HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-03-27 - Orange Coast Pilot--
MONDA f, MA JlCtt J'S, IUM
It your Socl•I
Security number
11 518-30-4411
you've wonl
Cout
Laguna Canyon neigh-
bors have captured the
ear of county planners In
effort to preserve their
community .I A3
Coast residents were
asked what's their fancy,
now that It's spring-
time./ A3
California
Latest Dlablo Canyon
nuke protest ends In 32
arrests./ A4
KCET fund-raising efforts
result In $1. 1 million, sup-
porters say .I A4
Natt on
Hart takes victory In Mon-
tana; first win In 10 days
of campaigning./ A4
Is the nation's boom
economy heading for a
big bust? I A4
World
The U.S. consul general
to France has been shot
In the head./ A4
El Salvador voting Is
fraught wtth foulupa and
charges of fraud./ A4
Feature.
Stop-Gap dramatics help
people with spec I al needs
tap feelings and find their
potentlal./81
If your child Is having
trouble keeping up In
school, check some warn-
, Ing to help determine the
cause./82
Sporta
Golden West College
freshman Shane Flores Is
swinging a mean bat this
season./C1
Georgetown and Hous-
ton added their names to
'complete the NCAA's
Final Four Tournament
palrlngs./C1
The UC Irvine tennis team
knocked off Yale to settle
for third place In Its own
Invitational tourna-
ment. /C2
Entertainment
An orlglnal comedy at
Golden West College Is
one of three new plays
opening this week./83
Baalneee
It's cheaper for com-
panies to help problem
employees than to cover
up their mlatakes./U
INDEX
A3
EM
BM
A4
C4-t IM ca
C4
11-2
12
C7
82
M
M
Al
C4
01.-. • • • Al
M
Baby 1~.ft in ·trash 'sup~r' ·
FV cops treating abandonment
of tot as an attempted murder
BJ ROBERT BARKER
Of ... 0.., NM ...
An hours.-old baby found over the
weekend in a lafJe, metal trash
container along wtth garbage and
grass clippings at a Fountain Valley
condominium complex was making a
strong recovery today.
The 7-pound, 1 ~unce red-haired
boy, found by a trash collector who
heard a noise and then saw the baby's
foot slipping from a blanket, re-
Scott llcPhenon (left) wu fliit acl'099 the line ID
mlnl-trlatbl~n beld Sanday ln Newport Beach. and bJa
ported.ly 1tol)l>Cd breath~ briefly at
Fountam V&lley Community Hospi·
tal Sunday.
But Fountain Valley ~lice Detec-
tive Rick Chrittenten wd the found ..
lina "i1 in super health" today.
Police invcstipton, who arc call-
ina the incident an attempted
murder, arc queryina residents of the
Paradise Manor Condominium
Complex on Euc)jd Strec\ aJX! Slater
A venue in efforts to find lbe mother
of the Caucuian baby or Whoever
placed him in the metal dumpster on
Saturday.
Christensen said be believe. the
baby was only an hour old when be
was taken to the dumpster about 6
a.m. He was found three boun later,
just as workers from the Rainbow
Disposal Co. were preparina to put
the dumpster on a hydraulic hoist to
................................
reward wu cbam.-cne bath admlnletered by trophy
preMDter Vern Lace.
They swam, ran and rode for pal
By LP.BENET
Of ... 0.-, ........
Nineteen men and one woman participated Sunday in a Newport
Beach mini-triathlon held in honor of Chuck Stone, a 25-year-old
supermarket niaht manager who has spent JO weeks in a hospital fighting
for his life after a tragic Jan. 12 automobile accident
Stone sustained massive injuries to the body after he fell asleep at the
wheel ofbiscarandcollided with a pole on a southbound Newport
Frccwayonrampnearthe91 freeway.
Docton gave him little chance of surviving, explained roommate
Brian Krewson. But now, they arc hopeful of a full recovery.
Stone's friends set up the triathlon contest in hopes that he can
participate when it is held again next year.
So on Sunday, before about l 00 onlooken including Stone's mother
Judy Lacey, 20 tnathletes lined up on the beach near the comer of33rd
Street and West Oceanfront Boulevard and dashed for the water. The
course started off with 100 yards of swimming, followed by a five-mile bike
ride and a three-mile run.
"The race was a complete success -all 20 finished," said Stone's
roommate Brian Krewson.
Scott McPherson won the overall title. Tim Wiedkaler placed second
and Terri Proud was third.
Heritage liquidation could.take year
Payoff to bank· s customers termed
·smooth· process say FDIC officials
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of .... DlillJ,... .....
It could take federal regulators as
long as a year to complete the
liquidation of the failed Heritage
Bank, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. spokesman Tom Levine said
today.
Regulators are likely to stay at the
bank's fonncr Anaheim headquarters
for most of that time but the bank's
three branches in Costa Mesa, Irvine
and Santa Ana will be closed sooner.
The State Bankiu Department
closed the bank Maren 16 after $62
million in problem loans and con-
tinuing operating losses bad made the.
bank insolvent.
The department handed control of
the bank to the FDIC while both
aaenicies searched for a stronger
financial institution to take over
Heritage Bank's insured accounts.
No buyer was found and the FDIC
started to )jquidate the bank last
week.
About half of the the bank's 15,000
accounts were closed during the first
week of the liq_uidation.
"On each of the first two days we
bad about 2,500 customers getting
their pay off but that has trailed off
considerably,'' Levine said.
"They have been very courteous
and it bas been a very smooth pay
off." Levine said.
Nearly all of the 15,000 accounts
had $100,000 or less and were ~lly
insured by the government. But m a
new policy that makes no effort to
protect dcspositors with larger ac-
counts, the FDIC announced ac-
count-holders with more than
S 100,000 in the bank will get back
only 35 percent of their money over
S 100.000. About 75 investors fell into
the category.
"Some of the people over the
insurance limit are obviously upset
but the ones t talked to were
courteous and understanding,"
Levine said.
Customers wanting to retrieve
their money from the bank shouJd •o
the Heritage's main office on Euclid
A venue in Anaheim. The .bank is
open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
People with valuables in safe
deposit boxes should go to the branch
where they rented the box.
Non-problem loans arc considered
an asset of the bank's. The FDIC will
continue to manage loans from the
bank but may eventually sell them to
other financial institutions to man-
age.
The bank's other assets include
furniture and office equipment,
Levine said. The FDIC 1s stiU
working on ao appraisal of the bank's
assets, he added.
Oip ii over into the tnc:t. Olllri11 r•r -•
Mid me ...._._ IWdY. would IMlft -
his deatbetther in"' ill8l plWW •
When oompuy worten ute a~
to unub the nabbilb.
"I cu't ,et it out of my miad dFll
someone wbo did tbis new die
ICbcduJe of the trub pick up," llellill
today. Thebaby~tJywu trl'••••
(PMMe ... BAST/M/I
.
Four
Marine
victims
fromOC
Bodies due soon
from copter crash
BJ ANDREA ADELSON °' .. ...., .......
The bodies of 18 Marines tilled in a
mountain helicopter crash dwUta a
South Korean · · nacile •
Saturday will~ murned to
the Uruted States within a week. a
Marine spokesman said today.
As yet, plans for memorial lerVicel
have not been made for the eer-
vicemcn, four of whom weR hued al
the Marine Corpt Hdico Scation
in Tustin, Capt. -Mart &':'uab laid
from Washington, D.C.
Of \be mnajnjng victims, l i..ere.
Camp Pendleton-bucd Marines aad
two arc believed to have beeD
stationed at Okinawa, Houah said.
Eleven Korean Marines also died
when the CH-530 .. Sea Stallion ..
helicopter crashed into cou&a1 mou.n-
tains, about 24 miles north ofl>obana.
The unidentified pilot, wbo bad been
forced to abort the .. t mitlioa
wben weather condation1 de-
teriorated, and was returnina to
Pohang, Cam~ P~n spokesman
Sgt. Dennis Littlien said.
The cause of tbe crash is under
invcstiption, Hou&h said. They wae
the first fatalities to occur since the
annual joint training exm:ise .. Team
(Pleue eee lllAIUIU8/ .&2)
Are police, fire benefits beneficial?
Associations say
they are, but
there are headaches
It wu one of those 6 o'clock calls.
For eome reason. people who call
my Fountain Valley ~ent at 6 e.m., just u I'm tcWna ready for
dinner, invariably try to tell me
tomethina. Lat week'• 6 o'clock call
went tomcthina like thil: CaUer .. GOod evenina, Mr.
Saeidennan. rm calli~ for the Orus Cou111Y FimnaD 1 Atlocia-tion. ·How are you toniebt?" lk ...... ftftc before I tot tbit call.
You'rt 811 tout me to l:May a ticket
to tome 1d.a of'beodlt *-· And if I
don't wut to~ you11 pve my ticket
to teaiot cidam or beMiclDOOCI
dlildml. ljust tot a call lib tbit a few
daYlllO." ~ "Tb'at must bave been ftom ~ ~~ ..==··.~
ihow, and they*re makina il1-J cati.
to Fountain Valley reaidentl. Tbey've
•
been reprimanded by their fire chief
for doina so."
Me: "What aroup are you callina
for, qain? Fountain Valley has its
own fire department."
Caller: "The Oranae County Firc--
men's Auociation. We repraent all
the deputmcnta in the county. We
call you so you don't set a lot of calls
from individual deputmentl."
At this point, ( WU tb~y
confused. lf the countywide
fund-raiter kecpe you &om bein&
approecbed ~ individual deoert-.,...,..= I lar livm Coouo Meta ten? ADd ~ Costa
M• ten really miltY of = ~ c:alls'• into 'J:ouiuain
Tbe ftnt caller bad claimed incor-
reetly •tMt C.olta Maa WU the
"1Md-9 .. flri ~· f'or i:ou. tain Valle)'.11l fKi. F!JIUDWD Vlllcy•t ftre pttAectioa plala II I oooperab~
UT1'911D81lt witb Hu~ ae.cb, We1tmU.W aDd s.J Bclcb .
..... ..,.. repeatedly to ~
be8dt lhOw dcbtl cu be a bit
aanO)'iaa. But at the aame ~Lrm
aware of tbe aood deedl fireQPlen
Pl1L
S1mu111 .
PERSPECTIVE
do with the money they oollect.
On my own beat, r~e eeen Fou.n·
tain Valley fi.refiPtm donate play-srou.nd equipment f0t handicapped
childrell at Aavan School. Tiiey~
donated time and materials to the
new hiJtorical Dalt behiod City Hall.
And just • h . weeb .. \bey
doealed s l 00 to belp • local y<Math
&lb io an AtMricu wradUit ....,rn •. to China.
But I WU still conftJ.lod ebout lbe *8e tOlichations. I made a h<:alll
or my own, bopina to dtar tbiQll. r:w.. 11 you may boW, tbe people
:~ ~ for tickell l&lel are DOC ten. Tbey're peid telet**
--~
I
:"A2 **Orange eo.t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Match 20, 1984
Firemen on top of blaze
Orange County flreflgbten s plinter a
•hake roof on Whlatllng Swan in Irvine
trying to get at a fire that br oke ou t late
OellJ ......... .., _._...I(....,
Sunday afternoon. The blase, apparently
Ignited by a touter oven, cauaed $55,000
lD damage to home of David Shell.
S. Laguna plan rejection urged
Night and morning low clouds
Extended
Temperatures
.. Le
53 27 ee 34 72 36 42 35
67 .. ee 43 45 40
76 62
42 37
49 38
61 41
.. 27 45 35
44 211
81 89
45 25
39 19
42 27
71 54
Tides
TOOAY
.. " TO 41
" 16 43 24
47 34 42 H n 43
4' " n • 40 2t
41 24
Q 37
... 25 u 2A t2 68 2t 10
llO 37 .. .
.. 2t ~ 28 u ao ~::
43 S1
t7 .. as .a
41 " 6t 42
54 33 11 as 13 47 1s eo 52 37
76 ..
65 ..
80 70 42 2t
48 31
64 ..
72 49
Arlt low 12:35 pm -0.2 Second hlgll 7·24 p m 3 9
Second IOw lWSOAY
12:25•m
6:09&."1
I IOpm .
7:43p.m.
Sun ..i1 lodey 11 6:09 p.m., "-
T~ at 5:47&.m.and .... ~111 6·10p.m
Moon ...... T.-dey Id $!3& Lift..
..... 11:68p.m.
SuRF REPORT
SID 1-3
2-3 1-3
1·2 1-2
I
1·2
46 II
75 81
47 " 80 12
.. 82 .. llO
" 20 46 43 74 55
47 14
43 14
46 " 5t ..
71 Q
81 52
46 S4 59 ..
Coastal commission
meets Wednesday
to ponder proposal
By L.P. BENET
Wednesday at the commission's
monthly meeting at the Shelter Island
Marina Inn, 2051 Shelter Island
Drive, San Di~o.
The meeting 1s to beg.in at 9 a.m.
State officials also are recommend-
ing that parking space d isplaced as a
result of the \>roposod widening of
South Coast Highway from four to six
lanes must be replaced on a
one-for-one basis, Bates said.
and we are talking about pnvate
property here."
One developer, for example, had
proposed a 200-unit tract along the
Hobo Canyon ridgeline, Winter said.
Olympic Relay a 'success'
Of the Oe11J Piiot Staff
California Coastal Commission of-
ficials ha ve urged the state to reject
Orange County's proposed coastal
plan for South Laguna and adopt 21
pages of mochficat1ons to protect the
lush environment of scenic hillsides
and canyons.
In a 53-page report to be presen1ed
to state Coastal Comm1ss1oners this
week, commission staffers are asking
for a si~ificant reduction of large
residential developments along Hobo
Canyon ridge near South Coast
Hiptway and the 1mplementat1on of
stnct guidelines that would allow
natural vegetation to be removed
only from property slated for de-
velopment. rather than from sur-
rounding environmentally sensitive
open space. according De'on Bates.
the state's lead planner on the outh
Laguna coastal program.
"We have a mandate to pro1ect
environmental values:· Bate!> said
"The county may approach it dif-
ferently."
Coastal Commissioners arc ex -
pected to review the South Laguna
plan and the suggested modifications
"We don't want any loss of parking
for people who wish to use the area for
recreation or commercial use," she
said.
For the past four years, county
planners have been working with
state officials to develop a land use
and w ning plan for the entire South
Laguna community.
lt will set guidelines for all residen-
tial and commercial projects de-
signed to accommodate a doubling of ·
the South Laguna population dunng
the next 30 to 40 years and establish
regulations for the protection ofland,
water wildlife and marine resources.
However, Ken Winter. a planner
for the county Environmental Man-
agement Agency, said 1f the county
coastal plan 1s revised as proposed.
the size of many proposed res1dcnt1al
developments will be severely re-
duced.
"It gets to the point of un-
reasonableness,'' Winter sajd. "Some
proJects \\Ou Id be cut back to nothing.
"Under the proposed modi-
fications. that project will be slashed
by 80 percent," he said. "The fuel
modification suggestions (natural
vegetation requirements) c-0uld cut
back other developments by 50
percent."
State planners say the Hobo Ca-
nyon ridgeline project is undesirable
because an access road leading to the
community cuts through sensitjve
environmental space.
In addition, there are concerns that
developments along the ridge could
spur landslides similar to one that
occurred on the nearby Laguna Sur
development earlier this year.
Neither the county Planning Com-
mission nor the Board of Supervisors
is likely to approve the modifications.
But the city of Laguna Beach and
members of the South Laguna Re-
view Committee for the coastal plan
endorse many oft he recommedat1ons
wholeheartedly.
Laguna Beach City Manager Ken
Frank said scaling down the proposed
Hobo Canyon development comes as
good news to Laguna officials because
they have opposed planners'
proposals to tie the ridgctop com-
munit} into city roads.
$500, 000 raised
for county youth
sports programs
By MICHALE NE BUSICO
Of ... DlllJ ..........
Although sponsors of Olympic
Torch Relay ki lometers have not
come forward as fast as local or
national 01l3nizcrs expected, the
fund-raiser 1s still being called a
success.
As the sponsorship drive winds
down to its final weeks. 169 kilo-
meters have been purchased tn Or-
ange County, raising more than
$500,000 for county youth sports.
The county goal was to sell 250
kilometers and raise $750,000.
Even so, Diane Dailac1s,
co-chairman for the county's Olym-
pic Torch Relay Committee. said
organizers are more than satisfied
with the level of suppon 1n Orange
County, where the Olympic Torch
will be earned on its way to the
Summer Olympic Games in Los
Angeles.
"We picked an arbitrary goal when
we started," she said. "And there's no
obligation to make it. I think that the
balf-miUion raised indicates very
strong commitment in the county."
For nine weeks, the committee bas
been selling kilometers to individ-
uals, corporations, and other groups
at $3,000 each. Because of a 10-day
extension granted last week, Dailacis
said the total should reach nearl).' 200
kilometers by the new April I 0
deadline.
"Peter Ueberroth (Los An$eles
Olympic Organizing Committee
president) extended the deadline to
April 10 because we still have kilo-
meters available throughout the na-
tion," she said.
Originally, the "Youth Legacy
Kilometer PT~m" had planned to
sell I 0.000 kilometers nationwide
and raise $30 million fo r youth
sports. So far, 4,000 kilometers have
been sold.
Dailacis said she wasn't expecting a
surge of enthusiasm followmg the
agreement reached this week by the
LAOOC and Greek officials, who
were threatening to withhold the
flame from Anc1ent Olympia. The
town's citizens opposed the first-ever
sponsorship relay. saying it was a
commcrc1ahzauon of tradition.
Dalacis said the difficulty caused
local relay organizers no more prob-
lems, just some phoned in questions.
"The people that arc interested arc
just asking questions; I don't think it
stifled any enthusiasm," she said.
"We have always been assured that
the torch would go through the U.S.
regardless of what the Greeks did."
But there had been some doubt
about whether it would go through
Orange County. Originally1 the relay
was scheduled to bypass tne county
completely.
But after considerable support was
indicated by county civic and busi-
ness leaders, the relay was re-routed
to include the area.
Steve Gould, committee spokes-
man, said that the majority of county
kilometers have been sold in Irvine,
Newport Beach, Corona de! Mar and
Huntington Beach. Because of that,
the route will most likely emphasize
those cities.
"If people sponsor kilometers, it's
probable that the torch will go
\hro11gh their areas. The torch will go
whe~ the kilometer interest is," be
said.
-llMiHlll@iJMU!l----------------------------------------
Bonv FOUND OFF HB ...
From Al
fhe day the youth vanisbed there
were strong nptides and the water
temperature was recorded at a bnsk
60 degrees. according to lifeguards.
State lifeguards said they are train-
ed to react to visual signs of danger in
the water and that a language barrier
would not have been a factor.
ROBBERIES .••
• # ... ~Al
hoking in ilifomatic handgun,
~anlk-upwlndowand
oot.trofJtild actertt, OOflee~. TIM ._._, ,,.... ltood at a drMMJp
...... Md NJOetwd the moneiy,
=~ .. betWMn $200 and
l
Tbe nien ~ fl.ct In an oldef".
Lifeguards said the) are suit on a
winter schedule and that on the day
Herrera disappeared. there were only
three guards patrolling th"e strand.
Herrera, relatives said, bad come to
the Unned States last year to earn
money for his family in Mexico.
BABY ••.
From Al
at home.
Christensen also said that dropping
the baby in the dumpster to die
surrounded by trash "reeks of
murder."
"If someone left it on a doorstep, it
would be child abandonment," he
said. The mcident now is being
treated as an attempted murder.
Hospital Administrator Craig
Myers said today the baby is doing
fine and receiving "lots of attention"
from nurses. "They always gather
around someone who has as prob-
lem.'' he said.
The baby 1s expected to remain at
the hospital for several days to make
sure he didn't contract disease or
mfection from contact with the trash
and garbage, Myers said.
He then is expected to be taken to
the Alben Sitton Home in Orange
where he will be put up for adoption.
POLICE BENEFITS WORTHWHILE? •.•
From Al
The 89-member Costa Mesa Fire-
men's Association 1s indeed sponsor-
ing a variety show on April 28 at
Orange Coast College. Tickets are
being sold over the phone at $15 a
pair.
The fund-raiser was alread\' 1n
mouon before fircfigh1cr-paramed1c
Keith Fujimoto took o'er earlier this
year as prcsidenl of the Costa Mesa
Firemen's Assoc1at1on. He said the
group should receive S 7,500 as its
sharc from the show. Firefighters will
donate that moncr to bum organiza-
tions. youth athletic groups and other
chanttes, he said.
Fujimoto said he understood the
uckct sellers would limit their calls to
Costa Mesa. but he said some calls
may have been made to neighbonng
communities such as Fountain Val-
ley.
Although associations have gentle-
men's agreements to raise funds only
tn their own city, calls to other cities
are not "illegal," as long as the caller
doesn't misrepresent himself. Fu-
11moto said the Costa Mesa associa-
tion bas not been reprimanded by the
et ty's fire chief.
"I guess I c.a.11 th15 o necessary evil
because without 1t, we wouldn't be
able to sup~n the local groups."
Fujimoto said.
But he added. "f don't really catt
for the$C kind of {telephone)
fund-raisinadnvC1, and this is the last
year we're hav1n11t. There are a lot of
bea<t.chcs involved."
FuJamoto sa.id the ao;soc1at1on con-
macted for a Firemen' Ball two )e&rS aa,o. But after the promoter pa1d
dpcnlU for the event. there was' no mo~y left for the fin:mcn, he said.
j
•
The association president said he
hopes next year the firefighters will
supervise their own fund-raiser on a
smaller scale. an event such as a
pancake breakfast. Although the fire-
fighters may raise less money, Fu-
Jlmoto said they may avoid some of
1he 111 will associated wnh telephone
<,ales.
But Ivan Kell erhals, president of
the J ,400-member Orange County
Firemen's Association, says he's re-
ceived very few complatnts this year
about the group's telephone sohc1-
tation drive. He believes that's be-
cause the promoter's phone oper-
ations is being closely monitored.
"We try td see to it that there's
nothing misleading. that they don't
lie or misrepresent us," he said. "We
try to have someone at the sales office
at the time the sales are goin~ on. We
review the message that's being used.
The people don't always use the exact
spiel, but they tend to suck to it pretty
much so."
Kellerhals said salespeople who
misrepresent themselves arc ftrcd.
He said b.is organization represents
fircflibtcrs throuJbout the county.
Telephone soliciung is prohibited m
only two c1t1C$, at the request of local
firemen's aS30ciations. he said.
The county orpnization is now
sellina tickets foracircu•1 t0 be held in
May at Eddie West tachum in Santa
Ana. In the fall, the IJ'OUP sponsors I
rodeo fund-rai1CT. Ktllcrhafs said the
county firemen's association 11
auarantce.d a certain fee for tbe5e
c ·cots, but hedcchncd to disclose the
um. . He said the money aocs to a vanety
of chpltics includina the UCt Bum
ll
'L
Center and the Salvation Army.
Kellerhals suggested that anyone
who does not wish to receive ticket
sales pitches should ask the caller to
remove his or her name from the list
used b)' the promoter.
Still. the solicitation process 1s not
popular among all firefighters.
Fountain Valley firefighter Joel
Couser was chairman for a big annual
dance sponsored by the associations
representing Fountain Valley, Hunt-
mgton Beach, Westminster and Seal
Beach firefighters. For seven years,
Couser said. the fund-raiser, using
telephone ticket sales, was a success,
allowing the associations to spli t as
much as $41 ,000 annually.
But in 1982, Couser said, the
firefi,ghtcrs asked the promoter to
rcstnct telephone calls tO the four
cities served by the firefighters. That
year, when the dance was over, the
promoter told the firemen there was
no money left after expenses, Couser
said.
He said the firefighten tried to take
legal actjon apjnst the promoter but
were unsuccessful.
As a result, Fountain Valley firc-
fi&hters bad no fund-raiser last year.
This year. they arc orpniiina their
own, more modest dance, without a
promoter. Couser said the men are
explorinJ o•her self-promoted
fund·rais1na ideas such as btnao
nights and 1thlet1c events.
"What we're tryioa to keep away
from is tumina it over to a promoter ..
wh o mi&h• hara citizens (with
tdcphonc sales).'' be a.id. "It work ed
well for a few ye.11, but at the end it
fell apan when we restricted them to
callina only the areas we ~r\'e."
('
I I I
I 1
Photo •howa CB-53 1Sea Stallion• helicop-
ter, almllar to large copter that crulaed in
De9J .......... .., ~ IJ9illt
South Korea durln& tnalnln& ezerclae in
etorm on Saturday.
MARINES WERE FROM OC •••
From Al
Spirit '84" began m February.
The unnamed pilot was guiding a
CH-530 with a four-man crew,
capable of carrying 38 combat-ready
Marines.
Sgt. Peg Cauley said the four Tustin
Marines had left in December with a
squadron that was on a six-month
Just Call
642-6086
Deify ptlot Dettv.rr e. Guet'enteed
Mone»'( r hOll; II Y011 00 "°''-'f0/111~~ 5 3() p "' ca41 IM!ote 7 p 11'1 *'° )'Oii' t OCIY ""' De °""'9red
rotation to Okinawa. Pendleton in-
fantrymen had left a month later, a
base spokesman said.
Only the names and hometowns of
the victims are available. More
detailed military records arc for-
warded to the temporary base during
any extended stay, Cauley said.
Tht four ftom Tustm arc Cpl.
Jeffrey Acquisto. San Dimas; Sgt.
David C. Higgins, Somerset, Pa.;
Capt. Stephen J. Burley, Magnolia,
N.J.; and Capt. John Houston,
Gahanna, Ohio.
The remains are being held at a
U.S. Army mortuary in Yongsan,
according to Hough.
Wbat do yo. like about tlae Dally Pilot? Wbat don't you llke? Call tllle
n.amber at It h ud yo1r me11a1e wUI be recorded, traaacrlbed and delivered
to &lie appropriate edlter.
ne same U ·lllHr u1werla1 service may be aaed to reconl letten to tlae
e4Jtor Oii aay topic. CntrtM .. n to ov Letters column mHt lachHle .,.eir
~me 1114 ttlepltolte HmMr for nrificatloa. No circulatioa calla, pleaH.
Tell •• wlaat'1 oe yCHlr ma.d.
ORAl"'GE COAST
llilyPlat
H. L khwertz Ht ,
Publisher
Clrcua.tlon 714/Mt...un
Cleeelfted 8dverttel .. 11~
AH ottw depewtmenta Ml-4121
MAIN OFFICE ..
330 W• S.V SI . Cwt• ......_CA .... _._ 9o1 15IO C-.._ CA 02Qt
C4pyft0"' 1113.0.~ CoMI ~ ~ No
-llonet klttllOnl, tcll!ONI IMIMlf 01 eo.tfl ...
-· """" IN't ..,. ,..,.~ ""1heul ~ I*· '"'°'' .no lun(lay " Y01J do no! I~ l'OUI
'°°Y or ' • "' . ~ o.totm 10 • m •llO YIM COi>( ... l>m ....,me!
~ol~IQfK-\ Chazy DowelbJ "~Churchmen
Editor and AssiStant Cormollef.
Clrculetton , ..........
MOii °'--~y
"''''" ta'4ID
to the Publisher
···-"'·c.... PrOCM; llOtl
~
D....ed "· Wllll•• CiteoiatlOI\ ...,,.,
HIGHU LOW57 ,,,.. ., f 1111 11111•
TUESDAY. M ARCH 27. 1984 0 ~ i A N ' J [ (: 0 u ~ l y I~ ~ L I f (\ ~; N I A ~·" ( ~ ~ .. ' .
Coast
T raffle deaths down In
state, but up slightly In
Orange County .I A3
Revised bullet train route
would kill stretch through
Camp Pendleton./ A3
California
The Bay Area got a bit of a
shake Monday, but little
damage reported./ A4
A chemical splll In
Hollister leaves two per-
sons Injured./ A4
Nation
Florida town not doing
weli In It's 'Boozeless
Week' effort./88
Smokers actually pay an
additional $3 per pack In
hidden costs./ A5
World
A French diplomat Is shot
In Beirut as battles con-
tinue./ AS
An IRA landmine kills a
British soldier en route to
a double date.IM
Mlnd&Body
Under certain conditions,
virtually all human beings
can have an eplleptlc
selzure./82
·.::...-u..ir ................... ,,..·.···································· ..... ,., ....... •.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.• •.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.• .. •.•.•.•.•.•.
Sports
Georgetown and Ken-
tucky prepare for their
NCAA basketball semi-
finals showdown at Seat-
tle./C1
Former Kansas City
Royal Jerry Martin Is pick-
ing up the pieces with the
New York Mets./C2
Fountain Valley stopped
Edison In volleyball for a
big step towards the
Sunset League cham-
plonshlp./C4
Entertainment
Only twice In history of
Oscars has there been a
tie vote In actlng./83
In this production the
pope Is a woman. And
that's not the only sur-
prlse./83
Bualneu
lrvlne-based Hellonetlcs
offers speclal premium to
stockholders who ex-
ercise their warrants.JBS
INDEX
Erma Bombed(
Bulletln Board
Bridge
Butlneu
Callfornla Newa
Ctuatfted
Comk:a
Cr098W0f d
Oelth Nottcee
HelpYouraett
Hof oec:ope
Annlandert Mtnd and Body
Natk>nal Hewe
Optnton
PoMoeLog
Pubtlc Notloee
=M1rteet1
T•dllon ,.....,. .....
World..._
-i
82
A3
84
BS-7
A4
C&-8
84
C8
88
82
C7
82
81·2
A4
AS
A3
Bl.CM
C1'"'4
87
83
83
A2.
M
! ·~ < e res1
Newport Beach City Council membera Phil
Mauer and Jackie Heather try oat the
o.., ......... ~~-...... propoeed new trolley 1179tem on Via Lido
near Lido VlllaCe.
Will Newpoi;t sing 'Cl~ng,
Clang Goes the Trolley?'
By JERRY filRSCH
Of ... 0.-, .........
Newport Beach city officials are looking at a track.less
trolley to improve transportation in the city.
At its afternoon meeting Monday, the Newport Beach
City Council listened to a presentation by Shuttle
Concepts Inc., a Long Beach company that operates
track.less trollies in 14 cities throughout the United States.
The company proposed using two or three trollies,
each carrying up to 50 passengers, on heavily trafficked
routes through the city.
Advertising on the inside of the trollies and the sale of
tokens to local businesses for promotional use would pay
for the service, according to Al Diamond, the president of
Shuttle Concepts.
"We run in 14 cities on this system and we are
profitable with little or no fare," Diamond said, adding the
tokens range in cost from five cents to a quarter.
"We charge hotels, restaurants and businesses l 0
cents a token and they sell them to their customers for a
nickel or they give them away," Diamond said.
Th.is type of system, however, is most successful in
seaside tourist towns and ifNewport Beach were
(Pleue eee TROLLEY I A2)
,.
arson
Police suspect latest apartment blaze
might be the work of same ftrestatter
By PHIL SNEIDERM.AN apartment door open while fleeina.
°'*DelJ,....... ·~ Scott Smith, who lives upt&ain
Investigators suspect two fires from the vacant apartment, smelled
started in a vacant apartment Mon-smoke, went downstairs, saw some-
day night may be the work of an thins burning and called fi.refiabten.
arsonist who has set nine other fires Werth said. Sbe said Smith oloeed tbe
since January in the same HuntingtOn apartment door before callin&. ID
Beach neighborhood. doina so, be cut off some o1' tbe
Police and fire officials have sc:hed-o.xygen supply, and the flames were
uled a community meeting Wednes. almost out when firefighters arriwd..
day to inform residents about the Werth said.
ongoing arson investigation and to She said the lack of oxygen and the
tell them bow to help prevent ad-lack of combostible materialJ bdpcd
ditional fires. prevent the flames from apreadina.
Huntington Beach Fire Depa.rt-InvestiptorsbelieveMonday'slirc
ment spokeswoman Martha Werth could have been set by tbe same
said Monday's blaze occurred at person who bas star1ed Dine other
11 :34 p.m. in a vacant, ground-floor blazes in the same Huntington Beach
apartment at 2114 Florida St. She · neighborhood. off Y ort:town A venue
said the residence had apparently between Delaware and Aorida
been left unlocked to permit painters streets, Werth said. She said the stri•
and carpet layers to enter. of fires bas prompted some DCl'VOUS
She said someone entered the residents to move out of the area.
apartment and ignited rags and Previous fires have been in
newspapers in a hallway linen closet carports., garlleS, a laundry room and
and in a bedroom closet, then left the (Pleue Me A'AllOR/ A2)
Rescued baby !_
is flourishing
I 00 people volunteer
to adopt boy found
in trash dumpster
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. DelJ .......
A redheaded baby found in a
Fountain Valley trash container
along with garbaJe and grass cuttings
is depicted by his doctor "as a little
toughie" who "probably has a (date
with) destiny" because of the way he
survived his fint few hours of life.
The baby, found wrapped in a dirty
and bloody blanket by trash colJectors
early Saturday, is not only surviving
-he appears to be flourisbin$-
Tbe baby bas a good appetJte, bas
been eating formula every foor hours
and i~ gainina weight at a local
hospital.
He is still being given antibiotics to
ward off possible mfection from the
garbaac and debris be was exposed to,
but is-expected to be rekascd soon to
the Albert Sitton Rome in Oranae for
abused and abandoned children.
"He's so railienl It's probably put
of a miracle," said Dr. Ronald
Comelsen of Fountain Valley Com-
munity Hospital.
He's the center of attention for the
nurses in the maternity ward and
police detectives estimate there have
already been about 100 offers of
adoption.
While the Fountain Valle)' infant
appears destined for a happy life, it's a
farditfercntendina from the birth of a
Huntington Beach infant.
A baby was found dead at the
bottom of a trash container in an
industrial section of the city on New
(Pleue Me BABY /A.2)
Orange County is turning to gray German
shepherd
joins PD
in Irvine
Study predicts proportion of older folks • ~~e:0l~· ~f ~~~;0255f ~!~
------------------------during the same period. Finance will increase sharply as year 2000 nears Dcpanment forecasters believe.
Much of the age increase can be
By JEFF ADLER
Of .... 0.-, Not .....
Call it the graying of Orange
County. We're getting older.
As Orange County continues to
diversify economically, the median
age of county residents is expected to
increase, according to a recently
published state study. ·
Although Orange County residents
now arc slightly younger than their
CO\lnterparts around the state, the
proporuon of older residents will
increase rather sharply in the latter
years of the century. By the year 20001 half of the
county's population WLll be two years
older than the projected statewide
median age of 35.8. In Z020, the
county's median age is ·ex~ to be
41.1 while the state's median age
edges upward to 38. l years old,
according to state Finance Depart-
ment estimates.
And while the county's population
is expected to increase by 55 percent
Father NeVin marks
BOth birthday 37
~=:~~m~~i• f.~: church
probably officiated at more of life's
precious moments than just about
anyone.
Weddinp, baptisms, confirma-
tions, funerals -he has presided
over the milestones that shape and form our lives and the lives of those
we love.
Nevin, the toft ... poken priest cmlj ..
ted with found.ins the Catholic com·
munity in Costa Mesa, celebrated a
milestone ofhiJ own ~tly, on SL
Patrick'• Day: his 80th birtbd8y
~ dat~ of the celebration wu
appropriate. Nevin said, even thouah
he actually turned 80 on ~ a. He was appointed to establilh a
Costa Mesa ~ri1h on hls blnbdiy in 1~7 and 111d hi1 fint ma at Bell
Broedway Mortuary Chapel on L
Patrick'• Day of that yearl !ix years
before the aty of Costa Mesa was
incorporated.
KAREN
KL£11
ProPu IN lHl NEw s
bis 3 7 )Wit of reJiaiOus ae.denbip in
Costa M ... at St. foecbim'• Catholic
Church.
While hc,s alowcd a bit wilb qe,
Nevin's hearina ii slaar1> and he still officiates at mastes ind sacramenu
and travels on weekend retreats.
.. I rtcl better now than I did at 40;'
be declared. thoup be admitted he
retired from hiud.ID.inisttativcduties
a coupleofyean blc:k.
attributed to the aging of the
baby-boom generation, explained
Alta Yetter, a labor market analyst
with the state Employment Develop-
ment Oej>!'rtment.
But wtth the county's population
growth comes evidence that the local
economy is continuing to diversify.
While the cities of Anaheim and
Santa Ana continue to be the top
employment centers in the county,
both cities claimed smaller shares of
the employment pie in 1980 than they
did in 1975.
Irvine jumped from seventh place
in 1975 to third place in 1980.
claiming 6.8 percent of all jobs in the
county, Yetter said.
Large percentage gains between
1975 and 1980 also were reported in
Laguna HilJs and Mission Viejo.
Irvine registered a 100 percent gain in
the five-year period. Countywide,
growth averaged 46. 7 percent during
the period, Yetter said.
Out.side of Anaheim, Santa Ana
and Irvine. the next largest employ-
ment centers in the county in 1980
were, in descending order, Fullerton,
Oran$e. Newport Beach, Costa Mesa.
Huntmgton Beach. Garden Grove
and Buena Park.
On bi1 birthday, the liilh-bom
monsipor who pfefen to be called
aim ply "fa lb~ lat do.n to reflect on
Nevin only chuc:tla wben uted
bow many weddinp ind t.pc.isma lat
hu pcrfbtmed. "~y thcN•llidl, 1
IUl>P<*." he 111' MUi~=-Ind (,._.._WA /Al)
.....................
118Cf. Tllolile1 Rntaudclaucla Ille'•-teclf•S7,...,..
'I tl ' I I ••
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. DelJ ........
Irvine police. who have made news
by using roly-poly, eewao. cat-
tle-herding dogs for its carunc co~
are preparing to introduce a m<>ft
conventional model -a Gennan
shepherd.
Rex, a 2-ycar-old shepherd. has
been selected to replace Farnsworth,
the popular Bouvier des Flanders
killed in the line of duty last month.
Rex will begin his tour of duty Friday
morning.
The shepherd has been provided to
the city at no charge by Master Canine
Kennels of Redlands. which bu
supplied Irvine with t.hrce trained
Bouviers since the four-leaed oopa
were introduoed in late 1981':
.. They felt real bad about Farns and
gave us our choice of any of the dop
they had," explained C.apt. Cbartel
Boz:za.
"They had two Bouviers and oae
shepherd. The shepherd was just. t.be
best," added Bozza. "He's obedient
and 1ttcntive, yet very fiiendly."
Rex will shale carune duties widii Bart. the department's remaini•
Bouvier. Police said they don"t doubt
the two dop will set alone ~ each will be wortcing with a diffmid
P9t.rolman.
Irvine swore in two Bouvien in ...
t982 as its first polict dop. There
were Barr and f araswonb., two
dart-haired year-old dQp widii ._
ceivinaty cuddly appeatUICeL ne
dcp were picked over •epll 1 * bccaute they loobd u.no. 8lt
family pdJ ud did lllOt -V9 tM .. mill look" or:-Barr~wever, O~oltM
nnlw ~t beer,. of a r.~..Wrc demcaDCM"' aad ..._.
q~tlyMS~by1ais ..... ,
Of6cer Jefr ,Lo\ie. ·He .. ....
m*ccd by Ban. tove ·t.s unct -., --. ......
fft•••-DOlllAll
Aa Ot'MQe Coat DAILY P9LOTITUMday, March 27. 1984
NB won't shut beaoheS early,
plans stronger enforcement
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of ... 0.., ........ "We are not onfomn1 the do~urc properly," Mitchell
told the counetl.
Clearing and warmer on Coast
...... "CINm • '1 ........ 48 )2 ... ... 32 Coaatal
9-0ll 41 2t &rownellllt .. 10 lklrl.io 40 H ~on " II
The Ncwpon Beach Ci&y Council has rejected a
proposal to close a larae Slretch of the city's beaches a1 10
p.m . but qreed to inCTCase enforccmeot of the-regular
midnight cfosil'\& time.
When police come by after m1dniaht and ask lhe
people to leave they only go away for 1 S to 20 minut~ A ~
soon as they are sure the police ar~ gone the people ao ri&ht
back to their panjes, Mjtchell said.
c...,., °'*"91on.a.c. Clwleelon. w v CNwlot!Al,N.C
~ Olnolnl\llli
., 2t • M
52 " ea 41 « 25
•1 »
$3 42 Residents of the Balboa Peninsula asked for the
earlier closu~ of the beach ,fro~ E Street to the Wedge
because lato-ntaht ~ach pa rues d isturb the nei$hborhood.
All but two !>f ibe city•s beaches ~l<;>sc at midrught.
"We should issue cit~tjons to people stayin& after
midnight,•• be suggested.
"ft sounds like we nave more of an enforoemrnt
problem than a time problem," Mayor Evelyn Hart said.
1:'he rcs1de~ts p~nted a pe11t1on of228 signatures to
the City Council asking for the earlier closure but on a 4-2
vote with Councilman Donald Strauss abstainin~ the
council rejected the idea at its meeting Monday night.
Councilman Bill Agee said he was against closing the
beach early.
Agee lives near the Corona del Mar State Beach and
the Little Corona Beach, the two Newport beaches that
close at I 0 p.m .... but on a nice ni~t I have walked down
there after I 0. A lot of people do,· be said. Instead the council dil'CC'tcd City Manager Robert
Wynn to increase supervision of the nigh ti)' beach dosure.
"The people at the beach dun"J the<daytime att a
different breed from the ones at night,· said R.G. Mitchell
who lives on Ocean Front. '
Mitchell said that whale most da}tame beach.goers are
courteous. the people at night scream. yell and leave a trail
of latter and broken ~r bottles from the beach to their
(.'ll I'<;
Strauss su~ested the council approve closing the
beach tarly unul Oct I on a trial basis. He was supported
by Councilwomen Jackie Heather and Ruthelyn Plummer
but has mouon lost.
The council then \Oted to leave the beach open and at
tht' same time attempt to improve enforcement of the
do~ure time
ARSON PROMPTS MEETING •..
From Al
refuse bins. O n March 19, someone
set the eighth and ninth fires in a
garage and in a lumber pale at a Del
Way condominium complex.
Werth said this week's fires were
the first set inside a residence.
But she said invesugators believe
they may be related 10 the earlier fires
because. as in the o ther 1nc1dents.
papers and rags wert 1gn11ed dunng
naghtume hours an the same neigh-
borhood.
No serious anJ unes ha' e occurred
yet in connection wuh the fires.
Because ofgrowang concern among
residents, she said police and fi re
officials will conduct a community
meetang at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in
the Fellowship Room of the First
United Methodist Church at 17th and
Delaware streets. Neighborhood
Watch members have distnbuted
fliers alerting residents to the meet-
ing.
Wenh said police and fire oflicaals
will discuss their 1nvest1gat1on anto
the string offires.
They will also suggest residents
BABY BOY FLOURISHING ...
From Al
Year's Day, I 982. Detectives believe
the baby was placed inside a cheap
briefcase and dumped in the dump-
ster. The infant was believed to be
alive and about a day old at the tame.
according to Sgt. Ed McErlam.
Despite widespread med ia atten-
tion, detectjves failed to locate any
witnesses and the case remains un-
solved. ~It's probably JUSt a shot in the
dark. but I want to talk to Rick
(Fountain Valley Detecuve Rack
Christensen about the recent death."
McErlain said.
"It's a remote possabht}. but some-
one ma} have seen someone who wa!">
pregnant who isn't pregnant any
longer and come forward ...
Christensen said he believes the
baby may have been born outdoors
but that the person mav have been
famaliar with the trash pickup sched-
ule. The baby was placed 1n the
dumpster at 6 a.m. at the Paradise
Manor Condom101um Complex. on
Euclid Street and Slater A venue when
at was about an hour old.
Collectors. who pack up trash once
a week. were due at the location at 9
a.m.
keep their garages and cars locked and
their trash a reas clean to help reduce
the chances of additional fires, Wen.h
said. They will a lso be told how to
provide information d irectly to in-
vestigators or how to call anonymous-
ly through the WeTip program.
Wenh said police patro ls a re being
beefed up in the area.
"But we feel the key with will be
with the residents, who are more
likely . to sec or hear something
SUSPICIOUS and report II,.. the fire
spokeswoman said.
DOG ...
From Al
the dog to rehabili tate him.
Last month, Fams was struck by a
hit-and-run driver during a tense drug
bust. Police staged a funeral for the
dog early this m onth, burying him
with his badge and a bone at the city's
new animal shelter.
Fams was credited with taking part
an 160 incidents.
"He was the best partner I ever
had." said Faro's trainer Officer Steve
Frew dunng the afternoon services.
"It's hard to say goodbye."
Fre"' no" "'II be working w11h
Re.>.. )
TROLLEY LINE STUDIED FOR NEWPORT ...
From Al
considering using the sen1ce pnmanly forits o"'n
residents the cit} might ha' c to come up with a !>Ubs1d\
Diamond said.
cars" hen usa ng a trolley.
( ouncll"'oman Jackie Heather agreed there are
problems but said 11 "'as crucial for the council get some
traffic relicfbefore summer. "The trolle) could be a great way to help people lo get
around a city that 1s .,,ery difficult. As we look into this. we
should look at 11 as a way to move our own residents ... said
Councilman Philip Maurer.
"lf)OU saw what happened th as weekend in Balboa
you know we ha"c to free the peninsula. The}' are virtual
prisoners down there ... Heather said. ·
At the urgangofthe council. Mayor Evelyn Han
appointed a committee to talk• ·th the shuttle company
and report to the counnl with a detailed plan and cost
analysis.
Councilman Agee said he was impressed w11h the idea
but some problems needed to be worked out.
Usanga trolley to relieve tourist traffic on Balboa
Peninsula would create two problems. he s.aad. First
without a lane of at sown it would only add to the traffic.
Second Newport Beach does not have a large public
parking lot where beach-bound tounsts could leave their
The trollc·) s. which were displayed Sunday, are about
26 feet long and arc replicas of the famous San Francisco
cable cars. Diamond says the trolley design makes it more
attract ave than a bus and encourages people to it.
FATHER NEVIN MARKS 80TH YEAR .•.
From Al
He was 43 and had been m the
United States for 17 years when he
was assigned to establish a new
church to serve the unancorporated
area between Newport Beach and
Santa Ana.
When he first caught sight of what
would soon be Costa Mesa, he said. 1t
was nothing bul barley fields and
weeds.
"There wasn't a stop sign between
Sarita Ana and Newport Beach at that
tame, I don't thank," Nevin recalled,
tracesofhis lnsh brogue stall lingering
in his voice.
Nevin rounded up some fnends
from Loyola Marymount an Orange.
where he was a pastor before being
assigned to Costa Mesa. arranged to
use the monual) chapel and sched-
uled has first mass
On that first unda}. 15~ people
showed up. l JO of whom were signed
up to become mem bers of the new
pansh With each add1t1onal unday.
the congregation grc"'.
Because Nevin could not find a
home to rent 1n Costa Mesa. he
continued to h\'e an Orange. where he
had worked at Loyola Marymount.
and commuted lO Costa Mesa
It wasn't easy to find a car at that
tame, Nevan said, so he had to settle
for a used one that barely got him to
and from the pansh In 1949, the
rectory was built and he moved into
the building next to the church, where
he still lives. A convent was built in
1962.
"There were I 0 acres of tomatoes
and peppers growing there." Nevin
said, gesturing toward the eastsidc
Costa Mesa neighborhood adjacent
to St. Joachim's.
Af\er a few years. he said, the
burgeonin1 area started to blossom
with houses.
"The wests1de homes were built
and the Santa Ana Anny Air Base
(covenng land now occupied by the
Orange County Fa1rarounds and Or-anae Coast College) WIS dismantled.
There were people all over the place."
The flcda11na pansh went from 130
membcn -most of whom are no
tonier alive, Nevin sa.id -to about
2.300 today. In 19S8 a second Co ta
Mesa chutcb, t. John the Baptm
Catholic Chureb, was built and at
became indepcndt-nt in I 9S9.
Ovtr the yea.rs, Nevin said, he has
bttn m06t proud of his anvolvcrMnl
Ln in1tuuuna the Newport Harbor .
' I
I
' • •
Interfaith Council. a place where
religious leaders of vanous faiths
come together to discuss common
concerns.
Nevin never would ha\'e dreamed
of has accomplishments 1n the area
when he was ordaaned an 1929 at the
age of25. he s.a1d
One of sax children, Nevin was
born in Offal) Count). Ireland. JUSt
after the tum of the century.
"I always wanted to be a priest -as
long as I can remember:· Nev an !">aid.
But an a poor count) hkc Offaly,
there was a surplus of priests and
Nevin was released from h1!"> home
diocese to come to the l ln11ed States.
"I've been the black '>hcep of the
famal) ever sance. for lca,ang Ire-
land.'' he said.
When Ne\'ln emigrated in 1930. he
came to Los ..\ ngdes. "here one
Catholic diocese stretched from
anta Mana on the central coast
southward lo Coronado
He was the onl) pastor at thc
school. college and hospital at Lo)ola
Marymount an Orange for nine years
and he served an 'anou!"> other posts
before getting the Costa Mesa assign-
ment.
Overthe years. Nevin has taken the
radical changes the Catholic Church
has made in stride. trying to make
sure that old traditions don't disap-
pear too quickly for some of the older
parishioners.
T he biggest change came in the
early 60s. after the histonc Vattcan 11
conference, he said. Before that he
said mass in the traditio nal Latin of
the church.
"People are more educated now
than they used to be," he said. "They
have a kecncl' intellect and curiosity
and it•s good that they've made the
service more understandable ...
When he traveled to London
recently, he said. he sat in on a La tan
mass in one of the cathedrals. Rather
than findina it nostalJ,Jc and fam1har.
he said. it metel)' seemed strange ancr
so many yean of say1na ma 10
En&lish.
Another chan,c'" the chureh over
the ye.trs has been the increa~d
mvolvement of lay people in par-
ochial Khools and church funetion •
.. When our school opened all the
tcachtts were nun1. .. be said.
.. Now we are till fortunate to have
some nuns, but most of our teachers
arc eminently qu11ificd lay people:·
to rtttnt years, 0 folk .. maues -
• .
I
emphasmng guitar music and con-
gregational singing -have become
popular with man~ an the church. he
said. But he did not embrace them
completely at first.
"I don't do thangs abruptly," he
said. "That's not my way."
What he dad was offer parishio ners
a choice -folk mass al one service
and a traditional mass at another.
One change Nevin cannot accept as
the long-talked-about lift ing of the
celibacy restriction for priests.
When asked if priests will ever be
allowed to marry. Nevin only smiles
bashfully and shakes his head no. The
celibacy restnction isn't keeping any-
one out of the priesthood as far as he
can tell. he said.
Ten young men now under has
1ra1n1ng arc an the process of becom-
ing ordaaned, he said.
For the future. he says. he 1s
concerned about the influx of H is-
panac and A.s1an refugees who are
mo"ang into the area and have httle
support from the comm unit}.
H1span1n gravitate to St.
Joacham·s Spanish-lan~uage mass
and the church has a chanty organiza-
tion. the St. Vancent de Paul society,
that serves as a counterpart to the
Costa Mesa-ba~d Share O ur Selves
chanty organization.
"We provide vouchers for food.
pay rent and give medical assistance"
to people who apply. Nevin said.
Most of the tame, community
needs come to his attentio n throu&h a
third party. .
"If the)' (Hispanic and Asiart
refugees) are in need. someone else
usually tells us so -they're too proud
10 ask for help, .. he said.
He remembers burying an inf.ant
recently for a Hispanic fa.mily that
could not afford to pay for a funeral.
"Thef re here. whether they're
!cpl or tlltgal, and our ministry must
include them :ind show them they're
welcome." he said.
Thou&h he's been an exile from
Erin for most of his life. Nev1n said,
he did take an extended vacation back
home two years ago.
Hi four isters.. one a nun, and his
brother rtm11n 1n Ireland. most still
living in the to~n where they were
bom. •
On hi tnp, Nevin aa1d, h.e per·
formed a manit&C ccremon)' fot one
of his 21 nieces and nephews and
bap1iied nother
r I
~ 4 1 21
Colunlble,S.C. 70 43 ColulnbUt 53 SI DtllM•l't wonh et 57 Oey1on 50 ar o.n ... •• 32 o..~ •• 40 o.lron « 211
Oululh 38 :t• Wwm .,... C>n.ludi'<l .,.... Statona~y •• EIPMO 7S 57 Frontg· I :111(1 'YT
Falrbetlkt 3e 111 M4lmphla 70 541 ~City 53 30 Fwgo 43 3.4 Miami as 74 Reno 5f 34 FN!g91an 64 31 M ........ ,, 33 RlcMIOnd 57 ,.
GIMIFllllt .. 31 Mpe..$1 P8\ll •7 34 SI.LOUii 41 41 HertforO 49 t2 58 49 Sl ...... T~ 79 eo ~ 42 30 NMIWllle
NewOrtMN 87 81 Sall LAik• 47 3e 81 74 New Yew• S2 3.4 SM Ant-N 86 HO\.wton 14 Ml Norloli 50 34 San OieoO M 13 lndlenapolil 47 42 Ncw1ll Piel •• . .. 30 Sen FrencieC.O 57 •1 Jeok-.MIM 75 81 Oll~CllY 84 47 S1Ste Metle 31 20 "-*-llllM 78 57 Om8N •2 38 8-IU• S2 42 ,,.,,_. « 41 OttenOo 90 80 Sllr~ 7t .. i<....Cny 45 42 Pelffl Sl)f "'OS 75 61 Sioux Fiii 37 34 lMV41QM 81 ~4 ~· S3 30 Spot.-'5 2t Utt .. Roell 79 54 Ptioenl• as 64 SyrllCUM 37 II Extended Loe~ 64 SS Ptl~ 51 31 T~e 50 « l.Oullwle 53 45 Pon .Me 46 22 Tucaoo 90 25 Lubbock Ml 41 PQftl9114,0t• ~ •2 TulM 10 •• ProvlOence 60 n Wal\tnglon 58 37 P.,tty CIOUOy Thur.Oey Fl.It Fnoey ano Saturdey Loc:el 11U9ty nonn--1w1y wlndt Thureclay end Friday
HIQlll 85 to 75 LOW9 45 10 55 Tl des Ra~.,~ 511 311 WlcNta 58 41
TODAY Temperatures Second low 1 10 p.m SURF REPORT Second hlgll 7 .3.4 p m
WEONllDAY 1.0l~m e·s1 •·m
1:31p.m
8:02 p m,
1.8 0 LOCATION
-0.3 Hunllngton Belch
---=--
'""'" ,.,, ,.,, Albany
Albuque<que
Amarillo
AncllorlQt
Aett.Alle
Alllnll
A tlenlle City
Awtltl
8altlmore
Blttlnga
HI Lo
47 23
47 31
68 43
5() 42
61 35
64 49
48 3 ..
.. &e 64 31
47 34
4 3 R!Wt Jelly, Newport
40lh S ltwl, Newport
22n0 81..-, Newpafl
B.11100. Wedge. Newpc>r1
L.egur1A 8Ndl
Sun Nit loel1y II 8. 10 p m., rl-
W.O'*IC!ey el 5 46 • m •ll<l Mii tlglln ate 11 p.m.
llU
1·3 2-4
1·3 •·2
1·2
1
2·3
goocl
poot
poot
poot
Moonr .... toctaye11·68p.m.,M11et
4.13 t m. W~ey ltld rlaM ~ 112.SSp.m.
San Cleon4lnle Walw twnp 61
&WWII Dlfeetlon IOUl"-1
llllr
Airport suit gets new judge
~umner says he __
won 't preside ~~er __
expansion hearing
By JEFF ADLER
ot tM Ody l'llot Steff
O range County Supen or Coun
Judge Bruce Sumner -who threw
o ut the county's 1981 John Wayne
Airport expansion plan - will not
hear the ci ty of Newport Beach's
latest legal challenge over airport
improvements.
Sumner acknowledged Mo nday he
asked Presiding Judge Richard
Beacom to reassign the case to
another Judge because he fea red at
might not be resolved b} the tame he
is scheduled to stcp-<lo"'n from the
bench on Ma' 7
Hov .. ever. the Nev. pon Beach resi-
dent said 1hedcc1s1on 1n not related to
his purchase of a Balbaoa Island
residence last Janual) Jets using
John Wa)ne Airport usual!) fly over
the qua ant Newport Bay island.
Sumner announced several
months ago that he dad not plan to
seek re-election 10 the coun bench.
He said he plans to re-enter private
legal practice.
The city of Newport Beach sued the
Board of Supervisors last week.
claiming county plans to construct a
1.800-car parking lot north of the
Just Call
642-6086
Delly Piiot
Delivery
la Guaranteed
·.~ 0·1 t, 't ,.,, ' y
' I ....... """•' 'JCt-1-f I' '10, ,, _., r.-1 ,,. .. , ,.
1111.1 l I C 1 N U l,f>
1""• M~1J
airpon violated Sumner's previous
airport ruling.
Attorneys represenung the caty
contend the parking lot project 1s pan
of the larger, comprehensive airport
expansion plan now being readied for
board approval. The city's attorneys
clajm that environmental impact
reports for the project arc inadequate
because the} are not included as part
of the documentation for the total
expansion project.
The case. Sumner said. now will be
heard b) Judge Ph1hp Schwab. who
wall adjudicate all airport matters,
including the enforcement of
prov1s1ons from the city's previous
lawsuit
Me1t1orial services slated
for Marine crash vtcti111s
' Memorial wvtoes are Kheduted tNt week at Mllllne buee In Tustin
and at Cemp Pendteton fOf the 18 Marfnee that died In a ftefy heHcopter
crash Saturday on a South Korean mountainside.
Camp Penchton Mtvtc. ar• to be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at
Santa Margarita~. bue epokeeman Sgt. Dennis u i.uen said. Who
would preside ovs the public l8tvloe hafn't been determined, he Mid.
Navy chapfaJn Jeffrey Mftcnea l9 to conduct a private eervk:e In the
bue cbapef of the M.nne COtpl Heffcopter Statton In Tu.tin at 2 p.m.
Thursday, Gunnery Sgt. Peg Ceulev Mid today. TM tour TUltln-~
Marlnel will be honored with a rtfle l&lut• and tap9. Cauley ...a.
The Martnee dted when the6r S.. St.,Hon heNcopter orMhed tn
stOfmy weather near Pohang after tumlng baCk from a night trailntng
mtnlon. Two other Okln--...bued U.S. Martnee and 11 AepubUC of
Korea Marlnee UC>~ In the -cruh, the nm fatafftles during the
annual Teem Sptrtt • trainlng ex«QIM that began lrt F.t>ruary.
The ~ of the eoldlei'ra. t•en to an Army hOePftaJ In ~•.
probabty wlll be returned to the United St~tes within a week, Merine
spok~an Capt. Marte Hough Mid from Waehlngton. O.C. ~ta of an
Investigation Into the cruh are not ex,pected for month•. he said.
Wha t do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? CaJI the
number at left a nd your message will be recorded, transcribed a nd delivered
to the appropriate ed itor.
The same !4-bour answering service may be used to record letters to the
editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letter column must include their
name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, please.
Tell us what's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Clrc:ul•tlon 714/642-4333
CleHlfled adv-rtlalng 714/642-5671
All other department• 642-.4321
MAIN OFFICE
JJO Wt"it ll,1, <.t <'•·~IJ l,A~ C~
Me,,i tlOO'""'' Bu• •" 6tl < osr11 ~esa CA 1.1.ifi,.·6
.,..t• 1t J•t; I' 1 • '~•h Ii J
,.,.,., , tl ,,. ,., ..... ''"
, Pl h r t ~I t tl1 l"f•f , 1 Chazy Dow1llby Rosemary Churchm1n
( .,,,~1.gnr t'l6 t ~a• 'l'" C•>J" Pul)<.VO"'Q Comoan1 No
n.ew\ \lf)flf'C ""o'iifLl!l()t'I\ Pd1U'lfJ;'tl ""111fl't N aOVtlf1i$f
rner11s hfotPM'l mttr l t reOftx.tut~ "'''hQ~J' ~-.1 Pet
HH").fii•OO u• CC)()YI 1qn1 ()Wn('r
0 I '1 1rnl ( l 1• t tl(•t N Ii Editor and Assistant Controller ~c..:1lfh1 c ''•S. po<t11hJiP p.11r.J ti L.~1~tA Me$ti C<i1,tomut tllP~ to 6001 ~"IMI<:""''""' llv •d"o<er S• 75 mon1llly
bf "'"'~ If• 'i.O "'"'Jt'ltniy
t.r h•I ""''''''} to the Publisher
Circulation
Telephonea Stephen F. c .,azo
PrOdU<..l•On
Manager
TN .. Qtanf:)ft <..u..t\1 0~ ty P~I >N•ln Aihtc;P\ .s l\)f"nt:>tne<J the
Nt ..... P·~~ ~, .... bl • .,_, lly ''"' 0.8~ Co"" PIJort-.g
Coml'o'"• 1,,,..,. ..i~""" ft•e t•,_,,..., Monday ''"OUQll
f t•0-1~ A " u t "'a• '"'1 ~ ''°"" -s t~Jt')tr~"Cd SatVt<Say1
l n 1 Su'tl1 ty'\ 1 'iet P' f"I(.•' ., PUbi•VW"Q Ult101 "ar 310 West fl•• S••~M '' fl • j •,/i(l LO-I~ '-'esa ( ~<>l(>tnoJ 91626
H '
'' JI'• if ',
A• I Glorl• A. Powers
Clt•f'CIO• "'
Aavefl •S•ng
Don•ld L. Wllll•m•
C1tcu1at10t1
Manager Ul·MOO I VOL. n , HO. 87
--
There w m LOUilDES and there WO'.i FATIMA •••
Now Our Lady Appears in America
For the past thirteen -Th• ai.,'9<1 Mo#ter ond °"'
years the Blessed lord ho .... lOid Ihm unleu -
Mother a nd Our lord Und mok•• o compi.t. re--.nol
hove been appearing of in ilnful woyi lhrG1>9h
to o wife and mother prayer ond otot-n0o God,
of five children, Ver· i+ie U.S. ond oil notlon•of the
onico Lueken, at reg-world will be deonwd ond
ulorly hold Rosary pvnfled by !MOM of ei.ot
tribulotlCN!t ond Q Qreat Vigils at FlushiOQ cf,a~, 0 wvrldwldt""'"
Meadow Pork in ct.or wor (WOfld wor Ill), and
flushing, long Island. ofief'y&otloU.-.~lft
the '°'"'of Q celeniol (OfMlt,
Mowy~"""'~ ''°"' the foe• of !ht eonh, ond
ftl,....fourtha of mriMd ~be
dett1oyed.
OUI LADY Of THI IOAI ...... ,.0. IOX It., l1tytt4e, NY 11M• ,., , ........... ~., ...... ..., f.,....,. lftf.,,,...Jen_ c9ftfect yew ..... .,..,...n
"'-'~-MOt'I ~ ,.._
·~-~-------------Addfm I
Wotbn f0t Our lody
P.O. lo• 2'473
la Hobro, Ca 90631
--------~--.!~ Oly~~~·~~~~~~~ ..... _______ _ lip _____ ,..
.
"All who come he,.o will bo solaced ond nouri1hud with groco1 ...
and will r~turn in gloriou~ triumph to ftw Kan"dom" Our Lndy
I
I
Art auction to help
Children's Hospital
An art auction featunna works of more than SO anisls
will be held in Newport Beach April 29, with the _proceeds
&olna to sup~n the Children's Ho)pital of Oranae
County. 1
The Queen of Hearts guild is organizing the auction at
the Newport Beach Mamou in Newport Center1 wilh a
preview o f~rtworks at 3 p.m .• followed by lhc auct.Jon at 4.
Amona ~sts represented are R. A. bcnson, Richard
BunkaU, Vincent Farrell, Robert frame.~ene Lalique,
Marco Sassone, Robert E. Wood and Joad Miro. Tickets
areS I 2.SO and may be reserved bycallingSusan Jabrausat
497-4S40 or Cathy McMahon, 494-I 9S4.
Spring rec slgnu,,. begm la LB
Registration for the Laguna Beach recreation depart·
ment's sprina activity program is now underway and
classes arc expected to bq.in April 2.
A number of activities are being offered. ranging from
dance, to volleyball to flash dancing, to sailing.. For further
information call 497-331 1 and ask for the recreation
department.
Falrvt.ew art auctloa plaJJDed
An art exhibition and auction will be held at the Costa
Mesa Neighborhood Community Center Friday to benefit
Fairview State Hospital. The exhibition begins at 7 p.m.
with bidding beginning at 8 p.m. Works by Dali, Picasso,
Mino and Chagall will be available. Fee is $5 per person.
The center is located at 1845 Park Ave. in Costa Mesa.
FV Mayor breaJcfa•t Wednesday
The monthly Fountain Valley Mayor's Breakfast will
be held at 8 a.m. Wednesday at the California Elwyn
Institute. 18325 Mt. Baldy Circle, Fountain Valley.
Mayor Marvin Adler will welcome those attending.
Dr. Joe Piccari will lead a tour of the facility, which trains
and employs handicapped people to do contract work.
Breakfast. served by Elwyn trainees, will cost SI.
The event is open to the public. To reserve a place. call
963·832 I during weekday business hours and leave a
message with the switchboard operator.
Mesa chamber to be blg sports
Orange Coeat DAILY PILOTITutlliday, M.rch 27, 1114
State r()ad deaths diP; county's up
.deTbe number of people who d~ in Cahfol"!11a traffic C:aWomia moton ti drO\'C an estimated 178.2 billion dnvin& arm
acct nts last year .was the lowe1t It .has. been 11ncc 1976 mtles tn 1983, 1 record total, the CHP said. That roduced · ebev~n thothu&h mo tons ts drove more nules 1n 1983 lhao ever a death rate of 2.6 deaths per J 00 million miles ~e lowest The numbtr of traffic AC'ddent 1nJuries incttatcd 6.
iore. e H1&hway Patrol reports. ever. ' percent over 1982 to 292,S38. And 66.909 or thc>tt wen
In Otanae County.t traffic deaths increased slightly Thtre was • 1.S percent drop from 1982 to fatal 1Jcobol·rtlattd. ~
from 250 in 1982 to 25:S last year. accidents caused by intoxicated dnvers at1d a f 3 percent The num~r of motorcycli 11 killed declined 4.4
Some 4 "7 l 1 d' d · ffi . dech~e from 1981 , before touatter drunken dnvina laws ~nt to 6S 1. Pcdestnan fata.Ulies rose 4 -t to tl~. ,., peop e 1e an state tra 1c accidents 10 went into effect. _. ~-~
19,83 -2,386 of the deat~s wei:e ca~scd by drunken The Highway Patrol &rTC$ted a rtQord 143 470 th1ofbicyclc·ndcnjumped28perccnuo 114. Twtl~ dn~ers or resulted fr,om acc1~nts in which alc~h9I was a motorists on drunken drivin1r cha s durin J 983 •The moped riders died, compared to 10 the year before. •
mljor factor, according to the JUSt·released stat1sttcs. C'HP makts mort than ont.thrrd of~ Califo~ drUnken whiJ:='"~~~2'3.ajor cause of S24 fatal accidenu~
Bullet train to
bypa~s camp?
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Promoters of a bullet traia,
between Los Anscles and San Diego have proposect
altcn~a the route through the Camp Pendleton Marine
Base U\ the wake fl/ a mtUtary report indicating t~
high-speed rail hoe could disrupt training. .
··we art determined to make sure that the bullet
train's overall benefits to Southern California have no
negative im~ct on Camp Pendleton's role in the nation's
defense," said Lawrence 0 . Gilson. president of Amcncan
High Speed Rail Corp.
The proposed 130-milc route of the train includes an
18-mile stretch through Camp Pendletop.
The new route for the $3. l biUion trafo is further wCSf.
than the ongjnal route and more closely follows ex1stina
Santa Fe railroad lines, as well as Interstate 5. American
High Spe.cd Rail spokesman Nat B. Read said.
Manne Corps oppos1t1on could kiJI the bullet trai11
since the project needs permission to cross base property,
. In a report las~ !anuary, Marine Corps plannCfJ ~b)CC~ed to t~e o~gJnal rou_te of the train, sayin1
s1gn1ficant d1srupt1on or displacement of miliwy
operatjons may render the project unacceptable to the
U.S. Marine Corps and the Department of the Navy." •
Huntington chamber ,
installs new president
Banking official Dale Dunn will take over ai"
president of thc .Hunungton Beach Chamber of Com:
merce at the organization's annual dinner tonight at the
seacliff Country Club. I
A luncheon highlighttng the I 984 Olympics will be
sponsored by the Sports Committee of the Costa Mesa
Chamber of Commerce Thursday at the Costa Mesa Golf
and Country Club, 1701 Golf Course Drive in Costa
Mesa. Fee is SI 5 per person. Social hour begins at 11 a. m.
and luncheon will be held at noon. For in(ormation and
reservations, call 979-0536.
AnJmal care center needs fund• A char.re (er• chew) to the finish
In addition, members are expected to band out
awards for the outstanding citizen, the outstandini
chamber member and the chamber's ambassador of the
year.
A crowd of more than 200 is expected to be on hand lQ
aJso help celebrate Huntington Beach's 75th birthday. A support group of the Irvine Animal Care Center is
facing a Sunday fund raising deadline to come up with
$3,800 to help construct an exhibit area in time for the
opening of the city's new shelter. ..
Loe An1&elee Ram•' quarterback Jeff Kemp
and Shelly Ben80n, 13, of Irvine were two
of 30 Mmcan food lovers who con•umed
98 taco. du.rl.ng a fut-food eatln« conteet
Saturday to benefit a local charity at El
Conejo reetaurant in Irvine. The winner
downed 6.5 tacoe in under three mlnutee
and won a trip to Catalina.
Dunn. the branch manager of Huntington Savings
and Loan Association. was chamber vice president this
year.
The Committee of Friends wants to construct a
special animal exhibit area for some special critters, such
as a {>Y&rnY goat, a Chinese goose, a chincilla and desert
tortoises. all impounded in Irvine. They believe the
exhibit promotes animal adoption by detracting from the
shelter's institutionalized setting.
Tu-Oeductibte donations of money and materials
maybe madetothcanimalcareccnterat 20401 Sun Valley
Dr., Laguna Beach. Further information may be obtained
by calling Harry Ehrlich at 857--0124.
Now some kind.words about journalists
Art and clay cJaues to begln By WALTER BURROUGHS
Last Tuesday, I was harshlycrittcal of
today's crop of you ngJoumalists -maybe
too cri tical.
getting there on his bicycle in lime. Dick
would start pedaling furiously. On the wa )'
he would tune in the pohce departments.
Lee Payne 1sa h1ghl )' hterateauthoras
well. W1thout question he is the leading
Sou them California authorit) on a1rsh1ps
and on different practical ways they can be
used. I have a copy of one ofh1s books and
Lee has told me that one of the sure· fire
ways to hide big nuclear rockets 1s to tour
them aboard airships instead of railway
cars. He says theob1ection the Army ·
transportation depanment always puts up
that airships can't lift enough 1s1ust not
true.
Registration is under way for April workshops in
modem art and clay offered by the Irvine Fine Arts Center.
A two.day ceramics class is being offered for children
ages 5to 7 on April 16and 18and for youth 8 to 12on April
17 and l 9. The fee is S 11.
A six-week primer on post-World War JI art begins
April 25 at 7:30 p.m. for ages 16 and over. The fee is S50.
WALTER
BURROUGHS
The result was that the News-Press ~.at
the Globe Herald/Orange Coast Pilot week
after week. That's lhe reason I have so little
hair left. I tore it out in frustratton.
Murphine was a different story. My
"friend" Ben Reddick had a thing about
me. For one reason. I joked about his
determination never to use the title "Dr ...
before any physician's name. Further informaton on the classes. offered at 4601
Walnut Ave. in Heritage Park, can be obtained by calling
552-1078.
Tuesday, March 27
Asa fledghng1oumah st myself, under
the late, grcatJames Anderson Wood, I
wrote an editorial about Christmas shop-
ping for submission to the string of
newspapers served by Mr. Wood's bureau.
I put1ton Mr. Wood's desk. He read it,
then gently put it into a pigeon hole in his
old, roll top desk without comment. A
week later, at mail.dispatch time, he
withdrew it and laid it on my desk.
"Read it," he suggested. After I had done
so, he smiled and asked "Well, shall we
move the sour oner InjoumaJese "to
move" means to put it on the wire or in the
mail.
Ata meeting of Amigos Viejos last
month, one of the members asked me why
the Daily Pilot bought the Newport-Balboa
News Press.
"That's easy to answer," l said. "The
News Press had a photographer and a
reporter.editorial writer that I wanted very
badly. Both of them were loyal to their jobs
and wouldn't move. So we just took over
the News--Press."
Rightafterthe Daily PHot "went
regional" we used different colors of ink for
the "flag." I've forgotten the breakdown
but there was one color for the Newport
Beach edition, another for the Costa Mesa
edition, another fort he Huntington Beach
edition ... aod so on.
Instead ~f~iscly keeping his shirt on,
Ben commissioned Tom Murphme to
write an editorial rid1cuhng the Pt lot's use
of colors. The editorial was so clever that I
complimented Tom and asked him
wouldn't he like to switch totbe Pilot. Tom
1s a very loyal guy and although we used to
exchange social fraternity handshakes
every timeoneofus saw the other, he
wouldn't move.
What brought up this whole subject 1s a
color photo by Dick Koehler that appeared
on page one of the Daily Pilot for March 20.
It's a picture ofa darling little gJrl. Erica
Nelson ofNewpo11 Beach, welcoming the
coming of spring with her friend Goldie.
Goldie 1s a beautiful golden rctnever who 1s
shaking hands w11h Erica.
• I :30 p.m., Orange Couty PllllliDg CommJulon,
Hall of Administration, I 0 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana.
• 7:30 p.m .. Fountain Valley Park.a and Recreation
Commlulon. Fountain Valley City Council Chambers,
I 0200 Slater A vc.
Wednesday, March 28
Now please don't misunderstand me.
rm not at all sorry for what I said. I regret
only that I, like the young reporter I was
complaining about, did not gi ve the "full
picture."
I agree that there should be no implica-
tion that all journalism school graduates
arc inadequately or improperly trained.
There was one other man involved. He
was a space salesman and my associate
publisher, N. Paul Nissen, wanted him
verybadJy. Not that we might not have
been able to lure the man. Nissen could sell
most anybody anything. But we got him as
a sort ofbonus for the purchase.
The picture 1s loaded with sentiment.
The only picture I have ever seen that
comes close to this 1sa picture of an Eskimo
girl tn theC'anadian orthwest Temtoncs.
If )OU thought that an Eslomocan't be
beautiful. you should see this one.
• 9:30 a.m., Orange Couty Board of Sapervbon,
Hall of Administration, 10 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana.
• 7 p.m., CoHt Commaalty College Dlatrlct Board of
Tn1tee1, Costa Mesa City Council Chambers, 77 Fair
Drive.
U nhappilY. there arc too many like that.
But, the Pilot still has some very
well·trajncd editorial employees and I am
proud of them. These are the ones with the
courage to survive the hapless invasion of
personnel from the Times Mirror's paper
m Dallas, Texas. Specifically it docs not
apply to the photographers at the Pilot
these days.
The two men I was so anxious to get were
Rkhard Koehler and Tom Murphine.
J used literally to covet Richard Koehler.
Long before he went to high school. Dick
used to ride his bicycle all over the area
north and south of Coast Highway and as
far as Balboa Island and Balboa. He had
two tools of the trade ~a small radio and
his·camera. The radio was tuned to set the
fire calls and if there was any Possibility of
Well. the happy ending was that we got
both ~1.ck Kochler and Tom Murphine.
D1ck1omed another pohot~. rapher with
equally great but different skiJls-Lee
Payne.
Yes. the Daily Pilot sttll has some fine
eduonal employ~. Here'sa short list: Bea
Anderson. Bob Barker. Roger Carlson, Peg
McAhster. Steve Muchcll. Carol Moore,
Craig Sheff, Tom Titus and Earl Wilson.
Another I'd like to mentJon is my former
SCC'relary Pat Stephenson. I know she's
good because I trained her myself.
• 7:30 p.m., Foutain Valley Planaing Comml11loa,
Fountain Valley City Council Chambers, 10200 Slater
Ave.
Irvine teen captured after
$3 burglary at apartment
A l6-year-0ld Irvine youth was
anated for suspicion of assault and
burtlary Monday afternoon and
boolccd at juvenile halt after allegcdJy
breaking into an apartment in the
3000 block of Parkview Lane and
stealing $3 in quarters.
Irvine police Sat. Dick Bowman
said the boyfriend of the woman who
CoetallflM
A box of jewelry, ICJ'IP a.old and
loose diamonds, valued at S32,22S,
wu reported stolen from the Otanae
County Fairarounds Swap Meet over
the weekend. A Del Mar vendor told
poUce 1 couple c::amc into his stand
about I: IS p.m. and he discovered the
boll miuina sbortlv thereafter. . ~.
A man eatina 11 the Annex Room, I 670 Newpon Blvd, told poliClC
10meone stole his wallet when he left
il on the table and went to make a
ohone call. The lou wu estimated at Sill in the Sundav bwJlary. • • • An open prqe provided tbJevea
tntry to an uru~ted vehicle Monday
on the 900 blockofMiasloo Drive. A
car radio and an Apple computer were slOlen. The lou was placed 11 s l,600. • • • • 5oinetime Sunday nlaht a jeep
parked on the 2800 block of Bear
'
I
lived in the apartment had aJlowed
his I 6-year-0ld brother into the
apartment without the woman's
knowledge. The youth had apparent-
ly crawled into the apartment through
a window to retrieve some clothes
and bad "helped himself' to the
coins. The youth apparently retumcd
later Monday afternoon and was
Street was jacked up on blocks and the
two rear ttres and rims were stolen.
The loss was placed II SS70. • • • The Pacific Micro Utilities Co .•
2900 Bristol St.. was broken into over
the weekend and the manqer•s
computer wu stolen. Thieves ap.
parently opened the bulldi~ with a
te}'. The IOU WU placed It $3,000. • • • A woman sbopp1na in the 8.
Dalton Bookstore in South Coast Plaza Sunday told poUoe her purse
was stolen ~ a man bumped into
bcr. The woman said abe ditc:overcd
the theft after she left the slOre and
found the strap still on her shoulder
but the pune cut off the wap. Lo~•
W&I placed a1 $225.
lntae
Employees of a Cart's Jr. rcstairamt
d.iscov.-cct $140 in ~ipu missina
from a cub rqistcr Monday after
closif\I titM. Polkic initially thouaht
l
confronted by the woman's
I 6-year-0ld son, Bowman said.
The two teen-agers got in a shovmg
match and the alleged burglar threat·
cned the other with a K.oife. The
suspected coin thief then fled. but in
the process cut his thumb with the
weapon, according to Bowman. The
injury was minor, he said.
the theft was committed by a patron. • • • Two juveniles were arrested for
suspicion of shopliftinJ candy and
rjpfettes from an Alpha Beta on
CUiver Drive Monday afternoon,
detained by a sto~ employee. Both
were ~Iced at iuvenile hall. .. . . Two car ownen d1tc0vered their
SSOO 4t.efeol miaina Monday mom·
ina. Tiie side windows of their vehicles were pried open by a thief.
The can were left at the Irvine
Marriott, the other in 1 Parker
Kanmfin lol
l"oa.ntaln Valley
A p&SSC1\1Cr swuna open a d29r of a
red Toyota Qlic::a car and 1frilck a
I 2·)ur-old boy sittina on his btqele
at Toua.n Cirde and Bircb Street. He
SUJtaincd a possible broken riaht
hand and a bruised left knc:c. • • • Buralars ransacked a house in lhc
Like reporters I have mentioned most
photographers think the way to a great a
picture is sensation. Not so ei thcr Payne or
Kochler.
Waltt.'r Burroughs 1s the Pilot's founding
publisher.
16000 block of Mt. Michaelis Circle
and stole jewelry. a video recorder
and other items valued at $2.477. • • • Someone stole clothing. power
tools and an auto t-top valued at
S 1.278 from a garage in the I 5.000
block of Ward St.
L-.Una Beach
Jewelry wonh an estimated $4,000
was reported taken from a room at the
Surf and Sand Hotel , I 555 South
Coast Highway, Monday. The victim
said the theft occurred sometime
Saturday. • • • A vending machine was rifled and
someone made off with approximate-
ly $280 in cha~~e Monday at 1040
South Coast Hit":ar
A class ring and three watches
valued at S 1.000 were reported stolen
in a buralary 1n the 600 block of
Bolsana *ay Monday. • • • Victims who reside in the 200 block
of Loma Terrace have not yet tallied
their loss from a buralary at the
residence sometime Sunday. • • • Nothina was taken from a vehicle
e&rked in the 1700 block of South
COA$t H1ahway Monday but the •
owner reponcd a S 120 loss due to a
broken side window
Newport Belacb
A Newpon Beach woman rtported
Monday that U.000 1n )Cwclry was
stolen from ber bome 10 the lOOO
blockofBuck:inaham la.st Friday. The
suspecu pined" ~try to the home
throup 1 1lidmf \ia:s door.
An Irvine man ~ported th~ lbcn of
bis 1981 Mm:ury Lynx valued at
I
$6.000 from the Newport Beach Cit)'
Hall parking lot at 3300 Ne~Pon
Bl vd. Monday evening.
Huntington Beach
Burglanes were ~ported Monda~
at two co10 laundncs 1n Huntington
Beach. At a laundry al 9025 Adams
A. ve .. someone broke tnto a change
machine and a video game. stealing
S 110. At another laundry at 707 I
Warner Ave., someone opened coin
machmes and took $400 in quaners ••• Someone broke mto a white 1983
Toyota Cehca. parked in a carport on
the 16900 block of Umelight Circle.
The loss included stereo equipment
worth S 1,000. • • • By kicking in a back door. a burglar
entered a home on 21700 block of
Bushard Strttt. The toss· included
camera equipment worth $3.000. • • • Someone broke into the HB
Plumbing Co., I 7362 Gothard t., the
owner reported Monday. The loss.
estimated at $3.542, included equip-
ment such as drills and eb110 saws • • • A wh11c 1966 Buick Special was
buralam:ed while parked m a rear
alleyonthe300blockofl8th t~t A
windwina was broken to enter The
loss included stettO equipment wonh
S2SO. • •• A IS.year-old boy told pohct
Monday his stlvcr dll\ bike was stolen
from a COO\'Cntentt stOtt It Beach
Boulevard and later A venue. The
Jou was es.tima\cd at $300.
• • •
Someone broke into a blue t 979
Toyota Corolla puked over the
weekend an 1 c::arpon on the 21000
block or t..ocblea lane. Tlle IO!S
I
included car stereo equipment wonh
$515 • • • <\ re<>1dcnt of the 2600 block of
England Street reported Monda) that
someone entered her home through
an unlocked door and stole $25 from
a drawer. • • • .\ resident of the i '7200 blocl of
Beach Boule' ard reponed Monda~
that a Rugar handgun ~onh $400 1
missing from hi s home • • • Someone stoic a hlue 1968
Mercede~ auto from a parking lot at
Peter's -Landing. the owner ~Ported
Mon_da) The loss was estimated at
$20.000.
Ex-Boys Club
leader guilty
in molesting
By tlae Aasodakd Presa
A 42·ycar-old fonnct('yprcu Boys
Club kader Wlll be sentcnttd May 17
on charges of molestina lttn-.r'I
who belonged to tM club, a coun
offic1at said.
Donald Ltt Lusk Jr of La Palma
pleaded 1U1lty Mooday to 46 fdon)
counts of chi.Id molcstatton and other
su charaes before upcnor Coun
Jud&e James Pttet..
Lusk. who was am:sted after one
Vlcllm spoke to potioe. bas ~maindl
'" Oranac County lad without bail in~ his arrest Last Oct. 9
Part of the cvuknc:e ert:"ntcd
durina the prclimanlJ) hcarint a
vidco\.lpc selzcd from Lu ·1 apen-
mcat that <kpicied LUlk with t-o
be» qcd 13 and I ~.
~ . .
NRC inspector blasts Diablo safety
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A federal inspector who
threw a wrench into lic:ensinc bearinas and shocked has
wpcrion by contrldictina them on safety at Diabto
C&nron nuclear power plant says be was surprised they
bad ~ored bis opinions.
•They didn't bother to read my rcpon," Isa Yin, a
Otina-bom eftlineer, sajd durina a break an Nuclear
Reaulatory Commjssion bearings Monday in Washing-
ton.
As his stanled superiors listened, the 42-year..old
. .
NRC anspcctor told the commis ioners tbat the plant
should not be allowed to ~ma opera tin, yet because, "We
have a large number of(dC$ign) violations, and it's unwise
to ignore them."
Van's 1tatements conflicted with the official NRC
staff report 58ying there were no safety considerations that
wamnt dctayana the flrst start-up of the troubled $4.9
billion plant for low-power testina.
Yin as the top pipe-stress expert assigned to
investigate allegations of shoddy or deficient design and
ORANGE COUNTY'S
RELAXING MUSIC STATION
IS
KDCM tD!l.t
FMSTERED
con trucuon wodr •t Dtablo C.nyon -majnly relati~
its ability to withstand earthquakes.
Yan wd he had found .. an apparent quali-
ty-assurance proaram breakdown" in many pans of the
plant's pipes of less than four inches in diameter. He urted
the NRC to withhold a license from Pacific Oas & Electric
Co. until those problems are ~lved.
The pipe system is "not meetinl the (NRC)
requirements, in my professional opinion, Yin wd.
He said the commissioners had told him not to
discuss his criticisms in detail.
The coastal nuclear plant, coincidentally. is located
near the college where Yin was educated, California
Polytechnic State University in Sao Luis Obispo, about 160 miles northwest of Lot Angeles.
Yin was born in China but fled to Hong Kona with his
family when he was 10. He came to the United States to
attend colle~e. earning a bachelor's degree in mechanical
engineering in I 96S.
He has worked for sevcraJ engineeruia firms,
including Bechtel Corp., wbach aJso constructed Units 2
and 3 at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station south
of San Clemente. And PG&E has retained Bechtel to
correct several problems during the extensive modi-
ficauons the NRC demanded to make the plant more
earthquake resistant.
Volcano pumps
out tons of lava
VOLCANO, Hawaii (AP) -The world's largest
active volcano continued pumping out I million cubic
meters oflava an hour, but rivers of the molten rock posed
no threat to people or property.
Molten rock was fountaining 50 to I 00 feet into the air
Monday along a 300-foot-long vent at the 2_i400-foot level
of the volcano, said Reggie Okamura, a stan geologist with
the U.S. Geological Survey's Hawaiian Volcano Ob-
servatory.
The longest flow, an eight-mile river of Liquid rock
wtth a front edge measuring 900 to 1.200 feet across. was
traveling to the northeast at about 500 feet per hour,
Okamura said.
It was that flow that knocked down a main power line
that linked generators in Hilo, the state's second largest
caty. with the other side of the island.
HOW TO TELL
A PACIFIC BELL YELLOW PAGES SALES REP
fROM THE IMITATORS.
I f you 're in business in California. you hould know that
there' more than one type of yellow pages sale,
repre entative.
One sells advertisements m the Pacific Bell Yellow Page".
the book you've probably been using for years.
The other reprc ent one of tho-.,e other hooks th.n may
look like o ur yellow pages. but isn't.
If you want to be able to tell the difference, it's really
very easy. Just ask these simple questions:
What's the circulation of your book?
The Pacific Bell Yellow Pages are found in 97% of the home~
in your area. The competitors average less than 54%.
How often do people use your book?
In a recent survey. 873 of those polled said they had u~ed
their Pacific Bell Yellow Pages in the last year. They u~d them
5 times as often as competing directories~
Do new people who move into your community
automatically get a copy?
Pacific Bell sends a copy of our yellow pages to all new
customers, soon after their phone arc connected
/
I
\
How long have you been in business?
Only the Pacific Bell Yellow Page ha been bringing custo-
mers into California busincs e for over 75 successful years.
Are you from Pacific Bell?
If you want to save time, ask this question first. Because if
he'!'! not from Pacific Bell, there really isn't much to talk about
Yes , there is more than one book ca lled the yellow
pages. But no other book offers busines es the kind ~
of exposure you get with an ad in the Pacific Bell
Yellow Pages. ·
11.,.,..,f, "' , 11>'< I •un •·\ u111d111 inf in C .1l1f,,rn1~ l'!V A[)f-Rt-~arch Inc
August 3 is the closing date
for the Orange County North
and Central directories. Call
your Pacific Bell Yellow Pages
representative right now
at 714-972-4011.
'
Pacific Bell
Yellow Pages SM
Credit clam.pdown
appears certainty
By lbt Ataodattcl Presa
WASHINGTON -Federal Reserve ~licymak.ers.
wmding up two days of secret talks, most likely ~
earlier this month to stan clamping do~n on c~1t
conditions as a means of cooling off eoonom1c expansion,
private analysts say. As evidence, the analysts point to the
recent round of interest rate increases and say the
policymakers have done little to case the prcssu~ on those
rates. But because they believe the tiahteninJ. ac~ao~s were
taken earlier, they don't foresee a fun.her h1~e 10 interest
rates right away. Those rates. though. could nsc ~ore 1.ater
in the year, the analysts said an advance of tbe d1scuss1ons
Monday and today by the Federal Open Market
Committee.
Rape terms sald ucealve
FALL RIVER. Mass. -Attorneys for four men sent
to pnson for raping a woman on a t?arr~m pool t.a~I~ a~
protesting the sentences as "hard time. but the v1ct1m s
lawyer says the woman's sentence is "exile." Ju~ge •
William Young sentenced the four men to terms ra_ngmg
from six to 12 years on Monday, sayinJ they "brutalized a
defenseless young woman and sought to degrade and
destroy her human. individual dignity." The men, ~II
Portuguese immigrants, received support from many in
the area's Portuguese community, and t~e victim's lawyer
said demonstrations in their favor convinced the woman
to move from her hometown.
Faulkner poems released
NEW YORK -Poems written by a young Wi~liam
Faulkner and presented to his future wife will~ published
for the first time this spring, the University of Texas Press
has announced. The collection of I 4 poems, titled "Vision
in Spring." is part of some 200 poems Faulker wrote over
a six-to-eight year period before declaring himself a "failed
poet" and turning to prose. It will be published May 26.
'Fame' star's mom sentenced
NEW YORK -The mother of dancer Gene
Anthony Ray. star of television show .. Fame." has been
sentenced to 15 years to life in pnsan for drug trafficking.
Jean Ray 44, of the Bronx, was convicted of selling
cocaine to undercover agents on four occasions. She was
arrested last June. Her son, who hves in C41ifornia. plays
dancer Leroy Johnson on "Fame."
Mlsslng helress' checks I ound
CHICAGO-Thirteen forged checks written against
the account of candy heiress Helen Vorh~s Brach turned
up in February 1977, the month she disappeared •. the
administrator of her estate says. Everett Moore testified
Monday in a hearing on a request by Mrs. Brach's brother.
Charles Vorhees. to have her declared "presumed dead ..
seven years after her disappearance. Such a rulin$ wo~ld
permit her estate to be distributed. Mrs. Brach, third wife
of the late candymaker Frank V. Brach. vanished !n
mid-February 1977 after she visited the Mayo Chn1 c an
Rochester. Minn .. for a routine examination.
Bay Area gets the shakes
SAN FRANCISCO -A moderate earthquake shook
the San Francisco Bay area. knock1.n$ ~ttles off s~~re
shelves but causing no damage or inJunes. authont.ies
said. The temblor struck at 7:36 p.m. Mond~y. mea~unng
4.25 on the Richter sca~e of ~ound m~t1on. ~1d t~e
Untversity of California Sc1smograph1c station in
Berkeley. The state Department of Water Resovrces
estimated the quake at 4.5.
CIJemlcal splll Injures two
HOLLISTER -T)No people were injured Monday
night when an unidentified hazardous chemical spilled
from a truck on Highway I 52 near here. The injured. a
motorist and a worker from the state Department of
Transportation. complained of eye irritation. dryness in
the throat and un~ing of the fingers. the California
Highway Patrol said. They were taken to Los Banos
Community Hospital where they were treated and
released.
State highway deaths decline
SACRAMENTO -Highway deaths in California
declined to 4,57 I fatalities during 1983, the lowest total in
seven years, the Highway Patrol says. At the same time,
highway travel increased last year to an estimated 178.2
biflion miles in 1983. a record total. the CHP said in a
report issued Monday. That produced a death rate of 2.6
deaths per 100 million miles, the lowest ever.
Duarte El Salvador winner?
SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador -Election officiats
have blamed rebel sabota.Je for the widespread foul-ups in
Sunday's presidential votmg. but some Western observers
say overzealous authorities trying to keep the process
clean inadvertently derailed it. "The elections council
plan nod and planned and planned, but they never planne.d
a sound system," said a Western official familiar with the
procedure who asked no t to be identified. By late Monday.
the Central Election Council had released no results from
the polling places where, according to U.S. election
observers, an estimated 1.3 million out of some t.8
million eligible voters cast ballots. Unofficial returns
showed moderate Christian Democratic pany candidate
Jose Napoleon Duarte with a solid lead. but he is not
expected to win the mltjority required for a victory, and a
run-off election is expected to be held within 4S days.
IRA bomb kill• .aldler
LONDONDERRY. Nonhem Ireland -An IRA
landmine blew up under an unmarked military minibus
on the outskirts of Londonderry today, killinaone British
soldier and severely woundina another, police said. A
police spokesman. Chieflnspcctor Jim McK.innery, said
1u~lla1 hid.in& on a nearby hill detonated the mine when
lhe van paued ovcrit nearGransha mental hospital on the
main road from Londonderry to Limavady, 20 miles to
the east. The mine was believed to contain several
hundred pounds of uplotivcs. McKinney ideotJfied tbe
dead man as military police Set. David Ross, 31, wbo was
drivina the vehicle to Londonderry anny headQuant11 to
take several aoldicrs' wives on an outi"I to the coatL
OablN p,..Jdeat •accamZ>.
CLEVELAND -President Ahmed Sekou Toure of
Guinea, 1 black African Mamat who led his country to
in<tependencie in 19S8, died on an oPCTatina table after 1
S,000.mile OiJht for cmctJCncy 1ul'(tf')' on his de-
tcnorated aona. He wu 62. Stkou Toure was flown to the
Oeveland C1inac carty Monday and-... pronounced dead
at 3:23 p.m. Monday. Sekou Toure ... a foundina member ln 1946 of the African Democratic R.aUy, an
umbrella an:>UP of W t African panics tttkina in4eotn-'
deoce from France.
\
f
FBI joins tot
molest 11robe
A
LOS . ANGELES (AP) -The FBI 1w beaun
invest1gahng a Manhattan Beach preschool whose younp~en. allegedly were sexually abused in order to
dctemunc 1f there were links to child pomoaraphy.
The federal agency entered the case after some of the
children told authorities that lheywere phOtOJflphcd and gav~ de~riptions ~fli&hting and camera equipment used
dunn& picture sessions.
Authorities have not reported finding any photo-graphs. however.
SpeciaJ AJcnt Melvin L. Aohr said Monday that tbe
FBI was seeking to determine whether photographs of
children perf'or:m~& sex acts "'.ere taken for purposes of
interstate dtstnbuuon. He declined to discuss the federal
aovestigation furtber.
Puffers
really.
pay$3
a paClt
BOSTON (AP) -An
extra tax of $3 on every
pack of cigarettes would be
needed to recover all the
medical expenses and lost
wages caused by smok·
ing-rclated illnesses in the
United States, researchers
contend.
A study released Mon ·
day found that a man
between the ages of 35 and
44 who smokes more than
two packs a day wilJ cost an
average $58,987 over his
lifetime in cigarette-related
medical bills and lost work.
The cost for a woman in
this category is S20. I 52,
largely because of lower
projected earnings for
women.
The figures were com-
piled by health economists
who calculated the hidden
costs of smoking. The fig.
ures are averages for all
smokers, not just those
who get sick.
"We likened every
smoker to a '8mbler," said
the study director, Gerry
Oster ... And we wanted to
esumate the likely amount
of money that every
smoker should expect to
lose in the lottery that he or
she is playing wit h his or
her li fe."
Some of these smoking
costs arc paid by
non-smokers in the form of
higher insu r ance
premiums and Medicare
costs. A higher tax on
cigarettes. Oster said.
wou ld require smokers to
pay all 1he1r medical bills
and make up the eammgs
thal they would have con-
tnbuted tf they'd avoided
the habtt.
Calls made Monday
ni!ht for comment from
offi cials of the American
Tobacco Institute in Wash·
mgton were not answered .
.. These cost esti mates do
not imply that every
smoker will get lung cancer.
coronary heart disease or
emphysema," Oster said.
''This takes the costs for
those smokers who do de·
velop the diseases and
spreads them across all
smokers."
The study was conducted
at Policy Analysis Inc .. a
Brookline. Mass .. firm that
researches health<ost is-
sues. and it was released
Monday at a meeting of the
American Coll ege of
Cardiology in Dallas.
TVanchor
Jensen
deadat49
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
-Three weeks after he
told viewers he was suffer-
ing from incurable cancer.
television anchorman
Jerr'} Jensen has died. He
was 49.
Jense n, who had cancer
of the pancreas. died on
Monday. Jensen's moviog state·
ment, read on the air by
KGO-TV co-anchor Van
Ambur& March 7, said the
popular newsman found
out about the fatal illness
shortly before Christmas.
Jensen ten the air at that
time.
''l want to deal with the
1ubstance of this story; and,
as a newsman. l know bow
to do a story even when it is
terribly difficult," the state·
ment said. ''There has bttn
some confusion over the
pest couple of months
around the nature of my
medical pro~lem. I am
dyina of panc-rcatic cancer.
which ii spre1din1
throuahout my body.''
Jentcn was bom In the
Panama Canal Zont and
attended 1ebools in Hawaii
bd'o~ .,aduahna from San
Jote State Collett And re.o
ceivina a muie.r'• ~in bf'oadcast commun1cat100
ft'om San FrancllCO State.
He worttod at tevtral
radJo stations u an an·
nouncer a"d cn&inttr biefo~ joinina KOO f'ldio
in l9S8.
At Security Pacific we've created a whole new kind
of auto financing. The kind that gives you what yt>u
probably want most when you buy a new car: lower
monthly payments and up to 100% financi ng.
By looking forward. we created an auto financ ing
p lan that's like other loans in some ways. but unlike
any other loan in most. Like other loans. you can select
fro111 a variety of repayment periods. But unlike others
we a5sign your new car an Assured Value up front.
That's the amount we assure as the value of your car to
us at the end of your loan term. But you don't pay that
amount now.
Instead. your monthly payments will be based on
the total amount of the loan plus finance charges
minus that Assured Value. Subtracting that Assured
Value from the cars cost really adds to your buying
,
I
Frenche oy·
shot in Beirut
BEIRUT. lib.anon (AP) -A frftd dfplori\jt wu
1hot and ICrioully woun&a toaiy la ldnlt's MOIJem
tcetor, and at least 20 tavdians ~ tepofted 'WC>Undcd in
an artillery barra&e<>n Christian nriahborboocb.
Spokesmen at the Frtnch Emo.My icknlifaod lbt
wounded diplomat ai cultural attachc Sauveur Gliouo,,
but would not give detaila about how he was shot or ew,w
serious his condition wa . '"
At the American Un1ven1ty Hotpiw. ~men said Oliouo underwent emergency suf'IU)' to ~move at
least two bullets from his St.qmach arwrarm. They also
declined to classify the teraousness of his condibon.
There was no 1mmed1att responsibility claim for the
attack. and locat radio tatJons said the aNilaot or
assailants escaped.
Lebanon's state radio wd Ghono was •hot as be was
on his way to work at the French Embassy.
power. It means yo·u'll be paying less every 1nonth.
You have three choices at the end of vour loan
term:
1. Re turn lhe vehicle to us per the conditions of your
loan agreement.
2. Apply to refinance the Assured Value payrncnt
amount and keep your vehicle.
3. Keep the vehicle just by paying us the Assured Value.
Then. if you sell the vehicl . any profit above that ts
yours to keep and use any way you want.
So stop into any convenient Security Pacific Bank-
ing Office. We'll show you
why our Lower Payment
Option Plan has the t\vo
most important new car
options of all.
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JI
•
Countyrene
onJWA tal s
with Newport
At the heart of every compromise is the premise that both
sides will win. The county supervisors apparently forgot that last
week when they approved a S3 million parking lot enlargem~nt
project at John Wayne Airport and ignored a tentative
expansion agreement with Newport ~each. .
· · It is a matter of fact that the parking lot-and the terminal
building -are insufficient to accomodate the people who use
the airport now.
It is a foregone conclusion that more people will be using the
airport when an Environmental Impact Report that would allow
an increase from 41 daily flights to 55 is approved by the courts
and accepted by the supervisors. . .
That is expected to happen this year. The supervisors have
already voted for the increase. .
It is also a fact that more than a few people m Newport
Beach suffer from the irritating and property-value threatening
noise delivered from JWA 41 times a day.
Fragile negotiations between the city an~ the county to put
conditions and time limits on airport expansion were shattered
when the supervisors gave the go-ahead to the parking lot
project, seen by Newport Beach as the first step on the road to
more noise.
It didn't have to be. Reasonable people, recognizing that the
airport is a crucial element in the continued economic
development of Orange County, might have ham~ere~ out a
compromise that would accomodate necessary mod1ficat1ons at
JW A without ignoring the noise problem.
But when the supervisors introduced and then approved the
parking plan -without notifying Newport and while ostensibly
considering the tentative agreement -they sent the city
scurrying not to the bargaining table but into the courts.
We recognize that the county has no legal obligation to clear
its business through Newport Beach. But the supervisor~ led the
city to believe they were negotiating the proposed agreement in
good faith. Apparently. they were not.
. -
j
' •'Somehow the goodness of America gets deformed when expressed
as foreign policy-so much so that we grieve for a thug and questJon
the creilentlals of those who Jn any way mJght have k1lled hlm .• ,
RJCBAJlD COBBN
colamalat
RICHARD
CoHEI
Terrorist,
freedom
flghteror
heroine ~?
U.S. opposes
ambassador tied
to deadly plot
WASH ING TON -It is said that
·six years ago Nora Astorga, then 33
and in the words of a friend "very
handsome." lured a high official of
the Somoza regime to her house in
Nicaragua and either killed rum
herselfor had him killed. Either way,
the man, Gen. Reynaldo Perez Vega,
the second-highest-ranking officer in
the Nicaraguan national guard, was
found dead in her bedroom.
Travelen jam the terminal at J ohn Wayne Airport.
It is said by Nora Astorp's friends
that the story is not quite true. They
maintain, instead, that theSand-
inistas, who were later to seize power
in a revolution. were attempting to
kidnap Gen. Perez and that some-
thing went wrong. In this version of
the s1ory, Astorp, a lawyer and a
secret Sandinista, is no killer-
merely the bait for seizing an ac-
complished womanizer who was to be
exchanged for political prisoners.
Pass the ale, by George
When George Washi ngton retired
as commander-in-chief in 1783, com-
patriots threw his farewell dinner in a
New York City bar called Fraunces
Tavern. Sounds lively. Shuffieboard.
Bumper pool. Poker in the back. Hey.
Turkey, you're getting wig dust in my
rum. No. probably wasn't like that.
When you eat a salisbury steak. do
you pause to think of the· English
physician for whom it was named. J.
H . Salisbury? No, suppose not.
In Niagara Falls are honeymoon
cabins, and on one of same an
obnoxious woodpecker hammered at
length, disturbing the serenity therein
of newlyweds Walter and Gracie
Lantz. Bad, but not too bad. It
inspired Walter to create the cartoon
character Woody the Woodpecker.
and Gracie to do the bird's voice.
New England's renowned pies and
dou~nuts were popularized by a
stuptd law. Women of early Massa-
chusetts liked to visit over cakes and
buns. The male lawmakers contrived
to break up these gossip gettogethers.
for what they thought was the good of
the colony. They outlawed sale of
cakes and buns except for special
occasions. Observing the letter of that
law, the women started turning out
pies and doughnuts.
The sunflower is not one big bloom
but a whole bunch of little ones.
Why don't you pay attention when
I tell you the rings of Saturn are no
more than 50 meters thick?
According to Adolf Hitler. the
Nazis couldn't have taken over
Germany without the airplane, the
automobile and the loudspeaker.
California law is such that a woman
there can't legally drive a car while
wearing a housecoat.
The sun isn't round. Not quite. It,
too, is fatter at the poles.
L.M. Boyd 11 a syadlcated
columalst.
What makes either version of the
story germane at the moment is the
fact that the Sandinistas want Astorp
to be their next ambassador to the
United States and lots ofother
people, some of them ve,..Y influential,
don't. Gen. Perez, it 1urnsout, was
not only a high Nicaraguan official:
he was also a CIA" asset" and, to
American intelligence, a virtual col-
league.
It's likely tha1 details of this story
will remain forever in dispute. What
is not in dispute. though, 1s that Perez
was the number two man in the
detested National Guard. As such, he
was reponsible for some of the agony
Nicaraguans suffered under the
Somoza regime-everything from
capricious murder to the theft ofrelief
supplies sent to that country after its
1972 earthquake. When ii comes to
morality, the CIA is an
equal-opportunity employer.
It is by now a cliche that one man's
terrorist is another man's freedom
fighter. This is certainly thecesc with
President Reagan, who has referred to
the anti-Sandinista guerrillas. funded
by the CIA, as "freedom fighters." It
is also the case with the Irish
Republican Army, the Palestine
Liberation Organization and, to go
back some years. John Mosby, a
Virginian. who was a freedom fighter
to the South but a plain terrorist to the
North.
Unitary tax keeps new business from state
Jf you are a CIA agent, it's probably
bad policy to accredit a person who
might have been instrumental in the
death ofa fellow agent. But if you are
anyone else. you would have to
wonder why this country should have
any loyalty at all to the memory of a
man who was a -certified killer and, in
the bargain, probably corrupt. The
Sandinistas say that as a former
emigration director, Perez made a
fortune selling illegal passports-a
routine activity under the Somoza
regime.
Anyone wondenng why the Hon-
das, Volkswagens and Sonys oft he
world locate their new U.S. factories
outside California need look no
further than lhis state's tax laws-
one tax in particular. So. at least, say
the foreign corporations.
California's unitary tax law 1s the
culprit they finger. h produces about
$500 million each year for the state,
basing its take on the worldwide
income ofa corporation, not Just how
much money it claims to earn within
the state.
The unitary tax is "a tremendous
burden·· on multinational firms. says
Seizi Tozaki. chairman ofa steel
company and leader of a Japanese
business group seeking repeal of the
law.
And Noburo Yoshi. a Sony Corp.
vice president, said his company
"didn't even consider Cali fom ia" as a
location for its new ma~etic tape
plant. eventually built 10 Alabama.
Yoshi said an existing Sony color
television plant in San Diego may be
moved to South Carolina if state
officials stick with the unitary tax.
It is no coincidence that the foreign
attacks on California's law come just
a few months after a U.S. Supreme
Court ruling which said states can use
the unitary system. That ruling was
far m ore import.ant in California than
elsewhere: Only 11 other states have
unitary levies and their combined
take last year was S 120 million, less
1han a quarter of California's.
With the courtroom battle decided,
the multinationals have apparently
decided to tum 1he political screws on
the tax.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
THOMAS
Euas
And 1heircampaign is makin~
headway. So fart his year, nine bills
have been introduced in Sacramen10
to el i m 1 na te, restrict or water down
the levy.
One bill would exempt all
foreign-based companies from the
tax, applying it only to U.S.-owned
firms. Another would ease the tax on
research-onented businesses. A third
exempts firms that operate only
within the state's foreign trade zones.
But the most popular plan for
defusing the un1tary tax conflict is the
fi ve-ycar exemption. Four bills now
headed for legislati ve committees
would waive the unitary tax on
various kinds ofbusinesses for the
next five years, with renewal of the
exemption possible after that time.
Even state Controller Ken Cory,
usually a defender of the tax says
five· year waivers of the tax for new
businesses may be needed to attract
new investment to California. Cory
said applying a waiver only to new
business would assure that the state
would suffer no revenue losses.
And Oov. Deukmejian, too, is
respondina to the foreian pmsurc.
He had ordered a review of the tax
and itseffectson the state economy.
H. l. lohwartz ltl
Pu~
ChaqDow .. fb1
(Otl04' Ind A-.1111111
10 tl\e PIJtllltl'le(
~ llWlfY O.y Of Ille 'f('•t •t J30 Wffl 81y 51
Col'll .,..._ AOOIM '°'""'OOMf•(I(• 10 &• 15'i0
COii• ~ CA •?e:>e
LMfJ D.lpeen
M11negtng E01IQf
Frenll Zh'al
ASIOCllll& Editor
saying he would likely back chanites if
they would mean no major financial
problems for the state.
About the only agency that hasn't
yielded at least some ground to the
foreinttcampaign is the state Board of
Equalization.
Board member William M. Ben-
nett warns that abandoning tbe
unitary system would let corpor-
ationsju~e their books to reduce
Califomta tax bills. "This tax is the
way California gets its fair share of
multinational income," he said.
But the politicians must decide
questions that 'o beyond fairness.
They must decide whether the multi-
nationals are bluffing: Would they
really locate more plants here without
a un1tary tax? Or are they merely
trying to reduce their tax bills with
little likelihood ofnew plants -and
jobs-here?
If the answerto the first question is
yes, the smart move would be drop
the tax or water it down. For enough
new jobs produced by foreign invest-
ment could themselves generate tax
money to make up for whatever
revenues are lost by giving up the
unitary system.
But if the answer is no, then
Bennett would be proven correct -
the companies would simply escape
paying their fair share of California
freight. Sodroppingall forms of the
tax might be too risky a proposition
with $300 million a year at stake.
The best course? A partial retreat
similar to what Cory suggests. fol-
lowed by a total waiver of the tax ifa
partway measure produces important
new investment.
TbomH Elias 11 a S..Ota
Moalca-bHed columal., on date
J11ae1.
Tass reporter revealed as spy
WASHINGTON -The Kremlin
has devo1cd considerable energy to
denouncing the Voice of America and
jamming its broadcasts to Eastern
Europe. But the Soviets unwittingly
did VOA a favor last year. Here's the
untold story:
For 33 years. VOA correspondents
had been denied access to con-
gressional press galleries. Lona-
standing rules barred government
officials from accreditation -a
move intended to prevent them from
using press passes to buttonhole
members of Congress in the Capitol
corTidors.
But correspondents for foreian
government press aaencies -like the
British .Broadcanina Corp. and the
Soviet news qency, Tass -were
exempt from the exclusionary rule.
The correspondents• committee that
handles accreditation bad ICICeoted
them at the u~na of the State Dc~rtment back an lhe l 9"40t.
Enter Boris Ivanov, a TaM co...
rctp0ndent who had held con·
JtCSSiOnal cre<fent.iall for ICVeral
years.
On April 22, 1983. Sen. John East.
R-N,C., sent a Jeuer to Sen. Charles
Mathiaa. R-Md.. chairman of the
"
JACK
AIDEISOI
Rules and Administration Commit-
tee. East stamped bis Jetter .. secret."
He wrote:
.. An employee of the Soviet news
aaency Tw. and an accredited mem·
ber of the Senate~ pJlery, Boria
Ivanov, is in fact an officer or qent of
the Soviet intelliaence eervice, the
KOB.'' The ICnltor added that he
didn't think it was ''appropriate for a
Soviet spy to enjoy the privilean of
the members of a tree pt'a5.'' Then East aot to the point: .. Nor do
I believe that h is appropriate for an
arm of the Soviet proptpnda ma-
chine such u Tass to have represent.a·
lives in w press pllery or the Senate, es~iaUy amce the Voice of America
luclrhu never been aranted sudi .
privilqa on the arounds.~hat it is a
aovemment news qcncy.
EaJt concluded: .. Tau is also •
' _.._._ ....... ~~.....__......_._,~b • ~
f
government news agency, yet tt has
full press credentials in the Senate,
even though some of its employees,
and Ivanov in particular, have long
been known to be intelliacnce officers
under cover."
On May 4, Mathias aot another
letter -from Sen. Jesse Helms,
R-N.C .• and 49 other scn.aton, u~na
a waiver of the Senate rule bannina
VOA correspondents. They pointed
out that denyina VOA pms creden-
tials hampered its oonaressional man-
date to be an "accurate, com-
prehensive and objective source of
news.'' . But, faced with the confrontation
Easl and Helm1 ~re obviou1ly
thrcatmina -Tass va. VOA, Soviet
spies va. American patriots -
Mathlu' commiuee prudently
qrccd to a QOmprOmisc. VOA cor-
respoodenu were accredited. thouah
without a vote in the conae.,ondenu' aMOCia~on and other priviletct the
Soviets enjoy.
And lvanov7 Mathiu relayed
Eut'a c.barses to tht FBI. wt fall,
Ivanov dilCrettly <.tcperted.
J•t!t AMuNlt a • 1TM1ca-4 tWmultt.
The Perez-Astorp yarn is il-
lustrative ofourcountry's tendency
to consort -as they say down at the
parole board-with known crimi-
nals. Wearedoingthesamctbingin
El Salvador. where yet another
high-ranking military official also
reportedly on the CJA dole is, as they
say', linked to the Death Squads. But
worse than that, we are continuing to
find ourselves on the wrong sides of
1hese fights. lnstead of standing for
economic. social and political prcr
gress. this nation finds itself per-
sistently allied with the forces of
oppression.
That was the case with Nicaragua's
Somoza regime. In the 1930s, the
United States placed a Somou at the
head ofthcAmerican-orpnized na-
tional guard and it promptly killed
revolutionary acneral Augusto Sand-
ino-producing both a martyr and a
na11'le fora revolutionary movement.
However much we may quarrel with
the way Sandino'• hein now rule
Nicarqua, they are pussycau oom·
pared to the reai me they succeeded.
Asa country. we haveiiof only .
co mt a Jona way from our own •
revolution but also from our revol·
utionary values. Somehow the aood-•
ne11of America~u deformed when
ell pressed u fore1sn policy-so .
much so that we arievefora thu1 and :
question the CRdcntials of those who:
in any way miaht have killed him. • • We can choose to see Nora Atio,..:
aaeitherafreodom fiahterora '
terrorist, rememberi111, tbOU.lh. lhat
in herowncountryabe 111 betolne. .•
She need not be \bat in oun. but if we;l
rcftate to ICCftdit her u Nicanaua'a •
ambuudor, wedoeomethinafar :
wonethan mereijdishonorber. We I
continue to do what wehavedoaelll.
alona-honorherformercnemyu ~
well.
~C....••,,,...19' ....,.,
...
.,
Wherewaathe
cra11Mt~
you ever found
your cer keya? 82. ........ ~~------........ ~ ..
Phobic patterns probed
.
to prevent recurrence
Panic and anxiety disorders
are biochemical in origin
By SUSAN MONAHAN
D...,. Noe e..,11111andeolt
Bill was sitting in the barber chair awaiting his tum
when, without warning and for no apparent reason, he was
overcome by terror. He began to hyperventilate and
tremble, his legs turned to rubber and his heart raced. More
than anything else, Bill felt an urgent need to escape. But
from what?
"Bill was diagnosed as having a panic disorder," said
Dr. Noel Drury, staff psychiatrist at Hoag Memorial
Hospital. Newport Beach.
Drury and
Dr. Douglas
Khan, chairman
of the department
of psychiatry,
were explaining
some of the causes
underlying
"Anxiety, Panic
and Phobic Dis-
orders' to an au-
dience in the Hoag
conference center.
The reason
most of them were
attending became
obvious when
Khan asked,
"How many of
you have felt
anxiety?" A
phalanx of raised
hands was the
reply, and many
people also re-
spond ed af-
finnatively when
asked about panic and phobias.
Drury said that people who suffer from one of these
disorders don't always admit it. "for many years, these
people were treated as hypochondriacs." he explained.
The problem. however. 1s not only real, 1t may have a
physical basis. "If you get n_othi~g else out of this lcct~re.
understand this; all panic d1so!"ders. many a~~etr,
disorders and many phobias arc b1ochem1cal in ong.m.
said Khan.
Drury said that the biochemistry theory is a
controversial one and not accepted by all psychiatrists.
Khan, however, stated that the theory "that these
disorders can be biochemical in origin has been known by
psychiatry for I 5 years."
The symptoms of an anxiety attack can include
dizziness, shortness of breath, stomach cramps, a tightness
in the throat and numbness or tingling in the finiers and
toes. All the feelings in other words, associated with fear.
The symptoms of a panic attack are similar, said
Khan, "But about 100 times worse."
"It's like havin$ a gun held to your head and having
someone play Russian Roulette wt th you," said Drury.
"But there's no $Un."
Anitiety with no apparent cause is known as
endogenous anxiety -"anxiety from within." Exogenous
anxiety will produce the same physical reactions, but the
attacks arc triggered by identifiable circumstances.
"If the anxiety attack seems to come out of nowhere,
there's an 85 percent chance that it's biochemical until
proven otherwise."
The phobic individual experiences anxiety when
confronted with a specific situation or object. Most people
are probably aware of some of the simple phobias, such as
fear offlying or heights, and a more complex condition -
agoraphobia -has rec1eved a great deal of publicity in the
'80s.
The literal translation. "fear of the marketplace,"
provides a limited description of how immobilizing this
phobia can be. The agoraphobic person may be so terrified
of public places that he or more likely she (the majority of
victims are women) becomes virtually imprisoned at
home.
A number of psychological theories have been
advanced to citplain tbis disorder, but Khan said that,
"more than 65 percent of the people with agoraphobia
began with a panic disorder."
What happens. he uplained, is that the panic attacks
become associated with the situations in which they occur.
Fearing a recurrence of the attack, the person tends to
avoid the situations.
"lfit happens while you're driving, you won't drive; if
1t happens while you're shopfing, you won't shop; it it
happens when you step o ut o the door, pretty soon you
won't step out of the door."
There is some good news, however. If the phobia bas
evolved from a panic disorder, "it is eminently treatable
1 HELP YouRSELF
-- --L -_"'!IO._ .....-.
with medicine," said Khan.
A number of drugs can be used to correct the
biochemical imbalance, although only one of them -
alphazolam -is an anti-anxiety medication. The others,
includina phenelzine and imipramine, are
anti-depressants.
There is no test to determine whether an anxiety or
phobic disorder is biochemical; the diagnosis is a clinical
one, based on an evaluation of the symptoms and an
examination of the family history. (There is evidence for a
hereditary tendency in biochemical disorders, said Drury.)
"Non-biochemical disorders fit a pattern that is
reproducible," said Khan. "It happens every Monday
morning or when confronting the boss ... the cause is either
known to you or operates on a specific schedule."
Even 1fthe anxiety or panic is curtajled by medication,
the fear of having another attack may reinforce the phobia.
Bchavorial therapy may be a supplementary treatment in
these cases. and can also be used to trcaJ phobias which do
not have a biochemical basis.
If that is unsuccessful, psychotherapy can be used to
help the patient deal with unconscious conflicts which may
be manifesting themselves as anxiety or phobias.
Khan stressed, however. that therapy cannot replace
medication ifthe disorder 1s physical. "You cannot control
your biochemistry by an effort in thinking."
For more infonnation about Hoag Hospital's free
lecture series. call 760-5923.
HANG-UP HIDDEN?
They're closet------------
neurotics. They look
wonderful most of
the time and arc
often the envy of
others. No one would
ever guess they have
a problem. let alone
LINDA
Atw1
t~I; .,,
an addiction. But, ad-••••••••••••• dieted they are ... to
shopping..
Just as an alcoholic dnnks and a foodaholic eats to
reduce anxiety, so docs a shopping addict shop.
Everyone does it sometimes and while narcissistic
personal involvement can be fun and pleasurable. too
much of the good things can lead to pain, discomfort and
even ruin.
A vcrage consumers spend about 10 percent of their
personal spendable income on clothes and accessories.
The most severely addicted may spend 90 percent or more.
and indeed, may go into serious debt in search of the
physiological high which may be associated with a
shopping spree.
The typical shopping addict is female. att~active,
highly visible, lonely, often has unrevealed unhappiness in
her life and is driven toward impossible perfection.
She may secretly believe that her status rn life depends
on looking perfect and fashionable. For her. looking good
has always been a singularly major source of personal
success.
Men arc not immune. They also like to look good and
while they also may buy too many clothes. their
overspending is more likely to take the culturally more
masculine forrn of bu yin$ cit pensive automobiles, pickihg
up restaurant tabs or buying rounds of drinks at a favorite
bar. The psychology, however, remains the same.
Shopping addicts are not just looking for a new
bauble. They may shop to control anxiety or to ward off
depression. They may shop to kill time. For some,
shopping is the focal point of their social life.
The shopping mall has been called "the new town
square" -the place to go when there's nothing to do. The
usually attractive shopping addict has the opportunity to
parade her latest purchases in front of friends and others.
We've all been there; we've overshopped and
overspent to avoid pain, but when the pleasure of shopping
becomes a comJ)ulsive need, sooner or later I\ can interfere
with other aspltts of living. And then ... you may want to
change.
The cure for addiction or compulsive behavior
requires the discovery of new sources of pleasure.
Learn a new skill, or develop an old one. Commit
more of your time each day 10 some project outside of
yourself. Remember to plan shopping time into your week
selectively and to stay out of the stores otherwise.
There's power and control in understanding what's
~ost likely to be happening in your life just prior to an
mappropnate sho1;>ping spree.
When the gomg gets tough. some of the tough go
shopping. while others get going 10 find substitute sources
of gratification.
Dr. Algaz1 is a psychologist and mamage counselor in
Corona de/ Mar. Address any questions to Linda Algazi,
Ph.D .. c/o Daily Pilot. p.o. Box 1560 Costa Mesa 92626.
Fun's all in the family
Afonzos serve.a zesty menu
to aid counseling agency
By ANN CONWAY
~ ..... C«r11111"'9ei1t
If family happiness can be measured by cooperative
output. the Alonzos arc ecstatic.
Lee, Joyce, Jerry and Sandy AJon10, owners of la
Costa restaurant in Huntington Beach. created the
generously portioned Mexican dishes served at La
Familia Auxiliary's recent fund-raising luncheon and
fashion show.
La Familia is the Huntington Beach-based support
group of Family Service Association of Orange County,
which offers marriaae. family, aroup and individual
counselina on an ability-to-pay basis.
More than I 00 membcn and guests sipped
refreshments and then dineq on hot bean dip laced with
chorizo and salsa (Joyce's special family recipe)and
family-size tostadas with flan for dessert. More than one
guest observed that the Alonzos' effort proved it wasn't
only families who played togetherth!lt stayed together.
During the luncheon. auxiliary members Marlon
Harrl1on, Rath Otta, Dee Ewert a nd Dell Jobn1oa (so
young looking, she is almost unbelievably the mother of
member Gloria Hyams) modeled casual wear from
Beach n' Resort T hings of Long Beach.
The S 1,000 from this event was added to the
proceeds from the group's Christmas nut sale, last fall's
"Eggciting" brunch and the recent fish fry hosted by
ways and means co-chairman Undy Smltb. La Familia
raises almost $9,000 yearly in support of FSA.
Amona those cnJoyi na the south-of-the-border
fund-raiser were Joyce BroWD, president, and fellow
officers Mary H•m•, Jalle Sauders, Carol Perry,
Pew GlblOD, Ju Lalley, Uada Fredertk1en, Helen
SMpllerd and Jestlca Ualack.
Also present were Adelaide Damm, Monona
Bnu11. Coule Cottle, Barbara Davia, Joyce Gold-
a ... , Maey Hime, Gert Easterday, Helen Grace (of
chocolates fame) Hele• Ortard,8'erl Ro11, Vera
Mlulek, Aadne 01 ... , Gall Roacla, Jean Smith, Earla
S.ow, Say MJluo, Mary Elin Hoaeal, Ed and Mlm
Strickler, Dr. Robert Cl.ae and Jack Beary (manager
ofMeadowlarkaolfcoune).
..
I
Patti Saanden and daaiJlter-tn-law, Jalle,
admired OlJ1Dplc·ln•plrid •port.wear oatflt
modeled by au:llluy member Del Coleman.
I • I
Irvine devic@·
aids surgery -
V cry young Chinese children, who until recently have
been excluded from the life-saving benefits of open-bau1
surgery, now have a new lease on life, thanks to an lrviDe
connection.
On a recent visit to Beijing, a Southern California
medical team introduced their Chinese coUcaaues to new
techniques for performing open-heart suraery on l l
children, only two of whom were older than 2 years.
According to the team, l 25,000 Chinese babies ane
born each year with heart problems but corrective SUJ'ICl'Y
is delayed until the children are at least 2. Many, says~
member Nancy Bailey, die before surgery is availab.k to
them. Such SUJlery has been commonly performed in the
United States since the late l 960s.
Because this surgery allows only small marain• lw
error, the more than S 125,000 in donated 1UJ'lial
equipment and pharmaceuticals that accompanied d9e
group to China included a new product -Gas-ST AT -
from Cardiovascular Devices Inc., of Irvine. This device.
connected 10 the loop of tubing that links the patient to tbe
external hcan-lung bypass machine, monitors the coocen-·
tration of critical blood p.scs, giving doctors continuous
information on· both the patient and the machine.
The smalJ volume of blood in an infant's body, Ult
the quickness of pbysiologial changes, make it especialty
important that the surgical team have a constant readout
on blood gas content so any adverse trend can be corrected
before it becomes life-threatening.
Without Gas-ST AT, the patient's blood must ~
sampled periodically and tested in the hospital's la~
tory. a process that takes about 15 minutes.
The medical team, which left all its medicaf
equipment in Beijing, was invited to return next year to
check on the success of the newly learned techniques.
Hepatitis
symptoms,
types differ
Q. I bavt beard
datrt art different
types of btpatltlt. If I
or a friend develop B
11epatau.. ,, u 1m-RENNIN portanl to now wllat
type It lt? How does c
"e doetor Identify ASSIDY
wllat type I bave? ••••••••••••• A. liepatitis is a
viral infection of the It ver caused by one of the group of the
viruses that can be indentified by testing a blood specimen.
Symptoms of the disease vary remarkably. They ranee
from little or no apparent signs of illness to severe sickness
requiring hospnaJizatton and even, on occasion. causina
death within a few days.
The usual symptoms art gencrahzed weakness,
fatigue, loss of appetite. low p-ade fever, muscle and joint
aches. nausea. vomiting. diarrhea or consupation. Oo-
cas1onally upper respiratory "cold like" symptoms such as
nasal dtscharge. cough and sore throat occur. Smok:en
tend to d~velop a distaste for tobacco.
Most v1ral hepatitis is caused b)' one of two viruses
classified as hepatitis A and hepat1t1s B. The manner in
which the vtrus 1s transmitted from one person to ano\ber
and the symptoms caused by_ each of the hepalltis viruses is
similar. In fact. these diseases sometimes are so similar
that the type of infection (A or 8) can only be determiAed
by a blood test.
Both diseases can be lnlnsmitted by cont.am.in..sed
needles. or by fecal-oral contamination, either by di~
contact with the body secretions {saliva, feces, sperm~
vqinal secretions) of an infected tndividual or by in ·
contact through catina contaminated food.
Hepatitis A is usually transmitted by the fccal«al
route. Hepatitis 8 is transmitted by contaminated nc:edlet
or contaminated blood products. However hepatitis I ii
also commonly spread by oral and 1e1uaJ cootad and m
a high prcvalenClC amona intravenous dnaa u1er1 aDd
homosexuals.
Both forms of hcpat1t1s arc V1ral diseues for wtaicla
there ts no definitive trutment. But an in~ ind.Jvidml
may develop deb1lit.at1na symptoms •hicb cu .....
weeks. 1t is 1mponant that a penon with bepatitil rem '
under a phys1C\8n'1 care and undcrsocs periodic hlr
functions tc t
Physicians need to d1qnote whether patiellta .._
t)pe A or typt 8 beoetius to ddmnine proper prQ4e1t1i1
for other mdtv1d1.1als who may have been cxpOled • ..
diteUC. Th11 hcl~ mimm1u the IP"ad of beoatitiL
Protective 1~1on i recommended · b I* II• havina acovc 1nt1mate con'8Ct ot UviQs ia t.M
boutcbold Wlth an individual who dcvdopl laelathil}
you cocounltr uch .sym{>&om• or you u~ Mi ~·
with• pmon with b(p&tiUS. you~• row•= fOfblood t t1na1.nd evaluation of)'OUr DOid for 11 an~or such a prophylactic irUcdioa..
J ~nNn ·r.r. M.D .. ~ ._.,. _,
tmt~ncy mtdiano m c.o.i.. ese •
b c
I
-
•
Cause of epilepsy unknown in half of the cases
of <lumaae done to the temporal lobe during birth. Th~
can also accompany high fever. ln older people, ep1leps>
commonly results from a brain tumor. head injury, ltJdnry
failure or other specific trauma.
However, in the other 50 percent of cases, the causes
Que•iions 1bou1 epilepsy aaswered by Arnold Starr, rem~in a ~ystery .. Fortunately. due to rap~d advances in
M .D., prokuor and chainnan of the UC Irvine College of medical science, this n.umber 1s on th~ dechn.e. ,
Under certain conditions
seizure likely for anyone
M«liciae'i Department of Neurology. Alt~ough ther~ as son:ie ~enet~c basis . for ones
Q. Dutq a receat collese fraternity bdtlatlon In propensity. to expenencc ep1leptfc seizures, v1rtual1Y. all -*' 1 wu deprived of sleep for aeverel days 1 human beings will get such attacks 1;1~der the nght • cond1taons. Rob the body of sleep, nutnt1on. water and ·~ • 1faort blackoat accompanied by• powerftll other physic.al necessities, and the nervous system may
Miiare. I wu &Un to a doetor wlao 11.ld I bad bad an have no other way to resr_>nd than to go into seizure. The
atiack of epileptJ. Does tlal1 meH I bave • cbronlc stn:ssof your"initiation' appearstofallintoth1scategory.
"8eue! .wut are my cu.aces ~f laav~g another attacll? However. from your description alone. 1t is imposs-
A. fint, understand that epilepsy lS not a disease. but 1ble to make valid medical diagnosis. I therefore suggest
merely a symptom. It 1s a ~izure disorder that can take )OU )t.'C your doctor. After tests. he should be able to tell
many forms and have a vanety of causes. .,.0 u 1l ~uch episodes are likel) to reoccur.
From 3 to 5 percent of the population expencncc · Q. Wbat are tbe dJfferent forms of epilepsy?
some sort of epileptic seizure dunng thC"1r ltves. One in 200 .\ Sncncc now recognizes several ba$ic form!> ol the
people experience repeated attacks. S\ ndrome·
In about half lhC' cases of ep1lcps). the causes are Gencral11ed -Also known as "Grand Mal," this t>pe
known. In younger people, the attacks are often the result of epalep\> 1\ characterized b) blackouts accompanied by
violent hak1ng of all pans of the body.
Absence sel11res -Sometimes called .. Petite Mal,"
this seizure takes the form of ~ssive staring, in which the
individual is out of touch wtth the immediate environ-
ment.
Temporal lobe -These involve stereotyped, repeti-
tive behavior such as the smacking of the lips or hand
movements done out of context.
Focal -These are major seizures that affect only one
part of the body, such as an arm, a leg or the head.
Myocloolc -This variety 1s characterized by the
symmetrical Jerking of the arms or legs.
A small segment of epileptics ar"C said to be
"photosenstive." This means that their seizures can be
lriagered by nash1ng lights of a specific color and
frequency.
Q. b tbert a cart for t pllep1y?
A. Because epilepsy 1s not a disease, there is no cure.
However. there are a variety of treatments, dependmg on
the nature of the disorder. In most cses. the seizures c.an be
controlled by using any one of about a dozen medicines
now on the mvket. In a few caSC1, suracry can help. There is also a voup of casn for which no treatment has yet to be
proven effective.
Althouah we've made considerable headway io
fiJ,htina the disorder, research continues. At UCI, a new
childhood epilepsy retc!V'Ch center is about to open under
the direction of Dr. Ira T. Lott and Or. Nai..Shin Cbu of our
Ocpar1ment of Pediatrics.
Q. Cu epilepsy be fatal?
A. Epilepsy is rarely life-threatening. When 1t 1s, 1l
usually is due to asphyxiation following the swallowina of
the tongue.
If you sec an individual experiencing an· epilepti('
seizure, you can prevent asphyxiauon by romna the victim
over on bis or her side. The tongue cannot be swallowed in
this position. Try to just hold the individual at this anale
until the seizure passes and loosen any restrictive anicTes
of clothing. Do not try to fight or restrain epileptics. nor
fol'('t anything into their mouths.
Following a seizure. epileptics are likely to be very
confused for several minutes. Don't worry. This usually
passes of its own accord.
MAKING SENSE Sharlngpiropefty tft:Je unfair THIS GADGET
OUT OF SCENTS OEARANN DEARWIFE:"AIMWtheun......_Of~~ UNLOCKS HER
If her perfume (or has after-!> ha ve-) stays on} our mind.
yo1.& can understand why the Monell Chemica l Senses
Center in Philadelphia 1s led by the nose in brain rc!>earch
that seeks the secrets of our sense of smdl.
Smell re<:eptors at the back ot the nose are actuall>
endings of a nerve that runs up tu the olfactory bulb. a pan
of the brain with direct links to the emotion-regulaung
limbic system. The short pathway from scent to sensing is
logical to Dr. Solomon Sn)der. head of neurosc1ences at
Johns Hopkins Uni\Crs11y and a member of the ad\ 1sol)
board of Monell Chemical Senses Center.
"In lower animals, the sense of smell d1s1ingu1shes
friend from enem y and plays a kc) role 1n sexual arousal."
he says.
The rok of thC' hmb1c system 1n memo!) may account
for the power of taste· and smell-triggered rccollccuon\.
hke the "remembrances of things past" that washed o'er
Marcel Proust at the taste of a fa"onte childhood cookie -
and filled his voluminous novel.
Snyder's special tnterest: the chemical locks on thl·
back-Of-the-nose cells that permit a whiff of perfume to
trigger a nerve-cell cascade that ends 1n intense desire
"Smell must depend on receptors of exqu1S1te sc nst11\ 11\
and specificity," Snyder says.
"How many smell receptors are there'' ls there one for
Chanel, another for EsteC' Lauder,, For all we know. there
ma,Y be just five types of receptor cells. whose ~ubtk
actlvation patterns enable us to d1 stmgu1sh th ousands of
smells."
LANDERS:Mytu.a... ~tot\lf~.M~tdM<>•tMNqUnyOf KEY TO SANITY band and tare In retaaNno half-ownerlhlp-. How can you be Mn he
our60t. We mar-A won'tohangethewtllllg.m?
rledforloveafter NN · TMf.otthatAIWMatlck~tOOl'thllneme
having lost our on the orlgfnel papere ~thal ~"-4 • lllWYI'
prevtousmatet. We LANDERS toe<Juceteyouonyourpropertyrtghts.GetwtthH1
both had property woman. • • •
and tome money. 0 DEAR ANN LAHOEAS: 8o much junk Mi bMfl
had more than he.) wrtttenlbc>Ut MdrOOm~lnthelMt,_
a.tor• we mwrted hetumed O'rl« '*home and all !!; that rnWonaof men haw de\; ilQl»ed a~ but $10,000 to hts Chldren. I dkt not do that, I decided conlldet~ lmPOtent becMIMthey
~~~ mychttdrenthefrlnhet1tenceatthetlmeof my can.t ~the.-Y~d6d 25~990.
Ai ted that I Nit home and buy another l~a82-yMr-old rMnwhO l910 d9prllilllfVll•1.,.11md ld~IA ... ~ In t he.. • per1le tmplant. I totd him MW I to get r ""'memottet." f wee agreemen on crazy . .,.. Mid Utok>gtlt r9'Uled to apptOV9tt'41
that ecore but kltended to put the new home Jn my open.lion,'° he a. aotna to find one who wtat.
name only. Howwer, Al wu preeent at the dosing and .,..._ teM mkfdle..iged men to grow up. That
somehow maneged to get f\lS name on the papersaa a wMm-blm-thank-you-ma'em number~ did 1n
Jofnt owner. Of COUtM, thta wustupkt on my part, but coee.ge 11 out of date. I wouldn't go beck to ~t
I thought husb~automaucatlywere entitled to an stand• with young atud8 for .. thegokt ln Fort Knox.
Interest Ina wife •property. When lr.ceff at aAtMt btdr~. I mwthaw
Al then mact.1newwltt"1d teftttatf hls ftnanclal been crazy too. Gettn my corner wlJlyou Ann?-
holdlngs to meand Mlfto .. chlldren. That meant hie ROANot<.E. VA. • '
holding• con8'atedof hit $10,000 "1d half lnter•t tn DEAR RO; f've atwa)lt been there. You're uwone myhouM-~ltworthSI0,000 -.gMng_~lma whohatchanQldcortWt lln'tftr~beehOW
total of SA0,000plUeS10,000, Whloh eq"*'•'50.000. If common eenMcan tmprcM, the que1tye)f fh1
Al dlel first, I wHl g9t '25,000 lnltead of $40,000 tl'Mlt • • •
wasrealtymlMI lt'•not ~wyi.,IWOOfnllWSow. ~
When I~ "*out. I htt the cettlng. Al changed tM flrsttkrMMtNnd • .A.cqualrtt ~wlfh U.
his wilt and left me ttMt houee, whiCtt wa mine anyhow. guld4llln#. ANdAM ~ boOlcJet. ''&.owarS.
Everything wfll be .. right lfl outtlYe Nm. If I don't, AJ and How to Tflll tMOtlfel91roe. "FOl'acopyt nWlll 60
walks off wtth $40,000 of my chldren'a money. Is thla cents Md a long, -*4Jdd11111 d Mwilol» wtth ,.aw
I was thumbing -------------through one of those
catalogues of gadgets
when the words
caught my eye,
"NEVER WASTE
ANOTHER
MINUTE SEARCH-
ERMA
Bo11Ec1
ING FOR YOUR ·---------CAR KEYS!"
Arc they serious? In the years I have p~ffied away
looltin,forthe keys to my car, I could havequahfied for the
downhill slalom in the Olympics. I could have written
"Gone with the Wind" in longhand. I could have fixed
myself up and married above me. I could have built a
Pol'$Che from a kit.
Never has one woman spent so much time pursuing
something that cannot walk and is always in the same place
in which she left it. And I'll bet you cannot guess how many
yea rs in therapy it has taken me to admit that!
For a long time, I honestly thought I was losing my
grip. The kids would be in the car fighting over the
windows and I'd be running around like a crazy person
trying to fi nd the car keys. They always turned up, but in
the most unlikely places. I found them once ~n the ~P
dish in the shower. on top of the beach towels in the hnen
closet. in a diaper on the baby. in the sewing basket. the
clothes hamper, stored with the Christmas tree lights and
in the yellow pages on the refrigeration page. I once found
them in a milk carton in the garbage can.
Snyder calls thC' sense of smell ··an elaborate
pattem-recogn121ng system" !hat could hint ho~ the brain
1uclf 1s organtzcd. Noone could convince me those little suckers weren't
-----------------fiMMMMM~AiiiAiiii'iifr==================jl mobile.
My husband bought me one of those little wooden
plaques with hooks to hanJ by the door that said ··KEYS''
on 1t. I remember laughmg and saying, "Who are we
kidding here? You know and I know that little hook can't
keep keys from wallong!"
falr?-SECONOWIFE ~ttoAnnLMt-.,P.O.~ 11Hl.Ch#catl0~111.
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In time, reason returned. I think it occurred the day I
had all the kids at the shopping center and forgot on which
~~;;;;;;~~~~~====.;;;=~~;;=:==l color level I parked the car. One of them said, ··Mom not
r;: only can't find her car keys, she can't even find the car!" •************ I know now that it's me. If God had meant for me to
drive a car. He would have given me i~nition key fingers .
It's not going to get any better. I will go through life
emptying out sofa cushions,' dumping handbags in the • •
• • • • •
YOVTOOCAN
it middle of the floor and standing in the middle of a room
..... shouting. "If I have to come and get you, you'll be sorry!''
,,,,. But when I saw, "NEVER WASTE ANOTHER
Jt MINUTE SEARCHING FOR YOUR CAR KEYS," I
it became a believer again. The gadget comes in two parts, a
..... finder and a receiver. The key ring emits an electronic beep
,,,,. and flashes a light for six seconds when I'm within I 2 to IS
it feet of it with ihe finder.
it That little gadget is going to save my sanity -just as B £ A CHAM p JON Jt jp;;;soo;;;;;;n;;;;;;a:;;;:s:;;:;I ;:;;;fin;:;;;d;:;;;m;:;:y;:;;;ca;:;r;:;k::;;ey;:;s ;:;to;:;a;:;tta;:;c;:;;;h :;;;:to:::;:lh:::;:e;:;;;rccc=1v=e=r =· . =· =,
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. . . .;
-'--L.-
Wallace Beery bullied his
way to tne first Oscar 'tie'
As a result, we now-have
Price, Waterhouse auditors
By BOB THOMAS
A11ocla&ed Pre11 Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP)-During the 56·year history of
the Academy Awards. the Oscars aivcn for acting tied
twice -one legitimate, one IC$S so.
In 1969, Katharine Hepburn, who appeared in "The
Lion in Winter." and Barbra Streisand. who was in
"Funny Girl," were both given Oscars as best actress. Vote
counters tallied the ballots several times to assure
themselves that it was a genuine tie.
In I 932, the honor for best actor was bestowed on
Frcdnc March for"Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" and Wallace
Beery for "The Champ." But was it truly a tic?
"They announced the awards early m those day, and
I learned that I was the winner," ·March said in an
interview at that time. "But then Wally Beery told Louis B.
Mayer that he wouldn't sign a new contract at MGM
unless he won the Oscar. Since Mayer was one of the men
who r:in H nllvwnnc1 W:illv ""'hi~ w:iv"
LT ONIGHT'S TV
-8;00-
60 D NEWS
DCHIPS G POLICE WOMAN
tD THREES COMPANY
g) HAWAII RVE-4
fD MACNEJl I LEHRER
NEWSHOUR '1i> AMERICAN GOVEAAMEHT
CISNEWS
l!IABCHEWSQ
(JI NBC NEWS m DeCK VAN DYKE
!H).MOYIE
• t "O'Hara·s Wife" (1982) Edwatd
Asner. Mariette Hlftley
$ UOV1£
• • ,,._ "The 0u1Sldet'S (1983) C
Thomas Howett. Matt Ottton
!Z)M0VI£
• • • "Tomofrow" (19721 Rober1
Duvall, Olga Bethn
-8:30-
tD AUCE ~FACES OF CULTURE
N8A BASKETBALL
®l TAXI a WHEEL Of FORTUNE
mTHATGIRL
C MOVIE
***'" 'Tno" (1951) Jean Stm·
moos. MIChaet Rennie
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D Hl!ICNEWS 8 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
DABCNEWSQ G FAHTASYISlAHD
(f) NEWS tD THREE'S COMPANY
Q) WHEEL Of FORTUNE
UllBUSINESS~
mHOVA
®) E.NTEAT AINMEHT TONIGHT
~LOVE CONNECTION m ORANGE COUNTY KIWANIS
BOWL
0 l ON SPORTS SPECIAL: G'Ol.E
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0 ot FAMILY FEUD
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tD ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Q) MOVIE * *'" "Attack On Te<ror The FBI VetSU$ The Ku KkJJt Klan" (Part 2)
( 1975) Ned Beatty. John Beck
&>NOVA
~ SPORTS AMERICA
mBOLDONES
Cl MOVIE
**'•"High Road To China" (1983)
Tom Setlecil. Bess Armstrong.
(H)MOVIE ** "The Unseen" P981) Barblfa
Bach. Sidney Lasslcll (QJMOVIE • *'~ "W1111ou1 A Trace" ( 1983) Kate
Nelligan, Judd Hlr5dl
SI PAPE.A CHASE
ZJMOVIE
"Nudo 01 Donna' (1982) Nino
Manlredt 'l
-1:30-D ®I A.KA PA81.0 G TIC TAC DOUGH
(!) LOVE BOAT m P .... MAOAZJME
-t:OO-IJ CJ) rTT THEA TEfl
U ~AIPTIDE G Q1) THREFS COMPANY
OHEWS m MERV GRIFRN
fD AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE m MONEY -HOW TO MAKE rT
[S' l.EHA HORNE: THE LADY ANO
HEHMUSte
-9:30-D [QJ SHAPING UP
(!)MOVIE
• • • "Thundef Bay'" ( 1953) James
Stewart. Jotnne Dru.
~ MAK»«) THE MOST Of THE
..cAO m HORSE RAQHG
-10:00-a ~REMINGTON STEELE
8Ga«l)NEW8 D OJ HART TO HART
GTHESAIHT
mNATURE meoXJHG C·SCTV
H MOVIE
"The Cold Room" ( 1984) GeOtge
Segal. Amanda Pays
tO'MOVIE
Shortly af\crwacd. tne pre tiaious accountina firm of
Price. Waterhouse, which had been auditina the Academy
of Motion Picture Arts ond Science's books since its
founding 1n 1927, took over the award voting. The secret
ballot has prevailed ever since.
But the Academy remained casual about rclcastnf the
results. informina the press beforehand to faciJllate
late.night deadlines. ln 1940, guests arriving for the
banQuct at the Biltmore Bowl were P.:cetcd with early Los
Angeles Times editions headlining: ·'GONE WITH THE
WIND' SWEEPS OSCARS."
"That was the start of the scaled envelopes," says
Frank Johnson. the Price. Waterhouse man responsible
for keeping the Academy vottng sacro51V\Ct. He and his
associate, Steve Kaplan, arc the only ones who know the
results before the envelopes are opened onstage at the
Music Center.
During most of the year Johnson works for
engineering and aerospace clients. But on April 9 he'll be
in a tuxedo and spotlight. dispensing the all-im poru.nt
envelopes.
'"The Academy prepares the ballots and the
envelopes, along with the membership list," said Johnson
in an interview with The Associated Press. '"We scan the
hst. test a number of the oames to make sure they are
Q) TOP 40 VIDEOS m DICK VAN DYKE rc1MOV1E
• •'; "A Family Upside Down'
( 1978) Heten Hayes, Fred Ast11rt
Z)MOVIE
•• "The Sword And The Sorcerer
( 19821 Lee H0tsJey. Kalhleen Beller
-11:30-
1) (I) MAGHUM, P.I.
O ~TOHIGHT 8 TWILIGHT ZONE 8 ®l ABC NEWS NGHTUN£
I IN 8EAACtt Of ...
ARCHIE BUM<Elr8 PLACE e 8TAEET8 Of SAN FRANCISCO
S) LATBIGHT AMERICA m 700ClUB
$1MOVI£
•• • ..,"Without A Trace" (1983) Kate
Nell19an. Judd Hirsch
-11:50-
( 11 l NOT NECESSAAILY THE
MOVIES -12:00-
0 Al.FRED HITCHCOCK
PAESENT'S
D EYE ON HOU YWOOO 0 MOV1E • * • "Two For The Road" (1967)
Audrey Hepburn, Albert Finney
Cf) IHOEPENOENT NETWOAt<
NEWS tD THICKE Of THE NIGHT
~MOYE-
• • •;, "LOYtn' MOiiy" {1974) Blythe
Danner. Anthony Perkins
< Ol ON THE MOVE
-12:20-
(11 J HOU. YWOOO FRENZY: RACING
FOR THE 8'00EBT AWARD
-12:30-a 18 LA TE NIGHT wtn4 DA VIO
LETTERMAN D ~T RECORO ALBUM
COl.l..ECT10N
DLA. TODAY
ROWAN & MARTIN'S LAUOH·IN
Q) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
fll) GROWING YEARS
0 ROCKON
-12:40-
1) MCCLOUD
C MOVIE
t t "~JOna· (1980) Fiona RIChmond.
Anthony Steel
-12:50-
H MOVIE
•• "Hot Toueh" (19821 Wayne ROQ·
ers, Marie·Frances Ptsier
-1;00-
D MOVIE * * * "Cape Feat ( 1962) Gregory
Peck. Robetl M1tehum
DMOVIE * • 1.; "Jarrett" ( 19731 Glenn Ford,
Anthony Quayle
g)MOVIE • * * "The Roman Spnng Of Mra
Stone" (1961) Vivien Leigh. W11ren
Beatty
mGEHESCOTT
IOJMOVIE • • * • "My Fair Lady · ( 1~) Rex Hamson. Audrey Hepburn
f'Z)MOVIE * * "National Lampoon's Movie
Madness" ( 1981) Robby Benson.
Richard Widmark
-1:10-
S MOVIE * * "The Sensuous Nurse"· I 1979)
Ursola Andress. Ou11to Oe4 Prete
-1:30-a HEAL TH AElD tD All IN THE FAMILY
3 HEWS
-2:<JO-
I) CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH
tDHEWS
-2:10-
C MOVIE • • * ·~ "The Man Who Would Bt Kjng" ( 1975) Sean Connery. Mlcilael
Caine.
DNEWS m MOVIE
-2:30-
* • "Blondie s Luclly Day ( 19461
Penny Sulgletoo. Arthur Lah
tHl S MOVIE * • '" 'The Outllders" t 19831 C Thomas Howell. Matt Diiion rz MOVIE
Nudo 01 Donna" I 1982) Nino
Manfredi
-3;00-
D MOVIE
• • • Souls At Sea (19371 Gary
Cooper Geo<ge Raft
CD WKRP IN CINCINNATI
Q) ®l PEOPl.E'S COURT
fl!) WILD, WILD WORLD OF
AHMALS • • • "FlaShdance" t 1983) Jennlle< 1;::===========================;1
Beals. M1ehael Nouri.
f H l HOLL YWOOO FREHZY: RACING
FOR ntf BIGGEST AWAPIJ
-1:00-
1) THE AMERICAN PARADE O ~THEA-TEAM 8 MOVIE * * * • The 39 Steps" ( 1935) Rob-ert Donat. Madeleine Carroll
D ®l FOUL-uPS. BlEEPS& BlUNOERS 0 JOKER'S WILD
(f) SOAP
' Z l CHARLES CHAMPLIN TALKS
wtn4
-10:30-
Q) IHOEPEHOEHT NETWORK
NEWS
Ell) GOTT A MAKE THIS JOURNEY:
SWEET HONEY IH THE ROCK
-11:00-
1) CJ D (I) Q1l O! NEWS 8 TAXI G ROWAN & MARTIN'S LAUGH-IN
m w·A·S·H
From the first laugh, you11 be hooked!
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LUXURY THEATRES
U :JO 2:40 4 :SO 7•10 1:20
THI /ll p1~rts PU
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Just don't call them when you're in trouble.
JPIUCIW
What an Institution!
NOW Pl.JYINC!
WIUI 879mO
PACIFIC·s AHAH(IM Of! IN
UU 5295339
MANN BREA PLAZA
CtSTA llSA 1514184
COWARDS TOWN CCNIER
lL Ttlt ~81 5880
(OWAROS SAOO.l8"CK
lA ..... (213) 691-063 3
NI( f ASHIOH SQUARl
"FOR POOPLE WHO LONG FOR MOVIES
11IA T MlE BETTER. RICHER, AND MOD!
EMOO'IONALLY SATl.S FYINO..:RACINO WITH Tff t; MOON' IS THE ANSWER TOA
PRAYER ... WONDERFUL ST\JFF ... A POWERFUL PILM." lllft~1091'
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EOWAROS MISSION V1£10 MAll
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COWARDS NEWPORT
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WUT•STll 891 3693
PACIFIC'S It WAY 39 DR IN
NO~PLAYING
•
I
---=--°""" -··
I
Wallace Beery Fredric March
leg1t1mate. Then we put the ballots in maiJ bags and take
them to the post office ourselves ...
Ballots for out·of-state members are maiJed a few
days earlier, so they'll have more time to meet the
deadline. Ballots and envelopes arc numbered to prevent
counterfeit in,&. As the ballots return. they are pJac.ed each
day in the office safe. Those arriving after the deadline arc
discarded. Some members deliver their ballots by hand to
beat the deadline.
This year the poll closes on Apnl 3. Six people take
pan in the counting. which 1s usuall)' finished on the
Saturday before the awards. For two days. only Johnson
and Kaplan know the results.
"No. I don"t talk in my sleep," Johnson said. "My
wife. Anne. love~ films and 1s immensely curious. but ...
she never asks. It's always fun to know the result when all
the speculation 1s for another candidate. For 1ostance.
"Chariots of Fire' two years ago."
Johnson attends the Sunda) rehearsal at the Music
Center. providing dummy envelopes for presenters. On
Monday Kaplan types the cards with the winners. If a
presenter has had difficulty reading at the rehearsal. the
winner is hand-printed in large letters.
"Our building is very security.conscious, so there·s
not much danger of anyone break1n$ in," said Johnson.
"Just to make sure, we put everything in the safe, including
the typewntcr ribbon used to type th e winners. We make a
duplicate set of envelopes.just in case I'm in a car accident
or one set 1s somehow stolen."
On Oscar night, Johnson's main problem 1s getting
the envelopes into the the right hands. The backstage is
dimly lit. and sometimes presenters are changed at the last
moment. A few years ago, Charlton Heston was delayed in
a traffic jam. and Clint Eastwood had to go on for him.
"Only once did a presenter get the wrong envelope."
Johnson recalled. "That was several years ago when
Sammy Davis announced the wrong name for an award.
'"Wan 'til the NAACP hears about this!' he said."
IS
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
edwcrds SOOTH COAST PlAZA
I RISTOl A 1 SUNflOWll 546 2711
COSTA MESA •
Mon· Thurs
6:45, 8:30. 10 15
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• 8orgo1n Motine~1 • o:r.i 'r' • · •
•
MOHOAV llHu SAIURDAY IACulnot(ANOl£W000
All ,.,,0.,,,."'" hto1t S 00 PM "FOOTLOOSE .. {l'G)
IE • Sptc l "••t•"''"" & Hohl 111 00.l"t ~11110 ll lO I 00 ~ lll I 00 10 ~ WA!l6 f'z~) II ACADCMYAWARO NOMINATIONS
lA MIRADA A 1 ROSLC!!A!IS "TWIS Of ElllCMIEl1" (PS)
12 30 3 05 5 45, 8 25. 10 55 "Tll. 1C£ ,_ATES" (l'G)
12 40. 2 40. 4 40. 6 40. 8 40. 10 40 "TIE HOTEL D HWStlM" (~)
12 45 3 15 545, 8 15, 10 45
"Al.LO CAf' (II}
12 30. 2 20. 4 10, 6 05 8 00, 10 00 "SLAPSTICK Of MOTIO Kiii>" (PG)
11 ACAOCMY AWARD NOMIHATIONS
"TWG Of Ol>CADIJO" (PG)
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All OPEN o Oll S1ort 6 4~
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I
' The Pc;Jpe's
'she' in this
presentation
ZURICH, Sw1ucrtaod (AP) -ll is in 2014 AJD.:
Mcmbenh1p of the Roman Catboli( church ha1 Jbruu '°
a fraction ofitt formeraii.e. Vuicao City hu been told otr
to banks and a department &lOrt with the pOpt uk>wed to
keep a small rent·frecapa.rtment. The lhroneofSt. PeW•
is of plastic and His Holinc: 1s11he, born tn LotA~
the Westem capital oflslam.
That about sums up the shock opener of .. The
Amencan Woman Po~··. the latest provocatl\'C piece b)'
Esther Vilar. the ~nlLnC·bom German author of .. Tbc
Manipulated Man,• which was translated into 21
languages and earned her a Lemon Pm:e from the
National Orpnization for Women in the United States.
The onc·hour, one·person play, co-produced by
Zurich's prestigious Schauspielhaus, drew warm applaux
but unOattenna reviews after its German·laniuaie
premier Feb. 18 at the Hecht· Theater. ju.st four months
before Pope John Paul JI 1s to vJsjt Switzerland.
The messaJe revives Vilar's thesis tn ·•The Man1pu·
lated Man.'' wh1ch she labels a ··pamphlet: .. People have a
"fear of freedom" and a "joy in obed1enoe" and onJy a few
have enoullh auts to li ve totally independent hvn.
Pope Joan, played by Mana Becker, one of the most
respected aclresses on the Central European circuit, 1s the
first female pontiff smc.e popes were elected by
church-wide vote under a .. democratization" program
started in 1998.
Her predecessors since the democratization included
an ascetic German. who sold all church property for the
benefit of the poor: a "wild Spaniard" who abolished
celibacy of pnests, lifted church bans on divoroe and
abortion and finally revoked lhe dogma of papal
mfalhbilny; a Bntish-bom profes~ homosexual, and a
Dutchman who mamed a Protestant pastor m an
interfaith gesture that was not appreciated by
non-Catholics.
All th is, according to V1lar's visions. has led the
Roman Catholic Church to a disastrous state with
mosques mushrooming all over the world and austere
sects growing fast while only one-fourth of the 22 million
Catholics still practice -compared with more than 600
million in 1984.
Pope Joan tells about all this in her investiture
address. televised with lhe aid of a commercial sponsor
and regularly interrupted by spots for an msuran<%
company. BuJ midway through her monologue. she
announces ''infallibly" that unbridled freedom m the
church has come to an end.
"I have decided to give you a church where authority
and austerity prevail again. in which 1t 1s possible to tndc
one's independence against the comfort of firm rules ...
and which thus makes you as free as you have never been
as non·behcvers."
•'QUB Of .. as' (J)
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GUFIEL•
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
BIG GEORGE
by Jim Davis
I'P TORN HER IN,
6U'f WM0 ''7 APMli
TO 0E.INO MANCJL("
0Y A GIRL ~oar ?
· 'J-Z1 r
.,_, ... . )·=:-'-":...
"I'm colecting aluminum cons for recyclin',
Grandma. When yours ore empty will
you moil them all to me?''
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
llCI
,,,, . ..:'"' -y
)·1.1 -yjp
"I always make them sing for their supper."
-
'(·~~-~~~ ~ -------. C•.,.-f_,,s..--n: r~":_~~ 32' 11,
"You don't have to.~ow me how you got
rid of the salesman."
PEANUTS
T~IS 15 A 14ARD
TEST, ISN'T IT, SIR?
TlJM8LEWEEDS
4
I
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
IT1SG'OT To BE.AT
:e TEDDY'S T,AVE~N .
~ ~ 11LL B~ BACK IN A
_,, ... FEW MINLITE~,
~..-...}. 0.1<.?
u) "?--9-._.......
STAY AS
LONG Ac; you L/J(t,
Wll.l.IE .
I RUN THROUGH THE
WMOLE TEST. AND SKIP
TME QUESTIONS I DON'T
KNOW AND ANSWER. TilE
ONES r KNOW.
by Charles M. Schulz
JUST WHAT I NEED ..
A BLANK PA6E ~
by Tom K. Ryan
I WISH '(OU \\tXJL.~1'~fJ}(Aftl.T
MAKES Me WAm"R> f'INCH MY-
56'-F, ANP 1 l'RUISE
EASll ... 'f'.
•
Holh vulnt•rablc. South deal~.
NOKTH
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I l'utt I • P ai.11
4 l'u!i Pa" Ublt
l'u11 f'u"' 1'8''1
Op1·n1nl! ll•ad J,11 I. 111 +
dinj( ha' larkt•cl . l'Onfidt•nrt•
11nd you run :wt• from yuur
hunJ lhul lh1•y ;.n• J(oinl( lu
run into u m1,fil. .1 duuhlt• on
"t'•lllt•n·d h1ich 1·ard11 rnn lw
prorilnhlt•. llu t Ln do KO wht•n
lh1• oppont·nl~ h.1vt• l\hown
'ln•nglh I~ l ht• ht•il(ht or
folly .• ind '"'n draw a hlut•
prinl of I ht• h;1nd for
<l1•d;in•r.
~:il,l had no rt•t1,on lo 'II'
pt·rl that ht· rnuld ch•rt .. 11 ,jx
h1•.1rl:., 11'1 alurw lour "''
1l11uhli· 1·.11111· h.1rk 1« haunt
h1m, l11r 1t .1llo"t·d 1h·1·l.1n·r 111
m.1k1· .1 rnnl r.11'1 I h.11 "1111ltl
11t h1·r" ,,,. h.I\ 1• h1•1•n iii·
h'.tll'tl "11 h normal pl.I\
~:\I'll "II h ,I 1•h1h h·ad. h1·
m ufti nut h1· ... 11r1 I h.11 h1· h.1d
'"" tnd ..... 1n 1 h.11 -1111. .and
\\ hl'rl ' h1• I \jll't'lt•tl hi' ,llfl' Ill
CllllLES
Go1E1
ic1•t two murt' trit·k11 hi n
mystt•ry.
w ('lll lt•d lht• j;u·k or d11bi1.
~:u,t won tht• kinic nntl ht•
wa,, in 1•1f1•1·t. 1•nd playt•d\ al
trit•k ont'. lit• l'l>uhl do no ht•I
tt•r th11n t•ontinUl' wilh lht• ...... ur rluh:. and anol h1•r.
l>cclurrr won and cashed lhl'
kinl( or lrumps. Had Wu!!I
folfOWl•d LO lhls lrick. lht•
conlrucl would h:1vt1 bt•t•n u
la ydown.
Whl·n Wt•sl )jhowrd out.
d1·t·lm•r would quilt' likl'ly
hav1• ;1doph·d .1 tosinl( lin1•
had h1· known noth1n1< ahoul
I h1• h.1nd. Thi• n.11 ur.11 way to
l.ll'ld1· I h1· h,1nd '' lo dr.1 w
tr11m1,, ;ind lt·;1d .1 diamond
In" .ml th1· qu1·1·n. pla.vinic w,.,, lor th1• k1n1< l'ht• tluu
hh'. ho" 1•v1•r, rn.1rk1·rl E.1,I
lur .di 1111' rn1"1ni.: t'.1rd:., ... u
0111
S11111F
d1•tolnr.-r <'Ul nboul
nnoth1•r mt•Lhod. Jlt• rumt•
wiLh :1 prt•LLy ~olulion.
Ill-ronlinu1•d wath Lht•
and n low Lrump. •:11111 w<
Lrirk ht• did noL 1•xp1•r\ "
lht• jnt•k, hut hl1 WllS (II
with lo-ciol( ultt•rn11tivr1.
sp;1d1• would nllow d1·cltt
tu 11l11rf lwo diamonds
dummy·, isp;uir11. ;1nd 11 •
rnund would !)(• ;awuy rr
lht· k1nl( .ind dt•durt•r wo
run 11 lo lht• lahlt•'" 11ur
Eit h1•r way. I ht• runt ratl '
1n I h1• h.11(.
N1111• lh.11 ii wouhi not h
~:a,f 111 unhlork lht• jut·k
trump' Th.11 "'oulrl ~im1
m.11.1· lh1· ho.1rd\ l1•n an
1 r~ .. 1 ntl tl1·1·l.m·r woulrl m~
.1 n m 1•rt r1rk
by Jeff MacN
~l~.Dl
BRABBLE
FOR BETIER OR FOR WORSE
l'M <Jl>5f Go1~ To
lRKE.11'4 TH~SE
f'oSffP.8,<JOHN
-COMING""
1Rl51SPR~)INICl=1 I HA~N'i eeEN IN A
L.IBRRR'/ SINCE I WAS
IN UNl'JER&r'f I ,--
y ~ ,,
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
DR. SMOCK
010 Yoo GoTtiERE.
To SiurJ.!? .
Masako was a
Japanese silkworm. r
One day she f
and henceforth
cou ld only produce
polka dot kimonos.
caught measles ...
FE~ ~
~~t*.~ M~~(JJ:IJ
Nt'N? l(D..'I,
FEN'TON ...
·--
... ~D MAN'~
'4.~ LIFE ~ l?UP.'
by Kevin Fag
~O 116"1, OAO ~
l'l .. L u wrrn '{Ou 1w
A M\NU1'~ ! ---~ ~ ---1
~ 1984 U'liltd fHllle S le.l<IC
by Lynn Johnst
by George Lemo
WRli"ING A
KIPS' e ooK 15
SUCH A PtPe .'
..
--
for
up
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE LllTINGI •Ji
CREDIT LINE
llc.'l'
111 n :,~~ NB ' s Fox adds four accountants
A
r'l'r
on
lin·
om
.ild
·Ip
of
11.v
31ly
an
on
Jk
nt
ey
ux
Fox & Co. has added four professional to the staff in
the Orange County office in NeW{>Ort Beach. Jou C.
Parry of Costa 4Mesa was named senior accountant m the
audit department. Parry has been with Fox for more than
three years. Corona del Mar resident Deanne McCubbhl is
now a senior accountant in the tax department. Jeff
Morrt1 of Fullerton was named staff account.ant m the tax
department and Scott H. Homan of Fullerton was named
staff account.ant in the audit department. • • • J ou R. Dugal of Santa Ana has Joined the Charles
Dann Co.'1 Orange County office 1n Newport Beach as a
commercial sales and leasing representative. He was
previously associated with Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. • • • Dick Bentley of A1bwlll/Schoelder lnc.'1 Orange
offi ce has negotiated the $4. 9 million sale of the
Beacb-Garfleld Shopping Center in Huntington Beach.
Bentley represented both the buyer. Marusan, U.S.A. and
Beach Garfield Ltd. Anchor tenants in the
93.000-square-foot neighborhood shopping center arc
Ralpb'1 Supermarket and Sav-on Drugs. • • • John Bernards, president of Off Shore Sportswear,
Inc., has a nnounced the selection of Madeline Zuckerman
Public Relatlona/ AdverU1lng as its corporate public
relations counsel. Off Shore 1s headquartered in Santa
Ana. The Zuckerman agency 1s located in Tusun.
• • •• Microventure, a developer of microcomputer soft-
and distnbutor of compressed aas equ.ipment and scuba
gear, have purchased sites in the Irvine Industrial Center
for new headquarters buildings. KeUey Blue Book
purchased 1.2 acres on Oldfield Drive, a buy valued at
S442,000. Sherwood West, which is alccady located in the
center but is leasing its facility, has purchased a 36,000
square foot parcel to build its own structure. Total value of
the site, located on Chrysler Drive. is $303,000. The Irvine
Industrial Center is located at t~ confluence of the Santa
Ana and San Diego freewa ys in east Irvine.
• • • Elaine Sant'Angelo, pnnc1pal of her own commercial
interior design firm. Design Urbanetlc1, in Fullerton, has
been selected by TMI Equities, Inc. of Irvine. to redesign
TM l's offices. TMI Equities is a subsidiary of Teacben
Management & Investment Corp. of Newport Beach. • •• Richard Bradshaw has been promoted to vice
president of land acqu1S1t1on for Warmington Homes, a
California home building fi rm based in Costa Mesa.
Bradshaw, a graduate of UCLA and Occidental College.
has more than 15 years of real estate and development
experience. He served most recently with Broadmoor
Homes and McKcon Construction. He lives in Lake
Forest. • • • Lynda Morris has recentl y been appotnted marketing
ware for use in the real estate trades. announced reve nues
forthe first fiscal quarter ending Jan. 31 totalled $285.535.
The Irvine-based company's results reflect a sales volume
of25 percent v.eater than that achieved in the entire pri or
fiscal year. said Kenneth J . Gregory, president.
coordinator for lrvi ne-based Back to Basics Environmen-
tal Merchandltlng, Inc. Morris bnngs 10 years of
marketing and merchdandiz1ng experience to the
merchandizing firm . • • • Rolling out the drapes
Stephanie Stewart has been named director of
• • • Kelley Blue Book Company, publisher of automotive
price guidelines. and Sherwood West Corp., manufacturer
personnel and training for The Ritt-Carlton in Laguna
Niguel. a new resort hotel now under construction on the
bluffs overlooking the ocean. Stewart has been associated
wit h AmFac Hotel and Resort in DaJtas.
Donna and Bob MorrlM>n, ownera of the
newat Spring Crat Cuatom Drapery
Center, poee at their apacloua •tore at 1804
Newport Blvd ln Coeta Ilea. Spring Crest,
headquartered ln Brea, baa atora ln ab
countrla. lncludlnf the tJ .s ., Japua, caa-
ada, Auatralla, Soath Africa and Saadl
Arabia. The Coeta Meu couple openeid
their francb.lae a tore earlier th1a montla &Dll
a.re ready for bualneea.
PRESENTING THE UNIQUE
AFFORDABLE AUTO LOAN TM
FROM THE CROCK!R1 ~B~A:_:.:NK.:---
1 .. cw car yo u h --111 VOll get t lC n .
1 . (·rocker Bank can e . . . d still kccp to your Now 11<.: , f r <lrcan1s-an .
nceu -or the car o }'~~c: Auto Loan FJves you :
budget. o ur new Affor a
0 A low initial interest rate. . ·1 >red to you r budget.
hl , p·lyment tat < . 0 A \ow fixed moot ) ' . , . _. ·• \\'ith varying tern1s-. car purch .. t."\t~ 0 iooo(, financing o n nc:~
bo th ~hort and long. , .. hv no t finan ce it
l uy a nc:w t:4tr, w ' <l to
So if you ·re looking t~>, ~. , the: ncx ihility y< >u nee
, •ith the loan that g t\t.'.S) ou
w h doct too. managl' your u ~ .
, . (. t:ktT·~ ne\V ' all the detail~ on ,ro . \ Ask ,o r .. A ~ rdabk Auto Loan at . NlO .
Costa Mesa Main
1845 Newport. Blvd.
I
Costa M esa, CA 92627
(7 14) 646-3291
D yes. I want a cash bonus of $50 or mo re!
Deposit 510,000 in our 1-year or 2·ye.u account loday and you11 l'e<'eive s.50
in c.uh. Bui our bonuses don'I stop there. St;1r1 with il litlle '" SSOO or as
much as $100,000 and you11 get • bonus of up to SSOO!
D yes. I have maturi ng funds to reinvest.
Whet~ you r 32-day, frmonth or »month t1tcount i coming due, your
best move right now Is to lock in today's high bonus tamlngs at
Cre.11 American.
D yes. I wanl a short-lenn, high-yield account.
loolt how bonu\ Int~ bomts eaming.s, even on a 6-monlh .ccount.
And if~ more <>n 1-y~•r and 2-yur IC<'OUnt , whkh mah pt>ffe<1
• IRA Investment,.
Huntin,ton luch
fou.,.,.n v.ltty
Balboa Ptnlnsula
a.lboa ltland
N.wport a..th
Woodbrid1•
La(una BMch
Monarch S., LlcUN Hl&Ult
'"" Juan C9plstraino C•lstrainoluch
San Qemen•
6-Month
Accounl ... .......
2·~.u
Account
Helionetics will
off er premium to
warrant holders
Helionetics. Inc .• has announced a special pre mium
pncc offC1' to holders of the company's over-the-counter
warrants.
The Irvine-based high te<:hnology firm 1s making the ,
offer in ant1c1pation of its common stock being listed on I
the American Stock Exchange. The move 1s also ~
reguiremcnt for the listing of Hclionetics stock on several
foreign stock exchanges.
As part of its offer. the company proposes to g;ive
holders of Its outstanding warrants -for a limited nmc
only -the nght to purchase thr~ shares of Its common
stock at a pnce ofS6.875 per share fo r each 1wo warrants I
exercised. I
Each warrant currently allows the holder to purchase
one share of common stock at an exercise pnce of $6.875
until Dec. 2. 1985. thereafter at SI 0 unltl the warrants
e)(p1rc on Nov. 30. 1987
The offer would permit a holder of 100 Hehoneti~
warrants to pu rchase I 50 shares of Its common stock for s 1.03 1. 25.
Montgomer\ Scott. Inc .. "''II serve as dealer-manag r . ( for the offenng.
CM camera store
sets photo contest
Cal's CamcrasofCosta Mesa 1saccepungentncs frotll
amateur photographers for a photo contest runrudg
through Ma-. I:! to help celebrate NauonaJ Photo Week:
The categones are travel. nature and people. V.'lth
winners· cntnes d1sola~cd in the store
Pnzcs are being donated by major camera manufac-
turers.
.\II cntncs muc;t be color 8 X JO mounted photos on
11 X 14 mount boards. and ma} be reproduced from a
negatn c or slide. Onh one ent" per category 1s permitted.
Funher information oo the contest ma:r be obtained
b:r calling Cal's at 646-9383.
293o/o
RETURN
"itho ut \dditional Ri~k *
Mr.\\'. m a d e Si 80.37 o n a S2.024.63
in\'estm<>n t in jus t 48 days.*
\\ t' ~pt>ria l111· 111 our o"o produr ti..
44Ct;RRENCY BROKER I c."
7 I ·1-/6·14-4350
*Do c ume nta tion on file
10.55 % 9.61 \
•
Yield with bonus• Current r.ite
11.20 ' 10.20 '
Yield with bonu • Current r.ate
11.80 ' 10.80 '
Yield with bonu • Current r•te
Voll( ... .,""'~ inttorf11 00 J kl.,..., ~Of 4(\QWIC
• v..w "'°" """'" 0114tpos~., nooo Wft-. ... h ontt'm! i..-• o4dtd «> rht i..i.r.tt "1M.,_i W ._ l'llllJI lit ktop 111 t CCo.tM •I'll~ l'llllVn(Y Of ylfl4 U u l'f4 ~ ftOI bt fftl1-.I
Attt111nU .1111bi«1 !O lllil•""'"' ti.laftc. '"""' twmrncly $100.000 tamillp Mlf ht w!MlttWft .. any
1-lllK. wlltwirl..i ol prtNipM pro IO rN1Nrq -"' -II•.,___,_.....,...., ....
,.,._ o/ ....... -"°""'' ,,,..,.,. ,.... Mlb;.n !O ....,. •
Off~ ''am•~ <>p.n "°"' -'<<ount lod.tt 1n ~ ~
<W cal ttw tol·ff'ff fiNn<\al liM m LJ .
•
.. '.!• • J ..... : .
,_
__ ; *ff C F P+f
' ..
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ovea
c.
$ 0 0401 .. ' ... 5
2mg
5mg
--
Wa rning The Surgeon Ge nera~ Has Det ermined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health
5mg
/5mg
SOFT PACk 100s fll TER. MENTHOL 7 mg. "111 0 2 mg nicottne
IV. ptr ciga1111e. FTC Repon MAR '83
•rw 1rw Y t RI rTC Aeoort cw llC: ~!hod
NOW T Hf I OW! ST or All BRANDS
I I
.J _____ _
•
---
sop
•
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J
5
OVER THE COUNTER
NEW YORK (AP)
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NEW YORK (A.Pl -The followlng ll1t
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f et end Percentage cm.noes art th• di trtl'C• bttw"n the PrtvlouJ ctoslng &I prle9 end todav.'J test bid e>rlce. UP'S
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WHAT AMEX Orn
NEW YORK CAP) /Mr.2'
Advenced ()Kilned
Todem
Jil ¥nchlnQed otet luues New nighs New lows 7 23
AMEX LEADER S
NEW YORK (AP) -S.IM, Monday i>rlc• end Ml cllanCM of the 10 most ecove A~rlc1n Stocit Exchlnge tuun, tredlng
nettonattv et ~• then tl. OeteProd 2•1.100 2•V• + :\Oi Alc>helnd 173,000 13 -2
OhloMafl l l)!t.900 1~ -"-~:.nir:,t>, l;;l l~= + ~ ~omtPtrl I~, 3 l-16 uttCen g , 1'1h
etsc>hr• n 9 • i: + Y> HouOllTr • Ecllo8av n , Ye
NASDAQ SUMMARY
GoLo Quo 1Es
ME TALS Quons
That's an apt description of both business and
business people along the Orange Coast. Toke p track of
where companies are going and which people are helping
them get there.justwatch 'Credit Line· -every day ln the
Business section of your new Daily Pilaf
,.
•
~ Cout DAILY PtLOT/Tueedey, March 27. 1984
American Theresa Fitzgibbon, 4 7, of Tren-
ton, N.J ., l•among the women protesters at
., ........ 0
a 'peace camp' outalde the cruilte m1 .. ue
ba•e at Greenham Common.
Protesters facing ouster
Women's evi ction imminent
after 2 1/2 years in 'peace camp'
GREENHAM COMMON. England (AP)-Defiant
women protesters have endured cold. 1a1I terms. fines,
ooun inJunct1ons and demolition squads for 2'h )ears in
makeshift camps outside this cruise missile base.
But burcaucrac). with bulldozers looming behind. as
tightening lls control around the world's best-known
"peace camp ... Frustrated officials hope to dnve awa} the
women whom guard<; patrol dogs and barbed ware have
failed to 1n11m1date
"I think the> 're finall> going to throw the book at us
this time." c;a1d Hazel Pegg. 24, a coll ege dropout who
l.'.ame here 15 months ago "But we wo n't go. ome women
may gi ve up. but others will co me:·
Ms. Pegg was wt th 20 other women weanng1eans and
muddy boots as they boiled lunchtime eggs over a fire
outside the main gate oft he U.S. Air Force base where U.S.
nuclear-tipped cruise missiles arc deployed.
Established Sept. 5. 1981 . after NA TO announced 11s
plans to deploy 96 U.S, crui se missiles at the base 50 miles
west of Londo n. the camp is the oldest of seven strung
round the 9-mile penmcter fence. The camps-clusters of
plastic sheeting. broken furniture, fluttenng peace
symbols and overflowing garbage cans -have rotating
populations of between a half-dozen and 50 "omen.
The women's protest as based o n a combination of
pacifism. anti-nuclear sentiment and feminism: men an~
not permitted to Join.
Sance the protest began. about 1.500 women ha"e
been fined. maanl) for breaking into the base or blocking
roads. Ms. Pegg estimated. and another SOO Jailed for
between a week and a month.
In add111on to the 96 m1s\lles at Greenham ( ommon.
another 64 cruise m1'is1lcs an: scheduled to he deplo~ed at
Moleswonh near ( ambndge b) 1988. The m1ss1les are
pan of the total of 572 cruise and Pershing~ mid-range
nuclear missiles NA TO has agreed to deplo) in Britain.
West (1crman). Ital)'. Belgium and the Netherlands to
counter Soviet S~-2Ch already in place rn Eastern Europe.
Most of the camp'> are on la nd owned e11her by the
local Newbur) D1stm·t Council or the larger Berkshire
County Council. which have stepped up attempts to evict
the women since Feh 25 when the councils decided on
joint action.
The women at the main gate responded by making
sure that pan of their camp was on land owned by the
Depanment of Transpon. a tactic which for a time left
them immune to eviction threats.
But in what oflicials said was a coincidence and what
the women called an orchestrated squeeze. the Transpon
Dcpanmcnt has announced plans to stan a $217.500
road-widening pro1ect on its land.
On March 23 the depanment got a court injunction
ordenn~ the women to leave by April 2 when, officials
said. ba1ldTs will evict them and the bulldozers move in.
Two wardens hired by Newbury council have made
fora)s to tear down the women's plastic shelters.
sometimes dumping their possessions in garbage trucks.
But the women returned, often putting up new shelters
after spending a night 1n the open.
"I can't sa} whether It's workrng or not." Newbury C~unc1I spokesman John Page said of the latest series of
ev1ct1ons. "But we're trying to protect our proP.Cny ...
A group of I 0 protesters at a camp half a mile from the
mam gate said they've been evicted eight times in two
weeks.
"They usuall} gi ve us five minutes to collect our
clothes and things. Sometimes we just move them across
the road, sometimes into a car," said Chnstine Drake. 44.
She's been Jailed three times for break-ins and
dcmonstrauons and is about to lose custody to her former
husband of her three t'hildren she left with her sister in
nonhern England.
The Joint push against the women's camps by the
councils, both controlled by the ruling Conservative
Pan). appears to have had little effect so far.
But the Transport Department has said it means
busine~s "We knov. what a sens1t1ve issue this is and 1t"s
1ust no t true to "3)' we're doing 11 in conspirac)' wi th the
councils."' said ~pokeswoman Trud} Shah. ··we need the land If the) don't go. ba1hfTs will mo'c
them ph )'~1call) Don't a\k me how they'll do it. but we're
gomg to start "ork on A.pnl 2 or thereafter." she !Mild.
Last month. the Defense M1n1stf) discovered it owns
a patch of land on v. h1ch one camp 1s located. "We're
considering wh.11 to Jo we'll do something," said a
spokesman.
"We don't fl':lll) know what's going to happen now
eat her. but o,om\.'how it'll continue ... said American Teresa
F111gibbon. 47. of frenton. N.J .. a former teacher who
split~ her time between her apanment in London and the
camps.
This town's no booze week ..
iJfftoa 'shaky' beginning
BOCA RA TON. Ra. (AP)-A challenge to give up
elCohOf fOf a week hu found few takers among bar
ptitrone In thfa ~n Florida city, say customer&
end wort<•• at local taverna.
Mayor Wltftam Konrad, at the urging of Boca
"9ton Community HotpltaJ, catted on residents to go
on the wagon for the week. and one tounge,
Mdlowef', cooperated by offering $1 off for specialty
~lcdrlnka.
Ek.It few patrons gave up atcohOI, Mid WUdftower
rMN1Q« Jamie Moore. "Awareness among the press
ii ,,....ch greater than among ouetomera." he said.
•·t• the meyor If he oomee out to WUdflower and
doeM't drink, we won't," uld 24-year-old JacqueUne s.-a. "t Ju•t decided to Ignore the whole thing," aatd
Alen LaVole. alto part of Wlldtflower'a happy-hour
crowd ewty Mond1y night.
But one customer, Joe Stugotte, 36, did accept
the Challenge to abetaln from akx>hot. Wtth a glate of me• on the bar betide titm. Stugotta teJd he
d to give up boOze "Just to eee If I could."
"t.alt oaU•• wu midnight Sat'::~for thOM going
Oft tM w.gon. The atcohof..fr.. ends at 12:01
a.in. Sundey.
•·Ewwyone can get wuted next Sunday If they
W9nt to," ~ Donna Curtey Hearn, 36, community
education coordinator at Boca Allton Community
Hoepltal, a private non-profit facflty.
Ms. Heam. WhO dalfned ctedJt for lnlplrtng
•· Alcohof Awarenesa Week,'' aald It• .am was to make
people aware that ak:oh.ol ta the "No. 1 abUMd drug In
the country."
''We'd lttce peopte to know that many ~who
are 8'eohoflo can go one week without dttnkt«lg.'' l1le
18ld.
Ma. H .. rn Md no flguret on hoW m*'Y Of the
town'• eo.-000 ree4dent• have gt~ up~. "Th&t1• not our go.t." lhe Mid. ·•we•re not go.lnQ to
watch-d<>g ~. ••
Some b1t1 and tWtaurant• In fl(>CI Raton ''have
made • bfO )oke'' of the hOepftal'l Idea, uld Nonnan
Brlooe. another~ of~. adding, 0 1
don'l think tn.v 8houkl. 11 •
"We',. not here to try to get ~ drunk. We
want our cuetomera to Comt beck, ' he Mid.
Jo9 Alelo, OWIW of .... erty'•• le not oftet1ng
any M:oholo tpeel•. ""you own a gee station would
YoU wMt to ltOI) Mr""'9 099 for • W!Mk?" he Mked. ~ Mid &lnday night -"9 dey the cemplllgr'I
began -... hfl biggest Sundey of the~·
Belldee the lllcohoMt• WMk, Me. Heam hee
Uked 10 peroent of the holpltal'• 1,500 empfo)tMI to
w.rthea.h• "A'' to work Wedneeday.
Existing home sales jump
23 percent over last year
By Tbe A11oclated Pre11
The sale of ex1 hnf homes. increased 23 percent last
month from a year carher despite recent gains 1n interest
rates. a trade voup said and President Reagan's top
economist said it's "CffU11nly pos ible" that interest rates
will continue to nse.
Meanwhile, the Labor Department, whicb oversees
man14Cment of worker pension funds, hiu come out 1n
oppos1tion to a bill aimed at pcnnittina laf#-SCIJe
mvestment of tho~ fund an home mortgages.
Sales of cx14itmg homes last month rose 22 7 percent
ft"om a year earlter 10 200.000. the National Associatton of
Realtors said. The lcs level also was up 12.4 per~nt
from January
Jack Carlson. chief econom14it of the trade group. said
the fi1urcs "1nd1aate a trona housina market and
underscore both the recent resuraence in consumer
confidence 1n the economy and the continued unleashin1 of pent-up housing demand ~1ncc intcrc t rates fell from
1bcir lofty level of 1wo years ago."
He also 1d thr ancrcasin acceptance of ad-
jutllblc:·rate monaaac is hclp1n1 the housina resale
market. In the last two month~. in111al interest rates on
ch mo~ werr averaging I I pcrt'cnt. whllc
I I
..J
filled-rate monpges avcraeed at or above 13 percent
FinanClal analysts say 11 appears the Federal Reserve
may have recently moved to tighten the reins on credit,
accounting 1n pan for thC' recent gain~ 1n interest rates.
The analy t • comments came as the central bank's
pohcymaken met pnvately Monday and today to plot
monetary stratrgy. The meeting·, results won't be made
public for six weeks. but anal)'st id 1f the policymakers
take no funhcrtction, 1n1crc" rates probably Wlll Jc"Vel ofT
somewhat in the next fow Wt'ek4i
The Fed wants to provide enou&h money to
aocomodatc moderate and sustaJncd ccooom1c arowth,
but not so much a to fuel inflation. ,
Some cconom1 ts fear that the economy's rohust
arowth IS tinin, mflatJon to the point where lhe Fed will
fun her tighten 11 IJ"IP on Cl'C'dtl, driving rates higher.
Manin Feldstein. ch11rman of the pru1den1's
Council of Economic Advisers, told a Oulfpon., MiSJ.,
audience "there as no evidence at the present umc that the
PICC or recovery 1 puttina upward prc W'C on inOauon."
Over the lonacr term. he saJd.1111 .. cc.rtainly po1s1blt"
that interc$l l"IUCS mtght nlC funhcr to rtnttt ~Iler
.demand for loans.
•
Looking fora
win in N.Y.
Candidates shift focus
to big delegate prize
lllOm'IOUe ........ -Mm tTATUaNT NOTIC9 CM' 1llWtU'9 MA.a Tll4I ~ perwon .. doing T.a. ........ ~ • YOU ARE"" OUAULT UHOU' A MOOl1'H BALON 1108 SW-DUO OIF TRUST. OATt.D ltoWm-Oll* Dr., COrOM d.I NM, calf. bw 21. 1M2. UHLIN YOU 'l'Al(I •212$ ACTION TO ,,llOTECT YOUfl J«f't Uoton. f.41e 0 81 .. PAOPfATY,rT MAYlltOLDATA TllOOIN. WUll tf.408 PUBLIC IALE. IF YOU NHD AN Thie~ II conducted by. an EXPLANA TIOH OF THE NA TUN!
lndMduel Of' TH! PAOCEfOINO AGAINST
.-ry L Upton YOU. YOU IHOUl.D CONTACT A Thie lllltf'Ml'I\ wu ni.ci With \M LAWYlR. COUf\ty Cleftl Of Orange COUf\ty on On Aptt 10. 1"4, et 10:00 a.m., Mer. t, 1"4 c.llfOl'na. Mot1gegt 8«\llce, .,
• ,_.. duly eppoln*f Trutt• und9r and
By the A11oclated l're11 Pu~ Orange Cout o.11y eurauarit to o.d of Tn.tlt rtoOtded Piiot Match 20, 27. Aprll 3, 10, 1N4. Strc>t_,,,b« 29, 1N2, u lntt. HO.
t&tl44 12-341113, of Otflctal flecotde "' Gary Hart looked for a victory today in Connecticut's tt1e office ot tne County flteofder of
Democratic presidential primary while Walter Mondale, "8.IC NOTICE Orange. Stat. of ca11totn1a ex· afterwidenin~his lcadfor dcleptesinVirainia'scaucuscs, PM:Tm0Ua11U._.• =~~~= ~.·~
focused his stghts on New York's big delegate priu next Ma. tTAT'Pmlf "*'*' women WILL Sl:LL AT
week. TM fOllowlng '*''°"'.,.doing PU8t.,IC AUCTION TO HIOH~T
Hart and MondaJe debated at a distance on the eve of bull,,...•: ~= ~~=: ?:;~.!: ~ Connecticut's voting. voicing djstinctly different views on Nl!WPOAT !X!CUTIVE SPA. iawtu1 money of tti. United 8tat•l
the use of U.S. troops in Central America. The Rev. Jesse ~ ~:ZC, Way. N"'POf1 •t In"'-IObby In front of 8utc. to1
Jackson, also vyina for Connecticut vot"""' told Yale M.i 'v. a.ho. 1424 w 117th Pl .. •1 2130 E. Fourth St .. 8anl• Ana, ... ..., Q.,dene C.llf 90241 Callt0tnla, all rtoM. tltle, and University students he would end poveny in three years if .,,..8_:. ·14· .... w 17 .. Pl ,..__ 1n1 .... 1 comrey9d to end now'*"
president. ~ c:it0 'to;;I 1 1" · .,.... by n undet Mid o.d of TNtt In IN
Han. the Colorado senator, accused Mondale of Thie~ II conducted by. an property lltuated In N6d <:ounty lndMdual . end Stei• deacrlbed u
backing a Central American policy that will lead to "the M .. v. Saito PARCEL 1: Unn 11 ... lllOWnend rather large loss of American Lives .. by the end of the TNe 1tatemt111t wu filed with the d•fln.ct on th•1 c•rtain con·
d d M d I _,., h H . County C6eftc ol Orange County on domlnlYm plan r«:0rded on March cca e. on a e counte1cu t at an was wrongly trying Mar 9 lH4 18. 1H2 .. 1n11rum•nt No
to link him to President Reagan's pohcies in the region. · · ,~ 82-094758 of Official ~d• of
"I believe my opponent as gelling frantic." Mondale PublflMd Oreno-Cout OeJtv Orange County, CallfOfnla.. 'd Piiot Merctl 20 27 Apfll 3 tO 1H4 PARCEL 2: An undMded 1116ttl sa1 . · · · 1e04-84 lnter .. t In and to Loi 1 of Trec1 No.
Polls were opening at 6 a.m. across Connecticut t0928 u anown on• map~ today; they close at 8 p.m. In Boole 496, Pegee 8 through 10 of "8.JC NOTICE Mltcelleneou1 Mepa, r.c0tcft of Or· Connecticut Democrats will decide 52 of the state's ange County. C•Hf<>fnla. together
60 national convention deleP.tes through their primary, '1CTtTIOua 8UllNHI w11h •11 lmprOVM*lt• thereon, ...
and Han hopes the voting will provide more momentum NAMI ITATIMINT C9Pllng ttl«ef1om Condominium
going into neighboring New York's primary next week. bu~~:,ing pertOnt ar• doing ~~9d ~ti!':n~n 18· lnctuil.,.,
There will be 252 delegates at stake then. 8ANTAAND ASSOCIATES, 2006 PARCEL 3: An ••ctullw ....
Pand o fficials e~ted a turnout of only about w. Balboa Blvd. Sull• 212. Newpon ment eppunenent lo MC:tl unit ror
h. h • 6 000 De · 8Mc:tl, Callf. 92863 theuMandoccupancyolthoeepot· one-t 1r t estate s , mocrauc voters. Ar1hur e. eant•. 128 E. OoMll tlonl 01 the r•trlct.ct common ar ..
Han is hoping to complete a clean sweep of the six Front. Balboa. ce111 12ee1 dellgnated In th• o.ci11e11on1 of
New England st.a tes. It was the surprising victory in New Lott M. B1n1e, 128 E. OoMll R .. tr1c11on1 end shown on tile Con·
Hampshire one month a~o that started Hart's su1ce and Front, Balt>oa, eaut. 12881 domlnlum P1en fOf •ac:h unit. Thlt bullnnl II conduct.cl by: an The 1treet eddr... of IM ,..., put him alongside Mon ale as a top contender or the lndlvldual property ducrlb•d abov• 11
Democratic presidential nomination. Ar1hur E. Sant• purPC>r1ed to be: 138 Waet 18th
Mondale. meanwhile, appeared headed toward Thi. tt•t.,,_.t wu Ried with tile StrMt •D-t. Costa MeM.. CA.
another caucus victory based on incomplete results from County et.rk of Orange County on 92627 Mar 8, 1964 TM undenigned dl9Clelme any
Virginia, which held its second night of statewide FMIMll 11a1>111ty '°'any 1nco<r9Ct,_. of'"-Democratic "mass meetings" Monday. PublllMd Orange Cout Deity at>oYe 1tr .. t edd,... and other
With 3.382 of the 3,500 state and congressional Piiot March 20• 27· Aprll 3. \~ :;:n: oe.1gnet1on, 11 any, lhowrl
d1stnct convention delegates already chosen. the former Seid .. ,. w111 1>e made. but
vice president had 31 percent. Jackson 2 7 percent. "8.IC NOTICE without cov.nan1 °' watTanty. ax-
uncommittcd 27 percent and Gary Hart 15 percent. P' ... "' Implied, regarding 1111e.
T tal la • · d ' I ·1 bl '1CTmoul llUatNlll potMUlon. °' encumbfanc.a. to o popu r votes weren t 1mme iatc y avat a e. NAMI ITATIMl.NT P•Y '"-remaining pflndpel aum a1
and pany officials were still figuri111 how the 68 national Tri. following P«tone .,. doing tile note<•> MaKed by Mid Deed of
delegates that were at stake would be divided. Their initial buetnea 11 Tru1t, w11h lnteraet their.on, u
estimate was Mondale 12, Jackson 10. uncommitted 10. MIKE'S TOOL SHACK • Call-provl<Md In Mid note(•). edvencee.
H 5 d h · · r. lornl• Limit.cl Pannerlhip doing If any, under the term• of N6d o.d an , an l e rcmamder still up 1or grabs. though they buetneu u "TOOL SHACK· ... 225g of Tru11, 1 .... chergee end ex-
said those figures would be changing as results were Harbo< Bouteverd, coat• M .... CA. P«'MI ol the TN9t• end of IM tabulated. 12827 trust• creel.ct by Mid Deed of
Han campaigned hard right up to today's voting in Mk:hMI Rlcll11d1 1G-•• P•r1· Trust.
Connecticut. Neither Han nor his aides would venture~ ~~~.~~~21n~';'Y Lene, Garden bJ~0~~1 1~~~:i!.."-~
prediction. but the only pre-election poll. conducted by Thi• bullMM I• conduc1.ci by: • by tne pr~ to be lotd. end
the University. of Co.nnecticut last week. gave him a 20 limited p1nnertt1lp. rMtonabi. •t meted 00811· 0 • Michael Rlc:h1rd1 perlMI and edV•ncee ., Iha tlf'M of percentage-point lead over Mondale with Jackson fa r Thi• 1tel4"Mnt wu llled wllh the IM Initial publfclltlon of tM Notice
behind and 19 percent undecided. County Clerk 01 Or•noe County on 01 SW le l 123,5ee.eo.
Mondale made only two brief campaign trips to the M11ctt 1, 1"4 F2MMll of r~ua~ "":'.:::!, °=
state. He was concentrating on New York. where a recent Publllhed Orange coui Delly dellV9fedto the un<Setlllgned a wrtt·
poll has him leading Hart, and Pennsylvania. which holds Piiot March 20 27 APfll 3 to 1984 ten o.claretlon of default end o. 11s pnmary Apnl JO. · · · 1 ~ mend'°' Sele, and• wntten Notice of Default and Election to Seti. n. "Tomorrow. I need ya." he told several hundred -----------lund4n1Qned ceuNd taJd Notice of
senior cauzens on a 90-minute trip to Connecticut Plll.JC NOTICE o.1eu11 and a.c11on 10 a... to 1>e
Monday night. "This as a tight contest. It's close." '1CTIT10UI au.,..11 r.cord.cl In '"-COYnty wtw. "'-
Later. however. Mondale told reporters: "I don't NAMe ITATE.•NT ,...O: .. ~ary~t~
know what's gomg to happen tomorrow. I used to read The touowtng pereona .,.. doing CallfOfnl• Mortg• SeMoe. u
polls until I found they were very unreliable." bullnees u 1ru11 .. by
Jackson ended two days of campaigning m the st.ate AUTO EXPRESS, 2085 Pleoentl• CelWIOe Trust Deed SeMoea. inc Ave , Coata MMa, Calif 92627 AV4W11. Monday. when be said he would fight poverty by Joe Manni.no. 2277 Harbor Blvd, 2130 E. 4th St., Sult• 101
abandoning or ffcezing weapons programs such as the 8-1 Apt 18t5.Coat•Meta. Calif 92128 Santa Ana. ea 92705
bomber. MX missile and nuclear aircraft carriers. Rocky Schllefer, 2277 Harbor (714) 953-5610
"If elected president. I will send to Con$ress a budget ~8~8Apt 1518· Coit• MMe. Celit ~.,,. Cerlton. Trull" sai. Of.
package that will eliminate hunger in Amenca within six Thi• bullneu 11 conducted by.• Pvbllllled Orange Coeat Delly Piiot
months," he said. "I will eliminate poven) in Amcnca llmlled PlrtMrthlp Merch 20. 21. Aprll 3, 11&4 · h h " Roctly Senti.fer 18t t-&4 wit in t rec years. Thi• 1t11emen1 w•• 111.c1 with tile
Han and Mondale offered differing views on troops County Clerk ol Orenge county on
in Central America in separate campaign appearances M•r 9, 118.4
Monday. Han said the troops must be pulled out as soon Publllhed Orange coa:i2~~
as possible. while Mondale said he would keep "a few" Piiot Merell 20. 21. Aprll 3. 10. 1984
troops in El Salvador and "temporarily ... a modest 1805·8•
number" of troops in Honduras.
"I believe lessons must be learned from Vietnam." ___ Pta. __ IC_NO_T_IC_E __ _
Han said. "There are areas of the world where military
solutions will not suffice ... " 'ICTITIOUI •UllNHI NAMI ITAHMENT The lollowlng pel'ton II doing -I JJ1 ,•~111 I VPA, 15 Purple s •. Irvine. CA Em buelnes1 .. ·
_ -~--------92715, PO Box 7789, Newport Beacti, CA. 92e80 Bren D Leisure, 15 Purples •. Irvine. CA. 92715
GREY 1984 at 2 PM at Harbor Thi• bullneu 11 conduc1ed by en
COLONEL RICHAR[ Lawn Memorial Chapel lndMdu•I. . . . . · Bren 0 Lelture ELDON GREY passec Recepuon al their home un-Thia 1ta1ement wu l'*f wilh 1t1e
away on Man:h 23. 1984 mediately following. County Clerk of Orenge Counly Ol'I
f"?"' an illness. He was tht WAGGONER Feb ,,., 118• FnMn
widower of Floren~ W LIL y SKIDMORE WAG-Publltll.cl Orenge Cout Dally
Grey. Both were res1dentJ GONER a 28 year Costa P1101 Mercti 8. 13. 20. 21. tl8•
of Costa Mesa. Richard Wal M · .d bo t245-a.4
a retired Air Force offlce1 esa resJ ent was rn -----------
who served in World War ll Se~tember 29· 1884 at Em-PlB.lC NOTICE h K w d ' pona, Kansas and pasaed --...;....;.~~.;...;..;..;.;;.... __
t e oren ar an t~e Vie1. away March 25, 1984 at Port FICTmOUI .ualfelll
Nam War. He Is survived by M Co alesan H ital NAMI ITATIMINT his mother, Lorna Bach of Shesa ~ in 19~1 ~ · The lollow1ng per1on1 ere doing
Los Angeles, Calfornia; his e re . . a but1nN1 u : brother Bert Grey of In career With I. Magrun, Loa LE GARY CONSTRUCTION
glewood, California; hi; Angeles. She is. survived by ~:~N:._c~;~A~:f~ Str .. t,
brother, William Gray of 8 ":ery special dal.lgh-Leone Irene P••tev. 1551 Cor-
Lancaster California· his ter-m-law, Myrtle Wag-lender Dr Apt c , Cotti M .... CA.
R. ' El · goner of Costa Mesa and by 92628 son, ichard don Grey II l J hn G f Kansas J Frenk Anokovlch. 915 Ai.ppo
of Balboa, California; hit C~o 80~· o . doGe W 81., Newport S.ech, CA 92e80 d a u g h t e r , Lorn a ity, lSSOun an ne · Thi• buelneu 11 conduct9d by •
Grey-Kusiak of W . k of Costa Mesa; three grand· gener•I per1nerllllp arwtc · children and ten great L.on• I Putey Rhode Island and rueces and . . Thi• 1tetemen1 wu 111.ci with the nephews. Services will be ~and.children. Pnvate ser-County Clerk of Orange County on
held Wednesday March 28 Vlce& were at Harbor Lawn March 1. 1184 · • Memorial Park. ~ PublllMd Orenge Cout Dally ,;-:;:;;;;1;;;;;;;a;--i5iii;m.::!=-----------~P11o1 Marcil8, 13. 20. 21. 1984 1211-34
Ml.IC NOTICE Mt.IC f«)TIC[
fltBUC NOTICE
FICTITtOUI IU .... aa NAME IT A TIMIN'T Tile lollowlng peraon1 ere doing
butlneee u : ACCESSORIES PLUS, 211 w .. i.a1ey Ln. Coal• M.... Ca. 92826 MlchHI J . Howerd , 1648-0 Adame Ave, Coate M .... Ce. 92828 Cherlet W. Grahem, 1~1-D Adami AV9. Cotta M .... Ce. 92628 Thl1 bvllnea le conduct.cl by. e
generel per1nerehlp
MlchMI J How8td Thia 1tetement wu flied wtth IM County Clerk of Orange County on March 18, ttM
FM1170 PublllMd Orange Cou1 Oelt)o Pilot l\Aercll 27. Aprll 3, 10, 17, 1964 1740-M
Pta.IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI 9UllNHa NAMI ITA TIMINT
The lollowlng pertona ere doing bullnftt ...
AMERICAN RA TING SERVICE COMPANY, 12345 W81tmln1ter Ave . Sent• An•. Ca. 92703 Edward Aeymond Kllllen, a.475 B Eatl Pacific Cout Hwy, Long
Beach, Ce. 90803 Thi• bullneae 11 conduoted by: • llmll9d pert~hlp,
Edward R. Killian Thi• 1t1tement wu filed wnh tM County Cler'k of Orenge County on Maren 18. 1~
'111171 Publltlled Orange Cout Delly Pllol Miich 27, Aprll 3, 10, 17. 1934
173M4
Ml.IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI_, .....
NAME ITA TIMINT The lollowtng pwtone .,. doing
bu9inM1u· HA"IO" L.AWN·MT. 0UW
Mortuary • C.met.,y
Cr9matory
SUN SHADE CUSTOM WINDOW TINTING, 570 Sturgeon Or., Coate '1CTtTIOUa llU ... 11 FlCTITIOUI .U .... 11 ~. C. 9'2828 HAim HATl-.r Ma. ITATRMINT Tony A. Hen»ey, 570 Sturgeon 162S Glsler Ave.
Costa M ...
!>40-~SS4
Pll"CI IAOTHIRI HLL IROAOWAY
MORTUARY
t 10 Broadway
CottaM ...
642·9150
IAL TZ IEflQlROM
IMl~H.I TUTHILL
WllTCLt'P CHA.NL
42'7 E 17th St
Co1tt~•
~8-937 t
TM followlng P9r110n 19 doing TM following l*'90l'1 11 doing Dr .. Coate~. Ce. 12829
bullnMI U . bullneN u Thl1 buelneu le conducted by: an NAUTILUS. 4eoe Roxbury Rd., AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL lndlYlduel.
Corona del Mar. Calff. 92826 MOTOR CAR, 3303 Herb« F2, TONY A. H~SLEY Jamee G. Loofbourrow, 480e Coale Meu, CA. 921128 Thia etetemenl w• filed wlUI tM Roxbuty Rd .. CorON del Mar Calff. Donald M. Davie, 2117112 Via Sin-County Clerk or Orange Coun1y on 92825 . t M ...... -Viejo CA 12891 March 18, 1984 Thlt bu9lneM It conduc:1ed "'--:.,, ra. ._...., ' · lndMdual .,,, Thl1 bullneu It condueted by: Ill f'M1111
Jamee 0 . ' ......._. ·rrow lnd~~·M ...... A. Pubffttted Orange CoMt Delly ......,....... ....,.,_. Ulm Piiot March 27, Aprll a. tO, 11. ttf.4 Thll ttat.,.,_.t w• fll«I with IM Thie 1181«Mnt WM ftt.d with tM 174344
County Clerk "' Orange <:ounty on County OWll of Oranot County on ----------M.,. t , 1"4 ,,_ Marett t. tlM ,_ Pt8JC NOTIC(
Publlefled ~ Coeel ~ Publlttled <>nno-Couc Dalty __ fllCm'IOU8 ....... =:;..;.;;;:lll:.:.Jl=.::-=--.. --
PllOt March 20, 21, ~ 8. tO, 1"4 Pilot ulf'ch 11 20. 21 .. ...,. , 1"4 ......... .,. .. __ ..,. 1902-14 ... ' ' '""""1A' .. a .... -.. ,_, .......... ™ foMowlng PWIOfl .. OOlrlO bualneMu:
·-t1t llftnH' ma. S30S Harb« llvd. ,_2•
""""" ""'I~ Coate Meaa. CA. t2tff ...cnnoue .,_... flonald A. Steger, 21111
MAim STA,....,, ...CTTnOUe .,_.. lycamot•. Mlaalon Viejo. CA TM~ peqone ar• Oo1nQ MAm 8TA1WT t2tl1 ~-. TM following penon le dOfne TNt ~la conduc1W tiy: an
OLf.AH TUBE COMPANY H11 tMlfl88e N' lndMdUel. I. La ,.._ Unit L ~ C.. THE OOAONA OIL MAfl AoNld A. ltager t2I07 ' FlOMT, 3337 !.eat Coea1 Hton-T'lll .. tetement WM Ried .eth ._
Den L CoMlne. ms w CYbbon w./. Newpor1 leeet\, CA County a.tr of o..enoe County on
11.L.. ~Ana, Ce t2T03 Matti ~. 13121 ~. March 1, 11M
,.,. ~la condUCted by:"" Whfttl«. ~. IOI01 ,_ lndMduel. Tilll buM*t le concNc:Md l:ly: an ,.,.,.laNd Or.,.. COM1 Olly
Den L Colline llldMouel Hot Merell 13. 20, ».~a, ttt4
Tilll M9181Mnt .. llled Wfth ttMS Metil~ 1'47 ... ~,~.:0ranoeCountyon ~"c:':'~~': F• Ad Action PM'9e l".o 14, 1"4 P11ot"':'21~a. ~1. \>::I ~ o...,,.. co.t"'= Cal I --~-----11-41 ....... ~Martn .. ,,,ro,21. t~ Daly Plot
Call 142-1171. Cill 1•2 .. 1171. If\ VIS(I Pul I t--wo .... 1 NI• ...... •" Put 1 few wordt
towo'• for ou. lowotk for ou. 642·~71 l ... ,
I
L ... __ -----
•'
•• ..
l
Spnn. tralntna la the baal-
ne. 0'11etttnc the proe ready
for the fona eammer, bat It'•
not all baalneaa at the Anael•
tn•ntna ~In Palm Sprtnl• u denced by theae
endeaYon by Leo Durocher
and Marty Jacbon, the
Dine-year-old brother of Rec-
it.e. and Aaron Boone, Bob
loone'• 11-year-old eon. Leo
kept acore of fly ball• caacbt
with the loeer forced to nm
around the entire bueball
field. Marty wu flnt and
Aaron wu aecond, bat both
bad to ran. Aaron araaea.
point with Durocher. while
below. Jacbon (left) io.1ea to
the plate and Durocher polnta
oat a &ood catch by Boone
(right).
DalV ~lot ~ av Richard KOlhler
Brock looks good for Dodgers
From AP d11patcbes Brock, batting .269, now leads the team with seven
ST. PETERSBU RG -Greg Brock drove in two runs RBI.The Dodgers were to play the Chicago White Sox in
in suppon of the five.hit pitching by three hurlers as the Sarasota. Aa., today. Bob Welch was scheduled for his first
Los Angeles Dodgers defeated the St. Louis Cardinals 4-2 appearance since suffering a pulled groin March 16 against
in an exhibition game Monday. St. Louis. Jerry Reuss will maJce his third appearance of the
Rick Honeycutt was the staner and winner for Los spring.
Angeles. He limited the Cardinals to three hits an~ two -------------------runs in five innings. Rich Rodas and Tom Niedenfuer
combined to silence St. Louis in the final four innings.
Brock drove in his first run and pve the Dodgers a J ..()
lead in the second when he looped an RBI sing.le to right,
drivinc in Mike Marshall who had sing.led and stole
second.
Grich's hit enough
to give Angels wln
The Dodaers added two runs in the sixth against
Cardinal staner and loser Neil Allen. Ken Landreaux led PALM SPRINGS -Bobby Grich sing.led for the
offthe innina with a double and scored on a sing.le by Pedro game's only run in the founh inning and rightbander Mike
Guerrero. Marshall grounded into a forceout, but scored Witt went seven innings Monday, as the California Angels
on Brock's double to right center. beat the Milwaukee Brewers 1..0 in exhibition baseball.
The Cardinals scored two runs in the sixth after Witt, runninahisstrinaofscoreless innings to 14, held
loading the bases with none out. One run scored on a wild the Brewers to seven singles while walking one and striking
pitch and the other on a sacrifice fly by George Hendrick. out three.
Los Anaeles added another run in the seventh on a Cun Kaufman and Luis Sanchez came out of the
sacrifice fly by Lemmie Miller. bullpen to seal California's 12th win in 19 Cactus l.clgue
The victory improved the Dod_Jers' record to 9-11 tnjl decisions. Milwaukee's record dropped to 12-10.
spring. The.Cardinals lost their sixth consecutive ga~e The Angels bunched four of their five hits off Mike
and are now 4-1 S. Caldwell, who went the first six innings for the Brewers,
It was Honeycutt's fifth stan of the spring and first into the founh. Singles by Ron Jackson and Regie
apinst a National L.caaue club. After allowing three hits Jackson and a force play arounder by Fred Lynn preceded
over five scoreless inninp , he walked the first two batten Grich'• run-scoring sinale.
in the sixth. AJthou&h he let\, the runners later scored so he Paul Molitor who has hit safely in all J 4 Brewer pmes
was charaed with tile runs. Honeycutt has a 3.60 earned in which he has played, went 2-for-3 to hike his averaae to
run averqe. .SS I.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Georgetown, on its way to
the second Final Four appearance in three years, will find
itself in a rare position apinst Kentucky on Saturday -
looking up at a bigger opponent.
•
(All O..• -Claaaael 11 • • 12:30 p.m.: Vir,tala "· Bo.toll 3110 p.a .1 Oeorjetowa ... KeatackJ
Cb.amploulllp: MoadaJ. e P·•·
I
I
. But the Hoyas say the quickness that helped them set
records for defense this season should be more than a
match for the "Twin Towers" of Kentucky.
"Pressure (defense) has to be more of a factor for us
now," said Georgetown Coach John Thompson.
Seattle area without returning to the Georgetown campus
before Saturday's semifinal.
Georgetown earned the trip to Seattle by beatina
Dayton 61-49 Sunday, and that was the most points the
Hoyas have allowed in the postseason tournament.
In Los Angeles, Thompson bcaan preparina a stratqy
to offset the Kentucky inside strenJth.
"They're awesome," he said. ..Turpin is the belt
offensive center I've seen. Bowie passes the baU extremely
well ... and they've got a great supportinJ cast." "It won't be meapinst (7-1 Sam) Bowieor(6-l I Mel)
Turpin," said 7-foot All-American center Patrick Ewing.
named the top player in the West Regional. "It will be
Geo~etown against Kentucky. It will be team defense.
That s the way we'll be looking at it."
Senior guard Gene Smith says the Hoyas aren't going
to let Bowie and Turpin stop their march to a title.
Georgetown's win over Oaytan did httlc to change the
Hoyas' reputation as an overaagrcssive team, however. In
the second half. power forward Michael Grahatn
completed a scorinf spree with a strong dunk and then
slammed the Ayers Scdric Toney to the Ooor.
"Our three objectives this year were to win the Big
East Conference, to win the Big East tournament and the
national championship," he said. "Two of those we
accomplished, and the third is stiJI our objective.
Graham apologized to Toney for the incident. but
critics say 1t is one of many involving the freshman from
Washington, D.C. this season.
··Guards will be a major factor, but defense wiU be the
major factor. Who can stop whom?" he said.
Smith will have the task of guarding Dickie Beal, the
speedy guard who has paced the Wildcats since moving
into the starting lineup a little more than 10 games ago.
"Basically, I don't care what the people say," Graham
said after the pme. "I'm just playing the best that I
possibly can."
"Michael's been hitting the boards," said Thompson.
"I've just got to calm him down a little bit. He gets all fired
up and excited."
"He's probably one of the quickest guards in college
basketball," said Smith.
Kentucky seems not totally in awe.
"We're not going to be intimidated by them." said
Wildcat forward Winston Bennett, who's been known to
roughhouse himself. "Physical play aod roughness is oul'
kind of game anyway. We're a hard-nosed. physical
ballclub. That's what we stand for."
Georgetown players stayed on the West Coast, where
they have been since traveling to the regionals two weeks
ago. A team spokesman said the players would go to the
Tlmes do change,
but not Lasorda
Dodgers' manager
keeps gift of gab
going regardless
By HAL BOCK
ST. PETERSBURG, Aa. (AP) -
Tommy Lasorda was talking, a com-
pletely nonnal condition for the
manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers.
"Spring training has changed. Now
you've JOt all this modem equip-
ment, video machines and stuff. It's
not like when I played.
"Look in the trainer's room. It
looks like the Mayo Clinic in there.
T hey got a trainer, an assistant
trainer, a strength guy, a weights
guy. . . specialists. When I was
breaking in, we had one trainer. He
had a bottle of rubbing alcohol and by
the fifth inning, he would drink half of
il
"Modem players drive some man-
agers to drink. My team drove me to
stop. I mean how can you enjoy a
cocktail after watching Steve Sax
maJce 29 bad throws?
"(Coach) Monte Basgall hits him
50 grounders every day and he hits
the first baseman's glove perfect
every time. In the game though. . .
he just couldn't.
"We were in St. Louis once. It must
have been I OS degrees. I took Sax for
a walk around the outfield track. I
said to him, 'Saxie, how many people
do you suppose are walking the streets
who can hit .283, like you are?'
0 He said 'None.·
"And then I asked him how many
people he thouaht were walking the
street who could steal 37 bases like he
had.
"He said 'None,· again.
"And then I asked him how many
people were walking the street who
could make the throw from seond
base to first and I told him there were
millions of them -not only men. but
women, too. But he couldn't.
"He's a veat kid, though. We're in
San Francisco one time and Saxie is
talking to some guy. I told him 'Hey
Saxie, c'mon, loosen up.· He said he
was talkina to his brother-in-law. I
said I was sorry. I didn't know he had
a brother-in-law. He said the guy had
married his cousin:
"Another time we were on the bus.
I was rcadina the Wall Street Journal.
Sax said, 'Let me sec the spons
tcetion.'"
For his next monoloaue, Lasorda
chose Dodacr history, a favorite
subject.
"When I was playina, they'd take
28 players nonh from spnng training
for the first month of the season. I'd
work like hell to be one of the three
they'd cut after 30 days. Just to get to
Brooklyn with that club. that was an
accomplishment.
"I remember one year, I got there
and when I walked into the dressing
room, I was so proud. Then (Coach)
Jake Pitier walked over to me and
said, 'Son, don't get an apanment
yet.'
"That was how it was with the
Dodgers in those days. You could be a
catcher with Montreal and hit 80
home runs and drive in 160 runs or a
first baseman at St. Paul who hit .380.
With Campy (Roy Campanella) and
Gil (Hodges) there. where were you
going to play? In Montreal or St. Paul.
that's where."
The current Dodger lineup 1s not as
set in concrete as that one was. There
is, for example, the possibility that
third baseman Pedro Guerrero may
move back to the outfield this year.
reversing the switch he made last
spring.
"Pete's so valuable that way be-
cause he's versatile."
Guerrero's production was hardly
disturbed by the pos1t1on switch. He
batted .298 and had his second
straight 32-home run season with I 02
runs batted in.
Anteaters
rally, 7 -6
POMONA-UC Irvine rallied
with four runs in the eigbtb
innin~ th_en pick~ up th~ tyina
and winning runs m the n10th «>
bold on to a 7-6 non~nfercncc
baseball victory at Cal Poly
Pomona Monday.
The decision raises the Ant·
eaters' record to 12· I ~ I after Bo
Kent got the last two Pomona
batters to ground out with two
runners on base.
Kent got the victory at\er UCJ
scored twice in the top of the
ninth by VJnue ofBill O'Connell's
sacrifice fl y and an RBI sing.le by
Steve Morgan.
Earlier the Anteaters struck for
four runs to taJce a 5-3 lead when
Adam Ging and Bob Perry
sing.led, followed by O'Connell's
run-scoring double. Morgan's
sacrifice fly scored one run, then
after Mike Sugar tripled in a run,
Brady Anderson singled home
Sugar.
The Anteaters scored one run
in the second inning when Ging
singled and came around on
Morgan's RBI base bit.
Cal Poly Pomona rallied for
three in the bottom of the eighth,
but the Anteaters' nintb-innina
surge and Kent's relief got the
Anteaters out with a victory.
Phelps hoping he '11 get one more present
NEW YORK (AP) -Notre Dame
basketball Coach Diuer Phelps Is still
enjoying the Christmas ercsent liven
him by Irish football Coach Gerry
Fault -wide rcceiver-tumed·point
pa.rd Joe Howard.
Phelps went to the ~9 Howard u a
last rcaon when the lrith Iott their
only point auardl on the roster «>
academics and iJUury. Howard is 1tiU
paytna dividend• and the lat.at is a
trip «> the champioutup pme of the
47tb National lnvitauon Tour·
nament
Notre Dame, ll·l I, beat fellow
independent Southwestern Lou.iaiana
65-59 Monday n.iaht to advance to
Wcdnetday'a tltW,am.e apin1t Mich,.
l11n .• The Wolverines. 22-10,
. . I
eliminated Virainia Tech 78--7' in tbe
openina pme of the semifinal
doubleheader played before a
Madison Square Ouden crowd of
9,049.
Ho1¥1rd, who scored six poin~ 20
fewer tban 11mlor forward Tom
Sluby, wu the caW)'lt in a U-6 lrisb
apun over tbt final 6:07 that hf\cd
Notre 0.me into iu accond NIT
champioNbip pme.
••He's been doina tbole thinp aincc
be joined the ~1 '' Pbelpt said of
the man who hat 1CG the Jrith football
team in receptions etlCh of tbe 'put
th.RC 1ea10n1. HoQl'd arrived at
Phelps' sideline aft.er the footbtll
team'• 19-18 victory over Boston
Colleac 1n the Libeny Bowl on Dec.
29.
With Notre Dame leadina SS.SS,
Ken Barlow of the lritb was c:aUed for
an offensive foul that nullified a
IUccatftal dunk. The Rqjn' ~UDI
came downcoun and AIOn.za Allen
missed a jump shot that Howard
m»ounded. Nine seconds later, How· ard fed Barlow for a tbreo-point olay
and a aix·point Iced. Howard theft
madt two free tbntwa with 1:20
rcma.inina and six aeconda later be
stole the ball u USL tried to tel beck
In thepme.
The Irish enjoyed a fine n11bt. on
the free--throw line to keep the Ralin'
C.tun1 at bay.
After not attemptlna a hie throw in
the fint half, Notre Dame made it
fint IS in the second tt.lfand finilhcd
with l1of20. ••t don't want to talk about
~throw ahootina until Thursday
momilJ." Phelps said in his bat
1u~uou1 coachina voice. "I've
said all &Jona the three th1np that s<>t
us here were defentc\ rebounding and
freo.throw tbootina,. ..
Southwestcrn Louisiana Coach
Bobby Puchal llf'Ced that thole three
flcton tent his iam into the comola-
don pmc.
.. We didn't handle ounelves very
well, .. Paid\al aid. "Their defense
bad a lot to do with that. They made
us impatient with their lllfHlive-~-itr/C4)
. . .
I ..
J
I
United Nations,
Statue of Liberty
favored for torch
From AP dhpatck1
LOS ANGELES -A flag-lined Untt-•
ed Nations plaza and the Statue of Ltbcrty • ~ •
arc leading shes for a relijhting ceremony
when the Olympic flame is electronically
transmitted to the United States from Greece. officials
said Monday.
The May 7 ceremony in New York City marks the
official transfer of the flame and launches a
cro~ouotf) torch relay that l·nds on July 28 in Los
Angeles at lhl' Opening C'eremon1es of the Summer
Games .
.\ spolo.t"Sman for Ne" ) ork Ci t) Mayor Ed Koch
said the c1t\ has been informed that the Statue of
L1beny was one of the pnme locauons, along with tbe
Emp1f'(' State Building and Batte~ Park.
But the project manager for Amencan Telephone
& l elegraph. technical supervisors of the torch transfer.
said the L1.N. plaza appears to be the frontrunning
choice
··rhe~ art'leamngtoward the I ln1ted Na11o ns\1te."
said Bill Haggans. 1n a tekphonc 1nterv1c"' from AT&T
otfo:c~ 1n Bedm1n1ster. N.J
Ol)mp1corgantzers1n LosAngclesplan to!.end the
flam~· b' undcrwa cable tran">m1ss1on from .\thens.
after con' ening the flame an to a heat impulse that
tr.l\els about 8.000 miles almost instantl)
Montreal 01) mp1c offin als made the first mo' t' 10
USt' high tcchnolog} tor the flame transfer. using a
satellite for the 1976 Summer Uamcs.
After being re1gn11ed 1n New York C11~. the flame
will be transported to Los Angeles through 32 state~ b}
torch·bearing rela) runne~
The Los Angeles Olympic Organwng ( omm1t1ce
ha<l hoped to raise $30 million for )outh spons
programs h) selling I 0.000 kilometers at $ HXX> a
lo.alometer
Quote of the day
httt Corzine, wife of Chtcago center Dave
Corzine, following a Bulls vtctory over the Phlladef·
phla 76ers, who were playing wl1hout MOMS
Malone: "I knew somethfng was wrong when Dave
came home with no btte marks." ·
Michigan rolls on in USFL
HOUSTON -M1ch1gan quanerback [il
Bobb} Heben led the Panthers to a 52·34 c II•
United States Football League 'icto!)
Monda} 01gh1. passing fo r a league-record
444 yards agamst the Houston Gamblers. .
Bnmingham beat Tampa Ba) 27·9 in the onl}
other Monday night game.
Hebert completed 26 of 37 passe!.. including 9-12.
230 yardc; and three touchdowns in the second half in
leading the defending league champions to their fifth
victory in as many games. Houston. nov. tted with
Oklahoma behind M1ch1gan an the Central D' 1s1on. fell
to 3.2 before 38. 754
Holmes. Coetzee set fight date
LOS ANGELES -lfca'~"'e1ght m l.a!T) Holmes will fight ~ orld Ro\lng
As~oc1a11on champion ( •l'mc < Ol'ttce
June is at Caesars Palan· 1n I :J'> \ l'ga'>.
A temporary outdoor an'na seating 25 .000 Ill
30.00U people w11l lx' l'rl'Ch:d tor the tight.
It "ill be Holmcc;· tir<,t tight '>tnl'c he rellnqu1.,hcd
hts World Boxing ( ounu l hl'a' ~\\l'1ght !Ilk 1n
l>cce m bt'. r
A •s trade Stoddard to Cubs
PHOE'll\ -\\·teran rl'11e,er Tim Ei
Stoddard. acquired b} 1h1: Oakland .\'s m
.Den·mber was dealt av.a\ Monda\ an a
trade with the Chicago< uh\ -
The A 'sgot two pla~ers. minor league pitcher tan
K )IC~ and another pla}er ''ho Mil be named later.
~toddard. 3 I. was •Hth the Baltimore Orioles s1>.
seasons before that cl uh traded him to the A ·s for
anlielder Wa}ne Gro.,., on De<: 9 The nght·handed
relte,er v.as 4.3 "•th a fl 09 earned run a'erage last
c;eason
K' les. 13 ,., a nght·hander "ho posted a combined
9· 12 record w11h tv.o <.. ubs' farm dubs last sea<>on lie
w1ll 1om one of the ..\ ·s minor league teams.
Knight NIT Man of the Year
NEW YORK -ft9bby Kni&ht was m m New York on Monday.1ronically, to accept
the National Invitation Tournament Man
of the Year award when he wiu a kcd if his
controversial, often checkered off'-court behavior made
him the proper selection as Olympic basketball coach.
"That doesn't bother me an the slightest," said
Kn1&ht. who~ Indiana Hoosiers were eliminated from
the NCAA tournament last Saturday by Virgnia. "If the
Olympic Committee had picked someone else. l would
have done all I oould to help."
AJthough widely considered the best college coach
in the country, Knight has been followed by oon-
troversy much of his career.
As coach of the Pan American team in 1979, he was
convicted ofassaulting a police officer in Puerto Rico.
where he still is personna non grata.
Kings sign amat.,ur Brennan
Brennan has signed a five-game amateur ,
INGLEWOOD -Lef\ winger Dan "1
tryout contract wtth the Los Angeles Kings
that wall cover the balance of the 1983-84
Nataonal Hockey League season.
Brennan. 21. has played the last four years at the
Un1versit} of North Dakota. where he compiled career
totals of SU goals and 75 assists for 125 points in 156
games.
Brennan will bt'. 10 um form tonight ( 7:30) when fhe
Kings host the W1nn1pcg Jets.
Meanwhile, the Kings announced that left winger
.\nders Hakansson. who was acquired by the club last
\eptember from the Pittsburgh Penguins. has signed a
new contract. ·
Hakansson. 27. was on a tcrm1na11on contract th as
':>eason which would have made him a free agent
without compensauon in June.
Pac-10 honors standouts
WALNUT CREEK -Oregon's Joa· Ill qu1m Cruz. who opened his collegiate
outdoor season with a w1n01ng time of
3:39.4 1n a 1.500-meter race, wa!> among the ·
Pac1fic· IO Athletes of the Week honored Monda).
Cruz and Southern Cal's Hank Kraychir were the
award winners in track and field. The Baseball Player of
the Weck awards went to Mark McGw1re of USC and
Gary Hamilton of Oregon State.
The 1,500 time by Cruz was has career best and put
him 1n ninth place on the all-11 mc Pac·IO list in the
event. Kraychir won both the shot put (61·5'12) and
discus ( 178·0) in a weekend meet in which he also
claimed a world record in the obscure category of
ambidextrous discus throwing. totaling 324-6 by going
I 'l8 right handed and 146-6 lefl handed.
McGw1reofUSC hit .563 m fhe games and hit two
lwme runs. gi' mg him a conference career-record total
of 40. OSU's Hamilton htt 41 7 dunng the week.
Swim championships begin
lNDIANAPOLIS -The U.S. Swim-13 mmg mdoor national championships
begin at the Indiana U niversity
Natatonum toda). and for the top con-
tenders the meet will be a dress rehearsal for the U.S.
Ol1mpic Trials. which v.111 bt'. held m the same pool m
June
The indoor champ1onsh1ps here produced 14 meet
and se,cn Amencan records a year ago. The big
difference this 11me 1s that instead ofbemg held over the
<thon course (25 yards). tht• compet1t1on will be in the
50·meter pool because 1h1s 1s an Olympic 1ear.
A.t least four world record·holders wall be among
thl' 9()() or so swimmers. man-. ofv. horn will be here to
prepare for the all-tmponant 'Olympic eliminations m
late June.
,\mung the v.orld champions expected to compete
here arc buttcrfl) sp<.-c1ahsts Marv T. Meagh er and Matt
C 1rtbble. frt·est) ler Rowd> Games and backstroker Rick
C arq
Televt.lon. radio
TELEvtafON
None.
RADIO
1 p.m. -BASEaALL: Angels ve. s.ttle from
Palm Sprtnga. KMPC (710).
7:30 p.m. -HOCKEY: Klnge vs. Winnipeg,
KFOX-FM (93.5).
WEDNllOAY'9 llADIO
10:30 a.m. -8AH8All: Dodgen vs.
Battlmore, KABC (790}.
1 p.m. -8AIE8AU.: Angels vs. San C>Mtgo
from Palm Sprtnga, KMPC(710). ·
IQR4 8~CA
Rustlers
tied, 1-1
WE KNOW 500WAYS
TO I ESSEN THF TAX BITE. t ~
SAN DIEGO -Adrian
Mason banged a lcadofT
double in the seventh in-
ntng and eventually scored
to tie the game as Golden
West College and San
Diego State battled to an
I I ·1nn1ng. 1-1 tie in
women's non-conference
~year your Uncle has bPen laking pieces
of your 1ncorrie Thats why now yrnJ r eecl us
We ve complied over 500 dedur t1ons credits
and exctus1ons allowed by rhe IRS to qet you all the
deductions you have com111g
oliball action Monda~.
Mason mo\ed to third
on a single by Lon Holler
and scored on a wild p11ch
to 11e up the contest.
Cindy Ewart hurled six
inntngs of no·hit ball in
reltef for the Rustlers whale
striking out six as Golden
West ran its season record
to I 5·4-1.
Karen Carlson pitched
fi , e innings. gn 1ng up two
hits and the only Aztec run.
11 America• s new racing bike
Engineering profeuor Cheater Kyle of
Long Beach State lift.a a 16-pound Olym-
pic racing bike wboee dealgn be •uper-
Oft-Road Equipment Show
A record number or uh1b1tors will d1spla)' lht'
latest off-road veh icles and motonng accessont's for camping.. hunttns. fishing and explonng
recrcat1001s1s at the seventh annual SCO RE
Off·Road Equipment Show at the Anaheim
Convt'ntlon Center Apnl 13· I 5. Exh1b11ors rcprcsenllng 230 companies wilt
display 1he1r products, an mcrcasc of 17 percent
over last year. A trade show for industry businessmen will be held Fnday, Apnl 13. and doors will open to tht'
publicat5p.m.Showttmesarc5-l I p.m. Fnda};
11 a.m. to IOp.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday.
Youth track cllnlc
A track and field clinic for boys and 11rls 1n
clemt'ntary and 1n1crmcd1a1e schools will be held Saturday al Nt'wpon Harbor High from 9
a.m. 10 noon.
The evt'nt i~ sponsored by the Caty ofNt'wpon
Beach Parks. Beaches and Recreation Dcpan·
ment. The chn1c will be co nducted by Newpon
Harbor High track and field coach Enc T"'t'll
with Olympic gold mt'dal winner Dr. Dallas
Long ass1sung and demonstratmg. Lon& 1s a
former shot·putter.
Dr. Anhur A. Walton will conduct an 1n1ury
prcvt'ntton chnic with a free examination for all pan1c1pants.
The clinic format is an introduction to basic
track and field techniques for beginners. Panici-pants will learn about the sprints as well as the
basics in the highJump, long1ump, shot put and
softball throw. The annual Newpon Beach track and field
meet for elementary and intermediate school
students will be held Saturda}. Apnl 7 at
Nt'wpon Harbor High. For more 1nformat1on on the chn1c phone
6~2271.
vt.ed. It ha• tiny wheel•. flat handleban
and a frame with a •treamllned •hape like
airplane wing•.
Sklln.g trip planned
A Mamm oth 1v1ountain ski 1np, including
lodgJng at the Sierra Nevada Inn, will be
provided by tht' City of Newpon Beacb Parks,
Beaches and Recreation Dcpanment Apnl 6-8
Tbt' 46-paS.\Cn~er recliner bus will leave
Newpon Beach C'1ty Hall al 5·30 p.m. Fnda).
Apnl 6. Ftt is S88 per person. Lift tickets and meals
(other than Sunday evt'ning) are not included.
Lodging will be provided in the three-bedroom chalets with approx1ma1ely 12 people in each
chalet for two nights.
For more infonna11on phone 640-2271.
Girl•' ba•ketball tryoata
Tht' Pro-Keds run and gun 11rls' basketball league will hold tts tryou asSaturday from 9 a.m.
to noon at Gahr High 1n Ccmtos. The league 1s open for all players with high
school eli11bil11y left with league games sched-
uled on Saturdays and Sundays through May 13 from 9 a.m. to I p.m.
Cost lS SSO with each player receiving
basketball shoes, uniform and insurance.
World bo%1n6 cb.amplon•bJJM
The world's top boxers are scheduled 10
compete in all 13 weight classes in the 1984
World Boxing Championships at the Los Angeles Spons Arena on Fnday. Apnl 13 at 7:30
p.m.
Tht' current "'orld champion and tht' top
challen~er are slated in th e preview of the Olympic compettllon
Ticket pnces range from S7.50 toS50and ma)
be purchased through T1ckt'1ron Spon~ .\r<'nil Box Office and Charge Linc (2 13-741 ·2164).
Jerry Martin starting over
Ex-Royal trying to lfve down
stigma -of cocaine rap, prison
ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. (AP)-Before Jerry Martin
began his 81-day prison term, he received a telephone call
from Davey Johnson.
The rookie manager of the New York Mets, a
teammate of Martin's with the Phillies in 1977 and 1978.
wanted to offer the 34-year-old outfielder a JOb.
"He's a friend." said Johnson. ··Nothing more needs
to be said."
Manin. one of three Kansas City Ro}al players to
plead guilty to charges of trying to possess cocaine. started
what originally was a three-month sentence at Fort Worth
Federal Prison on Dec. 5. But. because of good ~havior,
he was released on Feb. 23. nine days ahead of schedule.
Less than a wee.k later, he appeared at the Mets' spring
training camp at St. Petersburg, Fla.
"I remember Jerry as a guy who always worked hard
and did his best.'' said Johnson.
On the orders of outgoing Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn , who imposed a one-year suspension on the Lhret'
Royals, Martin would have to pay his own way andl:ould
onl y participate in the team's workouts. He would be
ineligible for intra-squad or exhibition games.
sec the light at the end ot the forest.''
Two weeks into his tryout, the I 0-year veteran signed
a one•yearcontract worth $250.00(he earned $350.000 last
year with Kansas City), but the pay won't start until the
ban is lifted. A review of the case 1s set for May 15.
"I won't feel like part of the team until l'm playi ng,"
he said. "I know I won't go out there and embarrass myself.
I'm ready. But I'll be as nervous as a rookie on my first day
back:·
Johnson said that Martm would be the "perfect
role·player," fi lling 1n as a nght-handed pinch hitter and
defensive reserve.
"He said he feels comfortable in that role." said the
New York skipper. "and I'm confident he can do the job."
A free agent in last November's re-entry draft. Martin
was not sell'Cted by any club. Part of the reason may be
that. 10 addition to the drug conviction. Martin missed all
but 13 games in 1983 because ofa broken bone in his hand.
For Martin. the Mets will be his fif\h major league
club. He's hoping to stay.
"Jerry Wlll always have a place on my roster," said
Johnson. "I've known him for a lo ng time. He's an
outstanding individual. And nothing has happened to
change it. I don't care what the reaction has been.
"He's paid his debt to society. He knows he did
SQmething wrong. and feels bad about it. He's still kicking
himselfin the tail for getting involved with that stufTin the
first place. He'll be hving this down for the rest-Qi his life." We ve got same c~ay service to complele your
1040A or 1040EZ w11h fees as low as '510
''I'm not out of the woods yet," said Martin. ·~but I can
~ ------------
~ •SAirS • So call for an appointment or star 1n for tile
Beneficial Full Deductions Checklist
We don't iust know taxes we know monc>y
~Beneficial Income Tax Service®
Qoen .. llf'n111Q'> a•ttt S<ltu"l.ll''-u, Hlflo<' '"'''"' ,,r ~
IRVIN[-
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5!>2 .. 168
EL TOR0-
13704 Et l()IO Ro.to Su1l1> 1
581-t8t 1
cYPRESS-
9841 Waltw1 Slt()f'tl 121-5700
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GARDEN GROVE 9750 Chapman Av('nun 53t.2104
HUNTINGTON BEACH -t0046 Adams Alo'enue 964·2718
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Servicing All Make•
And Model.
Meu Verde Center J 751-4882 I Co.ta M ... ~ \.. 2701 Harbor Bl•d
ATTENTION
SHQOII~~ E~THU51A5T5
REX GAGE, RENOWNED SHOOTING IN·
STRUCTOR FROM HOLLAND AND HOLLAND,
LONDON, ENGLAND, Will BE TEACHING
INDIVIDUAL CLASSES AT COTO DE CAZA
FROM MARCH 30-APRIL -'TH. FOR INFOR-
MATION, CALL 71.4/~""800 • DAYS, ASK
FOR VICKI O~ 71.4/673-3112 -EVES.
C .•
___________ ....._ ___ ~.f .... __ ~~·--'--·---l -
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I
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I
Russell outlasts W#ade
BOSTON {AP) -Veteran Virginia
Wade. oominft oft an unex~tcd Joss to
Joanne Russe in the Virgin1a Slims tennis
tournament, says she never bad a chance to
to win the first.round sin&lcs match.
"I thouaht I served very well. In the key
pme, I was up 4().love aod I hit three aood
serves,'' Wade said after the match Mon·
day ni&ht. "But I djdn•t have a chance and
I lost the game. Sbc hit the b&JI really well."
Russen wore down Wade to knock the
38-ycar-old former champion out of tbe
tournament at WaJtcr Brown Arena.
Wade. who won the Boston tournament
in 1972 and was a losins finahst an 1980.
split the first two set and appeared headed
for a victory when she built a._ I lead in the
third set.
But Russell rallied before a crowd of
I.SI '4 to eliminate Wade, of Gmn Brit.tin,
3·6, 6-3, 1·S.
Russell said hcrwinninacffort came late
1n the match
"h took me until the seventh pme of the
Lhird ~t to change my position. I moved
beck from the baseline ... It gave me mott
lime to &et ready for her serve, time to
make up m¥ mind," she said.
She admitted that Wade was bard to
beat.
"She's really hard to read, and bcSidcs, I
wear contact lenstsand I don't see that w.U
indoors," she noted. "I was kind oflired
aoi.na into the match. I aot here late last niaht and had a little ftiaht taa."
In othcrtoumament play, Kathy RuWdi
whipped Y\lonne VermiakofSouth Afnca
tn a downhill match in the cveoina
proaram. The unlCICded Rinaldi n~cd 49
minutet to take the first set, but ran ofl'thc
second in a cffip 13 minutes for a 7"6, ~I
v1ctory.
"Yvonne must have been ttred." said
Rinadli. •• he had two touah matchc ju t
to quaJ1fy."
J
-. Fo R THf Rr coRo ..
NIA
WISTattN COHl'aa•NC•
f'1clfk DMW1
Jl•utltn
Portland
w I. ., 2l f'C1. H
.611
s .. utt
Pnotnlx
Golden St1t1
S1n OI~
0 2' 36 u ~ .0 32 ,,
26 ..
MldwHt OM'*"
'°' .soo .•ll .451
.361
Oat111 :It 32 .S.9 Ut1h .0 33 .s.t
K•n11a City :U 37 .•7' Oonve< )4 lt .4'6 s.n Antonio 31 • 1 ."31 Hou1ton 27 .. .llO
aA"•RN COHl'•alHC•
A tlafltlc OMSllft •·Boston
• ·PlllllelotPhl• 11·N1w Yorio.
Now Jer11v
Waalllngton
52 " 45 2S 42 ,.
it 32 3} •1 Cemrll~
• ·Mllwaukff •2 30 x· Detroit 41 30
Allanl1 J3 40
Cllk:aoo 26 "3
Cltvtlan<I 25 •S
lndla"a 72 •9
JI ·Cllnclltd Pll VOlf l>erth
Mtndt'I'• Games
No "''"'' •chtdultd TINeflt'l Gamet
Dallas II Ntw York
Boston 11 W1Sllt11111on
New Jersey at Clavlland
Pllll10tlolll1 11 Allante
Golden S1111 a• San Antonio
Dt lrOll ,, ClllCIOO
Denver et Houston
Kenan Cllv II Ulall
San Diego e t Pttoenlx
Stallle a t Porll•nd
NCAA tournament
DIVISION I
FINAL l'OUR
1tSNttle
Saturdav'a Game1
st3
S17 .•S2
371 3S7
310
·~ 12
IS"" 1$ii'I n
s
6 II')
II
Keotuckv 1?9·•> vs. Ge«99lown <32·3l
vtrvlnla (21· ll) vs. Housron (31·•>
Mtndt'1'1 Game
Chamoton•lllo
c .....
FINAL l'OUR ROSTERS llosttr1 for the flnat tour team• In tht
NCAA Division I men's basketball cllam·
olonslliP
V""'"'8 Cl't'alltn ,. Ht Wt 0
•Jim Miiier t 1 Othlll Wllaon
12 Antttonv Soloman
1 S R lck v SlokH n Tom Shtehty
2• Olden Polynice
30 Ken1on Edelln
l3 Kenny Jonnson
:U Rick Carll•la
4S Tlm Mutten
SI Oen Mlrrlfllld
F 6·1 210 Jr
G 6·0 19' Sr
G S·lO 160 Fr
G S·10 163 Sr
F 6·1 215 Fr
C 6·10 210 Fr
C 6·7 20S Sr
G 6·0 llO Jr
G 6·S 210 Sr
F 6·S 196 Jr
F 6·6 220 Jr
Hou1toft Cau11r1
f' Ht Wt a 10· 11 Otrtlt Giies G 6·3 17S Sr
12· 13 Ren1ldo Tllom11 G 6·2 190 So
1•· is Eric Dicken• G 6· I 110 Jr
20· 21 Atvln F renklln G 6-2 its So
21·23 Mervlo Alexandr G 6·• 190 Jr
2•·2S J1me1 W11vtr G 6·3 190 Fr
30·31 Garv Orsek F 6·7 220 Jr
32·33 Bennv Anders F·G 6·S 118 Jr
3'·35 Akffm Ot1luwon c 7·0 2SO Jr
.0-•1 Ricky Wlnatow F 6·1 223 Fr
.,.43 MicllHI YOUllll F 6·7 220 Sr
.. -•5 Reid Ge1tv1 G 6·7 200 Jr so-s I SllCtY Belcher F 6·6 210 Fr
52·5J Bruton Clerk F , .. 230 Jr
S4·S5 Greo Anderson c 6·10 220 Fr
l<omvdlv Wlldub ft Ht Wt a
10 J1mes Bl1ckman G 6·3 iao Fr
1l Oby 8ffl G S· 11 i10 Sr
12 Leroy Byrd G S·S l•S So
I• P1ut AndrtWl G 6·3 llO Fr
20 Jim Master G 6·S llO Sr
23 llCXllf' Harden G 6·1 165 So
24 8rel Beeruo F 6·9 no Jr
2S Winston 8enne11 F 6·7 210 Fr 31 S.m8owl1 F·C 7·1 23S Sr l3 Tom Helli C·F 6·9 210 Sr
34 Kenny Welker F 6·1 i90 So 40 Troy McKlnlty F·C 6·6 19S Jr
54 Melvin Turoln c 6· 11 240 Sr
c..w .... wn Heves .. "' wt a 20 FrN Brown G 6•S llS Sr 22 GeneSmllll G 6·2 17S Sr
2• Blll Marlln G 6·7 190 Jr
30 Mlcllaot J1Cklon G 6·1 17S So
32 Hor1c:e Bra.dnu G 6·1 171 So
l3 Petrick Ewlno c 1·0 220 Jr :u Reoota Wiiiiams G·F 6·7 llS Fr
40 David Wlno1te G·F 6·S 170 So
•2 Cllflon 01lraow F 6·7 22S Fr
SO Mtcnall Grel'lam F 6·9 210 Fr
52 R1toh 011ton F·C 6·9 no Jr
SS Vlclor Morris F 6·1 220 So
l'IHAL l'OUR RECORDS
How this v1ar'1 final four In the NCAA
Division t men's baskelball CflamolonslllP
l'laYI ler~ In PHI final lours, with over1ll
rec01ds 1(""'1dr't' ( 12·4)
19•2-Fourtll
19~1rst
19•9-Flrst 1951-Flrst
1951-Flrst
1966-Second
197rSecon<1
197t-Flrst Vlrtlnla<l-i)
1911-Tlllrd
H1111-.U·S)
1967-Tlllrd
196f-Fourtll
1912-Thlrd 1913-Second
GfftettoWn (2-2)
19Q-Second
1m--Second
NCAA cMmP60na
llesulls of colteoe baaketbatt'' nt1ilonat
cllamotonshlP nmes:
•S
OT
i939--0reoon 46, Ohio S 1 33
19~tndl1na 60, Kanses 42
1941-Wtscon1tri 39, w11111no1on SI.,.
19•2-Sltnford S3, D1rtmouth 38
19Q-Wyomtno 46, Georgelown ,.
1944-Ulell •2. Dertmou111 40, OT 19•s--Oktalloma A&M 49. New Yori< U
l9•6--0lll1110m1 A&M 43, N Carolina 40
19•7-Holv Cron se, Okl1110ma •7
19.._.Kentudly SI, B1ylor •2 1'~Kenlucky 46, Oklll\Oma SI 36 lt~CNY 7i, 8redlty ..
1951-KtnfudlV 61, Kanlas SI SI
l9S1-K1n11s IO. s1. Jonn's 63
19S>-ln<llana 69. t<1n11s 61
1•s.-L1Satta n. Br~ 76 19SS-San Frenclsco n, LaSalle 63
1956-San FrenclKO 13, IOWI 11
1957-+lorlh Cerotlna 54, K1nus SJ, 3
1•st-teontuckv M, s..1111 72 l9S9-<1lllofnl1 71, w .v lrolnla 10
1HO-<>hlo SI. 75, Calltornl1 SS
1'61-<:lnclnnatl 70, Ohio St. 6S, OT
1H:r-<lnclnnall 11, Ohio SI. ff lH>--Lovota. 111 60, Cincinnati SI, OT
!.....-UCLA "· Oukt 13 IH.S-UCl.A 91, Mlehlo1n IO
IK6-Texa1 Wntitrn 72, l(onlUCkY 6S
1'67-UCLA 1', D•vton '4
!Ht-UCL.A 11, N.C1rollna " Ifft-UCL.A n. PUf'dut n
1910-UCLA IO, J•dlaonvlllt 69
1971-UCLA 61, Vl1141nov• 62 1972-UCLA 11, Flor~ St. 16
197>-UCLA 17, ~·SI. 66 197 ........ C•rollne SI. 16, N\Moutltt 6A 1'7j-UCLA n. Kontucav es 1'7~ndt.n. N. Mlcllloen " 1'17-MarCIU'llle 67, N .C•rollna ff
1'1t-t(tfttudt't' ••• Ouk• • I~ SI, 75, llldlena St. '4 l~lavlllt Sf, UCL.A M
1,.l-lndlena .,, H Ct rollna so 1~.c.rollnll '3. o.or .. town 6J 1~.C•rollnl SI. M, ~ton U , .... ,tur
Cemmeft 0 JJ I Mlfttl
A RSI of 110w IN foll tetrM wtMI 11111 .-V In Saturday's HCM MmlflMlt In
letttlt fwtel ... !Mt common ~ In tta·M:
YaGtMlA VI. HOUSTON ....... c.nlM .....
~'°"Iott,, .....
V1'9lnll WOfl twlet. S1·M MCI 76-Q w .... ,......
~lon-.61·.., Vlrelnle lo6t r.tct, ... ,. w '3·Sl; won ... ,,
.,......,
""4IOll WOii twice, 6A•61 anct S7·56, Iott 7).-61
Vlrvtnl1 won, Sl•ll In owrlltnt
Houston Mfteltd v~ 7 .. 65 °" "'° ,, ,, Hout!Of\.
O•OltOITOWN VL K•NTUCKY ~y--lml to Ktntudlv twice, '3·5'. n..e
Lost to Georeetown, '7·JI.
NCAA ,..., flew Heb
,...,.,.,. •• ·-ll-et ..... s..ta ... , Gtortttown, 6·5; K.ntudlv, 7·S, Houa· ton, J•2, v1rv1n11, •·I.
KIT
Meltdlv'a~~ tat Mii._ ~ 0.'*"1 N.Y,)
MkNHn 71, Vlr1lnl1 75
Notr~ DI~ '5, $0ut11wntwn Loulala,,. " ........ .,..°""*'" ...
Mk:l\ltan v" Notre O•n'lt
LOS AM!mltes
MOHOAY'1 RISULTS
3'ttl .......... IYmnl mwtlllel
fflaST RACE. Onl mile NC.O. Ltvltv
Rllvttvn (5'Mlll) 11.00 6.IO S.00
CQP4twlnna (Aubll'I) 3.40 2.60
llowdvs TrN1Uro IAndlfsonl 5.60
AllO recld: Kiiie Bravo, C1flfornt1
El'TIHf'tl, Or1noerk Brtn<la, G'91a Otslgt1,
Andys MIY. Timber Cr...._
Time: 2:CM •ts.
S2 IXACTA <•·91 oeld Slot.IO
SECOND ltACI. Onl milt PK.I. SurNMr (Laekwl 3.10 2.60 2.60
CounltH Rov1ta (Spriggs) S.60 3.IO
F1tr Sllrt (0-l • 60 Allo rleff: Monllant 1!1141, 8llbrM11,
Ttlr11111, A~v Aw1r<1, Emerald Sue.
Time: 2:02 •t S.
S2 EXACTA (1·2) Plld S1UO.
THIRD RACI. One mile PICO.
P•OI Eddie (Perkor) 12.20 3.20 3.20
Renni ud (Plano) 2 . .0 2 . .0
Super T~ (R•ICllfordl •.20
AllO recld: Rodtv Scotch, Hunrtn
StMtdow, Et Torenlo, Andvs Ursula, A L
'WMka, Andvs PtPOtr.
Time: 2~1.
S2 EXACTA (S-6) o•kl 126.40,
.. OURTit RACE. Onl milt trOf.
Huntrns Sier (Vtttvn) •.co "-20 3.10
LadY L (Greoorvl uo •.10 3.20
Hunters t<arl (810nl •.10
Also r.ced: G J Sier, Sea Wlllu>er, S.ny
Ster, PKlflc Hunler, Mffna Stlllranne.
Stolen Ore~s..
Time: 2:03 21 S.
l'll'TH RACE. Ont mllt oece.
Rowen CrH I (LOl\90) UO 3.40 3.60
ProfoHor Osborne (Vllhm) 5.10 00
Ro..._nd Adover ITOOdl 7.llJ
Allo racec:t: Hindu Al>Ot, Aaron Chlo,
Tommy Rio, J1mes Gre11an, Flt And
Ready.
Time: 2:00 31S.
U Ix.ACTA (l·S) 01ld "3.20.
SIXTH RACE. Ont milt Pict. Tecoma N
IBroa> 7.40 • . .o 2.IO JudV NOVI ( l.ac.k•v) 6.20 •.OO
COltwlu (Parker) 2.IO
Alao recld: Brookd1le Bov. W1tt>ro
Tarn, Jen Hal N, Jen Rldd, Klftvtuck Idell,
Pony E11orns N.
Time: 2:00.
U EXACTA (6·7) Plld 71.20.
SEVENTH RACE. Ont mile oac:e. Dlab lo C 1 nvo n (011om1r)
16.20 8.40 uo Fly Jlnda iety (Grundv) 11.IO IS.00
Hatcvon Holiday (Pierce) UO
Also raced: MattHe Hunlitr, Jim1 Peo·
otr, 8ff J1y GM, Skloe>tnlrle, Amvs Pete,
Condk» Ster.
Time: 2:01 llS.
U Ex.ACTA C•·Sl 01ld SISI 60
EIGHTit RACE. One milt Pact
Monterey Roc:M1 (AUOlnl 40.20 20.60 7 20
Bene Jolie (Pertt.,l 34 IO 13 00
Horizon Ster (Sleeth) 3 40
Atao rlCld Trickll Cttaroer. Dtsert Son.
Primitive SlrMk, 011n Polnl, Prln1m1ker,
Irish F~n.
Time: 1:51 •t S.. U EXACTA IS-6) oald '81•00
NINTH llACI. One mlle irot
NOClll Arne1t1 (Andtraonl 2• 20
Petey CL.atey)
Andvs Mtlaor (Ritchie)
Also r1C9d: Clleartut Moose.
•.40 3.20 2 20 2.20
3 00
Trot On. Berrien County, Como Ster
Time: l'S9 31S..
12 EXACTA <S·7l oald SS9 00
U fttCK SIX (1·311·6·•·S·SI Nine win·
ners oald Sl,SIS.00 (flYI hOfltsl
TENTH RACE. Ont mllt oac1
The Raider N (Uelteyl 3.20 2.40 2.10
C1ot•ln James (Longo) •.20 2.60
Berl Gltnvele (Vlldngllm) 2.10
Also rac.d: Buck Fifty, Wing Com·
mandtr, Johnny Mac, Sltd9otlammer
Time: 2:00 31S. S2 EXACTA (1·9l 01ld Sll.60.
A tllndanco: •.oo..
NHL
CAMf'BELL CONl'ERIHCI
SmV1M OMNtlt
w-'L T f'b G,.
y·Edmonton SS II s 1lS ~
x·Catoary 33 29 ,. IO ,,.
11·V•ncouv1< 31 39 I 10 29t
x·Wlnnlot11 29 37 io " l31
1('"91 22 43 12
Horris OM.-i
S6 m
y·Mln,,.s.o11 38 )0 ' I S 333
K·St. Louis 32 39 1 11 -x·Otlrott 30 .0 1 67 219
Clllcooo 21 41 • .. 266
Toronlo 2S 43 9 S9 293
WALES COHP:ERaNCI
ftatrtctr OMlien
)C·NY lalas ., 26 • 91 ,.s
x·Wetlllnolon 46 26 s 91 297
•· Pnlladelohla 42 2S 10 9• 331
)C·NY R1noors 40 21 9 .. 303
NIW JtrHY 11 S3 7 41 226
Plllsbur91\ 16 SS 6 38 2 ..
Adams OIVINtlt
x·Buffalo ., 23 7 101 309
•·Boston •5 2S 6 " 321
Jl•Quetlec 40 27 10 90 3'7
•·Montreat 3S 37 s 75 2t3
Harllord 26 40 10 62 176
x·Cllnched pl1yoff berth
Y·Cllnchtd division tttlt MIMIV's Sc_...
MlnntlOll •. SI. Louis 3 (ot)
TlflitM'I G.mn Wlnnlo.o11 ~
Botton 11 Quebec
MonlrN I at NY lllandlfl
Ectmonton at Catearv
8uff1lo 1t HaHlord
I
GA
309
2t3
324
363
366
321
lot
313
300
37S
267
220 211
295
335 3n
247
252
269
211
310
~ • • . . . ..
•XH .. fTIOM aAHIALL
Mtellt '· ........ 0 ,., ..... ,......,
Mllw1i.*... -000 000-0 I I A/IMlt 000 lOO OOx-1 I 0
C.ldwlll, W•lt1 (1) end Schroeder. Witt,
1(1ufmen II), $el'CMI (f) Ind loon.,
H11t11 (51, w-w111 l.-C1ldw111
Hlh-NOnt,
ONeer'I 4, C:.rdMl1 2
(Atlt.,.......,.,
OodOltl 010 002 100---. 11 0 SI, 1.oula 000 002 OOC>-2 5 o Honeycutt, Rodll1 l6), N~uer (I)
Ind Scio~, Flmole (61; Allen, Rudlitr (7),
Sullitr (I) end trllMIMt. ~_.,cull.
L-Allefl. ~·~·
°"*'~ Ptl~l1 t, CllldMltl 2
1(~111 CllY 5, Atlenll •
Chieffo (All •, PlttaburOll (H ) )
8olloll t, MofltrMI l
Pltttbur9'1 (") 11, Mlnnnol1 S
THM 3, 8alllmort 0
Hou11on s. Detroit • 112 IMlno•>
s..1111 u, s.n oi.oo 1
ClevNlld S. ClllcQo (NLI •
Sen Fr1ndaco S. o.klend 3
New York (ALI 7, Toronto 2
T .. V'•G-Sealtle v1. 4""" 1t P1tm Sl>rlno•
Oedelrl vs c111c100 (AL> 11 s.reao11 Pllll~ll vs. NIW Yorll (NL) 11 SI
P111nbur9 Mtnneao11 (Si) vs. Clnclnnell 11 T1moa
Toronto vs. Hou11on 11 Cocoe New York (AL) YI, Monlfffl •• Wiii
P1tm 8ffCll Otlroll 111 Pllhburgll 11 Breoenlon
Atlante v1. 1<111111 City 11 Fort Myera
TtxH YI. 81lllmor• •• Ml1ml Mlnnaol1 vs. Bolton 11 Winier H1v1n
01klarid vs. Clll~l>O (NL) 11 MIH C .. vllend YI . S.n Francisco II ~I·
!Miiie Sin Oleoo vs. MllwaukH 11 Suri City
Aneets' TV idMdule
(Al l'Md .. !Ml unlftl O!MnrlM ~)
o... '**""' Time Fri., April 13 O.ktalld 7:30 o.m
Sat .. Aprlt U 0.kland 1 o.m.
Sun .. Aprh IS O.kllnd i o.m.
Wld., A.orll 11 Mlrineaota S:30 p,m
Suri., April 22 Toronto ICl'.30 1.m.
Fri . MIV • S111tle 7:30 P.ITI.
S.t .. Mav S Seattle 1 o.m
Sun., May 6 S.•1111 1:30 P.m.
SIHI .. MIV 13 Otlroil ICl'.30 P.m.
Fri, May II New Yorll S p.m.
Sun., May 10 New York 11 a.m
TUH., May 2t New Yor1t• 7:30 o.m
wees., May >O New York' 7.30 o.m.
S.I , June 2 Cleveland • o.m
Sun., June 3 Clevtllnd ICl'.30 a.m.
wees .• June 6 Cllb9o S:JO o.ITI
Thura., June 1 Chlcaoo S:JO o.m
Fri., June I K1n111 City S:30 o.m
Sal , June ' Kan11s Cltv S:30 o.m.
Sun .. June 10 K1n1A1 Cltv 11:30 a.m.
Fri., June 2t Mltwaul<ff S:JO o.m.
Sat , June 30 Mllw1ukff S:JO o.m.
Sun., Jul\' 1 Mllw1ukff 11:30 1.m.
Wed., Juty • Toronto •:JS p.m.
Fri .. July 6 8o$1on 4:30 o.m.
Sun., Jutv I Boalon 11 a.m.
Fri., JUiy 27 Minnesota S:30 p.m.
Sal., Jutv 21 Mln,,.aota S:JO o.m.
Fri .. Auo. 17 B1ttlmore S o.m.
Sun., Auo. 19 B11tlmore 2 o.m. Ml>n., Auo. 20 New York S o.m.
T"" .. Auo. 2i New York S o.m. wees., Auo. 22 New York S p.m.
Mon .. Sept. 3 ci.vtlan<I • o.m.
Sun., Sellt. 9 Chieffo • o.m. •--denot11 An1helm Stadium oame.
AH bfa.dca1t times are sublect 10
c11anoe. All times are PST
Ood9en' TV scheduM
(Al ere rwd .. mes)
Mon , Aorll 16 Houi ton S:lO p m
Tues .. APf'll 17 Houston S:JO o.m Fri., Aorll 71 San Oit90 7 om.
Sat., Aprll 21 S.n Ole9o 7 pm
Sun .. AO<ll 2t San D'-00 1 o m
Mon., APl'M lO S.n Francisco 7:30 o.m. Tues., Mav 1 San Frenc1sco 7:30 o.m
Sun., MIY 6 Plllst>uroh 10:30 a.m
Mon .. May 7 St. Louil S:JO o.m.
Tuts., May I St. Louis S:JO o.m
TUH .. MIV 22 PlllladelOl\la •:30 o.m.
w~ .. Mav 13 Plllt1delohl1 •:30 o.m
Thurs , May 24 Plllladelollla •:30 p.m.
Sun .. May 27 New York 10-JO 1.m
!Mn., Mav 21 Montreat •:30 o.m.
Ttturs , June 1• Houston S:30 o.m.
Fri., June IS Houston 5:30 o.m.
s.1 .. June 16 Houalon S:30 o.m.
Sun., Ju,,. 17 Houston • p.m.
Tue., June 19 Clnclnnall •:30 o.m.
W~ .• June 20 Cincinnati •:JO o.m.
Thurs , June 71 Clnclnn1ll •:30 o.m.
Sun .. June 24 Atlante 11:05 a.m. Sun., July IS Cllk:aoo ll:IS 1.m.
!Mn., Jutv 16 Plllsburgll •:30 p.m.
Tuea .. Jutv 17 Plt11burgll 4:30 o.m.
wees., July 11 PlllsbUrvll •:30 o.m.
Thurs .. Jutv 19 SI. Louis S:JO p.m. Sun., July 22 St Louil 11:10 1.m.
Mon , Julv JO Sen Dieoo 7 o.m
Tues., July 31 S.n D'-00 1 o.m. W~ .• AUO. i San Oleoo 7 o.m.
Sun., AU9. S Cincinnati 11:10 a.m
Mon., Auo 6 At1ent1 •:JS o.m.
Tues .. Auo. 1 Allant1 •:JS o m
Wed , AU9 I Atlante 2:3S P m. Fri., Auo 10 San Frenclsco I o.m.
Sat .. Auo. 11 S.n Frenclsco 1 om
Sun., AU9. 12 S.n Frenclsco 1 o.m
Sun.. A UO 26 Plllladelollla 10-.30 I m
Fri .. Auo. 31 1Mntrt1I •:30 o.m.
Sun., S.at. 2 Montreal 10 1.m
Sat., Seat IS Cincinnati • p m.
Sun., SePI. 16 Clnclnnall 11:10 1 m.
Fri., Sept. 2i S.n Francisco I o.m.
Sun., Seal, 23 San Franclaco 1 o.m.
AH limes .,.. PSTIPDT. Wvm·up lhOW
IMQlns IS mlnuln before 1M1m• llme.
c .....
UC ll'Wlt 7, c.I ftGIV ftemtnl 6
UC trvlne 010 000 0.2-7 12 2
Cat Potv Pomon1 010 001 'I~ 10 o Dffll, Linton (6 ), Kent Ill and Morgan;
McQuarre, Jeosen (7l, NOien (I), Hunt (9)'
end P11t1non. W-Kent. L-Not1n.
28-<>'Connell CUCll, Wffks (Pl, Valcllvla
CP), Palterson (P). 3&-Su1111r (UCO.
HR-Johns (P).
US,L
waSTaRN COH .. aaENCE
ll>adllc w l T ftd.. ,., f'A
Denver • 1 0 .too lot 106
Arla one 3 2 0 600 1'4 72 ........ 2 3 0 ·* 54 n
Oeltland 0 s 0 .000 2• 100
c ......
Mldllilan ~ 0 0 1000 15' 10'2
Houaton 3 2 0 .600 ,., ,.,,
OkllllOma , 2 0 600 S9 90 sen Antonio 1 • 0 .200 50 15
Cllkffo 0 s 0 .000 11' , ..
IAITIU COMPlltaNCI
Allllllk
~a
New.lerWV
Pfllsllur911
WMl!lneton
4 1 0 ,too 101 ff
4 1 0 .tOO l30 M
1 • 0 .200 71 " 0 5 0 .000 .0 166
MIMll't'• S-... a1~t1. T.,,...._.,
Mlcflltefl S2. HoUllOll a.
~ ......
Houltofl ,, Ok'9flome
CNQeo •IW~
.i.cktOIW .. •t ~. "
~·-..... ....., ..........
MIOM t i Oeftvet
TamN llv II 11t1n1•1 tl4I
OtlllanO •• flllttMurtfl
SM ~ tt MlctliMll
, p ......
..... OrtaaM •• ~'*llNm; "
I
,., ..
m .. 101 122
126 11S " , ..
,..,Ndln
ALL·IUMIST LIAGUI
MOit velual* lll•ver -Kiili l rown (Marine). lllW ,..,.
Kim e.,tvte Ct!dttonl, JMntter HoueN.t-
J/lo (Edison), Yvttt• Welker (F~l•lll
Vdrt), Clllrt Momttdt (f'OUlll•lfl V•lltv). l..tl9Nnnt t<ltcn <Hunflneton IMctl), 1<111Vvne Albef't (Huntlneton a..ctl), Clndv
Orav (M.rlnt1), t<rls Katv IM.rln•>.
WendY McK•v CNewPOfl H•rDof'>. ar1nc11 w111..-(NewPOfl HtrDof'), Trlcl1 Hint•
(Wttlmlnaler), Donna &lbleY !WHl-
mln•tw).
lecaNTNm
Tr.cy Ftll (NtwPOfl H•rDor), Atilt lotto (Newwt H.arDor), Lori Mert1 (~woot1 H•r1IOI'), Nency Lettman (Wttl•
mti11titr), Jtntll CWlloft (Edlton), Ktllv
Qulnltn (Edltonl. Tr.CV I.• (Fount1ln
Vtlltv), l(tttf C.ltldv CHuntlneton IMcll),
Cflrlt GrtY (!Nrlna l, Ott>IJle Hume
(Marina), OenlM F.ntv (M.rin.J
HIGH SCHOOL
SIHIMt uaeue
Marina def Huntlnoton 811c11, lS·t ,
IS-3, is-i1.
Fountain Vatlev def Ed1aon, 16·14.
15-11, IS·6. La Quint• def Wetlmlnaler. IS·I, is-7,
IS·7. °'''"" ~ R•nlllnes I. L1vun1 811c11, 1. E11ancl1, l . Coron1
del Mar, •· Founteln Valley; S. Ntwoort Herbor; 6. C1pl1trano Valley, 7 (111) Edlaon
end lrvlne; 9. Min ion Vltlo. 10 Et Toro.
sunset 1. .. eu•
lNtue WL
Founl1ln V11t1v • 0 Marina 4 O
Edlaon 4 I
Hunllnolon BtaCll 2 3
La Qulnll I 3
Oc:Hn View 0 • W11tmtn11er o •
Ovitral Wl
6 2
4 •
6 2
2 s
I • I 6
0 6
Wldnelday's Gamet
Fount1ln V1t1ey 11 Huntlnllton S.1ctt
Marin. II Edlaon W11tmlnsltf 11 Ocean Vt.w
l'ridt'l's Gamet (7)
Edison 11 Hun1tno1on Baacll
Wntmlnsttr al Fountain Valley
Oce1n View al Marine
s.. View LNeu•
Ltaeue W L
Est1ncla 6 o
Ntwoort Hert>or s l
Corona dtl Mar • 2 trvlne 4 2
El Toro 3 3
Mater Otl i s
Untverally 1 S
Co•ta Mtaa o 6
O\lwal WL
9 0
1 2 6 2
6 2 • 3
2 6 1 I
0 1
Tedlv's Game1 Cl:ISI N1woort Herbor al Coron• def Mar
Unlver1lly 11 E1t1nct1
Et Toro at Irvine
Coste Mesa at Maler Del
l'rldl'l's Games (1)
Corona def Mar at Eslancla
Newoort Herbor at Unlversllv
Coste MalA •I Et Toro
Maler Del 11 trvtne
Souttl Cou t LNeu•
LNtiUt WL
Lagun1 811c11 S O
Min ton Vltto • 1 C.olatreno V1tley 3 l
O\lwal Wl s 2 s 2 4 •
WOOCIOrldllt 2 3 Dana Hiiis 2 3
L1gun1 Hills i •
San Citmenlt 1 • Tedl'l's Games (l:lSl
San Cltmentt al Laguna Beech
WooelbrlOGe 11 Mission Vie.a
LH una Hills II Dana Hills
Frtda'l's Games C1I
Lagune B11c11 11 Caolslreno Vettev
WOOdbrldot a1 Leouna Hill• • Min ion Vlelo al Sen Clemente
~ • • .. "
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Hencenferenct
G~ WHt '· San 0 .... si.tt I
(c.led aftw 11 lmlnes. dartr.ness)
• s • s • s • s
GOldtfl Wtsl 000 000 100 OC>-1 S 1
San 0'-00 St 000 ioo 000 OC>-1 2 0
Certson, Ewert (6) an<! Rusr.etl, Rice end
Moser 28 -Mason CGWCl
..
Monday's tr1ns.ct1ons
IASEIALL
Amtnun LNtue
80STON RED SOX-Senf R09er
Cltmenl, Rich Gilt end Steve Crawford,
olldltrs, Marc Sulllv1n, c1tc11er. end Lff Greh1m, outfielder, 10 their minor l11gue
comP1t11 for rt111'9nmen1
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Waived R1ndv
Martz, Stave Mura, and Kevin Hickey,
ollcllers. for 1110 ouroost of giving them
thetr uncondlllonat r1111111.
OAKLAND A's-Wa led Ed Fi rmer,
ollcher, for the ouroose of giving him Ills
unconoltton11 release. Pieced Rici<
Langford, ollc:ttar, on the dlseblod 1111. Soni
Biii l(r~r. Gorman Helmueller, Be<t
Bredltv end Curt Youno, oltclltrs. ano
MlcktY Tellltlon Ind BIK Balhe. Cllchers, n m Pvanarskl, lnfiolotr, and Tom Romeno,
oulflOldtf, to Tacom1 of Ille P1clflc Coast
Lt1gue. Sent Cer10s Lezca no . outflllder, and Mark Waoner. Infielder, to their minor
lte9UI come>lex for reautonmen1 TEXAS RANGERS-W1tved Pel
Undtr....OOCS, oltcritr, tor Ille ouroose of
otvtno him Ills uncondlllon•I "'"" Sent Al LaCflOwlcz, oltctler, to lttelr minor l11gue
como1t11 tor rtts•lgnment
NafltMI LNtut
ATLANT" l!lllAVEs-Pt1ctd Boo Wallto,
ollehtr, on w1lv1n for the ourPOsa of
vtvlno him ht1 uncondlllonat relffse Re·
turlltd Paul Runge Ind Paul Zuvella,
lntlttdtn, 11'd Rick Llal, Rufino LlnarH Ind
L.o Varo-1. oullleldtrs, to their minor
IHOut c:ome>lt• for ,.. .. u'9nmen1
CHICAGO CU8S-Acqutrtd Tim Slod·
ct.rd, plldltf, from Ille 0.kllnd A'I In
.. 11~not lw Sten K't'llS, l>ltellor end a
ola't'W to tit namt<I later. MONTREAL EXPOS-Placed Mika
V1 U, outflt!Otr. on w1lvers !of the PUf'POSI
of 0M119 him Ills rtft•H. NEW Y()ttl( METs-Plactd John
Stearna. ca1cnw. on tnt 2l·dav dl11011ct 1111
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS-Waived Jami.
Qulr11, Cllleh«, for Ille ~H of 9'Ylntl
lllm Ill• U!'COnditlOMI rtlMM
IASKU .. ALL.. ........ ................ *"
SAN ANTONIO SP\JRS-Slontd Br•nl
Wl4dnlt. fOrwt(f-cen!Of, for the r.-
rnalndlf' .. "" MMOtl.
llOOTaALL ~, ..... u...
HAMii. TON TIGER-CA Ts-slentd Ed
I.Alt, ~. tllCI Oevld Grltffl, "'""
nlfte Mck. Ul8IM""" , ............ CHICAOO IL.1Tt-$1ent4 Rlllt We~·
Jnetol\, lllllMcklf. W11ved Ttm Koeeel,
--~
OranoeCout 0.AaLY PILOT/Tu.day .... di"·,..
Ou~MyWay
St. Lout. Bluea defeneeman Terry Job.mon (26) &1vee •
Mlnneaota North Star•' Brlan Bellowa a above da.rt.ni
National Hockey League game Monday nfCbt, woo by
Mlnneaota, 4 -3 In overtime.
All-Americans set·
for East-West tiff
William~Sallclle
Beeuwsaert lead
West on April 8
By ROGER CARL.WN
OftM0.-,"°41a.ft
----
L OS ANGELES -I n t he prep
a rena1ust a bout e vel) one knows h ov.
well Mater De1 High star Matt
Bttuwsaert. Long Beach P o ly 's Chns
Sandie and C renshaw's J o h n W 1l-
hams p lays -th ey've been the
d o mma ung factors o f C I F 4-A a n d
Los A ngeles Cit y baske t ball for the
past two years.
All three are c o n s ide r e d
All-Americans . but whe n you talk
All-American you·re taUo ng a bout
players fro m areas whic h d o n 't even
come close t o competing agains t o ne
a n o ther.
It's j u st a n o ther reason for the
attrac tio n o f the M c D o n a ld's
All-Ame rican H igh Sch ool b asketball
game April 8 at U CLA - a c han ce to
see just h ow well t he c re am of
Sou the m Cahfom1a ba sk etball stacks
up with th e best 1n the natton T ipoO
is sch eduled for 7 p.m.
Twe n ty-fi ve o f the best p rep
sen iors ha ve been in' 1ted to part1c 1-
pate in the East vs. W est formula and
h eading a panel of e xperts whod1d the
sclecung for th e game are two
advisers -UCLA legend John
Wooden a n d Coac h M o rgan W ootten
o f DeMatha H igh m H ya tts ville. \ltd .
The W est squad will c o n sist o f 6-4
guard Delray Brooks (R o gers H igh.
M1c h 1gan C ity. Ind.): 6-2 guard Gal)
G rant (M c K inley, Canto n , O h io): 6-8
forward Craig Jackson (M ontebello.
Denver): 6-9 center Andrew Lang
(Dollarway. P ine BlutT. Ark.): 6-4
guard Troy Lewis (Ande rson . Ind.).
6-7 forward Al Lore n zen (K e nne d ).
Cedar Rapids. Iowa ): 6-10 forwa rd
Danny Manning (Lawren ce. Kan.):
6-4 guard R o ger M cClend o n (Cente n -
nia l, C hampaign. Ill.); and 6-6 guard
C raig M c M illa n (Cloverdale), tn ad-
di tion to Bee uwsaert (6-6). Sandie
(6-8) and W ilhams (6-8).
Matt Beeuwaaert
The Eas t squad includes 6-4 guard
Mic hael Bro w n (Dunbar. Baltimore)j
6 -6 forward C?erric k C h1evous (Holy
C ross. Flushing. N .Y.): 6-2 guard
Edward Davende r (Boys & Gi~
Brookl} n ); 6-6 fowa.rd Duane Ferrell
(Calvert. T owson . M d .): 6-8 forward
C ednc J e nkins (T e rrell C ounty.
Dawson. G a .): 6-7 guard-foward
Shelton Jones (Am llyville MemonaJ.
.\m 1tp 1lle . N .Y .): 6-7 foward Der-
n c k uw1s (C arroll. Washington,
D .C.). 6-8 forward Richard Madison
(North s1de . M e mphis): 6-1 guard
O a \'ld Rivers (St. A n tho n y"s, Jersey
C it y ): 6-9 center C harles Smith
(H ard m g. Bridge port. Conn.); 6-7
center-forward John Tho mpson
(Brunswtc k. Lawrenceville, Va.); 6-2
gua rd K evin Walls (Camden, NJ.):
6-11 cente r C hris Washburn (Laurin-
b urg Ins titute. Laurinburg. N .C.).
All proceed s fro m the game wilJ
benefit the C hild Life Program at
H arbor-U C LA M edical Center.
T ickets are S 12.50, S8 and $6 and
a\ a1lable a t th e UCLA. C e ntral T icket
Office . all T1c k e tmas ter ticke t centers
a n d area T 1ck etron o u tlet s.
Harshman selected
West All-Stars coach
SEATTLE (AP) -Washtngton·s
6 6-yca r-old M arv Harshman was
named M o n d a )' to coach the W est
against the East in the Natio n al
Association o f Bas k e tball Coac he •
22nd annual College AJl-Ame n c.a
game here Sunda y.
The NABC contest. at Wash1~
ton's Hee Edmundson Pavilion, will
be held in con1unc tion wtlh the
N C AA Final Fo ur at Seattle's Krng·
dome Sacurday a fternoon and M o n ·
day nighL
Harshman's H uskies w ere
eliminated b y 03)to n 1n the ~mt·
finals o f the N C AA W est R cgtona ls in
Los An,eles last weeke n d
With the ret1remt'nt of Ra> M e)er
followina OcPaur~ loss 1n the Mid-
west Rqjonal • semifinals la t week-
end, Harshman becam e college
basketball's W10Dlnsest ICllVe head
ch wtth a 620-438 career record.
The Huskies were 24-7 1h1 !Cason .
He coached the H u k1cs to a
Pac 1 f1 c -I O C o n ference
eo<hamps.onsh1p and was voted
Pa<> IO Coach of the Year.
H.anhman haJ anno u nttd he w11l
retire a*"r tltc 19 4-SS 1ea.son, his
~h 1n tbe J)On and his 14th at
Washinaton.
Jim Valn no of dtftndin NC
c ha m p ion N orth Carolin a S tate wtll
coac h the East in S unda) 's pmc,
w hic h 1s scheduled to s tart at I p.m
PST.
Gaudio takes
Wood Regatta
Mark G audio o f Bah1a C onnthian
Yacht C"l ub was the Oau A winner in
the Harry Wood ~egau.a for Lid~l4
sailed o ut of Balboa Yacht C1ub
Saturday and Sund&).
T h irty-fiv e boats tumed o ut for the
rtgal\a to compete for t~ coveted
trophy h o n o rina Harry Wood of Lona
Beac h. a fomer national cbarnpton an
th e clus.
Cla 8 -w1nncr Yr&s Lcland Smith.
Alamitos Bl)' Yacht O ub.
In Che Grand Masters dais for
klppcn over SO the wtnocr Gib
Marshall, Al.am1to Ba YC. Trophy
wrnners·
Cl.AU A-I #llW1l o.udlt, lllfll9 C.111111111
YC, J H ~. I~ VC, 1 OW111
CU"1m4'* AIVC
CL.AU I -I i...i-t $mitt\, Al YC; L •oear flle1*14n.M4Ulon-~YC, ,.,...T ...... IVC •uoMA1Ta1ts-1 011t~ .... vc.
1 Clled Tw , IV<:, ~ A ~ a'YQ c
lto....tlMld L.oflf'N!I, I YC.
•
\
.; '
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Tueedey, Mard\ 27, 1914
I
Virginia Tech guard Perry Young trlea
unauceaafully to block a pasa by Michigan
.,~
guard Erle Turner (right) to a teammate
Monday night In NIT .emlflnala.
NIT. • • From Cl
ness and their 00cns1ve reboundmg
hun us as much as missed free
throws··
The tinal rebounding total w~s
38-30 for Notre Dame and the
offensn <.' number'\ read 12-9 for the
lnsh.
"Tim (Kempton) and (Jim) Dolan
did a great job on the boards." Sluby
said. "That made it easier for me to
.take my shots."
Sluby finished at 50 percent from
the field. 11 of 22.
: "We wanted to keep Sluby on the
perimeter and we did," Paschal said.
''They just contmued to get the big
baskets."
The big points for Michigan came
from the free-throw line and the\
. , were two of sophomore center Ro)·
Tarpley's 23 on the night.
W1th 45 seconds remainmg.
Tarpley made two foul sho1s 1hat ga' c
the Wolverines a 76-75 lead . .\fter
t.,.,o timeouts were called b~ V1rgm1a
·.Tech Coach ( harhc Moir. the Hok1es
missed their last chance at '1ctol)
when a 15-foot Jumper b~ Tim Lewis
missed. Tarple) grabbed the rebound
and fed freshman guard .\ntoine
· Jouben who .... ent the length of the
coun for a la~ up that pro' 1ded the
final margin
"I took a deep breath and just made
them," Tarple} said of the winmng
free throws. "I missed one and made
against Texas-El Paso 1n a Chnstmas
tournament and we lost that game by
one point. I thought about that when I
went to the line."
Michigan Coach Rill Fncder credi-
ted his team's defense. e<;pec1all}
guard Enc Turner and Jouben with
the semifinal '1ctol)
··we struggled in the fim half
defensively," Fncder said. "We
. usuall) play better than that. We
_didn't give them the trans1t1011
ba\l>.ets in the second half Enc turned
in a great s1x-to-e1ght minutes on
<Dell) C:un) and Joubert pushed him
out the rest of the wa~ "
M1ch1gan was nghtlull) roncerncd
"'1th Cun) as the sophomore guard
had I 6 points at halftime on eight of
· I 3 shoo11ng. He finished with 24 as he
got 1ust six shots in the second half.
"The) were bigger than we were."
Moir said. "They arc b1~ and physical
and took advantage of 11."
Virginia Tech. 21-13. will meet
Southwestern Lou1s1ana. 23-9. in the
rnnsolat1on game Wednesday night.
Yelich ends
college role
in athletics
Karen ) ehch ha'i put the wraps on
J tour-\car athlcllc career at New
"v1cx1co· State Un1.,ers1t}. v..here the
pre-med student ha!I d1stingu1shed
herself with several honorll.
Scheduled to be graduated on May
5. Yehch capped her senior season as
an Academic All-Amencan first team
selection in volleyball and was an
All-High Country Athletic Con-
ference choice.
She was also the Outstanding
Woman of the Community in sports
for her sophomore and seni ors years
at the Las Cruces campu4>
As a junior she was an Academic
All-Amencan third team choice and
even as a sophomore. earned
All-lntermounta1n Athletic Con-
ference honors.
Asa senior she led the conference in
h1tt1n1 pcrcentqe (.340). ranked
third 1n block1na (I SI average).
fourth in service aces ( 17) and I 0th in
kJlls ( 136)
The 1980 Costa Mesa High gradu-
ate pan1c1pated in intramural basket-
ball and softball. along with coed
volleyball. oosketball, baseball and
water polo act1v1ttes at New Mexico
St.etc
She was on the Dean's List four
yc3rs running 11fler camma honor m
volleyball. basketball and track al
Costa Mesa .
,I
Cougars just hope
free throws to fall
Houston tunes up
for semis game
with Virginia
HOUSTON (AP) -The Houston
Cougars will try to unlock the secret of
shooting free throws this week as they
prepare for their 1h1rd straight tnp to
the NCAA Final Four tournament.
The Cougars have reached the
Final Four three straight years
without being able to hit free throws
cons1stentl}. 1nclud1ng unda}' 's
IO-for-21 performance 1n a 68-63
'1cton over Wake Forest 1n the finals
of the NC>\A Midwest Regional at 1
Louis
··some nights 1.1.e hit free thro.,.,.s
and h11 free thro1.1. sand hit free thro.,.,.s
and some nights 1.1.e misc, free throws
and miss free throws.'' ..aid guard
.\h in Franklin," ho h11 fi, c ofh1s SI\
free shots Sunda'
The Cougars ·missed .... hat could
have been crucial free throws in the
closing minutes against the Deacons
but Akeem Olajuv.on turned in a
dominating performance w1th 29
points and 12 revounds.
Olajuwon hit 14 of 16 llho1s from
the field for 29 points and grabbed 12
rebounds.
Although Olajuwon lifted his
self-imposed vow of silence Collowing
Sunday's game. most of the talk was
about the 7-fool N1genan's per-
formance.
Anthon} Tcache). who tned to
guard OlaJuwon said. "He's the best
center J'\C pla}ed against. Yes. that
includes Ralph (Sampson) He's bet-
ter than Ralph. He's strong ms1de and
bigger than Ralph He sta)s inside
more than Ralph ··
Racer injured
S>\N DIEGO (AP)-Jack McC'o)
of Modesto was in good cond1t1on
Monday at Ba) General Hospital.
two da}s after being injured during
the SCORE San Felipe 250 ofT-road
race in Mexico.
McCoy's Ford Ranchcro pickup
flipped over as he tned to avoid
another vehicle. His passenger. Stan
McCuskey, 28. also of Modesto. died
at the scene.
Sherry Memorial
golf tourney set
Costa Mesa Golf and Country
Club's Mesa Linde course will be the
site of Saturday's first Glenn Sherry
Memonal Golf Tournament. an
event hononng the late Estancia High
athletic director who d1ed 1n Decem-
ber.
Proceeds from the tournament and
reception will be used to aenernte
scholarship monies for deserving
hg1h school studcnl$1 accordina to
WaJly Chute of Estancia H 1ah School.
Interested panics should contact
Chute at 760-34 I 0 for further details
Asked how to beat OlaJuwon.
Teache) said. "If you're 8-5 }OU have
a chance."
Michael Young. Houston's most
consistent scorer throughout the re~
ular season, could not explain his
sudden slump. He hit only 5 of 22
shots 1n the Midwest semifinals
against Memphis State and was 7 of
18 against Wake Forest.
"Never 1n my life have I shot that
poorly," Young said. "I don't know
what the problem was. l jUSt lost my
technique. Maybe I was thinking
about 11 too much .
"I need practice right now. I should
ha\ e sta) ed out and practiced free
throws when the game 1.1.as o'er."
Young had tY.O points at half11me.
He finished Y.llh 15 points and h11
onl) one of six free throws.
Wrestlers
to leave
for China
Sixteen Southern California high
school athletes, including Edison
H1gh's ScottBrown, Fountain Valley
H1gh's Marty Strech. and Capistrano
Valley's Brad Osborne and Tim lge.
leave the United States for the
mainland of the People Republic of
China April 6.
The 13-day cultural exchange tour
will involve a m1n1mum of 10
matche!> \ .... h1le v1s11ing three of
China's major cities -Beijing. Xian
and hangha1.
Others making the trip. under
coaches Fred Jackson of Mahbu. Bob
Stolo of Placentia and Bob Becher of
Rancho Alamitos. include Laurence
Jackson (Santa Monica). Dwayne
De Nolf (Tro) ). Sa mm} Martinez
(Rowland), Scot Bolsinger (Walnut).
Paul Reutzel (Diamond Bar), Mike
Carver (Walnut). Todd McCracken
(CaJon), Doug King (San Gorgonio).
Ken Lane (Nonhview). Steve Bot11ni
(Arlington) and Travis Blasingame
(Elsinore).
The tour 1s under the ausp1cies of
the Cahforn1a Wrestling Association.
They return April 20.
Mother head
sparksFV ,
past Edison
Scou Motherhead came ofT the
bt·nch to spearhead a dominating
second and third set to lead Fountain
Valley High to a three-set sweep over
Edison 1n a Sunset League showdown
of undefeated boys' volleyball teams
Monday mght.
Fountain Valley pulled out a 16-14
win 1n a hard-fought first set in wh1cft
both teams had an opportunity to
win.
The Barons won the next two sets,
15-11 and 15-6 to secure the win and
raise their league record to 4-0.
Edison 1s 4-1 in league.
Sco11 McKeough and Carlos
Bnceno each had 14 kills for the
Aarons.
Edison was sconng up the middle
1n the early going before Brent
Hanson took control to shut down the
attack. according to Baron coach
Gregg valstad.
Manna. meanwhile. rcmamed un-
defeated w11h a 15-9. I S-3. I S-11 win
over Huntington Beach to keep pace
with Fountain Valley's 4..() lca,ue
record
Mike Crowley. Randy mnh and
Rob Rosenblatt led the way for the
Vikings who travel to Edison ·
Wednesday. •
La (!uinta won-its fir11 teaaue
match oy defeating Weitminst.cr,
I S·8. I S&LJ.S. 7 WJth Todd Bates and Rus~ll McKen7ie paci11a the Allets.
-----__,;_ _ _l .:__._~------~-
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Orange Coat OAtLY PtLOT/Tu.dey, ...,.t1, tll4
MUC ll)llC( MlJC mm .,__ __ ,... __ 1e ___ .,_m ____ -.1 ... --... MUC ....... -.• ... m ___ .....,.._ .............. ......., ......... __ ....,__ ........ --.......,, ...... __ ·--·
~tJeM COUNTY • 1·19m MOnCI Oii,.,.,........ MOTIC8 Of,_.,... IM.8 llOTICI Ofl ~ UL.9 & at• ~CCMIT 09'• ... couwrt ............. .._ ... .....,....,. YA.•• Lw ... CAM Lw ... ftllf" NOll(S -WB. 111.::~~'1.~:-' ~,,,.:C.~c::"TNC:T ..._.,:_.."':• c~~.==. COit-O:=r..!:I.\..~$ '~C:.T T~~ lAMD i OWN 6 ~Defilnden--·DOUMAHlve. ... .......,A,_., ... -NO.A·1oeol4 ...,.....,.QAQI ...... ,............. T.O...W:SC091MV • ....,..._UWl.I& AU IL IAllD ~
AUIONPA.TNCKAHTHOHYA ,....,_CA._. lntM~Cour\ofU.lta ~~T"*-"'*'lfte ,_ .................. e _...T,,_.., .. 1:.¥ .... T,__., .. LACllD. .l&A IA-TIH, end DOU I ttwo..tigfl X. in.. P\alntlft: HEAITAGJ! BA.HI<. 1 of Celttoml&. tor tM County of Or· dela1Nd deed of Wll ,... ...., ff Jl!ll ..., -__...... rt !bed deed of .,_. ._.... ... • net llAft GAii,.,._ Am
dullw C9lltornl9 oorporatlon, etlg9 I. AT PV9UC AUCTION ...... .. .... ....... .. '" WILL A.T ""8IJC AUCnC* WtL.L Al llU9UC MIC110ll • ION -AA •• aL Cf~tt CITY 0' Oefel\dant: OOUOLA!..i,!; Iii the Matter of the &wte or 0 TH! litQHf.lt 8100!" '°" lllfllll ............ ,.., , .. TO THI HtQH£8T M>CX" R>R ffO TH& HtC»8T ..... fOft OI' p an av --
YOAIALINDA IAOW~= DOU ONI lt\ • .._.. JOSE IBCoeA"-tit• JOSE LUia HANO/O,.THICAIHlfMO" .....,..._.,...,_. CA&HAHOIOATHECASH~OA ~OAT .. CAllmNOfl llTS8 SITATS JIO. C... No. '7-91-41 TlN, • UCOIAlhkl JOSB L. ucoeA"-ERTWlfDCHl!CQ IPKIFIE) IN STEWART TIT&.I 0, CALI• ctRTl'llO~Ot<8~1H QHICQWICll la> .. A·IH"4 I U Ill M 0 N I 0 N CaleNo..Ano32 0.01111d M\.C00£llCTIONd24ft!Pw-~ 1~corpot'lli0ft.. ,.,,____.._.._..._CS.-CODlllCTION .... C..0 -... -n ~--• ari _. CMll-()C .. 'INT enqs~ NOti011 11 ~ ~ tMt the -'the Ume Of ... In .._ d4I'/ ~ T,_.. Ultdlt U. M'; ;'ci" .,.;"i;'~ It._._ t1I 1111 lilt........ ,•v .u -~ om•W--.
NOnCll YM............. MOTICIJ YM ............... und9=wt11Mlla1Prlvell.... of the United ei.t.e) .. tolowlna deeoribed deed°' true! of .,. Uftl*I ...... , .. of lie Ufllell ........ credilon and coo ..... t n. ..-t _, ........... ,_ ,.._ _,.., ....._ ..::J u ° C to the and belt Dtdder, M»-t, tide end 1n'9reat ~ to WIU. stLL A.T ~ AUCTIOH title 9"CS ..,_. ~ to , .... 1rW1 ~ CCMl'lll9'f Id to cnditorl OI JAMJS I. 0-AJ, ........ ,.. ..... ....._ ............ ,... ..... JeOt to CCM\tlrmatlOn Clf Mid Superior now held by It undet Mid OMd TO TH~ HIGHEST 81DOE" fl!O" and Mw .. bY It under Mid 0!,9d ,.. held "1 '-"'* .... O!'d LACHER. IJ(A ... JAMl8
,.. ,........ .... .,.. ..................... ...,.. ..... Court. on ~ .,.., the 2nd ~ of Trutt In tht PtoPMY h«elNftet CASH Of • Mt fontl "" e.ctb'I Of TMt In tM ptC)pefty .... ...,. TMC ..... ,,..., ....... GALL. c H •a Alt A tft9 W.11 lllR -..... IM.,.....,. .. .,....... April 18'4, et the offloe of JeeM : 2924h of the CMI eoo.. II f1Gflt, delCt'lbed· dm IMd: " • ...::.i
K you w11t1to1Mk the ldYIOe of If you wWI to_. Vie ldvtol of onu.i. w• Fargo~ • TMt TAUSTOA: 8AAO OVHN. JOHN 00. and tnw..i con~ to end TAUST0R: K£Htlfl'TH o . CAM. TNJITOft OMO C. THOMA8 JANU lZATT OAL.:.
WI ettom.y In tNe ""'1ar, you en 81tomeiy lft "* "**· you Dept., P.O. 8o.x 7U, ~ Hiii. Plill..UPS now t'*1 by It unds Mid OMd al JOAH V CARA KNIAQNn':MNKOFM&Ns LACHD Ind-...-wbo ~ do eo PtOmOtlY IO that 'f04K lflCIVld Clo IO promptly IO ttlC "°"' CA. 10213 COunty of Or ... Sta.. ltOIUICIAAY: WfST!ftN COM· Trwl Jn the P'oPlttY hellllwdtlr de-BENEFICIARY: ITEPHaH H. CA ... T. & a.A. -.v be ~ .............
wtttten '~· it -eny. IMY be wrltten •MC*•· H eny, 'MY be of Clllfomta. all rtont, tltle and MUNrTY MOHEYCVfTER acrtbed: , ' MULLER. DIAN! M. MUUEA 10" l'oeTM 'A.Mt8 GAOUP _,, Ned on time. flled on time. lnterwt of Mid dec:Ulld at tht lime f\£COAOEO Nowmber 24, 1912 T R u 8 T 0 A : J 0 H N F RECOR.DU> Octotlet •• 1MO .. TAUST . tn the .in l/Ddlor lltale: A~ hi tlldo demens AVllOtUlted ha ~oemtin-of deeth Ind all tnt right, Ut1e and M lnatr. No. &2 ... 141t2 of Otftolal HA8EHZAHI.. 1nt11. No. 7'11In8o01C 1S776 Peoe MCOfaD ~ 22.. 1elt • A pedUGD t. btim m.d
itecte. EJ tnoume: .... ....., .... c1.cte El tttt>um&: ._. _ .... tnterwt INt the .... of.., it. "9cotdl 1n tht ot11oe of the ..._ BENEFICtA"v· AoeeAT e. 1wotOfftcNIAecorditln1"9ofloe 1n1tr. No. 21111 in 1oo1e "* ._. NOHAM!GALL:ACHD
In Ud. eln 1u .i 1 nde • w .. h Ud. *' au., 1 Ft11e • ,...._ .. CMMd hat acqult9d by opet •11011 corder of Oret1g9 County; MORAIS. 1t1 lllWNfMd man Of u. "-OOfdef of Or11nge County; s:-ge t'24 of Oftdll Aeoc:wd9 In.. ~ •L-a.~ ,.. _ _. -4 Or
Ud. fllll IMe ........ • ..... Ud. n.,1M1 ............. of II'# Of othel'WIM °'*'Ir than or In Mid dMcl of llWl deect'lbel the ~ ~ 115, ttl3 .. INt.t Mid dMcl of tNM ~the Office al IN "9caiclili "' Or.,.. '°\DIS--..--~ u. aL._: L.eell ....... 111aatu........ .... ......... u ha......... mddltlonlolt\llOfMld-..Md,at lollbwlngproperty: No.83-157M1ofOtflotelAeoot,dlln f~propet1y. COunty, anetCounly~U-
lfr-wteltto..-"'-....._of .. ,_ ....... ..-.._...._., tht time of deeth, In end to ell the Lot2'fof8'ock-136.LM•Tr9Gt,ln the office of the "9corder Oriinge PARC!L 1: i.ot' t5 OI Tr.ct No. Mid d.cl of INM fll :"* tM NONA M.GALLAall:abe
en '"-lft ... .,.....,, -• 9"omer "' • fMHllf, ,... -~-1n rMl. pr.......-. 11tuated In tht the City OI ~ a.di. County County; Mid deed of lrutt dMcrllMill 31..t• In the County Of 0r-......_..,_, .__ .... -..a --•
....... ·~ ,........, ........ ;;;, eNuld ... Pf......, ....... ,... c::ty of Or.,..:, Stat• of Cd-of Orenge. Stete of CaMtornll. .. the 1oll0wtno prOC*tY' st:.~ of Celltotnla. .. per ,,.~ "L.:,Cs""'of TrtlCt No. 1at. • per •..,....--• pww.-..
..,... I 1111 ,,.., " '"'· IM!f -written ••• , ..... If ... ,. _, ... fOf .. pat1lculelly delctlbed .. fol-per mep ieoorcMd In boO« 4, Pl!oe PARCEL t: Ari undl'Mld 1/lttl corded In 8ocMI 120. ~end 4 ,,., recorded In 8ootl 13, ...... IO raentalive '° ed-rinW. the lied OA ltlM. tied•..._ towt. 11>-Wtt. 13, Ml9oeleneoua M•, In the Ofs lnt--1 In wld to Lot 1 of Trect No MllOllenlCM M.,., In lfte offtce Q; Of MleOlillleOUI MIC:la. Ill.,_ oflkie esiate of JAKIS L GAL-
8' u.tM ..... ....._el...., • u.led .._ 90lloftat .. _.... Ari undtvlded ~ lnl•eet In· nc. of the county recorder of M6d 11038, In the County of Oriinge, tht County Aeoocder of Mid eoun.. of the County A«iorder of Mid LAau:a. AKA M. JAMIS
............ .,._.. ............ .._... .... .._., Lot 12, TreGt 4483, II per Mep county. !~~~oe..ln°!"_f!l!"!~.u. P=-,_3 .'!:.. ty.P•"",.EL ...... ..---t f-..,_ ~y'"1Y· .... .,,1N~•••'*T' ............... GALLACH•R, AKA le, d•b•tla haoe,lo In · lo, d1b1rl1 haoerlo n• rlCOfcMd In 800IJ 1&o. PllQle 10 EXCEPTING THEREFROM all oll, _...., ...,.... ....., 131 wiv """' "" ,.., -·-· .... "'"' OU .. ._ .,....,...,,, ~"" ..
medlelelMnle,cleMta!MIMf .. .., ~cleMte....,_.,.., and 11 of Mlecelleneou• Mape, In gu. mlnerel• •nd otner 32 of Mi.e.tlaneoue Mape. rlCOfdt 0, .. egr..i end pubic utllltie. OHO Of TRUST DAT!O October JAM&S lZA'M' GAL-,,._.. ......, .. h8f ...,_. ,..,_...=el My ....,_, the otfloe of tht Orenge County Re-hydrocerbon 1ub1tenee1 lylng of Or91199 Counw. California. In tht 11ong' the .outf\ tO t.-of Ul4• 1 to 1. 191'1. UHLES& YOU TN<a N; LACHER under the IDCM-
,uede "' ,.......,.. • ......... ,.,.. .., .. • .......... corder St•le ot CalltOtnla below • depth of 600 feet trorn tht Office of IM County Recorder of to~. Ind the"°"" \0 .... of TION TO PAOTECT YOUR ~-=l AdwnfnMtnaUall of
1·TO,... bDeMl>Mm A cMt 1·TO,... #Mf: A .e¥I • rno<9 oommonlyknown N : ~ofMldprOC*1Y. blltwttf\no Mid County LOii 111o20 ~.ofelkHrect EATY. rTMAY IESOU>AT A~ =ln1 hM bMtt MM bf tN c.mpWnl hM ..._..MM br tN Tennt of .... eaah tn lawtul rlghtoftulf909tntry.ureMQledln EXCEPTING THEREFROM aft No.3102,lnthec.tyofeo.t.Mw. LIC SALE. IF YOU NEID AH EX-ta Ad). The peCition ii
....,_.. J*1. I JOU wfeft lo pelnhft lilaMMt JOU• If,_ wtell to m<>My of tht United St•t• on oon• lntlrumenle of record. unlta U lhown upon tM Con-County of Orin09, ~Hite of Cd-Pl.ANATION OF THE NA.TU"E Of' lel for hMrlnc in Dept. No. 3
cleflirld ... teweutt, JOU muet, ~ !Ne leweutl. JOU -'• flrm•tlon of ..... Of part cuh and YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNDEI\ A domlnlum PIM r900fded Februery fOfnla. U I* map ~«Md In eoott THE PROCEEDING AQAJNST YOU, a\ 700 Qvic Calll!r' Or., wttMft • d•yt aft« thl1 tummona wllNn • dayt eft« thla 1Ummont baltne19Yldenoed by note MCUted DEED OF TRUST DA.TED Novem· 24, 1912 II ln1trument No. 120, pllQle 3 end 4. mlacellnlc>UI YOU SHOULD CONTACT A I.AW· W San •-· CA 92'70l
It Ml'wd on you, tti. with thlt court la MrWd on you, !tie with thll court by Mortgege or Trutt Deed on tf\I b« 24. 1982. UNLESS YOU TAKE 82-0eS587 of Official Reeordt of ~ In the omc:. of the County YER. est. ta ~-.
.written reeponM to tht cornc>llinl. • written retpon• to the complaint. Pl'°'*1Y IO IOld Ten per cent of ACTION TO PROTECT YOUR Orenge County. Reco<dlr of Nkl County. 2688 Wllo Lane. CoMa ..... CA. on April 18, 1984 ., i-.30
lJnlee9 you do, your defeull w111 be Un._. you do. your defeull Wiii be amount bid to be dlpc)elted with PROPERTY. IT MAY B£ SOLO AT A PARCEL 2: Unit 5 u lhown upon Except that por11on Included 92&27 A.M
enteted on appllcellon of the plains ent•ed on applleetlon of the plain· bid. PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NE.ED AN the Condominium Plan referred to within PaI'Clll 1 •boYI cllecnbed. ''(tt ... ,... addt9M or commol'I IF. YOU o:sn:cr the tttt. end thlt court mey enllf a tin, Ind lhll court may enter a 81dt Of offert 10 be In writing and EXPLANA TlON OF THE NATURE In Parcel 1 above. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A dMIQnltlon of P<OC*'IY le lflown SO
Judgement ao4'1ntt you for tht relief Judgement 11Qeln1t you fOf the rellef wlll be received •t lht aloreMld of· OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST MAY BE ALSO KNOWN AS: DEED OF TRUST DATED A1JgU9t ebol/e, no w11ranty le gNen .. to"' IJ'&lltine of the peU1kln, )'OU
demanded In the complaint, whloh demanded In lhe complelnt. wtlldl flee •I any lime efter the"'" pubij. YOU. YOU SHOULD CONT1,.CT A ~109 Vlollt Lantern. Dene Point, 2e, 1NO. UNLESS YOU TAKE AC-~.,.....or~~ .. The should either appear ., the
could IMUlt In garMtlment of oould ,..,.. In garnllh~t of cation ~ Ind before d•tl °' LAWYER. CA 92829 TIOH TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· ~ ""'* -'d o.s of hearing and lltate you obja>
Wllgle. tllklna of money Of property Wllgle. taking of money or ptC)pefty..... 209. 209 'h 35TH STREET. NEW· "(If. •t•eet lddf ... or common EATY. IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PU8s Trust. by ..-on of e brMdl Of de-ob"--
or othtr rlllef requ.ted In the com-Of other 1ellef requetled In ttll com-Dated tf\11 14th d•y ol Mardi, PORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA dMigtlatlon It ahown tboY9, no LIC SALE. IF YOU HEED AN EX· feult In the o~ll MCU'ed tialw or file written ·,-..r
p191nt. , plaint. 1984. "(If a ttlMt lddr ... or common w11ranty It given lo ltt complet• PLAN,ATION OF THE NATURE Of thereby, i.r.ofore ~ end lions with the court befOl!t
Oiied! Jen. 25, 1ta3 Dated: Nov. 15, 1ta3 Hell W. Knuppel. &q. deeignatlon of pre>C*1Y It ahown nett or correctneee~" THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, dellYef9d to the undlr1lg11ed I writ-the beuinC-Your appeal•
LEEA BRANCH. Clerk ROBERT R. RILL, Cletk GARBER. SOKOLOFF & VAN •boYl,nowam1ntyle~u.!OltJ The Vendor under Uld Deed ol YOU SHOULD CONTACT A I.AW· ten DIGlaratieln of Oefeutt end 0.-ance ft\aV be In-«._. By:J.Y,HYATT.Dlputy By: CONSTANCE M. LENGYEl,oYKE,INC. compiet.,,...OfCQf'NCt,,...~ The Trust,byreuonofabfMChorde-YER. mendforSale.endWftttennotiaeof ~,, r--... ,
MIT A.N a TUCKU Deputy 14 14 w Commonweelth AYenUe beneflcletY undet Mid Died ol I.ult In the obllgatlonl ..:ured 720 Jemee Street, Cotta ......_ bf.ch end of lflllCtton \0 caa-. tt. )'OW' •ttol'DeY · UOMAM> A. KAMP&&.. "9eet A. l9"tt . Fullerton. CA. 92833 Trust. by reuon ot a bfMCh or c»-thereby, heretofore executed Ind ea. 92627 underl60nld to ... Miki property to IF YOU ARE A CREDI·
Dl90RA.H A. AUIY encl cuta d:I ..-•Inn Dr .. ..,._ 100 (7 t4) 526-2267 fiautt In the obligations ..cured dellvered to the under.tgned •writ· "(If a 1tr .. 1 eddr ... or c:omrnon utllfy Nkl=loM· end .,.,. TOR or a contingent c:reditol' LAMDll ,,o. 9o• ,_ Attor~•) for Admlnlttrator with thereby, f'llr9tofore executed Ind ten o.olatetlon of Dlfeult end 0... deelgnatlon of pr()9el'ty 11 ahown aft• the u led ceueed Mid .a
111 Amon at.ct., 1ufte 1400, fJ.O. ntM. CA. ani Wiii Annexed cleltvered to IM undersigned• writ· mand for Sell. end written notice of aboYe no w•r911ty ts gl¥tn .. to It• f'IOllce of breech 9"CS ot ~ to of the dee 1 M!U, you must
9o• 1MO Pu~ Orange Coaat Dally Piiot WELLS FARGO BANK. N.A. ten Dedar•tlon of Default end Qe.. breedl and of election to <*IM lhe • en.-or cort9CtneM)." The be recotded ~ 17, 1tl3 -file your claim with the eoeu ...... CA.... Marcti 20, 27, A.pr1t 3. 10, ttM Admlnlatretor with Wiit Annexed mend lor Sale. Ind wrltten notice of undertlgned to NII Mid pre>C*1Y to t>eneflciaty un<Mr Mid Deed of lnttr. Ho. l3s6309t2 of OMc:MI ,.._ court or pr'l!Rnt it io the per·
.. 1 .. 100 t81J.8' of the Ettat• of Mid Dlcedent. breech Ind of electlon lo ceu• the Ntltfy Mid obtlgatlona, and I._. Nit, by 1euon of 1 brMCfl or• cordt In the offloe of d'9 Aecoldlr .on.al re-••tive •P· Pubhhed Orange coaat Deity Piiot Publlthed Orange Cout Oalty Piiot undettlgned to NII Mid pre>C*1Y to after the undertlgned ceuMd uld fault 1n the obf!Qltlont eec::ured of ~ County; y• ~~ •
Match I, 13, 20. 27. 198-4 DllDlfC NOTIM March 20. 2t. 27, 1984 Atltfy Aid obllgatlona, Ind tiler• notice of brlllch 9nd of elec:tlon to thefet>y hefetofore execu\ed end , Said .... wllt be IMdl, but J>O'nted by the court within
1283oa.i .-~ ~ 1&oJ.84 after the undertlgned c:auMd Aid be Recorded Dloember 18. 1983 u deltvered to the undlnigned a writ-'NtthOut cownant Of wwninty, ex-four monthl from the date of
notice of brHCh wld of elec:tlon to lnetr. No 83o570989 ot Aid Ottlclal ten Dlclaratlon ·of Dlfatlt and Qe.. ~ or lrnpled, reoerdtno ttt1e first ... ,,,,_ of Jrtter'I M
RCT1110U8 llUaMll be reeorcMd June 10, 1ta3 u lnetr. Recorda. mend ror Sall. end wrltten notice of poe111llon, Of encumtwencea. to -~ ._ a---700 ~ MAmlTATIMDfT rta.JCN011C( No83-247302ofOfflclalRec«dsln Said Ale wlU t>e meoe. but t>rMChandofelectlontoc:auMthepaythererneln6ngprinc:iOel.umof ~., .. _ .... ~--· ~
The followlng l*90nl we doing tM onlcl of the Recorder of Orange without covenenl or warrenty, exs undertlgned to Mii Mid prC)pefty to the noe.(t) MCUted by Mid dMcl of the Probate Code of Cldi·
aA.N DtEQO COUNTY bulineee u : Ks1... County· pr .. or Implied. retarding tltle, utlafy Aid obllgattont. end !her• TNlt, with Int.,.• In Mid now fornia. The time fOI' fil1ng IUNMOR COURT OCEAN VIEW LEGAL SEC· Nolloe of .. of Seid' Ale wlU be made, hut ~Ion or encumbrancee to ..._ ,.__i,.ned caueed Aid provided edv~ If eny under
220 WM1 .,..,_., RET ARIAL SERVICE, 369 San "9el ftr°'*1Y at wtthout covenant or werranty, ;;'.. pey tM r.m..ning principal tum of ~·; ~;.;d, '"1nc, of e1ect1on to the tm of Mid Deed Of tMt,.... c:J.ainw will not expire prior
llft Dl99o. CA. 12101 Miguel Ortve. Sutt• 250, N9WPort Pttvete l9'e pr ... or lmplled. regarding tltle the note(•) MCU<ed by Mid OMd of reeorcMd December 6. 1ta3 • ct1et999. end upeneee of the io four maotha from the deMI
Ptelntlff: ALL~ A. GARRETT end BMch. Ca. 92660 No. HEP 2Me8 l)OlaeNlon. Of encumbf~. to Trutt, with lnl••t .. In uld not• lnatr. No. 83-556083 of 01ftctel Re-1'NSW9 9"CS of the tNltl Ct-'ld by of the bearinl oodaed eboYe.
NEOLA F. GARRETT Unda Susan Tardie, 2e Llk__,., In the Supenor Court of the State pay the r9"\alnlng prtndpll eum of provtded, ectv~. If 1111y, under ds In the office of the Recorder Nkl Deed of TIWL YOU MA y EXAMINE
Oefendanl:MICHAEL J.RICE,911 lrvlne.C..92714 ofCal~lortheCountyolLOI thenot.,•'teeuredbyUlddeedof the term• of Aid DMd of Trutt fOr Cou..... SaldlMlwMlbel...edon:W.,,,..,
lndMdull; OOT ZETKO • .,, lndtvld· Thll bullneea I• conducted by:.,, Angetee Trutl, ;;th lnlerMt .. In Aid not• f ... cllargee and •xpenMe of t"9 .o SlkJangeAM ;in; be made.-but dmy, ~ 4, 1M4, .. 2:00 p.m ... the file kept by \be court. u
I.Ill: TARBELL REALTORS. • CAii· lndMduel. In the Matter or lht Ettat• of provided, lldVanoet, If any. under T"'81M Ind of the tru•t• crMted by thout covenant or wetranty, ... the etiapmM Awnue entrMOe to you are tnlel'Mled In the ..,
fomle ()()(pora11on end DOES 1 Unda Suun Tardie NORMAN RICHARD ARCONTI. ekt the termt ot Aid Deed of truet, feel, uk1 Deed of Trutt. pr.a or Implied, regarding lltle the CMe CenW Bulldtng. 300 e. tate, you may 9elVe upon the
through 40, lnclullve Thia ltatement wu nled with the N Richard Aroontl, Dlce9Md. ctiarget, and expen... of the Said .... wiU be held on Tuea.. poe .... lon. or eneumbr9"CM. to ~ A¥11.. Or9flll9, CA. \Qr adminilltn.tor or
Cue No. 497438 County Clertt of ~ County on Notice la hereby given that the TruatM and of tht trutta creeted by Apnf 17, 198' et tO:OO A.M .. et the pe; IM remaining pMclpel .utn of At the ttme or the .,..... ~ execu or • .... _ •
IU ... Otel Feb.11, 19M u~wtll ... atPrtvate ..... ulclo.dofTruat. Cf\~ AY9nlle entrance to the tn.oote(e)MCUteclbyNlddeedof cation of tH9 nottc.. the tollll upontheat\or'Dley~orYEex·
NOTICEI You ""9 ..._..wed. fnll19 tolhehlgheltwldt>eetbfddet,eut>-Sald .... wlllbeheldon:Tueedey, CMcCenterBulldlnQ.300Ctlmpman 'Trus1 with lntereet u In Mid note ernountoftheunpeld~ofthe ecutor or admlrU8\ntor, and
T'Moowtf'MJdecltcle ....... J'CMI Pvbflehed Or9ng41 Cout Del!Y )ecttoconflrmatlonofUlcSSuJ:1: Aprll 17, 198-4, •t 2:30 p.m. et the Avenue, Orange, CA. provided. edv911C41a, If eny, under obllQatloneec:uredbytheltlovect. file with the oourt with
wllNut JOUF belftt.....,.. ...._ PllotMetch 13.20,27,Aprll3, 198' Court, on or •fter the 8th IY of Chtipmarl Avenue entrance to the The total amount of the unpaid thetermeofMldOMdof\N9t,f .... ecrl61ddeedoftN1tend•Mlm1Ud proof ,J • a writte!J
r-rMPOfld wftMft • defa. ReN 1459-a.i ~I 1964, •t the otflce of Coldwell Civic Center BuUdlng, 300 Eut balance of the obllgellon NCVred charget end expen.-of tht coeu, ~ end ed'4•IOll II ~ eet'Y'ICe,
ti. lntonMtlon .-ow. Benk•. 2181 San Joequln Hiiia ~an AY9 .. Orange. CA. by Hid property to be told, TruttM ~of the truat• creeled by 133,682.50 request atatin& that you de-" you wleti to ... the advkle Of I Ortve. Newport a..c:n. CA. 92660 At the time of lhe lnltlal pubis togetl'Mlr with In ..... t•t• c:Nr999. Mid Deed of Truet, The tote! lllditMd!IW being ., are special notice of the file
111 1ttorney In lf\la matter. you PtllJC NOTlC( County of Orenge. State of Call· cetlon or thla notice. the tot.i andettlmatedcoet1,expen ... lnd Sald .... wlllbetleldon.Tueeday, estlmeteonwhldltne~bldll i•u• of 1111 i.DYesl',..., tlDd •P-
lhOUld do IO promptly to that your fomla. ell right, title and lntereet of amount oftheunpPf bel9"09ofthl adv~. as to me dire hereof, 11 Apnt 1o, 198.4, al 2:30 p.m. et !he compufed mey be obUlined by~ --. -,,
written retponM, It any, m•y be FlCTITIOUllU ... 11 aalddeceaaed•tlhellmeoldMth obflgatlonMCUredbylheaboYlc»-$32,459.41. ChepmM A.venue entienoe to tnt Ing (714) 937-0HI or (213) pral8elnell\ofstate-9or
flied on time. MAMIE ITA.nlRNT Ind ell the right. tttle and lnter•t ecrlbed deed of 1ru11 Ind ettlm•ted Date: Maren 19. 1984 Clvk: Centar Bulldtng. 300 EMt &27--4865 the dey befor'9 the..._ of the petitiool or accounts
AVllOIUlted h• lido d4lmao-The folloWlng peraon la doing tNll ttle estate of Mid deceaMd hat costs, expenees. and advanOM I• STEWART TITLE OF CALIFORNIA Chepmen Ave .• Oriinge. CA. Dlted: Merdl 5, 18'4 men~ in SecUoo 1200
d.cte. El trlbuma; lede dectclr con-butlnest 11: ecqu1red by <>Qer•llon ol law Of $76 37514 11 Mid Trust.. •t the time of the ltlltlal publl-NEWPORT HOME LOAN IHC
tr• Ud."" ~. --caw ST ARVINO COLLEGE STU· otherwlM other than Of In eddltlon The total lndebtedneet being en By. STEWART. TITLE Of CALI· ce71on of lhla notice. the total .. eald TNltee, • • and 1200.5 of the California
Ud. ree111 nde dentro de • dim. DENTS CLEANING SERVICE. 6951 to thet of llld dlcMMd. et the lime estimate on wttk;tl the opening bid 11 FORNIA lltnOUnt otthe unpeld baltnOI ofthe By T.O. SERVICE COMPAHY, 11(191\t Probate Code.
LN te lldenft•ckln ... ...... Warner Ave .. Suite 555, Huntington! of d•lh. In 1111d to en the oenaln computed may be oblelned by callo too North Broee!w•y obllg•tlon secured by the abow d• By Cindy Schoc>nCMlr, ~t f'RANI A. OLDMEN
H ,_ wteh to Miii tM adYtc. of Beach, CA. 928-47 real. property lltutted In the City ot Ing (415) 945-8418 the dey before Senta Ana. Callfornle 92701 scribed deed of trust end •tlmated Sectetwy l'IH n..a•e A•e.
.,. '"°"'8f tn Wt man.. JOU W•yna Joaeph L.emothe. 20 Newport Be9Ch County of Orange, the Nie (714) 55&s 111' costs upenen. end •dvancea la One City 8fvd. Watt. Or.,., CA. "'-..,.M--. c• t•••'1 ........ ,,......,eottlelJOUF Lugonia -B. Newport Beeeh, CA. St•I• of Cellfornla, partlculerty ct. Oeted: Match 21, 1984 By: VINCENT D BAAR. ASST VICE $.43,894.84. 926a ~aa esa. A. -·
........ ,. ....... " .,. _, be 92663 eenbed II folloWs, tCH#tt: WESTERN COMMUNITY MORT· PRESIDENT The total lndebtedneu being.,, (71') 83$sl288 Published ~ c.o..t
Med -....... Thia buelllMI .. conducted by: Lot 8 of Block 138, Reeubdlvlslon GAGE Publlshed Orang• Cout Deity Piiot estimate on whk;tl the opening bid II Pubflltled Ortn91 eo.t Delly Daily Pilot March 26 27
SI Ueted ..... ....._ .. -lndtvldu.I. of Coron• del Mer. In the City of u sald TNtlM, Maret\ 27, April 3, 10, 198-4 computed m•y be obtained by calls Piiot M111en 13, 20, 27, 18'4 • .... .n ., 1984 ' ' lllfolte••agedoM .......... W•ynaLamotM N"POflBeectl.CountyofOrMge, ByT.D.SERVICECOMPANY.egent 1737-8-4 Ing (714) 937-0966 or (213) 1466-M "f-.. ., 17...a•"'
to, -.-•••• heo•rlo tfl· Thlt 1t91ement wn 1'lecl wtttl 1 Stet• or Caltlornle, 11 I* mac> By Cehty Lockhert, AUlatent Secs 627-4885 the d•y before the.... ~O"t
II" 1dl1tMten ... cle .... .......,., eu County Cletk of Orange County thereof, recorded In Boolt 4• Peo9 retery DI_ It' NOTil'r' Dated. Marcti 9. 19&4
,._,__.. eea1ta, el My ....... Metdl t, 1984 67 of MlacellaneoUI Mmc>a, reeordl 1tt0 N. Calllornfa Blvd. l"UUU\I 1~ TO SERVICE COMPANY
,_. eer ,.....,.. e tl9lllpo. or ukl Oriinge County. w.inut Creek, CA. 9469&-3787 ..,.TICI TO CON'nlACTORI 11 said TruttM. FICTmOUa..,..... 1sTO THm blrnNDIMf: A chi Pvbllahed Orange Cout Delly Exceptl~ tllerefrom th•t portion 41S.M4st015 '9V B Don Mu lett AUi t I~ NAm ITATDmlfT =._, .._ ..__ --.... :r.,:--Piiot Mar .... 13 20 27 ..,,..., 3 198' f Id Lot ...,~ .. ----..erty of• c Dally Thi• notice I• publlthed 9nnualty Y na rr •. • en ..... _ 1..........a-,._........ .,. ............. ...,. m • ..,. _.. -,,_ ''" ' , ,..,.... ' o.. .,. ,...,.,,_, Publlthed Orange qaat lnacc;ordencewfthprovttlon1olthe retery ,,,. "''''"'."""' ...-~-......... .,, ACTITIOUlllLll••
pe1ft ..... JOU. H JOU to 1451 t llne dr•wn •I r ht eng ... to lhe Piiot March 27, Apnl 3, 10, 1984 California Education Code, Section ~~tty Btvd Weat. Orange, CA. ~RCHIT .. EC. TU"•LWORKS 220 ~ ~ ~ ... rT.......,. defend ille a.weutt, ,_ ,.....,, Southellterty tine of the 35th Slleet 1738--84 92....., ,. ""' ,.,. ....__.,. ,.._. __ _,,
wttMn • ~ •ft• tf\la eummone f'tBJC NOTlC( end dlltan1 thereon 125.00 feet 1-----------!e~~5 dr.,,:~. t='= ~:'. (71') e3f>..8288 TUltln Ave .. ~ a.ct.. C.. ~em: 11 Mtwd on you. Ille wttf\ thla court Northeu1erty f1om the point on In-DI-tC NOTICE Ti-public ldlool dlalrlc1• may Pvbflahed Or911g9 eo..t Dally 92963 Ml • CA MACHIMHG. 13371
•written reeponM to tht c:omplllnt. ffCTITIOUI .,..... lerMCtlon thereof with the North-.-~ •ward contrect1 In amount• ot '"' Piiot M.rch 20, 27, April 3, 1984 Mere Ancke' ~..: 91'3!._2E:;-' Henl St., <Wden ~CA. "*I Un._. you Clo, your cMtMllt wlll be NA• ITATlllPfT Mlterty llne of Oceell BouleYard. ITAn_,.,. ~ then 112 000 during the current 1612·&.i 20th #8, eo.1• ......_ -.... 'v Mlc:tlMI Leon.rd Sctlonetetl.
ent•ed on applicetlon of IM plaln· Thi followfng ptl(IOll I• doing • more commonly known u : 3000 ABANDONMENT OF UH OF IChOol yea, for general engll!Ml1ng Thlt ~ .. conducted by: .,, 13311 Hanf St .. <Wden OrOlle, CA. tiff. Ind this court mmy enter a oustnea II: OoMn Boulevard, Corona cSe1 Mar, FICTITIOUI _,,..11 MAfllE 1 b lldlna. d 1 • lndlv!du91. 928'4
judgemenl 99elna1youforlhereli.t AUTO COLLISION TECH~ C.ittornla .. .. Thefollo'#ltv>WIOf\lh.Waben-genere u ng. an v.,ou, PlBl.JC NOTICE MARCl..EMO'NE c.u.rtne E. ~ 13371
dlmended In the complelnt. which NOLOOY 18'41 Gaape Clrcte Tenne Of.... u Is for CUh In dolled Ille u~Tthe Flctltlous Bull-tpecie/ty cont1ector tervloet by I~ This at•ternent WM fled wttf\ IN Hlll9I St <Wden ~ cA_ t2M4
could reeult In gemllhment of Huntlngt0n 8Mc:h, CA. 928'7 lawful money of the United Statet Neme· WIL WRIGHrS • ORs fori::n=~trectort, who de91re FtCTrrtOUI BUllNEll County C*1t of Or1n91 County on ' T1* --II oonducted by. 1
wagee,l9ktngofmoneyorpr()9el'ty OllVld Rlcherd Minder. 18441 onconflnnellonof ..... orpertcuh NOE COUNTY ORIGINAL ICE to be pieced on bid flste for the MAmlTAna.NT Merdl 16• 1984 ,...1_, generllloattner'INP.
Of otl'Mlr relief reque9ted In the com· G~ Circle, Huntington Beach, end balance ~ by note .... CREAM 3355 VI• Lido, Suite 215, purpoee of r909lvlng IOllcftet1on1 The following per.ona .,. doing ,,,., ·bt'·........ Or CoMt ,_., ~~ .._.. --. _ plalnl. CA. 926'7 eured by Mortgege or Trutl Deed -P«i Beach. CA. 92883 for Informal bid• for WOtk within buslnea .. : .-.., ,._, range _, • •--·-·-" _. -....,. .... Dated: Jen. 25, 1913 Thll buelneet 11 conduc:ted by: on the property to told. Ten I* owner NEWPORT CIRCLE INs their specl•lty ar111, are en-WESTHAVEN TRAVEL. 15859 Piiot M•c:h 27, Ac>r1I 3, 10, \~·J~ County Clet1t of Or-. County on
ROBERT 0 . ZUMWAI.. T. Clltle lndM<lual. cent of M\OUnt bid to be dep<>tlted ERNATIONAL, INC , 3355 Vie c:ourag9<1 to make appllcatlon Bre>okhurt1 St .. Wettmlntter. CA. f«>. 14, 18'4
By: G. L POTTS, Deputy Dlvtd Rlchatd Minder with bid. Lido Suite 300 Newport Beach directly to the dlttrtc1offlcM11 lol-92883 PtllJC ll)llC( ,,_ ....... • NMY, AJl.C. Thlt 11atement waa flied with t 8ldt or otters to be In wrttlng wld CA 92663 ' ' IOwt: Alta June Walt•. 4442 H)'91lnl• Publlltled Oranoe COMt Olly " SltlmUnd LUIMr, leq. Cou ty ,........ f Or County on wlH be reoelvld •I tht aforeuld Of· . p rt H II I ,,,. __ .... c· "2·~· p ...... M--6 . 13. 20, 27 11MM ~ .......,., ,.....1eoo n ..._ .. o anoe I flee 11 ar1y time elter the first publl· The Flc:tltlou• Bulfneu Namer• OcHn View School Olttrlct. o • un ng on--.... .... • .,._ FtcTITIOUI .,..... ....,, _...,, • • • • a; Dteoo. ci tt101 Feb. 28. 1984 cation hefeof and before date of ferred to above wu filed In Orange Oh1llllon of Butlneu Support, 1694-0 Cheryl Ann Waltert, 15859 ..,.,_ If An.NT 12~
(l1t) 2li·a. n-•i.. .... County on Feb. 3, 1983 "B" StrMI, Huntington Beach, CA. Brookhurtt. Wettmln1ter, CA. The follawfng P9!"80n9 we ck*1g
Publ,.,,.d Orange Cout Dally Pltot Publllhed Orange eo..t3 ;-:::~ Deted lhlJ 20th dey of Meren. Ttil• 1>otlneawuconduc:.1ed by• 92647 92646 buW-•: .en 3 20. 27. Apr\13 19'4 Piiot Mll'Cll 13. 20. 27. April • ·-198' atlon. • Huntington Beech City Sc:tlOOI Thi• bullnas la conducted by. BARI PAK, 1000 Pwtt N9wpOrt. ___ ;...;oo~------
M 1 • • • ' 1453o&4 1443-84 ~ O. ArCOfltl. Specie! Jeri L Loftarce, Pretldenl Olltrtc1, Pvrc:hUlng Agent, P.O. ~el pertnershlp. NO. 201, ~Beach, Ca. t2tl60 ----------~IAdmlnletratrlx of IM Ettata ot Thia 1111ement wu filed with the Box 71, Huntington Betlch, CA. Atta June Wa/tlf'I F. A. t<Nwn. 100 Pwtt ~. ..,.,_ IT,.m FrT PlBl.IC NOTICE . uld Dloedent County Clerk of Orange County on 92848 This etalement waa llled with the No. 207. Newport Beach. ea. 92eee) The lollowlng per'IOn9 .. e1o1n9 MUC NOTICE __ __;;..;.;:;.;;;.;;...;.;~~----flt HAHN 1 HAHN Feb. t4, 1984 Huntington e.ecti Union High County Clerk of Orange County on This~ It oonduc:1ed t>y:.,, ~..: ---~~-------flCTITIOUI MJIMH Attor~I) lor Admlnlttr•trtJt Ille no F208t78 Sdlool Olstrtc1, PvrchUlnQ Man-Feb. 7. 198' lndlVldual. TRl·R A.T.V. PARTS ......
'1Ctm0UI ....... NAm ITA.TIMINT Pvblllhed Oranoe Coul Dally Piiot Pvblt9hed Orange Collt Dally 909', 1025t YOfktown Avenue. '2:17M1 F.A. Ferem ~ Clrcle. Huntington e.:it\.
..,.,_ ITA,.....,,. The following peraon la Merch 26. 21, Aprll 2, 1954 Piiot Mwc:ti 6, 13, 20. 27, 198' Huntington Betlch, CA. 92648 Publlthed Orenge COUI Delly This atelemenl wu flled with the ca. t264e
The follOWlnll per.on II doing bulllneet .. : 1728-6' 1247-6' Founteln Velley Sc:tlOOI 0t11r1c:t. Pilot Meren 6. 13, 20, 27, 1984 County Clertt of~ County on John Rldwd ,_.,, Jr .......
butlnea u : PACIFIC COAST BROKERS. Purchulng Agent, P.O. 8oK 6510, 12114-84 Merci'l 16, 19&.i ~ Cltde. Huntington lieMtl.
BEACH-GARFIELD EAST; 3303 H•rbor Blvd. F-2. Cott• M.... Fountain Vtlley. CA. 92708 n.11n Ca. 92648
KNOTT ~ORANGE APTS.; end BUC-CA. 92628 PlBl.JC NOTICE PlBl.JC NOTICE All contreotor• wno are pllQed on Pvbflahed Orenge Coal Delly Judith Merger• M9of, 148e
COLA INVESTMENT co.. 18'5 Donald M. Devis, 26782 Via Sin. Ko•-auc:f\ Informal bkl llllt lhall tl'len be PlBl.JC ll>TICE Pilot M8t'Ctl 27. Aprll 3, 10, 17. t8'4 ......, Clrcle. ~ 8-d\, ~Drive. Coron• del Mer. CA. • • .__.~ v....... CA 92891 •-K 10S10 given notice of eny Informal bide 1736-8' Ca.~ t,., ..,.....,., ·-,..... · OflA.NQI! COUNTY s of eoffcjte<l lor auc:f\ WOtk within their ORANGE COUNTY P\B.JC NOTlC( genel'T1*el.,..,_~ll conduc:9d -• This bualneu la conducted by: an aUl'IJUOllt COURT No1toe of .. -• George o. Buccola, 18'5 8l)'lldl Individual. "9el "'--" •• epectelty arMI by thole dl1tr1ct1 IUPENOft C°'-"'T
Drive, Corona del Mat, CA. 92625 Donald M. Davi• TOO Clwlc C•ter Dr..... "'1Y.te •• with whom they hew '9gls1ered. TOO Clvto Cenlef °'· .... John ft~. Jf.
Cetherln• C. Bucc:ole. 1645 Thi• ttatement wu llled with the left .. AM. CA. "701 No. As109089 Contrect1 to be let for tervloet llfte. AN. CA. ll'1'tl FICTTTIOUI llU9MEll T1* ~.-fled wtttl the BaYlide Drive, Co<ona del Mar. CA. County Cletk of Orenge County on Pl1lntlff: COMMUNITY BANK. • In the Superior Court ol the Stete 1boYe the $12,000 en'IOUnl C!• Plalntltf· JUANITA RUCKER. I MAm ITATDmJfT County Qertl of Or .. CcNnty on
92625 Mllld'I 1, 198' Callfornl• corporetlon Callfoml•. lor tM County of Or-acribed •boYI .,.. MC*•I• and wlll minor. lk• JUANITA HARDIMON, The fol<Mlng per'80n9 .,.. ck*1g Feb. 2'7. 11MM Thlt t>utin.. IS conducied by: an ,,_.. Dltendent: S.R. METAL FAB, ange be edvertlaed et IM time bid• ere by end through her Guwdlan Ad buelneu •: ,__
lndlVldual. Pvblllhed ~ Coul Delly INC.. • Cellfornl• corporetlon; In the M•tt• ol the Ettata ot required. Utem. JUAN IT A C. HARDIMON, GROSSMAN + ASSOCIATES, Publehed Orenge Coelll Deity a.oroe o. Buc:col• Piiot M ch 13. 20. "!17 Aprll 3 19&.i FRANK SMITH. an lndfvldu•I: MON-REJNA ESCOBAR. akt BLANCA For: BOARD OF TRUSTEES end JUANITA c. HARDIMON. 749 Grmy1lng Bay, Coet• ....... Ca. Pilot Merdl 13 10 t7 Ap1I a. 1M4
Thlt 1t1tement w• filed with the er ' ' ' 144M4 TAGUE-HARRIS ANO COMPANY REINA ESCOBAR. Oecelled. OVSD. HBCSO, HBUHSO, FVSD Defendant: ALEXANDER CAMs 92&26 ' ' ' 14'()-64 County C1ertt of Orange County on OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA, INC., Notice It hereby ~ that the Pvblllhed Or•nge Coast Diiiy Piiot POS PEREZ, LUZ SANSON. I. YNN A..+MI S. Groaman. 749 Gray·
Feb. 14, 198' -PlBJC rl)TIC[ • C911fomle corporlllon: JERRY under91gned wff1 Mii •t Prlv•t• ..... Maren 27, tta4 MORGAN, end DOES t TO 10. I~ II, Bey, Colie Meu, Ca. 9M26 ---~---..,-JIC(----r-t-;JKl'.\WIETZ • .,, lndMduel; end tothlhlgheet and belt bid<*. tub-1748-84 c:lulllw. hla~llconduc:ted by: 11n ___ ;...;oo--.-------
Pvbllthed Orange Cout Diiiy '1CTTTIOU9 MJllNEll DOES 1 through 15. lnclualve. )4lct to conftrmetlon of .aid Supl(lor c~~1,te31 1""11/fduv"" • *M· s . GROSSM •N ACTITIOUI • 11 ... Pnot Metch 6, 13. 20. 27, 198' NAME ITAnMINT Cue No. 39-99·33 Court on Of •ft• the 2nd dey of ..,__..,... .. "" " MAim IT IWT 1244-84 Th• folloWI"" rww 11 doing llWONI Aprll '1ta4, 11 the office of JeMe PtBl.IC NOTICE NOTtCll You tiave been wed. This atalement waa flied wtlh the A ... ,.....-·· NOTICll You hne beet\ eued •......... , Wei'· F•rno n--k • T~-t --~==...;...;.;.....;...;..,__ __ ....._ ~ ... -..........._ ~ -Coun"' Cletk of"'---County on The foloWlng ~ ... Oc*'O -----------pullnett u : clecWt....... ..,.,..._ ,. -• ...,, .... FICTITIOUI MJ ... 11 =--..-:"' ·--,._:-~~ ., ..,._._ ~ • •-"' NOTll'r (A~EWPOATMESAPLUMBING ~....,........_...___. .. ,...Dept., P.O. Box 111. Baverly Hiit•. NAMEITAnMeNT =.~..:=:! • ..._ ........... Mercn 19• 1984 -..1-.. CALIFORNIA wEEKENOEfll
-__ ,.;l"VULl'l:...;;::;;:;;;;...;;~1~~;...._--• H Tlun COMP•NY (8) NEW J0UF--. _. ....._ CA.to213CountyotOrange.Stete ,-·.....-----,--r--S"'., ~'""'0 c• ,. """ " ' s J9U reepoM wtltlM • ..,._ ...... of California 1111 f10ht, tllle Ind The loflowlng peraone ere doing tM lnfuu1•'6cM1...._. Pvbbhed Orange eo..t Olly EHTEAPRI .-, .._ .. mpue
'1CTIT10UI .,..... ~ MESA PLUM8fHG COM-tM ~ ....... lnlereetof.-d~elthetlme bullnesa u : If you wtth to 1M the advkle of Pttot Metett27,Aprit 3, 10, 11, tM4 ~ #213, Newport 8-dl. CA.
NAME ITA,..,,,. ANY (C) DAVE'S POWER tt you Wlef\ to IM the advice of of dMth and ell the right, title and I.AU MARC SPECIALTY CON· an •tlorney In Ihle m•tter, you 11~ n~ ............. __,. .. ___._ ••-
Thi follo'#lnO per.ont IN doing OOTER, 1979 Anaheim A..,.., an 1ttom.y In thlt matt«. you lnteree1 tllet tM •l•te of .aid c»-TRACTORS. 7132 B Gerdln Grove fhoWd do to promptly to that yOUt .,..... .._ • ..., .._......,_ ..._.., ~ u; 1 M .... CA.. 92627 lhould do 10 promptty to that your CllMd hat ecqulred by Ol*•tlOn Blvd. SYlte 141, W•tmlntt•. CA. ~ltt-" ~. 11 erfY. mey be campue OfM, 1213. ~
IHreRNATIONAL DATA SUPPLY ~avid Wayne BllCk. 1979 wrt1WI ~. If eny, mey be of ... or olt\elwtM other than or In 92613 flied on time a.di. CA. t2'IO
C<>fW()RATION. 108, 2151 !MM Aw •• Coetl MIM. CA. IMedontlme. lddltlonlolhatofMlddecUll"··t Merk Wllllam Beamllh, 2900 AvtlOll.Mlld ,... ~ delftan.-AC~BUll... T1*~11~W ·
AYe.,Sult•l28 10, CoeteMIM.CA. 2&27 oonducted by: AYllOtU91ed ha lidO dlfMn.-tht tlfM of de9th, In and to .. tnt ltl•dlton A18, Fullertog. CA. 92131 c1a09. El lt1bume; lede .... _... MAim ITA'W corporetloft.
92127 Thlsbu111'191111 .an dedl. El trlbUl'M: ....... ..,., cenelnzso,>artYeltualed lnthl Ltn01 Hwrteon Wllli111nt, 13t81 1\-e Ud. .... u•1 ah,....... Thi folOwlftg per90n II dotnQ Otc* W.. 111P1,.,Ndll-111rt =~J~. '"130 YMtPf:Mnlu':.<!': Ind~. 8lliCI( Ire Ucl.eln _., .... a .......... Coun'Y of ' • State of Cell· Cherry, Wettmlntler, CA. 92883 Ucl. lllJI .............. bullnWPRO. ~ ....... 241 . 0129, 18111 "~ ~~~-~ ': ienl • -·-,. ,...., wl1h the U& rnJ ,,. 4leMN de ..... fomla. dMCrlbed M fol. Thi• butlnMt le conducted by: e L• a. Mfie(mullfl ... ..._, '""""' ...,.._,., ._,. .,. ...... -..,.. ._._.., • #J18, Fullerton, A. 92t3t Th4t 9'1t.,,..,,t WU flled u. ......... H.... ........ ._ 1-.... t· gener91 partnenhlp .......................... Mt. WllhlnOton St~ FoumMI v• ,..,, 2t. 1114 M l(Mhanl, .... LJncOln BMS .• County ()ertt Of Oriinge County on • ... .............. of -... ~-. Mn w. 8Mlnllh ·-.. .... ~ CA. til'M ,_,.
'
P, a.ma~ CA. 90403 -.. 14, 18'4 ,.. A.n undMdld ~Int.,... In: . .. ........, ... • ,.. Aoe.t "" Wlllk•. noo ,..,,,..., lll'ulllllNd Or...-COMI ~ ~ by: r -Pmm • ....,_, In WI --::. ,_ Ul4 12, Trect '483, ., per Map T1* ai.tement wu !tied wl1tl tht ..._.. "9 .. ,. '"""' • lllal,.. ~ Y202. OoMe ...._CA. aat Piiot MerGh 1S. 20, l1. AIJtt 3, 1 ... Thie bullf'9ll " . • Publlttled Orenoe CoMt Dally ....... • • ,.., .. .,.. ,.. recorded "' Book 1eo. Peget 10 County CWk of Otenge County on "'"""' ,..,"..., • ..,, ..., be Thie~ II oonduoted by:"' 1"2-14
_, ............ Adnanl For· Piiot March 8, 13. 20. 27, 1M4 -,..,. ...... .,,,, ..., -Wld 11 of Mil09llAMOUI Mapa. In ,eb. 14• 1984 ..., Ofl....... lnclMdUlll. _............. 1241-14 ...,....... theoffloeoftheOr.,.COuntyRe-rlml1 •u..t..._....., .. ._. ~ •u..M .... ......., ..... cionMr.St•w ~Omll Publllhld 0r.,. COMI Ody ....... ,,,, ........ _.. ~Lw .. ., WllJlll Till91tl""*'1.,.. fllld-"fl ti.,._ __________ ...................... • rnoreoommonlYknown•· 14002 P110t '°"etdlt. 13, 20, 21, 1914 l•, lfe-erle ttuetl• I•• r~=-:rt~~-~ '::1---..;.;=-..;.-..;.;.-.--.--CounCY a.rtt of Or.noe County on "8JC ll>TU ••• 4'•-HI• .... ., ••••• HoMend Wmy lUltln CA t242-8' ...... _... __ .., __ ..,.. __.., rem ... I .,.
,._,,1'1,198' .,_ .................. _.. .. T..-mt of i.e. cMt. In~ ir.. ............. ~ ....... Merd\1•1"' ,_, MAmlTACT F
...... ~ n.."91 C0Mt ,_.... ACTmOUl.ueMll I JU ......... ..., ....... moneyotthellnlt9d81etllon00ft-----------_, ......... e...... . ~ Or eo... ,_ n._ ~ ........ II .... .... --""t. 20. _., I NAm ITAW ........ .., ~"""r; 11rma11on of ...., or pan calfl wld "8.IC NOTICE 1·TO THm blNNDAlrn l ...,. Mer'Cltl S. :.Tr Apt a. MM ~ •
Piiot Merell I . 13. • 27, 1~ Thi tolowlng pet'90n II doing 1-TO nm ~ belet'I09 ~by noc• ~ __ _..;..;.;;,;;;;..;;.._..;._..;. ____ i-or••.·.:: ~.lied,.. ....... PIOt t • ~ !.H~~1.V1A1M=-l.ITIH ~ te: =· I liel ._ .._ lllf '-by MOf10aOe Of Trwt o.cl on the 11TIOUI ..,.._.. ,_ ..._ ,...__.,.._ ... ._
SHOW Ill !NT!"TA.INMl!NT ....... ,_. • ,_ willl .. ~ IO eoki. Ten per 09llt of ~ ITATUmfT ...... ,_ ...... PmlJC ll)TlC( CotoM dll .... CA. ...... w .... -.... -.._..,_,.. __ .,.,..,_..., ,..~---___ ..,_,. ~· v. vvi-.-11•11111.~ 111t
leed\, CA. 12M7 .... • _. lfW thll IUtNnOfW bid ~--.,, llfWd on you, .... WWI 1NI court MC i lllOUe • 111 •M DIM. ConN dll .... CA. HCTTTMMM ....... J. M9I .HlrnlOln. 1665 0"1111d le WWd on YoU• ftle wtlt\ "* OOU'1 itd. 0t on.. to be tn wf'IOnQ and DtAL Tlll COMMUNICATIOk& wtltttn relC)OllM to tht ~. ..,._ ITACT 11
MAim •TA,._.1 AYll., ~alft VfMtlrl, CA. 9270I I wf'ltterl t'llPOflM to tht ~t. Wiii be reoel\'9d et lht lfCM IHid of· tllOO La AlMlede. Sutt• 45 ,oun.: you dO. 'YO"' dltllAt .. be Thi ~ S--.,. Tllll ...,_la 001 dlA~ lair:•
Thi 1io110w1nO ...,..,. .,. ClofnO L TMI ~II oonclU*d bY-11'1 Ul"'8lil you fto:'f04ll ~ _. bl t1oe et eny ,...,. lfter 1M ftrlit putll-lain V*'t CA. t210I ' tetecl on llJC)IC9UOll of ._ ~ ~ ~ • tndl'f'dllll .,__,on~ of Vie l*ln-OdOf\ ,__ end ~ ~ a1 JoelOtl ·1't9nc61 LCJ119. "°° u , end tNa oaun IN!Y antw • WAT!R YINDINO, LTI>. 1. Jalw ..... , v. v.--
IUHIHM 'AC1FlC CO,. 1642 J. Mel JwMo1n !ff"~ t'1ll ~ ""'Y entilr I ..._ --A.lllMda U. 41 flounlaln v.., ~~tor._,..., M1cAteu 1111. ..-.. CA. 91111 Tllll 11!1t c A -_, .....
NrttrotrjOt •• ~ lwltl. Ca ,,. ~ ... flled ~ -~It._,...~ tor ... ,.... Deted tNe 14th -of t.larcl\, CA. 12109 • • In .,. QOii;pWrft. ~ ..... A. e.-KIY. 8701 Lape IJ County°"" .. Or-.. o.Rr ..
"'41 ~ a.rtt of OrMOll County on -.!did In the ~--~ t"4. Wllllm ~ CltnObell Jt ,... '" gerNlt\!'Wlt ol \lw Ot , tii8llllOf\ ..,._CA._., M. It. ttM Ar=;~~~ , .... 1
... ,..,., =.5:~~ ~ .. ~r~~J(~ • VAN~~==-Awe •• 8atcfwln ...-: atMr~:.~:== v:: =-::.::o,. .._,.,. .............. ar.. OotllA~=
t2147 PU'*'*9 OrwlM eo... ~ °'°"* 1'9qUeetedlnltlecom-DVKl.rHC. TNlbllllflWll~W.• TNa...,_llDD •cs ft:.r. Noc...,_ia,IG.}1,Afft&, Tllll.....,_ll~brtin flOIMetd\t. t&.f0,21. 1'=2 ... •a:. MlrdlJO ,... 1•14W CCWMICM:&MNIA._.. Dl'*'lll~· . ................. ,...._..
lndhtct11.-t • fl'ullenon. CA. ntS3 w J ~JI w.,. aw:',::'-' --.. __ Te -:z:r.. 1 EwlM ~ lH A.. aAA= (114t U9-nl7 Thll ....,_,t w tied wfttl the TMt at. ---•
Till9 .. ....,_,. w Med .tt'1 1"9 For Cl•11fted M ='•"°'y 1 --Anon.ca) fOt AclmlrMltor tr~ Of OrW1g11 COunty °" County Cllril ol Otwiill cow.ty °" o.nty Ot9ttc °' ar.,.. CcM':I)'"" ACTION -"' wnl.l"IAMO 8AHK. H.A 1. 11114 Mwdl 1. tM4 ,....._ ,.._, Mer'Cltl I tlM Cell I _, c-e-y._. ........ -~Mor of CM~ ,_ ~ .....
Pv1111MC1 Ofw'll 0.:: ~ Aa¢l'o:.~=IWJ .... ~~oo.l~,.,_ ~ ~ COM1 ~ "°4"':'1m.=:-.. = Q I ==...11
flllOt Matdl 21. ~u. 10. n, "" au.a.11 20. t7 ..-s. 10. 'er::.... Mer'Cltl 20. 21. 21. ttt4... ...,. 1. u. · 11• ~:i.... MllM4' f 17.... , tl07-M
rtaJC NOTICE
NlJC llOllCE
I • • I
• I I
I 4
Pt.a.IC NOTICE
'1CTmOUI IMJ .... S NA• ITATW•M'T • The followtng pettOn It doing 1-o-----------butlneel ea; l'tCTmOU• ...... AQUA CLEAR, 409 Magnotta, ltAm STA~ Coate M .... c.111. 92827 The ~no pereont lft doing Jactt W Dollahite. 409 Magnolia. ~:'1:-PO~T CELLULAR COM· c~~ ~=·~.,by: an
MUNl'oATIOHS, 1809 W. Bey, New-lndMdual
Pof1 e.to'I, CA. 02183 JllCk w. Dotlahlte T~ Le"°Y Nlcholt, 158-4 0CMn Thie atatement was llled with the
INYd,, BelbO&, CA. 92881 County Clerk of Orange County on ~ V. Stinton. 1809 W Bay. Mar 9. 196-4
Hewpot1 Beech, CA 112M3 'MOll1
Thia bualr'9ae la oonductlld by I Publlahed Orange Coat Dally 09f*el pat1neBhfp. Piiot March 20. 27. Apfll 3, 10, 1984
MtchMI V. Stlnaon 1903-84
TNI eUitement wN filed with the -----------
County Clertl of Orange County on Pllll.IC M>TICE Maroh 8, 1984 I---....;;..;..;;.. _____ _
nan FlCTITIOUS IUS*EU
Publlatled Orange Coaat Dally NAME ITATEMENT
PMot March 20, 27, Aprtl 3. 10. 1984 The toltowtng persona are doln,
1660-6-4 buatnaa u :
Pllll.IC NOTICE
'ICTITIOUS IUllNtH
NA• STATIMENT
The followlng person le doing
butlneea u : MARY PAVICICH/PAESCOTT.
1891 Mua Dr . .r De. Senta Ana. CA.
92707
Mary Pavk:ldl. 16111 MaH Dr.
IDe, Santi Ana, CA. 112707
Thia bullnese 11 conduC1ed by· an
lndlVlduat.
Mary Pavtclch
Thi• atatemen1 wa• tlled with tha
WILLOWVIEW MEDICAL
CENTER. 1101 W. Stevene II 108
Santa Ana, CA. 92707
Nelson D. McNulty, 1101 W
Stevens 11108. Sll'lta Ana. CA
92707
This business le conduC1ed by: •
llmlted pertnershlp
N.D. MCNUity
This atatement waa tiled with thf>
County Clerk of Orange County or
March 5, 1984 ~
Publlehed Orange Coast Dall)
Piiot March 20, 27, Aprll 3, 10, 1984
1614--84
County Cle<k ot Orange County on -----------
Feb. 21, 1984 FUWC NOTICE ~ , __________ _
Published Orange Coaat Dally
Piiot March 20, 27, Aprtl 3. 10, 196-4
1616-84
NOTICE INVITING llDS Notice Is hereby given that ,,,.
Board of Trust ... of ttll Couf
Community COiiege Dtatrict of Or· ---Dl-.,-.1-C-NO_TI_C_E ___ ange County. Callfomla, will reoet¥e ____ rUU\. _______ Maled bids up to but no leter th.,,
FICTITIOUS IUllNESS Wednetday. 10:00 1.m.. Apfll 4, 1984 at the Purchallng Depar1ment NAME ST A TUffNT of Mid college district toc:ated at
The followtng petson 1' dOlng 1370 Adams Avenue, Coeta Mee&. ~P~N IMPORT INVEST-C.lllornl• at Which lime said bid•
S 11 wtll be pubtloly ~ and r..o l<w MENTS, 2085 Plecentla, ulte 1• PAINTING AND BINDING OR• Co9t1 Meta, CA. 92627
Patrick M. O'BrMln. 18960 Algon ANGE COAST
Quin #2·l05, Huntington BMch, COLLEGE 1984-65 CATALOG
CA. 92649 All bids are to be In accorda~
Thlt butlneu le conducted by an with the Bid Documerlta wttlch are now In Ille and may be aecured 111 lndp':g~rlen 1he otfloe of the Dlrec1or of Purcnu:
Thia atatement was flied with the Ing ot sald college district. '
County Clerk of Ora""" Countw on Each bidder must tobmlt with hi ··.-' bid a calhter'a check, certified
March 1, 1984 F23lal check,°' bidder's bond made pay·
Publlah41d Orange cout Dally able to the order of the Coaat Com·
7 3 0 .... 4 munlty College Oietrlci Board of PtlOt Maren 20. 2 · AprU • 1 • 1•<> Trust-In an amount not leas than 1501-84 five percent (5%) of the aum bid aa a
-----------guarantee that the bidder wlll enter PtB.IC NOTICE Into the propoHd Contract II the
FICTITIOUS 8USINEll
NAME STAT!MENT
The IOllowlng peraons are dOlng
buelneu aa·
CORPORATE RESORTS & HO-
TELS, 2740 So Harbor
L. S.nta Ana. Calif 92704
Pacific Car Inc . California, 27 40
So Harbor
L. Santa Ana. Cellt 112704
Thie bullnesa 11 conducted by a
corporation
John Derito, Vice Pra~t
Thia etalement was tli.<1 with the
County Cieri\ ot Orange County on
Mar B. 1984
,240451
Publlahed Orange Coa11 Dally
Pltol March 20, 27, Aprtl 3, 10, 196-4
1596-6-4
Pllll.IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINEll
aame la awarded to him In the evenl
ol tallure to enter Into SUCh contract,
the proceeds of the checic wtll be
torfalted, or In the case ot a bod, th;I
f\Jll aum lhereot wtll be lorletted 10
llld COiiege dlatrlci.
No bidder may withdraw his bid
lor e per10<I tor torty-ltve (45) da~
alter the date set tor the open1"1j
thereof The Board of Trustees reaerves
the prlYelage of rejecllng any and a I
bids or to waive any lrregularlttee or
lntcirmalltles In any bid or In tht
bidding
COARELLAN J . THOMPSON
Exec Vice Chancellor. Buslnttae At·
lairs
CoaSI Community College Dlstrlct
Published Orange Coast Dally Pllof
March 20, 27, 1984
1613·8~
Pllll.IC NOTICE
NAME STATEMENT K·1CMl5
The tollowlng persona are doing Eecrow No. 244400
butlneu aa: NOTICE TO CREDITORS Of IULlt WEST COAST DEVELOPMENT TRANSFER AND Of INTENTIOll
SYSTEMS, 711 W 17th St., Suite TO TRANSFER ALCOHOLIC
8-3, Coste Mne, CA 92827 8EVERAOE UC:ENH(S) (lec:a.
High Tech Construction Inc. Cell· 1101-e101 U.C.C. end/Of 24071
fomla, 711 W 17th St , Suite B-3, NP)
Cotta Mesa. CA 92627 Notice Is hereby given thet a bu*
Thlt bulineu Is conduC1ed by a trl!'lsler of penonal proper1y and •
CC)(?Ofatlon transfer of liquor llcenM(s) la a.bou1
Roger Ackerman. Jr to be made
Thia 11atemet1t waa tit.cl with the The name(a). Social Security (Of)
County Cle<k ot Orange County on Federal Tax Number. and milling
March 6. 1!16-4 address. and ZIP Code Number, of
FM<IZ>I the transteror(s) are DAVID
Publlshed Orange Coast Delly BOOTH, 12391 Kenlngton, Loa
Piiot Mareh 20, 27, Aprll 3, 10, 196-4 Alamltos. CA. 90830
Pllll.IC NOTICE
1615-84 The name(s), Social Security (or)
Federel Tax Number, and mallll'I')
address, end ZIP Code Number. ot
the 1rensferee(1) are. MYRON MILL·
EA. 3201 Dakota. Costa Mesa. CA
flCTITtoUS IUllNHS 2626
NAME STATl!MENT That the personal proper1y to be
The tollowtng persona 8fe doing ransterred Is deacrlb41d In generel
~alnea u : s meterlels. supplies. merchl!'I·
EAGLE-LITE. 20372 Dublin Ln . 198, equipment. (or) f\Jrnlture, fix·
tiuntlngton Beac:h. CA 92646 ures, equipment, tredeneme,
Petrlcia [)y9', 9711 Crawford Cr , oodwlll, lease, leasehold lmprow·
Huntington Beech, CA 92646 ents and stock In trade of tM ~len Somm4tffield, 8701 Knights business known as THE SPORTS·
Cr Huntington e.ach CA 92646 PAGE and la located al: 1562 01·1
Petrlcla c Mulllns, 20372 Dublin Newport Blvd ' Costa Mesa. c~
Ln., Huntington Beach, CA. 926-46 92627 together with the tollowfn ~ JllCk A\lppel, 6701 Knlghta Cr . described alcoholic beverag9
Huntington &NCh. CA 92646 llcense(s)· On sale bee< and wine
Dennis V Dyer, 9711 Craw!ord lloenae no 42-117010 now lasu•:I
Cr., Huntington Beach, CA 92646 tor said premises, tor pr~IMI
Aon Sommerfield 8711 KnlghtSI loceted at (tame address) (or) 1562
Cf., Huntington Beaeh, CA 92646 Old Newport Blvd . Costa MMa,
Wlllla P Mullins, 20372 Dublin Calllornte .
Ln • Huntington Beach, CA 92646 That the total c;onStderatlon tc r
Thia buaJneaa 11 conducted by a the transfer 01 said bull,_. and uf
p9r*al partnerehlp said llcense(s) Is the aum eof
Petrlcle C. Mullins S60. 163 00 1ncludlng inventory"' -
Thlt atalerMnt waa Iii.<! with the• mated at S 1,000 00. wttlch consll11 ~nty Cl4M''k of Orange Counly on or the lollOWing -=.o 28 1984 Deecrlpllon Amourit · ' '238811 Checks personal chec~,
Pubtlan.d Orenge Co1111 Dally S 1.000 00
PUot March 20, 27. Aprll 3. 10. 1984 Demand note to be repl.ced with
Plll.IC NOTICE
1817-84 caah In eacrow, $10,000.00
Promfsaory not .. In favor ot Nllw,
$t2,00000
demand note to be marked vOid
at IUCh time at the encumbr81'1Ce
PICTITIOUI IUIMSS hu been aasurT*! by buyer at clote
NAMe IT A Tl•NT of Hcrow and ell creditors whO filed
The fOlloWlng person 11 doing claim• In thlt eec:row haYe been
buelMee aa: paid In lull In acicordance with ak·
VOLTA WEST, 2&tl0 Walnut, tlon 24074 ol the 8ueineee and Pro-
&ulte E. Tuetln, Call! 92880 leaslona Code,, $37, 183.00
Robert Dockter Sport, 81 That la hae been agreed between ~bfook, lrvlne, Call!. 92714 aald trensleree(e) and eald trana-
Thlt butlneu It conducted by an ~ero~e) that constdetatlon lor the
Individual 1ranater ot said butlneaa and of Mid
Robef1 D. Sport 41cenae(t) 11 to be paid only aftw
Thia etatement wat ftled with the 1rantlll!' hH been approved by 0..
CountY Cieri! of Orange County Of' pertment of AlcOhollc Bevwege
Mar. f , 1N4 ~ Control. purauant lo Sec 24073 et
Publl.n.d Orange Coat D<y .,hat the herein deterlbed tran11-
Pllot March 20, 27. Aprll 3. 10. 1N4 fera are to be conaumm.ted, eub-
1599-14 ~ to the above proYlt'One, at
-----------:SERVICE ESCROW COMPANY, ·-•c 11111'\Tll'C 14212 BMct1 01 .. w .. 1m1ne1ar. CA ___ .. ruuu;;.;..;...__nu.._11_'-< ___ 92683 on or after Apr1123 , 1914.
ACTmOUI .,...... An othet ~ namee Ind .O·
NAm •TAn.NT dr .... UMd by the trW\IMrOt(t)
The fQllowlng penona ere ckllnQ within the thr• yeat'8 !Mt -'· eo ~ ..-191' ea known to ,,..,,...,..,,, .,.,
COACH IMP<>f'T9. 931 w tlth ~E and eddr ... « eecrow
8C , C-t, Cotta Meta, C. 92127 ~ SEAVICI ESCROW COM· MoNmmact Reza Nll('*'hl· 931 W. 11'11\ 8t ' C.1, Coeta ..... Ca PAHY, 142'2 9eeCh 1111 .. w_,.
1Je27 mln9ter. CA t2M3 ~ ~ 111 condUc1ed by an Det.S MerQfl 20, 1914 ,,_ DAVID BOOTH
lo&tMdual M A Ni.tblkht ~rwterOf(e)
TNe ''*""""' ... Iii.cl wtth the MYROH MILi.EA
County 0Wtc of 0rlll'IQ8 County on ~~~W COW.,.Y Merdl , •• '"' .... -............. __ .____. it>ttt• __ _.. ....
f'utlfl9hed Orano-eo.1 Ody W•"""._..,. CA. WI
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CLASSI FI ED 642-5678
18ta1t1 ftr Sale .... " l11 l1lt
Cit1er1l 1002 Gtatral IOOZ
LIDO ISLE
Traditional 3 Br, 3 ~ Ba. Bayfront, pier &
float for 65' boat. Priced to sell $950,000.
Remodeled 3 Br, 2 Ba, lrg playroom,
fireplace, beam ceiling. $420,000.
Clll COllO II YFllOIT
Jetty & bay view, Mai Kai 2 Br. 2 Ba. 40'
bay patio. $695.000.
lllYllE TERRACE
Panoramic bay & ocean view. 4 Br, 4 Ba,
patio. pool home. Fee Price $775,000.
111 LIDO POI IR., IAYFROIT
Fabulous bay/mountain view. 1 Br. 1 Ba,
condo co-op. Lowest price. $295,000.
IAYSIDE PUCE IAYFROIT
Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 Br, 2 Ba up,
2 Br, 2 Ba dn. 2 boat spaces. $1,375,000.
PElllSUU HOIE OOUIFllOIT
Ocean & jetty views. Marine room, 4 Br, 3
Ba, 3700 sq. ft. car parking. $1,285,000.
IRllOWHEID HOIE
Near new 4 Br, 4 Ba, lake view. 3500 sq.
ft. $440,000. Will trade for local prop.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 B"Y'"'' o,,~·· NB b7S b161
GE 159.9100 ------.. .. .
lll,IOO
YAIPPllYEI
Fantatk: loeatlon nMr the
best ehopplng In th•
Southland. 9 theatres
and all med. & prof. ter·
vices. Better aee thlt one
FASTI 759· 1901
Traditional
Realty
631-7370
THE REAL
ESTATERS
~Macnab-lrwine
I< I \I I \
I • I \ i I \ ~, \
For Ad Action
1-------.1Ctatr1l IOOZ Can a
,. ' 1114,100 \•''~:,~\\\ti· IOIEL PERFECT Daily Pilot
"'' t 2 bedroom condo with AD VISOR ~' plush earth1one carpett. •
custom plantation shu1·
$
THE REAL
ESTATERtj
\4ATI RfRO"T
ltOMU, a-.
REAL ESTATE 831-1400 "95'.4. of m1
~spon~• camr
from 111~ Pi/01."
Beautlful custom Ille. 642•5678
ters, designer wallpaper, !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ huge country kitchen, 1-
I 1d-.r1i.f'd ID th•
Pilot ood tilt R''"'" for my O!'<'n hou"
I r<etivf'd 20 ri ll• -
Ill Una• from th• Piiot
1od only on• r ... pon••
from tb< K<&l•tu
I w .. nrt h1ppr
with tb. Pilot
j,,,, hehon
Nrwporr ~•th
For Classillfld Ad
ACTION
Call
A DAILT P1LOT
AO-YISOl
M2°1471
Shop at home. lt'a euy
with ctaulfled 642-5678
luah landacaplng with
:nallbu lighting, central
air and much more. A
buyer's dream come
true. You must aeel Call
546-2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
USE THE
DAILY PILOT
"FAST
RESULT0
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
For Result
Service Call
642-5671
Id.JU
IPNITllITT
knocks often when you
uae result-getting Dally
Piiot Claealfled Ada to
reach the Oranoe Coast
mar~et.
Phone 642-5678
,~~:~:~' s~\l'1~-ar.trs· .... ... ,
-----14~•'-. ClAY t '0U.ut -----
0 fff''0""0• -.ueu of ""• f0w, tef'O"""Oi.cf WOtdt be
~-"O IOt ,._ fr 1f I ~1>le WO'd'I
YOUR AD IN THIS
SECTION IS
REACHING
108,777 HOUSEHOLDS
. 261,064 READERS
5 .-----·~----. T E L U S H
I I 1 !1 I I
COMPARE*
OUR CLASSIFIED RATES
Daly 108, 777 25C
Plot Cercutabol\ per tbousand
Santa Ana 49,000 63c
Re&tster C1rtul.ahon per ttiouund
Newport'
Ensl&n 52,000
C1rc11l.atlon
The I0,000 Pemysaver c.ttu11t1on pet tho11u
Rat• 8ued On 3 Unee - 7 Tim
Cl~~ Plot Manih 27, Aprll l. 10. t7, 10'4 ~:r,, c:e:o-Coat Delly PHot
174444 1731-64 -------------------
..
4
j I
* a; a a s s
J
642-5678
COLDWC!U
BANl(eRO
-COTE rt~
REALTY I
I
BIG CANYON HOUSE FOR RENT:
S295/mo. Need• work.
8-41~208 f ..
I ~
M!!f!la!at latll
$2.17 per day
lllat't All VOU pay tor 3 tin.a, 30 dtY9
In the DAlY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIEC TORY
' HOROSCOPE
•
-'---'
' / I \ 1 /
0r:lft09 Colet DAILY PfLOTITUeeday. Mwct121, 1984
~ODAY'S CROSSWORD PUVJ E
ACAOSS
t Slrtkt
6 Vthlcle
90ral
14 Additional
15 SpJQed stew
1 e Get etound
17 Mlcrowe'l4t
18 Direction
19 Hunter's lure
20 10%
22 Tara
24 Paint
2e1nc11"8
27 Inter -
29 Punster
30 Wood trough
33 Priekly plant
var.
37 llama land
38 Employs
39 Shoshonean
40 Parents
4 1 Czech river
42 Place tor
canapes:
2 wds
44 Born
45 Angler's
need
46 Sharp
47Wild
49 Fell bhndly
53 Copyist
2 3
14
17
20
24
57 Took n oath
58 Sohtary
59 Edenlte
6 1 Land on the
Persian Gull
62 Born -
63 This. Sp
64 What's lefl
65 Cast out
66 Permeate
67 Greek
resistance
DOWN
1 Hit hard
2 Loom-made
3 Action place
4 Omar
the --
5 Farm animal
6 Mall dnnks
7 Revolts
8 Collls1on
casually
2 wds
9 Narrow-
minded
teacher
10 Turn c..1ay
t 1 Ethnic group
12 Smell
13 Meadows
var
21 -Angels
6
Haw eomethlng to tell?
Nenpaper
PAI VIOU8
PUZZLE SOLVED
23 Weather
word
25 Untruth
28 Plenitudes
30 Mint or sage
3 t Soviet city
32 Eleonora -
33 Face part
34 French river
35 Canadian
Indian
36 Lizar d genus
37 Thin steel
product
2 wds
7 8
40 Makers sufl
42 Painful
43 Container
45 Go back
4 7 Penalties
48 Htre
50 Studied hard
51 Aul:> out
52 Fender
marks
53 Auc11on
54 Encumber
55 Flower
56 Solemn act
60 Siesta
10 11 12 13
................. ~
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
llOIPTilllST Mon.-Frl. 8:30-5:30 Ughl
typing. N.B. 955-0650.
Orange County daily newspaper is
seweking fast paced, flexible
achiever to coordinate display aale1
activity. Must have execptional or·
ganzat.lonaJ skills. Duties inclide
tracking daily sales, answering buay
phones for crut.side sales staff, coordJ-
~tin8 theater advertising. Some
ty'ping, f lllng required. Newspaper or
agency experi nee a plus. Send re-
sume or letter of qualifications to:
Orange C.OOSt Daily Pilot
P.O. Box 1560
Costa M I CA 92626
Attention; Peggy Hoggatth
ORANGE COAST OAtl Y PtlOT
l30 W OAY SI • COSf-MESA CA t2626
.,._, t ,.•IA Jt•t•t1 .. HH•1t• f ~ .. \0Yt • ......
·~:i.:-------------1
DEADLINE:
. " •
~ 0 S•lff-s.tvte.-Leulng
S,t1l1lht11 l1
• .,., ... hlhtl'J
Excellent s.lectlon of New
and Carefully prep•re4
UMd BMW't alWaya In
Stocil
111-11'11
.... ....
.®;
11u•i1iu11 SOUTH oou1n
YOLllW&IEI
"WIWIUHT
11 lllDllLI''
Volume SaJM. ~
Andleulng
18711 Beech Btvd.
Huntington BMch
('114) 142-2000
'l2YWIM New 1835 engine, magt, new tlrea. $2000.
957-2805, 8&2-2997
'73 7-paaa-:-eua. Look• &
run1 good. U150.
650-1334
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
'·"-"ti.or I• 1 I". •
I I .., I \ ,, ~ ' '
546-1200
tilt
.......... lffntt a.et, .... off«.
751~705or~1029
SIADMIM
llONllAC
~ T ~ fl I ll "''
' • ,
---~~~.::..__~---~~~--l~_;;_-=----_._J..___·~~'-'
•
HIGH85 LOW57 caum 1111111
TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1984 OH ANC.f COUN TY C ALI FOR N IA 25 CENlS
Coast
Traffic deaths down In
state, but up slightly In
Orange County .I A3
Revised bullet train route
would kill stretch through
Camp Pendleton./ A3
California
The Bay Area got a bit of a
shake Monday, but little
damage reported./ A4
A chemical spill In
Hollister leaves two per-
sons Injured./ A4
Na tio n
Florida town not doing
well In It's 'Boozeless
Week' effort./88
Smokers actually pay an
addltlonal $3 per pack In
hidden costs.I A5
World
A French diplomat is shot
In Beirut as battles con-
tinue./ AS
An IRA landmine kills a
British soldier en route to
a double date./ A4
Mlnd&Body
Under certain conditions,
virtually all human beings
can have an epileptic
selzure./82
Sports
Georgetown and Ken-
tucky prepare for their
NCAA basketball semi-
finals showdown at Seat-
tle./C1
Former Kansas City
Royal Jerry Martin Is pick-
ing up the pieces with the
New York Mets./C2
Fountain Valley stopped
Edison In volleyball for a
big step towards the
Sunset League cham-
plonship./C4
Entertainment
Only twice In history of
Oscars has there been a
tie vote In actlng./83
In this production the
pope Is a woman. And
that's not the only sur-
prlse./83
Buslneu
Irvine-based Hellonetlcs
offers special premium to
stockholders who ex-
ercise their warrants./85
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bulletin Board
Bridge
Bullnal
Callfomle News
Cluatfted
Com lea
Croeeword
Death Notices
H .. pYourMlf
Horoecope
Anf\ Lender1
Mind and Body
HetloneJ Newt
Opinion
POlloe Log
Publk: Notloel
Sport1
8took Marketa
T4MYtlk>n
Theet ..
WeMher
WortdNft9
92
A3
B•
85-7 A• CM a.. ce
88
92
C7
82
81-2
A• AS A3
88,CM
C1-<4
87
83
-...~~~es
I
A2
A4
10th HB ar~on spaiJts rail}!
Police suspect latest apartment blaze Huntington Beach Fire Deoart-
ment spokeswoman Manha Werth
said Monday's blaze occurred at
11 :34 p.m. in a vacant, around-floor
apartment at 2114 Florida St. She
said the residence had apparently
been le(t unlocked to permit painters
and carpel layers to enter.
might be the work of same flrestarter
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of .. °""""' •wt Beach neiahborbood.
Police and fire officials have sched-
uled .a community meeting Wednes-
day to inform residents about the
ongoina arson investigation and to
tell them how to help prevent ad-
ditional fires.
Investigators suspect two fires
started in a vacant apartment Mon-
day night may be the work of an
arsonist who has set nine other fires
since January in the same Huntington
Newport Beach City Council membera Phil
Mauer and Jackie Heather try out the
She said someone entered the
apartment and ignited rags and
newspapers in a hallway linen closet
°"",...,.....,.....,_I( ....
propoeed new trolley •yatem on Via Lido
near Lido Village.
Will Newpor( sing 'Clang,
Clang Goes the Trolley?'
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of .... °"" ..........
Newport Beach city officials arc looking at a trackless
trolley to improve transportation in the city.
At its afternoon meeting Monday, the Newport Beach
City Council listened to a presentation by Shuttle
Concepts Inc., a Long Beach company that operates
trackless trollies in 14 cities throughout the United States.
The company proposed using two or three troUics,
each carrying up to 50 passengers, on heavily trafficked
routes through the city.
Advertising on the inside oflhe trollies and the sale of
tokens to local businesses for promotional use would pay
for the service, according to Al Diamond, the president of
Shuttle Concepts.
"We run in 14 cities on this system and we are
profitable with little or no fare," Diamond said, adding the
tokens range in cost from five cents to a quarter.
"We charge hotels, restaurants and businesses I 0
cents a token and they sell them to their customers for a
nickel or they give them away," Diamond said.
This type of system, however, is tnost successful in
seaside tourist towns and ifNewport Beach were
(P~eue .ee TROLLEY I A.2)
and in a bedroom closet, then left the
apartment door open while fleeina.
Scott Smith, who lives upstairs
from the vacant apartment, smeUed
smoke, went downstairs, saw some-
thing burning and called firefighters,
Werth said. She said Smith closed the
apartment door before caUing. Jn
doing so, Ile cut ofT some of the
oxygen supply, and the flames were·
almost ouf when firefighters arrived,
Werth 1a1d
She said the lack of oxnea aad die
lack of combustible materialt bclped
prevent the names fiom apreadiJll.
lnvestiptors belieTe Monday'i lite
could have been set by tbe aame
penon who has started nine Otber
blazes io the same Huntinitoo 8aldl
n~i&hborhood, off Yorktown A venue
between Delaware and Florida
(Pleue eee All80ff / A.2)
Plaza to make
urban natives
feel 'at home'
By ANDREA ADELSON
Of ... 0.-,,... .....
For the urban dweller who yearns
to live near downtown skylines and
posh hotel restaurants, a Newport
Beach-based developer may have an
answer in a project under consider-
ation in Irvine.
Douglas Plaza, a condominium
project of seven. four-story towers in
the heart of Irvine's freeway business
complex, is envisioned as a haven for
those who want to forsake suburbia
for a metropolitan-like setting.
The six-acre project of 260 coo-
dominiums that averaac 1,000 square
feet in size is the first ofits kind in &be
city.
It woo unanimous suppon from
the Transportation Commission
Monday night, and needs only ooe
more commission's approval before
breaking ground, said GeofJC i;>e-
vine, a city transportation pl.ao.nina
engineer.
"lo 1977, when we suaested
residential uses in the IBC (lrvioe
Business Complex)., everyone la~
cd at us," Councilman David Sills
(Pleue 11ee URBAll/ A2)
Rescued baby
is flourishing
100 people volunteer
to adopt boy found
in trash dumpster
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. 0.-, ,...11-11
A redheaded baby found in a
Fountain Valley trash container
along with garbaJe and grass cuttings
is depicted by his doctor "as a little
toughie" who "probably has a (date
with) destiny" because of the way he
survived his first few hours oflife.
The baby, found wrapped in a dirty
and bloody blanket by trash collectors
early Saturday, is not only surviving
-he appears to be OourishinJ.
The baby has a good appetite, has
been eating fonnula every four hours
and is gaining weight al a local
hospital.
He is still being given antibiotics to
ward ofT possible infection from the
garbage and debris he was exposed to,
but is expected to be released IOOn to
the Albert Sitton Home in Oranae for
abused and abaodooed children.
"He's so resilient. lt'a probably P9ft
of a miracle." said Dr. Ronald
Comelsen of Fountain Valley Com-
m unity Hospital.
He's the center of attention for the
nurses in the maternity ward and
police detectives estimate there have
already been about 100 offers of
adoption.
While the Fountain Valley infant
appears destined fora happy life, it's a
far different ending from the birth ofa
Huntington Beach infant.
A baby was found dead at the
bottom of a trash container in an
industnal section of the city on New
(Pleue mee BABY I A2)
Orange County is turning to gray German
shepherd
joins PD
i n Irvine
Study predicts proportion of older folks
will Increase sharply as year 2000 nears
By JEFF ADLER
Of the 0.., ""°' .....
Call it the graying of Orange
County. We're getting older.
As Orange County continues lo
diversify economically, the median
age of county residents is expected to
increase, according to a recently
published stale study.
Although Orange County residents
now are slightly younger than their
counterparts around the state, the
proportion of older residents will
increase rather sharply in the latter
years of the century.
By the year 2000, half of the
county's population will be two years
older than the projected statewide
median age of 35.8. In 2020, the
county's median age is expected to be
41.l while the state's median age
edges upward to 38. l years old,
according to state Finance Depart-
ment estimates.
And while the county's population
is expected lo increase by 55 percent
Father Nevin marks
BOth birthday 37
years at CM church
Monsignor Thomas Nevin has
probably officiated al more of life's
precious moments than just about
anyone.
Weddinp, baptisms, confirrna·
tions., funefals -he has presided
over the milestones that shape and
fonn our lives and the lives of those
we love.
Nevin, the soft-spoken priest mdi·
ted with fouod1na the Catholic com-
munity in CO.ta Meta, celebrated a
milestone of his own recently1 on St.
Patrick's Day: bis 80th btrt.bday
pa~y.
The date of the celebration was
appropriate, Nevin said, even thouah
he actually turned 80 on March 8.
He wa1 appe>intcd to establish a
Costa Meta ~ah on hi1 birthday in
194 7 and saad bis fint ma11 '' Bell Broedway Mortuary Chapel on St.
Patrick'• Day o that year\. !i• ycan
bcfoR the ctty P( COlta Meta was
incorporated. ,
On hit ~rihdG-the lrith-bom
monsipor w~o-1Jlftfs to be c:iUed
almply''fathet'' sat down to reftecton
,4
1
KAREi
KL£11
PEOP LE IN I HE NEW S
bis 37 yean ofreliaious leNenhip in
Costa Meta ll St. IO.Chim'• Catholic
Oturch.
While he's slowed a bit with -..
Nevin's bearina is sharp and he auil
officiates at masta and 11cnments
and travels on weekend retreats.
''I feel better DOW than I did It .0,"
be declared, tb()Ulh he admitted he
ret.ittd from hi1tldmini1tr1tiveduties a couple of years beck.
Nevin only chuckles when asked
bow many Weddinp ·~ blptilma be bu permned. ''Many_~ 1 IUppolt~:r' ahaki .. ~!'CI . ._ r ATllSll/AI)
I
by 2020, the proportion of people
over 65 will grow by 255 percent
during the same period, Finance
Department forecasters believe.
Much of the age increase can be
attributed to the aging of the
baby-boom generation, explained
Alta Yetter, a labor market analyst
with the state Employmeot Develop-
ment De~rtment.
But with the county's population
growth comes evidence that the local ~onomy is continuing to diversify.
While the cities of AnaheifT\ and
Santa Ana continue to be the top
emplo~ent centers in the county,
both cities claimed smaller shares of
the employment pie in 1980 than they
did in 1975.
Irvine Jumped from seventh place
in 1975 to third place in 1980,
claiming 6.8 percent of all jobs in the
county. Yetter said.
Large percentage gains between
1975 and 1980 also were reported in
La~una Hills and Mission Viejo.
Irvine registered a I 00 percent gain in
the five-year period. Countywide.
growth averaged 46. 7 percent during
the pcrjod. Yetter said.
Out!ide of Anaheim, Santa Ana
and Irvine. the next largest employ-
ment centers in the county in 1980
were, in descending order. Fullerton.
Orall.$e. Newport Beach. Costa Mesa.
Huntington Beach. Garden Grove
and Buena Park.
...................
1111r. Tbmn••Nnta andcla~lle'1W"Yedt.S7,....._
. 1 4 ..
By STEVE MARBLE
OflMOelr,... ......
Irvine police. who have made news
by using roly-poly, Belgian, cat-
tle--herd1ng dogs for its canine corp1,
arc prcpanng to introduce a more
conventtonal model -a German
shepherd.
Rex. a 2-ycar-old shepherd., bas
been selected to replace Farnsworth,
the popular Bouvier des Aanden
killed in the line of duty last month.
Rex ~ill begin his tour of duty Friday
morning.
The shepherd has been provided to
the city at no charge by Master Ca.nine
Kennels of Redlands, which bu
supplied Irvine with three trained
Bouv1ers since the four-ltaed COIJI
were introduced in late 198.l.
"They felt real bad about F1.m1 ud
gave us our choice ofany of the dclll
they had," explained Capt. a.m1ia
Bozza.
"They had two Bouvicrs and ODe
shepherd. The shepherd wu j.ast die
best," added Bou.a. .. He's ot-oiJian
and attentive, yet Vet)' &iendly.•
Ru wiU share camne dutD wida
Bart, the <kparuncnt•s l"Miei•
Bouvier. Pol.ice said they doe"t ._
the two dop will JC' aloGa dMI ...
each wiU be wortina 'With a dim M
pall'Olman.
lrvine swore in~ BoUvienia ._
t 982 u its tint police doll. ,,_.
were Barr and f'~ ._
dark-haired year-old ...........
ccivinaJy cuddly ..,.,_... 1111
dotS ~ picked owr '? = becautc they loobd ......
family pcU and d.id ........
.. military loot .. of= cli.
Barr, bowewr, -ft6 police ~t t-II f/I a .. laUlcz-faire demeeDai'" .. , __
q~tly WU ENtCbued ~ .... ~ Oft\c:ler Jcf( ·1.;ove:~~Jtj ...
reolacled by But;
l..Ove bas since bem ...... ,...._ ___ .4r .. •
I
URBAN PLAZA EYED FOR IRVINE •••
Prom Al
~lied. "But when 11 was proposed, 1
aot more phone call~ from people who
wanted to know whert' the) could act
on a List."
The DouJlas Plaza proposal as on
Von K,annan Avenue, between Du-
pont and Manin avenues. If ap-
proved, a two.bedroom P.t'nthousc
suite costing $250,000 will have a
view of the Ko ll Center twm black
office towers to the nonh and the
Registry hotel on the west.
Irvine. incorp<mllcd in 1971, 1s a
city whose downtown 1s stall e\.olv-
ing. But 1b fast-filhng business d1s-
tnct has grown up around John
Wayne A1rpon and the juncture of
the Newport 3nd n Diego freeways.
While once the freewa) d1stnct was
home to manufacrurers and light
1ndustr). it's nov. sprouting with glass
office towers and h1gh-nse hott-ls.
"I thinl its um1: has come:· Sills
said.
Kath~ (,w" 1n project manager
for Dougla!> PIJLa · ~ dt'' elope rs. Ne\\--
pon Ot-'elllpmt·nt C ompan). said
lbe project 1s aimed at se<:ur-
ity-conscious business people who fly
frequently and don't want to bother
with yards.
The proj~t. first proposed m 1979,
was put off until a lawsuit involving
the Irvine Co. and homeowners
reached resolution over lease-held
land, she said. Be<:ause of the suit's
outcome, Godwin said the original
landowner sold the land rather than
propose cpndominiums tied to a
lease.
The landown er wall the
Irvine-based Douglas Development
Co.. the development division of
McDonnell Dou~as Corp. Douglas
sull holds a portion of the acreage.
and intends to de\.elop 11 for com-
mercial uses later, Godwm said.
"The diOicult part 1s to male ti feel
residential and not hke an office But
)OU can't make 11 East Coast
Tudor-St) le either ... she said.
To !>Olve tht' dilemma, Douglas
Plaza home!> are being planned \\1th
prden house windows. balconies.
chimneys and sloped roofs. To make
subterranean parldna less cavelike,
Godwin said trees are to be planted
within lhe structu"'· forctng de-
velopers to build shafts around them
to allow m natural light.
Godwin said the project has been
met with such enthusiasm, construc-
tion drawings arc alr~ady under way.
Barring complications, the de-
velopers hope to begin grading by
May IS and begin buil~ by
September. .. . ~
It built, Douglas Plaza wiU also be
the most dense living arrangement
Wllhm city limits, at 45 units ~racre.
The most intense buildins in Irvine's
res1denual areas is 31 units ~r acre,
assistant caty engine<'r Mem e Wilend
said.
Douglas Plaza will have at least one
competitor. in a high-density metro-
politan-style laving complex planned
near the South Coast Plaza Town
Center in Costa Mesa.
ARSON PROMPTS MEETING •..
From Al
~ln~ets. Wl•rth \a1d. Shl' !>aid the string
of lirl'S ha!> prompl<.'d \Orne nenous
residents to mo\e ou1 ot the area.
Pre' 1ous tires haH' heen 1n
carpons. garage!>. a laundl) room and
refuse bins. On March 19. sonH~onc
!>Ct the eighth and ninth fires in a
garage and 1n a lumber pile at a Del
Wa\ condom1n1um complc\.
Werth !.aid this v.1:c!..'s lire!. '"l'n:
1he first set 1ns1de a residence.
But she said 1n,es11gator~ behCH'
the' ma' be related to the earlier fires
because: as 1n thl' otht•r inc1den1s.
papers and rag<; "'ere 1~n1ted dunng
nighlllme hours 1n the same neigh-
borhood.
No serious 1njur1es have occurred
yet m connection with the firt!..
Because of growing concern among
residents. she said police and fire
officials will conduct a communit)
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in
the Fellowship Room of the First
United Method 1st Church at 17th and
Dela"'are streets. Neighborhood
Watch members have d1stnbuted
fliers alerting residents to the meet-
ing.
Werth said pohce and fire officials "''11 discuss their invesllgallon into
BABY BOY FLOURISHING ...
From Al
Year's Da}. 1982. Octect1vcs belie\e
1he baby was placed 1ns1de a cheap
briefcase and dumped in the dump-
ster. The infant was bcl1e,ed to ~
alive and about a day old at the time.
according to Sgt. Ed McE rla1n .
Despite w1dc!.pread media atten-
tion. detectives failed to locate any
witnesses and the case remains un-
solved.
"It's probabl} JUSt a shot 1n the
dark., but l want to talk to Rick
(Fountain Tallc~ Detective Rick
Chnstensen) about the recent death."
McErlain i;a1d
.. It's a remote poss1hllt\ but some-
one ma} have seen someone "' ho was
pregnant who isn't pregnant any
longer and come forward."
Chnstensen said he behevcs the
bab) may have been horn outdoors
but that the person ma> have been
familiar with the trash pickup sched-
ule. The baby was placed in the
dumpster at 6 a.m. at the Paradise
Manor Condominium Complex on
Euclid Street and Slater A' enue when
It was about an hour old.
Collect0rs. who pick up trash oncc
a weei... "ere due at the lo<:at1on at 9
am
the string offires.
They will also suggest residents
keep their garages and cars locked and
their trash areas clean to help reduce
the chances of additional fires, Werth
said. They will also be told how to
provide information directly to in-
vestigators or how to call anonymous~
ly through the WeTip program.
Werth said police patrols are being
beefed up in the area.
"But we feel the key with will be
with the residents. who are more
likely to see or hear something
SUSPICIOUS and report It," the fire
spokeswoman said.
DOG .••
From Al
the dog to rehabilitate him.
Last month, Farns was struck by a
hit-and-run driverduringa tense drug
bust. Police staged a funeral for the
dog early this month. burying him
with his badge and a bone at the city's
new animal shelter.
Farns was credited with taking pan
in t 60 incidents.
"He was the best partner I ever
had.·· said Fam 'strainer Officer Steve
Frew dunng the afternoon services.
"It's hard to say goodbye."
Frcv. now will be working \\Ith
Rex
TROLLEY LINE STUDIED FOR NEWPORT .•.
From Al
cons1denng using 1he <;en 1tc primanl) for 11s own
residents the Cit} might have to lOmc up"' 1th a subs1d~.
Dia mond said
cars"' hen u!.ing a trolle~
Councilwoman Jad.1e Heather agreed there are
problems but said 11 was l·runal for the council get some
traffic relief before summer "The trolln rnuld he a great wa) to help people to get
around a cm that I\' Cl"\. diffi cu lt A.!. "'l' look into tl11s. we:
should look ·at 1t a'>a wa\ to move ourov.n residents." said
Councilman Ph1hp Maurer
"lf)OU saw what happened this weekend in Balboa
you know we have to free the peninsula. The) are virtual
prisoner!. down there.'' Heather said.
At th e urgi ngofthccounc1I, Mayor Evelyn Han
appointed a committee to talk with the shuttle company
and report to the council w11h a detailed plan and cost
analysis.
Councilman Age1: said he was impressed with 1he idea
but some problem~ needed to be worked ou1.
Using a trolley 10 rdte' e touns1 traffic on Balboa
Peninsula would create tv.o problems. he ~id. First
without a lane of tts own 11 would onlv add to the traffic.
Second Newport Beach <locrnot ha \'Ca large pubhc
parking lot where beach-hound tounsts could leave their
Thc trollc) i,, which were displayed Sunday. are about
~6 feet long and-are replicas of th e famous San Francisco
cable cars. Diamond i,ays the trolley design makes It more
attractive than a bus and encourages people to it.
FATHER NEVIN MARKS SOTH YEAR ...
From Al
He wa'> 43 and had been 1n the
L n11ed Stale'> for 17 'ear'> when he
was a~s1gn1:d to estahh~h a ne"
church to ser'e th1: unincorporated
area between Nev.port Beach and
Santa Ana
When he first taught c;1g.h1 of what
would soon be \nsta Me4'a. he said. 11
wa" nothing but barle> fields and
weeds.
"Thcrc wasn't a stop sign between
Santa Ana and Ne"" port Rl·ach a1 that
time. I don't thin!..." Nevin recalled.
traces ofh1s I ri'>h brogue still lingering
In h1c; \'OICC.
"levin rounded un '>Offil' friends
from Lo)ola Man mount in Orange.
where he wa\ a nas1or helore being
assigned to ( t)'ita Me\a arranged to
use the mortuan ~·hapd .ind ~Chl·d
uled h1\ first ma'>'>
On that firs1 Sunda). 152 pt·opk
shov.ed un I '() ot \\ hom \\C'rc ~1gncd
up to become m(·m~r., of the m·v.
parish V..1th 1:ach add1t1unal °:)und11\.
the congregation gn.'\\
Bl'rnu~ l'on 1n lllUld not find a
home to rent 1n C <1'\la \fr'k.I. hl'
continued to lave in <lrange. v.here he
had worked at L o-.oln ~an mount.
and cum muted to ( o<.lll \-tcia
It wa!>n 't eas'. to lind a car at that
11ml'. Nc.,,1n said. 'io he: had 10 i;ettlc:
for a u~d onc that harch got h1m to
and from the paMh In 1949. the
rector} wa., hu1lt and hl' moved into
the bu'1ld1ng nrxt tel the churt h, where
he still live\ '\ con'l'Ot wn' hu11t in
196:!.
"There wer1: I 0 J<:re., ot tomat~
and peppers growing there," Nevin
said, gestunng toward the ca!.ts1dc
Costa Mesa neighborhood adjacent
to SL Joachim's.
Af\CT a few year!>. he said. the
bur&eomn& area started to blossom
witt\ houses.
"The wcsto;1d<' homco; were built
and the Santa Ana Army Air Base
(covcnna land now occupied by the
Oran e County Fauvounds and Or-
ange Coast Collcac> wt dismantled.
There were people oil over the plact."
The fledaJ 1na pansh went from 130
members -most of whom art no
tonaer alive, Nevin ~1d -to about
2,300 today In I 958 a ~ond Costa
Mesa church. St. John the Baptm
Catholic Church, wa built and It
b«Ame independent in 19S9.
Over the years. NeVln said. he hn'I
bttn most proud uf his involvement
1n m1111u11nj the Ntwpon 1 larbor
j
ln1erfa11h Council. a place where
rehg1ous leaders of vanou!> faiths
come together to d1scu!i<i common
concerns
Ne' 1n ne,cr v.ould ha'e dreamed
of h1'> accomplishments in the area
"'hen he was ordained in 1929 at the
age of ~5. he said.
One of six children, Ne' 1n was
born in Offaly Count}. Ireland. JUSt
after the turn of the ccntul)
"I alwa} s wanted to be a priest -as
long as I can remember:· Nevrn said.
But in a poOI count} like Offaly,
there was a surplus of priests and
Ne' 1n was released from h1'i home
diocese to come to thc l lnited States.
''I've been the blad. \heep of the
fam1I} e'er since. for lea\tng Ire-
land:· he said
When Nevin emigrated in 1930. he
came to Los .\ ngeles. where one
C athohc diocese c;tretchcd from
anta Mana on the central con.,t
southward to Coronado
He "as the onl} pastor at the
!>Choo!. college and ho~p1 tal at Lo)ola
Mar) mount in Orange for nine }ears
and he served in .,,anous other post'>
before getting the Costa Mesa assign-
ment.
Over the} cars. Nevin has taken the
radical changes the Catholic Church
has made in stride. trying to make
sure that old traditions don't disap-
pear too quickly for wme of the older
parishioners.
The biggest change came 1n the
early 60s, after the historic Vatican fl
conference, he said. Before that he
said mass in the tradttional Laun of
the church.
"People arc more educated now
than they used to be," he said "They
have a keener intellect and curiosity
and ifs good that they've made the
">Crvicc more understandable."
When he traveled to London
recently. he said, he gt 1n on a Latin
mass in one of the cathedrals. Rather
than finding it nosutsic and familiar.
he said. it merely teemed •uanac af\C1
so many years of ~yina m in En&lish.
Another clunae in the church O\ICT
I.ht years bas been the 1ncm1Cd
mvolvcmnit of lay people an par-
ochial school and church funC11on1.
.. When our school opened all the
teachers we~ nunst he said.
"Now ~c arc still fonunue 10 have
some nuns. but mMt of our tc~hers •~ ('minmtly qualified lay people "
In tttt-nt years, .. rolk" m1 s -
I
empha!>tzing guitar music and con-
gregattonal singing -have become
popular w1th man} in the church. he
said. But he did not embrace them
com pletely at first.
"I don't do things abruptly." he
~aid. "That's not my way."
What he did was offer panshioners
a choice -folk mass at one service
and a trad1t1onal mass at another.
One change Nevin cannot aq::ept is
the long-talked-about lifting of the
celibacy restriction for priests.
When asked 1f priests will ever be
allowed 10 marry. Nevin only smiles
bashfully and shakes his head no. The
cchbac~ rcc;1ric11on 1sn '1 keeping any-
one out of the pnesthood as far as he
can tell. he said.
Ten young men now under his
training arc 1n the process of becom-
ing ordained. he said
For the future. he says. he 1s
con<.'erned about the influx of I l1s-
pan1c and Asian refugees who are
mo\ 1ng into the area and have hlllc
support from the commun1t}
H1span1cs gra' 1tate to St.
Joachim's Spal)1sh-language mass
and the church has a charity organiza-
tion. the St. Vincent de Paul society.
that serves as a counterpart to the
Costa Me~-based Share Our Selves
charity organ1zatton.
"We provide vouchers for food,
pay ren t and give medmll assistance"
to people who apply. Nevin said.
Most of th e time. community
needs come to his attention through a
third pany.
"If they (Hispanic and Asian
refugees) are in need, someone else
usually tells us so-1hey're too proud
to ask for help," he said.
He rememben buryina an infant
recently for a Hispanic famiJy that
could not afford to pay fot a f\IMnl.
"Thef ~ here. whet~e.r lhcy'rc tepl or 1llcpl, and our rrumstty mu&t
include them and how them ihcy'rc
weloomc." he said. Thouah he's been an exile from
Erin for most of his life, Nevtn 1&1d.
he did take •n utcndcd vacauoo beck
home two years qo.
Hi fot.lr si.nen. one a nun, and hi
brother remain in lrcland. mosl still
llvina in the town where they were
born.
On his tnp. Nevin sajd, be per-
formed a mam ceremony for one
of has 2 t nieces and nephews and
h.1p1izcd another.
)
:a
. Clearing and warmer onrC oast
Coastal
Extended
.. .,
49 u
41 u ,, 2t
• 70 40 26 aa ,,
41 " . .. u n .. 48
4.4 25
0 33
1$ 42
41 27 70 ,,
&,) ..
11 67
50 37
49 st
44 40
44 29 st 24 75 57
!WI It .., 3'
64 31
48 31 411 22
42 30 87 74
74 M 47 42
7$ 01
71 57
44 41
45 4ll
81 S4
71 54
6-' $5
~ 45
M 41
Rain m Snow rn!I Showwa. Flurr
"""IN.lt•rw W•··•r•••· ·-~~ HOM \I~, l>it;ctt of Ct•lWf\(_~tH
Fronts Cokl ...,. Wu·111 .,.. On:ludo<l ..,-
~ 70 68 ~Cit) Mlllnl 86 7 4 Aetlo
Mllweull.M J 7 a3 RIClwnonCI ~81 Peul 47 3' St.LOW. ~ 5a 41 St P91 .. f..-npe
New on-wt 17 11 SM! L.ak1
,.._Yotil 52 3' SanAntOnlo
HOrloll 50 ,. Sin Diego
Honll Plell• ... 30 San l'flnd800
Ol<Jlhoml Cir, ~ 47 St 811 MeM
Omehe ., 38 hlttie 0<1enoo IO IO Sii<~
Pllln 89r"'9• 75 41 Slou• Feh
PNledelphll ~ 30 Spoll-
PhoeniJI as 64 Sy.-. ..
Pilltburgll SI 31 fopeka
Portlend.MI 46 21 T-
Portllnd.Ore 56 42 Tulsa
6S )0 sa a4
57 H
47 41
111 eo
47 M
M 15 M 83
57 47
311 20
52 42 711 ~
Penly c;loudy flllKMlly Faw Ftkl•y
lllld 811ur<1ey loc:a.I gutty not!!\•
-tw1y wind• Thurtdey and Fll<ley
Hlg/11 05 tO 75 lOWI 45 10 55 Tides
Provtdlnce 50 21 WlthlnQlon
Rll'"?" 611 39 WlcNta
31 34 45 21
37 II
50 44
IO 25 70 48 s6 37
58 41
TODAY
Temperatures kond IOw 1 · 10 p m -03
4 I SURF REPORT Second high 7·34 pm
ftDNHDAY
.. Lo
47 23
47 31 se 43 50 42
0 1 35
64 411
46 3'
... 96 S4 31
47 3"
FlrttlOw 101am
Alt>any
Alt>Yquerque
All\llflllO AMtlorege
~
Allllltt
Atlentlc City
Auetln
BllllmOt•
8Allngl
Flr"et hlgn o·st • m Second low 1.3' p.m
Sec:ond hlqll 8:02 p m
Sun M1t todly at I . 10 p.m , ,._
weooeeo.y115·461 m endMl .. Olin
111:11 p.m.
Moonr!MltoC11ye11:56pm .M1a1l
4· 13 e.m. Wedn.dly end r1M1 egei11
•I 2.54p.lft.
Airport suit gets new judge
Sumner says he ----won't preside over
expansi~n hearln_g~
By JEFF ADLER
Of IN Delly l'tklt 811ff
Orange County Supenor Coun
Judge Bruce Sumner -who threw
out the county's 1981 John Wayne
Airpon expansion plan -will not
hear the city of Newport Beach·s
latest legal challenge over airport
improvements.
Sumner acknowledged Monday he
asked Pres1d1ng Judge Ri chard
Beacom to reassign the case to
another judge because he feared 11
might not be resol.,,ed by the ume he
1s scheduled to step-down from the
bench on Ma) 7.
Howc,er. 1hc Nc....,,port Beach resi-
dent said the dcc1s1on 1n not related to
his purchase of a Balbaoa lsland
residence last January. Jets using
John Wa )nc .\1rport usually fl) over
the quaint Newport Ba) island.
Sumner announced several
months ago that he did not plan to
seek re-election to the court bench.
He !>aid he plam to re-enter private
legal practice.
The city of Newport Beach sued the
Board of Supervisors last week,
claiming countv plans to construct a
1,800-car parking lot north of the
Just Call
642-6086
Dally Piiot
Delivery
la Guarenteed
"~ r J 1, ~ ._., 1 I I"'·'"' , ti ,,_.,,,, If'
~ If f t t t,••! r1 7 l •
t''I ,,..,,, 1 w A<1+i I •
!~;,, •.• , •• ,
t I I' 1!1•, t I I ! ~ !i. j f
airport violated Sumner's previous
airpon ruling.
Attorneys representing the city
contend the parking lot project is part
of the larger. comprehensive airport
expansion plan now being readied for
board approval. The city's attorneys
claim that environmental impact
repons for the project are inadequate
because they arc not included as part
of the documentation for the total
expansion project.
The case. Sumner said. now will be
heard by Judge Philip Schwab. who
will adjudicate all airport matters.
including the enforcement of
prov1s1ons from the city's previous
lawsuit.
Memorial services slated
for Marine crash victitns
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ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilot
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Circulation 7141842""333
CIHtlfled advertlalng 714/842-5878
All other department• 842-4321
MAIN OFFICE
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Controller
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f'tt!'WS "°''~' 1Husua1tlV'\\ ""•'cw-.1 man~ °' aovtt1tse 'N!nlS tiel 81!\ may 0-·~P<O<lUC4'0 ..,,lh<t\;1 S~1~I per
"Ion.on of copyr'l!"r o .. ne.
S!'C0<'•1 CIAM j)04l&Qt' p~ Cl 11 1.0~10 Mt'\a Ca1tl0tNa
ilJPS 144 8001 Su""rtpl!()n Oy c.err~r SA 7!> "10!'1~y
tl~ ma• S6 !>O rnontnry
Clrculatlon
Telephonea Stephen F. CerHo
Proouclton
Mandqer
Glorle A. Pow•re
O.rec101 Of
AO~ef1tS"1g
Donead L. Wllllema
CorcutaltOn
Manage.
T"" Ot>tnq<> Co.ur Otl>!y P.lol will• """<:h •S C(JrYlb<necj '"" ~ .. s p,~"' rs t?UOl<$f\e<J lly 11-. Uta'l(le CoHI PuDI~
Corrl(l•nv """ e<lltiOn~ /I'~ OVDIOShe<I Monoay fflrougl' r "oay A ..nQ"' 'llQ'°'1ill lfdlhon " pybl•~ Satllfelayt •rtO 5.,nQ.\y~ T,,.. pr.n. ~I C>ubloi;htnQ pienl ~ 11 J30 Wttt S.~ ~,, .. , I I) A. • 1'>6() Co\11 ~ CaMotn,. 976;>6
VOL. n , NO. 87
There wm LOURDES and there was FATIMA •••
Now Our Lady Appears in America --for the past thirteen ,, The &leiild Molher and Our
years the Blessed
Mother and Our lord
hove been appearing
to o wlf e and mother
of fi\1t children, Ver-
onica lueken, ot reg-
ulatly held Rosary
Vigils at Flushi"9
~dowParkin
Flushing, long Island.
,., , .......... ,.. ... _., .... ....
fer we lftf., ... tlM, ceet9cf
1ew1e<•~wa
WCH'ten for OU< lody
P.O. lox 2 .. 73
lo Hobro, Co 90631
lord ho.... told !hot unt.u mon
kind moket 0 COft'lpietie ,..,..'1CJl
of ltt Wlful WO)" lhrouofi
prayer ond atonement to God,
the U.S. and oLI ~Ont of the
world wih be cleonild and
fXirlfied by meont of Ol'eof
trlbulotlont Of\d 0 great
chottl*"*"' 0worldwide1111
cleor WOf {World Wor Ill), ond
o fiery loll of R~ lrl
the form of o <•lestiol <Oftltf,
Morry nolioM Wtll ~
fl'Ofll the foe. of ltle-1tl, Of\d
ltl-4ov'1tl1 of mankind ~ be
~
oua LADY Of THI 10111 IHIM
P.O. •ox 12, ley•••· NY 11MI
,..._. Mfld -moH Wom.olMu
NOfM ~~--~~~~~~~--~~-AcWr na
~-~~~~~~~~--~
Vp ____ __.
"All who comtt h~re will bo \olocnd ond nouri1hod with graces ...
and will return 1n glor101.n triumph to ttw K ingdom·· -Our lody
J
.. . ..
CUil 1111111
TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1984
Coast
T rattle deaths down In
state, but up slightly In
Orange County./ A3
Revised bullet train route
would klll str'etch through
Camp Pendleton./ A 3
Ca lifornia
The Bay Area got a bit of a
shake Monday, but little
damage reported./ A4
A chemical-spill In
Hollister leaves two per-
sons Injured./ A4
Nation
Florid a town not doing
well In It's 'Boozeless
Week' ettort./BI
Smokers actually pay an
additional $3 per pack In
hidden costs./ AS ·
World
A French dlplomat Is shot
In Beirut as battles con-
tinue./ AS
An IRA landmine kills a
British soldier en route to
a double date./ A4
Mind&Body
Under certain conditions,
virtually all human beings
can have an eplleptlc
selzure./82
Sports
Georgetown and Ken·
tucky prepare for their
NCAA basketball semi-
finals showdown at Seat-
tle./C1
Former Kansas City
Royal Jerry Martin Is pick-
ing up the pieces with the
New York Mets./C2
Fountain Valley stopped
Edison In volleyball for a
big step towards the
Sunset League cham-
plonshlp./C4
Entertainment
Only twice In history of
Oscars has there been a
tie vote in actlng./83
In this production the
pope is a woman. And
that's not the only sur-
prlse./83
Buaine ..
Irvine-based Hellonetlcs
otters special premium to
stockholders who ex-
ercise their warrants.JBS
INDEX
82
A3
EM
85-7
A~
C&-8
EM
C8
88
82
C7
82
81·2
A4
A8
A3
88,CM
C1-4
87
83
83
A2
M
, -Earlybe~cb . ,. . closing n1xe
Newport promises stricter enforcement of 228 si1natures to the City Council
askin& for the earlier closu~ but oo a
4-2 vote with Councilman Don.aid
Strauss abstaining, the council re· j~ted the idea at its meeting Monday
n11ht.
of midnight limit as residents protest noise
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of ... Dellr,... .....
The Newport Beach City Council
has rejected a pro~sal to close a larje
stretch of the city s beaches at I 0 p.m.
but agreed to increase enforcement of
the regular midnight closing time.
Residents of the Balboa Peninsula
asked for the earlier closure of the
beach from E Street to the W~
because late-night beach panics dis-
turb the neighborhood. All but two of
the city's beaches close at midni~t.
The residents presented a petition
Instead the council directed City
Manager Robert Wynn to increase
supervision of the nightly beach
closure.
"The (>COpleat the beach during the
daytime are a different breed from the
Newport Beach City Coancll memben Phil
Ma uer and Jackie Heather try out the
Dlllr,... ..... .., .....__I( .....
propoeed new trolley ayatem on Via Lido
near Lido Vlllace.
Will Newport sing 'Clang,
Clang Goes the Trolley?'
By JERRY HIRSCH
OtlllellellrNlltew.t
Newport Beach city officials are looking at a trackless
trolley to improve transportation in the city. ~·
At its afternoon meeting Monday, the Newport Beach
City Council listened to a presentation by Shuttle
Concepts Inc., a Lona Beach company that operates
track.less trollies in 14cities throughout the United States.
The company proposed using two or three trollies,
each carrying up to SO passengers, on heavily trafficked
routes throu&h the city.
Advertising on the inside of the trollies and the sale of
tokens to local businesses for promotional use would pay
for the service, according to Al Diamond, the president of
Shuttle Concepts.
"We run in 14citieson this system and we are
profitable with little or no fare," Diamond said, adding the
tokens range in cost from five cents to a quarter.
"We charge hotels, restaurants and businesses 10
centsa token and theyseU them t9 their customers fora
nickel or they gj ve them away," Diamond said.
This type of system, however, is most successful in
seaside tourist towns and ifNewport Beach were
(PleueMe TROLL&Y I A2)
ones at niah~' aaid R.O. Mitchell,
wbo lives on ucean FrooL
Mitchell said that while most
daytime beachfoen are courteous,
the people at n1&ht tcream, yell and
leave a trail of litter and broken beer
bottles from the'bcacb to tt)eir C<lfS.
"We are not enforcing the closure
properly," Mitchell told the council.
When police come by after mid-
night and ask the people to leave they
only 10 away for IS to 20 minutes. As
soon 11 they are sure tbc potioit _.:
SoDe the people 10 riabt a.c:k 10
parties, MitcbeU saic[
.. We should issue ciWioal IO
people sta)'in1 aft.et midiUlbtt .. lie
suaested.
hlt sounds like we have mote ol•
enforcement problem than a..._
problem," Mayor Evelyn Hait llid.
Councilman Bill A,ee l&id lie WM
apinst closina the beach eattv.
(Pleue ... •ACJJ/dJ
$186,000 art
theft pulled
by amateurs?
By STEVE MARBLE
OtlNDellr ..........
Laguna Beach detectives now be-
lieve the theft of S 186,000 worth of
precious artwork by Pablo Picasso,
Salvador Dali and Toulousc-Lautrec
is the work of amateurs.
"Judging by the crime scene and
the method of entry -it looks
amateur," said Laguna Beach police
Sgt. Alex Jimenez.
The 1 7 paintings, etchings, and
lithographs were taken last weekend
from art dealer Park Alan Stanley's
home. Works by Picasso, Dali, Henri
de Toulouse-Lautrec and Marc
Chapll were stripped from his apart-
ment walls.
Officen said it is nothi~ more
than a "strange coincidence that a SI 00,000 Toulouse-Lau tree lithro-
paph was stolen from a Newport
Beach business office the same week· end. _
The expensive lithograph taken in
Newport has been located and a~
pears to be at the center of a civil
dispute between two men, ac:cordina
to Newport Beach police Officer Tom
(P1eue eee AllT TDH/A2)
Rescued baby
is flourishing ·
100 people volunteer
to adopt boy found
in trash dumpster
By ROBERT BARKER
Of It-Dlllr ,... ....
A redheaded baby found in a
Fountain Valley trash container
along with garbaJe and grass cuttings
is depicted by his doctor "as a little
toughie" who "probably has a (date
with' destiny" because of the way he
survived his first few hours of life.
The baby, found wrapped in a dirty
and bloody blanket by trash collectors
early Saturday, is not only surviving
-he appears to be fl ourishins.
The baby has a good appetite, has
been eating formula every four hours
and is gaining weight at a local
hospital.
He is stih being ~ven antibiotics to
ward off possible mfec::tion from the
garbage and debris he was ellposed to,
but is expected to be released soon to
the Albert Sitton Home in Oraqe for
abused and abandoned children.
··He·s so resilienL It's probably part
of a miracle," said Dr. Ronald
Comelscn of Fountain Valley Com-
munity Hospital.
He's the cenrcr of attention for the
nurses in the maternity ward and
police detectives estimate there have
already been about 100 offers of
adoption.
While t he Fountain Val~ infant
appears destined fora happy life, it'sa
far different ending from the birth of a
Huntington Beach infant.
A baby was found dead at the
bottom of a trash container in an
industrial section of the city on New
(Pleue Me BABY I A2)
Orange County is turning to gray Stevens
ouster
sought
Study predicts proportion of older folks
will increase sharply as year 2000 nears
By JEFF ADLER
OttNDellr ..........
Call it the graying of Orange
County. We're getting older.
As Orange County continues to
diversify economically, the median
age of county residents is expected to
increase, according to a recently
published state study.
Although Orange County residents
now_ are slightly younger than their
counterparts around the state, the
proporuon of older residents will
increase rather sharply in the latter
years of the century.
By the year 20001 half of the
county's population will be two years
older than-the projected statewide
median age of 3S.8. ln 2020, the
county's median age is expected to be
41. l while the state's median age
edges upward to 38. I years old,
according to state Finance Depart·
ment estimates.
And while the county's population
is expected to increase by SS percent
Father Nevin marks
BOth birthday 37
years at CM church
Monsianor Thomas Nevin has
probably officiated at more of life's
precious moments than just about
anyone.
Weddinp, baptisms, confirm•·
tions, funerals -he bu presided
over the milestones that sbaP-C and
form our lives and the lives or thole
we love.
Nevin, the soft-spoken priest crcdi·
ted with foundina the Catholic com·
munity in Costa Mesa, celebrated a
milestone of bis own ~nt1y1 on St.
Patrick's 0.y. his 80lh birthday
party.
The date of the celebration was
appropriate, Nevin aald, even thouah
he actually turned 80 on March 8.
He wa •Pl>O'nsed to establiab a
Cotta Maa ~ab on bis binhday in
1947 and Mid his ftnt mm at Bell
Btoldny Mortuary 0..pel on St.
Patrick's Dal' of that year 1 !'X yean
before Lhc aty of Coeta Ma& wu
i~.
On bis biftbday. tbe lriilMMn mo~ .-0 ~ IO be Giiied ahnpty ~~ ut down IO ""'9Ct Oft
I
Ka£t1
KL£1t1
Pr oPL£ 1N THE Nrw s
bis 37 yean of'rclilious leedenl\ip in
Costa Meu at St. foecbim'• Catholic
Cburch.
While he's lloMd 1 bit with 'IF.
Nevin'• bearina is lhul> and he sud
officiates at mute1 .na 11aamenta
and travelt on weckcod retreats.
··1 rcet benernow thlft I did at 40,"
be declated.. tho-" be admitted he
tetired from hit edlnini1tr1tive duties
a c:ou~ of~ l*k.. Nevin ()ftJy cbucka Wbeii asked
bow IUDJ...wiLwl •i•• •
hu pafOraied. M tE t IUPl'OMt:1M M11t eM':a\il :(1'19Me-f'A U) .
I
by 2020, the proportion of people
over 6S will grow by 2SS percent
during the same period, Finance
Department forecasters believe.
Much of the age increase can be
attributed to the aging of the
baby-boom generation, explained
Alta Yetter. a labor market analyst
with the state Employment Develop-
ment Dc~ment.
But with the county's population
growth comes evidence that the local
economy is continuina to diversify.
While the cities of Anaheim and
Santa Ana continue to be the top
employment centers in the county,
both c1ties claimed smaller shares of
the employment pie in 1980 than they
did in 197S.
Irvine jumped from seventh place
in 197 S to third place in 1980,
claiming 6.8 percent of all jobs in the
county, Yetter said.
Large percentage gains between
197 S and 1980 also were reported in
Laiuna Hills and Mission Viejo.
lrvme registered a I 00 percent gain in
the five-year period. Countywide.
growth averaged 46. 7 percent during
the period, Yetter said.
Outside of Anaheim. Santa Ana
and Irvine, the next la~1t employ-
ment centers in the county in 1980
were, in descending order, Fullerton.
Oranfe. Newpon Beach, Costa Mesa.
Huntington Beach. Garden Grove
and Buena Park.
Faculty members at Saddlcback
Community College have urged the
board of trustees to axe Chancellor
Larry P. Stevens who directs tbe
COllCJe's campuses in Irvine and
Mission Viejo.
Teachers made the request to tbe
district board at a public meeting
Monday night. But the board declin·
ed to hear the faculty's arpunents
because policy states that cbartes
against public employ«S should be
heard only in closed ~ion. accord·
mg to William Schreiber. an a·
ecuuve assistant to Stevens.
Teachers said most full-time ~
ulty members and administrat0n
expressed "no confidence .. in Stcvaaa
during a faculty ballot ea.rlier dail
month.
Ballots were dchvercd to 2CM
teachers and 20 administraton. or
the 80 percent who responded, 94. 7
percent said the chancellor ._
"doina a poor job" and exprcwd .. .,
confidence" m him, ~ IO
Sharon MacMillan a political mence
professor and president-cleci of IM
Saddleback Colleae Faculty AllOC'i9-
tion.
During the mcetina. MacMiUD
said faculty memben an: concened
about Stevens' militaristic: style 8lid
his filC&l policies. such u ~
money for administrative CllP'.._
instead of for classrooms.
Stevens, who has been at ttie W.
of the oollqt for two yea.n, ctUplated
t.be c~ tellina the board tbat d9I
teacberl unresolved contnct ...._
is the caute of their di-tilfactioa.
••DurinJ dafticult labot' ...-
uations. n often bappem dliM me
district chief aecuti¥t o5cer' ii
ai~ out by the onioe .. die lal
poant for~~ofdush•we. .. S~t iaid in I~ ---t duriaa the meetina, .. I ba~ 009oi
6dmcle in tbt ti~\oaond ~Of this~1011WA•a-~ of prohPoMliun ud .._.,_
'T~ bowc~er, dlmlli k *t
coatract dltP'ltt .. w ._. .... ..,
muon for kWty oatr 1;0' za
.u••or~ Coatt OAILV PILOT/Tue.day, March 27, 1DM
Hllntington resi"dellts rally
following tenth area arson
8y PHIL SNEIOERMAN
OllM~ ..........
spreading..
Investigators suspect two fi~s started in a vacant
apartment Monday ni&ht may be the work of an arsonii.t
who has set nine other f ttts since January an the same
II untington Beach nei&hborhood.
Poliot and fire ofTfoials have scheduled a community
meeting Wednesday to infonn midems about the
ongoing arson investigation and to tell them how to help
prevent additional fires.
lnvesugatori. believe Monda)· fire could have been
set by the same pcr5on who ha~ $taned nine other blazc5 in
the same Huntington Beach neighborhood. oITYorktown
Avenue between IJclaware and Florida streets, Werth
said. She said the stnng of fires has prompted some
nervous residents to move out of the uea.
Huntington Beach Fire Department spokeswoman
Martha Werth said Monday's blaze occurred at 11 :34 p.m.
in a vacant, ground-floor apanment at 211 4 Florida St.
Sht: said the residence had apparently been left unlocked
to permit painters and carpet layers to enter.
he said someone entered the apartment and ignited
rags and newspapers an a hallway linen closet and in a
bedroom closet. then left the apartment door open whale
fleeing .
Previous fires have been in carports. garages, a
laundry room and rrfuse bins. On March 19, someone set
the eighth and ninth fires in a garage and in a lumber pile
at a Del Way condominium complex .
Werth said this week's tires were the lirst set inside a
residence.
But she said invesugators believe they may be related
to the earlier fires because, as an the other incidents, papers
and rags were ap.nated during nighttime hours in the same
neighborhood.
Scott m1th. who ll\eS upstairs from the vaca nt
apartment. smelled smoke, went downstairs. saw some-
thing burning and called firefighters. Werth said. She said
Sm a th closed the apartment door before calling. In doing
so. he cut off some of the oxygen suppl}. and the flames
were almost out when firefighters amved, Werth said.
She said the lack of ox)gen and the lack of
combustible matenals helped prevent the flames from
No senous 1n1unes have occurred yet in connecuon
wtth the fires.
BecauM' of growing concern among residents. she said
police and fin-officials wall conduct a comm unit~ meeting
at 7.30 p.m. Wednesday an the Fellowship Room of"the
First United Methodist Church at 17th and Delaware
streets, Neighborhood Watch members have d1stnbuted
fliers alerting reMdents to the meeting.
Werth !>aid police and fire officials will discuss their
mvestigataon into th e stnng offires.
~ld~9WU~J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ART THEFT IN LAGUNA ... From Al
tittle.
Jimenez \aad there is "zilch" in the
"a~ of evidence to work wath an the
Laguna case but that 1nvest1ga1ors arc
holdi ng out hope the thieves wall tnp
themselves up
.. lf11's an amateur. he's not going to
ha'c an easy ume getting nd of the
stuff Most b1gan deals ask for papers
on transacuon:i like that." said
Jimenez.
Stanley. who told officers the
artworks are insured. has been work-
ing with police to contact major art
dealers throughout the country. ac-
cording to Jimene2.
"If the person trys to approach a big
dealer, hopefully we'll be tapped ofT. ..
said the detective.
"But if it's a pro. then the stuffs
BABY BOY FLOURISHING ...
From Al
)'ear's Da~. 1982 Detecu .. es believe
the baby was placed ansade a cheap
bnefc:ase and dumped an the dump-
ster. The infant was believed to be
ahve and about a day old at the tame,
according to Sgt. Ed McErlaan.
Despite widespread media atten-
tion. detecti ves failed to locate any
witnesses and the case remains un-
solved.
"It's probabl} JUSl a shot in the
dark. but I want to talk to Rick
(Fountain Talley Detecuve Rick
\hnstensen) about the recent death."
McErlain said
"lt'c; a remote poso:,1blitv. but some-
one may have seen someone who was
p~gnant who isn't pregnant an)
longer and come forward."
Chnstensen said he believes the
baby may have been born oµtdoors
but that the person may have been
familiar with the trash pickup sched-
ule. The baby was placed in th e
dumpster at 6 a.m. at the Paradise
Manor Condominium Complex on
Euclid Street and Slater A venue when
1t was about an hour old.
Collectors. who pack up trash once
a week. were due at the location at 9
am
probably gone underground and it'll
be hard to find. It could be shipped
out ot the country."
The stolen art pieces included two
Toulouse-Lautrec paintings. a
Picasso lithograph. three Chapll
etchings and two surrealistic paint-
ings by Dali. Though valauble. all are
considered minor works by the
well-known artists.
BEACH ••.
From Al
Agee laves near the Corona del Mar
State Beach and the Little Corona
Beach. the two Newport beaches that
close at 10 p.m .. "but on a nice night I
have walked down there after 10. A
lot ·of people do," he said.
Strauss suggested the council ap-
prove closing the beach early until
Oct. I on a trial basis. He was
supported by Councilwomen Jackie
Heather and Ruthelyn Plummer but
his motion lost.
The council then voted to leave the
beach open and at the saml' tame
attempt to ampro.,,e enforcement of
the closure lime.
TROLLEY LINE STUDIED FOR NEWPORT ...
From Al
comadenng using the ser' ice pnmanl) form own
residents the t 11\ m 1gh1 haH· totomc up"' 1th a subs1d~.
Diamond said
cars when using a trollc)
Councilwoman Jackie Heather agreed there arc
problems but said fl was crucial for the council get some
traffic rel 1efbeforc sum mer "The trolll·\. l ould he a great wa)' to help people to get
around a city that 1'i \.Cr\ d1ffitUll As we look an to this. we
should look ·at 11 a-,a wa\ to mo.,,e our own residents." said
Councilman Philip Maurer
"If you saw what happened this weekend in Balboa
you know we have to free the peninsula. They are\. Jrtual
pnsonersdown there," Heath er said.
At th e urging of the council. Ma)'Or Eve I~ n Han
appointed a committee to talk wath the shuttle company
and report to th e council w11h a detailed plan and cost
analysis.
Councilman l\gee said he was impressed w11h the idea
but some problems needed l<i he worked out.
Us111ga trolley to relieve tounst traffic on B~lboa
Peninsula would create two problems. he said. First
without a lane of 11s own 11 would only add to the traffic.
Second Newport Beach d~s not have a large public
park1n~ 101 "'here beach-bound 1ouns1s could leave their
The trolleys, whi ch were displayed Sunday. arc about
26 feet long and arc replicas of the famous San Francisco
cable cars. Diamond says the trolle} design makes it more
attractive than a bus and encourages people to 11.
FATHER NEVIN MARKS 80TH YEAR •..
From Al
He was 43 and had been in the
l 'nated tatcs for 17 ~cars when he
was as~agned to establish a new
thurlh to 'ierve the unincorporated
area bct~een Newport Beach and
Santa .\na
When he fin,1 caught sight of what
would soon be ( osta Mesa, he said, it
was nothing hut barley fi elds and
weeds.
"There wac;n'l a stop sign between
Santa Ana and Newport Beach at that
tame. I don't thank." Nevin recalled.
traces of ha'> J rish brogue o;,tall lingcnng
In has VOICC
Nt•van rounded up \Orne fncnds
from Lo)ola Marymount 1n Orange.
where he was a pastor before being
assigned to ( osta Mc!.a. arranged to
use the mortual) chapel and sched-
uled has firo;t mao;c;,
On that first 5unda). 15:? people
showed up. I JO of whom were signed
up to become members of the ne"'
pansh W11h each addauonal unda).
the congregati on grew
Because Ne.,, in could not find a
home to rent an ( 0<1ta Me~. he
lOntanucd to Inc 1n Orange. where he
had worked at Lo)ola Maf)mount.
and mm muted to ( O'ila Mesa
It wasn't easy to find a car at that
time. Nc.,,an $<11d. so he had to settle
for a used one 1ha1 barcl~ got ham to
and from th<.· parish In 1949. the
rectory was built and he move<l into
the building next to the church. where
he stall live~. A con"ent was built in
1962.
''There were I 0 acres of tomatoe!i
and peppers growing there:· Nevin
said. aestunng toward the castsade
Costa Mesa neighborhood adjacent
to St. Joachim's
Afttr a few year'i. he ~1d. the
buraeonang 3rc3 tancd to blossom
Wlth house
"The westsu.lc homcc; were built
and the Santa Ana Army Air Base
(covering land now occupied by the
Oran&c County fa1rarounds and Or-
ange Coast C'ollegt) wall d1~mantled
There were people all over the place."
The Oedghna pan h went from 130
members -most of whom arc no lon~r alive. Nevin wd -to about 2.300 today. In 1958 a s«ond Costa
Mesa church. t. John the 81p11st
Ca.lbohc Church, was built and 1t
bccamt independent in 1959.
Over the )Cllfl. Nevin said. he hns
been mot• proud of his involvemenl
an in'11tutJn the Newport H.arbur
)
Interfaith Council. a place where
rehgaous leaders of vanous faiths
t·ome together to discuss common
concerns.
Ne•.an never would ha' e dreamed
of his accomplishments an the area
when he was ordained 1n 1929 at the
age of 25. he said.
One of six children. Nevm was
born in Offaly County, Ireland. jUSl
after the turn of the century.
.. , always wanted to be a pncst-as
long as I can remember." Nevin said.
But in a poor county like Offaly,
there was a surplus of priests and
Ne\. tn was released from has home
diocese to come to the United States.
"I've been the black sheep of the
famal) ever since. for leaving Ire-
land.'' he <>aid
When Ncvm emigrated 1n 1930. he
came to Los Angeles. where one
Catholic diocese stretched from
anta Mana on the central coast
southward to Coronado.
He was the onl} pastor at the
school. college and hospital at lo}ola
Mar) mount in Oran~e for nine year;
and he served an various other posts
before getting the Costa Mesa assign-
ment.
Over the years. Nevin has taken the
radical changes the Catholic Church
has made in stride. trying to make
sure that old trad1t1ons don't disap-
pear too quickly for some of the older
panshioners.
The biggest change came in the
early 60s, after the historic Vatican II
conference. he said. Before that he
said mass in the traditional Latin of
the church.
"People arc more educated now
than they used to be." he s:ud. "They
have a keener intellect and cuno lly
and it's good that they've made the
service more understandable."
When he traveled to London
recently, he said, be sat an on a Llltin
mass in one of the cathedrals. Rather
than ftndin1 it nostalaic and familiar,
he said. it merely ~med slranse after
so many yean of sayini mass in
En&lisb.
Anotherchanae in the church over
the ~·rs has "bttn lbt inc:ttUtd
involvement or lay people in par·
ochial schools and cburc&·function
"When our school opened a.II lbo
teachers were nuns," he iaid. ''Now we are still fonu.nate lO have
some nuns. but most of our teachers
an: crnincnlly qualified Jay people. ..
In rect'nt )'can, "folk .. masses -,
I
emphas1Z1ng guitar music and con-
gregational singing -have become
popular with man) tn the church. he
said But he dad not embrace them
completely at first.
"I don't do things abruptly." he
said. ''That's not my way ."
What he did was offer parishioners
a choice -folk mass at one service
and a traditional mass at another.
One change Nevin cannot accept 1s
the long-talked-about lffting of the
celibacy restriction for priests.
When asked if priests will ever be
allowed 10 marry, Nevin only smiles
bashfully and shakes has head no. The
celibacy rcstnct1on isn't keeping any-
one out of the priesthood as far as he
can tell he said
Ten young men now under his
training arc an the proccsc; of becom-
ing ordained. he said.
For the future. he $<1\'>. he as
concerned about the influ·A of H1s-
pan1c and Asian refugees who arc
moqng into the area and have liulc
support from the communit).
H1span1cs gravitate to St.
Joachim's Spanish-language mass
and the church has a chanty organ1z.a-
1ion. the St. Vincent de Paul society.
that serves as a counterpart to the
Costa Mesa-based Share Our Selves
chanty organmuaon.
"We provide vouchers for food.
pay rent and give medical assistance"
10 people who appl)'. Nevin said.
Most of the umc. community
needs come to his attention through a
third party.
"If the)' (Hispanic and Asian
ref ugecs) are an need. someone else
usually tells us so-they're too proud
to ask for help." he said.
He remembers burying ap mfant
recently for a Hispanic family that
could not afford to pay for a funeral.
"Ther.'rt hctt, whether they're
legal or 11lcpl, and our min.inry mutt
include them and show them they're
welcome " he said
Thouih he's been an exile from
Erin for most or h.ts life. evan Said,
be dad \Ake a.o ute.nded vacation beck
home two yan •JO· His four sjstcrs. one a nun. and b:i1
brothtt mnain in Ireland, mOtt still
hvu'a io the town where th~ wm:
born. On h1 trip, Nevin said, he per.
formed 1 ntam ceremony for ne
of has 21 nieces and nc:pbe-ws and
baptLud another.
I I.
Clearing and warmer on Coast
Coastal
Extended
.. 57 ... 32
... 32
•1 n .. 70
40 25 ,. ,.
47 2t .. M
t>i 38 ea ...
.. 26
•7 » ., 42
.. , 27
10 43 ., »
11 57
llO 37
40 32
44 40 .. 2:t
36 24 75 57
at " 43 34 54 31 ... 31
48 22 4~ 30
17 74
74 .. 47 42 76 .,
71 57 .. 41
45 42
11 M 79 M
IM 55 63 45 .....
70 6t
.. 74 n 13 47 $4
51 •• 17 ,,
Slatona•y••
Pltlty ClOudy T""4'Ml•y F•u Frkl•y eno &•1ut<1•r local 111.1•1J l'«tfl.
_l.,ly ""1ndl Tl>ufMl•y end Fr~.
Hight es to 75 lowt 45 to 55 Tides
52 34
50 Sot
44 30 1M 4f
42 38 eo eo
76 11
$3 30 as ... 51 31 48 21
5' 42
50 2t
51 39
63 30 u 34
67 31 47 41
rt eo
47 31
MN .. e3
57 47
30 20
62 42
78 ...
37 34 45 21
37 11
50 44
IO 25 70 41 61 37
51 41
TODAY Temperatures SeconCI low 1 10 p m ..() 3
4 1 SURF REPORT $ecot>d hlOh 7.34'.J' m Wal*l90A
HILo 47 23
H 38
58 43
50 42
01 :15
IM 49
F1rs1 low t:OI • m
Albany Albvqu.iqva
AmMlllo
Ancl>OttQe
Allhllvllte At1&111a
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Airport suit gets new judge
Sumner says he ---won't preside over
expansion heart ng
By JEFF ADLER
Of the o.tty Piiot llaft
Orange County Superior Coun
Judge Bruc.c Sumner -who threw
out the county's 198 1 John Wayne
Airport expansion plan -will not
hear the city of Newport Beach's
latest legal challenge over airpon
improvements.
Sumner acknowledged Monday he
asked Presid ing Judge Richard
Beacom to reassign the case to
another Judge because he feared it
might not be resohed b~ the tame he
as scheduled to step-down from the
bench on Ma) 7
Howe\ er. thl.' N~"' port Beach resi-
dent said the dern;1on in not related to
his purchase of a Balbaoa Island
residence la!>t Januaf). Jets using
John Wa)ne .\arport usually 0~ over
the quain1 Newport Bay island.
Sumner announced several
months ago that he did not plan to
seek re-e lccuon to the court bench.
He said he plans to re-enter pri vate
legal practice.
The ca l} ofNewpon Beach sued the
Board of Supervisors last week,
claiming count) plans to construct a
1.800-car parking lot nonh of the
Just Call
642-6086
Dally Piiot
Dell very
la Guaranteed
H t t, ' •
'• 11• r Iii
ff. If I'•' If'•
P t " I t "'' '• .... '
~ l t f I t I 1 '. t I I
airport violated Sumner's previous
airport ruling.
Attorneys representing the city
contend the parking lot project as part
of the larger, comprehensive airport
expansion plan now being readied for
board approval. The city's attorneys
claim that environmental impact
reports for the project are inadequate
because they are not included as pan
of the documentation for the total
expansion project.
The c.asc. Sumner said. now will be
heard by Judge Philip Schwab. who
will ad1udicate all airpon matters,
including the enforcement of
provisions from the city's previous
lawsuit.
Memortal services slated
for Marine crash vlctints
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Tell u1 what's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
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VOL. n, NO. 17
There wm LOURDES and thcr"' wo\ FATIMA ...
Now Our Lady Appears in America
For the post thirteen ,,,,--_-The ~MottMlrondOur
years the Blened
Mother and Our lord
have been appearing
to a wife and mother
of five children, Ver-
onica Lueken, ot reg·
ularty held Rosory
Vigils at Flushlng
M.odow Park in
FluShing, long Island.
Per ftlt•rn;:r.-rHI W•f~ ....
fw"'4W• enMrtt.ft,e...19C't , ......... ..........,
Worken f0t Our Locty
P.O. lo• 2~73
la Hobro, Ca 9063 l
l.o<d h<M aaid ~ "'*"• -kind mak.s 0 complete_,
of Its tlnful "Yt th"°"911
prayer ond Olof l9t'Ml'lt to Ood,
th. U.S. ond all~ of the
world will be dtonttd and
pvtlfltd by IMOM of 9f'MI
trlbulotloN ond 0 or'IClll
c~rt1 o~nu
cleof -cw (World Wor llQ, and
o ffety loll of~"°"' ill
the fotftl of 0 ~ conwt.
Morty~ w111 .. ,..,..
,,_the toe. of .. "'*'· and
"',....~of IMMlnd wil be
GUI LADY Of tMI 10111 .....
P.O. IOJl H , a.,.w., NY 11161 ,.._Mid -INl'9 ~Ii
......~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·
AcMt...~~~~~~~~~~~
°"-----~~~~~~~~~·
.... ....-~~--~~ zip·~~ ..... .._~_..
''All who come hfHO will bo solotnci onci 11ouri,hnd with groc,1\ ..
ond will rofurn in glorious Tri umpt, To Tiu~ I( .nqdom 011r l orl .,.
·~
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