best Ameri-
can finishers in Olympic downhill
were William Beck in 1952 at Oslo
and Pete Patterson four years ago in
Lake Placid. ~ ... k ..
Both came in fifth. callfornlan BW Job.nlton 1t•a thumbe-ap after Yictory.
COAST OIL FIRM DEF AUL TS
ON $15 MILLION IN. LOANS
. .
Anti-inissile meet
proves a 'no-show'
By MICHALENE BUSICO
Of .... 0.-, Not .....
Delegates attending a defense in-
dustry convention in Costa Mesa
were offered an alternative Wednes-
day night by several peace groups. but
none came to listen.
The alternative conference, held at
the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel,
consisted of anti-nuclear lectures and
films and was originally aimed at
delegates attending the WINCON '84
convention in the hotel.
But the audience, which ranged
from 14 to 30 people. was composed
entirely of members of groups spon-
soring the conference -the Aero-
pspace En~neers/Workers for Social
Responsibility, Occidental Colle~e
Peacemakers, Los Angeles Catholic
Worker. and the Computer Pro-
fessionaJs for Social Responsibility
-and community members. Win-
con delegates did not accept offers to
attend.
Jonathan Parfrey. a conference
organizer. blamed the ho tel for
prohibiting the peace groups from
distributing literature on the con-
ference.
"We've had some difficulty reach-
ing out to the participants of WIN-
CON, I know ofno other way to reach
them than through the hotel .. .1 have
to admit we've been licked in that
way," he said.
But J.W Wilson, a W INCON
spokesman had a different reason for
the non-participation of the del-
egates.
"The points being raised here arc
nothing new, peculiar. or unique.
They (the delegates) know the
negativity they'll probably feel here
and there's nothing going to be
presented here that's not already
known or discussed. They arc not
operating in a vacuum."
The program was a part of the
(Pleue eee NUKE/ A2)
Newport company
cites price decline,
drilling failures
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of the o.-, Not .....
A Newport Beach oil and gas
exploration company with a repu-
tation for aggressively seeking ac-
quisitions defaulted on more than
SI 5 million in loans from First
Interstate Bank and is seeking to
restructure the debt .. •
Transierra Exploration Corp. said
it has an unpaid loan balance ofS 13.5
million plus interest considered in
default by the bank and that Trans-
ierra's subsidiary, TEC of Texas Inc ..
is in default on an upa1d balance of
SI . 7 plus interest.
"Declining oil prices is the main
reason. But we have not had as much
success in drilling as we had hoped
during the last year. I guess that is the
oil gam~" Transierra spokesman
John T. uarlc said Wednesday.
The company's auditors, Arthur
Anderson & Co. have inserted a
"going concern" clause in this year's
financial report wamini that Trans..
ierra is in serious finanCJaJ trouble.
But Clark says he does not believe
the company 1s in any immediate
danger of going under.
The default put on hold a Trans--
ierra plan to trade $4 million in stock
for nearly all the oil and gas assets of
Palo Petroleum Inc. of Dallas.
Transierra's stock swaps have
gained it ownership of folft-other 011
companies during the past year and
boosted the com~ny's reserves to
more than two m1lllon barrels of oil
and 16 million feet of natural gas.
But the worldwide oil glut that has
steadily sent petroleum prices down-
ward apparently resulted in a cash
crunch for the company.
Clark said Transierra dtd not make
it January payments to First Inter-
state and told the bank it could not
Wife gets
horse in
split suit • Docton. teclmlclan.a, &Dd ataff of Coeta
Meu'• Emer1lcenter Walk-in Medical
Center poee fOr picture before palntinC
.,.., ............................
o•er •i.tn on bulldl.DC'• wall. Coeta Meea
coaoclf' memben orilered the rerno'Yal,
aayt.nc the 8J'Dlbol• Yiolate at.en ordinance.
By tlae A11oclated Pren
meet it February obligations.
However, the company is paid up
with its suppliers and sub-contracton
leaving First Interstate as Trans-
icrra's only creditor, he said.
Clark said that in 1982 the com-
pany .. hit" a lot of oil wens but that
1983 turned sour for the company.
Most of the company·s exploration
1s 1n western Texas.
"We drill onJy domcstJcaJI) and
then only shallow holes. Everything
under 7,000 feet." Clark said.
Transierra, which is traded as an
over-the-counter stock. reported a net
loss for the year ended Oct 31 of SI . 7
million compared to a loss of $2.8
million for the previous year.
The bid price for the stock today
was I )!a -down 1h from the close
Wednesday.
Clark said Trans1erra 1s currently
studying vanous alternatives that are
available. including ongoing dis-
cuss1ons wtth the banks man attempt
to restructure the terms. conditions
and payment schedules of the loans.
Phooof!
Fated
fin~er
finished
By KAREN E. KLEIN °' .. 0.-, ,... ll.ilt
The huge. bandaged fingCT that
pointed the way to Costa Mesa's
Emerg1center Walk-in Medical
Center was amputated this morning
by the city's order.
The Costa ~ Cit) Council last
month decided that the
71 4-square-foot graph icon lht wall of
the medical center's building, at 131
E. I 7th t .. Viol ated the city's stgn
ordinance. Under the ordmance. the
Emergicenter is allowed a sign of
133.5 square feet.
The Emcri1center stafThad a coffee
and doughnut "off the wall" pan) at 8
a.m . today. the deadline set by the city
(Ple&N eee orr / A2l
An Orange County woman who
went to jail for three days rather than
reveal whereabouts of a stud horse
she hid from her cstranacd busband
has won possession o( the animal
after a five-day divorce trial.
Medics bridge refugee cultural gap
"I'm ccstauc. I'm so excited I can
hardly talk." Theresia O. Williams
said after Superior Coun Jydge
Myron S. Brown's dc<:Jsion Wedoes~
day.
"It looks kind of one-sided to me."
said Fred M. Chamcss of Encino,
attorney (or Walter Williams. "She
ended up with cverythina. and he 101
nothing."
In explainina h11 rulina, the j
&&id the horse is imPortant lh
financiaJly and cmotionany lo Mn.
W111iams. 4S
"I found that he doesn•t have any
definable employment skllls." Brown
wd. "And I was hop1ng the aw
the horse would 1ivc her; e." •
Communication
lack impedes
proper care -------
One prqnant woman won•t take
vttAmins bcQusc she believes they
will CIUllC her baby to P'OW too l&fJC, ·na a difficult bitth.
A an refuses to submit touimple
bl test be<:IUJe he believes the
b will never be rcpl~
'A mother rcfu to &ivc ~r t0n a
· ption -all because the doctor
pve her child a fncodly pat on the
bead.
I
These don't seem hke normal
medical problems. but for doctors
who are treatmg Onange County's
arowing population or Souttleast
Asian rcfug~ a great cultural gap 1s creauna difficulties.
There arc between SO 000 and
60,000 Southeast 1an rt?ugc:cs h v-
ina 1n the coun ty, accordina to
Nampel Pan ic hpant ·m .
•p<?kcswoman for the Refugee As-""11sian~ Project of the county's
Health C~rt Aacncy. Most hvc 1n
Santa-Ana. Garden Gro"'t and West·
minister, but refugee pol>ulations al
are exs-ndma in Hun11naton Be h
a_nd Fountain Valley.
Whlle it i1 unlikely the rcf ugccs will
'
JERRY
HIRSCH
PE RSPE c T IVE
transm1t rare. CAOtte di to other Ora.nae Count)' rt: 1deou. they have a
vanct) of h~lth l>f'Oblcms and the
cultural JIP somcum makn treat-
ment difficult.
Rcfu rommatoOrangeCounty
'
now arc d1ffe"'nt from th05C who
came after the fall of on 10 1975,
according to Dr. Gerald R. Greene. an
mft.rt1ou d1sease expert and d.trcctor
ofpediatnoat the UC 1rv1nc Medlcal
Center in Onngc.
.. The first waves we"' fairly soph1 •
tlcated. The) wcrt 1ovcrnment of·
fiC'lals and South VlctnamCK pro.
fl ionaJ •
•• The more rcctnt tm ·~ acas
sopbi ticated. Many have been farm.
crs or peas.ants. Man) who ba\le
tented here arc bill people 11id have
never 9ttO a car or a Ph • n
before ... G rttne e plained.
"Al\houab t~ an m likely to
(Pleu8 eee UnJO /A2l •
l
1 ~~~_...._._ ____ __,__-'-----=-~~--=---=-~.-....;;;.~....-..~~~------......... -------................. ~~----................ __ ............ ..:.. ... lllilillllillll--...,
AS Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday. February 18. 198.4
Marines 'gas' nuke workers
SAN ONOFRE (AP) -Twcn·
ty-one worlcrs at the San Onofre
nuclear power plant were treated for
watery eye,., runny noses and ditti-
ness after comina into contact with
tear ps that had drifted toward tht
plant from nearby (',amp Pendleton
Marine Corps bast.
All tbe employees except one -
mechanic Bobby Peters. 41, of Vista
-were trutcd and returned to their
jobs shortly after Wednesday's inci-
dent, according to a news release from
Southern California Edison Co.,/'nn-
cipal o.wner and operator o the
facility.
Peters was listed 10 stable condition
at San Clemente General Hospital,
where he wu bctn& kept for obSt"rva-
tion.
"The d(){'ton f eJ t he Just needed to
be watched more closely,.. nursina
supervisor Marian Founner sajd
early todAy.
When employees at the plant and at
an admtn1strat1vc site some distan~
away first began complaining about
strange fumes. the nuclear generating
plant was already involved tn an
emergency drill that had been
previously scheduled, said Stanley
Cann, a spokesman for Edison.
AJso. the situtation was com-
pUcated when two warehouse em-
ployees were injured by bam:ls that
rolled over onto them. At first, it was
thouaht that that accident bad some-
tbina to do with the fumes from the
barrels, said Cann.
MeanwhaJe, accord.inj to Camp
Pendleton spokesman Capt. Wayne
Jones. a Marine unit training on the
base had used 1 small amount of tear
psatabout 7:30a.m. WednesdAy. "It
appears that some residue amount of
the gas drifted over the emergency
operating facility at the San Onofre
nuclear generating station." said
Jones.
Ralph Castleton. administrator of
San Clemente General Hospital,
where most of the cm ployees rece1 ved
treatment, said effects of the tear ~s
were ··very minor and temporary. '
Transit tax pushed on cable TV
Oranae County Transponation
Commission Chamnan Thomas F.
Riley and Executive Director Stan
Oftelie will appear on cable telev1s1on
systems throughout the county ex-
plainini the commission's ambitious
$12.5 billion 15-year Transportation
Investment Plan
The program, .. Lifestyles," hosted
by Phil Blauer, will examine the
development and financial impact of
the plan which will be presented to
Orange County voters in June.
The transit plan asks voters to
approve a penny sales tax increase to
raise funds for easing traffic conges·
uon throughout the county by widen-
tng every Orange County freeway,
creating three new freeways. improv-
ing mass transit and providing fund·
mg to cities for local improvements.
Times Mirror Cable will air the
program at 6 p.m. today; Communtty
Cablevision Company. at 7:30 p.m.
today; California Cablesystems, at 3
p.m. Sunday and Feb. 26 ; Storer
Cable at 6:30 p.m. today, Saturday,
Feb. 23 and 25; Group W Cable at 7
p.m. Feb. Monday, Wednesday and
Feb. 24 and Century Cable at 1 p.m.
today.
Drivers needed
Volunteers are needed to deliver
meals to Huntington Beach elderly
citizens who are confined to their
homes.
Delivering takes two hours a week.
A car and California driver's license 1s
required.
Mileage reimbursement is avail-
able and orientation is provided. For
more information, call Semors·
Outreach. 96()..2478.
NUKE-FOES ST AGE NO-SHOW •••
From Al
ongomg protest of the de te nse mdus~
try convention: The protest began
Tuesday night before with a
candlelight vigil, and continued
Wednesday morning with a passive
resistance protest. resulting 10 28
arrests.
Last night's conference. called an
"alternative program" to the conven-
tion. included lectures by members of
the Aerospace Engineers for Social
Responsibility. who told of their
personal crisis that came from work-
mg in the defense industry and led
them to their subsequent act1 v1sm.
The Rev. Doug uregg led the
Occidental Collcg Peacemakers. who
along with the Catholic worker. gave
a Christian perspective on arms
build-up. and asked such questions as
.. Is it a sin to build a nuclear
weapon?"
Both groups stressed the need for
better communication between the
polarized peace ~oups and the de-
fense representatives. companng the
separation to the current relauonsh1p
between Russia and the United
States.
"We must strategize on how we can
be more effective in establishing a
diaJogue," Rev. Gregg said.
Alfred Beebe, a former software
engineer for Hughes Aircraft. said the
value placed on the tinaJ product -a
missile -rather than on the theoreti-
cal and mathemaucal insight gained
in the product's development caused
him to leave the company.
He said the system, beginning in
colleges and continuing into the job
market. fosters a disregard for the
human impact of the technology
betng developed.
.. We have to ask now what the
social implications are," he said.
The WINCON convention con·
tinues through Friday.
OFF THEW ALL •••
From Al
for removal of the offending finger.
Doctors. X-ray technicians. medi-
cal assistants and assoned fnends
with paintbrushes and rollers in hand,
collaborated to bury the bandaged
finger and Red Cross mural under a
new coat of paint.
Dr. J. Brennan Cassidy, who
founded the chn1c in 1982, said he
plans to repaint the same.
copynghted logo on the wall but in
smaller proponion.
"The new one will be only about 16
percent the size of this one ... Cassidy
said.
"I was disappointed that they
wouldn't let us keep (the on~nal
sign). I've gotten a lot of positive
comments about it being pleasing
aesthetically," he said ... All over L.A.
the} 're putting up murals on the walls
to dean up :rnd improve blank walls
for the Olympics and 1 thought this
was really an improvement on a
blank, bare wall."
The sign requirements for the
Emergicenter came to the attenuon of
the city after the mural was put up
illegally, according to Clarence
Clarke, vice chairman of the city's
Planning Commission.
There was no question about
whether the graphic constituted an or
commercial, Clarke said. The sign has
to comply with the city's required
square-footage allotments. he added.
because it was erected after the sign
ordinance went into effect in 1973.
Last year's City Council decision to
·•grandfather" in non-compliant
signs that were up before the ord1·
nancc was passed did not apply to
Emerg1center. Clarke said.
REFUGEE TREATMENT PROBLEMS •••
From Al
have infections or parasites because
of where they lived, the liklihood of
transmitting those to other people in
Orange County is extreme!} shm,"
G reene said.
And they have completely different
concepts of heaJth care.
"Communications, perhaps, has
been the biggest problem with de-
livering good health care to the
retugees:· Greene said.
Refugees may make it appear that
the doctor is understood and that they
agree with the treatment when neither
may be true.
"They won't say anything 1f they
don't understand the treatment be-
cause they don't want the doctor to
lose face. They won't question the
doctor but they might i11.nore the
treatment." Greene said.
Refugees may re1ect treatment or
think the doctor is not a good
physician if he:
•Does not give an inJectton.
•Asks a patient to take off h1~ or
her clothes for an examination.
•Mentions that folk remedies arc
ineffective.
•Pats a child on the head which 1s
demeaning to Southeast Asians.
Refugees' primlt;ve
beliefs pose proDle:m
"Most recent amvals ha ve no
concept of body organs or the West-
ern concept of medicine. For exam-
ple. they won't submit to a blood test
because they feel the blood will not be
repl(lied," Greene said.
"Trying to do surgery requires a
~eat deal of education and convmc-
ing.''
J
Just Call
642-6086
Refugee woman often will not take
vitamins 1f they are pregnant. They
believe the vitamins will make the
baby too big and cause a difficult
delivery. according to Greene
Most of the 11lne!>scs as!.oc1atcd
with the refugees are a result of hfe m
crowded. unsanitary conditions. It is
not unusual for an entire family to
have lived in a 10 to 15-square-foot
area, Greene said.
The refugees often come to the
county with a vanety of intesttnal
ailments which are corrected with
treatment and the use of proper
sanitation facilities.
"People have expressed wonies
about epidemics but nothing bas
occured since the m1d-70's when the
refugees first started to settle here,"
Greene added.
"I am certain that there have been
isolated incidents of transmission but
that was going on before the refu1ees
amved," Greene said.
"Most of the diseases require close
contact during a prolonged period of
time," Green said.
The HeaJth Care Agency sees about
15,000 refugees a year, according Lo
Panichpant-m.
"Our goal is to help them take
better care of their health and help
them become self-sufficient. We try
to bridge both sides, .. she said
A lot of that work involves trans-
lating for doctors treating pallents
who don't speak Enalish and writina
pamphlets about American medicine
in SOutheast Asian lanauaacs.
"We want to help local docton
undcntand about the refugee pa-
tient ... Panichpant-m said.
Wbat do you like about tbt Dally Piiot? Wut doD 't yo. like'! Call Ult
aumbu at ltft aad your me1uae will bt recorded, traa1cribff and dt>Unm
to tbt approprtatt editor.
Tbt 11mt U -hoar 1nswert11 service may bt 01td to record letters to l~f
tdll.or OD any topl<'. Coatrlbuton to our Letters colama mull lodadt ttltelr
um• and ttltpbone nombtr for verifl~lloa. Nt clttalatioe c1U1, pleatt.
Ttll us wh11'1 on yo.r mllHI.
4
W EATHER
\
Fair skies, gusty winds due
Coutal
Extended
It .. ,... as ... ,,
II 20 n IO to • 11 ,.
27 °' IO N
.. )$
... 2t TO 34
.. a3 74 46 M » II 11
• 47 53 29 M iM
.. 30
02 ·13 31 M 53 ,.
42 30
50 41
40 21
" 73 ~ = 7& SS
--..w ..... s--10
HOM. U.S Oe1>4 al C-09
Fronts: Cold ..., W&1m .,. Occtoded ..,.. ......... 51 32 IWIO 11 32
~,,... ... 17 ~ M 61
NMfMle .. 48 St LOUlt .. ... .. on.en. 70 IO 8t."-t•Temr>e 71 67
... Yooil se 44 SM Liii• 37 ao
Notfoll eo 51 Sin Antonio 82 41
Not1tl "'9lt. 45 31 Sen Diego 72 " Ok.WIOrN City .. 4.1 Senf,.,._ 56 ...
Om-"9 52 31 81 ....... • 21
OrWldo T7 52 ...... 51 '7
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62 31 eo 2s
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46 47 '5 Hight 1n m1e1 eoe 10 mid 70. Lowe
mQ911y 40 10 52 78 "'
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71
62
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31 S'f'-'° 27
p ...... ... '° T°'*'I se 42
Temperatures Tides Poru.nd,O... 53 42 T-ee 3t
P1o'tldel-se 44 TulN 87 47
="City 17 39 WuNnQton " 48 ee
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TODAY 41 21 WlciNUI 41
49 38 SeootlO IOw 3 17 pm ·11 --------------------52 22 Second l'llgll t 41 pm 4.1 ~ ~: Flrll IOw FNOA2~53. m 1.1 Surf report ee 28 Flr.i hloh........ 1:02 • m 8 1 87 44 SeooncJk,.,. 3:66pm ·U LOCATIOM
57 46 Second hlQll 10 13 pm 4.1 ~on....,,.
82 41 "'-Jilny, Nlowpot1
S3 47 &Ill Nta 1oday • s 31 pm. ,,... 40lh St.. N9wpof1
42 2$ fncll!y at 8:311 Lm. and aett agalrl 11 22lld St .. Nlowpot1 ee 48 S'.tt pm a.oa Wedge
37 22 Moon Ii.-loday 11 5 30 pm , IMI Laguna a-ti
42 27 Fl'ldey 11 1.42 Lm. end r1-IQllll 11 Sin Clememl 50 42 8:44 p.m Wat• Temp: ~1
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A winner will be drawn weekly from entnes received the previous
week. Pictures of winners will appear 1n the Pilot.
Winners may choose to have lunch at any of our part1c1pat1ng
restaurants. which include . . The Grinder. Zub1es. Hogue's .
Spires. A complete hst of participating restaurants is available to
winners
I 1 , ..... < I'' e Owv p,,,.,, and 1rieu ,,.,,.,,eo.are lam·~ a•12 1nel191t>'e No ou•l r.l!~e
"" !.'<•, LO'vllMSITlilybep i..eJu1.1a1Da1yP1101 JJOWes1BayStreel CostaM esa
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1·2 poor
2-3 poor 2-3 poor
2~ poor
1·2 poor
1·2 poor.fair
2·3 ..... s .... Olrectton-wwt
COUPON I
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t l.i""' Phone I
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Ad\Jlt''>~ I
I WhP.rl• you L>u119h1 I
vow lunch11111p P 101 _ __ I
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Dally Piiot
Dellwery
I• Guaranteed
Mnn(jlly f' Clrly It yrio \1l.1
r 1 t rt,,. , '~ Pd0~' O t
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t.vctr tly 1 • m t.-dlf be'fOf~
10 .1 m ann fl"l\.lr c.inv will
be <)t11'¥f>ffl0
Masi
Clrculetlon
Telephone•
C>ange Coun1y
AteH "2-4111
LaQU<lll N'(IU@I ........
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
H. l. Schw•rtz Ill
Publisher
MAIN OFFICE
330 Wftl Bay $1 C<ls!e Mesa CA
M•• .00.ess eo. ·~ Cotl• Mesa CA 92&26
Coc>v-IQ'll 1983 Orange Coe'1 PullllslW>Q C-ny No
nt•\ sior•es 1Uustttl1on' eduouel ma tte r or
8<1'91 l_,_IS "«"' _,. DI ·~~e<I ...,ll'IOUI 5P1C-'
I»'"""'°" ot ooe>yr.gl'I! -
Ch•zy Dow•llby Rosemary Churchman
Ed1IOf and Assistant Controller
S«ono ClaU POSlllQe paocJ ., Cosll Mela. CaMlo,, ...
IUPS 14• 8001 Suotc•~hon Dy c.tr.., S.. 75 monlNy
oy me• S6 SO monwy to the Publtsher
ltepheft F. Ca1uo
ProOu<: ''°" "'~ Ill
Olofla A. P-en
Olr1e1or ol
"'a-1"'"9
Oonakt L. Wltltema
C•cuiation
"'•naoe< VOL. n, NO. 47
I
Clothing, To Be ·Valid,
should be a natural and positive
extension of the wearer. We've
designed an entire collection with
that in mind.
The Nines Collection, by South·
wic~ a carefully talJored edition of
slightly updated traditional clothing.
A collectio n that makes the quiet
yet firm assertion that clothing
should be seen and noted, but most
of all appreciated and enjoyed.
A tnJmon •""~ ~ntlnncn.
119 fuhion bland
Newport Bff ch
. (114) 759· 1622
--·;-----..-.... j I
4728 Admiralty Way
~tarln1 del Rey
(2 13) 825-79S5
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