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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-12-28 - Orange Coast PilotTHE DIAllE Cllll c11m 1111111 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1982 on ANG [ COUN 1 y C A Lll OHNIA ")~J C [NT!> ·'Off-duty' cop parties probed By BOB BARKER Of'-.Delr ......... Top Huntinston Beach city officlala appeared to ~ reaclins cau\lou1ly to diaclo1ures that aeveral off-duty police officer• participated ln drink.in& aealons at the police firln& range. City Admlnistrator Charlea Thomp1on said Monday that evidence doesn't 1upport reports that the firing range was the aite of wild sex and drinking parties. He aald that his chief concern iJ that the good work of the ·s:iouce department isn't negated "by what a handful of off-duty police officers might or might not have done. "A half dozen individuals do not represent the entire department. Th~y shouldn't detract from the good work that 180 or 190 policemen do," he declared. "One can hear all kinds of wild stories and virtually none are true or are only half-true," he said. Thompson also sald that leaders of the Huntington' Beach Police Officers Association (9ld him they too had heard rwnon of the alleged goings-on at the ft.ring range. "They said they were as concerned as I was. They promised to put a stop to the activities if they existed and as far as I know they did put a st.op to them." Mayor Bob Mandie said he had heard rumors of the alleged parties but hadn't received any official reports and didn't plan any action. Police Chlef Earle Robitaille said an investigation he ordered revealed that eight or 10 police Dlllllr ............ Illy CMnee •tan Firing range that figures in police probe of officers' conduct is also open to the public. officers had consumed alcohol on firing range premises but that there was no misconduct. He said evidence didn't bear out rumors that sex parties had taken place there despite published reports to the contrary. Huntington Beach Police Office r Association Vice President James Austin said today that there is "no foundation al all" to rumors of wild parties by police. "It was just some off ·duty officers meeting there lo have a couple of beers after work. It's no different from a group of construction workers getting together at the end of their day," he aa1d. Austin satd he doesn't know lf off-duty officers are continuing to meet at the facility's clubhouse for beer. Another source pointed out that Robitaille may be in a sensitive position because the activities allegedly are taking place on property leased by the city to the police oftlcera &llOclaUon. The alleaed partie. occur after houn and on prtvate property, even thouah It'• located In a city park. The aource lndlcated there'• little the chief can do about the ao-called alleaed "bimbo-rama" meetings. The inve1tisatlon into happenlnp at the firing range acro11 Talbert Avenue from C-entral Park followed the death of 18-year-old Llla Garllch laat July 11 In a traffic accident near Parker, Ari%. Huntington Beach police officer John J . Blackwell, the reported driver of the vehicle, b scheduled to stand trial next month on charges of negligent homicide and leaving the acene of a aerioua accident, according to Arizona court officials. Blackwell was alleged to be at the firing range clubhouse at the time that alcohol waa being consumed, but the investigation' didn't reveal if he had been drinking, according to Robitaille. ' Robitaille said the officers met at the firing range to form a convoy to the Colorado River for a weekend outing. Arizona authorities reported that the fatal accident occurred on the two-lane State Route 95, about 10 miles north of Parker. The accident report said Blackwell's vehicle was going approximately 50 mph ln a 35-mile-an-hour zone when it failed to negotiate a curve and rolled over. Garlich and two other passengers were thrown out of the vehicle. (See COP, Page At) Prime rate falls to .11 percent 8 7 TM AsMelated Pre91 The prime rate fell to a 28-mmth low of 11 peft!ftlt toda)' at the nation's third-largest t.nk, • day after hopes tor lower interest rats propelled the atock tparket'a best-known indicator to a record high. Chue Manhattan Bank cut ita prime rate from the 11.5 percent level that bad prevailed since Nov. 22, JDOvina to a rate umeen aince Auaust 1980. The prime, upon which banka compute intereat charaea on short-term bualne. loans, hu been fallin8 since July, when lt atood at 16 percent. Two yean ago lt reached a record high 21.5 percent. The Dow Jones averag-: of. 30 industrtal stocks IW"pd ~ to 1,070.55 -a pin of 2~.48 polnta and the hlgbest closing ever, aurpuaina the l ,0&.49 of Nov. 3. The blah volume of tradina continued today on Wall Street. The Dow Jones average of 30 lnduatrial 1t.oclu had riaen 1.29 OC judges c onfirmed 2 -1 Deuk mejian casts "no" vote on appellate slate By JEFF ADLER Of tM 0.-, "°' ..... Orange County's new division of the state Court of Appeal waa put Into bualnesa Monday when tour county judges nominated to the appellate bench by Gov. Edmund G . Brown Jr. were confirmed by the state Commission on Judicial ~ppointmenta. Detplte a "no" vote cut by Gov.-elect George Deukmejian, one of the commission '1 three members, the four appointees to the new division of the 4th District Court of Appeal were approved 2-1 durins the panel's meeting in Loe Angeles. Minutes af1er the confirmation vote, state Supreme Court Chief Justice Rose Bird, a commission member, swore in justices John Trotter, Thomas Crosby, Sheila Sonenahine and F.dward Wallin. Also confirmed was Orange County Superior C.ourt Presidins Judge Robert RiCkles, to the seat in the San Bernardino division of the court being vacated by Trott.er. Trott.er, a superior court judge in Orange County before his appointment to the appellate court last April, will be the presiding judge of the court's new Santa Ana division. Bird was joined in voting for the confirmation of the five judges by Gerald Brown, a senior presiding judge of the 4th l District Court of Appeal and the commlsalon's thlrd member. Deukrnejian, who sits on the panel, as attorney general, aa.ld he voted against the five county jurists because they had reflaed to answer questions col'lC'erning their personal views on legal questions such as the death penalty. The questions had been sent to all appellate court nominees earlier this month. Ten other judges -includini the nomination of Joeeph Grodin to the 1tate Supreme C.ourt - were unanimously approved by the com.rniasion. Contacted after his (See JUDGF.S, Pase A%> point.a to l ,071.84 after three houra of tndlna. ln a new s1f!1 of the Federal ReRrve Board 1 concern about a pr'Olon&ed rec ur1on, the board's policy-makina arm baa decided to allow the teaer.J funds rate to drop further, accordlnf to minutes releued Monday o the group'• Nov. 16 meeting. The rate on federal funda ls what b8nlu charge e.ch other on overnight loans and is considered a key gauge of the price of money. A drop In the federal funds rate usually precedes, declines In other typea of Interest rates. The policy group, called the Federal Open Market Committee, also voted to allow somewhat more growth in a broad meuure of the money supply. The money 1upply already IS expanding far futer than the Federal Reserve had planned. But economiaW believe the Fed'• willlngne9a to pump more money lnto the economy la evidence of its concern that the rece11lon oould deepen unle. Interest rat.ea fall. The cut In the prime rate wu the first alnce major banks adopted an 11.5 percent rate on Nov. 22. .,.., .......... "'~ "~ This aceoe from the Gordon Bennett Balloon Race in Fountain Valley won't be. repeated next year a.a the event moves to Paris, the original site o( manned balloon fiiMhts. FV balloon race gets French flavor By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of the o.HJ l'tlol • ..,, The Gordon Bennett Balloon race, a popular Fountain Valley attraction for the past three years. will be launched elsewhere next spring. Debbie Fawcett , a spokeswoman for the race, said the 1983 Gordon Bennett will be held In Paris, France, next June to tie in with a French cel ebration of the 200th anniversary of the first manned balloon flight. The International contest will return to Southern Califonua an 1984 although a location has not been confirmed. Fawcett said it is likely to be held again in Mtle Square Park in Fountain Valley, although the race organizers have not ruled out other sites. The Gordon Bennett Balloon Race, named for New York Herald Tribune publisher Jame. Gordon Bennett, was first held in 1906. The race continued through 1938, when it was halted by World War II Rolling Hills physicl1t and balloonist Thomas Heinaheimer revived the competition In 1979, holding the first modem Gordon Bennett near the Queen Mary in Lons Beach In 1980, the festival waa moved to Mile Square and has returned there the past two (See BALLOON, Page A%) Rent hike .puts h er in bind want to get them angry. But 1 am in a jam," she said, pausing before adding, "I guess It's worse than a jam.'' With a recent ralse of $12, Leonard receives $451 a month ln dl1ablllty. She has a live-in housekeeper of nine years who is paid throuih Social Security and a brother who aometimea drope off arocertea. Last year, ahe explained, her rent WU raJ.led from $321 to $380 a month. She aid owners of the park -the De An:ra Corp. of I....o, Anaelea -liter reduced the rent to '351. But a of next week, her rent la aotna up to "418 a mbnth. "Every year it 1•ta a little harder. You could MY I've aone from 'losing sround' to 90methins like 'sin.king fast'." ~ she did last year, Leonard hu filled out a hardship form asking owners to dlacount her • rent. She aald the ownen have agreed to let her aJ'1l\le her cut sometime next month. Owners of the mobile home park did not return phone calla an<l, In the paat, have no\ commented on a lawsuit tenantl ln the park have filed challenging rent hlka ~ Leo""rd ia not a na ed plainttfnn the lawwul' but ahe 1a concerned abQ.ut rumon · that ownen want to phue out the mobtle home perk -one of the .....Uona in the lawau.lt. (SM RENT. Pace A.I) ----lllDEX---..... BA:LLOON RACE .. • y.an. The •vent hu 1rown In popularity, attrac:Una ballooniata from many naUoM and 26,000 vill1lon to the county park on Uh oil daya. Fawcett explained the race organ11en had mMSe preliminary plans to conduct the 1983 Gordon Bennett on May 7, a1aln In Fountain Valley. But the aaid the Aero Club de ~la oraaniDnl. awnmer- lOftl feeUval next year markina 2410 yean alnce Frenchmen M.rqw. D' Arlar.de9 and Pila tee de Rozier mMSe the first manned balloon flight. So It WU decided that the 1983 Gordon Bennett would be held in Paria next June In conjunction with the French feetivities. The Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce, which has co- sponsored the race locally. had npt yet made agreements with concessionaires for the 1983 Gordon Bennett, said Pat One of them, Ka t hy Grunbaum, 19, of Huntington Beach waa treated at Parker HoeJ>ital for injuries. Bruce Garlich of C.O.ta Mesa. the father of the dead girl, aid today the family has filed a w..rongful death ault against Wackwell for an unspecified ~na authorities reported that Blackwell and another t: Crocke1tt, th• chamber'• executlv" dlreotor. ''lt'a i<>ln1 to be a bi& la. for all of ua," she uld. Although the chamber ltaelf haa not made much money from the race, local tetVice clubll wW loae the Income they've tr:1dltlol'l11llv r1tl-1 hy operatina Gordon Bennett food and drink atanda. Crockett aaid the balloon race a1ao benefits the dty becau.e It draws worldwide newa coverage, In which Fountain Valley is frequently named as the race take-off point. She added the race a1ao brings money in to Fountain V~y gas stations, stores and restaurants and to neighboring cities. Contestants and crews booked 52 rooms for 14 daya at the Holiday Inn in Coeta Mesa last spring. The race banquet, involving almost 400 people, wu held at the South Cout Plaza Hotel, also in C.O.ta Me.a. • • Huntington Beach officer left the acene of the accident. Police association officer Austin said the fatal accident occurred 41,.i hour s after Blackwell's party bad left the firing range. He said that would have been sufficient time for the effects of the drinks to wear off if Blackwell had been drinking at the range. RENT HIKE BIND . . . I ''One Way or the Other rm }eft ~th the question, where do I go? And I juat don't know. rm poor aad I require a lot of thing• because of my condition. lt'a a very diffk:ult thing for a landlord to. accept someone like me with all of my problems." He r neigh bon, though. have gone to great lengths to make Leonard's life more comfortable and enjoyable . : A former neighbor built a sun deck onto her mobile home w_}\ere she can be moved during JUDGES. • • con firmation in the superior ceurt chamben he eoon will be vacating, Crosby said he was not surprised that the governor-elect cl)Ole to vote against him and his fellow justices. '"I definitely had not answered the questions In the way he W)nted and I told him I wouldn't dbcuas penonal vieWI on manera like capital punishment or jUdidal activist.m." Croeby said. summery days. On the Fourth of July -her birthday -park residents stage a parade and annually detour onto her street so that s h e can view the celebration. Four times a week, a group of friends visit for a round of bridge. She can't hold her cards but ia able to play the game with aasitance from other playen. S he said ahe feels as badly for her friends who are being hit with rent hi)tes as ahe does for henelf. "A lot of people moved here with \he idea that this would be their laat move and moat of them. just like me, are on a limited income. Many of thne people are o)der and they struggle 90 to set by ... She stopped herself, pausing before going on. "But I juat don't want to up1et the owners. I'm distressed, of course, but I don't believe In attacking people. After all, the owners hold all the cards. "If this were a bri~ game, I'm afraid I'd have to pus with the hand that I have." Blizzard shuts m~.jor Midwest cities By 'ne AHCK'llted Prell A hll1unJ ahut down m•Jur dtlM of thf' Mldwnt wllh a foot •nd : ..!::ailf of 1no-w luduy and thuu.aand1 ul Lcavehua wore 1tr1nd .. d H authorlllH cloat"d mJll,. of nuajur hl&hway1 The U,hta and heat w•nt out In thouaanda of homtt whill' the wind chill factor re1la~red 40 d~&f'C'el below zero In placet. Whlle some t'ltles auch aa Milwaukee and Ann Arbo r . Mic h ., posted record warm temperatures for the date, bllndlna snow swept from eastern Nebraska and eastern Iowa to northern Minnet10ta and upper Michigan. Meanwhile, more than 1,300 people remained displaced from their homes b y flooding In Louisiana and neighboring states. Violent weather since t 'hrt1ln\U Ev• hu bwn blamtd fur al I ut lCJ d •lh.a In Mlnnt•apol11, wt11•rt• l ~ lnchaa ot snuw had MC't"U1nulatcd al th• alrporl, lh• at•l• Dt-p•rtrn.-nt of Traneporui1tlon juat bt-toN rush hour bannc:d trllvel In any pan of thc.- m•tropolltan arH until furthtor noUco. The Mlnneapolla·St Paul A lrporl woa cloaed. and atate police aald iall major freeway• and aide street• In the MinneapoU.-St. Paul area were closed w ith stuck cars. The University o f Minnesota announced It waa cloelng for the first tJme aince 1966 In L incoln. Neb., the s torm knocked out the power to more than half of the city's 170,000 resident.a Monday night. People whose home1 still had power Packard votes case ·delayed by judge By The A11oelated Preas A judge has called for a one- week delay ln a legal attempt to nullify Ron Pac kard 's congressional write-in victory in the 43rd District. Superior Court Judge Franklin Orfleld halted the h earing, which opened Monday in San Diego, until Jan. 3 to allow himself time to consider a motion by Packard's attorney. Pat Archer. the defeated Democratic candidate, is seeking to have Packard's triumph set aside, clung irregularities and alleging that San Diego County election officials conspired to elect Packard. Packard, who was defeated by Johnnie Crean in the June Republican primary by 92 votes. defeated Archer by a margin of 66,444 to 57,995. Crean, the GOP winner in June, had 56,297 votes. (The 43rd District includes parts of southern Orange County.) With the victory. Pack ard became California's first write-in winner of a congressional race and only the fourth person to achieve it in U.S . history. Archer petitioned Superior Court Hus month to have a judge prevent the seating of the representative-elect on Jan. 3 1n Washington, D.C. His attorney claimed at least 1.213 of 1,941 ballot booklets were defaced and that Packard participated in illegal campaigning near the polls on election day In h11 m otion. Packard's atto rn ey, Terry Knoepp. contends the state court has no jurisdiction in the case and that only the U .S . H ouse of Representauves can decide over the contested elect.ion w r• ur1t'd 'o lod•• f•mlll•• wlthoul h at In &uth Dukot.a, wht•rt• up w 17 lnrhu of snow ft•ll i.nd bllunJ c:undil.iona re1ducod vlalblllty to n"ar u-ro, Gov 8111 Junklow ordt•rt•d Interstate 2g 11<>uth of Sloux Fa&lt. dOMd and ttw N•tlonal Weather Service r1·rnmm41nd~ no travel In 28 countleH Blluurd condltlona thl1 mornlns paralyzed moat o f Nebraska. where 11now was falling faster than snowplows 1.'0uld clear It. "You ·can't even aee your hand m front of your face out there," uld Dan McCaahn, the town marshal In Anselmo, Neb. Cold air aweeping .outh from Canada collided with mlld air from the Gulf of Mexico creatina Ron Packard Knoepp ci t ed the Federal Contested Electton Act of 1969 which states all con tested elections must go to ~e House of Representatives for resolution. w ath r tulvtx from Color.du to Mkhl1an, with hf'IY)' rain l'Ontlnulnii for • third day In the / t11.llf Cout sta\4"1 Mure rain WM ) talhnc I.Oday °" tlood-rav.aeci.L .,..ru. of MIMourl and IUlnola. Jn Louisiana, stat• police • cloaud at least ~o ra.dt due LO ; floodlna from • t>.and of weekend : thund'1ratormt that dumped u : rnuch aa 16 Inches on perta of the : 111tat1: ond spawn e d uiveral / tomadoa In rural areu. There : were n o lnjurlea from the ~ tornadoee but aevere damage wu ; repol'U!d In aome areu. , National Guard troope were: helping evacuate about 400 reaidenu of small communities , along the raln-swoUen Calcasieu Ri ver In Allen Pariah 1n Lou111iana. They were being ~ taken Lo a nearby community ~nter Shoppers nab theft suspect • A 15-year-old Los Angeles girl : was collared by two South C-oast : Plaza shoppers following a $30,-: DOO jewelry theft Monday : evening, police reported. , The girl. not identified because ~ of her age, is one of two suspects: police said they believe smashed • out a display case in J . Jessops & : Sons and grabbed three $10,000 : watches. , : Several wltnesses told officers.: that one of the suspects -a • male-cracked the diaplay case : with a small sledgehammer. : Two shoppers reportedly ; c hased the girl around the : shopping mall, finally catching : up with her in the parking lot. : Police 11a1d the girl was. booked . on suspicion of grand theft and is being held at Orange County Juvenile Hall. 3 held. • in car radio thefts Harbour area blacked out B y GLENN SCOTT ofti.. DeltJ Not •l9ft Irvine police have captured· three teen-agen1, two girls and a boy, they believe are responsible for recent thefta of car radios in the city. But 1nveat1gators were reminded this mornJng. when hve mo re auto thefts were reported in Woodbridge, that other groups are still at work in the a rea , where about 60 burglarie1 have been reported thaa month. All five caae. reported today involved can parked in carportS in north Woodbridge, said police Sgt. Richard Bowman. Police have 1.-ued advice to owners of new European can to park them in locked garages. Bowman noted, however, that many residents in lrvine don't have garages and that three- aided carporta can actually offer a kind of protect.ion to thieves. Although info rmation on thefts repo rted today was s ketchy because officen were still taking reporta, investigaton1 say thieves are taking mostly Blaupunkt and Concord stereo receivers common In new im- ports. Audas, Volkswagens. Poraches and BMWs have been favorite targets. Bowman added, but the boy was familiar with Irvine because his father lives there. No other thefts were reported over the holiday weekend until this morning. Bowman said while other dtiea are experiencing some similar auto the fts, Irvine appears particularly hard rut, perhaps because of its affluence and the way parking stalls are often concealed from view Pohce ar~ still asking new car owners to try to park m well- Ughted areas. A power failure blacked o ut • most of the Huntington Harbour area for about lO minutes : Monday, according to Southern : California F.d.Uon Co. offida.la. : About 2,000 customers were : affected. Power was N!!Stoted to : all but 40 homes within 30 : minutes of the 10: 15 a.m. outage. · Electricity was restored to the : rema.uling homes at 6:30 p.m. • Edison Area Manager Jim Kennedy blamed the outage on a failure m an underground cable m the area. Officials probe spill of chemical in Irvine Windy tonight Last Friday. offlcen1 arrested three JUVeniles. a 16-year-old boy and two 17-year-old girls, on suspicion of grand \heft. burglary and receiving stolen property after a resident, returning home at midnight. saw them In hla car, said Bowman. Officers caught one of the girls In the back 1eat of the car and thJ! two others hiding nearby. said Bowman. Confiacated and returned to the owners were four tadioe r~ported stolen that night. he aaid. Authorities began efforta thia police officers at the 9celle. , morning to identify a milky 0 range Co u n t y Fi re : white chemical apparently Department officials assumed : weoneSdav December 29 T e mpe ratures MATlCMI .. 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Slit.a ~ 83 at Sclc*ana 21 20 HonoMll IO 70 Houaeon N 47 ·~ 44 M Topaa. 3t 24 lndle!llPolle IO .. .ladl-...... 11 ... TUCllOll 8-4 .,. 71 .. TUltl ... 31 ~ 'WaeHnoton 12 41 JI-. M tT ~Cfty 44 l4 wtcMI sa 19 ~= s1 1w CMJJOMIA " ., llallltllfteld ... ~ " a ~ H ... UtMlOOll ,, .,.. 17 ,. ~ .. •7 ,ttanO N M Mllrllll 16 74 l.anoMtar 60 u ,. ·--.a n ~ 11 11 ............ .. 2A .. ...... 7t IO Momet9y .. . lllf llPIRT • R11n~ SnowQ Show•raElll Flurrietf!]] Ne.di. 5& Paeo ~l>IM Cl1 44 A9d Bk.ti! st 39 l\adwOOd City eo 42 Secr-•o 48 S3 6t 42 Salina• San Ol9go 83 50 Sanl"ra~ $4 .. 811111 a.rt>ar• eo 47 Santa Metia ee 65 33 a1oc1t1on Cl2 TMrmal Ulclatl &Cl ear.1-eo 33 Big 8eaf 48 11 9llhop 62 25 44 Celallna 88 l..ono 9Mcfl 62 42 e2 37 Mof\fcwla ..., WlllOll 47 M ~9-dl 12 44 On1arl0 6t 34 Palm 8'wln01 eo 37 ,....,._ 5t 40 57 .se ,.__. SM hmardtnO st 32 ,. ..,.. Oabrtal ... hn.loea 51 " ... 41 Simi Ml l4ltlta CM 14 4CI Tar-V,_,, 31 21 CANADA Celgery ldmonton Mont1NI Ottawe "'llN T«onto Vlf\OOINlt ~ The three were booked into · Orange County Juvenile Kall. The suspects are from Glendale. spilled into a flood control control of the incident and : channel in an Industrial ~on spokesman Jeff Taylor said their : of Irvine. first •~p would be to identity the • The substance In the channel chemical. He said oUiclala knew • at Alton and Von Karman neither how t he substance ; avenues emitted a petroleum reached the channel nor where it : odor but didn 't cause eye came from. : irritation, att0rdlng to Irvine No evacuation was ordered. : ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.....:_~~~--=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~: \ • l l l ! t ' t • ; t : 1t OAILV PILOT/Ju ... WORlD wars back VeteFan of 3 • action • ID • l Troops withdrawal sought for Beirut By Tbe A11~lated Pre11 lara<ill, LA:•baneee and U S negotu&ton opened talk. at D heavily guarde<i hotuJ in M Beirut 1uburb today on uw withdrawal of foreign troopei from L e banon. Although aome progreu waa claimed. Israe l appeared t o b e toughenmg 1 ts demands. "The dele&ations met today and exchanged views on their respective positions," a JOlnt communique said after nearly six hours of talks ended. ''The 116(t•ndu wu dl1cu11ed and p1 ogrcu waa made The ugenda will be dl1cu11ed further at the next meetlna at Klryat Shrnona on Thunday mornmg." The publH· opening s tat emt'nts 1nd1c ated flexib1llty on the pa.rt of the negouators, but behind the scen es. Israel 's agenda proposals pointed to a wide d ivergence of views on key issues of withdrawal, security and normalization. PLO, I sraeli meet told VIENNA, Austria -The Palest ine L i beration Organization has held talks with IsraeJi representatives on several issues, jncluding a po_sslble excPl'ange of prisoners, a PLO official confirmed today. He emphasized, however, that hls organization was not negotiating directly with members of Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin's government, whic h 1has pubucly refused to deal with the PLO Abdullah Frangi, who heads the PLO offices in Vienna and Bonn, West Germany, said the prisoner exchange is "one of many points" his organization is trying to settle in contacts with Israelis. Walesa comme nts attar.kfl!d ' WARSAW, Poland - Martial law authorities published a personal attack on Lech Walesa today and decided to transfer money from the outlawed Solidarity union he once led to new unions controlled by the Communist government. In the latest denunciation of Walesa, the official Polish NATION news agency PAP criticized him for e quating the sufferings of the Poles and Gennans. The report. also published by the Communist Party newspaper Trybuna Ludu, quoted WaJesa as saying "The Poles and the Germans know what suffering means." Swigert dies of cancer ru.~~~·~r:AN LONU BEACH Sh.-bluktd lwr way th1"0Ulh lhl'M wu'I In lh• .,.,, 40 yeara and now. rt•flli.d wilh fuluriaUc weapon.1 c1p11bl. of auack on land, IH, or air, lhe USS New Jeney la rudy for .c:Uon. "The New Jeniey hu not only lhe (erulle) mluUet but al.lo heir big 16-lnch guna," Lt, Ron Morte of the U.S. Navy'• lntormJtton bureau Mid Monday. "She can do a number of roles. We can pul her with an aircraft carrier and she can provide anti-air defenN or shippLna defen1e, we can put her with an amphlblou1 tHk force and the guns will eoften up the deep." The $326 million refurblahing of the 887-foot dreadnought, whlch was flnt commiuioned in 1943, la pa.rt of the Navy's fleet repuilding program. Morse said the Navy is .eeking to rebuild ita strength to 600 ships from about -170 at praent, compared to 90me l,000 du.rlna the Vietnam War. "We've got three oceana full of naval coromitmenta and we've got enough 1hips to support one and a half," he said, citing Pacific, Atlantic and Indian ocean involvement.s. "The Soviets have been building up for the last 10 years." It was decided to reactivate the New Jeniey because the C06t was considerably less than that of building a new ship, he said. The r ecomm1ss1o ning was scheduled for this afternoon in Long Beach Harbor, with President Reagan as the main speaker. The ship will can;r 67 officers and 1,460 enlisted personnel under the command of Capt. William M. Fogarty. Alter crew refresher training. the New Jeraey will head next spring for the western Pacific, where it will operate wilh the Seventh Fleet in exercises and routine operations, Morse said. The array of weaponry on the Naval officer salutes Battleship New J ersey prior to today's recommissioning. The s hip is goin g back on active duty J\ {ourth time. New Jersey is the stuff of science fiction. There are two types of cruise missiles -32 Tomahawks and 16 Harpoo ns The Harpoons, designed for anti-ship combat, are smaller and have a shorter range, normally in the 30 to 35 nautical mile range, although they can go up to 60 miles. A nautical mile Is 6,076 feet, while a land mile is 5,280 feet. Both cruise missiles fly low at about 700 mph, just under the speed of sound, Morse said. The Tomahawk has a longer range -250 nules for anti-ship missiles and up to l,500 miles for land m.isslles, which have greater fuel capacity Critics question usefulness of ship PHOENIX (AP) -President Reagan, committed to beefing up the Navy, is recommis.sioning the USS New Jersey, a refurbished World War Il battleship whose future usefulness has been questioned by navaJ experts. Reagan ac knowledged the $326 million pricetag for the New Jersey's renovation was high. "But the price of neglect would be mfirutely hjgher," he sa1d "We must be able in time of emergency to venture l.ll hann'it way. controlling air, surface an0 sub-surface areas to aaeure accellll· to all 1.he oceans of the world." But critics wondered just how effective the New Jersey would be. . ''There are other, cheaper ways to get gunpower on a ship," said Norman Polmar, a Wt"iter and consultant to the navaJ and aerospace industries "We're talking about 1,800 people to to~ around nine guns or 40 missilts" WASHINGTON - R ep.-elect Jack Swigert, R -Colo., a former a11tronaut who campaigned for the House of Representatives while undergoing treatment for cancer . has died of the dl1ea1e at the Lombardi Cancer Institute of Georgetown University. Co lorado 's new 6th Congressfonal District Nov. 2 iyid was to have been sworn in Jan. 3. He died Monday rught at the age of 51. Watt's wilderness nJove criticized Swigert, who piloted the Apollo 13 moon mission, was elec tPrl to represent Before the November general electfon, Swigert had announced that his doctors had d&.agn09ed his condition u bone marrow cancer. The cancer later spread to Swigen's lun~. doctors said. Transportation boss quits WASHINGTON - T ransportation Secretary Drew Lewis announced his resignation today and said he would re turn to work in private industry next February. Lewis. whose departure had been rumored for months. said in announcm& his resignation that he contin u ed to have "the greatest respect" for President Reagan and "the utmost confidence in his policies." but he nevertheless decided it was time to leave the government. Tylenol suspect moved NEW YORK -James W Lew1a. accused of extortion m the Tylenol k.illmgs case. has been returned to Chicago where he wants to fight the charges against him, his lawyer says. Deputy U .S . Marshal Vincent J . Hickey said late Monday afternoon that Lewis STATE would be arraigned 1n Chicago this afternoon, but he would give no details of how the move from New York was executed or when Lewis would arrive in Chicago. Lewis, 36, had been held held at the Metropolitan CorrectJon.Cent.er here since his arrest two week.a ago. Utility seeks rate hike SAN FRANCISCO -San Diego Gas and Electric Co. has asked for a $126.8 million rate increase that would raise the typical resid ential customer's bill by 6.5 percent on Jan. 1, 1984. The utility made its request ln a formal filing Monday with the state Public Utilities Cornrn.l.adon. San Diego Deputy City Attorney William Shaffran laid the utility's request for a 19 percent profit on the amount of .noney invested by 1hareholden wu excealve The current ~tum 11 16.25 percent. (The utility aerves portion• of 1outh Oranae County.) WASHINGTON (AP) - Interior Secretary James Watt is removing wUdemeu protection from thousands of acres acre:. the We i t In a move envlronmentaUata HY 1hows contempt for Coner-· The Interior Department said Monday the action would affect more than 80~.ooo acres of land th.at has been protected while the administration and Congress decide whether to add the areas to the national wilderness s~tem. However, envlronmentalista claimed the act.loo would affect more than 2 million acres out of the 24 million being studied for possible inclusion in the wilderness system. The land is spread out in 10 West.em states. ''Secretary Watt's action ahows an astonishing degree o f contempt for Congress," said Terry Sopher of the Wilderness Society. "Congress and the Americ.an people should be given the opportunity lo decide whether they want these areas u wilderness. Thia decision takes that choice away." Environmentallata clalmed \hat Watt timed the announcement to come aft.er Congresa adjourned and made it effective immediately to keep Congress from overruling him. Interior officials, however, called the decision "rather routine." and Hid it merely impleft'lented a ruling by an Interior Department appeals board. • The board, in three c88es brought by Weatern ranching and railroad lnt.er~tl. aaid the land in question did not qualify for review as potential wildeme... Twenty-four million acres - out of a total of 310 million acret under conb'.91 of the B~'!. of We're Listening ••• What do you llke about the Dally Pilot., What don't you llkf'., 842-6086 Call t.he number at left and your mesaage will be recorded, tranacribed and delivered tot.he appropriate editor. The same 24·bour ansl"erin1 Aervlce m•y be used lo record let· ters lo the editor on any topic:. Mallbox contributors mu1t Include their n•mt and telephone number for ver1/tcatton. No circulation u lls. please. T II us wh•t'• on your mind. OAANOE COAST Dilly Piiat L K., Schvlh Vote~ ... 0.KIOt t:J Adltetl• .... • . -. ------_._ -~-- Land Management m the West -were designated in 1980 aa wildernem 1tudy areas. A 1976 law require• the adminhlration to make a reoommendation to CongJ'9I on adftlng thls land to the wtlderneH sy1tem. Congre11 must make the final decision on each recommendation. The department's action, ou.tllned in an opinion by Interior Solicitor William Coldiron, states that these lands were improperly designated wilderness study areaa and deletes them from further review by th e administration or Congress The study areas affected mclude: -Areas of lesa than 5,000 acres. The department aa1d th.ls covered 341.000 acres, with the largest total amount -123,600 -In California. There are smaller amounts Jn· Arizona, Colorado, Idaho. Montana, Oregon. Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming. -Areas where the federal government owns the Land but not the underground mineral nghts. The department said thJ.s covers 465,000 acres. Arizona has 299,300 acres in this category with smaller amounts 1n Colorado, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico. Oregon, Utah and Wyoming. -Areas controlled by the Bureau of Land Management which do not quaUfy on thel( own for consideration a& wilderneu, even thou1h they adjoin wllderneu areas or potential wilderness area•·· administered by other federal agencies. Interior officials said thaf while the areas will no longer be• col'\lidered under the wilderness review program. the department, on a case-by-cue b&al1, could protect them from development under other programs or might consider them for wlldernes11 protection at aome future time -. Pelica-ns' attacker still sought .: By JOEL C. DON o< ... o.ltr ,... ...., As anxious u most wildlife offidala att to catch the culprit re1pon1ible for mutilating 18 brown pelicans, no suspects have been arrested in the two-month- old caae. ''All I can say is we're still working on it," said state Fish and Game Department spokesman Ralph Young. "We had hoped that the reward would give us a solid enough lead, but it hasn't ... The Nati o nal Audubo n Society's reward fund has swelled to more than $18,000, yet no one has come forward with information that might lead to the conviction of whoever chopped oc sawed oU the upper beaks of pelicans in the Dana Polnl Harbor area. ' "h's likely that it's one peMIOn, but we have no way of knowing for sure," Young said. Another investigator who has examined the mutilated pelicans believes ~\\~ ~ • • • ~ ~\.>~ \~\)~ co~~ Save 25% • All Fall And Holiday Merchandise From: • Condor • Tattoo • Lady Manhattan P.any Woodard Esprit & More!! 50% -- one person is responsible because the cuts were similar on most of the birds. A fisherman is believed td · have cut off the beaks becaW1e the birds often steal anchovy ha.it . and get tangled in fishinR lines. Since the malmings began · around mid -Octobe r ,; international media attention halJ : been drawn to the Orange Coast : area. (See REW ARD, Pa1e A4) . l I I I \ . ·. Guests drop in for the holidays • Partridges may have their pear trees, but ducks in the la ke at Heritage Park in I rvine depend on ha ndou ts during the winter. Even some gulls have discovered tha t this is a five-sta r location for dining on tidbits. REWARD FAILS TO SOLVE PELICAN MAIMINGS • • • From Page A3 At Crown Valley Animal Hospital in Laguna Niguel, where 13 of the birds are being cared for. cash donations continue to come in from sympathetic animal lovers all over the world The animal hospital, in addition, is still working off more than 700 pounds of mackerel donated to the pelicans. Without the1r upper beaks. the birds cannot feed themselves Ln the wild. Veterinarians hope most of the birds will be fitted with Fiberglass beaka through a special surgical process involving stainless steel plates, ecrews ana a powerful bone glue. So far. four pelicans - Pinocchio, Rusty, Cathy Lee and Jamie -have undergone the novel prosthetic surgery. Animal doctors are cautiously optimistic about the eventual success of their efforts. Some wildlife officials fear the beaka,may .rip oft when the birds dive Lnto the water to catch fl.ah. Of the 18 mutilated pelicans, four have died as a result of their injuries. One bird Is at San Diego's Sea World and the rest are at the animal hospital in ,Laguna Niguel. ''They're all doing just fine," said Lisa James , hospital spokeswoman. The brown pelican is on the federal endangered species list and is a protected species in California. Federal fine for killing or mutilating a bird is $20,000 and/or a year In jail. State penalty i.s $1,000 and/or a year Ln jail for each mutilation. But the outlook for a conviction seems bleak, unless a wilnellll can be found. "The biggest difficulty of coune i.s getting a 10lid enough lead so that we can go to the dlatrlct attorney and say 'Here's a ~:"Young said. Gibraltar"' ., () ntl1t1' lm·om h•• be n droppln1 partly be • In m •r •• ther are 100 many df'nll1&1. Recession biting into dental visits Clalmlna the rece11lo n 11 provldtna yet another reuon to avoid vl1its to the dentl1t, the California Dental Aalclation baa ~gun a $1.1 million ad campaign to lure back patienta. "There ha1 alway1 been a reluctance to villt the denlllt," said Or. Eugene Brown of La Pal.ma, a former president of the Orange County Dentral Society. "Now, with the economy In 1uch bad shape, people are even more reluctant," Brown added. Paul Peric h , marketing director for the Callforrua Dental Aaoclation, said 10me dent.iata' Incomes have been dropping, partly because of the economy and partly because In some areas there are too many dentists. The Ameri c an Dental Aseociation recommends a ratio of one dentist for every 2,500 people. But the Orange County Dental Aasoc1atlon says that in some affluent county communities such as Newport Beach and Irvine, there is one dentist for every 500 residents The at.ate dent.al IJ'OUP found that office vl1lta to dentJ1ta In San Dleao and Sacramento roee an average of 3 percent durtna a pilot proaram of radio ad1 In lhoee cltiea three yean aao. However the American Dent.al Aaoclatlon uld Its nationwide pilot radio campalan did not produce the hoped-for raulta. The c urrent statewide campaign make1 California's dentlsta the first in the nation to try radio and televhlon advertialng on a long-term bull, Pench u.id. The ada do not mention any specific dent.iat.a. However aome denlilt.a have been running their own ad1 1lnce 1975, when the U .S . Supreme Court upheld Federal Trade Comml11ion rulings allowipg profem:ionala to advertl.e. Moat profe11ional organizations, including the American Dental Association, have opposed such advertising by individual members. The state dental organization's ads stress prevention . Judge Y ounghlood 'resolving' debts Central Orange County Municipal Court Judge Bobby 0 . Youngblood apparently i.s getting hi.s financial house back tn order. A bankruptcy petition action involving the judge was removed from a court calender th.ii week. Youngblood's attorney, Gary Gunderman, said the move shows Youngblood is paying off creditors on schedule. Gunderman said that under lhe Chapter 13 bankruptcy action. Youngblood I.a permitted to pay a fixed sum of money each month to a trustee who, in t.urn, pays creditors. Youngblood is giving $400 per month to the trustee, Gunderman said. Youngblood was elected to the bench in 1980 in a bl tter challenge to then-Judge IUchard Orozco. More recently, Youngblood has been in the news after demanding federal authorities Investigate conditions at the Orange County Jail In Santa Ana . is the one place you canea1'11 A steakhouse tradition comes to Huntington Beach. The Plankhouse has become Reuben's Plan khouse. We're wooing you with an exceptional new menu. Featuring hearty, delicious dinners like Roast Prime Rib of Beef. our famous Shrimp Scampi, delicious seafood , chicken and an even bigger Plank Steak dinner for two. Each comes with warm bread, v~getables, and your choice of our Special Steak Soup or any of three unu sual salads. All at affordable prices. You'll love our incomparable hospitalit~ prompt, friendly service, and casual atmosphere. Call for reserva· lions or to arrange a private party. Reuben's Plankhouse. A delicious change of taste that will plbse your palate for a long tfme to come. ReubaD/P~ouse More or what you go out for. 6060 Warner Avenue, Huntington Beach. 842-5111. 642-4321 Money twoway ..... s: Annual Yltld 12.08% Annu•l R..t~ 11.25% throuah Dectrnt-JOth. You'll never need a money market fund again. New M9ttey Madcet • • 0 Gibraltar gives you high money market rates on your entire balance. 0 G ibraltar gives you total liquidity. No term. No penalties. So you have your money when yo u need it. 0 Gibraltar gives you FSLIC insured safety to $100,000. 0 Gibraltar gives it all to you for a low $2,500 minimum. Now for saW. and checking it~~leanon the Rock. Annyal Y•ld 11.00% You'll never Annual !Utt need -s~o 2"% bank checking ..IJ • 1°7 , again. through December JOth. Ch~~ 0 Gibraltar gives you high money market rates on your entire balance. 0 Gibraltar gives you unlimited check writing. No fees. No restrictions. So pre- register now for January 5th start. 0 Gibraltar gives you 200 personalized scenic checks. Free when you sign up before January 5th. 0 FSLIC-insured to $100,000. 0 Gibraltar gives it all to you for a low S2,~ minimum. Children' home nears ceremony Oroundbre1kln1 for Oranpwood -Oranp County'• new home for dependent children -tentatively 11 1eheduled tor Jan. 31, Albert Sitton Home Director William Si.tner Mid. The firtt pha1e of the $7 .~ million project to build the new home 1hould be completed by next December, Maid. The new facility 1a needed to replace the overcrowded and •sins Albert Sitton Home. Oransewood'1 directors have conducted a fund-raialn1 drive for the put two yeen in order to rai.e the monies nece.ary for conatruction. Steiner Mid Oranaewood has ralaed $6 mlllloo toward ita $7.5 million goal. "The whole campaign should be complete within the next few monlhl." he said. "It's a dream come true. The whole community haa responded just ao well." The fl.rat phase of construction for the new Orangewood facility will Include five residential cottages, containing 100 beds for children aged 6 to 17, a kitchen, dining room and laundry. Steiner said. Construction coeta for the initial phaae are pegged at $2.5 milllon. Eventually, Orangewood also will have a school, nursery, infirmary and court offices, he said. The facility ia intended to house 154 children In a 12 building complex. Solvent state Swoap's goal SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. elect George Deukmejian's nominee to head California's Health and Welfare agency says his top priority in that post will be to "restore the fiscal solvency of the state." Interviewed in Washington, D.C., where he currently serves as President Reagan's undeniecretary of the federal Health and Human Services Agency. Davis Swoap told the Sacramento Union in an interview that there definitely will be cuts in state health and welfare benefita. SJ.nee the $16-billlon-a-year .gency Swoap will be.cl spends ~tter than 60 percent of all state doUan. Swoap will have to provide a major portion of the cuta needed to meet a projected $1.3 billion budget deficit. But Swoap said he haa not had enough time to study California'• welfare, Medi-Cal and other health programs to say yet precillely where thoee cull will be made. "I feel very strongly that the concept of targeting benefit• on people who can demonstrate le,gitimate need 1a not just a slogan, but ia, in fact, a carefully thought out and tested method of allocating increasingly scarce reeourcee," Swoap said. "I want to target benefita on legitimately needy people with as much care and precision .and compassion as pomlble," he added. He added that eventually, the Duekmejian administration will expand thoee aocial welfare programs which show a tangible return, such as child care, homemaker 1ervices and in-home Ulb1ance to the elderly. Swoap also said after he assumes h18 state post around Jan. 15 that he will expand work- for-welfare requiremenll. "There are a whole host of private and ublic 1ervice opportunities that can provide 1peclfic employment lkil1s and job training 1 " he said, listing 1uch jobe as nunes aides, library usiatanll and IChool crossing guards. Swoap says he a1IJO plans to \Ille the greater flexibility Reapn'a federal administration has liven states to tighten eligibility standards for health and ~lbre programs. '\ Gorillas get TLC Two baby lowland gorUlat are cared for in dillerent ways. Gilbert Boese, left, director of Milwaukee County Zoo, feed1 Mandara, 8 month1. He worked Christmas Eve IO other volunteers could be at home. Gigi, right, holds her second 0((1pring hours after recent birth. Gigi had rejected her firstborn last year but continues to show signs of maternal behavior this time. .................................................................................................................................................... ~1 VISIT ONE OF ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST Leather Galleries Over 100 pieces of genuine top grain leather ON DISPLAY Sofas, Sofa beds, love seats, wing chairs, office chairs. Sectionals, recliners, lounge chairs, pull up chairs. Look at Our Fabulous Leather Selection Come to Garrett's today and see our fabulous selection of top grain leather upholstered furniture. Each sofa, loveseat, chair and ottoman Is crafted by leather manuf acturlng specialists. When you choose leather for your home or office. you get elegance beyond compare . . . comfort that is unsurpassed . . . and long l~stlng durability. You'll also appreciate our surprisingly affordable prices on our ent ire leather selection. It all adds up to the best value for your furniture dollars. 11 I 1 ' lf P TO [' ,,,, 1' ~: 1~~·j I ,.._ ---J • I ... 25-5 ~' r._ \ 'l I .. --..... ' II I ~ I I ,._. ' . I 0 · .. .. '• . ('. I ,,. Or I DAILY IL Of If Alf ordable housing plans losing impac t Apparently wlth some justllt~atlon. Orange County supervtisors are conaidering phasing out the county's ao-called lnclualonary housing program. flrat adopted in January 1979. Deelgned to increase the volume of available affordable houaing for lower -income residents, the program requires buildens in county terrritory to earmark 25 percent of units in new developments for sale to f amllies whose incomes range from 80 percent to 120 percent of the county's median family income, now $33,095. It also impoaea long-term resale price controls on the affordable units and requires that rental units be kept available for low-income tenahta, both tending to dampen the market. W h ile concluding that the affordable housing program has been helpful, supervisors feel it is time to phase out the government controls and let the marketplace take over, probably offering incentives to builders who continue to construct lower-cost dwellings. These could include higher density allowances to permit construction of more units, modification of some building requirements or revenue bond programs. Heartn11 on the proposed phase-out continue and then1 will oo a final public hearing ~fore the board Jan. 26. Meanwhile, a study sponsored by the Industrial Leaaue of Orange County, an a.saodation of 6~0 industrial and commercial firms, concludes that the affordable houaing program has resulted in construction of fewer homes in other price ranges and raised the cost of such homes as ,.developers seek to balance out the cost of affordable homes. With continued high interest rates and th-e high level of unemployment discouraging would-.be home buyers, the housing market, even in the so- called affordable range, remains sluggish. The county cannot legally drop the affordable housing program overnight, but it would appear that a phase-out over a period of years is in order. If the economy steadies, there will be a demand for houses in all price ranges, and if there is a strong market for lower-cost homes, builders will not ignore it. But requiring their construction can only have the effect of raising the price of other homes in a development to subsidize the program. Food stamp controls With food stamp losses now amounting to some $36,000 a month , Orange County supervisors have approved a plan designed to assure that the easily redeemable coupons are not diverted en route to qualified recipients. About $1.8 million worth of food stamps are mailed every month to 20,000 needy families w qo are entitled to buy groceries adreduced rates b y using the stam ps. But about 2 P""..rcent of the stamps are lost in the mail each mon th, at a h u ge cost to the county which usuaJJy replaces them. Now an even greater loss is threatened, with a decision by the federal government to stop giving counties full reimbursement for lost stamps. Since this policy could cost an additional $300,000 a year, the county has decided that, beginning in July, the stamps will be dist.ributed by private companies dispensing them at distribution centers in a number of locations. Until that system is In effect, the stamps will be sent by certified mail to reduce possible theft. And handicapped persona and those living more than 20 miles from a distribution center will continue to receive their stamps by certified mail. While being obliged to pick up food stamps in person doubtl~ will be an inconvenience to many, this is a reasonable step to reduce an ever-increasing and ev~r­ more-costly black market in the stamps. Fire responsibility In an interesting test of a state on a power pole at the atrcraft law, Orange CoWlty fire officials firm's test facility. The county are planning to bill McDonnell claims the power line was either Douglas Corp. for $269,000 to improperly inst a 11 e d or cover the cost of fighting the Oct. maintained. 9 Gypsum Canyon brushfire. This is the first time Orange Add it I o n a 11 y , the st a t e County has attempted to recover Department of Forestry is the cost of fighting a brushfire expected to bill the company for under the state law and it almost its share of the fi.refighµng costs. undoubtedly will end with bo\h which could bring the total to parties in court. $400,000. But. given tht appalling cost State law allows firefighting of fighting wildlands fires, the test agencies to bill individuals or case may have the beneficial effect corppanies for the cost of fighting of alerting firms to the ongoing bf11Shtires caused by malleasance need to play close attention to the or negligence. The county's condition of their power lines in contention is that the Gypsum remote areas. Putting the cost of ~yon fire was started when fighting such fires entirely on the winds knocked down a cross bar taxpayers is not justifiable. oofn1ona exprelMd In the apace above• are those of the Dally Pllot.'-Oth~r view. exs'eaed on this page are those o1 their authors and artists. Reader comment la Invited. Addr ... The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92826. Phone (714) &42--4321. L.M. Boyd/ Nagging CJearJy, men do not aar'ff Wltn wunen on the nature of naain8· It baa been defined, J:.~'ll recau. .. complalnJ.n.i more once about some thing that complalruna can't ch a nge . When p ollsters asked numerous men lf their wtvee were oven to the nagging vice, 16 percent Of C.hoM husbands ~ ya . Only 7 percent of the wtves admitted that hablt. however. Amo n1 the proleHlonal team plQ •rl, tbOM In football survive ....,. ln t.betr IMaUes then \hcee in t r l»U and \bme ln bMeba1l au.rvtve kJaCw th-i thme In bMketbell. But not much 1coler'· AVIQCt football player, tour and a baU aeaaona. A~ :::£.rfl• four yeert. A~ player, tMle and • tiall ,....,. Q . How many of the active National Footb.n League players have ~ degreet" A. One out of five. How do you eccount for the fact ..,.t hat left-han ded men allghtly ~tnumber left-handed women? Linea recommended to Rodney Danaerfield: "My tooth fairy left an I.0 .0 ." "The doa'catcher ran oU with my wife." '1Dial-a-Prayer calla me collect." "Reform .chool doubled my tuition." "l booked my mJcrowave up to ~Y pay TV and now I a et acralnbled ega." -Only l~ percent of the movMil made befon lD30 at.ill exist ln &('Y form. Only ~ peiu!ftt ot tM9e made befcn l9&e> 1tUl can be found. Illegal rule hits disabled WASHINGTON -The Social Security Adm1niatration has just pulled the wheelchalr out from under some cripples. Here's the dismal story: The agency diacovered that disability penaionen who have been cut off the rolls have a better chance of reinstatement lf they hire lawyers. So officlals leaped into action -and illegal action at that. The penny-pinching offlci.ala eet out to di8courage attorneys from represenUng disability claimants before the administrative law judges who review their appeals. On Sept. 20, the agency issued a 22-page memo to it.a district offices. The memo atatH -falsely -that "the Appropriatiana Bill for Fia:aJ Year 1983 oontaina a LJ.mjtation on Administrative Expenses (LAE) which prohibits SSA from setting individual fees for attorneys and other representatives, and from paying authorlz.ed fees to attorneys out of past-due benefita even if the fee was allowed by a federal court. THE FACT OF the matter la that the 22-page memo was baaed on nothing more than wishful thinking by offidals detennined to keep handicapped per'ION from having their appeals effectively argued. A provwon probibitina the Social Security Administration from paying lawyers' fees was proposed by the agency, but was not -repeat, not - included in the appropriationa bill. A House Appropriations Committee aide told my associate Vicki Warren, "Our subcommittee didn't even recommend that it be put in the G. -Jl-Cl-11-D-lll_D_I -~ appropriations bill, because it is not in our jurisdiction -and the Social Security Adminiatration knows that." Any changes in the SSA act would be handled by the Ways and Means Cornmitlee, he explained. Asked about the memo, an SSA spokesman said it was issued "by someone who was overanxious." Ordinarily, he said, memos are not sent out telling agency employees how to implement changes ln the law until the law ia actually passed. Indeed, the agency acknowledged as much by aend.ing out a 9eCOnd memo 18 days after the lint. The Oct. 8 memo almpl~ countermanded the Sept. 20 memos~ The wasted effort and paperwork involved in the two sets of orders wou.Jd be bad enough. But the results were more serious than that. According to a representative of the NatlQul $enior Citizen Law Center, agency officials achieved pretty much what they wanted anyway. News of the first memo made the rounds of those who deal with disability claims, he explained, and "the letter had a chilling effect on private attorneys" who represent disability claimants fighting to keep their benefits. This is what the Social Security Administration really wanted in the first place. IT'S OBVIOUS that the 22-page memo misstating the law took a lot of work to prepare and send out. Yet at about the same time, the agency's boas, Health and Human Services Secretary Richard Schweiker, was explaining to critics that the reaaon his department was late in issuing regulations for other laws was that his employees simply didn't have time to do it. Yet no such labor shortage stood in the way of the illegal instructions to enforce a law that didn't exist. Footnote: Ap~ntly deciding that i1 they can't lick em they'll join 'em, the agency decided on an experimental program in some areas -having its own lawyen on hand to argue the~·, caae against disability claimants. Ayala still pursues water solution The old water warrior, Sen. Reuben Ayala has signalled that he will renew his effort.a to find a workable plan to meet California's water needs. Sponsor of legislation which would have launched the construction of the Peripheral Canal. Ayala's efforts were ahot down by the voten who rejected his t.JJot propoul for the canal. "But." aaya Ayala, ''there ls a large void in Callforn•a•s water resources development program. a void that should be filled. Since the voten have rejected the Peripheral Canal plan, some other mean• must be Jound, for the void rema.tna and won't be filled until some workable plan for water development ls found." A Y AL A, who represents San Bemard1no County, was lured into the t>.ttle for water development by Gov. J erry Brown, whoae dln!ctor of Water Reeourcea, Ronald Robie, waa firmly wedded to the Peripheral Canal plan. But any chance that plan had for gaining voter approval went down the drain when Brown. sensing strong opposition, waffled on the iaaue and not oruy failed to provide the leadership needed to win public support but. in the end, pretended u though he had never heard of the plan and Indeed was against it. In contrast to his father, Pat Brown, who. when he was g<>Vemor took the lead and battled through the~-part of California's water plan. incl · the building of the Oroville Dam, the can.al to transport water to southern California, against bitter oppos1t1on. llll IATIRS Jerry played politics with the issue and ran for cover when the going got heated. Unwilling to leave what he considers a neamary job undone and not wanting to create another political football, Ayala has scheduled special hearings of the Senate Conunittee on Agriculture and Water Resources to be held starting January 18. In seeking a solution to the water problem he has arranged to take the testimony of the last five directon of the · Water Resources Department. These include Robie, who may be an ex- direcior by the Ume the hearing rolla around. The others are John Teerink. William Giannelli. William Warne and Harvey &nks, some of whom served under Pat Brown and the others under Ronald Rea,gan. While Ayala uys the expertise of • theee last five directon should prov1de a starting point for a new plan to meet the water needs, he already haa held a meeting with state agricultural and water leaden outside of government. Hia plan to find a workable water program which will gain enough support to win approval of the Legial.ature and a vote of the people. if necessary. IOUnds good. BUT AS HE has already learned from his pt'e'Aious efforts, water ia the most controversial subject in California. It has always been \hat way. The so-called California Water Plan waa initially conttived back in the 20.. Each new Legislature wrest.led with the plan year after year with nothing gamed except more studies. It· wasn't until Pat Brown became governor that any action was taken. Pat not only believed wholeheartedly in the plan but w as determined to do aomething about it. He took the leAd in gettlng the necessary legislation and bond laaues approved despite the bitter opposition headed by the late Sen. George Mlller Jr., of Contra Co•ta County. The Oroville Dam and related water projecta which were constructed during his administration stand u a monument to his efforts, an echievement which a long line of governors before him were unable to aocompllah. Bridge brings out worst in .some players There la an old saying In most countries to the effect that there is one law for the r1ch and another for the poor; and you don't have to be a Marxist to agree with lt. Yet it ts only a part of the whole truth. For there is also. in mosl venturet, one law for th• 1uccesoful and an~! IYlllY 111111 ~) the medioett w o are atrivtna upward and may never make h. Professional tenni• ta one such example -the O\ltr~ c:onduct pennitt«I a McEnroe or a Connon would never be tolerotc'd f~ 1 player of ~r renown or abJU~. Another fltld In which t his aamo altuaUon obWna -to an even lf'tl\er delref -18 dupllmte brid19, a pme I enjoy but rarely p1t,y wldet iouma~t conditJOnl. Here no l1'IOM)' lt directly Involved, but UM! ftnlale for ~ ·~ La jwu &a '?ieree, •nd th• • :li J.ait: .. Lftb61plt&ba. to th novn or the a"9'fl8 pla~. It ~ that, with 1 few laudAibw .. cepuo,,a, the more proflcJ•nt you bteome. •he mote dt11rilc:elul you~ l'DllWWn toWlnl you.r oppc!Qmtl and tht of I •· lnct.ed, ntarly · every month, the Butietm of the Amencan Contract Bndge League, which sanctions these tournaments. deplores the rude and arrogant atlltude of the "better'' players. l\ also seems that the higher tbe level of play. the lower the atandatd of counesy and civility. The main reuon that the ACBL It f'IOt gaining memben u it should m•y be attributed to the chilling recepUon f ven to new members by the "expert.a,' both real and tell· styled. The le.,ue rftOI011lN this• ltl blagoet recruitment proble-m. Why should thla be ao? My own ~nt goes much furt.Mt than &M bridge table. From obeervation, 1 lua-t tbal many, It •n not moat, of the. men and women who dovo~ th"7lllllvel to \his ht9hly-competitiw form of bridte do ao u a 1ub1Utut.o o~ compenaatloft for deftdtl and faU\u• In other, and more Ln import.an~ af'8I of Ute. BlUDOB CAN b«onae a monomania with 10mt pcopki ~ they Ml It, aleep. It. lhem have abandoned or retreated from. _ A few may be successful in their out.'llde careers, but for the most part they tend to be people who have failed in penonal and emotional relationships, and feel far more comfor~ble dealing with cords than with live penons. Thia Is a phy, for hrld ae 11 t h e pattnership gamtt par excellence, and hAs no equal ln tts l'Odallzina function. To turn it into uvqe mastery of the ''point ays~n'I" It to pervert lta 90Cia1 purpcm for purely egocentrie mda. and lO twla\ a bask?ally coUabontlve ..... lnto an ua Jy con te1t of wllla. Llt&le wonder tnat rnott normal p&ann an rtpulled by the brtdae dub a~ than are attrac1cd t:> lt. and llw It, If yo\! can that Uvt"I. Th y uaumtt a /roprlet.ary air toward the same, an while auperflclally th y encour• mol'9cplijtd '4 UICI t up,,,.-- Mneath '"' aurtace they retenl and ~p•I 111 Inter bre4tda. ltvep. ln an awraae club, the auperior.playwra are of ten quJte Insufferable. · The pme, for &htin, W ~ a ~noptlt foi' "*1 Ult, which tn.n• of I OAILV l'ILOT If Make today~ Great American day/ ~ Great American __,_Insured M Account™ Say goodbye to uninsured money funds. The greatest investment idea of the decade is here: the Great American Insured Moneymarket Account. It gives you high money-market interest, solid FSLIC Insurance, unlimited deposits and withdrawals, and your choice of variable interest or a ~ay fixed rate! Open your Great American Insured Moneymaricet Account with as little as $2,500 or as much as $85,CXX>. Immediately start ~ming a yield well above the averdge paid by uninsured money funds. You get something no money fund can off er: insurance on the full amount by the Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation. Something else you won't get with a money fund: Your choice of earning either (1) a variable rate that moves with changes in the money maricet, or (2) a fixed rate of interest. UNLIMITED WITHDRAWAlS & DEPOSITS MIMHR FSIJC The variable-rate account offers you unlimited liquidity, allowing withdrawals and deposits at a!'ly time. You have 24-H@UR TELLER access to ,.... .... ,u-...... c:.,. your money at eighty SMlp ....... II llOO.D locations, in addition to counter service at 140 Great Auhllm Hills • 5550 Santa Ana Canyon Road lllltil • 600 East Balboa Blvd. lllMI Island • 301 Marine Avenue ,..___....Ca~• lelch • 34206 Doheny Park Road El Tn • 23688 El Toro Road FOUltall Wiiiey • 1017 5 Slater Ave. American Federal offices throughout the state. An interest-earning checking account is yours for the asking, free of service charges for all of 1983. And you can link this checking account to your Great American Insured Moneymarket Account, transferring money by telephone' to meet your checkwriting needs. 30-DAY FIXED-RATE ACCOUNT If you pref er, you can lock in a fixed fate for a full 30 days:• the longest period allowed by law o n this type account. 1 At the end of 30 days, your account is automatically reneVved at the interest rate in effect that day. Deposits and withdrawals can be made at the end of each 30-day period, and additional accounts may be opened at any time with deposits of $2,500 or more. INSURED MONEYMARKET CHECKING, TOO For those desiring full checking access to invested funds, Great American Insured Moneymaricet Checking' .. will be introduced on January 5, 1963, combining high money-market interest w ith unlim ited checkwriting convenience ... plus FSLIC insurance of the complete balance. You can reserve Great American Insured Moneymarket Checking by signing up for o ur interim account, Market-Rate Checking; then, on January 5th, your balance will be transferred auto matically to Great American Insured Mo neymarket Checking. During the interim, you'll earn high rl)flrket-rate interesttt and enjoy the checkwriting convenience of the interim account. The minimum balance is $2,500. Never before have you had such a choice of Insured Moneymarket Accounts. Come in today for more information. • • Huntlnston Buch • 9132 Adams Ave. L11un1 Buch • 260 Ocean Avenue Laauna HHls • 24301 Paseo de ¥alencia uauna Nl1uel • 30112 Crown Valley Parkway Million Vltlo • 25332 Cabot Road Monarch Bly • 3 Monarch Bay Plaza I ' I,' ... , .. .. . . ', .. •.· . . . •. ',•, ···'• ·.f, The current annual yield of the Great American Insured -' Moneymaricet Account at the time this was written · ,1 .1 appears below: • .... ·• • Annual Yield' bawd on raft• of 1117' J>4.'r ;annum As the rate is subject to change daily, we suggest you obtain today's yield by calling either of the toll-free numbers below. ,, .. , .. . ,• •' .. ... ,.._ ______________________ ..,,.~ For rate information, call ;~ ~· The Rate Line: (800) 552-8855 To open your account by phone or for answers to your questions, call The Financial Line: (800) 272-9000 • Annu.tl Yield aswmn relnveitmff>I of p<lncip.l and lnte"'" at -turlty at 1Ame r1te, though this can't be guar;inteed. ••1f b.\lance In ac:coont falh below Sl,SOO, 5 1/4'.\ f>ef 1nnum It !Mid IOI that JO.d.Jy cycle. 'Umhed to till tr-fen per monm. "lnt«lm lnt9tt'tt rate aubject to change dally The balan<e on your Interim account up to Sl.000 Is fully Insured by the FSLIC. Although me balance OY« 11.000 It no( • 1Avlnp account Of clep>sit Ind ii not lnwfed by the FSLIC. It It badted by United Stlllet Covemm«\t securftlff. "' ... ,, .... , ,,, i!J --~·J Newport Buch • 5 Corporate Plaza :;ij Oran11/0llvt • 2535 N. Tustin Ave. ·"' San Clttltltt • 400 Avenlda Pico • 601 North El Camino Real • sin Jun Ci;lltl'lftO • 32222 Cimino Capistrano Woodbridll ---On Barranca at lake Come in now for your beautiful, full-color 1983 Colorscapes calendar. I • lo ing • om1nance • • 1n science BERKELEY (AP) Germany and J•pan a.re 1pendlna far more tham the United St.at.ea on aclence and math education, thrutenln1 to overshadow th l1 country In scientific development. a Unlveraity of California study Wa.tnl. The 1tudy from the schoo1'1 Berkeley campus says a dramatic shorta.ge of mathematics and acience teachers -decreasing at the rate of 2,200 teachers a yNr in CahfornJa alone -may doom the United St.ates to a second-rate future in hlah technology fields. And if America doesn't catch up, ''the whole nation may realize the nightmares of doomsayera, who predict that the United States may become' a second-rate nation overshadowed and d ominated. . by high-tech abilities of foreign nations," said the report authored by James Guthrie, chairman of the UC School of Education, and research as.sistant A.mi Zushman. Private industry is luring teachers from their classrooms with offers of more lucrative pay, the report said. In the San Francisco Bay area, for example, 1tarting teachers earn $12,680 while private industry probably would pay them $20,000. Universities, meanwhile. are replacing them . at a slower pace. • From 1971 and 1980, the number of ~sraduates preparing to teach mathematics ,.dropped 77 percent, and the ranks of proepective .tcience teachers declined 65 percent, according to lhe atudy. California school districts cope with the drain by using unqualified people to teach those subjects: half the state's h igh school math students are taught by teachers with o nly a minor in.math or even less special.iz.ed education. Nationally, more than half the newly hired math and science teachers were employed on an emergency basis because "no qualified teac~rs oould be found," the report said, citing a Natiorial ."6cience Teachers Aaaociation study • The report suggested five methods of • tiahting the high achool brain drain in technical tletda: -Schools could use qualified private individuals from industry as part-time teachers. -SChool districts could retrain as math and tdence teachers thoee in oversuppUed fields. -Schools or government agencies could make more loans and acholarshlps available to math and 9C:lence education students. -Schools could encourage qualified teachers to stay by offering sabbatical programs, improved clerical help and other benefits. • Whale watching cruiaes begin Saturday and bin through the e00 of March from Dana Point ~.with two cru.illeS daily. ~ erw-pt under way at 10 a.m. and .,.in p .m ., departing from Dana Wharf. lional a'Uillea beain every hour from 8 a.i:n. m. during weekends of the Dana Point i E'eetival of Whales ln mid-February and i!erly March. · Ticketa are $7 for adults and $~ for children fbr the two-hour whale watching expeditions. Piiot Logbook -D ·1y p·1 ' Candid com~~es II I DI e.rclusn~ly m tM OUR MAKE YOU SMU OFF EAR to To take advantage of this special offer. present thts coupon to OUt photographer and make a 95¢ deposit on your $12.~ collection TOTAL PORTRAIT COLLECTION INCLUDES 2-8 x 10s. 3-5 x 7s and 15 wallets NOYIONLY99.95 ~~y wtth this coupon ;1SAVE8300 I on your child's regular $12.~ I portrait oollecoon. Ol'lt ...,._,,.-.~ ,,..,_.. ,.....,... .. i.M --•c 0-~tt'\tllJJ~W J ,.=.,-:t::: ........ , ___ ... I . ~ca-...-::!' THESE DAY• ONL VI MON. TUES. WED. THURS . FRI. DECEMBER 27th DECEMBER 28th DECEMBER 29th DECEMBER 30fh DECEMBER 81at Volunteer~ sought for assistance plan DEAR READli:ttS. Thf' lntt.irmal t\\•vt•t1Ul' Servi""' 11 ~uNUn11 lntercaWd voluntec1ra to tJakt: free tralnln1 that will enablt1 them to participate In the Volunteer Income Tax .A.ala~ proaram deta.ltpled to provide free aul1\ance at community location• to lndlviduala who cannot afford profe.ional I.ax help. Volunt.eera wUl aaaiat people wtth alrnple tax returns, partkularly low Income, elderly, non-English 1pttak lng and handicapped taxpayers. VITA participation will require an average of three houra per week during the tax pttparation aeuon. Training 1esalon1 will focus on the preparation of Fonna 1040 and 1040A. New volunteers will receive approximately 24 hours of tralnln&, Including teating with a m1n1mal acceptable score required. VITA trainmg materials will be provided by the IRS. VITA training claBSes will be held weekdays from 8:30 a m. to 4.30 p.m. at the Laguna Niguel Federal Building, 24000 Avila Road, Laguna Niguel from: Jan. 3 to Jan. 7; Jan. 17 to Jan. 21; and Jan. 24 to Jan. 28. SIGN UP FOR HIGH RATES TODAY. Your patience is rewarded. Bank of America's Matur<Juy c1.,...,. arc 11ehedull'd Jim H 1md Jam 21i1 trum l'I a.m. to 4:ao p.m Tralnlna cl111H a1au will he ht•ld Wl.oekdaya a\ Orana Codt Coll~i<' In ei.rly Ff'bruary. Exact dattt• and tlmea will b<' annouJ'l('ed later For more information on the.e claMes or tralnlna 1ee1lona acheduled at other Orange County locaUona, phone the Voluntary A.cuon Center of South Orange County at 953-~757 or 8~~-6772. Enzyme action quits DEAR PAT: I u1e meal tenderizer most of tbe time, but one tblng bat always bothered me. Does tbe tenderl1ln1 stop wben tbe food It eaten? K.L., Costa Meta If the enzyme action didn't stop, you wouldn't be here to worry about 1t. Meat tenderlu!rs usually are preparatlona of crude "papaln," which la the dried powdered latex (milky sap) of grown, unripe papaya It contains variows digestive enzymes as well as papaln. When tenderized meats reach the stomach , these enzymes are inactivated by hydrochloric add. high-interest Cash Maximizer account is here. i---~~---------=:~ ___ J Now you can get the high interest rates oi a money market fund and a combination of safety and convenience that no fund can top. With a Cash Maximtzer account you can write checkst and make withdrawals. You can get a monthly unified Timesaver Statement~ This provides you with a consolidated state- ment for certain of your Bank of America invest- ment accounts. Plus your Cash Maximizer account is accessible at any of Bank of Amer- ica's 1000 branches and 400 VERSATELLER• automated teller machines Your investment is insured up to $100,000 by the FDIC and backed by the safety of California's leading bank. And that's a combination no fund, no broker, no sav- ings and loan or bank anywhere can offer F'urniturp delecli.-e? DEAR PAT: Oott U1e furalture IDdH&ry but 1 trade attoc llllo• tllat lltlp1 conumert? I bave wllat I believe It 1 defective piece of HW ,.,..Jture. I cu'• set aaywltere worllla1 wUla th 1tort wt.ere I bou1bt I&, aor bave I beea able to 1•• uy reapoaae to my letter to tile muafactarer. S.R., Newpor1 Buell ContAct the Furniture Industry Consumer Advlaory Panel'• (Jl'I CAP) Director of Conaumer Affairs, P.O. Box 9~ 1, High Point, N.C 27261 (phone: (919) 885-5065). You alao may want to contact the California Bureau of Home Furniahlnp, 3401 La Grande Blvd , Sacramento 95823 • Got a problem., Then write to • 1 Pat Horowitz Pat will rot rt'd t8pe, - getting the nnswt-rs und action you n et• d t o so I v <' 1 n e q u 1 11 es 1 n government and busm('SS Mill/ your qu~twns to Pat Horowicz. At Your St•rvic·e, Orange Coast Daily P1/01. P.0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa, \CA 92626 J UP TO $100 INTEREST BONUS THROUGH DECEMBER 31 ONLY. Open your account now, and we'll pay an inter- est bonus of up to $100. That's a deal that's hard to beat. And it's a deal that's too good to last. Coupons will be honored only through Decem- ber 31, 1982. So, don't wait. Top the money mar- ket funds, and get an interest bonus on top of that. Look below for our extended hours loca· tions. Come into any Bank of America branch soon. Before the year ends and your interest bonus goes away. f cAsH MAx1M1zER ·AccouNr-1cAsH MAX1M1zER-AccouNr j cAsH MAx1M1zER·AccouNT j cAsH MAX1M1zER·AccouNr 1 $10 Thi1couponfroinll1nkof s25 Th1tc:ouponfrom8anllof sso Tht\cOUpoolromBankol 1 $)00 ™·cou~fTomBankol I I Amcrlu It good for . SIO I Amcnc.111 good for. S2 ~ I Am~rlc.111 itood lor. s~ America •• good for a SIOO I lntcreat boriu1 when• •n I 1ntttttt boriut when I open I 1nteru1 boriuJ when I open I intcr"t bonut w~n I opfn I a Cuh Max1m1ur account a C..h MuJmlur 1ccoun1 a Cuh Maalmlur 1ccouna • c:..h MWmlzer 1ccount I wnh • ckpos11 of Sl,SOO-S<&.99999 Only ont I with a ckpotlt of IS,000.$9.99999 Onlyont' I w11h a ckpcHtl of SI0,000-119.99999 Only one I wnh • ckpos1t oi SlO,OOOor more Only one bonut I bonut percut1o~r. and not mo,~ thin ont rcr bonut pet cu1tomer, and not more than one J!C'r bonut per cu,tomcr, and not mon than orw per I IK'I cu"omct, and not more lhan one r.r account I I 1ccount Donut offer only 1vallablc on pueonal I 1ccount. Bonu1 offer only available on pereonal I account Bonu~ offer only 1v.1l1ble on perwnal llonu1 offer only avallable onpenona accounts, I 1ccoun11, andu-"ln• December JI, 1982 Tht1 I accounta,and expires December 31, 1982 Thl1 I 1ccn,.n11,and rxptrn Ottcmber JI, 19112 Thi, I and up1re1 December JI, 1981 Thlt l.nterctt I Interest bonua Wlll be CTCdttcd to my account and 1ntcrut bonu• wlll be credited to my account and tntcrcll bonu\ will be credited 10 my ac:cnunt anJ bonu• will be crrdtted to my account ind appear I •i>P<" on tbt firtt monthly 11arcment · I 1ppearon tbt flut monthly ttllc~nt I 1ppc11 on the hr•r monthly 1t11cmcnt \ttn th< 11111 monthly •tatem<nt I I Name I Nune. I Name I Name: I I Addrm I Addrtu I Addtt.1 I Addrett I I I I I I L~alSe~r1~~---------~~ISec~1~---------:J~"l~~t~---------:.J~~Sc<u~y~---------_J 511ir,.l' •L CASH MAXIMIZrR EXTENDSD HOUD5 You can open a Cash Maximizer account at all of our branche1 durlna reaular 1;&.i"' .:;i " 'banking hours. For your added convenience, you can open your Caah Maximizer account at the following br1nche1 In your erca until 8 p. m., Monday:rhureday, Dec. 14-30 (except Dec. 23). Come In or call for an •ppolntmcnt. Plea1e note: We will not be open late for other bankioJt transactions. iwnwn Valley Branch 174JO Brook.hum St. 961-1~)1 • Nrwpon &e.ch Branch J444 Vlt Udn 759-.!6110 • Ne"'1Mlft Ccntu .8unc.h !iOO Newport Center Ot 7$9-44C'M • Waa:.Uff Plue 8nanch 1016 lmnc Aw. Ncwpon Beach 759-41\.16 r • ; .-- TUllDAV, D C. H , t882 CAVALCADE ENT!RT AINMENT COMIC S 82 83 84 ·Delayed holidays end happily Ella Peterson By KAREN E. KLEIN Of ttle Deir ........... Ella Pet.ef'llOn had a wonderful Chriatmu planned for this year. She retired two daya before the yule, after 13 yeara in the alterations department at Josllns Department Store in Denver. Aft.er a huge retirement dinner In her honor. she was scheduled to spend the holidays at her daughter's home In Foun- tain Valley, where her grandchildren and even great-grandchildren were gathered from as far away as Arkansas. There was only one hitch in Petenon's carefully laid plana: She picked the worst one-day snowstorm of the century aa the day she would leave Denver from Stapleton International Airport. She got about half way to the airport in a neighbor's four-wheel drive truck before she 1µ1d her husband, Anton, had to turn back. They ended up spending Christmas In a city under the siege of winter. But Peterson, 78, wasn't about to let the holidays go by without getting to Fountain Valley someh ow. So ah e a n d An ton were among the 95 pa11engers who arrived at John Wayne Airport Monday -three days late -on Frontier Airlines flight 875. The whole family turned out to greet them, as did about 25 others with family and friends of their own finally making it out from under the Christmas blizzard, which dumped two feet of snow on Denver in 24 hours. The anxious greeters scanned the sky and swapped stories about friends who had been stranded in the airport In Denver. When the plane finally touched down -it was delayed an hour -aome people screamed.some waved and others ahed a few tears of relief. Seven Mllaion Viejo t.een-agen were the first to race up to Gate 2 u the plane taxied up the runway. "There they are" they screamed, when they spotted their friends Tom and Teresa Lovell comJna down the plane's ramp tor a Southern California vacation. The Peterson• were among the last pUSengera to make their way over to the gate and into the arms of their happy family, Including daughter Conni e Stephens and granddaughter Barbara Drake. Even Monday, Peterson said, at had taken over an hour to get from the entrance of Stapleton Airport to the Frontier terminal. "You should have aeen the mow," she said. The storm spawned a lot of good will among people stranded together, Peterson said. For instance, when she called Joslin's on Christmas Eve, she found the store serving as a temporary refuge for 200 shoppers. "The store agreed to stay open, so all the other stores sent their stranded customers to J oslina," daughter Stephens said. "They opened up the kitchen and fed aoup to all the people and took mattresses and bedding out of inventory so people could spend the night." Peterson's Christmas wasn't exactly what she had planned, but their family readily agreed th.at It was better to have her arrive late than never. " Christmas if she hadn't waited to go to her retirement party," her husband commented. But then, Peterson had gotten a late start on her career, too. "She started at 65 . when most people retire," her granddaughter said. ' llflllU Jufft•' .. M11~t• 1111d. Mon•lr.n" a •u pt'n lul (,'U~"'i ,,,,,.,,,,, U('('Ur dln11 '" f .,r ,,d Ho the11berg. Pas t· 8 5. D D As Wiley Drake finally greets Anton Peterson• Tom Lovell of Denver gets a hug and a babbling welcome-by-committee. Keeping her balance I .. I t HOIOSCON BY SIDNEY OMARA WedDetd~f. December H ARJES (March 21-AprU 19): Shortcut.a could costly -atick to quality and familiar around. ula on tecW'lty, property, aafety meuurM condl.lllon of lona·ltandlni neaot.iationa. ;. TAUR US (April 20-May 20): Someone lntendll t.o :•nd you on wild aoc-chue. Don't pennit It. F~ on meaagea, trips, vtalta, calla from relaUvea. .:. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Flnandal windfall co~d lHd to greater independence of thought, ac\{9n. You find younelt extremely popular with m(Jrlbera of oppoaite aex. :·:CANCER (June 21.July 22): Follow through on;~t imp~ona. Judgment and intuition are on ~t. You ll be at n.ht place at crudal moment. Al$0intment wlll be made w ith one who can fuN'ier your bu.sine.a and personal uplrations. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Partidpa\ion in apecial group, organization or club activity clearly indicated. Fears, doubt.a, suspicion.a can be erased. You'll have more working room. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Wish comes true, baalc procedures are revi8ed, unusual acquaintance can be transformed into meaningful relationship.' UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Be ready for cha.Nle, travel, variety and a boost in career. Indh.;duaI who prwioualy oppoaed you will now flash green Light tor cooperation, progress. : SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Family member dixusses travel, abo talks about education and des1re to communicate. Domestic adjuatment is necessary, you'll know it, you'lJ make It and hannony will be restored. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): What appears on surface can be deceptive. Be aware. alert, willing to dig deep for valid infonnation. Money ia involved, an accounting ia required and you would be wise to take inventory. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Play waiting game. Contractual obligations will be clarified. U patient, you win. Otherwile, you'll be forced to retrace atepa. AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 18): Added tion CXJmeS from peers. Your opinion will be in conn«tion with labor dispute. Divialon of will be in oootention. ; PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Roman ce, creativity, apeculative ventures are part of exciting sc4tnar lo. .POT SHOTS .._av ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT ;SORELY 'THE MOST IMPORTANT NEWS .. OF ANY DAY \S THAT THE SUN ~AS RISEtJ ONE MORE -rlN\E. "IT'S A Gll&\T MOVIE!" -l'•t Colllru. C&S-1V MorwlNa Nnrt "Clint Eastwood shines as · , e..n ~Honkytonk Man.' .,:'!~f'. -TIMr M•l(•.rlttr _J :-;. ~ \ r.7~·· f;!J '-( LUXURY THEATRES ) ~ 1tt Tiil llati..Slilllltllcs•YS2.MIWm"'"'9ellltttl ~ S]tllifeJ44•1inl6I~ 25ssf~~) S ... ~ FOi Mt E>IOTEmEllTI VllrtOur ••• .: io:: ;: :.: GOlll 011 lllOfl IV OMAAL 8 H 00 N ANO OMAA 8HAAI~ Both vulnerable tJouLh dt1l1. Noam • JIOtO <:I K4H 0 ". •ao WEST EA8T lometlmea a brld1• hand wlll enable you to tflt ycnir level of aklll. Her•'• a hand from "The Bridr• World: 8e1t of th• Earr1 8laLl11" that will 1lve you a chance t.o rate your 1am1. and 1hlfl1lo1 low 1p1dt. You raplul"f! E.tlt't qunn with Lht act. Uow do you co n ti nut'/ If you er• an a veraii• player, you know that the odd• favor a 3 2 club apllt. So you draw lrump1 and 1t1rt on the club1. Uy th• time you learn of the 5-0 club dlvl1lon, ll 11 too late and you mutt ro down two trlck1. ruff a elub In dummy and 1 .. vre your 1lam. Un for Lunately. Lht 1ult doe1 not behave aa kindly 11 you had upecttd, 10 you are down one -at ltut, an Improve ment. hlth th1bt and hi• remaf nln1 .:!iamond winner. lh•• cro11ruU1 Lht rt1t of hand for 12 \rlck1. ... " • ., .. ,.... cl•lt• Utr ... ltHt U.. --•tl'J .. u.. fev"4eal ~· .... ,. De U.11 U.W --•tM.as '" dH'&1 Cltarlta a.,. •.• •KUHi •Q <:I A <::1 t7U o QJl7U O lOU +Veld +JlotU SOUTH •A <:;I J 10812 O A4 + AKQ73 The biddlnr: Tht blddln1 la a1rrt11lv1 but not unreuonablt. North'• jump to three htarU 11 a limit ralM 1how4n1 • hand of 9·11 point• with rood trump1; however, ht ahould have four trump• for t hl• bid or compenutlnr hl1h-card valuea. No one can quibble with South'• leap to alam. At your 1ame lmprov11, you learn that you can handle a 4·1 club 1plit. You draw only one more round or trump• and then at.art on club1. H cluba are 4·1 and the player with the long cluba al10 hu the remainlna trump, you will be able to The upert draw1 Ml more trump•. Ht flrat ca1h11 one hlth club. Should both defender• follow, ht wlll pro- ceed ntat with a 1tcond trump and then with a Hcond club, and he will make the 1lam If the condltlon1 above ul1t. But he will 1110 land the contract if the layout i1 u in the dlarram. When Weat •how1 out and can't ruff, declarer •Imply ca1hee hla "Four-Deal Brld1•.. wlll tead1 yeu th ltratet'ea a.ad t.etk• ., Utf• fut-·~ ae· tloa , .. , tlaat ,......_, dl.e CIU"I for utadlq ,....,... r or a copy ucl a ..... ,.... MIMI 11. 75 to "G ........ .... De al," care ti tit la aew1paper. P.O. Be• 259, NorwMCI, N.J. 01"8. Make eheek1 payable t.t Ntw• paperbooka. 8oaUt W "' N ortla Eur 1 l::;I 1. s <;;> , ... 8 l::;I PU1PU1PU1 Openina lead: Queen of o. A gain1l the heart slam Weet lead• the queen of dlamond1. You win and lead a trump. Weet takea the ace DEAR ANN: You're a busy lady so fll get right to the point. What does a wife lack that would make her husband buy girlie magazines on a dally basis? I don't mean classy onea like Playboy. My guy ls hooked on the raunchy, filthy, perverted atuff and it ls driving me crazy. I need an answer t.o thia question and I hope you will provide it. -GOING OUT OF MY MIND IN CONNIX:TICUT DEAR GOING: Plea1e read tbe next letter caref.Uy becaue tile u1wer la tbe aame for yoa and tile woman wboae 1l1aatare la carloHly almllar to youa. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why would a man Indulge In aelf-gratlflcation when hia loving, puaionate, attractive wife I.a lying beside him - ready, willing and able? Pleue sign thia letter - GOING OUT OF MY MIND IN CALIFORNIA DEAR CALIFORNIA (AND CONNECl'ICUT): Yoar b1bu4'1 bavolvemnt ha pornop-aplay ucl aelf-sntUlcatioa lau no&Ma1 to do wUll yoa. la DO way la eltller of yoa womea lavolved to tile 1ll1llte1t de1ree. Stop feell•I ludeqaate. Tile problem la arrea&ed devel.,meaL Tile bebvlor of botll mea la adolnceat. So accept tllat wklct. yoa ca.D.Dot clause ud doa't let It drive yoe cra1y or dama1e you aelf-ea&eem. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a Dobttm.an ptNcher. eight montha old. My muter aays I am the most gentle, friendly dog be has ever had. Now for the problem: Everywhere we ao I hear people say, "That Doberman ls frlendly now, but wait three or four rean. He will go benerk and rip your 900'1 arm off.' 'nley •Y my bn.in ls too big for my akull and that la why I will become v1doua one day. I have aeen other dop who bark. snip and yap, but they are 1mall, ao no one conaldera them dangerous. U I bark, they aay, .. See how mean he ....... eN ··••11tntan• -....... .............................. , --~ .. ·~-~~~ ----•OWPLAYl•G ---·- IMA -··-· UtUlt CllTAmuA ---~IU• CMJA-Elw ... ..._,,,.,, UIUOI lll-1 .. -s--~·~&IO .... , .. ___ ,.. c-• S)t 06S) MAml OtyC.... IJ•UU WU~TU 1 .. -c:-...w ... It> JtlS ..n•tAllfT _,,_v..., °""9 ... u .. • ..... ~°""'· 1311710 "A magical blend of mythology and eclence fiction. Every toene contalnt weird and wonderful thrllla and discoveries." ..... A work of soaring, sustained Imagination ... It's wonderful.'' -Dennis Cunningham, WCBS-TV 'a... ...·, ~ ·Rex R#d, N.Y. Po.t QUll By PHIL INTERLANOI of LagunaBeach ir~tA\W~lb £~~w tr• ;~ tff~ ~ ) "Now, here's one. A tourist resort for people who hate tourist resorts." 11." Ann, 1 am not mean but 1 do protect my territory -which includes home and yard. I am worried that the public'• opinion of us may one day become united and they will get rid of ua. Pleue don't allow thia t.o happen. Give ua a chance to aho~ people how lovable we are. - MAN'S BEST FRIEND IN SHAMOKIN, PA. DEAR FRIEND: Stop frettta1. Yoe bve more frlead1 tlaa• yoa tlllD~. I llave howa maay DoHrmu loven wllo 1wear yo• are ~ 1eatleat bl'ffd of all. hi alcohol/am ruining your lll~~ Know tb~ ~ 6'/lnab and what to do. Rad the boold~t, "AJcohoUtm -Hope and Help," by Ann I...nden. Enclote 60 cents with your request and • l01J6, .r..mped, ~11-addrettaed tmvelope to Ann Land~rs, P.O. Box 11911,, Chicago, ID. 60611. "UPROARIOUS ... Ma& oft~ routines are huge fun and a couple approach-greatness.• -Vorunt Canb¥, NEW YORJC TIMES . ......, ... _ ............ ....,.., .......... .._.. . -.,.. w•••-w-.wa1w =-= =----=-==-~--...,. __ Clllma ___ ---~"'"" flMA IOMlfCI ATWIT'S ENO I Jove you, Jane Goodall. I really do. I was filled with envy when you went to Eaat Africa in the '60s, t.o observe the baboons and chimJ)amee9. I aaid, "Why not me, God? I could take the silence, the boredom, the isolation. Why wu I choeen to stay behind battling smog, bickering children and aggressive leftoven?" From Ume to time I would see you on a special on PBS and for days afterward I would fanlaliz.e about climbing into a pair of shorts and faded ahirt, fastening my hair in a ponytail (where do you get all lhOlle rubber bands?) and ascending to a aolltary hill t.o write down what I saw. No pantyhoee riding around your hips, no gas · gauge on E, .no shaving your legs (just mingle), no video games, no newspaper in the apouting, no securing the howe every night like Fort Knox . . . juat blessed peace and a clean pair of shorts for the next day. Sometimea, Jane, I'll go for months and not think too much about you, and then the week between Christmas and New Year' a comes and I think about you a lot. Like when all the kids are home and two of them are pounding the first eight ban of "Heart and Soul" on the piano for three solid hours. When one of them ii going through the garbage trying to find a aales slip that you burned with the traah three days ago. When you run out of milk every six hours. When the countertop haa wall-to-wall glaasea. When putting Christmaa 1ticlten on the dog's tail is "IOmething t.o do." When the traffic through your house makea you fee) like you're living ln a bus station restroom. I want your job, Jane! I want to sit on a hillaide and know that the moment I sit down. the phone won't ring. I'll be all right ln a few week.a. 1 alwaye recover. But right now, Jane, if I were you, I'd shape up. I'm willinc to watch baboons and chimps the rest of my life for "acale." cmTa.... ... ~II.at -~cir-. Qllljir Edwlllls WOOllbrldlll &liM* Soldll eo.a ~ 111•u1 c.-ss1 a.ss 4141514 asuss~ WUT na f.dw .. o... wesu11 u3s , ______ , ACAOEllY MOIHM: ~ ~ wt11 edmlt you end a ... , to.,.,, performance Monday ttwu Thuf'lday. . . . ~ . . I . I I • Brigitte Bardot bares all • once again PARIS (AP• Nt1rly \ht r.ltud •fl I rock9Un1 to f•rrut u an ln .. rnallon1l •• kltto11, BrlllH• &rdot 11 barlnc her frwitratlon.e ancJ ~:tnmt. Irr-ttw hottat--hoild.,.-"'IV t .mt Ir-, - Fra~ At "i'' 48, the 1tar once known 1lmply •• , B.B. hu retalnod her Iona toualt!d blonde hair, and hf'r walat ta only 1ll1htly thk:ker than th• 19 lnchw of old. It hat been nine yean II.nee her last fllm, but ahe hu not lost her ability to capUvate the audience. With broadCl&lt of the TV ahows, Brialtte Bardot haa broken her cu1tomary 11lence to speak candidly of her 28-fl.lm career, her three failed marriages, her 1960 1uiclde attempt and her hatred of the paparaui ahe aays once made her feel like a hunted animal. "There have been too many false things aaid about me," she said In explaining why she agreed to the three-part TV wries, which began la.st week and condudes Jan. 2 on the French network Antenne 2. The shows feature clips from old movies and interviews with her former co·workers. with her llHJM_eAOS_ I\ Wl\f<Nf H \..l>MMUNt(..AllON~ (.UMPANV • "'11111: * ........ .., .... • lfARQAIN MATINBl!S • Mond•y lltrv l•tunt•Y All PerlormancH befOfe 5:00 PM IElce,e S[llleill £11.....-IM HlllUyll "BEiT F"laNDS" "' ----- "THE VERDICT" ,. ----- "41 HRS."., ------ +>THE Tor------ "AJIU'LANI I '"11lAL CW THI THI MOUB."-I ... PANT'Hml" -------------•'*1•1• ii:,ia~ffiO J ...,OOTar------ "THE Vl!RDICT",. ----- Lt l<EWOOO CEHTEQ SOUTH ..,,.1, '" "llX WEEKS"------. "KIN• Q0009ff" ------ ,... Ollot er,. ....... , .......... .,. , .. lllrlHITUT llOTICll CIOUIMJI __. If fllUI ---.. -----.... --.. ,.. *"'-·.,..•w-••-" ••c.--.--c::919f -........... l.l•IU *"'-·· ·- •••A-V ANAHEIM OQIV( IN ......, .... '-. .,.....IO "KIU -Q0009ft" - "FORT ~ACHE. THIMOMX",. a. ... _ ............. BUENA PARK (•wiwl '" ..------HM070 . •.· ,.,. LINCOLN D RIVE IN "TMmTOY" --"STIR CRAZY" ""' C:..fl- "THE DAM CAYST AL" --"1941" .. .. ... ~ .... ~-... -.. --"attAMaY"a llA~ "' 121-4010 . . .... .,. FOUNTAIN VALLEY OQIVl IN ·~· ,. ......... .. ~jft99 ••• -01eee ,_, .. ---(1e 1 To.Tl ,,.,,,,,_"' M2·2411 _,._ .... ST "1!'9DI" .,.. "'TMI Y!Y" .,.. "NIGHT....,. ... ~ ,,,...,,. ---·II- I A Ht.IHI/\ . . " thlrtf hUlbllnd, w ' u~nn1n mllllonalt µJayboy Ounth~r &.chi, •nd with h•r furnwr •·r.lary whu outr•t•d Ml" Bardo& 20 yHn 11110 by ~·!:*~an lnllnwue book an her-llf-.. Tho thl'ft' frt'n('h telf!vl•lon network.a do nut ronduC't r11t1n1• aurv•y1, but It 11 clear th11 t mlllfb1\Jt uf famlllee Included "8rl1IU0 Barden; Th• Way She 11" ln thelr holiday plant. Before thf' flrat ahow appnred, French fnlllu!noe put ..... ...,.. ... ,,.,, l"H>t •CllU- H--C-1 .. 1102 C:DIYA-th••~C...1 "-'• , •• 11t' llT-fh-~• HI IU O = _____ ..., m 1m ~ ~~ .. 7:'"'' ,.,.., :.~-=-...... -...... I 0.-ffl ltll °''"' .. .,. t:M1 thl' form•r film llMr Oil thOlt C:CJVNI, llld the• rtNM.'h pr h I hfttn IWllllh Wllh llorlH lbout BB that wf'rtl with bt•l111 on ol thl." cenlUt)''I mGIC not.·0111lu-d ICJC 1ymbola She blame• pr .. vre ' from th• Vfwll fur her auk:ld• au.empt and lhe ol't'akup-or h.-r Tour-yHr nutrrl•I (o Tr h ~ ac:lOr Jacqun Chimer -~~ .. ~ .~ .. ~,,,... pi-•-mok -• BnaJtw Bardot dresaed caauaUy ln pulluver awutel't ur low-cut 1umm r drr9NI In lnt.ervlvw1 t.'Onduc t<od lut 1ummor In Parle ond In 8t. Tropc.<i on the Rlvl~ra, where 1he hu a home Born lnw an uppt'r cl1&11 Parlal.an family { Sept. 28. 1934. Mt. Bardot t.:aan work.in& • a model at aae 16 They lf'am ahe la bitter about the att.enuon 0 YCAllS M AT ,..~~ 3901 [. Co11t HwJ. Cor dtf Mat 759·1154 n ... l ... ,..OMD PIANO Anll •GAii• None finer 12•/o financing on new Baldwlns Dec only taal• 11em1 excluded) ORGAN & PIANO CINTIR 270 E. 17th St., Cotto MHo 645-2471 Edwards ff'estbrooli Cinema Is Now Only '!l.00 All §eats! E11er D.-t MON-FRI. 8:45, 10-.30 8AT/8UN. 3:00, 8:45, 10:30 lt'H lift you up w~• you belong. RICHARD DEBRA GERE WINO ER G~,~. r.i1 A PARAMOUNT ~ PICTURE MON-FRI. 8:00, 10:35 SAT/SUN. 3:35, 8:15 CHRISTOPHER REEVE MON-FRI. 1:15 SAT/SUN. 1:15, 5:50, 10:20 edwards WESTBROOK WISTMIMSTll 530-4401 AT IROOIMUHT •••D .. aaon T• f~lllLt' l'll('l'I "It's what I've been wanting my WHOLE LIFE!" by Brad Anderson "Strange .. .I keep hearing ocean surf and Hawaiian music.'' • /2 1¥ "let'• not bt 1 thowoff, Hector." DEN~IS THE Mt:N1'CE Hank Ketchum ~ • 1 DIOTOOtcEEPA SECAET. I DIOHT TELL~ IT W4S MY~~ "'T ~WHO $VE HER ™T ~I.ET ~• by Harold Le Ooux LOOK C.LOSE.LV JON. THESE ARE CAT'S PJ\W~ NOT &LAVe.'S PAWS llOMDAY'I flUZZLI IOI.YID SllOIE NANCl' NEW ¥~R'S RESOL.Ui10N #2 GoRDO l 'M c:>~. ~A'f'MA C~ISF"ll!~ ••• ~ WRl'Tl! NJ!!PtCAL. MY's1"11~1es ..• l ~.HOW I WISH we HAt7 ®NS INS-rMV' OF !'O'NS A~W ARl',OWS! .~ '~i .i by Jeff MacNelly ~~~~~- I By Mark Lasky r--~~~~~~-- 'I ' . -1 WILL MAKE FRIEND~IPS THAT LAST FOR Ye.AAS ~P 'r'E:ARS --0 -. -' . '. Mickey Spleen was a private eye doctor ... and like a.11 doctors, he was honest, dedicat- ed to his profession, and never concerned with mAkl.ng a fdst buck ... W Hf NEVE. R Po5Sl&.E. by Gus Arriola 'M z and Mon t •r ' u p n f ul • mov1 f/,t.f',!!! ff!" NBt:llU NIW YORK -Cnll•a• 11 ttadlllonall)' • Um• of ••tH• rr•• from par•nlal lnfluenc , eomt atu.d~ll exhibit • reu .. ,_poMI that tak" vartoua forma of ov.rd~lna. from aotdltah w ptOteeta to drup. al•• ~ 11• 1tw film'• • t•lA ~miJUt •I 'l'h• ldt•• for th• ~k 1·u11w fltim 11 rww11pttpc•r ,...,.,,, •buul 11 lhwt• l911)' ur• atiuw1r1a. uf l'llUrt•, (hit thla 1tury l'OUlJ hMVVf!" tu a11ybudy All h•v• Jtlou•lblf' moUvaUcm• 1111 llwlr ~ lflJ1ul1hm ft11 • ii•nw lhal ~.._ &hem w L:tMW \.twit 1ndtv1du1I ranlH)' worlda and tawh un '° totnethlna 1pec'la.l In their llv•. ••• I hU' h• .. ,. h 'I fWl lh.al t·um1,.u11n and wuuld rather makt• UJJ 11mu lh•n play orpnlwd apurta. More recent campu• ob1t11lon1, vldt-o and fantaay 1amee. now .erve to keep ntallty at • dluance Dun1eon1 and Oragon1. one popular aamt'. allow• playera to create their own charactera and let their lmaginat.lona run wild. l"ll 1• 1tud,•n1 bl!H ved ln h•vl• diMppMl'...d Whll9 ac:W\I ~l M (amt or Oun&~lll and Oraauna Tht' 1tudttnt eventually turned up, but Jaffe'• r....rch lndlc•led &hat atudenu wer• takln1 the game beyond th• board Into tunnela, cav-. .. and fol'ftta. lt'a an lntrtauln1 premlM, but an lncrt>dlble on• for thoH unfamiliar with fantasy samet. So l he movlto'I first 1cene attempt• t o build belief. A trasedy seems to have occurred. and a reporter aay1 It involve1 college ktda and a 1ame. ln which the parttclpantl "deal with problema In thelr lives by acting them out" Jay Jay, pl1yed by Chrl• Makeptt.CO of "My Body,uard," 11 thl' bo)' 1•nlw who entered ooUea~ early. Hta mother (Lou!M Sorel) I• a kooky toetallw who con1tantly chan1e1 hi• room dec:or. "You obliterate me, you wipe m«-out," he aaya. Kate (Canadian actreu Wendy Crewaon) wanta to be a writer She'• experlenclng writer'• block. and aaya ahe lack.a enouah life experiences to work through It. Her mother (Susan Struberg) !luggeata using her imagination. "Mazt!s and Mon1tera," tonight'• suspenaeful CBS movie, ahows how an addiction to these fUahta of fancy can pt out of hand, particularly when lhe players don't have a firm grasp on reality. The movie II baaed on the best-selling book. "Mazes and Monaters" by Rona Jaffe, who With that established, the story jumps back six months, when we meet the players. They're all bright, clean-cut, The athletic Daniel (David Wallace) could have done better than Grant University in Pequod, lr:OO ID. NEWS CHAAUE'S ANGELS Tltfwiy ~ I "ghoel hunt" .tlel\ -~ -ta lhrMlen Ille Mfe of '* college lr*'<I. CiJ ElOHT IS ENOUGH NICfW>IU trie9 IO~ I girt by Introducing her to • IOc:lll ~ •• .,. • M0 A0 S'H B.J. tt1M to OfOlnin I prHent-day, •t1te1ld1 91therlng of 4017th laml- 11 ... ., HAWAII fflE-0 Denny and • coillgl pro- ._ .,. -ldf\8PP9d and held 11 hOetagel. to be kllled unleaa two membet't of • , edlcel group .,. relMNd from 1111 • OVEREMY Gu.t: llU1h0f Bel Kllllf- •H&w.na Tl4AOUOH TI* ART8 "Sculptura· Mirror 01 IM~==Q N.c..wa ::::.. PfllCa • NGHT ··~"'The~ -Pwt II" ( 197tl Maureen StaPWton. EMm ZlmbellM Jr. A Mdow and Nr grown chlldren'1 Chrl11m11 reunion la compllclted by thllt unta'<IOflble rlKtlOll 10 I,,_~ In Fl9r Mt. and conNct• In thelt own .__ CD>MOW * * "MeMn And Howerd" (19801 Paul LeMat. Jeaon Ro1>11d•. An otnen.tM unknown 011 1t1llon ~ dllm8 to be lhl rlOhtful heir to Howwd HughH • bl II Ion dollar •tale. 'R' ())MOW • • "F1111no In LOVI Again" ( 1980) Elliott Gould. ~ VOfll A men go.a 10 his high tctlOCll reunion In IM b9ll9f !Mt hi can re!Mt the good llmea of the pqt. 'PG' e:ao1 AUCE DC<CAVETr au.et•: .t.or-de Mille and Or. Fred Plum (P111 II I MWNiPOWER QINEWS BARNEY MILLER An opefl hou .. at the 12th bf1ngl Medy ctlllrecier• lnlo the 9C3I*' room. • WOAl.D Of P£OPU: ®HENRY FOMlA: niE MAN AHO HIS MOW.a The on.end on.,_ ... "' -af AIMrlce'• ·--It• ec10r1 II tr-' wllh lllm clp9 of aome of hi9 belt moYlel lnduellnQ "On ~ Pond" wtllGtl won !Wftan0-7'JJOI C88NEW8 N8CNEW8 HAW'f OAYS /llJNN AlcHI .,., Pol.M pool their lund9 fOf • eporty t91SO convertlble that pr-to be Ill 11\oW and no90. I MCHEWSQ 80AP • Chester tt1M to reform and Mery .... ttlll her beby -tathwed by the ~ Burt. i:.acowNtt A i.n., In I "4 ~ ~ COfWlnC* .... ol the two glftl tNi the Cl'lfllf 11 heW1g an llfflllr with .... 11-::::.WIU> MPORT (I) ...... MAQA1JNI A td'OOI met prollllMe to """ • WOlllell Imo ..... fllllllOl'I modtl In tO ~ en Ol*don weed to an ....., ..,.,... IN INbllty Bruce Boxleitner, seen here with a close working partner, plays Frank Buck on the CBS series "Bring 'Em Back Alive." 10 brMlhe ...... U6lep 9 EHTERTAINMEHT TONIGHT Benlnd ,,,. ~ ., the Florida loclllon IOt the ,,,_.. ··smo1cay 1a n.. Bandit .. tD OAAHGE COUNTY TODAY (%)MOYIE • I • 'A "The Wiid Chief' ( 1970) ,,._..,...,,. c.voi. F~ TNffeu1 Art fl1h- o.ntwy phywldan •twncna to c::Nllle .• t2-y.s-old boy tound MnCI .., In ow tor..u of Fr.-. ·o· 7!30 12 ON THE TOWN QI FMllA. Y RUD lAVENI& & llHR..EY &COMPAHY ~ end Shlttay -stolen df-to 1 fancy '*"' 8 £YEO..LA "-hired a lodl It L.A 'I Olympic ~ the 111 oe 1*JC>1e watcNno, ex•· dMa for pregnant women. D MAOAMF8 PUCE Or. Joyce Bro111er1 11 called In wtlerl Madame tt.,,. acting •• • ~ ~ Fred Wllerd • M'A'S'H An enlltted man wtio WWlll to merry 1 K- glr1 oomea 10 Hft41¥ for help. I Cl) TIC TN:. DOUGH MACHEL I LEHRER AEPOAT ID MAGIC Of OIL PANTING 9 YOU ASKED~ IT FMtured "8omeo High-- WI re F1rm111 ' and ''Tomato.a Thal Lllten To Radio." G MOVIE ••'h ''Trlengll" (19701 Dena Wynt•. R8y o.mon A young homo•••u•I !Mdler In I ofr11' ec:flOol tnea to _, l.hf'OUQfl Ilia ~In -di°',... \NI ld«1tlty. ®HBO MAGAZJNE 1:00 8 Cl) MINO 'EM BACK ALM Franlc 8ldl '-a Samu- rel wlt1ofd wtlo la *10ttz· Ing Jungle vMl-O-and tall· Ing deedly rneeeut• to conllecate .,.,... and II)' hlrnlelf wfth tile J..,.._ ij Cll FATHEA MUl¥HY A Pfegnlflt 18-Y"f-dd dllp«lllly tt1M to l'llde '* eondltlOn Wiiie IMng at Iha orpNneo9. ewow *** "H I 'W«e Klng" ( t93tl Ronald Cdman, EJllf\ Of... TIMI ,__.. poet, Fr9nOCll9 VIiion, tan- g6ea wtt• wtlfl King Louil XI OllFrenoa • 9 HM't'Y DAYI Joanie announce• har planl to -IO ~ pem191..mty IO oonunue ....,. with her ~ Qwdll.CR)O I ::.HOQAH eortrww Ml9 out to bftnO Tim bedl ll'om hila - end ""1 Me M enoountet wltfl a UfO • ~ .... MAQAZINI ,. tchOOI tlllt promtMe 10 tum 1 wom1r1 Into 1 lllgh- llllhlon model In 10 di~. an operation uNd 10 OKI .., ~ the lnlJ>Mjly to twMthe wNtl llllM9 • MOVIE * • "Ftmltt FMght" (1972) Rod T lylot. OWle Merrtll. A llytr!g vecatton to MexJco ror en at-odda farnlly turne Into•-~ bettle ror~. • NOYA "T .. t-Tut>e Bablet A o..qtMr For Nd(' Exc:lu· Ull'9 tootaoa ~ tr1e oonoep.. lion and birth of Amertca'• "'•I 1191-tube t>eOy .. retwoedc..e on II« one yeM~(R)Q ID MYSTERY "Quilt As A Nun" A w1tn Ing note and I t1'ddln wll compel Jem1me IO tnv.ll- 91le 1 I~ tale ln--.led ~1~1' (Plfl 21Q * • • "Batrtegrounel' ( 1~91 Vat\ JohNon. JoNI Hodllll Am«lcll1 toldierl o4 the 101tt Alrt)Ofne DM- lllOfl «'0909 In the French '~ .,., Iha Bettte o4 Iha Bulgl. <DJ OMOYIE * ''Modern PToblenla'' (t91tl ~ o-. Paid O'~ Ah._,._ e# 1r11nc controller wlltl numeroue pw'lonll prob-*"' .. endowed wtth te1e111Mt1c: poww-9 an .. being doueed wtth nudMr ....... ·pa· (1)~'8 AFOOT ~ StaPWton and Ar""1 Gibb ttM In I.Na mualcel wflodunll about 10 hou ... ou-ia at an Engltah coun- try tio.JM wtio •• mur- dered one by one t:tO. 0 LA'ltAHE & 8HIAl.EY LawrM CHll• hlVOO II her -IOb.....,. ... floats through Iha hlctory -ring an lllll-9f'lvll'I' tull (RIO CJ) CHAIW.JFI ANGE..a Whlll on YK1tlon, the Angell 11umble on a pl111 to fr• I...,...,_ tyndi· '81e' I atrongrnan being tran1portld by forHI langel'L • 000 COUPl.E OIClf and Fellll ..,.nd 1 ..... ltlM-hle>PY v-'lon In.~ lowtllt tnp ®MOYll • • ''Thia le EM•" (tHtl ooeum.nwy Alm'°°'• and *arMllC ,._il()flt b U19C1 to tel Iha 910t't Of EMI ~· tlM ~ Cll'- (%) M<Wll * •• * "8toMn Klaw" (INI) .JMn..Plerr• l.eald, Oelphlne S.yrlg. Thia toucNng and hlfllfloul """ ... """' • yowng, llllMbll jetll~-... lradel fllllng In IOW. ..oo • (J) ~ wn·• MAD9 AHOMONel!N 'Wt Gifted OOlleOI ecu- defltt ,..,, to ooaeoe .,.., """"* "**Ion end btoo"'• denaerou1ly tmoMd Ill .,,. .___ .............. ____________________ ................ __ _,_ ~ o4 • tMafwtlCll .... 0--. Cfll'll ... ~ Wfllt//tt Crwton1 OeWI Wlllleol Ind TOfl'I Hlllltt .. ., ··CHAtlll LISTINGS r. 1<,,iXT (t8$; ttkNOC CN&CI e ICT\.A (Ind I .KAIC (A8CI 1 e tt,M• tCI~) e 1<....i·TV (lftd) e l(UT CA8C> e 1tTTV (Ind 1 -.l(~TY111W I ~.kCl!T 1"851 '•KOCC CNSI .... l(O()C {lnd ) O On-TV I Z T\/ 11 HBO ' ""'*ma~i IWORl NV ,NV f1l IWTBSI ft .u ...... it fSMwfltNI • Sc»111on1 • lcatlle Nf"" Ntt-• I PiGAYILAH dMttl Oii ::::: ..: heW kllCIWfl toe ,,..,. Mlout hllffl ~ ~TH..r· Otltl#Nt'f "-* 111.-1nto • lf*"4 -C(. "9:• ..... ... '"¥IMllt ......... ... l'llOfldl *'* ooukl "" fllj'ft lnlM ....... lflltQ • OOOIM IA8KET8AU "Hollday ClaNic T oum•· rnent" • MlAV Gl'llFFlN O~tt! SklC> Stec>"41nl00, Mll11n O'Boen, Sherri Fox- ~. lr-K-w • MYSTERY "Quiet .U A Nun" A watn• Ing nota and • hidden wlH cornf)e4 Jemima 10 1n .... 11. Qll•. loollah tall ln..,..,led ~me .wdentt. (Part 21 Q 41111 NOVA "THI-Tub• 8ablH A Oeuofll« F0< Ju<ty" Exelu- llve lootage ol thl concep- tion and birtll ol Amwtc;a'• flrat tMl·IUbe baby I• rebr09dCMt on II« one Y9lf birthday. (RI Q • 90l.OOH£8 Tllr• llWV9f• we Qhal· lengad In c•••• ol aulhanalla. n«collc:a and 1 e111rge 01 NllUll on 1 mlnot t:30G9 noa T,,. Okla entertain 1 hlfd· noMd eecu<hy OUlfd with their 1torle• about • <l.clut, • typeWrltlf and .,, (fj=lng goldlllh (RI * * 'h "'The Ore1tn Mer· cnan11" (Part 21 I 19801 Miik Harmon. Morgan Falrdlllel An amb4tlou1 young man )oit'9 IOfOW wtlh .,, optlrnlsllc: nlclcelo- deOn ope<alOf 10 cooelrUC1 one of 1tw1 ~ dynat- ti. In Ille motion plciura toOuttry (O)MOVIE ••• "Refuge" (1981) Anne Twomey, Jam•• Congdon The courM of frlendlhlC> do.a nol run amooWy for 1 quartet of 11el:8llonen In ......... t:40 • VIEWSf8 CHOICE ¥OT1NO tO:OO 8 QI Nee WHITE ,~ ··~ M MIO-Term" Roget ~ and Tom 8to- k-examk1e ,,. llr9' two ye1r1 ot the Raaoan lldmlni9tr1tlon. lnclucllng "• for9gn and econom6C polk:llw • .,., IM ••.ICKIOC --MCI ,....,_ to date o4 the ~nitlon't PfOOrlll'M. ··~~HART JonatNn and Jennlter - led Into the midst of --el blutTe murder p60t1 on the lk>OM of the Val lkl ....art.(RIO • THI MAZllJAN COHNECTIOH 8'1U1'1 flrll ,,.. -.cllont In ,. Y'M'• and !heir lfnPeCt on the counlr(• Mure are examined In • docum1nt1ry f11turlng lnter'\Ww9 wt th Bf azlllln ~tafllc:llla.~ dldlll•. and ,.,,_, .. t'-o4 Am«ican benkl and bull.- • BODY~ QUESTION · Native Medicine" Or. JONltllln Mill« oontrut1 thl prac:tlcl of modenl medldnl In 1(1 Enolllh 1 own wHh the lrlldltlonll m101e11 •Y1em of the Az.lnde lnbe In Afl1ca. Q ID THE V1AGHAH A young gk1'• ~ lo tum lltlde • P«.ie1ant lldmlf'ef ~ oontuMon and~endlng (C)MOYIE '*'** "Stripw" (IN11 a.I Murray, Har<*' Aamll A ,... y Ott! cabbte tool!lnQ f(I( 11tc:lt-' ~ • hie 11ee1 frMnd to IOln him In anA1t1nO In the U.S. Almy. 'A' Cl) WHATI uP It.MERICAi ~.,,., • lll9tl with Sin-- ,. • • ,..,. .. ltley OM" up fOf Ille hOllday ~. ""81 It lekW IO be a tll.I palrolmln; • ret.,....,1 home fOf cNmc>e In RM- da. • V!E'#ml CHOICE WIHNM (%)~ * ** "Ned Kally" (tt701 Midi .,..., • Alan 41di- IOfd. All Auatr...,.. outtew -r-.on~ ·~~ '°' IMtlnCI ..... inotMr In )II, 'R' 10: 1f ®ON LOCATION "The 9e¥enlh Annual Young ~ Show" Ho91. Alan Klng. ~ 8ahmOdl and V..,_.,, Mike MacOOllald. Stew Wrlgf!I, l.MfY Amorot Ind J.J 'Wll. •.ao . INOIJllNDINT t1IOD;;;c;;. ..we • MT\NAY IMHT Holl! Hornw\ i..,. ~ . '°''°'"'' ... IC>OOll' New YOftt AnOlll ... LOI ~laWt • N.L .. MPN&V ~ ..,,.. or1rM .... ~ .. ............ orly hllf1t~lo~ """" ---~ [:.~.:.-DOCTOR .. ,... Olellte 81PlllD .. Dfl IO I ........... ,......, CD>MCMI .,,_,... (1tH) NofWd h '1 ntW fn(l9\er, and lhLI \hr• aome nettd1 • rourth for M11e1 and Monatera. aom.on• ·•who doc.isn't flunk out or t.--1& out." It t>ecom•• Robbie (Tom Bank.I of "ao.om Buddlea"), who arnvet u • tranafcr from Tufte Pre11ured by hi• blckerlna parenu to achl.ve. Robbie alto carrie11 t0me guilt In hia bllgap. havtna alven hlt brother money to leave home aeveral yeara ago. The family hadn't heard from the boy alnce. That .-ycholostcal burden 1urfacH in Robbie's frequent nightmares. Bania captures lhls complex paychologlcal role with a brooding lntenaity. The dress he had to wear for "Boeom Buddies" la • diatant memory. Wendy Crewson, Tom Hanke, Chril Makepeace (with sword ) and David Wallace prepare . to defend themselves in Rona Jaffe's uMazes' nnd Monsters" at 9:00 on KNXT (2). TUBE TOPPERS KNXT (2) 8:00 -"Bring 'Em Batk Alive." Frank Buck faces a Samurai warlord who ls terrorizing jungle villages: and taking deadly measures to confiscate arms and ally himself with the Japanese. KABC (7) 8:30 -"Laverne and Shirley." Laverne creates havoc at her new job when she floats through the factory wearing an anti-gravity suit. KNBC (4) 10:00 -"Reagan at Mid-Term," an NBC Whit'e Paper, presents Roger Mudd and Tom Brok.a'w to examine the fint two years of the Reagan ·administration. Oreyf\IM, Jea.ic. HWpet ·x· (])A NlW DAY~ ma. A powetful f amity turna • 111\811 town into 1 model rljuvenellon projec1 (Piii 10) 11:ao 8 Cl) NCAA BA8KET8ALL LOUllllllll Cardinal• ., UCLABnllnt 8 8TOMGHT Hott Johnny Caraon GuMlt Charle• NellOO Reltly. COfY Clf90n, 104- yeer-old TUiie AbraMl'n· IOn D 9 MC HE"'9 NIOHTUHE CJ) THE PROTECTORS • 000 OOUf>l.E Feel• 6evelope • --ceM or lnlomnta and Oecar tnae to help him • Al'(( Of llEIHO HUMAN ''The 8111 And Empty c.n.. t•" • NSl.AnNIOHT Ouwt athelat Medatyn Murr9'; O'Hak (R) e 100cu. (I) ~NCa: 9ENEA-0. THEMAOIC ~21 t 1:41 CHJ MOWE ..... "Don't Cry, 11'1 Only Thunder" ( IN21 Oennl9 Chtietoph«. au_, s.lnt J.,,_ A llmele Army doctOf and 1 trouf)l9. prone medic help l'#O nuns b1tng a o<ouP of Vkll· -Ofl)hln9 to lalely 'PG' 1 t:ao CC) MOW I "CllamPon Of O..lh" (19771 Sonny CNbe. Aller kllllng a moba1«. • marull I .,,. lxper1 ,....,.. briefly '*~ Uiklna on • tclOf'e °' ' llnd ......... R' 12::00. IHT8'T AMitENT TOHIOKT Behind the --11 Iha • • Flond• IOc:ltlon fOf Iha ,,,_.. .. Smollaoy 11 The Bandll " 1:ELA8T~ ***"A a..... In 0.- tr-" (1137) Fred ~I. Joan Fontline A 8flllttl heli.e .. wooed by Ill American dancer wllo ~ llhe II 1 c:hOrU8 ,. LOVE. AM£NCAH ITYLE "L0119 And The P\arw F~ ia.y" Wt*I two l*IC>le bllrnp Into eec:tl otNr on • fllghl to Sen Fr al'CMCO. H' • lolle 11 tnt alghl (l)MOWE '**** "An"*' Stat•" (IMO) Wiiiem Hurt, Blllf Brown. A Hervard tcten- uat'a genetic: ttrvc:ture II altered .tlel\ he conducll mlnd~"O Hperl· mtnta ~ ~Ion ..... and poww1ul hallud~ 00~ + • '.4 "The Beguiled" ( 197 O CNnt Eutwood, Gerllldlne Paoa. An Injured Union loldlar reouperattng In a glfta' adlOOl Ml Ml leg nMdtellly amput1tld by the ~ hMdmlftr- _.., f'le II <*IOhf -"fl one of tlleOlfit. .... 11:11• MOYll •• "Hotlor Guard" (No 0.tt) Rod Steiger. A pect- 11111 ""° o-tt the AITff'J end~ to'~ ~ the llfVll of M 111--Mlflnll -v-nt end .. ~ buddlet.. 'R' 1a:ao G (II LATI NIGHT wmi Dt\W. LITTINW' 0U.C.: OM llllW 8ot> Ind "-Y, CM I , I I ThOlft ..,.~--- Wagman. 8 TOM COTTLE: UP Cl.OSE CJ) MOV1£ • • "In Old Mexico" ( 19381 Wllllam 8o)'d Hopalong Cutldy encoun1«1 a murderout rii'toVE. AMERICAN STYii ''Love And The Sever>- Y1t1 Wiit" LoulM'• hul- blnd h .. be«1 milling tor _, ye11•. almoet. "Love And The Secret SpouM" O.vld Ind J-don't wanl their MfowlnOW CUI off 1:00 8 MOVIE * *'4 "Devit And The DffP" (19321 Tallulah BanllhMd, Glf'f Coop« To rid hlmllll of hi• romantic r1v111. • Brttl9h ,_,.. command« In North AlnU cMllb«•lety ..... .,,.., .. ~ 8 WE OUTAOY THE fAtll/4. Y: PUNKI V8. ,M!HT8 eMOWE ••'h "AMwocf' (1~71 Joel MeCrea. veronic. LM• So that 11'9 can hive her own wey. the i.mlM -0( I ~ rll'Cfl Ntta men IO help II« outwll her own father 9ENTERT~ TOHIGKT ~ ,,,. ___ thl Florida IOc:ltlon tor the rnovtl •. Smollaoy 19 The Bendit .. (O)MOW *I "Mew YOttl Bibee" ( 19801 Glor•• Leonard. Mlflene Wiiioughby Mtm- ben d I ,_.,.. of be&itltul women find plenty ol action on and off IM ~·fltld t:20 (CJ MOWE I * "Conlwaiont Of A Pop Peformer'' (t9751 Roblrl Alltwtth. Anthony Booth. A rode 'n' rol1 ttlf flnOe plenty of rom11>llc ICilon wtllll on lour. 1:30 I TO. AHNOUNCEO QIHllCNl.WS OVEMGHT 8 MOW • • ··o.vll'• Ano•I•" ( IN7) John C--IW, e.-ty Ad-A gang of terrortlt molOfcyde lloodt ftrld aetlCy In number• when tMy ttlc:ll togettl« r~9'191CCUM1lon. •• "Anll ~r· (1980) GenlMaW 9ujokf. Mlol\MI y Ott! A Clnldl.wl TV reporter In Moeoow dlll- 00¥«9 • Rulllan ldenllftc nperirnenl utlng llarold9 on cntldren and -wee lnulmlnltlng materiel Olll of the country 'PO' 1:41 CJ) MOW *'**"Mod«n~" ( 19811 Albert Brooke • Kathryn Htrr06d A fllrn edllOf tnea ~ldty to win bad! the ,_, "' ttle WOl'l\WI he lollw. 'R' l::OO • Cl) 088 Haw8 NIGHTWATCH CJ) MRQeANf MXO "•o·a w., AQeinat eut- ture" 1= **** .. ~ l(ene" ( 18' 11 Or•on Welltl. JOMPh eottan. ~· r.ceil the llfe of I weefttTy. ~and·~·· ly aelf-lnclUlgent nl9P'" per~t•ll•~ tlf/ldlel IOt Int ~ cm'°9 Oii tll8 INWl't ~ •word. ...,. ···~ ''TM ....... '°"'" (1 .. 1) MM Alda. c.91 .......,. TtwW ... plea. ell c:IOM. long-time trtlnd•. ·~ pro-found cNng9a In their rutlONINpa when one or the marrlagH dlaln- !~•tea 'PO' CZ> CHIU>AEN cw THEATRE STMET PrlnOMI Gr-gi..,.. ua • looll belllnd the welll or the Vaganova Cf'toreo- o<ac>hle lnttltut• -Ilea 11nown .. the Kirov blllet ecf\OOI -· 10 explor• Ille dr-of two~ dll1Gert wllo hope to I~ IOw In thl lootllec>e of Bar· • ytllnlkov. Nureyev and MM111ova 2:30 • MOVIE * '* * "Soula Al S.." (1937) Gary Cooper, George Raft Alt« a ... wrecl<, a 11\Jp'a offle« It! IOfoed to rnalce an lrne>Ort· ~I dec:lllOn concetnlng Iha only llllb<>al CJ) MCHALF8 NAVY Binghamton conoucta 1 IOfoed aele of IMUranoe In Of<lef to lmpr-an lnM.11· anoa tycoon. • MOVIE I * • "BMI The O.W" ( 1954) Humphrey 8ogll1, Jennifer Jones lnlern•- llonal 1wlndlera, neck- dleP In plan• to outwit MCh 0411«, •• diverted from their ainlstlf dMflnol w11en an eq)IOslon Wf9CilS 1111 ahlp they ar• abolfd 2:56$= '* * * "Quo Vedia" (19511 Robert Taylor, Oeboreh KerT A Rom*1 arlltoetat g11na Neto'• dlefellOf ....., lie fella In IOve wllh • Chr1a-- tlan girt. 1:001 teW8 IEAHUNT S:OS MOVIE **"Thia It EMI" (IHl) ~wy.Rlmlootaoe lf>CI drarnellc ~Mllon8 -ueld to 1• v. illory Of EIVll PrwleY'• .... and ~. 3:20 CJ) MOYIE * • • ··s1ranger 1n Tiie ~ .. (19751 l<alr OulM. OIMe ...._.,. A peycftotlc m1Kder9r ~ In the attic ~ • college IOf ority hO<MI on CtristmM Eve a:ao~=20 * * • "The French Lieu-tenant'• Women" (le& 1) Maryl StrNP. Jeramy lrona. An an.It ~ two actorw It pet"a/leled In the romantic petlOd lllm 1n wNch Ille two are perform- ~ 'R' 4:00 (!) TOfi O' THE MOAHINO .MOVlf; *I* "The Frend\ IJIU. tenant'• Woman" ( 19811 Meryl Streep, J1r1my lrOM. An aHalr ~ two ac:torw le Pit llleled on the romanllc petlOd fllm 1n wNcll IN two -perloni>-~ ·R' 4·11 . MOW * '4 "TM Phantom Of 42rtd Street" (1$45) Deva O'Brien. Kay Aldflch. A tllMt• In N9w Yortt City b«:IOfn'9 the -of • hOrrtble murder 4:IOl 18f'Y IUUWIHKLE 4:80 H90 MAGAZINE 1t'#dR#•4G8'• Da11ll•~ Mortl#• 1M (%) • * • • "8to61n Ki-'' ( ,., JMn-Plerre L.-HS. Oelphlne Seyrig. Thll toucnlng MCI hlllttoua lllm tMturea • young. Ilk• able --~--·trldel ,... ~ In lolle 'R' e.-oo CHJ • _, "Jeok And The ewnttllk" ( 19711 Animal· Id. An lldwlnNroue young boy dlrnOe I glMI bean- stalk 10 I maglcel kingdom oo-nect by • gNedy. ann6cai glMI '()' ••• "8oerdwelk" ( 19711 Aultl (J(l(don, L .. Strub«;. An old couple ,.._ to ....,. lflt llelG"- bOmOOd they ~ ap«ll "-* Oii tMlt ._ fn dlil()lte ""*' ortme and .,~fi)':::.=. "'" Of Mttor ""'°" .. C11MI c::MrllOfl HtetOft. Julie Adltl'll A IOUQI\ """"IMfl. ~ .,., • ____ .......... ........... lo • mll\ay r.. .... The ...... """'" l ,.,,, """' lq- """' Jf/Jlrnf Oer"'-"'° d\Hdran IUfl IWI)' f'r041I hOml and hide In ..... y Ott! Qty'• Metropollt.lft Mut«tm of Ari. wfl«• tn.y We befriended by I llC)ltlt- ed reduM. ·a· (I) •••• "Oflvet" (191a) Aon Moody.~ Reed A young Ofphan II kldneoc>ed trom hi• ,_ hOml by his old gang. but managea 10 .-cape and return 10 1119 berMllllCIOf. 7:15(%) '** *'"' "Nlghl Train To Munlch" ( 19'0) Mar~ rel Lockwood. Rea Hw~ ton. A eclentlet'• daughl« outwlll Ille Naill w4th the hale> of • Brtll9h IQlnf 7:30 CC}* '*'4 "FOf Yoor Eyea Only" ( 19811 RoO« Moor•, Topol J-Bond trldl.I • criminal wno purloined a top ~•I Brllleh defen• C1eY1C1 'PG' CID **'"' "R.cl fOf Your lite. Charlie Brown!" ( 19771 Animated Clllllll Brown and the entire "Pe«Mt" geno hMd IOf aumm« camp, whet• they t>ac;ome ln110lved In -II wild ldventur• ·o· U>O O • • • 11\-"A.croaa The GrNI OMde' ( 197111 Rob- ert Logan, HellFier All· tray Two orphaned CM• Oren '91 out alone acroa the Rod<y Mountains In Ofd« to Claim 1 larm Ill Or911on wf\ICll lhay lnllerll-- ed. ·G· l'<IO 6D I * * "Magnificent Obewllon'' ( 1835) "- Dunne. Rob«1 T aytOf A playboy wnoee Clrut*el'I antlc:I ceueed the dMlh 0( • ..Qian and hll wtfe'• ~ dedlc:ll• hfm. Mlf 10 medldna. (Q) I '*I ''The Frenc:ti L11ulen1nt'1 Woman" (19811 tHrtl SI~ • .-.. my iron• An 1tf1lr ~ two ICl<>rW la S-· ...._, In tht romantic: p«tod Nm lrf wtllctl the two are per1ol n*'O-'R' (%) •• "Undllroround N;;ea" ( 1980) Ditti .,._. dlcl. M9arlle Grttflth. Pin· Ing 11t1nd1nta wreall hllvOC ill • _. a.-ty Htll1110t•. 'PO' 10:00 (CJ .... ''ln\pf~ Ch-. nell" (IN ti Alen Antin, Man.He Hlfllty. A _. of ml•undertt anding• ~ 1 loc:illl wortcer to .u~t the 5-year-old daughl« of I M941telld couple II the vtc11m of Cf"4d lbull 'PG' CID • •.,., "lono. The~ Blade • (1981) Georo• Hamilton, l..ll.l'en Hutlon I Thi heroic ton of old Cell-' IOfnla'• lemou1 )U91lc4 fight., 19 IN:apecflated by I riding injury, f(l(cing hil fopplth bro!Nr to don Iha Ind mult 'PG' ~ '* 'h ''Low II Bell« Than E_." ( 1952) Eliz> beth T lylot, LlfTy Pet111 A confirmed ~ ftn4llty decldM lo MUie down wfth a New' Ha..,., dlndng teedl« Ct •• "Hany'1W1t" (1981) EOW1tel tWrmann, 1 0.eldlne PllQ9 A -8- town poetmen comM 10 1M aid of hil aunt, wtlo -Iha IRS back tax• 'PO' 11:00(%) ...... !\-.. ~ .. (1N11 Rip Tom, Condlala Fetrell A rancher and hit houaekNper lac• th• rlgOt9 ol frontier ... In t910 'Nyomlno 'PO' 11:30 (C) •• '4 "All The F1nl Young Cennlblle" (1MOI N1t1lle Wood. Robert• Wl(IMll. A hMdllrong glr1 ll'om 1 poor Southern t- lfy man1et fOf money, no4 IOlle. Cl)*.*. "T_ .. (19791 NMta.-11 Klntll.I, P9t9( Flt1t\. The cltuOht• of • poor Enoll•h farmer beconlW Iha lltctlm ol Mt famll(I ~Mt0fl9 and lletown~.·PO' 11:00. • * "The Big St.., .. (JIM91 ~ MMdMn. Jene ar-After e Oln• geroua c:h•M thr~oll Muloo, an AlmY aflloeC' r9QOWn • llolen PllYfOI • ··~"TheBobO" (1187) Pet• IWler'9. 9r1" Oland. A bumbllftO f'Mt ... dor-turn•d-1l119er I• ptOtlllted !tit llrnelghl If "' can tedllOI ""~ *" In lairotlone wllflln; ttwM cltyt. ! ® ••• "On Oolcltft ,ond" (1M11 ~ ~ da. Kl1Nttnt ~'t JOHN DARLING_,...._---.~~ ~-rS~Ylle ~c:;tOtNO~~ byAnnatro a Batluk · -.~NW~,- -------- .. 01eon .. , DAii y f'll.OTlfu TODAY'S RATE 11.50% Move Out of Your Uninsured Money Fund. Movelnto This rate compounds daily and fluctuates with the money mar1<et. , MEMBE" ESIJIC 1st Nationwide Savings New Insure I ,_,. ....... .__._Corl' F ................ ~ S10QOOO I d Money Market Account Pays High Rates Like the Money Funds! Your Insured Money Market Account pays like the uninsured money funds. 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It's easy to qualify: discounts as high as 60% are based on your savings account'balance with 1st Nationwide Savings. call today to get all the facts and schedule your private appointment. ' • 1 ... 1 • I 11 I .. . ~ 1 .. , .. 14• •l • ~ .. ""' 111111 TU IOA~. DIO. H , tlH BUSINESS STOCKS C4 C5 ClASSIFIED ce Eagles, Barons at Orange; Sailors advance • Will While Newport Harbor's Joe Seager ( f{)) coven from behind, Brian Folk (25) tries to take the ball away from El Modena'& Rich Rycraw. By ROGER CARL80N ora.o.-,,._. • ..,, Estanc ia, Fountain Valley and Newport Harbor high 1ehool basketball teams sailed into today's champiofl,Ship quarterfinals at the Orange Optimist T ournament following Monday's conquests over Foothill, Centennial and El Modena, respectively. The results find Fatancia and Fountain Valley, two teams which scrimmaged prior to the start of the regular season, dueling for $ spot In the semifinals, while Newport Harbor is pitted against La Quinta. Here's a look at what transpired Monday at Chapman College regarding Daily Pilot area teams: E1taocla 15, Foothill 6% Gary Jaeger (it's pronounced Yay- gur) made his presence felt very quickly for the winning Eagles, scoring 12 points (6 of 11 from the field) and grabbing 13 rebounds 1n his first appearance for Estancia after transferring from Mater Dea The 6-6 senior clogged up the middle, forcing Foothill to settle for perimeter shots for the most part as the Eagles came from behind to up their overall record to 6-2 and earn a shot at Fountain Valley in today's quarterfinals. "He was a big factor," said Foothill Coach Jim Reames, alluding to Jaeger. "He got some clutch rebounds ... I think we would have beaten Estancia without him." Gt1vin Warlaumont was missing from the F.stancia attack (ankle), but when he returns , Estancia Coach Larry Sunderman admits he has to figure out how to shuffle his lineup. "We've already changed aome of our offense," says Sunderman, "going to aome piggy back, but we're not going to change a-lot. We want to run a power game .,.mat man defen.e now." The F.agles trailed Foothill by as many as nine points in the first half as Foothill nailed 13 of 18 from the field and &ta.ncia was down by a 42-39 margin with 2:07 left in the third quarter. But a 10-point spurt, started and firuahed by hoope from Doug Pinckney, and including buc kets from Rick Tars' Cadigan, CdM' s Moss All-CIF Newport Harbor's Brazas, Kacura gain second team Division Ill honors By ROGER CAR~N or ... o.-, "°' • ..,. Newport Harbor High's Dave Cadigan, a two-way tackle at the top of many major college football prospects list, and Corona del Mar punter Gordon Moss, have been chosen on the All-CIF Division III first team by the First Interstate Bank's selection board. Alao tabbed for second teain laurels are Newport Harbor juniors Steve Brazas and Brett K'.acura, who along with Cadigan, led the Sailors to a third place fi.nish in the Sea View League The Sailors were the last team to defeat CIF CentraJ Conference titliat El Toro and fell by a 21 -20 decision to Saddleback. El Toro and Saddleback each placed four playe"' on the two teama u the Sea View League picked up a dozen berths. Dave Cadigan Gordon Moss Steve Brazas Brett Kacura Tonight's schedule Chemptonahlp quarterftnel• 3:30-Eatancla vs. Fountain Valley 5: 10-Lakewood vs. Servlte 6:50-Newport Harbor vs. La Quinta 8:30-Mater Del vs. Orange L ockwood, Jam Curtis and Jaeger, shoved Foothill into a 49-42 deficit with 6:22 left. · Foothill narrowed the margin to 59-56 with 1:56 left, but Estancia kept the pressure on with clutch free throws by Jon Johnston, Curtis and Pinckney, along with Jaeger's muacle shot inside. Estancia hit 26 of 44 from the field (59 percent) and Curtis had seven assists. Jaeger averaged 4.9 points a game in 20 appearances for Mater Dei as a junior with a high of 11 points m the season opener before illness wrecked the second haH of the 1eason. Ar. a senior he played very sparingly for the Mona.rct\s, who are top-rated in Orange County. Ar. has been Estanc1a's custom, the Eagles had four players acoring in double figures. Fountain Valley 7Z, Centelllllal 50 The Barons took the lead for good with a 14-point burst propelling them mto a 16-3 lead at the outaet and were never threatened by an Apache quintet which failed to show a lo~ in temll of defense or in an ability to so1ve Fountain Valley's matchup zone. Rolf Jacobs led the Barona' acoring with 20 points, but Rob Whitehair's tough 16 pointa and the playmaking (and 10 points) of junjor Mike Newton were al80 bis factors. "Rob's been very oonal.atent for us," said Fountain Valley Coach Dave Brown, who admitted he didn't have any complain ta. "We've been getting a little better every time out." The Barona utilized the 6-6 Whitehair. 6-7 Jacobs •nd 6-6 aophotnore Brent (See EAG~. Pase C%) Weaver,Dokes WBA rematch ordered .PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP) -The World Boxing Association ordered Monday a rematch of the Michael Dokes- Mike Weaver heavyweight championship fight. ' WBA President Gilberto Mendoza said the decision waa made at a special meeting of the asaocUation'a executive conunittee during which videotapes of the controversial Dec. 10 fisht were shown three times and technicians and doctors offered thelr &taeaments. Dokes was lis ted as the champion in the WBA's rankings announc ed Monday for dethroning Weaver when the fight in Laa Vegas, was stopped early in the first round by referee Joey Curt.is. Weaver and hie trainers protested vigorously that the bout should not have been halted. Sharing Player of the Year honors are Darryl Harris of Garey and Earl Betancourt of Rosemead. Hanis acored 25 touchdown• and Betancourt spearheaded Roeemead'a attack. The two shared the Southeastern Conference championship after the two teams tied. 19-19, in the finals. "There's no question," aays his coach, Mike Giddings, "If he would have played every game our record would have been different. That's how much he meant to us u an offensive lineman." improve with every practice. And, he has the gift of sii.e and speed. You'll be reading about Cadigan for yean." his co.ch, Dick Morris. "He punted as a freshman and sophomore and was a fullback and defenaive end, but he Weaver was knocked down i.n the opening seconds but appeared to have recovered when Curtis suddenly stopped the fight. The sudden endina prompted a chorua of booa and catcalls from apectaton, and a charae by Weaver that a fix had been arranaed by promoter Don Kina, a remark for which he later apologiz.ed. Cadigan'• rt.e to prominence after an injury in the tint half ot the El Toro game could be labeled the comeback story of the year. A aevere knee injury appeared to be enough to knock him out for the balance of the aee.m, but th.rough the correct dliana.b and a remarkable recovery rate, he wu back after mila1ng just three gamea. c.adigan, who a.lao played defenae on occasion, was chosen on the defensive team, but hla real forte was on offense, wheR! he led the way with hi.I crushing blocking for Braz.aa. "He even grew during the 1ea110n," continues Glddinp. "He worked so hard on his t.echnJque, you could see hltn The University of Southern California la the favorite to llign Cadigan to a letter of intent. Moes, an All-CIF bueball player as a junior, was a brilliant punter, averaging 41.7 yar<k on 41 punts with his longest at 65 yarda. The return yardage was just 108 yard.I on 23 of Lhoee 41 punta for an avera,e of feu than five ya.rda per return. "We knew he was a punter," uya . dropped out as a junior because of bueball.'' Arizona State has shown keen Interest in Moss as a bueball player. Brazu la the one with the numbers . The 6-3, 207-pound junior rambled for 1,162 yards on 239 carrlea for a 5.0 averqe, caught 35 puaea for 4~ yards and acored 23 touchdowns. He alao punted for a 37.7 averae and 36 ~turns (See A.LL-CIF, Pase ct) Kina'• aon Carl manaaeJJ ~kes, and Kina promotea the flahta of WBC cnampion Larry Holmea. CANADA TOPS U.S •. SKATERS Chargers are no longer perfect, lose to Bruins LZNlNGRAD (AP) Defendina champion Canada overcamf a two-1oal deflclt Monday u Pal Flatley ecoNd twb to ct.f.ut the Unltad Statel 4-2 in u,. World ,Junior Hockey °'911\ponahlJa The U.S. tMm took a M §Md on 8091a by Andy Otto in \ht ..,,..th minute and Die Erdell tn the Utfl. But J'laU.y, &be flnt-rowtd drAft.$])ft of Metr York ltlander1 Wt 1ummer, put a..da -.... ~ l&.Jhe 18'b ...... with hit tint ..... - -_ _......._ ·~· ln one of the '6tuer upaeta of the youna buk•tball aeuon, Lona Bffch WU1on ed19d prevloualy unbeaten Edlaon in the flnt round of t.he Marina- Edi.on women'• buketball tounwnenl Monday J1liht. In other Marlna-Edlaon tourney pmea. Fountain van.y rout.ct Cyprem, Ocean View cru1hed Dana Hilla, Weatmlnater ou tla1ted Savanna, Hunttncton BNcb dropped a ~one to (Butbenk) and Marina WM by ti Toro. the Ettanda tourney_, ~the holt ~ripped Bolla., wbne C.oiia M.-. io.t to Bne. Han'• what heppened: LM1 .a..dl w1i. -n. a.1M1111 ~Char..,. aot 28 pofnll from WOMEN Jump•~ by Vaneua Robtnaon, who lln&llMd wfth 20 points. 1ave the Bru.lna the lead for 1ood with 20 aeconda rematru.na. The Owpn adll Md a chance to Gretchen Melnbardtt but it waan't win It at the end but their lhota failed to enouah to hold off a aeterrnlMd Lona 10 In. h 1hould be noted that the > ' Beecl\ Wlll01\ equad that evened fll Char,.n were lllo a poor l& of 30 from reoord to ... wtth the~· th free throw llM. ~ to. WU the Charaen' fln\ Of they...,. .,.Wt 11 wtna. Foutala Vall•J H, Cnnt1 U The 1arne wu clOH thro~hout, 'n. Barcna. 0·2, &toke open a dole althouah the Cha.rir«I held a foW'-potnt pme ln th.I ~ quarwr Md turned h edae fate ln the lourth qu.atter. Th• Into• fOUt by pme'• end '° lidYance into Bril1n& ~ blclfln aha.~ _...,-u.. ~~ of the MMtria•....., howev.r, to tlt the 1COr9 and .Mt It lnto Tournu..nL • over1ime. rountaln Valley contlftuet 9lay The ~·ied ~ U.. clollnl tonllht (7 o'dodl) .,._ Maw Dll. aeconda of -di1 overtime, '°°• but a Juruot fcJrward '1,,.._ PumaWd ' (:onnors ends season with No. I ranking ·' ·,.rom AP dl1patc'9e1 ' NEW YORK -Resurgent ~ Jimmy Connors hu earned the No l ·"Tanking among male tennis ;profeaaions from Tennis Maeazine, '·the publication announced Monday. Scheduled for publication In the magazine's -'February issue, the annual rankings include, in 'order behind Con n ors: I van Lend I of •'X:::zechoalovakia, John McEnroe, GuaUermo Vilas •. of Argentina, Mats Walander of Sweden, Vatas Gerulaius, Gene Mayer, Jose Luis Clere of Argentina, Yannick Noah of France and J ose Higueras of Spain. In rankings done by each of the {our tournament surfaces played durmg the ' year, Connors topped the luit -on grass and hard ceurt , cot9M>fta finished third behmd Lend! ·and McEnroe on indoor carpet and did not rate 'among the top hve on clay. ·' Johan Kriek and Australta 's Mark. •Edmondson, who did not rate among the top 10 '.pros overall, earned third and fourth places, respectively, in the grass court rankings. The complete list of rankings by surface: Grass: Connors, McEnroe, Kriek. "F.dmondson, Gerulaitis. ' Indoor : Lendl, M cEnroe. Connors, 'Gerulaitis, Mayer. C lay: Wilander. Vilas, Lend!, Clerc, 'Higueras. ~ Hard court: Connors, Lendt. McEnroe. 'Gerulaitis.. Vilas. Quote of the day Calvin Griffith, owner of the Minnesota Twins, when asked where he thought Billy Martin would end up in 1983: "He may end up in Sing Sing if he doesn't. 1 -pay the $100,000 he owes the IRS.'' ' Nuggets win on lssel's jumper Dan llsel hit a 20-foot jump shot m at the buzzer to give Denver, helped by Alex Eng1J1b'1 41 points. a 180-128 win over Golden State to highhght NBA action Monday .. Elsewhere, Gre1 Ballard hit a jumper from the comer as time expired, giving Washington an 89-87 decision .over Chicago ... Albert King scored 24 points ·and B•ck WUllams added 13 points and 19 ·rebounds tb lead New Jersey to a 94-82 win over hapless Cleveland. The game proved coslly for the Nets, however. as forward Mike O'Koren broke his wrist in the aecond quart.er and will be lan to the team for eight weeks . . Maarlce Lacas, who led Phoenix to three Wll\S m four games last week, has been named the NBA's player of the week. d·~ ., .. ~f! • •13. ~ ~\1rw1mt Mittie I VHll 1r m 1 1 lhr ''"' ,,._, with :ir kli ,.. lnln • lflaPI' n1 • IHI oo .'t,,,. and 11vtn1 I th ran1u'tf ltuu1lon • "l·fl non-<'onr•Hn<'• vl~anry uvu P••ppvr~ln• P ppcrrdJno hid tltd lhe pnMt wllh I :08 ao 10 wt\m frnhman au-rd OrHt On4rttlck hit a 17·fW\l"r Th Wavn •r• nuw 7 4, whll• ahc Cou1ara ar" 7 2 Unbe1t.-n and Mventh· runkt'd St J uhn'a, led by Clarlt Mulll•'• 22 poin&a. defoeted 8YU, 73-64, Monday night \0 odvance to the flnala of t~ Holiday Ft .. uval tournament In New York. St John's will ploy W&lkt" Forl'at which, behind Delaney Rudd'• 20 polntM, roukld St JOMph'1, 88-66 Freshman Rafael Addison Ignited a 1lu1u1t1h Syracuse octente In tht' first half and the 13th-ranked Or&J)lemen w.:nt on to blast Pluaburaih. 67 -66. Syracuse ls now 9 0 . Je rry McMiiian hit 1 20-foot JUmper with 2·05 remaining to l~ad DeJ>aul \O a 68-66 non-confere nce win over Creighton. Clarke puh; f'lyers in rirst Bobby Clarke scored three goals ri1 and asstated on two others to spark ' Ph1ladelph1a to an 8-4 victory over Detro1 t. The victory. the third In a row for Philadelphia. all on the road, moved the Flyers into a tie with the New York Islanders for first place in the Patrick Division of the NHL . . . Glenn Anderson of Edmonton, who 1COred five goals and had three assists last week, has been named the NHL's Player of the Week . Gottfried gets Kansas post Mike Gottfried, who's made o [il living taking down-and-out football 4• • programs and turning them around, accepted possibly the biggest challenge of his life Monday. the head coaching JOb at Kansas. Gottfried signed a five-year contract at $57,000 as the replacement for Don Fambrough, who was fired after a disappointing 2-7-2 record amid reports the Jayhawks are under NCAA investigation. Television, radio Following are the top sports events on TV tonight Ratings are. vvvv excellent, vvv worth watching; v v fair: v forget it. Cf) 9 p.m., Channel 9 V' V' COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Wagner at Nevada-Las Vegas. Announcer: Chick Heam. Jerry Tarkaruan's Runrun' Rebels (18th in the AP poll) are undefeated this season (7 -0). The Rebels figure to beat Wagner (2-5) tonight an an opening round game of the Holiday Classic in Las Vegas and meet Tt*lnessee or San Jose State in the finals Wednesday. Danny Tarkanian, the coach's son, is a starter for UNL V. Jeff Collins becomes eUgible for the first time during the tournament and joins three-year starters Sidney Green and Larry Anderson along with !reshman Eldridge Hudson in the UNL V starting lineup. OTHER TELEVISION Basketball -Louisville at UCLA, 11 :30 p.m .. Channel 2. Taped. Indoor Soccer -Arrows at Lai.ers. 11 p.m .. Channel 9. Taped. RADIO Basketball -Cal State Fullerton vs Auburn at Utah Classic, 5 p.m .. KWRM (1370). USC vs Alabama m Holiday Classic. 9 p.m . KNX (1070): Lou1sv11le at UCLA, 8:30 p IT' • KMPC (710). ALL-CIF FOOTBALL TEAMS • • • From Page C1 neJted the opposition just 1.7 yards per attempt. : "I've never been around a pla~er on any level th4t could do 90 many things well, ' says Giddings. "lte makes ao few errors ... he's intelligent. The cloeest thing I can think of ia Dave Wilcox (49era) at linebacker and Mike Garrett (USC) at runnlng bat:!k. but Braz.u ia a punter, too." Kacura. at 6--0, 204 pounds. gave the Sailors a dquble punch in the line. , "He's the most natural high achool lineman I've evtr been around," adds Oiddinp. "He has God-given leg strength that gives him a pop. He comes off the ball as fast as any I've aeen and he likes to play ln the trenches. "If .:very ~ame wu played in the mud he'd love It." Kacura turn;.-d 16 during the aeuon El Toro's CIF Central Conference champs picked up a pair of flnt team aelect.lona -guard- linebacker Paul Svltenko and tackle L ou ie Sergeant, and defensive stars Shawn Cardin (llnebecker) and Mike McLain (backfield) on the leCOnd team. Saddleback's Todd Cage and Robert Williams were fi.nt team aelect.lona at receiver and defensive beck, Costa Mesa resident Blake Smith (defens!Ye line) and Kevin Bradley (running back) w~re te00nd team choices. AJl-CIF DM1ion W Flnt Team Offeate P... Player, Sctlatl WR-Dan Robles, Jlaldwin Park WR-Todd Ce.ae, Saddlebeck .. Rt. Wt. Cl. 6-0 175 Sr. 6-2 170 Sr. One last party lfor 'Bania's Bear WR-David Willes, Fullerton T -Louie Sergeant, El Toro T -Steve James, Ro.emead G -Paul Svitenko, El Toro G -Bob F.ickelman, Indio C -Ed Atkinson. Sunny Hills B -Darrell Harris, Garey B -Ryan Knighi, Rubidoux E -Tom Henley, Damien B -Randy Berry. Norco B -Ron Davis. Duarte B -Rene Cazaras. Bell Gardens "' -Robert Barone, Norwalk First Team Defense 5-11 6-5 6-3 6 3 6-1 6-3 6-1 6-2 5-11 5-6 5-11 5-10 5"9 DL-Chuck Hill, Rubidoux 6-2 01.,-Mark Mraz, Glendora 6-4 DI.,-Marcus Williams, Garey 6-1 DL-Cllf~'McNeUl, Loa A.m.laoa 6·2 DL-Oavld Cadlcan. Newport •·• LB-Earl Betancourt, Rolemead 5-11 LB-David Simpon. Ganesha 6-2 LB-Gil Ogden, Fullerton 6-2 LB-Dennis Cal. Victor Valley 5-8 LB-Tom Houts, Brea-Olinda 6-0 DB-Meechee Williams. Garey 5-11 DB-Michael Moore, Cajon 5-10 OB-Robert Williams, Saddleback 5-7 DB-Reggie Clark, Rlvertide Poly 5-10 DB-Paco Craig, Ramona 5-10 DB-Steve Kline, La Habra 6-l Puter-GordoD Moe•. CdM 5·10 SecoDd Team Offense WR-Donald Davia, Duarte 5-11 WR-Jeff Curry, Rancho Al 6-2 TE-Don Jon«!9, Rubidoux 6-~ T -Mike Favoreau, Oanesha 6-~ T -Fzic Jones, Ramona 6-4 O -Bren Kacara, Newport .. o G --Cieorie Camacho, Montebello $-9 C -Mari< Steele, Cajon 6-0 ,8 -Kevin Bradley, Saddleblck 6-9 B -Steve Brau1, Newport 1-3 B -Bryan Mullen , Ganesha 6-10 B ~Robert Perez, Bell Garcfena 6·9 B -Andy Jaramlllo, Rancho Al. 6·11 B -Mike McGuire, ArU~ 6·9 K -!Wnne Whitman, Santa Jl'e $.11 170 235 225 215 215 220 180 195 175 165 160 178 165 235 220 205 235 U7 190 210 210 175 202 175 155 150 175 175 185 180 155 180 246 260 250 to• 17, 185 165 %07 170 160 170 1~3 le& Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Scou Filipek HB, Lions, Chargers • post WIDS The Huntington Beach, Edison and Westminster high basketball teams r ecorded first round victories Monday night in the Rancho Las Vegas. Ca.non City Capitol Classic and Santiago tournaments, respectively. Here's what happened; Oilers survive In a matchup of undefeated teams, the Oilers (9-0) survived, 68-64 over Las Vegas Valley, on the strength of Danny and Billy Thompeon's shooting. Danny scored a game-tugh 24 points while Billy added 19. Teammate Jamel Garner also had 12 points. and Mike Mills had six points and 12 rebounds before fouling out late in the game. The Oilers pulled ahead by as many as nine points in the third quarter, but stubborn Las Vegas Valley (9-1) continually fought back to keep the score close. "Thill was by far the quickest team w e've seen all yea r," praLSed Oiler Coach Roy Miller. "I thJnk the diHerence was that they were trying to pressure our guards and we'd just th, "W the 50-foot pass to set up a three- on-one or two-on-one fast break That's when we'd pull ahead and get our e ight or nine-point leads." The Oilers return for second round action tonight (9 o'clock) agamst Clark (Las Vegas) E dison '· i:-:; tbrlller Jeff Washington's Hail Mary from behind the backboard. to give Edison a 44-43 win over Reed. advanced the Chargers Into tonight's semifinals game against host Canon an the Carson City Capitol Clas.sic With the Chargers trailing 43-42 and only 25 seconds to play, Ed1SOn threw the ball out of bounds to give Reed poaesalon. The r!i=rn then fouled but Reed the front end of a one-plua-one and Edtaon brought the ball back up the court. The Chargers then ran through their Rt offeNe, miDed the shot, and Washington found himaelf with the ball behind the backboard w ith the clock counting down. Washington, in d"esperalion, threw the ball over the top of the board and it fell through t he buket with two .eoonda left to live Edison the vicU>ry. The Chargers. 3-6, were led in acor ing by guard Brendan Masterson. wh o came off the bench t.o total 12 pointa, 10 In the .eoond half. Tim Wertner, with 10 points, was the only other player ln double figures Westminster rolls The Uon.s, 4-4, broke open a cloee game In the second quarter, outacortna Buena Park by nine ln the perfod, and were n ever threatened thereafter, winning 54-40 over Buena Park In the first round of the Santiago tourney. Westminster was led by Rick OeLavallade (16 pointa) and Jeff Eattln (15 polnt1 and eight rebound.I). The Uons return to the t'OUrt Wedneeday ruaht (7 o'clock) to take on Kennedy Hljh In the 1eeond round of the Santiago Tournament. EAGLE • • • Prom Page C 1 Mar lln &o thurou1hly domlnah• lh11 Ap11d1 , althwgh th l11llc•r Jtd rru.no .. w a.•ul th Oerons' l.:ad IO 48·40 ~furu ancuhor •lvo of t'V bdikuta Tht•rt• wa11n't ll turning pc>lnt liut 11 htah point ur,»· wllh 2 46 ll'rt In lhr lhlrd quaner whl·n Brent liarwon 1toll" the> bell. Newton follow~ with • pk1uni paa1 ond Jacobi convf'rted It Into • lhrfl~·polnt play to up the mara!n to 46 32. Newport Harbor 8', El Modeaa 30 The Sailon wuted El Mod4N with a withering press and Joe Seag~r'• i I point.I and nine rebound.I, along wtth Jlln Wolfe'• seven rebounds and eight aailta from Brad Harker t'Omblned to turn It Into a rout quickly. "It was one of those games where everyone scored," said Newport Coach Jerry DeBu.sk "I feel a httle sorry for EI Modena we've taken our lumps and we know what it's like " The wan snapped a four-game losing streak and puts the Sailors into tonight's (6:50) quarterfinah againat La . Quanta (6-9 Junior Utu and 6-4 juniors Mark Moses and J.T . Debbs) Lakewood 64, Costa Mesa ~4 "I JUSt don 't understand why we aren't attacking the press better." lamented Costa Mesa Coach Tun Parse!, following his team's setback which sent the Mustangs up against Marina today in the consolation bracket. Mesa had a shot at Lakewood, getting to within 53-52 with 2.04 left on Dave Palmblade's buc ket, but Lakewood scored the next 11 straight. "I thought we were going to tum the corner," said Parse!. whose team's demise came at the lane (8 of 16). from the field (23 of 56 for (41 pcr<."ent) and in turnovers (15). Servlte 68, Marlna ~3 Scott Filipek put on a one-man show with his deft passing and scoring (24 points), but it wasn't enough w offset the Vlkmgs' No. l problem -a 5-for-15 performance from the line. "W e can't hit a free throw ,'' understated Marina Coach Steve Popovich. "And our continuity is reaUy lacking. We've only had two days since Nov. 6 that we've all been together, for one reason or another." Fihpek returned to the lineup after massing four games with a dislocated shoulder and s parkled, leading a fourth-quarter surge that pulled Marina to withm 50-48 before Servite regained control of the issue behind 6-8 Steve Krallman, who led Servite wath 18 pomts. 'CHARGERS • • • From Page C1 without the sennces of 6-3 center Cheryl Eiland. Chase hat 27 points and Webb had 24 for the Hawks who started fast and never looked back. Eiland has left school for New Guinea on a church mission and IS lost for the balance of the season Westminster 53, Savanna U Diane Watson 1eored eight pointS an the third quarter as the Lions put the decision away with a 20-8 differential. The Lions started the second half with a 12-2 bliti after leading by four at intermission. Watson and teammate Stacy Schla.nae each had 14 points but Darlene Trenary of Savanna was high for the game with 19. Debbie Eastin added 12 to the Westm.inster total. Westminster met El Toro ma second round game thiJ afternoon. El Toro H, Marina 4S A cold fourth quarter in which they 900red only six pointa sealed the doom of the Vl.klnp. El Toro held a five-point ~going into the final period. Alene Andenon with 13 and Sandy Corbett with 12 were the acoring leaders for Marina. Barroa1b1 It, Buttqton Beacl• 35 The Oilers let the game get out of reach by scoring only two pointa in the third quarter, turning a one-point halftime defici t into a 29-20 disadvantage entering the final quarter. Estucla 51 , Bolea t8 Debbie Hughes, an All-CIF third team performer last ye&r, made her first appearance of the aeuon following an ankle injury and recorded a pme-high 18 polntl to lead the F.aales to a fint round victory ln their own tournament. Hughe9 alto had 11 rebounds aa did aenlor forward Sherry Carpenter, who a1ao contributed 17 points. . Brea H, Costa Mesa to The Mut\aJ\O, who battled back trom an 11-• trral quarter deficit, couldn't hold oU Brea 1n the final perlod when they were oumcared, 18-6. HVLL signups slated Pr p, college basketball c:r- Houtton t), ~.,_ ti Cllantltl.oe 10..L ::.=:: .,. """"'• Ill ... c. .. Cl •ei.e,.h•ld ti, Lwllllocll CfvllOM 00 UC ••n Ole90 11 Cl LH ~ .. ......... IH W.....,en 17, All10M 64 ....... T 06edo 77, o.t10lt .. 0.PW U , ~eiOtlton N MK~.,, ,IOtlCSe A&~ ff Loyole, Ill to. H 11111\ofe 73 .... 81 f 1-.nc;le, NY lot, P-f4 Syr.cuee 17, Piii ee TOURNA•NH ,,., •• ReuM) cono,c._. Au111n P••y II. Hetdln• SllTll'nOn• &a 100 Mc.._ St 73, U81U 91 ........ 80\llh Alebwne ff, Beftlmot• 12 H<>n'-em 74, VelC*lilo 71 ......,, ...... SI Jolln't 75. 8YU 64 w .... FO!MI ea. St ~·· eo ........ c ...... M11qu•ll• 57. w11.-0r_, ley 47 ClnGlnnell 71. LI 8 ... 73 ~CleMlio MllMOUfl 41, At'-'9 81 47 H..,.llllM,Pr~4a ,, ..... c .... <Kegon SI. 59, T--St. 47 LMn• se. Orlk• 64 MueAcCltJ .............. Vendert>lll 112. E l<antuel(y 71 Menhellen 74. Penn 73 Community coa.o. TOURNAMINTI (flnt Rowtd) a.nteAM l'u119'ton 57, El Cemlno se CVP<-... LA Ve//tett 43 T:i:.:=::. '"'"'' ..__,, Or~ E11encl1 65, Foothill 12 Founletn Vlliley 72, Centennlel 60 Lek-OO<I 64, Coe\1 M-. 64 S-Vlle 611, Mwlne 53 ~ Hert>ot 84. El MoOenl 30 Otenge eo. cneney 50 M•l9r Del 70. Oena Hiiie 47 LI Ouinlt 63. Senta Clere 5e I.MY .... Hunllnglon 8Mctl 61, LM V90M Valley 64 Oaoeol• 75. ~ eo w .. 1 P1111adelpl\1a t2. 1o1en1 48 Palo• VerdH 55, Rancho Lu Vega 49 Clvk 95, Monn HHll 52 Chepanal et, Penn Hiiis &e Gomlen ea, bit Ancn«ege 50 a1 e.m.d eo. 8onl8ll 45 C.-Cftr Edi.on «. Reed 43 Si-t<• (Nw l 54, Magnoll 44 .... Fun.non 93, SctlutT IO c.lllornla 49, Woodbridge 47 Sunny Hlll9 7 4, .Anet*m & 1 Br....otinde 88, Pec:mc. 39 Col .... doll ............. LAguna Hila SI. El T0to 51 MIMIOn Vi.jo 98. Olernoncl 8eit 53 .......T--t WM1mlnStet 54, 81.-ne Peril 40 K.,,,,.,., 54. GerOen Grow 45 IC-... LB Miiiiken 72, ~ Hiie 17 Ket .... 61. Sent• AM Ve/ltett ea CMM G.,_,..a 57, Sen~ 31 Teml*! Cl!y eo. On1et10 51 Get ey 76, lJpler>O 65 c.rrnoe 112. Mooldllt 38 8onl1• 65, Oon Lugo 2e Oem1er1 ee. u ~ 48 Chino n . Olt.1119QM (CWled•I &4 e.con<llOo 66. Clwemonl 51 WotMn HMMi SCHOC>l. , ................ ~ .. 1 .. an ,,,....._.~ W•trnln91et 53. SlrYWVle 4A El T 0to 56, MllMe 43 OciMr1Vw112. Deni Hllll •2 Foo!hln «. Chino 41 (Oil Mel« Del 31, L0«9 26 Founteln Ve//tett 53, Cwt'-33 Lona 8eec:tl Wlleon "· Edleon 61 coo 8urroug'11 (8urt1en1t) 39. Hunltnglon ~ 36 h4aoMle ""' ........... EIUincil 51. BOlee 21 Keppel 61. VIie P11111 51 Le Oulnl• 51. 8WWIP AIM! « u. veou a1, Aow1McS 40 L .. VllQH Ve//tett 711, Le Sl9rre 23 Pkll X &4, Kllelle 17 ar .. 53, eo.11 ~ 40 Mltllon Vi.jo 83. Wlllttl« 21 Chargers • win two . .. LA VERNE -Senior Lars Wiberg totaled three goals in two games to help lead F.d1.9on High . to a pair of victorie1 at ; the Damien High llOOCer • tournament Monday. . I ) I i I • I I I The Chargers, behind , two goals from Wiberg • and two more by aenlor· John Glore, routed Loe , Altos in first ro u nd , action. 4-1. 1 In a second round , ' contest, Wiberg ICOred { the g~ winner with 10 ! minutes remaining H ( Edison edaed Gannha. 2-1. After battling to a 1COmesa halfum. qainat Oanesha, the Cbaraen scored flnt •• Juntor midfielder Chrh BruynJMI kicked tloe in ' to make it 1-0. ! '-.......... lllC*DA.,.. ..... ,. c:.:.: .......... --.. _....., no, """°'°~140 00 uo uo ~ ~jT;.ka, '80 320 Vu l'lang tei.o-1 8.40 Aleo r-o· lime '°' ..__.. .. Sue Dee Jo, Run MM A.on, lhc.1 Merlini, Rapid Slat• .... Ou.1 ..... Rodeo on.... T-11.k • lliCTA (Ml paid 1)4 IO M C:OM> lllACt. 350 ywCIJ ~ Aloi et-gar (11Mwl24 '° 9 20 $ '° s..._ un1e Men (lAd.911'1 3 eo 3.40 Sia LMgUJ 0..-1~1 6 20 Aleo r-O: "91~, Cl•aey V~eque, Tiny CtYetil, 0\'6Cll kr.w1. Tuff Hono<j4M Too Tlnu ~. $~ Domln1l0< Time· 17.97. ,..... uca. 350 y- Azvre HumbOll (Ken) 16 40 • 4() 4 80 ...,... "°"" J011n <MnC11111 4 ao 3 ao Sv.t SMw1 (Ptl!IMM) 5 00 Aleo rec.d JueMJ T.ody, CIJ.bl>Jttlna R.C. A 211<1 Hop., o.tlnyl Dully Oecll Ou.ty ~. SllWt lnMlttenc.. Nubtaeloa Jet TlrM; 1713. • DACTA (M) paid '87.00. f<CKMTM llACL 300 y11da Clwt•llO (Chevez) 1.40 4 40 3.00 Klublee Lenny (Myi.I 4 40 2.80 ~ (Laca.y) 380 Alie> r~· Hey Doc. Nlghtl l.ll'nlta, Si.pp N Up, Win Monday. 1rW1 sr....1. TrJllft. 8ob ..,., Moon. Time' 15.13 tll SJIACTA (7· 10) pJld $39 00 P.-nf llAC._ 360 yJtda Jlfly lunc:ft (Clr<IOU ) 10 00 I 40 3 00 Lue bey G-(Tr~> 10.eo ~ 40 Mt x Clwge IAouclhl 2.eo Aao rlKIJd: ~ F .. ture. lookln For lOYJ. Ludu1moon. liector JoJ Jr . JullJe Oenoer. Slrete TOUdl, Rell A JM. Tm.. HM. tll SJIAC:TA IMll>Jld S150IO aan4 UC.. 870 ywda Silt "'-lment (P ...... 1 4 00 3 20 2 eo 8lly C1rtJt e-(o.GmbJ) 9 20 4.80 Mr Si.qt Boll (Rouohl 4 80 Aleo r~· "1t>Jjlle, Go OwlQht Go. AeC>JI Zelle. ~ Gr-. A1f'1 ~otlllte Time: 46.42. MVaJfnt IUCI. 350 yltda a... Utt1e ,...,... 1ervr1 e. eo 33 eo 8.oo Nice Alt4 llcll (l °""'' 18 eo 6.eo ar-8-J1y (Hett) 2 90 Alto reced. MJOQIM MJm, OIJco Kttty. Heve A Dendy, CM F¥nQ Saint. Jeil On Jiii. Ul1IJ a... Go. TIIM: 17.83. • DACTA (10..) pJld Sl,46180 • Pie« llX (5-3-7~1-10) peld 15.103.40 """"' -winning tlC*eta (!hoe i.or..~ 12 PtC11 ao c:on-t1ot1 pe1c1 M6.oo wni. 1u """"""" llek.C. (four ,__, IJQHTM llAC.. 350 ywda Ploe ~l 9 80 t.20 3 IO Time To Shu <~ :a.ao a.20 ~ lllla (CMdola) 4.00 At.o raced; Hurry On Now. Up Front Unda, ~ ...,, Tiie Smoo4tl Lady, ~Aly, fluOy ... ....,,, ~ T1inr. 11.n . • llXACTA ( 11>4) pllld 131 ttJ. ...-nt Mca. MO -0.. aui.il FOJCY L.8dy (C<grl 4 IO 3.40 2.90 an.w, ... 91' (Flonel 5.2.0 3-20 o.ci-Go Go Ollrt ~· 3.40 Nao ,__,. Ttlk:o Joe. ~ l!lluJ Girt. ~. Fl .. tqu-.twfalCOn . .._. o.dl. Sprtng 811111. TirN: 19JJ8. t:l llXACT A ( 1CM) mJld 124 00 AtterldenOJ -l,313 Nrr• J:::o~";:'Z.1 ... )-49 'sng1sr9-62 bmJ. 67 bonito, t oow eod. 1 n mecll.,el, 60 roc:ll cod, 51 rCH:ll llah, 1 ~vr:. .. ~ (....,.n ...... , - 119 ~ SSC>--· 856 -cod, 1 und tiw,. ~. 15 wtllle """· 3 perdl. DMA WHAIW' -IO MQlera 14 bMe, J ............ 290 -eod, 12 rode """' 10 aculpln. 11 aheec>h••CI, 1 lllua si-rcb. 1 CJOGon. a•AL •IACM -84 1ngl1re 311 "**-· 150 rode cod, 204 roclc fllh. 30 eoulpln. (a9rw1) -1141 engl9o'a 3 llOnlto. 2 llellbwt.14 medt-. 230 """"'-Ctoetl.,. 120 ~IWI. - 4{_ ~ . .... WCSftM CC*PDINCtl .... ~ • l ,_L Lell.,a 2t • fll ... ,". u 7 "-• 17 ,, He P0<tlencl 11 I, M1 OOlden ltat1 12 " 414 Sen OIJgo • 23 119 .._.,,..,~ l(en ... Cny ,. • 14() s ... ,.,,1_ ,, 12 IOO Olllaa ,, 14 462 Oltl-t2 •• '" Uteh It 11 379 HOU.loo 4 t3 t4t IAITSM C:C*nMNCI AllMUo DMelcwo Phi1JdJ4pNa 22 8 116 8otaton 21 7 760 N..,. Wll)I 18 13 662 Walhlngton I~ 13 630 -York • ,, 321 c ... 1r .. D1YWon ... ...._ .. lfl 10 6SS l>JttOit 16 14 533 AllMIJ 13 14 411 lnO'-10 17 370 ChlelgO 10 11 357 C..,,..MO 4 23 148 ...... , •• 1c .... -J.,..,, 94, Ci.v•tnct U Wtlahlngton 89. Chleego 87 o.n-130. G-. s1111 ,,. T~aO-.. San OIJgo at A te Mh-11 at·CblcaQO 8oeton at 1(.,. ... City Pl'tOJCIJlphlJ ., Houeton tndlena 11 Oen- O.trOlt et Uleh P0<t1<111d at "-• HIGH ICHOOL .. "' ••• • 10'• 11 •• 4 .. $'• 1 13 , ... 7 , ... "'" ,,,., 6 8 9y, 14 ... .,=. tt.rbof 14, l!I Modena 30 EL NA -E,,,..,eket 5, lune 0, C MOM 2, J MOM 2. Rycraw 12 Cook 2 Rull 2.~5 Tota1a 1J ~12:io •w.otn HAMCMil -!'.:P:'. 21. HJr'llJt 2, Foti< 13. Wok!• 9. Showw 4, MC01w11n 10 Sor-1. Guti..ru 4 Aa.-.. 7. C<OOll 2. Fr-lln 0 ll_.man 5 Totala 31 22·30 .. ._. by o-tJt9 El Modena 7 4 10 t -30 Hewpot1 Harbof 17 19 24 24-14 Total loull El Moder>• 22 Newpott Harbo< 12 Eat1tnela 15. foothlll 112 llTANCIA -JeJQ., 12, JOl'tnlton 11. Muatafa 9, Curll• 14. Ptnc~n•y 17 loeliwood 2 TotJle 25 15-23 65 ,OOTNILL -Outrletc ti. J l Jlrd 14 Mu...it 10, R Laird 14. "81'1ICll O. Go<1 4, Ouncan 2 Tot ... 2$ 12·18 82 ae-...,o-w.. EatMGIJ 13 It 14 20-65 Foothllt 21 13 I 20-02 Total 101.111 Eatancla 18, Foothlll 23. Fouled out Outrlalc (Foothltlf. M••-11 (Footl'll4il ""· Valley 72, Cetttennlal 50 CQITWNHIAL -PflCJ 2. Bnc1oa 2, 8roolta 24. o..n. 5. AJJd 8. BJr'llJt -10. 8oOo o. ClwkO ~o.o.-o Tot• 20 10.17 5 '0UNTAUI VAL.LIT -Newton 10 Jeco0e 20. Mer11n 4. Whl1-18. &own 2. Po,.., 2 Harty 2 Han1on 9 Tlnn•y 7 Totala 28 11-27 72 ._....., OIHl'Wa C...tenn!Jl 7 " 14 10-60 Fountain v~ ta 15 15 24-n Total IOYla. CenlJnntal 23, Fountall't VfM9'1' 15, FOUied ovt l>Jana (ClnMnnlal), Mlt11n !Fountain Vlllleyl LAll .. ood M, Coeta ..... M COSTA •SA-P~ 18. Edaon $, Tltlg O. Cool! I , S1"1 11. Koe I , '°"""1 3 T Ot1le. 23 I-11 $4 LAltSWOOO -Obon 4. ,._ ti, Vl!ww I. S...... 7, Terry I . OQIMlly 0, Slmn>one I, lee-it 0. SoulNI I. -Sadflr 2 T Ot11e. 24 11-2214. ...... ..,0-.... c-....... 10 13 12 ·-54 l Jll-12 " 11 25-14 Tolel fOlila eo.ta ...... ti. lAUwood 14 a.me.-. ...-a MAllllMA -a.I~ 4, H..,,,,.,... 12 p .... 5. Aow lti1ig •• F1llpJll 24. ,._,.. o. "'-e 0. Coonll O. Ellatrom 0 T-24 S-15 53 MnJTI -~ 14, Kr.,_, 18, ~a, Metuelcb 6 . ......., t . Joe11o> t4. Solomen 0. o.c.... 2. Oertactt o, Cayw o. ~ 0, Cnn 0 T01• 318-1118. ...... ...,o-w.. MarlnJ tt 4 2 I 9-53 a.r.111 15 19 11 20-411 local ,_ ....,,,,. 15. s.r..... 11. FoulJc:t. out Ptdle (Marlna.I l!dllMfl '4. fl.ed a IDIM>tl -WJJhinOton I , W.,,,_ 10 Mtlard 2, H8'nlllon I, l1ecil>'-' 7 • ......,_ 12. T1'omM 2, ~ 2 T~ ti 8-13 .... MID -Eacobary 4, Almond 4. ~ 12. CotlJr 5, Mollnl 10. lundgrlft 6. Tlmjon 2 TOUll 19 5-18 43 ._....,°'**" EdlJon t I t 11 12-44 AJJd 12 13 • -43 Total foull Eo11on II. R11d 13 TJCMlcala. MM1Jr9Qft IE) WM1~54,~P.ti40 Wl~TIJI -~ t8. &tun t6. a. ..... o. Jollna1on o. Nlcolil 11 Tot• 19 1e.24 6-4 llUllMA ..... -8emltdo 11. l!t-.> 7. llnOMy 8. Rae 2, lOYely I , Fag6ne 2, Famum 2 Tolale 17 1-11 40 N FL standings NATIONAL CONFERENCE W L T Pct. PF PA x-Wuh. 7 1 0 .875 162 128 ·x-0.U.. 6 2 0 .7~ 199 114 x-Green Bay5 2 1 .688 202 1'2 x-Atlanta 5 3 0 .626 177 164 ,x-St. Louis 5 3 0 .626 135 142 .x-M!nneeota 4 4 0 .600 156 l 'U Tampa Bey 4 4 0 .500 132 155 ChJc:agO 3 5 0 .375 118 148 Detroit 3 5 0 .375 lM 152 New Orleana3 5 0 .375 94 154 NY Giants 3 5 0 .375 138 136 Phlladelphia 3 ~ 0 .375 U'7 169 San Fran. 3 6 0 .375 l~ lM Ra.mt 1 7 0 .126 179 230 x-Cl.lnched playoff berth MODda1'• Score Miami 27. Buffalo 10 &aat'• o .. es Ra.mt at San Frand9co (Channel 2 at 1 p.m.) l RaWien-., ~ (Channel 4 , at l p.m.) ~atS-tu. New York Jeta at KaNet City New York Olanta at ~na---•phla AMERICAN CONFERENCE W L T Pct. PF PA •-Raiden 7 l 0 .875 219 166 x-0.ncinnati 6 2 0 .7~ 197 150 x-M.lami 6 2 0 .7~ 164 124 x-NY Jeta 6 2 0 .750 232 129 x-San Diego 6 2 0 .7~ 254 180 x-Pittaburgh 5 3 0 .625 167 125 ·Buffalo 4 4 0 .500 131 124 Cleveland 4 4 0 .500 119 146 New En6J. 4 4 0 .500 113 1381 Seattle 3 5 0 .375 114 136 Denver 2 6 0 .2~ 137 213 K.anua Cty 2 6 0 .250 139 171 Hou.ton 1 7 0 .125 109 210 Baltimore 0 7 1 .063 106 202 St. Louis at w .. hington ctuc.go at Tamp. Bey Bu.ffalo at New £na1and Clndnnati at HOUiton Cleveland at Pituburlh Miami at 8alttmor. Atlanta at N•w Orleans Green. Bay at Detrbit Dmver at Suttle MOD4ay't0ame DallM at Mlnnaoia . .. -~iiliii~ Y!'e'.Yr:L~ •t I th•:;::,,'"j-r Ha1111111 t b 1~·4 CtM 'I lift ... ti ltH ~· ¥114, W4'0• "clM a lana~ II .., • ltOmoeorl' C>rfof1 14 Wlolld , ·-~ ... , ......... ,, .. ........... ft\llltllOflan IMclfl ti I 1 t t 1 I M 111 V90M Vlllly 11 II 14 ti M Tetel lo.ii• Huntlfltllon IJN/I It ~ .. v..-Y....., ti 'cMai Ollt K~•IMO (lYVI MllafHSI 1 0 NO • 1 '31 1~ 171 •1 .,, 1..0 1'1 •2 ... 1.1 m 5-1 t70 •1 168 M IOI 7-2 4e7 M 461 .. , 372 11·1 331 , .. , 213 1-2 222 M 217 &-2 118 t-1 .. &-2 8$ HtOH ICHOOL WOM•N Lona 9Mcfl Wtteon 12, ldleon 111 LOtlO MACH WIUOtl -Aol>lneon 20, Wendt 9. StOUd«rnlra 2. GOQClln 0, L. .. I , Fren•Hn 12, 8a11Jv 8 Totlll1· 20 12·1' 52 IOtlOH -~ I, C:•t .. I. TrJ114 0 8111-t!I . .....,.,,.,di 2t, Oendron 2, T~ 1 Totala 19 16-30 61 ..... ..., ...... ll w-II 12 1 18-52 Ed._ 9 12 I 15-61 Totlll loule lot19 e..cn Wlleon 24 Edleon 7, FoulJd out 11.i11y (L.8W) •ut'fouaha at, Htn. llNch IS HUHTINQfON alACM -Cordova 11, T OWtl--0 5. Cooper 4, Tllua 6. Comogtlo e. ~yt>urn 2 TolW: 12 11-23 36 IUllllOUQHS <•UllaANIC) -Hire 2 Ka11l1r 10. l(lnkennon 2. &ce ntan 14. ""°"''°" o, H1Y9J 2. Gwe1a 2, 11 .. 1cn !> Ktna 2 TOlall 14 11· 14 39 .... ..,a-w-. Hut'ttltlg1on 8eac:tl 1 11 2 16 35 8u<rC>UQN l&u<banltl 4 10 10 t0-311 Total loul1 Huntington Beach 17, Burrouot>• 2 1 fovntaln Vel .. y IS, CYPNH U ,OUNTAfN YAlLIV -My1ra 2. Pucl't•l1llt 10. Arteoge 12. Hend111on 8. Burcl't 7. Whltl'tam 4. RJ)'N 4, Cl-.. 2 Totllla 24 5-6 63 C't',.llEll -Baker e Swenaon 4 Hoffman II Si-um 4 Wong I TotalJ 1$ 3-1:133 ._. by °"1riwl Fountain v~ t2 13 12 18-63 Cypt111 e 10 9 e 33 TolJI foui. Fountain VaJIJy 9, Cy1><111 8 WHtmlnater 53, lawanna .,. IAYANNA -Trenary 19, RJdlHu 14, C<l1tolwo 9. Gunenon 2. 8 ... o. 0 Totela 20 .. , 44 fta~ITlll -EMTln 12 &l'tlenge 14 Guthrie 6. WIJteon 14. Jon. 5 Kueumt 1 a-boa 2 T01ala 12 9-13 53 .......,a-ten sev...,.,. 9 11 8 18-4" W11tmlnatJt 10 14 20 9-63 Total loull S.venne 14, Wet1mln11., 9, foulld oul l\JO-ISevannal II Toro N. lbftna 4S EL TOflO -~ 12, Olnnleon 11. 01naa 10, MCGiii 10, M ... 11 13 ToUlll 2t 4-966 MARINA -Corllett 12, Calkln1 I Ft11acher 0, And1re1n 13, Keddy 2 K-2. Lalll I. TOl.ele Ill 5-13 43 ._....,o-rtw. El T0<0 12 13 11 16-1141 ....,_ 10 13 14 1--"'3 TOI., loute El Toro I, MM1NI I OoMft View 11. Dene Httla 42 DAMA ta.La -Shulda 9. Hool4t\Af\ 14, OuWln 0. For.w I, 0 . 9tt0hl I. ~ 4. Coete 0, I 9flgltl 2 T otela 1' 4-7 42 ocaM VWtf -W9bb 24, CN>mlcr 4, ........ II, Oou!y 4, 0-11. 0.,_ I, G~ 4 T.,._, 311 ~13 n ._...,~ OJne... 12 10 ' 11-42 Oc:91t1 V-. 25 II 16 22-12 T oUI blle 0... ._ 18, OcMt't V.... I. FOUIJO ovt 0 Bf191'tl (Olt\e Hillel ht.nda ''· 9otee 2t IOLSA -Nomlyarne 2, Spargul 8, LonllJr1 10 C<oee I, Monlof1 2 T 04lie t 2 ... 21 I.IT AM:&A -ClrPllnl« 17 HathCOClc 10. 8-2 eor-~. llf"UJI 2. Hugi.. 18 Tot• 20 11.14 !1 ..... .., ..... 8olM Gt-5 • • 7-21 E.-11 1 18 10-81 Totsl io."9 80IM 12. E.91~1 I I 'OUIJd out· Noml\t.,,.,. cei ..... a. Coete ..... 40 9MA -HOUI 19, Satpfeo IS. GlllC>My 0. M""'o 1. '"'°"' .. 9. LJtnll s. vanoon 2. KIM>Jr 0 Nlleon 0, CNotll 2 Totals 20 13-22 63 C:OITA lllaA -H1r1C11 5, NHI 10 Gwc:IJ 7. SGhutnal<Jt 10. l!IJtton 8. l4'11 2 TotaM 17I-11 40 ..... ..,~ a... 11 11 12 It-&:! Colt• ...... 4 " l:S 5-AO Tottl loul1 BrN n . Colle M111 1'. Fouled out N11t (CM). T.Chnlcet1· NHf (C.MI .. "llK'I PIOU" JO HNSON &SON presents .. NFL Pleb tf fttt WHlr Sun., Jan. ~· Roms over Sdn Ftondaco * Atlanta ov• New ();leon1 * Chicago T-Sletle"-M , .... dOwnl 17 ,..,.,_.,.,Oii 21 I :U , ....... ,.,. IN "9cutll yatdt 14 .. _ 21332 hcl.• 1·7 """'' 4 ~1 ,~, 2·2 ....,..,i.t-ywd• 12-970 Tlmeof P~ 2101 ~·~ lllla t7 31-tlt ., 21 7-lt-1 4-:N S..6 3-2 1-eo atllt RUSHING -aulltlO, Crlbba 1'· 101, l.Mke 1-21, KofW 1-e. II ~· 2-4 Miami, 'rWlltl 21•12. Nelban 9·41, Olerta 4·2 t, WCIOdlJlo :l-17, HJtrle 1· t 3 PAISIHG -lufleto, F1rguaon 21·S3-t-1M Miami., Wooclielo 7-lt-t .... RIECEll/IHG -BuffllO. L9wt1 4-eO. Cttllbe •·3'. ~ 4·32. Bt-3-22. lknlier 2·2:S. 8¥netl 2·11, 8 ~ t-1, HOii 1-7 MIJml, Cefalo 2-40. H Moor. 2·24. Net"1n 2-111.uHJttll 1··• MISSIO Fl!lO GO/llS -Buffalo. Herl'Jfa 49 Mleml, Horwl. N'L pfayoft ttetiedule Thl top aiglll IMma In MCh conlltJt'tCA wlN Mlvanoe lo the pteyolf1 c-Ue-brMkJta JJCllon fO< O.tJrmlnauon ol QullilllJrlf. 1n<1 wlll Ill ...0.0 I 10 8 '°' 1,,. duration of .,,. P'•Yo"' by won-folt percen•eo-1"d ne-IH .... Jta lat .. JM. I a lun .. Jen. t "'c encl we: (fnt llCMHM:I e at t. 1 " 2. a., 3. s at 4 ..... JJrt. ,. ....... ,,..., ,. lOwHt re maining ae1d1 11 highell remaining "1d1 MC;Ond-lo"'"t -• •t MC:ond·io-t MJd• c-i..-. c:.....,~ a-.. a.t .. Jen. n a 1w> .. Jen. n Wlnnwa ot J~ 11.10 ~ •I hOmJ OI ~t r1tnalnlng....,. lllt* aowt XVII lun •• JM. ao. "-..._ .. I p.m. AFC •• NFC c h1mp1on1, lor Vince lomllardl trophy l'ro hwf •11n .. flb .•. Hotlolul11 AFC AM..Slara ... NFC AH·Stera TIE·MIAKlll TwoT- 1 Hl•Cl·IO•Haad ll>HI WOn·IOll•llJO P«CJrlUIOJ In g.,,._ ~ , ... clut>JI 2 Conf.,Jr>Ce g.,,,.., II JQUal numb<w ot OJmJJ Pl•yed 3 Common g1m11. minimum ot thrM g•mJJ 4 C0r>I.,.,_ e-mea. It u~uel number of g.,,,.. pl•yed S O..t net polnla. all o- 0 a.11 n11 touehdowna 1111 gAmJJ 7 Strlft(lth of ICllJOull 8 CoN't ION n.. .. T_ NOTE II lwo ct..111 remein 1114 J fl., • lhlrd 11 ellmlnatld during any 1tep lie· I>••••., revJrta to alep one ol 1'#0-INm format I HNd·IO-hJMI •-lappl-blJ only II one Clull l't•• c!JfNted MCh ol ,,,. othl'a °' one cliJll ,,.. loat to each of tl'tl othl'• 1 2 Stec>• 2-8 M al>Ow ..... WAUIC~ ...... DMaMo> W l T CW 20 12 $ 149 19 14 7 143 18 10 9 132 17 11 s 145 11 111 o 120 1 2' 7 ICM AdM>e~ ...... ,,. 45 124 45 122 41 13<1 37 180 21 118 2t eoe1on n 9 e 1r.a 101 o Montl'MI 20 9 7 llWI 129 47 llulfJlo 11 13 7 131 120 39 0.-16 w 8 105 159 31 Hetttord 10 21 4 115 181 24 C:AlllNIU COMAMMCI CNeaoo Mlrw1"01• St loull OeltOil T0<onto .....,. .,........ :l4 5 • 105 20 10 7 15' 13 21 4 131 8 19 10 114 !> '' e 109 SMftMDMalorl 18 It • 182 1~ 16 3 139 14 17 ~ 122 13 18 1 133 13 19 7 157 .......,. .. ._.. PNladJlpNa 8, OelrOll 4 T......-.·ea- Herttord at Ou1bec Plft111<1rgt1 el WMfl!noton Toronto at Mont,... 8oeton al St. l- ChleaOO II c.ltllf'f WlnnlpJg ., v- tt3 M 131 47 ISO 30 167 26 163 1e 149 44 142 33 141 33 130 33 165 )3 Of "•• tnternettonal Jvntot ChemJllonshlpa I•• ,.on .,.,....._ M. 'I.) lllefl'a 1IY1«1-U.... '1rat lllowld ......... Aon Ag1nor (Haltll def Mark Karuke1 fU S I. 8·3, 8·0. Slmon41 Ercoll lltatyl dll PICIO L.aglogle (V.,_.,...), 8-3. 6-4 hoond "°""" ........ Agenor fHeltll del John. Schmln (US I. ~-7. 7-0. 8·3. Ercoll (Italy) def MJtlhew Ullky fU S). 1-3. 1-3, Ed HJ(lll 'U 8) dJI Eduardo MJciot (Brazill. 1-2. 8-1, MWltn Hiiie> (WJJi Germany> dJI 8111 Slaf\lev (U S ). 4·6. 8·3. 1·4, Jell Karp (U S J O•I Bred Acawman CU.8 I e-t. 1-1 Wortd Junior Champlon.nlpa (el lllllemt lleedl, FIL) MJtl•e ,. ........ flNI Guy F0<e-t (Fr~) def Jorot 81rdou (Spain>. 7-5, 2"6, 6"1 __ .,,. ........ ,...., Crng 811Hll (C•n•cf•) def Menu•I• ,......... (8ulglr1JI. 1-.1. 4-3 ,,,._ _.., oft QOut1 aft• ~ call.) -··eooc. HIGH ICttOOl. ~T..,., '' l'fte ...... Edoaon 4, l OI AllOI 1 Edllon ICOf1"Q Wlblrg 2. Gior. 2 ..-...-.. Ed4aon 2. G-1\e 1 Edlaon ICO<ln(I: WltlJrg t, 8rvynHlll t lilondaY'• tr8neoactlona aU«STMU ...................... r°r.t DALL.AS MAVERICKS -Ac:tl¥ated C«ny Thomp•on fo,. .. rd. from tl'te Injured --1 HOC«IY NellJMI ..... ., L.aee- NEW YORK RANGERS -Senl 0.... SMk, forward. to Tulia ol 1"-Cemral Hoc:~ey L-:Jr.:'NtPEG JETS -8.nt CrJl(I 1..-. ... ~. 10 ShJtt>rook1 of I ... A,.,,..lean -lYLlJllUJ Bill till struggling in Florida MlAM.J (AP) -The Buffalo Biila dldn'l f lnd Florida very.._ hotpli.ble. Two lo.es ln •lab' 1 cUYt have dampened their hoP9 for • National Football ~ payoff berth . "It'1 fruatratlnJ. W•'ve 109t two touah pmea and when )'OU look beclc, you reaJJu we lhou.ld be undefeated. We've aot a much better team than we've 1hown," quarterback Joe Fer1u.on aald ' Monday n11Jht after the Miami Dolphins crushed the BW. .27-10 1n a nationally televiled pme. The loss dropped Buffalo'• • record to 4-4 and completed au\ • una• i.cceMful two-same road trip to the Sunsh ine State. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers nipped the Billa 24-23 on Dec. 19. "All we can ~o ia try to put these two week.a behind ua, go • back home and regroup," said ' Ferguson. "lt'll be a reaJ tat for UI to come back." Buffalo cloees the eeaaon next . Sunday at New England. A • victory over the Patriota would , put the Billa 1n the playoffa. "We just have tor pull It • together and get ready for New • Engl.and," said Billa Coach Chuck Knox. "We tried hard In this game. but made too many mi.Btakea." Turnovers 1et up second-half touchdown runs of 2 and 6 yards • by Andra Franklin and Uwe von Schamann added a pair of field goals as the Dolphins came back from a 10-7 halftime defidt. Mlaml, already uaured of a playoff berth, improved its record to 6-2 with Coach Don ) Shula's 200th regular-season career Vlctory. A triumph next week at Baltimore would assure the team the home field 1n the first round of the playoffs. The Dolphins victory also guaranteed the idle Pittaburgtl Steelers a playoff spot and virtually locked one up for the Cleveland Browm as well. Buffalo rolled to a 10-0 first- quarter lead on the strength of Joe Cribbs' 62-yard touchdown sprint on the Bills' first play from acrimmage and Efren Herrera's 33-yard field goal. Ml.aml, however, didn't puah lhe panic button . Von Sclwnann'a 35-yard field goal wtth 10:37 left ln the third period lifted the Dolphins into a 10-10 tie, and the game shifted dramallcally four minutes later . Los Alamitos trainer suspended From AP dlapatclles . Bruce Hawkinson, a trainer at · Loe Alamitos Race Coune, has been suspended for a year and• fined $2.500 after two of hil quarter hor9eS ran with an illegal medication ln their syslems. Hawkinson, 47, w ho trains about 25 hones for Los Angeles physician, Dr. F.dward C. Aiired, can appeal to the state Horse Racing Commission. The suspension, w hich was handed down by track stewards Monday night, came aft.er post~ race tests showed that Holme Base, who ran in the Katella ! Handicap Dec. 10, and Noisy Reb, ·who ran ln the sixth race Dec. 4, had morphine in their syat.ems SAVE s150 ON THIS COLOR COMPUTER DISK SYSTEM '• . ' ~. J •I'!, ,, ·. '• . Complete System 84895 Reg. 891.95 .t • .. , ............................ t.11 ....... ,....,.,.......,t111MtMtwt1.IM , ..... 1 .............. Pltate uu now to tnlkt 1n 1ni1111 no '"'no commmntnt 1ppo1n1men1 w11h our 11111 of 11 IOfntyl Incl 1CCount1n11 to rtvttw your lllUlllOll Wt will bt 1v11l1b1t 1v11y Illy 111ctpt Dtetmblr 24 & 2f>. Including Sunday'•. 9am 10 9pm, 10 11rv1 you DAL TON, DAL TON COOPER I FRANKLIN, INC. i1'14) 841·3781 .. _____ 2691 Richter Avt . Sit 102. lrvtne Nur Jimborn/405 _____ .. ·---·~-.. : um.,. • .,......., Th9 tOlowlng ~ .,. doing ~-· l11 PALOMAA TECH CENTAE PAlffNEASHI ... (21 PALOMAR TIQH CENTRE, 3151 Airway AW.ua. a1:za. G·3. Coeta Maaa, ~o9mar Tach C antr• Partf!efalllp, a Callto'"la llmlled ~. 3161 Altwey A--. :3e G-3. Costa ....... c.lflotnle . lntaramarloan Oavalopmanl Conipany, a Calllornla llmltad ~Ip, 3161 Airway Avenue. llulldlng G·3 , Coate W•••. Celltltl1la 92e29 ~ramblay Llmttad, a c.llfomla C>OrP!Jf•tlOn, 3151 Nlway A.-. Bulfdlng G-3, Coate Meaa, celMDrrM 80071 T"9 ~ .. conduGtad Oy • lllyllled part-.Np. Tremblay Um/tad E. AuMell Wardln, Jr .. "'-ktant ,... 11•1-' WM lllacl with the County Clark of Orenge Cwunty on Deoaint>er 10, 1982. "°'* P\lll'lalled Orang• Coatt Dally PMot. Dec. 21, 21, 1982. Jan. 4, 11, 11188 PlllJC M>TICE MTTT10U9.,._ll NAMI tTAT'DmMT TIM folowlng 1*90M are doing ~-.. CLUB Of 25. ~ P1ua. 270 Newport Center Or .. Newport ~. CA 92tltl0. Jack Ullar. unincorporated •octal club. 24212 Vlata O'Oro, Laguna Niguel. CA ~ t2e53. Stave WHlar. 24212 Vlata 0·0ro. Laguna Ntguat. CA mn Chucll Clark. 24214 Vlata o·aro, Laguna Niguel. CA nen e G Frlclc, 24212 "'9te o·oro. Laguna HIQual. CA 92977 l'tU ~ .. condUctad by .... unlncorporltad aaaoclallon other than apart~ Jaak Utt• Thie et••-• -fllad wnh tt1a County Clartl of Orenga County on Dec 3, 1982. ,_ Publl•had Orenga Cout Dally Piiot. Dec. 7, 14, 2f, 28. tte2 6283.-12 Nil.IC M>TICE fl AT'l.-.n CW MAMDOl R.-WT CW UM CW Aetmoue ............ The lollowlng paraon he1 M>andonad ,,,. -"'the Ac11tlou9 ~NwM' GOLDEN C HARIOTS, 1 t Sar9na c-t. Hawpor1 a..cn. CA 92t«l. Tha Flclltlout 8u11na1t Name referred to a bove waa fifed In Orange County on Juty 13, 1982 Alia No. 19G238. Oar'Ak Paraona. 11 S-ana Court. N9wpOr1 8eadl, CA 92tt3. Thia ~ -conducted by 1111 indMdual. o. M.Pareona Thia ata1-t -lllacl wttll the Counl'f Caartc of Orer>ga County on Nov 29, 1982 Publlallad Orang• COHI Deily Piiot. Dec. 7, 14, 21, 28. 1H2 6371-82 tMll4I MOTlCtl CW "'91.JC ...... NOT1CI CW TO .. HIUI aY TMR TRUeTU'I UU OUNOI COUWTY T ....... f • ....,,. ""All•ll CCllWJI .... ~Mn MOTIC9 TO ON TMR IM I COAIT "'°""" OWMlltl L~ COAITA&. "'°°AM YOU AM .. DePAUi.T.,..,.. A NOTIOI IS HERUY GIVEN tllal Dem CW .,..,.T, DATilD 111111. the Orang• County Planning UILIM YOU TAKI ACT'IOle TO CommlUlon wlll llold a publle f'ttOftCT YOU. ~RTY. rT hearing on Jalluaty 10, ltl2 to llAY •I IOLD AT A PU•UC conaldat adOC>llon of tmandlMnll I A L I . I ' Y 0 U N I I D A N to Iha DIWICt f\loulMlona MCllon ID\.ManoM CW TMI MATUNI ol Iha Caplatrano 9Meh 8paoltle CW TN9 MOCUDINe AGA*IT Plan/Local c-tal Program YOU. YOU IMOUL.D CONTACT A The,_ tvr Ihle ,_Ing 11 Ille L.Awvmt. ~of tlM Oranee County eoard On Jtnu"'f 12, 1"3, at 10:00 of Supervl9ora aatlon on No...-nbar A M , CENTURY l!ICROWL. a 24. 1812 whlGll continued llnal Cellfornla eo1poratlon, 11 duly adOpt)Of> ol Zona Cbanga 12-le tor eppolntad Truataa under and llKtllar conalC:laratlon end poMlbla pureuent to Dead ol Trwt r-ded a"'andmanu to Illa Olatrlct May 13, lH1 ... lnal. No 1711&, In ftaOul•llona of Mid 8cleclllc Plan/ boot! 1405'. page 1~. ol OfllQlal Local Coaatal Program untll Aeoorda In Iha oflloa Of Illa C0unty .S-ary 29, 1"3 Amend"*11a to Aacordel• of Orange COunty. State the OMtrlcl Aegulatione adjult Iha ot Callfornla . a11aeutao by Coaatal Oavalopmant Oletrlct CHARLES JA'I' StiENK and JEAN Regulallone and dlacrallonary W SHlHK (huaband and wlla). permit prooadur• and amanda the WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION alla development at1ndard1 lot TO HIOHE8T BIDDER FOR CASH propartlH on Baaoh Road and (payable al Um• of Mia In lewfUI CoHt Hlgh••Y In Cap1a1r1no money of Iha United StalM) al llM 8aecll. Nor1ll front entr-to the ~ Th• llHrlng wlll commence at court~ 700 Civic Center Drive uo P w .. or aa aoon ttwMttar .. w .. 1, IM'a Ana. Calllomla, all POlllbla and wlll be h•ld In th• rigfll, ltlllll and in-1 ~ to Commiaal0n'1 Hearing Room In Iha anl)OWIMlldbyltundarMkfDeed Or a n o• County Halt o t of Tl'\111 In Iha property lltul1ad In Admlnlltrallon. 10 Civic Cantar Mid Caunty and 81ate daecnbed • PIUA, lenta Ana. California All Lot 4 of Tt9Ct "°· 7511 ae par l'Mf peraone alt'-~ or~ -0.0 In Boot! 292. Paoaa U tNa ptopoaal -lnvttad to pr-t and 23 of ~ Mapa. Ill tl'lalr vlewa before tll• Planning the oflloe of Iha County AloorO. of Comm'-lon. Wrtttan comment• are Mid Oranol County. al90 ~. n-may be ..,,, 10 Tiie atrMI addraH a nd oth., Illa Planning Commluton 11 th• oommon daelgnatlon. " atY'f, of Iha above addrau prior to or al rMl prOP«t'f da9crlbed above It oonwnaooement ol, the achadulad putl)Orted 10 be: 8 Mont.av Court, putJlio '-lnQ. Newpot1 9aec:fl, Calltomle 92980. For f\wlhar lnlormallon, paraona Th• undartlgnad Truataa are Invited lo call Community dlaclalma any llablllly tor any Pllnnlng at 834-~78 or vtall the 1neoneev-of Ille..,... addt.-office IOcatad at 400 CMc Cant• end oltlar common daaignatlOn, " Ortv. WMt, Santa Ana, Caljfomla any, lflOWll herein. 92102 Said Hla wlll ba made. but COMP LIANCE WITH THE wltllout covenant or warranty. CALIFORNIA ENVIRONMENTAL expraae or lmpllad, f90Wdlng Ima. OUAUTY ACT po11aulon, or ancumbranoaa, Tiie Caplatrano Baacll Specific Including taaa, eharga1 and Plan wu ~tilled by Ille OrlflilA ~ of Iha Trvatea and of ltla Cwnty Board of Supan1IM>t1 by tru1ta craatad by aald OMd ol Ra1olullon No 82-1775 on Tn..t. to pay Iha ramelnlng pmclpel Nowmbar 29, 11112 8UITM of the noteC•I aacurad by aeld Publlall•d Orange CoHI Delly Dead of Tn111 to wft: t.200.000.00 Plloc, Dec. 28, 1982 with lntw .. 1 thereon "°"' Mardi ~2 1!, 1912 111% par --Pf<>-------------ridad In aald nota(a) plua coal• P\llllC N()TJC[ and any ·-•ttmawd 10 be ------------'315.00 end Foradoaura ooae. -IUlll«IUOfl CC>Ufn' Of' T .. aatllMf.ad lo be 12,149.91 •of thla ITATI CW CALAIOIUtlA date. COUNTY Of' OflANOe ,..,,. bel~y undar Mid Daecl ,... Ct\ote c..... °"" of Truat .... ofor. uaoucact and lent.a""' CA dellvarad to tlla undaralgned a ~ L.IOMA..RD a. COOHI '""'91\ Oedaralton of daflllll and D• *4t Demand tor Sale, and a written crTY Of' IANTA ANA.~ Of' NoOoa of o.tllAllt and Baetlon to .. OLICI RAYMOND C. OAVll, Sal. Tha unclar1ig11ed Ca.ad M6d •GT. II. LA•NIRI, OPPtCUll Hotloe of o.tault encl l!lectlOn lo •• c • " " A a " d z A " A L A ; W to be ,_dad In Iha county lldrt t .. ., aM ae ....._,_ of wtier-. Iha,.... property 11 loc:etad ....... a.a,..... 01,a...._t; OMeO: OeoaiNlar t , ttl1. e•4 DOie I t"r••tfl XXV, CEHTUAV E8CAOWL. • ............. c..torNa oorpor.-on .. Mid tru9t-. MS&~ °"' Alo Souttt San Oleoo. CA 92 tOe T~ (4119) 280-&100 "'-M. 9* de MontljO VloH'ra_ITNat Oftlcar ,.ubll~ Ofanea Coaa1 Delly Piiot o.c. 2t. 28, 1982. Jan. 4, 11183 &5a1-s2 ~ .... ,. NOTICE OF DEATH OP RNELIA BELEN YU .... NIUC M)TICl: P V T T E N A N D 0 P ------------PET IT I 0 N TO PlCm10U8 ••-• ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. MAMI ITATDmfT A·lllit'7. ~o1;-1no s>«.on i. dOlnt T4 all heirs. ~ ANTIQUES ANO NAUTICAL. credltora and contln1ent 1e10 WNt CoNt Hwy., ~ c redlton of CORNELIA a..:tl. CA 92te3. HELEN van der PUTTEN Jo"911 Thomu Vallalo. 4$0 Alvaralda. Newport Baacll, CA and peraona who may be t2ee3 otherwi9e lntereeted ln the Thia ~ II conduo1ecl by an wtl1 and/or est.ate: lndlVIOuet. A~Uon bu heal filed ~T Vllllajo Tiiie .. ...,,..,,, -ftled WIUI IN by ol Chapman ln the County ca.r-of Orange County on Superior Court of Oranp P« 1. 1992. C.oUnty reque9tfnc that c.aro2 ,..._ Chapman be appointed u Publl•had Orange Cou1 Dally penonal reprneniaUve to Pllo'I. o.c. 7. 14, 21, 28. 19*2 5344-e2 admlnlater the eatate of ACTmOUl9UH•N ..... .,..Tlmlff ,..,,. followtnG .,.,_ -doing ~-FINANCIAL SERVICES. 171 Soutll Anita Orlva, Sutta 103. <Jtanoa, CA 92tel. !ucoHt Flnanelal, 171 8. Anna Orlw. lkllta 103. Orange. CA ~ Thie~ II ~ad by an ~ leecoM1 Ar\andal JoM w. Choclal< Pl'9'ident Thia .....,,..,t w• Ned with the COun'Y <*111 of Orange County on a.c .•. 1912. ...ne P111>llahad Oreno-CoU1 Dally Hot. Die. 7, 14. 2f. 21, tM2 531M2 HOittlOUI WU .._.,.A,_.,. TM followl"t pertOtl '-dOlftf ........ UNITED CAETO COMPANY, 12'4 Tuttln Avenue, Bulla 7, ....,.. leeclfl. ~ t2M3 ........ °"*"· M3 ,.,. ..,..., ~ ....... Callton'lll .... ,..... ...... la oonduOtad by an noMduel. __, .. ~ rnelia Helen van der HClllWWll MAlm8TATIJSNT Tiie lollowtng parson 11 doing ~-PAmSON SAIL DESIGN. 505 3 tal Srraal, Newport Baeoll, Callfomla 82te3 Herry Hayaa Palllaon, 28181 Rldgaviaw. Laguna Mlgu•I, Calltotnla 924177. Thia ~ 11 oondllC1ad bV an lndMdual. Harry H. P1ttl1«1 Th11 atat-t -llled with Ille Counf'f Clartt of Orange County °" Nov 11. 1"2 ...... Publlahad Or1n11e Coatl Oelly Piiot. Dae. 7. 14. 21. 21. 1M2 ~1....a Ml.IC NOl1CE MUC M>TU NOTICI INVmNQ NAL.D ""'°"°9~,s:•> '°" ntl c 1NMf °' wrwtM:O..OTION9 TO ll08T1M0 cm o. LAGUNA lllACt4 MWAM IYITDI '°" TMI Al.'90 WATI" MANA....,, A•llOY CfTY CW LAOUMA MACM NOTl()E It HfAIB'I' OIVIH ttlel I.,• Board 01 Olr.ctora ot Hid Aeanev lnvllH end wlll ttcalva Melad propoule (bld•I "' to the llOur of 10.00 A.M. on the 11th ~ of January, 1913, for Illa lurnlllllng to Mid Aganoy ol all lraneportatlOn, labor, matetlala1 toola. ~t. ..,.,._, ulllltlM, and other ltema ~ to OOMtr\let .., WOfil Al Mid time, Mid proCJOMll wtll be publlcly openae1 and read alOud at Illa olflc:a of Iha South COMI Counly Water Otttnel. 31682 Wael StrNt, Sooth Laguna. Catlfornla 924177 Bld.1 may be malled or Clallverad to tlla Allao Waler Management A~. 25411 Cabot Road, Suite 209, la(IUN Hiiia, CA 92'63. Blda ,.,.11 conform to and ba re1pon1lva to th• con11ac1 dowrnanta for Iha woni Coplaa of 111a contreci document• are on n1a end may be Hamlnad In Iha olftoa or the ~ end In 111a oflloa of Neala, Brudln I Siona lncorporetad. 10920 Vla f".rontara. San Diego, CA 92128 COplM may be obtained at Neal•. Brudln & Stone lncorporatlld tor a non-r•lunclabla tea of '50 00 PAf ... In Addition 10 wtllc:ll • 16.00 ,.. wtll be CllarOad tor MCh aet melted A pral>ld oonfwanoa wlM be held el 10 00 a.m on th• 4th day ot Jar.All'/. 1983 al Iha City Council CtlambaB, City or Laguna Beedl, 506 ForMt AVetlU9, Lagune BMcll, Callforrtla. Each bid ahall be aubmlllad on • form lurnl1had aa part ol Illa oontreci doelurnenll, and must be ~ by • caahlar'• Clhadl. a oartlflad Cllaelt, or a bkldar'a bond In 1111 amount not taee tllan 10% of Illa amount 01 tlla bid, m1da payable lo Illa orctar of or lor Iha b•n•ltt ol Iha Agency Each bid ahall be ... lad and dallvarad to the Aoanc:y at llM location daaiOnalad 1n 11111 notlee tor Ill• opanlng 01 proe><>aa11 11 or l*ora Iha time In 111i. notJca provtdad The med< or bond ahall be gl\'WI U guartlnlM 11111 Ill• bidder •Ill antef Into a contrecl wllll th• Agency and lurnlltl Ille required PA'f"*ll end partormanc. bondl and oartlftca1• of lnautanca and andolaamenl• " awarded Ille work, and wlll ba declared lortaltad II Iha bidder ralu-10 Umaty .,,I., Into aald contract or turnlah tlla required bOnd• or oartlflcat• Of in-anoa and andoraamant1 If hi• bid la accepted. TIM Contractor wll be parmlttad to 1Ubatltu1a MCUrftlM for ~ wlthllald under 11111 Contract to aneura parformanea. Suoh 1Uba111utlon lflall be 9UOji9ct 10 Iha provlllona of Artlcle 9.5 or Illa General PrO'Mk>na of Iha Conlrect Tha ContrllGtor lflAll compy with Iha ExACYtlve Orctar 11249, entitled "Equal Employment ()poortunlty," .. amended by Executive Order 11375, and H Supplamaflted In O.partmanl of labor ragulatlon1 (41CFR part 801 Tha raQUlr-ta 1or ~ and c;onttacfon unoar lhl1 ord., ara axplelned In Iha ~ Any Contract or Contrac ta awarded under llllla ~I tor 8lda .,.. ·~ to be ~ In par1 by a Ql"enl from IN ~ SlatH Envtronm.nlll Proteetlon Aoancy Natthar Iha United a.... nor any of IU department•. ~or~llorwllbe a party to !Me Adv9rt'-1 lor Bldl or any r..,itlng ~act. Th• Board ol Olractora llH OC11ained from llM Dnc1or of Iha Clllornle Department of lnduetrial Aalallon1. p11reuant to Iha prCl'llalotw of Sactldl'I 1773 of .,. Labor Cod• of th• Stat• of California. a datarmlnetlon of Ille ;an.el pr~ rate of par diafft wagaa and Iha ~al P'rnllllnO rat• fot laOal holl6ay Md _... "'°"' In the locellty In wtlloll Mid WOt1I II to be parlO<!Md kw MC:ll crall, claHlflcallon. or type of ---lweded Hot ... "*' the dalarmlned ratae .,,... be paid to el work••• .,tlployad In Ille partonnenot of Iha oontrac:t. ~ rat• Of W9QM -on Illa wltll Iha ~ of lnclul1rial AlletlOnl and In Iha ofl\oa of IN ArlfitOJ llncl -avalllblit to rrry Int.,..., c-t; upon raqu .. t. The aucceHtul bidder ltlell poll a OOC1Y of AllCtl ~tlOn al MQll joOalle. Tiie 8oar0 Of Olraolon of the ,..,,,,.,,,, ,__ -rtghl to .-c1 th• ao~ule(a) \lndaf wfllet\ the bid• are lo I>• compared tnd COfttrac1(•1 llWArOad, to Njec1 any and .. bldl. and to ........ .,,., encl .. lrragulertty In "" bid BY 1"HE Of!JDEA ~ THE BOARO OF OIAl!CTOA8 OF THE ALISO WAT£1' MANAGDll!NT AGENCY. Delaet: o.oembar 1&. 1M2. la/ Wlllarn &lkanlll ,.ubllallad Orange Coall Dally P1101 Dec. 21, 21, tH2 M1~2 MUC M>TICE Jun rt Drtrirlc l.lt'bl Nnvolft)' Emr.ry Monkt'e ABLE names sales director .. '· ~ ... . ,. " , ABLE Computer of Irvine hat appointed Robert T. Joaee dltfJCtor of worldwide ulea with reeponalbWty for national and International aalea activities. Jones, • realdent of Newport Beach, jolned ABLE Computer ln 1977, shortly after the company wu formed. Ronald L. Detrick, 46, hu been appointed vice president of education for achool.t aroup by the Natio nal Education Corp. of Newport Beach Dr. Detrick haa been prominent ln the field of career education for the past 15 yean. In hla new poaltlon, he will ovenee all educational programs in the company's National Education Cent.era throughout the U .S. Gary E. Llebl, president of Macrodat.a Corp of Irvine, has taken over the additional responsibilities of c hief executive of the firm. Liebl succeeds Donald W . Fuller, who is resigning as chainnan and c hie f exec utive after 12 years of service to M icrodata. Ciady NovotDy haa been named sales ~ger of the Westin South Coast Plaza Hot.el ln C.ta Mesa. A resident of Diamond Bar, her corporate specialty will be In the medical and insurance markets. She will a18o coordinate the public relations and sales promotion activities with the hotel's outaide agencies. Jobn W. Emery, managing principal and 14-year-veteran of executive search and professional recruitment, will h ead up the eighth office o f Arthur Young Executive Resource Consultanta in C.t.a Mesa. OYER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS HEW VOAK IAPI Clar!UL JI ,. .... 1nerc1:cnt ,:.: J~ I =:'."" ~~ ..... c-c.p 111. 11'1 ,,,... _,,."'--,_ Col•l'le t>" n.. ll'ttrn9d IS\l'J 1~ Pllt..., --·.,,..,,II'( C....0-.... $-1• lnlmtGo 1% "'---rnetMl_,..Mol c.mclti tll<o .,.. .,,e_ ~ '°"" Plwc.eSS 4 p rn. P,.IQll do nM Cmt51v IOh ""' -SoUI ~ ..... ,,_,._, '"' .................... c,.,..,., •• ""' ""' ;.,.,_, '"" 14 PlonHit ---~ CM ..... » »"' -?Stlt ,. ..... 11 .. hMM lar ~, ~~. 40 ...... tµlfty . ,. ~ ........ SICll Bid~ " '"' ~W'I. Jt ,...... "'"""' AELI ... 1614 1 ...... CwlttF<I , .... "· -pl IS l•ll'J ~ AFA""°' DI<. M ~:=-. 4\lo ~ ~ 1 IYt /IYMC. s ~ llllt IM!t ~ -~ ~ N«llM •"' 10''1 = ""' '"' K.elySv • 11 13\l'J Puttllefl ~..-. " ""' ) Jl·D Mo K._I .,....,, ~ 1 ...... 1~ ~ 1• 1•11. K .... lnC 1 ... %'"' ---· s s~ ~11\1') K~ 1%"'1 .,,_ == .,._ " llVJ 0.-V~I " 1J\l'J ~ 11 ,,..., Allc<ttn< . ,. 0.-V wt 1 10 10 10"' "-.,,...,.,. 1\1') '"' g:~ • " KllllO.e U\l'J U.\I, It~ AFUNI ...... ...... -Lance • ~ 11\io ltolll>Mv ~ J1lo. OocwOlv -1011. ~"'" Ao .. ._ A.-~= .. -""' OolrGll • """ """ lANGo ,.. ... S1 s.d!IH !Slit I~ ~ 1 ..... 1~ Lii-• ...... s.itco ~=-~ ~ 11-. au .. ~· .,.,, -~~ I ~It 1'-()180 ~Uh ~~ 1S IS~1 SC Pu ~ .. 10.. , .... Our-11'-'"" ~-S<riCIH ~ 1~ IS\l'J ~vnc JW) •11. I IYt =-· _,.. £~ ----M-oE l"-HIO -13~ El .... EI 1%\iot~ :::r:"' 2"-J ~ 11"" n E._ .. s >"'-.... s Swcmat 111. 7\l'J E-1 1Jl't 1Jlo'> -Ian ~ , ... VIMecl ~=· ,. ••It< f:IMod t 27\l'J u Mell!LP JO JD\l'J ~ lS"-lS"' E...c-r 11\'t ,. _.,,.. ""' "' Sierelb A-""""' E-'" % ~ S'-'"' SlllC.ofta ••oo Wiii .. "' Enlbv ,.. ~ 21\l'J %1 .. sc..i-::~ "' ,., ~· UV. llV. M<F•I .._ ' SwEISol ~ ... Eql()ll 1 .. 1llt == 10 ... 10\> SI~ .I:':.", 1Jf\ IJ\oo ~=-U"' WAI 10'.'J ,._. SldMlcre U\'J ~ MidlXW 27\lo u Stc!Reol I I.JI I t-1• FllUV' ~,. ~ ""''""SI-... ~. 40 ...... Fl....,, 1SI\'> 1•1o. ·~ l?llt """' .. ,. .. StenSC "= u 11\l'J --2t I:~ ....... -1\io .. " ~. """:e'.o • .... "" Yt >-1• "$~ 21 ""' Ml• I~ It\'> INtl~ » UV. ~ .... ,,... aflt Mol9I ., ., .... = ~ZJ .... :It 2t'oll -..cot l4V. , ... ~ ""' Flwc• • al4 =t 13 !>'-llt.ilSoft IJ\oo ,,..... F.-0 in" C" :It JD .• .._ -1 "'-if ~ i...." 9,.,_ 17\'1 17 Fr-·~ ,. ... 11"' 1%\.'t ...._, JV., 1·1 Fr..sG 4'Yt .... MMe!~ 20 t1 Job Monsees hu Jolned Janaen AModataa, ~: lnc., of Irvine, u an art dlrector for the~·· " oonaumer and hJah·technology oriented 8CCOW\ta.: ~ Moat recently, Moll9ee9 waa een.ior art director at .... Re~r Clenn and Man of Reno, Nev. .. Three lnd1v1dual1 were honored for out· ~ at.anding sale. • achievementa ln the third qW&l"ter , of 1982 by the Sales and Marketing Council of the·.~ Buildlna Industry A11oclatlon of Southern ' California. They were Cyntllla P"cllelt of Walker and Lee; SbJrley Bruce of Misalon Viejo Company; , and Wllllam Moore of Ponderoaa Homes. Allen Cbarltoo, owner of Tierra Verde Landacape, Inc .• of Huntington Beach. haa been e lected state vice president of the California / Landscape Contractors Aallociation for 1983. " Rlcbard B. Cobeo, owner of Richard Cohen '. ; Land.acape and Construction. Inc .. o f Millaion Viejo • was honored with CLCA's "Member of the Year" ; 1 ~~. . Jamel L . Jobo1oa of Vista baa joined the •· ~ c areer counseling staff of Stanley, Barber,;~ Southard, Brown and Aallociates of N e wport Beach. :.; Johnson, 51, waa formerly a career COJU\ultant with ':.;~ Drake Beam Morin, Inc. •· Mark Kalataky, c hairman of the board,~·~ Sernic<>a. haa announced the rromotion of Lynda : ; Gray to general manager o Sernicoa Software ~ Systems divialon. Gray was previously vice .# t president, Finance and Admin.iatration for Semiooa ,~.I -the parent company. :~ t Gray will have responsibility for profit and loss • ~ and overall o perations of the diviaion. i j ,.(, ,, .. ~r-CI Jli,1 ,. .... 11 "'' s..... .. '°""~ f\lio ··~ trsE• ~ 1 -)1 10 10\oo 1 ..... 1 ... Ml DC 4'o 1\lo 1~ 1•~· ~== n •.i. SJ\l'J %114 ,,~. 2''"' 26'"' v. ""' h<-P 7t ,.~. 17"' " TokmA __ .,, ...__ T_,. 11"-1 .. , •v. '°" r::::J. s ..... Moo .... '"' , __ lf\ ,. ,_ T..,.,C. I ..... ~ n"'u r.r.!~ ,,,. -11-.. 1 .... ,. II 11\lo 11\l'J irt:d IT'> ZJ 1\l'J 1~ -'"" I~" USS... " ...... Ul<o ?~ US Tt<' ""' 12 ,.. "'"' uv.ev. ... ..... ""' 12 U11v:,, •loo "~ , .... %1\l'J u~ ""' IS ,.. -V-R l~IOt ... U'o\ Ullo v .. _, 17''> 17\o '"" ~ v-10•, 1~ --Vekro 17\, 17"-~,.. .... VlctreSI .. ,. .... ,,._ %1"' ~= ~ S\o ~ .. lJl. 1>'tt ""' """ Wwnfl 1Jt. .. u ..... 11"' ~ ""' 11-.. u-. lol w~ ,, s1 ... Ull'o M "-WHold Sl\o Sl\o ""'""' WmorC 1 ..... ,..-., UI<. IS-. -v.u ...... 19\.. 1%~ I] Wl..0• 11-, 1a1. 10'' JtV. -vAlv ' ..... ~)41.. WOnwt I~ I,.. lt '''• _..,. u »"' IO''I n =w 11\-\1%~ :It -,. ... JtV. ?h JI<. ... --... 1<- UPS AND DOWNS HEW VOltK IAPI -Tiw .__..,. 1 ... -... °"'"" ... . c-r AocU-••renl• -...... -.. ........ _ -u. ..... -Oii ~--... r-r-• • ......... !.u.n~ tr~-G •• lftcl-. ...,.__ , ............. ......-.. --........... -,....,... llld ~ --·· IHI bid P<~• "" -Lall .o;t. Prt 1 TectrM -Ut> 40.0 2 ~-... • 1 "" ... , ...,_. ,. " ""' •.A . • Al*ISol .... .. ,, . ,._ ""' U.t s GenotE11"" S\of . ' u. D.S • ~· • "' ""' n.1 1 Ho .... "" n_z • OetwlE.n '"" "" "" JI.I ' =t'r '"' 1Y, "" ti.I 10 , ... "' "" %1 , II ~ .. D • S\l'J u. ... u ,. • JV. "" 1a.s 1) t""' WI ) 1~1· .... ,. Up 11..J " HK.al. •"-.. Up IU • u arao 2 • \lo "" U.l ,. 0-... J . .... ""' U.J HIO.CC IMo J"" "" ll.I 11 • " Tufll"" llO . .. "" IU lt _ ... ,._ ._ "" 1%) . JO Hwntni " • % "" IJ.j' ,, "'*VIII ...... . ... u. IJ.J D GoedyN •1 .. • JV. "" 11.ll ZJ E: s ... . "' "" 11 t J7\'I •• VP II t 5. Ht ... : ... .. "" 11.S 1V. "' Up II S DOWMI -Lal -°11. ""'' 1 1'1-Ull J\l'J : I . . ' . •' . '. : i l: .. , . ,_. "'' ,, \ \ ·-. " .. , '' _, . \ :~i· ... ., .. ' . . \ ..... /l ... " . ' .•. ..... ,, ' . . " =~ 8'WT-. '"' F.-Mil ·:: = D M\l'J °" ... ~ 11" 1~ FuttrHI ""',.. ttv. 12 .. NASDAQ SUMMARY , Fl-,.. "' Oft ,. % ....... ....... ~ GMwlnl • •14 ~ ~UV. J ..,, .... J -"' Oft 11..J ~ "" Mil ~ r .. Zh • "9lc:ll .... 4\'J -. Oft U.l ... .. W\'Ntl ,_. '"" "" , .... =Ell IS<, 11 HlcllOG "'-'"' NIEW YOltK tAPI --a ll.,. --" ""' E'11 """' u ......... ........ --=-~ .... .:...~ 'Cel'MS¥ ""'41""~~ """ " .. ........ .. ..\'> -c-.... Jlli I'> -,, ,. ....... --#!Cl .... 2.n•.• ---~. 11~,.1 .. ~ '"' ' ~ IJ9' 11 .. ....... -·-Jl\lo ,...... "' ~" ... 711. '"" 1n11 ~ ---,,.. ,,.. • v. CAIPAI• 2h ,.,...._ ..... .._ -" IN lt ~ vuoo J2'-D'°' . "' c.ec. 12 ,, _ ... ' ..._ -· ,.. .. lt"'1 256.• • l\oo ... ~ """''""-1 '"" ~= $-1• , t• ... HE ZJ1.J0t IJ'llt u . "' CMrllllo lM ,. ........ ..-.. u ,,._ 119' ,, ... T-m.-..... Kl<. • Yt ·= ""' 11-. == ~ :t"' ~ """-~ JOt.JOO tMo .. ..,, _.,. u... »-. . 27\'J t "' °" C2\ol NIOaee '"·'°° If'-lt\l'J •1"" °""'"" • = . lSlli ... OllFwT9 J'-I"' T-i.i.• Ullo )2YJ -.. ' J 11.,. Jiil F 11 •1'• C>nlr'TP n-. n-. ~ •re1s -~,"" ~ ..... • ..... ..._ .. "' ;a..ut1 , .... 21 ........ ""' ""' P-8 ""' ""' Olcl-..s Qll,eO »'-~ _,,lb , J"' $ 11 111.'t ¥::-".::. ... 2.111 Ci~ •Iii Mil IMS 1nC tlftt 11t p • ... U JI 'CllJloGa ~ ,.._ ISC ,..... 19'" • 10\'J -~ .... llJ ~ ~ ...... , .... ..i... .... • I "-tEM ~II --... 14 O lli a I.... ltv.,...... ....._I 1"' , ... T-.-,....,.. . ' ..... "' J .. "' • ~ ... ,.. -"' 1 -11\l'J 1iw. • .... Plr %"' -._ ' = Zh -"' Ml ~ _ , .. 11 ' v. " UN4le ... .... "' IJ £"811ttf1 ..... .... " ......_ J\io .. u =:· %\lo .... M '"' "' " ·-'"' ~ ,. =t ,. ,_, " ,_, .. • =' .... -"' JI '"' -.. n °"'* .... J"' -.. n WNtr'ln J~ .. lM WltlrnAL 27\l'J 2 u ........... J ~,. ~1· Fwm t.17 NL Inc.em t.•1 NL ~ F!.Jwl: 1J.SI C.W 1' 1' 14. IS .... £q u 41 16.t1 0-V 1~ M.'2 ~ 11.n It.a -Iii tr.• 10.97 HI Vici 16.SI 11.11 ·-.. ,, 1.n ....... 11001UIZ °"" tJ 11 .,_., T•• & 21m nm -·-°'-- Oft g: Oft °" g: Ofl °" °" Ofl °" OH Ofl Oft Oft °" °" Ofl °" Oft 1J.4 11..6 IU 11.S 11.S 11.4 " ' IU M.S ,. .. IO.O u ,,_ L7 u u u u Ll u 7.t .. ,. ... ... . . .. .. •I '" , .: .... .. .! ..... " •6 .. ' •• -~ • ., t NL !f NL •' NL NL NL NL Late surge aids Yule sales mark LOS ANGELES -A IHt-mlnute u&tl• In Chrtatmu ule1, aided by boomlna poet-ChrUt.ma. bua!NM Sunday, helped CallfomJ.a reiaf le,.. Mlvaao what at flnt appt>ated to be dluppolntJ.na ......W tlaara. F..rly tallies point to a modest 1.6 percmt to !Ive pen.-ent lncreue In retail u.11:1 over the prevloua year after adjultina for lnflaUon, l&id David Jaclclon, an analyit with the Lot AngelH brokeraae firm of Bateman Eichler I Hill Rkhardl. Jacbon added that ahopkeepera went i.nto t.l'M! holid ay aeaaon with sm aller Inventories. thua lmprovfnl their chance. of ahowlng a profit Mon·ey supply growing NEW YORK -The nation'• money supply 1.11 continuing to grow faster than the Federal Reserve Board planned. but aome economists aay the poor condition of the economy means the Fed will not react by forcing up interest rates. Economist.a said they saw no aignilicant effects from the Federal Reserve'a report Monday that the money supply .roee $600 million in the JeCOnd week of December. More unportant., the economata said, wu a report that the Fed's policy-making ann recently had voted to lower its target range for a key interest rate. 10,000 jobs eliminated LACKAWANNA, N.Y. -A reorgaruzation plan by Bethlehem Steel Corp. that eliminates 10,000 jobs in two states caught some workers by surprise and raised fears of a two-percentage-point jump in unemployment here. .. The nation's No. 2 steelmaker announced Monday 1t was eliminating the jobe at it.a mills in Lackawanna and Johnstown, Pa., to counteract losses of $209 million for the third quarter of 1982 and predicted major loeses for the year. "U there wu another steel plant, I'd go out and get another job," said one Lackawanna work.er who identified hlmaell as a foreman but declined to give his ruune. ''There'• not. rm done." I .... :\-, .... · .. "· .. .. • ----------------------------.-----------------------------.I WHAT STOCKS DID Nl!W YOllK CAPI 09< JI WK• ""''J DO HEW YOllll: IAPI OK 11 --l-Ji DKllNod ,., ~ = -"""" 24 -"-" I METALS HEW YOllK "'"I -Spol nonlerrou1 rn.481 ptlCM loOay c., .. , 11~-u cent• 1 povnd. u.a ........... LeM ~ -• pouftd ZIM l6-40 oente • POWld. ~ ""~ _. ... POWld • .,.,......,_ '111 M.1171 ..._... WMll ~lb ........... l't -a PQUnd. H,Y MaNwy 13M.OO pet ........ H ~"~ uro oo-un.oo t•or ouncie, SILVER H•no.,. •no "~''""· s11.010 e>« ''°' ~ GOLD QUOTATIONS SYMBOLS ~ '4 IOlt.11 !07'" 100 .. lt'J0.11 . J:S.• • Tm .... u 4.ff ,. 4-.00 W .'1 • I .. '•. • U VII 117.W lltM 117 •• llt.llS• I.Ill • e.s 5a .. u 411tlll -· ·~· l.JJ ~=-~::= ·1 Vlh . . . . . . . . . • • 1.114.9 • ., -•..u.- AMERICAN LEADERS HEW VOfllt CAPI· S.ltt. 4 p.rn in<• --c.-.. .. "" ... -..... MWtcao S..a Elie....,.. -· •·=......_ .. , ........ -u· =-.....:.. ":."-11\·,"' ·.':: HGwOllTr IJl.1'0 12.... • "' lftdrSonl ltl,IW J .... 111,• -..... W~"' W,JOI tVt -l<o ~ '7,1'0 '"" . .... ,, ..... "' C ,... ISfli •I O....i.lcl "' ,.... ,.,, • "' ... .. .. ., , I ., c I Donald Regan if ax ikes eyed WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Treasury. Secretary ~onald T . Regan, ;oncerned about 'eCOvery-stifling effects f huge federal defidta, raising the idea of creases in selected axes as a way of "hittling th06e deficita lown, a spokesman has iaJd. The poui bl li ties :oncern ending or irniting tax wrlteoffa on :onsumers' intere1t )a)"lne1lta on installment oens and mortgages for nd homes, said the pokesman , Marlin ?itrwater. "I would characteriz.e as ideas th.at he is illing to consider; at polnt they are not roposals," Fitzwater But he said Repn was being realiatic" in hi.a ncern that spending ut s would not gnilicantly hold back get defidta that are IJ'Xll.eclA!!O to ri8e to $150 on or more ln fi8cal 983 and the following ears. Many eoonomiata have Id they fear deficits Ing far above fiacal 982'• record $111 billion ould cause the aon!Vf'1"ft'n _..t to borrow 90 uch ~ that private orrowen would be wded out of money arkets and intereat ta would ri8e again. Such an increHe in nte rest rate1 , ~t'enllJDl~t and private loCIOClrnistll agree, would ten remvery from long reciemlon even on It ~ well under ~ was vacationing Palm Beach, Fla., onday and WH not vallable for direct torinm1mt. W.Tl ..... OM SMnt•~ WISICUflf CMA11L 427 E 17th SI CostaMeM IM&-9371 Tiny· Oh 'o hambu whets appetite nationwide COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) On hit wl"\JJ111.i da)'1 Jim Maurwr u.wct hll bride and th •nll,.. brlual part)' to Whli. Cull• h•mbW',.l"I In Dotroll An Ohlo woman took a 40·miM cab rid• for an unJ r of che ... bura.r1. Movie director Francl1 J'ord Coppola put ln an order while he wu lllmln1 "Apocalypeo Now" in the Phlllpplnft. Devotion to the little, 2 ~ -lnc:h 1qu11r• hamburgen of the Columbua-bak-d White Ca.Utt chain eeen.!"llY know• few bound1. White e&.i!le aay1 it once .ent 104,000 of thelr two-ounce bura\'rt to a tund-ral1in1 event In Arii.ona. Without any promotJon, It ta shlpplnj 10, 000 hambur1en a week lo people out1ide Ila marketa in the F.ut and Midwest. Such cravings mean dollan, the chain decided, to it la 1ettl.ng up a t.1U-free phone number to cat.er to people deprived ot White Castle hamburgen. That will be atod news for Jim and Jeanie Maurer, who live in Denver, far from any White Castle outlet. Maurer aaid his bride-to-be had. developed such a "hankering" for White Castle's hamburgen dunng two years in Denver that they dedded to eat at a White Castle when they were m Detroit for thelr wedding. "We took a wedding party of about 16 people directly aft.er the wedding," he said. While other hamburger makers tout their products as the meatiest, the best-tasting or the most original, White Castle Inc. simply continues to mass-produce the same two-ounce, onion-covered burger it haa made since 1921. "I think it's a different type of hamburger than the rest of the induatry is offering," aaid Bob Goldburg, assistant director of advertising and public r elations. "It's a very simple, honest hamburger." The first White Castle restaurant was opened 61 years ago in Wichita, Kan., with $700 in borrowed money. Restaurants later sprouted throughout the East and Midwest, primarily in the big metropolitan areas. The lengths to which White Castle devotees will go for the little burgers are part of the company•s traditicm. "So help me, this is a true story," said Gad Turley, director of advertising and public relations. "II h•1Jpt•11 ~ •t "ur Huber tJ•la&hlJI 1tor., a 1ubu1b of l>eylun A lllll i.d)' l'amt' In 11nl' nllhl Sh obvluwd~ had Lhe hunati for WhllM C..llt• She boucht a:l 00 worth o( chGeel!bur(len twr ~xi fartt WU $DB "Sh• llvt•d In Sprtnafh•l d •ntl hud no trenapurtAUon, ao •he cal14-d " cab," Turluy gid. "That aort of thing I.I not unusual.'' Tho '"'mpany oxpecta to havo lta new 1hippln1 syswm in operation within two months. Orders wlU ~ tak.,n on 6 t.oU-free number or by order lorm1 print~ In n~w•papera, and credit card• will oo accepted. The bUt1 wUJ beetn with ads In a Southern CallComlA newspaper. Eventually, Turley believes White Castle may ship $40,000 to $50,000 worth of hamburiers a month to C&lifornla alone. "We teel that lt'a the bi~t populatJon bue made up of former Midwesterners and F.uterners," Goldburg said. ''Most' of the lettena we get are from the California area." The hamburgers will be cooked, frozen, packed in dry ice and shipped express. "We generally get delivery anywhere m the country within 48 hours," Turley aaid A 100-burger shipment can be had for a maximum of $89, depending on location, he added. The burgers will be shipped on Tuesdays and Thursdays from airport to airport, with customers having to pick them up planeslde, Goldburg said. The success of the mail-order venture rests on the burger's reputation, he said. ~o . Ann Stokes of Las Vegas needs no convmcmg. Recently, Stokes was smitt.ed by the White Castle bug several months into her pregnancy. "She was craving White Castles," said her husband, Bruce. "She had been craving them for a couple of nights." He said sh e happened to mention it during a telephone conversation with his father. who lives m Columbus. A couple of weeks later the Stokes received a pickup call from the local airport. "He sent us a hundred of them," Stokes said, addmg that the couple put them In the freez.er and ate them one by one over the next few weeks Does she still have the craving? "No," Sokes said. "She had the baby." Rubik's Cube hits Russia MOSCOW (AP)-Rubik's Cube haa hit Lhe Soviet Union and thousands of Muscovites braved the cold and snow this week to try their luck at the brain-teasing puzzle that has been perplexing the West for yeare. A ahfpment of 20,000 cubes went on sale Monday and half had been sold by midday Tuesday, said a saleswoman at the Hungarian shop called Balaton on Lenin Hills. They cost the equivalent of $7.70 and customers were limited to two. Soviet 1c:>uroes say they cost $35 to $40 on the black market. The small plastic puule is made up of movable cubes in red, orange, yellow, green. blue and white that the player is suppoeed to align by color -a feat that sounds much easJer than It la. The brainchild of Hungarian Erne Rubik, the cube has been driving Americans to distraction for two yea.rs. More than a thousand people clad in heavy overcoats and fur hats stood outaide at dusk in a line that snaked around a parking lot outside the store. Many standees were students from the nearby Moscow University,, whose massive Stallne9que spires ri8e less than a mile away. "rve never aen a queue like this before,'' said a middle-aged MU9COYite who -like most Soviets -is a veteran line stander. Two girls said they stood for 1ix hours before they got to the spedal counter at 8 p.m. Th& long wait was worth it, they said, because the eube ia highly prir.ed l.n a country with few such diversions. "I wouldn't eell my cube for anything. My baby loves to play with it,'' said one MU9COYite, who got hi.a on the black market. where a wide DllTH 11mc11-~---=......;;._TIC[ - FLUBART FLUHART, BERNARD H ., beloved hu1band of Isabelle D. f1uhart. father of Robert E. Fluhart, Okria G. Matthew• and Juanita f9CTITIOUS WH U..8TATDmNT The tollowlnO .,.,_,. .,. doing ~-. f'ITTMAN TRUCKING ANO RENTALS. 711 S•n Ju•n l•nw. "'-'tM. Cellfcwnl8 92'70 Ard•ll 0 Ellln91on, U ll Brltt•ny l•n•, 8r••· C•llfornl• 92921 Friend. Brother of r:.teU. Ro~1 E Pl1tm•n. 7 ti sen McFarland, a.190 surviwd by Ju1111 L•ne. Plwcentl•. C•lllornl• 4 pnc:lchildren and 1 p-eal ~ bu8lr-. .. ~ lrindlon. Serv'°'9 \o be held '18f*8I .,.,.,_lhlp WCI by • §AM, Wed., 09c. 29, 1982 in AOeERl E PITTMAN Hope Chapel. Forest t.wn Thie ... temwn1 -111we1 lllllh 1'lw Memorial Park, Cypreu, =~ °t~llllOW Couniy on directed by Forest Lawn · riontl Mortuary. Publlwhed Or•no-Cout O•lly ANDREAE Plot. o.c 21, 21, fH2, Jen 4, 11. J A N I C E L Y N N E 1983 M03-82 ANDREAE resident of ----------C.O.ta Meu foe the put 18 rta.lC M>TICE yeara. Pa11ed away Dec. 8TATBmNT Oft WfTHDRAWM. 26th. She wu a llJ'aduate of MOii ,.~ .... M.khipn State 1Jntvenity, ONMTINO UMllD an active member of th• l'1CllTIOUI 9UIMta ~ Punch & Judy GulJd of The followtne pwreon h .. ea.ta Mea ~ County wtlfldt_.. ••owner• peniw from • ' 1'141 ~ op91'81ln9 under IN Chlldnm1 Hospl the Boy flcthlou• buelnen n•me 01 Smuts of Amer1ca, the Girl VANOEAllL T INVESTMl!NT Sc:outa of America and a b\8 COMPANY •• CelllOfnl• Limited active member of the Pertnwflhlp •t 170H Pullm•n A--. !MM, C411tom68 '2714 Pareni.-T.-chen A9oclat.lon Th• flc1111oue bueln"' n•m• "' ea.ta .... bfenda HiO atetWl\Wlt "" the Pl!nl'let'tlNp -<>-bool TewlnkJe Middle fltwd on Augu•t 11, 1112 In IN .;x: • Coun~~Or1tnoe-• School She la awvlved by .!H11 Cl•rk. 11832 Hto1111e1e her buabmd Jamll, IOI» Jim Teuece, Turtle ftocll. Irvin•. & John. dauah ..... Krtat1n & CWllfOMll Jt.ath«, aU °' ec.ta w... Jotwi cw. Parenti Mr.• Mn Vauchn Publlatled Or.no• coe:.'~~~ Reddint of Costa Me1a, Plot. Dec. 1, 14, tf, 21, 11a b rot h e r W II I l am of 6375-ta Honolulu, Hawaii, 1l1ter X.,.,, Malt of MlMMpol.t.. Minn., 1randmoth•r LouAnn Reddln1. Co1ta MHa. ServlcH wnl b• Wednffday, 2PM, Harbor Lawn Memorial ClApel wtth lkv. Lo Or .. n Collea• u._. ... ~ lfll1t a.ch ot Ventura offlclaUna. lntermeat 1e,vto•~ lmmild.latelJ toOowtnc. In ... Of OowWI. ~ IDllU =.~, ':h~J~,~~ IJ•PflllkOf'Ult 111...aai~ lhlimiian. _,... ..... • .,.._.._. of ....._, wwn Mouat Olive Mortuary, ...... ..., ...... range of scarce luxury goods are avallable for astronomical prices. Some Rubik's Cubes have been brought into the country over the last two years by foreign tourists or the few Soviets who get penniaalQll to travel abroad. A Soviet-licensed version of Rubik's Cube IB due to ~ sold beginning early next year at Detsky Mir (Children's World) toy stores around the country, the state media reported recently. The current shipment from Hungary apparently is Lhe first allotment brought lnto the country from abroad. Komsomolskaya Pravda, newspaper of the Young Communist League, carried a report last Jan 1 from Budapest that said, "The cube has become a worldwide sensation." "Many succeed ; many, alas, do not," Komsomolskaya Pravda said. The paper quoted the inventor, Rubik. as saymg "I have received thousands of letters from people who are interested in the cube but do not have 1t yet, including letters from the Soviet Unton." He said Hungarian and Soviet state trade agencies conducting negotiation• on "distributing the game" in the Soviet Union, the paper aa.id. Although the cube has not previoualy been sold in state st ores, Soviet publications acknowledged its popularity by printing eolutions in issues last summer. MU8covites said the solutJons were copied down by hand and puled among people who had managed to get a cube. 6 Cll 4 =•1111 1ill1'8'1=~· .... ~~~1--...... - 2 1'r11111 l .hl11 ~~!~.~~~~>~·~!~m.11 1~ b.th • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y P· I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D Lie•· I. u .. 111 t•1111J :t """' 1llJJ9 ti.aoo.ooo J{1•1111Kl1•h'tl :J lx.lrm, :t buth + l•ril' rt'l' trtl • h1•11rn 11•lltnK•· rurnh1ht'<l, p1o1ll1• ...,W,000 PHlllULI 11011 ( i.. ••1111 ~ )l•tty v11•w1 Mill'lne room, 4 hctrm, 3 IJ;oth. :noo Ill! ft $1.386,000 CX't!anCruni LlllD& llLE llYFROIT L.it(Ci<lll v1t·w from 6 lx.lrm, ~ bath, playroom, cinrk rm, d1·n Boat 1l1p Now $1*00,000 llYSIH PUOE Stx't'.t...,ulu.r Ully Cront dplx 'l br, 'l ba up, 2 br, l bo J n 'J. bc>11t Sp<k-es IWdu<:'t.'d Sl.500,000 FllRIAlll RUCH Nl•W -I u1 . -I ', ba. custom French Nonnandy El.tall· I 2 prime acre h1l1Lop $1 ,2W.OOO COROllAIO CIYI Coronado Island cust bayCront lot 85' boat <.l0t:k Plitru. avail Now $370,000 w/termt BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR )41 Bn y\od•• Q .. ,.. "< B bl~ b:t.1 AYl ... , ... mu leal latatt ... f •·• Only 15000 down P•Y· HI " .... menlt Super Condo -lnnal IOl2 end unit! CloH to 8o. -----------= CoHt Plue. Security I lllM get•. pool• end tennie ...... YI I ~~·~.~c:z H1.1g9 3 Bdrm home lo-979-6370. cat9d In •AC911«11 .,..._ nw•• B6g lot, per1ec;t fOf I~ ..... Fu4I price. 193,500. Cell 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS LODI For our new regul•r ....icty l•tur• IDIT SllW-CISE Every Seturday In th• Dally Piiot Claultled1 MUI YllW ----Striking contemporuy deelgn feetur9d In HOl'M & Guden M agazine. Palnelaklngly bulll 3 bdrm homw on prlv•le corner lot with bay, ocean. & jetty view9. Thil home le truly • 1how- pl-that mua1 be -to llp9(9CJal•. $976,000. ...... , .. .,.,. ....... 3 Bdrm. with curb •P· peel. New cerp« allow· ence. Move In laat. 845-5735 Of ~5 l'Yr lflf'd lhf' R~1t1rr and Timn bu1 I •l••r• YH lhr Dail, P1lo1 ror j:.-----,,,---''----I -~-:~_:"_:.,,,__:._··. ___ .. ! - 673-7300 Ull .... ""' Cuetom home of red- wood.~ otllnp. 2 wet ban. and MUM. c... aooommodete up to 18W .... be*. G&Mwded g91e ~. Pffv* tie.:t'I and tennll ooun.. Prloed to NII at 1960, 000. Cell Linda TtOll•· nettl tor additional a.. tlla. 758-9100 GEORGI: ELKINS C Cenaa .. 1 Jiu IP! TRAii ... S!!I! .... •II! !ti O.M. 3 bd, 2 be, =· 1~ INUft'I 11 K. 11 500. 146-7~ IMO 2 Bdrm W.IHH dMc*t by dout>M car OataQ9. ConCle1• drl¥9, prtval• P9llo9. 1127. 700. .., •.•• tt•· ... 11 UITamlMll NICE Mlghbortlood • 3 Bdrmhom9~~ aparlm9nl. 160,000 • call !Of ....... 142 .. 1111 A PETE BARRETI REALTY ....... wn II Beautiful 4 Bdrm lwnlty home .... urina ..,. Md etlCIOMd gatclen room, oll lh• matter 1ulte. Completefy r•model9d =ut!,, •J: ;'.:;l mlnetlnQ buyw. A8klng 1190.000. For 8'>P()lnl· m•nt to •••· c•ll 540-1111 ~HERITAGE ·~· REALTORS ........... lMI 2 Br. No end. ~ .. tin. 1225.000. 442 Mon- teny Dr. 4~15-4 No pcJlnte. OCEAffRClfT NO DOWN WITH TRAii ....... , ....... . .. cu.tom home QA 48A, 11-s>• to Mndy buctl. Prime L•ou11a Nlguer location. f'.Ull prtca. a 1, tll0,000. AGENT 644-1513 lf'flUll 2-Sloty NMtuck• 5 • wllh bHutlful 8un1et pool aurroundld ~ 14, 000 l'9d bftc*a. T•llM!y decoratod ttlruout w/ wellpapere & lhutten. Many upgrade9. 8eHet ftnanoe. 9ubmlt down. t780,000 lndlldee lllnd. ..., .. , ... •• ...,. """4111 your bqftng Income P'O- perty Of outgrown ~ enoe wftt'I the *99 _,. lty fOt Ihle neet ruetlo and rOOlfff'f 4 ldrm, 3M b• home In WALi< TO THE BEACH CORONA OCEAN Vl!W COHO<> l O!L. MAR LOCATION ,,__ ....... -dlD- wllh apectaoutar tlO "'II rm. mtaro. pod.~ dao. ocHn, Catalll'la • TIM .,.. ~ of lelMd and IWtlOf *-· t11001 All. MarllYl'I ~-~~ au.IOOO 111 of t471JIOO.tea. ~--~.._....., ___ Own4t flea •1H ,OOO r.r.'1 end .. ~ .... 1111 I · 1 .. '=- ,.: ... t .. ' .. ---------- r CeMer ..... 1 1 Cttnl huh• I CINI• """" I I Inn lltt&M l ''''"" '''" eain """' AllM•tfr' tl.14 Ml dav I HIOf' OA81HITMAKI.. W• c.,. Cfl)t OIMneft 1' OUITOM ... , p 1t10 CU.TOM "''IHllHINO Wt .,. ,, ... ,..iy llOMI .. .... CUITOM weo d PlllO OMllMMlll\I •• .,.. , I I ..... HP Cuttom blll ltum CINn ' UptlOI .... rtdwoOd --.. ' '"'n ' KH ~ .mina ICW "°'* ' "' br "ICl'll fd llnor Lio ~·· l9dwOOd dlloll• ' ,AaHIOH ~--Tiie! I All you r-Y """'11.trt. LIC'd Tr\ICll Mount Unit '---~ 141-otaJ ITIVf 171-1* on Lldo ltlt unlll Jeni alOl44. 14 1fl Of~ flflOel fWldy 141-olU "au..-.. ...._..., r0t I K., lurkeU ~140 1 Work 9'* 14~371« "::= -:==1:: ltJ::lH-*81 cuetomert f'·-"-/ lne'· :tO ._dirt ed !!!! !!!!!!!! -!!!!--TMM you, N 1.+e 1o fV'" " ,., the ... ___ I t ... at/ C...1!!! 1 DOOM OALONll ._.U ID'I f'LAITIRINO TtM ...... DAly !!~mr -M Bloc* Gift Door1 ln.tllted ,... Oulclc ,,AINTlll NllDI NNt petdlee. lnl/nt. N lOW MTU M • I Aemod./,_,.1 Lo 111.. °:'*'~wZ LIO I Clll lob. Me-2123 9¥1 TQ9tMldlrtMOV9d. CtMn MrV I T0411 Ir .. NtV, llnCllGIC>t. WOf .. (I DO yrt np, Intl "-*tuooo.. ..H2M Tr• trlm/remov, dMll PloT D1ok1, p1tlo1, 110011 11 .. 810· 57 •-b aAMW Drp "p, ltwn '9fl0¥, 701-:MTI HAULIH0-11ud•nt w11oe hllldymM. ciement, m• ftl. ~tlo Cl6l!nee UO. _ llrte •t. 81...,. 762.e65f " ..., 111 ••""'-_.__Yd"'-=· truck, Hm• lo ra le1.1 .-.... 28 we, 6'8-0914 3"7IO. ,, .. •tlmtt18. PL.Aa·~A PATCHINO UOf, mowing ff4.7017 ·-•-T 1 • -·~·y-...,,.... Th k 1•0 1019 ~··• ,. ....... .... p ............. ,....,a "11tuoco1. lntltJCI. 30 Ctr,...I. DRYWALL TAPING Tr .. trltn/remov-M I '" you " • lll!HJ!I ....,,.. -"""' -. .._., P-" ...... -11 SERVICE EXPEA oerpent•r doe• __ _ 1 •w T-t·-& •A-~... .....,•t'--Jim 8,.1 Al""' JOfVI 1 ,, , ....... , -..-.ir... T .dd'n• remod d~ka ....vl'I TILi ...., -..,_ .............., "'.,,......., " ..., ,. Lowe1t rllt• rompt. NORD p• •"'T'"RI...,. •&::I:: Skllf!Ohi. & ,...,... 7,.. ••KY ,,,.. ... Kevin aao-eo .. Cler~ malnt H.\ULINO & CLEAN..UP8 IRICKWO"K Small !Obi nHt PfOffftlon•I• Ill .......... ~ ---~--... -----DIECTORY •t OM, 6A 1_.612 Expert ln91811 083-3283 tr• woik oornin/lndutt CALL RICHARD 1 Newpoft, Co.le MeM, yrt NP eat-714t ln1/e.t ~. MOit eubtl', K·14 OOIT HOWi ... .., ...... YOVI Oiltv Piiot 8erYlce Diect""Y Aepl ... 1tltlve Ml-111 tit lit REMOOEUREPAIR C~lW C.n ll!ctritaJ CtlUCk Nowlin 642·2113 ' lft• aonoot. t6T-tl21 lnllne. Aef9 878-3118 -,..,. .~.__:; &IM892 ~=9Ml t.~'7. 8tor11. ollloee, hom ... Child Cere, my home. M ELECTRICIAN Priced IUNl•I WUlll ....... BRICK.STONE·81.0CK Low rtrt•. ttc. 638-8198 •--~---~----!\'~~ fo'~~'; ,c:b~~:t:, °'pt/time Nwpt Shor• ~:·~':i:~~i:te.on Mowing, edging, rlklnQ, H 1w 0 y> IU-llll :,::,~=~~~ PAIHTIHG-FAU EIT. 14116' 0 y> ~llll WW.. CleulM •l ( Bonded. Ina. LIO. 191801 ., ... fWta. MMHM Lio. 3He21. 01:Ml3118 IWH plng. ,.,.. Htl. l'urnac:e..pool·w•ter hMI CA8M OR PVMTS. Dy• 40 o.i watemeater 1226 WfWASHWiNOOwa Palombo Con11r * Splrltuel bued chlld· met ... 646-5731 .i.ctrontc lllgn aerv..-to. •.n.1 871.()124; evt 831·5043 ..... _ p _ ............ ~-• LIC'D ELECTRICIAN _ ual l'MI • ,__ • •• "2-8314 cer• In love & 1ot111 ec:· Quat. wortc-Rw. ,.,.. LAWN & YARD MAI~. lnM Cltaalai *'-' •Ym• fattdQ Hubet Aootl....._." t Quality wottt guwmnteed i rept1nc• C M home Fr• •I Tom .... 1.iu.12 Cllen-upe. Int, Hod. _ Top Ql.' ... lty. 211 yr evn. F~'-t...._ OMlall ..,_ -~ IYP881 Fr• •tlma1e 148-73'1 Cupt ltnlet 645-t188 . ...., "" F,_ Mt. DI..,. 083-2503 R081N'S CLEANING ~Ith ..... HANGl "' ..,...., PPllla ,_......., .... -dedla ....... ,. .. 1 ..... --. In I0\'9 • 101-· TOP QUALITY WORK ---=--8eMce •• thoroughly No oven':.~ ;~·363 .~~~-~..!!'!lf!10""5 Lie U 11802. 648-0TM , ________ _ ------------151\ampoo & •team clMn ..,.,_ • .. AT REAS. RATES ~ c1Mn houM 540-0851 ,._..,,,_ ......,., .,...,.. -a.....a. ~ P.nt=t Color brlghten..-1, wht ~ltne:e, FT/PT. m) Llc'd. Joel 973-1644 HOME CARE·REPAIR, UILI .,....., ·A&C MOVING-1 1 •• Pl-.at 11• Lft -.-M • ,....., s..icoa . orptl • 10 min bleec:h CM home.. 64M18e pelnt, yard. FrM h•ul. IP n.&1111 Quick Clntful ~ I bpert w1t1cover no n· Don'I r•roof, 1'9Peir . •• That 1111 contrect°'9 wtlO r1~ S&S ~It 831.-.189 to Hall, llvldln. rme S t5; ev,; Child Cere: tam to "'" RESID/COMM'L/IND. Fr• •I. 761 .... S4I CINnl~ Servlee. Clee· We do 'pec1c1ng 552-04 {o llall&tlon. Aeu. Coneul-lrllCtlon of SS. 8&1·2890 perform WOf1t over S200 • room $7.50; couoti 110 "'ou-•A•""•· ~ltd. ull 20 yr1 Oo my own wortc. n•---1 next to Godl' tent Alltgnmt. 581-8590 ,.. ;t; lncl"dlng lebor end' ... M-•-n ....... -·-Uc 278041 Al &4f.812e ·• "-,. STARVING COLLEGE ROOFIN..,, REPAIRo meterttl• mutt be fl.... '• tt wt. ltn. chr S6. Guer, ellm. pet or pan lime. 64 ·290& . ***Wl"O DAMAOE? nMI. 642·&800 STUDENTS MOVING flltr Ilana) Smell Jobe OK. FrH oeneed. UnlloenMd con-'• odor. Crpt r999lr. 15 Yfl Repaln/Aemod. No job -ti t c 11 T • l'lberglt boat rep1lr up. Do work my11fl Child cere my home In ftnaJn/ Tilt loo amlll. Fiii MNlol. HOUSECLEANING CO Uc T124-438 **BRYANT'S•* •• me H . 8 om or trectore llhould eo ltlte Verni ..... paint & melnt fWf1. 554-0123 E•llide C.M. Good ,.. F I T f 11 Fr• eet Keith 64M8?2 Honeel & DependabMI lnturecl. 641-8427 WaMcovenng Removal Chuck, 542-83G2. In their~· (;on. Prof, ,._, ee1..-1e1 • tarencee 642·8136 orm c• op1 • o • · er.nd• oe2-2ell0 WATCH US GROWi ~ 1ype9. &42·1343 H ..... eorr.~you went trector• Ind c:ontumer9, :O)!. 6pm. No Steam/No Shampoo klndL Prompt • RMeon-Exp'd In Ill home~ , contact Mery Grondtl et ._J Stein Spec:idlt. Ful SELL Idle lleml wllll I able coat 842·0125. RMI. No Job too Smell. He\'9 aom.thlng lo Mii? WANT ACTION? Cluejfled Ada, your one-lo Mii? .01 do (714) ~ wtth eny ,: Went eds &42·7M7 \ f >I I I 11 F If .. , . T~\DIT IO\ \I ~L\I r) .-.-.. PlllE MOBll.E t«K PARK l4~ Specu on 23 Atte + 20 addHlot).-1 Kres '3.1$0.000 ••t• ••eltJ a ........ Ot. T141l .. 1• dry. F,.. eet. 839-1582 OWiy Piiot Ctealtled Ad 642-2741 Bnen 86()...309ll -Cl11111\ed ed1 do It W9M. Cluelfecl Adi &42-H7f ! 1top lfloPplng cent• It well. &42-541711. QUMllont. .- ' I COMMElL CHEVROLET ... ~ 11 ,··· I r-. \ \1 .• ' 541>-1200 I THI DRlllE COAD CIAIT 1111111 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1982 OllANG ( C:OUNl V. C Allf on NIA '}',C l NT 5 4 county judges confirmed By JEFF ADLER Of tM Delly ...... ,...,, Orange County's new dtvwon of the at.ate Court of Appeal was put lnto business Monday when four county judaes nominated t.o the appellate bench b y Gov Edmund G Brown Jr. were oonfirmed by the state Commission on Judicial Appointments. Despite a "no" vote ctlst by Gov.-elect George Deukmejian, one of the commission's three members. the four appointees to the new division of the 4th District Court of AppeaJ were approved 2-1 during the panel's meeting in Los Angeles. Minutes after the confirmation vote, state Supreme Court Chief ,Justice Rose Bird, a commission member, swore in justices John Trotter, Thomas Crosby, Sheila Sonenshine and F.ciward Wallin. Also confirmed was Orange County Superior Court Presiding Refusal to answer questions on legal views brought negative vote Judge Robert Rickles, to the 1e&t an the San Bernardino divi&on of the court being vacated by Trotter. Trotter, a supenor. court judge m Orange County before his appointment to the appellBte court last April, will be the presiding judge of the court's new Santa Ana divisioft. Bard waa joined in votins for the confirmation of the five Judges by Gerald Brown, a .eruor presidin~ judge of the 4th Distnct Court pf Appeal and the commission's third member. Deukmejian, who sita on the panel as attorney general. aaid he voted against the five county jurists because they had refused to answer questions concerning their personal views on legal questions such as the death penalty. The questions had been sent to all appellate court nominees earlier thi.a month. Ten other judges -including the nomination of Joaeph Grodin to the st.ate Supreme Court - were unanimously approved by . the commission. Contacted after his confirmation an the superior court chambers he soon will be vacating, Crosby S8ld he was not surprised th.at the governor-elect chose to vote again.st him and his fellow justices. "I defirutely had not answered the questions In the way he wanted and I told him I wouJdn't discuss personal views on matters like capital punishment or . _., .............. The Main Beach Park fireworks show for summer of 1983 will be paid for by the Laguna Beach Exchange Club. Fireworks won't tax public Laguna Beach will have its annual fireworks display next July 4th, and if all goes as planned it won't cost the taxpayen a dime. That's because the Laguna Beach Exchange Club has agreed to participate ln a two-day fund- raiser next summer that will allow them to foot the $6,000 bill. The City Council last week approved a plan allowing the Exchange Club the exclusive rliht to operate food and soft drink booths at Main Beach Park on July 3 and 4, 1983. The first $6,000 raised after expenses will go toward funding the pyrotechnics display, and the Exchange Club will be allowed to keep any earnings over $6,000 for ita youth-orienied projecta. If the conoesaiona do not net J6,000, the city ia prepared to piake up the difference. The fund-raising plan came about when the City Council realiz.ed Laguna's 1983 budget did not include funding for the show. Last July 4th the first year the city sponsored a fireworks display, community groups contributed $3,000 toward the show and the city put in the other $3,000. Next year, the dty will order the fireworks on ita credit and pay for publicity, clean-up and police and fire co.ta for the show. Any fund-raising the Ex- change Club wants to do, other than the food and soft drink concessions, will have to be approved by the Oty C-oundl. The city began 1ponaorlng a fireworks d isplay as an alternative to private fireworks, which were banned early this year, said Verna Rollinger, city clerk. In 1978, the City Council lifted a fireworks ban and allowed people to set off their own fireworks on Laguna's Main Beach. But that plan turned into a dlsaster. "F.ach year it got progressively worse. Things were going off in the hills and it was ao smoky you couldn't see anything," she said. Finally, safety hazards on the holiday were so high the city had to ban the fittworka agaln. And so was born the half-hour pyrotechnics show held at the north end of Main Be11ch Park, Rollinger said. Liability for the fireworks di.splay will be the responsibility of the city and the fireworks company contracied to put on the show. jucJlciaf actJvlalm," Croeby aaid. The juatlce added that he WU somewhat surprised that Deukmejlan decided against quesllonln1 the fi ve on those iuuee during the confirmation hearing. "l aueu he just saw no polnt In It," Croeby said. The new division of the appeals court will begin procealng caaee Jan. 3, 8ClCOrdlng to Trotter. However, the state has yet to leaae apace for the justices' chambers or for a temporary courtroom. Eventually, the court la expected to be hOUled in the old Orange County Courthou1e in Santa Ana, but renovation of that building might not be completed for a year or more. The new division of the court will handle appeals that previously were heard by 4th district court divisions in San Diego or San Bemardlno. (See JUDGES, Page A!) PriHJe falls to 11 percent By Tbe A11oclated Pre11 The prime rate fell to a 28-month low of 11 percent today at the nation's third-largest bank, a day after hopes for lower interest rates propelled the stock market's best-known indicator to a record high. Chase Manhattan Bank cut illl prime rate from the 11.5 percent level that had prevailed since Nov. 22, moving to a rate unseen since Auguat 1980. The prime, upon which bank.I compute interest charges on short-term bu1inH1 loans, baa been falling a1nce July, when It stood at 16 percent. Two years ago it reeched a record high 21.5 percent. The Dow Jones average of 30 lnduatrlal stocka surged Monday to 1,070.55 -a gain of 25.48 points and the highest closing ever, surpassing the 1,065.49 of Nov. 3. The high volume of trading continued early today on Wall Street but fell at mid-day.' The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks was down 5.52 at 1,065.03 at noon Pacific Standard Time. In a new sign of the Federal .Reeerve Board's concern about a prolonged recession, the board's policy-making arm has decided to allow the fe<ieral funds rate to drop further, according to mlnutes releued Monday of the group's Nov. 16 meeting. The rate on federal funds ls what banks charge each other on , overnight loans and la conside~ a key gauge of the prtce of money. A drop In the federal funds rate usually precedes declines ln other types of interest rates. The policy group, called the Federal Open Mark et Committee, also voted to allow somewhat more growth in a (See ECONOMY, Page A!) 0.-, ......... .,, ........ " ..... This scene from the Gordon Bennett Balloon Race in Fountain Valley won't be repeated next year as the event moves to Paris, the original site of manned balloon flights. 'FV balloon race gets French flavor By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of tM Deity ll'lk>t at.ff The Gordon Bennett Balloon race, a popular Fountain Valley attraction for the past three years, will be launched elsewhere next spring Debbie Faw ce tt , a spokeswoman for the race, said the 1983 Gordon Bennett will be held in Parts. France. next June t o lie In with a French celebration of the 200th anniversary of the first manned balloon flight. The international contest will return to Southern California in 1984 aJthough a location has not been confirmed. Fawcett said It is likely to be held again in Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley, although the race organizers have not ruled out other sit.es. The Gordon Bennett Balloon Race, named for New York Herald Tribune publisher James Gordon Bennett, was first held in 1906. The race continued through 1938, when it was halted by World War Il. Rolling Hills physicist and balloonist Thomas Hein.sheimer revived the competition in 1979, holding the first modem Gordon Bennett near the Queen Mary in Long Beach. In 1980, the festival was moved to Mile Square and haa returned there the past two (See BALLOON, Pace A%) Rent hike puts her in bind her want to get them angry. But lam in a jam," ahe said, pausing before adding, "I gues1 it'a wone than a jam." With a recent raise of $12, Leonard receives $451 a month ln disability. She ha.. a live-In how.ekeeper of nine yea.rs who Is paid through Sodal Security and a brother who eometimea drope off groceries. Lut year, ahe explained, her rent was railed from $321 to •380 a month. She aid owners of the par.k -the Da A.ma Corp. of Lo. Ansele1 -lat.er reduced the rent to $3~1 . But u of next week, her rent la aolna up to $418 a month. -"t"very year It 1eta a little harder. You could aay I've pw from 'losing sround' to something llke 'ainking fut'." >.. she dld 1aat year, Leonard has filled out a hardship form asking ownen to dl9count her rent. She said the owners have ~ to let her arsue her cue IOIDC!time next month. Ownen of the mobile home park did not return phone celll and, In t h e paat, have no~ conunen1ed on a laW11ult tenanta l n the park have flhd challenPll rent hikea. Leonard la not a namacl plaintiff In the laWIUlt but tald . she ta concerned about namora that ownen want to phMe out the mobUe home l)U'k -OM ~ the ....nlona In the"1'WllU1t. .. ( ... RENT, Pap At) J I ,,,,------iiliiiiliiiiiilliiiiiliilliii--.,._.----iliiiili--iiiiiiii----iiiiiiiil--------.-....--------iiiiiliiii--------------------iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiii------iiiil!!!I-, 'Off-duty' cop parties probed ~ Continued 8forl•• BALLOON RACE ... )'tan. Th• ev•nt hu IJ"OWn In populartty, attncUna bllloonlata iNin\ many natlona and 26,000 viii ton to the county perk on Uf t off daya. Fawcett explained the race orp.niRn had made prellminar)' plana to cond~ the 1983 Gordon Bennet\ on May 7. a1aln In Fountain Valley. . . But the MJd the Aero Oub de P'r'ence la orpni.zinc a aummer- loq festival iwxt year marking 2Q.O years since Frenchmen Mirqula D' Arlandee and Pllatre =er made the flrat manned fllght. So it WU decided that the 1983 Gardon Bennett would be held ln Part.a next June in conjunction with the French festivities. The Fount.a.in Valley Ch.amber of Commerce, which has co- Hal Smith's • services set Wednesday Funeral .ervicea for longtime Bflboa laland resident and real estate broker Hal Wlll Smith, who died Monday will be conducted Wednesday noon at Community Congregational Church in c.orona del Mar. Smith died at Hoag Memorial H01pita.l ln Newport Beach. He wu83. Raised in Whittier, Smith moved to Balboa Ialand in 1924 and opened bi.I Marine Avenue real estate office the following year. He retired in 1957. 1poN10red ~he rac. .. locall)', ~c.r not y•t made 11reomenta with conce11lonalrea for the 1983 Gordon Benn•tt. 1ald Pat <.:rocket\, the c hamber '• executive dlt«tor. "ll'• aolna to be a bl& loea for all of ua," she aald. Although th'e chamber Itself has not made much money from the race. local aervice clube will lose the income they've tndltlonally ralH'd by operaUns Gordon Bennett food and drink stands. Crockett aatd the balloon race also beneflta the city because it draws worldwide news coverage, In which Fountain Valley la frequently named aa the race take-off point. She added ~e race a.bo brings money in to Fountain Valley ps stations, stores and restaurants and to neighboring cities. C.Ontestanta and crews booked 52 rooms for 14 days at the Holiday Inn in C.O.ta Mesa laat spri n1. The race banquet, involvina almost 400 people, was held at the South Coast Plaza Hot.el. also in C.O.ta Mesa. The chamber dlttctor also said she hopes the balloon race returns to Mile Square in 1984. She noted that few other places in Southern California have the proper amount of open apace are out.aide airport flight patterns and are cloee to major population cent.en. ECONOMY • • broad measure of the money supply. 11.JP!. ft'\U1 T0Pftunt1n1tun o .. ,.h ell)' offlctall •PJ>'"•tf'd to bt "'1t·Un1 cau Uoutly tu Jltcloaure1 that MYerel oft duty pqlice officers pertklpoated In drinkina -.ioN at the pollce firina ranJO. Cit)' Administrator Charles Thompaon Hid Monda)' th•t •vidence doeen't aupport reportAI that the flrtns ra5u the alt.ct of wlld aex a.rad dr partfc:e. He u.id that hla chi• "°ncem la that the aood work of the police department lan't neaated "by what • handful of off-duty police offlcen mi&ht or mtcht not have done. "A half dot.en individuals do not represent the entire department. They shouldn't detract from the good work that 180 or 190 policemen do," he declared. "One can hear all kinda of wild 1lort .. 1nd v1rtu1lly no .,, lru e1r are only tuilf ·tni.," ht Mid Thomr•un al10 Hid that luden o tht HWlUnl\U1 Bnch PoUce OUloera A.modal.Jon told him they loo had h.ard rwnon of the! aUeaed 1otnp--0n at the flrlna ranp. "They Hid they were u concern•d u I wu. They promised to put a atop to th• actlvlUes U they exJJted and u far u I know they did put a atop to them." Mayor Bob Mandie aaid he had heard rumora of the alleaed parties but h•dn't received any oftlclal reporta and didn't plan any action. Police Chief Earle Robitaille aa.ld an investigation he ordered revealed that eight or 10 police offk:en had consumed alcohol on firing range premlaes but that there waa no mt.conduct. Packard votes case delayed by judge By Tbe A11oclated Presa A judge has called for a one- week delay Ln a legal attempt to nullify Ron Packard 's congressional writ.e·ln victory in the 43rd Dia\rict. Superior C.Ourt Judge Franklin Orfleld halted the hearing, which opened Monday ln San Diego, until Jan. 3 to allow himself time to consider a motion by Packard's attorney. Pat Archer, the defeated Democratic candidate. is seeking to have Packard'• triumph set aside, citing Irregularities and alleging that San Diego County election officials conspired to elect Packard. Packard, who was defeated by <Johnnie Crean In the June Republican primary by 92 votes, defeated Archer by a margin of 66,444 to 57,995. Crean. the GOP winner in June, had 56,297 votes. (The 43rd Diat.Qct Lncludea parts of southern Orange C.Ounty.) With the victory. Packard became Callfomia'a flnt wiit.e-i.h winner of a congreuJonal race and only the fourth penon to achieve It in U.S. hiatory. Archer petitioned Superior Court this month to have a judge prevent the aeat1n1 of the repretientativ~lect on Jan. 3 in WaahiQlton. D.C. Hia attorney claimed at least 1,213 of 1,941 ballot booklets were defaced and that Packard participated in illegal campaigning near the polls on election day. In his motion, Packard's attorney, Terry Knoepp, cont.end.a the state court has no juri.dlction in the cue and that ·on l y the U .S . Houae of Representatives can decide over the contested election. Hunt1n1ton 8HC'h Pultu Oftlnr A11otl1llon Vloe Prtaldenl J1m11 Aualln 11ld tod1y that ther• la "no foundaUon at all" to rumon of wlJd parUel by police "lt w11 Juat aom• off-duty offl~re meeUna there to hav• • couple ot been after work. It'• no different from a aroup of conatrucuon workera aettln* \oictthcr at the end of their day, he said. Another source pointed out that Robitaille may be In a aenaltlve poaltlon becauae the activities allegedly are taking place on property lealed by the city to the police offlcera a.oclation. The alleged parties occur after houn and on private property, even though It'• located ln a city park. Ron Packard • Knoepp cited the Federal Cpntested Election Act of 1969 which 1tates all contested elections must go to the House of Representatives for re90lution. Th• euurc·• lndloUld lh r1·1 ll Ut~ the ch6ef can do abuul Ltw ; 10-t'1led 1ll•aed "btmbc>-r•rn." ~ meetlnp. The lnve1tl11t1on Into ,. happenJnp at t>Mt flrtn1 rante ~ 1ero11 T1lb•rt Avenue from .. C.ntrel Park followed tho duth of 18·)'ear-old Llaa OarUch IMt • July 11 ln a \raffle eccident near Parker. Ariz Huntington Beach police •· officer John J. Blackwell, the reponed driver of tM vehJcle, la 1cheduled to 1tand trial next month on char1ee of nealJpnt homicide and leavinl the ecene of a aerloua accident, according to Arizona court offldala. Blackwell wu alle,ed to be at ; the flrlna range clubhouse at the 'f' time that alcohol waa being ? conaumed, but the Lnveatiption ~ didn't reveal lf he had been : drinklng, aocordlng to Robitaille : RENT HIKE From Page A1 . ... "One way or the other I'm left :: with the question, where do I go? .; And I juat don't know. I'm poor ': and I require a lot of things : because of my condition. It'a a ·: very difflcult thing for a landlord ' to accept aomeone like me with : all of my problems." . Her neighbors, though, have • gone to great lengths ~ make ~ Leona.rd'• life more comfortable : and enjoyable. :: A former neighbor built a aun :· deck onto her mobile home • where she can be moved during : summery days. On the Fourth of July -her birthday ~ park ' residents stage a parade and , annually detour onto her street ~ so that 1he can view the celebration. ·• Four times a week, a groud of . friend a viall for a roun of ~. bridge. She can't hold her carda 'i but i.I able to play the p:rne With" asaitance from other players. She aa.ld ahe feels as badly for .• her frlel').ds who are being hit .~ with rent hikes aa she does for · henelf He aerved as president of the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors, wu a charter member of the Balboa Yacht Club and waa instrumental In gettin8 the city to line the Balboa Island business district with t.reee. Smith waa an avid boater and a photography buff, mapping many of the early day photographs of life on Balboa Island that appeared in booka. The money supply already is expanding far faster than the Federal Reserve had planned. But econorn1sta believe the Fed's wi.llingnell to pump more money into the economy ii evidence of its concern that the recession could deepen unless interest rat.es fall. Sewage uni.ts to join forces "A lot of people moved here with the idea that this would be " their last move and most of:: them, just like me. are on a :: limited income. ;: She stopped herself, pausing •. Friends said in recent years he had converted his garage to a repair ahop and. took delJ4iht in helping neighborhood younpten fix bicycle. and toys. He is survived by ht. wife, Mabel; and two aons. Hal Will Smith Jr. and Michael Smith, both of Costa Mesa. He also leaves two grandchildren, Janet Smith Shea and David Smith. The family haa asked that memorial contributions to be sent to the Parkinson'• Education Program of Newport Beach or Hoag Memorial Hoepital. The cut in the prime rate was the first since major banks adopted an 11.S percent rate on Nov. 22. JUDGES • • • Appellate court justices consider appeals from both civil and criminal cues tried at the supertor coun level. Court of appeal decisions can in tum be ~ed to the state Supreme By STEVE MITCHELL or ... .,..,,......,. Two south Orange County sewage and waste water reclamation agenciea are going to share top peraonnel ln an effort to reduce managment oosta to the multi-member agencies. The agreement between the six-member Aliso Water Management Agency (A WM~) and the South East Regional Reclamatlon Authority (SERRA) has been endoraed by the city of Laguna Beach. Laguna, along ·with five other member water agencies that make up AWMA, hM agreed to "lend" management penonnel to SERRA. an agency compoeed of the citiea of San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano, u well u four water aaencies. Laguna Beach council members were told that work on AWMA's nearly $100 mi11ion regional sewage f acill ues will be completed by next summer. As work on that project winds down. the Slaff workload ls e xpected to decrease aigniflcantly. A pact 11gned by the A WMA and SERRA boards would see aome management personnel from A WMA taking on some of the workload at ~------------------------------------------------------.. \ SERRA Coastnl Noru..c wtncte 15 to 25 mph below ce_nyon• end PHH•. v .... Ngll ~ tonlgM endW~. Coutel, lnl~ low9 In 401. eo...i 111g11 eo, lnllnd ee. w .. ... Inner ••t•,., light Ylrlebl• wtnde tonight end Wed~ey 'jlllClp( ~ of northeMC "4nda -11 to 25 knot9 below tile IMln ~.w.....,, ..... 1to2 ... v.-.. hlgll douclneM. Windy tonight Temperatures .. Le 44 31 42 11 35 11 ... 27 15 57 71 12 41 44 5S 40 43 40 29 10 74 54 2t oe 11 02 42 38 15 44 51 42 40 31 23 -41 17 5e 10 57 .. 5e 21 04 11 42 13 11 5e &e TS 55 81 57 ... ,. 81 58 23 -03 3e 21 45 45 25 20 .. 2t 15 H gro 22 06 40 11 2t~ IO 70 13 47 IO SI T7 .. ,. .. ,. aT .. 24 61 H' • 41 .. a .. 11 .. 47 11 74 41 " a1 14 71 IO Weor1esctav Oec.emoer 29 •, ~· ·..v~-(. -.. ., .. Newon.n. Jr1 H New York 47 43 Nol1olll 5S ... Notttl Piette 2t 10 Okleflome City 31 30 a-NI 32 17 ONndo ao 12 ~ 44 41 Plloentll 57 41 ~"=f." ... M 52 ..,, 32 POt1Mnd, o.. 46 31 PfO\ltdenol 42 40 ="City t3 5t 34 11 Reno S4 20 Alchnond M 41 1911 Laik• )2 10 ..,. AntOtllO " M 8eattla 40 '° = ., 41 'l1 14 It Louis .. 44 St. ,._..Tanipe ao .. Sl 119...,. 33 31 ~ 21 ao l)'t'--44 .. T°""e N 24 TU090tl S4 at Tll6M .. 31 'WMNng'lon 52 411 Wlc:M• u ,, OM.IPOMIA .. .,..., .. llytM H f&nk1 17 .. "'~ ~ M ~ IO II ~ 11 ., M ~ .. R••nl'm Snowf:m Showerail!I Flurries**· Needlee 51 Peeo Aoblee 11 44 Red Bluff M ,. "9ctwood c.ty eo 42 a.er-to .. aa se1111 .. St 42 Sen Diego t3 ISO S.n l'fencl9CO 54 48 s.nt• Berbet• eo 47 SMta M.,._ .. Stocltton la S3 Thermel 12 Ullleh Ill 8erl1CYW ao 33 Big 8Mr ... 11 8lehop 62 25 C.tellne 51 44 Long 9Md'I 12 42 MonnNle 12 J1 Ml. Wlleofl 47 ,.. Newport 9Mcl'I 12 44 Ont.no 51 M Plllm lprtngt ao ST Pl!Md9ne 68 40 ..,_.,. 11 M 8911 9emlrdlno II 32 9-o.brlll .. " ..,. JOM 51 St 8ent1 An1 .. 42• SM\a On.ti .. .. TW-Vt/flty ,. 21 c.ulAOA ~ at 11 l!dmonton 11 10 Mont'HI = " OttllWll ao ~ 11 .. .. ,. YllWOIMf .. , 17 ~ " ·1 Tides---==~ The mutual agreement will run through 'Sept. 14, 1983 and both agencies estimate the aavinga wlll •mount to about $10,000. Besides Laguna Beach, A WMA la made up of the Emerald Bay Service DI.strict. El Toro. Irvine Ranch, Loa AJ.ilCl6. Moulton Niguel and South Coast C.Ounty water di.atricta. Members of SERRA participating in the management sharing plan include the dties of San Clemente and San Juan Capl.atrano. the Santa Marp.rita Water ~trlct. and the Moulton· Niguel Water District, which belongs to both agencies. before going OD. !: "But I just don't want to upeet !. the owners. I'm dJJtreued, ot •. course, but I don't believe in:: attacking people. After all, the:: ownen hold all the cards. :: "If this were a bridge game. :: I'm afraid I'd have to pau with;: the hand that I have." •: Officials probe spill of cheDiical in Irvine Authorities discovered a milky white liquid polluting a flood control channel in an Industrial section of Irvine early today but later said It poaed no health hazard. The aubetance, believed to be a combination of oil u.ect ln cuttina metal and a cleaning aolvent, wu found in a mile-long stretch of Barranca Channel near Von Karman Avenue •t Barranca Parkway. The mixture'• aou.rce waa not determined today, but Orange C.Ounty Fire Department Capt. Gary Stenberg aa.ld it probably came from a machine shop or other kind of industrial building lining the channel upstre.am in Santa Ana. Firefight.en called to the BCene thi1 morning built dikes to prevent the liquid from floating downstream to the Upper Newport Bay. Stenberg said cleanup will be, handled by the county's ~ Environmental Management Agency in cooperation with the state department of Fish and Game . t . :· .. .• ... . ~. ) l' I• t! 1: Ii " H ,, •• 1• " I• i~ .. , $. } r I , I ' • ----------- WORLD Vete an of 3 war back • ID -. action Troops withdrawal sought for Beirut Nat's/ e11p r l quc llon u1cl11/ne of hip re110.,al ed I or 326 ml/Jlon By Tiie A11od1ced Pre11 larHli, l.eb&Mw and U .S neaoUaton optnod ua.lk.a •t • heavily guarded hotel •n a Beirut 1uburb tt!bay on the withdrawal of foreign tl"oOJ» from Lebanon. Althoush aome proar... wu claimed, hrae I a pp ea red t o be toughening It.a demand.a. "The delegationa met today and exchanged view1 on their respective positions," a joint communique said •ft.er nearly aix hours of talk.! ended. "The agend• w .. dl1cu11t1d and proairt'u wu m•dtt Tho 111enda will be dl1cu1ud further at the next rnffllnt •t Kiryat Shmona on Thurtday mominj" The public opening 1tatem e nt1 I ndi ca ted flexiblllty on the part of the negotiators. but behind the scenes, Israel's agenda propoaala pointed lo a wide divergence of vlew1 on key i.ssues of withdrawal, 1eeurily and normalization .. PLO, I sraeli meet told VIENNA, Austria -The Palestine Liberation Organization has held talk.! with Israeli representatives on several issues, including a possible exchange o f prisoners, a PLO oCfklal conlinned today. He emphasized, however, that hiA organization was not negotiating directly with members of Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin's government. which has publicly refused to deal with t he PLO Abdullah Frang1, who heads the PLO offices In Vienna and Bo nn, West Germany, said the prisoner exchange 1s "one of many points" his organization is trying to settle in contac ts with Israelis. Walesa comme nts a tt ac k ~d W ARSAW , Poland - Martial law authorities published a personal attack on Lech Walesa today and decided to transfer money from the outlawed Solidarity union he once led to new unions controlled by the Communist government. In the latest denunciation of Walesa, th e official Poli.ah NATION news agency PAP criticized him for equating the sufferings of the Poles and Germans. The ~port, a1ao published by the Communist Party newspaper Trybuna Ludu, quoted Walesa as saying "The Poles and the Gennans know what suffering means." Swigert dies of cancer LONO BEACH CAY) - PrPlldenl R••a•n &oday r'1commluloned the U 8 New J.,WJy, a rwnovac.id World War U blatUnhJp whkh he Mid lhoWI lht Uni~ Statf't la "reannlnt wlth prudenc." to pro&«t the r,_ world. While n•val experts qUC!IUoned the u.efulne91 of the 1hlp which COit $326 million to renovate, Re•t•n Hid, "The price of ne1fect would be Infinitely hlaher." He ta.Id the Soviet Union had reached "superpower 1tatua only by virtue of lta mllltary rnlaht. It hu done ao by aacriflclng and ignoring achievemenu In any and every other field." The Soviets, he aaid, have built a navy for offenalve action, to cut Free World supply lines and prevent Free World alliee from reaching each other in war. The p r esident made his remark.a in a speech prepared for delivery at a dockside ceremony that officially brine• the battleship back to the fleet. Showing aenaitivity to criticism of the price tag, Reagan said the sh ip 's reco mmissioning "demonstrated that we are rearmlng with prudence, using existing assets to the fullest." H e sa id the work was co mpl ~ted "on budget, on schedule and with the maximum cost effective application of high technology 10 existing assets." The president said that in the 1970s the United States decreased defense spending by 22 percent and the Navy's fleet shrank from more than 1,000 ships lo 453. "Pot.entiaJ adversaries saw this unilateral disarmament which was matched in all the other services as a sign of weakness and lack of the will necessary to protect our way of life," he said. The New Jersey is the first of four si.st.er ships Reagan wants to return to active duty. "We must be able in time of emergency to venture in harm's .. .. '. . Naval officer salutes Ba ttleship New J ersey prior to tod ay's recommissioning. The ship is going back on a ctive duty a fo urth time. AJI' ..... ir.a•p .......... ~ way, controlling air, surface and subsurface areas to assure access to all the oceans of the world," the president said. But critics wondered just how effective the New Jersey would be. "There are other, cheaper ways to get gunpower on a ship," said Norman Polmar, a writer and consultant to the naval and aerospace industries. "We're t.a.Lking about 1,800 people to tote around nine guns or 40 missiles. lt's not cost effective." Jeffrey Record, a defense a nalyst associated with the Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis, said, "I don't think there is anything inherently stupid or wasteful about bringing out older ships. But if they are used only as battleships, it is hard to make a case for them." Meanwhile, one senior Navy Department o ffi cial said the missile-bearing vessel is now "the most modem warship in the world." Rear Adm. Walt.er T. Piotli Jr., director of the Navy's surface warfare division , said the improvements give the ship "a war -fighting co mpetence relevant to th e 1980s and beyond." He told the House Armed Services seapower subcommittee earlier this month that the moderniz.ation was "one of the most successful and ooat-effectiv(· Navy programs of modern times." The New Jersey was launched Dec. 7, 1942, a year after the Japanese attack on the Pacific F1eet in Pearl Harbor. It has been taken in and out of service three times .. The modernuation of the 58,000-ton, 887-foot vessel, which can cruise at 35.5 knots, included installation of eight armored launchers for Tomahawk cruise missiles, advanced cruiser-style communications equipment, reactivation of 16-inch turrets and 5-lnch gun mounts. WASHINGTON - Rep.-elect Jack Swigert, R-Colo., a former astronaut who campaigned for the House of Representatives while undergoing treatment for cancer, haa ated of the dlseue at the Lombardi Cancer Institute of Georgetown University. Colorado's new 6th Congressional District Nov. 2 and was to have been sworn In Jan. 3. He died Monday night at the age of 51. Watt's wilderness Inove criticized ,• Sw!gert. who piloted the Apollo 13 moon miaalon. was eJec tPti to represent Before the November general election, Swigert had announced that hia doctors had diagnoeed his condition u bone marrow cancer. The c anc e r later spread to Swigert's lungs, doctors said. WASHINGTON (AP) - Interior Seaetary Jame9 Watt is removing wlldem~ protection from thouaanda of'iicres acroa the West In a move envtronmentall1t1 say abowa contempt for Congreea. Trans portation boss quits The Interior Department aaid Monday the M:tlon would affect more than 805,000 acres of land' that haa been pro~ while the administration and Congress decide whether to add the areas to the national wilderness system. WASHINGTON - Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis announced his resignation today and said he would return to work in private indu1try next February. Lewis, whose departure had been rumored for months, said in announcing his re11gnation that he cont inued to have "the greateat respect " for President Reagan and "the utmost confidence In his policies," but he nevertheless decided it was time to leave the government T yl enol susp ect m oved However, environmentalists claimed the action would alfect more than 2 million acres out of the 24 million being studied for possible inclusion in the wilderness system. The land ia spread out in 10 Western stat.es. "Secretary Watt's action shows an astonishing degree of contempt for Congress," said Terry Sopher of the Wilderness Society. "Congress and the American people should be given the o ppo rtunity t o decide whether they want theee areas as wildf!'Tless. This decision takes that choice away." NEW YORK -James W Lewis, accused of e>etortion in the Tylenol killings case, has been returned to Chicago where he wants 10 fight the charges against him, his lawyer says. Deputy \T .S . Marshal Vincent J . Httkey said late Monday afternoon that Lewis STATE would be arraigned 1n Chicago this altemoon, but he wouJd give no details of how the move from New York was executed or when LeW1S would arrive in Chicago. Lewis, 36, had been held held at the Metropolitan Correction Center here since hia arrest two weeb ago. Environmentalists claimed tblt Watt Urned the announcement to come after Congress adjourned and made it effective Immediately to keep Congress from overruling him. Utility seeks rate hike Interior officials, however, called the decision "rather · routine ," and said lt1ilerely Implemented a ruling by an Interior Department •ppeal1 board. SAN FRA.NCISOO -San Otego Gu and Electric Co. has uked for a $126.8 million rate .lncreue that would ra.l.le the typical realden tlal customer'• bill by 6.5 percent on Jan. l, 1984. 'The utility made lta request 1n a for mal filing Monday with the at.ate Public UtilJUee C.ornm1..ion. We're Listening ••• 842•8086 San Diego Deputy City Attorney William Shaffrat'l aaid the utility'• request for a 19 percent profit on the amount of money invested by 1hareholdera wu exc.euive. The current return ii 16.25 percent. (The uULlty aervee portions of south Orange County.) The board, in three cases brought by Western ranchin g and railroad int.ere.ta, uld the land in question dJd not qualify f or review aa potential wildeme99. Twenty-four million acres - out of a total of 310 million acres under con~ of ~e ~u-of What do you llke about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like" Call the number at left and your meuage wtU be recorded, tranacrlbed and delivered to the appropriate editor. · The same 24-hour •ns)"er1n1 tervlce m•y be used to record let ten to lbe editor on any topic. Matlbox contributors mual Include their namt-and telephone number for verifi cation. No clrcul•tlon calls, please. Tell tu what'• Off your mtnd. L by Sch"'" ~.~---.... OlfKIOt o# ....,...,_, I Land Management in the West -were designated in 1980 as wilderness study area.a. A 1976 law requires the administration to make a recommendation to Congress on adding this land to the wilderness system. Congress mUll make the final decialon on each recommendation. The department's action, outlined in an opinion by Interior Solicitor William Coldiron, states that these lands were improperly designated wilderness study areas and deletes the m from further review by th e administration or Congress. The study areas affected include: -Areas of less than 5,000 acres. The department aald this covered 341,000 acres. with the largest total amount -123,600 -in Califor nia. There are smaller amounts In Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Nevada, New Mexico. Utah and Wyoming. -Areas where the federal government owns the land but not the underground mineral rights. The department said this covers 465,000 acres. Arizona has 299,300 acres in this category with smaller amoun t s in Colorado. Montana, Nevada. New Mexico, Oregon, Utah and Wyoming. . -Areas controlled by the.: Bureau of Land Management which do not qualify on their own f o r co nsid e ration a& wilderneaa, ~ven though the)" adjoin wildernesa areas or- potential wilderness areas adminatered by other federal agencies. Interior officials said that while the areas will no longer be considered under the wilderness review program, the department. on a case-by-case buts, could protect them from c:l.Ne1opment under other programs or m.ighl consider them for wilderness protection at 101ne future time. -, Pelicans' attacker still sought By JOEL C. DON Of'ltle ~ ,... • ..., As anxious as most wildlife offidals are to catch the culprit responsible for mutilating 18 brown pelicans. no suspects have been arTeSted in the two-month- old case. "AU I can say is we're still working on it," said state Fish and Game Department spokesman Ralph Young. "We had hoped that the re ward would give us a solid enough lead, but it hasn't." The National Audubon Society's r e ward fund has swelled to more than $18,000, yet no one has come forward with information that might lead to t h e conviction o f whoever chopped or sawed off the upper beaks of pelicans In the Dana Point Harbor area. "It's likely that it's one person, but we have no way of knowing for sure," Young said. Another Investigator who has examined the mutilated pelicans believes • • • Save 25%-50% - 'A1rF8Il An CI ollCla y Merchandise From: one person is respollSlble because the cuts were aiml.Lar on most o( the birds. ··; A fisherman is believed to : have cut off the beaks becaUM the birds of1en steal anch~ bait · and get tangled in fishing lines. Since the maimings began . around mid -October ,' international media attention has: been drawn to the Orange Coast area. (See R EWARD, Page At ) I f f , l ' \ • l ) l THI Qllllf CDllT ClllT f IRlll TUESDAY, DECEMBER 28. 198'2 (lll /\N <,( ! OIJNI '( ! 1\111 OIC Nll\ '2'1 C CNJ S 4 ty judges confirmed By JEFF ADLER Of ... Delt) ...... tt.n Orange County's new dlv1Slon of the st.ate Court of Appeal was put Into business Monday when four county judges nominated to the appellate bench by Gov Edmund G Brown Jr were confirm e d by the s tale Comm1s11on o n Jud1 c1a l Appointments Despite a ''no" vote cast by Gov.-elect George Deukme11an, one o( the commission's three members, the four appointees to the new d1v1s1on of the 4th District Court o( Appeal were approved 2-l during the panel's meeting In Los Angeles. Minutes after the confinnation vote. state Supreme Court Chief Justice Rose Bird, a commission member, swore in justices John Trotter, Thomas Crosby, S heila Sonenshine and Edward Wallin. Also confirmed was Orange County Superior Court Presiding Refusal to answer questions on legal views brought negative vote Judge Robert Rickles, to the seal in the San Bernardino division of the court being vacated by Trotter. Trotter, a superior court JUdge in Orange County before his appointment to the appellate court last April, will be the presiding judge of the court's new Santa Ana division. Bird was joined in voting for the confirmation of the five judges by Gerald Brown. a senior presidlnil judge of the 4th District Court p f Appeal and the commisaion's third member. Deukmejian. who sits on the panel as attorney general, said he voted against the five county jurists because they had refused to answer questions concerning their personal views on legal que1t1on1 1uch aa the death peralty. The quesUona had been aent to all appellate court nominees earli~r this month. Ten other judges ......... including the nomination of J<>Mph Grodin to the atate Supreme Court - were unanimously approved by the commiaion Co nta c ted after his confirmation in the superior court chambers he soon will be vacating, Crosby said he was not surprised that the governor-elect chose to vote against him and his fellow justices. "l definitely had not answered the questions in the way he wanted and I told him I wouldn't discuss pereonal views on matters like capital punishment or .,. ............... The Main Beach Park fireworks show for smnmer of 1983 will be , paid f ()r by the Laguna Beach Exchange Club. Fireworks won't tax public Laguna Beach will have its annual fireworks display next July 4th, and if all goes as planned it won't cost the taxpayen a dime. That's because the Laguna Beach Exchange Club has agreed to participate In a two-day fund- ralser next summer that will allow them to foot the $6,000 bill. The City Council last wee k approved a plan allowing the Exchange Club the exclusive right to operate food and soft drink booths at Main Beach Park on July 3 and 4, 1983. The first $6,000 raised after expenaes will go toward funding the pyrotechnics display, and the Exchange Club will be allowed to keep any earnlnp over $6,000 for ita youth-oriented projects. U the concessions do not net $6,000, the city is prepared w make up the difference. The fund-raising plan came about when the City Council realized Laguna's ~3 budget did not include funding for the show. Last July 4th, the first year the city sponsored a firework.a display. community groups contributed $3,000 toward the show and the city put In the other $3,000. · Next year, the city will order the fireworks on its credit and pay for publicity, clean-up and police and fire C08ta for the ahow. Any fund-raiaini the Ex- change Club wanta to do, other than the food and soft drink conceasions. w ill have to be approved by the City Council. The city began sponsoring a fireworks display as an alternative to private firework.a. which were banned early this year, said Verna Rollinger, d ty clerk. In 1978, the City Council lifted a fireworks ban and allowed people to set off their own fireworks on Laguna's Main Beach. But that plan turned Into a diaaster. "F..ach year it got progressively worse. Things were going off in the hills and It was ao smoky you couldn't see anything," ahe said. Finally, safety hazards on the holiday were 80 high the dty had to ban the fireworks again. And 10 waa born the half-hour pyrotechnics 1how held at the north end of Main Beach Park, Rollinger said. Liability for the fireworks display will be the responaibllit.y of the city and the flreworb company contracted to put on the show. judicial. acttviaim," Croaby NJd. The jwlt.lce lldded that he wu 1om ewhat aurprl1ed that Deukmejlan decided aaalnat queatlonlni the five on those luuea during the confirmation heaJ'ini. "I guem he jult •w no point In It," Crosby said. The new dlvhlon of the appeala court will beJln Procealni cues Jan. 3, according to Trotter. How.wer, the atat.e hu yet to leue apace for the justices' ch.ambers or for a temporary courtroom. Eventually, the court la expected to be hoWled in the old Orange County Courthouse In Santa Ana, but renovation of that building might n ot be completed for a year or more. The new division of the court will handle appeal• that previously were heard by 4th district court dlvlslona in San Diego or San Bernardino. (See JUDGES, Page A!) Prime falls to 11 percent By Tbe Auodated Preu The prime ra te fell to a 28-month low of 11 percent today at the nation's third-largest bank, a day after hopes for lower interest rat.es propelled the stock market'• beat-known Indicator to a record high. Chase.Manhattan Bank cut it.s prime r&\e from the 11.5 percent level that had prevailed since Nov. 22, moving to a rate unaeen since Auguat 1980. Th.e prime, upon which banks compute interest chargea on ahort-term buslneaa loana, hu been falling since July, when lt stood at 16 percent. Two years ago it reached a record high 21.5 percent. The Dow Jonee average of 30 industrial ltocb •uraed Monday to 1,070.55 -a gain of 2~.48 pointa and the highest closing ever. Trad.ing took a roller couter ride toaay on Wall Street, continuing it'a high volume of trading early in the day but derailing at the cloee. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks cloeed down 11.67 al l . 065.88 today. ln a new sign of the Federal Reserve Board's concern about a prolonged recemdon, the board'• policy-making arm hal decided to allow the fe<ieral funds rate to drop further, according to minutes releued Monday of the group's Nov. 16 meeting. The rate on federal funds ls what bank.a charge each other on , overnight loana and la conatdered a key gauge of the price of money. A drop In the federal funds rate u1ually precede• declines in other types of Interest rates. The policy group, called the Federal Open Market Com.mlttee, abo voted to allow somewhat more growth In a (See ECONOMY, Pa1e A!) 0.-, .... ,._... ~ ~ 1( ...... This scene froin the Gordon Bennett Balloon Race in F ountaio Valley won't be repeated next year as the event mov• to Paris, the original site o( manned balloon flights. ·Fv balloon race gets French flavor By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of the DellJ Not It.ft The Gordon Bennett Balloon race, a popular Fountain Valley attrac tion for the past three years, will be launc hed elsewhere next spring. Debbie Fawcett , a spokeswoman for the ~. said the 1983 Gordon Bennett will be held in Paris next June to tie in with a French celebration of the 200th anniversary of the first manned balloon flight. The international cont.est will return to Southern California in 1984 although a location has not been confirmed. Fawcett said It is likely to be held again m Mlle Square Park In Fountain Valley, although the race organizers have not ruled out other aitet. The Gordon Bennett Balloon Race , named for New York Herald Tribune publlaher James Gordon Bennett, was flnt held in 1906. The race continued th.rough 1938, when it was halted by World War II. Rolling Hilla phy1ici1t and balloonist Thomas Helnsheimer revived the competition in 1979, holding the first modem Gordon Bennett near the Queen Mary in Long Beach. In 1980, the festival waa moved to Mile Squatt and hal returned there the past two (See BALLOON, Pa1e Al) Rent hike puts her in bind BJ STEVE MARBLE Of'IMO.-, ......... Nancy Leonard la doing her best not to f.et angry. But it Im t easy. The 60-year-old Newport Beach woman, a pollo victim paralyzed from the neck down, la lacini a rent lnc:reue th.at will leave her $33 a month to live Of\. The blonde-haired woman hu manaaed to make ends meet for the laat year on only $100 a month after rent. She said It'• been tough. ''I've rnanqed but I don't 1e8 how l can cul t.ck anymore. I ldll have my ut.llity bU1a to pay • and tlwy're certainly not F'n8 down.'' lAonard hu lived tn Baymde Vlllap mobUe home park for 13 ,..,.. It'•. IPfaWllna 211 .. ,.. .,.rk tucQd en the .n Ilda of the Upper Newport B.y, juat off Padf.lc: Co.t H{ltiway. Conf.tMd to. 6ed and ~pped . to• bNethlnl machine, Leonard 1atd movlnc out of th• park would bt • .,..,..1rnpo1111blll more tW1> lt lhe did haw 80IDIWhere want to get them angry. But l am In a jam," she aaid, pausing before adding, "I gueee lt'• wone than a jam." With a recent raise of $12. Leonard receives $451 a month In disability. She haa a live-In h<>U9ekeeper ot nine yean who la paJd th.rough Social Security and a brother who aometimet dropt off p-oceriea. Lut year, ahe explained, her rent wu raJaed from $321 to $380 .. month. She aid ownen of the park -the De Am.a c.orp. of Loe Anpl• -lat.er reduced the rent to $3~1. But u of next week, her rent la tolna up to $418 a month. -"Every year lt l•ll a little hardel'. You could aay rve FM f r om ' 1 o a l n g_ Sr o u n d ' to eomethtna like 'alnkinl fut'." A. ahe did 1.ut year, Leonard haa fllled out a hardahlp form asking owners to dbcount her rent. She aid the ownen haw ~ to let her arp her cue aometime next month. Ownen of the mobUe home park did not return phone calla and, In the patl, have not commented on a lawauit tenanw ln the park have filed challf!nllnl rent hikea. Leonard i• not a named plaintiff ln the laWIUlt but laid ah• la concerned about rumon that ownen want to phMe ou\ the rnoblle home DU'k -one at the ..-rt4ona ln t.he la....Wt. (SM RENT, P .... At> to . ~ ........ ~,-~~­and wd 1b• doeen'l want w .. • • .,erk. • Nda.-. "TM ow ... hlMt""' Nm to IDI tn she pm& ... I r.111 dan't \ I • Dow Jones Flnal DOWN 11.17 CLOllNQ 1 ..... Late surge aids Yule sales mark LOS ANGELES -A last-minute 1urge In ~1 Chriatmu sales, aided by booming poet-Chrl•tmaa ·• bu.ainell Sunday, helped California retailel"I salvage \1~ what at fl.nt appeared to be disappointing 11euonal , H figures. F.arly \&llies point to a modest 1.5 percent to five • percent incttue in retail aa1et over the previous year.,,. after adjultlng for inflation, said David Jackaon, an ·;- analyst with the Loa Angeln brokerage firm of a Bateman Eichler, Hill Rich.arda. "'"' Jackaon added that 1hopkeepel"I went lnto the.'~ ~ holiday season with 1maller lnventorie1, thua obi ue improving thelr chances of showing a profit. .;~ i.o •• 'lo:> Money supply growing :.~: ~g mll NEW YORK -The nation's money aupS'ly is continuing to grow faster than the Federal Reserve .• 1 Board planned, but some economiata aay the poor . "' condition of the economy meana the Fed will not react -J by forcing up interest rat.ea. . td Economists said they aaw no significant effecta ·.o. from the Federal Re9erve'a report Monday that the money supply l'08e $600 million ln the aecond week of December. More important, the economiata said, was a report ;,,. that the Fed's policy-making arm recently had voted t to lower ita target range for a key interest rate. :9'1 J:> 10,000 jobs eliminated~~ LACKAWANNA, N.Y . -A reorganizat.k>n plan by Bethlehem Steel Corp. that eliminates 10,000 jobs in two states caught aome workers by surpriae and raised fears of a two-percentage-point jump in unemployment here. The nation's No. 2 steelmaker announced Monday it was eliminating the jobs at ita mill.a in Lackawanna and Johnstown, Pa., to counteract losses of $209 million for the third quarter of 1982 and predicted major 10Slle9 for the year. ~----------------~--~------------~--------.;_Q I~~ AMERICAN LEADERS UPS ANO DOWNS HEW YOftX IAPI -Tl'9 ... """"' 11• .,_ .. -Yorll. S-11. 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