HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-12-18 - Orange Coast PilotTOMORROW:
NEWPORT BEACH
0 f~ A N Ci E C 0 UN T Y C A l I F 0 R N I A > . F N r S
Oil suit ma¥· Spell Coast windfall
ettlement ~n oi company price-fixing
could mean more money foi:-Newport
By ROBERT BARKER other states all~ng that several °' .._ DellJ,.......,. major oil companies rigged.prices, a
• • . • 6 spokesman for state Controller Ken-011-prod~cin_g coa~tal C!Ues stand neth Cory said today. .
o reap maJor financial ga.ms f~om a For example, the cities of Hunt-ede~l lawsu1t filed by Cahfomaa a~d ington Beach and Seal Beach could
A Costa Mesa student
fighting cancer spent his
Christmas gift on his
friends./ A3
California's home energy
savers who applied for
assistance program
should get checks before
Christmas./ A4
Nation
Soviet second-ln-com-
m~nd says It's United
St,:ttes' move for success ..
ful arms talks./ AS
Reagan likely to pare
defense budget cuts over
three year period./ A4
-World
Iran says It will prosecute
four hijackers accused of
klntng two Americans
aboard Kuwaiti jet./ M
A fourth 'naval target' has
been hit In the Persian
Gulf./A4
Mind It Body
Teaching children
resposlblllty Involves
more than making them
take out the trash.81
Sports
The Rams will face the
New York Giants Sunday
at Anaheim Stadium In
the NFC wild card play-
offs./C1
Coast
Jews
celebrate
freedom
Hanukkah recalls
history's first fight for
freed om of religion
By P HILSNEIDERMAN
OftMO.-, ..........
Jews along the Orange Coast and
around the world tonight will light
candles to mark the bcgi nning of
Hanukkah, an eight-day celebration
of religious freedom.
The festjval commemorates a vic-
tory by Jewish warriors overSyrians
who had defiled the Jewish Temple in
Jerusalem in 165 B.C. durinian
attempttostampout thcrehgion. The
word Hanukkah means "dedication"
and refers to the reclaim Ing of the
Temple.
The key symbol of the holiday is the
menorah, a nine-branch
candleholder. It holds one candle for
each night of the festi val, plus a
"shamash" or caretaker candle used
to light the o thers.
According to Jewish tradition, only
a small amount of sacred olivcoil was
discovered for use in an eternal flame
when the Jewish Temple was reclaim-
ed from the Syrians. Through a
miracle, however, the one-day supply
burned for eight days until new ritual
oil could be prepared. the Hanukkah
story says.
To mark the event. contemporary
(Pleue .ee HA.NUK.K.AJI/ A2)
Surgeons
remove
wrong
rccei ve up to $200,000 each as a result
of Thursday's settlement by Atlantic
Richfield Co.1 spokesman John Jervis
said. The cities oould receive much
more if the other oil companies settle
or if the state wins its suit, Jervis said.
The city of Newpon Beach .also
figures to colJeci money based on oil
produced on city-owned propeny.
'Representatives from the attorney
general's offioe will be chcckin~ with
local officials in a few days to
determine how much otl was
produced," Jel"Vis said.
He said that the payment to the
cities will be based on the amount of
oil extracted from city-owned prop-
eny from 1971 through 1977. lnittal
payments1 he said, woi.tld come from
a fund oh670,000 set up by Arco.
Huntington, Beach and Seal Beach
are the major oil producers of the 30
to 40 .. public entities" that would
share lhc fund, Jcrvts said.
The money is made available
under terms of tJOO's settlement. be
said, because of the "anti•ttult con·
spiracy by the companiC$" that the
suit claims fixed prices while alleged-
ly undercutting the public's share of
udelands oil revenues.
Meanwhile, The A'ssocaated Press
reported that ooun papers unsealed ..
Rabbi Mendel Duchman of Chabad of Ir-
vine JewlahC,enter llChta the flr•t candle of
OllllJ .... ,..... .... p.,_
the Hanulrlrah menorah u daughter Sarah,
S, loouon.
Monday tn Los A,.&es allqc tba1
maJOr oil comperue:s, operatioa .... •
Stnalc fraternal orpnization,"
swapped 'information and aped to
P..f<OP up prioes from the l 9SOl 10to the 70s. costing consumers and mWler (Pleue ... OD,/ A2)
Cras·h
charge
angers
kin
Relatives of three
Viejo women want
murder accusation
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. o.9r ........
Relatives of three Mission ViCJO
women killed Sept. 10 in a head-on
collision near Huntington Harbour,
·say they are angry that the woman
blamed for the deaths hasn't been
charged with murder.
Kym l.amell Murphy. the sole
survivor of ------tbe two-car
accident ,
was ordered
Monday to
st.and tnal
for felony
m a n -
slaughc-r and
dru nken
driving.
"W e 'r e
very angry
that mu~T c h a r g e s Mupty
weren't filed." said OaireJJ Ut·
terback. the brother of one v1ctJms.
'Tm not angry at her (Murphy); wc
(Pleue eee RELATIVES/ A2)
Dead inmate's files turned
over to Gates after hearing
By JEFF ADLER
Of ... 0.-,,.,... .....
Since st.ate law requires an inmate's
mental health records remain con~
fidcnt1aL a county mental bea,lth
team refused to tum them over to jail • An Orange County Superior Court
Judge ordered the county Health Care
~-:-'-:'::=:-:--'-:---t---A~tt:y-en-MeAd~ -ta-turn over a
dead jail inmate's psychiatric files to
Sheriff-Coroner Brad Gates.
Gates sought the confidential re-
cords as part ofa coroner's m vestiga-
11on into Stephenson's death. Step-
henson died in his cell Nov. 6 .
apparently after he severed an anef)
m his at 111 w1tl1 a ja1l-supphcd-r.tt01"
officials as requested several days
a.f\ei'..St~ru&~'S-OCam..~~~~~-+-t
back win opening round
of Irvine basketball tour-
nament./C1
The U.S. Davis Cup team
shows It Is no match for
Sweden./C3
Huntin on man. 64,
seeks da·mages from
Lon Beach hospital Sheriff Brad Gates
As expected. Judge Everett Dickey
directed that inmate John Ray Step-
henson's mental health files be turned
over to the coroners office following
a brief counroom hearing.
Stephenson's mental health re-
cords touched off a dispute that
prompted the Board ofSuperv1sors to
ask for a review of the poss1bihty of
div1d1ng the shenff<oroncr's office
into separate functions. Gates heads
both.
However, a JaJI official confiscated
the documents and ordered the
mental health team out of the jail.
Smee the incident. Gates. 1n his
role as coroner. has said the records
arc ~sent1al an determining what
(Pleue eee GATfS/A2)
Entertainment
Nell Simon's auto-
biographical characters
are In the Army now In
''Biioxi Blues.''/IM
From staff and wire reports
A Huntington Beach man who
underwcnl surgery for removal of a
diseased right kidney and emerged
from the o peration minus his left
kidney is suing the hospital and
medical team that made the alleged
error.
Mesa ,~etting sights on arena bands
Nineteen eighty four will
be a record year for
teasing of office space In
Orange County./85
INDEX
Erma Bombeck 82
Bridge 88
Bulletin Board A3
Lawyers for Harry Jordan, 64,
argued in Los Angeles Superior Court
on Monday that Long Beach Com·
munity Hospital was negligent, along
with several individuals and medical
groups.
Jordan's suit.alleges negligence and
conscious disregard for the; safety of a
. patient in the Nov. 26. 1982 oper-
ation.
"He was thought to have cancer ot
the right kidney, and they took out the
left' kidney," said Attorney James
Pagliuso, representing Jordan.
(Pleue eee KIDllfET I A2)
City hopes to bring pressure on performers
to quiet rock_'n-; rol~ noise a_!: ~mp_!litheatre
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of Ille 0.-,,.,... .....
"The Pretenders" rock group could
be among th~ first performing acts
caught in a new legal strategy by Costa
Mesa officials to force down the
volume at the Pacific Amphitheatre.
The City Council voled unani-
mously Monday to· brinJ charaes
against' performers violaung Costa
Mcsa·s much-disputed noise ordi-
nance. • .
And C1tv Attorney Tom Wood
recommended that Costa Mesa
launch its latest legal maneuver by
seekmg prosecution agatnst "The
Pret,.enders" and other rock ·n· roll
performers surpassing noise lt m1ts
during the amphitheaters past
season. which ended in Novcmtxr.
In a report to the council. Wood
singled out the raucous band as 1he
"worst offender" for the 1984 season,
referring to a Sept. 4 conccn that
sparked .103 noise complaints from
nearby residents.
g==:.:New• :~1 State g'r. ants match e. oast
Comics 88
Crouword C6 ~ h t ~ ~·~1 ............. tu,._ aent~ wit -eolnr-lu ers HorotCOpe • cs -~ &.&..& .t'
Anrt Lander• 82 ~ • --~ by the late Board of Educauon 1n
Mind and BOdy 81-2 Hands-on projects from robots to videotapes Janu ry. But th.i vote is ·~n~rall)' a
Mut I F d 86 ---fonnahty. 1ccordln1 to Linda Or· Natl:.,~ A• will be offered via futuristic Co~st programs OLCO, one of the \WO lex.I reprcsc:nla· o .. ank>n A7 ttve' on the l)..member t~hnolOf.Y
.,.. Somct: Fountain Valley students uch arc the futunstic proaams commmec. Paparazzi B 1 wifl ~~bte to hone their computer bcina fundtd Wlth the S2•9J14 tn Tht aroup s formed by state
Ptay Review EM skills n~t year by playina WTth a mtr cduatwnal ttthnolotD v.ints legislators tn l 983 to help 1dm1n1 1cr
Ponce log A3 robot turtle named "Fred." unoffic11lly. aW11rdcd chi month to state fund.int forcomputereduc111on
Pubttc Notlcet C'4 Meanwhile, computer Cfauipment Oranl!: Coast ec:hool and tclccommuntcauons tn pubhc
Sport• C1..3 et 1nother Fountain Valley achool The slate Educational Tcc:hnolOI} :h'tX>l
Stoek Markets 87 will be modified for physically handt· Com.mince ·pvc preliminary ap-Oro1co. obo ~ucattonal tcc h-Tetevltlon 82 capped children. proY&J on Otoe. 7 for $9 m1lhon 1n nolot.Y coordtnator for the counly
And in Huntinaton.Bcach. youna ,,ate~ ara.nu. Oranac \ounty is °'panmcnt of Edu tion. Said 1bou1
Theatera 83-4 acholan Wlll keep abrusl 0£ current 't~pc:cted to col ' S7'3l,6®. wuh a 272 project Y.crc s~bm1tttd for th~
WMther A2 events b)' producina vadtataped t1ttccb1.1n.kao1n1 to h,oolulona tht 7S Oran County arants
Workt Newt A4 newteastt to be shown at monthly Orlnae out. "That w a lot more than wc
auembliet. The P:'.8nts must ull be appro~cd c t>«tcd." ~he \atd "Wt h d more
One angl) resident stormC'd a ( '''
Council mce11ng that night. com-
plaining the dC\·1bcl level near the
open arena was "ungodl~ ..
.. Such performers have escaped
anv repercussions for having violated
the cit) ·s noise ordina.ncc and causing
the disturbance tn surroundinJ neigh·
borhoods." Wood said. an his late!>t
repon.
He was not sure when 1he com·
plaints would be filed at Harbor
Municipal Court tn Ncwpon Beach.
or 1f the v1olat1ons would be pros·
ecuted as m1sdemeano~ or infra~
t1ons.
Conv1ct1on on a misdemeanor
cJlmcs a S 1.000 penalt). and a
NEWS BACKGROUND
tha.n balf of lbe pu.bhc schools an Oranae Counr)' apply •• hoou &Iona tbe OranVCoa.st
pmcn:d U of the arant nme of
them toina to Ocean V1ew hoot
Ot tnct. vtn to ewpon-Mcsa
UruficdScbool Disltlcty fut co lruQC.
Unified hool Distnct, thrct to
-Fountain Valle)' hoot Ot tnct,
thrtt to 'HuntinJtOn Be h Umon
Hl_&h ·hool Di tnct and one to
Huntanaton Beach City hool Di
tnct •
(Pleue ... COlllPOTta/ A2)
ross1hk s1A-monlh ,Jail sentence.
"'h1le in fracuons arc punishable by a
SI 00 fine for' the first offense.
Monday's action addod a new twist
to the legal battle txtwcen the cn y and
amphitheater owner Ned-West Inc.
over the no1~ sptlhng from the
18.000-scat faciht> at• the Orange
Count)' Fairgrounds.
Prcv1ousl). Costa Mesa has aimed
its attack at Ned-West and officen of
the company Now. thr city· as
targeting. performers. who may tx
llflawarc they are breaking local laws
dunng concerts
Tbe new tactic could hamper the
amph1tht'ater's eb11Jry to book top
(Pleue eee MESA/ A2)
ueislams
doors on ---fr es men
By PHIL NEIDERMAN °'_..._ ..........
You're a tuah hool te111or intent
on ancnd•na C lmnc next fall. but
you M1 cn't ubmtUcd your apph·
cation yet Sol'T)'. SI)' unwcnuy
offictal • 1f s probably too late.
For the first time 1n 16 years. U 1
uopl>Cd a~lln& freshman apph·
catio ns ov. November " the
pnnetpa1 month when tuden apply
to llC ampu: but dunn& the put
two ycan. the apPJioallon pcnod has
be-en utmd~ lhrouah January and
February. ln c:arhCf \'ftn. ~·· ( .......... UC1/U) .
..
,
I
..
*°'"'"Coat DAIL.V PILOT/Tunday, December 18, 188~
CoNTINUEO S10R1Es
OIL SUIT WINDFALL SEEN •••
From Al ·
companit' s:ud: "Never have char&t1
ohuch ~nousnen bctn !.u pponed by
so lmJe" fum~ hundred of millioM of dollars.
'fhc ~t1m11tcd million document~
arc pan of a I 0-ycar"°ld federal
lawr.u1t flltd b)' C ahfom1a and other
Jtlll~ .apmst several oil companie ,
aUeiJni pncc nuina -cspcc111ll)
undtrcuuina lhc pubhc's sbatt of 011
tideland revenues -and con&nvina
shon.aa durana the 197 3 Arab oil
embario.
.. The indu try opcrate~.1..as a single
fraternal organ17atton," th·e Cali-
fornia o.ttorncy general said an one
legal bncf.
it were .. a anJle company.
rco settled for $2 2.S m1lhon its
pan 1n a pnCC>-fiA1ng_ lzt'W1u1t ftJcd by
the state on behalf of the city oft.on&
Beach. State Controller Cory 1d he
wa~ pr~p&red to &O to trial against sax
other oil compan1esalso named an the
l 97S law uit. which allcacd that the
indu 1ry conspired to underpricc
crude oil taken from public-owned
ttdelnnds.
h 1d pla1nt1ffi fllled to document
"any d,rcct proof of coospiratori I
agreements or understandin15."
The case was consoltd:ued 1n U S.
Dtstnct Coun with another suit
brought by Cahfom1a, Arilona, 01'·
eaon, Washanston and Flonda accus-
an.a 1he same Ut companies -Mobil
Chevron. Texaco. Unocal. Exxon and
He said dota swapping wa o
com moo &h t the industry acted as 1f
rco Vice President Francis
McCormack said Arco settled 10 save
time and com but in istcd lhc
allcgatjons were "without mcnt."
And a joint filing by the defendant
hell -phis Arco, Phillips aod
Chevron's Gulf Oil subsidiary of
rigging prices and ('.Ontriving fuel
shortages during the 1973 Arab oil
emt>arao, according to Associated Press repons.
RELATIVES ANGERED AT CHARGE .••
From Al
JU)t want JU~tlcc "
tat<' law pcnnrb 1he filing of
second~egrce murder chaflCS in
ceruun fatal acc1den1s, usuaJI) 1f there
as alcohol or drugs involved
Murph). an Oxnard resident ~ho
was hv1ng in Huntington Beach at the
time of the rarl) morning accident.
allegedly allowed her c.ar to dnfi into
the opposite luncs of Pacific Coast
Highwa) near the Anaheim Bay
bndge. smkang the Fiat in which the
three women were riding.
The accident claimed the hvcs of
Dawn Joy Utterback, 18: Deborah
Lee Slemmons. 20. and Diane Mae
Druckrcy, 21. All were pronounced
dead at the accident scene.
Murphy, confined to a wheelchair
becauseofinJuncs suffered dunng the
accident, fought back tears during the
hcanng and wept openl)' as she was
wheeled from the counroom pa\t
relati ves of the dead ~omen.
Peter Brown. Murphf~ auorne}.
said his chcnt suffered compound
fractures of both legs. a punctured
Jung, a broken Jaw and lost her spleen.
Murphy nearly daed from the IOJUnes.
Brown said.
Brown confirmed that his chenl
was convicted of drunk.en dnving 1n
July and that her driver's hccnsc had
beef) rt'1tnctcd for 90 days. pcr-
m1tung her to dnvc only to and from
work.. .
He would not say where Murphy
was dnvmg from or where she as
headed. He said h1~ chcnt held several
jobs at the time. including working at
a restaurant.
Duri~ the two-hour preliminary
hearing tn Westminster, Deputy Di~
trict Attorney Arnold Westra re-
vealed that lab est showed the
presence of cocaine as well as alcohol
in Murphy's system at the time of the
accident.
Tests placed Murphy's blood-al-
cohol level at 0.11 -JUSt over the
level al which a motorist is presumed
intoxicated. Westra did not speculate
whether the woman was actually
under the influence of oocatne at the
time.
Barbara Slemmons, the mother of
one oft he victims. sajd thecounroom
disclosure was the first she'd heard
that cocaine rniP.it have been in-
volved m the accident.
"Nobody's told me anything about
what's going on." she complained.
Slcmmoas said !>he had twice flown
from her home in Sacramento to
attend court heanngs only to learn the
procecdmgs had been postponed.
Rick Grnves, a Huntiogton Beach
man identified as the only witness to
the accident, testified that Murphy
was swerving and dnving with her
bright headlight beams on just prior
to the accident.
"She kept coming up real fast
behind me and 1 was worried she was
going to hit me." Graves testified.
He said the woman eventually
passed him and accelerated quickly.
Graves estimated she reached speeds
up to 70 mph before the crash, which
he descnbcd as ''headlight-to-head-. ligbt. ..
"I never saw any brake lights,"
Graves said ... There was just a puff of
smoke and then complete darkness in
the night."
Graves said when he pulled up to
the accident there was "no sound, no
hghts, no signs oflife." '.
Seal Beach Sgt lal1')' Sides. one of
the fi~t officers on lhe scene, said he
detected the odor of alcohol when he
---------------------------, Jcancd into Murphy's crushed sedan. "I saw a female inside. She was
KIDNEY LAWSUIT ... screaming, thrashing around," Sides
said. From Al
He said Jordan had a tumor "the
size of a softball" on his nght k1dne}.
bul that doctor!> read the X-ray
backward and took out the left kidney
instead.
After the wrong kidney was re-
moved. Jordan went to UCLA Medi-
cal Centerin December 1982 and had
most of the nght one taken out.
Paglauso said
Jordan's health has detenorated
quickly since then. the attorney said.
noting 1hat the Huntington man was
forced to sell has insurance business
Pa'1iuso said doctors ha ve made
conflicting statements about who put
up the X-rays on viewers pnor to
Jordan's surgery in Long Beach.
One defense attorney admitted in
coun Monday that the wrong kidney
was removed. but said the kidney that
was extracted at Long Beach Com-
munity showed some small signs of
cancer.
Pagl1uso said the trial. which open-
ed Monday. could last up to a month.
He did not say how much in damages
his client is seeking.
Asked afhccould identify Murphy
as the woman he saw in the wreckage,
Sides said he could not because lhe
woman he saw was so "damaged."
Murphy was ordered to appear for
arraignment io Superior Coun in
Westminster on Dec. 31. A trial date
will be set at that time. Murphy is free
on SI 0,000 bail. •
"This whole thing is very hard,"
~•d Darrell Utterback, who said he
was very close to his sister. "It harder
than anyth1ne yo u can imagine. You
read about than_ss like this but J never
would have behcved 1t would feel like
this."
HANUKKAH CELEBRATES FREEDOM ••.
From Al
Jew\ ltsht onetandk un 1hc llm night
of the fcst1val.1 ..... ocandk\On 1ht·
~1..·ond n1gh1 and '>O fonh
Olhl'r Hanukl..ah 1nu..l111on\ 1n-
clude the d1s1nbuuon of' .. gl'lt"
(money) tot·h1l dn:n. the ea11ng.0J
potato fn1ter'> calk•d ··1atkcs'' and lhc
use of the drc1dcl. a lop-II kt· to~
Although 1t 1s a well-1..nown and
w1delycclebra1ed fest1val.Jcw1'>h
leaders sa)' Hanukkah doc' not ha' c
the spmtual ')tgn1ficancc ofhol) days
such as Yorn K1ppuror Pa\!>OH·r.
"Hanukkah 1spnmanl) a home:
holiday." \aid Rabbi Stephen E1m-
1cin vf< ongrcgat1on B'na1T1eJek m
J-ounta1n Valle~ Hesa1d 1t l\J po.,t-
b1bltcal ho ltd a\ whose ob!>l'r' a nee
.... a'> not ordned 1 n the Jc~ t '>h Torah
.. ll'<>a full.. fc<,11val . rcall\ .. he said
'8 1Jt that"san import.int m1..·s~gc
1h,u underlie., the fun It rnm-
ml·moratl'' tht• lirst ltght tor rchg1ou'
lrl·t•dom tQ human ht'>tl>r) ..
l tn\h:1n '>aid he plan'> lo .,peak on
th10, l\'>UC at a Sabbath !>Crv ice Fnda}'
night pmntrngpan1cularl~ U>Jc~r, in
f 1h1up1a ~ho arc being persecuted
becau..e of their religion
That theml.' wa<, alw cm phas11cd
h' ( an1or .\'Ian WeincrofTemplc Bat
GATES ...
From Al
l:IU\Cd Stt•pht'n'11r1\ dt·.11h
Bui rnunt~ Hc:alth ( ,m· ·\~Wnl\
l>m·l'tor Kubert I U\ c: \;ml hl· would
lurn owr thl.' dtxunwnh onl} ti
d1r1..·ctcd b\ uiun order
In an agrccm1..·nt re: at hl·d la\t wee!...
holh mun I\ offo 1a1., Jgm:·d to JOJO ti}'
'>t'l'k a 1..oun orda manda11ng the
rcu1rds n:k<t,t' pro' 1d1ng 1hc t.on-
t\!nt' rc:ma1n lunfidl.'nttal
I hl' courtroom proc.cl.'ding. during
wlmh 1hr \Caln! pa\ kl·t of dornmcnt'>
~ac, 1urn1..·d 11\l'f Ill .I rcprcr,cn1at1ve u(
the coroner'\ office mok lcc;s than live
minute\
WE'RE LISTENING
Yahm ofNcwpon Beach.
"Hanukkah celebrate<, 1hc 1mpon·
a nee of rehg1ou!> freedom for Jc~"
and for all people." We1ner..a1d
"L1ghnng of th<· c.·andlc) 1'i keeping th1..·
hght oftrad111on ahv\.·. kc<·r.1ng ~
flame of freedom bum mg. · -
Alt-hough Hanukkah 1s technical I}
a minor Jewish fcsttval , 11sccl-
cbra11on has become more prominent
because itoccursdunng the:
Christmas season.
In many Jewish home!>. 1he ths-
tnbution of"ge1t•· has I urned into an
exchange of presents. In add111on,
many Jews place colorful Hanukkah
decorations 1n their homcsJIJ!>t a'i
Chns11ansadom thei r homes for
Chnstmas. ·
Some Jc~ ash leaders \a} the trend
1snot ncccssanty ch~1urbin$ becau'iC
Jews arc taking pnde 1n thc:tr own
1rad111on and arc u'iing I lanukkah a\
an opponunl\) to JOm 10 a sca\On of
widespread memm<.'nt
"Hanukkah ha~g.ro~n 1n 1mp<>n-
3'nce because of the tame of )'carin
which 11 ocrur..'' Cantor Weiner said
"Because we )J, c 1n a m1.1ted soc1c1-..
Jcw., wan I to feel the) have a ·
'>tgn11icant holiday at 1h1c; 11mc of
}car But we don't wan11ocmpha\11r
1ha11t 1~a match1ngof ondhoh\la))
aga1n'\t lhc other Pt·opk ju<,t want to
kcl good at th1'> lime "
f ollo" 1ngarc <,unw o;rx·nal I lanuk
kahJlll\1l1c\planncdb\ lm.tl\yO·
;1gcigut·c,.
•( hahaJutln1nck~l\h( l'nt<.'r
4872 Rovcc.· Road, In tne. har,\chcd·
ulcda Hanukkah Adult H1ngu N1gh1
ht·~inningat 8 p.m toda) at the
tt\ntcr
The t t•ntcr w1ll ,pon'>Or a (,rand
Hanukkah Ralh-1 '\travagan1a on
Sunda~. It bcgin\al 2 p m w1tha
ch1ldrcn·s program fea1unngdo~ n\
games and refrl''>hments .\t 4 p.m .
the rall) moves to the Woodhndgc
5hoppmg \fall. 4600 Barranta
Parkwa} The hghttngofa )0.foot
high menorah~ 111 Lakc place there at
4·jOp m. Mu.-.11.. will be provided bya
children·, choir and an orchestra. and
rl'fn:shmrnl'> ~ 111 be !.Cn ed.
·r hc Woodbridge Village A!>soc1a-
t10n. 1n coopcra1100 with the Chabad
Ccn1er. will hold its Hanukkah Chil-
dren's Party at 7 p.m. Dec. 25at the
South Lake Beach Club. 2 Blue Lake
South. Irvine. For reser.vations. call
Lynda Robbin s, 786-6968, or the
Woodbridge Village Association Rec-
reation Dcpanmcnt. 786· 1800.
•Temple Isaiah of Newport Beach.
240 I In me Ave .. will conduct a
Hanukkah Potluck Party at 6:30 p.m.
Saturda) at the temple. The dairy
dinner" 111 be fo llowed by entertam-
ment provided b) the Landmark
Performer~ Donation J.SSJ per
pcr'>on For reservations. call
S4M-6900or 646-7512.
• 1 h<.' kw1sh ( ommuntt} Center
of ~outh Orange Count}. 298 Broad-
wa). Laguna Beach, ~•II offer a
Hanukkah celebration at 7:30 p.m.
Wcdne~da) at the center. The eve-
ning will feature -;tone!., songs, dance
and refreshments. Donation is$2 for
members and SJ.SO for non-mem-
bc~. with children adm1t1ed free. For
re~crvat1on,, 1..all 497-2070 or
iff\.10 17
• 1 l·mpk Hat Yahrn, I 0 I I
< a ml· I hatk A' c . Ncwpon Beach.
"'tll wnduct 1t\ annual Hanukkah
famtl~ \Cf\·ltcat 7.JOp.m. Friday, led
b) kabh1 Mark S. Miller and Cantor
·\Ian Weiner The temple'sJun1orand
adult chem' will participate. Each
fomtl} "an\ 1ted to bring its own
menorah with fi ve candles to JOln m
1he candle-I 1ght1 ng ceremony.
•(ongrcgat1on B'na1 T LCdek. 9669
Taltx-n Ave .. Founuun Valley. will
dedtc..:ate the temple's new library
dunng Hanukkah Sabbath services
~inn1ngat 8 15 p.m. Fnday. Rc-
ltg,aou'5 school student will pan1c1-
patc 1n Hanukkah panic-; on Sunda'r
Just Call
-=-642-6086
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to tbe approprla te ecU tor. •
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OAANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
< H.L, Schwertz Ill
Pubhsl'ler
Frank Zlnl
Aar aging f d1Jor
Keren Wittmer
A011Prtts1ng Dir«>ctor
Ao••mary Churchmen
Conrroller
Robert Centrell
Pr0duc 11on
ManAger
Donald L. Wllllam1
C1rcure 1 t0"
Manag~r
• •
Clrcul1Uon 71•fM2-U33
CIH1tfled edwertl1lng 71MM2·5111.
All other department• M2-4321
MAIN OfFICE
""I' ' C6* "'~ C-1*"( No ,_,, •-,..Jt'l<_,!VN -Ol'Wt "llm.,. or -IW
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VOLn,No.au
.
More rain in store for Coast
A winter ttorm .og.d Into " ornla !Oday,
te>twnlng ahoWef9 juat In time kw Neft "°"' ln\S promltif\O more
Wtdneld•Y 1tter en owmlgtlt br.-Ttt. N1t1on1I WNlhlr ..,.._ ~.ac'-' a 40 S*C*'ll
chenc:. of rain Wednetdey .. t,_ ~bred atoon mo~
Inland. The 11orm wa1 abOut 400 mli. on u ... Centrel Callte>mi.
cout ffrly 10day. with the IMdlng edge moW'Q 1n10 the t>uln 11
wu •xptettd to bootl rain totale ln the L.oe Anoe'M buln by vp
to a h•lf-lnch, end thr...-quartera to en ln<ih In the mount11n1.
forflCaatlf Bob Orebe .. 1d todlY Hight Wednead1y wltt be In the eo. In Loe A~ and the mld•tO upper 501 In the vall~a. lOWI tonlg"t will be tn the upper
301 10 •01. The forecut along Iha Oren~ Cotti call• (or eontlderabl•
cloudlnet• Wednesday with a ~hence of rain ~•In. Continued
cool with highs In the mid 50• to low 801. Not qullt as cold tonight
with Iowa In the vpper 301 and 40..
Temps Ml*-SI PMAI 11 02 ·Ql~~ f'lltONTS
Watm-Coio......,.
Occlv<l•d....,.. S1tr.ona1 r ..,.. N..,._ 10 fl 14 " SP10wt11 Raon ""'"u Snow .... Ot1Mne
HI IA N..-Yotk ,, 50 tq-WM,..,. W ollC • N().U L S Cllc>t . .,. C..,,.,,. ~ •
All>My It 30 NOtll*,VI ., ..
Al~q\19 3S 20 Ol<W>otN Olly ,. 29
Mllitt1• 12 " OMal\a 11 DI
Allenuc Cily .. SI ONnOo n IO
Awtln 10 64 ~ 57 " Calif. Temps
1111-· .. 45 ~ .. .. 45
~ 11 M ""~ .. .. H1Q11 IOw P'~•llon IOt 2• Nlut• Sent•AM '° 0
tllldlllO 11 a • m lo09)' Sa11taCfw 83 36 lllemMCll 03 -25 P IM 57 2t
.9o1M 20 03 Pottlencl. °" 40 21
eo.ton t2 37 Pr~ 83 33 eun.ao ,, :S7 NMlgll IS 46
CMC* 24 03 ~ 31 11
°'*1ot1'H C 70 •• S•Uke Oty 29 12
~ 21. 04 ..,,..,,._ 70 es
~. 44 It ,hn.NM,PR 11 14 ., 42 StS.Mwle 32 It
~ 81 ,.. s.Mt• 34 21
Colum~Oll t7 42 ~ J9 es
eoi-d.NH lie H 8'*-21 -03
~flWMll tO 43 ~ M 28
~on .. 3' Top911.I 39 18
T-119 46
lll'•• &3 ~ T~V~ 32 10 ,.,_ SI •• UlnCN4• 43 29
Loe Angeloa9 611 4. Extended 0...Nlnd S2 41
R«twood °''" 53 3t
s.ct-to SI 37 • A good c;henOe OI,..... TllUt9dey with 8*IM S2 •2
Sen Diego Sii 51 ply w4r!Ot -Ille -.1 ~
SanF•-SI 40 .nct1f1Q fr~~,.., 8a1111~
Santa e.ttN>r• SS 4$ HlgM 65 lo 7 Lowe In <lo. 10 tow
SIOCllllon •• 38 but h.. rMQf-colClw SatUl<lay
morning
°"""" 30 12
O.Molnee u ft) Tulle 81 32
14 49
High. tow, prMl194tatlOtl lo-24 llOura Tides 0.Crott u )3 W~lon 43 21 ~lt5pm
Oultltll 15 .oe Wlelllla Berltow
EIP-5t 39 Wllll"'"8••• .. JI BIQllMr
'*'**• SS 2e 8l9hOp
'WOo 03 -15 Surf report ,.._all M It .......,. 03 -oe
Blylr..
Catal!M
Long 8Mc:n
Monr0¥!a Honolulu 82 73 LOeAnc>M 8IZll IHAN HouMon 74 13 Monl•ay
~ .. 33 Hullt#\Oton 8Mcll 1-3 PoOf Ml Wll9on
Jeclt90ll,Ma n SI !\"-.i.tty. N9wpOf1 1·3 POO< ~8Nc;tt
"-*~ 77 &a IOlh Str•. Newport 1·2 poor Ontario
.iu-28 20 22nd 8\JWI. Newport I poor PMll Sprlngt
~City ,. 11 e.lboe Wedgtt 0 poor PaMd91\9
LMVeQM 44 28 1.AQUna&Mdl I POO< ,....,.,.
utti. AOCll 14 52 SMci.n-te 1-3 POO< a.. ........ dk>o
L°"""1h .. 441 w .. ., IMIO· 64-57 s.no.orw
MelllPHe 74 .. SWllll ClhcllOn: _,.,.... S...JoM
CONTINUED STOR IES
MESA TAKES ON BANDS •.•
From Al
rock 'n' rolJ acts by discouraging the
pcrfonners, who may have to lower
lhe volume on their equipment or
face prosecution.
"It would definitely affect book·
ing," said Mary Anne Campagna.
"The Pretenders'' management assis-
t.ant in the United States. "It sounds
like this(action) is going a btt too far."
Campagna said she has learned
firsthand that some rock groups
would rather sidestep arenas with
stringent noise regulations. She said
"The Pretenders" turned down her
idea to play at the Hollywood Bowl
during their rcc.ent tour because of
similar noise restrictions.
"A lot of bands don't play there
anymore," she said.
Stan Seiden, West Coast chief of
operations for Ned-West, said he
"seriously doubted" that Costa
UCI ATTENDANCE ••.
From Al
cations were accepted even later.
But this )Car, officials at Irvine and
other C campuses say they're
having 1rouble accommodating the
flood of applicants, hence the cutoff.
The exception to the Nov. 30
freshman cutoff wall be for "under-
represented" mmonty students, in-
cluding blacks. Lau nos. F1lipanos and
Amcncan Indians. UCI officials said.
Throughout Cahfornaa. the declin-
ing birth rate has led to a steady drop
~n lhc number of high school g.radu-
a1cs. At the same time, however.
interest 1n attending the University of
California has skyrocketed.
This November, applications to
the eigh1 UC campuses increased 12
percent over the previous year. The
most popular camP,uscs are Berkeley
and UCLA. but even at Irvine.
freshman apphcat1ons arc up 8.2
percent over 1983
Al the same time, however, UCI
officials arc planning to reduce the
number of freshmen they enroll next
fall to accept more transfer students.
Transfer students include those who
completed !heir basic studies at
community colleges and those mov-
ing from other universities.
60 33
l8 Ot
3t 00 TOOAY se 41 S.Cond nign e43p.m 3.8
65 ., 9.conotow It lapm 15
57 3• noe.llOAY 67 34
63 38 f'lrat lllgll a It a_m •• 3" 24 Flrtl tow I 2'pm 07
S8 3t s.ooncl tllQh 7 Upm 39
se 33
IM 38 Sun Ml• lo09lJ II 4 •• p m . "-
SS le WednMday 111 e • m tr'(! Mft ~
S7 38 114 47pm
67 3S Moon Mt••• 1 se p rn. ,_ w.,,_.
S8 3S day at 3 53 • m end Mt• age1n •I 2 36
6' 36 pm
Mesa's plan would endanger booking
at the amphllheater.
But at least one amphitheater
official has shown some concern over
the bad publicity generated by the
noise dispute with the city.
In August. Pacific Amphitheatre
General Manager Steve Redfearn
charged that com~titors at the Irvine
Meadows amphitheater were using
media accounts of the noise battle to
discourage rock star Bruce Spring-
steen from possibly bringing bis tour
to Costa Mesa. Spnngsteen ended up
appearing seven nights last faU at the
Los Angeles Sports Arena.
Costa Mesa officials said their
latest tactic not intended to sway
performers away fro m the
amphitheater but to make them
consider nearb}' residents while per-
forming.
"An)body that come'> mto town
and plays ought to knol.¥ we have a
noise ordinance," Wood sajd.
Attorneys for Ned-Wes1 Inc. wert'.
unavailable for commem
In a separate action, the council
also voted unanimous!) to seek a
court order rcqumng Ned-West Inc
10 appl) for a city enLcnainment
permit As part of its ongoing attack.
the city beefed up its entenainment
ordinance in September. requinng
that all businesses featunng ltve or
recorded muMc be licensed.
COMPUTER AGE ENTERS SCHOOLS ...
From Al
The money will be usc:d as part ofa own shows. and miniature news.-"We have to let them know
nationwide revolution to slowly re-hounds at Haven View Elementary computers tn the classroom 1s some-
place the chalkboard with computer will keep classmates informed with a thtng that makes a difference for
1enn1nals, and send children home monthly newscast, said Gayle k1ds," SaJd Frank Wallace. executive
with videotaped lesM>ns as well as Wayne, Ocean View admin1strat1ve secretary to the committee. urging
tcx1boolcs. assiSTanL parems1owntc statc--1cp1escntat1YCS.
Educators are looking to the day Teachers at Haven View will also "A few teardrops on the letter could
when many instructors will spend be spotlighted in a project 10 help." Joked committee member Jack
their time showing students how to videotape classroom lessons as Hill. dunng a public committee
use computers rather than actually models for fledghng instructors. mee11ng earlier this month in Costa
teaching a subject. "We'll be taping model lessons so Mesa.
"The instructors would become that other people can sec how teach-W1th a S 15 m11l1on budget for fiscal
facili tators, resource specialists, ing is done well," said Wayne. 1984-85. the committee is asking
rather than actual teachers," Orozco Members of the Educational Tech-Gov. George Dcukmejian to push
said. nology Committee arc keeping an eye that figure to$43 million as part of his
Computers could some day make on these and other projects around proposal for the state budget ne~t
up for the shortage of teachers in such California. hoping for the successes year. The ,governor is scheduled to
areas as math and science. she mused. that will convince legislators to urtve1f his spending plan In mid-
That vision 1s becoming a reality allocate more grant money. January
for school<; th roughout C'ahfornia . .-----------------------------
und e\pcc..:1ally along the Orange < ·oa<;l, where robots will soon teach
children basic computer logic,
Cox Elementary School in f.oun·
tarn Valley will spend part of its
$8.000 an grant money to bur three
robots. including a mechanica tunic.
Bob Vanderpool. director of cur-
riculum for the Fountain Valley
School D15tnct, said children would
learn "problem-solving" techniques
by e<ealing computcc programs to
maneuver the robots
Elsewhere an the da tr1ct, Tamura
Elementary School students will take
simulated trips along "the Oregon
Trail" via computer. They'll face the
same d1lemmH that plagued 19th
century pioneers tra veling the 2...1.000-
m1le course from the Missouri 1<iver
to the Columbia Ra ver in Orqon.
"Thts program moves SO<:ial stud·
ies out of the teiubook and into
application." Vanderpool said.
"We're lookina in terms that com-
puters will Utkc the plaoe of work·-• ... =-~-.
books. They'll become an important
part of education where we now u~
the blackboard."
Also 1n Fountain Valley. Plavan
Flementary School LS planning to
adapt its computer eQuipmcnt ·so
handa appcd t~nt can alto use
the tcnn1nab.
The ~an View School Olstnct an
Huntin1ton Ekach 11 tappin11nother
resource thll bu been around for a
while. but untd lately WIJ too ex-
Rtn tvc and toO cumbertomc: tele-
communication •
With v1dfi>tapin1 equipment be-
comina lt&htcr and sm~llcr. •~well as
l~s co tly, ch1ldttn and teachers ahke
arc c.allina for "ltsbts, camera," ac-
tton." Nut year, Hope V1c:w Elementary
School tucknts will produ'~ their
rlk I=erfccl t~xcculive Cifl
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• •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . " • . . • • • • • • • '9 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Yule parade benefit
slated in Newport
The Irvine and Saddleback chapter of Zonta
lntcroat1onal and Imperial vinas invite the public to a
'pcc,1aJ celebration of tbc annual Newport Harbor Festival
of LJ&hta parade Saturday.
Ffarborsidc fcstiv1tics at lbc Imperial Savings officc
3366 Via Udo w11l benefit thecb1ldrco ofthcAJt>MSino~
Home, the nta Ana Girls Club and other local co~munity service proj~ts. Fro~ 6 to 9 p.m. visitors will
en.ioy refreshments, hve Chnstmas music and the
procession of liahts acrois the harbor. Guests arc asked to
bring wrapped toys for the children. .
This 1s the fourth year that Zonta International and
Imperial Sav1np have joined in the Parade of Ll&hts
benefit. The tax-deductible donauon for adulu 1s S1JO;
children arc free. Call Pegy Banlett at 751-3522 or Lynn
Juon at 673-3130 for rc5ervations.
CIJJld aba.e Halon .et
, OnJ01og 1oformauon and planning to aid in lbe
oreventton of chil~ abuse will be presented Thursday at
the monthly meeting of the Orange County Child At)usc Council. •
The session will be held from 9 to 10:30 a.m. in
Build1n1 C, Room 1022, of the Orange County Depart-
ment ofEducation, 200 Kai mus, Costa Mesa. It lS free and
open to the public, and further information may be
obtained by calling Jeanne O'Bryan at 972~975.
Bridge playen wanted
.The Laguna ~ch w.omen's Club is fo~ing teams
for tts annual w1ntcr-spnng round robin bndgc tour-
nament.
Play will be conducted at I 1:30 a.m. on the second
and fourth Tuesdays of each month at the clubhouse, 286
St. Ann's Drive. Non-members arc welcome.
For more information, call Mary Benning at
494-2019 or Jeed Doherty at 497-7021.
Semi.nan on tran•ltlon• at OCC
Alyn Banick. a Newport Beach therapist who
specializes in adult development and 1n guiding people
throu&h transitions. will hold a series of workshops next
month at Orange C-oast College in Costa Mesa.
The series will run on three consecutive Fridays, Jan.
11-25, from 7 to 10 p.m. in Room 113 of OCC's
Counseling and Admissions Building.
Topics will be "Anger: A Learned Response" Jan. 11 ,
"Designing Your Own Life" Jan. 18 and "Women's
Lifestyles" Jan. 25. The fee for each workshop is SI 0 and
further information is available al 432-5880.
PWP orlentatlon dance .et .
A dance at the Costa ~esa Country Oub and an
oncntation for new members will be held Jan. 4 by the
Orange Coast chapter of Parents Without Partners.
The event is scheduled from 9 p.m. to I a.m. at a
charge of $4. Further mfonnauon may be obtained by
calling 546-5788. •
'Souper Bowl' ule In Newport
A "Souper Bowl" and "Santa Goofed" sale will be
held Jan. 12 at the Zonta Club of Newport Harbor. 15th
Street and Irvine Avenue. between the hours of 10 and 4
p.m
Soup tasting will be the h1ghhgh\ of the day, along
with wine and bread. A rummage and white elephant sale
will be conducted wilt\ proceeds benefiting the club's
community service proJects.'such as homeless women and
student scholarships.
Contact Lenora Scars at 549-3924 for further
information.
SeJf-def ense cJa .. e• planned
The Laguna Beach Free Clinic 1s offering free self-
defensc classes fo r women on the first Saturday of every
month from 9 a.m. 10 noon a1 the chn1c. 364 Ocean Ave ..
Laguna Beach.
The classes are geared to teach women of all ages eas)
techniques to help resist an unarmed assault. The next
class will be pre~nted Jan. 5 and child care will be
provided.
For more information, and to rc\Crve a place in the
cla~all 494-9429. • Exchange etudenta needed "
The Huntington Beach Sister City Association 1s
seeking candidates for its 1985 youth exchange with
Huntington Beach's sister city of AnJO. Japan
Applicants must be at least 13 by June 15. 1985 and no
older than 19 years of age by Sept. 1
Pat" Dapkus can be called at 536-5578 for more
1nformat1on.
Tueaday. Dec. 18
• 4 p.m., County Sanitation Dl1trlcts1 Newpon Beach
Council Conference Room, 3300 Newport Blvd.
• 6:30 p.m., Fo.ntaln Valley City Conell, study
session, Council Chambers, I 0200 Slater Ave. ·
• 8 p.m., Foantaln Valley City CoucU, council
meet mg, I 0200 Slater Ave.
Pouc E Loe
Two year•• worth of loot
Dogged kennel owners
seek rights in Heights
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of ... Dellr .......
nta Ana Heiabts kenocl operaton arc
ft&htina to ensure th.at John Wayoe Atrp0n
expan ion doesn't leave I.Mm m the
doihousc, or more appropriately. without
a cfQ&house.
Owners of the 12 kennel on R1vcf'11de
Drive say their hvehhood.s may be threat-
ened 1f their busincsse arc found to ~
incompatible with expansion of at.rport
fac1bt1~ and add1uonal Jet no1it, says
Manin South, who owns KAm 's Kennels at
20332 R1vcrs1dc Dnve.
"We do not ObJect to the improvements
and modifications olanned for John
Wa yne A1rpon," South says ·t But we don't
want to be forced to leave These kennels
cannot be replaced."
South and other kennel operators met
Monday ruettt to determine how best to
fi&ht for thr1r nghts a~ the Oran1e County
Pfanning Comm1ss1on bqins public hear-
ings today on the fate of anta Ana Heights.
They have contacted an attorney to
represent their interests 1n case their
busine~ses are threatened by a1rpon eit-
pans1on The> also intend to attend all of
the count) pubhc hnn on al'U»Qft
plan • South IA) •
c 12 kennel' ITPfetcnt ab®t 14
percent of all the kennel specc U) Or-.
County. South say and would be eotely
missed sbuwd they bt forced to c:Joie.
0 There 11 a mmcndou1 demand i>f
kennel• in Otanae County," he Aid. ·•we
expect from SOO to 600 dop to be kept herf
at ou.r kennels over the holiday tcUOC. ..
South said he and other operators. wt.o
have both hved and worked oo Rivenidc
Dnvc for the past IS yean. fed thejd GOilC
d<>t1 not bothn-lhem and say tbc:ir
bu11nnsc arc very compttibk with a
nearby airport.
"Jet no1.ecan bea nui nocand b&ddna
dO&S can be a nuisance," be saic1 ·ean YotJ
think of a better plac:e to put kenndJ'r'
The kennel owncn are ~t anM"XI·
tion to Newport Beach and ' oppote a
change of zonina tbat would allow for
construction of commercial bwldiftll,
South say~.
"We offer one of the ~test commu.cmy
services around." he u1d. .. As an cums*.
if you have a dog, and your mom's sici in
Chicago. what arc you 101na to do?"'
Artukovic appeal vqwed
By tbe A11oclated P re11
r
Attorney Gary Fle1schmao had atJUtld
that Artukov1c is being held unfairly for an
cxtrad1llon hearini to answer chirp on
which he bas already been acqwned.
1'ewport Beach Officer Tom Little lnapecta Uzi machine tun. part of
more than $150.000 worth of Y&luabla reco•erecf followtna
l'rlday'• arreat of aupected burfla,r John Leonard Miller. a 34-year-
old campaa policeman at Saddfeback Collece In lmne. Mlller hu
been linked to 90 buralarte. over a two-year period at the Oakwood
Garden Apartmenta ln 1'ewport Beach.
A lawyer said he will appeal a coun
ruhna denying bail for 85-year-old AndnJa
Anukov1c who the sovemment wants to
depan to Yugoslavia to face N121 war
cnmes charges.
Chief U. S. District Judge Manuel Real
refused to set bail for AntukoVJc Monday,
saying the conditions under which he 1s
held arc unchanged from when a ma11s-
trate onginally refused bail.
He prnt"nted to the court a com-
putcnzcd companson of indictments
against the former wartime YlJaoslav
JOvrmmcnt offic1al filed 10 the 1950s and
in 1984
Attukov1c now faces mass murder
cbarces 1n htS nauve country, and was
arrested by U.S. authoriucs on Nov. 14, • • • Dying boy spends special -
holiday gift on his family Rhoi:da Stevens
OB ITUARIE S
12-year-oTdCo!>_!a Mesa stlldent dying of
cancer wants others to remember him
By Tiie Associated Press
Despite the pain heenduresand the
likelihood that this will be his last
Christmas. 12-year-old ~c Bowen
plans to spend his holiday g1f\ on
others, not himself. ·
When Enc's classmates at St John
the Baptist School in Costa Mc~gave
him $800 for Christmas, the youn'-
ster with terminal cancer asked his
mother to plan a lavish binhday pany
for his 5-year-old brother, Brandon.
"1 want to give Brandon a big
birthday party because I'm afraid he
won't remember me," Enc's mother.
Carol Bowen, said her son told her.
He also asked her to bu) a battef)-
powered red motorq.cle with ltght'I
and Stren for Brandon, whose pa11y
was planned for Sunday. and a
fircflacc for his grandmother.
" thought 1t would be nice to spend
ll on someone else than spend 11 on
me." Enc said.
The brothers arc close dt~p1te the
\even years that !ieparate them.
Bowen said. They have discussed
Enc's disease, and Brandon once 5a1d
he wanted to ~o to hea,cn with Enc
but changed his mmd when told there
were no toys there. she said
Enc learned on Than ksg1 vmg 1981
that he had Ewing's sarcoma His
rfght leg swelled up "'hen he fell "'hlle
playing ba~ketball and X-ra) s sho"'ed
a malignant tumor had replaced
much•ofthe bone in his leg
.
MacDonald libel trial
venue change refused
By tbe A11oclated Pre11
A request to change the trial site for
a S 15 mil hon damage suit filed
against author Joe McG1nn1ss by a
former Green Beret physician con-
victed of murdering his family has
been denied by a federal Judge.
Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald contends
Mc0in01ss1 best-scH1ng book, "Fatal
Vision." contains "multiple false
statements" and has caused him
mental anguish , loss of weight and
ni&htmarcs since It was published.
McGinniss concludes 1n hi s
treatise that MacDonald 1s guilt> of
the 1970 murders at the former Green
Beret's home in Fort Bragg. N ('
The suit says MacDonald per-
mitted McGinnis to hear his most
'ntimate thoughts to wntr 4 "pos111ve
account" of MacDonnh.J''> light
against the mwrder chargr~
McGin01s has said he changed his
mind about MacDonald'" innocence
dunng the five "'ce1'..'I ot 1est1mon>
which led to the former offic~r'<,
1.onv1clion 1n 197'>.
MeGinn1~ ltve~ in Ne"' York.
where he sought to htn e the sutt
moved, but lJ S. D1\tnc1 Judge
W1ll1am Rea de01ed the request
Monda).
MacDonald 1s 1n custo<h at a
federal pri~n m Bastrop, Texas.
He formerly was head of emerg-
ency ~rv1ces at St. Mary Medical
Center 1n Long &ach and lived 1n
Huntington Reach
After radiation and chemotherapy
treatments, doctors at Childrens Hos-
pital of Orange County were en-
couraged and thought he would beat
the c~nccr.
But last spnng, tumors were found
in his spinal column. Breathing
became difficult. he started hemor-
rhagrng and the pam in his lower back
and nght leg increased. He spent
months 1n the hospital, confined to
bed and weanng a special head brace
called a halo.
Eric asked to go home and got his
wish Dec. 10. When he arrived, he
found the fireplace had been installed
the day before
~As the ambulance attendants -
wheeled him 1n, he looked at the
fireplace out of the corner of his C}C
and he was vef) happ}';· said h1!.
grandmother. Mar) Bowen
There was also a ne v. S2.300 ..\pplr
computer -v.h1ch Enc learned 10
use at school -thanks to tht' "1 a~t'·
·\-'Iv ish Foundation ofOr~e loun.-'> and the C omputrr Conne,1on. a
C it) of lndustf') computer \tore
Make-A-Wish Jtants reques1s for
terminally 111 children.
_The fam1lv Chnstmas tree was up
but bare because Bowen hadn't had
time to shop
Ho"'e' er an anon~ mou'I fa mil)
adopted the Bowens through the
hospital and 11 took two tnps and a
hospital gurnt'y to transport the bags
offood, clothes and toys to the Bowen
homt'. Classmates bnghtened the famtl} 's
home with balloons that read "You're
Special" and asked to \Cc the com·
putcr
"He docsn·t -wnnt us 10 feel SOrT) for
him ," )a1d Scott Dreher. 12 But he
said ht and his classmates can't
imagine Enc's pain. "If 11 v.as one ol
us. "'C couldn't bear 1t." he ..aid
Enc and his fam1I) hn,cn't gl\·t:n
up "'-' c're 1n ltnc for a miracle:·
Bnv.cn ..aid
services held
Funeral scrv1c:cs were conducted Monday for Rhoda
B. ''Brown re" Stevens of Cota Mesa. who died at her home
Thunday at the age of 70.
Mn Stevens. an electncaJ COJlncer for .0 ycan, bad
been emplo)ed at EECO Enginccnna 1n Sant.a Ana for the
past 28 years. She "'as born m Hasungs. Neb •. and had ,
hved 1n Cost.a Mesa since 1955
She 1s survived b} her husband. Ra ymond A. Stevens.
Services were held at P1crce Brothers Bell Broadway
Monuary Chapel by the Rev Bruce Mcmfield of Costa
Mcsa·s Tnmty Bapust Church lnicrment followed at
Harbor Lawn Me"1~nal Park
Elizabeth Ross of Mesa
'ien ices ha ve b«n held for Ehzabeth S. Ross of Costa
Me\3. a retired bakrl') saleHlerk whod1ed Dec. 8 an Hoaa
\ifemonal Hosp11al af\er a bnet 1llncs.s be was 82
\.irs Ro~s who Y..as born tn Charleston W Va .. b.ad
hn•n a cler~ a1 Frrnch ·s Baler. on Eas1 17th Strttt tn
( O\ta ~e~ for r }'Cars
'ihe is -;ur.1Ye<l h) three wm -\\> 1lham and Monon
Ro\~ of ( mta Mesa and Jnmt'~ Kos1i of Burke. Va ~·and
a daughter fkts~ Fleming ot < osta Mesa
.\lc,o sur..1vmg arc a hrulher. Hatl) Huntle) of
Lemoore. Calif .. and a sister. Mar$uente Murray of
Oa\-ton. Ohio. a v.ell as a grandchild and five grcat-
grand1:h1ldren
Sc-r.1ces were conducted at P1erce Brothers Bell
Broadwa) ~onuar: C hapcl b'.> the ReY Vic Schmeltz of
Cahan Chapel follo"'ed b' intcnncnt at Pacific View
\.temunal Park
Mesa's Joseph Hager
Pm.i.tc scn.1.CbhaH. been hcld for pmnecr rc.su1Clll
Jo~ph George Hager of Cosa Mesa. who died Dec. 5 in
Hoag Mt'monal Hosr11tal after a bnef illness. He was 83
~1r Hager .,..ho had hved in the Cosa Mesa and
~anta .\na areas since 1925, was born tn Browerville.
\1inn He v.asa pilot and mechao1c for 50 years and tau&Jlt
m1htnl) !>tudents to O~ dunng World War II at Santa Ana
( ollrge
Uc,.., sur. l\ed h\ two c,ac,tc~. Frances Hynncclt and
Loretta Hagrr. and t\loll ncphc"'"· JrrT) Hynnt'clt and Jcm
I t\hl·r .111 of \<linnc.-.ma
Three countians perish
from cabin stove fumes
Newport Beach
·\ $450 stereo unit "'a' 'tolfn from
a pickup truck parleJ nn R.1lhoa
Boulevard near the "'<'"'IX11l P1l·r
The crooks entered the 'ch1lll' alln
prying open a locked door • • • Rurglar'i broke 1 nto a Do' er ~h,,rl''
\ \umm11 l>nH 11·,11knt 1111J
pol11:c that "''mconl' h.1d lnt'J In
hrcai.. 1n10 thl· h11me carh \unJa\
ThC' c;u~pcl t "'3, de" nlx·d J\ \lJnJ
1ntt atx111t ' ICt"I 1nd1l'' tall v.11h ·'
mC'J1um hu1kl JOll v.1·.11in~ .1 ,1.1
m.1 .. i..
-.u nua' I ht· flJ\\('ngcr wmg windov.
h;id h\·cn pn<'d npcn to gain cntn
• • •
\n .aull)mob1le bra. wo11h )lS5. wu
rqxmcJ <;tolcn from a car at 3200
Par!..< enter Dn"e somume between ~ \1111 m and 5 20 p m Monday
A Ht.lntington Beach man and a
Westminster couple were found dead
Monday afternoon in a mountail\
cabin that apparently had filled with'
cal'bon monoxide fum!s from a
propane stove.
The victims were identified as
Robert Memmo, 21. of Huntinau>n
Beach and Donald Buller. 23. and his
Huntlntton Beach
Someone stole a white Pomeranian
puppy with tan ears valued at $225
from the c ara 61' a home in e SOOO block of cFadden A Yen..-. • • • • A police l'Cfnlit said a $300 sold
necklace wa stolen at Golden We t
Collqe. • • • Bur&lan ransacked a home 1n the
SOOO block of C.ast1lc and stoic a S 12S sun, $2SO m appHa.....,..nd $200 in
jewelry • • • "' man weanna 1 blue Levi jacket
and Levis pants stoic a botile of
Southern omfon a.nd a botUo of
champqne valued at 416 from Pasha
Liquor, 706 P.cific Coast H11hway. • • • Th1c'\ICS ttolc a woman'• wet.1\lll
valued at Sl-10 from a aaraac 1n 1be
21000 block of trathmoor.
• • •• A ..,.oman how1n~ a hou.c In the
wife Sherri. 24, both of Westminster,
according to San Bernardino County
sherifl's spokesman Jim Bryant.
Their bodies were found in a cabin
at Bia Bear City in tbc San Bernardino
Mountains about 3:30 p.m. by a IOCAI
water depan.ment employee who
apparently noticed moisture and
arbon soot on a window of the cabin.
9000 block of Kapaa as a rental
discovered that h~r purse containin1
$50 in cash and credit cards wa~
Bryant said
Autopsies were to be performed
today. Bryant said tt appears the thrtt
were overcome by carbon monoxide
fumes from an improperly ventilated
propane stove.
He said the deaths probabl y
occurred someume late Sunday
miff1na.
Thieves stole SSOO 1n tools. a $70
J&Cket and a $25 caf{>Cntcr's pouch
from a vehtclt parked 1n an aJle)' near
Pacific Coat ~abwa.y ..and Palm
• • • Avenue.
Two bicycles we~e solcn from the • • •
coun yard of a residence 1n t.hc 6000 buraJar lcn blo6d stains after
block of OaUpcan. One was 1 five-brcak1na a shd1n1 al• door in the
speed red Schwmn valued at SI SS: 2000 block of Delaware and stoic 1
the ICCOl\d wa a blue men' cruiser SSOO •terco; $660 1n JCWtlry and $70
valued at S 149. in cash. • • • • • • u~ty auards at K·Mart. 1910I ... A rcs1dcnt in the I blodt•of
Maanolta St.. cktaint'd • woman Keswick 111d aomconc broke out h1 employ~ whom they believed was drlvcrs' window for the third time rcspon11ble for taklnf $300 lo cash. • • • • •• Thieve broke into a rear window
11 Alexander's Mov1n1 It. te>falC.
I 5642 Producer and \olcS2S in ca h.
• • • • A tree valued at S3,SOO 'ft'U cut
down in ihc yard oh m1dcnc. 1n tbe
16000 block of Ptcifi Co. t Hiah-
way. • • •
•
Thie" vTil11h~aWln®w,enuo
a van at "" \enut and I th
trttt and stole lhrtt auns valued at
S.00. • • • Bui'ilan tole a S 100 ~rto from a
blue Mcrmx1 nt tn tht 6000bl ~
of<;on ma
•
home but the re-;1dcnt\ h.id nut
computed the loss. • • • ( hcvrolet 'alucd at about S 1.000
was stolen from a parli.1ng 101 on
Do"er On\.e. • • • .\ mast ""onh $800 wac, 'itolcn lrom
a boat docked otT Bay~1dc Dn't'
Lacuna Beach
An clderl)' \\Oman llVIOJ on Oal
l)uttt behcYC'd her home was on lire.
but pohc-c offi~rs rc~pondin io the
call Monday maht dt1erm1ncd a
small mount of smoke wa com1n1
only from the oven. • • • Pohc~ .1.rrotcd. R.15 bard La~rcn~
nana.pn ''I. on SUSPIC'lOn of drun\-
el\ df"htng nanap.n wa, ,topped
Monda~ c'cninf on Forc t ~"enue. • • . uth (. oa t Hitthwa~ bu '""'
ov.1'cr told pohct Monda~ ~< beltc' <'~
he kno"' v. ho was rc,f)Oll~ ble f()f
\:.tndalwn an clt"ator. CilU!ltnl an
cstmateJ S400 m damaac • • • Canyon Acre Wa) rc.,1dcn1 1111,1
puh ~ fonda) that <\Omeom· h<i\
been '~~int. mail from her m11lt'I\" ....
1e\ sbttboard ~•lucd t $6 wa~
tcponcd tolcn u~ ancmoon on
uth t Hift:'1 .
About $200 n chlnet tra1 rtl'Ot1cd
\totcn .,und11 momana rrom 1
laundry mJKhtnt at a uth C out
• • •
\hout S'\1141 v.a' rrpoill'd ""'len
from J l0c. l td c.ar pJ1l1·d \;11urd.1'
mom1n~ nn ( htl On' c th!" '1l lt1TI
told poh(t . . .
Police :irn-\tc.-d 1'.cnn<'lh [)a, 1J
f\l-hhach 4' l'arh \.1t11rl\;i' .in
~u\p1e1on ol drun1'..l n ,111\ in
F..chb.'J(h .... a, \lt)(lpt"d .tt I ll'i 1 m on
Mountain Rr1old . and < ilrnnc' r"
~trttt
CoetaMeea
... \'. bura.ltr ap~ttntl)' .tttcnipthl h"I
enter a houK 1n tht 400 hlol ~ ,1f f 4'1\t
20th 't tarl) unda> h) pulhna op<"n
a cran._ v.1nd ow. Ho..,.e\Cr, the \:ulpn1
tl~ when tht &la \hatttr""1. "'il1ni
tht rt' tdtnt around :la m.
• • •
'\ Q()() trrco v.a rtpontd \tolen
fr,)m a car parkC'-0 at I edC'o
dc(larimtnt \tore. '010 lluoor 81\d ~t"'cen 4 p m ind 10 pm
Monda) I he rear hal\.h to tht car
had ~n torttJ ooen
• • •
.\ ~ttlTO and a llrt, totahn \S9~.
•Hrt ~l"Jed \lnltn fmm a truC'
parkt'd at uth ( N\t P1va \Omt"-
ttmc hC'tv.ttn ' '° t' m and fl om
Fountain Valley
\ dcrk al &aut) World. 9055
< 1.irt1chl i\vc. told pohcc a man
t'ntrn.•tl th<' tiu .. mcs~ Mon~v and ''"I he v.111c, therr to clean the Carpet ~k a'ilcd lor a S60 dtpo!.1 t to cover
th1• l'O\I ul "upphC"i Uc Id\ with the
nlonc' .md did not l"C'turn. the cl~k
\.lid
• • •
.\ rc<.1dcnt of lht' I 7~()() block of ''"111 \u1annC' Strttt told police she
too~ her tnJU~d dauJhl<'r to
mrd1cnl chm<' at l!Q70 Warntr Ave
on \aturda\. While 4'he was 1n 1dc
wmt'OM 'itolc a brown bncfdsc
v.1Hlh ~I 00 from her vt"hicle. she satd
. \ ..
.\ r~1<knt ot lhe %00 block or
Talhttt ""enue ttpontd Monda)
that somtonc buratamcd hts white
1 Q7Q r oo1111<' Tnan' m. The lo
1ndudtd \lettO C\tU1pn)Cnt v.onh
St .OW and a v.-ool M"lrf worth $1~
Al~l. $400 1n d magt' wa~ done to tht
\thtcl~
• • •
o,r, tht v.cckcnd, ~mcone \tole
\1dr-mnuntt'd m1rron from a uzuk1
mntc'lr'CH le and me tool , al\ from a
C&fl>'ln. on the '0200 blod or \a\Cr
'cnuc The lo\ WIS nttmaled at
S' Ill
Ot~ COMt DAILY PILOTIT"'9day. December 18, 198'
... Reagan pares_ defense budget cuts
If he had his way. Pentagon cuts would only
be $28.1 billion over 3 years. not $58 billion --~--~--
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pmi· the Stockman target .
dent Reapn &oday proposed • fl r The sp0ke man insisted Rtapn
mallet cut in his ma ive defense has not abandoned lus deficic.r·eduo-
buildupovcr the next three )'Cars than lion 1oal, but pve no indication of
Ms top bu.t adv1scrs said as needed how Reagan plans to reach 11 wsth the
to rcdU« the burgeoning federal plan outlined today. ~
deficit. The president has safd he would
For Ascal 1986, presidential not raise l&Jles to make up for the
spok'esman Larry Speake said, Re. honfaJI in spending cuts, but some apn ~as decided to reduce planned aides have indicated a tu increase
defense outlays by $8.7 billion, $700 still could be 1n the offina.
million more than budget director RC3,&&n would not hesitate to
Oevid A. Stockman and other senior appeal to voten 1f Conarcss opposes
pc Ices said that Rcaaan "bas to
make decision based on the nauonal
interest. He had indicated tbat all
departmcou 1neludjJ\I the Depart-
ment of Defense would take a share of
bud,et reductions, and the' Defense
Department has reduced their re-
quest substantiaJJy over the three-
year penod from wliat they oriainally
subm11ted, abo substantially ttdueed
from what f 'onare h d authorized."
When compared to the sue of the
overall federal budsct and the hopcd-
for spcndina rcductions, "I don•t
think tt's far olT," pealtcs said.
Iran to prosecute
4 in hij~ck deaths
bud&et advisers had sought. his ~Ian. Speakes said.
But, over the three yea~. the "The president will show Conarcss NICO IA. Cyprus (AP) -Iran's a doctor and Janitors who ~ntcrcd the
defense spending reductions will total the wa~ and will attempt to lead them public prosccutor announced today hijacked Kuwaiti Airlines Airbus-JOO
only $28.1 bilJion. Stockmcn had sajd and will not hesitate to 10 to the that the four hijackers who-~~ _two six days after it was forced to land at
Pentago n pending would have to people to present his case and carry Americans aboard a Kuwa1t1 a1rhncr Tehran. However, some U.S. officials
come down $58.billion to ach1tve the the day," the spokesman s~ud. in Tehran two weeks ago will be tried have sugaested that Iran was in
administration's aoal of a S 100-Before today's announcc~ent, ~v-1n Iran, the official Iranian news collusion with the hijackers.
billion overall deficit rcducuon. eral congressional. R~pubhcans, an-agency reported. Mir Emadj said the four hijackers
Speakes portrayed lhe spcnd1ng eluding Sen~te MaJ~nty Leader. Rob-The prosecutor', HoJatoleslam Mir arc being intcrropted and their trial
reduction as "larger than those ong-ert Dole, ~ad that. suable cuts m the, Emadi. said the four will be tned will start as soon as the investipt~n
1naJly recommended," but acknowl-defense buildup wtU be needed to wm · according to "the penal law of the 1s completed. lt will be decided later
edged under questioning that the cuts a~proval of the proposal on Capitol Islamic Republicoflran." the Islamic whether the trial "<ill be open or
over three years would fall far short of Hill. Republic News Agency reported. closed, ·he was quoted as saying.
Several countries have urged that Th~ two Am~ricans killed by lhc
the h1Jaclcers be extradited to Kuwait hijackers-Charles Aoyd Hegna, 50, LISTEN or elsewhere. but Mir Emadi was and William L. Stanford 52 -..Jere
quoted as saying "such an irrational honored Monday at Arlington Na-
rcquest will not be accepted" sinc-e tional Cemetery in military cc ... TO THE
SOUNDS other countries have not extradited to emonies attended by their fflmilies
fran a number of hijackers of Iranian and dozens of their colleagues in the
planes. Agency for International ·Dcvelop-
Westmorelaiid attorneys
can't force CBS admission
By &lie A110C1atd Prett
NEW YORK-Lawyers for retired Oen. William C. Wntmoreland .bavt
had little luck so far an their attempts t'? force CBS producer Georae Crilc to
admh he made mistakes in a contry>vcrsLal 1982 d~um_ent•'J'· Wcnmorela~
claims in has $120 million lawsuit that he was libeled by . The nc:uodnt
Enemy: A Vietnam Deception." Crile was due back on. the witness stan t I )'
for his seventh day of tcstJmony in the t I-week-old tnaJ. Crile has stea,<ifastly
refused to admiunr errors in hJs work on the documentaryh_ even on po1'W for
which he was criticized within CBS. Th~ br~dcast ; 11J~~~~ 19cz~· moreland who commanded U.S. troops an Va.etnam 1ro~ . • suppressed information in 1967 that would have alerted President Lyndon 8.
Johnson and others to the fact that enemy forces were much tarscr than
believed.
Fatal pluie had tvea.k tall .ec.tlon ..
HY ANN tS, Mass. -MetaJ used in .~e tail scc~aoos of a Brllllian-madc
plane used by Provincetown-Boston A1rho~ Inc. IS oncss than acn.crally
accepted aviation quality, accordin~ to a pubh~hed rcpon. A PBA ~CU"ahtc airplane crashed Dec. 61n Jacksonv1Jlc, Fla., rrilhnaall 13 peC?ple a .. w en
its tail 5Caion came apart dunng taJc~ff. PBA _groun.ded its remam1na 13
Bandcirantes for an intensive examination. PB~ anvesuga_tors found the st~I
used to build the tail sections contains almost 1mpe-rccpt1blc fissures, which
cause excessive friction and vibration. ..
Guard dog dle. defen ding. •tatlon
EAST MEADOW. N.Y. -A 5-year-old German shephc~d. which.had
thwcvted IO burglaries at a Lo_ng Island~ s~uon. W!lS ~ten with lead ptpcs,
bashed with a pickax and had 1.ts thr<;>at sli~ whale making has final d~fense of the
building, Nassau County police said. Pnncc. a 90-pound dog, died M.onday
afler the brutaJ assault by three men who hel~ up the Nobek Gas Stat1~n ~n
Hempstead Turnpike here, police said. "He wa_s one hell of a wa~chdog, said
Detective Dan Severin. "His throat was cut, his stomach was wide open and
still he wouldn't let us in the place."
OF THE
SEASON
According to Iranian news reports, ment.
the four hijackers were captured Dec. The three Americans were headed 4--
9 by Jranian security m~n disguised as for Pakistan aboard a Kuwaiti plane. Police •tlng net• 122 •uspec ..
1
------------...-.----------------. NEW YORK -Police who opened a bogus "chop shop" to 1nv~~tigatc
.. . .
•..
KDCM
103.1
FM
STEREO
A LIMITED NUMBER OF ATTRACTIVE
Christmas Carol
Song Sheets
ARE NOW AVAILABLE TO:
Churches & Org·anizati ons
Call In Person. 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
HARBOR LAWN
morluwy
1625 Gisler Ave. ' Costa Mesa
540-5554
NO CHARGE • NO OBLIGATION ++ . ~
hl>l~--
LE JAZZHOf.
Tc1kc t1 "l'.tt in C,ifc Flcun, a!'! we serve
ur ti gc nl'rPu ...... 1Jc>.>'Jcr of hot Jazz. Take
111 ,111 }l >ll ltkl'., hut le.we enough room for
S,tl ,tdc ~tCl >1 ,e, Quiche Lorraine and
Frr nch 0 Aron oup.
Yc 1u can .il o;o receive your si.Je order tn our
Arrrum Rc:ir. Hot jazz goes great wirh
· u >l kt a r1 ..... ind hors d 'oeu v.rc .
Le jazz qucuccr, fe antrmg Judi Lorit k,
performs each Tucsd(ly th rough Saturday
evening, from 5:00 p.m. until 9:00 p.m.
EX'clusivdy ~t ( .afc Flclirt. The newest lffl'f
... pot in Newport Beach.
Ni ~
MERJDIEN
HOTEL MERIDIEN NEWPORT BEA H
4~ M.1{ Arthur Blv.J f\.c"'-P"" fh .1rh C A 91660, (714) '476 2001
?kw 1;elle ~ & . RU FF.ELL'S auto insurance fraud got so many takers they had to expand, and authont1cs say """""' e~ the experience indicates Some 25 percent of the city's st~len C3! reports are
Cnist Newport or Lone Beach fraudulent. Authorities on Monday char$cd 122 ~ople ~including a ba~cr.
Harbors aboard 136' ship. UPHOLSTERY, llC. a police officer. accountants and housewives -with ma_al fraud or consp~cy
-150 sues ts mamun -hr Tht llnt OI y,.. Life as a result of what police, the FBI and the U.S. attorney said was the l~t sting
1'22 HAUOa Bl.VI> .. COSTA 111£SA -S41-llS6 operation of its rrind in U.S. history. Th~ task ~orce that set up the fake chop '.f 241-7500 shop in Brooklyn received 142 vch1cles, 1ncludang BMWs, Merccdes.-Bcnzcs,
A GIFT OF A LIFETIME
ICE SKA TING LESSONS
1/2 Price Sale
•4000 for 13 Weeks
Del...oreans and a $50,000 Porsche.The owners reported the cars stolen to
colJcct insurance money, authoritJes said.
· Tur~ey prices climb this holiday
COLLEGE STATION. Texas -Turkey P.roduction is down nationwide
and the popular birds, particularly hen~. arc 10 sbo~ supply .. B_ut a po~ltry
marketing expert says finding a bird suitable for Chn~!f1U d1nani woo t be
difficult. Consumers, will. however, pay more for the pry vilCJC of ~Ung turkey.
Bill C.awley, a marketing expert at Texas A~M University, said Monday.
Prices through August were 45 cents per pound an 1984, compared to 35.2 cents
through August in J 983, Cawley said.
' CALIFORN IA
...._ -~ -....__
Bonanno tried to help Domlnelll
• SAN DI EGO -Joseph Bonanno Jr .. son of a reputed ~afia leader, says
he could have obtained a multimillion dollar loan to bail out bankrupt
financier J. David Dominelli. but Dominelli failed to produce the re(!uired
paperwork. Bonanno's comments came in an interview with the San Diego ~~__........;..;._..,._....;..._~'--"--'-----------------1· Union after his arrajgnment in federal court Monday on charges ofsellang
cocaine. His father is Joseph "Joe Bananas" Bonanno Sr., reportedly the
retired leader ofan organized crime ring. Bonanno, 39. said he and busmess
panner Jerome Gatto were _going to set up a S 125 mi!lion ven~ure capital trust
for DominelU so the financier could pay b.1ck J. DaVJd &. Co. mvestors. ~OS(
investors claim they lost more than $60 million in J. David&. Co., which folded
earlier this year. Dominelli, 43, subsequently was jailed on charges of fraud.
I
(\NOIL\MO. coIDIDits to
Traveling Light in 1985
and b eyond.
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lhl' Ill'\\' Traveling Light
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compl<'l(' rn ngc of
ANDIAMO lightweight,
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111 1985 and beyond.
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~outh (.011111 Plaza '13:JJ '°'<1Ulh Br11>1<1I, Costa Mesa. CA !l2fi26 (71415."i?-1263
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Energy sa ven to get checks
SACRAMENTO-The ead yapplicants for the Home Energy Assistance
Provam who filled out Lheir forms nght the first time will get checks before
Chnstmas. The state Office of Economic Opponunity said Monday the early
checks are being mailed early this week to 207,000 low-income households out
of the 550.000 expected to qualify. The rest are to go out ~arty next year. The
aid, covered by federal funds, averages about S 128 per hou~hold for a I 2-
montb period, and ran~es from $40 to about $400 dependmg on level of
poverty, primary fuel ut11i2cd , weather patterns and other factors.
State'• murder toll drop•
SACRAMENTO -Fewer people were murdered in c.atifomta last year,
but the rate remains higher than it was a decade a~o. says the state attorney
general. Monday's report, "Homicide in Califo_~ 1983," also noted that
nearly 70 percent of victims and murderers kne'Weach other, guns were the
most popular weapons. and blacks and males had a greater chanc~ of being
rrilled. There were 2,640 victims of willful homicide during 1983, the report
-said, for11rate-of1 0.S per 100,000 population-. That wuirdrop of 5 percent in
numbers and 6.2 percent in rate from the 2,778 homicides and 11.2 per 100,000
rate of I 973.
Reagan-Bu•h -It'• official
SACRAMENTO -Califomia·s 47 Electoral College memben have
voted as expected for Ronald Reagan for president and George Bush for vioc
president. "l think you'll all be pleased to know the 47 electors in c.atifomia
have all cast their votes for President Ronald Reagan," Gov. George
Dcukmcjian announced Monday after the formal balloting in the state
Assembly chambers.
WORLD
OPEC oU cutback• urged
GEN£V A, Switzerland-An OPEC committee recommended today that
the can.cl continue production cutbacks adopted seven weeks ago in an aucmpt
to shore up oil prices and that OPEC caJI for an end to cheating on its quotas.
The renewed call for restraint came u analysts were expressing skepticism
about OPECs ability to succ.essfully defend its official prioe of$29 a barrel for
Arabian Light crude oil, its benchmark blend.
21 .eateaced In V1etnam
HO CH I MINH CITY, Viclnam -The biaestsubversion tnaJ here since
North Vietnam conquered the south in t 97.S ended today when 21 men were
given sentences ranaina from death to eiabt years in prison for allegedly
plottin& to topple the Communist aovemment .
The defendants, all Victnamete. wcrcaocused ofcapionaac and treason. tn
the trial, which bqan on Frida)', the defendants were accused of plannina
disruptive terror attacks on specific taraets in Ho Chi Minh City inclµdioa the
murder or kidnas>pin& of French and Soviet consular offi ciafa in 'hopes of
exerting a "stron_g 1mpact on world opinion."
Ic_#and W'Oman caa'tjola luubaJJd_
SAN DIEOO -A woman false!¥ accused of particil*ina in a drua
smuglin,opcration in Iceland is btil'f(preventcd ftom rejolnina her husband ~
1n the United States, accordina to an auomey repreaentina the couple. Salome
Mendler, 29. has been playina a wa.hin1 pme with Icelandic and U.S. officlalt
ever sinoc'beina amsted on Nov. '3, 1981i after she was implicated in the
smugling operation. Althouah Mn. Mend er was c:leared of all ~ &bi s ~~he •.till is ~ins ~fu.ed r;:~to the U.S., her attorney, Eu_&enc , •id. She tt tepanted thftbend, Jdftey Mendler. JO; a carpcnt.er from Oceanside.
FoartJJ aanl tJu6et lllt 1a Gall
MANAMA. Bahnin -lf'llQ Mid today that its jet fishtcn" attacked 1
"la.rlc naval taraiet .. south of I~'• KJws lllaftd od terminal, the fourth
stnffb,t day it has claimed s&qj a raid on ~n Oulf thippina, Maritime
offidalt in the rqion uid they no Independent confirmation that any
tanker or f'teipier 1n the auJf wu attacked today. An Iraqi military apok_etman
in Blilhdld, readfo11 communique over the stale l'lldlO, aid tht tareet was
·•accuratetr. hit .. but ditcloted no further details. The lam .. ,araic naval Witt.••
in Iraqi military parlance. utullly refers to an oil tanker ..
--
-. When I accepted the position
of Chairman and Chief Execu-
tive Officer of Americm Saving.c;
last August. it was the most dif-
firult period in the company ·s
99-vear historv. , ' We faced a crisis in con -
sumer confidence. which led to
deposit withdmwals of S6.8
billion. But American Savin~
' had the strength to meet ffiat
challenge. immediately honor-
i.ng every request for with
drawitls hv our customers.
'Still , it w'~~ ohvious chm1ges
were called for.
A CHANGE IN
MANAGEMENT DlREC1lON ..
''
_KJ_ey facts.
FCAIA~IERICA:\ SA\'l~C~
~ET PROflT of. I J 1111/li1111 i11 /btrd l/Utl/'/1•1· /'JS-1 Throughout this period
ASSETS an· -': U -1 /nl/1u11 tb<• bt,f.!bt•.,·tjur <111r of mmsition. we never
\(f/.'111,1.!.S {(.\SI )('{(l/llJI/ h I --'------------stopped making ome o<ms. LOA~ Fl ·~rn~c;s 14 ,·18 IN/11011 d11m1g thmt
Th e first step in putting
,11111rtc·1: t'JS-1 In fact. during the third quar-
~~ P.-:'1-. f-) E-P<-l!i~-T-gt-111-,,, -of_s_1 ,-, 1J-t11-101-11-11-t x-,, >bt-,,. -ter. American Sarin!!,~ funded
almost S3 billion in loans.
to rem~tin one of the nation ·s
largest mo~lenders.
the organization hack on ·
course was establishing a new
management cHrection for
American Savings and its parent
company, FinandaJ Corporation
of America .
The situation demanded
intelligent , prudent husiness
practices and controlled growth ,
The first thing we did W<L) cut
non esscnti~tl expenses to make
our operations more effi cient -
without sacrificing our high
level of u1stomer serYice.
DEAIJ G WITH
PROBLEM LOA S.
Ameriam Savings · rapid
growth in the last few yt11rs h<L)
resulted in a significant number
of prohlem lo~ms. A$ of Septem-
her 30. 1984, we increased our
rese rves for cmticipate<l lrnm
losses hy 44.0 'X, to S88 .. ~0
million , one of the highesL
Americ~m Sav in!!,< parent com
pcu1y. Fin~mciaJ Corpomtion of
Amt'rica . reported a con~oli
-tlatl'<l net profit of S l.2 million .
And in October. 'we enjo~ e<l a
net deposit gain of S l billion.
Despite th e problems we
fac..:ed. American Savings remains
the nation ·s largest savings and
loan ;L"sociation. with over S.)~
hill ion in asset". And that ·s :L"
much a tribute to our new man
agement priorities ~L) it is to the
products and services we· ve pro-
vi ded our customers since 1885.
IT TOOK
A TEAM EFFORT.
The rebound of our com-
pm1y. is a direct result of out-
standing tem11work ~tween
our employees. th e investment
com·ml'1nity and government
regufators -partiu1 larl y
the Federal I lame I.mm
Proriding home loans in
C~tlifon1ia reflects our business
philosophy of hacking customer
deposiLc; primarily with residen-
liitl real estate here in the Cnital
States. and not overseas.
· That ·s smart for us. Arni for
ou r customers.
~1Y MONEY
IS WITH AMERJCAN .
The company ·s performance
in a very ad\'erse-enYironment
clearly demonstrates its funda -
mental strengths. I ~lieYe in
An~erican Saving5. its people.
products and services. And
ohviously so do CalifornimJs
like you. Because every day.
more and more people
are saying, ··My money
is with Am rican:·
AMERICAN-
SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
\ ~ lt\IU llt Fl\.\ \C l\1 I llkl'llk\flO\ hf '\lfklC \
·-
OtanQe CoMt DAILY PILOT /Tueeday, Oecemb« 11, 1984
1.
I
. . .
011 companies deny price fixing Tracking The Prime
Firms accused of contrtvtn oil sho~es
o, costtn consumers millions
LOS ANGELES (AP) -M~Ot oil
companies say there·s no proof for
alltpt1ons made in coun documents
that they acted "es a sina)e fraternity"
to prop up price$, costin1 consumers
hundreds of millions of dollars.
The estimated I million docu-
ments arepart of a 10-year-old federal
lawsujt filed by Cahfom11 and other
states qainst several companies.
aocustnJ them of riafing pnccs,
contriving shortages dunng the 197 3
Arab 011 embarao, and underpricma
crude oil taken from public tidelands.
"The industry operated ... as a
single fratema~organization." a Cali-
fom11 attorney gener11l said an one
lca<tl bnd, the Wall treet Joumnl
rtponcd Monday. Information swap-
pma wauocommon that the tndustrr,
.acted asaf tt were "a analc com~ny, '
the umdentJficd pro~utor stud.
Tht newspaper ~ued two years ago
to obtafo he documena
1·hecompan1essa1d 1n aJotnt filing.
"Never have charges of ~uch senous-
ness been supp()rtcd by ~ little." It
said the phuntiffs did not document
"any direct proof of con~p1ratonal
agrttment\ or und1:rsuandJn~."
( allfornia, Ar1wna. Oreaon.
Wa~htnjton and Flondn arc suang
Mobil Corp . (. hevron Corp .. Texaco
Inc. Unocal Corp., Euon orp ..
hell 011 C'o., Atlantic R1chfteld Co.,
Ph1lhp11 Petroleum Corp. and
C'hcvron'11 Gulf01l subsidiary.
Gorbachev: It's U.S. move
for successful arms talks
U.S. District Judae Wilham Gray
initially ordered the documents seal-
ed a,t the tndustry's request to protect
trade secrets. But on Monday. he
signed three orders unsealing most of
them aner lhc 9th U.S. Circuit Coun
of Appeals upheld his decision, and
the U.S. Supreme Coun declined to
block it.
On Thursday, Arco agreed to pay
$22.5 million to settle a section of the
suit brought m 1975 by CaJifomia on
behalf o( the City of long Beach.
chariing it with conspiring with
Mobil, Chevron, Texaco, Unocal,
Exxon and Shell to underprice crude
from public tidelands.
Monday 's drop to 10.75 percent
marked the first time since late
1983 that the prime rate has
been below 11 percent
I
LONDON (AP) -Vis1t1na
Kremlin leader Mikhail S.
Gorbachev wd today the Soviet
Un.ion is prepared to take the "most
radical measures" in upc~•mina arms
talks with the United Sta es in order
to limit and eventuaJI eliminate
nuclear wcap()ns.
"It is now up to the United States to
make a move, to take this time a
realistic staf'ld which would make for
effective negotiations." he told Brit-
ish members of Parliament during a
visit to the House of Commons.
preventi ng an anns ra~ m space.
Referring to a preliminary round of
arms talks m Geneva Jan. 7-8
between the United States and the
Soviet Union. Gorbachev said they
would "embrace the qudtton of non-
militarization of space and the ques-
tions of reducing nuclear arms, both
strategic and medium-range" and
should be "considered and resolved
io their interconnection."
He said the Soviet Union "is
prepared to seek and work out the
most radical measures on aJI these
issues, measures which would help
advance towards complete prohibi-
tion and eventual elimination of
nuclear wcap()ns."
today, the fourth da} ot his weel.-long
v1s1t. was shorn of the ant1-Amencan
invective which charactenzed fre-
quent Soviet pronouncements in the
past
He said that the Moscow leadership
"stands for forthnght and honest
talks," adding: "We arc read)' to $0
here as far as our Western partners 1n
the talks. Naturally enough, equallt~
and equal security shall underlie an}
agreements in this field."
The rest of the su11 has not been
resolved
Arco Vice President Francis
McCormack said the company set-
tled in order to save time and costs
but insisted the allegations wer~
"w11hout ment."
25
20
15
10
5
His S(>Cecb followed a morning of
sightseeing during which Gorbacbev1 a member of the Soviet Politburo ana
a possible successor to President
Konstantin U. Chernenko, paid a
visit to a church -London's historic
Westminster Abbey.
In a generally conciJiatory speech
to the lawmakers,. Gorbachev
stressed as he has be1orc during his
visit here the "key imPortance'' of
The Krcmlfo has underscored the
imPortancc of Gorbachcv's vJSit with
extensive coverage, including his
meetings with Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher and Foreign Sec-
retary Sir Geoffrey Howe.
Gorbachev's speech to Parliament
In a bnefapparent reference to the
United States1 Gorbache' said Mos-
cow "rememocrs perfectly the par-
ticular words and deeds which
created the climate of mistrust and
hostility and destabilized the inter-
national situation ... But it is not to
pique anyone that I am reminding
you about that today."
He said the Soviet goal was "a JOlnt
scttJement" of such issues as prevent-
ioi war, stopping the arms race.
scttline existing conflicts, averting
-:::======-=-=====:--:-i~============:::i potential cnscs and "creattng an l ""•••••••••••llll mtemat1onal atmosphere which
Gray ordered some documents
kept under seal, including long-range
<:0mpany plans, internal manuals and
material considered sensitive to
foreign governments. such as a Jan.
25. 1972, rePort on negotiations
between the Organization of Pet-
roleum ExPonin& Countries and oil
company representatives.
Among the unsealed documents
was testimony by Chevron marketi.ng
official Theodore Wellman. who said
that as early as the 19 50s, executives
from competing companies regularly
met to excbanae pricing information
but kept no records of such meetings
.and set up an untraceable network of
mutual contacts.
Income, spending
up, but prime down
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would enable each country to concen-
trate its attention and resources on
settling its own problems."
He added, "Show me a country
which bas no such problems. h
Gorbachev said if Britain "adheres
to this linc1 we shall be glad to
cooperate wt th her."
After the U.S. Supreme Coun
outlawed such meetings in 1969. oil
companies switched to a less djrect
method of exchanaing data. accord-
ing to internal company memos.
By Tbe Associated Pre11
Americans· personal mcome rose
0. 7 percent in November and con-
sumer spending rose even faster, the
Commerce Department said today.
But a separate Commerce Ocpan-
rnent report today said housing
r---------------,-,--------------~ I "~ '[ 5'9 s l STORE COUPON "~ I $1150 2 s ~ s l STORE COUPON *11150 I ,...., 7POFF TWO PACKS ,...., .a-st.SO OFF A CARTON Y_a-
1 OF CENTURY KING SIZE OR 100'$ FILTERS OR LIGHTS I · OF CENTURY KING SIZE OR 100'$ FILTERS OR LIGHTS I
TElllS IJ CIU'lll lfm CllllUB CA11TD11 Qiuoor1 gooe1 r1'tv ~ ~ S¥els1 soeot'80 D11cnaseo
• tannOI De .vi<;'erfed C. l!llCMnQed '°' ~ coupo1S y~ musl pay~
saies taxes PaltKJOil!t011111 llll5 or~ is a1 llil' ~ al Ifie retatilJ
~ Of~ OO'ilS lltlll1 b'f m.3'>1;laciuttf
lMT OllE CIU'lll 19 anlU #10 T1I aaEIS tl 'tlW IJ NI 111 llJB
QI RI USE II a.iATDI Wl'lll #ff OTlO ~ IJffl
I aJISUllO r.AllfOll Cotffl ptJ ~ 'V HN'< tJfaoO ~~K(ll< 11.M Wcii.l'.ied
1 r.ao•_,, Ile trans•er1ed / • ,, t PIQl:(l ~ otN'! ca..tnl'> v~ '".ti.'~ 1w.r ~ ..
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lJllT 111£ CUIJI rel aJISUMBI MIO T1I SIQ(DS tl YENIS IJ AGf. l.i ll.09
~ ta•P< l>vtlf•pa111Y r r• ,,r,-••• K. rt tt ~ '" "• t ,,. •pt• P< f>Jl (f\TI In
'
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l(TAlEJIS #ID MITlCllllEJ a.ENllGIOl$U (XVy If' ?)t lf'tl"(,i-Sl'C 1.« I •-:Jl>J!'
..._ ___ ..., >1C "" 'l•'!ll•~~'tu!•ll:!M..,10'0~....,,RJ!:p~l~~CXlCDlll!ITT'S
~ ...... ,...
..------'
I
I
I
T5851
w:..u~':,., '~'eer-t ')<:I V ... 1 " '< V....-• ,tu ~'{J!ICJI Cenleo PO &• »:Xl ,,~ 1 ~150 .,I . ~ W1" 1,... ..•• r, I ~ ., COOP(lj EXPNTD DATE FtBMJMY t8 1985
L Nol avaolible on 111 areas
Sl~ I T5852 -----------------
SA\1E
CE
WAY ON
SAVE
EVERY DAY
Century ghes you 25 ext:t1' elgarettes
per earton ... at no extra eost:
0 u
0 u u ~
0 ,.. ,,,
0 ..J 0 ~ ... CIC ..,
ri
I 0
•Based on suggested retail ~
vertUS other natlonal 200 ~arette
carton count name brands
Not •v•Ul•t>le 1n ell areaa
LIGHTS 10 mg "ter". 0 8 mg lllCOtlne. LIGHTS IOO's 12 mg "tar~ 0 9 mg ntco11ne.
FILTER IS mg -1a(. 11 mQ nrcot1ne, FILTER 100'5 16 mg "tar". 1 2 mg nicottne, IY per cioarana by rTC method
I
Warning The Surgeon General Has Determined •
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
J
I
construction starts sltpped 0. 7 per-
cent last month to the lowest rate
since December 1982. However. a
building trade group . said lower
interest rat~ would help slow the
decline in construction.
Meanwhile, the prime lending rate
fell one-half percentage point to 10. 75
percent at Manufacturers Hanover
Trust Co .. the nation's fourth -largest
bank. The cut Mo nday lefi the key
business borrowing rate at the lowest
level since the 10.5 percent of early
August 1983.
In today's repon on personal
income. the Commerce Department
also said consumer spending rose 0. 9
percent in November. rebounding
from a 0.2 percent decltne in October
In the other rcp()rt. it said new
houstng was started at a seasonall}"
adjusted annual rate of 1.53 m1llton
units last month, the lowest since the
1.3 m1lhon of December 1982. when
the economy was JUSt emerging from
a steep recession.
Michael Sum1chrast. chief econ-
omist of the Nattonal Association of
Home Builders ..aid that despite the
slowdown tn the second half of the
year. he expected housing construc-
tt0n 1n 1984 would reach I , 74 million
units. a shght gain on the 1.7 m1llton
units cr<·cted 1n I 983 He said falling
interest rates had improved the
outlook for 1985.
Most big bankc. curren t!~ have an
11 .25 percent pnme rate. No. 2
Citibank quotes an 11 .5 percent
prime .
Schroeder
suffered
3strokes
LOUI VILLE. Ky . (A P)-Carol-
in~ children and a wheelchair nde
bnghtened William ~hro«ler"s
spirits. but his doctors and fam1lv
worried about stroke damage that let't
the an1fic1al heart recipient having
trouble recognizing his family and
knowin$ the day.
A bratn specialist said Monday that
new tests showed the 52-year-old
Jasper, Ind., man suffered three small
strokes rather than the one detected
on Thur<1day, and a psychiatmt
diagnosed Schroeder as depressed.
Schroeder was mo~cd Monday
from his room in the intensive care
unit to a private room "so his family
can be with him more and also as son
of a psychological boost for him,"
said Dr. Allan M. Lansing.
The neurologist. Dr. Gary Fox, saJd
complete recovery is possible, "but he
may always have some difficulty. I
don't know how much recovery he
will get.''
Lansing. chairman and medical
director of Humana Heart lnstttute
International, said the memory prob-
lems alone would not prevent
Schroeder from leaving the hospital 1f
he otherwise recovered from the Nov.
25 implantation of his plastic.and-
metal bean.
Tests later in the week will try to
pinpoint the cause of the strokes that
damaged both sides of Schroeder's
brain, Lansing said.
Family members were gl ad
Schroeder "looks so much better "
but were conoemed because "he still
·nroHhe personality tha't c WDn
wctk ago." he said.
---=.___;;;..._.,;;==;;;.._-----I
----------~~~= .... ~-~
Sen. Bergeson
hits the beach
. . ~late Sena~or Marian Bergeson has hit the beach like a
d1v1s1on.ofMannes at the start of her first term. One of only two
women in the Senate,. Bergeson was elected by acclamation to
the key party le~dersh1p post of Republican whip.
But more important lo the coastal constituents in her
sprawling 37tp Distrj.ct, Bergeson 1s drafting legislation that
wo~ld protect beach ctties from liability in ocean-related injury
accidents.
The. J?roliferation of such suits and the inevitability of
n:t~lti--n:ttlhon-dollar awards literally threatens the way of life in
c111es hke Newport Beach. Laguna Beach and Huntington
Beach. A yo.ung ~an who was paraly1cd by a neck injury suffered
when he dived into the surf. recently won $6 million from
N~WJ?Ort Be~ch. T~e award was followed almost immediately by
a similar claim against Laguna Beach -this one for $25 million.
. As long as .people take to the ocean for recreation, injuries
will occur. But 1f otherwise-responsible cities can be considered
irresponsible and. therefore, legally liable fo r these injuries. they
will be forced to take actions to limit beach access. Or. they will
go bankrupt.
Berseson's bill would remove a city from liability for factors
beyond its control while allowing it to provide safety services
like lifeguards. Those safety services have, somehow, come to be
interpreted as an admission of responsibility for anything that
occurs from the beach west.
It will provide a balance between the nghts oft he victim and
the rights of the public tfiat presentl y is absent.
1
: LETTERS
~ --=--=---
Sherlff-corbner def ends
double hat that he wears
To the &11tor: chosen to administer that otlice.
Your editonal about the shcnff. would there not be n greater chance
coroner issue. appearing on Dec. 5. 1s for a conflict of interest to develop? In
replete with errors. Ifs important almost any pos'lible structure, the
your readers. as c1l1Lens and ta'-po1en11al for conflict in competing
payers. rece1 ve accurate information interest exists.
about the structure and functioning of What )OU presently have in Orange
county government. panicularl} as 1l < ount} I!> a VCI) workable. pro-
involves law enforcement. fes!>1onnl. ob1ective and honest o ffice
I'm surprised 10 find that the cnect1vel} carry1n& out its rcsponsi·
people who arc the most cnt1cal about b1lit} to the public. U nfortunate!).
the corofter's office: seem to kno" \oualsohave1nOrange\ountysome
ve11 little about it. Not one ol them cnucs "ho. without an\ defin111ve
has asked me about the methods. knowledge of "'hat the Coroner's
techniques, and afeguards which we Offile does. assume the worst because
' employ to assure an ho ncc;t and someone raises an issue.
objective finding in 1a1I deaths and You reported that a "second
ofli cer-invqlved deaths We go to opinion" 1n the C urt1s Cupel) casl·
great lengths to a void C\en the indicates Mr Cuper} "as murdered.
slightest poss1h1lil} of a rnnll1ct of 'I ou reported that the dec1s1on was
interest. ba')Cd o n scratlhes and hru1ses found
fhe media portrayal nl the cor· on 'arious part" nf Mr. C upel") ·~
onl•r's dutll'S. "h1ch haH' been h(>th In fact. Dr 'l a tar. "ho wa.,
enhanced b' the tclc' 1s1on \ho\\ hirnl b} ~fr ( upa' ·., father da1m..,
.. Quine)." ha' no ha-;1s in tact '1.fJm hl ha-.cs h1~ o pin111n' on thl· con-
peoplc think the rnrnm·r 1'>,JU'>I like J111on of the h\CHd bone in thl·
Quine} anJ decides not unh tht• dtTra\nf'> ncll..
rausl' of death hut \\ho·, re'lpun-.1blc Tht· h\oid bonl· 1n Mr. Cuper)·'>
for 11. On telc\ 1s1on thl' coroner 1o; neck "as not hrokcn pnor to tht•
always the main character 1n tht· autop'>) It was broken by Dr. Fisher
prosecution of the .. suspect·· In n.·al during the au top~) Dr Fisher 1s a
hfe. this is s1mpl) not true' private foren~u .. pathologi">t hired b)
tatc law assigns four func11l'>n'> to a the rnroner to conduct the au lops)
coroner: He C'ilabhshes the medical The breaking of this bone 1s a
cause o f death, determine'> thl' t1mc ol ffil'd1call} sound procedure which
death. 1den11fies the detcased and allows the doctor to funher examrnc
classifies the death into one nl ti' e thr lal) n'\. In la) man's terms th!\
cate&oncs. The!tc categoric'> are mcans the breal.. "as made from the
u1c1dc. accident. natural hom1L 1de IN~IDE OUT. NOT from the outside
o r undetermined If the death 1<> in J'> would happen in a manual
class11icd as a homicide. thl' dl'tmt '..trangulat1on Thi~ cnure proof of a
attorney decides whether or not a tracture after death is SUJ:!pOrted b)
criminal violation has cx·curn·d photographic eVldcnL'C. Dr. Yatar
In cases involving a1aJ1 death or an "a' full) a ppnscd of these facts prior
officer-involved death. the c.l1'>tnct to h1., e'amina11on of the photo-
attorney conducts a separatt' in-graph\ and ti ssue
vestlgalion The grand JUI") rc\ 1t·ws Your editorial also refers to the
the case in detail. Both tht• d1'itnct 'ihooting death of Deanna Slender in
attorney and member.; of the grand the Tustin area b) a dl·put) sheriff
JUIJ' arc present at a tr' 1cw of the On No' 21 the Coroner's Office
coroner's findings. lf:..a nothl·r police cln!>,ilied the death a'> a hom1c1de. ~s
agcnq 1o; involved. the) rnnduct <In I pointed out earlier. 1l 1s the district
independent 1m e-;11ga11on .ind Jrt· attorne) ·s respons1h1hl} to determine
also present at the coroner'<> rev1e\\. wht>tht:t a ct1m1n<1l \10lat1on wa'>
c1entitic and medical finding'> art• in'oheJ We fail to sec how de·
checked and rl't her ked h' thoc,l' term 1 n.it tnn of t hl' l la~s1 fie a lion nt
people performing the autup\\ ~l' lka1h 1n aO\ \\.j\ hampered a detcn-
frcquently will send our tind1ng\ to Jani\ la~
1 other coroners in the state for 'enli-'ou further point to another 1nl1-
\
cat1on. We have made ll a pran1cc in dent 1m oh ingfS}<:h1atnc record<> as
these types of situations tn have an example o con01ct of inte rest
laboratory findings confirmed b> "1th1n the sheriff-coroner office. The
o;omc oft he best forensic laborjtoncs a' nilab1ht} of tho e records arc at
in the United Sl:ltes. in~ludmg the issue regnrdle s of the placement
FBI laboratory in Wa hington. D (. w1th1n county go"crnment ol the
Our procedure'\ and findings arc toroner's office
videotaped and photographl'd. Thr · I did not order dcputt~ to o;e1Lc
tapes. photograph~ and 1nve'lt1gat1 vc P'>\chrntm: reports. A ~n1or staff
reports have always been made member o btained those repons and
available to nn) public agency ~1th a gave them to the coroner in-
legal right to review such records H'lllgalor., The: issue of whether or
The medical doctors who aetuall) not we·rc entitled to such records •~
perform the autopsies are not coroner nov. hcfore the court. The manner in
er:nployees. They arc private. forens1t' which we obtained those records wai.
pathologists \\.ho contract with the wrong and we corrected that error
county to pro' 1dc a service and to v.llhin JO minutes. Our mistak<.• 1s not
render their independent. e'pcr1 nov. nor has 11 ever been germnne to
o pinions as to the medical c11u~ of the main issue but 1t hnc; scrv~ 3!> ••
death. ham for media hype
You may not be aware thul nine Thc'ie arc not simple issues and 1t
people died in Orange C'ount} la t take., 'o me time to detail the vanou
year from what the mcdu:al pro· a'ipcct<. of these t:asc~ I appreciate the
fess1on-cal . "ml'dltnl m1\adv~ anh:reo,l 5hown b} }Our edit.ori.a.1.but ll
turc'i ... To you and me that mean concerns me that }Ou t·all for a tud)
'°meoned1ed wh1lcundergoinai.omc 10 dNcrm1nc th._ fact<. but hope 1t
type of mcdiC:ll treatmcnt which went re'iulto; in ll restructure of th1 office.
awry. Additio nall)'. many people Aren't you really ~n~mg. "Go ahead
commit u1c1dc wh1k confined 1n :mdgetlhe fact'ihuth<'nlrcady mt1de
mental health lac1ht1cs. If a ~P<Anlll' up m:r mind ..
coroner's office v.crc: e tuhh\hcd and
a medical health pro ~1onal \\Cre -
OAANOE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Sohw•rt1 Ill
f' r
Frenk Zlnl
• • r t•
Tom Telt
Craig &Mff
[ O'
Oran90 Coet1 DAIL v PILOT ITuaday, o.c.mw 11. ~"" A7
.. Billion are pour.e.d lntoantl·poverty pre>gram -enough to wlpeout
poverty altogether If tlJe government Imply malled chec1c to all
the poor In f ead of fllterln the money through the bureaucraCJc
labyrinth ...
JACK AJO>Sll80N
cola•otet
Taxes
simply
too easy
to raise
Ie s just too taxing ------to cut spending, so
Despite potential abuses,
absentee vote here to stay
Congress ups ante
WASHINGTON -One of the
1rrevers1ble c urrents I've noticed
dunng 38 years of covenng Washing-
ton is the ballooning of the federal
budget almost beyond control or
comprehenuon.
The cost of paying. housing. equ1~
ping and pensioning the federaJ
burc~ucracy has become truly flab-
bergasting.
Governor unlikely
to touch a system
assisting his party
Almo'lt 900,000 Cali fornia voters
cast their ballots before elcct1on da)
this fall. \ome 'oting as much as three
weeks earl\
The head start "a~ pcrfectl) legal.
even 1f 11 wac; orchc<,tratcd b) can-
didates and worked most I~ to benefit
one part)
For the earl) ballots were:
absentee\. C\ en though most of those
who cast them v.eren 't actual I\
absent. Under a 6-)ear·old state la"··
absentee voters don·1 haH· to give a
reason when they ask to vote early. as
the\ do in 43 other talcs.
Republicans v.ere the li~t to d•!>·
cover the poltucal potenual of the
eas)-ab-;cntee la". drowning Los
-\ngcles Mayor Tom Bradley in a
cascade of 500.000 abscntre votes for
Go". George Deul..me11an 1n 198~
Brad le} at tuall~ "'on on election da).
but -the l'arl) birds too~ his worm
3\1.a).
~nd Rcpubhcan'i thd their tnck
again 1h1c; }'Car. generating about two·
th1rd'i ofthl' fall abscntl'l' \Ole
The (,cw ha-. thl' ab,l·ntec ad' .in-
tagc bl·l.au~ m 'tatt'\\ 1de anJ na·
t1onal l'ampa1gns u<;uall\ ha' eat lcac,t
JO percent more munn than their
Democratll' counterpart). That'!i im-
portant In the absentee em>n because
THOMAS
ELIAS
it's an eitpens1\C electoral tactic
Consider the cost for putting
absentee ballot apphcauons in the
hands of this year's votc·b~-ma1l
participants ince pollucal direct
mail usuall} produces less than a 20
percent return. the GOP this fall had
to send out about 3 m1lhon ballot
apphcauons to produce its 700 ()()()..
odd mail votes.
Then there·., the printing co\l. paid
b} whoever "ants to '>end out
apphcauonc, en masse.
But mone' and the resulting o ne·
sidedness o( the ..,ote is onh one
potential problt:m \lollh the ncwl}·
fashionable absentee S) stem
C'omider some others:
•Coercion . ...,o one has pro" en that
this ocl·urred in the last t\lo O general
elecuons But \Omc emplO\ers did
hold "ballot-m.1rking .. pa rues "hen.·
emplo~ccs "l'rt• encouraged to 'ote
togl•ther -and to 'ote the 'amc "a~
fht' potentwl for abuse b' l'mplo}er,.
IJbor union~ and othrr groups I'>
ob\ IOU'>
•Fraud If dl·ad peoplt• 1n ( h1c.1go
ha\I.' long Ocl'n l..nu'' n to 'ote. "b}
not here'' When 'oters d on't ha' e to
'>how up anJ sign 1n at thl" poll'>. who
can ever kno"' whether the voter
himself or someone else actually cast
a ballot''
•Lack of information The earliest
of this )ear's earl} bird voters sent in
ballots before the last of the prcs1den-
t1al debates. before the candidates'
last minute swings through California
and before the last week's advertising
avalanches. If a candidate had col-
lapsed or died in the cam pa1gn 's final
da,s. might not some \Oters ha"e
wished the\ could have their ballots
back.., ·
ome foreign countnes arc so
conct."rned about the potential for
uninformed \Ollng that the} ban all
absentee \Ollng. no matter what the
e'cuse .\ \Oler who won't go to the
polls. or can't v.a1t long enough to
hear the candidates out. the} reaso~.
'>houldn't e'en be counted.
All those dra" hacl..s. both real and
potential. seem to point to .... ard a
need for change in the absentee ballot
la"' But don't hold "our breath
\\a1t1ng for ll ·
frue. Democrat\ in the Leg.1slature
nre mindful of ho\\ one-sided the
absent~ 'ote has become .\nd lhl'\
might l''en tr) to change the law ·
But "h~ should DeukmeJ1an sign
an} c,uch la"' as long as toda} 's s~ stem
wort..\ 'iO "'ell Im him and his part~''
~ h1r h mean' th.ii abuses. potl·n-
t1J I Jhu\Cs and .111 tht· big ab~.'ntee
~•Ill I'> hl'fl' II \IJ\ .\nd that \l'f\
11 1..ch "ill '>Ul l m1•'>I lOO \en1enu:.
m1ndnl <. a hforniJ n.., JU'>t line
Tbomas Elias 1s a Santa Moalca-
bast>d columnist on state issues.
Greetings for .Christmas
sometimes tough to take
In lhl· last Ii< da\\ the ( hnstma'>
card'> ha..,e bccn roiling m Most ol
them are a JO~ to rele1ve. You kno"
-the one<; that sa) "Mem
Christmas and Happ) New Year."
Those. of course. arc prelt} stan·
dard and heart.warming. coming as
the) do (rom long11me fnends "ho
want me to kno"" the\ 'illll loH' me
e..,cn though'lhe\ ha,cn·1 scen nw for
a whok n·ar.
Rut thl·n· .irt• ll\O other !..ind' 1h~11
come 1n lrom and ahout foll..., "1th
"hom l \l' had no l OOH'r\3t1on and
no commun1cat1on. (:,ampk "Dear
Mr Burroughs. I thought I ought It)
\Vnll' you and tell you about the death
of Beth~ Wilmarth. I saw you j u<1t
once.Just before Col Wilmarth died
You remember he had an ad-.canced
case oflaleral o;cleros1s and he wanted
very much to sec) ou before he died I
rode with Bette and her husband
when she drcWl' him up from Po"a\
to ~e )'OU J', e never forgotten 11
because you were o b' 1oush o;urh
good friends and I felt urc }OU would
want to know about Beue·s death
That wo a sad one. too. A lung cancer
had metasm ized throughout hl·r
body. Barbara Wallace ...
Sad. but kind It c;a"ed me from
scnd1na n cnrd to someone long since
gone.
WALTER
BURROUGHS
\\Ondcrlul '>l'hool \ear .rnd I lh•1u~h1
\OU \l.Ould \\;)01 Ill 1mn U\ 10 the
'Ptnl ol ( hrt \tma'. \\ llh J lll Ill rnu<o
u mtnbution to \lUr J l)~:\ 'l hllljr,h1p
lund rm surc )ou'll ngrl'l' then· 1.an
tx· no liner wa' lo rekhrate
Christmas than to t~nmhutl' to th('
operating fund of this fine '>Chool I'm
sure n "111 mat..l· ~our gr.ind.,on'
pwud of' ou ··
I thJok I h.n c told 'ou ho\.\. man'
..,ears ago. l \\M~ed for one ol the ~rl'a·t
Journalist<; of all times -faml'\
..\nderson \\ ood -and "role a
C hnstmas cdHorial for one of the
papers ht-sen ed. In 11 I made !>Ome
1n' 1d1ous commentsJbout the SahJ-
11on .\rm\ Santa Clauses on tht" trcet
comers. the Christmas advcrt1s1ng b>
the big department tor in Scattk .
pot..anc and Portland. and endetl the
cd1tonal .,..1th a sardonic "(hm tma'i
-Men; Chn stmas.''
Mr. Wood l'\"ad thec-Ouonal and :r;ct
II nc;1dc. A Y.CCk hater WC "'ere mat..ing
up ttur llltlnll~ 1t·11n lur tnl "fl'll..Jne
~~)kesman·Rl'' ll'"' the Portland Or·
egon1an. the '\c" \ ork Herald-
lnbunc and '>Offit' of the other papers
the Puget ~ound bureau \Cf\ ed He
picked up the l·d1tonal I had "ntten
and !k11d "Ho" atxlut th1\ <;our 1me"
Do \OU think th.tt\ rcalh the <,pint o f
C hn,tma, •··
l .1greed 11 ,,,1.,n·t \11 'h. 1lllnth
u1n,1gnl'd it 11' the rnund fik
I .1<.1\\Cl'!..J m1n1'1l·r tr11m .1, IHH1 h
n ll unt111~1,,n tl .1r~•ur gJ\l' J 1.111.. .11
.1 duti ti• "h11.h I t1o,:h1ni.: Th, 1111l
l h1 Rl'JI \k.inin~ ,11 l hr"tmJ-.. It
\\j\ J\ tine .1 d1,~·rt,l111•n .1, J h,t , 1
heard on the true mea ning t1I
( hr1'tma~
.\' I "a" h'>te ning tn 11 I rl'lalkd
tht ~iur 11m• · thJt \Ir \\ 1\\•J, .111d l
lud con'\1gnl·d tu the "a\td'J'kl'I \,
l d1J ~11 I tx·gan to rl·grct JU\t J httk
1hJt I had agre-cJ II' dump II
fhe Rt'' Peter \t Do n ""' gt•1t ing
to thr..anw point Pl"'ll 'l'h 1h.i1 I had
t>elJborcd nl'ttall' ch
I'm g•' mg the re' cn.•nd unh J little
credit ho.,.,,·,cr for he ltllt the insp1rJ·
t1on d1ret·th out ol the '-e"' 1 t'\l3·
mcnl I rather kt•l that that 1" the snn
of Chnstma-. me,'<lge ~,· ''U[lhl to
hear mort· fn~QU<'nth
\o ChnMma\ -\h'm l hrl\lnl,1'
and a Ha pf" l\l"" 'l l'·"
W•ll~r Burroagb" I tbt' Pilot'
fouadlnx pabll~ber
, The Penuigon. for example. seems
ro operate o n the pnna plc that
mass1' e 1.1;astc is an unavoidable cost
ofm1htary preparedness. Billions arc
poured into anti-povaty programs-
enough to wipe 01:91 poverty altogether
1f the government simply malled
checks to all the poor instead of
filtmng the money lt\rough the
bureaucratic labynnth.
Prior to the bureaucratic age. when
a government required operaung
funds. 11 had to fombly la} hands on
estates or invade and loot another
countr; Now the Internal Revenue
Service peaceably and effortlessly
perpetrates the same atr0C1l1es. It
quietly extracts S594 b1ll1on a year
from us. target~ through the mail. and
all "'e eomplatn about 1s the com-
pltcat1on of the form
So gentl} and prosa1call) does the
go,ernment pick our pockets that
members of C-ongre s hav~ found
taxauon the easiest soluuon to the
problems that conlront them To
finance their assorted schemes -
med1C'al larc. old -age care. da~ cart'.
prl'natal care (or 1f \OU arc '>O
dl'>Ptl~·d unl1m1tcd lrel' ahonio n'>l
-lht'\ l..t.rp gmng hJ1!.. tn tht• \.\l'lf
l 1intzrt•<;-;mcn ..trl' 11ttcn nc,u-
thelC'>!> ahout 1mrt1\lng ta\e'> and
prefrr tn postpone \Ul h unpkasanl·
ness untll thl' ne\t fcllo1.1;\ tcrm Thl'\
1n' Jnnbl~ spend more. therefore
than Internal Re,cnue takes in Th1'I
has produced a P1~e·c. Peak nauonal
dt•ht that ~eeps pu'>h1ng upward
The interest al one on the debt 1<,
e\P<'llt'd to surpas~ S 133 b1lhon
during th1~ fiscal \Car - a staggenng
sum that "'II constitute t"o-th1rds of
tht' drfiut The bigger the deficit. the
higher tht• debt. the higher the debt.
the greater the interest. the greater the
interest the bigger the deficit.
If the four deficus lorecast b\ the C00gr~'s1onal Budget Office tor thC'
second Rl'.'agan term occur as sched-
uled. the !-Carl) intcre<;t pa) ment will
reach S25U b1l hon and will then be on
a sclf-prupelhng track The debt will
automaucall) jump tens of h1lhon'
ealh \Cnr. mult1pl)ing on an ine\-
Mahle ~ hedule
l hl·n tht• t1mctahk ~I fo nh h\ thl'
i rracc < omm1S'it0n -"h1eh projrct\
ll1r thl 'l'Jr ~OOO an annual de-ti1.·1t 1•t
'-~ 1nll1nn and a puhht deht llt S 1'
IP 11•n -"1llbet·ome 1u\tama ttl'T •I
'1mpk J rt thmc11c f.3ch ta\paH'r°"
\h.lfl' ot th1c. ..1stronom1cal IOL' "''II ht.·
• I t-r -1xlO That's thl' 1nhcntancc "e
\\ ,1uld lea' c our children onh I 'I
'ca r' do" n the rond '
Tht• prc..,a1hng \\.o.t1.h1og1.oo w1
J1•m " that ta\es mu'il be ra1St.-d to
rt·<lult' lh<'detic1l M \ o"ne,penenl.'C
ha' tJught -rnll 1t ~ndcrson·-; la\.\ -
th.,t thl' outla~ "'II al"a's C\pand 111
atn,mmodatc the income
The li~t modl'm butt'au<Tnn c-on-
"'ted ol J handful ol underpaid
~lllh.1al' in the rrcnch c:oun lalt' In lhc
I ~th rentun ~n fl'\en~hh did the\
mult1ph that h\ the 18th n'.'ntul)
.llrnrd1ng tn the nukt• dt' Sa1nt-
\1m11n th<'rc "'ere !Hl.ll(l{) offil 1al\
in\ti h t•d merch in adm1n1'itenng thl'
\.alt ta\ '
In \·1mtemrorar\ .\menca then:
.ire mo~ than If\ m1lhon publ1l
..
~nother. h.'c;s kind -but wdcom<'
because' of the death newi. 1 hadn't
h~ard· "Yo ur old pal. m y bro1her. loc;1
h1 second leg to d1nbetc hui Janu·
al]. then liMl~ <ht'\! 1n .\ugust
McrT) Chmtmas .ind Happy cw
Year"' ··'
Dall7 Pilot welcome~
l!eaders' commen~
sen ant' at Jll kvrl'> ot go' emmcnt
.\<, th1<; l'uttaocrati< fon.e has muh·~1-:-----1
phC'd lJ\(''i h3\(' ~n IOU'('a'iC(j 10
But n 's the ~ond k1n<l 1hnt really
get me. Here arc examples·
I "(i1vc vourself C'hnstmn prt~nt \ ou·r nlma mntcr need$
monc) de'ipc'ratcl" ''\.e gc m·r-
20-«nt 111mp o n the
o~d en velopt> ~ 111 hl"lp • t'H~n
mor<'" 2 ''In the sp1nt of( hn'ltma'i ca •
~nd at lca'it S:!~ 10 father O'H w
http ham ta~· cart of bo "'ho hJ\. •
gone a tr.I\ -~n1 ularlv U'iCf'\ of
COC'31nc and 01hcr han! dmss ..
l "1 he unfonun:ue "'ho arc lorl't'd
to live on k1J row mJ) hO\\' ~ Merry
Chm tmd\ J1nner 1f )ou'll hl'lp
Pk3'iC ~ acntrou<> ..
4 -we h ''t 1u't complctcJ iii
I
support It But the new 13\e\ 1n
'anabh ha"e produ( ·ti new prn
ttram'I tf1 '\flt'nd the m onn on
The lnlOnl(' uf a t\fll~.11 tnm11\ h.,
JUmpcJ trom S.l 1 l'i., in I ~41) tu
$:::!4 I <11 1n I QI\' Rut the t.im1h ·, f~rnria 'C'\ ha' c \hot ufl trom 10
S ~ 21 Junn~ th(' ~m(' \p:tn Pui
an6ther "'3\ their IOlOO\C' h.l\ r1'l'l'I
, 6 um~ but their 1ncl,ml" ta\C' ha'('
1n<rea d ~· llmc . h ~m\ 10 me 1ha1 lhl'.' problem 1\
not too httk ta,at1on but tno much
\pcnJm1
I
Aworia of Havor in a low tan
,.
Warni ng: The Surgeon General Ha s Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
8 mg 1ar 0 6 mg n1co11ne ;iv PIH r.1gare11e. by f TC method
..
'
I
t
Dr. Bernard deBerry, a head and
neck suraeon and an authority on
sleep disorders uys, "Snorina Is no
lauahina matter! It can be a major
symptom of a serious dieeate known
as Obstructed Sleep Apnca, or OSA.
which is cbaractenzed by loud snor-
: · ina auociated with frequent epiaodes
ortotally obstrueted breathina."
"There are SO million Americans
whose mi>iradon durina sleep is
abnormal. These people are known as
snorers," deBerry asserted. "ApP.rox-
imateJy one-third of these SO million
people may suffer from OSA which
has been ltnked to sudden death of
sleepina adults from unknown
causes, heart disease, stroke, de-
pression, impotence or obesity, and is
probably related to Sudden Infant
Death Syndrome."
For the past J 2 years, Dr. deBerry
has concentrated his medical and
clinical efforts on sleep disorders. He
has been published extensively and
has made numerous presentations on
the subject to national and inter-
national medical audiences.
"Snoring has been erroneously
regarded as an embarrassina but
benign habit. However, for the af-
f ccted individuals, snorina can be
psychologically and socially devastat-
ing, as well as dangerous to their
health," de Berry said.
"At least 30 percent of an individ-
ual's life span is spent sleeping, and I
find it amazina how little practicing
H 11 p y Oliff SI lJ
medical profesStonaJs know about the
body function during sleep," com-
mented deBerry.
In 1983, Dr. deBerry established
the Health Monitoring Center in
Laguna Hills. The center is desi'1tcd
to help physicians detect potenttally
serious health hazards related to sleep
disorders.
"At the center, patients underao
comprehensive clinical evaluations.
They are then fitted with a computer-
bascd monitor which gathers data on
the function of a patient's heart,
respiration and blood o~yacn level
durina slcepln• houn. Becawe the
monitor is easily affixed and liaht·
wci&ht, patients are able to use the
monitor in the comfon of their own
homes," explained deBerry.
The information derived from the comprehensive exams, coupled with
findmgs from the computer araphs,
enable dcctors to make diaa;nosd.
Treatment for excessive snoring
and OSA depends on the diagnoses
"It may be as simple as controllin;J
nasal allergies or adjusting an ind1-
vidual's dlet and sleep habits. or tt
could require surgery to correct
deformed nasal and/or narrow throat
passases. In any case, individuals
who snore excessively should seek
medical attentJon to determine
whether or not they arc at nsk." says
de Berry.
Dr. dcBerry believes that people
should take precautionary measures
to insure •ood health, "By matn-
taining optimal health through ex-
ercise and proper eatina habits. one
can lowerthcoddsofdevelopingOSA
and. other dJseases as well."
-
H11P Y1111 H\t11
--= -=------
To be considered a responsible and
· wcll-adJus\edc1tuen between thcqes
of sax and 11 means:
• Gettan& along with family,
fncnds and teachers mOSt of the time.
• Achaevina scholastically, accord-
•n& to ability. and
• Feclin& good about school and
oneself most of the (ime.
It docs not mean to gleefully
assume household chores. As a some-
what well-adjusted adult, I do not
&Jeef ulll assume household chores
either. do wnat needs to be done -
most of tbe ume.
I believe that too much ume is
spent scrcaminJ. enforcina and
aroundinJ our children to act them to
make tbCU' beds, pick up their clothes,
do their own dishes and take out the
garbaac. Is tidiness really next to
godhness? Or docs the Jj"roblem really have lO with mom's ego?
Is mom really more concerned with
the character butldana of her chtldren
or with her reputation as a perfect
housekeepet!
Beds and garbage ARE tmportant.
but I don't think they arc unpon.ant
enough to warrant quite so much nme
and discussion. Espectally when our
efforts usually fail anyway.
Lil•• hzl
responsible tor their school work.
their after tchool activities and their
peer relationships. BWlt·in reiftboce.
ments arc available to them in tbe
form of lfldcs. applau1e and ~
Larity.
When they come home, they tee
differently than wir parenu do. It'•
so f rustratma when our cbildrm
exclude us from their world and
ref use to acknowledee that they're
part of us. Take heart. Rcfusina 10do
chores may seem like total rejection.
but may just be a normal P9ft of the
separalJon prooesa.
lf whatever you've done bun't
worked. consider these ideal in
developina a new pme plan;
• Tbe same healthy children wbO
are likclY. to i&nore or rebel apiDst ao
arbttranly usi&ned task are likely to
respond to a real need for help within
the family. ·
It's easy to gain weight during the holidays
Children, we've been tau&ht, must
learn responsibility. Toward that end
we're likely to assign to them the
simple. boring household tasks we'd
rather not do. lt all seems so logJcal -
but more than one.parent has ques-
tioned this wisdom in retrospect.
It is usually easier for us to do these
sample taslu than to police our
children's efforts. We continue, how-
ever. to make rules. As good parents
we treat taking responsibility for the
family garbage ltkc taking a vaccine to
prevent serious illness.
• A well adjusted J().yc:ar-old is
hkely to find 1t more in~ to
pre~ dinner from scratch one nilbt a week than to add a rote job 10
bis/her list of tbinas \0 do each day.
•If it's responsibility we're after, it
often works better to offer a series of
task choices. and
• Much of the time we spend
chast1 jng our children about what
they hould be doinf could be more
wascly spent d1.5CUKtn1 other tbJ.aas
and lau&hina t<>setber. lt'a lauahter
and encourq.cment which is most
likely to result in Jood self-ateem
and mpon.sibile Ltvtn&.
Arc you one of those who resolves
each New Y car to go on a diet? Or do
you flt into the group who diet and
exercise in the Spring to get ready for
beaches and bathinJ suits each sum-
met? Or do you find yourself per-
iodically or even continua!ly tryina to
take pounds and inches off?
If yes, join the crowd. The average
citizen is overweight. Winter is a
common time of year to p in weight.
A 7-10 pound weight pin during the
cooler months is not unusual. ln fact ,
7-10 pounds of excess weight 1s very
PAPARA/ II
--~
usual.
Our habits change with chanaina
seasons. Even in Southern California
we are less active and exercise less in
shorter, darker, cooler, winter days.
We bum fewer calories by less
activity. So if we merely maintain our
usual summer diet, we pin weight.
More likely, however, we eat more
during the cooler months. We drink
more alcohol. We cat more sweets.
We generally party more and exercise
less. The cocktail party replaces the
tennis match. We have bigger meals
BREIHIAI
CASSIDY
more often. We eat more calories per
meal; turkeys, sauces. potatoes. and
gravy, more desserts. We cat more
caloncs ... we bum fewer ... we gam
Rain doesn .'t dampen spirits
at Noel <J 'Elegance party
Cllstoffi-decorated
trees raffled at end of
Cancer Society f ete
The weather outside was frightful
(by Southern California standards -
a drenching downpour) but the mood
was so delightful as couples de-
scended the Ritz-Carlton staircase to
"Noel d'Elcgance."
As hot hors d' oeuvres were passed
in the lower lobby, the formally
attired}ucsts were as eaRer as ch ii·
dren on Chnstmas mom to peek
inside the ballroom to sec the custom-
decorated trees to be raffled off at
evening's end.
Their expectations were more than
met when the doors opened. The
stunning creations by six interior
designers mi&ht have been better
displayed individually amona the
tablcsmsteadofin twoclustcn
flanking the bandstand.
Pink poinsettias and life-sized
white doves nestled in the branches of
"Peace" by Mar&U Oreskam. Jea
Jallr entitled his tree "A-huntina We
Will Go" and decorated it with plaid
bows and teddy bears while "Pirou-
ette Christmas" was interpreted by
WUU.m Merrill and Paal Eckc in
gold and crystal.
Bouie BroWll used gold starbursts
and silver-glittered fans for her ver·
sion of"PuttJngon the Ritz."
Burnished magnolia leaves were the
foil for exotic pink blossoms on
Rudy Harmer's "Regal Christmas,"
and Abby MCllMaett used maroon
and green irapcs. velvet rope and
antique lace bows redolent of
"Christmas in Bordeaux."
Among the South County Cancer
League members and guests closely
inspecting the designer trees before
dinnerwereSudyl\obcrtaoa(in
white sequins), RoblD Voet (also in a
shimmerinacnsemble), Andrea Rlcll· ar•• (in a red and black silk sarong),
ClalMlla JollaMD (in backless white)
with hu sband Robert and the Steve ~Ht, all of Laguna NiiueL
Those lucky enouah to have the
trees deli vercd to their homes were
the JaM Baemw, l\MertDr hr••.
Ced1Etna,l\*'1C.l'Mva1,a-.
ertCavuaqhand Dr. Terrace Sc...,,,, .
After co-chainneo TIU Stewart
andSMreaMorl&M lhanked tbe400
aucsts for supportiq "this joyous and
worthwhile evcnina bencfitana the
AmericanCancerSociety,"dinner
bepn with marinated sal~bn and
scallops. The tan'qon chicken en tree
was presented with drum roll fanfare
and folJowed by strawberry sablyon
for dessert.
Between courses there was dancina.
caroUna. admirinaoftbe incense cedarccnterpiecnby&.lm~of
Panqeand modtlinaoffivtfur
jackets from Ward Furs, one of which
wu doAawel u an oPPQnunity.,Rac
Auctlon«r 0-0.YllMa. cowny
chapear chairman for ACS, ovttcame a belky ~blic lddrnl system lO
tolicit bids for tbe fur, 1 bluet~. a-o round-trip t1Ckets to New Y Of'k
from super deluxe Retent Alt, 1 wee'k
• at a Maui condo and an otl p&inttna
b)'~thntll. lnctudtntdon11-~~.,...il: ........... ,~~"""" .. ~:.lil'~d t10MfortM .. ~ .. Jllod
.................. ..,
. TM ........ of .... ttllla OD tlae ...... tne ..... ...
..... ._. of blpb aa.-11et11J WooGoue of 8aia '1Ma
Ca ......
Sl0,000. •
Alto cni= the fntivities were ._and W11A1•1ofS.n
Jun Caputruo, J.-and IAlla Qilfll• ofl..aPna Niluel wllb a.. • 111u3: .-..na ..._Olt'9-~~a=.9nc1~~ ~·-·~·~ ..........
Pa,,. run it edJ ttd by Daily Piiot
tyle Editor Vida DNn.
weight. Caloncs tn, calones out!
The most 1mponant way to avoid
this cycle 1s to be aware
Also plan for different exercise
habits dunng the shorter and darker
days of wrnter. You need to plan for
more indoor exercise. Maybe even
JOin a health club JUSt for the season
Many clubs have seasonal packages.
Stay toned up wtth exercise. Stay
trimmed down with fewer caloncs.
Stay an tune with your bod}. And
your holidays will be healthier, ha~
pier and safer Happy Hohdays'
Nobody likes getttng a shot, but the
expenence seems cost-effect1vc, at
least in the case of a vaccine.
In an effort to gain better control. I
think it's omc that we become more
selecuve tn the demands we m2xe on
our children. and I'm not talklna
aboot penn1ss1ve parennng.
Ln our modem world. normal
sc hool-age children alteady llve cuJ-
turally prescribed lt"cs with lots of
bu 1Jt -1n structure The) learn to be
Dr. Al6UJ is• marna,e and family
therapist in Corona dd Mar. She
~lcomes your responses. If you wisb
a ~pl). enclcne • stamped. Jdf-
1ddrnsttl em,dope. Wnte to Lindi
A/lvr. Ph.D .. Daily Pilot, P.O. Box
I 560. Costa Mesa 92626.
Ball co-ebalrmaD TlDa Stewart aaka deelfner Jon Jahr about b.la decondJtC ..._e
of•• A·bantlnc We WW Go.•• .
llutlaa OnaM• baa tile admlratlOD of lb&roa Morland, bell co-elaal.raaa ... Ille _.,.,.. _.....t Oil Iler 0 Peace .. tree. , • . . . •
a • 0r8n0' Coat OAILY PILOT /Tuesday, December 18, 1884
PnRTY WRAP
~ .... ,......, ....... c....._
Ball Chairman Cathy Grant, buaband DaYe, Bobbi and Roger Roberta, Rick Lamb, Cbrlata Flltcher, Robert and Ann Marte Alford, Nancy and James Clayton, and Carol Hoppe • ..
()andyCane party-goers
bid, buyandhavea ball
By VIDA DEAN
Of tfle o.117 "°' Ile«
More than 400 were lured to 1he
36th annual Candx Cane Ball hosted
by the Junior Auxiliary of Assistance
. League of Newport Beach at the
• -Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel.
:-They found the ballroom trans-
. formed (by Chris Lindsay) into a
. white and gold'winter wonderland to
carry out the theme. "The Nut-
cracker."
Cat.by Grant (with David) was
chairman of the event and Bobbi
, Roberta and Nancy Clayton, aur1ion
• chairmen, were assisted by witty
emcee Bob Ball in presenting silent
• auction and opport unity pnzes.
As a bonus, one lucky couple at
~ each table (dining on NY Steak au
• Poivre and cheesecake with fresh
strawberries) was presented a gift
: certificate for lunch or dinner at a
0: locaJ restaurant.
~: Some of the guests attending in
glittering holiday fi nery were Allll
Marie and Roger AJford (she's aux-
iliary chairman), Marion (league
president) and Denals Pickens,
Barbara and William Dosta, Barbara
and' Kent Johnson, Trish and Jo.bu
O'Donnell, Martha and Bob Ball,
Carol and Richard Hoppe, Dora and
Terry Brigham, Jeu and William
Wegener, Veronica and MJcllael
Baum, Judy and Richard Bauer,
Melody and Rlclla.rd Ferber, Llasa
and Richard Callnan and Sasle and
Ron Harrington . . . . ' When Pegasus Courier Service of
Newport Beach threw a ~rty for
clients and friends at Irvine Marriott .
800 showed. Delighting the partygers
was the appearance of Michael Jack-
son, Dolly Parton escorted by Burt
Reynolds and Lt. ColumbO (well,
rcall) celebrity look-alikes who had
some guestl> fooled for awhile). ••• Belly Boyvey of Balboa celebrated
her l.!Oth with 175 friends and rela-
tives gathenng at the Boyvey home-
for a champagne luncheon.
.. You're now eighty, hale and
heart} -for twice you've started li fe
at forty" were lines from the poem
written for the birthday girl and
delivered by T. Duncan Stewart, poet
laureate of Newport Beach.
Son Roger Boyvey (who came with
wife Mary from Be rkeley) was emcee
for the proe.ram of tributes that
featured friends respQnding to flash-
backs in the lives of the Boyveys in
Wichita, Nashvi lle. Seattle, Whittter
as well as Balboa (since 1943).
Helping with the party in addition
to Roger and Mary. were Suzanne
Radley of NewpQrt and Lynda
Gagliano of Costa Mesa.
Teresa Angulo was in charge of the
guest book and was signing in folks
from as close as NewpQrt Be-a:ch to as
far away as Tulsa and Albuquerque. • • • More than J ,200 were partying at
the Newport T urtle Restaurant as
Jo.bu Rader, general manager, show-
ed off the newly redecorated Fash ion
Island dinner house done in wine.
dark rose and gray colors.
It was a "giant open .house fo r the
community" with lots of food -
from cheese t'o steak tartar. fresh
oysters. shrimp, fruit and you name
it. Dominating one of the large buffet
tables was a huge turtle ice sculpture
(wearing a top bat).
Guest were greeted by 14 bagpipers
and later were entertained by song-
styli st Paul Refd. • • • Donald Smallwood-and wife Lou
greeted more than 350 at the Pacific
Club duri ng a cocktail reception
Monday fo llowing his formal installa-
tion as a judge of the Superio r Court,
1n and for the County of Orange.
Sta te Senato r-elect Marian
Bergeson a nd Sheila Prell
Judge Donald Smallwood and wife Lou Ice-cold turtle wanna to bow tie, top hat.
partying after hilt lnatallation.
Sooeosbine, associate justice of the
Court of Appeals. were on hand with
words of praise for the 56-year-old
Smallwood, a Costa· Mesa resident
appointed' by Gov. Deukmejian.
Others congratula ting Judge
Smallwood were Erle and Cynthia
Wittenberg, Supervisor Tom Riley,
Congressman Bob Badbam, Mayor
Norma Hert~og, David and Leslie
Emmes, Rlcbard and Diane Doyle,
Judge Richard Beacom and GaJI and
Peter Ochs.
Betty MacKenzie from Michigan
and Jeanne Naechterleln with hus-
band Herb from Indiana came for
their brother's installation and recep-
tion as did brother Stephen with wi fe
Lollie and daughter Ka ren of
Sunnyvale.
Other fam ily members at the affair
were sons Mark, David and Thomas
Smallwood and daughter Cheryl
Cohen (with husband Mark) and Mrs.
Smallwood's son, Ralpb Bennett.
Smallwood joined the California
Bar 'in 1962 after being awarded his
LLB degree, magna cum laude from
Southwestern Uni versity Night Law
School, where he graduated first in his
class. He has practiced law in the
Newport Beach-Costa Mesa area
during his cnurc legal career.
He has also served as l\ Judge Pro
Tern in both Municipal and Superior
C'ourt1 and !><!rved as a State Bar
Examiner.
Community activities include ser-
ving as a past president of South
Coast Repertory's board of trustees
and continuing as an active trustee.
He is a director of Mardan Foun-
dation and the Orange Coast YMCA,
and a member of UCI Friends of the
Library. 552 Club of Hoag, Lions
Club. Mesa Verde Homeowners As-
sociation and the C'osta Mesa
Chamber of Commerce.
Problems same, only the names have changed
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: Recent-
ly you made referen-
ce to th e fact that it
was your 29th an-
niversary of writing
the column. I would
be interested in see-
ing what your very
first column looked
ANN
UNDERS
the noose is tighteningaround my own neck. We have been
mamed I 0 years and have two sons. I like auto racing but
my wife has no interest 1n it so I've always gone to the track
without her.
like and I'll bet a great man) others would. 100. What did
people write about in 1955'.'' Plea!>e hunt 11 up and 1>harc 11
wJthus.-LONG-TIME.\NNF.\N(.\BOl T 14
YEARS!)
I've fallen for a woman with three children who is also
very fond of auto racing. H'er husband is ignorant and .
impossible. This may sound crazy but I have more in
common with this woma n than I do with my wife. I am
thinking about making a change. You will probably say I'm
a lou~!=· but remember, you only hve once. Give me some
advice. -MR. K.
DEAR K.: Time wound s all heels -and you'll get
yours. Do you realize there are five children involved In
your little racetrack comanee? Don't be surprised If you
wake up one day and wish you bad your wife and sons back.
You are flirting with a muddy track on black Friday and
the way you're beaded you will get exactly what you
deserve.
DEAR FAN: Here it is -right out oflbe Chicago Sun-
Tlmes archives. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've always regarded most
marital mix ups as very humorous-until now. because
Walkers need a gimmick
Walking has always been the 11-
legitimale child of the physical fitness
movement.
In spite of the fact that 99 m11l1on
Americans hst walking as their No. I
mode of exercise. 11 just 1sn '1 making
it as a major sport. As an earlv
morning stroller, I've done a lot o-f
thinking about this.
Maybe we need a super brat hke
tennis has to make obscene gesture~
to cars that run us off the road. Or
perhaps a few celebnues hke Dinah
Shore and Glen Campbell to enter-
: tain us as we walk like they do 1n golf
The ambiance of bowling might help
where we all drink tx·er and shout
encouragement to one anothrr On
the other hand, the long-d1stancl'
runners have a great g1mm1ck. The>
reward you with a T-shirt or a loaf of
fresh bread when you reach your goal.
ERMA
BoMBECK
rutnes on the sleeves and the leotards
with leg~ cut up to the arm pits.
Exerc1<,c 1f it's to catch on. 1s all
!>ho"' b11 and gl1t1. Walker<; need a
rostumt·
We c,tan v.11h a pair ofS80 v.alk1ng
'ohocc, that Wl' wear all da} Jong. not
lx·lauw 1hcv'1c comfonahle. hut tx·-
c:au .. t· thn tt·ll the world v.l''rc
walkt•r'>
An important accessory 1s the
walk1n~ cane which we carry around
in ~pccaalcanvas bags that we leave in
our ~hoppin~ carts or compare gnps
with an pubhc.
It will only be a matter of time
before a walking videocassette hits
the market and people all over the
country will wa tch some scantily clad
person show you how to correctly
place one foot in front of the other.
As soon as a baby takes his first
step. he will be in a pair of walking
shoes. Books will flood the market by
walk'ers who walked before 1t became
"in" Eventually, every party wi ll
have walkers talking about their
inJunes ... the rocks m the shoe. the
pulled shoestring ... the downhill
wall they hit when they're tired.
DEA R ANN LANDERS: I havejustg,raduated from
grad.eschool and the boy I like. is in th~ Army. Yesterday I
rece1 ved a letter from him say1 ng he will be. home on leave
soon. I was so thrilled I told m y motqer. She made it clear
that I can't go out with him. I tried to explain that wejust
want to see a movie and will be homeearly. She insisted
that I am too young to date and I can't budge her. Please be
on my side. -E. V.
DEARE . V .: II you just graduated from grade 1cbool
you are about 13 years old. Tbatguy bas to be 18. His brains
must be AWOL. Uncle Sam needs men -you don 't! Listen
to your mother. • • • DEA R ANN LANDERS:Twomonthsago l meta
man who seems very fo nd of me. He has two Jobs, which 1!>
the reason he has never called me up on the phone or taken
me out. He is very busy. He has told me that he cares fo r me
a great deal, but I see ham only once a day when he ma)c.es
deliveries'\o my home. I don't want to rush him into
EVENING
-l.'00-11 II D (JJ) NEWS 8 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
G NBA BASKETBAU m ntAtttOOMPAHY
41)8TARTREK
tD BU8INE8S REPORT
(J)C88NEWS
Qt NBC NEWS
~~AHDYKE *** "George Wuhlngtoo Slept Here" (19•2) Jacll Benny, Ann Sher'I·
dan.
-t:30-ll NBC NEWS 8 HAPPY DAYSAOAIN
Q)AUCE
fJ1) MACNEIL / LEHRER NEWSHOUR
~ MISTER ROOEAS ())NEWS
(JJ) THREE'S COMPANY a WHm Of FORTUNE
mTHATOIRL
(.C)MOVIE *** "Gregory'a 0111" (1981) Qor.'
don John Sinclair. Dee Hepburn.
anything. What do you think'!-STEADY READER
DEAR STEADY: What this man Is delivering to your
bom.e sounds like baloney. I bave a sneak.log suspicion that
your back-door Romeo has a wife and a family, plus
several other very good "customers." You'd better forget
about blm and suggest that be leave whatever It ls that be
11 deliverlng lo a convenient place. • • • CONFfDENTIALto MissO.E.B.: You are entitled to
a hfeofyourown. You have given more than your share to
mother and the rest of the family. Move out of that house
before they drive you ba tty.
• • •
Therf'lsa brgd1fference between co/cl and cool. Ann
Landers shows you how to play it cool without freezing
people out tn her booklet, "Teen-AgcScA -Ten Ways to
Cool It." Send 50cents and a long. self-addressed. stamped
em't'lope t.oAnn Landers. P.O. Box 11995. Chicago Ill 60611. . .
m TOOCWB
~MOVIE * "Lefs Do It" ( 1982) Gteg Bfad-
lord. Britt Heller.
(S)MOVlE *** "Raggedy Man" (1981) Slay Space!(, Eric Roberta.
-12:00-e TWILIGHT ZONE
D rn ON HOLL YWOOO GMOVIE
H 'A "A Bfeath Of Scandal" (1980)
Sophia Loren. John Gavin. (]) IHDEPEHOENT HEWS
Q) STETS OF SAM F1W08CO fD8UTTEAFW
11§) ROCl<FON> RLE8
-12:30-a a LATE NIGHT WTTli DAV10 LEmAMAN 8 Al.RE> HrT()tC()Ct(
PAE8ENT8
D HOLL YWOOO CLOSEUP
(])MOVIE **'II "Love Arid Kl .... " (1965) Rlcil
NellOn. Kriltln Nelson tDMOVIE H 1/i "loll Angel'' (194') M1rgart1
0'8'1en, James CralQ.
Then it hit me. All walkers need 1s
the aerobics treatment. Think back
and try to remember what aerobic.,
was like before someone came out
wi th th ose cute little outfits with the
Tht'n v.c get a celebnty walker hkc
N<1nt) Walker or Clint Walker to
cnmt out wtth a line of walking
clotht'' fhcy have to be bnght. cute.
1mprJt11cal. '>k1mpy and cause a lot nl
ix·oplt• to look at you when ~ ou do
ynm grocery '>hopping 1n tht·m.
But wa lking won't become a world
class sport until you roll out of bed.
stretch. put on your walkin$ shoes.
grab your wal king stick. get.into the
car and drive down to a walking path.
Any physical exercise you have to
drive to gets respect!
-7:00-
tJCBSNEWS U $100,000 NAME THAT TUNE
BLOYE.BOAT
AICNEWSQ
(!)NEWS
1 Y ~1 Bear ~Y• Santa to a hoet of Illa friend•
on ·v~l r'• All-Star Comedy Chrlatmaa
Caper,' to be rebroadcut at 8 tontght on
Channel 2.
ID COMEDY TONICIHT
-1~f) (J) COLUM80
-12:A5-
(B) THE INYESTIGATOM
CAU8ADINO IVOfmM °' THe AIR Patience a major priority I THREE'S COMPANY
WHEE. Of FORTUNe IU·2· t CONTACT (fQQ
(J) P.M. MAGAZINE
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: What
would you say is the most important
factor an the treatment of high blood
pressure? I tell my friends 1t ts being
on a low salt diet. Agree? MRS. U.
DEAR, MRS. U: One of the most
import.ant. but not at the head of the
list. I'd put "patience" there. What do
I mean? Hypertension is a sneaky
disease. It 1s a -sl.ub.bo.m...condition.
Knock it down and.it will JU mp up as
soon as the pati~nt lets down his
guard.
Many who suffer from hyper-
tension do not have the patience 10
continue treatment -whatever form
it take' For example, we know that
obesity is an ally of hyperten!>1on At
first the patient may lose wc~t
(which often. 1n 1t.<ielf. lower" blood
pre sure), but, within months lowc.
patience. no longer diet'! and tlH·
weight returns, ounce b> ounn·
pound by pound. ·
Or, knowing that a low -wit d1t•1 1\
essential an managing hypertension.
they become carclcs!> and tBkc too
much of 1t. And how ahout drug~'! v.·
many patients will he cooperative.'
dunna the fi rst few months Then. not
havrna any d1scomfon~ or other
manift'lflltt<>ns of h1~h blood orr._.,.
• •
,
PETER
STEINCROHN
ure. will "forge t" to take their
medica tion. '
I recall many patient<> who were
models in rnmpl)'1ng, yet would
continue to work too hard and too
long. tense and fatigued, thinking that
the mrdiC1ne would el1m1 natc the
eflcctc, of overwork and daitytemion
Of rour\C a low 'lalt diel 1s important,
Mr~ I • Rut what''! more importanr 1s
thl' rl'al11at1on 1hat treating hypcr-
ten\wn ciuccesc;folly n:qmrC'i ytar!>
<not monthc;)-ul patll•ncc in ob\Crvmg
<111 the ruk' -diet, pill' and a relaxed
v.a )' nf hlr • • • OEAR DR. STEINCROnN: ,, or
1•m't 11 trur that taking vitamin E will
hclpnnr'~c.rx hfc')Myhu bandc;urcly
~uu l<l u~· '>Onie Ht'~ w11hng to try
anything. MR . W.
DKAR MRS W: Manv promise,
(f) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
have been made. I suppose there's no Qt.IEOPAAOY
harm in tryin g. But I th ink you should ~ Mll..UONAIAE
know where the belief began that ~~fECfS8AAll.Y MNEWS
v1tam in E will increase sexual vigor. *** "All Fd Down" (19821 Eva Laboratory tests in rats depnved of Sain ., __ . . E h d h be Marie t. Warren .,..tty. vita min s owe t at many came ,
sterile. This has no connection with 8 2 ON THE ;-J:.-·
male potency. YOUNGP£0Pt.E'81P!QAL
I suggest that your husband take up i EY!ONL.A.
h-18-pioblem l¥ilh)10ur fa mily doct.o WKflUfCICNNATl
If he feels that vitamin E will help, PEOPLE'S COURT
finc.-8.ut don't 'Jet yo ur husbagd ~WIU>WON,.D°'
preserilic it fo r himself. I!) 'W:NA . . . . I TIC T~ j)OUQH DEAR DR. STElNCROHN: I had a t100000.W.THATT\M
heart attack two weeks ago. I've ~en FNAY RUD
home rot a few dayi. and am rnnn' to HAVIGUN MU. TMVEL
return to work. My doctor say. 1waet MOTiiciii•.M.YTHlYW
it for at lea~ more wccks. l sn•t he ltMYIEW
bcina too conservative? MR. G. -t:ooL e Cl> YOOt lf.AA'8 M..&.AT AA DEAR MR. 0 : Your doctor 1s the CC*IDYOtMTMASCAPER
only o ne who can answer that. Be aaAo'TIMI
thanlcful you're alive and resotvt to lilCMI
cooperate. Lcamina how to relax *** "BIOlt 1n =:J1t39) Midi·
while waiting to get back into the 1~ ·
haryttU IS sometimes as im~n~nt as c .. ~
g1v1na up cigarettes and keeping your NTUALI
weight down. MOYIE
ave your "rann,.' for much lat.er, ••'.4 "Tiit Undlofd'' (1970) Beau
af'\cr your heart muscle hu had a ~
good opportunity to heal. •~
..
-
Ofange CoMt DAILY PILOTITUlllday, Oeoembw 11, 11M •
Actors doing as the Roman did
Brltiab acton Kell Dicbon (left). Cecll Hamphreye •tar In
the KBC mlnt.erlee •A.o .•
i PRIME TIM E SOAPS
""------
British performers spent 10 months ftlmln
ambitious biblical miniseries 'A.O.· forTV
ly JEIUt Y av~ ,,, ...............
LOS ANGELES -For almost a
year, while filmi~ the NBC mini·
series ''A.o.:• lntith actors Neil
Oicklon and Cecil Humphreys had a
lallC or what it WU like tO live in
Roman times. I
"When you put on authentic aladi·
a tor aear and stand in the same rooms
they were in a"d come over the rise and sec the Colitcum, it gives you a
special reehna. .. said Humphreys.
He and Dickson spent 10 months
an 1983 and early 1984 wor,Jrina in
Tunisia on the miniseries, which tells
of the b1nb and 1prnd or t'hn1-
t1anity. They and three othCT actors
ate the only onc1 who span the e1u.1rc
12 hours. , "The five of us 10 all the way
throuah1 from two days after the
crucifi11on of Christ to 69 A.D ... said
Dickson. "The whole project of
·A.O.' is made up of people who are
historically correct and biblically
correc\ To tic all these saints and
emperors toaclber they have cr~tcd
five charac&m to 10 tbrouab the
whole senes.
"I stan out in Rome as a youna
member of the imperial 1uard, and
Cecil stans in Judea as a youna Jewish
zeaJot. We allow the alld1enoe to look at what's happenjns through our eyes.
Asexyofficecallon 'St. Elsewhere'
BY LYNDA HIRSCH HILL STREET BLUES: .Belker &oct
undercover as a hairdresser to catch a
voup of drug dealers. BclJcer makes the amst too soon and is criticized by Furillo,
who mentions Bclker's break with Robin
H a possibiUty for bis jumpina the aun.
Police in lhe pTCCinct anary when they
leam that all their ovenime has been cut
due to austerity measure. Fay thinks
Frank mi&bt have been rctponsible for denust as\ina her out so he'll provide
cheaper dental treatment for Frank. Jr.
Two gangs, the Shamrocks and the Blood,
beain warrina when the Blood decides to
take over Shamrock. territory. Garibaldi
lnes to get a young prostitute in a
methadone cbnac by cla1m1na she 1s hlS new snatch. Henry, telling Garibaldi he
was cutting c.orners. cuts her from the
methadone program Belk.er shows up
outside Robin's door and is stunned when
she returns with date. Robin tells ham 11'1
over and a tearful Bclker accepts the fact.
mcan,a immanent death. Karen's sons are
upset with her and they feel she is still
runnina away from her problems rather
than facina them.
PAPER OOU.S: Michael continuct 10
wonder if Dinah i1 Kein1 Jake Lamer.
Taryn realiui that her mother has set up
the meetina. Marjorie considerina gettina
divorce from Or1nt. l.ellie decides to join Matjorie ln order to pin her trust. Colette
Ferner decides that she still hu fcelinp for
Wesley. Michael wonden if it's time that
he and Dinah divorce. Laurie blames her
mother. wooderina how 1hc could jeop-
ardize her marriqc for someone like Jake. Louis Crosby, Laurie's secret admirer,
decides he's '-oin& to personaUy confront
Laurie. Bl.air s cm tic behavior continues.
David wrapped up in his sport.swear line,
unaware of Blair's d~seated cmouoiW
problems since her miJcarriqe.
Cherry allows Grady lo ao on road with
her dauahter.
ST. ELSEWHERE: Just as Andy
Weaner is about 10 be taken off tiver
t..ran1eouninJ treatment that'• be1n1 used
to aavc AlCJLll, AleJL1s comes out of coma
and is returned to Chicaao with her
mother. WettphaJl's dauahtcr L1tt1e 11
a~led when he decides that his autistic son Tommy must be placed 1n a home.
When the ovcneJLed wife of Ehrlich's oversexed i-ucnt tells him 1f they don't
have ICJl there'll be no mamaac. he cnlJsts
Luther's help. Luther decides the v1-
cationint Dr. Cra11'• office would be a perfect place for a tryst for the paucnt The
trySt takes place, but Dr Crat1 finds
telltale nqlip:e 1n his office. The wife of
Helen R0tentbal's lover confronts her in
the h<>1pital. announc1n1 she plans to tell
Helen's husband Ira about the affair.
Cathy Martin senses that fellow sani· Larium patient Anaus hasn·1 an emotional diseue. but • phys1caJ aJlment. and acts
Fi5Cut to run tests provina that patient is
sufferina from myuthenia 1J8V\S.
That way )'Ou c1on·1 ha"cJ1ni fluJuna c.mcos oflome em~ror ... .. A.0 ... which wall be 1ttn tqin·
nina Marth 3J 1 was filmed 1n Tun1 _1a
by VlnctfllO Labella ( .. Je us of
Nazattth.0
• ·•Ma~ Polo"),
Amons the'ffell·known pcrformtn
appeanna in only one hour or tv.io of
the min1scnn are John Houseman.
the late James Mason. Jan Mc.:Sbane,
Jenrufer O'Neill. Ben Vereen, Jack
Warden, Ava Gardner1 Anthony An·
drews. MillJe Perkmt. Richard
Roundtree, Colleen Dewhurst and
Richard Kiley.
But the five contmuous characttrS
aive it t~ aJuc. For instance, C~lcb·s
(Humphreys) SlStCT IS sent IS a 1la\le
to Rome, where sbe falli tn love wuh
Valen us (DicO<>n). Caleb is alM> 1ent
off to Rome, bccoma a &lad1ator and
marries a Roman nobfewoman. At
the end of tht' scnn he heads back \O
Judea.
Dickson said tbe costumes and
props were authentically reproduced.
"Even the dyes duplicated the ong-1nal colors." he 58Jd. ··The leather
armor was all molded to our bodies
We had no plastic helmets. J wore
aladiator equipment, and 1f the
feather was rubbing one shoulder. like
a real gladiator, I'd go to the leather
worker and get it fixed."
Humphreys said they hvcd like
"warrior monks'' in Tunisia.
"We got up at 5 a.m .• spent three
h ur1 1n makeup, and tbe rat ol lbe
day e worked or ru '1t e"traled
un11I wt ent IO bed," he A•d
Ditkson added. •we pvc 111P
dnnkina., We tan every nillaL We
ere unlono~n actot1, and we bid IO •or~ bard and repay the failb Ule
producer and director had placed 10 u ••
Six blocks or thC' Roman Forum
were rc-.crnted In Monutir, Tuoilia.
Just around the corner, so IO sCIC8kt
wa Jeru~Jm\ and its temple
"It waull thrce-dimenslonaJ:• said
Dickson. ..We bad 420 soc:at.ial
paru. h was like an old-failuoDea
epic. h wa Hollywood reborn. ..
D1ck50n .ad Humphreys were CMt
in Enatind. Oiebon was do1111 lbe
play "Trafford Tanzi" in Lo~'•
West End. Humpbrey5 was doit'I
"Barefoot 1n the Park... OtcUoo
previously played a cocky bo-:nber
p1tot 1n the minjscries .. The Winds of
War." Humphreys played a dnaa
daler 10 .. Bndeshcad Revwt.ec1.••
··There was a lot of resistance from
the network." Otck..son said. -rbey
~nt.ed lO east well·kQ.OWft Amen· .
cans Wlth high (rccosn.mon) m tbc
five paru. But the d.itcctor, Stuan
Cooper. talked them out o(it. He felt
the scnpt (by Anthony Buraiess and
Labella) was so ornate and f)owc:ry
that it needed British actors with
extensive stage backgrounds to pull it
off."
Whale Watch Cruises
ABOARD THE CATAl..J.M HOLIDAY
WEfKEIU)S: 9:30 a.m. 6 t:JO p.a
WEEKDAYS: tO:OOA.llll
a....e .......
BALBOA PAVIUJOft
tt.oo· .. Mt11t F.,.. .-M
&plres: l • 31 ·85 p
DALLAS: While the Ewing barbeque 1s
in prO&fess J.R. calls a family meeting to
discuss Jamie's letter. The document
would make the heirs of Digger Barnes,
Jason Ewin& and Jock equal panners m
the oil company. Lucy and Eddy wander
away from the other auests and she lei.$
him convince her 10 JOtn him an the hayloft. Bobby gives Jenna a fabulous
enwemcnt nna. however. after Bobby comphmcnts Cllarhe on her brooch, he's
u~t t<rtearn Naldoaave 1t to herdurinaa v11il. 01fT ma Ices amngemcnts to vi sat his
Aunt Maaie to stt 1f0iagcr had a copy of Jamie's document. J R has Harve
Smithfield mvcsugair the matter as well.
NaJdo p1clts Charlie up after school. The
following morn1n1Jcnna dastrau&ht when she learns Charlie d1dn·1 spend the n1&ht
wtth her school fnend as had been
arranaed. The afternoon of Jenna and
Bobby's weddin& the guests arc walling at
South Fork for the ccremon~ to be&Jn
when Bobby gets a phone caJI. Bobby and
J.R. rush to Jenna's apanment where they
find a note from Jenna say1na she can't
marry him.
KNOTS LANDING: Val, still refusmg to
believe her twins are dead, as on the
emotional edge. Abby continuct to get
calls askina her questions about the twins'
blood types. Joshua can no longer deny hls
physical fcelinJS for Kath y. Karen fearful
that the vowing numbness in her body
RITUALS: Tom learns that his father
E.ddie is a prime au1pect in Sam's murder.
Taylor decides to act back Chapin estate
no matter wbt While on his honeymoon, Carter learns that Patrick hu bad fatal heart attack. Carter fies home. Mike ,---------------_.
convinces Lacey to 19 on date. Lacey tells
Mike she loves him very much but still
can't get over his sleepin1 with Oeeandra.
DYNASTY: Krystle Joyous when she
learns Christ1na's bod}' has accepted the
blood transfusion. Jeff learns that Peter had a map that would lead ham to a statue 1-::;jj;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;~I
of a solid aold Inca deny with precious
stones inside. Nicole took half the map
when she left him and Peter gave the other
half to Fallon for safekeeping. Jeff learns that Peter was with a model Bngll
Helstrom when he 101 the call f(om the
monastery about Fallon. JefTbehcves that
Bng.it may have been wt th Peter when the plane crashed Adam and Domen1que
bnng Blake back Rash1d's s11Dcd con·
fess1on. C1aud1a tells Dean that they never
should have &!cpl t<>aether Alc11s admits
to BlaJcc that she was pregnant wnh
Amanda before she left Denver. but not by
Blake. DcJL and Amanda make love. They
realize their moment oflovcmak1n1 was a
mistake Jeff lea ms Bnait was With Pe1er
in Seattle. Alexis announcn her plans to
mavy Dex
FALCON CREST: Chase be&Jns to hear
rumors about Richard's dastardly past an
Pam. Chase sugges" 10 Ben that they head
for Europe and learn about Richard's past
Maggie meets her real mother for the first
ume, but doesn't realm· (as Angela docs)
that she has a gambling addiction. Lance
and Joel plan to race cars for high stakes.
Angela suuests that Reardon continue to
make a play for Melissa. Cole and Melissa
announce their enwcmcnt; Chase and
Maggie arec less than thnlled
Orchestra
plans 2nd
U.S. tour
PHILADELPHIA (A P) -The
Philadelphia Orchestra will make its
second U.S. tour under music dire<:-
tor-conductor Riccardo Muti, with
stops in Arizona and California
scheduled for Februrary.
Muti, who took over from Eugene
Ormandy in 1980, said the orchestra
will be in Tempe. Ariz .. Feb. 12, at the
Gammage Auditorium; Pasadena on
Feb. 13-14 at Ambassador College;
and at Davies Hall an San Francisco
Feb. 16.
The last time the orchestra was on
tour in this country was in 1983 when
it made an I I-city rrip to the Midwest.
Last year, the orchestra was on the
European circuit.
Bc$ides the Philadelphia post, Mut1
is a re&ular auest conductor with the
Berlin Philharmonic, Vienna
Philharmonic and London
Philham)onic orchestras.
WALK-INS * ~~ :;_:::_ ~ *
~~;.'~~" ~,~E[J~[)I GA.Mt: rat111ous ~ rw r• rw RCHlM
113hH•r•l1.tl6l 1,. m1~ci;, ) .1 .... J '1~o·Hh
lhd O.w• (P0·1 J)
NO PASSES
STA~ ... )
70 MM/OOllt)' Slereo
12:)0 2:55 5 t20
7:50 &. 10:20
CITY .-AT .. ) SHOWS AT 1 :Sl J:U
5 :55 7 :S5 t •SS NO l'ASSES
,.,. "'8J
SHOWS AT \2:00 2 :JO 5:00 7:JO .. 10100
70MM I No P1uu
..VSRL V HILLS COP fR) SHOWS AT I S J ·25 5 .)5
ftACHalllS ,.,
Plu1 Oh, God I You
'0.•11 (l'G) 7 so .. 10·05
OH,8001VOU
DEVIL "'8) J :I 0 7 :20 Plus
Tuc11er1 '"/ ':-00 5 :10 •• 5
Meryl StrHP
rAL.l.J ... IN LOVIE (N-1») I 145 l :IO Sits 1 :00 &. 10:00
OHOSTllUSTSU ('N)
Plu1 Co·,.Htur•
Suoertlrt (~GI
...... "'ACTIOfll f") '"di•"• Jo"•• •"d th• Temple of Doom (PO)
DUME~U)
I" 70 MM
COUWT•Y (l'e)
11 :JO 2 :05 4 :40
7:25 I. IO:OS
l : JS 7 :41 Plu1 Pl1ce1 '"
Ille Hurt' (~G) 1 :JS
1:4 5 .. 1 :15
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WOOOMIOCf
•• r "••• I #o•
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When you
romein .
pick up
a great gift idea.
Black Angus gift rertifialte5.
They· re a great way to
for family and
friends .
FllOAll nun' Ult& llAt UIHI UIYI,
TllWCE, 1111nn, LAIEWlll, WIEll, WE fllESl
---~· • M COf19I ClW •1
\11 t• It
., •• .._.Kl9" ....
CUil lAS i.ooo ...... ~cmiur (N) 11\ 11' IOlt
lE GRAND PIANISl'E.
~t.1rr rh\.· lh,lt\.l.t\'''n .1 hig h rh 1h.· \\tth
,, ,, 1ml' l!rL'.lt ~ml'rt<11n~r' tn.m1 Frnncl.'.
~ Ar rlw Tn.1111 in, tl1L' Hord McnJa:n',
".11 m. 1nr1m,\tt' l,1ungt'.
R.1t.:ht 11\1\\, ,,·1u'r1: 1m~J f\) meet
Gl·r.ir~l R.trh11 t . lll 't in tr, 1m PM1 ~. Frnncl.'.
~ k p\.·rt1 irm' c.K h Tt1t·.,.J .1\ thr, 1u~h
~.mm.l.l\ n 1~hr t r1 irn ~:L'll'\ p. m , in inti 1
t ht• \Ill I l h Ill p,
Joi.n.lll.'r.lr\.l B,1rh11r n''''· .m\.1 m tht• future
l 1th~r tvp tr~\Ll) pl'rh 'rtncr-, .n r he
Tn ,m' m R.1 r \\ he.· rt.· , itJ 111,\ n l'\'l.'n mg'
1'l'U mw ,, l fl)l.'( h I 111! 'P'-'lltl l
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MERIDIEN
Hl)TEL MERIOIE E RTB H
4x'0 M.1 uhur E\hJ 'llj'""'r,.,n B -' h. ~ .. Ml:, \714) 47tl 2\.\.'l
'
I
-
Simon 's·memoirs
1n the Army now
at the Ahmanson
By CHl\18 C8A WFORD
__, .... C..1 Jllll ... I
Euaene Moms Jerome is back with
us, and now the lchoolboy is learning
to be a soldier during that rite of
passage known as Basic Training.
The world premiere of "Biloxi
Blues." which opened last week at the
Ahmanson Theater, is Neil Simon's
continuing autobiographical sage,
which ~n with "Brighton Beach
Memoirs1 two sea.sons ago at the
same theter (and most recently last
fall . in a rerun at the Wilshire
Theater).
Mauhew Broderick. who orig-
inated the leading role of Eugene
(representing Simon as a youth) and
won a Tony Award for it, now ~turns
In the sequel, every bit as endearing
•pin as be plays the wise.cracking
kid who keeps a daily journal and
wants someday to be a writer.
Except now he must store the
Journal in his barracks locker, and his
~ly observations arc mostly com-
ments on the personalities of his
buddies in the barracks -a micro-cosm of humanity that includes those
who _gn be trusted and counted on,
and those who cannot; those who will
endure, and those who wiU not.
to shape them all into discipHned
men ready for battle. SQme of the
funniest lines in the play art
Toomey's rapid-fire eitpla11.ations, de-
liver,,d like a machine g~ · yet
perfectly enunciated, as he d plaJos
military jaraon or sexual tenns to his
troops.
The sergeant ultimately meets his
match in Arnold Epstein (played by
Barry Miller), the boy with the
sensitive stomach who can't eat
S.O.S. and has brought along bis
doctor's note for further verification.
Ironically, though, what Epstein lacks
10 inteSttnal fortitude, he more than
makes up for in stubbornness. Of all
the raw recruits, Epstein will forevq
serve on latrine duty before he will
bow -in submission' to Toomey's
unreasonable demands.
Randall Edwards is well cast as the
blonde. gum-chewing prostitute who
helps Eugene achieve his goal of
losmg his virginity. whereas Penelope
Ann Miller as Daisy Hannigan is
almost to good to be true as Eugene's
first real love, the "gee whiz"
schoolgirl who doesn't think she
should kiss him on Good Friday.
Mau Mulhern, Alan Ruck. Geof-
frey Sharp and Brian Tarantinaare all
effectjve in supporting roles as
Eugene's fellow soldiers in thew
barrcks. All four c.ome off ~s distract
personalities who can, each in his
own way, give us lots of laughs but
BiJJ Sadler, as Sergeant Toomey,
plays to perfection the quintessential
drill instructor, the catalyst who
psychologically pits one young
loJdier against another as he attempts
iiiiiiiliiiiiiil also give us pause for thoupit. David Mitcbell'S'Set design offers a
fairly simple Jet realistic barracks,
troop train an prostitute's parlor.
,...,
Prom top, left to ~t. Barry lllller. Bill Sadler. Oeoftrey
Sharp, llatt llalbem, llattlaew Broclertcll, Brian Tanmttna
and Alan Rack appear ln Pfeil Simon'• '"Bllozi Bluee" atthe
Ahm•neon Tbeater ln Loe AnCelee.
Zombies retu.rn
for thirds in new
'Day of the ~:~ad'
Creator of horror cult movie trfl<J declares
his creatures are •sympathetic characters'
By MARCIA DUNN
Amil '1lllPl'W ....
WAMPUM, Pa. (AP) -The
zombies are back. And they're mad·
der, meaner and more menacina than
ever in George Romero's "Day of the
Dead," the frightening finale to his
horror film tri1o&Y. ,
· But this time, tnere's a good zombie
in the lot -an indication that at least ·
in the eyes of their creator, the
outcasts from the nether world aren't
as awful as they might first appear.
"l always liked the· zombies,"
Romero said during a recent filming
session at an underground limestone
mine in western Pennsylvania. He
smiled as dozens of the wild-eyed,
mud and blood-encrusted creatures
shuffied into a nearby dressing room.
some of them stopping to shake his
·nand ..
"I have a lot of sympathy for them.
l think they're the most sympathetic
characters in all three films. My
zombies are ... just working Joes who
can't find a way out of here," he said,
Laughing.
ffomero's fans apparently find the
zombies agreeable as well. Thousands
of people applied for the approx-
imately 800 zombie walk-on parts
needed for scenes shot inside the
mine; the chosen received $1 a day, a
boxed lunch and a special cap for their
efforts.
"It was really great to be a zombie.
"Day of the Dead" is shahtly more
Jr8Phic than its predeccJSOrs, climax-
ing with a 1 S-m1nute scene certain to ap~l to "gore fans," accordina to
the 44-year-old Romero. the triloay's
writer and director.
Yet the horror is "so stylized and
highly exaggerated that the film takes
on the tone of a comic book,"
according to Richard P. Rubinstein.
the movie's producer.
"After all, we are watching pt'.OPle
fight zombies and not the neighbor
next door," Rubinstein said.
Regardless of its nature, the viol-
ence - stemming, in part, from the
fac1 that zombies can die only by
being shot in the head-bas virtually
guaranteed the film an "X" rating. As
a result, Romero has opted to release
the ~ovie without a rating, even
though it's meant working with a
reduced budget and consequently
cutting back somewhat on the plot.
Romero and Rubinstein, who also
teamed for "Knlghtriders" and
"Creepshow," plan to begin shooting
Stephen King's "Pet Sematary" as
soon as production of "Day of the
Dead" ends in January.
As the times have changed over the
past two decades, so, too, has the
trilogy, according to Romero.
Director Gene Saks, who won the .
1983 Tony Awards best director of --------------------------Simon's "Brighton Beach Memoirs,•·
You tell somebody in the street and
they say, 'Wow,"' said Joe Mazzella,
201 of Bronx. N.Y., founder of
Romero's fan club1 The New Dawn.
"Even though it (6Ni&ht of the
Living Dead') liad a lot o(tongue-in-
cheek humor, it was scarier and
darker and angrier than 'Dawn of the
Dead.· ·Dawn of the Dead' was a Ii nle
more frivolous and a ljttle more pop,"
said Romero.
•
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I
Paul Anka says Elvis
destroyed by isolation
NEW YORK (AP) -Singer-
songwriter Paul Anka, reflecting on
his late friend Elvis Presley, says the
legendary performer's isolation led to
self-destruction.
"Elvis never really got into life ••
Anka said. "He never traveled, nev~r
got really close to people and never
learned to be comfortable in public.
He was isolated so long that he
became self-destructiye, and what·
ever he was into, he got into it too
far."
Anlca said he loved Presley, who
would have been SO this January. He
last saw him six months before his
,death in August 1977. "I could sense
something was wronJ with him
en:iotionally and physically.'' Anka
said. ·
One , of the last songs Presley
recorded was Anica's "My Way."
Like 1968's· "Niaht of the living
Dead," and 1979's "Dawn of the
Dead," also filmed near Pittsbu!Jh,
Romero's third filfll pits the li ving
against the dead. It is a violent
struggle that worsens over time.
Only 12 people are left at the start of
"Day of the Dead," all of them hiding
in an underground military installa-
tion in Florida from the human-
eating zombies which have taken
over the earth.
Most of the film's production 1s
being done by Romero's Pittsburgh-
based Laurel Entertainment, Inc ..
inside the cold, empty mine near
Wampum, with a few segments .Ti;::;::==========;;:;:;-i filmed in Florida. The movie is "'BEVERLY tc..1.S COP' expected to ht-released by next fall.
IS DYNAMITE. IT HAS
''This one's a little darker again
because I think things have gotten a
little darker. Kids are learning about
'duck and cover' again and worried
abou't bein~ nuked," be said.
Despite its allegories, the trilogy
isn't meant to be "h.eavy," according
to Romero, who refuses to divuJge the
ending. He hasn't yet decided
whether to continue the saga.
"There's an underbelly to it1 I
think, 'havin$ to do with civilization
devQ}lring Itself with whatever,
wheiher It's consumerism or high
tech, doing its genocidal thing." Jic
said. "That's really the bottom line I
think to what this movie is about.
Eating itself alive. In this case,
literally." -
ENERGY, SASS AND
PUNCH. EDDE t.UAfY
IS TERRFIC."
-i...on.G Mllltin, ENTEATAINMEHT TONIGHT
l~l:.\llEl~~f
1-t 11~1-'c;
Mado~na's 'Virgin'
tops singles chart
AIWfll
PACIFIC AIWiCIM 01!-IN
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"WfTA MA EDWAAOS 8A1S1 Dt
S40 7"-4
IDTIMSIU
NOW PLAYING
• llllA .._ .... ....,.
~Ull
•MllANM u--. 951 .,.,
By The Associated Preas
The following are Billboard's hot record
hits as they appear in next week·s issue of
Billboard magazine. Copyright 1984.
Billboard Publications. Inc. Reprinted
with permission.
BOT SINGLES I ."Like A Virgin" Madonna (Warner
Bros.)
2. "The Wild Boys" Duran Duran
(Capitol)
3."0ul of Touch" Daryl Hall & John
Oates(RCA)
4."Sca of Love" Honeydrippcrs
(ATCO)
S."Cool It Now" New Edition (MCA)
6."We Belong" Pat Bcnatar (Chrysalis)
7."I Fell For You" Chaka Khan (Warn-lOW~ROS WOOOBlnoCE SSH16SS
"LAHBA
EDWAAOS CHMA WES!
891·393S
"ftlESOOID
er Bros.) ~============~ 8."No More Lonely Nights" Paul McCartney (Columbia)
~ f AS/a SQUARE
(213) 691-0633 •en.BY
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Center South ~ J
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*PACIFIC DRIVE ·IN THEATRES•
CnllbT
'lUS
... , ..... -(N) ""0-.. 1..,-,.,,-,,,,-... ---.. -·1
-(Pl.lJ) ""' 111 IMf "-,.,
ORANGE ~
a-J. I 01 c ...... Cit-Jwy
Lo Hl~BPA ...
llll11 ·1~.-T ' ' .
MISSION
....... J •
9."All t Need" Jack Wagner (Warner
Bros.)
10."Valoue" Julian Lennon (Atlantic)
11."Walce Me Up Before You Go-Go"
Wham (Columbia)
12."Ruo To You" Bryan Adams
(A&M)
13."All Through The Night"'' Cyndi
Lau per (Epic)
14."Bom fn The USA" Bruce Spring-
steen {Columbia) .
I S."You'rc Tfae Inspiration" Chicaio
{Warner Bros.)
16."I Can't Hold Back" Survivor (Epic)
17."Do Whal You Do" Jermaine Jack-
son (Arista)
I IS ... Penn}' Lover" Lionel R1ch1e
(Motown)
19,"Undersianding" Bob Seger & The
Silver Bullet Band (Capitol)
20."Hello Again·· The Cars (Elektra)
TOPLPS
!."Purple Rain" Prince & The Revol-
u1ion (Warner Bros.)
2."Born ln The U.S.A.'0 Bruce Spring-
s1een (Columbia)
3."Like A Virgin" Madonna (Warner
Bros.)
4:'Pnvate Dancer" Tina Turner
(Capitol)
5."Arena" Duran Duran (Capitol)
6."Big Barn Boom" Daryl Hall & John
Oates(RCA)
7.:·votume One" Honeydrippcn (At·
Ian tic)
8.':The Woman In Red-Soundtrack·'
Stevie Wonder (Motown)
9."17" Chicago (Warner Bros.)
10."Can't Slow Dowq" Lionel Richie
(Motown) •
11 ."Spons" (Huey Lewis and Tbe News
(Chrysalis)
12. "Reckless" Bryan Adams (A&M) l~."Shc's So Unusual" Cyndi l.aupcr
(Epic)
14. "T ropico'' Pat Bena tar (Chrysalis)
l S. "Lush Life" Linda Ronstadt (Elektra)
16. "The Unforgettable Fire, U2 (lsland)
17."l Feel For Yo11" Chaka khan
(Wa~er Bros.l .
18. Valotte Juhan Lennon (Atlantic)
19. "Heartbeat City" The Can (Elektra)
20."Suddcnly" Billy Ocean (Arista)
-
Or9n09 CO... DAILY PflOT/Tueeday, Oeoembet ti, tN4
COMPLET! NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS,
Irvine'• lar&eat office building
Coutnactlon bu •tarted on the Atrium, the lar&eet
commercial ~fOce bailclbl& In lnine. Located on Von
Karmon AYenae. near oran,e County'• John Wayne
Airport. the $64.5 million complea will provide 347,186
9qa&re feet of apace on 8 .2 acreta of land between Dupont
Drl•e and Campu Drt•e ~ben lt la completed ln early
1988. The twin-towered ball=f•tare a 10-.tory l&M-enclOMd artrtam. The ball la a int Yentare of ~e French• llcKenn.a Company and. atfon. both lnine-
buecl real •tate dnelopment-ftnu. .
This is a good year for Office
spacerentals;.'85 'betteryet'
Nineteen eighty four will be a
record year for leasing of office space
in Orange County, and 1985 should
be even better, according to princi-
pals of McCarter-Burke & Partners.
Inc., lrvme-bascdcommercial, indus-
trial and inyestment real estate finn.
George McCarter, president and
chief executive officer of the bro-
lceraae firm, said a record 3.65 million
square feet of office space will be
leased this year, compared to 3.2
million square feet leased in 1983.
"When all the figures are in. I thank
thr> will show that 1984 was the year
that economic vitality returned to
Orange County in full swing.'' noted
McCarter. who co-found ed
McCartcr-Burke in 1983.
He said his firm projects that 3.8
m1ll1on ~uarc feet of oflice space wtll
be leased m 1985. followed by about 4
million square feet m 1986 and 4.25
million square feet m 1987.
"The long-term picture for Orange
County·~ commercial office market is
bnght as long as the economy holds
up. which we expect It will do," said
McCarter.
Although commercial and indus-
tnal real estate development and
leasing activity was $Olid in all
sections of the county during the year.
the area around John Wayne Airport
wa a standout. actbrding to
Mc arter
He P<llnted out that approx1 matel}
2 million square feet of offi ce space
will be leased in the Airport Area in
1984. which is 55 percent of all space
leased countyw1de. By 1988, the
Airport area's share will reach 60
percent, he added.
"Most of the county's major office
projects arc in the Airport area, which
encompasses Irvine. Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa. and most of the
industrial deve_!f.pmcnt is occuring in
the nearby lrvi~ lndustriaJ Center in
eastern Irvine: MoCarter explained.
''This part of Orange County is
rapidly becoming the county's down-
town and also a center of commerce
for Southern California. We expect
that the high level of business growth
aroond John Wayne Airport wtll be
more than enough to absorb all the
ne1.1. commercial and industrial de-
velopment underway or in planning."
He said there arc currently 3 7
different office projects m some stage
of development in the airport area,
the largest of which are The Irvine
Company's Jamboree Center, Koll
Center-Irvine, the Performing Arts
complex in South Coast Plaza Town
Center, Brinderson P1aza and Metro
Center (Sakioka development).
Another indicator of Orange Coun-
ty's emergence of a world-Qass com-
mercial center is the increase in the
amount of high-rise office space beina
built or planned, McCart~r said.
He noted that high-rise accounted
for about 500,000 square feet of the
office space developed annually in
the county, but Jumped to I.I million
square feet last year. nearly all of
which was in the airport area.
"Almost 70 percent of the high-nse
office space leased in Orange County
over the past severaJ years has been in
tbe airport area, and more than halfof
the office projects under develop-
ment or planned around the airport
arc high-rise," McCarter said. "It's a
stroni sign that Orange County, and
especially the airport area, is attract-
ing sophisticated companies that
demand quality high-rise office space
for regional or corporate head-
quarters. The major portion of firms seeking
offices in ffie county arc scrviec-based
companies such as finance, in-
surance, marketing, engineering,
leaal counsel and real estate, Burke
concluded. He said there arc also a
arcat deal of high-tech. med-tech and
other technoloCY related companies
moving into the county.
Fluor unit
~-ardedjob
in Portsmouth
A unit of Auor C''1rp. has been
awarded an extension on a contract
from the U.S. Department of Energy
for a gas centrifuge enrichment plant
near Ponsmouth, Ohio. the company
said.
The value oft he contract ex tension
isSI l.3million. Theorig.inalcontract
value was S l 02. I million.
The advanced technology d1v1s1on
of Auor Enaincen Loe. bas des~ and
construction support rtspons1bility ADnlverury celebration for "the plant's process facilities.
SW IDtenaadoaal, IDc. recenty celebrated Sek.lllo. preeident and director; and T. Construction of the $7.5 bilhon
tm lOtll anni-nnuy d-.t-• the annual Imal. eaecadn vice preeident and cl1rector complex is 40 percent complete. a..; _.._ d /1 la ... _ _..... Fluor has been provid1ng dcs1an corporate m.eedDC U1 LaCana Jlflaael. Dar-poae 11or P otoer&P'I-•11w •a Dew UOt-and constcuctaon support SUVtocs lDf a meetlDC br.k llOb Guilm. left. welibt alot lMd pl'Ojeetor • t.lae Ont of dine since Apnl 1978. To date, Fluor has a.cadn rice-oneldent and aen•ral man-mo4ela to be aancnanced by the end of the provided 3 million man-boun to the
Quotas, trade
restraints no
solution for . . steel's ·problem
BJ ,JOHN CUNNIFF ,, ....... AMIW9'
NEW YORK -Smee their nature
is to continue growing, economies are
never free from challenges, and one of
the most persistent c~lenfCS is what
to do about protecuoa cmportant
industries.
It is a persistent chaJlenae because
it is almost never met Instead,
compromises arc reached that prot>
ably avoid the real issues or dissuise
them or maybe even worsen them.
Examples mi&ht be the com-
promises reached on steel and auto-
mobile$, two of the most basic and
important of American industries.
In each instance federal authorities
declined to impose quotas on imports
of Japanese products; instead, they
won aarccments from the Japanese
that they would voluntarily limit
their shipments to the United States.
In doina so, studies show, the
immediate ~ins of the domestic
industries might be cased. but nobody
has assurance that in the Iona rtm the
United States will be any better oft
Jobs might be saved, but other jobs
miaht be lost.
A government report cited by
Professor Arthur Denzau of the
Center for the Study of American
Business at Washinston Unjversity
explains how it happens.
The International Trade Com-
mission, Dcnzau relates, rec-
ommended thafthe Reaaan ad.minis..
•ration pursue mandatory 15 percent
import quotas on steel as a means of
preserving the American industry
and its jobS.
Such a quota. the iovemment
analysis suggests, would indeed help
the steel industry, but at an enormous
cost, since 1t would raise steel pnccs to
U.S. consumers by 8.9 percent -SS
billion a year.
According to Otnzau's calcu-
lations., a 15_ percent quota could
mean 92.000 lewer JObs 10 stecl-usu11
sectors such as metal fabnca~
machinery and transportation equip:
meot. · . .. Thus, he states in a.study, .. Faci.alil
Up To The Problems Beaeltina Bil
Steel, .. even talcina into account tbl
26,000 steelworker jobs that would bi
saved, "the impos1uon of an im~
quota would result an a net lou Of
66,000 jobs in the American work· •
force."
The admirustration didn't ~
the trade commission·s rccornmen,
dation and instead reached a QOlll•
promise with the Japanete in wbida
they ap-eed to linut their steel cxponf
to the United States to 6 pen::eot «
less of the market.
The decision was , bai&ed af
Solomon-like, and boU, free uaden
and the steel industry hailed it u a
victory. But Denz.au sugesu .. in the
Iona run it will likely prove IO
neither," because all that clMllQlllll
were pcrcen.s.
The domesuc automobile ind
enjoys similar ltm1tations on ~
to the U.S. matket from Japan,
the consequences could be aimi
The auto industry, however, bas
usina the time that i:s pined tosg· improve iu production fi · 1 •
While domesttc carmaken still
not ma.kc a small car for the l&tn4
pnce Japan, General Motors vows 1'
solve the problem.
·The situation is less clear in stee\
and Dem.au SUIJeS\S that restraints it
any form merely treat symptomt
rather than the malaiJe.
In his analysis,, steel's basic prot>
lem is a low rate of productivll
arowth. agravated amona othct
things by a penod of steadily risn\I
labor costs.
In 1970, he points out. sted
workers already were receiving wages
one-fourth higher than the averqt
U.S. manufactunn1 worker.
One million dlaka · 1 Dick Charlton. iUht. president of Charlton ANOClatee ln
lr"Ylne. preMDta tie company'• one millionth rtald dl8C to
Alan F . ShUCart. chairman of the board of ee.,ate.
Charlton ta a ma.tor aappller of IU.ld dl8C med.la to &eacate.
a leaclin.« manafactarere of dlec artvee. Sea&ate pioneered
the 51/• -fnch dlaca to Wlncheeter dlac drive manafactaren.
The club for .
••; Tabo NBmara. 'Yice preatdent: K. year. project.
I r-~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiii~
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contract by lhe I RS. The IRS contract represents 'lhe
1CCOnd federal rclocauon contract to
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fint fcderaJ contract wa awarded by
the FBIDEA on ~ov. 6.
• Relocation scrvata provided to tbc
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oldwtll Banker will tndude.
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Association
When> Tomorrou' Begins Today. " til 1 t' .
'"'"'·'""'''' "' ,.,.,,.,.,. l'""~t ,,, • .,,, ••ll~h '"·'''~ ''"111 ~·· '""' tt.~ ..... 0111<•1 fn1i1
l1t\h.1t1jt\ d uh ""' 111..,.,1 h•I< rillt Wl•"llll l1111•·tt1"1 l!ljt ~
. ..,
-
118 Orange Cout DAIL. Y PILOT 1,Tuaday, O«:ember 18, 19M
Jet-lag ls the biggest problem
In be_atlng United at its game
SAN DIEGO (AP) -It takes
creativity and jet-laf cannot bother
you too much ff you re aoina to beat
United Airlines at its own aame -
flying to all SO states in 50 days.
Fred Newell flys a lot on business
so the challcnae was less severe to
him. The former department store
president who now 9wns bis own
retail consultina firm for clients in 21
states managed to sec the entire
United States in less than 50 days.
And he spent parts of most weekends
at home an Coronac:Jo.
Ncwcllspcnds$60,000toS70.000a
year nyina. His prite ftom United -
unlimited first-class travel to any
U.S. city served by the airline -probably will be worth $4(),000 next
year, he said.
Oftbe $10,000 he spent answerina
U nited's challenge, Newell said he probably would have spent $6,000 on
business travel anyway. He would
have visted 34 of the states on
business. So the others were no big
deal. ·
"It wasn't so hard physically be-
cause I am so uicd to flyina the time
clock thin& doesn't bother me 1 lot.
But there were some toua,h days,''
Newell said. .
l..Ast weekend's travel schedule, for
instance, might have made a national
political candidate shudder.
"Last Saturday, 1 went to Hawaii
on the momfog plane 111d aot into
Honolulu at 12:45, bought my wife an
orchid plant and some Maui (potato)
chips and got on the I p.m. plane to
oome home. Fifteen minutes in
Hawaii, and that wasn't fun. '
"Theo, tbe next day, Sunday, 1 left
for Anchoraae about 3:50 p.m., changed in ~atde and got to Anchor-
age about 9:30 p,m. Went downtown
to a place called the Pines, which is
their big country music lounae, had a
couple of drinks, got back to tbe
airpon for a I a.m. plane to Seattle,
then to Portland to Chicaao to
Raleiah, N.C .. and aot there at 8:30
Monday night," Newell said. "That
was a long day.'1
' NEW YORK (!<P> -The foltowlno I''' shows the Over • the -CoUll er I!~' end werrents triar llave oone uo n .. mo1st ,•nd d9wn the most beHd on e>erctn o (henge tor Monday
· EntrepreneurGroup
~~~ I 1~ ~i H reports profit increase ·
No. M:Curllles trading below s2 or lOOC sh~res ere lnclUded. et end rcenle • Chi ' 1r llf dld•renc1 • i:fw•~.' ,he c>r~us cTosln, bl or ce encf Monr,~j" 1111 bid Price.
p Ntr• "' Cllg Pct j ~~ t~ ~ UP ll.' om ·~ l'• UP 7
j ~ C 1Pl un \.'J l~ Up ~: • un 'h Uo .0 Lamp ~ Uo 6 Lemp un ~ UP :6 rtn~yn j Up
S ~·'~trr5 ~ ~g l '.i !V 'I I/• Up 1 • i Mer 2 Uo 1 ~ S un 3.4 11. UP 1 :
Sd 2 ll-16 I+ 1~ 8~ . AB let I/• Up :1 ns ~ UP .1 ~ I 1 'h '(! UP . ~~,~' :l .~ 8~ iJ HllllvFn •;. 1;. uo .3
DOWNS Lfi' _c90 · "• --~ -1'1'2
7'n -f~ 13 -lit SJ4 -I,\ , ....... -v.
734 -111. 7~ -111. l·~ -~ ~ -~ ....... -'h 'h -~ lit -~ ~ -Vi 3 v. -41/•
13-f.. -1s-u lllt -3* 2 1/• -31/4 l/4 111
i ~ 1,4
I/•
ct. ~•1:~ • Record first-quarter net income for
·~ Entrepreneur Group Inc. formerly
•4 Chase Revel Inc., was reported by the :11 company's president. Wellington
: For the three months ended Sept. I. Ewen. ·
·1 30, the Entrepreneur Group, which
1 : publishes Entrepreneur Magazine
1 · and other business research infor·
ll : mation. had net income of$212,982, fl comparea with $80, 787 the previous
l J'. year. an increase of 164 percent. l l· Gross revenues for the quarter were {[4l SI . 708,31 S, compared with
11. 11. 11.1 11.I 11,1 MUTUAL F UNOS
l1NMllll@Qlii!il-------
The Gift of Joy.
Make the holiday glow even brighter
with a gift that sparkles all year long.
From the people making crysta l
a legend.
SWAROVSKI "
Frosted lovebirds. delicately perched on a
multi-faceted bowl of 32 % full lead Austrian
crystal. A superb Hottday gift for the most
important person 1n your life. Exclusively yours
from the Swarovsk1 Silver Crystal' .. Collection.
This week we are open
Mon. thru Fri. until 9 p.m.-Sat. until 5 p.m.,
Sun. 12to 5 p.m.
........ , ,
H. DARR
11•1 .,..... w.....,. .....
Ml•r•ltec'
• 1
$1.662,959 for the previous year's
first quarter. Sates for the fiscal year
ended June 30 were $7,233,962 and
net income was $991 ,202. Reporting sales and income, Ewen
credited the increase to an "excep-
tionally strong performance by our
telephone sales division and a better
sales mix of products."
Ewen also cited savinJS ttirol!gh
improved cost controls tn pnntsng
and other operations, as well as more
efficient methods of deli vering prod-
ucts to customers.
'1.1 \
'°'• r~• ,,,., y
Jt ~
-----
... _ On ---the
,_::
• I
•
WH AT NYSE Dio
NEW YOAIC (AP) Dec. ae
UP S AND DOWN S
DOWNS N•me Lui °'9 I PayNPak 12'h -1~
2 Equlmr1t CP 4 --3 Texfl Ind 2~ -II. 4 8utlerlnt 17"9 -1'1'1 S KanebSvc 934 -~ 6 CenlmOatJ 10 -"'2
7 Ht$$10fl Co t-'I• I CCXCorP -*
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4 Pe.bOdy 7 --• S N!MlneSv ~ -114
Pel ~ ••
WHAT AM£X Dw
NEW YORK API 0eC 11 <. Prev
Advanced T-~ ~y
Dec tined m ynchange(j otaliswn New niQhs b y NtwlOWS
AMEX LEADERS
NEW YORK (APl -S.la, 4 o.m. prfc.
and net ehanot of !he ltn mOil active American Sle>Q ExGtla~ IUU9S tr a d lno na Hona tlv a 1 mo rt
ll'lan SI. !AT Ind l ,091 tteil)tlere ulfCan o Wanguga S<~BJ}lJI! Gr'~Cf'lm A hi Tl omm l(..,PMfM
4 I-~ +1-16 + .... 1: 1;.
1 ~ +I~ 3'4 + ') 11 -16 f ~ :t·~
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NASDAQ SUMMARY
NEW YORK !AP) -Most active over -tl'le·cOYnter stodl;s wPC>lled t>v NASO
Name '!~ 8~ As•ui C~ ~~ :1·1~• ;~ ~ -I Mentor I 3~ 3 ., + •
lntChn , 11 II • MCI wt S,1 11·16 1 'e A09leC 9, 77 27'• + -, RHvts 0, J ') S~ -• Se4'0111e 43. , S~ •
U"•sv '47 ?00 "'t 91,. + " h"40n 422 200 S7' 6 -">
GoLD Quo rEs
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Leoodoft illl<WnOOn ft&1n9 $)Ot 00, Oii l f 00
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.,._.., & "--fon!y 0-, ~I AOI 00. o1! I~ 00 1...--.1°"'J-., QuOIOlf UGI .a 01t Sr oo ................... t°"'I'...., .-.1 ..,, • ., Oii 17 1()
N't' C-"t O<*I tOOl INWlftl ,I'! b ROO Olf SI 00
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-Mon __,. u 15 00-lllfo 00 per 7t ~ ........... .,_.
....._ l30t 004:»14 00 ~flC ftWOlltlltt ·~ _.,,..,
That'sanaptdes r1ption ofboth bu ine a nd
bu In s people along th Oran Coast. To keep ti:a k of
\Vh r compani sare oin~and hi hp oplearehelpin
them tther ,ju twat h r di cin ' v r da in th
Busin tlon of our n w Daily Pilal
J
I
Of•• OOMI DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, p.c.mber 18, 1984
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"Our TV set got pr~·empted." •
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"We had to do 1tl We're going caroling and
Marmaduke thinks he's a solo bass!"
GORDO
/.fas ~ 'T"HE "'-IRL~'' ""°u PL.A" 1};:NNI~
WITH ble.R-1 l?A'I,
/NallATAr
GARFIELD
rv LOVE TO CATCH
'i'OVRMIC( GRANl7PA.
OOT I HAVtN'i SE.EN
A/4Y WORI HY OF MY TIME.. GOT ANYT HINCf
61Guf.R ?
MOON MULLINS
81.JSltJESS PEC>U CTION ...
How t>o You Feet... 11M
,ABOUT CHRISTM,AS Fo~ IT.'
80NUSES FOR THE
EMPLoY~ES
?
JUDGE PARKER
BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
. , .,
h ,
I
"I decided to go publlc."
DENNIS THE MENACE
1 ,,
t
'
by Hank Ketcham
~ • rr ~·r OONOGOOO TO PROOISE /(If; STUFF-You OOTTA TAU< iO MY M/JM 'N OAn. ~ .
G
I I
J I
A
by Jim Davis
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
PE~SoNALLY, I WHAT'S THAT
!MINI' IT'S 1'o ~~E,AT GOT lo Do WITH
IDE,A··FROM MY YOU?
po I NT OF V/ EW. r----"11•"'-
by Harold Le Doux
•• lo
I •
by Garry Trudeau
SHOE by Jeff MacNally
·Vl~nia : The reason he
can fly all over
the wt)r .1d. for
he·g been in tlie.:
Thinks ~n fur JWr ldter. As I keep telling )t'U,
there !S a Santa Claus. nothins i~ .
Frequent Flyer~
for ~neratioll6.
PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz
YES, MA'AM , l1D LIKE
TO VOLUNTEER TOMPLAY
THE PAAT OF MAR'r' IN
OUR C~RISiMAS PLAY ...
TMAT'5 Rl6~T,
SIR .. SME ASKEO
ME 'r'ESTERDA'r'
MAR'( NEVEl 11 WORE 6LASSE5 ..
12-11
DRABBLE
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
ue.PN CPNf" COMe lt-l
~.~.SMe·s t-\AVI~ A BAD BOUT"
CY~~-<! • ICl<IES.'l/
,
Wi<ITINU
L£ne1<~
'fO !>AtlTA
\~KIO~'
'iuH.
by Kevin Fagan
1 IA~EO
O\~U.1L.'i
IMIO
\.M
C.OMM€.R~
J I&.'
~~
by Tom K. Ryan
r--::::::=:::----r '1'EAH. 1\W t4UN~l!U 6CNS L.5AFING-
Ff'.AN11CAU.'( "™"Dt.15H EMl!Rt!Hif\Jev'
C~ISIS HAN~ WAS A SIGtn".
BRIDGE IT'S EASY IF YOU KNOW
Eric Kokisb dec1ared after the auc·
East-West vulnerable. South deals. tion shown, he received the lead of
NOKRTH the jack or spades, won in hand with
• 15 the queen. He could count eight
r::J JJ 87
7
5 2 tricks, and he decided that the kinr
0 of spa4es was his best bet for the
WEST + K .C 3 £ ST ninth. Without rurther ado, Kokiah ~ returned a spade at trick two, and ~: J 10 9 8 • ~ K Q 10 9 5 3 West smoothly prbaUced the eight.
0 9 8 3 0 10 .C 2 Now anyone seeing all the cards + J 10 6 5 + Q 8 2 knows that declarer need only play
OUTH
• Q6 32
'V AG
O AKQ 8
+A97
The bidding:
.. t .. WHt
I 0 Put
2 T Pau
P .. 1 Pa11
Nort.la £H t
l ~ Pue
3 T Pue
Opening lead. J ack o( •.
OMAR
SHARIFF
the king of spades from dummy for
his contract. Kok i h, howrver,
reaaon d that W t. might weUhava
~ For the i pectator at 1 bridge overcalled If his holdln1. lncludln1
match who can ae aII tht urd1, tht five spades headed by tht A J 10.
g4me i1 easy. For the pl11er , It l a So he pl&)'t'd low. and a dell1hi.d
bit mor dlfrlcull. Thia band ~ from West took three mor~ 1pade tricks.
the Epson Swl 1 Team• Champion-No ninth trklc mat r'lallz d -down
s hip In Tokyo. on ·
Th re no trump was re •ched at In the other room Yamanaka of
all tabl , although not al 1ay1 with Oaaka. Japan, dedar d thl'ff no
South a d•rlarer. Wh er .dontr al'a trump from th North eat, and h•
delivered a virtuoso performance.
He woo the opening lead of the king
of hearts and came t.o hand with a
spade to the king. He crossed to th~
king of diamonds to lead a heart,
and ducked when West sluffed a
spade.
East exited with a diamond, and
decltrer cleared the suit. On the
fourth diamond West had to find a
discard. He co uldn't afford another
spade, so he pitched a club. Now
CHARLES
Go REN
dttlarer cuhed the act-klng of
~lub and exited with hi• rtmalnins
club. He did not care. which
d fender won the club. tr il was
W•lt, b WOU]d haYt t.o concede the ..,
n1nth trick to'the queen of apadtt; tr
East, the jack of hearu wowd
become tht ninth trick!
Pw ............ ••t cw..,
Gena'tM•MW•tt.r tw ~
playen, wn~ G.,.. lriAp Let&er
l lOt Caa ... a .... Ave •• ca. ... ..:
.... N.J. own.
NFL playoff .chedule
NPLIUyeffl
(Al !Imel "ST)
WILD CUD GAMES satw•v lt•lders •t S.•t~, l o.m. <Chenntl 4)
SUMav ·
N•w YOl'k Gl•nts •I Items, l2:30 o.m.
CON,IR•HCI S•M.,INALS
s.tuf'clH, Dec. 2'
R•lders Of' Seattle •I Miami, 9:30 a.m. Chlcaoo or Ntw York Giants at San
FranclKo, 1 o.m.
SUlldllV, Dec. IO
Rams Of' Chlcaoo ., WHhlllQIOl'I, ?:30 a.m,
Pfttsb\iroh at Oenvtr, I o.m.
C:ONf'IRIHCI CHAMl"tONSHf .. SUMav, JM' Tlmff Md Slfel TaA
AFC Semffl~I Winners
NFC semrnnat WlllMl'I
SU .. lll BOWL SUftclav, Jal\. 20
.At hie Atte AFC Clwlrni>lon YI. NFC Chamolon, 3 o.m.
* lally Pilll TUESDAY. DECEMBER 18, 19S.
''~; ' Sweden win•
l ~ ~. In double•
1 .. ,, to top U.S. ~ In Davia Cup. C3.
WavM knock off
UC8enl8.....,•
with 3 ••coad• remelnlng. C3.
R~~s hoping for another fia·sc1;1
Bum bltng Gian ts had a very long day Bill Pa~lls will tell 'you. com~ttttve Wllh every te.am In the traveJed 10 Dallas Sunda~ ;i I • "I think we are ·• much more league. rematch oflast year's NFC wild-Card
th fl t ti th t d t A h i competitive team this year th.an we "In the past, the Giants have been game. e rs me ey Ven Ure 0 na e ffi were the year befott, panicularly in more or less the doormats of the C c.h J h R b ' _ .. b' our division," said Parcells. league and the teams have feasted.off oa . 0 n o inson au" . JI
ByCURT SEEDEN
OttMO.., ..........
The New York Giants did not have
a lot of fun the last time they visited
Anaheim Stadium.
You might recall things started out
well enough for the Giants back on
Sept. 30. The Giants kicked off to the
Rams and jumped on the free ball in
the end zone for a quick touchdown.
Things went downhill quickly after
that.
The Giants, who will venture to
Anaheim Stadium Sunday (12:30) to
face the Rams in the NFC wild-card
game, probably burned the films of
that game. Before the day was over,
the Rams had recorded an NFL
record three safeties and h'eld the
Giants to ei~t yards rushing en route
to a 33-12 victory.
h G. .. 'd c "O h players had to sweat out WuJtint-All-Pro lfoebacker H~rry Carson t e tan ts, sat . arson. ne t . ing ton's 29-27 win over St. Louis Sunday
said the team bas had tts Ur and that ha~ occurred IS a lo~ of. growing. Which qualified the Rams for tNI
downs. but played well overal . ta;ge~~emess and learning how to Sunday's wild-card contesL win.
But white the Giants may have
looked like the same inept team
which went 3-12-1 one year earljer,
they made some giant strides, Coach
"I woutd say the season has been a
success ~rdtess of what happens~"
Carson said. "We've grown a lot and I
feel good knowing over the next
couple of years we'U have a strong
nucleus here."
Carson said the Giants now have a
team that is capable of winnini the
NFC East title and one that w1Jt be
Vikings roll,
CdMm.isses
It's Marina, 5 -41;
Sea Kings lose out
to Foothill, 60-57
By ROGER CARl.SQN
OftMDelJ ..........
Corona del Mar High's Sea Kings
are fighting to stay alive in the
consolation bracket of the third
annual Irvine Invitational basketball
tournament today (4:30), while
Marina's Vikings go up agajnst Foot-
hill (7:30) in the nightcap at UC
Irvine.
Here's how it went Monday in the
ftrst round at UCI:
Marina 5$, Moreno Valley 41: The
Vikings, led by 6-8 sophomore Mark
Georgeson and 6-5 freshman Steve
Guild, toyed with a quintet which was
unable to meet previous Moreno
Valley standards.
Georgeson led the way with 22
points as the Vikings pulled away in
the third quarter despite turning the
* * *
ball over njne times against a Moreno
Valley press.
''That was an important win," said
Marina Coach Steve Popovich, who
saw his team post its fourth victory in
six decisions. "That's all we got last
year (the Yikes were 4-18)," added
Popovich. "I didn't want to get out of
here in two."
Marina hit its first four shots from
the field egainst a Moreno Valley
team which CO!,!ld manage just 6 for
28 in the ftrst half and 11 of 44 (25
percent) through three periods.
"We were patient on offense, took
some good shots and got it inside,"
said Popovich.
Marina was also deadly at the line,
hitting its first 12 and going 17 for 20
in all.
Footblll 50, Corona del Mar 57: The
most glaring error in the tour-
nament's first round proved out as
these two, easily quarterfinalists with
proper seeding, dueled to the fmal
three Seconds before it was senled.
And it came down to a split second
decision as Corona del Mar junior
(Pleue eee vnmtGS/C2)
*·* * Warriors: heartbrea k;
Saddle back: f astbreak
Some of the best action at the Irvine
Tournament Monday centered
around Woodbndge High School, the
site where two area basketball teams
-Woodbridge and Saddleback -
produced contrasting results.
For the Warriors, the result was
grief when a Villa Park field goal with
three seconds left cost them a first-
round win.
For Saddleback's speedy Road-
runners, an easy win advanced them
to the winners' bracket.
Here's a closer took at how things
went:
Wamors couldn't hold on.
The Wamors inbounded the ball
under the Villa Park basket with time
in their favor and missed a wide open
lay-up. The Spartans rebounded,
sped down coun and 6-0 senior Vince
Ayres scored from the comer with
three seconds left.
The Warriors, in ieopardy of being
eliminated early from their own
tournament, host Rancho Alamitos
at 4:30 today.
New York finished the season with Should the Rams get past the
a 9-7 record. Giants. they would then traveJ to
:rhe Rams. meanwhile. wouldn't Washington to meet the Redskins on
ryirn·d another fiasco. · . Sunday, Dec. 30.
The Rams (I~) manaJed to ,ain a ·Tickets for this Sunday's game
home playoff game despite losing to went on sale Monday at the Anaheim
San Francisco Friday night. Had the Stadium ticket office and at
Cowboys knocked off Miami Mon-Ticketron and Ticket Master to-
day night, the Rams would have cations
VllJa Park 48, Woodbridge 46: With Marina aophom ore Mark Georgeaon (44) goea up to ecore on a 46-45 lead. possession of the ball
the way to a 22-polnt production for the Vlklnga Monday. and Is seconds left in the itamc. the
"Overall we made too many turn-
overs and took too many bad shots,"
said Woodbridge Coach Bill Shan-
non. "And those really hurt you in a
close game."
(Pleue aee BREAK/C2)
Deir ........... _, .............
Mark Lyon of Woodbridge goea high to claim a rebound in
the Warrion• 48-46 lut-eecond eetback to the Sputa.na.
Vaqueros ,
Mustangs
victorious
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
Irvine High's Vaquerors are in
tonight's (7:30) second round of the
championship bracket -going
agajnst an old basketball foe from the
Sea View League -Costa Mesa's
Mustangs following opening round
victories Monday ni$ht in the third
annual Irvine lnvitauonal.
Here's how it went in first·round
games at Irvine:
Irvine 77, Garden Grove 15: Forget
the score. It was much tougher than
the score indicates.
"Whew, that was a g~ game
wasn't it?" said Vaqueros Coach Al
Herring after his team finally. put
away the scrappy Argonauts with a
late surge after Garden Grove had
pulled to within 66-61 with 3: 18
remaining.
·"We played good defense coming
out in the second half," said Herring.
"Our board work improved and we
got some-rcal-jOOd-shots."
The Vaqueros shot a blisterin,s 71
percent in the second hnlf. Irvine's
defense, mcanwhite. forced turnovers
and bad shots that t~ Vaqueros
tumed into fast break lay-ups.
In the first four minutes of the third
quaner Irvine went on a tear. outsoor·
int Garden Grove 14-2 for a 4S-36
lead af\er trailina 31-34 at the half.
.But then the ArJonauts climbed
back in it.with a spurt of tbcll' ow11 to
pull to within S8-S4 with ix minutes
lef\.
Two strai&ht rebound baskets. one
by Brian Snoddy and another by
sophomore Mike Herrin&. aavc the
Vaqueros some brtathina room with
a 62-S4 cushion.
Herrin& led Irvine wtth 21 points
and tied Garden Grove's Raul Duran
fonop scorina honors. Duran scored
(Pl•• ... VAg8/C2)
Estancia rumbles, but University High tumbles
Eagles putLosAmigosaway, 81-46;
second half disastrous for Uni, 84-62
scorers in the game. Clements also
pulled down six rebounds.
Many of Clements' points came
from inside the Irey during the few
times the Eagles weren't scoring on
fast break lay-ups. Estancia Coach Joe
Reid said they were not looking
specifically to go to Clements on
offense.
By CHRIS MONAHAN
Dally l'ffot Corrnpandetll
Both Estancia and University High
were involved in blow-outs in first
round basketball action at the third
annual lrvirte Tournament Monday
at University High. Estancia was on
the big end of a decision with Los
Amigos, while University was
crushed by Don Lugo.
Here's what took place:
Eatucla 81, Loa Amigos 41: ·Yes,
the Eagles did break a sweat as they
cruised to their lopsided victery over
the Lobos.
Estancia (5-0) ran by. around and
often through the Lobos (1 -5) taking
the lead early as the Eagles sprinted to
a 23-6 first quaner lead, li1ded by a
14-0 spun to stan the game.
With the win, Estancia moves to
the second round of the cham-·
pionship bracket tonight (6) against
Troy, a 48-44 winner over Western.
The Eagles wcr~ led by forward
Scott Clements, whose 25 points, 19
in the first half, was tops among all
"The play is not designed for Scott.
It just hap~ned to go has wa>
tonight," Reid said. "Scott and Todd
(Mooney) set scree,ns for each other
and rolled off to get the pass."
The Eagles were able to run often
thanks 10 a 36-29 rebounding edge
(despite three LObos at 6-4 or better:
tstancia's tallest player is 6-4 reserve
Craig Covey) and 24 team steals. 11
Jets blast McKay for la t e ploy
NFL officials to study-Bucs'
giveaway touchdown to NY
But Hector was tack.led at the two by safety Mark
Cotney, who later conceded he was supposed to let him
soore, but stopped him "by instinct." On the next play,
there wctt no such instinctive moves -Hector waltzed
into the end zone without a Dues' player near bim .
coming from guard Adam Lockwood.
"We got our running game going
and wrth our big lead they had to
throw up shots before the) wen~
read). -;o v.c were able to board
better." ..ard Rerd
<\n o1hcr contnbutrng factor in thl'
Eagles' v.in \\3!> fnx· throv. shoot111g.
The Eagles con' e11ed 21 of 2 ~
attempts for the game (87.S percent)
and didn't alloy.. Los o\m1gos an
attempt 1n the second half.
Don Lugo 84. University it: The
host Tro1ans (0-3). who trailed onl}
36-31 at halftime. fell back on old
habits and were run out of the game rn
the-second half.
The Conqu1stadorcs (~I) used a
decided height advantage and good
. NEW YORK (AP)-The Tampa Bay Buccanneers' "l think it wasa total embarrassment to the NFL ltsct
. ~e.-sumnder of.a towcbd~wn to the N.cw York J~~ back 20 yc.ars. ~called for," sattt-"'t-:::=
m the sea~?n fi na.te, goes ap1nst everyth1n1 tbe N~ New York Coach Joe Walton, who "bad to tell assistant
stands for, a National F90tball League sp0kcsman sa1d coach Mike Fautkincr to be quiet as be accosted McKay Mon~~Yaddcd that the matter would be reviewed by the vctbally after the pmc. · .
league office. • "I d<?n't ~lie!'c there's anything m our ,rule~ to cover
The score came m the final minute of Tampa Bay's such a s1tuauoo, Joe Browne. the NFL dn"CCtor of
41·2 I victory over the Jets unday, so that the Bucs could information, said Monday. .
act the ball back and give running back James Walder a "However, I believe it's f&1r to Slj' that'it aoes apinst
chance to set a sinale-season record for combmed yardqc. everyth1na the NFL stands for" That would ioclnde
But Wilder could pin only one )'•rd and fell IS yardsahor1 intesrity and competition for openers. The maner will be.
of .EricDickcnoo s ct«>rd of 1.2~~-rds. reviewed by our officund wt'll haye oothina funhcrtosa)
The action was ordered by Dues Coach John McKay, at this time:•
who bad.announced his retirement at midtcaSOn and was M('K.ay, who sat~ .. The Jct cal~ me 1evm.1 nam
in hi final 41mc. whichemblnused me,"Juallficd t6e move on the around
Follow1n1 a touchdown with. 1:4 l left that put the that the team's fan and &>la)'ers were )ell1na tb.rouahout
Sues ahead 41 -14, McKay ordered thrcc onside kick the fourth quarter to act Wtldcr I.ht l'tt()l'd.
attempts to get the baJI back and 11vc Wilder hia shot. .. They were throwtna statistics at me, 'Wilder n«'ds
Aner two penalties, the Jets finally aot the ~II at the tbi , Wilder needs that, ... ht. ~ad. "Our pll)'m wanted it so
Tampa Bay 3S. and the Bucs bcpt\ to pla~ pus1vcty on bldly. Tbi1Ytould be the last ume that I, as coach. could do
defense. conCcdint 12-and I 4o.yard compteuons to Wesley anythjft.f for them. Our fan wanted it, nobody was k.avrna
Walker, then bicJcana up as Johnny Htttor,.n towards t~ the stadtum They alfk.ncw the ituatton. l went with the • J bD lleKaJ
goal from the nine.yard hnc -~plc who me•~ mo t to me."' • 0
speed on the breaJt to outscore the
Trojans 48-31 tn the second half to
cruise to the wm.
"The\ heat us up on the bOards and
rm not surpnsed as big u they are
and as well as thev rebound," said
l nt'e~tt) Coach· Steve Scoggin.
.. Thl') must work on their break."
continued Scoggin. "We played well
the first half and poorly the second.
That's been the story all year. "We've
got to play 32 minutes of basketball."
The loss drops the Trojans into the
consolation bracket this afternoon
( 4.30) against Corona.. a 6.2-52 loser to
Laguna Hills. Meanwhile, Don Lugo
moves on to the second ro.u.nd in the
champ1onsh1p bracket against
(Pleue eee ESTANCIA/C2)
. ..
'
I
...
I.
Team that survived
fiery plane crash
comes home by bus
Prom AP dlspatd1es
JOHNSON CITY. Tenn. -A tired m
but relieved East Tennessee tate Unavcr-
ny ba ketball team amved home by bus
Monday night to champagne and baJlooM honorina
their narrow escape from a fiery plane ·era h rn
Alabama.
··w e're celebrating New Year's tomght," .said
Tammy Lowry, wife of Assistant ETSU Coach Vincent
Lowry who was unhurt when the plane crashed Sunday
near Jasper, Ala., and iQJured 12 players.
"We were JUSl plain lucky. We shouldn't be here
today." Lowry said as a crowd of 300 greeted the 33
players, coaches, reporters and alumni who were on the
charter flight
The players were handed duffie' baJS when the
team amved on the ET U campus weanng the same
clothes they wore when the plane crashed and destroyed
their luggage ··We lost everythmg.'' said Mike .Dent, a player
who cut his hand.
''I'll never nde an airplane agam," vowed Steve
h1rley. a player tnJured when he crawled out a broken
wmdow.
Officials at Walker County Medical Center said
1nJured players were treated for cuts, bruises or bum~
and none were hosp1tah.£ed.
Federal Av1at1on Administration mvesllgators
launched a probe into the accident, which occurred at
an airport 1n Jasper, northwest of Birmingham.
The plane made two passes over Bevill Field before
landing. 8111 Starnes. the airport manager. said the tires
blew out when the plane touched down and it skidded
off the runway
Quote of the day
Chacon &et8 10 days in jail
OROVILLE -Boxer Bobby Chacon m
ha been sentenced to 10 days 1n JG•l and
fined S 1,000 for tx-auna his second wife
The former Worfd Boxina Council
featherwe1Jht champion, who pleaded no contest la t
month to a misdemeanor charae of Wife beating. wa
also ordered Monday to pt-rform 400 hours of
community ~rv1ce work by Dec 23. 1985, and to repay
$241 for county citpenses related to the case.
In addition. Ju•ticc C"'ourt Judge Steven McNelis
1old Chacon to pa)' ht& wife's medical expenses
stemming from the beating. to refnsin from using
alcohol and to continue to receive <lOuosdin$-
Chaco n could have received up to a year 1njiul a,nd
a $1 ,000 fine. The county probation depanment
recommended 15 days mjail for the Aug. 2 attack.
Chacon's wife Meh&sa. who has filed for divorce.
appeared in court to ask for lentency for her husband.
..I do not believe there would be any benefit 10
soc1t:tr or 10 Bobby 1fjail time were imposed," she said.
"But do trongly believe tha1 Bobby would benefit
from coun~hng and probation "
Gretzky closes in on 1.000
Mael.eu scored first-penod oals Monda ,
Mel Brldgma11 and rookie Jobn ~
night to lead the.New Jersey ~vi ls to a 5-~
National Hockey League victory over
.... -
----0.-,~~.._.I( ......
Qeore-Rllvellng, basketball coach at Iowa,
defending a IChedule that began with 10 garnet at
home for the Hawt<eyes: "There are a lot of guys
Who ptayed tough IChedules Who are wortctng at K-
Mart."
Edmonton as the Oilers' Wayne Gretz.ky moved to
within an assist or goal of 1,000 career points. The
victory gave the Devils a four-game unbeaten streak
and was the third loss in th.e last four games for the first-
place Oilers. h was also the Devils' first victory over
Edmonton since moving from Colorado. snapptng an
0-6-1 streak. Bridgman opened the scoring at 8:58 of the
first period as he deflected Bob Lorlmer's 50-foot shot
from the point ... In the only other NHL game, Greg
Pa1law1t1•1 second goal of the game. a backhander
10:34 into the third period, lifted the St. Louis Blues to
a 3-2 victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs. Paslawski.
whose third goal of the season had brought the Blues
into a 2-2 tic after two periods. took a pass from Doug
Wlckellltelaer and banged the winning shot off the goal
post and past Leafs goaltender Rick St. Croix. Toronto
pulled St. Crollt tn favor of a sixth attacker inside the
final two minutes and appeared to score the tying goal
with 31 seconds left. But Toronto's Walt Poddubay was
called for high sticlemg on the play and referee Terry
Gregson disallowed the score. Marina HJ(h'• WlllJam Quinn rebound• (left), WoodbrtdCe'• Mlke Murphy cuta off.
PCAA lauds Washington
Utah uue guard Vince Washington. m
who led the Aggies to a pair of v1ctones last
Anzlnger leads tourney VIKINGS WIN EASILY ••. VAOS ...
From<!'?
week, has been selected as the Pacific Coast
l\thle11c Assoc1a11on 's first basketball play-
er of the week.
Washington. a 6-2. 180-pound senior from
Berkeley. scored 26 points and had five asmts in Utah
State's 92-91 overtime victory over BneJ1am Young on
Dec. I I. He won the game for the Aggies by making a
field goal with two seconds left 1n the overtime period.
I Three nights larer, Washington had 25 points and
six assists in Utah State's 104-83 triumph over Weber
State.
Utah State now has a 6-1 record this season.
Pepperdlne ptayer honored
Enc White, Peppcrd1ne's sophomore m
forward who scored a career-high 23 point!>
against Nc\ ada-Reno over the weekend.
was named West Coast Athletic Con-
ference Pla)'er of the Week Monda). ·
White made 11 of 19 field goal attempts and had
nine rebounds in the road game which the Waves lost
94-89 He 1s averaging 181 points and 10.8 rebounds
per game.
LA QUINT A -Paul Anzmger fired a fl
5-under-par 67 on Monday and held a 1-
stroke lead over Phil Blackmar after five
roundsofthe 108-hole PGi\ Tour Qualify-
ing Tournament.
Anzinger. a Sarasota, Fla., resident whose fi ve-<lay
score stands at 14-under-par 346, is trying to retain his
playing card after failing to fintsh among the top 125
money-earners o n this xcar's professional golf tour. The
tournament winner will earn $15,000 and the low 50
scorers in this six-day tournament will cam 1985 tour
playing privileges.
Tele'rialon. radio
TEL!VlltON
6 p .m. -PRO 8AIKETBAU.: Laken at
Atlanta (delayed), Channel 9.
10 p.m. -BOXING: From the Otymptc
Auditorium, Channet 56.
RADtO
6 p.m. -PRO aAIKETBAU.: Lakers at
Attanta (delayed), KLAC (570). .
6:30 p.m. -PRO HOCKEY: Klng111t Calgary,
KWVE-FV ( 108).
UCLA needs_ a lot of points
• • I
That's Donahue's
thought on Jan. 1
Fiesta Bowl game
LO ANGELES !A.P) -UCLA
Coach Tern Donahue believes his
team is going to ha"c to score a lot of
points1f11 'sgoingto beat M1am1. Fla .
in the Fiesta Bov.I at Tempe. Anz
Thal might not he l'3'>~ cr,pcc1all~
lOns1dcnng the prnhab1lm that the
Bruin'> will be ..... 11hou1 their leading
ruc;hcr and top rl·u·1 H'r 1 n the l\c\.\
')car\ Da\ g..tml'
quarter of UC LA\ sea!lon-cndmg
29·10 triumph O\er Southern Cal on
No\. 17. "He's had quite a bit of pain
since being 1n)ured. I would say he's
extremely doubtful.
.. A,fter the use game (Junior wide
rcce1 ver ) Mike Sherrard broke a bone
1n his right hand playmg basketball
He's 10 a cast 1 would sa) he's vef)
doubtful.
"Right now. we're not counting on
ei ther player ..
•\nothcr key player 11l.Ju'red in the
game ag.amst Southern Cal. cor-
ncrback Ron Pitts. has a better chance
of playing. according to Donahue-
P111s suffered a knee injury and
underwent arthroscopic knee surgery.
Bodyboard pro
championship set
HONOLULU -The world-
famou~ 8anza1 Pipeline off the
1iawa11an island coast of Oahu 1s the
sit<: of the Third Annual lntemauonal
More> Boogie Bodyboard Pro-
tcss1onal C"hamp1onsh1ps being held
this weekend .
From Cl
Jeff Fryer. who led all scorers with 30
points, grabbed a rebound a nd put it
in with three seconds left, but what
would have been a game-tying basket
(at 59) was nullified because a foul
was called a way from the ball.
The Sea Klngs' 6-8 Steve Morris.
however, missed the front end of a
one·and-one si tuation. Foothill re-
bounded and a final free throw was
tacked on with one second left.
"We should have won it anyway,"
said an unhappy Corona del Mar
Coach Jack Errion. "But we didn't
play well enough to wm." he con-
tinued.
It was a nip-and-tuck game from
the start as Corona. now 4-3. pulled
from behtnd 10 lead at halftime,
29-28. saw a 39-34 lead vanish, then
rallied 10 trail after three quarters,
48-47.
The lead changed hands fi ve umes
in the fourth quarter before Foothill's
6-5 David Gazzantga scored with
2:44 left to give the Kntghts a 56-55
lead.
Moments later Gazzantga bulled
down 1hc baseline and Gary Myers
picked ofT the rebound and scored to
give 'Foothill a 58-55 edge.
B<* Zi1Wrncr's 16-foot turnaround
with 29 seconds left pared it to 59-58.
Myers retaliated with a free throw to
make tt 59-57, then the Sea Kings
called time out with 11 seconds left.
But the offi cial's whistle came into
play in the final seconds and what
might have been a game-tying bucket
by Fryer with three seconds left
disappeared.
"The effort was good." said Em on.
"But we can't go in spurts like we did.
We need a consistent. strong game.··
Morris and Zimmer finished in
double figures for the Sea Kings with
11 and 10 points respectively. while
ESTANCIA ..•
From Cl
··1 don't thtnk rhat l>ann\ .\ndrc ..... s
..... ,11 pla) "Donahue ..aid \,fonda) at a
luncheon v.1th reporterc; when asked
about the \enwr 1a1lbal k "'ho a acked
the fibula 1n hi\ nghl leg 1n the \econd
..\ndrews gained 605 ~ard'> on 15~
ca mes ..... h1lc Sherrard ca ugh I 38
passes for 635 )ards If they're unable
to pla). freshman (1a~ton (1rce n
v.ould start at tailback and either i\I
Wilson. Paco Craig or Flipper
.\nderson ~ould start along with
Mike Young at wide recen·cr.
Donahue said
Over 20 compctnors from six
different countries will match their
skills against 1he challenging Pipeline Laguna Hills at 7:30.
Surf for a S 12.500 cash purse, the The game was a very physical one
largest ever offered in bodyboard with 39 fouls (and four techinals)
hmory . called. leading to 55 free throws by Edison takes on Santa Ana Valley The most important international both teams. University was 22-29
e11cnt 1n the fa!>t-growing sport of from the hoc, while Lugo was 16 for
oodyboard1ng. the Morey Boogje 26
Foothill's attack was paced by Jud
Dutrisac ( 18) and Ralph Laird. a pair
of6-I seniors.
While Emon. obviously, would
have liked a better effort, the fact is
the Sea IGngs hit 23 of 48 from the
field (47.9 percent) and hit 11 of 16
from the line.
Foothill was just as tough, making
25 of 46 (54 percent) from the field.
BREAK ...
From Cl
Woodbridie offensively was led by
6-2junio r Mike ¥urphy. who scored
12 points and Mark Lyon and Vince
Bryan. who tossed in eight and seven
points, respectively.
Saddlebaell 73, Norco H : The
Roadrunners were off and running
from the openjng tJpotf and never
slowed down. The victory, Saddlc-
back·s third in four games this season.
puts the Roadrunners into tonight's 6
o'clock second-round confrontation
with O inyon, also at Woodbridge.
Things started going Saddleback's
way early on as the Roadrunners
outscored Norco 20-13 10 the first
quarter.
Saddleback took advantage of 21
Norco fouls and converted 25 of its 36
free throw attempts. But the real story
belonged to Earl Jones who regis-
tered seven steals, fi ve of which came
in the third quarter .
Chance Peterson pulled down a
game-high 10 rebounds (he also
added 15 points) for the Road-
runners, and Jones. whose defensive
tactics in the third quarter caused the
Cougars many troubles. chipped in
with nine points.
The Walton brothers. Bryant ( 16)
and Marie (14), combined for 30
points for Saddlebacle and Joe Deal,
who also grabbed a game-high 10
boards. poured in 15 points.
17 of his 21 potnts 10 the first two
quarters when the Argonauts were
buildinJ their first-half advantage.
Hemng also had a game-high nine
rebounds. Teammate Shawn Patchell
added 16 points before fouling out.
Cotta Mesa 43, Tustin 31: The
Mustangs of Costa Mesa used an
outside touch and some inside muscle
to defeat the Tillers.
The Mus tangs we·re paced by ~uard
Mitch Pclichowski who threw m 16
points. with most of the damage being
done with long range j umpers.
Matt Judd (14 rebounds) and Karl
Kimme ( 11 rebounds) controlled the
boards and shut down the inside.
forcing the Tillers outside where they
shot a dismal 31 percent for the night.
Coach Tim Parsel was happy with
the win that boosted the Mustangs'
record to 3-1 , already one more wm
than they had last year (2-20).
.. I was really happy with the way we
Jammed up the middle and didn't
give up any second shots:· said
Parse!. "Mitch (Pellchowsk1) played
his first game smce coming back. from
a sprained ankle and played well.'.
After Costa Mesa trailed 4-8 with
4:31 left 1n the first quarter. the
Mustangs oulscored the Tillers 19-6
and took a 23-14 lead with 2: 17
remaining in the second quarter.
The closest T us tin cou Id come after
that was 26-20 when 6-~ center M ike
Predney hit a lay-up wi~~ 4:50 ten m
the third quarter.
Costa Mesa then proceeded to rip
off a 12-2 run for a 38-22 lead when
Pelichowsle1 hit an 18-foot jumper
and the Mustangs never looked back.
The Tillers were led by swingman
Joe Kovac who scored 12 points.
Parscl thinks tonight's second
round game will be a good test for his
team.
"They're (Irvine) a very good
presstng team with a lot of speed . We
ha ven't faced anyone like that yet this
year so we'll fi nd out what we can do,··
said Parsel.
Dickerson, Marino
head All-Pro team Fd1.,11n I l1~h \ C h.ir~t'r\ tonllnUl'
the tournMrn:nt h,1\l-.l·th.tll trail 10-
n1ght "'1th .1 ftr\t round l'ntounll'I
with ~a nr;i ·\n.i \,din rn thc La
C)u1nta ln111ta11onl
rhc Charge re,. 4. I .ind runncr'>·ur
in the Valenua In\ 1tat1on.il to Mater
De1. ~111 meet the l,(.oJnner of tht·
Pomona-l.akewd<xl game 1 hur\da>
night 1fsuccec;ful
Huntington Beath followc, on
~ cdneua~ night with a mall hup ~1th
~ c\l Torrance 1n the o ther hall 111 tht•
fir~I round
TOHIGH'T'S FIRST ROUND
I at LA Ovlrlta Hltfl)
Profc~wmal Championships will fea-Thl· Conquistadores were led by
ture ndcr'> from ,._ustralia. France. guard Robert Hcrnande7 with 27
Peru. Japan, Brat ii and the United points. top among all scorers and NEW YORK (AP)-Dan Marino, Bears and Randy White of the Dallas
State!> These finalists have qualified forward Dan Kenwood who chipped Walter Payton and Eric Dickerson. Cowboys; nose tackle Joe Nash of the
for the International Championships 10 wtth 16 points, a game-high 10 who among them broke four of the SeattleSeahawks:outsidelinebackers
over 2.000 regional entrants. rebounds as well as five steals. National Football .JLeague's most Lawrence Taylor of the New York 6 IS-Pomona ~l. Lakewood
8-S.nta Ana Vali.v o E<lllOn
WEDNESDAY'S FIRST ROUND
4 IS-Weit Torr•nce Vl HunhnglOfl 8H'h
I-Et Modena "'· La Qul11t•
f 1£[
••t•r Bottle wtt~ t~ls 1d
90 Day
Interest
fr:ee
Financing
. ~"
... MOTOBECANE SAVINGS C:-::~.:_:s
PRO llG~T ............. $964.95 ••••••••• NOW t7ff.91
AR Alumll'lum from•, 19 9 lbs.
Grand Jubiliee ....... $424.95 ••••••••• llOW •319.95
Compc19oe'e ct.ollleur •ystem
Jubilee Sport .......... $329.95 ••••••••• llOW t299.9S
OPEN7 DAYS
Mf:S A VERDE Cl:NTER
.' ,11J H ARH<>R BLVD * COSTA ML~1A
( 714 ) 75 1-4882
Last year's champion. 20-year-old The Trojans were paced.in defeat coveted records, 11orm a dream Giants and Rod Martin of the Raiers;
Ha wa11an Mi kc Stewart. wil I return to by sen 1or forward Brad A m old. one o f backfield for the Associated Press· i ns1de I inebacke~ Mi kc Singletary of
defend his t itle. Among hts onl y two TroJans With varsity ex-All-Pro team, announced today. the Bears and E.J . Junior of the
challengers arc fellow Hawaiian Pat pcnence. with 26 points and 9 Marino. one of four Miami Cardinals: brothers Mike Haynes of
Caldwell. winner of the J 984 Morey rebounds They also got,J I points and Dolphins on the team, threw 48 the Raiders and Marie Haynes of the
Boogie ProAm Championships. and 6 rebound~ from guard George touchdown passes. sbatterina the Giants at comerback, and safeties
Jay RealeofOceans1de. Md. Paulson. record of 36 set by Y.A. Tittle and Dcron Cherry of the Kansas City f--..:..--------'-------------------, George Blanda in 1963 and 1961 Chiefs and Kenny F.aslcyofScattJe.
respectively. He aJso threw for S.084 The specialists arc place-kicker
yards, breaking Dan 'Fouts' three-Norm Johnson of Seattle; punter
year-old standard of 4,802. Regg.ic Roby of Miami and kick
· Dickerson, meanwhile, became returner Henry Ellard of the Rams.
only the second man in history to There are only eight repeaters on
rush .for more. than ,2,000 yards, the 27-man team led by wrutc, who brcak1~ qJ. Simpson s stan~ard of made it for the fourth straiibt year 2!00~ 1.n his I Sth game 7 Simpson and sixth of the last seven and Taylo~ did tt m 14 -and leading the Los wh h bee II Pr · ll fi f h
AngeleHs R11a01shtoda 'Y'ld
2
-ca
0
r<l plardyofT sea~nassin t;e ~FL~ 10 a our o is
berth. e nis c Wlth ;; I, J ya s. The others are Gastineau. who
And P~yton, who unishcd ,the "made it tor the third time in a row· scasoJfw11~ 1~84 ~ards rushing, Dickerson, Green, Jacob. d
raced st !•m nro:-"'n s c.arccr matt-Gnmm. It also was the fourth time
_ of 12, 12 in the StA~mc of the that Payton has made the squad in his season and finished w1th I ~.247 IO-year NFL career.
career yards as he led the Oucago Miami had six ~ayers on the first Bears to the NFC C.cntral crown. • The other members of the all-pro two all-pro team • e Bears. Raiders
offense chosen by a vote of three and Scahawka had five players each spotts~ntcn and broadcasters who on the first two teams .
<lovered each of the NFL's 28 team s The second team included wide
WC1C: Wldcrcociven Roy Oreen of the receivers Mark Clartoo of Miami and
t. Louis C.rdJnats and An Mon.k of tcvc t..a,.nt of Scank lilbt end
the Washinaton Redskins; tiaht end Todd Chnstcnsen of the Raiders;
Oz71e Newsome of the Cleveland tackle Anthony Munoi of C'1ncin-
8rowns; tackles Joe Jacoby of Wa b· nat1 lnd 8111 Blan of the Los An,elc
inatoo and Keith Fahnhont of the Rams, 1uard John Hannah of New
San Franci~o 49ers; 1u.ards Ru EoaJand and Randy Cross of San
·Grimm of Washan1ton and Ed New. Francisco: center Mike Webster of
man of Mia.mi, and center Dwiaht P1tubu~quartcrbeck.Joc Montana
tcphenson oft.he Oolplun of n rrancisco; runoinJ becks
The defense is ends Mark Jame Wilder or Tam~ Bay and Oastt~u of the New York Jeu and Martu Allen of tM Ra1dcrt; kicker
Ho..-i~ Lona of lhc Los Anttlct Jan enrud of Mlnneso1A and kJclc
R11dm: taekJ Dan Ka.mPton oT the return~ l.ou1 L1pJ>$ of Pltt\bufJh .
4 ~-·-~··--------------• ..
FoR THE REcoRo
NflL
NATIONAL CON'HINCI WHt
••kn l'ren y·llamt
H-Orlten1 Alleni.
W L T "<t. "' .. A 15 I 0 m 47S U7 10 • 0 .,, ,.. 31'
1 ' 0 .Qt ,.. 361 • 11 0 150 211 .,
.,Chic.II(>
Cr""a.v Ternoe an
O.lrolt
MinneM>i.
CMl!fal 10 • 0
• • 0 • 10 0 4 11 1 , I) 0
l •lf
us 325 sot 390
J75 3J5 211 2'l 1 .. ,,,
••Watnliwton 11 5 o 6M 426 310 Y•HY Glan11 t 7 0 56) 2" 301 St. Loult t 1 0 56.3 423 J.45
0.llH 9 1 0 S6;J JOI JOe
Ph~a 6 t I .406 271 110
AMSIUCAN CON,HINCI
11•0..wer
v·S..111• ., . ....,..
Ktn&H CllY
Sen Dlfoo
a·Pllll«llKGh
Ctncl-11
Cle¥elancl Hou1ton
Wet
ll J 0 ,, 4 0
II S 0 • • 0
7 ' 0 ,..,,,. ..
' 7 0 I I 0
S II 0
l 13 0
I Ht a·Ml•l'l'll • 14 1 0
H-E1191anc! t 7 o H Y Jtl1 7 t 0
lndlt nt llOlh 4 17 o
l utfalo ? It 0
•·ell~ dfvl•lon !Illa
5'3 ,., 310 soo m m
313 1SO 1'1 ,.. 2.0 437
17S Sil 291 5'3 3'2 m 'le l32 364 1SO 239 4\t
12S 150 4S4
Y·Clll'ICtlecl wlld-<erd PltYoti lltfll'I
Mtrldt\"I kWt Miami 21, DaHal 21 IND ltlGULAlt SIA$0N
NflL otavofh
(Al !Imel .. 1 Tl
WIULCAltD GAMU
S.tvrdlv lteldtn at S.allla, I p,m !Cllann.i 4)
~v
N-York Glanl1 at Ram•. 12:JO Pm
CON,lltlNCI llMIP:INA LS
Sttw•v. O.C.. 2'
Rel<Mn or S.t lllt •I Miami, t.JO • m. ClllUOO or ,.._ York Giant• II Sen
FrenclKO, 1 pm.
~ •• O.C.. lO lterm or CN<.aoo at WHlllngton. 9 30
e.m.
PllllbutOtl et o.tlvlf, 1 P m
C°"'llllNCI CHANW't<>NSH!f>
SV!ld9Y, Jen. 6
T1rMt ..W SltM TIA AFC s.tnlflnel Wlnoto
NFC Semlilnel Winner•
SUf'llt I OWL
~Y,Jtn..111 At ..... .,._
AFC CnemP+on YI NFC CllamPlon. pm
ltM AP Al-Pro tHm
P:NUT TEAM
OftenM WR-ftoy GrMn, SI Louil, Ari Monk,
WHhlnglon
TE-Onie Newsome, Cltvtltnd
T-Joe Jecot>v. Wnt\11191on, Ktllll Fellnllonl, San Frt ncllGo
G-Ruu Grimm, W••lllngton, Ed Ntw· men, Mlt ml C-Owlont Stton.nMlll, Mleml
Q8-0tn Mtrl11<1, Ml1ml Ra-Eric Dlck1rM111, Rtm,, Welltr Po·
IOfl, Clllc.oo PK-Norm Johnlon, S.•1111
Kll-Henrv Enerd, Rem'
o.ttnM E-Mtrk GHllMtu. New York Jt t,,
Howle L-. Relden T-Ot n Hempton, Cnlclloo. Renov
W'!fll 011!e 1 NT-Joe NHll. S.allle
OL8-Ltwrenct Ttvlor New York Glel\t1, !too Martin, Rtldtn tLll-Mlllt Slnole1•rv Cn1ceoo, E J Jvn
for. SI Loul1 Ca-Miki H•YMI, Rtlde" Maril Hev·
nH, New York Gltnh
FS-Otron Cl'llfrv. Ktn'H cnv
$5-1Cen Ee11n, SNt11t
P-Awol• Aoov. Mlt f'l'll
H CONO TEAM
OfNftM
WA-Merk Clnton, Mleml Sl•v•
Lervenl, Statllt
TE-Todd Cllrl1ten1en , lhldln T-Antll()(tv Muno1, Cincinnati, 8111 lh'n
Atml 0.-Jonn Hannah, Naw Enoland. Aa11dv Crou , Sen F rencl1co C-Mlkt Wtt>tt•r, Plll•l>urgn QI-Jot Monlene, Sen Frencl1co
R8-J1me1 Wlld•r. Temo1 Bev.
Mtrcu1 .-.11en, Atldert
PK-Jen Steneruo. Mlnnuota KR-.t..ouls LI!»&, Plll,burgPI
OetlftM E-Rld\erd Oen!, Cllk•oo. Art Sllll,
IC.t nH"' City T-0.v• Bull, Wulllnoton. Oouo Eno·
ll&h, °'"°'' NT-BoO laumllOwlf', Mleml
<Xl-ltlckey JtdllOll, Ntw Oftet nl
Ctn Mtttriew1, Clt'Wet1no
ILi -Jim ColllnL Rem•. Tom
CO\ISlllMu, Cltvt4en<I C8-0tvt 8rown, S.tllll Eric Wrlgnt
San Frencl1eo FS-Mlchttl Oownl, 01llH
SS-Todd llM, ClllctOO P-Jlm Arnold K1n111 CllY
NFL r.cerd1 brotren In 1"4
INDtVIOUAl
S..Mn ltulMM New-Eric Dlclr.lflon, It.ml 'l, IOS
Y9feh Ot&-O J s1rnp1on, am,, 2 003 vttd•.
197J Ctr-ltu~
New-Wtlllf Pevlon, 81er1. 13.309,
lt?S·M ()16-Jlm Brown, 8rowns, 12,312,
19S7 6S Ctr-It~ N1w-C11erlle Joiner Cheroen 6S1.
1969·1.4 010-C.l'larllv TnlOr, Rtd,kln\, 6-49,
196-4· 7S, 1917
SffMl'I TO ""'" Ntw-O•n Merino, Oo1onln1, 4' ~tol'OI 81tn<lt, Olltn 1961 Y A
Tiiiie, Gl1nt1, 1963, U
ll u llllftt A ttilmclh, SM Mn
Nt-Jltnff WI~. llucctnMn . .07 Old-Eric OlclltrlOll, Ram•. 191l. 390
lttceMrtl Ntw-Arl Monk, R~ln1, 106 Olct-Cl'ltrlev Hen111111n. 041tn 1'6-C, 101
Meoet "a'* c'"""""' s.. .... N--D•n Mtlll'O, Do!Ptlln1, l62 OIO-O•n Fouh, Cntrttrt, lttl, :WO
... uM!e y., .... S..Mfl
New-Oen Merino, Oo1Pn11111 S.OM
Olct-0.n Fou"· Ctlaroe<s. 1tt1. •,902
TtudldeWM It~ S..-N...,-Mtrk Ctevton, Oolof\I"', II Olct-Ooll Hul1on, PICl<lfl, lt'2. Elroy
Hinch, lttms, ltS 1, 1111 Groman, Ol11t1,
lfl61, 17
TIAM
llMlt a-Wlfl ,..._,,.. 4ftf1. 1$
~"n 001pi,ln1. 1'7t S•~• 1m
Rtcl"'l111, 14
M9ft s..c111, S.Mn
~a.."n Old-1'67 Oektencl ltt ldttt '1 Mttt ......... Gefnl
H•-l, Lo• 4119tltl ll•m• YI Ntw
Yorll 01•11", Slot. 30, ""' Old-2, ~ bv manv cJulK
T..,., ~ lttflH'll Ytrdl, Otme
""'~ S.t lllt n . KtntH CllY, Nov .......
Olf-314 Lot """"' VI Sen Fr•ncllCO, Ocl 11-lMt_
Melt Tfk ltetumlfte
.. , ......... 0..,.. Ntw-4, Sffllll .... Ktl'IMI City, NOY •• ,,..
OICl-J, Hfid It'll mtnY C.tullt
NPL ... clftt TO r9C~ ( ... Mii)
T'llttWfltlle 1"4 .......
wioe rec.llvet MMtl CltV* Of Ille
Mi.m Dolltfllnt Dt•t Ille 'Kord Nt "'°'' ltluCJldtw'l'I r~ltflt )It 4' ... IOl't wltll
ll'lttl ... Intl ltle Delat Cowl.IOV• Mendtv nltl'tl Tiit tellOWlftt It a 1111 o! ~ ~vtn
.... lle'le ~ lllt "*' IOue.flOOWl'I ....-111 6'lt Nt llontl 'OO!btl LHeut
._...., wltfl i.tn. yeet, •lld """*"of TO '--'""" c~ A'L rtc0tfl ,.. .............. "'l l' YMI ... 1,... II
1'41 11
lffl 11 1'61 11
l"3 " 1"'1 IS ""° "
PGA tour QUallfvlnt
(It U Quinta)
°'anot Coelt DAIL v PILOT ITUHday. O.oemb9r 18, 1N4 .. Cl
: CoLL£LE B4 ~1'if rH.11 t
a. ........... ... 6-M.••-v ... "' S.vlftllt 7~11 ~ YI llYWI
(tt ....... ,
C-.tllM lee_. "WIW > Mt"'°"' vi Norco 4 »-Woootwldtl v• •allCl'IO Alef!lllOI ~--~·--6'-(envOll ..,, ~
1~ ~tr' WI I I T ...
(at UQMnlty) c...... ........ ...-
l-Wtlltrn Vt. Ut Al'l'lt ... ~JO-Unh•tOllv .,.. Coton. awri.•·11~ .. ~ ... t-l!!t1111Clt vt Trov
Waves rock
UCSB, 65~63
1:30-Ut una Hlh v1 Don L"ff
Cat UC IMMI c-.111• S«.-. llauM >-l'l'letlt va $0 Tttrenc. JV •:Jt-Coron. dtl ~ "• M0t9ft0 ..,....., ~ .......... tuftll
6-Ceolt treno V•lltv YI a.... GrtnOt
7:30-f'ooltllll vi. Mtrlot
Polee'sjump shot
With o:o3 to go
sinks Gauchos
waDNHOAY'S OUMTlltf'INALS From AP dltpatdt
.-.w .. ~~:~::..J~ ... cor Dwayne Polee sank a IJ.foot
OM·Ufll1ttOJ1v wlftlltt CCOfltOl••IOll Quer • Jumper with three seconds rcmaimna
'":~n-Mlulon vi.1o IOllf YI Monday niaht to a.ive Pep perdlne a
co.ta ~lnllnl loMf 111t1 otec. -r· 6S-63 non-conference collcsc basket·
llf•> ball victory over host tJC nll ..-.Mtrlne·Foothlll lcKlr vi lolu 8 rba Grllldt-Caohlrtno Vt Me¥ IOMf C7tll N<e a ra.
AP '" 20 -'•"> Scott Fisher of the host Gaucho ll-.f ~ ..,,. 7!30-<•llVOfl•SedcllaoKll winner YI El had t ed lh t 63 I
1 Glor Toro-vi-. ~.11e wiMt< <C11amoton"1•• 1 e game a on y nine
2 oua.111•rrwn ('3) ~: m: ~ _,. .... , seconds earher. when he made a
l.MMnc>1111 s1 6-0 101s ~ <•• U!Wtnltvl jumper from 1n close
4 IMlnoll 10·1 1060 6 >-Arll'la·Sovlh Torrence JV wlnntr . John Kotfas brought the ball U~
: ~~llOOl1I ::J :: ~ (~~°::, °!.':::,~f"tnQ Vtllly wlnotf coun for the Waves. stopped bneny
1 we1t11nv1on ..o Ill a 4.l0-Ce11¥on·S.00110t<:11. loMf v• e1 at the top of the key. then fed Polee on
I St Jotln'' 5· I 734 4 Toro·Vlllt Perk loMr (7111 Pleet QUtrllfll th I ft s d d p I · d · I Uvrtcu11 S·O m 10 t·lollt GrtnOt·Caplslreno Vellav win· e e I e , an 0 CC tmme Ille y
10.Hor111 C•rol•n• s-o '14 lJ ner YI Merlne·Footl'llM winner <c11em· went u P and made the game-w1 nnina
po1nta and center Jon Konc:ak added
21 po1olS and IS rebounds '° ad
6th•ranked Southern Melhodiit put
·the Campbell Camels •
W n&ht, shooti.na from the oullide,
a.nd the 7-foot Konen. patrollina the
lane, combined to te0re 16 strai;.bt
poinu durina the second half u me
Mu ta.nss-? .(), overpowered the
Camels.
C.tmpbell (N.C.), which fell to 1-6,
iot 16 poina from auard John HWI'·
tetler
LooltvU~ 87, T1anpe S5 -At
Loui5V1lle, Jeff Hall led five (>la)-cn
1n double figures Wlth IS points u
No. 12 U>ui.sv1Uc rolled to a win ovtt
Tampa.
Tampa., J.S. an NCAA Division 11
school, j umped to a 14-7 lead •ilh
I S·46 left ID the fir t h.aJf
Ffflll round ICOfH' Paul A1lnoer '9·71·69-10·67-~ 11 Otc1tnom1 6-2 490 IS PlonllllP CIUtrllf•I shot.
72·70·69·69·67-347 12 Loul1vlllt 4· l 483 14 7:30-Troy·E,lencl• W'lnner Vl Lt oune The Gauchos •ol off a d-IV'ratlon
But U>uasvlllc. S-1 and playins
Wlthout the KrvlCn o/ its two senior
starters, outscored the SpartaM 12-2
over the next fi ve minutts to take a
19-16 lead 1\ never rclinqul.Sbcd.
Tom Sleckmenn
Pllll 81t Cll.mtr
St•vtPelt Aooart Wrenn WnntGrt dY
MArk Wlebt
Cllrls PlffY
Ired Ft~ Skffttr Htetn
Mlcll SOii Miki Hulbert KtMV Knox llM 8rlllon
8111 lergln
GO<dOfl JoMIOll
Tom Ltllmtn
Jiff Herl
BobLOhf Klf'IGreen
AnorewMt-Steyen .i-s
Mike lrlOhl
SftYtn ll4t>ler
JoMO.For.sl Jay Otlslng
Jiff COiion
Otnnl\ Trl11ler 0.vld Tllort
Greo Twloo•
Rick D•IPOS OevlO Lundstrom
Jiff Sandin Mike l ernblall
Jiff Slumen
Tlf'rv SnodOreu
S1tv1n Bowmen Ron Comma,,,
Lln<IV Mllltr Stuart Smllll Wllllt mNffl
G•rv Plnns
K•llll Parklf JoMHemarlk
lven Smllll
wooov 81tckburn
lllM 8UllMr
Jonn Sterk
Jim Htllll Ot vid Fro11
BooTw•v
Tim Conley Tomwoooerd
81"Gltnon Lennie Clements
El'nle Gonzalt.1
'
72 70 •• fl Gilorgl1 TICtl 4• I .t40 12 Hlh ·Don LUOO wl~ (cl\trnplonllllP QUlr· o ""r-6 • • ·6'·7e>-... 7 101 C1rQOn• s1. s-1 .01 1 •If•) shot at the buzzer. but Richard '7·69·6'·74· 75-)SJ 71-72-70·69·71-lSJ 1S.K•n11' 7· 1 39• " 1111rv1n11 Townsend's heave from halfcourt
7NN2-71·6t-354 lt~:i~r. TKn !:~ : lt >-sonore·S.nt• Ana...,,_, v\. Tustin· bounced off the front of t he nm. ~~!~:~:~~=~~ ll,Mlc:'lllQ•n 6-0 275 20 ~~?"' Grove winner lconM>taHon auer· Polee led th e Pepperd ine scoring
67·69·71·16·7l-3S5 19 Loul•l•n• St •·1 113 " •;JO-Me11noll1·Norco winner n with 16 ~ints nd Anthony Frederick 71·71·70-72·7C>-US 10 Loul•l•ne Teen 1-0 110 Rt llCllO A&eM1to1·Woootwlc11>1 winner Icon· "'dd ed I r. th W h 1o·n·11-n -1e>-Jss ao1e11on 01Htrtlf•l "' ior e aves, w o are now
69-n-n-10-12-3S6 COLLEGE 6-TrO'l·E1lencl• loMr Y\ ugune HHll· 6-3.
n -11-n-10-1e>-3S6 Cltrtst c ..... "' Slutflwestlm 4' 0on LU90 1o1« C71PI Plea Ql.;trtlf•I Fisher was the Gauchos' top scorer
71-70-71·73-n-3S7 (Wftt.nl Qwts1IOll Allilellc A•Mddall 7:JO-Stv•nne·Mlulon Viejo winner vs Wlth 15 points, while Conner Henry 70-7S-70-70-72-3S7 SOUTHWISTl"N (46) -Lenon 13, Cot•• Mtlt·lrvlne Wlnnef' (Cflemolon'1\lp 71-7H1·71-7C>-JS7 Hev s. Morgan 1•. HldlmVtf 2. H«:ll 4, QUtrllf'•I chipped 10 14. UCSB is now 2-4
12-11-n -10-n-357 Sonnor 4, Hodnefltld 4 Totelt: II 10-11 46 73-10-67·74-74--JSI CHlllST COLLIGI (M) -Surrldol "· OTHlll OltANGI COUNTY ICOltES Duke 8%, Da•ldsoa IS -At
11-10-n-10-1s-13' 1 .. 16. Henman 1. Ktt'° 6, El<.'tlaltltfotr •· ~ T___,, Durham, N .C. Ja(. Bila.s scored 10 73·n·73-70-7C>-3SI Ho4mts 7, Loflnlr. 6, ICtmP!'t 10, 8rancton 7, Ant.._ VtllOY 60, lr11·0linoe SI . .
1 .. n-11-n-u-Jse H1mmontr• 2. 1tencau111 4. Han"" •-Hen·T~ P<>1nls m the fust av~ minutes of the n-6t-71-7H~SI To1e11. l7 1'·22 " Loera '7· Stllstan 3-t second half Monday ni&hl as sluggish
--;1rr,1·;.;n·r.·1ws~-n9:·~·1~-~:----¥!~~~~~~~~ri:ri.'i:-------------~-t-No. 2. Dulce defeated David.son.
70-n·70-7HS-JSI
'7-n·n·14·7S-3'0
n-11-1s-n-~3'0
70· 71-71-78· 7C>-3'0 71· 74· 71·71·7>-3'0 70-17·70-70-7)-)60
74-n·71·6'·7._:WO
7s-7HS·11·69-3'1
70-71·7•·1S·7l-3'1 u -11-n-74 • .,._u,
74·74·69·70-7 .... 3' 1 71-70-71·73·76'-3'2
6'·6t·1l·70·'1-3'2 6'·75-70-73·75-3'2
76·71·73·'9·73-3'2 70-74·'9·71-n-3'2 n -76·7•·n -67-3'2
7•·73·71·71·72-3'2 n · 11-11-n-1..-u2
73·73·72·6'·76'-3'2
10-14. 69· 7 s-14--362
71·73·71·74·13-3'2 11·10-72· 7 Hl-3'2 11-n·74·1l·7>-3'l 76·74·71·70-11-363
7l·74-74-'9·73-l63 69-n -10-76·75-3'3
7'·6'·6'·73·76-3'3
74·69-72·74·7-3'3 n -n-10-n·n-3'3
n -n ·7•·74·7C>-3'l
7•·76·6'·'7·,._3'3
17, Ov'l'I
HIGH SCHOOL
~rlnll SS, Mor9M V.a.v 4 I
(lr'Wle T--•l MOtllNO VALLaY (41) -H•M •. Cl\trntltrl 0, CummlnGl 5, Cobt> 6, Cerrlef
10, Dawlev •. McOonelCI 2. TOltll: II S·7 41.
MAltlNA (SS) -G'°'°"°" 22, MtOltlll 0, Knutt J, GullO I. Pl 4, Drel'ltlm I, QulM
2, Crtft S, Hwmann J. Totals: 19 17·20 SS. kw•.,., OUlll1WI MortnO Vettey 8 6 10 17-41
Merine 12 10 IS 11-SS
Tolel touts· Mortn0 V•lllv '"· Marine 14.
Foettl• 60, Conna dtil ~r 57
llrv!M Ttumt"*"'l C°"ONA OaL MU (57) -Frytf 30, Morrl' 11, Zlmmtr 10. Turner O. Streun 0,
Smlrl 6, a .. rt>owlf 0 TotelS: 23 II· l6 S7.
'OOTHtLL (60) -Dutr1~ 11, Gore 11,
G•uanlge 6, Laird 17, Myen 7, llrfff• I.
Tollll 24 12·2'2 60.
S<en bY OUtntn Corona Ott Mer 11 11 II 1C>-S7 Foolllitt IS 13 10 I~ Tott l louts Corona Cltl ,,_.r 16, Fooll'IMI
'"· Foultel OUI Turner (COM). TICMktl Coecn Errloll (COMI
COS1a Mes. 43, TQ1ftn J1
I ntM Ttur'MIMlltl
TUSTIN (311 -Gtvlf 0. PreclnlY 6.
Sen Dleoo Lnltl Wlcnlta
L1.1 VeoH Tt QOIT\t
DaM" Kenltl CllY
MISL
WHlWll OM.-
W
' 1 • • 4 4 . ' s •
3 11
1 ' Euttnl Dlvhllfl
L .. d . Ga
900 '67 2 soo 4 "°° 5 lS7 6 214 I
1t2 Na
c11v•••nd 7 ) 700
SI. Louis 7 4 .636 1-'I
Mlnneto11 6 • .00 1 ltlllmor1 7 S Sil I
Clllctoo 6 S S<IS 1 ~,
Plllsburon 6 S S<IS 1 ''>
CCKmos l 1 300 4
~.,..~
No Qtmtt IC!ltduted T lfllttlt'l Game LH Veotl 11 CCKmol
Th~ Blue Devils. unbeaten 10 six
games, got 16 points from Johnny
Dawkins. one of five players in
double fig ures. S ilas added 13 points.
David H enderson scored 11. while
Dan M eagher and Mark Alaric had
I 0 points apiece. •
MJcM1ao 84, Alcore St. 11 -At
A n n Arbor, Mach, center Roy
Tarpley scored 21 of his carccr-h1gb
29 points in the second half to lead
No. 18 M ichigan to a victory over
tenacious Alcorn State.
The victory left the W o lvennes
perfect at 7-0. whale Alcorn State fell
to 4-2.
The 6-'. 11 Tarpley scored I I
straight Michigan points early in the
second half tof've Michigan a S0-43
lead with 15:4 rcm ainmg.
SMU te, CamPbeU '70 -Al Dallas.
Junior guard Car l W rigbl scored 23
Loal1laoa Tecla '78, NW LooJ1tua
H -At Natch itoches. La., No. 20
U>umana Tech, paced by top scorn
Wulte Bland with 2S points. moved
out to an early 10-0 lead and never
fell behind in handing Northwestern
Lou1s1ana its seventh loss in eight
ouungs.
Nonhwestcrn never ao1 closeT
than etght pomu and Tech . buoyed
by-MWs of a fint~ver appearance in
the AP Top Twenty poll. cveotuall)
widened the margrn to 37 point
70-33. with 6: 13 to go in the game.
Hamboldt L 7', UC Su 0tep U
-At Arcata, Junior guard Mike
Hammond scored 19 points to lead
Humboldt State past UC San Otego
Humboldt's center Brian
P lacouralus had 16 points and •
game h1ah of 12 rebounds. Guard
Greg Kamansky led San Diego with
22 points.
H umboldt's record rose to S.. I.
whale Cal-San Diego dropped to J.S.
Colorado St. '7%, USIU U -At San
Diego, John Dudley 9COred 13 poin ts
and Mike Gray added Colorad o
St.ate, talung command early 1.n the
se<:ond half. downed U.S. Int.er·
national.
The Rams led JUSt 23-21 at the
mtcmussion. but reeled off an I ~2
stnng an the o pening seven -minutes
of the S«ond half to puU awa)
AnOtrlOll S. P111u S, Kon e 12. HefmtM 3 To1el1 14 3·8 31 COSTA MESA ('31 -Strolcn 6, Louden 2. Kimme 10. Judd 9, PellchOwlkl 16
H•rrl'°" O Tott" II 7·9 CJ. Marino halted ~
NHL
CAMPIEL.L CON,.EllENCE
Smvtfll DMMln w L T "" GP: GA
Edmonton 71 6 J 4S IS1 ts
Wl""IPfll 17 10 ) 31 Ill 111
Celoerv . " II ) lS IS1 111 l(tnes l4 11 s 33 137 111
Vancouver 1 :n l 17 91 176
N.,-rh DMIHft
ClllCIOO 15 13 l l3 131 114
SI Louil 1) 11 s 31 112 110
Oetroll 10 17 4 24 113 141
MlnntlOll ' " 6 24 108 121 Toronto s 22 s IS " IS?
WALES CONP:EllENCa ~•"1Cll OMslell
Pnll•delPl'll• 11 • s lt 125 ..
wunlngtOfl 16 ' 6 lt 124 96
NY "lender\ 16 12 I J3 144 124
Plll.OUrQll 11 14 l 2S 103 124
N-Jtf'MV 10 IS 2• 102 120
NY llt not<'S 10 " • 14 106 127
AdMn~ DMlitft Monlr .. I .. • 4 "° 121 " QveOec 1l ll s 31 120 121
&Olton 12 ll s ,, 103 ,.,
8ufltlo 10 11 ' ,, 106 100
Harttunl II t3 • 16 n 11'
MlfllltY'• Sc.,..
New Jtntv s. Edmonton 2
SI Louis l . Toronto 1
TINltlt'I Gtmet
K""91 et Ctlotrv 801ton ti Monlr .. I
WHlllnQIOO t1 ~ Wl11nl-at New YO<ll lllendefs w....-V's Gtmt1 K""91 ti Edmonton
Bot ton •I Hertford lvffalo 11 Cnlceoo
Winnipeg 11 New Yorll AtnOtrt
New JtrMY et Plllsburgn
Mlnne•ote al SI LOUii
NBA
WIU11"N CC>ft,.altlNCE
.. ldfk DMsllfl
W L
LA Ulltn 16 10 ,,._,,. IS 11
Pont.no 13 12
LA °""'"" IJ 14 S..1111 11 1l
Golden Ste•• I 17 ,,...,, .. , DMt.llfl
"ct. Ga '1S -
577 I 520 211)
411 3•,
4IO JI) :no 7,,
o.t!Vlf\ IS t 62S HO\lllOfl 15 10 .00 ....,
Dt tltl 12 1' 500 J $an Ant~ 11 fl "80 J•~ UltPI 12 1• ... , "
1Can1t\ City 7 16 * 7\'>
RASTaltN COH,a1t .. tea
8o1ton PllA~lt
Wt1lll119lon
NtW WMY H•w Yori.
Detroit
MltwaukM
Chic.to M4eftfe-
llldltne
CIOVNncl
A tlefllk OM'*' " , It s
1• 11
10 I•
11 " Cenfl'• OMWft 14 10 IS II 1l 13
10 IS 6 ,,
3 ,,
MeMIV'• sc-NO Hmtt~ T ...... t 04lf'*
L.Htn t i Allen!•
IOtlOft al N-Yor" .,.._ WW'/ t i Wn hlfttklfl kn AlllO!llO 11 C .... llltnd
Utth et tndlene
Hovtton •1 Chic.Ho 0.... ., Mlkwtuk.-
~ t i 1(111M& City
Oanwr •t OOIC*'I Slllt ~tl S..ltll
Clletl tcent
WWIT
m m S60 .•17
407
, ,..,
11
11\'9
"'"""dlM 6!! UC Sente kWt ~ ~ lt. 14, UC SM Ole90 61 .. So\l twn u1t11 11 n. Ctl ....., ...,,_
Alt •Anctw ... II, Secr.,,_10 SI .. IMIM SI, 41, .._.,. Demi, C.allf ..
c.nt wottt111910ft "· WtlltfNll n o.m ... 1', MOfllON St 6t
------------
S<.,.. .,., OUllrMn
Tullln t S • t-31
Co\lt MtH l• 9 ll 7--0
To••• foul• Tu,lln 9, '°''' Mew 6
Irvine 77, Garden G~ '5
("""""T~) GAltDaN GltOVE (65) -Fourn• 2, Woooward 0, K•MOH 4, (~er I, Gulbord 10, Ouren 11, Crone 4, Ander1on 1. Ktlef' 14 Tot1ll 24 17·26 6S
IRVINE (71) -PllCl'lltl "· Tamure 6. Harrlno 11. Moclfl 7, k/lut1 14, Snodc:lv s.
Mun>llY o. Rn• • Totet1 JI 1S·16 n ~-bY OuerMn Gtrdtn Grov• 18 16 12 19-65
lrvlnt 11 13 10 26-n Toltl foul&. Gero.n Grove 17, lrvlne 21;
!Oultel out· P1tchtll <trvlMl Tecnnlctl lrvlne bench
Eshlncla 11, LOI Amten 4'
Ctrw. T--"""'> LOS AMIGOS ("61 -Howard IS,
Peer.on I. wvm 7. Aneltf'IOO 6, Dt vls 4,
Cor1,r 4, GrendllOll 2 Total': 21 4·1 "6
ESTANCIA 1111 -Cllmtn" 2S, SlamPJ 11, Mf#'tev 10, Ven Oortfl 9, Lodlwooo 7,
111111 7, Furln 6, Covey 4, Ptnarhl 2, Erlc&0n 0 Totet1 lO 11·2• 11
ken llY OUllrMn LCK Amlooi 6 14 12 1...-..
e"enc•a 23 n ,.. l>--41
Tot•• fouls LOS Am'9o1 17 E•••ncl• 13 TKllnlea! Coecll Mer'I. ll.Al
Don Lueo M, UnfVenttv n
(INN T__,,_.l
DON LUGO IM) -Herntndtr 27.
Martin"· Kenwooo 13, Moum.n 2, TI\omi>-
~2~6kArbon 2, Eltll I. ,Gl&I 11 Total• 3-t
UNIVl"llTY (HJ -Arnold 26. Ftfrell
1, Peul.on 11, Wt rren 6, GiatMf! 6, SI011off 4, Grtllon 6, WlnilOw I, Meik 0, Orllrtlc 0,
Menrttnl 0, Pltcntt1 0, Sal~ 0. Totelt 20
22·1' 62
Seer• .,., °"'"'" Don Luoo 16 20 20 ,.._..
UnCvtrsllv 12 19 11 10-62
To111 toul\ Don Luoo 21, U11lv1nlly 11
Fouled out Gl1t IOU. Flfrtll !Uni) TKll·
ntcelt Gil l <DLI MHll. IUnll. Coecll
Scoooln I Unit 1
VIia P1rtc 41, WMdbrtdte 46
!lnint TtvrNment) VILLA ,AltK (41) -Koob lJ, Cnrl1ftnMfl 11, J•COOl I, Avtr• •• Dufault
6 Totell 21 6· 10 4 WOOOUIOGI C"61 -Mun>fly 12, Lvon I, a rnn 7, wMlnn 6. Yor• 6.
TownlMICI l, Crvw 2, Keefe 2 Tolllt 10
6·10 ..
~-bY OUWten VIiie Plfll 16 11 11 11>-41 Wooot>r k1M II It 10 ...._.. Tolt l loult vm. Pt l1t 12, Woo@l'ldOI
13, TKMlcal WOOOtlrtCIOI DlflCll
HIGH SCHOOL
Slddl1,1dl 71. Nwc'9 ..
(.,.._T_......_,l
"°"CO ( .. ) -Mlh 20, LIWMV IS,
StndOW U, Wlbon l2, """° S, L"911 2, COOi'. 0. Totel1 2' 1 ... 1f 6' SAOO'-a lACIC (TJ) -8 W•flon 16, ~t~ IS, 0..1 1$, M. Wellon I•, ~ t.
coo11 2. s.1111 crur , Totelt' '" ts-3' 73 s.c ... ...,~
Norco ta 15 17 11-ii6 ~-20 17 17 1~13 total IOUlt' HOfCO "· s.ddlttMKll 17, F9Ultd GI.It COOll ( H )
-. •
Lo1 AJarnffM
MONDA Y'S ltESUL TS Cl6tt1 tf Sf .,,._,t .,,,,...,_.,. .. '""""91
FIRST •ACE 350 vtrdl
Amtr•Clll FlgMr <CrOorel II 20 420 310
lk• Tiit Vllt.t <Lecllevl l 00 l 00 Urooc ( Mltci1eH) • 00
Time II 2'
SECOND RACE JSO vtr<tt
0.H<I Rocket (Hermon) 11 40 '10 HO
Stmle1 Juo ( Oldtrlekl•n I II 80 S 20
DUOH Meolc Pride !Mv•e\I 4 80
Time lt-23 U DAILY OOVI La (J·2l oeld S17t 60
u •XACTA 17·101 oelo '31320
THNtO llACI. l50 o rdl
illowdv Pen 10cnoe1 11 80
8ftl Actw (H1rll
Gemblln 8tllt fTrMturtl Tlmt. 1860
,.OUttTI4 llACE. lOO vtrd' A lt .. hty CCreaW ) l 40
illtltO Fl"I (Ltel<tv)
Ptai11 '""" (Gere •l
•20 •10 1 80 2.tO
HO
JOO 2.tO
•60 260 uo
SM out AllO rtctd G ddln11\ Fte,.,,. Wlllll\, Mv Kdv Gll'I Auaull
Timi ISn. $1 IX.ACTA (1 41 Pel<I '1SIO
P'lnH llACI . 350 ve•dl FretH (ltrd) 5'0 HO JOO G•IT\I lret klf (Figueroa l 40 2 IO NIQhr IW10d (LacJitvl s IO
AllO ,.Cid Reconoo•ltr OontQut, Mid· nlollt Stint, Surlln S.ter1 C11r1,1ooner Slv
Sovlftlon Snet k T ahleQuen Solll Tlmt IUl n llJlACTA (9·•1 oeld '10 IO
SIXTH ltACI. 170 verdl Ct ull Im Felr (8ard) 4 00 UO 160
Lffdt< ROO"I (Hert) l IO 3 00
LUCkV Pollcv lLtwhl '60
AIM> recld Hoists Altair &oDDv Ori on JuMbo• Cowbov W•n ,., Fol~ L me HuDle
Time 453' U a XACTA II 41 Pt ld , 1180
SEVENTH RACI )50 ro•ch
Toatl Me lOetomba' l9 00 ll 10 I IO
•-IPeuune) 21 •0 900 Ktrmerlllt ILtwl1) 10 60 "''° rtctd ~' Starlet PrKIOU\ Wine, Duoe' 1111bolt J''' ee<1u1no A
8tdulno l •lltd Time 1'-26
u ••ACTA (!·JI Ptl<I lNOO
llGHTH ltAC•. lSO Vlrd\ ~trl0"'9 Miu CH•rll s 10 '60 2 60
AMtrletl'I PollCv (Hermon I 17 00 S 80
Gernttv IL-Isl SOO
Timi 11 '7 0 IXACTA 12·11 oe d \11 00
u ~K sut u 1 ' 1 1 11 °''° 'lS, I lJ 20 wttfl ~ w1nn111Q llCktt I''"
l'lor'\et) u PICIC. SIX con~tion H id
f flt 00 wolll " Wlfln!llO hOlll (fi..-"OfWtl *'"" llACa. 11t ftreh Sudden Ollef (Ltck..,l II 00 HO UO
Rtfl.. Actoon ICrteOtf' I l 10 l 00
Ot l'Otf'OUI Dtbl IL-It ) 9 60
Timi "644 U aX.ACTA (4·l) Niel._.. 00 .. lll!!dellCt , ,)16
Mll•v'• ....... c ......
aAH a ALL Ar•• liCMI ua.-CHICAGO WHITI SO>c-SltNf 111111
..,,.,., ~ ....... -(tftlttet
.... M.TaALL . .................. .---.
MlLWAUkll I UCICS.-A<tlv•ltd ltietlY ~·• ~ It ....... \Aff'Y MleflMull, .....,..
fo~ 57 minutes
But he couldn't
be conta ined
in the fina l 3
MIAMI (AP) -R on Fe lluv.s
couldn't have felt an) worse. and
Mark Clayton couldn •t have been an)
better.
Fellows and his Dallas Cowbo)
teammates controlled the vaunted
Miami passing attack for 57 minutes
Monda) night 10 the Orange Bowl
Then the) -and Fellows 10 pan1cu-
lar -watched as Dan Manno
connected v.1tb Cla~ton on t wo long.
range 1ouchdowns to &J'e the
Dolphins a 28-:! I '1ctof') and knock
th~ Cowbo)S out of the '\lataonal
Football uaguc playoffs for the first
ume since I 974
Manno finished v.tth 1mpress1,c
\tausuc-s-23 of 40 for 340 > ards and
four touchdov. ns. But h~ packed up
four of the comrleuon . 110 of the
)ards and two o the touchdov.M 1n
1hc final three minutes.
First. Cla\lon snatched a passa.,.,a)
from a d1' ang Fellow'\ and \CC•Otl'd 'Q
}:lrd<i to makC' 11 ~1 -14 \\Ith .:!·11 111
pla}
·· 1 v.:is If\ ing lo kn<X k till' h.111
down.·· fC'llO"-"' rt'C'alled 1n 11 drear'\
Dallas locker room "I (Ol twu fingl."r'i
on tt. I JU!it v.1sh m' hnge"' .,.,ere a
h11lc lunger ..
Fellov.'I said ht· v.as tht• happ1rs1
pc~on in the Orange Bo"-I v. hen the
Co"'bo)" tied tht' score 44 .;crnnd\
later on a spn:tacular 66-}ard tom.:h·
dov.n ratch b' Ton' H ill He said ha'>
heart started ilu11ering.,., hen the tlall
ltppt'd b) Dolphin drftn'"' c rod.
Don \.1c"1eal. tnd«i up 1n H1ll''>
hand~ .and l~ l o.,.,bo, "'de rcce1,cr
rat.ed untouch~ to the end zone.
"I v.cn1 bac k o ut then-thinkmg
how I v.asn·1 going 10 garnble an'·
more·· f ellow\ said .. I v.as gorng tc,
pl3\ II ~fr ..
Instead he plaved lt on the ground
On the second pfa) after the k1clcotT.
Fellov.s slipped whale shadowing
Cla)tOn o n a crossing pattern. When
he looked up. Clayton had the ball
and v.a-; heading for a 6.3-yard. game-
chnching touchdown y,1th SI seconds
left
"I slipped ..... h.H can 199) ··Felio"
\!ltd "I mes~ up all these gu)'i
chance-; to make the pla~offs I've got
10 take 11 all on m\ '>houldcrs. b«au~
11 "'as m} gu' both umes.
.. Et1hcr YOU'rt a hero OT' vou·R" a
goat I was.the goat ·· ·
C'la' to n v.u 1he hero The ~ond·
\C.ar ~1de recc1,cr. v.ho also had
· nartd a 41 -Yard touchdown m the
St'<'Ond quan.er. finished the ~ason
with 18 TD catc hes. breaking the
1'1Fl. mark of 17 set b) Don Hutson
With the Green ea, Packers In I q4.:!
and equalled b) ·the Los .\ngeles
R am .. • Elro\ H1r~h 1n I YS I and tht
H ouston 011cn' 8111 Groman in I% I
"It \\00 't reahu v. hat r vc ac-
1. ornphshed until the morning:· (la~
inn "8.td 'Th1'i 1\ ~nmething that
mean' a Int to me A. gentkrnan carnt
up 1t1 me on the sidelines and sa1d he
"'anted the ball for thi Hall of Fam~
tiut I 1old him ·you·re not getung th"
ti~1ll • .. •
The lac,1 thl"C't' m1nutt'<1 of nclle·
m<'nt -.1.cre a dtl't'Ct lOntra"' to the lir..t
'\"minute
.\ lot wao; nding on the game -t he
( o v..btH ' had 10 v.1n to cam the final
'It Fl wild-cud bcnh and tht'
Dolphin n«ded a' 1cto" to gain the
ho me field ad,anlag<' 1f the\ reach
·the .\ F< l1tle µme •
Clay was quicksand
for Davis Cup team
GOTEBORG •. >Ac:den ( \P)-Thc
cursed red r la) proved to be the
.\mencans· qut(ksand again and thC')
lo't tliFDavls L\ap final to wt-den
"lt"ubsurb to pill) on 1 court that's
~badly put together. Mpc:"l,Jll) --~n
)OU play a team as good a.s the) arc
bcC'ausc ll0S aot to bt fa.ir." ~)d John
McEnroc Mondav n1aJ'll after he and
Peter FlC'mmaJo l a ()a,1~ C'up
doubles match for the fu"5t lime "n~ hn)'d a.nd rin d~T1 snaJ>eCd the "mcncan.s· 14-match
winninastre•kwatha7·S. ~'.6-2. i.~
VtctOI') lo ai"c the )'OUJ'\& "'C'dl h
teim an unbeatable }.() kad co•
1nto todl) ·s final two s11~1ln 1n lhc bnt~f.fivc match M:TIC$
"Then-'~ a lot of th1 wro """th
1tnni,, .. sa1d Mc:Fnroe. "h' ablurb10
ptay the final lbc Wttk bdon:
C"b" 1ma and on a lou ) ('Oun h\:c
lh1s one. 11· unbthc"ahk ...
But the Swtdc:c, lo '>'e tht dll).
The old master ~1'\ time fn:nch
Open champ.ion B1om Dori. wa., no1
lrmmt! But Bora ' tremerntom m-.._mph~ -in lud1n1 fi"e' §lraJ&}\l
\\. 1mbltdon htk~. 9t>h1ch 1) one of
spon\· attate\t ae<'omplt~hmtnts -
tngcrtd lht Mk."CC\ Of toda' '\
Sv.cd1sh ht'r~ ·
f..dhcra I . who hc<~me the: ri,..,
man to 'Mn the JUn1or Grand lam
~t ynr benmc one of the voun 1
DI\ lS C up champion~ sinet" ·Harvard
m.1&nt ~'Ahl F 0. .. 1, p1.11 up tht'
troph' 84' 'ta" ago
One ol the fcv. \ cdt h ~ e-and·
volt(') pla)m EdlxtJ "" 1he only
p1•)tr not 10 drop h" 5ef'\e 1n the
double mat h 1 WK'C' he w& down
k>\e-tO. but he nc"cr •1htd
"l hid Pf lcm' with h1urnc, but
thl\ coun ,, un Cttl>tablt 10 pl.a~
1tnD1\ on.'' ~d tcE::nroc.
J
'
....
PlBllC t«>TICE NIUC NOTICE
.... Ol'll• COUNTY Oll'MMCOUNTY MOT1CIOI' K·1-MOla GI' ......... OOUln' • •..a.AA. COURT TINITH'I IAl.8 NOTICI Of' PWLIC MU 114, ... .._. tMit W1llMIM.., .... 1tDl-4llmllS OIATH Oil'
GI' ... =...... Wutu kwlSs. ......_.., VOU AAL!tt DEFAULT THOMU CHAlllUI
flW Itri CAW 0 ........ ' UHDf.R A OEID OF n.uST C..ONOM t llt• 8 · PtelntMf . .-OOE.M t 019, PWntlff: ROOIAS I. 010. OATtO MAY 11 . 1882 UN· AHO M NTITION
Noaoell,.,_tMnltwl A LAW COAPOAATION, ALAWCOAPOAATION.fof• LESS YOV TAK! ACTION TOAOlillHll'T'D ~to~ 1 ... Of 'ORM"Ai.Y OEOAGI L. met!Y Q.otoe L.. ~ 1 TO PROTtCfYOUR PAOP~ HTATI NO. ble OM Ood9. .... o4 C... AOGERS, A lAW COAPOf\. Lew ~tlotl EATY, IT MAY BE 80LO AT A 1 ....
lofNa. tM ~ Wiii ATIOH Defendant: IART LAW· A PU8L.IC 8ALI!. " YOU To ell helrl, benellclwi.t
..... pulllo .... oom-DetenGMt: AL ot!LUCtA, SON, .net DOES 11hrOUOfl NffO AN IXPLANATION c:,.Olto'1 I/Id conOnoent
.,...,. ~on tWt AND DOH I THAOUOH v. '· ~ OF THE NATVRe OF THE credltora, Ind l*lorMI wtlo ~Of~. 1N4, at INCLu&IVf c ... Mo 107342 PAOC!IOlf"Q AGAINST MayMOt~lnlWted 10:90 o'dOlk AM. on the C... Mo, to tM WONI YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· In tM will e/'410< 111111 of .
.,..,......,.. 9lkt PfoP-WCIM You M"9 • ~ TACTALAWYUt THOMAS CHARLIS ~~~-~~ ~~~~~~~~-~ ~1•H~1000~~~ ~================~~==~~~~-~~;;~~~~~-~ ... .,.. ~ at Publlo ....... TM .... ...., ..... ~ ... ,., ...... .,... TRANSAMERICA TITI.£ IN· A pe11\1on 11 .. bMrl filed I I .... .. ••• ... • •••••••••• !ttortot. lne., th41 ~ ....... ,_ W1tMut yew ""'*' ,...._ .. •ll~ SUAAHCe COMPANY u by htty 1.oulM Cro.on In nlll tr IHI I I!
"°9d, 1n tN Cfly °' ntN. ...._.._......_,_,..wt. c1u11 1ppo1n1•cl Truer .. ti. 8QPei'IOr Court of Or· THE D ILY PILOT ltaual tOOl leu11l Hil 1ta111I tit --~Of °'*'fe, ....._., ............... ....., A..,.._.,,.._. Ml wllt u~ and pur1U1111t to Died engeC0unty reqU11tl~ that
CeMornl-. CM abendoMd lhelt .... mtllftW.W. ..,....,._.JOMlr-11,.. olTru11r~s.11.e2aa httyLOYIMCrONOnbop· CLA JFIED OFFI E HOUR IMYllNUIY .. ....,.. MlmYMTTAll
l
~. oNltUel 0t P9r90MI tt you wtett to 9"tC ti. ed· wrtttM ,.,,,_ "'-' M lnatrutMnl .,.o 82· 188549, poiflted •• !*tonal rep. TIWl•lnll cut• S Bd orne loealed In Pf:=l.~lbed below. In -.1ct o1 "' 1ttornt1V 1n tl'lll lft ........,. ..... '°"" If row or Ottlc111 A9Corda, ex-rMent11iv. ti> edmtnl1tlf the Telephone Service: lllTll llTlTI the Btc* lay.NB .,. ...
19'1 of. melt«, you tnould clO ao wenttNoeuttto9'Mr)'OW ecutad by: WAYNE .. taleoftl'llct«*ltint Thlt5bd .. 51H1a.homeof .... TIUll Large lot remodeled
M-*' ~. 0t1 '*•· 10 promptly ao tllet ~°"' writ· .... &TIRNAMAN ANO LEHAIRI! Th• petition requ11t1 M onday-Friday approx. 4900 eq tt offera H9# the btiM;tl. 3 Bdrma, klchen & UMlmabtt loan.
bKa. mlaa, ao. a 114 ten~. If any, mey be If JOU do '* fMe JOUr 8TIRNAMAN, •• truat0rt, In authority to aclmtnltter the the ultlrnate In com· 2 'A bath•, upgr~. Ptl· Mtk• 11111 a or .. t bUy. llWI AobeNon • CN!i flied on time. ,.,,,,.. ... time, JOU_, 11'11 omc. of tl'll Cooo1y,.... .. l•t• under the lncllPen· 8:00 A.M.·5:30 P.M. fof'tablt family IMng and vatHnclOMdpatlo.M ... Atk price 1 133 900 .,ec,., tble, IOfa. c:todl, 1 AYl9CMUtted n. l6do ci.. ioe. at. UM, .net ~ 00tdlf of Or11191 County, dint AOmlni11t1tlOn of &-I• ldMI f0t eotert .. nlng 1., tultt ha.I hloh beamed ' ctlelr. eunc... ac>bxa. Cflen. m~•. E trlbuma: Ilda • ...., l'llOMJ .net prep-St1t• of CallfOfnl•, WILi. t•tM Act. Business Counter: Ith bMUllM oqMn and 11 Perle llk Mltng l dllltr lldl btd tv 3 bd. ao . ....., .....,_ Ud. "" w-eftr Mef M tae wfttMWt S£Ll AT PUBLIC AUCTION A n..tlng on tile petltlOn :,., llOhl• \lltwa. The ::br:: trafll. •Acroll Tradition& H &at ' · ._. • -.,. lM. rwtw •lft'llftt "°"' ttie TO HIGHEST e1ooeR FOR wm bl held on JANUARY o. Mon<lay.friday ' .. Realt China c0nt. c:twt. •· dry, ,..,, 1MI defttro • ao di.le. oowt. CASH ~1y1bll 11 time of toes 1t o:30 A.M. tn ~' = "'?r ueume 11ux· from community pool .. y
chelt,bool!CM,fl'lg9,wtllf,2 IM le lltfonMotOfl .,. n.r. .,......, ..,., ,.. ..i. tn 1wtut money of 1M No. 3 11 100 CIYlc Center 8:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. d 'th r11,.t1"'tar'a' deeclm•" -tpa.A
1
,j28TW,OOITOC.HECLaLll 1 ao1 7370 ll'\ol1 l mlrr0f.gtfclblb0, .._ ~tl.YWmeJWlflt Unlt.c!St1t11)1t:Tt11Chep.Of'IV9W11t.San11Ana,CA in • 1 MA i.• vo •
20"bu.mieo,&p.H&11 lf ,_ .w. to Mell tM to oeM.,. ettomey fteht maoAY1nueen1renoetothe 02702. 01.·AOl I E provide Hcondery !~~~~~~~~~ LMcllcwd reNf'V•• the ..,....,.,......_,1,.~ ew11. If,.• not llnow" CIVIC Cent., 8utldlng. 300 IF YOU OBJECT to ttw! r.. # tlnenclng. 11,195,000 II
"9'lt '° bid at ti. ..... ---· ,.., ........... l!ll'"on-::.='"'•foaltert Eat CtllPnl•n AYenut, Or· granting orthe 1>41tltton, you Pl HI.IC : \TIO:\ OEAl>l.&:'•F Ed Eloe~!'4!~ Whit• UOILLEIT am ~ muet bl mede ,,_...., eo tf\tt )'OW .mt· ett°""'F 11 .....toe°' 1nge. CA 111 right, title ind lhovld ettl\W IPl>Mf at the 4. 'JQ .,.......,.""' ORANGE HILl.8
With Calf\~ encl paid for e.nr11p1nee,lf.,.,,....,._ 1 ..... eld otnoe <"'ted In tntlt'Mt conveyed to Md hearing I/Id 1t1t• your ob-M onday Fri. :., p.m. *
3
BRSbeBMutlful It IM time 9' purdlue. All fled ett tlMe. tM pfloMo booll>. now held by It undlf aid Jeotlon1 or Ille W(ltten oblec·
·pul'ChMedgooduruotdu If UMN .... .-Cltet o..,_. de.,_ II en-DMOotTrutttntl'llpropeny t.lon• wtttl the cOYrt before Tuesday Mon. 4:30 p.m. RIHOTIM II 1335,000 ta, and~ bl remowd 11 el ....,. • +"' ._. ""wn .,.._ cltlcton Jv· ettuatad In ea.Id County Incl the i..r1ng. Your appetr· W d d T 4 30 COSTA MESA 1._ time of purOheM. Sale ....... Muftfo, deierte dlcW '*" ..._ 11n ~ St111 deecrll>ed u : ·~ m1y be tn perwon Of 1>y e nes 8 y ues. : p.m. PllOE *3 Un1t1
1
•
1
Bar
74
ga1,n n ~to Pfb CMC:iektlon ........ lftlMdlatlMln••· • ao DIAi CAllNDANOI Tti. Southweeterly · 150 your lttorney. Th d Wed 4·30 p n1 .lOO tn the.....,, of llt11e!Mn1 d• Hla 1unera, Ill par• pr••en•u llfta feltOllhelOUtheUterlyll& IFYOU.AREA"CREDITOR Url'i ay . . . . ontf111lovetyL1urelModet •2HC10Meon1L01
___,landlord end obit. ,......... ~ II NJ reepuwta -rtta • ·,., .. feet of th1t ponlon of Lot or • cohttngent creditor ol f riday Thurs. 4:30 p.m. UIUlll In Turtle Rock Hlghl1nd1 $189.000
oe1*f party. Dlted thll t 1th ........ ,_. .., ,...._ qlllne en .. ta C«t9. 293 ol Newport H9igl'tt1, In the deoeued, you must Illa S d F 3 OO Townhomff. 2 Bdrm, MESA VERDE 1 11111 c1ey of Dlcemt>er, tr• 1 ..._,.. une um o uni Ramada the Ctty of Co•t• MIN. your etatm with the court or atur ay rt. : p .m. Llqutd1t1ng bank & Gov. 2b•. Excellent location *4BRcuitompoottiome 1064. 1·TO THI' PIN.NOA.NT: ....,_.. no le ofr-• County of Or1nge, St1te of pruent It to the peraonat uitday F · 3 00 owned propenl... 1 h t 1 1 I• ... 8,. 000 ........__ --'--•-C·'tf I nd f •-'W I 11 I t_... by fl : p.m. Cualom o.----. off•~ Wt P81 or 8 v w. .., •· 11t11Mlc I tor .. •, lrtc., A cMI oompt1tnt hM -· ................ i 111 ~-.. orn •. • o """''n no repretlfltl ve appo n ..., · ,..,.,..,. ..,. M 1 d 1 t ( 0 n IAVINE ' -lff z=: .... ~ I ...___ 1 t "' h ··•thl f th .... lldlngs end lend. ove· n con · ...,...,& fled "1 tM pelnt 1 HCft1a 1 maqu NI ,,..._ .-• ree •· as per m..,.. r .. t • court .. , n our rnon • "" •179 900 BA
2
b p tlo H Pubtllhed Orange CoNt ,..,. If JOU wtlfl to cu"'f"' con 111 for• corded In Book 4, Page 83. from the date ol flret 11-M•troptex Co. 8~·2480 • • · *2 a a ome
o.tlyPtlotDlceml>er 11, 11 ...... leweult. roti "'"··mil dad .. 1., .... Mlec.ll1neou1 Mape, In the 1U&neeoflett1ru1provlded CA~CEIJ .A TION & ~£rm -~ NEWIP101~;.TEAcH
1914 _.... ao dlYI '"" thlt ...,..._II 111e.ct ,....,_ Office 01 the County ~ Ill Section 700 01 th• CO RR ECTIONc ... ElEUlll I
T-317 tummoni II MrVld on you, .,_ la -'• eecuche au cordlf ol aald Or111Q41 Coun· Problt1 Code of Calllornla. ~: BrlQht end open room _ 0 $0 r • *2 Unltt~.oJooc.I
m.w1thlhl1court1wrltten ceM. ly, bounded and delcrlbed Tl'lltlmeforflllngclalm1wtll (' II . d with plush Hrthtone ealty .~aA2• ..... •,pool tMPOnM to the complaint. If UIM no ,,...m. Ml .. followl. not expire prior 10 rour .nn1·4• atHHl~ an ('Orrf'l'lion ~ m&y carpeta In 1hta 2 8drm 2 .. ,.,.,.
Unleel you do. your defeult ,..,.._ .. • .......,., puede Beglnnlne at the Inter-month• from the det• of the ht• m<11lt• on bUlllf' ch•adl i1w'-a~ uh on>. bath condo. Patio Wlttr $.450,000 wtll bl entered on IPPll· ,.,-et ceeo. r le~ MCtlon of ttle centlf fine of hllrlng notice 1bove. •· .. ·Ht In Bar·B-OU.. FHA 786 1172 111-1111
cation of the ptalntlrt. and .,.._•11Nlatlo,M1dlfter0 Or1noe Avenue, with.,!!' YOU MAY EX.AMINE~the Plt•U&l' ai.k for a t·a11c•t•llation ~laueumabte,utdng -thllcourtmeyentlfalodQI-r otr11 OOIH de au c.nter tine ol TWerlty~~· fllekeptbytllecourt
1105
,
000751
-319
1
1199 ment~natyouforttier• Pf~ aln •~ ... ondStraet,aunownonAld are•'*"°" tnterMt In 11urnbt•r \\lien <·a1wt-llit}_g ~our ad. ... lief~ In the com· cloftatf)Ofpart••ll~ map of Newport Helgtrt1, the ntata, you rNY llfVI !pSElECT •11111 DrnrH Nor 1c ls plaint, whlotl could rMUlt In l•lelen otroa .....,.....,. 1ncl running thenc• uponthe1xec:utororadmln· CLA SIFIED 642-5678 $880MlchellOnOrrve
gatntlhmlnt of wag11, tlk· ~. ltuede .,_•led nbof'thlll1erly 11ong Mid 111rator, or upon the •t· -----------------• PROPERl:.IES Irvine fng of money 01 Pfoe>artY or qulera llamat • un abooado cet'ltlf llne or Orange Av· torney for the executor or 1-::===========!.:============I
other,....., requnled In the lmmedl1t1111•"t1. •f "o .,-iue. 330.15 feet to the edmlntttrator. 1nd tlle wttll ',~'ir'L',",' Q/lil ~ .9\, f _ f) 'C ~c..8 won 1 ~~~!!!!!!!!!!!:~~~ comf)lalnt. CIOllOGI • 11n abogado, l'lonh-lerty 1X1en11on of the court With proof of-· 81a111 fer Salt ltun f11 lalt • v\!::> l'oU ~"' ~ ~<r \J ,._, •~
Otrtld: DEC 17 1982 ,.... llamat • Uft ..,... the nor1hellttlfly tine of Mid vice, • written r~t 1111· "-I IOOI ....... aaa.. £4W.4 _,CLAY • ,OUAN 111 ..... DIEHL
"ICHA"D J . WACK, de t~ • 1bog1dn Lot 2 9 3 ; than c • Ing that you d11lr1 epecial .,,-;:.::;•.;;11::.;:l;.;... ___ ..;;.;::.;:;.;::l;:=:::u=----..:.:::ww~• f f W llTllllT
RUTH KRAMER Cleftl, 1y: '°109 WMlt«, o a 11na oflclM de .yuda IOUtheat1erly 11000 llld ex· no11c. or the llllng of an In-.---------·-------• 0 ~·";,~ ... b::;•·:_~, ~ ~llle:l~::"':JP~rtff"' '.,:..., _., DIEHL, age 74 years. OeputJ legal ('fMel dlr-ectono , .... tension and the north· ventory and appralsement of 1ow.,, '°'"' '"'" .,,.0i. ,_d, .,._,_.
Survived by hus· "°t9fe a Dtb, AttomeJ• et fonlco>. ea111f1y line of .. Id lot; eatat• uaet1 or of the pell· LIDO ISLE ., U p
1
A
0
Deluxe 2 Bdrm, 2 bath &Aw, 11111 IMcfl ltfd., Th• n1me and lddr ... ol t37.88 fMt to the true oolnt tlon1 or ICCOUnte mentioned I " condo. Terrific tocatlon
band, Robert; daugh· Hununaton a .. cl\, CA theoourtl1:WESTORANGE oft>eglnntngoltheboundlfY tnSectlont200andl200.6of MarvC'lous f) Br bayfront 7U' on bay. po<>I. I' I I I' I near the park, thopplng ters, Bobbie Diehl • ..., COUNTY MUNIUCIPAL of the property herein cl• thlCellfornl• Prob•I• Codi. . . . . . . and tranaporletlon. Built
Debbie Shepler; Pubtlahld Or1nge Coe•t COURT, 81'1 13th Street. ecrll>ed, thence continuing lectc.Wlllonl.Nolan1 ,Al· "P<• lOO' boat s paC'e Xlnt f'm $4.H50.000 lnkltchen,pool,tlreptace,
Catherine Smith Dally Pllol Deoember 18, 25, w"tmtn1ter, CA. 1outh .. sterty along 1110 torrt•r• for Petit oner, I w 0 N 0 y I cerpet end drapee. "'---Ha lena d• 1984, JlnUlfY 1, 8, 1985 The n1me, aodr111, 1nc:1 northeUterty nne, t28.00 Mm Catta de ta P11t1, S F
11
,_ •
119
.
600
.
1JWM1 v • an . T'3i1 telephone number ol pllln· feet; thence touthwettwly tutte 4001 Lag11ne Hltte, CA l'h;irmmg pi.intsh :i Br. 'l. & on 4;,-lot, I I j• I I u pr ...... • • ·
grandchildren, Ve-rta.IC NOTICE tiff'• 11torney. or pt11nt1rt parallel w1111 the center llne ma dt..'('k. courtyard, pit>r & slip $1 .100.000 . . . . . t (714) 673 4400
neeaa, n.-avia. SarJi, ~~~TD.~C:: ~/:::· =· ~~ O.~b:i~~';:, 1~~~'. BAYSIDE PLACE BAYFRONT I W-A K E 0 1 ! A WOOdsman was as-eo wllal and Erin; sister• C~~~OOf' porelion. 17111 Beach Twenly·Second Str11t, 25, 198A i---1s~1-,-, -,-• t1• 111oog111 01 c1anica1 music
Catherine Henninger. IMJUt TltANtnft Blvd . Ste. 103, Huntlneton 126.00 faet; thenoe nonll· -------'TW.u.;;-33~0 !=:!:·=·~:!::-=!.·-..!-~:.., 'Frankly: he answered To Memorial services (lea. 1101 .. 107 Beech, CA 926.47 (714) euterly peraJlef wtlll the P\8.IC NOTICE Spectat·ular ba)lfront dplx. 2 Br. 2 Ba up ,, I ra1her 1is1en 10 ttle __ .... ·
will be b ld t Pacific ucc > 847-60•1 cent., line of Cringe Av· --;...;:;;:~;....;..;~..;.;;.--2 Br, 2 Ba down. 2 boatspa<.-es. $1,250,000 ... ___ L_o_s..,.,...0_1_£.---1 O c ..... P1••• .... '~"'•1• ""°'"'*
e a • • · Dated DEC 5 1984 enue 330 15 feet to the true I I I' I I b• '·"••v '" ·~· """'"0 -ood• View PMMe~~~~l ttieH<>J,i:,,i::::>';D!,":' ~o "lcMtd·.1. Wac:t, Ctn. br point' of b9g1nn1ng. .:;:.!!-:. PENINSULA HOME OCEANFRONT . f..., _..1oo ''""' •••P No 1 b•'-
Chapel 1 .l uoeawoy Slkor1 and Dorothy 1 · OenlM Alarcon, Deputy The etreet 1ddreu and ••Of "'81 8 ~;~'it'P!"~a:~~'lS I' 11 I' 1• II I' I' I' I
Dec. 18, 198-4. Inter· Sikora.• Tranaferora, wno.e c~bllahed Orange Coeet ~'':y.e:"~r=:r.= Pfopetty et ·Exciting Ocean & Jetty views, 4 Br. 3 Ba. • w . • . . . . . . .
Plment Aile~~~· PA. ~~r1=.r7u11~ tC:: Diiiy Piiot December t8. 25, described •bove 11 '~~;':7*:" 3700 sq. ft. car parking. $1.150,000 f) .~~V:r~Me'f roel I I I • I I I j • e~ ~nu o~ers. Coate Mela. County of Of. 198.4, J1nuary 1, 8, t965 purported to be. 216 22ND In the Superior Court 01 . . . . _ . . . .
Pact ft c V 1 e w anoe State of Callfomla T-342 STREET. COSTA MESA, CA the Stile ot C11tlorn11, l<>t WEST BAY AVE BA YFRONT IOIAl·LfTI l llWlrl 11 lla111f111fl11 ICMM .
Mortuary Directors, th1t i bulk tr1nsfer ta 1bo\i Pla.IC NOTICE 92~~· underelgned Truatee the County of Otanoe
644-2700 ~~~~~:;:.::.~w~:! FICTTTIOUSaUltNEll dt1e1a1m11nyllabllttyforany oftn~1~~a".:'u~tt~E~~6~ At NII Y C Trad1tmn;.il .) Br spt•t..·t,1eul.ir
bullnau addr ... 11 270 NAMESTATIMENT lnoorrectl1118 of 1he tlreet DENOORF.Conserv1tM b:1\ \'It.'\\ Ownt·r ltnanl'mg $!.050,000
South Brl1tol. Suite 102. Tne lollowlng perton1 are =~'::u:d fr'': ~= Notice Is hefeby given that
Coat• MMa, County ol Or-dolng bualoes1 u : herein · y. the undersign«! wlll NII at LAGUNA BEACH HILLSIDE RATTET anoe. St1te ol C.lllomla. Ma M MANUFACTURING Said Ille Wiii bl rNde but Private Sale. to tne hlghett
ROSALIE M . RAT-1'heprop«tytobetren .. a MARKETING CO .. 1312wtthout covenant Ot ~.,. 1ndt>ettbldd1f,eubjectto 1'.1111r1.i11111 ou«rn&ut-. \'tc-w.spuuou,.,.'i
TET, r esident of ~~~ 'i;,1~:*'~ult:' tri2° :,: c?:i~~~,:~;=· Or· raJlty.1xprenortmptted.r .. ~,:me~ i!' or'!~~.,~~; B1 :1 B<1 Xlnt r111~1m·1ng, now $7:'>0.1100 m-court. flreplt, covered
Costa Mesa. Pasaed Co111 M .... County of or'. Don A Moyer, 8.43 ::!'~t,'~~;~c;'·,,: 2•thd1yofOeoember. 1984, patio, neer park 11\d .. ,
away December 16, ange. S11te of Cllttornl1~ Danube Way, Coeta Meta, emalnlng prl~pal tum 01 at the otflee ol 8.45 West COTTON POINT ESTATES for~9.000
1984. She ill survived SaldpropenyladetlCflbed C111tomt192626 ;,... note MCUred by bid Vetenc:la MHS Drive, Full· I J"-t l()Uf f 1()Ml'S
by her mother, In Olf*al u : All •tock In Dirk A. Moyer, 8.43 Deed of Trust With tnterHt erton. CA 92836, County of Cus tom •Xt•an v tt•\.\ lot. ... nt•xt to CaS<J · ' .Reeltora.e
7
s-ecioo
S ht Mi i h trlde, ftKtur11, equipment Danube Way, Co111 Mesa, , .. ~eon ., ...... ~Vldadlnaald Or1111ge,SteteofCallfornta. I' I S ,.1 f $".llllllll • OP e 8 P i and good wtU of th1t ~uty California 92626 ~c». ad·v~ 11 an under atlthl right, lltle and lntereat ;u I lt'<i .• an '-1•m1•nt1• rom .1:-> .
daughters, Melanie bullneet kMWn .. Thi H1lr Thi• bu1lne11 ,. con· th terms ol Said ~ ol ol .. Id d'eeeeeed at the time WESTWOOD VILLAGE you Yater. Linda Anstine· Depot and toc:atad 11 270 ducted by: co-partner• • of death and all th• rtghl,
• ' South Brlatol Sule 102 • DON A MOYER Trust, fees, chaiges ind ••· title and lncereet that tne • --: ·"'. ·-.· • son, Mark, brothers, Co 1 ..... c'ount of 0,-T 1 · 11, ..... penaet of the Trustae and 01 -tte f aid d~ued has l> L' 1 1 1 1 ., 0 .1 ., n .. , _
Edwl·n. Manuel, 1 •"' • Y • ha llatemont was """ the trusts creeled by said """ 0 5 """" rm1t• c.ng IS l 11<1< 1110 11;.i " rx ,, n.i • 11191. Stata of C1llfornl1. wtth th4 County Cieri\ of Or· ICQUlrlld by oper1tJon ottaw. F' I · h rl I f I U' '1 A ~1· . Samuel and Allen The bulk transfer will be ange CC!Unty on Novem~ Deed 01 Trust. for the or otnerwtse other than or tn • rp cs. r W< rs. nr ~ • •P 1!-1.1,000
M.i.siph; sister, Pearl consumm1ted on or after 28, 198• F291139 ~~:,n:0 ;!~-~~e .. ~X J'11• addition to thll ol 881d de-s I R . t the 1 Ith day or January, Published Orange Coast The beneficiary' d~ 881<1 ceased. at the time of death. I • 1•1y P1•1 I l...t a Per a • 1 a 1985. 11 10:00 A.M. 11 Rell· Delly Piiot o-rT!bef 8,. 13. Deed 01 Trust ,,.,:i~fora ex-In end 10 all the oertatn reel ----
Bereini.ck, and Jean dent11I Etcrow. 1.470 Jam-20, 27. 198• led and delivered to the property lltulled In the City c lass 1f1ed ads IPYIUll P · k G id bor1e Road, Newport T"'-511 ecu ol Costa Mesa, County of h 642 5678 rimac ' raves e 8e1eh, County ol Orange, n underslgnad a wrl1ten Dec-Orange. State of C111fornla. p one -. Mfl,111
services will be held Srate of CllllMnta lar11ton of Default •nd De-partlculerty daecrlb«I u fol-DI-IC NOTICI , •••••••••••••••••••••••••• , A home jul1 made fOf Tuesda 3PM at the So tar u known to the f>UJUC NOTICE mend tor Site. and 1 written lows, to wit: ,.~ II famlly IMngl SeclucMd
Harbor wn em-Tran1ter-. au buslneu . Notice 0 ' Default Ind Elec-Lot 12 of Trac1 2727. u 1_ ..... :..;;.:;.;;.;;;...;.;;;;.;.;.=.__ location, child play .,...,
orial Park. Family re-names Ind •ddr.._ uMCI FICTITIOUS 8UllNEl9 lion to Sell The underelgned shown on a Map thereof r.. FICTITIOUI .., ... ,, QOfQeOU• pool 11\d IC)t
by Tran1feror1 f<>t the three NAME ITATIMENT caulld said Notice of De-corded tn BOOk 87 p1g9134 NA• ITAH...-T Ith IOI cS.ck 5 quest in lieu of ye11a Im put. are: none. The followln& persona ere t1ult ind Etecllon to Sell to and 35, of MltcellllnlOUs The followlng ~·are :.Oro:i
11
:!. ha.I One
flowers, donations to D1ted: November 6, 198.4 doing bu1lnn1 ... CIN· be recorded In the county Map1, In 1he office of 1111 doing, bullneu u , JEF· BR end beth on ~
the American Cancer "obeft Madden, Trane· NAMON CREEK APART· where the real property la County Reoorde< of aald Or-FREY S HOME OECORAT· level Views -mat'<llloUI
"'" MENTS. I.TD .• 2182 DuPont tocat.cl ange County ING CENTER, t216-D WMt Society. Services Publllhe<I Orange Cout Drive No 205, lrvtne, CA Diie: December 11, 1984 mor1 commonly known Biker StrM1, Cotta Mua, teetlngl
under the direction of Dally Piiot December 18, 92715 TranMIMrlca Tltle In-aa: .409 Prtr)Ce1on Drive, CA 92826 14'-...
Harbor Lawn Mt 1984 Herman J . Romero · Gen· •urene1 Compinr, 11 Cost• Miii. Clllf<>tnla John H. R1vey, 1 l518
T .3.,.3 eral Partner. 76 Lakeview. tru1tM , By: A.G. A-'d, A.. Te1ma 01 9119 cuh In 11...,. Oladaton• Clrcte, Fountllln 0 Ii v e Mortuary , •---------Irvine, CA 9271.,. 1l1tan1 tecrelary fut money 01 the United v1111y, CA 92708
Costa Mesa. 544-5554 P\8.IC NOTICE Timothy Romero • Oen-Published Oranee Coe11 Stites on confirmation 01 Thi• bu1lne11 11 con-
erel Partrn.r, S4 C.rver. Dall>' Piiot Oec:emt>er De-tale. or part cuh and btl· ducted by; en lndMdual VIW llLll&
WllW HllSllll
KOSTRACH
GERT RUDE I
KOSTRACH. a resi·
dent of Costa Mesa,
CA. Passed away De·
cember 15. 1984
Survived by son,
Leonard K ostrach;
daugher, Evelyn Mc
Ginley. Chapel Ser-
vice and lntennent,
Thursday at 3 PM
Directed by West-
minster Memorial
Park Mortuary and
Cemetery 893·2421
HARBOR LAWN·
MT. OLIVE
Mortuary • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-5554
PIERCE BROTHERS
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
BALTZ BERGERON
SMIT" I TUTHILL.
WHTCL"F CHAPEL
427 E. 17th St
CostLMesa
646-9371
PACIFIC Vl!W
IHMORIAL PARK
Cemetery • Mortuary
Chapel • Crematory
3500 Peclllc View Drive
Newr>e>rt Beach
&44·2700
McMOllMICK
MOftTUARY
1705 L,una Canyon oad
L•oun• buch. Ca
92851
•9•·94 ts
FICTITIOUI 9UllHESI lrv1ne. CA 92714 cemt>er 18, 25. 198.4, Janu· a.nee evidenced by note ee-John H. Revey
NAME STATIMlNT This business 19 con-l1Y t. 1985 cured by Mortgage or Trutt Thi• 1t1tement w1a flied
The followlng persona.,.. ducted by· 1 llmlteo partner· T-3AO Deed on the property 90 with the County Clerk of Or·
doing bullMu aa. PRO. Ship Mt.IC NOTICE eold. Ten percent of 1mount lllQ9 County on NOV9fllber FESSIONAL PRINTING Herman Romero bid to be depOllted wttll bid. 30, t984 ,_
SERVICES. 28101 Camino This 111tement was IUed 9-21911 Bid• or offer a to bl In wrtt· D ~lyu~ ~: 1~1
l.1 Ronda. San Ju1n with the COYnty Clerk of Or· NOTICl OF Ing and wtll be received •t 1 0 • • Ceptatrano, CA 92675 1nge County on December PU8llC IAli the efor ... ld offloe at i ny 26, 1984. J1nu1ty 1. 1~85
MllVln Traywick Gau1eon, 5. t984 OF P!"IOHAI. time 1rter the flrt1 publl--33-0
111, 2810t Camino L• Ronda, F212l25 ..,.OP!"TY cation he<IOf 1nd blfore Pla.JC '-lTICE San Juan Caplllrano. CA Publl•hed Orange Coast #00101 s d1t1 of 1111.
92675 Dally Piiot December 11, 18, Notlce te hefebyglven thlt t>eted thta3rd di)' of Dec , FICTtTIOUI .., ... ,,
Thi• bu1lne11 11 con· 25. Jenuary 1. 1985 pureuant to MCtlon 1988 of 1984. NAM! tTATl....-T
ducted by: an lndlvldu11 T-333 the C1v11 Code.1t1te of Call-KlmurlJ I . HughH, The lollowln& penon1 are
M T Oarneon. 111 lornta. Ille undertlgned wtn ConMf"fator of tl\e Mtate dotne bualn111 11: J.K.
Tnta 1111ement wea llled 1 P\13l.IC NOTICE Mii at publlc aale by com-ohalcl Contorn1M Counter Topi, 11861
wltn lhe Covnty Cl8fll ol Or· 1>9tlt1v1 bidding on the 26th Attorney• for Con· Martens River Cir .. Fountain ange Counly on o.oetrlber FICTITIOUS BUSINESS day ol Decernber. 198•. a1 Hrtllor CAMERON Ind Villey, CA 92708 NOTICE
4 198'4 NAME STATEMENT 12 30 o'clock PM, on the HOFFMAN, M5 W. Vat.note JOMP'1 Kiiiy, 17393 Santa
F2123n The following pereona are premltes where H id prop. MMe Drlva, Fullerton, CA l88bel. Fountain Valley, CA Publlahed Qrange Coast doing bustnen 11 DIE erty nu been 1tored, 1nd l2Q5 92708
Dally Piiot Deoembef 11, 18, YACHT KITS . 1 5 1 7 wtilch are located It Public Publlthld Or1nge Cout Thia buatnau 11 con·
25 1984. January 1, 1985 Monrov11 Ava.. Newport Storage, Inc 2()e5 Pll<*ltla Daily Piiot Decemblf 11. 12, duc:tad by: 1n lndlvldull
The Daily Pilot will DO l~er be open OD a.tarda7 ID~.
OV opcratlDC boare will be llOIMlay tllna htday, 8:00 a.a. to 5tSO p.m. Deidllnee will be u tollowar
T-33 t Beacfl. CA 928&3 Avenue, In ttle City of Colli 18. 198.4 Joteph Kelly
---------t Tllomae J Mccredie. Me... County of Of1nge, TW-338 Thi• 1t1temen1 wu fllecl Pl&.IC NOTICE 1517 Monrovia, N•wport St1te ol C1urornl1, lhe DllDtlC NOTICE wt1h 1111 County Ctertc of Or·
SDJTIOPf D&ADLDIS
_ _..;...;;.:;;.::.;.;::...;.;..;..;.;=--1 Be1c:h, CA 92e80 1bandoned gooda, ch1tti.. l'\IU\. ange County on Dlcember lloaclay ...................................................... rrtd&y, 4.180 •••• ~ ................................................... lloa..., .... •··· FICTITIOUS llU .... IS Phtllp K1ufm1n, 1940 Fed· or pertonel property ci.. 5 1oe.4 ,_
NA• •TATIMINT lfal. Coatl Mela, CA 92627 terlbed below In the mil· FICTrflOUI 8UllNHS . Publlllhed Orange Cout
The following peraona .,. Lawrence Thomat, t•H2 tart of. NAME ITATUllNT D•lly Pilot Oeoember 11 18
Wedaeeday .............................................. -r..daJ, 4.180 P·•· n ...... , .................................................... ,. •zao p.a.
dOlng bualMN 11. COR· C1nded1 Pl1ce, Tustin. CA Joeeptl Hov1r. 2 lllturl, The followlnt peraona ar~ 26, JIOuafY l , t08S T~i PORATE PAINTING SER· 92e80 2 pr aklls. 1911 8'>ft equip. cloln11 bu1lna11 11. , __ .;_.._...;.. _____ _ rrtc1ar ................................................... n .,....,, 4zao •·•·
.. ..,.,, ••••..•••••••••••••••... ····•••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... ,. l rCM> •••• VICES 24162Angeta8t El Thi• buelnett 11 eon-bd,lwnchatr,mlacbJCl,tult· ~l'IOWl.WOOD SEC· "8.JC NOTICE T0<o CA 92830 ·· ducted by. • generel Pl.fl· ose, muic ttm, &p. A 038 MET ARIES~ 3356 Vta Udo 1 __ :..;;;;;.:;;.;;..;.:..;;..-.;.;;;.. __
KeMt EdW1rd Eckholdt. nerthlp l.a"dlord raHrv11 111• ~ti.9~ Newpon e..cn. flCTmoul autMll
24162 Angela St El Toro Thoma J. McCredle rlgllt to bid It the Ille. A NAMl ITA,._..-y CA 92830 ·• • Thll ltltem.tlt wll rtlecl F>urctl-mual bl mad• Shieh• Anne Woode, 22& Thi fOllOMng l*'tOfll .,.
Tfllt bu1lne11 11 con-Wlttl ti. County Cieri< ot Or· with cuh only •nd paid for 82n0 Street, Newport dotno bultneea u : XXX
..._, ......................... ~·\··········"'" htdo1. SoGO p.-.
duC1ed by: 1n lndlvldu11 •1ftOl1 18Cou2 .. nty1,.8~ JOecemry~ ar the time o4 puroh .... All ~: ~ Knowt1on T•clinologl... Trl·E•
Kent Eokholdt • · '" • • •nu• • purc:h&Md good• at• told II · Tec:nl'loloaltil 4M !Mt tat,
Thia 1t1lement w11 flted 1985 It and mua1 bl rll'nOYed 11 22& &2nd Street. Newpon Tu111f1. CA t2teo
w11h tM County Clll'k of Or· P bllahed Or ntc!,.~ t~ time of Pllfot\ .... Sall ~· c:u:~: 11 con· Rohl! Hancl1, 14U 1 •noe County on DeoafY'lber u •noe • eubJeel to prior Ctnelltatlon • M\lll>lffY Aw • IN!ne. CA '· 1984 0.lly Piiot Deoembef 11, 18, tn the t'Vlfll of N1tllment dUG11d by: CG-Par1Ml'I 92714
· '*'11 26. 1984. Jenuary 1. 1985 ~ lancllor'd .,. ~ Shllha Anne Woo01 Thi• bulln .. • I• oon-
Publ"'*' Or•• Cout T ·327 gated perty. O.t.cl thta 11th Thll etetement wa filed due1ed by; 111 lndtvlduel
Dally Piiot Dlolrnber t 1, 18, & 18ttl cl•y of Deolmblr, :"" 1'-~n':,,C~~ RoN1 .. and•
2s, ~llllU8T'/ '· t985 Pllll.JC NOTICE 1984. 1 Inc ~ 8'.T91~ ty ,__ fnll atatement wt11 flled . T-332 P'*"° tor.... .. • Publlltled OflnOI ~1 with the County CWk of Or·
'1C'fmout M.IMtfH '°P'ubtlltled Orange eoeet OallyPllOl Dlolmblr 11, 11, ~914eounty on °== T,'!~T'DlllWT Diiiy P11o1 o.o.mw 11. 1r. as. 1914, J~ t, 1N5, 1 Publltihed 0renoe eo-t
doing buelneM ::'~~· I _____.. T-329 Da'lly~1>1oei11ber 11, 11, '~=~· 0 -n.e euF a REEF". T·318 Pllll.IC NOTICE 2s. JenuatY 1, tN& T..sM 111Cttn0Uii0Wii
The fol!Owtng P*f90ft1 •• 1520 Wiit Cout Hlgtlwey, P\BJC NOTICI · .a. "8JC NO'hCE MAim ITATnmff '
doing buelnW aia; Newpon BMcfl, CA . rte'n'f'ICMl8 ..,._.. Thi fOllOWtng peniona are
NORVAI.$ UOUOR .• 174e Olck'I Grinder, Inc. I ,tCTIT'tOUI 9Ue•ta U.. ITAW PJCTITIOW WM c1o1ng bue1f1W 81: Pec:fflo
Pl1Gentla Avenue. Co1t1 Cet1torn11 corporation. N.Am ITATlmW'r The fOltOWtno P«90N.,. NAMl ITA~ w orfd ProclUCll, 21602
MIN, CellforM 92t28 11823 I! Stauaon Ave , Suite The lollowlng PlftOfll -dolfl9 bWt1MI M: 81.UE TM fOlloWlnO '*'°"' we ~ Ctrell Huntington 1aeiier 9 8'ownift0 16310 31, Senta Fe Sprlngt, CA doing bu9inell M: OMNOf! CAT, 130 E Katella Allll., Or· doing bullrl4llt 18! AountrM ~ CA t2f4
Oenb«ouQn, We1onlne:ter, Bor11'1 8tlncler. Inc., • JUL-II!, 2200 Hlf1xW Btvd ...... CA 92M7 A.-oca MOO!. eo.. Hwy PtcHlc WO<td Cori· Clllf0tnll t2N3 C1tllornl1 corpor1t1on. e.t. C0e11 M.-.. CA 92&2'7 T'*"' fWortl, Inc (Stet• ~ 199, COrotta dCll Mat: alJon.. a =:= .
Thia bua4nell 11 con. 11823 E 81auaon AV9 • M• Hue Tuyetcl\iOftO Trang, of lncott>Otttton. c.Hfomte>. CA 92125 itlon 21112 •
ducted by: In lndMdual 3 t, Genia Fe Spnnga, CA SS1 8 AvocadO St., Colt• 1eeo 8 . Albion, Suite 400, ... L ...... a1Mt U..· alei ~en • CA IAfQ(A It. MOWNINQ Thll bullnell II GOii· ~CA 92621 Denver, CO 80222 tMTIOfn ~ Arr~ UM Ttlll atatement w11 filed ducted by a corl)OfltlOn Thl1 . bualne.. ta c:on· Thlt buatneee II COn• CA 92w ' flllt Mlneu 11 con •
wfth tfllf County Clcll'k of Of. Bert 8lendet. Vloe Pr .... ducied by 11'1 lnd!VtduaJ dllCled br • dlvWoft Thia bullnee• le oon-M'9cl tiy: • COfpOfltlOn
lnOI County on NOV'llllblr d«ll ~ Tif;etcluotlg Trang Brue. A. 8tu111. Mgr cluctld by: In lndMdual "°'*1 A L•1"1n 'f>t-.
llilyPillt
642-4321
Ml.IC NOTtCE
"oplt read
cln1lfltd
Light, bf'lghl and ~
with an unobttruoted
VIEW of OOMn 11\d ntght
1tg11t1. A perfect 1
bedroom condo '°' tht elngJe pertOn wno want•
MCYf'lty In a dellfabte to-
cation. A11um1bl•
flnenotng. 1159,000 FEE
-
Wl\~I HI HON)
liOMI" IM.
REAL ESTATE
831-1400
C.rna ••I llu IW
UIYlll-UI
1211,111
1 81 +den Qt ltnall 2nd Bel.
Orlglnally oerttlktrt
oondo w/~ b«Y 'eWw
fr·om llde llld«. Idell r•
trMt f0t 11"91ll>Ot.r0 Of
wHtender for city
dwelllf. Smalt but the
ltMt exptnelvt Mal-Kai
by $350,000 .
Mt-1111
"ln Nlf,!'
~I I\ 1 , I • i.
I\ 'i 'ill~ 11\ I I '
a, l"4 Thia 1tatemen1 WN flied Thi• 1te1ement '"8 flted Thie lllltment •N nled J I 8*. de!lt . ' ~-with tn. County Cltw1c of C>r· wtUI ttie County Clerk of Or· wtth the County Cltnl of Or· Thie ataternent .., fllld TNI tteltfMnt WM lllld 9 1.r.t 'tKAli NI) ......
Adaft '"°'"•Mo..• N. ·~ County on December anoe ~ty on Oloember ''T. County on Oeoember With ti. County Cltw1c Of ()o. wttfl ti. County Cllfll of Or· ~•did ...... loft,
T_.. Ae1' .,... a. 3, 1064 e. tNA s * enoe County on~.,.. County on Nov9mber ,c1•.,._ •t-m1 ._.AM.C•••.,... ,__ ~ ,_ 2 IN4 1t 1N4 ,_tl11
Putlbned Orenoe ~ Pubfllhed Ofl/IOI eo.. Publltihed C>rlllOI Colll Pul>lllhld~ 1Coett1 fl 1Pubftlhecl Orange ,.c:: ~ Orenge COM! rot Claillr-4 Ad A tAtU' N.OT w.m&iiiiCM, ._. .....
Dlll'y Ptlol ~-2.f,..... Deity Piiot Dlciltrlber 1...1.:..11• 011tV P'llOt '*-"'b« •~11 18, o.tly Pilot ....,. , • r\.a. PUoi ~ 21 O.GMY Plot O.....blr tt 1t. ACflO~ Ao...ol ""'Mr\ S bf 2 M ._. C oemW 5, t2. ft, t"4 2S. 1064, JVIUatJ I, 1RC> U , fN.i, ~ 1, 1H5 251 J~ary I, 191$ i064 ' 25, ttl4 ~ 1 1Me Call Ma.16?1 fin 1111,000 ~, ..
W,...24 f U • T4H T-335 f434 ' ' ' T.U. ._.;_-------···---------.-L. ...... _-======
•I
•TCI Conetruotlon•
•Call with odnfl~•
Addlttona/Aamodaflnge
Kltchen1/Bath1• Fire
Demeo-• (71 4)839-4e22
DIMES
A-
LINE
WANT ·ADS
IMPORT ANT NOTICE TO
PRIVATE PARTIES
Sell your Items for $50 or less In
our famous DIMES-A-LINES pub-
lished each Saturday m the Dally
Piiot.
DIMES-A-LINE ads must be
pre-paid so ma// or bring ther:n Into
the Dally Piiot office. Be sure to
Include your phone number or ad-
dress In your ad. have a price on
each Item & no abbreviations.
Sorry, no commercial ads, garage
sales, produce, plants or animals
•re acceptable.
DEADLINE:
3 p.m. Thur.dey
Coete Mna Office
IHtn ft1 Salt hrlexnj!JaJta Ull ...... VatuaiUM l,..,...tl, . ,..,...ti, "ti Val, ...,_ .. ,Vat. •
lrriat 1M4 Step1 to tMC'fi. CJUPl;x. ..~ .... --• ..; ..... --------! grMt lnV9Ctment Priced Cetta ... U24 c.r ..... 1 .. , nn _.. •• Z4 lniat 2'144 ...... 2~~;t·~ et s2~5~2Jr owner UNBEATABLE OFFERS 28f bUP'x oc:n "' hwy. 2110f)' 2 br. 2 ba deluupt ORANGETREE CONDO Beedltt 0111 L.ge 2 BR. ,.., Prof'I 28-38 to .... IWQ9 Woodbrtd 0• S300'1 bch bungalow Clean upper w/gar $850. ger trpl 2448 EJcMn Av. 18'.ioft, tennis, P<><* & tennis , avt Jan 1. Newport Heights home.
f9fton mJ:. Estatf'!'~-Lets ltr SU. 1400 w/werm decor apple Apply 321 lfle. 173-2080 $750 mo 851-822tl 1treem. No pet1. All! 1185 '900/mo. 831-e:J 1-5084 N/StMr. $400 Smell dog . • pro .......,. • provided otherS avail 834-11' 1 OK. ON1na "42-3442 Lloyd d Nur"ry land-San Juan c;;titrano 6 ta lltta Udo .... Watarlront Pvt ~-=--.....,..,"'="'---scape, Jac, bltln BBQ, tlra plus acres 90% fiat •IH.a111* llSTUT• Lltw ltecla bdl Lgc.tmdbt38f 2ba Prof'lraap.M/Ftolflrnk»
pit, patio, waterfall + horse cou,;try. End of Flal steal $700 E-sld• 3br Jta ~~f:'s='°No 1650/mo 2 8d 2ba lower mm;: Arm oo;n: $1800/mo l.M. us.-eeae 2br ttme Hpt ~ w/d
meny more custom f..,_ San Juan Cr..et ~ 2ba updat9d & ready pet• unit lg• yard, lrplc, · · l300 18tltalle M&-1352
tur•• FOR SALE by S665 000. 978-7041 . leisure patio kid• ok Sierra Mgmt 838-0772 carport lndry rm ~~~~1m· IWwpot1 Cra11 3BR 3t>a. Prof'I atv Udo twM Pl1
OWNER (714)77&-2505 --· --539-tl190 Belt Alty hie 1Br EMtllda. eme1t but 2195 Maple ltudy, ~ cs.cill, mini enVbe be9dl trpt tannle
or 675--8787 .,, ... 4pm LL....... H2S ..... ltacla cozy, loll Of natural TSL MANAGEMENT ~ ... lira• 2'152 ~/R • tptc, lga ~ nlamkr 1575+ 6J3...182• -wood-Squea«y ciMn No IM2-1tl03 _ _ · ~gar.
I t.. a.
1
,...
1
WANTED: ~ Br haa In Famlly home 5 br 2v. ba pell $445 85l-9528 N 21:1a l 2 fbe: POOi. now $1200/mo 5'48-t93e PrOf M_,Femele to lflr ~ IC• .., Npt Hte. Llvaabla, but dish wahr, frpt, patio. ew CondOS for rent nr no pets. Ga & water Incl Hwpt Hgt IPadous 28r 2 3Br 28e lrg CcfM DupMit i1000AewlR6 Vour9f« iome TLC nHdad. $1300+S1700aec:.Joyca 1BrTrlptax,gar'500.S.. SantaAna CountryCtub. 495-8221 meat•~ Utlts pd No S325+'4utla720-1Me
COE buyer IUx C&ndo Please not on busy It., (818) 915-8915 wkdya Sun 1211tl to-3. 202 E 3Br 2Ba, dbl gar S87S-pets. Avl 1211 $850+· dep
Bayview. 0 641 _8 HO have 1<101 c an cloM MOd daelgn entiancea 3.,, 18th 826-5159 7pm-8pm S1100 No pets 833-7890 IN...... flit IMS-7402 or 790-5055 leatala ...... IHI
X2166, E/W 642·52tl1 qutckly. Deya 883-6969 3ba •pit 1v1 w/lrplc ar 2 BDRM 1 ba all utll pd Oya. 548-3334 Ev/Wknd -NEED TO tEXSE 3 BR --lncd et ok s108·1 up11a!A. nu crpt & drpa'. Ntoa 3 Bdrm 2',4,,ba non-1 & 2Br M50. OCEANFRONT w/vlaw minimum, tor 1 yr. Sta11 IACI IAY YllW ltatala 539-61~ Best lee $650 mo. S300 aec:. Call amkra, no peta, eva11 ap-Dlhwahf. frig. 11ove Incl. Condo 2Br 2Ba, MC Feb. 1 ·es. Npt Hta. Exec.
Huge custom 4BR. fa. mlty Beth tl3 t-5230 p,tox. Jan. ti, $725. mo. No pats. C1ll btwn prkng. Cntr1 Balboa. 1M w/fllftlty, whla b1d9. MW
rnt home with poot/apa & I f l L.M Ocean e lse 1 br pad · 790-t• l8 or 1o42•7528 9am-4pm deity 545-4455 $1100/mo. No pett. lldltt home In aema .,.._ 0eY9
view Bkr 983-8377 Hiii era I• w/bltns S300's or 2br 2 bedroom. large fenced pref. Wkdyl 833-2704, 714/ee3-6M9. $510 w/dwshr 4 Info yard. Pat OK PAii ... APT W /l1IW Wknda/9Vee tl73-632•
Best buy In Bluma $139K 539-tl190 Best Alty fee $600 648-0721 2Br 28a patto bltlns. oar OCEAN FRONT PROF WOMAN going to
Just reduced. 3Br 2',4,Ba Ctrtal ••I Mar 2122 lnial 44 2 BR 1 b Eut~ good age s8oo1~ No peta~ tB l8a ~PP91';:; IChl.wthxohglrieNll~.
Agt 640-15291769-8459 oetignar fUUy fUrn 2 Bd [ IOC qui!t se7o ca,1 Olctl 215t PACIFIC AVE Ut~t Incl M0-<>567 ~ OOC:~ ~ ~l
FIRE SALE. 1 Br Condo In townhooM. Pool & tennl1 =1. k~t~t'::9' ~ a t . 9 9 8 ~ 7 3 0 0 d y 1, 63 l-8 t07 or 85S-0865 IN NEWPORT BEACH 1 & 2 BDRM CONDOS or room -
Shottz Plaza. $90,000. coon S 1 Ul5 tl73..0~9tl $600'• today 539~6190 640-~426 9'<199/wknde. Pvt t Br, trptc, pool, patio, A greet pl~ to 11..r. on the Vlta Balboe 1 VerMlllaa C.U.,.. ltr
Owner 619/273-3361 Belt,.. 2Br 2...,Ba 0u9tax 1800 •f illf. No patL 399 W. Bay Upper Bey. Private 631-4980 Agent lat 2911
IOUIFlllT Utl,000 ...... hftlralut4 11n11.s wlall xtru . dbl gar, l\ug9 t $585 tl50-tl351 clubh~u~::,..' ~:It~ WESTCLIFF 18R Condo. 1125 DOUbla G~•g•.
3BR Hm/Ouplex 756-91tl2 Gtaeral Z212 CALL us REGARDING ~d w/accetS. Pat ok $850 •STUNNING Lg 2 & 3Br =-doM to ~ MWcerJ* d'-N pool 18ll18. 724 James St.
•• ·1 R tl tRVINE LEASES _ 73-6338 °' IM2-9"e 28• Garden AP1 Pool oc Airport. F 11nton no r>eta 650 'mo 8~ C.M 673-nl7
t l I •n ON 39TH Large and lovely .lrtfa 2Br 28a IP81kllng etaen, SStS & "65 710 W l811\ lltend. oe>nYenient lh009 •--S 125 Double Oaraga.
br patiOyd5yrsNr~at & mll191' BR. r1rep1ace OISOr llngle story. Good to-pa11o Sl.50..J:>own'town 2 i R.ao..tom.end. caot.S73o-l787 -'
By own; 123.006 Sf*. 1 3 Bd upper w/1g ltvlng rm ~ • 1 newer carpet & drapM, Top 0raW91' 2Br 28a gar on 9'gtlt. _. M 1 tb18 72A Jamea St.
CM646-8A831Mtl-14 OS~~~ER 3 Bd. 2ba ealfy ~~~~~.:!:--:~.~ arM Nopat15'8-3365 SlngtM1&28drmA.pert-=~·~-~f~· 170 Stoc.ge only. 9'116°
LAlllAllUS Lower w/llrapla ce. I 851-952tl WllffUAIWE menllS & Townl\QU... t• 1:: ..... 12• Jamel St. Costa
PARK with a beauttlutty $1100/mo yrty 786-1172 2Br end gar crpti drps Want a ..a.ctton of great ~::~.Pt~,..oor!=--=:!au •!" ...._...e»rne7
customaed 20x52' Key 39TH ST La.roe & 1ovaty 3 773 w w n.00 No pet~ IMng? wa can off91' any-with TV Hnens'& ul91'1911. Sectuded studk> 1Pt Fan-Elatda c M 10x20 storage West home on a corn91' Bd upper wllge tlv:f.n rm thing fr e trnall apt to a · tastic C>Ca4lll.. lltaw All! only S90 mo • MC:Uffty lot. 2 BR 2be w/llght In-& master iutte. fir ace $550/mo tl50-7202 4 Bd hM II look""' In CM maybe rented for lhof1 111 '500/mif 499-8276 .-. ..__~ "'~"1 •u •
rlo A
-"'ll • 1enn or longer) On Jem-, .. , -..,..,.. 2.-
te rs very attrecttve s 1250/mo 3680 Michelson Drive * 2 Bdrm, 1 ba. MC IY9" NB. or HB think ol us flrsl boree Rd at San Joaquin l"al fi •-•1 _14 home tor only $25,000 LINDA ISLE BAYFRONT 5 tern. So Cst Plaza $550. lor that cho!Qa •deal llvlng Hiiis Rd . Cl _.tall ~ Call 540-5937 Bd • 1g entertaining rms Irvine 646-4667 TSL MGMT 642-t603 I IOO CM PVt fUrn rm & o•th Sfir 256 sq ft 2 rooms wfutl19
Spanish VIiia w/pool & Woodbridge SFR 3 br 2'~ •wtld lB /~ NB REAL TY tl7S-1642 "· 1 kllch & ell hM Lnary rm pd 779' W 19ttl SI CM
sauna S6500/mo. ba lormaf dr tr fr 2 ur ger crp~: ~rf!'s 1tC:ve ~ ,,':: WISTWf YILUll Avail 121 1 SltOtmo Rats $250/mo e«r 832 ... 161
f or Cl.m iflf'<I Ad
AC rtON
Call
W .. rf t. I $1200 IN 552-8928 ' • 'll· 63 1· 1198 t rH ... , 11, . No pets 50 648-4382 1 & 2 8d apt1. Pool, spa, Rttt lt,Jltttll ~ 111-1400 Ill-HOO l!'f'rt ltacla 22 9 3Br 2Ba lrg downatalr• gar, Indy rm. no pell. -f br 1, b• Penthouse condo unit. enet gar. patio. Xlnl TSL MANAGEMENT 2 .'ti!..~rmvi.!,~· ~?; Rooms and Aptl avaltabla
Poot Spa Seourlty toe No pall $&50+$450 845-8122 or 642-1603 bldg S • '25/mo •vt 1/15 $90/up. Batbol Inn, Winter Rental• · $1 ' · •' " ooean view 675-8740 JACOBS REAL TY building 50 673-2749 sec 536-2465, 989-2851 Dau Ptiat 72' c a11 Daya Only 631-8403
PROP MANAGEMENT 2BR 2BA small houM on ·~ S435 1 BR mobile nm Ot 2 BR 2ba cloM lo ba.ctl •Br 28a. den lri>tc nr SUUll ll1'll
WESTCLIFF BLDG
N EW PORT BEACH
'. ~.. .... '" )o -·-· • ---....
714/875-8173 acre tot. Acecle St S.A park, mature adtts, no 1 car gar Smalt yard' ~ vrty 'tM s1200 Wkly rentals now avail
----Hghll, security fence. pets tl73-7787184M725 $695/mo Cell 66 t 6 l•2 675-4912 or 754-1792 S12tl/wk & up 2274 N9w-754 aq. It. v'9w suite
lalMI $1000 mo. 752·2584 $560/mo 2 Bd 1ba, patio, 2 br 2 b• ~loe tm•I~ com-3 Br Ouptx, 2 ba, hatt gar. port Blvd C M 848-7«5
Peaiasala 2207 3Bd 1 'h ba hM. 2 ur gar. nlee eastskla locatlon. plex Soma vi.w H75 patio yrty Avelt Jan ... SU I Ill LIME ~lguf:'°:, :'Jr.~
2 ,, ''" ua.1111 ~:,y::: ~.~o~~~':I '::'e'n:!;m· clOM lo all 493..()4tl7 $850 mo J°"n.675-7078 ~~= r-: tural & Ofaftlng tadllty
1 t3 Eaat Balboa Blvd 3Br 20a 2-stry townnome TIL IHllllllT But. ltacla 2140 302' w;:\'eo..1
91
Northern E.x~
Cute lBA w/1 car o• Ger. lrptc. bay view Av1 H2-1HI 29r 1V.ea conao wttoft. '>Pel• nu~ ""Qlt' ""~ Vacatita Ui-1111
Completely racondl· now $975. yrly lae trplc. w/d , lrtg, pooll}ac b two bt>dronm c1'* •·-•·'· ..a7
llonad and radec 615-4912, 754-f79~Bltr 1950/mo 960-9738 ... wu _.. I•-------•
........... .__ ...... _ ............ .-. ....... 1 .. ------_. $700/mo yrly 1545 BLUFFS 3 8d 2 mle8tiBIHI "501$850 Mo 2 & 3 Bd aiGaEXAcABIN/LARGE Miramar 675-8 120 ·~ bl , .,,1s c~• gar W/D '"kkp Sips 14, pool tbl, ctr TV. 2 UllU llAll • Trtna plan. YleW. $1400 u•-•m ... """" .. C.rtal ••l llar A.gt &44-6636 -·-yerda/patlot.. . lrplcl. (714)545--6918 Small ob or~..,..._
330 ...... , ,,, .. ,
Coeta MMe, Ce. 12929
A DAILY '1LOT
AO.YISOt
'42-5471
2BR
.o.BA, at---to ..... ~... Beaulllully tand1cap•d llWPllT ... IUL n l1at1l1 •• -able on So Coelt BIYCS. ,.,, ....-.,.._., ... , IWlll" garden apt1. Pootl'l9a Mwy Boerdman, Aeeftor
1oma vl•w $1150. •bd 2',.,bellomew/lrg tot Patto/declc1 No pets Oayatl75-1&42 Sure Ztll 4i4-241•
HOROSCOPE SYDNEY
0MARR
960-4228 or 1)8(µ22t In Eut Bluff. $2100 par Bachelor $490-$500 EV91 ~tlt4 2e yr Old prof ndt 10 stir OC Al A P ORT AREA
2BR2ba.lrplc,patlo,yard, mo. Call Mark at 1Bdrm , $555-$565 BRANO NEW luxury 2Br fllRNISH[Q or 2BR 1BA CMept $283M 22~sq'$1.t0 a/f,utll
l&Yndry, 2 blkl to beaeh. 831-12(18 dy 760-8293 ~ 2Bdrm 1 l•B• S660·S665 28a Condo Raquatball UNfllRNISHf D .. d9P• ,,.. utl 548-2033 Incl, lots of pat11'g. Jant'I
$985/mo yrly IM. LNva ~~~EE ~88tt~ ~8-682-0•!~ and tennis eta. pool, spa, BIG CANYON M/F to w Mo to mo ~. 852-9366 m .. aage 873-1068 " -o.,,, sauna, MC gtte. ·~ mt to Ht Al 1 H · 151 E2111 548-2408 baach Harbor aree. wtfml ~utlfultyturn2 t>< Prime toe of'1oa IPl09,
••••••••••••• 3Br. 'tam rm+dan, 21"'81. 2 2250 Vanguard 540-962tl Botaa Chic• & warnfJf l l l 1R' If NNI' 2 ba twnl\M l'annlS. pool. with oeaut oceen Yi9w.
I fplcs. dbl gar. xtr•• 111\1,..,---_,--....,....,..----$800 mo •$800 security 'V.IW>1IN1, "'" ape H 50 760-1578 1000 IQ It Localed In
Wednesday, December 26 bike bc'1 S1tl95 873-8229 Hey look ~br w/dwahr pet Eastalda 28r 19a No pets 640-2661 . u•' ""'' """' fml snr wlaanwi 3 br 2''°tba pre11 tg tou1 Newport
ARIES (M ar' h 'I \nnl I Ii) W 1i.,h com es true in "mysteno us" c -ok S600 1 or oceen cisa Max 2 persona S560tmo n1 l'• '' ...,ri i.-' Con"o Npt 2 rms ava'I Center For turtl'ler Into . ,· -.. ,. , . harming 1paclqu1 2br 2br S700 bl Il a pd 135 Alban Pl 543-5478 Near beech 2 br 1 . ., be S3~· utl 759_8408 ~ 644-7844
way. Emphas1i. o n !>CCrt'I m eeting". romance. goo<l news ~onecm1ng 1be lfam rm ff.Pl,SttOO 539·6190 Bat fee E-atde 2Br IBawtt>eamad Townhouse. rrptc. bltns. ''' "''
1 1
' '••" -----
ca reer or bu~incss pro spcr ts. Power<; of pt'r'iuasion arc heighte ned -_!.•lltest + sac 720..8174 Off PCH tux 3br 2be stry erpll. drps, clean & Quiet ~OOd MatetNB apt, 28 R 2ba • CdMdtx 9'Jt1• AC. ampl
yo u can win fnends a nd inOuc ncc people. S pec vu-2BR 2b•. on bell, wlrustlc frplc gar/shop S:~';_~5f'f!~: 1~:.r~ Stl95 536-0921 $300. covers au Strgllor pncg, trom l 225. 2855 E
T AURUS(Apn120-Ma y20).Ma l..e th1i.apower-pla yday!Focuson unlurn, pvt gate $1800. under s 1000 539-6190 S225 2 parson1,nopet1 IUWlll n-atr~nttl3 l-6&43.8'1M eo.MHwy tl
7
5-4900
ro m ance, sentim en t. c"<pcnence and an "explo IVe" o pportunity for utll a tnct 213-928-184.4 Bast Alty,.. 650-17118 YILUIE Apartme nh Mon. uas
1
Wed
fi nancial gain. O lder 10d1 v1dual lends benefit of cxpt'n cnce. become~ t175-3834 walk to bdl 3Br 2ba. nu FIREPLACE. pool. ptitto N.-wport Buch So Male to lhr 3 br Bal Penn lntab 1111 valuable ally andm 1ght pro~1defunding. Spygla11 ti Bdrm Exec. cptlpntlgar. tannl1/poot X-LG t & 2Br ~pts E-~ 1 & 2 Bdrm tuic.ury I on lnlt "'"•' ~;_2~K':.n !,29~ •WfllTILYI
GEMINI (May 2 1-Jum.· 20) You'll reach beyond t orrent home with oc.an \119W. S1200Judy&48-717 1 SldaS5501Jp 567-284 1 ai>ta lnt4 ptan• l Bdrm. JIOP\t''
expect3t1ons -personal ho n1o n" are wide a nd you'll rc<'ctve unique s2950• can 780-1488 Bkr. •ta1a1... lllTUT • ~ ~s~":'.,,1nc:;"':::. 641 511 3 Mature MtF 1t1r rum NB
5t:> C:~OL~~
honor. Emphasis o n commun1cau o n. langkagc. fmt ual values a nd CnJI Mm 4 UalvaiaW 2410 t Br 1ba a11 bl1-IM . lndry 1a111. pon<S• Gu paid Newport Budi No :!.:.;::. ~84~°l>'t~ 54-n 29
poss1bk JOUrnC}. An c • Libra ocrson\ play ey ro cs. . 3 Bdrm, 2 bl. frplc, lo 341 Mtrboat sii ............ s rm, nr bol\/lhoc>e $495 From ~ Diego Frwy t • ••tF 3""13"'• L-.......... _ ... ~... 11-•
CANCER (June 2 1-J UI) 22) C'ict read) for new start: be w1lhng to malnt yard SuP« toe t>r 2.,. be w ~·~ 735 w •8th St dnve North Ol'I 9Mcti to 'I'\•• ''
11
• "~" '"' ..., "" .... ..., .....,, ,,_ •• ....
face fac_lS.OOnocrn1ng ''affair o( heart." focus .o n pract1cal '· UC5. pu t _!9!50 Ph 64&-m7 nr bch S1350 8;59:0588' TIL lllllmlf == ':;:' =: 11
'"
11
ivt
111
wtd mtcro FP & ABC HELPLINE
aside 1nv1a. ncccnt property and sec unty void ovcrcxtt'nd1ng as\Ct~. 1400'1 ~te ya 2bdrm wl2 A -, ..... MJ-1111 vmage 111•)8t3-S•N
64~ 1104 ~:;~ ~;r2~;:' 2, Hr r:!2~~ • ..-......
Leo pl_!ys role. bath. ~ & rn<>f• klcb ,..._..h ua --..
1,tJO (July 2J.-A ug. 22): Don't rush decisio ns! P1'1y waiting game; fine act fut 53Mt90 ch~k lcaal.~~1.11rcn:i.erts; perm it ~h-~~ close 10 you. 1nclu.dang partner aa.t Alty,.. C..ta -.. 2'24
or mate. to take 1n111auvc. lnfu111vc 1ntcllcct nas~es signal$. Your 58r 28a. trpf. dt>4 g• Xlnt §UXLl +RXILeA for rant. hunch will be on ta rget nghbrM 985 Sana1•. Old9r woman pref. $350.
VJDOO (Aug 2,-pt 22) Yo u'll be 1n demand )OC1all" -nro plc !050 -+ $1150 dep. Oo not 848-4151 . n . > · . ; (i ,..-.. 11tur b 1anan1a ~-----.....--........ ,..........
will confide in you; many will ~ck your aid where prac11ca l or 1.n anc1al 833-9305 I~
matters arc.concerned. Lona d1stanc.e comm~n1ca11on <'Ould involve ,9851mo tova1y 3 8d 2ba"F"'~..-...--c:ona,;;,;,;j;o;..on •. .-.LY••
trnvel, spe<'1al mfor.mah on or cduc.ut100'. houM wt yerd lndry rm ~'* tum. MO patk· LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Be wilhna to get n d ofshoddy ll'latcriat. gar 111 bit-I"• 'n~ ... t~ Ing s1t195/mo en.oaoe
Focus on change, travel and thccxc1tt mcn tof d isc.ovcry Young person aide tocatlon, utll pd. OcMn view 28r Varsafllae
become ally, ti.clps 11n your m o rale o rp10 na11vc ~hows way to 231 Cabrttto • CondO. 2ea s1soo1mo.
increase income. Yo u-ii win' -Tll •IHml Carol Mulvey, ~ SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 2 1 ): Be analyttcal. discern m otive • MJ-1111 873-7300 or 548-3218
realize you can aain by act11n1 thd uaJlt • ideas o n paper AC'«nt o n AYAIUIU.. w1N1e~EHTAL. even
residence, family m ember. lo na-ranac prospt'Ct!PI. Mem ber of oppo 1tc 111501a..u1•Br 2a. haa tnld Jan MOO plmo.
sex is romantically inclined. will make you a ware of it 1100 IQ ft '°'"* LA :.&,': oc:.ar\ l818l AGl'ITAJU U (N ov 22-DcC. 21)· Dome 11c adju tmcnt is w/frplc, 2 C., 09'· w/d .-----.--
ncct sary. vt!Plltors d o minate. )'Ou'll rtee1ve a .. la te aift.". hort lnp may httup a lndry rm Lg hied ta al.
be. n«c,ury, me lC req uire study for pro pt'r 11\lcrprctallon . Tauru , b.Ck ~cs. ~.: ..... ftaeh •-•1....a 1.1a.J Libra. orpto perwns fiau r pro m1nc nO • ~11n •out,_.,,..,,.., ............
CAPRICORN ( f.kc. 22.Jan. 19) What appta~ a lo will rcbQ~nd ~ 1::,:-Ana rs:=~=--~#.
an your favor Avoid d C<'e1v1n1 yo urself Meanrsec people in reaf1stac TSI. MAHA0£M HT
ll&l't. Pcrfttl techniques. strc•mltnc prcx~urcs. Piscc Virao native .. 2.1903
fiaurc in c:w.c11tn1 cnano Lo;;; nom.-1t1--lide--,-"'-AQ AR.I S (Jan 20-Fch 18): ()Cle hratr.-You'll de41 from 2 ba. tam~~ • ....,..,--
1rcna1h, you'll bt' confident and loved o ne W111 help &uo pint . Take ltt;t y•cs wtape. lmmed rift
1niU1llvt, make pcrwnal appals and •P«1a l appcarant't . d'cnary oec ''* ..0.5324' • c:8tPO't. ,... .,_,,
tays ... You'"c fol the •11\'nathl" .. U2l/Jl'IO 'fft1 1 !alt, PISCE! ( tb. 19-Mar"h 20). 't ou m ake umqur discovery by 2 ltd, 2 be~. '32S •·no PM&. IT3-61M
lookana "behind ~ocs." )d C m ove up, 1udamcnt and 1ntumon will *' fl wlfT111 + 2 ~ eer ....,, NdOM 2 " 2 t>a bcun llf'ICI Y ou·ll 13in I«<' ta pnvtlcacd rnformallo n. )OU ffil&hl be MSOlmo Mo petl C"'1 II bdlftom, ..,_. Jan 1.
offered ldm1n1.irwtlvt po'it. Kttp.( coo Alie,! . 13MHe ,_ SHOO "'° ?M>190I .. ____.. _ __.__..
" \
GRANDMAS & GRANDPAS
MOMS & DADS
Your Child Hert Your Pet Here
You can s'nd you love 1n a very spec1af way on Christmas Day. Show off your
f avorrt' fittl' ~non or~ rn pttnt. Yoo ca,,..do •t 1n th~ Dally Pilot Clanaf~d
"Christmas Cha(mers" section. Thas gre,ting wm also be a s~cial keepsake
ror years to come. A spec tal gift. S25 .00 CaU now to reserve your spac~t
642-5678
I
\
OnlnQe Cou1 OAJLY PILOT/T\JMdey, Oecembef-18, 1984
F•ADS
ARE FRE£
Cal:
Ml·Mll
GMutltul 2&" RCA Cir TV S~****1"*
0 • i~~ J J;:e'Je. 'fr: UOILUIY lffllTllY
C --,. ........... .
h, ~IJttl 10 320i Sap,a.tc 2allt31 Ital 7010 81320!&~1/r 10Uf4t7
IUlltO IUmll : ~ ~: ~ ~f ~~~<::r G Booking for Chflllmu 81 320l a/t 11, 1btb408 • ts Pw• '"' moft Info. 82 3201&IP1/r 1 .. 1401 (tf pleue call 831•5254 82 3201 Sip air tdtf 145 . tt, 8111 7 l 82 3201&IP1/r 1tff• 18
; • 82 320161P "' 11gp483
• 22 Bo•t TraHor· tHO. 82 32oi &ep air 1fdo103
$895 080 Term1? Single 82 S20l 6ip e/r 1evdt84
PORSCll
AUDI
CHf.VROU'T
H 1hu1 Q11aU111
kt It Su vke
CHICK
IVEllSON
•4& [ co .. 1 ltwv N ... 1por1 Dud!
6 75-0900 .
~: ,...,. Schnau&w.
S•ltlpepper color.
Yorktown & Ootll.,d,
H.8 . .,....teo-6018 NABERS
CADILLAC
de uf!, btak .. 526-5818 8H28E alt lo ( 11dl700 Seml·ees · · . . a • e2 528E sep I'd 1fnu308 • 11 H' lantana s1iibo1t. g g~gf~.:'!Jr1~1~~~ 1'~1\ stRR sRXoJ,
great cond. 115,000. 83320151p 'S'010512 NewpalntbyAoyCatYert
cuh or trade for equity In 83 3201 &ap ·s· 390918 compl. MtvlCe rectOfd•.
Found GIANT wtll1e Poo-
dle 'IC'Y t5tll l Senta An• St, Nwpt Hta.. &46-2901
Of e.7718
= ~at ~ :J:'.ncf 83 3201 alt air 072484 blue/iHver real t>MulY
L
______ G __ .x.., ______ __,j / SeJlOiees 8~1 .. 1:e.':91. ~33 ctyt • :n~~~5:i,·~~~~:.6: 1 s28.500. <.,.,.> "4· 1eo4
Found: Orey etr1pped or
1nottwtect ml cat. Bey•
wood 9PttlNB 844-7514
............ .........
714/540-9100
itt:ts ~· ariae ~~lf '¥. 83528Ealtl'd 1HIW80t Ttzsta t • ___ • __ e3s2eea1tld'd201194 ,_ __ 2 o: u .. ao
15 HP · naon , 8331G11/ttlr111dh512 79 °"' i;::=:=:=:=:===1;::=:=:;:======~I grHt allape, 12800. ~ Br·59K ml, AM/FM CUI
FOUND: LllHe Ap10
fM*t llwr, w/cohf a
red bow. Vic. SMtlago I
Irv. A 119. 6"-1153
·-------.....!HO TRAIN Model RR on I n()~·sLnn 1875--0740 S28000B053&-9162 ..... WllTU'T BABYSITTER for Infant my U ~A ~ Q 4x8 tbt w/200 llrl work GUJ _ .. -~ -~ ~ •
Mua1 have ebUlty to wort< Balboa 111. hm, Mon-Frf. M.Uf.J\. S2 Sac. f~ cost of matrt. 1t ~ UJWe..llS C"... 7.5hp Johnaon seoo. 211f (l 1•)111·3111 • IWIJH
Independently with or-7:30am-3:30om Exp. a ... 50. OBO. ts1-2102 . __ C.VeJ\1S . JoMson 1200 ·548-688 208 w. 11t. S•nta Ana llllU iiollHH'1
genlzatlonel I com-ref req. 875-to29 -FLOWERS BY MORRI •IUT OU1m• Honda 7.5 HP lono.lh1ft1 CLOSED SUNDAYS son11
FOUND: am.it Whitt mM
Dog, Vic. Mela V«IM ,
C .M. 557·2299 or
85&-0297
munlottlon alcllla ... welt Country C<lttwa Kimball Swinger 0rQ-". 2 4.a E. 17111 StrMt. 32• GRANO SANKS (2) ... 50 I $550 ee3-S272 --------
u good typing lkllla. IMllUPll Pampered puppet•. Per· manual w/auto rythm, Coete Mesa. MS-8144 s .S.T Cha11er171S0~215 l~ ~·· 7 2 Dataaa 11 17 COUITY Compu1• exp de9lra~ R.E Developer now Inter-fec:1 for all 873-5515 $2000. 84IS-80S2
l life Insurance •xi> Ylt'Mng fOI' • nQn-.llT\kg Wholtlaler llaudora.~ LEOPARD COAT· 5 alclna, •OllllTIUI 2 t P* 4'1 on b•Y9ki• '7!121~~c~~A;K ;Jt, VOLISWAliEI/
helpful 855-8017 eggreaNe bootckeeper. K<* ... Clllmp1, Raccoon cuat. made. Beet offw ''1-rl •MAT PllAll* of grand canal. 1160.. STEREO. IS75--08t5 ISUZU
LOST ~atd for 18fe
return of MIHy, 1m
8iemeM cat, 7 yre, ml•
Ing alno9 12/15. Vcty
F1owar l 19th CM. Sr Cltlnn grteytng IS50-34 77
or 546-7471
Gen. knowledge of ac-etc 10" (mom/babe) $6.45 over $5000. 842-•300 U' Bal~harter Corp. now P9' mo ~7-8720 wlcd)'9 US lllY IPI counting utilizing Cut. • 22" u Panda/Bear Uk fOI' Ad • 129 A A·11· ·nrit "<' 18 .. 1'1, reaervat1on1 tor DOCK AVAILABLE ft ""'2 T .. I d IBM/PC. Lit• typing & $11 "5 At 1 .... 1 --·· . . ~ \A.A t:.;) " 3-11 PM thl ~ "r ptaone lklfla MC. $20,400 ·• "" coa ~ ...,.,._ ODYSSEY 11 ame & 12 the -mu b<>et parade 1018 E. BALBOA BLVD
WISTUl ' Medlcal llealth plan & flex U Q9 548-2074 reg. I 150 IS75-1971S ILIPs·IHHI
floer polltlon In a MW I F ._.....,, ....., c.rtlflcate
'81 260 ZX T-top·Blk/buH
Int Loaded. 5 Spd, 30K
orig ml. SQ,500 548-8175
LOST Fem Oldn Retrlevef
Mix W/Wllt Cllelt, SJ
((apletrMO 881·3745
St .. Lag. Bch. annual Mlary wlm•Jo< I I I lpH. uSo. firm . ""Ill 12116--22 on 'The Rascal' Up to 50 ft 873-0182
.. STllCT hrs. Potential for an of· ~ $ PASTEL Portrait•• llfe.. Give a Cttrl1trnu Gift I Balboa Yacht Club need•
llAllAllll cocpor1tlon. Contact time g ft. r .. ,_, m•tt.... ()J'"lutiu approx 30 lllps, any lo-(P rt Tl ) C 1 r o I Pe a co c k CABBAGE PATCH DOLLS (from photo) 54~7 llW llLJ 111 ~ cation, Jan 2 to M1rcta 31 11
... ~.,.,:., Entetprl ... Ltd. {714) Quantity $80-$90. Wiii PEARL DRUM SET, s pc For•Cooi::l'i.~~AUTO . ~~~~~rguct~~~ln:o·-~~: • • A "' Hfl)(Nf -t?Httr "tfY/TJl't(llrT•tACM
SCRAM.LETS To aUflt Dlslrlct Mantger Q53-808
1
mall 831-2245 ...,.. Joan W::'' s9~~ :1~2 YIP THI Rlcll1rd01 Almond Tott.. Hlllpow•r. Call Rick In Newport Beach, · C1b Patch Boy1/Glrl1. b •· .o 9 5Sout11H bOrBi d "The Perteet Gitt for the Limb 873-.3515
Lagun1 Niguel and OAlll0-111.11 GrM1 Mlectlon $80-$80 STAINlESSSTEELWatw· 1 8 Cotta~~ v . Hollda)'9" l l=rln l Hta•a 125 ANSWERS Laguna Beach for oa11y FIT Perm Crown Hwd-w111dtuwres1-20e1 1eMCookwwes.t,1t1111n 111 •zzz Al.111eM Newport 8"eh
Piiot Newspaper• . ware 11S 14 San M!gu91 NB 1 box. Sec. $350. &4M995 ·• Locatlon1: Sc 7 nn 5 1pd beach ·'11 •IA A•ll ....... f Olrll Gym Mtm~-" p ----------------~.·-~ny Duties Include dlspat. .... o OUllll/IALll SJ*:lal Cllrlimu Gift Video arcade gamee •vall i..----------..1 IDT TlllllS crul1er many X1r11 S125 S13Q/mo.+ tx. $488 down.
714 -833-1300
,......,.. ...,.fed newspapers to carr1«1 7 u•• f _.,___,., cede Gd r ' Glr11 20' bike ridden once C.E Commercial IMM. WIND BLOW Inn down routes full time, Cotta Meta St• Prlcee, Laguna 49 --rom ....,...., If · p QOOdS •• ., ••"'-.726 da-S a " E .. s colco'::i~. and cult~ tlonet's, 270 E. 17111 St. Of NftPOf1 846-8828 condition. Pole poalUon. l"'l •ty · l 1 • E. lel~tl .,.., ,...,_ ,. A L L • ,. " A ~ WU IMNted "~ta M..._ A~ In Includes Front Une Miu \,\/\, Scttwlnn-.... blue 10 • ..A 714/432-1977 What he thought of c:faaal-Mrvlct Minimum of 25 vu. _., ' (Ptlllltlll) ...... ,. .,.,...
c.i muelc, "Frankly," he hours '*' WMk $-4.00 person 10-12am. PtcManl•dozen mor.. r---------'I $75 A-1cond842-1055 '82 4 dOM Civic. AC,
M fill' 'I"' !<t lll:H' II
SOUTH COUllTY
lntw9fed, "I'd rttller p/P'lr and mileage allow-01". ···r "'~ s100 Wiii hold tiff Chrtstmu. . lllUUYU llTTlll •••tr ·~" I ''"'°.;.~IQ 0'#79'""p,·p$5350 ll•t•n Ill• tll• WINO 1nce C•ll 642-4321 ·--"-..IU eJl $300/up, 75&-ee.41 CFA "'-. $300. ee2-09n II OWIEll .,...,..M
BLOW." (9 5 1 for 15 mo. old, your heme. •-v lOOO I 1 .... I binC8tke 31l HP, IPOJ<•1---VOLKSWAGEN
_
-;::=======l==a.=m=.== -p=m=. ==~ CM/NB. ~S ---rail wtlll $175 obo IS50-~420 * R. L SURF CENTER* -0 (.I L. ) _,
\ ~RCLE 1-MIRIETS
) NOW HIRING
/
CASllEllS
AISISTAIT lllAIEllS
~ ~ · • Interviews Wednesday ~-1 1
...___, , A M at 2588 Newport Blvd ..
~: Costa Mesa (on Newport
Blvd at Del Mar)
Call (714) 537-4840 for
more info EOE
CHILD CARE-HOUSE· Chrl1tm .. Special! New DOU"fiques ••••flt •ettrtycltt/
KEEPER tor e yr old g1r1. RL surtt>oard a w.u.utt Pe.ts 110 .... 1 .... 1011 lcMttra 1011 Nwpt Bcil. Flex hrs, tran1 $340. Call 53&-2851 L---------'I Ran · •..,
& refs req. 720-10&8 Blue/gold Mecaw llend CHRISTMAS GIFTS ..__ _______ ..,. TIFFEE 1!8u21t i<!i~.2:1~oggg;na.
CISTHIAL llLP ra!Md tame $700 Dou~ ~c::~~!J'.y~M. /~~ft~,~~ 1Jll le•,shlrt Pat • 838--0305
N I g ht S w • e P •" · C8Q9 S300 obo 541-6421 L=========.I Cl I ·11 YAM dirt bike 100cc
Subetltutea needed by CABBAGE PATCH DOLL, WP'lat e Wonderlul World fO I $75. '76 Yamaha lnduro
Huntington Beach City new collec1ora limited n ,...~,, 11ti1A() of Shopping, rlghl at (ltYlf SL.tfll) $ S"IS School Dist. $5.62 po/llr. edl ilon, porcelaln. L.i\ .. HUl.4·~ your flngertlpe everyday! • 250cc: 100. 842-3 ., ...,
MuS1 be S1udent1. Apply 873-58l20f831-5508 Dally Piiot CiHllfled lal1Ml-110t "78 12SX VESPA rune
20451 CraltMr Ln, H.B. Adi. To i>lac.t your ad, --------GREAT $650. 6«·5785 964-0888 Gorgeou1 AKC Belglan A1trotoger/Numerologl1t call &42-5e78 and let a Trade your old 1tuff tor --------
T ervuen. Rare. 7 mot. avt for Hollday Gather· CIUllfled Ad-Vleor help n • w good 1 u w Ith • '82 KAM 305 xlnt 4000 ml llTl EmY Special Term1. 7~·1318 Inge (213)92...0533 you. Cla .. lfled ad. 842·5678 $1050. '80 YAM 850 Spec-
Exper. CRT ope<1lor. IBM ljijiiiiiiiiiii"i~jijiijiiiiiiiiM"iiiili~jii laJ. $900 OBO 875-9179 5251. &CQJrtt• 50 wpm,"'
lrvlne location. Xlnt ben· ltlt Wut.. p SSJS '64 Yamaha Riva CA50 efit1. lmmedl•t• opening. _ th motorsoooter, 8 mo Old
Call Denise, 863-0222 lllTllOT ll•nllY Singing C1narlH for S.25 1So40-0352
Newspaper
btwn 9-1 1:30am. IAIAllll Wanted one world clw, CP'lrl1tmu $25. 5-48--0869 MOPEO-Pucta-Cleen Rune 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmmiiiilmmii:.~liiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Immediate opening for Pleuant phone voice 1 multl talented gen ofc tl lO good $175 obo 644-0937 fl Clrcul•tlon Ol91r1C1 Man-must. 751-8822 d1)'9. aec:tetlfY. Mu1t have xlnt1.,._t,.•.n..., ___ l"!'P.l'I' -:--,...--;----~.-.
,,__ R-wlfbflltles In-phone a IBM dleplay clOCk 11600 Plano 11000 A1tt Lt11i11 1
KIDS-EARN .GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! •-__. • writer alclll1. Total com-aew macti $500 540-4935 elude canler recNltment, Artllt pen18tlon to S40,000 --------
sales end collec:Uon1. IUllE OIAST Send reaumei: Preti-Oak wardrobe, bev mirror. ~~''o, h~r::k ~~= llll y PILIT dent, Collln1 ~MOCl•t• Gd cond $200 982-1149
I ALL-SAVERS
AGES 11-14
EARN Lf TO $75.00 PER WEEK
Wt now hne I~ openmcs for younc uger
buwtrs to S«urt ruden for Tht 011n1e Coast
Ollly Pilot Our crews start at 3 30 pm and
1work until 8 30 pm wetkdays On ~turday, we
!•wort 1 few more hours You will tarn many lrlj)S
and pnzn. alont wrth earninc ycM own money ,
t~re rs no ddtverinc 01 coll«hon 1nwolved
II you art 1nltmted. pltue ull Mr Earl
MO
COO£ (714) 548-7058
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 IOriChM
5 Cut
10 Moslem 1111e
14 Motoong
15 Meat poe
16 Smalt bee
17 SurpasSP<l
19 Beginner • If
20 Ae~111
21 H3Vf' Doll~
22 MerganSf'r
23 European~
25 Pos'seu1ve
26 I-lead a Drll
30 Bue~ s matt'
31 M11e,.11hzP
34 ComPlelp
36 Plum l ypP
311 Mell oron~ 39 Atoke
42 Tap 18 til~P
43 An11oua1f'O
44 Squander
45 Battertn•
47 UP prel
49 Thr-POI
SO FatlurP
!l 1 Narrow '"'"'' SJ Hot
6$ .,., C.el'"Q
2 J
Sr. r .... c ..
6, tnkhng
64> Anc1en1
111n9u11qP
64 f"rmerl~
6'> HNar•o
116 ~11 ...... ci.1 ,,, .....
87 Nntol"
'18 f 1r r1~1
h .. ,"" '
DOWN
"'' ,,,,
~ Wttl"' S1
1 Clb1,1ir·~
4 Ufi.nt)t'f':•hiili(H
!o Pll{fltcl ti
r~tPtvdl'l
t ( '" ptf4r;trT"·t ' v .. , f SPnOu'9
ll ~.17ov1s
"" l onaor1 P•tr '°
10 M •\tf'hil•l'S
tt ,_..an with 'I
~"t'""' lj' H'l(•li•I
'l l ...
M ( ~ wn<d~
If! f f<"y1 d,.
2• 8or•O·OQ\
t-'' (•t)1f ~V.fll3,
iii~
6
~VIOUa ll'UZZU SOLVED
~; OpP111 t.v
Pvcc.•r
if' Tt>t> 9"'"
29 lJn(Joh~I ""
J' Cuc•'>'•
);> So1o1ar1 31 51r•qer HP ,.r
t'> Rdr, f!•I\ , 4, ...... , .. 41
40 EQu-.••ly
• 1 P•rt1n .. n1
•f s ... •c:;o ol
J8 0PtlM«
7 8 9
5• S•llones\
S2 Bf'l'lle
'>:l Sff• OUyl
!t4 Pl)lllblP
5' Buroen
5 7 fun<;l•ons
'>II 1nc1on11ton
~O il~
59 Erte e g
f';O 8awt>a11 s
S••v9htftr
&3 POI •pm
11 12 t3
worttlng wttta young 1>oy1 hu an operiing '°'a part-s~~ ~~t:!ti. Anllaacn .: IOll ... ll·TIYITl
and gtrta. Dally Pilot, 330 time experienced, ca. 92880 • 23d Aman• Freeier. YflfY _ Unll ·
West Bay. Colt• Mna. creative Layout Artllt to gd cond. S200. 548-3096 ALL MAK£S -S199 down Apply In peraon with only pnrduee quality id SECURITY c E Comm Leue
111m to 5pm. 11youta, comp• a 11yer1 IEIT PAY 111.0. I llY IPPUUCH <714)432:1911
DRIVERS, Mlnlbu1/V1n IOI' I fut paced dally leading Security Guard LES 957-3133 -::---=~~---..~
Work In South County. newspaper. Coooec>t to Agency Metting Security New/nevet used. Sanyo A1tt1 Waatt4
Flt & Pi t Must be 21 finished art. Send reeume Offlcen mpact frig 2 5 clfl WE IUY Good driving record. only & xerox copies of 1 00 re 5~ Apply II 28031 Avenlda work to: Steve Hough, •Full/Part Tlm9 P09lllon1 S100/warrty. 5t-3115 CLEAi CAllS
DI 0 • Holiday woni Av1ll1ble RefrlL$195, Wastler/Oryr Aeropuerto. San Juan Art rector. range • Vacation Benefits
Capistrano 9em-4pm Coa11 Delly Piiot, P.O. For fUrther Information: set 95 547-2916
MtF. Cell 498-0335 or Bo11 1560, Costa M .... aail (JH)lll·1tll •e •ttn 6 11 542-3283 Ca. 92626 ---------llllliiiiiiiiiiii----• DYNAMIC PROTECTION Onie:;16'i Maclntollh.
WI lll·l 100 P /llY PAIT Tiii SERVICES printer a dltc drive. New,
I I
M L
CHEVROLET
~'>1 ll<irhor Ill' .t
cc~[,\ \H.:0-.\ I•••~• wert at1U. Dependable people 10 1141 Equal Opportunity only $2100. 845-7742
Nationwide Advert. Firm papers fOf the LOI An-Employer M/F FrH tt Jt1 i022 =====---==-~
hu ~nlng• for their getes T1m91 Newpape<. lllYlll ITATlll 2 Yr Old reg. bik/wtlt male WI HY
546-1 200
new o k:e with the follow-17 Yrs & up. 7 Daye /wk, full or part llrn.tlltl & Cotlle 2131427 _8686, USED CARS a TRUCKS
Ing poll1on1: Mon-Sat hrl 1:301m· wlcndl, neat appearance 7141538-8290 COME IN OR CALL FOR
TILIPIHE 3:30pm, Sun hre 1:30am-& handwriting only need =----=-----::::-== FllH IPPUJW. IPIUTlll 4:30am. 15. p/tar. Call 2~ tppty 2580 Newport Blvd, F11ait1rt H2S Cormle<-Oellllo
C.1.111111•111 hrs. 759-0630 642-IS015 C.M. Bdrm fum .• queen head-ClmlLn
IHllEI TUllllS PAIT Tiil lllY, STA. Amil. board, nit• 1tand1, 8 drwr 1821 1 BEACH Bl vo.
Call fOf appt. 540-7321 Home delivery. Loi An· FIT. Apply In perton, Shell drMMr $400. 640-4158 HUNTINGTON BEACH
INTERIOR DECORATING g1~3leo' "·.3TOlme,•;,,. 7 CDa~ya. Sta .. 2500 San Joaquin Complete full bd, new, •n-IOIJ; 141·1111 ~ Hiiis Rd. CdM S250obo &45-0627 eves Cotor-Oe11gn-Peop1e mustl S500 mo. Can 24 --------•-----~,...---WlWU'TYlll
PT /FT wlll train 77!-5«7 h re. 7 5 9-0 8 3 O or S•IUT111 ILHI lllY FllllTllll OLW 1111 OAll
KENNEL HELP Mo1tly 842-IS015 Expe<tenced Subrogetlon LES 957-8133 See Ronald O~
~~:• d~iv!';z-'7ice~:~ nl IPIUTNS ~:';. :~!~t~~ New Sofa, loveM11 & cot answering Mrvlct exper beMflt• lmmed open-1bl from BroadW1y. 1270 540-4234 pref.Full/parttltMdayor Ing . Call OenlH . 10$560.Contempneutrel LJIHEI evenings. &<42-1403 8 8 3 • 0 2 2 2 b t w n couch St5, 54S-3511S
FOR NEW CUSTOM PHOTOLAB COUNTER t •11:30AM rift laJH HOME, 47'~ Hrs p/wlc, 5 SALES-Camel'• know!· -
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
101'>0 HAlllOI lllVO
COST A MI SA 64 l 001"
day. SS. p/hr, S7.50 O'N· edge. 1 Hour Photo, l•IUTlll IUll I a•14 time. 675-8023 &48-2424 Mike Experienced Sut>rog1tlon Jnt ~ . H J"JI M22
W •• ,. ... 11 c1er1c for A+ r1ted com-L9d'9itdLESC SIS l gofd. 'II JEEP OIElllH _,.., IP Tl 110/11 pany. lrvlne locatlon. Xlnt Org S2100, eek $1200. Llndac1pe maintenance POLL TAKERS benefits. lmmed. open-840-lto0/675-5259 51pd, 010, A/C prep. PIS,
laborer, full time, SS. Mutt be able to talk Ing. Call OenlH , tllt,lntermlttentwlper1,
p/hr. Exper. pref. Apply w/publlc. No exp nee. 8 6 3 . o 2 2 2 b 1 w n Mink coat $1000 Mink reartreclock,endmore. Tue~-Set. Dine Pl. P/T.542_7211 p8ul 9-1t:30AM 1toleS500540-4935 (0994)Stock N.S846
Marine Co 24705 Dane · 11 211 $10 HI
Dr. Dane Pt PIEllllll IELPll Ttulttn lhlt P/T •bee HHll . ORANGlcoAST
LIQUOR CLERK Flt or Pi t, Part tlm9, Mon. Tuee 4pm· 3 taour1 dally. Beacll area colEcoV1§10N: Orllllng AMC/Jeep
01)'9, NiQhll or Wkndl flnlatl. Wiii train. Apply $4.50 llr. 788-7521 module, At1r1 module, t7 2524 Hart>or Co1ta Mesa
408--0272 PENNYSAVER, 11S80 c car1rldQea w/xtrH S300 l•t IOH
Plac.ntla •ve, Co1t1 TEACHERS-Sub for hrle-Ruu 804-8947 E\191 • ,. !Ian School, Fountain Vil-· ""y~·.-----r.ii"lUOS LHhr 1 ... Att.M... M... 1ey arN. ee2-3312 Metal laddef rack for 9· rac I N~~·::. 1~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-TELEMARKETING P/U Truck St5 &45-1691 '!ii,6~3-1n;.o,t;.oer_n_1t~lon-I '"t4"'1.,fia°"!t;;.bed"'"'
time, Tu..-Wed-Thura. IUL ESTATE ATIEITIOll MUST SELL· John Weyne w/4 lldea. 22.000 g~ 2-10 Cail Karen , w.••-•-TennltClubFamltyMetn-Idea l trull t rue
752-0585 (8-121 _,.._ IS .. 11 llLY IS wlhlp, $750. End Tbla, $3950/obo. 831-82t0 Need llcenMd tgent for rn Day Bed, 1950 Magnavox '83 FOl'd ranger V·8. HID utl/llftl. IUll ectlwt 8'lbOI leland of· tt you hive the llamlnt ._. R a d I o • S 1 5 • I 8 5 . Susp, 1tereo, Ing bd, 23K
..,_,... BMc:t\ RE. Co flee. Commllek>n only. h•ve I programttlat can 875-1879 ml 5-40-8578 ........ .,.,..' · · For confidentlal lntervtew pu1 $5000. • wMk In your ---=_,,....,,...,..,.,.,..,..,,....,.-=--1---,..,....,=--=-=-Dvtles lndd: malt pld!-up catt Be«YWlllttllt Water-pocket. Umlttd photlt8 SALUTING CANNONS WORl(HORSE: ·et Chev.
& dlWtrltr.,-.ippfy dl81rlb., front Hon.173-elOO avaltatite for the flgllt l-lend-mede IOlld br.... 1/2T wllumb., rack ~: !.o~~ ~00: people. ldnt cond, very hMvy, look• ugly • runa grNt.
forerrandi.Heavy.Nftlng lll•IT P.S.CLOSERSONLY 18" I 12" long. Call Orig. ownr S1t00
Involved. Exp'd pref. ll•P MR. JONES 850-2178 (213)51.._7sei, A8~. f~ 873-1830 (Iv mag) "" _ PIT~ The Glm Gym, _ __ Norb. (213,_ ... 1~ , .. A I
1
_ ...
955-01..., Laguna. 497·54&4 ......,..,_,. meg If" •rr ft
llHfMfwtq/P .. 'I Reeturant Stndwlctt Shop WHI tr.in for C.M. remodel· Student Mid• mooay 10
Som• hvy llf1T~. H':"S PIT, FIT counter help. Ing contrec:1or. 30 Hr/wf(. go home for Cllrl1tmu. ID t l 12 -....~-+--4--1 dlploml req ult be 955-1247 or 971-1739 Berwa. ~9-7922 IBM Sel9ct II Correcta* 172 200a. white. gd oond,
bright. energetic, hatd TOPLESS MODELS typwrlter. Xlnt cond ... 50 MW ~nt. xlru. G~ln:ev r~p~~· UIJI...... 1100/day. Plld dally Calh OBO 87&-eeae Call DenlM M2· 12t7
get Mure '1rv1~. Call Mr D ~~~,::Co ~~~ t~~ No exp nee. 828-2683 urfbo1rd-5t1 Tllrueter '83 BMW 320I under 2400
Klelnmen. 281-9302 energy 1~ ..._ / TYPllT/lllPT NEW! $200 873-e2&3 ml. A-1 $13,500 ... or belt
.-LI 11111. TYPll ..,..,lot pereon to man-AttrlCtlve girl. Nwp1 lcll laalt,l li tt. JIR offw. 840-7301
-etore C:IOM· ~~~cte; ~'*°"':i ~=· No 'ION'!W cWIAEt m ~I llW's locll. (21318 -e3IO .tma~ C•ll Miio · · Llk• MW. ~Ml3t &•E 11111 ~ ~~ :a" w!,0
Aodlctl, 146-1823 <.!~/=~'L PliHl/lnu1 IUI 'outt~dl S.Cttonl
ft--+--oojf---1 Npt ., .. Stan Jen 1915 111 .. lmflm. llr), -~· Prfvtt• c ibr.U.on upr\Qilt l.£A&E'?>R.,
M·F hm-eorn Meture, Hlgf'l SCflool Gractuete with Club. Vlfltel dtY I ._,.. pteno MSO. 840-1"2 Up to 7 Yfl tvalll
retie* & r9ft. &45--3595 aper. pref. OrllPNC art nll"Q -"1111 Including Thornel Vo 8330 mlUll Miii btcllground ll•lpful. wMkende.4"-5717 Topcon:~~2 ,S40Jtmbor.. NB. 'TT'-t--1f---+-~l---l CNA'• •• .,, the MW ..,.., .... motl¥91ed, IC>te to ... .. . Adtacent to Falhlon ltlend
oft '1gtll. Coml jC*l our ~. ~·1 == p/f OfG mwger, Tt::,: a'f~i!fa'?.o.d ltl HU = ~k~ t--eenfor }'lft;tl ~ eecr . Md~ --.....---.----:-.......,.,,.,,.1 ________ ,
, .... In• 1445 8uoerlor 'Y -.net ~ ottenttd EAl>':::lf 131.saoe I""'? 'rlf Int LARGE SELECTION Of
·-N 8 ••"·2•rn) lhop. ~Iona btlr'IG II~ i 'l'TD': NEW I USED IMW'SI "..... ' ~ al:C•Pt•d Mon·W•j Aeautetlon .. """'" .......... Tll e.to.n, ~ .. et 1M02 IMIUL"'"' •• Pool table, .... L•IUllll!,W
ame11 He.~. AetncY Mo1h.,, Tu1t1n (cor. IMltl 1150 63M3tO CO¥W & '*· 'vii Mt Of SEv~~~:~:;:1t.o
i---+--t--4--+-4---11 ...-. detell orleftlH Vetendl ' Aedhll) AKC c KEA AH bUff belle. °"" radf~ '°" Of 3170 N. Cherry AYoe. ~-to blll'ldte v.ned Of· . • CUtll I m6'0 lttrnl S4l5 LOHO BEACH ftdt cM ... Min 111'9 otc •Hnllf a red, m/f'200 557-6577 &45-1Mt (No Cherry••l1~)
FlllEIWIEll
*HONDA*
HAS
HONDA
CARS
(lH) Ill· 1111
13746 BMch Blvd
W'9tmln1ter
Between 22 a 405 F
Mint Condition -Whit• (0128)
$24,900
Jim Slemmon1 lmpor11
100 I Quall Street NB
133-1300
'82 300SO, Best otter
under $30K Wiii drive
home thl1 claaslc white,
fully loaded Turbo. Under
35K ml l In ~rfect oond.
Serlou1 offere only
840-2100
IEllOEHS llYIU
For competitive prlcee & IHM"'" on 1985 model1, Jon Aaynold1,
authorlz.ed dlr rep
648-7027 818/91S-e&ae
*FREE*
CHlllSTIAl lln
From Southweat MotOI'·
Cer. One lucky pe<ton
111 II lllC• l-'I
111111,111 IUU Cl ll Ill 100
7 4 THING. gd cond, rol
bar. Altclng 12600. Aft
8Pm 840-7360
'77 Scirooco, new eng.
need• pn1 12000. 'ISi Bug
great cond $1100 CUh.
Must Mil both. 845--57$5
WE CARE
•••lllH
'llOUIWOS
c
S 199 down Cloeed End
Commercial Leue AU.-
SAVERS 714/432-1977
NABERS
CADILLAC
LARGEST SELECTIO~
ot late model, low mlfeett
Cadlllacs In Southerrt
Calltornlat See ua toda'
540-1880
2600 Hart>or Blvd.
COSTA MESA
------CONNELL
CHEVROUT
.'-"-" 11 .• rr •• r 11 .1
(1 ..... l\Vf~'-,\
546-1200
.,..~ 1317 •+at Wag, auto, nu
ur .. $400 oeo 49Q..2~10 .,.
'67 Mu1t1ng. Fire rd, nu
289 eng, trans, Int, pnl.
Power B&S. air $2950
°494-2808 PI P
wm win a miniature '7 t Pinto. 2 dr, S800 080
M8foedes SL Convert Ible 642-008o4, 631-2515
motorized kid• car -now •-on dlepley All yov do 11 ·73 Pinto moving baok
bring In your current east, car In xloond 501<
Merced9l·Benz ml. new tires. btkl, bett.
regl1tr1tlon (eny model Sac. $850 Obo tM-2290
or year) and enter lhe ·79 Capri V·8 automatk;
trM drawing. At tile..,,,. air eun roof 11800 Ctll
u,,,. Cheek ou1 our large •f'I• 8pm 848-3027 Nlec:tlon of Meroedee
now avllla~ IOf Nie Of .,Lliiiiiaiioiici!iti!iii•~-----•
1MM 0raw1ng w111 be •11 ....... .. .. held on Dec. 24. 1984 ~1'H .., Cal Brook• Adema for Moving to EufQP9. 1oW dttallt mllMge-;{12,000), wf'lltt, SOUTHWEST 51s.ooo. 87M 2ao
MOTOR CAR CO.
1220 W. Cqtlt HfOllway
Newport Beach
714/831·•488
TOPlll Piii
For Pampefed Mer~Ben•
1111111nOA11
Top MerOld .. Prtcea P•ld
Call Peter or Aly
llllllfllPllTI
411111101111
-a43-or1'14 837-2333 •. ,,. .... , .. . ,., .......... .
lllElllUl
Over 1&0 New l Pr•
Owned M«*-to cl'IOOM from
.1111u•11 ,.,.,.
111111 •
lmmacutet•
Thll luxury Md•fl "• .,i
PO't¥et ..... , + '~· ..,.. co..,.,1, ntw • Uret, JUI! vlftYfl~Clliial econ-
omy. Attal! bQok S8,llO
Sale ptlot l&,MO Ortet
Amtrlcen L~ -Marty ,
973-13-45 de)'9 tfS-1344 ...,..,weektnda
'llllTUlllBU I 199 down. C. E. COfft-
mere I a I IHH ALL·
SAVERS 714/.:S2·t971
'"
aper. 1 mw1 Knowf• Start ~-MU9t ~KC Molan T.,..., H
-"'AIC. AIR, .... ._ OOod ............... 1150/ .. 734-IStt , "CL IOKT C.btr l11•)1H-IJ '7"Por ......... "tt "'4T ........ rec:ord kffplng Non typing & lhfMd eklb. _ I . Loott blndlnga, 'fr~tn.Wetc:ome • .... ,.., ou .. _.
amotclnO omc.. ContlCt Contict Ken ..... 370t POOdlePupt, Teecup, Tov. t P°* lt21. "'* OPfN8EV NOAYS tt.000 me OOod eof'd -~~==~==::!:==~~==~======:=:::1~~=!====~==~~=~~1ck-,_tto-;.__11_•_1 -===~=81r==cfl==St=,=N,=l=7=M..e===765==.l M~ 1250uP.&48-2~ -" 1 ;;;;::::::;:;:;::::::::=::J..::12:2:.000==/:obo:::;::':M4::·1=MO==i._--...;::~::::=:::::;:~
( -'. ...
I
}
TOMORROW:
FORECASTS ON A2
HUNTINGTON ~EACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
TUESDAY Of C l M BER 18 1'J84 OHAN GE COUNTY CA LIFOR N I A 2S C ENT S
Oil suit may spell CQaSt windfall
Settlement in oil company price-fixing
could mean $200,000 for Huntington
rece1 ve up to $200,000 each u a result
of Thursday's settlement by Atlantic
Richfield Co., spokesman John Jervis
said. The cities could receive much
more 1fthe other oil companies settle
or 1(the state wins 1J,Uuit, Jervis said.
local official• in a few days to
determine how much 0 11 was
produced," JCTV1s sa1d.
He sajd that the payment to the
cuies will be based on the amount of
oil extracted from city.owned prop.
erty from 1971 throu&h 1977. lnitiaJ
pa.Y.ment!i..l. he ~i.Et would come from
a fund of;,670,uuu set up by Arco.
to ~ "public cntitacs" lhat would
share the fund, Jervis said.
The money is made available
under terms of Arco's settlement, be
wd, beeauJC of the 0 antj-tru t con-
spiracy by the companies" that the
suit claims fixed pnccs wh1lt aJlqcd-
ly undercutting the public's share of
ttdelands oil revenues.
See related ltflrY P8g9M
By ROBERT BARKER
OfllleO.., ...... Uff
Oil-producing coastal cll1es stand
to reap major financial gains from a
federal lawsuit filed by Cahfom1a and
Coast
A Costa Mesa student
fighting cancer spent his
Christmas gift on his
friends./ A3
Calif ornia
California's home energy
savers who applied for
assistance program
should get checks before
Christmas./ A4
Nation
Soviet second-In-com-
mand says it's United
States' move for success-
ful arms talks./ AS
Reagan likely to pare
defense budget cuts over
three year period./ AA "
World
Iran says It will prosecute
four hijackers accused of
kllllng two A mericans
aboard Kuwaiti jet./ A4
A fourth 'naval target' has
been hit in the Persian
Gulf./A4
Mind&:Body
Teaching children
resposibility involves
more than making them
take out the trash.81
Sports
The Rams will face the
New York Giants Sunday
at Anaheim Stadium in
the NFC wild card play-
otts./C1
Marina, Estancia, Irvine,
Costa Mesa and Saddle-
back win opening round
of Irvine basketball tour-
nament./C1
The U.S. Davis Cup team
shows It is no match for
Sweden./C3
Ent ertainmen t
Nell Simon's auto-
biographical characters
are in the Army now In
''Biloxi Blues.'' /84
Bus iness
Nineteen eighty four will
be a record year for
leasing of office space In
Orange County./85
INDEX
Erma Bombeck 82
Bridge 88
Bulletin Board A3
Business 85-6
Callfornla News A4
Claaalfled C3-6
Comics 88
Crossword C6
Death Notices C4
Help Yourself 81
Horoscope cs
Ann Landers 82
Mind and Body 81-2
Mutual Funds 86
National News A4
Opinion A7
Papara:zl 81
Ptarc. Review 84
Pot Log A3
Public Notices C4
SPQrt1 -ci-3
Stoek Marketa 87
feteVtalon 82
Theater• 83""4
Weather A2
World Newt A4
.,
other states alle~ng that several
major oil companies rigged pnces. a
spokesman for state Controller Ken-
ne1h Cory said today.
For example. the cll1es of Hunt-
1ng1on Beach and Seal Beach could
Coast
Jews
celebrate
freedom
H~nukkah recalls
history•s first fight for
freed om-of religion
By PHlL SNEfDERMAN
Jews along the Orange Coast and
around the world tonight will light
candles to mark the beginning of
Hanukkah, an eight-day celcbratton
of religious freedom.
The festival commemorates a vic-
tory by Jewish wamors over Syrians
who had defiled the Jewish Temple 1n
Jerusalem an 165 8.C. durinian
attempt to stamp out the religion. The
word Hanukkah means"'dedicauon"
and refers to the reclaiming of the
Temple.
The key symbol of the holiday 1s the
menorah. a nine-branch
candle holder. It holds one candle for
each night oflhe festival. plus a
"shamash·· or caretaker candle used
10 light the others.
Accord mg to Jewish trad1t1on. only
a small amount of sacred oh ve oil was
discovered for use man eternal flame
w en the Jewish I em pie was reclaim-
ed from the Syrians. Through a
miracle, however. the one-day supplv
burned for eight days until new ntuar
011 could be prepared. the Hanukkah
story says.
To mark thee' ent. contemporary
(Please see HANUKKAH/A2)
The city of Newpon Beach also
figures to collect money based on oil
produced on city-owned propeny.
'Representatives from the attorney
general's office will be checking with
Huntington Beach and Seal Beach
are 1hc major 011 producers of 1he 30
Meanwhile, The Auociated J>rcs
reported that coun papers unseaJed
Rabbi Mendel Duchman of Chabad of Ir·
vlne Jewiab Center lights the first candle of
0.., .... ,......, ~...,,.
the Hanukkah menorah•• daughter Sarah,
3 , look• on.
Monday in Los Anaclcs allqt tbllt
major oil companies, operatina ... a
s1n,1c fraternal orpnuatioa,"
swapped information and ICud to
prop up poets from the 1950s into the
'70s. costing consumers and smaller
(Pleue eee OJL/ U)
Crash
~harge
angers
kin
Relatives of three
Viejo women want
murder accusation
By STEVE MARBLE
OftMO.-, .......
Relauvcs of three Mission Viejo
women kJlled Sept. 10 in a bead--on
colhs1on near Huntington Harbour,
say \hey arc angry that \he woman
blamed for the deaths baso •t been
charged with murder.
Kym l..amel) . Murphy. the sole
survivor of
the lYr<><ar
accident.
was ordered
Monday to
stand trial
for felony
m a n ·
slaughcr and
drunlcn
dnv1n
re
\:cry angry
that murder
c harger, M.,...)'
Yrercn't filed ." sa1d Darrell Ut·
terback. the.' brother of one v1ct1ms.
·-rm not anl!J"\ at her (Murphy): we
(Plea-.e 11ee R.ELA TIVES/ A2)
Surgeons
remove
wrong
kidney
Dead inmate's files t urned
over to .Gates a fter hearing
· Hunfington man. 64,
seeks-d-iillagesf rom
LongBeac_!1 hospital sheriff Brad Gates
By JEFF ADLER
Of IN Dally ..... ai.11
An Orange Counl} Supenor Coun
Judge ordered the county Health ('are
Agency on Monday to rum oveT a
dead Jail mmate's psychiatric files to
ShcnfT-Coroner Brad Gates.
As expected. Judge Everett Dickey
directed that inmate John Ray rep-
henson's mental health files be turned
over 10 the coroner's office followmg
a bnefcounroom heanng.
Gates sought 1he confidential re-
cords as pan ofa coroner's '"'cst1ga-
t1on into lephenson's deJth 'itep-
henson died an his cell !'lo' 6.
apparenll\. after he se"ered an anef')
in his ami "ith a jaiT-supphed ra10r
tephenson·s mental health re-
cords touched ofT a d1'ipute that
prompted the Board of'iupen-1sors 10
ask for a re\ 1ev. of the.' poss1b1htt oT
d1v1d1ng the shenfT-coronrr'\ office
mto separate funcuon'i Gatt"S head'!
both.
Since state lav. requires an inmate's
mental health records remain con.
lidenual a county mental healt.h
team refused to tum them over to jail
otlicials as requested sc'craJ days
after <;trphenson's death.
Hov.c' er a JaJI offioal confiscated
the documents and ordered the
mt'nLal heaJth team out ofth-$.lail.
S1nct' ·The lnCident. Gates; in hiS
role as coroner. has said the rcoon1s
arc l·c.o;enual 10 detennining what
(Pleaee aee GA TES/ A2)
From staff and wire reports
A Huntington Beach man who
underwent surgery for removal of a
diseased right k1dne) and emerged
from tht• operation minus h1i. kft
kidney ic; suing the hospital and
medical team that made the alleged
error.
UCI cuts Off freshman enr ollment
Lawyers for HafT) Jordan. 64,
argued in LosAngelcsSupenorC'oun
on Monday that Long Beach Com-
munity Hospital was neghgen1. along
with se'eral ind1 v1duals and medical
groups.
Increasing number of appli cation s forces
university to _cut off admissions earlier
mg b1nh rail' ha'> led 111 a 'ti:ad' Jror
an the number of high '>lhool ll-radu·
ales .\t thl' same time ho~n l·r
interest in attending the l n1,cr;11, 111
C'ahfom1a hac; sk\ rocki:tcd
Jordan's sut+illleges negligence and
conscious disregard for the safety of a
patient 1n the Nov. 26. 1982 oper-
ation,
.. He was thought to have cancer 01
the nght kidney. and they took out the
ten kidney:· said attorney James
Pagliuso. representing Jordan.
(Pleaae aee KIDNEY/ A2)
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of!MO.-, ..... ll.tlf
'r ou·rc a high c;chool senior mtent
on nttendtng UC Irvine next fall. but
)OU havcn·t ubm1ued your apph-
cat1on yet Sorry. sa) university
officials. it's probably too late.
For the first time m 16 years, UCJ
stopped accepting fresh man apph-
ca11on Nov. 30. November 1s the
pnnc1pal month whltn students appl)
to UC campuses,. but dunng the past
two ~cars, the apphc~t1on penod has
been e\lended 1hrough J3nunf) and
February. In earlier )Cars. apph·
cation were accepted e'en latrr
Bui this year. official a1 In inc and
01hcr UC' campuses ~r t~)'·re
having 1rouble accommodating the
flood of applicants. hence the cutofT
the e'cept1on to the No' 30
fre!>hman cutoff will be for .. under-
represented" mmont} students. tn·
eluding blacks. Latmos. F1hpmos and
Amertcan Indians. Cl officials said
Througl\oUl C'atrfom1a. the dechn-
This No' ember apphcaunn<i to thl'
eight UC campusei. 1nl rta">ed I~
pcrttnl O\t'r the pre' 1ou'I \C:Jf Thl·
most popular campu<;e~ art Bt'rl..ele\
and LCL.\ bu1 nc.-n at In me
freshman apphcat1on~ an.-up !( ~
percent o'er IQ83
<\t the ~me umc. h<'"c' rr. l C'I
offi(lals are planning to rl"ducc the
number offre-shmcn the\. enroll nc\1
fall 10 accept more transfer "ludC'nt\
Transfer student'> include thn"t' ~hl'
'C'Ompkt~ their 00'\ll' \IUdll'\ JI
St<l:te gra~ts rnatch Coast
stulients with cOm uters TONY
SAAVEDRA
i
Hands-on projects from robots to v1deotapes
will be offered v1a futuristic Coast p-rograms
me Founuun Valley Mudt'nt
W111 be able \0 hone ttiCir computer
tcills 1\cxt ]'t~r by Dt~n1 wtth a
robot turtle named "Fred " ..
Mcan"'h1lc computer ~u1pment
at another Fountain Vallt')' school
wall be mod1fi~d for ph) Kiiiy hand.,.
C1lppcd chtld n ..
nd 1n H ungton lk.irh. )041lt
scholar\ will ctp abreast of runtnt
cv('nl by producin Vldcot.A~
OC'\\SCI t to be \hO\lr'f\ II monthl)
a scmbltc
•
uch a~ the: futunst1c programs
being rundCCJ 1th the $249, 4 in
ui educateonal tech n1
unoffic1all awarded this month to
Ot'lnt . \t K'hqol'>
1 h~ tatc Edu t1onal Ttthnology
C omm1utt g.l\C ptclim1nary ap-
provat ·on Dec 7 for S9 m1tho11 1n
tatcv.,ide arant Oran~c ounl)' I
C\P\."'tted to collect S 71. 600. "'1\h •
larg chunk amn to school alona the
Ornn (<>a'lt
l ht' Jrl\nt mu\t 'llll ht-approvrd
by the statc 8oa.nf of Education 1n
January But that vote 1 ieneraJly a
formahty, accordU\& to Linda Or·
ozco. one of tht two local rcpre n~·
NEWS BACKGROUND
uve ~n the I .}.member ttthnolOI) th n half of the public hool'> 1n
comm1lttt. .. Orange Counh appl) ··
The lf'UUP "-1 r0cm@ ti lilt tiools 1lona t~ Oran e \oa\I
lqnlator.Hn l 3 t bdp mini ttor-~ • of l tl"' g:mm ninr ot
\t1tc fund1na for computcr education them aoina to Oct-an V1('\\ hoot
and teltt0mmunicat1 n in Pllbh Dutnct. tt\·cn 10 ~port ks.a
school . l nifled hoot Dlstnctt fh(' to In m('
Om1 o. al~ C'd0(8t1onal tech· Unif1'!d hoot 01\lncl, thrtt to
nolOI) C"OOrd1nator for the count) fountain Valle l\ool 01 tn"'·
()(partmcnt of ·du<.~llon. 1d about thrtt to Huntington Sc• h Union
272 proJ~t' w('rc ~ubm1t1C'd for tht' HtsJ't • hool DI tn\:t anJ one to
7S Oran Count) arant~. Hunttnaton &a h C'1t h •I Di~
"That "'a a lot mort thin ~l" tn<'t
cxp«ted:' h~ id ''We had mnl'f (Pleaee ... OOMPUT R/A2)
,
u1mmunll\ lOlleges and those mov-
1ne, Imm other uni\.ersll1es.
fame.'" Dunning, director of ad-
m1\<;1ono; at UCI. said the ·campus
enmllcd about 2.500 freshmen thlS
fall nnt fall. un wtll admit"l.~30.
ThC' lampus' overall undergraduate
population nelll fall will bl" about
~ ~oo Dunning said. JU ta 2 percent
tnl'rl'ase O\ er the current year
Dunning emphas11.cd that
although freshman applications have
hetn cut ofT l Cl 1s contmwng to
ac.:<:cp1 apphauons from prospccttvc
tran'il°er \tudents. The campu c •
~·t, tCl admit 31 perttnt more
1mn,fcr 'itudents next )Car, he satd.
(Pleue eee UCI COTS/ A2J ..... .
$250,000
for-pier
building
approved
By ft BERT BARK I\
Of .. 0.-,_ ... _ ...
Lambe un {"'It) adm1n1 tBtJon of·
Ii 1al' for ,., aoJ co t O'-C'rTUn .
Huntma n 8"ch councl members
Jrudgin 'i •crttd Monday 1 'faht to hormw 2S0,(KX) to compktc a con·
tro\C~1al b\11IJ1n at lb end of the
Cl\)· p1 r.
"Thu. proJtt't shnuld be teaJc4
tto"'n to fit th(' hnanct l"lilable. ..
(PS ... Pr&a/ A2)
,
U * Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuesdoy. December 18, 19M
CONTINUED STORIES
OIL SUIT WINDFALL SEEN •••
From Al
compani~ s111d: "Nt"vc!' ha vc charges •
of such ~nousness been supported by so little."
More rain ip. store for Coast
A wlntor etorm edgod Into Southem~all~ml• today, firms hundreds of m1lhons of dollari.
The estimated million documrnb
arei part of u I 0-)'car-otd federal
lawsuit filed by Cahforma and uther states aaainst several oil companies.
allC1Jn& pncc ngaifli -cspeciall~
undcrcuuma 1he public'~ share of 011
tideland revenuei. -and contri vin&
shortaaes dunna the 197 3 Arab oil
embarao. "The industry opcrated .. as a single
fraternal orpni1.ation," the Cah-
fo1 nia a Horney general said 1n one
lept brief
1-fe said data swapping was so
common that the industry acted as if
1t were "a smglc company.·
Arto settled for $22.5 million 1ts
part in a price-fixing lawsuit filed by
the state on behalf of the city of Lona
Beach. tate C'ontrolkr Co1 y said he
was prepared to go to tnul against ix
other 011 compunu:s nlso named in the
I 975 lawsuit, which allc&ed that the
industry conspired to undcrpnce
crude 011 taken from public-owned
tidelands.
Arco Vice Pres1dl"nt Francis
McC'urmnck $aid ArC'o settled tu suve
time and tosts but insisted the all~tions were "without merit."
And a joint filing by the defendant
lt stud plaintiffs filiJed to document
"any direct proof of conspiratorial
agreements or 1.rnderstandioas."
The case was consoltdatod in U.S.
District C'ourt with another suit
brought by Cahfornu1, AriLona. Or-
egon, Wash1r1,JtOn and Florida accus-
ing the same six companies -Mobil,
Chevron. Texaco, Unocal, Exxon and
ShcU -plus Arco, Pbillivs and
Chevron's Gulf Oil subsidiary of
nggin,g prices and con1rivina fuc:I
shortages dunns the 1973 Arab oil
embargo. according to AS.\OCiated
Press report!..
RELATIVES ANGERED AT CHARGE ..•
From Al
JUSt want JUStlCC."
State law pcrm1t<i the filing of
second-<kgree murder cha'lcs in
certain fatal acndt•nts, U!oually 11' there
is alcohol or drug) involved.
Murph). ·an Chnard resident who
was hvrng in Huntington Beach at tht'
tame of the earl) morning acc1dt·ot.
alkgcdly allowed hn l'ar to drift into
the opposite lanes of Pacific C'oast
l-h ghwa)' near the .\naheim Bay
bndge. striking the Fiat 1n which the
·-three women were riding.
The accident claimed the hvcs of
Oawn Jo\ Uttcrbud,. I l<. Oebornh
Lee Slemmons. 20, and Diane Mae
Druckrey. 21. All were pronounced
dead at the accident scene.
Murphy. confined to a wheelchair
becauseofinJunes sufTered during the
accident, fought back tears during the
heanng and Wl'pt Openly as She was
wheeled from tht.• courtroom past
relauves of the tk<1<.l women.
Peter Brown. Murphy's attome).
said his client sufTered compound
fractures of both legs. a punctured
lung. a brokenJ~ and lost her spleen.
Murphy nearly died from the injuries.
Brown sn1d.
Brown co nfirmed that his chent
was convicted of drunken driving in
Jul:r and that her dnver's license had
been rcstnctcd for 90 days. pcr-
m11tmg her to drive only to an.d from
work.
He would not say whett Murphy
was driving from or where she as
headed. He said h1b clltnt held several
jobs at the time. including working at
a res~urant. Dung the two;;noot preliminary
hearing in Westminster, Deputy Dis-
trict Attorney Arnold Westra re-
vealed that lab test showed the
presence of cocaine as well as alcohol
an Murphy's system at the time of the
accident.
Tests placed Murphy's blood-al·
cohol level at 0.1 1 -JUSt over the
level at which a motonst is presumed
into\1cated. Westra did not speculate
whether the woman was actually
under the influence of c~ne at the
time.
Barbara Slemmons, the mother of
one of.the v1ciims. said the courtroom
disclosure was the first she'd heard
that cocaine miJllt have been in-
volved in the accident.
KIDNEY LAWSUIT •..
From Al
He said Jordan had a tumor "the
size of a soft hall" on his nght k1dne).
but that doctors read the X-ray
backward and took out tht· left kidney
instead.
After the wrong k1dne) was re-
moved. Jordan went to UCLA Medi-
cal Center in December 1982 and had
most of the right one taken out.
Pagl iuso said.
Jordan's health has dl·tenorated
quickly. since then. the attorney ~1d.
noting that thl' Huntington man wa<,
forced to sell his m!ourance business.
;
P~iuso said doctors have made
conflicting statements about who put
up the X-rays on viewers prior to
Jordan's surgery in Long Beach.
One defense attorney admitted m
court Monday that the wrong kidney
was removed, but said the kidney that
was extracted at Long Beach Com-
munity showed some small signs of
cancer.
Paghuso said the trial, which open-
ed Monda~. could last up to a month.
He dad not say how much in damages
h1!. chent I'> ..cck1ng.
"Nobody's told me anything about
whM·s going on." she complained.
Slemmons said she had tw1C'e t1own
from her home in <ial·rumcnto to
attend court hearings only to learn the
proceedings had be.en postponed. ·
Rick Graves. a Huntington Beach
man identified as the on1y witness to
the accident. testified that Murphy
was swerving and driving with her
bright headlight beams on just prior
to the accident.
"She kept ooming up real fast
behind me and I was worried she wu!S
going to hit me," Graves testified.
He said the woman eventually
passed him and accelerated quickly.
Graves estimated she reached speeds
up to 70 mph before the crash, which
he described as "headlight-to-head-
hght."
"I never saw any brake lights,"
Graves said. "There was Just a puff of
smoke and then complete darkness in
the night."
Graves said when he pulled up to
the accident th~re was "no sound. no
lights, no signs 'oflifc."
Seal Beach Sgt. Larry Sides, one of
the first officers on the scene, said he
detected the odor of alcohol when he
leaned into Murphy's crushed sedan.
··1 saw a female inside. She was
screaming, thrashing arouoo." Sides
said.
Asked if he could identffy Murphy
as lhe woman he saw in the wreckage,
Sides said he could not because the
woman he saw was so "damaged."
Murphy was ordered to appear for
arraignment in Superior Court in
Wescminster on Dec. 31. A trial date
will be set at that time. Murphy is free
on $10,000 bail.
.. This whole thing is very hard,"
said Darrell Utterback, who said he
was very close to his sister. "It harder
than ariythin$ you can imagine. You
read about things like this but I never
would ha vt.' believed it would feel like
this."
HANYKKAH CELEBRATES FREE-DOM • .'.
From Al
Jews llghtonl·randlt'on th<.' ti~t n.1ght
of the ft'sti val. two candk'> on lhl·
second night Jnd c;o forth
Other Hanukkah trad1twm 1n-
d11dc th<.' d1-.trihut1on of"gt'lt"
(mone) J tochlldrev ht'ca11ngol
potato fnttt'" called "latkes .. and thl'
use of tht• drcidel. a top-hke to)
A.It hough n 1s a well-knov. n and
widely celebrated fest1 val. kw1sh
leaders sa~ Hanukkah docs not ha' r
the spmtual s1gn1ficance of holy days
suchac; Yorn K1ppur or Passo\cr
"Hanukkah 1s pnmanl) a home
holiday." said Rabbi Stephen Eins-
tt·10 ofC'ongregat1on H'na1 T t edel-in
Fountain Valle). Hc <,atd ii I\ J poc,t
b1hhl'al holtda' who..,c ohst•r, a net· v.a~ not ordcred in the kv.1\h Torah
"It's a folk fht1val. rcall\ "he <>atd
"Rut therc'<,an important message
that undcrltc!. thc fun It l·om-
memoratl'\ thc ltrst light for rcl1g1m1'
freedom in human ht\tOf) "
-Etn'ltctn ..aid ~plan"'; to speak on
th1<, 1ssue at a ()abbath sen ace Fnda'
night. po1nt1ng particularly to Jews ;n
Eth1op1a whoa re being persecuted
bec:ause of their religion
That theme was also emphas11ed
bvC'antor .\Ian We1nerof1 emnk Bat
GATES ...
From Al
rnu'>ed ~1t·rhcn,11n 'dt•,1111 .
But count~ llc;illh < .trl' .\gcrH '
Dirct·tor Rohen l o'e .-.aid h~· \.\.011ltl
turn O\er the <.lm.umcnl\ 11r1h ti
dtrtt'te<.l h) l'oun mdcr
In an agret.•mcnt rcalhed ta,t Wl'l'k
hoth lOUnt}' nflinal\ agrt•ed tu 101ntl\
\eek a lOUrl order mandating tht·
rnon.J"' rclca\c pro' 1ding the tun-
lt•nt\ rt·masn cunfi<lt·n11al
I he courtroom prnceeding. during
which the ')Caled packetuf<locument\
was turned 11H'r to a rcpres<·ntatlH' ot
the coroner'<, office took lec;c; than five
minutes
w LISTENING
Just Call
642dj086
Delly Piiot
OeUvery
I• Gu•r•nteed
t.l()nOt, 'odAy ' v "• 1' '10t ,.... fl.JV' f.A.,... II I
~JI) 0 m CA~ N'I ~· '~ "' lnd ffJ'tif o,.. .. .,. ..... t·"" --
~ 01i:.1n ofNewp<m Beach.
"Hanukkahc:elchrall''>thc 1mport-
,1ncc ofrchg1ou~ freedom tor Jc:w'
and tor all people.'' V.t.•1 ner '>a1d
"L1ghtsngnl the nindk''> I'> keeping the
light of 1rad1t1on alive. keeping the
flame oflrecdom.hurnsng."
.\lthough Hanukkah ii. tcchn1rnll)
a minor Jewish fest1val.1tset.·I·
cbrat1un has becomt· mort• prominent
because 11 occurs during the
Chnstmas !>Cal.on. ·
In man}' Jew1!oh homes. the d1s-
tnbution of"gelt'' has turned into an
exc.:hange of presents. In addition.
man~ Jews place colorful Hanukkah
ckcoratwns in their homcSJUSt a~ < hrt'>llansadorn their homes fo r
('hno,tma\.
Some Jcw1~h 1<.'adcrs sav the trcn<l
1' not nccessanl> d1\turb1ng b<:t:ause
Jew<, arc taking pndc 1n thl.'1r U\.\. n
II ad111on and arc using H.tnul-kah .1.-.
an opportunit) toJ01n 1n a \l':l~on of
widespread merriment.
"Hanukkah ha!> grown in 1mpor1·
anlc because ufthe tame of)'ear 1n
whKh noccur<>."( antorWe1ncr<1a1d .
"Bel.'ausr we Ii' l' in a m1).cd soc1ct)'.
Jews want 10 feel they have a
<,1gn1ficant holtda\ at this lime of
\c·iir Rut Wl'don't want toempha!.111.'
ihat 111' .1 m.ttl hang of one ( holtda-, I
ag.11n .. 1 thl'rithl·r People 1u't v.<.1111 to
led g11111J ,1t thl\ llflll·."
I 111111\' 1n1• .in· \11mt· 'Pl.'Ual J t.mul..
f...1h .ll II\ llll'\PIJnnl·d b) local'~ n
Jl'(Ol!Ul'\ •< h;1bad ot lrv1ndew1sh (enter.
4Joi 7 2 Ro )ldfoad. Ir.,. inc. haBched-
ull«J a I lanul-kah Adult Bingo Night
lx·g.ann1ng.at X pm toda) at the
ll'nll'I I
I hl' lrnter ..l1ll <>ponsor a Grand
Hanuf..t...ah Rall )-(xtra.,agan1a on
~unda) It heg1nsat 2 p.m. with a
l htldn n\ program featuring clown<.,
game, and refreshments At 4 pm
thc rail\ m<'' e!-to the Woodbn~IP,('
\hopping Mall 4600 Barranca
Parkwa._ f he ltght1np.ofa 30-fom
high menorah w tll take place there at
4.10p.m. Mu~1t·w1ll be pro.,ided b) a
children'<, cho1 rand an orchestra. an<l
refreshment' v.dl he serve<l .
Thl' Woodbridge Village A!>S<K13-
11,pn. 1n rnopcrat1on with the Chaba<l
(enter . .,.. ill hold 1t!> Hanukkah Chil -
dren's Partyat 7 p.m. Dec. 25at the
South Lake Beach Club. 2 Blue Lake
South. [rv1 ne. For reservations. call
Lynda Robbins. 786-6968, orthe
Woodbridge V11lageAssoc1ation Rec-
reation Department. 786-I 800.
•Tt"mplc Isaiah ofNewpon Beach.
2401 lrvineAvc .. w11lconducta
Hanukkah Potluck Pany at 6:30 p.m.
Saturday at the temple. The dairy
dinner wall be followed by entertain-
ment pnH 1ded by the Landmark
Performer!>. Donation 1s $~per
pcr'ion. Forrt>Scrva11ons. call
54X-6~00 or 646-7 512
•The Jewish Communal)' tenter
ofSnulh Orange County, 298 Broad·
\I.a). Laguna Beach, will ofTer a
Hanukkah celebration at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the ce nter. The eve-
ning will feature stories. songs, dant·e
and refreshments. Donation is$2 for
members and $3.50 for non-mem-
hcr!>, w1thc.:hildrcnadm1tted free. For
Tl'scrvatmns. call 4Q7-2070or
X 1 '.'-1 ()I 7 .
•I t•mpk Hat Yahm. fill I
< Jrm·lh<Jl k A \t.' . Newport Beach.
v..111londul't11\ annual Hanukkah
larrnl~ '>l'I" ace at 7.30 p.m. Frida). led
b> Rabbi MarkS. Miller and Cantor
i\lan Weaner. Thetemplc\JUOIOrand
adult choir~ will participate. Each
famtl)' 1c; invited to bnng its own
menorah with fi ve candles to Join in
the ca ndlc-lsghting ceremony
•Congregation B'nai T 1.cdek. 9669
Talbert Ave .. Fountain Vallev. will
dedicate the temple's new library
during Hanukkah Sahbath services
bc$1nn1ngat 8· 15 p.m. Friday. Re·
lig1ous school <1tudents will panici-
patc in Hanukkah panic<, on Sundav
What do )OU like nhout tbt Oaily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the
number tit ltft and your me11icage will bl' rt'<'orded, trans<'rlbf'd and dt>llvered
to the appropriate edit or.
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t>ditor on any topk. Contrtbuton to our Letten <'Olumn must include thtlr
name and telt>phone numbe-r for verification. ~o cir<'ulntion call11, please.
--~Lus what's on your mi.,_ __ _
ORANGr COAST
Daily Pilat
H.L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Clrcul•tlon 714/842-4333
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All other depertment1 842-4321
MAIN OFFICE
l 1') "'"" • lby SI l°..<'1t• ... _ CA
I.I~ • ,.,,., 9,,. V,/J c;.;.1a M-CA '.ln126
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''tll'~ 'f!Jf.... ~1'1ott•flll'A"' ...,.tfJfoAI' ""'.IJiflfJlt ~ ·~·--
..-11 ....... v "" •• .,,,,.,.,..a .. 1-.1 ti!« ... °"' S.tlJtO..• • ""' tu-<l.. • /OAJ dtJ nti1 ffil(.flW"W• ,-UW1
tt"1'f ov 1 ~ "' ~ flo'I e
•O a "' Moel :.lJUI r.~•y "' 119.,...,........,
Frank Zlnl
Mflnag1ng (d11or
Karen Wittmer
Ad11ertlsing Director
~t)f t1 1(~1~f ""''~
.. (./',..., I •it'>• o<"'IA'J" P<loQ 81 C-18 ....... U#ClMle
{U~ ~t ~•.Pll0<1 bY _,,... U l~ monltt,
IJy ..... "-' •• , "'°"' ~~
Ctrcul•tlon
T•phon ..
• Otellfl"~'1 ~· ~
l~~""~ ....
Roeemary Churchman
Controller
Robert Can1rell
Production
MnnagP.r
Ooneld L. Wllllame
C1rcutatton
Manager VOL.17, NO. W
apawnlng showers 1u1t In llmt lor ruth hour Pf ltlng moro
Wtdneaday after an o~rntght break. •
The National Woather SerVict predicted a 40 percent
chanC41 of rein Wedneaday •• the Callfomla-brod atonn movtd
Inland . The storm was 1boot 400 miles off tttt Central California
coast early today with the leading edo-moving Into the buln. It
was eicpec:tt<I to boost rain totals In the Loa Anget.a bu.In by up
to a hatf~lnch, and three..quartera to an Inch In the mobntalna,
forecaster Bob Grebe said today. Highs Wednesday Wiii be In the 601 In Lot Angetea and the
mid-to upper 501 In the valle)'9. Lows tonight wlll be In the upper
30• to 40s. The forecast along the Orange Coast calls for considerable
cloudiness Wednesday with a chance of rain again. Continued
cool with highs In the mid ·soa to low 60s. Not quite u cold tonight
with lows In ihe upper 30s and 40s.
Temps Mptw.$1 Peul 17 02
NMhvllle 70 81 ...... on-.. 74 55
HI Lo ......YO<k 01 60
Albany 59 30 NO<'folk. v. 07 40
Alb\lqu..QU41 " 20 Olil11110m• Clly se 29
...._ w .. ~ ~<•NOA~ us O.ot , .. CO""'• •
""''"' 1? 55 0-IM 21 08
"11181\llO Cll~ 04 5• Otl8n<lo 77 eo
Au111n 10 04 Pllllao.lpnla &7 39 Calif. Temps
811111mOH 68 4S
81rmlngtlem 71 S4
Pl!oe<\ta 04 45
Pltlt= 04 48 High. iow. preclj)41et1on 10< 24 rioutt Sat1te An• S•nt•Cna &3 40 T 81\oOt V llll9y
51 48
eo o
83 35 32 10 Blematck 03 ·25 Portt ,Me,
Bol• 20 03 Portllllld,Ot
8oeton . 02 37 Pt~
BuNlllo 61 3? Raleigh
Ca1oe< 24 03 Reno
Cl!arlOlle.N C 10 46 Sell l.81<• Ctty
~ 28 04 S...AntonlO
8=11 « t8 San J\MJ\.P R
87 42 SI Sle MMl<t
CltWIMCI 61 ,.. SMnle
Colunlbut.On 87 42 ~
Concold,N.H. 56 25 ~
Oellaie-fl Worth eo .., Syr-
o.ylon M 38 Topel&•
T\ICIOll
57 20
40 28
63 33 85 45
3l ,,
29 12
70 es
81 14
32 19
3.4 21
79 85
21 .()3
S4 28
39 18
69 45
ending et 6 • m today Eur ... o
f'tMtlO
l .ncut«
Los AllQ9Mll
Oellland
Redwood City Secr-10
Salll\U
Sen °"'00 Sen Ft enc:l9CO
S.,.te 9erbe••
Stooklon
43 29
St 48
52 41
53 38 51 37
52 42
59 !it
51 40 511 45
46 38
Extended
DenY« 30 12
0..Moln!lt 27 10 T\llte 61 32 114 49 Hlgl>, low, preclpllellon l0t 74 llout• Tides Oeltotl se 33 WMNl\glon
Oululll 15 .()9 Wld'llt1 43 21
fJPeeo 59 39 wi.. .. eena 68 38
F.itl>Mka u 20
f:wgo 03 -1& Surf report Aagelttll N 18
HeleM 03 -08
HonolUlu 82 73 L.OC•l'I<* ICZI! IHA.N Hou1lon 74 13
lndlanapolit 04 33 t1un11n91on 9eech 1·3 POOf
JIOklOfl,MI 77 51 RMlr Jetty. Newpon 1·3 POOf
J.cl<IO<Wll .. 77 58 40tt1 Sir.et. News>or1 1·2 POOf
JuMMi 28 20 22nd St1 .. 1, Newport 1 poor
KenueClty 39 17 llAIDoeWedg9 0 poor
Lee V-o• « 28 ~e..ct\ t POOf
Utile Roe* H 62 San Clemente l-3 POOf
l~ 68 40 W•ler 19f119. 64-6 7
MemCINI 74 04 Swell direction -.1~
CONTINUED STORIE S
ending •t 5 t> "' 6efatow
eige..r
8l9hop
81yt!M
C•leKn• long 8eMn
M OflfOvl8
Monl•9Y Ml ~ ~8eecll Onletlo
Palm Sprlngt
P...aent R'-1ikll s.,. S.nerdlno
Sen Gllltlel SenJoM
50 33 38 01
38 00 58 41
55 43
57 38
57 34
53 33
34 24
511 311
58 33
04 36
55 36
57 36 57 35
58 35 54 36
TOOAY s.oono high 8.4'pm. 3.8
Second low 1148 p.m 1.5
lftDHHOAY
Flttl higl'I 11·19 e.rn. 8.4 Ftul low 1:28 0"' 0.1
Secono llfOll 742pm 39
Son Mia today •I •·46 p.m . ,,_
wec1,_oay •• 8 &3 .. ,,,. end eet• •" al 4 470 m Moon Ml• et 1.58 ~m . ,,._ Weclnee·
day al 3.r.3 • m end Mia ~n •I 1.35
0"'
UCI CUTS ENROLLMENT EARLY •..
From Al
UCI officials said the campus
enrollment is limited by a shorta~e of
teaching space. This year the univer·
sity had to rent nearby movie theater
auditoriums for some classes because
of a shortage oflecture halls.
and books at a UC campus are
estimated at $6,000 a year. The
annual cost at a private university
may be as much as SI 5.000.
Also contributing to the UC appli-
cation surge is an increase in students
Dunning ' attributed the overall seeking to go directly to a UC campus
surge in applications 10 a widespread from high school, rather than attend-
view that "a UC education is trul y ing a community college or other
about the best bargain in the world." institution for their first two years.
UC campuses ~r~ nat~onally ~e-Freshman applicants who are not
cognized for providing high-q~hty accepted at their first-choice UC
education. but the cost of attend\ng is . ca mpus are usually "redirected" to s1g~1tic~n tl y less than that of pnvatc less crowded campuses such as River-
univ.ers1t1es such as Stanford and side and Santa CruL.
USC · Dunning said UCI has reserved
Expenses for tuition. room. board space to accept some redirected
PIER COST OVERRUN •••
From Al
said freshman City Counci lman Peter
Green who voted against the ad-
d1t1onal money. ''A 33 percent over-
run is almo~ like Pentagon budget-
' ng." he said. The cnd--0f-1he-p1er prOJCCt. which
mcludes a cafe and second-story
meeting rooms to be operated by the
city. was targeted for completion in
Juni: to cap1tahLc on the su mmer
tourist trade
But st was bitterly opposed b)
regular pier v1sttors and busmess
people who sought a single-story cafe
and who adamant I)' opposed the two-
stol) design.
In a report to City Council mem-
students in the fields of fine ans.
humanities and social ecology.
One significant finding in the UCI
application process was the large
number of Asians students seeking t<>
enroll. Dunning said one-third of
nex t fall's freshman class at UCI will
be Astlln. a higher percentage than at
any other UC campus.
Many of these Asian students are
from Indochinese families who have
relocated to Orange County in recent
years. UmversitY. officials say many
of these families place strong
emphasis on education. and the
students have performed well enough
in high school to qualify for the UC
system.
bers. City Administrator Charles
Thompson said costs to reinforce the
70..year-old wooden pier to accom-
modate the new building were higher
than e.>.pccted.
The old end-of-the-pier cafe that
sruod for three decades at the end of
the end vf rhe L830-foot structure,
was destroyed during the storms in
March of 1983 when huge waves also
ripped out decking. railing and ptl·
in gs.
COMPUTER AGE ENTERS SCHOOLS ...
From Al
The money will be used as part ofa
nationwide revolution to slowly re-
place the chalkboard with computer
terminals, and send children home
wtth videotaped lessons as well as
textbooks.
Educators arc looking to the day
when many instructors will spend
their time iohowing students .how..to.
use computers rather than actually
teaching a subject.
"The instructors would become
fac1htators. resource specialists.
rather than actual teachers,'' Orozco
said.
Computers could some day make
up for the shortage of teachers in such
arcac; ac; math and science. she mused .
own shows, and miniature news--
hounds at Haven View Elementary
will keep classmates informed with a
monthly newscast, said Gayle
Wayne, Ocean View administrative
assistant.
Teachers at Haven View will also
be spotlighted 1n a project lo
videotape cJassroom lessons as
models for fledgling instructors.
"We'll be taping model lessons so
that other people can see how teach·
ing is done well.'' said Wayne.
Members of the Educational Tech-
nology Committee are keeping an eye
on these and other projects around
California. hoping for the successes
that will convince legislators to
allocate more grant mone y.
"We have to let them know
computers in the classroom is some·
th ing that makes a difference: for
kids." said Frank Wallace. executive
secretary to the committee, urging
parents to write state representatives.
··A few teardrops on the letter could
help:' joked committee member Jack
Hill. during a public committee
meeting earlier this month in Costa
Mesa.
With a S 15 million budget for fiscal
1984-85, the committee is asking
Gov. George Dcukmejian to push ,
that figure 10 $43 million as part ofhis
proposal for lhe state budget next
year. The governor is scheduled to
unveil his spending plan in mid·
January. That v1'11on ic; becoming a reality
tor c;chnnl<, throughout Cahforn1a. ,.......-----------------------------
and l'Spcc1all) along the Orange
( oa-.t. where robots will soon teach
children basic computer logic.
Cox Elementary School in Foun-
tain Valley will spend part of its
$8,000 1n grant money to buy three
rohots. including a mechanical turtle.
Bob Vanderpool. director of rur-
ncutum for the Fountain Valley
School D1stnct. said children would
learn ·•problem-solving" techniques
by creatmg computer programs to
maneuver the robots.
Etsewhctt in the district, Tamura
Elementary School students will take
'i1muta1ed trips along "the Oregon
Trail" via computer. They'll face the
<;amc dilemmas that plagued 19th
century pioneers traveling the 2.000-
mitc course from the Missouri River
to the tolumbia Ri ver in Oregon.
"Thi~ program moves social Stud·
1es out of the textbook and into
application." Vanderpool said.
"We're looking in terms that com-
puters wtu-tak. the place of work
books They'll become an 1mponant
pan of education where we now u~
the blnckboard."
Also in Fountain Valley. Plavan
Elemenrnry School i!i plannma to
adapt its computer equ1pmenr so
handicapped students can also use
the terminal~.
The Ocean View School District in
lluntrngton Beach ts tapping another
resource that has been around for tl
while, but until lately wa$ too cx-
pcn~ive and too cumbersome: tclc-
co1nmun1cations.
With "idcot.'\pina equipment be-
coming lighter and smaller. as well u
less costly, children and teacher alike
are call1ng for .. Jighrs. camera, ac-
tion."
Ncx1 yenc, Hope View Elementary
School ~tudcnt will produce their
'
ril e Perfcc l t:xeculive Cifl
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. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
w
••
A Costa Mesa student
fighting cancer spent his
-Ghrfstmas-gfft on-hls-
frlends./ A3
Callfomla
California oil firms,
among others, are ac-
cused of price fixing that
may have cost consumer
millions./ A6
Nation
Soviet second-In-com-
mand says it's United
States' move for success-
ful arms talks./ AS
Reagan likely to pare
defense budget cuts over
three year period .I A4
World
Iran says It will prosecute
four hijackers accused of
killing two Americans
aboard Kuwaiti jet./ A4
A fourth 'naval target' has
been blt In the Pec.&Jan
Gulf./A4
Mlnd&Body
Teaching children
resposlbility Involves
more than making them
t ake out the trash.81 ·.
Sports
The Rams will face the
New York Giants Sunday
at Anaheim Stadium in
the NFC wild card play-
offs./C1
Marina, Estancia, Irvine,
Costa Mesa and Saddle-
bacKwf n openmg round
of Irvine basketball tour-
nament./C1
The U.S. Davis Cup team
shows it Is no match for
Sweden./C3
Entertainment
Nell Sim on's auto-
biographical characters
are in the Army now In
"Biloxi Blues." /84
Buslneaa
Nineteen eighty four will pe a record year for
leasing of office space In
Orange County ./85
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
82
88
A3
FIRST EDITION •
terc
ersvicti ·e ID
Coast
Jews
-celebrate
freedom
Hanukkah recalls
history's first fight for
freedom of religion
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
OftheDellyNottgfl
Jews along the Orange Coast and
around the world tonight will light
cand les to mark the beginning of
Hanukkah, an eight-day celebration
of religious freedom.
The festival commemorates a vic-
tory by Jewish warriors over Syrians
who had defiled the Jewish Temple in
Jerusalem in 165 B.C. during an
attempt tostampout the religion. The
word Hanukkah means "dedication"
· andreferstothereclaimingofthe
Temple.
The key symbol of the holiday is the
menorah, a nine-branch
candleholder. It holds one candle for
each night of the festival, plus a
"shamash" or caretaker candle used
to light the others.
According to Jewish tradition, only
a small amo unt of sacred olive oil was
discovered for use in an eternal flame
when the Jewish Temple was reclaim-
ed from the Syrians. =fhrough-a--
miracle, however, the one-day supplr
burned for eight days until new ritua
oil could be prepared, the Hanukkah
storysays ..
To mark the event, con tern porary
(Please eee HANUKKAH/ A2)
I
. -Surgeons
remove
wrong
kidne_y
Huntington man, 64,
seeks dam-age~from
Long Beach hospital
By tbe A11oclated Pre11
A Hunttngton Beach man who
underwent surgery for removal of a
diseased right kidriey and emerged
from the operation minus his lef\
kidney is entitled to monetary com-
pensation from the hospital and the
medical team that made the alleged
error, his lawyer said Monday.
Lawyers for Harry Jordan, 64,
argued in Los Angeles Superior Court
that Long Beach Community Hospi-
tal was negligent, along with several
individuals and medical groups.
Jordan's suit alleges negilgence and
conscious disregard for the safety of a
patient in the No~~2 oper-
ation.
"He was thought to have cancer of
the right kidney. and they took out the
lef\ kidney," said attorney James l'iili'iil~nttng Jordlm.
fie said Jordan had a tumor "the
(Pleue eee KJDIUY /A.2)
Relatives of three
Viejo women wa:nt
murder accusation
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... Dtllr~--
Relatives of three Mission Viejo
women killed Sept. 10 in a hQd-on
collision near Huntington Harbour,
say they arc angr'y that the womaD
blamed for the deaths bam't been
charged with murder.
Krm Lamell Muprby, the tOle
survtvor of
· the two-<:ar
accident ,
was orde~
Monday to
stand trial
for felony
m a n -
slaugher and
drunken
driving..
.. We ' re
very angry
that murder
charges MUl!b
weren't filed," said Darrell Ut·
terbaclc, . the brother of one victims.
"I'm not angry at her (Murphy); we
just want justice."
State law permits the filing of
second-degree murder c~ in
cenain fatal accidents, usually tftbcre
is alcohol or dru~ involved
Murphy, an Oxnard resident wbo
was liv10g in H11otington Beach at the
time of the early morning accident,
allegedly allowed her car to drift into
the opposite lanes of Pacific Coast
Highway neat the Anaheim Bay
bndge. striking the Fiat in which the
three WO!DeO were rid.ins. -· ·med tbUi_~es o
Dawn Joy Utterback.. l ~ Deborah
Lee Slemmons, 20, and OiaM Mae
Druckrcy, 21. All were pronounced
dead at the accident scene.
Rabbi Mendel Dachman of Cbabad of Ir·
vine Jewt.h Center lights the first candle of
Dtllr,.. .... ~'--~
the Hanukkah menorah u daqhter Sarah,
3, lookaon.
Murphy. confined to a wheelchair
(Ple.a.ee eee R.ELA TIVE8/ A.2)
Dead inmaLe ' &files turned
over to Gates after hearing·
Sheriff Brad Gates
By JEFF ADLER
Of .... 0.-, ..........
An Orange County Superior Court
judge ordered the county Health Care
Agency on Monday to tum over a
dead jai1 imnate'si>svchfatric files to
Sheriff-Coroner Brad Gates.
As expected, Judge Everett Dickey
directed that inmate John Ray Step-
henson's mental health ffiesbe fumed'
over to the coroner's office following
a brief courtroom hearing.
Gates sought the confidential re-
cords as part of a coroner's investiga-
tion into Stephenson's death. Step-
henson died in his celJ Nov. 6,
apparently after he severed an anef)
in his arm with a jail-supplied razor.
Stephenson's tnentaT nealih ·re-
cords touched off a dispute that
prompted the Board ofSupen isors to
ask for a review of the possibility of
dividing the sheriff-ooroner's office
into separate functions. Gates heads
both.
Since state law requires an inmate's
mental health records remain con--
fident1al , a co\Inty mental he<b
team refused to tum them over to-jail
officials as requested several days
after Stephenson's death.
However. a Jail official oonfi.seatelt'
the documents and ordtnd the
mental health team out of the jail
Since the incident. Gates, in his
role as coroner. bas said the record$
are essential m d~terminina what
~Lrleue Me GATSS/Aa)_
Mesa setting sights on arena bands
City hopes to l;>rtng pressure on performers
toquiet rock 'n ·roll noise at Amphitheatre
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of .... Delly ..........
"The Pretenders" rock group could
be among the first performing acts
caught in a new legal strategy by Costa
Mesa officials-to Jorce down the
volume at the Pacific Amphitheatre.
The City Council voted unani-
mously Monday to brinJ charges a~inst performers violau og Costa
M sa's mocbodisputed noise ordi-
nance.
A11d_City Attorney Tom Wood
recommended that Costa Mesa
launch its latest legal maneuver by
prosecuting "The Pretenders" and
other rock 'n' roll performers surpass~
ing noise limits during the
amphitheatct'.s _pa.st season. which
ended in November.
Jn a report to the council. Wood ·
sin~led out the raucous band as the
"worst offender" for the 1984 season.
referring to a Sept. 4 concert that
sparked 103 noise complaints from
nearby residents ..
One angn n:s1drnt stormed a Cit~ po<is1ble s111-month Jail sentence.
Council mee11ng that night. l.Om-"h1le infractions arc punishable by a
plaining the decibel level near the $100 fine for the first offense.
open arena was "ungodly " Monday's action added a new twisi
"Such performers have escaped · to the legal battle between the city and
any repercussions for ha.vmg v1ola~cd amphitheater owner Ned-West lnc.
the city's noise ordinance and causing over the noise spilling from the
1he disturbance in surrounding neigh· 18.bOO-~t facility at the Oran,e
. borhoods, .. Wood said, m his latest Count) Fairgrounds.
rt Prev1ousl~ Costa Mesa has aimed repo . He was not sure when the com-. its auack at ed-West and officcn of
plaints would be filed at Harbor the company. Now. ·the city is
Municipal Court in Newport Beach. targeting perfonners. who may be
or 1f the violations would be pros-unaware they arc brcak10g loca1 laws·
ecutcd as misdemeanors or infra • dunng concerts.
uons. • The new tactic could hamper the
Conviction on a m1sder.1c3nor amphitheater's ability to book top
cames a $1.000 penalty. and a (PleueeeeMUA/A.2)
Bulletin Board
Business
California News
Classlfled
·Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
BS-6 c~i State grants ~atch Coast
TONY
~SAAVEDRA
$250,000
.___fi~orpier __
etp Yourself
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Mind and Body
Mutual Fund&
Nat1onal News
Opinion
Paparazzi
C6 ~~U-1-: studfilits wit-h.-computers
P&ay Review
Pollc4a Log
Public Notices
Sports
,.
Stock Marketa •
Tetevtslon
Theaters w .. t•
World News
82
81-2
86
A4
A7
81
94
A3
C4
C 1-3
87
82
83-4
A2
A4
Hands-on projects from robots to videotapes
will be offered via f uturfstlc Coast programs
Some Fountain Valley tudcnts
wtll be able to hone their computer
skill s ncllt year by playina wtt h a
robot turtle named "Fred."
Meanwhile. computer cquipmcnt
at another Fountain Valley school
wlll be modified fur physially handi-
capped chi!drcn.
nd in Huntington Beach. youn.a
scholars will keel> abl"cast of current
events by produc1na videotaped
nc~asu to be hown at monthJy
asi;cmbhes_
Such are the futuristic P!ottams
bema funded with the S249.32'4 in
state educational ttthn.ofo&y srants
unofficially awarded this month to Oranac Coa t schools.
The state-Educa1ional Ttthnok>Jy
Committee llVCJ)ttliminary ap-
proval on OCc. 7 (or S9 mllhon 1n
statc"(idc aranu Oranac ounty 1
expected to collect S 732.600, wt th a
lar&e chunk aoina to school alona the
OnmatCoa t
The ranu must still be appro"ed
by the state Board of Education 10
January. Bw that vote is tcnttally a
formality, ac:icordin, to Linda Or-
ozco, one of the two oc.tl repttwnta·
tavcs on the I J..mtmbtt t~bnology
oommitttt. :
Tht aroup was fo~ed by mte lqislaton in I 83 to clp-.dminutcr
state fun<lina fot com w education
and telccommunicaa on an public
schools. 1
Orozco, •!so cdlkauonal tech·
noloa> coordinator for the county
Department of Ed1JCat1on. said about
272 proJccts were sdbm1tted for tht
7S Oranac County .,.ants.
"That was a tot more th.an wt
tllptttM." l'lt said .. Wt had more
News BACK GROUND
than half or tht pubhc 'IChools tn
Oral\JC County apply:· ·
Schools alona the Oran c Coast
&lrMrecf 28 or the arant n1ne of
them ao•na to can V 1c hool
Dmrict, ac~·tn to c.,,on-Mcsa
Unified bool 01 tr'ict. fhc to lrv•nc
Unified School Oistnct. thttt to
Founia10 Valk hool Di tnct.
thrtt to Huntmaton Bttch Umon
H-ah I Ot lnC't and ont to
Hunlln.gton Beach Ctt) • hoot D1s-
tnC'l.
(Pleue eee COMPUTER/ A2)
't
building
appro:ved
By ROBERT BAHE.ft ................
Lamba tin.a city adounistntibft ot-
fic1at for dcla)'$ and cost ovemans..
Hunllt\llOn BeacJl council members
it\1dc}n&Jy . ~ Monday niaht to borrow llSO, to complete a coi\-
trovcriiaJ buiJdlna at the end of the
city"s p~r
"ThLs proJoet shoukS be tcak:la
dowt'I to fit tinan availabk."
~-Pall/A2)
. . . . .
CoNTINUEu S 10R1Es
A Hl.lntinaton Beach man and a
Wtstminatcr couple wt'tt found dead
Monday aAcmooo m 1 mountain
cabin that apparcolly bad filkd with
carbon monoxide fumes from a
propane stove.
I he nct1ms wtrc identified a
Roberi Men:-uno, 21, of Huniinaton
&ac.b aDd Don.aid Bullu 23, and ha
wife hem, 2'4. both of WtStm1ns1er,
accorclina to San Bernardino C-0unty
sheritrt pokesm1n JiS'I 81)'1nt.
r
MESA TO TAKES ON BANDS •.•
.~Al
f ~It 'n' roU ecu by di1eourt&U\& the ollictal bas bown some cooetm o ver
>rrformen. wbo may have to lower the ba~ publictty generated by the ! "'~c volume oo their equipment or noise dispute with the city.
• 6 ce proteeution. Ip Auau t, P•CJfic Amphitheatre \ "ll would definitely affect book· Gencnal Manager Steve Redfearn
: ·~·" said M~ Anoe Campaa.na, charged that com~tltorut the Irvine
: "The Pretenders· m,anaaement ass1s-Meadows amphitheater were using
• 'unt in the Uruted States ... It sounds media accounb of the noise battle to
!.1ikethis(ac11on)isao1niab11toofar." discourage rock star Bruce Spnng·
: C'lmPaif\a said she has learned stccn from po sibly bringiog his tour
: • fi fllhand thu some rock aroups to Coi.ta Mesa. Springsteen ended up
, would rather Sidestep arena with appearing seven niaht last fall at the
• · · I · Sh · d Los Angeles Sports Arena. • stnnaent noise "9u ataons. e saa Costa Mesa official• said their : ~~The Pretenders' turned down her . . .. idea to play at the Hollywood Bowl latest tactic not intended to sway
durina their recent tour because of 'performers away from the
sunilar noise ttstncuons. ampb1tbcater but to make them consider nearby residents whale pcr-
"A lot of bands don't play there forming.
anymore," she said. "Anybody that comes an to town
• Stan Seiden, We$t Coast chief of and plays ouaht to know we have a
• • operattons for Ned· West, said he noise oroinanC4:," Wood said.
: "seriously doubted" that Costa Anorneys fol" Ned-West Inc. were
· Mesa's plan would endanger booking unavailable for comment.
· at the amphalh~ter. In a separate action. the oouociJ
;. But at least one amphitheater also voted unanimously to seek a '. ' .
coun order rcqumog Ned-Wea.t Inc.
to apply for a caly entertainment
permit. As part of ab o naoina attack.
the city beefed up 1t entertaJnment
ordananc.c an September. requiring
that nil businesses fcaturina live or
recorded mui.1c be licen~.
To reccavc that permit, Ned-West
must guarantee that It would adhere
to Costa Mesa laws regulatins noise.
traffic, building. zoning, parking and
sccunty
The company h8$ so far balked at
Coi.ta Mesa's ordinances. saying the
amphitheater is on state-owned prop-
c:n y and therefore. exempt from
regulation hy the city.
That question of "sovtrcign im·
mun1ty" has stalled the legal battle,
whale the city and Ned-West await an
answer from a state appellate court.
MeanwhjJe, \WO misdemeanor
charges apinJt Ned·West, a lawsuit
by the company ag:unst Costa Mesa
and a cros.s-complamt by the city
remain in limbo.
.,~ ...... ~~ .................................................................... ..
tr PIER COST OVERRUN ••• ~ r From Al
said freshman Cny Councilman Peter
' Green who voted against the ad·
ditaonal money. "A 33 percent over-
run is almost like Pentagon budget-
ing," he sajd.
• The end-of·the-pier project, which
includes a cafe and second-story
-1CCting rooms to be operated by the
ctty, was targeted for completion in
June to capataJizc on the summer
tounst trade.
But it was bitterly opposed by
regular pier visitoN and business
people who sought a single~story care
and wbo adamantly opposed the two-
'itory design.
lo a report to City Council mem-
bers. City Administrator Charles
T hom pson said costs to reinforce the
70-year-old wooden pier to accom·
modate the new building were higher
than expected.
The old end-of-the-pier cafe that
stood for three decades at the end of
the end of the 1,830-foot structure,
was destroyed durina the stonns in
March of 1983 when huge waves also
npped out docking. railing and pil-
ings.
After that, Thompson proposed
building a two-story, copper-roofed
building. He said rental fees paid to
th e ci ty for use of the second-story
faci lities for such things as reunions,
conventions and wedding ~pt1ons
could easily pay for costs.
Mayor Ruth Bailey said Monday
ni&ht she was "very unhappy" about
delays and overruns.
"lfthe others (on the councll) knew
what the costs would be for the l wo-
slory building they probably would
vote against it like I did." she sa id
"These delays and extra costs looks
lake we've beeo duped," Councilman
Bob Mandie said. Mand1c said he
w1&nted a timetable put in writing and
then followed. "Or next 1jmc I'm
going to vote 'no' against any damned
thing put in front of me."• ·
City Administrator Thompson
said com for the building arc pegged
at $225,000 but a new sewer lift
station and the need for other services
boost the cost to $2.S0,000.
A total of $776.810 has already
gone into the project. Insurance
rei mbursement provided $426,810; a
grant from Orange County Harbors
and Bcachs supolied $200,000 and
the state C.OSw Conservancy loaned
$1 S0,000. Monday's action called for
an additional loan of $250.000 from
the conservancy.
' w• :.~ ................................................................................... ..
.. HANUKKAH CELEBRATES FREEDOM ••.
· :'•romAl , .r .. 1'
Jews light one candle on the firc;t nigh t
of the kstaval. two candles on the
•.second nigh t and so fonh.
"•, Other ~anuk.kah trad1t1ons in·
· :•elude the distribution of"gelt"
(money) to children, the eat mg or
potato fritters called "latkes" and the
use of the dreidcl , a lop-lake toy
Although 1t 1sa well-known and
-....... ,.,.. ctycctcbratcdfcsnval, Jewr.ih
leaders say Hanukkah docs not ha ve
, the spiritual significance ofholy days
. 1uchasYom K.ippurorPassover.
"Hanukkah is primanly a home
holiday,'' said Rabbi Stephen Eins-
tein ofCongregation B'na1 Tzcdek in
Fountain Valley. He said 111s a post·
, · biblical holiday whose observance
was not ordered m the Jewish Torah
"It's a folk fesll val. reall y, .. he said
"But there's an 1mportan1 message
• 1• that underlies the fun . It com-
memorates the first fight for religious
freedom in human history "
Einstein said he plans to speak on
this issue at a Sabbath service Fnda>
ni&ht. pointing particularly to Jews in
Etluop1a who are being pc~cuted
because of their religion
That theme was also emphas11ed
by Cantor Alan Wcincr ofTemple Bat
Yahm ofNewpon Beach.
··Hanukkah celebrates the import·
a nee ofreligious freedom for Jews
and for all people," Weiner said.
"L1ght1ngofthe candles is keeping the
hght oftrad1t1on alive. keeping the
·flame of freedom burning."
. Although Hanukkah as technicall y
·•minor Jewi h festival. its~l
ebrat1 on has become more prom1 ncnt
because 1t occursdunng the
GATES ...
From Al
1..auscd Stephenson\ death
But count> Health (arc Agency
Director Robcn Lo ve o;a1d he would
turn over the doc uments only if
d1rt<.'ted by court order
In an agreement reached last week.
• both county offi cials agreed to JOHllly
leek a court order mandating the
•• rc<.ords' releue prov1d1ng the eon-
ten t<i remain confidential
The courtroom proceeding. dunng
wluch the sealed packet ofdocumcn1s
· wu I urned over to a representative of
the coroner's office took le!l!l than fi ve
mln"tes.
Christ mas season.
In many Jewish homes. thed1s-
tnbution of"gelt" has turned into an
exchange of presents. In add1uon,
many Jews place colorful Hanukkah
decorahons in thcirhomesjust as
C'hnst1ans ad om their homes for
Chnstmas.
Some Jewish Icade~ say th e trend
1s not n«essarily41Sturban~u.se
Jews are talung pride in their own
trad1t1on and arc using Hanukkah as
an opportunity to 101n in a season of
widespread merriment
"Hanukkah has grown 1n import·
ance bccauseofthe ti me of year in
"'h1ch 11 ex.cur'> ... Cantor Weaner <>aid
"Because we ll V'C'1n a mixed society,
Jc"s want to feel they have~
significant holiday at nllS lime of
year But wcdon't want toempha\11e
that 1t isa matching of one (holiday)
against the other. People JUSI want to
feel good al th as tJme"
Followangare some special Hanuk·
kah acti vi11es planned b} local sy n-
agogues:
•Chabad oflrvine Jewish Center
4872 Royce Road, Irvine, hassched·
ulcd a Hanukkah Adult Bingo Night
beginnangat 8 p.m. today at the
cente r
The center will sponsor a Grand
Hanukkah Rall y-Extravaganza on
Sunday. It begins at 2 p.m. with a
children's program featuring clown<..
gamesandrefreshments At4pm .
the rally moves to the Woodbndgc
Shopping Mall, 4600 Barranca
Parkway. Thelighlingofa 30-foot
high menorah will take place there at
4.30 p.m. Music will be provided by a
children 's choir and an orchestra. and
refresh men to; will he 41ervcd.
The Woodbridge Village Asc,oc1a-
ti on. in cooperation with the C habad
Center. will hold its Hanukkah Chil-
dren's Part) at 7 p.m. Dec. 25 at the
South Lake Beach Oub, 2 Blue Lake
South. Irvine. For reservations. call
Lynda Robbins, 786-6968, or the
Woodbridge Village Assoc1at1on Rec·
reauon Department, 786-1800.
•Temple Isaiah of Newport Beach.
-240LlLYineAve., will conduct a
Hanukkah Potluck Panyat 6:30 p.m.
Saturday at the temple. Tbeda1ry
d1nnerw1ll be followed by entertain ·
mcnt provided by th e Landmark
Performers Donatio n 1sS3 per
person For rc!)erva11ons. call
548-6900or646-7 5 I 2
•I he Jewish ( ommun1tyCcntcr
of'>outh Orange Count}. 298 Hroad-
wa>. Laguna Beach. will offer a
Hanukkah ccle brauon at 7:30 p.m
Wednesday at the center. The eve-
ning will fea ture stones, songs. dance
and refreshments. Dona lion is $2 for
membersandS3.50 for non-mem-
bers. w11'h children admitted free For
rec,crvat1 ono;, call 497-2070 or
lS33-IO l 7
•Temple Bat Yahm. 1011
( amelback Ave . Newport Beach,
will conduct 1tsannual Hanukkah
fa mily servi ce at 7:30 p.m. Frida}'. led
b) Ra bbi Mark S. Miller and Cantor
Alan Weiner The temple's Junio r and
adult choirs will participate. Each
fa mily 1s invited to bnng 1tsown
menorah wnh five candles lOJOln in
thecandle-hgh11ng ceremony.
•Congregation B'na1T1cdek, 9669
Talbert Ave .. Founta in Valley. will
dedicate the temple''lncw library
dunng Hanukkah Sabbath service~
be~anningat 8: 15 p.m Fnday. Re·
Ii gm us school students wi ll pa n1c1-
pa1c in Hanukkah panic~ on <iun da y
KIDNEY LAWSUIT ...
From Al
s11e ofa softball" on h1'i nght kidney,
hut that doctors read the X-ra>
backward and 100)( out tht' len kidney
1n"iteud.
After the wrong kidney wa11 re-
moved. Jordan went to l ICLA ~-frd1-
cal (enter an December 1982 and had
most of the right one taken out.
PagJ1uso said in a telephone interview
Monday
Jordan's health ha\ detenora1cd
'lance then and he had to ~II h1\
insurance bus1n<.·s,, the attorney said.
He said doctor~ have made con·
01cting statemen t~ about who put up
the X-rays on viewer<, prior to
Jordan's surgery.
One defense attomc> adm11ted in
court Monday that the wrong kidney
was re moved. but said the kidney that
was extracted at Long Beach Com·
mun 1ty showed some small signs of
cancer
What do you llkt about tht 011 ll y ~llot" What don't you like? Call the ""us t Call number., lt fl and your menagt wlll he rf'C'Orded, lran1ertbed Ind d,,llvered cJ I to lb.-appropriate t dltor.
Tbt tame 14-bour answering n rviee may be uud to record lt'tters to the
edtcor on any topic. Contrlbutora to our Letters column must lnC'lude tbtlr 642-6086 name and telephone number for vulfleatlon. No elrt'ulatlon call1 , pltHt.
----Tell us what'• on youunlnd.
Mol*Y '"°"" • • "' dv nol ~ your P4Sl"t by •JO pm c..-... f()le l pm
and '°" (Qpr .. ~
tleHrO.y AM ...,., I
' yow 00 ""' ,..,.,.. •vt CCIPI' Doy , • "' .,..,,., io a m Miii ~ etoOY ,... .....
Clrouletfon
T .. •phonM
"'°"' °'919'~ At-......
J
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H.l . Schweru 111
Publisher
Frenk Zlnl Keren Wittmer
Managing Editor Advertising Director
ROMmety Churchman
Controller
Aobefl Centrell
Production
Manager
Oonetd L. WHH•m1
Circuta t1on
Manag r
---
Clrcul•tlon 71•1142-4333
Cle•elfled MIYerttelng 714/142·5171
AH other «Mpartmente M2-'321
MAJH OFFICE
JTJ Yt ~f St (,.. · te Mew Clo
Me<I llCld<M• "'1• t~ ta M.W r lo ~,?iJ;rn
Cttf;.,,..n 11163 Oter111t Coeal Pw>Ww-u ~ He
"'I'#\ ltCI'"" ..,_trlltfA _,,.,..t INtfl• OI .,,_,,..
""""'' """" m.tr IMI ftf,l~..O w t!Qii -I Der .-. of ("'11'9'•1 -
VOL. n , NO. 353
It
A wtn'" tlorm tdgtd Into South9fn Cellfornta today,
1pawnlng •hower• lua1 tn time t0< ruah hour Ind promltlng mOf'•
Wtdnetday att• an overnight t>rMk Tha National Weal!Mr Servie. predlct41d a 40 s>«ctnt
chance of rain W41dneaday •• 11\9 Callfornla-bred 1torm mo-..ct Inland
TIM ttorm wu tbout 400 ml ... off tl\9 ~trtf Calltomta
co .. 1 eany today, with tt\91 .. dlng edge moving Into tl\9 balk\ It
waa a)(pac'ed to boo•t rain total• In th• Loi Angela buln by up
to a half-Inch, and three-quarters to an Inch In the mountatna,
fOfecMttr Bob Gr•b9 Nld today.
Hlghl WedMlday will b9 In ttwt eoa In lo• Angeltia and 'IM mid-to upper 50a In tlM valleys. Lowa tonight wlll b9 In th9 uppet 30• to 40a, TIM f0<eca1t along th• Orange Cout call• tor contkHlrab .. cloudlnua Wedn411day with a chance ol rain again Continued
coot wlah hlgha In th• mid 501 to tow 60s Not quite•• cold tonight
with Iowa In the UPPI' 301 and 40a. l!JJ1J!hb.~.~-~-"'O•HS '41111 '-m ~fr/~ we1m-Coio.,.. MPl9·SI Plllil 11 02 Temps ltlllhvllle .... o.i.n.
HI Le .....,Ven
TO
74
11
11
65
50
Snow11• ~ '"""" Snow Oc:c:lvdea .. St•hona1y a.p
liltllONI ,,,,.,_ 5-o<• ..04.t u $ Ootol ... ~ •
~ M 30 Nottolll. v. f7 ..
Allillq-que ~ :IO OkhlhOIN CUy " 21
AUtnta 12 && om.,,. 21 oe
AllMllQ Coy 14 51 C)rlando T7 IO
Awtln 70 14 PNladelpltle 57 31 Calli. Tempe
PhoeniA ...tlmor. ea 45 14 45
Ill<~ 7 1 5A P1U~I\ 14 41 .... IOw pt.apt!""°" IOr 24 ,_,. Senta AN to 42
endll>g •i 6 • "' IQdey ., S6 80-ck o;s 2& POt1 ,Me 67 21
llo4• )() OJ Po.Uand.Of 'Cl 28
Botlon oi ,, P10""'-83 33
"1lllllO Ii 37 RliletQn 16 4a c-24 03 Awlo 31 11
Chel1oue.N C.: TO 4!'> s.ltl.alleC11y 2t 12 =.::-?I (M Sall AnlonlO 10 16
44 18 •en .JUtofl,P A ., 74
~II 97 42 St St1Mat1e 37 19
Cle..-ncl 81 :M Seetlle $4 2i
~°" 97 42 ~t ,, 15
Coftoold,N H !ii 15 Spoil-21 .()3
DllllM.Fl Worth eo 43 ay,_, .. ~ 21
~on ee JI T~ ae ,,
OM-30 12 Tue-. ee 46
Santa CNi E..,...1 63 40 tw-\lelley 32 10 ,.,.,,., 51 49 ..__. 43 2t
Loe AftO'lel 69 ,.
Extended .OM"'"° 52 41
Aedwood City 63 ,.
---0 51 17 A good Cllence OI tlln Thur.cley wllh ...._ 52 42 a.noieoo St 51 glllly ~ ,_ tl>e COMt Rain
..,.~ 6 t 'Cl eltdlnO 'r::1, beOOrnlno talr S.ur~ a...1.a.-. 55 45 ~ $5 10 Lowe In * 10 low
Stoa.ton .. H .,.,, """' ~ oolCler a.lurUy
"'O"*'O
O.Moin. 2T 10 Tl.tlM 61 32
WMfllnOIOll ... 4t High, io9. ~llOtl lor 24 f'IOU(I Tl dee Detroit M » DlAuctl IS .ot WIUlll• 43 2i
!IP-se " Wllll.,._B.,o• M M
hlrl>Mll.I 35 21 Fervo 03 .15 Surf report ~ se ti .... 03 -oe HonoMu 12 n LOC:A TIOtol llZI 8"AN Houelon 74 13 ~ 14 " Hw!llng1on BMcl\ t-3 poor
Jeckton,MI n 51 """-Jetty Newl)Of1 1-3 PoOt
Jtdl-.vttle n 61 .oth 81ree1, Hewpot1 1-2 poor
""'-2tl :IO 22nd StrMI, N-s><>n 1 PoOt
~City " 17 8elboeWeooe 0 poor
LaVeQM « 28 UO.-BMctl t poor
Ut119 l'loc;lc 74 57 s.nci.n-tt 1·3 poor
l.OUllMlle ee 46 Wal« t9"'9 64·S7
MenlPhlt 74 ... Swell Cll<ectlon eout,,_t
endlftO .. ' ' "' ..,.._ 50 " Ilg..., at 01 lilllcp ,. 00 TODAY
lllyllle 51 41 8econct NQll 1:43pm u
Catt!IM 55 43 '-'CllOw 11:'4f p.m u Lono...,. 57 ,.
-.,..IOAY ~ ST 34 Montetey 63 31 Fnlltlgll •1tam 84
Mt~ 34 24 Ar .. IOw 1:2t pm 01
Hewpor'l leeall 58 at 8econct Ngll 7!42pm 3t
Onlllilo 51 33
Palm Se>rinee ... 31 8"n 11111 loel'l:, et '4·'48 p m . 11.-
PtMdene 55 H Weclnlecley at I a_m end Nia egelrl
~ 5T ,. a1 .. 47 p"' ..,. llenwClinO 57 3S Moonwta et i Ill P-"' , .-w--. a.no... 6t 35 Orf ti 3.63 a "' encl .... IOllfl el 2,35 Swi Joee 54 ,. p.m.
CONTINUED STORIES
RELATIVES ANGERED AT CHARGE •.•
From Al
bccauseof1njuriessufTered dunng the
accident, fought back tears during the
hearing and wept openly as she was
wheeled from the courtroom past
relatives of the dead women.
Peter Brown, Murphy's attome}.
said his client suffered compound
fractures of both leg~. a punctured
lung, a broken Jaw and lo~t her spleen
Murphy nearly died fro m 1he inJune'>.
Brown said.
Brown confirmed that has client
was convicted or drunken dnving 111
July and that her dnver's lice nse had
been rc~tnctcd for 90 days, pcr-
mlllan g her to dnv(· onl y to and fro m
work .
He would not sa) where Mu rphy
wa) doving from or where she as
headed. He said his d1enl held several
JObs at the time. including working at
a restaurant.
During the two-hour prelammary
hearing in We~tm i nstl·r, Deputy D1s-
1nct Attorne} Arnold Wcc;tra re-
' caled that lah tc'>l showed the
prek ncc ol t<>eatnl' a' well a\ alcohol
1n Murph}·, \)Siem at the li me of the
acl·1dent
I c~ts plan ·d Murph) ·c; blood-al·
cohol level al 0 11 -JU'it over the
level at which a motorist 1s presumed
intoxicated. Westra did not speculate
whether the woman was actually
under the 1nOuencc o(cocaane at 1bc
lime.
Barbabra Slemmons. the mother of
one oft he victims, said the courtroom
disclosure was the first she'd heard
that cocaine mi~t ha ve been in-
'olved 1n th e accident.
"Nobody's told me anything about
what's going on ," she complained.
Slemmons sa id she had twice nown
from her home an Sacramento to
attend court hearings only to learn the
proceeding-; had bttn postponed.
Rick G ra ves. a Huntington Beach
man 1dent11ied as the only witness to
the accident, testifi ed that Murphy
wac; swerving and dri ving with her
bright headlight beams on just prior
to the accident.
"She kept coming up ~al fast
behind me and I was wo rried she was
gmng 10 hit me.'' Graves testified.
I le ~1d the woman eventualty
pa\-.ed him and accelerated quickly.
0ra' r~ estimated she reached speeds
up to 70 mph before the crash. which
he <le~rnbcd as "headhg.ht-Co-hud-
hgh1. ··
"I never saw any brake lights,"
Graves said. "There was just a puff of
smoke and then com plete darknes.s in
the night."
Graves said when he pulled up to
the accident there was "no so und, no
lights, no signs of life."
Seal Beach Sgt. Larry Sides, one of
the first officers on the scene, said he
detected the odor of aJcobol when he
leaned into Murphy's crushed sedan.
"I saw a female inside. She was
screaming, thrashing around," Sides
said.
Asked 1f he could identify Murphy
as the woman he saw in the wreckage,
Sides said he could not because the
woman he saw was so "damaged."
Murphy was ordered to appear for
arraignment in Superior Court in
Westminster on Dec. 31. A trial date
will be set at that time. Murphy is free
on SI 0.000 bail.
"This whole thing is very hard,"
said Darrell Utterback, who said he
was very close to his sister. "It harder
than anythins you can i)naginc. You
read about thinJS l_ike Otis but l never
would have believed it would feel lake
this."
COMPUTER AGE ENTERS·SCHOOLS ••.
From Al
The mone:r will be uo;cd as part ofa own shows, and m1n1ature new~ "We have to let them know
nat1onw1de revolution to slowly re· hounds at Haven View Elementary computers in the classroom 1s some-
place the chalk board with computer will keep classmates informed with a thing that makes a difTerenc.c for
terminals. and ~nd children home monthly newscast, said Gayle kids," said Frank Wallace, executive
with videotaped lessons as well a~ Wa yne. Ocean View administrative secretary to the commiftec, urging
textbooks assistant parents to write su.te representatives.
Educ~toro; are looking to 1he day Teachers at Ha ven View will also "Afewtcardropsonthelettercould
wh en many instructors will spend be spotlighted in a project to hclp,"jokcd committee member Jack
their time ~howing students how to "1deotape classroom lessons as Hill , during a ~ubhc committee
use computers rather than actually models for fledgling instructors. meeting earlier this mo nth in Costa
1eaching a "iubjcct. "We'll be taping model lessons so Mesa.
"The instru ctors would become tha1 other people can see bow teach-With a SIS million budget for fiscal
faci litator~. resource spcciah~ts. 1ng 1s done well," said Wayne. 1984-85, the committee is ukinl.
rather than actual teacher<..'' Oro1co Members of the EducationaJ Tech· Gov. George Ocukmejian to push
<>a id nology Committee arc keeping an eye that figure to$43 million as part of bis
Computer., could '>Orne du y make on these and other projects around proposal for the state budget next
up forthc i,hortagc of teacher~ in !>uch California, hoping for the sucoeues year. The governor is scheduled to
area., as math and science. 'ihc mused th3t will convince legislators to unveil has spending plan an mid-
fhat 'l\Wn 1'i becoming a realil> allocate more grant money. January.
for o;chool'> throughout California . .-----------------------------
and e'ipct:ially al<)ng th e Orange
Coast. \I.hen: robot'\ will soon teach
children ha\lc computer logic
Cox Elementary School 10 f oun-
tain Valley will spend pan of 11s
S8.000 in grnnt money to buy th ree
robots. 1ndudmga mechanical turtle
Boh Vanderpool, director of cur-
nculum for the Fountain Valley
School 01stnct, said children would
lcam "problem-solving" techniques
by creating computer programs to
maneuver lhe robots.
f.l41ewfi ere in the d1stnct. T,.amura
Elemental') School students will take
\1mula1cd tnps along "the Orcaon
Trail" vaa computer. 1 hey'll face the
<>ame dilemmas that plagued 19th
century pioneers traveling the 2,()()()..
mile course from the M1 soun River
to the Colum))1a Ri ver in Oregon.
"This proe,ram moves social stud·
1c\ out of the textbook and into
appltca11 on," Vanderpool ~aid
''Wc'rt looking In terms that com·
putcrs wall take the place of work·
book\. Thcy11f6Ceom~11n 1mponant
part or education whel'C.' we now use
the hlackboarJ "
Also in Poun1a1n Vullcy, Plavan
Flementary School 1s plann1na to
dapl ab computer equipment so
handicapped student'! can al o use
the terminals. .. -Tbe Occ~n VlewSChool Oaurfct In
Huntington Beach 11 t. ppin1 another rc~ul'<'e that has been around for a
while, but until lately ~a" too ex·
pcn11vc and too cumb(rsomc· telc·
communicataons.
With v1dcotapin1 equipment bC'-
comana ltiJltcr and mailer, as well a
lc\HOSll)-. children and teacheraaJikc
art' rnlhna ror "hf.ht' camera. ac·
1ion "
Nex1 year, Ho~ View Fh:mentary
~hool •tudenls wall 11roduc~ their
•
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