HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-02-22 - Orange Coast PilotTHE ORANGE COAST COUNTY IDITIDN
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22. 198J OHANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Coast shaken by quake
Ono{ re tremor believed cause of tide spilling onto road
Spoke disapp(~a rin~
A "'orkt·r haul~ off pit•c•t• of I ht• Bulhoa Pit:•r
Fun Zmw Ft·rri~ "ht•t•I "hid1 i~ lwing
clis mantlt•d lo makt• W<t) for a rest aur ant a nd
offi<·t• th·u·lopnwut on '\t•wporl B arbor. Tht'
5 0 -yt·ar -old wht•t•I will ht> rt•t·on:-.lnu·lf•d al
~ite "lw11 It ... dt·H·lopmt•nt i!>t fini..,fwd.
Orange Cuunly puh<'•! orfinals
received plt'nly of t•alls Crum Lhe
curious, buL lht-re wt·n· nv
reports of lllJury or d1tmage from
yttSLerday's ll.18 pm earthquake.
The muderatl' undl'rsea
temblor nwasured <I 4 on the
R1chlt•r s<:ah' and waH fe lt along
the t'Oruil from Ventura County to
Lhe Mex1<:un bordt'r, off1l·1als
said The quake's l'p1centt'r was
near San Onufre
Suit vowed
in death
of dental
patient, 13
By JODI CADENHEAD
Of th• D•llJ Piiot lt•ff
(.' o s l a M t' s a d t.• 11l 1 s t To n y
Protupappas wall bt· the taq~t·t ..;f
ii lawsuit l.Jy th1• family uf a
13 yt>ar uld ~1rl who d1f'd
f u I I o w 1 n g l r t• a t rn t ' n t 1 n
Protopappas· u ff1<:1:. a family
allomt·y soys
Laguna Ha lls attorney Davl'
Fishman said Patrat·1;i Cr«Vt·n's
family wall l>t't•k unspt·< 1f 1ed
damages against Protopappas
Tht· SUit IS l'Xpt'<'tt-d to l:x• flll><l
this Wt't'k
Craven. whu d1l"CI Saturday at
M1sl>1un Community Hoi,p1tal,
wa!. tht.' third pal1C'l1t or
ProLopappas' to die i;1ncP
Sept.ember F'uneral '-C:rv1t~ are
sl'hC'dult-d T hursday
f't~hman has alleged that tht·
girl. who was brought tu the
dentist by her mother Patricia
Cravl'n Russ Feb 8. was given
etghL d1frpn•nl drugs for ~c·neral
an£''ilhes1a purposes dunnl( an
' Kamikaze just child's play
Mesa g irl, 12'1 wan~ 'ideo ganu• ('h an1 pionship, $5,000 prize
Chris tine Drda
vidf'o ~anw «hamp
t ltr 1-.llnc OrdC:t n•turn1"1.l to h..r
l '11'-1.1 M1•<,a JUl110r high S<.'hool
toda.,. " national v1dt•o l'(an11•
1 h,1mp1011. hc1v1n~ won c1 $:i.00tl
111nl1·-.1 111 ">an Frilnt·1S<.i1
fh1 ..,l v1·1Hh gradl'r .it IJ..iv1~
lntt•rm1·d1c:tlt' Sl'hool rtit k1·d uµ
liOO.UOO poanL" an .i g.mw t'dlit'f.J
Karn1kaz.« b1 .. 1t1ng nut four
fru~trnh·d uldt·r buv.., -. .. ud ht•I
l.atlwr. &.•m-d1< t DrJ-a
()(f1n,11~ r11r ll.1vd1·11 '->11fl\.\Jft'
t I 1• "' t h 1 • q u 1 ·< k h .1 n ti 1 d
I:! 1,:ear old c1rnl lwr fath1•r t11 San
Franu-.10 fur th1 1ont<·<,t
Saturd<1\ ..iftN th1· famrlv "<'nl a
phot1lgraph of .in 1mp1 <'ss1vc• 2o:i.ono prnnt g.urn· Chn-.tanf' h.1d
pl .. 1 w'<I
l..>urang thP six hour contC'St an
San Francasco, Chnsunc never
LOok a brC'ak. ht·r dad said
Players try to dodge falli n g
bomhs from planes But aft.er five
hour-; and 600,000 pcnnts. sht• was
l1rt'f.i and quit
St'(:ond plaet' wt•nt lo a high
sc·hool student w ith less than
400,000 points
"Sht> was JUSl vt·ry cool and
calm. she amassed point after
point .. Drda said "The boys
Wl·n • gelling very upset OnC' JUSl
<;Lonncd out"
With ht>r winnings Christine
plan-; t o buy a horse A
"<;po r::idt<.:" video game player,
s hC' preft'rs gymnastics and
hor<;t•back rrdmg. said her dad
Riptides Inar beach outings
By STEVE MARBLE
Of IM D•lly Pilot Ii.ff
P owprful rapt1dC'S kl•pl Orang!.'
Coast lifeguards on the mov<·
yesterday as more than 100.000
visit.ors hl'adt-d to ICJC'al ht·al'h1 .. .., to
soak up th<' ho!Jdav sunsham·
Dozens of peuplP werC' pullt·d
from dangerous currents and
choppy four ln six foot w;1vr·~
that marred an otherwise pcrfl'<.'l
ronclusaon l.0 a warm and sunny
three-day we<"kend
Daytime lPmperaturet a lon~
the coasL arC' exp<'< tcd lo dip
through Wednesday with high
clouds settling in No rain Is
forecast
About 22 001) br.1< hgot'r<i
-.pread out their towels at the
male-long Huntington &.•al·h c:1ty
-.trand Lifeguards rt'porte d
-.. ve-ral n>S<:urs. 1ndudang a scuba
d1vC'r whn was hount'NI off tht•
<iand bv a wavt• and a surfrr who
was hat an the fan• by a wayward
c;urfboard
"ThP crowd was hugr I'm not
sure that it's a record but 1
certainly don't recall a F'C'bruary
like this une and I've lx'f•n ht'rr
22 years," said Hu nttngtnn
hfeguard Lt Ball Richardson
More than 75,000 v1s1tt'd the
strand in Ne w port Beach. where•
a hot August day can bnng out
90,000 Newport lifeguards said
yesLerday's crowd appears to be a
c1tv rl'<'Ord for February.
At Huntington and Bois.a Chica
s tate beaches. about 15,000
v1s1tors turned out Lifeguards
explained the attendance would
have be€n larger 1 f moet of Bolsa
Chica had not been dosed for
storm-related repairs and half of
Huntington sea led o tr fo r
construction
Temperatures ranged from 68
degrees in Newpo rt to 72 in
Huntington Bei'ch. In Sa.nui Ana,
the mercury reached 77 degrees.
Tht· 11umt·rous phu11t• 1nquar11·s
tu thl· Orangt• County Sht•nH's
Lh·purlml•nt Wt'l't' from pl'uµh-
J u s t w a n ti n g tu v l' ra f y I h t·
~haktng thl•y ft,lt was an
l'arthquake, a spokt'Sman said
Tlw ~h1ft1ng o f tht' t'arth':.
surfan· may hnvc• l';J uSt'd some
h I g h l 1 d l' . t 11 wash 0 v l' r th l '
alrt'ady :.andy ~lrl't.ch of Pae1 f1c
Coast ll r~hway near thl• Boba
l'h1c<t wc·tliJnds an llunt1ngton
Palri<'ia Cravt~n'!>i
f ami l ~ to hrin ~ !'!Uil
1•1ght hour pPraod The g irl
.. 1appc·d into a coma a nd died
SaturJav at tht• M1ss1on Va•JO
hosp1ldl -
Cravt•n and her mother flew
from their Sa<:rament.o home to
Costc1 Mesa spenf1t·ally to see
Prutopappas. Fishman said. R uss
had bt~:n a formt•r pal1t•nl of has
when the famrly lived rn Mission
Viejo
A l>pokcsman for Lht• Orangt•
I ee PATIENT. Pa~e A2)
Ht•u1·h , a ll u nt1ngLu n Hl'ae h
pulaL·t.· off ll't'f said
The ;inaount u f sand which
washl'd unto the r oadway was
smull, how1:ver. and the highway
wa,, not dO&"d Lh1s morning
On land the nt•arest point to
Lht: ep1e1·1Her was San O nofrt·.
about lhrl't' males south of San
C lemente and sate of a nudear
power plaut, w h t•r£' Southern
Cal1forn1n Edison of fi cials
Delly "°' ..... "'°40
Greg Crow j umped from helico pter to rescue
boatwreck survivors off Hunaington Beach .
l't.>lldUL'tt•J an 1nspect1on w mak1·
sure no damagt' occurred
"Tht> temblor was fdt al tlw
plant, but then· was no damagt:,"
Edison s pokc>Sman Charles &·til
11e1id today. adding that neither ul
Lhe <-ompleLed umts al the plant
was in operation at the tam"' ol
thL• l'arthquakt·
"That's a p r etty smJJll
earthquake," said J erry Haynt'!'>,
<See COAST, Page AZ)
Strange
sea causes
accidents
By ROBERT BARKER
Of IM OellJ l'tlot ltan
Sunday's boatmg tragedy off
the coast of Huntington Beac:h as
being linked to other ac..-c1denL-;
along the California coast Lh at
may have be€n precipitated by
last month's stonns.
Lt. Ball Richardson o f t ht·
Hunungt.on Beach Manne Saf Ply
D1vis1on said January's stor ms
changed the shape of the ()('('an
bottom. apparently ca us1 n ~
waves to break farther out l<• S(•a
th.an usual.
He said a "bizarre" series of
accidents. including the recent
caps1ung of a whale watch boat
an Morro Bay. may be related to
the changmg c.'Onditions.
In S unday's accident. Ronald
Bryant. 38, and his wife. Carola,
48, of Garden Grove were killed
when their 27-foot cabin cruiser
Angelique was s mashed by
several big waves a half-mile off
the coast.
Four sons were rescued from
52-degree waters in a daring
mission b y a Huntington Beach
police helicopte r pilot and two
lifeguards
According to Richardson, the
Bryants' newly purchased boat
was pounded broadside by waves
while in the surfline.
"There's a natural rock reef in
the area." he said today. "Last
month 's stonns rearranged a lot
of t he beach sand and dumped it
on top of the reef."
(See BOATING. Page AZ)
---NDEX------------INSIDE--------
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Huntington Beac h H igh
wrf'lltl.-r Bob Gurbuz lost
for the f intt time in 34
outings laiot wt>.-kt>nd, but
t1P '11 8till a top conte nder
in Saturday'8 CIF Mastt-nl
mf'f't. Pa~e C l .
Re•iewe r Fred Rothe nberg
feel• compar,ton• are in
order betweeu CBS-TV'•
"WIU There Really Be a
Morning?" •tarring Susan
Blakely and the feature
Him 0 f rance1," both
profile• of Frances
Fanner. Page 86.
In an
with
ol mis
f ountaa Itri
are taking
program to fl
youngsten. Pagtf '
Dish duel
Erma Dombeck taeklff a
uquettion of the q H" for
parental 11 It really worth
all the acjaabblet, f ithll
and argumenta juat to 1 et
the kld1 to do thfi di1het?
Page B2.
>
..... _ ... __ . .._ .............
Director Patricia Terr y
and the Newport Theater
Art• Center ha•e sucC"eede d
in clearing the typical
hurdlet of a Noel Coward
play Pap 84 ..
,j
More people are
Yowtn1 to quit
drinkhJI collee, but
they quleldy Und that
ldeldna tlie eiDe
habit it an unpleMant
and. at time.~ painful
e•perience. Pap R 1.
~I ' I
~· Orang• Co••• DAILY PILOTITLIHday, February 22, 1883
BOATING • •
From Page A 1
lit> !lllld wut er •wella urt'
pwhed bf w l11u1 for tho~nthi
of mile. befol"t' devt'loping into a
wave, u1ually wht'n l'om lna
agalnat a sloping l>t>ach.
But In Sunday 's c 1ut',
Richardaon bellevea, the water
hit a "bump" In the sand on top
of the reef and bmke into a wave
farther out to sea than nonnal
"It (the wave) could have been
& sneaker and popped up ln front
tJf them and they were unaware
of It," he said.
H untington Beach helicopter
pilot J on Arnold was 1n the
process o f t rac king down a
reckless driver whe n he was
informed by radio that a body
had washed ashore 1n the Bluffs
area.
He and observt'r Greg S haner
immediately flew to the scene
They saw four v1C't1ms in tht'
water and asked tht>m to raise
both hands 1f they needed help.
One of them did
Arnold radioed a head for a
lifeguard, set down on a beach
access road. a nd p ic ke d up
lifeguard Greg Crow who was
trying to get to the S<.-ene
Arnold CJe w h is military
surplus Be ll 47 h elicopter in
betw een s w e lls a nd C r o w
jumped. Arnold said 1t was pretty
tricky "If water got into the tail
rotor or the blade, the ship would
have gone down."
But Crow didn't have e nough
flotation equipme nt to keep au
four survivors afloat
Arnold fle w his copter back to
the landing spot and picked up
lifeguard Dave Perry who also
was to jump into the water with
the victims.
The two lifeguards kept the
four s urvivors afloat until an
Orange County Har bor Patrol
boat arrived.
The cause of the accident 1s
under investiga.uo n by the U S.
Coast Guard and Harbor Patrol
A coroner's deputy said today
Jon Arnold oidt>d
rPsc·ue effort
Dave Pe rry ke pt
survivors afloat
...
the cause of death of Ronald and
C aro la Bryant has n 't been
determined off1c1ally , but
believes drowning 1s probable.
Thirteen-year-old David
Bryant, the only member of the
party to be hospatahzed, w as
Jjg\ed an good condition today at
Huntington Intercommunaty
Hospital
COAST QUAKE • • •
From Page A1
manager of nuclear o perations
for Edison "The plant is
designed to withstand an
ear thquake much large r than
that."
H e estimated th e design
capacity at "approximately a
PATIENT • • •
From Page A 1
County Corone r's office said
today that tox1cologica1 tests
co ntinue relating t o the
~n-ager's death
State d e nta l bo ard
investigators, the Coro n e r 's
Office and the Ca>ta Mesa police
a re also probing the deaths of
Cathryn D. Jones of Cost.a Mesa.
who died a week ago and Minna
Kim Andreassen, who died last
Sept.ember
magrutude 7 earthquake locat.eel
fairly near the plant "
H aynes said th t• plant 1s
equipped with an alarm system
attached to an instrument th at
measures gro und motion. The
other "alarm" system is the staff
that is on duty 24 hours a day.
"The operators obviously feel
an earthquake and there 1s a
written procedure th ey go
through," he said. ''They classify
the magnitude baaed on their
observation, and depending on
t h e magnitude . they order
inspections m the plant
ln this c ase , h e s aid , an
1n.specuon was conducted.
A1 though inspect.ors cannot get
to where the nuclear fue l is kept.
people are able to check ou t othe r
equipment. piping, valves a nd
s upports. he said
'Fixup'
costly
for pair
Mesa • in
Bv JODI CADEN HEAU
O(the D8"y ll'llol lt.lft
Lis.a and Alan WelJlwr thoughf
they had fou nd their dream
home las t spring when they
spotted the one-story faxt-r-uppcr
in Coeta Mesa locat.ed off 11 road
overlooking the bluffll on the
WCllt side of town
The dr e am became ll
nightmare for the H untington
Beach couple, who !jay they
demolished half the house for
rt>modehng before discovering
they'd be r equired to build
sidewalks t.oo.
After spending $40 ,UOO to
enlarge the laving r oom and
bedroom, they sa y lht'y don't
have the $13,000 at would cost tu
put 1n side walks. guttt•rs and
curbs.
Also. Webber contends that a
sl;.b of concrete in front of his
house at 2166 Pac1f1c Ave. w1U
leave his sidewalkless neighbors
with flooding prnlJl<.'ms when it
rains.
The Webbers will ask the City
Council tonight tor permission to
d e la y constru(·tio n of the
sidewalk. A s1m1lar request was
turned down by the planning
commissmn last month
The Webbers a n• not a lone. In
the last few years many Costa
Mesa r esiden ts hav~ sought
wa1vpr s from the s id ewalk
r e quirement wht•n seek ing
permits to remodel their homes.
Large se<'taons of the city on
the east side and sorne of Jhe
older art•as on the west s1dt· were
built before develupl'rs were
rpqu1n-d t.o inst.all s1dt·walks.
Th e ci ty n u w r e qui r e s
sadcwalks be 1nstaJIC'd whenever
improvements of $2,000 o r more
a r e made t o h o m es o r
apartments
Assistant c.·1ty cng1nl.'er Bo b
Brock said 1t 1s con<'t'avable that
som eon e remodC'l1ng the ir
bathroom rould b<• asked to build
a sidewalk in front uf the home
"Thas as the only way to get
s idewalks m sh ort o f putting
them tn ourselves," saui Brock
Rites conducte d
for Serino inf ant
Services were he ld today for
Joseph Oaruel Senno. who dled
at birth Feb 15
S urvivors include has Costa
Mesa parents. James 'and Sandra
Serino. Services we re held at 11
am u nder the direction of
Harbor L aw n -Mount Olive
Mortuary
Cooler days due
Coastal
Conaid«eb141 hlQh CIOudlness
tonlghl wtth lows SO lo 55 Mostly
doudy lomo«°"" end COOier, ""'" hlQlw ea 10 10.
l;latwhere, from Point
Conce ption 10 the Me•lcen
t>o rder end out 80 mite•
Nor1'-1 wlnda 10 to 20 kno1•
with eotnt>lned -end .,.... 7 to
10 ,_ ltwough tonight 0"9t out•
weltrt. locelly t19ht ver1e t>le
wlnde lhrough tonight. ••oec>1 '°' moeuy -terty wind• 8 10 15
ltnola Ihle llftemoon wtth -erty awellll of 3 to 7 ,_ PalChy tog
end IOw clooda elotlg the ~
IOOight end eerty IOtnOtr°""
California
21 Mt • reGC)td of ee oeor-.,
1he Civic C •nte r . w hll•
yHle rdt y't high et th• H me
pl•c • ... 8 t d•or•••. u ld
weelh•r Mrvlce meteorologlal
lec:tWci8n o. ... Cooper.
At the l>eech ••. th • t11m99'erur. reedled only In ,,..
high 70.. t>u1 "'9f .,. enough to
dr ... ..-ty ,,.,, • no.-on peopM
to the awld er>d IU<'bulent aKf.
A stomi from moving tow•rd
Celtlornl• It •J.PtC1ed to l:>flng
,..,, -moet of ~ and Centr•I Celllornle tonight and
Wedneadey, th• N e tlona l ween-SeNtce ...,.
Seatl•ed ligflt .,_.. -· expected Ihle ~ In the f•
north ...... l'llgtl douda ,_..,
0"9t other reglona. •
Temperatures
Alt>w>y
Alt>uque<que
Am#lllo ....,,..,..
Allenle
Attentlc City
Austin
Baltlmot•
8llllnge
Blr'mlt!Qh~
Biemercl<
9olN
Botton a.-_.....
Butt• Bur11ngton c...,.,
CNfteeton. SC
CNlteeton, WV
CNirlot1e, NC
CMy9nne
CNcego
Clncinnell
Clewlend
Columt>le. SC
Columt>ue
Del-A WOtth
o.yton o.n-
0. MolflM
O..rOlt
Duluth
EJPMO F•go fleoNfl Ot..i F•
.. u
48 25
58 Jt
4 1 37
84 33
86 51
48 42
6" « w 38
51 33
89 55
47 2e
!16 40
48 3.o4
75 47
48 29 44 28
42 25
82 50
88 3o4
63 38
55 26
49 31
M 37
80 3.o4
89 39
87 3-4
5e 48
&5 40 53 33
51! 41
61 32
32 23
83 3.o4 37 22 ee lie
52 30
k•..,,,...W••-~e NOAA US o.c>t OI c.,,.,,_ce
Fronta.Cold..., Wa1m 99
H9rtf0td 47 25
Helene 51 28
ttonoMu 82 87
HOU91on 58 49
~ lie 39
Jedi~. MS 09 51
Jack aonvllle 63 49
K.enau City 49 42
lM VeQU M 45
Uttle Rock M 51
L..oulevtll4I 87 42
Lut>bocll 49 40
~ 71 53
Mleml 72 89
Mllwmuk .. 42 33
Ml*-81 Peul 39 36
Nattl\lllle 71 47
New Or-.n• 89 53
New Von 51 42
NOrlOlk 81 40
flk)f1h Piette 47 28
Otllehom• City 52 45
Omllhe 40 33
Oflendo 73 80
Phlladelphle 61 32
Ptloen!Jt 76 48
Pit~ 81 32
Pon , Me 40 27
Porttend, Ore 57 48
Pr~ 45 32
:::tc11y &4 35
&e 30
Aeno 58 38
Alcltlmoo Id 84 36
St. Louie 86 ....
8t. ,...._Tempe 71 13
Slit Laike 112 " 8MI Alltonlo 80 42
81819 ...... 3e H
lllf llPIRT
•
StatK>nafy • •
C A&l<>f'MIA
Belcerafleld F,_
i...no.t• ~:re
Pao Rol>lee
Red 9luft
Redwood CUy
sea-to
8ellnM Sen Diego
Sen Frenoleco
811111 S..ber•
Stodlton
8er'tllow eioe-llWlop
~
Long 8-:lrl
MonrOYl9
Mt. '#-.on """""'°" llMdl On1erto Pmmlpt"'OI P..edtM ,.....
..,_..,_dlno Sen°*"' ..,_ Joee
lentaAM a-.Crui TlflOe V...,
Tides
6e 47 6e 52
37 30
49 42
52 3e 47 42
73 4!
48 48 eo 37 44 39 .. Lo
70 48
88 48 70 41
81 80
82 51
72 48
59 62
8t 61
57 llO
84 47
76 64
80 62
71 51
&3 90
70 4CI to 21
llG w
10 5f
11 47
82 48
86 90 10 llO
78 43
IO 47'
81 41
11 .... 71 ., .. ... ea .. n 47 .. llO ea 11
Irvine
bridge
studied . .
I
An aaireement tO build and :
maintain a vehkular bridp over j
the Santa Fe Railway tracka at •
Yale Avenue ln Irvine will be •
dlacuaaed to night by the City !
Council. :
City officiala are hoping to win :
a atate grant to f ln\n ce the •
overcroaalng. But before they can ;
aubmit an application to the at.ate •
Public u till ties CommlMion. they ;
mu1t agree to operatina terma
with the railroad oompeny. i
Part of the diacuaelon tonight ~
will center on a so-called ;
"focuaed" environmental impcact :
re port describing effecta of the :
~d~. r
The c ity c urre ntl y has a ·
footbridge spanning the tracks ·
and linking Deerfield Avenue to :
the south and Winvale Avenue to :
the n o rth. The overcr oaaing :
would replace It with two :
12-foot-wide automobile lanes, ;
two eight-foot-wide bicycle lanes •
a nd two f ive-f oo t -wide
walkways. .
The council meeting is ,
scheduled to begin at 6:30 at
Irvine City Hall, 17200 Jamboree
Blvd. : .
Tough courses :
I
he knows the rope
policy vote
due in Irvine San Clemenh· m ac rame artis t Ma rilyn Armijo
pla<•t•s price tag on one of he r rope works at the
Lug una Heac·h Winter Festiva l that concluded its
run a t the Festival of Ar ts ~ounds yeste rday.
N e w policies e n couraging
Irvine Unified Sch ool District
students to enro ll in difficult
courses are exp ected to b e
apl>roved tomorrow night by the •
district's Board of Trustees.
Norm Worthy, 'fa ther
of HB parks, 'dead
The board meeta at 6 p.m. at
Lakeside Middle School, 3
L e m ong rass, t o con s ider
proposals to help studenta take
the most challenging courses.
Trustees gave preliminary
passage to the plan two weeks
ago.
Services will be held Friday
for Norman L Worthy. widely
regarded as the father o f t he
Huntington Beach city park
system.
Worthy. a hfe-long resident of
Hunungt.on Beach, rued Sunday
night at his home at the age of
56 He had been undergoing
treatment for cancer
He w as direct.or o f the park
system for more than 20 years.
He became su perintendent for
p a rk developmen t and
a cq uisition an a departme nt
consolldauon several years ago.
Under his lead ership, c ity
parks won nauonal acclaim for
their excellence and design. It
was Worthy's idea to place parks
1n each o f th e ci ty 's
neighborhoods.
More than 400 acres have been
developed into city parkland.
Last November. city officials
named a 12-acre park across the
street from Huntington Beach
H igh School the Norman L .
Worthy Park.
He is survived by his wife
S harley; daughters Ellen Moss,
Becky Smith, Susan Lucio and
Amy Wor thy. son , James. a
brothe r . J er r y, and six
grandc hildren All li ve in
Huntington Beach
Services will be at 2.30 p.m. at
First C hristian C hurc h o f
Reg. 999.00
o rman Worthy,
pa rks leade r , dies
Hunungton Beach. 1207 Main St.
Burial will follow at Westminster
Memorial Park, 14801 Beach
Blvd., Westminster.
Family members are·
suggesting that donations be
made to the Norman L. Worthy
Memorial fund being established
a t First Christian Chureh. where
he had been active for many
years.
Among the po licieli is one •
aimed at keeping top students
enrolled in college preparatory
classes by a warding so-ca lled
honor points. A grade of B in a
calculus course, for example,
would be recorded as an A on a
student's tran!leript.
An A in such clasaes -others
include English. European and
U.S . h istor y and Spanish -
would go tow ard improving a
student's overall g rade-point
average.
Other new policies are:
-Limiting students to one
year of credit for 8erVing as lab
and o{fice as&stanta.
-Inc reasing mathematics ·
requirements fro m one to two ;
years. •
-Requiring aenion to enroll ·
m at least four counes even if
they need fewer to graduate.
-Increasing diploma
requir ements from 210 to 220 ,
units. '
-Prov iding s pecial!
r ecognition to students w h o:
complete a college preparatory:
COW"9e of study. :
A proposal to require studenta!
participating in athletics and!
other extracurricular activities to~
majntain a C average ha been
tabled for a future dlecuaaion,
perhaps next month, Waldfogel t
added.
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NATION '
House pan~I begins voting
on Social Sec urity plan
By Tti.e A11oclated Pre11
. WASHINGTO N -The first vot es In Congre11 on a
•' blpartiaan Social Security re&(•ue plan ure at hand 81 tax-writ.en 1 piece together legi.alatlon for the fuU Houae to corwder next
· month.
• . The House Ways and Means subcommittee on Social
'Security wu beginning wor k today on drafting a measure baaed
, on the recommendations of the National Commission on Social
Security Refonn. The full committee then will consider the
' package next week and a vote in the full House is expected by
March 10.
. Hilton makes $21 million d on atio n -. HOUSTON -The Conrad N Hilton Foundation has
. donated $21 million to the University of Houston's College of
, Hotel and Restaurant M a nagemen t. The donation was
announced yesterday by &rron Hilton, head of Hilton Hotels . Corp.
Reag an g uarantees I srael security
WASHINGTON -P resident Reagan says the United
States is ready to "lake au necessary measures" to guarantee the
leCUrity of Israel's northern borders if the lsrael.J.s withdraw
their forces from Lebanon. At the same ume. the president IS
urging Arabs to accept Israel's right to exist and to let Jordan
negotiate the future of the West Bank.
Agents monitor Chicag o election
CHICAGO -Under the watchful eyes of more than 1,500
federal and stale agents. Democrats voted today on whether to
keep Chicago's first woman mayor, nominate its first black
mayor or restore the Daley name to City Hall A million voters
:. were expected to choose among Mayor Jane M. Byrne, seeking
a 11erond term; Cook County State's Attorney Richard M. Daley.
whOfle father ruled as mayor for a generation; and U.S. Rep.
Harold Washington. the city's first black mayoral candidate
regarded as having a chance to win.
'·
.·
STATE
Ne w college lo b e built in d esert
JOSHUA TREE -With the help of more than $681 ,000 in
funds donated by local people. a new $1.2 million community
college is about to bloom in the desert. Groundbreaking was
held over th e weekend for Copper Mountain College at a time
when n~rous community college districts are fighting for
economic survival.
Two g irls kidnapped , raped, shot
CORONA.00 -Police were searching today for a man
wanted in connection with the abduction of two teen-aged girlB
who were raped, shot repeatedly and left for dead on a beach.
One of the vi~. shot seven times, was in critical condition
late Monday night after surgery. The other was in stable
condition. authorities said.
V et eran s finish Death Valley run
LAS VEGAS -Thirteen Vietnam war vet.enma -the
oldest of them a 60-year-old who began his military career with
Darby's Rangers in World War ll -jogged out of Death Valley
yesterday after a weeklong, 100-mile run intended to show th.at
"we can finish what we start."
Famed pool shark Pelkey dies
SAN JOSE -Edward "Fast Eddie'' Pelkey, the famed pool
shark portrayed by actor Paul Newman in the movie "The
Hustler," "died of lung cancer yesterday. His age was estimated
by relatives at 8~ to 88.
WORLD
Liby a threatens to down A WACS
BEIRUT, Lebanon -Libya has threatened to shoot down
American AW ACS aircraft in F.gyptian air space. rejecting
F.gypt's contention that the spy planes are only on a training
rnilllion, a Lebanese newspaper reported today.
Queen m ak es las t Mexican stop
LA PAZ. Mexico -Queen Elizabeth II and her husband
Prince Philip arrive today aboard the royal yacht Briia.nnia at
this port city near the tip of the Baja California Peninsula. From
here Elir.abeth will continue her cruise north to San Diego.
Morocco won't accept hijack e rs
VALLETTA, Malta -Three Libyan hijackers t.o<by
demanded to go to Morocco, but the North African country
refuaed to aooept them. Malta's Prime Miniater Dom Mintoff
said he would not refuel the stranded Boeing 727 until the
hijackers Creed the 162 hostages held aboard since Sunday
ni14t.
Worke rs search for more victims
GUA YMAS, Mexico -Police and rescue worken aea.rched
for more victims today after recovering 56 bodiet from the
twisted wreckage of a paaenger train that wa rammed by a
freiaht train, authorities said. A total of 78 people were injured
in iM crash .
FV school
wing to he
demolished
A f lr t--damaaed w l na of
Harptt r Elementary School,
which Fountain Valley parenta
have criticlied u a aafety hazard,
la expected to be demoU.hed thla
awnmer.
Fountain Valley Schoo l
Diatrict truateet have adopted an
advisory co mmitte e's
recommendation to dem olish
Harper's eight-classroom Wing
D, which waa damaged in al'110n
fires in 1977 and la.at October .
The cornrnittee waa made up of
local parents, other community
members and school officials .
The committee advlaed against
rebuilding the wing bec~uae the
entire school Is scheduloo to be
c losed in June 1984 due to
declining enrollment.
Aaaist.ant Superintendent Jack
Mahnken said the district will
seek bids on the demolition.
h o ping to clear the building
during the summer months when
students are absent. He said most
of the demolition costs, estimated
at $100,000, will be covered by
the district's insurance policy.
Wing D has not been used for
classes since the 1977 fire .
(Affected students were moved
into portable classrooms that are
sti ll located on the Harper
campus.) The wing was being
used for storage purposes when
the second fire occurred last
October.
At that time, Harper parents
urged the district to rebuild or
demolish the wing, clairrtlng it is
a safety hazard in its present
condition.
Committee
to explore
school use
A committee of parents,
community members and 8Chool
officials has been appointed to
explore alternate uses for Nieblas
Elementary School in Fountain
Valley, which is scheduled to
cloee in June.
Nieblas is one of four Fountain
Valley School Distric t sites
designated for closure over a
three -year period because of
declining enrollment.
Wardlow and Bushard schools
were closed last June. Harper
School ls scheduled to cloee in
June 1984.
T h e Ni e blas advisory
cornrni ttee is to consider options
for using all or portions of the
8Chool for activities such as a day
care center. private school, youth
spo rts programs, spec ial
education, extended day care and
senior citizen programs.
The committee will report to
the district's elected Board of
Trustees.
Committee member s will
include parents and community
members Bob Westphal. Vivian
Reuter. Marla Brennan, Joe
Samluc k , James Dic k . Ed
Landon, Lamar Warnick a nd
Fred Branca.
Abo serving on the committee
will be teachers Melissa Housel
and Steve Johnson, principal
Catherine Follett and AssiBtant
Superintendent Jack Mahnken.
Baby death
trial delayed
We're
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ORANGE COAST
Diiiy Piiat :-=·===-"
MAM Ol'PIC8 '30 w..t..., It., C-. -. CA .... .._ ....... C.. .... <:4.,.,.
~ 19N Or..,.. 0.. ,_.. 0...,.. Ho n••• 110•1 ... llh1t1rallon1, 1dl1orlal ...... , or _ ..... ,... .. _, ... ,..,..._.....,.,...,..
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Orange Ooeat DAILY PILOT /Tu.dey, '•bruery ti. 1tu
.,.., ..... ........,..,LM,._
B y la nd a nd b y sea r e&ide nts enjoy early warning
Washing to n 's Birthday m ay re main a fa r cr y from July 4 th, but
those who dipped in the cool waters a t Corona del Mar Sta te
Beach or simply lolled o n the la wn a t Northwood Community
Pa rk in Irvine didn't mind a wintertime tease tha t summer is
coming .
It
)
"
. \ . r
'·.
Drug crackdown stands even
Seiz ures increase. but narcotics more pre valent
r ......
"We may be hard to find,
But everyone thinks we're worth It.''
In association with
Via lido Plaza
Come
Early
. ..
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~· Orange Ooa11 DAIL V PILOT /Tu11d1y, fl'•bru1ry aa, 1813
Program smooths
refugees' friction
By GLENN SCOTl'
OCIM De1tr NM awt
Southeast Asian refugee• In
Ora.nae County oftl"n work hard
on the job. but they don't always
make friends.
Friel.lo'\ between refugees and
their co-"°'orkers has bee n a
continuing problem, according to
a survey by the privately funded
Immigrant and R e fugee
Planning Center o( Santa Ana.
The ce nter has set o ut to
overrome differences by setting
up its first tra1ninf progra m
designed to help re ugees and
their bosses understa nd each
other's cultural quirks.
About 35 employees at the
Fluor Corp were the first to try
out the day -long sessio n las t
week . The idea, said cente r
Program D evelo p e r M a r y
B e ltra n , was t o c r ea te a
non-threatentn'l en vironment fo r
u11c u 1•l o n 11 o n t•ultu r ul
di ffert·rwH .
All ot th..-AJllan workl'ra c.•wnt•
from Fluor's reproduction anc.t
graphi l·s d e partml'nt , n
lW-person !M.'('tion with about 27
refugees. Fluor was ..-ha.en for
the pilot project ~·ause a grunt
fro m the Fluo r Fo unda tio n
helped establlah the center.
Be ltra n said the cente r 's
su rvey of 40 large employers in
the county showed that language
problem s rema in the primary
barrier in assimilating refugees
into the work force. The traillinR
prosram 1s geared to help Asian
workers understand key phrases
and to teach Ame rican
s upe rvisors a few Vietnamese
and Laotian words.
The sessions also are meant to
instruct w orkers on avoiding
cultural habits that tend to cause
friction
Mary Beltran closes
cultural gap.
Stress
under
• scrutiny
0 n e 0 f f 0 u r r rt• l"
llt•mlnan on 1trua. uncJ
depr<'llllfon apuNOn-d by
a locMI hotplttal will be·
ataged Sunday at Irvine
Hl~ll School.
· How to Cope wit h
Streu.'' will be offered
at 7 p.m In the school'lj
theaU?r Speaker will be
John L . S c hwartz,
p_sychiatrhll-m -chlef of
\Jn1ted Western Medical
Centel'll of Sant.a Ana. •
Three more seminars
are s c h e dul e d o n
Thursdays. "Stress and
Human Sexuality," will
take place March 31 :
"Alcohol , . Drugs and
Stress.'' wiU be on April
28, and "How to Manage
Stress," wlU be May 19.
All will begin a t 7 p.m.
SFA's Annual
Eva n Picone Pantyhose
Safe: 20% off
Regular Prices!
• ~~r to-WJ1!>t SJnda/1001, Ultra-
Sh<1'er Curllfol Top Sondalloot and
Opaque pantyhose .. afl rt'H11l;uly
6 for 111, now6 for 16.80.
• Control-Top Sanda/loot
pJntyh~e . ..regularly 6 for
'14, now 6 for 19.20.
• Lace ( ontrOI· Top pantyhmt·
regularly 6 for 1 JO, now 6
for 22.50.
• Petite Fleur pantyhose. regu/Jrly
6 for 1J6, now 6 for 28.00
• City Blocks and
Sculptured Lace pantyho~e
.both regularly 6 for • J9,
now fo r 6 for 31.20.
Reservations for the P • t • 11 h I t k I t k • d seminars can be made by rill S WI e p rac OS I S caUing 953-3450.
• Now on sale for siLes
Small, Medium and
Long. in Hosiery
Collections.
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Ol'the DellJ Piiot Stan
Bea Caplett, a Fountain Valley
parent, had been reading about
mismng children.
project was a worthy service to
provide." she said.
e le m e ntary sch o ols 1n th e
Fo untain Valle y district have
agreed to oHer the fingerprint
program. Parent volunteers have
been trained by Fountain Valley
p o lice t o administer the
fingerprinting.
She was particularly disturbed
by a report that 5,000 children
die each year in the U.S . without
ever being identified.
Fingerprint records a re used
by police officers to help 1dentjfy
lost or missing children.
Caplett wanted to help local
par ents avoid tha t form o f
anguis h, so she persuaded the
Fountain Valley School District's
Superintendent Parent Council,
SPC, to initiate a fingerpr1nt
program for stude nts.
O fficials in the Founta in
Valley School District stressed
tha t t h e local finge rprint
program will be voluntary and
that no records will be retained
by the school district or police
age nc i es . A si ngle set o f
finge rprin t records 1s to b e
retaint'd by parents, traditionally
m a safety deposit box.
During fingerprinting, a child's
parents must be present to sign a
re lease. An inkJess fingerprinting
process will be used.
A 25-cent fee will be charged
each child to cover some material
costs. Fund-raising activities also
are planned to offset additional
costs.
"With the alarming increase in
the numbers of missing childre n
countrywide. the SPC felt this
Parents can then present these
finge rprints to local authorities 1f
a child should be ~.
Members of the SPC a r e
expected to meet thu week to set
up a schedule for fingerprinting. Accordin to Ca lett, all 15
ARE YOU
Out of Control
Nervous or Tense?
lndlVICluahzed programs usmg HYPNOSIS tor tne con1ro1 ol
weight. smoking. stress management. sell·coohelence anCI
sell-esteem Separauon anCI Cl1vorce ad1ustmen1 w11n less
amoe1y anCI stress
BONNIE J. COYLE, Ph.D.
AL HllUTIYE ClllSELllli CEmll
505 N. Tustin Ave .. Santa Ana
f'HONE fot OP90intm•nl
834-0749
JOHN R. DEEM, M.D.
Is Pleased To Announce
The Opening of His Off ices.
Full Family and General Practice
For All Ages.
400 Newport Ctr. Drive, Suite 707
Newport Beach, CA. 92660
Telephone
644-0381
OFFICE HOURS:
By Appointment
8-12 a m.. 1-5 p.m.
Monday thru Friday
Ronald L. Thommarson, M.D.
04plomate. Amer. Boerd of Internal Medicine
Is Pleased To
Announce The Relocation
Of His Practice To
1441 Avocado, Suite 708
Newport Beach, CA.
Office Hours
By Appointment
Telephone
(714) 780-6054
We know
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to save on
taxes.
Find out what
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Take ad,antagc of tht~ }Car\ \~CCJllOlL tax
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lNilmtMWvtoe.
Howard
Tangier's
Column
"If you don't avoid paying taxes, you are
unpatriotic."
Sounds like the rantings of some wild-eyed
radical Le t's take a thoughtful look at that
statement and see tf the re is, indeed, wisdom in
it. Fu'St of aU. notice that I srud "avoid" pa~
taxes, not "evade". Congress h as provided
severaJ deductions. e xclusions, and credits that
allow us to legally "avoid " paying taxes To
"evade", on the other ha nd, is a term t hat
describes an illegal non-payment of taxes.
With all the talk about deficits and tax
increases. let's take a look at why Congress
would aJlow us to reduce the amount of taxes we
legally pay. AH of the provisions of the Internal
Revenue Code w e re enacted to accomplish
certain objecuves. The tax deduction for IRA
accounts. for example, was given in order to
encourage us to take a more active role in
proVlding for our own retirement and take some
of the pressure off the Social Security System.
Opening your own lRA account reduces your
taxes and helps the government accomplish its
goals.
Capital Gains tax 1s another e xample of
reducing your taxes and w orking in the best
interests of your country. U a taxpayer makes an
investment and holds it for more than a year.
60% of the profit is not taxed. This attractive
feature of the tax law encourages people to save
their money for investment purposes. The
investments they make in housing. businesses.
and stocks create jobs which bring in other tax
revenues and build a more productive society.
Reducing your t ~ through Capital Gains taxes
may be the ulttm.ate in patriotism.
IC you reduce your taxes with a sound
investment program, combined with other
programs, such as an IRA a<.n>unt, you are alto
carrying out your patriotic duty by reducing
your dependency on the government in the
future. Many of our clients have found that they
can retire yNrS earlier than they ever thought
possible. And they don't have to worry about
whether Social Security will still be there when
they need It. Besides. when you retire early, you
help provide a job for someone else without
Increasing the une mployment rate.
At Ronson, we are dedlcated to helplni
people carry out their patriotic duty to reduce
their taxes and provide for a brtahtet future than
they ever dreamed pomible. We can ahow you
how to get started today. Perhaps the tint st.e~
should be to open an IRA account, if you haven i
already done ao. If you have an IRA account, you
may still want to talk to u.a about how to pt a
higher return on your funds, without aacrificina
safety.
Take your first step toward your dreanw by
attending one of our Free Sem.lnan. We won't
even try to sell you anything. We juat want you
to know ua better. and we would Uke to meet
you . Who k.nowa? That 90 mlnuta together may
be the 1tart of llOmethlng great.
Our next eemlnar will be Wedne.lay Feb.
23 and Thuraday March 10. To make your
re.ervat1on, call 870-6$00 and uk for Debbie.
I
AONSON AEAI. TY
INVESTMENTS, INC.
lJNMAlllY PlAZA 8IO~Dr!Ye ''*"°"· o.. 1293'
Breakfast
talk set
Fr e d B e ams ,
educational director for
Orange County Vector
Control, will be guest
speaker a t the monthly
Fountain Valley Mayor's
Bre akfa s t at 8 a .m .
tomorrow in Hall C of
the F o untain Valley
C o mmunity C e nte r ,
10200 Slater Ave.
Mayor Marvin Adler
will serve as host.
Charge for continental
breakfast is $1 .
Sourh ( O.HI Plaza )JJ J BrtSIOI Street. ( osta Mt>~il
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Trans{ us ions
stop diabetes?
BOSTON (AP) -ReeMrchen have dLlcov red
that ordinary blood tran1fu1lon1 will prevent JuY91\Ue dlabe\el ln laboratory animala, and .. y It
may eomeday provide a way of ellmlnaUng the cJ.-... ln humana.
'n\e doctonl found that a few tranafuaiona early
In life from a type of rata that never pt juvenile
dlabei.e. will completely atop development of the
dilleue ln rata that have a senetic weaime. for lt.
The n!9earchera cautioned, however, that more
l'eeeVch ta neceaary before docton try lhta limple
therapy to prevent diabetes ln humana sU1CepUble
to juvenile di.abet.es.
The atudy wu directed by Dr. Aldo A. Roain!
at the Univel'lity of Maasachuaetta Medical School.
It wu publiahed in Friday's issue of the journal
Science,
Unlike the more common adult form of the
dJaeue, juvenile diabetes often strikes ita victims in
early adol~. It deatroy1 the ability to make inaul.ln, a honnone necessary for the body to use
and at.ore sucar.
• By age 18, about one In every 300 or 400
children ln the United Stat.es has 'the disease. It
accounta for about 15 percent of all diabetes and
often run.a In families.
Life expectancl after diagnosis ia about 40
years, and victims o juvenile diabetes often suffer
heart attacks, kidney failure and eye damage
deepite daily insulin shots.
Last week, Dr. George S . Eisenbarth and
colleegues at the Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston
reported work with a blood test that will reveal
early sign.a of the disease several years before
irreparable damage occurs.
The lat.est study was conducted on a strain of
lab animals called BB rats. Between 30 and 50
percent of theee rats develop diabetes by the time
they are 120 days old, and doctors believe their
dilea8e may parallel the diaease in people.
TRADE UP TO NEW
INVESTORS CHECKING SERVICE
AND TOP THE NOW ACCOUNTS.
8.29% TODAY'S ANNUAL YIELDt
8.00% TODAY'S RATE tt
It's time to trade up. Up to new Investors
Checking Service at Bank of America. If
you keep a checking balance of $2,500 or
more, this variable rate interest checking
account is designed for you. Investors
Checking Service gives you all the advan-
tages of a regular interest-earning check-
ing account, yet pays higher interest.
Higher than the NOW accounts.• It's the
highest earning interest checking account
weoffer. And unlike the "sweep" accounts,
your entire Investors Checking account
balance will earn the same higher inter-
est when you maintain a $2,500 min-
imum daily balance. In addition, your
entire balance (up to $100,000) is insured
by the FDIC.
Besidca higher interest, Investors
O>eckin.g Service also gives you the case
and convmience of banking at over 1,000
,
By PAT HOROWITZ '"911111 .... Dllllr .....
DEAR PAT: I rud HVtraJ moa*'• 110
tlaat lepalatloa wa1 peMlal dlat Wffld mab
It maadatery for· p•ftlle -teleplloaea tq be
retrofitted IO people wltti llearla1 ald1 co•ld
11e dtem. Dtd tut l91l1latloa pa11?
M.H., .SaJta Au
Yea. Public Law 97-410 provides, among
other things, that essential telephones, such u
public phones., emergency phones, and phones
frequently needed for use by hearing aid
wearers be compatible with hearing aids. In
addition, the law removes the prohibition on
states that kept them from allowing telephone
companies to offer specializecf terminal
equipme nt to handicapped people at
subsidized rates. Exlating coin-operated
phones and phones for emergency use (such as
elevator phonea) will have to be retrofitted.
The Federal Communications Cornmisaion will
Issue regulations to spell out the de tails,
including labeling requirements for telephone
equipment purchased by consumers at retail
outlets.
For more information, write to the
Organization for Use of the Telephone, an
all-voluntary, non-profit organization working
on behaif ot hearing-impaired people. The
Bank of America
branches and
over 400 VERSATELLER•
machines. Plus you'll
get wilimited check-writing privileges
and your checks enjoy statewide recogni-
tion. You will receive our easy-to-read
Timesaver Statement• and free personal-
ized special checks. And, there are no
monthly service charges for accounts
with balances over SS,000.
PREE CREDIT CARD BONUS.
If you open an Investors Checking
account by March 31, 1983, we'll give you
an exciting bonus. Just bring in the cou-
pon below for a bonus credit on any exist-
ing or new Bank of America credit card
account you have.•• You can even get this
bonus on our most prestigious ca.rd, the
BankAmerica.rd• VISA• premium card.
The premium card gives you a $5,000 line
of credit, emergency cash and VISA
Worldwide ThlVeler Service. Plus special
high limit check cashing privileges at any
•
addreea la P.O. Box 17~, Owlnp MIU., Md.
21117.
First consumer column
DEAR PAT: I've t..-.ed '°/"' colama 1everat tlmea wllea I aeede llelp wUll
coaHmer problem•, aD4I I'm cvtee1 abotlt
wllea tile flrat Hell col•m• wa1 pabllalled.
Cu you tell me aboat dal1?
,....F
.....
J .R., Newport Beacll
A forerunner of the action line column,
''The Friend of the People," appeared on the
editorial page of the Chlcaao Tribune ln
January 1911. But "The Friend" did not eolve
individual complalnta. "HJ.a function will be to
throw such light aa he may upon questiona
that are puzz.l.ini readen of the Tribune, with
special reference to thoee matters that are of ..
general interest and application," tM column'•
Introduction promi1ed. And The Friend'•
scope was limited to "complaint• ...
regarding the municipallty, other branches of
the government or the public service
corporations."
Similar columns appeared in papera
across the country durtng the 1920. and 1930s.
The Houston Chronicle presented the first
phone-In column in 1961, and Chicago's
American became the first paper to use the
"action line" name In 1965.
~·--
ls the
thelmlt
You probabty1hink there isn't any·
thi"9 you (Ml do •bout so.ring health care costs. But there is. Now you can join
the FHP health pf•n where you work.
With most FHP pf•ns, your regular
monthly premiums take care of almost
ewrytt\1"9 from • routine cMdtup to "'*' survery. TheN are no big deduct-
lbles. no sty-hlth extra expenses to pay
out of your own pocket.
A recent survey conducted by the us. Deplrtment of HHhh and Human Servic1s reports that plans like FHP have
sewct from 10'6 to~ NCh ~r on• family's~ care costs when compered
to corwtnUonal health tnsu,.nm plw.
So Mk 8bout joining.FHP~ you. • wortc to brfng your hfffth care CIOltl bedc
down to Hrth.
'
.. ,•
. .
•'
..
. .. ..
'• '• .. .. ·. ·: '• .
-· Ot1nge Co11t DAILV Pll OT /Tueed•v. February ta, ' 13
Law seeks t o c ur b
int o xicated boaters
Drunk en p o w e r b oat
operators are ju!l t as much of a
menace to o ther boat e r s a nd
IWimmers as drunken drivers are
to other motori.ats and pedestrians,
eaya Assemblyman Peter Chacon,
D-San Diego. ·
With the support of the city of
San Diego, the state Department
of Boating and Wa terways and the
California Highway Patrol (a n
intoxicated boat operator becomes
an intoxicated driver w h en h e comes ashore), Charon is pushing a
bill designed to put some curbs on
boaters who overindulge.
The bill, AB 593, w o uld
require pow er boat owners to
license t h e ir cr a ft with t h e
Department of Motor Vehicles and
agree to take a sobriety test if
required to do so by local har bor
patrol authorities.
Refusal to take the test would
be assumed an admission of guilt,
just as wit h car drivers. And
operator s with 10 pe r cent of
alcohol in the blood would be
oonsidered intoxicated.
A firs t-o ffense con v iction
would result in a six-month license
suspension and a fine of $500.
Repeat offende rs could be fined
up to $2,500 and risk a permanent
license suspension .
The licensing procedure
would not requir e a proficiency
test and would apply only to
power boats. Canoes, kayak.I and
sailboats without motors would be
e xempt.
Statistics complied by the
U .S. Coast Guard seem to
s ubs tantiat e the need for
legislation of this type. Over a
recent 20-month period, l, 137
boating accidents resulting ln 491
injuries and 132 de~tha were
reported throughout the atate.
And the Coast Guard aaya 52
percent of all boating accidents are
caused by p eople under the.
influence of alcohol.
Chacon says hls bill would not
create any undue hardships for
safe b oat operato rs. Boating
licenses would be available at
boating stores and other retail
outlets, much like hunting and
fishing licenses. But the holder of
the license would be sybject to the
same sobriety laws now applied to
motorists.
With c oastal harbors
inc r e a singly c rowde d with
pleasure craft in a dangerous mix
of power and sail, it can take only
a s mall number of ine briated
boaters to ruin the pleasure of an
afternoon sail or fishing trip for
th e maj o r i t y . It i s not
unreasonable t-0 give harbor patrol
officers a legal weapon to curb this
risk.
. . . . .-. -~ -----Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views
expraaed on this page are-tt'tose of their author• aAd arti.ta. ~ ~la
Invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
642 ... 321.
Letters to the e d itor
Good laws must
al so be humane
To the Editor:
I've never written a letter to the
editor of a newspaper I practice
medicine an as near anonynuty as ts
pcmible in my profes.c;1on. But I am
increasingly <.·oncer1icd about the
tendency of our political system to
organize everything. Are men and
women nothing but raw materiaJ for
city councils and legislatures to
organize? It is too bad that our English
language does not have a word to
e xpress the -me r ged emotions of
aadness and anger That word would
be the one I would use to say how I
felt when 1 read m the Pilot that Ali
Roushan lost his three-year battle
with the City of Costa Mesa to
preserve his own met.al sculptures
which were inspired by the idea of
freedom. Once again, there has been a
~ration of inappropriate power by
our sick legal system which shows us
that our government increasingly
means "a b l u d g eoni ng o f th e
people, by the people. for the people"
It was w ith p leasure t h at I
frequently drove my guests past Mr.
Roushan's proper ty to look at the
eculptures. I remember them as one of
the great est of the aest h e tic
experiences of the Harbor area. l
think it good to remember that until
many people screamed in anger, the
Watts Towers had been condemned as
a public menace and eyesore. (The
artist ignored the building code).
I 'd li k e to t h ink that i f a
refere ndum had been taken, the
people of Cost.a Mesa would have said
to the city and the courts: ''Leave the
1'lAD alone! Let his sculptural tribute
to liberty stand as a symbol that all
Coat.a Mesans have th£' same right of
expl'ession and the same right to the
u1e of their pro p e rty. L e t u 1
remember tha t w e A me rican s
lnvented the phrase 'fair play•"!
WHEN THE LAW is wrong, aa
frequently as it is rig ht -as it
tncreasingly has been in our country
for many years -it can only be that
It bas been effectively separated from
~ conoem for justice.
Albert Schweitzer, whom many
have regarded as the moral genius of
tl'9 twentieth century, one time uid
U.t the foundation of law and right ia
humanity. Our preoccupation with
the enforcement of nonsensical or
e¥en 1tupld la ws and ordlnancea
1taow1 that our 1y stem has •
dllep-.eated belief that 10Jne th1np
.,.. more important than humanity
• the liberty to expraa it. All~. hu demonltrated that ~t and law on our local level
an not u humane aa they aho'i,!d be,
not aa educable aa they thou.Id bi, and
Mt u just M they ahou.Jd be. Maybe
shat will help ua define a problem
Whk:b otttainly exilta. I Nbmit that
1.be law • a.w ia not d~ of our
MAILBOX
respect; and that only law based on
humanity deserves our allegiance.
WILLIAM J . OWSLEY, M.D.
Blame misplaced
To the Editor:
As a faculty member at Orange
Coast College, I would like to thank
those students, community leaders,
staff, and faculty who attended and
spoke so eloquen'\ly a t the Coast
District board meeting. That it made
no difference in the final outcome waa
a lesson in local politics that these
people will never forget. Over 1,200
people watc he d as the truateea
unanimously voted to lay off over 100
full-time faculty members in areas of
history, psychology, nursing, theater
arts, speech, and the library, to name
but a few.
They watched as the board dancing
to the tune of Dr. Norman E. Watson,
Chancellor and architect of district,
totally ignored the e vidence put
before them, totally ignored the 5,000
petJtion c,ards sent to them , totally
ignore d the community leaders
spea king before them, and totally
ignored the alte rnative proposals
submitted by t he faculty of the
di.strict.
TB ESE SAME 1, 20 0 p eople
watched as the board tried to shift
blame onto Sacramento and onto the
audience for failing to lnfluence the
Legislature to prevent the $5.5 million
cutback. They watched as the
president of the local teacher'• union,
Phillis Basile. reminded the trustees
that the issue wu not how much
Sacramento was going to pay the
district, but rather what priorities
were to receive funding within the
di1trlct operation: educational ~ or the projected pu.rehue of
$1 million worth ol new equlpmen\;
the nursing program or the tS00,000
travel and conference budget (moet of
which is uled by top adminlstraton
for oon-1.mtructional ja~ta); library
books or leued can for the college
pres i dents and other top
administrators.
Tbe board, under the dltect1on of
Wataon, has cboaen to 1hlft the
educational emphasis away from
claaroom lnat.ruct.lon ln ~ycholoc 1 biology, marine IC'ience, h1ltOry ana
human development to the cheaper
televialon couraea ln thoae ••m•
dildplineL One th1na .. quite clear ln
the tlCtion taken by the board. They
have violated the public trmt of the
community.
I appeal t.o the board -pie ... ,
1pare the ~yen of thJa dlltrict the
experwe of a recall movetnenL PleMe
.. .i,n.
OONALD ACKLEY
MacDonald ~itness mystery
WASHINGTON -Not long ago, a
tragic young woman named Helena
Stoeckley stepped. out of the shadows to
aave a man from life in priton. She told
my office a story that brought her
nothlng but grlef and threats. Last
month she was found dead in her
hideout apartment in South Carolina.
Her statements implicated a black
witchcraft cult whoee members, she said,
had threatened her with violence. Her
atory also embarrassed the authorities
who may have 1ent the wrong man to
prison.
Stoeckley was a key witness in the
niui:der cue •agal.nst J)r. J...effrey •
MacDonald, the Green Beret doctor who
is now serving three consecutive life
sentences for the 1970 murder of his
wile and two young daughters at Fort
Bragg, N.C.
WBA T MADE Stoeckley a crucial
witnea in Capt. MacDonald's case was
that ahe had aa.id lhe was a member of
the cult that, she said, perpetrated the
murden. Thia corroborated MacDonald's
claim that not be, but a drug-crazed
"hippie group" had killed hia family and
aerioualy injured him.
Unfortunately for MacDonald,
Stoeckley's post-trial discloaures were
not admitted as evidence to support the
appeal of his convicUon. At hia trial,
Stoeckley had said she couldn't
remember the eventa of the tragic nlght
at Fort Bragg.
Since then. however, Stoeckley told
my aaaociate Donald Goldberg that
MacDonald was telling the truth. She
admitted being part of the drug-oriented
cult that ~tted the killlnp. She said
the motive for the murders was that
MacDonald had refused to supply illicit
drutrs to the group, which Included
soldiers at the base.
At MacDonald's 1979 trial, Stoeckley
said, "l was afraid that I was going to go
~ J-fl:-.-•• -.-111-,-. -~
fu prison."'' ~he dai.rne(! she couldn't
remember what happened.
There was more than just fear of
prbon, th°""h. "At the trial I was.hit on
the noee," Stoeckley said. "My noee wa.s
broken by one of (the members of the
cult). He told me the same thing I've
been (warned) the whole time now. He
said, 'Keep your mouth shut'."
She described the circumstances of her
attack at the hote l where she was
staying during MacDonald's trial: "I
went out to the ice machine. Well, then
he followed me upstairs and the next
thing I' know he just -punched me in
the noee and broke it." .
That wasn't the only time Stoec.kley
had been intimidated by members of the
cult, ahe said. They tracked her down
last year in a shopping-center parking
lot. There, she said, she was beaten up
and her infant son was knocked to the
ground.
South Carolina police officials sa y
there was no evidence of foul play in
Stoeckley's death. But Prince Beasley, a
former detective In Fayetteville, .N.C.,
be l ieves that she may have oeen
murdered.
Beasley had known Stoeckley for 15
years; he even picked her up with other
c ult members the night after the
Mac.Donald family klllings. But Beaaley
lacked authority in the cue, which had
taken place on the military bue outside
of town. He held the suspect& for Army
investigators for nearly two hours. They
never showed up, so Beasley had to let
the suspects go.
Beasley saya Stoeckley told him on
several occasions that she was being
threatened by cult members. In fact, just
Jays before her death, she contacted him
and asked him to meet her. Beasley aid •
she sounded frightened, but he w as
unable to meet her.
BUT SHORTLY before th.at, Stoeckley
had managed to g e t a message to
Beasley. She told him of another cult
member who could corroborate her
story.
That member has ainoe been located
and has told Ted Gunderson, a former
FBI agent in charge of the Los Angeles
office, of involvement in the cult. Showt\ .
pho tographs that Stoeckley had
identified as thoee of members of the
drug cult, the informant confirmed the
identification. 1
The i n formant also provide d
impol'tant ne w information on the
activities and whereabout.s ol the cult
members.
What is most frightening, though. ia
that the member of the cult was able to
tell investigators where Stoeckley was
hidi ng out. Obviously, II one member of
the cult knew where she was living.
other mernbera might also have known.
Brown's fiscal muddle burdens Duke
Gov. George .ueukmejian is finding
that it Is not easy picking up after his
predecessor, Jerry Brown. The new
governor now finds himself in the
position of going to court to defend one
of. the more questionable ac&ions of
Brown Just bef~ the latter left off.ice.
Late Wt year, an the warung moments
of Brown'• gubernatorial career and at
the height of hia ambitious quest foe a
U .S . Senate seat , Brown was
embarrassed to <lixover that his flnaJ
budget wu going to be-much higher
than the total amount of revenues
available to the at.ate, that an apparent·
deficit wu looming that pre.ented a
potential threat to hU viablllty u •
political candidate.
AT THE TIME. the deficit did not
appear to total what it now ii known to
be -about ll~ billion. Brown. teekinl an easy way out or the fi8ca.l dilemma,
dipped into a pool of dollara that has
been set ufde over the years to pay
pensions to public employees who have
retired.
The raid ultimately removed $180
million from the Public Employees
Retirement System (PERS), and pl.aced
it in the state's general fund in what was
to prove a fruitless effort to balance the
tottering budge t . Brown ha d the
uafatance of the Democrat-controlled
Legislature in taking his action, which
was contested by the Callfomla St.ate
Employee s Associatio n · and the
California School Employees Association.
The PERS fund always has been one
of the state's mos\ stable monetary
aocounta. It is the result of joint st.ate and
'Point systeID' for crimes
We are told repeatedly that
ahopllfUng, by employees u well u by
cuttornen. eccounta fot more property
loaa in the nation than ·an other
bwJdarles and robberi• combined, and I believe it. Theee depndatJorw, of COW"lle,
~
llllDW ""
astronomical." He eaUmatea that
repeated m19demeanora cause a greater
dra1n on state revenues than do felonies.
Thia aame Judge proposes a new
system that makes pat tel\le to me. It is
not more pun1ti'1e toward the cuua1 or
"impulle•1 shoplift.er, but it la cumulative
in lta eUect upon the habitual pilferer of
merchand.lle.
JUST AS SOME atatee have a "point
systmn" for drivlnc offemes. he w°"1d
ln1tltute the 1ame 1y1tem for
mlldemeenort. Convktion for the tint
mllclerneMol" would be two polnta, and
any eut.quent mAldemMnor would be
...... ec1 one point. When a pereon
accwnulatee a IU.ffkient number of polnta
-ay, ftw « mon -he (or IM) would
be c&mfled • felon, and • state prilOn .n~ would be mandatory.
'nlll would obvlamly put a damplt on
the prof..aona.11 and \he .. ,..,....,.. ..
wbill ~•a wry,..) &hr'Mt to &he
impulle thief, wbo woWd know that
punMbmmt far future antncUonl would
be ..Ut and M&n. &wry penol~ ~ lllia llaown tbM It II no& die~ ............... ~ .. ....... .. .. ....,.
employee contributions and exists tor the
purpose of paying retirement benefita to
public sector workers who have reached
the age of retirement. Tbe fund is large,
partly becauae of effective managemenJ
on the part of the PERS board, partly
becauae of the real poesibility that great
demands might at any time be placed on
the system by widespread retirements
by oontributing members.
Lawauits filed by the emplo yee
representative groups were upheld
through a aeries of. lower courts, each
determining in turn that Brown was
wrong in tapping the funds. Most
recently, a state appellate court ruled
that the raid was indeed improper, that
Brown acted illegally when he withheld
the $1JJO million in state contributions to
the PERS kitty.
"Legislative action randomly and
unilaterally canceling or dec:reaaing
periodic employer oontributiooa cJearly
interferes with vested contractual righta
of PERS members." said the 3rd District
Court of Appeals.
OOMING AS IT did after the .. ha~
in administrations. the court'• ~
placed the onus on Deulanejian'• •k.
already bent under the 1train o£
~ the aevere filca1 me9B left by
Brown upon hi• departure from the
Sacramento s:ene.
Earlier !his month, Deukmejlan
instructed lawyera for th e atate'~
Department of Finance to petition f« a
heartna befo.-e the Supreme Court 10
detennlne -once more -If the actiotl
can at.and. By fllinc foe the petition,
Deukmejian iemporarily balta the lower
court ruUna while a decWon ii r-.ched
by the hiah court on whether to bear the
appeal. l>eukmejlan 1ay1 that the
dedaion, lf left to it.and, will lna'•rs ihe
at.ate'• deficit from tl.6 bUlkll\ to about
U .68 billion, and under preaent
condtttona he flnda that poulbutty
un.aUafactory.
TUl8DAY, ,!l"UA"Y 121 1~ The Rev. Bill Fl•n•san ha•
de1iped a workshop to
.111a111111111 cmn ANN LANDERS
ENTERTAINMENT
COMICS
\ help divorced people. P.ase B3.
The grocery business has changed
considerably, going from a mom and dad,
behind-the-counter operation (below), to
large supermarkets where pricing i1
computerized, like at the Irvine Ranch
Market where Sherman Fields (right) is
the store 11\•nager.
Scann.ers.
BY KAREN E. KLEIN OtaeDllJ ........
•
Supennarket price 8Canners can make shopping
dMfck-out lines shorter and grocery tabs more accurate, but
~n must be alert in order to avoid getting ripped off.
, ~ The IC8Nlers, which read universal price code marking:s
-'the black bar codes -on lndivldual items, were
introduced five years ago and are now standard in mmt of
the large supennarket chains. -
Surprisingly little negative reaction on the part of
customers, oombined with lncreaaed revenues for
supennarkets, has encouraged the U9e of the ICaJ'lnefl,
"We were anticipating a lot of complaints in the
beginning," said Manuel Gonzales, deputy lealer with the
Orange County office of Weights and Meuures.
"But we didn't get a lot of them. Now, we do get 101De
ooc:uional calls. but they're the kind that probably would
ha'Ve occurred without the eamners," he said.
Bo~ state-and county-wide aurveys have ahown the
ICaJUlerS to be remarkably llCCUl'ate.
1 A study done by the state quality control office ·
abOwed fewer checldna erron were made tn stores where
dnnen were U8ed. "They eliminate the human factof," u4d Clifton Smith, the manager of the quantity control
~ . • By relying le. on a cuhiel"a memory, or the reading of
i Jllice mark.ea on the item. checking becomes more accurate
&rid more oamiatent, Smith aid.
County data confinm Smith'• findlnp.
"We started· a program here where we went to 10
different markets to conduct a aurvey,'' Gonzalel aald. ''In
~
:
0 1
•
Change seen
~hey' re too many takers
and not enough givers
'· . f=~ ..... 000..f, Tb• Nm• problem that la 'K::;t• the nation'• Social
ty ~ .. deYeloplnc 1n ;-,... countl'J'• credit marketa:
;,.... are tao many taken and
~~could lead to ..-.... ...,.. ln lnterwt ratea Jrlabba tJM decade, to ttaha.r _.ad to mw WQ1 of Ullnl ...,, I••" Chrlattan.z. the chief ma:;:..:.:-~·=°! -p In our ecooom&a ..
by the ,_. 2080.
-Accordlna to Chrlatlan, th•
--tbb'l 11 happmlnl in the ts.Id°' crtidlt. ~.;,..,. ... aucb ID extnor'd1nary apllt In thit
demc ..... phb." be IUd. Cbrl1tlan aald the adult population can be apllt Into
c:a~rime borrowen" are them= .... 2& to45, '"Tbn an bUl 'houlehold caf&tal
-d-t -&her ............. It ;;t.DUii1 on CNCflt,'' ~. ~~= ........
Thi,._._~ .. _....
,.._ .. ..., •. '!'MY--~
children aad pa(d fe• ta..&r
eoU.• eclucetron. n.1 ow ....., •.. ,,... __ _
at their PMk·' TIMJ ... IMa; ........... 17., ... .
Nlliaiu•tt'&m.m11. ~ovw•atlna~ c=roup Christian 1ald. ~h•J .. _ ...... tlilia
.......... , ..... -fllt&;lb ...... -..... -.... •admit·tllillr 11111•1 , ChrllUaa ..W that ID 111 l
I
• They're quicker, but not ·always correct
each store we purchaaed about 100 items at random -ao
we bought about 1,000 in all -and of thoee only two were
ecanned wrong. And one was in the customer's favor."
The supermarket chains have been eo1d on acannen
becaUle of the money they save and the extra featun!9 they
offer, a Sacramento weights and meuuree apokelman said.
The items are marked by the manufacturen, acoordinc
to "w:!~" groups of producta, Smith aid. The ecanner readl bar code u it ia pamed over a gi-area on the
checkout counter and calla up ill price out of a central
computer bank.
Smith said most stores have a programmer change the
prices in the computer once a week, on a regular basis, and
al80 anytime a prke changes during the week.
''Mlaprogramming occun oocaaionally, but ie..
frequently than cashier error u8ed to occur," he aald. "The
one danger ii that if the computen are not faithfully
programmed, the price would come up (wrong)."
Gonzales said the best way for consumen to avoid
having their groceries milpriced ia for them to figure an
estimate in advance of how much their purehue ahou1d
come to.
"If it (the 8Canner) makes a mistake it'll be a drastic
mistake. It'll be obvious if the customer baa an idea how
much his bill should come to," be aa1d.
Alert conswnen should pay attention to the prices
which come up on dlaplay read-outa near the register u the
items are 8C8JUled and go over their reoelpta to make sure
they are not being overcharged becaU9e of scanner erron.
. Another. ayatem of consumer checka exilta in the county
0 1
and state departments which are responsible for checking
the equipment periodically to make sure it is functioning
properly.
County weights and measures offidala, like Gonzales,
make random inspections of acanning equipment at
su~kets, and they al80 do "undercover" shopping to
detennine whether errors are occurring.
Conaumen who feel their purchuee have been mis.rung
abould alert the store manager to the problem, Gonzales
aald. If they do not get the situation handled aatiafactorily.
they can call the local weights and measurea office and file
a complaint.
Customers have reacted favorably on the whole to the
ayat.em, however, and both store managen and govenunent
offidala feel the acanner lysteml work well.
At the Irvine Ranch Fumen Market in Costa MesBt
Manager Sherman Fields said his point-of-aalea ayatem is
accurate and popular with customen.
The point-of-sales system ii much like a ecanner, except
that the codes, rather than being read by a eaumer, are
punched in by caahiers.
Fields said there ii ltill a pomibllity of hwnan error
with hia system, but it ii greatly reduced. 0 The item comes
up (on the read-out) with a deecription of each," he said,
"and the tape shows the price per pound, the total and the
item purchaaed. ''
With the point-of-sales syatema, u with all acanner
systems, the produce IC&le ia hoOked up to the computer eo a
(See SCANNER, Pa1e Bl)
0 1
·Caffeine kicked?
The credit 1y1tema are
laced with the problem
ol too many IMwrowen
and not eno• aa•en.
tt.. wwe 1.11 ..,,... for fNWY
borrower. Tb• ratio hu been
dmlnlM evw .-.. a,1817 belald,1twm.._...
low of .at ta••n for ever1
laronr. It wdl P"'!' ....... bUt
onlJ to 1.18 Nftl'I for ..-, bmaowwbJ.-.
The .._ ,_ tbe dJ19" I
ntlae-ln ............. lheerdt--~li ....
--that ----.... =~~ .. ........ _..,,.....-; ...
antlia:
.\
It can be tough to break the habit
µ>s ANGELES (Al») -If
you pt no kick from caffeine,
you're in the minority: More
than 00 penlml °' Ammcanl. 10 and over drink cott.-at leMt
once a day.
MHlkn "8rt thlU' day with a
jolt of caffeine: around 100
mllll1ram1 In a cup of
treeti-tnw.cl oottee or eo to 100
In inllant. 1n addldon '° pumpAna thllmelwl up With soda pap -40tolO~of~
and chooDlete ban. wtth ftw to
40 anOllpmm. Heavy eoU•• drlakera can
eaally ln1••t more thu too miJUlnml of caffeine a du. The malt ............. affeat .. ,..,._
nerve•" -1hall1 baade,
JIUHIDHl1 anxiety -but
.. .... -..... llnllid tD IDCI ..... blood ,,....... m
adlill'W..
r.rtul ~ ... ~ .-J ..-.»•• vow tO ,ult drlaldail OoffM, INt •uleklJ ftiMl-dael
WI1'¢Wdlltwtf l I MMall• unmna1 .. at tllDM nm ' ........ 1'lt"1 -·~-.... Ont ... ·~?.r~:g
own ayatem becomel luy; you
b«'OIDe dependfl't on external
rnechanilrm.''
Sbuttin1 off those external
mechanJanl can 18llCt to a wlcbd
cue of caffeine withdrawal,
durtna which the body ...-to the a6eent» of the aUmulant 1n a ~ph11lolo1lcal and way..
Caffeine wtthdnwal can lalt
anywhere from one day to
Callelne wltladrawal can
lut anywhere from one
day to ee•eral weeb. ......... __. ......
lacllvldual. Recent 1tud1 ..
~ that for hMYJ ooff• .. ....., ......... -* • man ... a
ctq-tbersld•ll•-dli&l&~MIMWtotllii·Gft ..... ....... ....,.
Ky., who conducted a 1981 study
on the top6c.
There'• a definite cbelldl9l
. npleNUGa lot the~ bl&m.~to ·
Tom Mackenale. auociat• ~ of pe=try at UM
Untvenlty of lMeo&a, Mid
caffeine enbanc•• the
Ulmulator7 action of
catecbolalDIMa -a aroup of
hormoae1 tbat Include• .._....._...., ......... the
............. lnthe'*'"'ll
IJSI I
..-....,.......__ ............ _ .. -. . -- -' ·-. ... --------. ---
' .. Orange CO.et OAILY PILOT/Tue.day, '•bruaty H, 1883
l
1he wording is awkward
: DEAR ANN LANDHS: Will you pleaH
chahp the namee and print thll aMOUncement ln
y<>Ut column? 1 would flke to know what you and Yout readers think of It.
My huaband and I are appalled, but then
~we don't get around much. Thanb for your
w . -MR. AND MRS. SIMPLE SIMON
Mr. John Doe
. and the late Mary Margaret Doe
are pleued to announce
·the rnarriqe of t.helr dauahter
Marcy Lo\l to Orville Horace,
10n of Mn. Gr1ee Ttnkerbell
·and the late Mr. Norther 0 . Tlnkerbell, Sr.
·on Saturday, December 2, 1982
Fl.rst Conareaatlon&l Church ,.
Outer SloboVla, Mich.
watL'hlng TV, eatlnt or talkana on th,, phonl•
whe never he aeea me unbutton my blouse or
remove a ahoe, he 1top1 everything ond t.ake8 over
the unbuttoning, unzipping, whatever. You can
gue11 the rest. Even when he la In bed and I am
sure he ls eound uleep, he suddenly springs to life
and goet lnto action.
Klm Wentzel
Vows exchanged
Wentzel-Conrad
K.Jm Lynette Conrad, daughter of Mr.
and Mn. Dale D. Conrad of Huntington
Beach, and Rex Bradley Wentzel, 1e>n of
the Rev. and Mn. Rex Wentzel of Sioux
City, Iowa, were married Feb. 12 In
Grace United Presbyterian Church,
Clarluvllle, Ind. They are residing In St.
Charles, Mo., following a honeymoon In
Panama.
The bride I.a a graduate of Cal Staie
Fullerton and her husband, a Unlvenlty
of Wlloonaln graduate, ls employed by
McDonnell-Douglas In St. Louis.
DEAR MR. AND MRS. S.S.: Maybe I doa'& 1e&
aroad m8d el&Mr, bet It aeem1 ullkely tU& .. e
deceated mo&Hr of &M bride wu able to auouce
anytlll•I· Tlaerefore, It II awkward aad
tuwroprtate to aae Iler aame la "I• mauer.
·I am not a cold person, but my lnteresi In He)( Is
not 1\early eo intense u hia. The man can't seem to
get enouah. Pleue say you understand. I mentioned
this once to a friend and she told me I waa nuts. -
DAVENPORT, IOWA
DEAR DAV.: M0tt women wonld say you bave
lll1ll-ela11 worries, dear, but apparently bl1 aexual
appetite la sreater tlwl youn ud you need more
rfft. Wlaat a mu doeta't aee caa 't a rouse him.
Scanner . IJ 1 I 1 1 & Debra Mama •
From Page 81 l/Veaaing~ .i. Mullin-Kilmer
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am writing in
defense of the woman who undresses in the
bathroom. She ia in her ~. t am in my 20.. but
maybe we have the same problem.
Len and I have been married nearly three
yean. He i.s in his early 30s. Lately I have learned
that the only safe place to 4ndreu is in the
bathroom -with the door locked. Here ia the
reason: No matter what he ia doing -reading,
flMA IOMlfCI
AT WIT'S ENO
It's a question that has plagued P&renta for
generations.
I& it worth all the aggravation, the nagging, the
varicoee veins of the neck to get your kids to do _,,_.... ., ~1es.
Parenta argue it builds character.
Kida say it's the only job in the world where
nepotiam is a curse.
Frankly, rve 9een aome side-effects that maybe
parents ahould know about. I always perceived the
kids doing dishes together every night as a sharing
experience where everyone pitched in and made it a
better world.
This myth exploded the night we took a steak
knife away from one of the boys who was usiJ18 his
brother as a dart board.
We moved right along to Plan B where each of
them would have their night in the kitchen and
then be off two. However, there was so much
trading and paying back , the book.keeping became
unwieldy-and we moved to a new houae to start
fresh. We called them the Three S's. F.ach had his
own penonality in the kitchen.
One wu a "Soaker." Everything soaked. The
only thing that wasn't put in the sink and filled
with water was the spaghetti pot which always
looked clean and hung with spaghetti hardened in
it for three years.
One was a "Saver." No leftover was too small
to store in its ortalnal lef'Ving dish: a peach pit. a
trench fry a wad of gum on a dinner plate. All
were ~rved for whoever was on for dishes the
next nilcht. .
Ttie other one wu a "Cyclone." She cleared.
She stacked. She washed. She dried. She put away.
In 15 secoJ'ld•. And at great expense to the
management.
All three, however, had one trait in conunon.
The moment the meal wu over a bloloS)cal urgency
would oome over them and they would disappear
into the bathroom until they were sure the food on
the plates wu in a solid state.
The children swear they carry the 9C31"8 of our
enforced labor. It's pomible. But I like to think the
three S's came out of the experience with 90rDe
advantages u well as disadvantages. The good news
ia none of them ever needed therapy. They got out
aI1 of their hostility over dishes every night.
· The bad newa? To this day they can't hear a
diSb rattle without instinctively going into the
bathroom and abutting the door.
EFFORTLESS EXERCISE
WITH MY OWN ELECTRONIC TRIMMER
.. lf'WN 1..s., 10 1k I ..., a6I. r• ~ • J6.u-14 IJpr. b1
_,,.,.. 00 p~ --" •f'--.M•-•Rw..i.elf-m • ,_.......,
•U-..•IMO• ........... f ......
(/l/J tmfayr,,./;,l;',,)
, ... _....._ ..................... CA ..... • 975--0619
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am leaving it up to
you. Do I have a right to feel hurt when I go to visit
my daughter-in-law once a year and she runs off to
a club meeting and leavea me alone for four and a
half houn?
Thia club is strictly social, and it would not
have killed her to miaa one meeUng. Am I wrong or
right? -FLORIDA MOM IN NORFOLK DEAR MOM: You don't 1ay bow long you were =est. U I& waa two day1, I'd 1ay you bave a
le dmate complaint. If your stay was longer, she
pt uve arranged a luncheon date for you with
&be motber of a friend 10 you would not have been
aloae all afternoon.
A no-nonsense approach to h ow to deal with
life's moat diffic ult and mos t rewarding
arrangemene. Ann Landers' booklet, "Marriage -
What to Exp«t." wW prepare you for better or for worse. Send your request to Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11995, Chicago, m. 60611 , enclosing 50 cents and a
long, stamped, self-addressed envelope.
• •
checker does not have to ,~ 6 4ohn Stanley Mullin read weight. / Jr. and his bride, the
One possible drawback . naaaemen J former Debra Jeanne
of t he system moy be ---------7'-7'• Kilme r, will reside in
correc ted by a new The Daily Pilot wants your wedding and Costa Mesa following a
feature currently being engagement news. wedding trip to .Hawaii.
tested In select locations, To help you s ubmit the r e quire d Ther were marned Fe~.
Gonzales said info.nnstion, forms are available at the Daily 19 in St.. Andrew 5
Since the customer no Pilot office 330 w: Bay St ,.. __ ta •1esa Presbyte rian Church,
h h h k ' · ·• ~ '"'' · Newport Beach longer ears t e c ec er For weddin,s, '!nly a black and white Mr. and M~. Melvin ~~~: ~~e~ce~f;~~~ 'P,hoto of the ~1de 1s acceptable. Snapshots, Daniel Kilmer III of
prices were i npu t olaroidand lorphotoscan'tbeused. Newport Beach are
manua 11 y i n 10 cash The photo must be submitted no later than parents of the bride, who
registers, If the customer three weeks after the wedding, otherwise it Is employed at Career
is n ot watch 1 n g th e will not be published. Research Systems, Inc. in
display or checking, his Engagem e nt in form a ti on is t o be Fountain Valley. Mullin,
receipts he may be submitted at least seven weeks before the son of Mrs . McComb
overcharged. wedding. Mullin and John Stanley
"A lot of times you Forms and photos can be droip·~ off st Mull~ of Los Angeles, is 't · l th h · . ~ . associated with Grubb ca n qui e sec e t e office or mailed to the Ed1tor1al and Elli's Commer."ial display because there's a De Dail o'il p 0 Bo 1560 ,...__ • glare on it," Gonzales ipartment, Y '' ot · · x • '-'<A')(a Brok e rage Co . in
said. Mesa, Calif. 92626. Ne wport Beach.
@ Pac\1\c;e\9~
C<ij>NSUN\ER YEL\...OW ~N:7ES
Orange Count:y
Nort:t'\ ~
. Thebesf llCldbookllas bellK .
ConslilierWllOw Pages illlOIWo.. dilldOries.
t
IY 8BA ANDBRION .. at" .............. 1'lae l'Olld to -hMllna aft.er d1VOl"C.'9 can
be .ity and painful.
But an alternate avenue, directed
towarda hel!Plna people oope and srow
throu1h thl1 fraatc period, ha• been
developed by the Rev. Bill Flanapn, lilna1e adult8 m1n.1ater at St. Andrew'•
Pre.b)'1erlan ChW'Ch. Newport Beech.
The route haa been rather well
traveled. In three prevlou1 Divorce ~ Workahop, about 700 people
have attended. The fourth, to 1tart
March 1, la expected to draw another 150
to 300 partldpanta.
~'"!be devutaUon for the.e people It
their to. of aeU-worth.
"Dlvorce doesn't mean that We 1a over,
that there ii no future.
''Thete people need a place where
"Our aim is to provide a
warm, authentic
atmoephere where they can
find healing and
wholeness."
they can put the pieces back together.
Our aim is to provide a warm. authentic
atmosphere where they can find healing
encl wholenesa,11 Flan.agan said.
Part of healing process, Flanuan said,
1a coming to terms with the reality that
divon.-e Ls actually happening, the topic
of the first aetaion.
other workahops deal with coping
with your fonner 1pouae, assuming new
responaJbilltiet, befna a llnale parent,
findina and expertelcfna'for&(~ and
think1na about maniap.
The format conaiata of an introductory
lecture by Flanagan, penonal srowth
through divorce i:. shared by a group
leader, and partidpanta br9ak Into arnall
groups for d1.cuaaion of the top6c.
Flanqan said h1a remarka 1timulate
di1cu11ton1, but it ta In the group1
"where the miracle of heallni happens.
"It's wonderful to see the wounded
come alive."
Individuals receive tremendou1
support from the group, Flanapn said.
When work1hop1 conclude, many
conUnue on-going frlend1hlp1 and
support at group ptherinp.
SHUI IERSCUSTOMQUALITYSHUI IERi
30 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters
FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE
ON THE MARKET TODAY ••• AT FACTORY
DIRECT PRICESI c.. (714) 541 U41 or~1717
19n fltlclntla Avenue• Costa Mtla. CA 827
..... -'
STOP! Is Drinking
Interfering With
Your Family ·
Life?
..
J'1anapn em~ the wor~
..... not a.a,n.d .. a Place to meet .net
date, "but eorne come wteh thia ln mind."
monthl. but Mid he will not Some a1lo ~zmrry ln a oouDlit ol
perfoma thttt .. rd feel Wire a
hypocrite, became I 't teel lhey have came to temw wteh the ._.. that have
cau.d the break-up ol thetr = marn.,t." A workltiop IOCUI ii
to help them aYGkl rwpeatinl the pt .
.,,, 11111 ''' WAlllllTll'I llRT#IA Y
nan.pn, who hal conduct*1 tlm11ar
worbhcilll amm the oountry for aevera1
yean. Mid the idea Wll ccino.tved while
counHllna ~1'1 ln Colorado
Sprtnp. hJa t prior to oom1na
to St. Andrew'• two ,..n .,o.
"JU I Uatened to their problema I
SUPER BARGAINS IN LADIES AND
MEN'S SPORTSWEAR AND LINGERIE.
Divorce is traumatic for the
children too. That's why a
teen-age seminar is held.
DRESSES, ROBES, BLOUSES, SKIRTS,
PANTS, JACKETSANDLOTS MORE.
realized their need for conatructlve
help."
Divorce la trawnaUc for the children
too, Flanagan aald. That'• why a
teen..ap aemlnar i. held the laat three
weeka of the adult -son.
The Divorce Recovery workahopa will
be held on comecuUve "Tu.days at 7:30
p.m. at the church'• Dlerenfield Hall.
For information and reeervationl, call
631-288& weekdaya between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m.
This • IS
..
DRASTIC REDUCTIONS.
SINCE 1149
DIP~ITORI
1111 NIWPORT 90UUVARD
....., _. . ..., ..... ....,IR Dcwsdesc1 CCIII .....
for each $5,000 ~deposit
in a 4-year to 10 .. ~
Great American mestor Account!
Lock in high interest for four to
ten years. Ad now and you'll
receive a big interest bonus:
Offer expires March 31, 1983.
Select the term you want-as little
as 4 years, as long as 10 years.
GreAt Alnerialn
lnvestM Account
4-Ye•r Account
S·Ye•r Account
6-Yur Account
7·Yeu Account
t-lnr Account
9-Yur Account
10-Yffr Account
liile Yield
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lo.Jn , ... ~
1un 11•~
1CUK 11.11~
10.6n 11.lt~
1t.7K 11..n It's a grNt way to build a solid
investment •.. to save for college or
retirement. If you have a maturing ::" .. 'lJ!..-:;'.:-..... ~:,,•,~:: IRA or K..nah Account, now's the Mic1111 .. ..,.,..., .. ._ ....... • .....,.,,.... --o ........................ ...., ............. .
time to move it here and pick up a
bonus. And savings in a Great
American Investor Account are
insured up to $100,000 by the FSLIC.
If you choose to use Interest as
monthly Income, earnings can be
automatically transferred to a Great
American Federal checking or
savings account at the end of
each month. • Open your account FSLJC:
now and eam a big --
interest bonus. ....-.
.-----.-----, ~.!:!~I -. ................. , . .., ..... . .................................
~ ...... !"'1'1:1 ......... ..., ..... .... .............. ,., ............... .. ............. ,...., ........... .... ..........
for today's h!p rote, coll The flnondol Une (•) J7MOOO ~
\
.. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tueact1y, February 22. 1883
Sophistication and irony
captured in 'Private Lives'
By TOM TITUS or .. o.-,,.......,
>.. a playwright, Noel Coward probably wu
hia own pateet admirer. He 8"l1l«I exceedingly
lm~ with the 10und of hi.a own dialogue,
which may explain why many of his plays meem
both talky and overwritten by today'• a~.
Attempu.n, to produce Coward todaj,
direotora muat aecu.re actors with an almost Inborn .nae of the delldoua Irony which pervades auch
worka aa ''Blithe Spirit," "~y Fever" and
perhape hla most popular of all, "Private Lives.''
Thia hurdle la very nearly cleared In the
production of the latter work at the ~wport
Theater Arla Center.
Here, direct.or Patricia Terry has instilled in
her cut the goal of capturing not so much the
Arudlciz.ed ph~ as the utter &0phistlcation
whlCh Coward priied above all el.le. The
newlyweds who ditch their respective mates on ~ir wedding night to rekindle a long-doused
~ simply reek with civility -no matter how
mµch their instincts bid them otherwise.
The second act Ls a virtUal aymphony of
erootlon as Elyot and Amanda repeatedly reign in
their hidden hostilities until finally their
oil-and-water mixture explodes into a knock
down, drag out brawl. It's here that Terry's gifts
for pacing and modulation are most visible.
Andrew Battershell gives a bravura
perlonnance as Elyot, tempering his every word
and gesture for maximum effect. His
rationalization aa he talks hia way out of a flght
with the overbearing husband of ex-wile (sturdily
played by Doug Stauter in the requisite single
dimension) ia one of the high points of the night. >.. Amanda, Barbara Sorenaon strives harder
to achieve the savior faire which comes naturally
to Bat1ershell, and her performance ia somewhat
forced as a result. More successful in a lesser role
is Naomi Myers, whose abandoned bride rings
with clarityand fairly fumes with indignation.
Mary Gouah ii quite effective as the maid,
who apeaka onfy French but geta her point across.
Alex &o.ich'a meUculoualy aymrnetrlcal aettings fit
the period like a velvet glove.
"Private Lives" continues for three more
weekends, playing Thursdays through Saturdays
at 8 p.m. at the Newport Theater Ai:ts Center,
2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach. Call 642-8119
for ticket information.
It's last weekend
for Date Festival
INDIO -County music star Johnny Lee, the
Beach Boy sounds of Papa Doo Run Run and a
costumed Mexican Review are the headline
attractions as the 37th annual' National Date
Festival moves into its final weekend.
Lee, who has a new record on the cbarta,
pined prominence with his "Looking for Love."
fie followed this with such hits as "One in A
Million," "Pick.in' Up Strangers" and "Prisoner of
Hope." He'll perform Friday at 3:30 and 8 p.m.
Riding the crest of a wave of success that's
lasted over 15 years, Papa Doo Run Run will go on
stage Saturday at 3:30 and 8 p.rn. This group has
been a popular attraction at Disneyland.
These shows, plus the Arabian Nights Pageant,
a nightly musical production at 6:30, and the camel
and ostrich races each day at 1 p.m. are free once
inside the fairgrounds. General admission at the
fairgrounds gate is $4, and $2 for children, 5 to 11.
l . ftl car _ _,~--i
2. rtad thl """.::J1.----11
3 .••• plan\S *'
•· ru4 the 11111 ~_,.
!) • ._...-
'· Thi -~----7. ------. ··----·
No matter what
you're doing ,
your hometown
newspaper
The 111111'111
fits In.
5 Academy
Award
Nominations
SOPHIE'S
CHOICE
Andrew Battershell charms
Barbara Sorenson in "Private
Lives" at the Newport Theater
Arts Center.
'West Side Story' sets
extra show tonight
Saddleback College will present· an-
additional performance of the muskal "West Side
Story" tonight at 8 in the college's main theater
on the Mission Viejo campus.
"The demand for tickets was ao great that we
felt we owed it to the community to add another
performance." said college managing director
Brian Donoghue. ,
The show, which opened laal Friday, al8o will
be presented Thunday through Saturday at 8 and
Sunday at 3 p.m. Call 831-4656 for reservations.
*************************
... ~ UAl-0.0.S muu _ ...
-.. ~°""""' .,, .. ,.
*************************
A film as powerful as the feelings
this family discovers.
.hl\tiglt
n
Table
for Five
Im --· .. --'-I'·-··~~ ___ ......,_
A comedy for
the Incurably romantic.
LOVESICK
.. A IMO CC#tll#lt Ml.WI ~-~~o ................ -
THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL
~-
* aARQAIN MATINUS •
..... ., ...... htWUy
Alt ,etfonMneff befOf• l:tO ,M
I~.,_... ln1111 1'ltl ... ......,_,
"'WfT'HOUT A TRACr "' -----
"THe IN iii Y" " -----
"TM LOMe Oii ~ ... -----
""LOYW81CK" -------
t1 ~
.~.::, ---•t11-;·:· •ocv~ ot Coftd~oOd J l • :) : 211/Hl•tllO
•=:J.r '1.ET'S SPEND THE
"TOOT .. " -NIGHT T<>!.,ITHEA" ..., -----------
"THE STING r------
lAICfWOOD C ENTER
~OUTH ..... "
"T .... '°" PIYm" ------
ANAHEIM l•lll'-'f IN
BUE NA PAii ~ • ,f '"
LINCOLN I~ .11N
~------
---
• ~ I , 1, , , • 11 ' ~ ,
·-.. ·---"IOPHIE'I CHOtCE" ----
.. SPfttHQ FEVER" ------·-
untl INTITY"" -----
c:-911-
"V'M~...........
c:-911-
'
.::.:=:t .. "I ........... fUll·~ ... -tAT ............ ..
"THI INTrTY" 111t
fUU.,,..,... ..... .. .. , .... -. ... ... .. .
c dward ~ WES TBR OOK CINEMA
:·: •.. ::·.: •. . •. . 530--140,
,.
SHOE
BIG GEORGE by Varg1I Partch (VI P)
"Now pert11p1 you'll think twice before you 1n1tch
another purse, young min."
PEANl'TS
5'UCE MEEDS HELP!
TO ARMS!!
e
i
I
f
f
I
by Charles M. Schul z
1' NEED HELP! AM
SURROUNDEC 8't' COYOTES !
CANNOT HOLD OUT
MIJCH L~6Ef{ ! "
2 -U
by Brad Anderson
"The money wuted on obedience schools
cannot be taken aa a tax loaf''
by Jeff MacNelly
'0tenoe Coeet OAILY PILOT/Tu.day, Flbtulty 22, 1"3
~ I ~.· GOllll 011 lllDGE ~-------av __ CH--AR_L_E_s_H __ G_O_A_E_N_A_N_o_o_M_A_R_S_H_A_A_lr ______ .................... __ ~~
North South vulnerabl1.
North deal~.
NOITH
t Al
OI UO
0 "94
+KU
WEST EAST
•U • tOH
':'J J U ~AQI
.O J6Z OQIOtU
• AQJ72 • 105 SOVTH
• KQJ874
Ii:> 1oe
0 ACS •eo
Tht b1ddinr'.
\orth lu1 !louU. W1111
I ¥ l'u. ! • Pan
I ~T Pu• 3 + Pa11
Pan f'all>
Oi>tning lcao. ·:
W~ hav1· •lways llrHtK
that lhere> Is no 1urh thing u
1 bllnd openln~ lead-onl~
d11af opening leader1. Here'•
I maaic CIR from tJie rtcenl
World Team Olymplad In
Biarritz, France.
Toward the middle of thtt
lut decadt, 1 pair of young
Scots bepn lo make an Im·
pact on tht Brltbh bridgf•
1cene. and soon bepn win
nang ner' major event 1n
stl!'hl, Ont or them. Michul
RosPnberg, em1gr1Led to
No. York Tht other, Bar
ntt Shenkin. is a stalwart or
Scotland'• 1nt"nat1ona!
Leam.
Shenkln held the Wt1t
card• on lhl1 hand from the
team ovonl. He heard hi•
left·hand opponent open the
biddlnr with one heart and
rebid one no trump over
South'• one apade re1ponte.
South'• lnvltallonal jump t~
three 1p1du wu paned out.
You have all the (acte.
Before reading on, decidt
what you would lead, and
why.
h took only a few
moment'• thought for Shen
kin lo telect the beat attack.
From the bidding it 'Sttmed
thaL, if either opponent had
tne king of club . it w11 more
likel~· lo be dumm.1 . So
Shenkii; ch()I(' to Jeao tn~
queen of t'lut>s!
Not 1urpr111nJI). dfflartf '
eltl(tl'd to dutk thr rirtl trtc~
In dummy. Shenk1n contl11
ued by c:11hlnA' thfi ue ~(
clubs and giving h11 partner a
club rurr. Since the ctefudtn
atlll had to C'Ome 10 two he-arc
lrtcka by f~rc~. that wu
down ont.
Ht• de'" e ...... &.M
.... t .,.., *" ca..n.. c ....................... a
e.,r .r "W .... 0,.-. .
Lea41," Had 11 .85 Ct
"GerH·L--'a." eatt .. lMi
... .,.,.,, P.O. au Ut.
NerwMCI. f'\.J. t7Ma. Maki
e1Mell1 peyahle 1.9 N .. .: . •
pepert.b.
D•::\:\IS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum Tl:MBLEWEED8 by Tom K. Ryan
• HOIOKOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
Wedaetday, Fdtrury %3
ARIES (March 21-ApriJ 19): Genuine bargains
can be located In antiquarian boob1orel and shops.
Views are verified, valuable information ii received
concerning property, taxes and possible sales or
purchases.
TAURUS (April 20..May 20): You're provided
key that opens d oor previously shut tlgbt.
Individual who appeared indiUerent could now
become a valuable ally. You'll experience surge of
popularity.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): 'Your signature
may be requittd on document releasing UBeta, cash.
Focus on Income, payments, collections, ability to
locate needed material. Timing Is Important ,
elemept of surprise favon your eUorts.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Excitement
replaces eruiul -be ready fOI' change, travel and
fresh opportunities. Vitality returns, timlna la on
target and you'll make right move at crucial
moment.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Major domestic
adjugt:rnent is highlighted. Family member makes
Intelligent ooncesion. Be gracious, diplomatic and
acknowledge that truly there are two sides to
consider. Mystery will be eolved.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Focus on romance,
glamour and a clandestine conference which atfecu
future policies. Cancer, PilOel and another Virgo
figure prorniMntly.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 22): Emphasis on
business, career, dealings with 1overnmental
agencies and persons in positions of authority.
Streas organization, responsibility and wil1.incrle9I
to Invest In yoor own talents.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Burden la
removed, progress la made and project can be
completed. Focua on ideallam, spiritual values,
educational pursui&a, pomible ~IJahlna enterprile
and travel SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): New
approach could atir.ct enthualutic supporters,
Investors. HJchl.llht independence, oriainality and
wiJJJnine-to let to heart of matters.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): imphalia on
legalltlel, l'OOperaUve efforta, public relaUonl and
marital 1tatua. Keep t'ftOIUtiOl\I concmUnc diet,
nutriUon, medical-dental appointments.
AQOWUS (Jan. 20-l'eb. 18): What appwed
to be a defeet can be tranlfonned Into Yk:1ory.
Cowotken. OChen who Iha.re bllic COllklenll will
become a111'8.
Pl8CBI (Feb. 19-March 20): Good lunar a.pect hlahlilhli cre.tivity, runantic ln....., lfininc.nt man,. Md partidpeUon ln 11*'\llatiw vwttun.
by George Lemont
'
by Kevin Fagan
FOR 8ETTEa ea rea ••aNll
Wli.U.,Wttrr 00 '/oJ lM ... BUi Yoo OOHT
1H1HKOF MY PW.e, t'Wt4e f\ 9e.D -~
5'S '? CtW\"'8 ... ~ peN
A1'9.a!
-
,...--------------~------1111111111:~--~··
by Ferd & Tom Johnson-
SMMA ! CAN'T you
HoLD OFF ON THE DAY1S
C0uPoNS TILL r FINISH
WITH THE DAY'S CRISIS?
by Harold Le Ooux
THE
FA~llLt'
CIBCl'8
ty Bil Keane
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/TUMday. Pebtuaty H . 1883 :
·Francis Farmer has •
ianother side on TV
Jly FRED ROTHENBERG l#T ...... Wrtter
NEW YORK -Televwion remaket many
okt,p>_Yiel. but lt'1 rare when a TV produc:Uon
~ _!e.ture fllm are releued at about \he aarne ttme. Comparilona between "Francs" and CBS' "WW There Really Be a Morning?" therefore are
ln otder. What the TV movie hued on the tragic Ule
of ICtrell Francet Fanner 1acka in depth of
n ii oft.et by pater attention to detail and
IDo aUon. The reault la a 1t.ronaer understanding
o relationahip between Farmer and her
bltt4r, domineering mother.
Baaed on Fanner'• 1972 autobtosraphy, "Will
There Really Be a Morning?" abo concentrates mote than "Frances" on Farmer's upbringing than tler downfall. Some especially wrenching •c~mes
tha( OQCW' late in the theatrical film -notably,
the f&raphic portrayal of Fanner's treatment ln a
menlal hospital -are treated in a lesa sensational
wa~ in the CBS movie, channel 2 at 8 tonight.
Suaan. Blakely f.lays the starring role on CBS.
Altl:iough she doesn t match the soulful depth of
Jelll6ca Lange's performance in "Frances," she is
no alouch, and her Frances la a powerful and con~ing character.
,A major theme in Frances' life is the
lnfl~ence of her mother (Kim Stanley In the
thMtrical film, Lee Grant in the TV movie). The
CP 3 version focuaes more on their love-hate re~!onahip, dating to Frances' early childhood. ='She courted the .limelight while I hid in the
wa," Frances aays ln narration on the TV
e. &th films establish I .Ullam Fanner' a
culpability in pushing Frances into a film career
she 'didn't want and couldn't handle. It's clear that
Lilllan enjoyed Hollywood's trappinp more than
Frances. .
Ullian Farmer's desire for self-gratification ls
clear ln both pictures, but the CBS movie
emphasbes another motivational facet of her
character -her unwilllng:ness to let the child 82·
"Hollywood is cloeer than New York," she tells
Frances. who argues for a stage rather than movie
career.
Why this brtaht and creative youna woman
allowed herMlf to be domlna-.d In thil way la not
totally clear ln either p6cture. Jt'1 evident from ~
CBS ven!on that her lather'• week-kneed
relaUonahtp with hla wife influenced Fanner'•
own behavior. _
. "She'll hwnWate the hell out of you," ll:rnemt
Fanner (Royal Dano) tella her dau,hter ln the
CBS movie, "but you'll come blek OI' more ... And
Franoel doel, over and owr apln.
The two fllml don't vary much ln plot.
Francee powa up ln Seattle and plna national
atienlion at an early age by wtnntnc a conie.t
with' an eauy about the death of GOd. She
eventually tuma to actJ.na, and achlevee lmmed1ate
aucceu in motion plcture1 ln the 19308.
But Frances, a perfection.lat ma Hollywood
corrununity_ that 1pecial1zee too often ln fMt-food
fi.lml, rebell apinlt the ayatem. She f
hapJ>{ne91 for a while on Bro.dway, atanl:.,..ln
"Golden &y" and 1uffering a trawnati af
with the lhow'1 playwright, Clllford ta.
John Heard la a l&l'CUtic, udlatic ta, who
explolta Frances' movie fame for h.ia own
purpoees. In ''France9,'' Odeta la treated
sympathetically.
After she ieaves Broadway for Hollywood,
Frances' life deteriorates in alcohol, clrup, a failed
ma.ni.age, bouts with the law, oontinulni oonf1ictl
with her mother and a aeries of eevere
psychological breakdowns, resulting ln
commitment to mental lnatitutiona.
The theatrical movie dwella more on her
drastic treabnent and the inhumane conditiona.
AB ii the case in any drama baaed on ree.llty,
it's hard to know what's real and what'• fiction.
One main character ln "Frances" never tW'DI up
tonight. The man who loves Frances and even
springs her from the hospital on one occasion was
a supportive thread ~t "Frances."
Perhaps it's television 1 need for neat endingl,
-or just Farmer's pert0nal view of the truth, but
"WW There Really"'Be a Moritlng?" reaches a
more hopeful raolution.
S11188n Blakely (left) portray• film 1tar Frances Farmer (rilht) in
"Will There Really Be a Morning?" on f{NXT (2) at 8:00 tonight.
----(C)lil<W'E
• lal'll:mtr NITWOM -1M-NOii l~..,_'MlWfl _,, __
l&Cfvl.INIWI -1:00--7:10-11.w.1.i.r~ 12 ON THE TOWN ltllMCNOll-Qt FNA.Y FBJO Titl Ah 0 dDNI -1:1f-LAVSINE a 8*UY a HNllY.O (ll)WOYIE COflPNff 11•1!18AEPORT r~~~ Pll LATBIGHT -1::ao-
MAOAME'8 PUCE (%)MOYIE 11 NIC NlWI CMlllGHT WICAP IC CICHNATI LOYINQ FMNDINID YOU TMNK YOU GOT
TICTACOOUQH P9HCT CXU'lD noa.11
MACHEi. i L.EHRE1' REPORT -u::ao--l:OO-
MAGIC OF OfCOMTM 11=--IL~taf!WAT04 PAINTltQ EVEMNO I LIE DETtCTOR .MOYIE -uo-YOU AllCID FOfl rT ~'°"" -ta-88NEWI Clll lil<W'E Cll>MCMI L' ..... QWl.JE'8 ANOB.I -1.'00-IB•CJllW.NWU BGtfT 4 ENOUGH 1 • G <I11£.00 g MOYIE MCUJI ~QWJIU4TAUCI THf&'I COflPNff QtTHEA-A NI'# DAY 11 llJIN HAWAIFIVH !II HAPP¥ DAYI -tl:OO----OW..EMY ~ 1---illAHUNT WNTNJ FOfl A MAION .,.M.IWWM u~WON) Cl)MCMI CllNEWI IL AICNl!WIQ -a11-
NICNEWI ONI l1IP IEYONO (Jl)MOYIE--
ANOTHER LR -a::ao--ti:»--as-eMOYE 19 LAV!ME &--.cf ~NIGHTwmtDAW> (J) ,Nnt.
-l::IO-QWl.JE'8 ANQ8.J _.._
·1:CAVITT UEDEIB:IOR IQU\11 I'.., -t:OO-TOM COTTU: "'cu• TQlll(I THI~ ' CONTBllOAARY HEALTH r--LCM. u.tlDICM I'm.I .MOYIE 1-THNl'8 COWINft llll"A'l"H IAMlY ...... >:M!llCM !'LAY"°'* lee ffmfllte ........ la TV lAI :::aTHIATM NOYA ~,Al.MU. QWUI Q4AWl.ll TM.Kl (%)MOYIE CHAlllL LISTINGS -1:GO--t::ao-== 11•101 9 KNXT (CBS) (MtlCOOCfM.I
tWft~YI MWM M0A~ 9 KNIC INB(I COl Oft.TV
' --Q ---9 I( T LA (Ind, I rz: Z·TV ., LLir'-£ .KABGCABCI (Ill HBO
9 KFMe(CBSI IGi CClnetne•I
THiil.LAW.. e ICHJ•TV (Ind.I (J) CWORI NV., M.Y.
e KCST IAIKI •QI IWTUI I Ul'l~ ..... e 1<TTV "'"·I 1111~1 TMIWlllMH e l<COP· TV Clnd. I rtl ,.,....,,,., ~MACllOONCaT e ICCET IPllS) ............
9 t<OCI INll e CCAMNewl...._,.I
8U8JEOT
PROPOSAL
...
..
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Newport BMch, In conjunction wfth Call~ornla Department of
Treneportatlon (CAL TRANS) and Federal Highway Admlnlatratlon
(FHWA) la planntng to wtdeti Pactflc COMt Highway between MacArthur
Boulevard Md the Upper Newport Bay Bridge to alx travel lanea; and to
r..trtpe Pedftc Cout Hlghwey betww DoYw Drive and Newport
Boulevard. Thie work la neceeaary to provide additional capacity for
motorl1t1 utUlzlng thll coutal faclllty.
The pubflc heettng wtll gtw you an opportunity to talk about the project
wtth CAL TRANS end City lt&tfa before the nnaJ design II picked. The
tentattw echedule for the purchue of land for right of way and for
conatruotlOn wtll be dlecu111d, and CALTRANS' 1taff wlll explain
'91ocatk>n ~ avattable for re.klenta moYed by the projeet.
From no..untHAprtL15, 1983,.YOUJT\U8"-.tnte9_..areport.of ~he _
entlclpated envtronmental effect• of conatruotlon {Draft EIS), and other
Information on the propoMd widening project. You may queetlon
CAL TRANS and Ctty repreeentattvee about the project. They wfll be
~ Monday through Friday from 8:00 Lm. to 4:00 p.m. at two
lttee. The first le the Pubtlc Workl Department, Newport Beach City
H.al, 3300 Nftl>Ort Boulevard, N...,,ort Beach, Callfornla. The second
llte la at CALTAANS, Project Development 8, 120 South Spring Street,
Loe Angelee, Ctlfffomla.
tf you can't ettend the ~. you can Mnd your written comment• unt" Aprff 15, 1913, to K.D. St ..... CALTRANS, Environmental Planning
Branch, 120 South Spring Street, Loa Angeles, CA 90012.
WHEN The hMring weal be Wedneeday, March 23, 1983 at 7:30 p.m. at the City
& WHERE Coundl CNmber, 3300 NftJ,,ort Boulevard, Newport Beach, Call!ornla.
CONTACT For more Information •bout thll project, call City of Newport Beach,
Pubflc Work• Oepw1ment, at (714) e..c>-2281 or CALTRANS at (213)
820-3210.
F YOU CARE • • • COME!
TUESDAY, 'II. 22, 1913
STOCKS
(
C4 CllBSIFllD C6
Road tests
set tonight
CJF play offs conti n 'T
8y ROGER CARLSON or-.Dellr,......,.
The aecond round of the CIF baaketbalJ
playoffa 1et under way tonight (7:30) on four fronta
involving area prep tean\s -with three taking to
the road, t
Only Sunath League representative OCean
View remain.a In the immediate area, at F.diton
High, and the Seahawka are decided underdogs
Tonight's games
4-A
Huntington Beach vs. Camarillo at Alo Mesa
High (Oxnard)
Mater Del va. Ocean View at Edison
3-A
Estancia vs. Dominguez at Lynwood High
Corona del Mar vs. Cerritos at Gahr High
Capistrano Valley vs. Foothill at Santa Ana
High
(all games at 7:30)
against the 4·A's No. 2 seed -Angelus League
champion Mater Dei.
Sea View Leaj(Ue co--champions Estancia and
Corona del Mar are both visiting rome Dona -
Estancia tangling with Dominguez in a game
changed today from Compton College to Lynwood
High and Corona del Mar claahing with CerrU.oe at
. yalu: High Schocil ln.1.:A~,!iOll; --. Ml!l!lil• Huntington Beach, the Sunset League kingpin,
has the longest trip -venturing to Ventura County
to duel Camarillo in another 4·A game.
. Spring is in t he air
h's back to basics at spring training for (clockwise) Yankees'
Goose Gossage,. Dodgen' Burt Hooton, Mih ¥Jukee's Rollie Fingen
and Seattle hurlen Ed Vande Berg (left) and Bill Caudill.
....
J im Greenfield
,Rustlers want home ~dvantage
"We either walk in or back in."
That's Golden West College buketball coach
Jim Greenfield'• quick analyala of hia Rustlers'
drive toward the SbauahnemY Playoffs.
Golden West, 7-6 and tied with three other
teams for third place in the South Coast Conference
race, cloee out the regular ae8801'l tomorrow night at
home against rival Orange Coast
And while the Ruatlera have dropped three
straight, nothing, not even Coach Tandy Gillia'
Pirates, can keep Golden West from advancing to
the playoffa.
That'• becaWle the Rustlers are the only team
to have beaten a higher·place team, namely
Cerritos, which has a 12·1 record. blemished only
•by Golden West'a 68·55 victory back in the first
round.
Santa Ana and Fullerton are tied with the
Rustlers at 7 ·6, and even lf all three teams win
(which would mean leCOnd·place Mt. San Antonio.
M , would have to l~ to the Dona), Golden West
would be oon1idered the KCOl'ld·place f.lnlaher. And
that means the home-court advantage for the Shaupne.y.
Should the Ruatlen loee, and Santa Ana.
Fullerton and Cyprea ( 6·7) win, the Ruatlen
would atil1 ,dvMOe over the Chargera becaUle of
their win oVer Cenitoe.
Orance Coaat, meanwhile. anapped an
etaht-pme 1oeins streak Saturday nlaht with U\
overtime victory over Santa Ana. Tan dy Gillis
Mater Dei boasta a 24·2 record and starts a
huge quintet -akin to playing a five.forward
offenae.
Matt l:Seeuwsaert, an All-CIF choice a year ago
when he was a aophomore, is the catalyst to the
Monarchs' offense with his point guard duties,
which develops into a scattering offense.
Camarillo ia the Marmonte League
co·champion with a 20·4 record and revolves
around the play of 6·2 guard Gil Banales.
Doounguez preeents a balanced attack. bent on
an up-beat tempo. The Dons a.re 18·5 overall.
Cerritos ia another one·man gang -in the
fonn of 6-2 aenior suard Joe Yemak, who enters
with a 21.6 900fi.na average .
Sullivan honor
goes to Tabb ,
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Distance runner
Mary Dedter Tabb. wbo baooke seven world records
and 10 American standarda last year, received the
Sullivan Award last night as the U.S . Amateur
Athletic Union's top athlete for 1982.
The winner of the prestigjous award, preeented
annually since 1930 by the AAU, was announced at
an awards dinner at the l.ndianapolla Convention
Center.
"This ia the moat prestigious award an athlete
can win," said Tabb, 24, who attended Garden
Grove'High and who now lives in Eugene, Ore.
Tabb aet women's world records for the indoor
mile three times last year, with her best cloc.k:inc at
4:20.5. During a 41-day span starting last June 5,
Tabb .et three world and lix American records. The
world marks were in 5,000 meters, 3,000 met.era and
the mile.
Among the other nominees was diver Greg
Lougania, 23, member of the Miaaion Viejo
Nadadorea, and a Sullivan finalist for the fourth
straight year
CIF road contests • IS finally over Streak
• • a-wait area -women
Edi.eon High has a date with
the No. 4-ranked team in the CIF 4·~ division tomorrow night in
the aecond round of women 'a bafletball playoff action.
The Chargers, 46-40 winners
over Plua X Saturday night, take
to the road to face Santa Barbara
which bouts a 21·3 record and (
I • PCAA tabs
UNLV stiu-
No. 4 ranking in the CIF.
Meanwhile, two other area
aurvlvon in the 3·A playotfa,
l'.lltanda and Corona del Mar, are
alto on the road tomorrow night
lor 9et.'Olld·round contesta.
E1tanda, 22·3 and ranked
fourth in CIF. ia at Empire
Leaaue runnerup Eaperanza.
Corona del Mar will vlalt
MVentb·ranked Walnut.
Eatancla advanced to th e
IM!CODd round with an~ 68·39 d~ over Padfk S8t~J '
.niaht. The Sea Ktn11,
mean•hlle, are ranked 11th in ,
3-A., even ~ they pc.-a
better record than Walnut (lM),
The Se• KJn&.:::'apd to
diepm of a.rt ... M-42
even-thouab 1everal of 1he .,a.,_. wen bettllna the nu.
Should the S... Kl"8I a-t plll
Walnut, they would thin ba• to
face the winner of the ~
Valley -Alemany cont Ht.
AJMnany II raMld MCOnd in 3-A
wl&b a 22-2 NCOl"d. . ,, i• •
T••wnc::~)
~ "'*l AM~• .laNln; .,... .... ...... ~ =:t.:.T...:.'\...~~~ ...... ,.., . ............. II.,., ... at tM ~......_.et ,---.: ...... ~,p;:··~~ e Mt ..... .........
&..-...• .
But HB wrestler Gurbuz has the cred entials
Bv CURT SEEDEN ,, .. ...., ........
HWlti.neton BMch High wrestler Bob Gurbuz ~ to have h.ia hands full lut Saturday when
the CD' Southern Sectlcn'a top .. A wt't!ltlen got
together at Cypnea ColJne.
Gurbuz, a 170-pound 8efl.ior, carried a 31-mat.ch
unbuten ltreek into the CIF flnala, and he knew
U.t If ewrythlna went ~ to hb schedule,
the 170-pouftd title match wou.kfhaw pi«ed him
apiNl the defend.inc state champ.
ahead. For Instance, there's the topic of college,
which is n,ht on the horizon for the 17-yea.r-old.
IN GURBUZ'S CASE, college la the firat step
towards medical 1ehool. And hia first clio6ce right
now appeen to be the University of California al
Berkeley. That'a cau.ea a amall problem, however.
YOU see, Cal doesn't fiela a wn!9'1.ina team
anymore.
"My parenta would like me to continue
Wl'fll\.lina ln coUeae,'' admits Gurbuz. ''I ..Uy don't
know what rm ao&nl to do riaht now."
Notee h.ia cmch: .. l~a aotnc to come down to
who encoUJ"a199 him the most. "Bob'• t.binklQI
about bea>miftl a doctor eo he'I Joo~ at the
echoola with the belt prolJ'UNI and then juat
aren't that many IChoole in the UC ayst.em that ltW
haw a wnltl1nc ~·" ColJeliate indMvon -'de, GurtMn ltiU he.
aome other mauen atlll to attend to -, like
Saturday'• Mattera. A f ter the Ma1&en, the
. campetiUon movee down to San DllF lot the CD'
,.._~ he ... Gurbul will brUW wtth him
eocne ~ cndentiall. Mb ..: ftM pa.. at
the M~ ellht-way towMy; tint .... at the ll·a..m II Camino &oumey; tlnt plMe at UM
l'l·filln ... a.a..a .. liDUmlJ ad fin& pa-. -MVP ol th9 1e.-.. Caa,an ~·
OlUUI AChJAU.Y LOIT ane matlltili
Im ,_,., but thin dlllt ~ before he wmt to a
IUlllllMI' wreidlaie __, Wl*h OOWIWI mare_.
lhlnJult ....... ''Tb• camp wu eoacluctecl by the Iowa
UniwNtJ •••~ ...... " Ouitiui "11P'0 be ·~--.._.. w14ll 11....._NO&..,
411111 -~..,.. a Ill II iDlldaodll but U.., allO ...._,,.._. .... ,......... ...
Cl
Meet Don Sutton:
Aerobics fanatic
Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Don
Sutton, who makes hia home in South
Orange County durtna the off-eeuon,
told local reportera recently he hu
become an aerobica enthuai.ut.
The former Dodger said he worlu out at a
fitness club ln Lake Forest five daya a week,
claiming the hour-long workoutl are the best
conditioners he has yet t.o diacover.
fund-raising
YMCA.
"The first Ume I watched
them working out I said, 'I'm
a professional athle~. I can do
that,' " obeerved Sutton. "So
then. I tried It. For the first
two weelu, I was dying."
Sutton, who llvel with
his wife and two children in
the Nellie Gall Ranch
development, recently
appeared at a press
conference to kick off a
campaign for the Saddleback
The veteran pitcher, traded to the Brewers
last season from Houston, was instrumental in
helping Milwaukee win the American Leuue
pennant. ~
Sabres gain 4-4 tie
Paal Cyr 'a 25-foot shot with 10 Iii seconds remaining lifted the Buffalo ,
Sabres to a 4-4 National Hockey
League tie with the New Jersey
Devils last night. The Devils t.ook a 4-2 lead into
the third period, but Buffalo rallied behind
Glllea Hammel'• second goal of the game and
Cyr's shot. The Sabres were down 2-0 lea than
six minutes into the game . . . In the only
other NHL game last night, goals by Peter
-lhnacak and Terry Martha in the final period
carried Toronto to a 4-2 deciaion over ptttlburgh.
U.S. pentathlon
A special Olympic tribute will be made to
members of the U.S. modem pent.athlon team
Friday night at the Balboa Bay Club.
The event Is being held to rai8e funds for the
Modem Pentathlon Junior World Championships to
be held at Coto de Caz.a, Oct. 15, 1983.
Robert Nieman, the 1979 modem pentathlon
world champion, and Mike Burley, a three-time
national champion, will he.dllne the fundral.aer,
according to Wally Gayner, ~h.airpel'90n for the
Olympic event. .
· "Our goal is to raille $35,000 ao we can put on a
first-dasa World Championship event at Coto de
Caz.a," Gayner said. "The eyes of the world will be
NllC ll)TIC(
Six gain OC
Hall of Fame
CarlOt J>alomlno and Brian Goodell were
amona the 1port1 pe1'110naJIUea Inducted ln'° the Or&l\fl County Sparta Hall of i'UM lMl n&lht at
the Anaheim Convention Center.
Goodell. who Plned fame u an Olym• aold medaUlt ln \be 40(f' and l ,6()0.met,er fnelllyle ,...
at t.ht 1976 Olympk Ounee ln Montnel with ~PVT" ....
record perfonnaQCel, la from M.'-lon VWjo.
Palom.lno, a araduace of W•tmbwt« HiMh,
won the world welterweight boxina c:hamplonahip
1n une.
Othel'l_ inducted lnto the hall included Del
Crandall, Blaine Nyt, David Meyen and Gavvy
Cravath, the latter poethumoualy.
PalomiJlo wa• Introduced by famed rln1 l
announcer Jimmy Lennon with at~ flouriah.
"WMn I heard hll voice, I kept waltina few the bell I to rinl." Palom1no Mid. •
Three (Jood Guy award• were presented
includln\. one to retired Daily PUot 1porta writet'
The Chicago White Sox kick off spring training with the help
ol aerobics inatructor Lynn Iannone.
"::'~~·TUI ~~: J~ ~n~. ~~ I
CAlllot PAt.OMIHO -Wortd Coelf Colleee: Mltle llluMI. Cel I -..M1Qt11 clwimpton lrom 1871 It• Flllenon: Pr~ OCM'8
throuo n 1878. Attended DeCtncH end lrtan Downing.
WeltmlMter Htoh and Lono 8Mcll Celtlornla Moall.
Trojans nip Cal
LOS ANGELES -Guard C.edrlc m Bailey'• 20-foot jumper with three
aeconda remain.in8 lilted use to a
55-53 Paclfic-10 Conference colleae
baaketball victory over the Univeralty of
CallfornLa Jut nJaht.
Wayne Carlander, an Ocean View High
&a~uct, had 14 PQintl and eeven rebounda while ey added 12 pointl and Jamee McDonald a<>t
10 for the Trojam. who railed their record t.o 9-3
in the Pac-10 and 15-7 overall. ...
Frank Avaloa had 19 pointl and Dave Butler
got 10 to lHd the Bean, who fell t.o 4-8 and
11-11.
The Bean led 43-37 in the second half
befC>re USC ran off six atraight points t.o tie the
acore at 43 with 10:35 left, the first of aix tie
1eores the rest of the way.
Cal pulled even the final time.. •t .53 on a
baaket by Avaloa with 1:34 to play.
USD selects Fogerty
Brtu Fopny, a wtnn1ng blah • school coach in one of Southern ·
California'• toughest leaauea, has
been named head coach at the
Univer:::'.:! San Dleao. Foprty. 32, replaces BW W , who recently resigned after the
school drew a one-year NCAA probation for
illeaal financial aid to aome of the players.
F<>1arty guided St. Francia High in La Canada t.o
the CIF B6g Five flayoffa in each of h.ia four
years at the IChoo • . . The dtrector of the
NCAA'a F.nforcement Department said yesterday
he ia aatltfied Benclael Walker did not aiSJl a
profe11ional contract with the New Jeraey
Generals of the United States Football League
' Television, radio
TV: No ~entl ICheduJ,ed.
RADIO: Hockey -. Bolton at ~. 7:20 p.m., KPRZ (1150).-
ttMe, now an actor. FOOTIALl. -High lchoot·
1 IAIAH GOODELL -Won gold lttvt ltutrltln, Strvtte:
rnecWt In the 1,500 and~ CommunlCY ~ lr1lln Hotlle. frttatylt al th• tt11 Olymptc Fullerton: Collett: Todd Ditton.
1
.
o.i-In Montrtlll. Swam for !ht Long 8ttctl ltaw. Profeaelonal:
MIHlon Vlt jo Nadadortt and St-Otetro. DtnWf Bronool. UCLA. IASKETBAU. -Htafl ldlool:
DEL CAAHOALL-c..ight 0\"11' Ri chard Cha ng. ~dlton :
6,000 "'*' ...,. gemee, -' Community ~ Andre lrnlth,
of tht m with lh• l.tllwlUkH Flllltnon: COlleOt: K~ Mao-. lr1vt1, Hit 178 home rune and UC trvlnt and 1..on Wood. Cal won lour OOld Qk;o.iae. State Fulter1on.
8LAU(E N'\'E -Starting IPIOIAL IPOATI -HIOh
ottenalvt guard for Iha DallH School: Merk Junllwman, Lo•
Cowt>oyt lrom 1Hf thfOUQll 1871. Alemttoa (crou country):
Pleyed In tlWet ~ 8owll and Oommuntty COlltgel Kim cw.po,
two pro bowie. Cypr-(croee counttYl: ~
DAVID MEVIM -8lat'f9d on Kath)' Van Wrll. Cal State
John wooden'• UCLA NCAA Fullerton (IOftbtll); Ameteur: Mety CINmplol..,_ tMlft In 1875. Later Otc:lk« Tabb (::::ot111lonel: ~ with Mllw-*M lkH:U In OMM Alleon (
lht NBA. COACHES -Auott Oa.rrldo.
OAVVV CAAVATH -Av.time Ctl 8l1t1 Fullwton (baMbtlll); Hll
N1tlon11 L••ou• home run Sherbeck, Fullerton Coll•O• chemplon wllh Phlladelphta. (footbaltt: Bobby [)y9, Cal 8..,e
Helped t~ win tht 1815 WM<I l•k•rafleld (bHketball): Ted 8tr111 Hlwlancl, UC trW1e (wet« po!O). HU~I OP 1111 0000 GU'( AWAA08 -CtlUCk
BASHALL -High School: e.nner, Arden Ferme: Howard L Mlttt Wiiie, Fullerton; CommunllY Handy, Orange COMI Delly Piiot.
Basketball scores
team members'~ to be lauded c:r
USC 65, calllomle 53 ........
.... Bollen Coll. ee, CoMec:tlc:ut eo
Canlllu9 71, Brooklyn Coll. • ~
Colgate 71, Armt 14 Fora11am 63. Lono laland u. ee Mert.t ee. St. Franc*, tU. 11 Tempe 13, Monmouth 12
Vwmonl 72, Orax.i 14 on Orange County th1a fall becawie th1a ia the only
world champiooah.lp event that will be held on an
official 1984 Olymp6c venue site. lt'a going to be a
real challenae for im."
Nieman became the tint American t.o win a
world champiomhip ln the modem pentathlon.
Previously, Nieman had participated as a member
of the 1976 U.S. Olympic modem pentathlon team.
and abo waa on the 1978 U.S . fencing team that
competed ln the world championships.
Nieman la currently an architect ln San
Antonio. Tex., and plant to compete in the 1983
World CbamC1blp1 and for the 1984 U.S .
modem penta team.
1-11
l111f-l-01r .... ., .. ..,, .........
IDCEJES BENZ
IOW ROYCE
fOUll
MASEIATI
Cl.DE
BMW CONVERT.
flJSTANG CONVERT.
VW CONVEITB.£
LIOU
CADU.AC
cmmt
Fmto
pl4) 650·1180
Burley haa been on the U .$. modern
pentathlon team a record 10 times, beairinina in
1973, and haa been a member of two U.S. Olympic
teaml -1976 and 1980.
The Modem Pentathlon consists of five eventa
that take place over a period of four coNeCUtive
daya. The events include rid.inc a hone over a
pre-aet obstacle course, awlmmtng 300 yarda,
fencing (agalnat all other competitora), ahooti.ng a
.22 caliber pistol over a 25-meter course, and
runn1.na over a four-kilometer cro. country oou.ne.
TiCketa for the dinner are $50 per peraoo. $500
for donora, ,1,000 for patrons, and '5,000 for major
spomora.
Wlc:hlte SL 72, New Mexico St.
70
._.. Flllflllgh Ok*lnlon M , WIO'*
Tn.-CMttanf'IOOga 52, Furman 51 17
Georgia 80, Florida 15 Boelon U. N , P9lwl SL ea
o.otgla Tech 63, Appalachian 81. '-ler"e 80, M~ 53 St.72 ......_.
~ 12, N.C,.Qlar1otte 73 Notre D11me IO, Akron 45
Old Dominion 12, South Flortda Detroit 71, St. Loull 15
74 IMlnoll St. 74, W. T-II. 59
Tulane 88, Clndnolll 54 Loyola. Ill. N . XIMar, Ohio 15
MaraNll 110, VMI 81 SW MleacM1 12. E. .,_ 75 ~ & Maty 75. Ht\')' 65 IH•ow ...
L.tdllw St N , Mii 1'rrls:!li SI. T-Cflrletlan 51, ~ 47
73 Ttua A&M 86, 81 Mery't ,
8. Mlllllltppl 15, W. ltllnotl 88 T-71
SW Loull6aN 74, 81Meon 72 N. T .... St. 75. LOullllna Tedi
New °"""' 10, Mlddll T-. 11 .. Orel~ 76,.,..., .. •:: · •rpj M , Alabame 112 Ev_.... 441, Oklltloma Cit)' 46
Paine Webber
wants to
·~ren ·~ur
tax burilen.
If you 're heavily taxed and concerned
about inflation, you should listen in on
our talks on Tux Favored Investment.s.
We'll discuss:
Insured Tax Shelters
Real Estate ~
Municipal Bonds
Join mat our free semina&
Time: Wednesday, February 23 at 7:30 p.m.
Place: The Sheraton Newport
4545 MacArthur Btvd.
Newport Beach, CA 92660
Time: Saturday, February 26 at 9:30 a.m.
Place: Plaza de Cates
4081 Birch St.
Newport Beach, CA 92660
Refreshments will be served.
10.253 10.9~3 Tp be sure of a aeat, send In the coupon below for a·
reeervatton. We want you to take a load off your feet
aa well •• your taxes.
Annual perc...,. ...-Bfllctfft 1nnual yteld ..... ._. ... ................ a... .... _ ................ .... ....,.. ..... a .... .... (714),....11 J
:· ...... Afttta ftll'UIOA Y'I M9'A. Tl
I ( .... ....,~-....)
_,, IUCI. I IWiong.
Aoody A.II 1s1 ...... 1 11 20 4 eo 3 IO f1nOtl 1~.,.., s.eo 2 eo , • c.t.bono• (Plotoel 8 eo Aleo roceo: GOO<lbye J v .. RoYlll tludaon. I 1 Col'potllo f'-. AA Curren!, In-Chol Time I 08 3/6
UCOMO IUCI, I· 1118 "'"" t-Wtry ZMllhe lllo'oC•rronl • eo 4.00 2.to Jenn"-tShoemlkorl 1 eo 5 40 Jo Jo Olmaaalo (Podrou) 4 40
Aleo rooid. Flgellenn. Low Snow, Aprll
Oloty, 8tonL9 Mllfk•I. I'm G..nneoete...,,
Ttm.· I 44 116
II OM.Y OOUlaLI (7-1) paid SJ9 20 .,..., tuca. 5 ,, 1uriono1
NoUW Sleppor IT Oto) 0 40 4 eo 3 40
WOllcl Aulot (McCeuon) 3 40 2 90
' Frltky PurohaM (Llpt\aml 4 80
Alto roced Senior Sonalor Angolflah, ....,.·,vow T1e1<a1 nm. 1.18
.. lllACTA 14· 1) paid 172 SO
, FOU«TH IUCI. 8 lurionga ~ (Aomerol 10 eo 4.eo 3 eo ~ LonoloGI (Ollehou ... .,..I 4 40 3 40
Too COICI I PioiWI s 20 Alto reoad Wonoora Navarceuo.
81rllluov11, Som Crow, Jell Seti Joe Tlmol0941
~ IUCE. One mllo
Ml Novro (Mcewron) S 80 3.40 3 00
·-, l.lndo'1 Brother (o.tahoulMyel 4.80 3 80
loo Flow (Men) 10 40
Al•o rocod Oollara. Ira A Sham
Conn-Kin, Chargeur. Smuggl•r'1 GolO. AollnOO, AO Men
Time: 1.34 4/6.
• UACTA (4·7) paid sse 00
MXTM !UC.. 1·1118 rnllol.
CMled IStloomel<etl 4 40 3 40 3 20 , Bold Frond (o.tahouMayel 4,00 3 20 Tlmborjaek (TOtO) 4 eo
'" Alllo fllCOd· SUM ConlUMO, EdOlo'a ...... o. Prlnoo Apel-, Sc:uM Plollae. WoNIChO. Mltloda, L• Fur. London Crou, 8eldate FIMI.
Tlfno 1 43 215
MVUfTit IUCE. One mile Cualll«te IOll'\My91 1 1 40 3 eo 2 eo
KonoWllh IMGCerronl 3.60 2 eo The C:.Olilln (ShOOm.akor) 3.40
Al•o ,.aceo· Erptodoo, Aau Pen\ng.
0...0ly,Alghetl.
Timo 1 $115
.. HACTA (4.,'ll paid $81.60
12 l'tCIC ~ 17·4-2-..-0-41Dald123~~22 00 with~ nlrl9 """"ff>9 llclcot1 (llll ,__, .., PQ
Sia con101111on patO $204 40 wllh 341
winning OC:kOll (l!Ye ,__,
llOHTM IUCE. I·'.\ mtlee on turl
Peiorln 1s1>oernu.or1 8 eo 4.ao 4 oo
W•lom (Mc:Carron) 8,20 4 40
~•(~I 4 80
w~·• tournement , .. o.llloM) ,.,..,... .......
$)'Mt tfentlll IW•I Oer"*"I) do! 8abiM Slmmonda (ltllly) ... 2, IM>, CatllOrlN T onYlor
(Franco) o.i. Ann KtyotN.111 (U.8.). e-2. 7-4: ~ Sukovo (Crocl\Ollovllll•I def .klllo H111rlngton (U 8 I. 7-5, I-~. Iva BvdllOYI ICnc:llolloYal<lo! o.1 ~ .__ tu a ~ , ... S-2 (dof""'11
Women'• tournaim.nt , .. .......,,_.,....,., ,.,..,....... .......
a.-ty ~ (Soulll Atnco) clef Gr-K"" (U.S ~ l-3, 1-1, C.trl<l JoHll (8-1
Oo1. Pam ~~don (U.S I. 11-2, 1-3
Coli.g.
UCIMMt.~li.ta1 ........ Snyder IUCll Ool Baumenn, e-o, 11-4, M1111
Son Hlna (UCI) Ool L-. 1-4, 1-1, Ov.ae
IUCI) del Granan. 8-4, 2·8. 11-2. Porcnll UCI) def. 8ottlol. 1-e, 1-4, Ne11011 IUCll Clef P9rry, &-3. 7-4, Anlllon (UCll def L•. l-1, 8-1 0--.. 0ue0o-Sn't'* (UCI) dot ....,,..,,,, • ._._,
l ·O. 8·4 , Gr•111n-Perry (ASU) def
Amor·Ne4aon, 3·1, 1-3. 8-3. Oorr·C"-<1911 (UCll del. Sotll-LM. 7-6, 7-6
~ > .
.. A
WHTl:M COtlRMNCI
Pao:tlloOMaklft • L fl>ct. ......... 40 12 7811
Poollncl 33 21 .511
Pfloonill 32 23 582 ~tie 30 24 ~
Golden Stall 22 32 .407
Seti Otoi.o Ill 36 .......... ~ S4S
Sao AnlOl\IO 33 22 ::&-Kana. Ctty 27 2t
Della 28 27 4111 '*'-2t 29 .473
UIOh 19 31 346 Houston 10 44 185
IEA8TUIM CC>NRMMCI Alleftllc~
Pllllaaelph<a 47 7 eee
&oelon 39 .. 738
New .lolW'/ 33 20 .123
Waolllnglon 24 28 462
U3
-8
0'h
11 Ill
221h
6 8
7 • 14
22~
1
13
21'}1
22 AllO roceo ~ Or°"9, Snow 0.y, ._ Miu Huntington. Coelello, Lltllan, Mulbor!'y. ~2243/S
New Yon.
Mltw-•
24 211
C...IHIO.........
38 t8 ee1
...,.,. IUCI. I· 11111 "lilOI • Brummet (Aometo) 21 40 I I 00 7 40 a.-• c.ntor (Mc:Canonl 4 20 3 20
OIMl<lowege (Meal I to
Aloo r..0-Vlmy'I CNmp MIQMY Duko. ~ 5nr'lnlla. Bubbling UnOet. 8lowOtlQ Snow.
Aln'Ollng, Flrsl 8laOo
Time: 1:43. a UACTA (11·10) paid $253 00 A~.42.370
Gold COMt Cup , .. Dolrer ..... l'fo.) ,.,...,...,,. .......
Cu~ Moll• (Brutll Oof G11y .F0<go1
(Fronce). 1-3. ~ W : luslor Monr-lar.t Brltalnl oet ....., Ell« IW• G«mony). f.2.
8-3, TllOmu Smid (Cact>o•kw•ld•) d.i Kem Curren (Sol<lh Alrlc:a). f.2. f.O: JttnmoJ
Nlea IU SI OM ...,.,_,, ~ (~
0-6, 1-4, 1-4. P ..... 8loJll C~•I
OOI. Ivon LOnOt l~lal. W, 7-6, 7·5: Henrik Sunclalrom (Sweden) cMf. Tom
Caln (Us ). .... 8-3, 7-8. Wofl• Fll:Mlk (~I OM Marti ~ (US.I. &-3, f.2. Eddie Olbba (U.S I dol. Marlo Mortlne~
18o4Ma), 8-1, 8-0. Eric FrOtMI (U.S.) Oef kou1la Oclkor (Nigorte), M , 6-2: Gullermo
VIM (Nganttno) dlll T«ry Moore (U.S ). 6-2.
6-3.
Co1op.oieUM C...-at U fMMal ,.,..~ ........
Mllto eau. (U.S I dlll. 8'9irlO ~g
(U.S.). 7·1. 8-4; Ml ... Eotop (U.S I def Alobet'10 T-(8'Mlin). 1-6, 1-41, Olw1I ~
(Hew z.alend) Clef. eg,,,, AdM\I (U.S.). 8-0. 6-0: er.o GltMlr1 (US.) Ool Mon11 Strode
(U S I. 8-1, M . Mllftln 09..i. (U 8.1 Oef Tr9Y Wittke (U S 1. 6-3, 6-3. Olcll Stoctrton (U 8 l
def. Bulc:tt W"'1• (U.8 I. 7 ·5, 6-1. Or.-Gttlln (US.) clef. Mel Puroall (U S.l. 1-2, 8-1, JoM
Htguwa (Speln) d9I Jtnvny lltown (U.8.1. 8-3. 2-4 7-6: !Aft A.no« (\J s l Ool. Fr.ctdlo
Ootrolt 26 21 •81
Allenta 2$ 21 472
~ Ill 3S 362
lndlanl 18 31 21141
ci...ena 13 41 .241 .,......,..ca--
~ 0-ICIMOulecl.
T~~
Oelto. •• New y Of\
GOIOon Stole •I Atlont•
New JetMY al lnOlww 0.-11~ Portlend al H-lon
WaaNnglon 91 Ulah
Mllw9ull• al Plloenlll
Sen Diogo al 8oemo
~ . ' •• ••
Co9Ne b111Mlt ftsftllDAn ~ UC s.nta llllfbefl 4, UCLA 3
10 10'4
17
20 23
Cal State l'ullorton 2, UC ~ I
Long 8oacl> SI 12, Cltl Poflt f'-5 ~8.T-EIP-4
Ocean View, CdM
both seeded third
Ocean View High will carry
the No. 3 aeedlng into Thunday'a
firat round C-IF 4·A soccer
playoffs when the Seahawka
host c.entury League third place
finbher Santa Ana.
Other 4·A tint round pmea
involving Sunaet teams include
Huntingto n Beach hosting
Dominguez and F.dbon traveUnc
to Walnut. All gamea are
tentatively scheduled for 3 p.m.
Corona del Mar is ai.o seeded
third in the 2-A playoffs.
c. ...... (.!"' "-td)
TWMltr'• ._(I~) 1.,, .......
8111 Gorgofllo at Oenyon; ~ 11
HunflnOton Beecft; Haollndt Hllghll WlMon
11 a.ndlll. Wld card 11 CMllrlllo; Wllllllll•
•• Pelot V9fd••: O•n•rd IC Mira Coe11: ~ It LAii Moe; Arqdla " Cler-l .............
Santa Ana at OCean View: Demi.n It
Pacific; P•--4 et Doe Pllff!OI; Simi v,,,,., It lolltfl T onenc« (dllon at W._,.; fl
MOdllWI ILC Alta "-; ~ et c.nttoa; IM11
.... at~ City.
ctP ... P'INt.......,
~~ .... ,
w°"""'*' 111 o.. .-.; l'IMlorw " Kit..._
SOCCER
Burben1! 11 El Aanc:ho: Allmeny 8' MIMlken;
Montebeilo 11 8'ldwlr\ Par1t; HM 11 L.onlpoG;
M.onldelr 1LC ~ =: lolco Tedl.
Artotl• at Sat! G abriel: Lallowood 11
Ctbrlllo; Wiid Clfd 11 OanMN: HOQlillt II
811 Olrdlna; l.0'10 8Mdl Jorden " ~;
Garey " ~ Pofr. l(eMldy at ....,,, VlelO( 9-nt• ~ at IJt. John lolco
ctf••=.~) ,....,.. p ,_.) , .......
Fulltton at LI Quinta: V*'da et Corone;
Lannoa 11 llllr. Mountain VI.-11 4')ple
va!IW; e Monte 11 SeMte: Wl6d card <Caton
or H1m1t) at C1n1r11: lnglewooct 11 at
8ernlrd: WIMlr'l'I •• eor-.. M#. ...............
T•mPI• City ., l(eppel: lndlO .. Palm
SpMge: CentWlll " Maflllm; UMetlltY " 011dan Oro,..e; C•1111Co 11 Victor Velley:
A1nct10 Al•"'"°' It T~• C1n1d1 II H.,..,.,d; llddllb«* .. MontfOIT*Y • ._ .. ctP ... (fllrtlt ...... ,
,.,,.~ ..... (a,..., ........ t4unt1no1on leech et Mire Coet1; lien ~ .. ~ W1lct 09f'd wlnl'9t at
Alta Lo.N: Metlna ll W.. Tomnoe ..........
CWWllOn'I Ill Edllon; WllCt card ...,., ..
Min ton VleJo: l1llftOl1 It llltlop MofltOOi1N17, ll 1J1eY1 M Plllol Vtrdll..
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IOlllOnlOll H 11 tO H r Ill ft c~ u" • ua , .. ., WW11Pat f 4 ao 1 HI MO M .... to ~ tO 111 HI 10 V-II M It 111 UI <It
ci-.o ""'"'-'• •• l.OUll
Toronto
0..roll
...,.... .......
N If 1 H.-tlO M II 11 11 141 Ill 11 II II It tit 2.U IO
II llO 10 ta1 147 ... 1111 1a 1M t4t o
WALH ~OMNMNCI ................. •·,..,Mt fl~ H 1' 7 tU 111 II NY llllndor1 H 20 I Ill 174 Tl
W~lon n 11 14 tat 1111 1J NY AMow'I ff H I Ill tt 1 to
Now .Jentrf 11 17 11 1 M 2.62 ti
P111111utQ11 13 •2 1 113 * N U-Dhteleft •·to.IOI\ 31 It I 240 111 II
Mon1fMI II II 10 la 210 1t
lufltlO 11 t2 " tit toO .. OuobOo 27 24 10 2M 2.41 .. H11tll0<0 11 H I IN )17 II
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Edmonton ti C-'OlfY SI. l.OUil al V-11«
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Booay, NY ~· 41 62 93 ~. Edmonton 311 62 II P St•tny, CNlllOo 38 65 Ill
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ETCHELLS-22 1151-1. Seduction, Get\11 Wllllema, 8YC, 2. 8t-. Aldo Hewlh«no,
NHYC: 3. Ohno. Ptul Sh11tp. BCVC.
SHIELDS II (1)-1. Merb!'y, BrlMI Honcll, UCISA; 2 AU-., Miko Elllolt, UCISA; 3
Columbla. /UVI Kinn, UCISA. SANTAH""20 (81-1 Loony lunoa. J«ry P91tl9on, NHYC; 2. Doja Vu, Jane Sclloclt,
NHVC; 3 Wlldllro. Alclt Hllf"-CotYC. sue METRE (4)-1 NHYeUSA II. Andy
MKl)onelO, NHYC. SORO (18}-I. Tr• Gordo, 0.... Prtoo,
BCVC; 2 Howlltl Owl. Al SI-. VYC, 3 V111togo, Dick 8owar0,..&.8f, 4, More _
Mlohog111. Joo Groonbtell, 81 eve, 5. o.nan1. A1C11 Nowllncl. save.
UOOltU-NHVC
tm-.....1ci-1
LASER (t)-1. L-Rowe. 8Ve: 2 Jolln Oolgh. NHYC; 3. K.oltll Dllllfte. 8YC.
SAIL80.AAOS 111-1 Gory Allen, DPYC. 2, Greoo Ann. UCJSA,
NAl>LES SABOT A (37)-I J J. Gobbell, HHYC: 2 O.Yld FrMQO, LIYC. S Poul Noting, HHYC, 4 Tom Ay.,,, SOYC; 5 Tim c-.11.
BCYC. NAPLES SABOT 8 (20)-1 Tom O'Neill.
SOYC: 2 St-SlolnlMltg, HHVC. 3. AolMlt1
L1trO, BYC. 4 AonOy Lallo, SOYC, 5
Goollrey 8rnllh, HHYC NAPLES SABOT C (31)-1 John
Jllci!man, MBYC, 2 e11r11 Miiier, 8YC. 3
Mall Aoynokla, SOYC: 4 Titn Aottdon, CIC>O
BYC, 5 OeYIO Schoell, NHYC
NAPLES SABOT SA. 111-1 Potty ~.
ABYC, 2 J-~. SOYe NAPlE.S SA80T OVEA 40 (201-I. Donnll O'Brien, 80YC; 2. Gobel Kenny, SDVC; 3.
Cetol Morlll't, NHYC, 4 ~Olhy Wheel«.
SOYC: 5 8M1y Woodell, SOYC
FLYH»IO JR (41-1 Gary Gr-. UC'8A.
2 KytoSl~,WlYC
OMIA POetf-C~ IAY TC
(11 ............. )
PHAF-A ( "4)-1 Mag6C UOflt. Ho«llo Mot, OPYC: 2 Joclot'nolter • ._ .._, BCYC.
3. Rock H Roll, Roger Alll«, Of>YC; 4 8luo
Mu, Bruce ~. Capo 8YC.
PHAF-811)-1 Mllf1lnlQul, 0.... Cooclor, Cllpo BYC. 2 On n. Wey, AJ ,.._,, OPYC.
3 MoelllnK. W• Thonlpoon, OPYC
PHAF.C (I)-I. Glory, Jeclt Ptnllfo. OYC,
2 Vulgllf &oetmen, Olctr. Anl-, Cepo
8Ye, 3 Sun SlleOow. 8111 Poloca, OPYC.
CATALJHA.27 1111-1 SuNNne, Aon & Joell MllMOlky. Of>YC; 2. ~.lob GelH , C1po 8 YC, 3 Anllc:lpollon, 8ob
Mc:ln~o. OPYC. MOAC (14)-1. 0.11111, Al"" AndtOWI, eve. 2 "'°· Pot• 8dloonmlk.or, eve. a 8"'* °"'91, Cflll Thomooon. 80YC: 4. a--Bullet. Ooney!Temc-U, SOYC
AUl!ln'Ol IAV YC ......... , ....... ,
INTEANATIONAL•l4 (20)-t. ToaOlo
Toddi.. &alrO 8M01rton, s.aui. YC, 2. H1nOlc•P Rac er. Adomo/Bonodlcl.
Aidvnond YC: 3 Jaow, Molt ...... 8ewrn
SA. 4. Amencan ~ Aleft IMln. St
FYC; 5. s.in-tlmo. Eric "'-· .....,.,, 8A. eAL·20A(l1)-1. Pl.oMc imooo Lid., Mu Ao1enll~g •. KHYC; 2. 8un1hlno,
Color/MertlnR, ABVC, 3 Allomlneblo, Doug
Mc:WM, Ol'IYC; 4, 111.wgyncty, J-.......
MBYC, 5 ~ JOlvl 911. A8YC
CAL·208 (1)-t . Nini Llvu, Mlllo Meo.de, ABYC: 2 UM, Jey Porrtno, 8 I
BYC, 3 P..,.,.,, 0.... Ola. SI 81C·
SNIPE (311-1 No,.._ JOlvl ~. ABYC; 2. All Pink tnelcle, .loft Lonh«t. M8YC,
3. EnlrOPfly, Mark Folk"'""· KHYC; 4. HIP9)' llnhdey, Cllrlo Au.II, HHYC. II. Umllod
P8rtnor, lrlln ic.M, A8YC.
LUXURY
LIASI
_.LAN ~
FORU•IE
5396
Lea9'ng Isn't right for
everyone, but It may be the
antwer to your new car
need1. L .... a tuxurtoue
Continental or Lincoln for
under S38e per month on a
clOMd end leue, with no
down payment and se
month frM maintenance &
warranty. COme In end help
ua find the rtght i.... plan
for you. Order youra today.•
'
' ,.. i H..._, WYO: J lo ... II;. f~ lte•et. "l'fC . ,,...,_ L .... ca.,-1 MIC 4
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A8VC, 4 Mio o>I eup., Ir"°° Oohon, Al'tC, I. M-'oio, I'-WMtlOlwn, I.AYO IHUllU>IA flOHAL OONTtNOI" (a)-I
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ME .. C\JllY (IOI-I Old llitltrd, Pol
lr1clloy, I t rYC, 2 Oromllulo, Petit OMl!moto. CI VO, 3 8Wlh, Olivo 0e>M. 81. FYC Kiri (41-1 Oulall lllYol, -y Wolcll,
CIYC
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IMIMQ, fi-.11 Cumrnlnot. CIYC.
IANTAHA-31 (11-1 Con!OnllOn, Gordon Qr1h1m, 18YC; 2. H1111. L1mpot1
W.,,'*'"°'• Ol'IYC. . CAL-28 (5)-1. Nolerllll, Sl•n L••I•,
CllYC; a. l'ttlnOOI II, Al Cotten, CBYC. NEWPORT·30 161-1 Vlraaon , HlrCIM>I~ A8YC. 2 8lly Budd Ill, OoYld Johnelono, CllYO. CAL,,25 (71-I. C•llb•n. Jim Roblneon, WCYC; 2. Upo, Bob Klrlllno, LIV C
HOl0£11·20 (6)-1 Or Heclllo I Mr .l+Yo, 8._ AoM. ave . HAL MACH YACKT Cl.U8 , .. ._... . .._)
SANTANA·52$ ( 10)-I. SOiar Wind, 8 ......
LHtlon, Nlvy YC, 2 ShaOow Fu, Totn
Edllel, AllOGIC)9 YC, 3 Fir-I«. Jlfrl "*I.
LSF. CATAl.INA-30 (7)-1 C 1lll1lo,
HMM/Hlt1men, SI BYC: 2. ChOColale 0 ,
Hetb HA111nQ SI BYC
CATALINA-27 (131-1 9'jpOf c.t. Hot91 Kortt. SI 8VC; 2, au-1. Roger Ooodlna, VYC; 3. 0\111y. Tony Alolo'(k, 81 BYC; ~.
C.botor, YOl'll/8 rbor. LAYC
CATALINA-26 (II-I. Gll•wey, Dom Gorle, S• BYC, 2. P11t Amour. OouQ Juno,
LSF; 3. WlnO H.....,,. Lloyd Kr-. 41 BYC CATALINA-22 (4)-1. P•yman, Oon
WoodtlOO, s 1 eve
COAONA00-26 (6)-1. LOle. Jolln Shela>y, s 1 eve. 2 MiMlnQ Fac..IUol, Kon ll<owl, ABYC.
LM ~VC
(UoMrtoo.l.._I
CAL·40 17) -1 PorHphon1, J 1cll W~ ColHornte YC. 2. Aldtem, Kevin
Atipoltlctl/Flnn s.vin, LAYO; 3 Aoelleol,
loll Young, LAYC
IOA-A lfl) Bon~ Trophy -I. 8tlM. Donn61 Chooto, LOnt load\ YC; 2 Amlnle.
Mel AIC:Noy, Udo IOlo YC. 3 Wl'lllttowlnd, £0
Gii Nowpor1 H11tb0r YO.
-iOR-ll(10)~'f~ 1. -OuM-. Don ttughee. S...t• Borbat• YC: 2. Getot*no, Didi Compton. SBYC, S
Roller Colllor. GOlllOn Syncllclta. LBYC.
IOR-C ~Don LOI Tropfly -I. ApogM, Miii anO V09", L8YC; 2 Tl'lll. Oemp
Sllftdicete, 8-:11 YC, 3 Splrll. Allen ltfown, v~ YC.
IOA-0 (7) Mu ,...., lr°fi -1. SelN. Lon ano LAI• Nldlor. Dal YC. 2 Rlllll St..i, Kon l<JocllMy, SBYC: Tonu, Dick
Vall'->.~Ye
•
•
Otente Oollt DAILY ~ILOTITUlldev, f'*'-Y n . , ..
Powerboats
heading west
New MBRA lures drivers
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY .,..,,.........._..,...,
The oftahore powcrboot ractna
acand.al in Florida ii 1wltchln1
much of the interest tn the sport
to the Wett C.out, aero~ to
Robert A. "Bob" Nordako8. the
granddaddy of offshore racing
and former pre1ldent of, the
American Power Boat
AmoclaUon.
Nordakog, a 73-year..old racer
and boat de.lgner, organia.ed the
Marath o n B oa t 'Race r•
Auoc latlon in Southern
California two years ago, and
already races aponaored by the
organir.atlon are drawing more
than 60 entries in a single race.
Local owners and driven have
switched to the MBRA aince the
acandal broke in Florida last year
with more than a dozen owners,
drivers and crewmen be ing
Coaches laud
Filipek, Mills
Marina High guard S cott
Filipek and Huntington Beach's
6-6 Mike Milla share the Sunset
League's Most Valuable Player
honors as chosen by the league's
coaches.
Filipek led Marina to a 7.3
league record -good for second
place -with a 25.3 scoring
average.
Mills averagged 14.5 points a
game from his high post position
on the Oilers' offel\le, helping his
team record a 9· 1 record on the
way to the championahip-
C.oach of the Year laurels go to
Roy Miller of Huntington Beach.
*· Ul111...C ~ ( .......... _.....,
nr.t T-,._,.,, ICtMMM Ht. Cl. ....
Jemel Gamer, Hin. 8eecll 6-7 SO. 15 3
B~on Ball, OcMt't View 6-8 Sr. 18 7
Roff JllCObl. Fin. VIMlrJ 6-7 J•. 11.3
8IM)' Tl\omptOn, Hin. 8Mch 8--0 Sr. 10.8 Olltla NeumWtn, Manne 6-5 Sr. 8.3 ._...T_
J4l1 EuUn, WMlmlmler 6-5 Jr. 13 I
Erk: P edllla, Mflllna 8-3 Sr. 11. 1
Rob Whhenaw. F1n. Vlllley M Sr. 13.0
SI-~. oe.n View M Jr. 11.5
Mike Newton, Fin. Vllltfrr 8--0 Jr. 12.1 e......, .. , .. .._.,_
Mike Mille, Hin. 8Mch M Sr 14.5
Scott FlllS*c. Merine &-1 Sr 25.3
......... lillftu.t
Mlle• Judge (Ooeln View), Lou Harrigan
(H11nt1noton S..Ch). Drow Brown (Fountain
V1U9)'), Kollh Mull1tl)' (Oc .. n View), Jell
W11hlng1on (Edl1M>n). De nny Tllomp1on
(tiunllng1on ~~ oftMY-
Roy Miiier (Huntington 8Mclll.
Tribute ahead
of ~heckmate
Jim Feuerstein '• Santa
Cnu-50 Tribute moved ahead of
Monte Livingston's PeterBOn-50
Checkmate yesterday in their
race for first to finish In the
1,125-m.He Marina del Rey to
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, yacht
raic!e. • ......
Noon reports showed Tnbute
about 10 miles ahead o f
Checkmate on their run down
the coast of Baja California.
In the corrected time atandingB
John Belanlcb'a Aquariue,
Mission Bay Yacht Club, was still
holding the overall and Class C
lead in the 18·boat fleet
•
~d~~::~~' .Ji cha.rps.
The MBRA WU founded ror
the purpo1e of helpln1 to develop
lntereet ln oU•hore powerboat ractna for new racen, Nordakog
Mid. "It• purpoee ia to enhance the
1port and have fun. None of the
races are run for money, only
trophiea and enjoyment, •
aportsman's sport," said
Nordakog.
In IYl.,aking the 1983 racing
calen~ Nordskog said that due
the problems in the APB.A. moet
oft.hore racing in the U .S . will
occur on the West Coast this
year. He said that races will be
run the full length of the West
Coast, from San Diego tD Seattle.
The first race this year wu the
Sweethean race out of Marina
del Rey, Feb. 19. Other races on
the calendar:
Marina del Rey Rum Run,
Maf'Ch 12; Channel Islands
(Oxnard, Anacapa, Ventura)
April 9; Dana Point, May 21 ;
Berkeley, June 18; Long Beach
to Catalina Island, July 23;
Seattle (local) Aug. 27; Oakland
Bay, Sept. 10; Lake Mead Speed
trials, Oct. 22; Las Vegas Lucky
race, Oct. 23.
This year the re will be 10
classes, rang.ing from an open
claaa for boats between 30 and 4S
feet with no reatricti~ns on
propulsion, to day.cruia&r·
.-runabout& ..which.. are AlriUb'..._
production modela.
Braves hit
in complaint
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
(AP) -The rivalry between the
Atlanta Braves and Loe Angeles
Dodgers, who finiahed first and
eecond in the National League
West last season, has erupted
only a few days into baseball'•
•J>l"in4J training.
The Dod8ets compWned to the
National League office that the
Braves were getting an unfair
early jump on the competition.
Braves offlclala said yesterday.
The complaint wu that five
Bravee were working out with
the team earlier than allowed by
·an agreement with the Players
A.aciation.
•'The league told µa the
complaint came from Vero
Beach," aaid Pat Nugent,
Atlanta'• auiatan t general
manager. '"lbat meana it either
came from the Dodgen or the
New Orleana Salnta." The Salnta.
of the National Football League,
train at Vero Be.ch during tbe
summer.
The complaint involved
outfielden Dale Murphy, Jerry
Royster and Brett Butler and
infielders Bob Homer and Brook
Jacoby. Only batterymen and
playen who were injured and
disabled lut teUOn are allowed
to participate in organiaed drills
before Thunday.
J -
• °'..,.. OoMt DAILY PILOT/lueldly, 11.0ru•ty It, tN3
,
Garage sales. yard sales. rummage sales, street sales ... no matter what
. you call them, the idea is the same -TURNING THl~GS YOU NO LONGER
. NEED INTO CASH. When you get tired of fighting your way Into a crowded
attic or garage. or when yO\J need a littte extra cash, have a garage sale! So
get Into the act, clean out those unwanted items, and make money ~olng it!
It's fun. It's profitable. and following these 10 steps will mal<e it simple.
..... ,
r
araie
Scile
1 Decide on dates.
Look at a calendar and set the dates and times of your
sale. Weekends are usually good. but many successful
• sales have been held in the evening, 1ust after work. 5 Make a sign.
To help make your sale successful, make a few signs
• from cardboard and letter with a magic marker. A good
sign size Is 14" x 22". Check the weather forecast in the paper, and watch for
any o ther large event that may attract potential buyers
away. such as fairs or community events. Have your
sale run at least two days -some people may not be
able to come o n any single day.
2 What to sell. ~
-Everything! That is, everything you haven't used in the
. • last year. If an item has antique value, or is brand-new. -..oi. has. unusual-'lalue.. t>e...sura.to ask.a beallby_prl c.e fo1
it. Get a pad of paper and search your whole house.
Look everywhere. and list everything.
,._..,,_•·This is yo ur main attraction and your
best source o f income. Be sure to place furniture
where it can be seen from the street. Price
· furniture low enough to beat auctions and
secondhand sales (c heck the classifieds tor
comparisons~ but high enough so you can come
down a little when someone shows interest.
RockinQ c hairs, chest of drawers. tables and
chairs are all very successful at garage sales. so
feature them in your ad.
~._ Smaller antiques should be grouped, and
kept close at hand where you can watch and talk
about them. Nostalgia items are very po pular -
display them well.
~ Make sure clothing is clean. and mark
the price way down. Put as many things as
possible on hangers. Separate kid's things by age.
Display adult clothing by sex and age group. Low
prices are a _. on clothes except for unusual
items, whic h should be tagged with an
explanatio n (like, "hand-embroidered flowers.
dress worn by Mae West~"
Afpi•cn. These w ill sell for a fair price only if
they work. No one will take your word for 1t. Have an extension cord so they can be tested. or better
yet, haw radios playing, old TV sets turned ori
etc. Make sure buyers understand they are sold
"as is".
"-h. These usually go fast. but keep them out of
direct sunlight. A good idea is to name your plants
before the sale (Spider Lady. Cousin Jasper,
Maggie~ and write a line CK two on the
name card about how to care for them.
J Write your ad.
I · Here is a suggested ad: "Garage Sale -desks,
Bentwood rocking chair, toys, inf&r)ts' clothing, 1922
• Victrola in orig inal cabinet. rrany gadgets. lots of
unusual items. rock collection, plants. Refreshments, 8
am. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. 1234 South
Anystreet. Yourtown. Just west of Main and 2nd."
Use this sample ad as a guide. Be sure to list unusual
Items. Be as specific as possible. Give directions If
needed. Don't use abbreviations-many people won't
bother to decipher them. CAUTION: Don't advertise
anything you don't really have. Every Item in the' ad
must be on hand at the start of the sale.
"
Where to advertise.
Place your ad where it wlll be seen by people who live
in the area -moat people shop close to home. The
• Dally Pilot is read by 88,000 adults In Costa Mesa,
· Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Irvine, Huntington
Beach and Fountain Valley -guaranteeing you wide
exposure. And with the Pilot, you're not paying for
waste circulation in Loe Angeles or Anaheim. Plan to
run your ad 3 times or more. and 1tart it a few daya
before the Mle ao bargain hunters can have plenty of
notice.
6 Placing your sign.
The.roornlng ot the sale, but nQ,1 before, place your
signs. Bf •ure and add your address and any
• directional arrows. This should be done about a half
--· tiour before the sale starts. Place your sign where It
~n De seen from both sides of the street by passing
cars and POdestrlans. CAUTION: Some towns have raws
that restricf'the placement and duration of garage sale
signs. Please check with your town's planning
department or clerk.
7 Marking prices.
Mar)( prices where they can be seen clearly. Office
supply stores have varoius sizes and colors of stickers
• that work well, or you can use masking tape. However
you mark them, ...... prices low. Garage sales are for
bar~ain hunters. Remember. whatever you can't sell
• you II have to drag back in the house and store again
for another year.
8 Serving refrest.nents.
This doesn't have to cost much, and creates a friendly
• atmosphere. It also encourages people to stay longer
and perhaps buy more. You could even charge for
expensive items like donuts, CK the kids could go In
business for the day, with a lemonade stand.
9 DisplAy.
Make sure everything can be 189n. Have card tables or
• boards used as shelves t>etween two ct\alra. Don't
cause people to bend over unaess you can't help It. Use
· one table u a desk whete you can ... 8V9rythlng and
take money. Use only one cash box (tin cane or boHs
work fine) and make 1ure eomeo11e le appoint.ct
"cashier" at all times. Arrange beforehand for a friend
who can help answer questions, relief for lunch, etc.
Check your nel ..... and
friends. •See if any want to join your ..... Thia wt II glw you
someone to 1hare ex~ with and lncreue lntere1t
In yoU11 ..... If others join you. be aure to incl"4M thia In
your ad (example: "th,....amily sale," "neighborhood sale"~ Group aale1 are a lot more fun, too.
I
$7 per barrel oil price
cut likely by OPEC
By ne Attoelate4 Prfft
OPEC oll mlnlaten from four Pertlan Gulf
countrlee met privately today ln Riyadh, Saudi Arabia,
to corwlder mat.chlnc or undercutt.tna price reducdonl
by three other nadona t.rytna to beat an lntematJonal
oU aJut.
A Sa udi new1pape r reported the Arab oil
producers f.lanned to 1laah their prices by at much aa f7 a barre . .
Today's emeraency meeUng wa1 tuppoted to
lndude all six members o f the Saudi-led Gulf
CooperatJon Council 1tat.et, acoordinf to a council
announcement. But only oil minittera o Saud.I Arabia,
Kuwait, the United Arab Emirate• and Qatar
attended. •Bahrain and Oman, which are not OP!X:
members, dld not show up.
The absences sparked predlctiont of an immediate price cut.
AMC loss 11th straight
DETROIT -American Moton Corp. posted ita
11th straight quarterly loa ln the fourth quarter of
1982, according to officiala for AMC.
The No. 4 U.S . automaker lost $2.9 million in the
final quarter Of 1982, bringing lOll&eS for the year to
$153.5 million or f 2.85 per share, the automaker aid
yesterday. The 1982 loss is higher than a year earlier
when the automaker lost $136.6 million or $2.44 per
ahare. However, the fourth-quarter Jou it down
1harply from the same period a year earlier when the
company lost $47.2 million, AMC said. -
Experienced workers sought
DETROIT -General Motors Corp. and Toyota . •
Motor Corp. will be 1ookJni for experienced workers
for their joint venture in Fremont. Calil., but that
doesn't mean they'll all be former UAW employees of
lhe .... plant, GM'rl:hairman-says; Chairman-Roger 13.
Smith said yesterday that negotiations should· start
''very lhortly" with the United Auto Workers wlion
on whether the union will represent workers
producing a GM-Toyota subcompact. More than 6,000
autoworkers used to work at FremonL Smith says
about 3,000 will be hired for the GM-Toyota venture.
Halt sought to PSA plan
FORT WORTH, Texas -The Federal Aviation
Administration and Continental Airlines have asked a
federal appeals court to stop a plan under which
Pacific Southwest Airlines would use about 30 idle
Braniff International jets to start a new Texas division.
Meanwhile, U.S. District Judge Eldon Mahon was
expected to rule today on requests that he stay hia
onler approving the deal. under which PSA plana to
hire up to 2,000 former Braniff employees. (PSA
serves John Wayne Airport ln Orange County, Calif.)
Debit card network studied
LOS ANGEL~ -The state's top five bankt uy
they're 1tudying a shared statewide debit card
network in which consumers could wie cards that
directly deduct money from their bank accounts to
nuake purchases. The system might tie in with
computerized cash regi.sten and ix-U>ly allow banb
to transfer fund• immediately from contumen'
account to those of participating supermarkets and •
other kinda of stores. The five bank.a are Bank of
America, Security Pacific National Bank, First •
Intentate Bank of Calilomia. Wells Fargo Bal\k and -
Crocker National Bank.
Drug advertising questioned r.
NEW YORK -The Food and Dru a: .
Adminiatration has "serioua reservations" about ,.;
advertlsln.g of preecription drugs to consumen., and it ,
wanta to 1tudy the practice before decidi.ng whether to •J
regulate tueh ads, the agency'• OOIJUl1mioner uys.. "I :::
cannot emphasize strongly enough that FDA has not '
formulated a policy on thit iaue," Dr. Arthur Hull "
Hays Jr. taid ln a recent speech to the Phannaceutie:al '
Advertlsln.g Council. Ads for preecription drugs bepn
appearing last year in newapapera and con.aumer '
magazines.
SD man nominated for board ..
WASHINGTON -President Reasan ha1
nominlted F.dwin J. Gray, a San Dieao aavtnca and
loen executive, to a seat on the Federal Home LoM
Bu\k Board, the chief federal regulator of S&lA.. Gny
wW likely become chalrman of the board, tuCCMdlnc Richard T . Vratt who, government aoorcet1 uy, pa..
to leave hia post by June.
• DH lo truaml11lea tn•le today 1 ·stock martsel
.-aadoai will aot appear.
Holal1
NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonferroua me
pric.Weoday:
•
Orange Co.et DAflV PILOT/Tueed1y, '.e>ruwy 22. 1"3
YOU • .................... AU.SN 1~ , .. ,. A I
WILLIAM A. ALLIN, ::J.l&'h~& :::toJtrA T-A
den• of S.lboa le lend, "*"° uu. vou -. Alt MY a
•• Puud •w•y on. nkWTICMI TMI NATUM :c:a,r\ •u :~·.·;.· ' Mn* ClllllfllD
•bruary 1'1, 19U. Born fou"ou~oMl:rI e!.!\.,'lJl.o:."'·••t'• 'fTo.:nr~~'~l.'l:f ~tl~lnP~~.u~ ~~ 1 "~••1.1 'o I ~-------~~~~~~~~~~~i=~==~~~.~-.--~~~-~~~~-~--~~~~~ !~~:t'1.'::':~~~u~~1:\~~ "°"°'C:UTWUeftl'I ::.".===~Y= "'~~~ CLASSIFIED· iljlUimw I =• .... __
"nfor1etabl• memory 11 On Mercfl 9f 1t,-: 10 00 ,. M u~ °' TMI NGD-1111 ~°»¥:" ....._ I/OT A !!!!!!!
Ullled In our hean1 •I th• main · .. , ... a•ntrenoe to a=~ :~.::..u '"OUl.D OUA"OIAN TftUIT 0110 INDEX LIM llLI ....
ln1trumental In ~TIU• lneurenoe Comofiny, OUAPIOIAH T"UIT OllD llfllVICll, a OOtpoflllon .. duly .'? . the Arcad1a HJch uo Nottti M.W. ltreet 111the Cl~ ot ltRVICU. 1 ~ corporM!on appointed Ttuet .. under tit• To Jiltlc• Yow Ad, Cal Rt-modclocl 3 lidrm, 2 bath+ Iara rec. rm.. Within welklnQ dlltMCe
n1 tlrne me:-:!r ClfbthA :;',~!Ao~tr=~ J'l~AN~ ~~'"=.!':"':"W: qLrr;1~~A~~~ 642 -5678 *"' ~IJlnp, furnlthed, pia\Jos. f420,000. of ~ ~ beldl. 3 0 • RtCONVEYANCI COMPANY, • WiLiilLL AT "'9UO AUCTION TO T I HIGHHT llOOIR lfOft Bdrm. a betll on A-2 IOt. than Cub, South HW. Callfornle Corpo11t1011, .. duly TO THI HIOHllT llDOlfll ,0" OAIH or .. Mt fonh 111 hctlon llOl ESTATC PllllllLA 1111 High 1Hum1t>l1 loan•.
cry Club, lrvine Co.at •Pfe!"'•d Tru11 .. under 11\•t OAIH "' II Mt '°"" "' lectlOft IN4fl of IN CMI C:O., "' ~ -Octtn & jotty vlow1. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3' ~';;~~Ill e«chenge.
• 1ru1101, recorded on Auguet 21, now lll6d .... It Ulldet Mid Deed of Truet 1r1 the pr~ty Mlelnatter 11a1i. .. 1,._, 100f ..,~ L .,..,,.. •
MTUITD I .aide OM 2 er 1 II
home on lrt "·2 lot w/tOOO+ e.f., 9"CI OI ~ ~-,.,~---· Owner wlll coneld•r
trede for local ptCll)erty.
Curt A. Herbert• 11,
NMHI o~i:::d>:'I cb1~·b sa:n~ ~~ae ~iV' A~:L '~,;.~ ~ ::4:r: ::,:-~~o"t:'d ::: =:, ~ ~'::' o:.c. .. ~.: ... 11•11• ~= bath, 3700 eq.ft_. SJ .38~.ooo. Oceanfront ...... 00. ........... lllt
a a• • n a PI one er tNt, .. lnetn_,t Ne 2tt ... 1n "' deecrltled' "-1-..,.,.,.....i. iocn • Aelti an..eoob
uocletlon. He wu Book""'· P11ge t1e, of Oftldel ~1.::C.~n. ptopeny hlre!Mftll' TftUITOfHAANKW '°TTa.en ~:,.in:;~" :~: LlllA llU IAYPlllT liii~~°'~'~ii~~~1111m=11~ mployed by Du common Aecotd• of °'MO' County, 811•• of TA u IT o A: R 1 o HARD 1 . Unlnerl'ted men t'••i. M-1024 Laeoon view from O bdnn, 4 beth, fem. nn. •tal.a and part owner of CelKornie, und« the poww of Nie NICHOLS ANO JIRftll R . HHl,.OIARY: LAWAl,HCI! "· , ... , .. l'<llnl IO:lt Bolt .Up for 3 boat.a. Now $990,000. ..... •• -1 S bb thtreln contlllned, wNI Mii at publlc NICHOLS. llulblftd anc1 wti., u W 0 RI( MAN AND L 0 A IN I! D T,.m IOU ,._ ,_
OU t•r-I bett before euotlon 10 Ille ~t bldCS.. f()( IC*ft 1-ltl. WOMMAN, IMtMltld Md .... .. """"""" Vtllh 10>4 lll'ft.lllll •
oundlnc Allen-Fry Steel tc.11. or CMClc .. dwllbed below. HNlf!ICIAAV: ALHRT 1. fOlnt ..,..,. H""''Wll""' -" :;: IAYllM PLAOE .,,IHI
pany, he retired In 1972. peyeble II the lime of Nie In ,_.I.II 8RANOLI, JA, llld CAftMEL Q, MCON>CD Auguet 27, 1Ht .. ~':!., H.,,_~ IM4 5..-•wcular beyfron• dplx 2 br, 2 '-~ ~· 2 br, WM put pnslderu of the toney 01 the United StatH of BRA.HOU, hueblNI endwtteMjoln1 lnatrument No. a.4074 8ook 141H, i....u,.. 11.,..m 11141 ...--• ..,. 4 br, ...cutNe llome on
al lfornla C h arola la 1~111:d~~ ~!r~:r.~=. t1n11111 11 to en undivided .,. :C 12920! OlftcMll A;;C;delnthl t:,': ~~~ :g~ 2 ba dn. 2 boat •l*'ell· Redua.'<.1-$1 , ,000. ~U7:,:,: ~I~
Hoclatlon, the Balboa IPOIMHlon or encumbranci.1. 111 ~~~~~·~":JN&.~~ ,County~"'-Recorcs.. of Oranoe t....k• t ..... , 10)~ Ible 1•t T.O. fixed rmtl
1 land ti om 1 owne r a ngnt, 11t1e end IM•MI now held by #Id wife • t:!': .,.,, .... 10 111 . Seid Deed of Truet, dMcrlbM 1t1e ~~ v~!~" :i: FAllllAlll 1&1011 101n. Form11 dlnlnC °'-~-~°"· c:o-aulhor of lhe :~~:~~ ~'::. ~~b~d ·~~0t:,~~ ~ ~-1I, lMO ~t~ No. n•. In the t',; ~:..~.';,..., • ..., m: New 4 br, 4 ~ ba, cuttom Frt'nch Normand>' ~9'!'~~ r~5 ~~t5~t 0 ; .-""'"~ Hl.ltory of Balboa t11ue1ec1 In the eforeeald County lltld a, lnetrument No. 23H7: Book Olly of Co111 MeH, County of s.n ... """ 101101 E:et.ate 1.2 ptlme ecre hJlltop $1,2M>,OOO. 752·7378. ". He la eurvived by Staie, to wtt: 13Ht; Pao• 1211 ol Olflclal Orange, State of C•llfornla, ae & ... 1 a...1i 1o.H
beloved wUe of 48 years Lot 7 ot Tract No 4787, In Ille Record• 111 th• office of '"'' lhowfi on• Map record.a in 8ook s. .. 111 i....,..... • 14*1 OOllOIAiO OAYI toulee eon William D City of Co111 MeH. County 01 Recordet of OrMQI County. Seid 197, PaoH 3 to 8 lnolu1111e of ~;Hoch ::;:: Coronado bland cust. ~Cron\ lot. 85. bol1
~ Walker 6 Lee lien, 'daughter-ln-leV.: ~-,..;;:::~P::!;S o .. d of Trull, dncrlbn th• MM1•11-Meipe,ln1heott1oeOI w .... mi ... i.r IOlll
ldrld, dau&hter Morie oi1i1---.M11>t.lntneofflce IOllowlngptoperty: ~~AecotderofuldOrange ~·:.".:"..:'""".. ::~ !kick. Planaavall. Now 70,000 w/terms.
f>odliaka, IOn-ln -law Ladd, of Ill• county recorder ot Hid PA~L 1: E:lloeptlnll thlteftom Ill Oii, OM. "-•mt111a 11!!0
1111' "' ...,.
~d 8 -d hll .. -And county The North half of the Eaet 13 fMt OI mfnerale and other hydroc:arbon a..,. h l'n,.ro 1 m •·an c ........ n . The ·total amount of the ,__.,. IUbetanc. In lltld under Mid lend °""'"'-1..,,..., '"" ved a1 his own Patrl1h, pr1ncipal balence, lnt•Mt t~;. the WMt t28 '"' of Lot 402 of , l' ' L tt .u
Carl and Bobby. The family together wtlfl rwonal>ly M11mated ~=-.:r:o! ~ ~: ~-=.·~~~~IOOthlfMt~:': =j}~~~'' ::~ BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR llll•Y--t DON'T PAINT·Brlghten
up lour eallrlor wall1,
roo & drl11eway w/our
··-Miki )'O"' own diet on
thla 3 Bdrm 1 81 hc:lotne.
Wiii Mii wlgr•t tenne.
Hunyt Cun A Herbin• II,
83M2tl
'' ti, j '('• <lo (Jf •' "• h CJ/ 1 f II') 1
f~eat In lieu of flowers coete, expen-end adveneee et recorded In Book 5, Peg• 1 of .Urlece entry ae r.-ved In t"-1i..11~,..,.1 Unoi. uur Jho9e detiring to .honor his the time of the lnltlal putlllcatlof\ of Mlec.ll•neou• M_,,., record• of Deed from Jem" H. H•~• end 1....._ .., 1w ,..._ 1)1: ~ k 11119 Mollee -182,200.01. _ _... ,. __ .., Betty M. H-, r9CO(ded '"'""" 25, ,,,....,.... . .-.~) IHt
e m or Y m a Y m a e Cutrently deted Clehlerl Check• AARCEL2:'" tt11. -~-...... ft Ind""'"•' t:;;,~~. 1m
tril>udona In hla name to Centtled ~ 1>9)'abte 10 Ille An ~· IOI pr'IV•ll roedwty MAY ALSO BE KHOWN AS: t135 Lula, •• Sako 1411( ......... . ~ e 5 5 2 C 1 u b , Ho a g ""'•or blddet -acceptable to purpoeee w1t11 1t1e r1gt1rt of.,._. ~.Colt&....., Callfornle Mobtt. llomo P~ 14u 1;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiil
emorial Hoa~ital Box Y. Tru•t•• provided p r oper and eor~H ovef end •= th• (If a llteet addreea or COftWllOt\ ~.:;'C::.""-1 ::: .__1 1 N 1 d 'N • Identification le 111all•ble Southltiy 1 t'>t leet of the one dltlQnttlon I• •hown ebove. no °"'of CNn•> 1~,& ew_port v • ewpon From Information wfllc:h the half of the weet 129 flMt of Lot 402 warranty I• given a1 to 111 °"' 01 :;,.,. l))O For Tue1day through Be.ch, Ca. 92663. Memorial ru11" dHm• ••ll•bl•. t>ul for of~ .._Tract .. per map ~or con'ectneee).. ~._ '"'™ 1)7) Saturday pubtlc1Uon1:
f«w to be held on Saturday, h I c II Tr u • t • • ma k • • no recorded In Book 5, Page 1 of The benellclary under Mid OMd ~.:::c'' IMO 5;30 p.m. the prevlou1
Oe_b0r0uAa r y a2t6 's t19 8J3 hat r,•trP .. r•1•!~'d~1.1 .. on ~r 0w1!!rr100n1ym'mthon• ~~Counellan~.u• Mape, record• of ~~·1nbyt.!..~'!t'~ ~~ a.&~ :,;;; d1y. For Sund1y and
• M . o n dellOMtlon of 1,,; .;:;. delcflbed EXCEPT V... EM! 83 fMt tr-.of, ii;,":by, ~';.of;;'"'.;.:,,ed .,';d lllt WanlMI vw ~~~d~~~\~~~~:n•: ~la.nney Chapel, 314 MAiine PfOc>li'tY It: 2283 w11erman Way, MAY ALSO BE KNOWN Al: de1t11ered to th• underelon•d • RENTALS ~ve .• Balbo1 bland, Ca. co.ta....._ Ca. t2e28. 843·845 Plumer Street; Coeta Mtlten OedMltlon of Default and H ....... "°"'"'-211111 pu.ria1 at eea. Said property II being told for the ....._ Calltl>mla. Demand tor Sele, and wmten notice u-, u"'""""""" uoc
putpOM of Pll~ the obllgallone The belllllcllary under Mid 0e9d of ~ and of election to cauM ltu..v~ l'urn .. lwod .,, COFFMAN Hcured by H I Deed of Truet of Truet. by,_ of a ~ or the undertl(ln•d to Hll Hid c:!:'i!~r;.~ i!:
, BE'M'Y W . COFFMAN, lndudinOTruet• -~.~~~. of the def9Uft M the obllg.etlonl -.'Id ll'OPlt1Y to utllfY Mid oblloetlonl. ..... "' -thereby, hefetofore Pec\lted end and thereafter th• underelgned ~~ '""' ~~ away on February 18, Dated Jenuaty 27, 19113. dellv•t•d to the underelgned a cauMd Mid notlol of> bl'Mdl end of 'l'uwnhooo< .. Unt n2~ Loved and loving • CALIFORNIA ~en Oeclarat.lon of Default and elect.Ion to be Aeclorded Nowmbet Oupt.••n ,...,.,. J»O mother of Susan Cole James R E c.o H v E y A N c E ~for S.. llnd wrtt1en "°"°' 10, Itta .. Inell. No. 82-3tl50f0 of Oupk .... Uni tm • d Sh R b • COMPANY of br.-dl and°' .-:tlon to cai. laid Otfldal Aecofdl.. ",_.....,. .. ~ ,_ an aryn o ertson, .. Mid T'rult• lh• und,~r=d to ••II H id Said 111• wlll be made, but A_._.. .. Uftl noo -J(.ann,e.tb_a.Jld Val.a.tie By:SlmRILForefland, ~ Mid~ without covenent or warranty, "i* rum or Uni uoo
au• .. ,ITllll
Kiii• Ind corrac1lonl may be mlde untH 5:30 p.m.
tor the nut dly'1 publl·
cetlon. For Sunday end
Monday publlcat1on1, U :OO noon Saturd1y. PllUI Ilk tor • "klll
number" when canc:•l· llng yoor Id. l\obertaon, Kathryn and 'EucutweVlc• Pnilaen1 -and th•rNtt•r ttle under_ll8_1'W ...._-w ~. reoerdlno tltle, ::::::"•a--i :
l.rorrey Barkley and John 9451 Corbin A--ca.-Mid nottce of breedl and of ~. « eneumbl'anoM to -• M......i. HIM U .•I [; ff d h 1 t NorttwiOoe Ca. 91328 .-:tton to be Alool'ded Novwn«lll' ~ Iha remelnlno pMcolp4ll eum Of c.-1 1s-ll06 0 man, an er 1 1 er Tel: (213) 701.2359 9, 1992 11 1netrumen1 Number IN nota1•1 aecur.i by Mid Deed Of su ......... Krni.t. HOii Check yoor Id delly Ind ~arbera Alexander. alto Publl•h•d Drano• Coaat Delly l2.-..0t4 °'Mid Oflldal AeoordL Truat, wltl'l lrl..,_ • In Mid note "-•-11 ........ i. lil01 report errors lmmedlet• ~vlng grandmother of Piiot Fee. 8, 15. 22. 1983 Said ule wlll be med•, but ptcMd9d, ectvenow, If any, under :::::::t :!'::; ;:: ty. The DAILY PILOT u-
e f f r e y a n d Ke v I n 850-83 wltflout covenant or warranty, the term• of Mid Deed of TNl1, ~ ..... '"' "'-• 2112 1ume1 llablllty tor 1h1
ber•-on, 0 -ott, And .... w · .. _,,. ..,,.TJC[ expteM or lmP4lad _ ......... tltte, tea. dlarQll llnd ~of IM Olfttt """.... 2'14 flr1t lneorr-t ln--... lon
.. ....i ""'~-thy~-'------, 'and"' ,._ "" poe-1ton, or enc:~;;. 10 TrulM and of the truat• etMi.d by --""""'"' 21118 ..... _, •
high preuure mobll•
power wull eys. Cell for
"1001 ~: .......... , ••. lllMI" ..... _
Prtv.11 welled commun-·-lty by th• IHI Doubt• ____ oee-e __ 545 ____ ,
door entry. Huge atep Home lnapectlon MMcl,
down ll11lng room with foundation to roof. O
cethldral Ollllnaa. Famlf)' PIQ9 report, tnapect ti.-
room hu crac:kllng fir• fore yoo ln~t. Ste 254.
piece. Formal dining. t 75--0941
Patio kitchen overloo1<1 1-----D.1-lll-----~ oorgeou1 pool. Open etalrcue leld1 to 3..huge Enjoy ext,_ prtvecy In
bdrm• & 3 beth•. 4'nty 6 11111 cu1tomlled 3 Bdrm min. to bMch. Alto, VA home. 1t1 out1tandlng
te r m t . S 1 8 t , 0 0 O , IMtur• Include I IP• •
IUlllmlml 114' ... 11 ... .,...:
Owner wlll carry eub••
1tantte1 2nd on thll _.:
melntMned *"" ltotY 1 end 2 bdrm lrite. Plenty.
of oft-W• perttlng & 4
Cir gw199. Atttecttwfy
prtced 1325.000 .
-.1111
541 313 c1oua rnat1>6e entry, for-\ mal DA, trg MBA 1Uf1e, r miwa ~~p=r~=~ ---------···-wi lly •r•••m, end more. •t ... _.., Cell Don O.Thomu for 2 Bdrm condo In Montl-
loWl)' 3 Bdnntiomewtttl en a9 polntment~ cello. 110,000 down. 3 patio• 1nd 11r1um. 759-9100 Webl); Bltl'. 493-07t1,
Gourmet kitchen r..tur· 4M-764g n6gih1s
\ I >I l I 11 F If
Ing all new::!/f.llanc111 PllWMY ft.Ill Only $139,0 . Don't Sedllded 3 bdrm home
hliltete to t7f..5370 on QUlet cu di ..:t Ex·
WILi Tl tr• l11g1 low malntlflo-lll llAll ance yard with loU of
QEOROE ELKINS CO
,....,. .. uuu .nuuo:.-...a NOT1Ct! TO CMDfTOAa pay the~~ eum of Mid OMd ell Truat. c-t ""11 .. a. 1111 !~=~~-~~~~~~~! ~nn and Amy Barkley. Of' ~ ttienot~)-.dbVMldOMdot Sald.-wllbehllldonTUMday, 1nc1 ... ~..i. mt J.
emorial aervlcea will be-,..._-::. .. ,., u.e.c.) Trull. h In..,....• In Mid note = !~t~:'c: !!:<>g~:A~~,!: ~':""'"'"'wla = " ................... 1..,er ..... S...,alt .. -.. __ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili eld o n Wedn e1day , Notice le hereby given to prO\llded ldY-If eny under •· :F,...._•a~ 23, 1983 al 2:00PM creditor• ol the within named the twm9 of Mid Deed of TNllt. TRUST DEED SERVICES, 1800 bet AHNOIJNCEMENTS lttatral Hl2
. '• , .. Redlcorlted 2 bdrm & ulld brlckl Super fl.
den home with Iota of nandngl ~ S125,000.
privacy. Flrepl1c1 , C. aoon 97t-5370
........... 7 tranefsor(t) lhet • bulk tr.,,..., 11 ..... dlatVll Md ~ of tM T A-, OrMge, Cellfomla. -1'!t St. Andrews Presbyterian about 10 b• mad• on p•reonel Tn.11t• and of the ""'1• etMted by total -' of the unptlld ~.. ::! 'flAll flU IDT COLDWeLL
BANl(eRO
bMfned oelllnga, onclol--
ed polio a • w 1n the den. A terrific value at
\ f >I I. I ti l' It
iChurch. In Ueu of flowers property herelneft• deecrlbed. Mid Dead of Truet. ~ °' the obligation _,,.. P-<•"""' !!Oit If purchued bV 3-31-t3. :the fa m 11 y re q u e 1 ta Th• name(•) and bualneu Said .... wlll be held on Tu..dly by Hid property to be •old, ~ Snv•"' :IOl4 New Mobil• home In $ 143,000 L.H.
)donation• be made to the a dd r • 1 • of 1 h • In 1 • n d • d Mardi 15, 1913 al 11:00 A.M., ei together with lnt.-t, 111• Clharga. S..IK•"'., '""~ >01• South L1gun1 Oc1an-t~•I-= the front entl'lnCe to GUARDIAN and eetlrnlted ooete, ~and Tr ..... t )011 front Perltl Agent there --... ·"'-C714' '1M40t -. ·
lllJ1'1•·iat
Ull1m 2 BA 1 81 w/mother-ln-
._ unit '*" ...... M-aumab .. aao.ooo loan,
S150,000. Ownr/agt .•
831·5M1
:cancer Society. SKI 10, Inc., 2820 w •• , TAUSTOEEDSEAVICU, t800Eaet adllaneM. .. of the~ her*>f,.. Dl•.rss' ........ 1n. .... 30 ' Ch • 0 CA ~elr A--Of-Ca11forn1a. 1140,0M.81. ~ _,, . .,......, · , WORTHY 9~men ... venue, renge, The toQI ~-c;-·ltll unp9ld °".i: FltW\iaty It, 1983 FINANCIAL Deya 409-4242 ---.,.,.. HAllaOR
: N 0 R M A N L E E The IOcallOn In c.ltomie of the b1Mt1Ce of 1M ot111gi111of1 _. GUAADtAN TRUST a--1.,,. s.i. t0it -641-2739 :-VORTHY, age 58, a Wetlme chief e11ecuthre office or ptlnclpal by Hid property to II• eold. OEED~S=°. ·e-.-0pponwv""' 4014 Top lnoome buy touth of
L:!:dent o ( Hunllnglon buelne" office ol the Intended together wtttl Int.,., late OIWo-, • • a-,_ w..,..., .011
Ca n---a treneferor It: 3033 Harbor lltld..um.tedoo.ta.~and u tf'\lll.. •1n-.,,,..n•°"""'1W11-IOll , . ..-_... away on ~ 5'lfte E.f COetl ~ .. of "" daM rw.ot. 19 tllOO e. ~,,,.., 1 .. -, w ... ....s .ozi ~wlday, P'ebnlary 20, 1983 c.11tom1a 92t2t · ..., .... eoue. Dr"~1_. 92te7 ::::; :.=; !::
llowing a lln,ering ill.nem. AU other bullMU nemM and Diile: ~ t5, 1N3 (7t4I 10 ..,,..,,_ T_o • -r . w 0 r t h y w a a eddl'-uMd by the Intended OUAAOIAN TIW8T Vicky L ..... ,,, DEED ~ Alllltant Secretary n.oowa-an euperinlendent of Park trlnlf•or within t "1M'1 lut • ,....-........._ · Publlehld Orange Co111 Dellv ~" 1.,..;.n• • d P••t 10 far •• known to the "'.,_....._ Plot Feb 22 ..., 8 N3 '
pment for the City of Kin9 ~ant #1808, • Mid truat• 947-83 Eu l • I t i o n a n Intended tr1nefer" are: Burget COl'POIMIGll • · • · 1· · 1
untington Beach. Mr. The nemeOI and bu11neu 1800 £.-~.., AIN. -'-born "-...-.. add re I e o I t he In I ended °'9ngl. Cl nM1 •-t1o llftTll'r ...-uiy w• on""'...,..... n...,M(l) are: (7t4) n1 .. 10 ,._ ""'"4 ~~~~ Sf.amilanta ~·~ 11.traer Kano ~. P.O. by: "'°'*Y ~-~ ·-".,.-Vly y , .... ~H 8o11 526783, 0.-al Mall Facllly, ~ --, ldent1 of Huntington MWnt. Ronde 33152. Put>tlthld Orange co .. t Diiiy 1irQ the late 1800's. Tflet the propeny pertinent Plot Febl'*Y 22. Mardi t, •. ,.., Wonh~aa an Elder at hereto 11 deecrlbed In generW ae: all N7-t3
lumlture. 11Jthn9, ~I, end --,,. )be Jilnt Church,• lnYlnlory, and 11 ~at: 2'20 ,._ ll>lJC( JDC!mber of the Hunting10n w .. 1 ~ AYenUe, Drano-. •--NO-TI-ICS--TO-CMD--.. -IT-OM ___ ,
&.ch Rotary Club, CPRS, ~ ~ · UWI by the cw .... TIUtJI& LC
,, h I S I g m a E p 1 ll o n • Mid .,.,.,., ..... ,1':"9Nld IOCatlon 11: ( ..... ..,,..,., u.c.c., "Munw--Beach VFW and -• Nolle• I• hereby glveft to t'~ --· BKl 10, Inc. credltora of the wltflln nerned ithe H untington Beac,ll Tlllt u ld bulk 1r1n1fer 11 nn.Mror(a,..., a bl* tnnlM' le
merlcan Legion, al.cl ~tobe-ted•tM about to be mad• on pereon11
erved In lhe Air Force ;::: r.t.~~~ =:~ property....,......, deactlbed:.
urln W orld War II . ..--onoratw ""--•A, 1...... The nam•l•I and buelneu .. .._... _..,,"' ....... tddre•• ot the Intended !.He!JO\lecl hueband of Shlrley Thie bulk trwter II eubjec1 to n...,ort•I -81<1 1, Inc., 1a:t1 aker W o rthy. beloved C1lltornla'Un1torm Commercl•I leech Boulevard, Huntlngtoft
El D M coo. s.c:uCwi 8106. ather of len . OH, The n._ and addrMI of the a.di. CA t2M7. ~ky L. Smith, Susan K. ~ .tttt wt1orn dalnl9 m.y .,. aJ1: :=. ~ ~ JI:~· Junes L . Worthy and flied 11 Jamee A. Maretien. Elq., bu11ne11 office of th• 1nter1de<1 •Amy Beth Worthy all of Bure-Qla Corpc:ntlon, P.O. Boll traneferor le: U03 Harbor untington Beach, Ca., al8o 520'783, General liolall Feclllty, ~d, 9'IM E..e. caeea MIN.
u r v i v i n g a r e 6 =-::' C:.:.:2~· = :-.:! CA t2tK. dren and 1 brother "'811 be •• __... 9, 1 ............. 11 ....... All otllel ~ namn and -Wl --· .... addJ ..... UMd by the lftlended eny OAhy of HuntinltOn bu• In• 11 day b •for• I h • ltllllilferor wttHn ttwe. ~ IMt
Be.ch, Ca. Frienda may call con1umm1t1on date epeclfled P••t 10 far 11 knowll to th•
al Pierce Brothen Smilha' ~«s FebtWly 11, 1883 Intended trane..,.. are: Burow
Monuary from 10:00.A.M Co Bul'ger KJng Cofp, ~~~d bu1lne11 9:00PM on Wedneeday and c... By: Truman D. Timmie, addreu ot th• In tended Thureday. Funeral aervk:ee ......, traneferff(e) ere: Burger King wW be conducted on Friday, Pu~ °'Mf' Coeet Delly Corporetlon. P.O. Box 520713.
February 25, 1983 at 2:30PM . '1 ttt..a 0.-al ..... Fdlly, Miami. t'LA
•at the Fint Cbriltlan Olurcb ...-13~~·, th• property pertinent f of Huntmcton Beach with W ""11K • """"° 1e 6wf1becl 1n oen-i aa: ,..
'Dr. T homas W. Overton """""" 11111ur9, ~"''"'· and lottJdatfnc. Interment will be lnllln10l'Y and .. locetld 11 18331
et We.tmlnater Memorial = Ji0=::.rd. Hunt111oton
Park. Pierce Brothers The..._.'*"' u.d t>y IM Smit.hi' Mortuary dlrecton. Mid .,.,,...,~•) at Mid 1ocatton II: J"8-6539·
W.Tl-••ON ...,,. & tVrM&&.
Wll1lfCUflf CMAfw.
4 27£ 11th St
ColtaMesa ~71
AllTOMOTM
IOIO
6011 9012
8014 .., .. ., ..
ton IOU
l lto
Nit 1114
Qll ., ..
6HO m •
luol(I l.noiftl IOIO
"'"" .....__,,..,._ IOI) A.u•W-.. ~.._....... .,n
4~1 °"""" 90)0
"""'"" ll03' Yono --......... ~ .. ,
AllTOS ..oatm
--=--1 -_..~ ... ..-...-.Ile
-~~r-...... =
"'--=--1
w••ia th• hlghw1y1 Duplex, __ 3 N... on :::f .... --·--each 2 BA, one beth. ...-~ ... ""• Nledld for A..i &tat• Fir_...... "-'......._.. 11 MP huge fem rm dtl6e ...,.-. .,..,_.,_, g -~~~~~~~~~I!'· Only St06K. Agt. firm. Orange County. age. Submit II otter.. A I· Coftlldentl•l Interview. "mu1t sell" eltuatlon. Ill Lft __ 2_ee_ee _____ _
Write Ad No. 1G46, o.lty Good Income .,.._ ... .or nft ~ the prioea &t-ede Condo, 3 ow 91'·
Piiot, PO Box 1560, ;~~·;•;4~-;·;~;l llO hlghetl Tlwee unit• 111 3 bd, 1~ ba. MOiie l1G"lt ;~~~I~ CA'd o::~7. with petloe Ind an~ In. Only S 114,000. ... unit with • llreoplecoe. 831-3513
842-4300, 24 In. Illa ftm Full price 1 low. low•-------------
Th• populer "T'' p11n. •11&.000. 751-319 1 Lrg 20tty femtly home EJ1IAll .... fl Three ep1clou1 be-!pSElECT w/38drm381end1oe1i1
Super tenn1. Miler Wiii' droom1. L1rg1 ll11lng ot room Alklng 1181 oon1lder VA/FHA or • room. Owners wtll paint PROPERTIES 000.131:7370., 546-7eM
buy down progreml A exterior ae eoon ••1----------temc>tlng lamlfy 4 Bdrm 2 -.ther permit•. $138, eac ... ----
beth home, allOws pride 500, 1111 of owneHhlp. ~ucecs IALi.T ,_....., _____ ......,...,. TR\DIT IO\ \I
to Mii to S11a,t00. Cell UY 111111 IULn SPAC. Cullom 3 Br
tilMe-1171 •• -2...iory -OCMn/frwy,
RI .\I n
• --1·1 Open Set/Sun or 1ny I ?'p-lR'·11J1! ~iiiiiiii~ii~ii~ eve. I Ut ,500. Sem 1-----------S: ~a~ -••NIT_. \ C rane, Agt . Office
Ill.Im
1
403-4900 , home
• lll IUIT •U•WNIT
....... £1 ..... 'I
~ In 3 bdrm, 2 blth
':r apt. Commerc111
, ofnc. OI 1'9tlil on
lower level plua 4 ~r
par1dng. Pl'lce el 1305, • .. •.•
associated
~ g • t !.; ' "'I A • Ii ', . .... . . . ' ..
THE REAL
ESTATERS
546-7530 Bring offerall Property ---------.1
on wey to torecloeure. C.... ... .. lip
Vacant 4 bdrm home
with n• ceramic Ille *....., "'9 .. * kltdlen and 11mo9t MW 3 B r • 2 8 a . N E A R
carpet. MOlll ·ln now. OREENBEL T. ON cu~
1143.8&0. Submtt. de-SAC, buullfully landtcaped. 1289,500.
111111111 844l030 iiii!!!i!!!!!i!!ii!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!iiii
a Mfllll" -1112 -1111 IMJ 1111 ""' An oppor1unlty to buy 2 bl'+ dan end untt. PIP. 3 Bdrm hOn'9 with. bi;
thl• IOWHt pl'ICld 3 S275K. 759-1Me back yal'd. H•rdw*
Bdrm home In lhlt ~·---------· floorl, ~ ._,,...
tlge community w/ ... YllW ttwougti ~ ~ =edl,J:tH. Open ...... PD and dlnlnt. lewndtf ~-room,~ 1ru11..._. • ......... 1111--In lhe heert of tM lllllaoe In -... ~ Uo. OrHI nelghbora. on a,.,. -*.lded 40' IOc _,...., 1~
Walk to pvt beech .• , 2 etory 2BR wllh t l3l,500.
&111.000. famlty rm & eun potch 141-1211 Pt.US a _.,ate entlt'e
ltudlo In • ~ gerden
letting. Juet a lhof1 Mic
to the bMch. Idell fOI' ~ 01 11\te In • IL Owri. ... l*P INnce.
CAlL '°" •-..uo.. DOU.AM NO .. IHM8
Win. O.. l!llllJ'.
n•11 .. 1•
j PETE J BA RRE T i . REALTY
...... ,111 '~~~~!!!~
I
l
. ....., .... -Clwming 2 Bctnn ~
UP(lfeded, ..,.,...,,. Ufll,
Excellent tlnenclng alltlll-
abla. Atklng sa.,toO.
For ao 'Pi>olntmant •• .... call 540-1151
· HERITACl
Rl Al r1 'R',
R!•sor ·((9alty
651•TI77
........ ~alker & Lee
Sci.als & Camp
CHRIST LUTHl!AAN
SCHOOL
Openings available tor
1983-1984 School Year
1st Grade & Kindergarten
"A CARINO SCHOOL WITH A
CHRIST-CENTERED EDUCATION"
Extended Day Care Available
1411111 .
780 Vlctorle Coeta Mffa
IPllTULmLllY lllllTllT
TUlll•
( ..... , ......... ,
l yr. tralnina for
c:ertif lcate.
18 hn per week paid
Trainina In HunU-naton Beach
Wrtt.tt•tlflffM #IH ...., ..... " ... "" ............. "" ........
• •1tr ••irmaat lrll••I
O~/tlCI COUNrY'S OLNl1' A 11/tlUT
nlYA11 JCHOOL
GrodesK ·8
IUT Y. M.W., A......._"'-114· ltll
Lt1rn How to use
WangJ IBM 056 & O.splaywr1ter
Xerox860 c• 014) 5518 r-..t_ .............
Dep•h••il• •Wm.,.
UIW MOii MOMIT
Become a Word Processing Specialist
Excellent Career Opportunities
WOAD PAOCESSINO ANO INFORMATION
2232 S.E 811stot-S~~:1~11 Ana. Ce t:l7Ut
....., .. l_ ... __,_u.-, ... .-
PARK llEWPORT
APARTMENTS . . .
(
1 ' ••
Sl.14 per day Cwwtl > lrmll lr'M'" lw lwln fefetfy
Ceriwll•M•o~ llDDtl Df'YWAU. TAP'tHCI T,.. ~ 141' HANDY ANDY It IACK '"°°""'Tu.,...., 110 .. HllTm w....cu.i. worti. Lio. NA T•turee l AooWUo ~._,.,..., Cllrt tue retirement • dltoCMH\t, aHt neeffd. by . "lchard ltnor Lio. ne tot7 "°8 M7·11N ,_ •· ICeYln t7S. 1a ,...... CNlok .. S.1117 Ill home repalt1 or ,.. c fl• r YI I ti· 3 U I , 2~. 14 vre Of ~ li=:;;:==~iMr:::;I·~=~;;;;:;;;;;;--,.~ ,,_,., M lllW41Y' rw ..... ,408 1ooe1 OUltomere. ·-.....,._... • lf'ftall Of w_r LAWN MOWI~ I,.,_,......... TMnk "/OU '3t-4410 .. fMl-1
That11 ALL you steY
for. 301n~ed
DAlY
PlOT
MIMI l'"M =-=-~~Ta 111.'~~1!:.im:~~c:= ,...,, ==.. r... 1nft Clw'" ltwtw LOWllT AA;UI Prompt, =~~~· .. ,~ ..
New oablnete, Cl bl net ""II llT'I tor o.m.nt ... or ""811 '*· .. , ........... oeu. "091N'I CLtANINO LOW tio!:T.'!:ri:e· nHt prolH•lona11. 15 ·-••••
facing, b1rt. formic• tllooll l brlok worll. Uc. IMUt. 11~M .... ,.71 ~. e thotouoNY TN 'ao1ory lnlutenoe 'ff• •P· "6-7141 -• • -mr
oounWtoOe. ..U-<1111 luropHn or1fta1un. WibiCOMM'L/INO. JA,ANUE OAN>fNE" ~ lloule. ~7 94f.IMO 833-0421 PAINTIM NHD M ~ ffNe .._
SERVICE
DIECTmtY
~ l c.p.ntry IM *4 lpeclllllt. Melnt Olean· WOftl<I 30 vrt exp, Intl IHI
"""'Jobt a,...,..,.. ~~::,,,,o:A..i1e ino. trl~. ,rj. ..,, Hr:~•:1ne. r=:ie. 'd'... Ht. Aoou1Uc c1111ng1. t• D ~ ... fin ........... ""'"' ,,.. ettine.. 145-2003 C.wlf Tiit Nl-M12 142·'°47 YOLANDA 8Mpt..2"°"°6 1111r Pr°"'ty a.rvloM. Uo. M17IO. 'rM eet. Quellty-wlllibll ,.._ ~ --=-w-"==:=-""'...... ll.ICTllUCIAN ~WN/OAAOIN MAINT Painting. roofing, Cit• 08'ilt Pelntlng '42·7471 'I: "* In •lMI-, !!!!!!wir .... pr1oae. ~213 Lio. 2U10I. llftal~ UO'd a~ ' IPlllU ftJln '*'''Y· gardening eto. PAINTING: INT/()CT ranta.;,... or'r~. lngt7~e:.o;~·
DO IT NOWI Aem0d,/"9pen. Lo r8*. -.11.a ,.&_ Jotle. reptllre. S41-& Free •t. 14S.S4t2 CIHnlng a.rvtce. C... loweat rat•· Aleo rental NMt. fWI. Free eat. TOP HAT IM-2030 ltt:
... .., ..... 0.Cll•. patio•, feno ... ,,., "" ~-• no Job teo "''*' II n-.t to Oodli-HfYIC• for landlotdl. Oreg Alley 54M790 PLUMllNO A£PAI": -!!!
Yow Delly Piiot R9e ._ 8tew 162-MM CHILO CAM wttfl lovil, ,,....._.d-GU8r L'fntr '*'· 142-tlOt ............ .,, .,. ,... Aeloc lte w1ter htre, l._U..Tl-LE~l ... ~T .. A-'L"!!:l~D--
lervtoe Olreotory IWMOOILl1'ACI LIFTS ~yd, meaAl~.M. 131·"41 Ul-40tO llftl _,.._ V8ry ~ refl ....,, 25 1 Uo ~1 1n1 llOOk up tor wa1flerl All ltlndl..,-0.-.....
. .. "9preeen~IU Cutto"' wood patio•· 14w 1• wtc lvfp'• bp'd In all tlOIN reptlltl. ~et* l Exp'd IAICf<WOfU(: 8meH ~., ~. Aef9. coi« 111: dryer, copper replpe. flWt Jofw\ IN-0481 IQ.llJL -dee*• & ttnoee. elLgen LIC'D CHILD CAAi TIDI Cornm'l/R8e. 548-3018 552•11522 Newp«t, Coata Mela. '*1. N3-0811 Ncflard 5341-2030 My expertlM: au tys»Mi ~~!!!~~~~~ hm rer:lr. FrH Ht. Agee 24· leactl l Hell •••HOME "EPAIR !MM. fWs. 875-3171 INT/EXT CALL JIM Aeplpe, repllr, rln\OCMI. MM . .UC'd.4'Mr . ......... / le!!ftl Aendy 1-otaa . .,.._ 8:3CM. 142.0711 Toppecl/t'WllCMCl. c:..i Eeo-Plumb-Cerpentry H'Tj!.: ~~ ~In Meeonry •• llll · FrH .. t. reHoneble. '3J·H45 14M010
Contnictor· to rt" exp. Aepeif·""-etlone TODDL!A FUNI lunch, up, MW lewnt. 751-3471 8ft'llll Jobt OK. F•t Xlnt refi. t57-0ee1 Lia/bonded. Low, low li~Ucit'dj. ijJohn~L83h1·~1=15='=J'!!r!l~! .... !!!e;;;;;--Pletll · ., ~ Doon-wtndowHeblMt• enaclle, aatlYltlet. 'air/ l.andlcaplng.-Yd ClnUOe MrVtoe. Keltll 14Mf72 wtnter prloel. 173-53e7 .... ,_.. Pttt otlln It• - -
fWs. ·~145 . P~tloe-'9noM. Fe!MeW, CM. 751·™2 Tf'9111 ttlm/rwnov·Melnt 20 YHrl HP crpntry HOUMOleanlng, lull ,or ftt/ IRICKWORK HIGHUT QUALITY -----INmll'fl 1m
D.L .... _ .. ___ • .;... ~~· .wry 54M413 "'=:1:: ...._. lrflOetiOn Jim 861.0129 _.__ ...... bnQ. IE. Wtythl,,,; tlfne, 22 '(ft •xi>. Im he 12 ""t In OC 83•11M 'P.O. BOX a.Mcaa -n'dtl7·1111 ...::.::....::::.--:=,:"~'_,::..!_...=:::::• .... :::.Jt=;:;;-=;--;-;;:;:j;t1a:::;:;;A""ll!!!!!!!!!t!!!!!l .. J!!!!'.,!I!!!·--_., """•. ~ l.OOU.'... tleetl 542·51M 8mall/lge lobs, res>elrt. ,. S~IPPINO SE .. VICE I---,.--'_..,...,.;.-,=-=--AllUJt I neY8 got I C8111 Remod, CIMtllna Ofc "-d'I qutl LAWN & YAN> MAINT. AIM t"8e. 1 • LOC81refl.1454512 p19t ,. l&lftl Nlw 1.0catlon In C.M. I LOW ""TU I
con•tt..1. repelre big Of wrk. 1'eti bondble. GWdenlnalCHHlp. '"'· JACK OF ALL TRADES lllpef11M HOUMkMPlng My ••PlfllN: •II typ••· FAii UT. INT/EXT. 2424 Newpott Blvd T,... trim/NrnOV,..,
°"""9Y9. PwllJng Lot email. uuw. l7M294 531-:nM -8314611 FrM .... OeY8 "3-2503 Call Jeck Mytlme, Vee~~~ Aeu.-llc'd.~ AUS. LIC. HOl81 831-1423 upe, mowtng. 554-1011 IA~~1-:Z:tc Caret.... Cell..,.,, '"9al ~~~.. Dey or night. 875-3014 H.E.A. a..nMcl a.rvtoe 831-2.345 54&-4010 no. 71'1111-8047 ltflt!M'M ...... P'e'r
Oen H811ber9 Grtldlng No StMm/No 8"8mpoo •REBUILD STORM Trw trim/"9moval le!U!t Qu811ty. HOUlllOfftoe. ...... ftPliM CABINET STRIPPING WE WAIH WIHC?0W9 ' PavlnQ Co. AMlcommt Stain' 8peclllltt. ,... DAMAGED* Lawn rnalnt/lilototllllng DUMP J088 You' rt the bOMI ·ABC MOVING· Fllthlng Interior DellQn .. RUIN18HING , .... Profl u.u...i
Uc. at7&804 142-1720 dry.,, ...... 83•1582 Holw a a. ...... Uc. ,,... ....... 5 ..... 5 .. 8m8ll MOYlng Jobi a&e-1719 Quloll, car .. ufSetvloe. HANG1NG/8TAIPPING H yn up. Free.... °'*"Y wont guar.-.ct IUnl Shampoo a etwn clWI o.lgll Contr 541-1137 Cell MIKE '4f:.1311 ....... "Riii Uc. T13'04e 562.()4 to VIM-MC Scott 145-9325 ............... 7184&.3078 Fr•....,,... '41-1at1
!!i!t Color brlglltenert, wht Remodel/~ oomm. U•I~ '!!"11•10 HAULINO·ttudent w/lge Thotouott & Depend8ble ... , -.. Expe rt w•llcoverlng In· JD Horn R4lftnitNna
88byllttlng, any hour crpte • 10 min. bleach. a reeld LJc'd, tlond8CI c~ ,,_. .,_. tNCtc, wne lo r•t• J°'1 M4-97M (tw .,,....> .. -·-tt8118tlon. RMI. CoMul· Antiquee, lllt. 08blnela, ..... La. l1Qll1•
Nw vtc1orl8/Xlnt rn Hell, llY/dln. rme 11&: ~ lnL For' .... s62.e1.a ' ~1.a11dec-s>l11g 1&1-1111 Th8nlt you ... ~iv!5,::.:_lC9· tent Alllgnmt. ae1.aaeo tine painting. 145-0e66 Th8t ell oontr8Ct0re """°
coeea...... 142-1412 r~·"a·50: ~. 11 ; ·-~I " .... Heullng . Tree Trtm HAUL-MOVE-REMOVE ...... tu Uc T-111.•21 130-1353 Bleckweldef P•WhMg· ~ l*fOmto udln~1.!"9"or 12.-nd laU Cnr -· uar ... m. pet -••~~ F,.. eel. 142·M07 Fumlt T Uh T T Service ...._.. lull !!!!!!!!!! lnoludl • .,
IW ::.· ~:'w'!f:''in!:ft: =':..~Plw. llW':. Mowing, edging & 9en ..::.1~ NOR::-~~om: apple. STARVING COLLEGE ~aor:;~~:u•. ROOFING REPAIRS ==:.e~b~~ a::=: ~~~.~t. fWs. &M.o.123 Uc. 1411570 14Man dMn·up. HOM91 a-.. 11:J1..: 831-4171. 8~~~~~1~~:0 p ._:__1 ~1elltlob•c ?.Kr. ,r .. tr8Ctort thOuldi;; ..... bo t 8 d · pend8ble. for he eet. !!!!!!!!!!!! Wouldn't r1ther tl8Ye lneufed.141-3427 llP _.. -·me... e om or In their~ 0--4~'~ '· ame •Y· ~~~~ ~ Ceutnetlta Clty11 75G-4403 or &U 415• 14 lilr D <;:? ... lift e CPA:::.,.~ In-WATCH U8 GROWi **8AYANT'8** Chuck, 542-13'2. tr8Cton Md=:·
... •--.1 Truell Mount Unit. Guar. ----;;;:00-H a ...,..-;;u-1..;;-Aalptl c.bellwo & IOM Fu"**"'POOl·water llMt come tu return•? Cell f·•-&1:: WallcOY9ttng Aemovel -= comec:t~ at
l!J .,...... AMa. ,..._ 145-3718 ~Up ind~ Compl. m1lnt, oomml a.t OREEH cMfl for he•· tee-1182 ... !!!!! All typet. 142"1343 11 JOtlt ~y I ~ .. eon:C:.: M Ill. --CARPET INSTALLATIOH Det8lf wont. 867.oet1 ,_Tree trimming & ,. for WHITE etepMnta Oeve'e; ~ St0.-75 or Water darNOe epeolalllt Trlde your old 1tufl tor ~~ 8ttN UOMM ~. 2i1
218 MAIN ST, H.B. • a AEPAIAS. 30 vre up. mov81, c:=-::r.· FrM wttll a CIMllfl«I Ad 20% of! lallt year'•. W1I 20 ~·Ina. new goodlH wltll a . -= Civic center Plau, ISM 4068 (213)tn-e413 14&-0031 (bet I, 811 4) OIMlllled Ma 142'·5e78 llt, 848 4854 • 4:30. Cell 142·5e78 tr8WI. 141.o929. ot, 138-6521 Ctetalfled ed. M2·&e71 Room HO, a.nta Ane,
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PlJlllf
ACROSS tit•
1 T opt 5e MM In blue
5 e. 8llgtY eo Ao...,.
10 Blond 81 Gel• tll8
14 Tunnel f Mgr.
15 Oklaihom8 2 wordl
city 14 love god
18 Entr' -e5 Mldyeert
17 ReslrWnt 5e W8'ght unit
19 O.t rid Of 87 Cat1ograme
20 Cuttlv1l8d 88 Morocco city
21 "-*lie e8 Nice MUON
23 Oriental DOWN
28 N.Z. tr• 1 Ught eource
27 Ladl 2 Bui. e.g.
30 a.ucty """ 3 c..,., 34 a.Yate 4 Yuton rtv.
SS -rot»bery s w P8'tl• ~ °'8tn. IUlft1' I Mltd retM!e
31~ 7 Y•nwne
heroine • --now: 3t TrMI.,._ Current
41 Be utwew t 8h#tl
42 lndte 10 ..... dOwfl
43 Good neme 11 Mi.y
44 aranc:t. 12 8rMI ~ .av.-ew 1acw...
47 A9dlc8I 11 ANll
50 "Whet9 -22 lldUllPI
-?" 24 In l'9tum
It Beood fMd 26 J41rtVt
52 SNk...,... 27 v..,.
28 Depend
29 Adult:
2word9
.11 8lblc* peek
32ChMMI
»Onthe..wi
Mllrd
31Abeat\
.0 IN09Uf'
44 O.-dtt99
4fWMPON
... Moetloy.i
41 Uquott
52 Tltl9of
reepect
53 cwo danc9f
54Conh
55 Six: PNft)I
57 MorlOQI em
pert: Abbr.
SI Cemeo, e.g .
61 !nOCtl'•
OOUlllrt
12 .....
IChCW
93 Tumor. lufftll
•
8 Or•ogt Ooa1t DAILY PILOT /Tuetday, February 12, 1083
.. l•t!f 119 ltlt l g l!f UM ltl• blM UM •a. Wy1!4 llM Nt lytt4 119 ''""'" tt11 bn Jiii &•!t! !yt!f U IMI!!· ,...,.,.
1'111•1 •IHI ====:;;;;;;::~====;;;;;;=: 110,_ITAf\Y, 20 SO llrl TILlftH~~~.ltOLIOI• I lft Wiii OIHllO 11' L.ap11t1ke •OOMt:ITICI• Ill
IMll MIO lo .. MOO 1>41r ., per wt.1 ••I*· typt 70 Ma.& Comm fOI prot 10 t-11111 111·11U OtrllUry bay boat, 4 QYI, (Any YHr Model) 1•-:io_.., ____ w.1 .. llalllL--.J"'I ~~¥en~,en~ llllllATI IPlll• .,. =~~ok1&-...::. H~ AcMttlelnf• 10.4 **I DllV** ~-PllOO _!76-!!!.!.:.._ Piii iN N MT '17 1201, n,w .,.g1,,a a N tta, ••I conct. Orlt ~ 1-.ntQ«t f191 PO lo• 1a.1, NI. Pl" IH•tll I he UVI H' mftlll .. llmal• 11 your~ lllH Ju11 tuMCf llHI r'f :o· ~arr
r. ,.ountrH at tiieO _llt·tl21 Pl•ll~ ,.,, ''• ON!Mr. lo IWI, II '*"HIV .. 1abllllh• roo!1 11100 010. etf."" aa
IMl-l'OM btwn l IAM l Nt...cl telephone .. 1. rep.....niauvee to TO, 1 1 1 flfNllee Pr.. M'"•Te•• .. ,....... loecMd *'•"•· a lllfl. •d 10 yeara tn Cotta ..-. .... 1 •. SH.I w..ic .. Wrt lt llah t I C• .. tA Mcu offlCf' .... .... '" •VT"O • d 1 I 1 t I M..a -'7 t "12 Renavlt, r .. H
.. aY9 1 ir • n -SECRETARY ~~~. d(2 t~I ~:a• :la./ ....... Ill,...:!!!! :,:'"~~m Nor,,:,: Newpot1tlf II Moton 111111 II U .no a ctuteti & fly~ Ullltml l8' llQf _
111
_..,11 --•-•• "" (11'i-s·HN 1174 CMtle II , C M '7' 2801. 10 ml, am11n1 ISHI offer over HOO
H•v• o-n1na1 10 take •Part tJm.. ..,. ti .. •• _, •-•-........ ltl c1t1, air, many HlrH ~ti ordel'1 l~Mk1Tg oep1, no •Mu.t be ""at l~ruJt 16 -• ' 5 yr• -•1>41r. 11 w .. 1.,n Pll•ll•lt II' Ll•Y Y~ -• .. 11 cond. 17000 obo ,_...;;....:..::..-...---••P9f MO. Prel•r ov•r lllt ""' ftf .. .,, State• Ovtlf 26 Yf•r team 8ever•I nice pl.c•• In· f30K down+ 11800/mo. WE PAY 615·H5T ltl11 lntt tllJ
11. have oat and el>le to •No expert l'\C\• ne<..'C.'llllU'y tffrtfltJ tttll ... ti• d rt v t n g . ca f 1 D 1 w n ctudlng 1oma 1co.e10-tor 116 11'111• In 6000.000 - -•CwtlmlMcl.l~HOO •Pteaaant pc,.,nallty 1•11 •••l•r•nt. 91m·tpm, 638·HOa.1 rlH and Orendlethe r cr11t ~·oon V1tk" TOP NWI 'lnl•~00~1~·.~.P~.T.·d~ •UHLHINU.$.A.
.,..._..., A190 have 40 lam•onll• 2 • • ._.. ,., ... zi.~ ... ~~ q"al l led •ReUabl~ :,-::11 le"' tff1tt 831·33<61 Clocll \/try low Pl'IO" "4·934 fll llll Ull 36.000ml, ••II cond ~
•Qood earnlna potentJal I Tlat lttrtflfJ ft toldlng chelr• and 6 2 7• -•Y· vv<idy ce· aa a• ••Miii t 7&oo obo 045·&495 -/lllll .... lttr4 .... , ... ~r9~NM~~:,~~:~ loldlng llblH Ca ll bin. •1111 eond. •9900 -----·-'75 2to1 2 + 2 .... ., fuel
f«gl"1.c:wo.a eoetM-ten tf 1 lntrl• ilf'I Od.i 13t .. :M2trom9amtot2 •M·2395 • PllTUl/111&11 lnJec. good condlllon. ~-•ICI-'""'"" tie.. Elq). ~-1n•91 ..i.wio m tvPM noon only 2480 Hatl>Of Blvd 550· !932 t-t!OO abO ,...,.,... • ..,.. ,,,. ..,.. ..., ~7373 Otlt ................ l •I •11t1I ••••• ,., WI IOI ll)flng faehlon1 and ' 1-•l Jtl..a COSTA MUA .., --.n IW
•• I .. l. ·-•1• --I.. _ ....... .,--....... an HCluelv• •wlmwear Rull f'lor•I Sola, •. • .. .. '74 aeoz Good Concl
Modele/ Qtncer• tor ba-otwor panlel. Good UI. '56-MSS
• • ..... • •• ..,., •--"".. .... tine. Aleo othtlf •vPM fOf plllow·btck. S250 111• fll1. ... 141·•HI .... Hll S3200 la .. n tH7
l111t1• 11 h11t1l1 betlf and wlri. 9dveru... 963-4058 POR 8At.e H"'hllli eun lmmed for 64e..1471 v
NEW OPENINGS F« Na· 'A .. 1euranl llonwld• lndullrlea. No OMI Salee, w1n train. 15,000 0, 1 p1119 a yew. For Info cell .nner hou•• ••P•r -
1-312·9St-7051 ••' enee. N•al and Malure HMA Fee/Ofrec:tcWv ONL YI Apply In pereon, 9-11 AM weekde.,_ 047
OfF-8HORE OIL JOBS Camino de Lo• M1ru, No Experience neCH· San Clemente. (Acron
Hry. ll.S. & over11111 from 0-•I Hoeplllll
For Dire ctory 1~t2·741-8170 Ext 0·13 •lauranl HH, PtlffJ lffHIM K MS Private Counlry Club.
NO EXPERIENCE Laguna Nlguel Phone
NECESSARY Chef, 4186-5767, 9 AM · 3
Meny poeltlOnl evallable PM Closed Mon<Saya For Into, 312-888·41347 I-------_;,.
Ext E·t1. Fee tor o.rec· llnAIL tory Full llme supervleo1 ol
new ololhe• boutique
Apply In pe<ton Plef I,
2710 Harbor Blvd, C M
OROEA DESK & gen. olo
procedure•. Wei 1utt Mtg. Have lmmed full
time opening tor lndlvl-
dual. Typing 56 wpm
plan't voice & able lo
handle phon" • mull Sal plu1 benetlla. For
REUBEN'S NEWPORT
need• 1n Oysrer Bar
Person. Mon-Fri. nUe1 25 tirs/wl< Apply In pet·
aon from 3 ·5PM 251
SALES polltlon open w/
guaranteed .. 1ary or comm. Earn up to 1 1000
wk a more Call Dick
Hardy 531-3000
w.n 1111
Comml11lon. lnterl« d•
coralor or pereon w/
good eye tor color Work
your own hrt. Income
potentlal unllmlled
Plellll Clll
1/6 19-270-41858 bel-·
en 8· 10 AM. M·F
SALES
lnllL .IEWELIY
Must be eapetlenCed In
retall setllng and man•· gemenL Salary and
eommiulon open Call
Jenice 2131747-6518
Yllef, Oa. ff' Intl• menll. and tHlaur1n1. Mat 1 ed t 2 a..a.4a..4, M•fl, l -6 "" 8alee·8ervtce-L.9Mlng
'
••••••
'
•• ' •
.. ,, automotive pan• nt•· 0( z eon our ,,.,. your Yehlcte. domeetlo or rerrad tl2l ........
• ioge. No ••wi.nae r• eon club chair Coit 30· Aaclng Stoop w/Mwpt foreign. 551·5285 -••I ...... tf rteffH I quired 8ackground SHO win take $264. !Ji. lllp AppralMCI S14,&oo ..... telln'I -wtft wll ... tf ... roles only By appoint· Cellent condition CHh 8 a c S 9 O O O Io tr . JMp lfll •Y &11'm1Z11 111·2141 ttMMI """'"' r-m IO menl 12131 M:t.seet llld carr; .... 8-4629 752· 1640 We'1e " ' In Ille w .. 1 f ERIUI WI • .,. l===========I 6drm Ht lpc. wh Fr UM 14 W/TUIW for New a uHd JHP T!ftta 1111 Pl .,. ••• a 111 WUTlll/WUTUSS Prov . Xcond. 050. u 0 0 &6 9...... 61i.t Tllefe'u Reuon ·~lllllPI 71 Celle:• grl cond I ... II, Wtr• prt• 18 ar ov•r. No E•perl· Lounge chair & all. S75. 857-4024 • • Prlee & Selectlon
1
,. • ~ ownr. AM/FM 0 .. 1~ nu
t tt:!illtt8'tfftH ence nec .... ry. Private Conv. 1ola, Dan. mod s1.000.000lnven1ory ~ 11rei. S4100 . 1tv1 ••-r t fftflr .. lt ...... Club. No Tip•. Good Pay Ilk• new 1200. 675-7064 lot' American FlberglHI !5418-1139
..... --· Pl II •73 7730 w II It $126 T bl W/IUll Hiii, "Ir. motor. '2 ---------
1.t ••••• t.''. ,.II ea•• ca ' v • a un . urn 1a • •~7 .... 2 )o • 7" ,.,..,__ 11 ........... -___ ,. Wed·Sun S96 CottM 1e1>1e Sl25. -v. v41 ·410141 .. "'..,......, --""""'''
trl111 Mltflt •Hk• WUl•ll 5!52·1833 14' Stardancer. Complete range,._ · 3100 W"t cO..t ~wy :3:s~·1~:'e9f· aacrlf.
•I•• Startl11 HllfJ Exper or tralnHI can Haitian co11on eota/ love-~~Jng $495 673-955-4 S: Q!.St ~ Newport Beech V IL 1173
......... ff .. llffl.. make S8-Jt3/hr lllrtlng Mat J400 both Q'*"' ...,, ftZ4 lol90t •• CGllA •JI 642-9405 taatw!la
Htltat a llJff• &,-pay Full and PIT avail· bed '30. 551-053!5 eve. 14' Sailboat w"rtr $800 cmt \19"11 111•1 ttt mt flat 1123 'lJ llPEI 1EOU ~a.. PtrHlltl lfftH able In our publleatlon1. P1u1h green eouen & twin Call Larry 4 un. 1 Drl 9030 Good cond St..o New ., ,.. • I , ·, Cell 537·2880, e.1 3 bed wllh heedboerd1. "41-?!61 w•ff "' '79 Br1va/6spd, air, am/ I I s2300 'c II
ti• tr • ' r KING'" Karyn 651·5575 '79 CJ5, lull roll cege, big Im ~'9190 eau, new pi,. g:e..~215 af1 e •
1-4, 111" 11111 AH., Wicker Lunch B11kel De-Sola, ru11 print, S2""" ~ •1rl1t litalJ . 7011 tlret. Ilk• new, Min lhan relll '· orig owner, Hit . , Y I • I ./, <N -- -t O , o o o m 11 e 1 . c o n d 5 <4 5 • 7 9 3 7
• • • • • • llvery. High Commltllon m•k• offer. Othef lurnl· SS Tuna tower w/dual • 6 6 0 0 I 0 B 0 $2800/obo 1111 "' Yll Part llme M·F Need lure 831..0266 eon1rol1, tor 25-35' boat 714/4194-0167 .-7-5--12-41--S-pv_d_e_r_c_o_n_v_-6 1 Auto. sunroof, new STIP Car. 720-0365 S300/olr 6416-4005 ' ... -..... , .... t tr·~. am1 ------------------If L a -35 tpd, neW yellOW paint/ "'-•ut --& 1ggrenlve, energetic SEClnOY /RDPT. Wiii IPIUTll ,, •-) ncaa -top 95.000 ml. S2950. Im eu .. ue, 48K ml,
Salee
poalllve ~pie wented Leading brokerage firm •11111 H n lllp A Dtclt 70ll '78 oa"un King Cab, lo 675-2172 PP. or~. owner. J4950. t.,::111~:'~~:.~. Far Hunllng1on Beach has Immediate ()9enlng lt1HlatW C....1212 Sllp1 Avall. Huntington ml. Concord Aedlo, llfl '76 SPIDER 124 49 •2903 -., medlcel eaneulllng aer-for ••perlenced wire H 1 r b our B 1 y , O A kll, chrome wht1. Goo-R """"" need al Peek1glng, 1peclal pro-SALES • guarenlee S6.00 C 1 11 T 0 m Park 11 r • v1c .. comp1ny Pleaaant operelor. Houre: 5"·45" Sgl meur ... & bolt epr· 840-55-45 84&.7766. &-9 dyear rad Lala. good una ¥"""'•
1 P nt VW Rag Top &Moot for
)eel. eo day. only. pr hr starting wage Only 53l·3081 phone mann1111, S/H AM -2 PM. Salary com-Inge wlframe, 6 mot, p M 8 4 o . 4 o 9 7 cond. 13500. 536-689tl $3000.
419
9-
5042
Mlcfo-Bu1. Graa1 c:ond.
957-0&81 ~;=. ~;:,,:~~:,ron ~u~ SCTIY/llEOPT. ~~1~1iz:'~'',~~ ~·!',~~j ~n~eu~~~· .~~~In~=~:-:~: :;::,~1u•tc 11•nd. 7WS40-7576 ' 'll ~ tt1 Fer• P.I Ht .. a tl2S Calf Jim 557..0100
East PCH 8'JS)t. 6412-1912
Piil/Tm MS f.I Engllah speaking Inter-for real etllle ofe PIM· oriented Ca 1' 1 He I en : J 1 121..a Maflnt 1Up, NB. 25' & 36', $1900, 546·5596 77 Accord, 5 spd, air, '74 Super Beetle, exit
Wanted adult• over 22 view• belween 1 30_3pM aant environment New-We otter a good lllt1lng 71416«-22g2 ... ry • 1111. Avall. lmmed. Henry, 1unrt AM/FM 8 Irk running, IHvlng llate wN> enjoy WOf111ng with only 15215 Sprlngdlle. p0rt Cenltlf IOe Retp0n· & 1 Ct Otarnond VSI clarity ... 2-8200 '76 Ford Courier, very $2450. Good cond: $2250 firm. 54f&.7004 or
youth. Muet b• well HB ~111~~~~~~;:~~~!r tr:~~: =--~~'Jin~.ce~~~7~:~~. Wiii PllOUlll/ Appr val. $8,000. Bii otr eo.1 alip• avallable. N-· ~=~~·.~~~~~rs~~;~· 542-6672. af1 6
84~203
groomed, penonal>le, • •&1£S knowledr. 01 rNI eetate Please con1ae1 Lorraine llOIPTllllST « Ired• 6415-5000, ext. pon 9eeetl 25-410', 1 mo 660-tl02t. ••&U 9141 '79 VW CONVERTIBLE
poelttw mollvalor. Start ..., l\etpful. alary commen· 11 7141/1142· 1090 Fulltlme position I« La-326 ltee rent. Cell 6"2·416641 , Lo mlleege, AM/FM, air
II S75 per WHk. Call In-house referral• 25% IUlllll w/expet Conlect xllron word proceulng • u ,.211 rrom 9.5 Mon-Frt 77 Chevy Luv pickup, like new. S7550 firm
2-5pm. 641S..7021 luk tor commlt1S1on. 538-30419. B B 1 group iyplll a tel9')hone ICuatry • , good cond. S2500 obo 545·266 t, aft. 3 p,m
Shanon). SALES 6::1~;0 arum in s.et1111rlal receptlont11. Entry level All ..... 1.. 3.~:~:~•.~lert.toN~lle: 536-6142 , _ _. __ d_a.;..y. ____ _
.E./w .. E. SECRET. RY/ RECEP· WOITIYE role with good beneflle & 3 h~1 phue 60 gal. aboard• 965-24173 Aall,111 '72 Bug. yellow. 10K on PAAT TIME ,.. beautllul working 1ur· ·-1 --... tank u-~ C / •1 eblt eng New lntr 1111 UILTI Plf't·H .. , Ftll-TI.. T10N1ST 1u11-11me. ••I•· SEOllnUY rounolnge. Apply 1n pet-~";~d. i729 T'e';';';', NB MARINA, day. w11 mo. l111lc1 9049 $1800 oeo: 4941-ee75. ·
Earn extra money col· Salee Manegemenl 1rei.. ptione & 1•e•p1lonlll H111dqu1r1ere olltce of eon with reeom• 10 Mr. 772•6390 Exel loe, HIH. & full 1111 llllll lectlng f« the Newport ,_, WHI train qualllled resp Ty1>4ng. IM3-21141 lhe Jolly Roger R"'8u· Fuent• al Robert Bein, t«V, melnt. 6416-0551 Speedslet repllC'-The '65 Bug . new 90g, new
Enlign""and Coste M"' persons tor Owlelon of SlOlfTAIJ rant Chain hu an open. Wi111em froal & Auoc:ia· •iKtll1aM1t 1211 Side Tl• ta 59' avan m. moat :l?iant convertible Spe1n1...!:..extt cond-,"7 .... ..,. Olverelfl•d Marketing lf\9 IOI an Hperi.nc.d tea, 140 I Ou all St . ·' ....., ... ......,., Co. B .. e opet•llon tor Newport Center Broker· Executive Secretary to N11WJ><¥1 e.ech NB POOL TABlE med. Ba~ Or 59/lt, evtlf bul II (20161-V'l&a Ht us-'ll -•~,..u..a... • laJ PtJ Salel expanlion In Sou· age nrm 111:1 need IOf an lhe Vice Pretldenl of · · · 41'x7' llat•. CUiiom wood mo lo mo. No llve $49,500... ,01 YOUI '" _... .. -.-•IHI... thern Calllorn•• Com· uperlene•d Hcrelary Ope<ellons. P091tlbn re-Jt~I Waat.. 5105 deelgn.Comes w/l>llNard aboard•. 955-24173 IOW 131 IDO NlnMUO•. $6500, Jdnt c:ond. 111ru.. •Print m1111on rang• hom With tome knowledge 01 quire• excellent thOr-WORD PROCESSOR • ~~:S :~I~~~~· wlldyt Tn.odore Ro.;/n1 Ford -It & 951-1800. 548-2127
Conitant adult eupervl· 12!5 ooo+ annually For Word ProceHlng and th1nd and lyplng1 •kill• experienced on many '°' J!500 firm 661-a23~ 1250/mo. Newport. No 2060 Harbor 91., C.M. .,_ '74 Squarebaok 412,
lion of all minors. con°tldenU1I interview. Apple II. Wiii train Call and offers a varety of 1y1tem1. lnterealed In ' lh1•aboal'd1.Yeartyonly. 6412·00105"0-8211 wten•.. m1g1, Am/Fm good
CIRCULATION DEPT Call Miu Rlcil8y Arlene LeSor, between rHponslbllltle1. Prior 111 mp0 r a r y w 0 r 11 . Chocolete chip recipe. EvH 650-34156, Daye ' fAClll'll shape $1800. 8~2
call 031-8120 YHl'll SAFI 10 A~ • 12 Noon. et rHllurenl uperlanee 667-3939 ... y lo make. For mot1I 5g4.1973 .... lt•H ltt4t•
11• •..at-1221 164141-9111 would be• definite plu1.' detall• wrll• 10: Kerry Bolt.,..._ avall1bte. New· 19416 Ford Woody Wt· mu111111.c•11 11csuom. '69 Van, exit c:ond.
,.._ Lovely ottleel, good be-I •-, I Bank• 410419 Sapphire. ..,,... B:;ch. 20'-30' 1 mo gon, J13.000. S3300 ot>o PUT nm BETWEEN 11 AM-3PM Want Adi Cell 6"2-5e78 nelll package Apply In ...... I Or, Encino 914138 ...... . ---'73 Mazda RX2, need• 6"2·9621 1111/Wlll.EllS pef'SO!l from e AM to 41 --frM renl. Call 6412-"644 1929 Ford Model A Town I 0 m II • n g w 0 r k '82 RABBIT CONVERT
Mak.e extre S$ helping PM 111· ..... 5510 PLASTIC BUCKETS S • d an . I 10.00 0 $3501080. Call Sherri P-1eet. every eX1ra. 41M,
youlh carriers promoie fMMrnl• T'f THE JOLLY ROGER. INC Schneuzer, mini, AKC. 8 c~:1~ doz.en lltrllt 702' 67s-&161 962~2eo $10,500. l60·9220
their own Hlebllshed l•lflf;,11111 I J 11042 Glllelta Ave wlls, champ nnee. S225 & ---------roulM. Malure, outgo· 714_1f.'~331 up. 779-7900 att. 6 Revolving )ewelry show-RV & BQAJ 'H OutLLM ••1ct4n Ina tl4S Jlisc. 1177
Ing, attr.etlve parental a11Jrlffl'~' LAB RET pupa. Avall Mar. eaae. new cond. Price All "'I I R ~...,... Alk about our COfne In & ... Newport
type pet'IOn, pi.a.. call ri;;,1111 ... SECRETARY AKC champ. Yel&Blk. neQ01· 8.t&-1677 DRY STORAGE Mu1f;..~·ia00;;,~ Ziii .... LUii 9eeetl'• fl,_t Mleetlol\
2-SPM. M-F. 64&-7021 for pvt lnveetor. bkpng. $150/$200. 557-3056 W ~ H1fn 842-0100 969-1221 tr PllOllll .. e• of prevlouely o wned
1
!5000 FOii exp & grammaoe.i lkllls S4t "' ..... n.-PorsehH. Audi• end · pet/mo po1en11a1 req. Non emkr. Hlary Oxy-aeet. 1mall tanks. Wet Bolt tllpt on your next Mere.cs" Volkaw.,_ Ho exper. neceuery M S • L •• Teecom min. l«Ch. Vic-'03 CORVAIR MONZA Benz. Cetl ut at -.--Women Pfof Full or pl :8 all reeume lo te trC•ID Ill tor dual tlege geugH, avtlllable alto. CONVERTIBLE ,,. SlJllllS ....
time. New buslneu. new • 15 T el-a-M:irketmg Agents CdM ;:::5 E Cll Hwy . .1-.i-111 1010 ••Ira tlpe 1200. II llU New top & erp1. s2000 l•Nm product•. For Info " ftAUll 542-0100 969-1221 Ufllll YllUll 675-1470 675-2580
548-9183 Mr. Adam• •Professional working cond1ltons TlUNlm U&JS •llTllR ...,_* IOI l..t ... -. 11 1so1 0ua11 si.r .. i ~~ Tired of meklng min· THUR!, FEB. 2.4. 6PM '77 Oak Clock regula1°' ••J• AatM, l•Jtrt.. NEWPORT BEACH 67 .. """"'
,.Im. •N by Colonial, brand new IU·1H1 --.... ,.._ ......,...,., 0 experience necessary lmum wagH7 We pey AMERICAN ANTIQUES e 0 n d . I 3 7 O / o tr . lift ... H 1109 -•· ._
Exp« count• person w/ guaranteed J5/l'lr Veryl Nice qld highboys w/ 759'-8001 l:m~~~~~~~iij!A!•!!IM~,1Dt11!!!!!t1!!!Jlk!!_ __
underet1ndlng ol PH· •All tratning pfOVtded euy Hll. PIHH e1111 mlrr« .. oek dr....,. WI ' t ff' '79 \I~ Sprint, 38K. 5 I" 1111 ••A•l!L ,_ i.up, layout & design Fl 531-308 t A1k far Mr mirror•. 2 Vietor pnonoa, Oeluo bathroom tlnk IUll!I I 08 tpd. ale. Blaupu.Mt am/ ...,.s; _,, t!!!
time. Co. beneltta •Must have pos1ltve attitude Watson golden oak aldeboarde tauc:.11. hlgrt quallty et line... ..II tmcua,mags.newtlfM. Black·ti.autllul-etegant. ·11 AMC Gremlin. good
Orange co Alrpon araa f II t & -• .. --.. .. W•I w/m lrrored b1ek1, lrlCllon of C091, S10 M. _ '4700 775-7227 1 35,000 mllea. NI extraa running cond. 8-1 oner.
557.9212. Mr. Emmons. • U 1me part lime ·~ trunk•. rocking chairs. Job letlawn ~62t Oeaperat• • mu" ••II 790-1178. ~ Stationers Inc p C Supplement yaur income rnd oak teblN. equare Litten mietoweve, 2 deell• IT .._ ... ~fliji]iii~ii!j~;iiiliii ~~7~i4~n~31~·~5~11~5~~~~!!~L===J!ij~ otent1a!ly High omm1ssion by dOlng CONUmer aur-din. 111>1e1. e Mt• of ioe wibooke•H• & chatre. '250. Todd 969-1221 1 laick 1311 PIHlt_. th veye over the phone No fency proud beck lamp•. plcturH etc 'II mz Hiii WI
11111.m Salary wG1uarantee1. ~~~n\ ::~~=. ~11:,;:I ::r'ri·.~~.~/~ CdM. ieo-e16!5 ev9 . •tt1rcycl11/ suver. blue teattier, io mt Air.'~~=~ict ~~ :a!:tt~~v;; Hourly pay Reply In-f8"C'f MOfTll, 2 nic. Vici. FEATHEA COMFORTERS lcMltH .... :~:9t.~klng S10.800. $5800/obo. 64M809
eapeb6e of det"'nlng & eluding your phone walnut bed•. o.k Hooelef cleaned & recovered '72 H--.. a 500 • .._ ,.._,, c-..am.-13M
eg1 OP d;p, C IR LE y ITT number Trendb Mar1te1 eablne11, .,, ..... 11end1. European 1tyle with "'"" • ~ . ...., '79 4150 SL Miian Brwn ~ ~,orT1990&~ ontact • at R .. eareh, PO Bo• 1011 of odd mirror• & beautllul downproot I.any ~2181 ••••rlor. Brwn Leather TIE LMlllT
POP-111341 wUh Cobol 141-4111 85703, Loe Angelee. CA 100·1 of othef oek, ma-tlelltng. &412-41670 Interior. Wire whHll. llU..,...
Call 553-09-40 90072. hog. a walnut otecee A s .. ra Coldl90t lrostleaa •ttr ..... 1121 SU PEA Mu" Sell ., .... htwfft I All 194 I Pll Ttl lifft large qu•nllty ol 1ma11 retrlg 1125. Sola bed •79 P An 28. onty l&Lll-IDYltf 875-6200 ot late model, tow mn.-
PIT c .. hler tor perking Ftr .,,,....... •• prlmlllvH, toya & col-1200 Wood bookcHe GIV\I\ liCtl 1 1 ow0_ .. • llat• .52 3000. 4000 ml, xtra age Cadllllet In Sou-fecllty. ltttn........ lec:table Uema 10% ~ · .-vvv "'• 0• .,.., muel 531·2040 4195-419419 ll'lerf't Cellfomlaf S.. ua 615-2790 T1l·l·Olro 12 needed No Selllng.1 .,., premium.' Call Char· J201ofr. 496--3518 Mii. Dane 557-353-4 SAllUIACI ... cleen. snrt: wht w/blue lodayl p~ ~-:rc:.:::.~n~: ~=================~ -z:r ,,~1n Part llme or I ~:..::J1~0~~tllll. 9t.:: ·=~~II,:::., hu-:.0~ IV'• IOU 254102 Mlrguerlt• Pkwy ~t.'ii1·-~g5 C::.1~218'' 111111
ofc, typing, etc. Allltete 966-<>151 1f1 1 PM LlfTJ •1111 lHtlH coll $250, Hll SU. '80 Blue Bird lio. ba, 33 (A~~tt ":r: 5) MB '80, 300 SO, Ivory. OAlll1JI
C.M 640-1011 _. -1585 Toronto Wey, C.M. 552-0TH rt. 1100,000, exceptional. Open S~..,; Sunroof. chrome whll, 2500 Herbof Btvd. 0011• ~o l!DOW .!!,~I 556-U901 M t • .,,...... ••-1_:::73:.:,:1·:,:268::::5~or::..=~:::::::::::;::__I-::-::-::-=:-===:-cataet\e, 23,100 ml. Im· COSTA MESA
REAL ESTATE ni Vi I~ lln• _...,_ ._..,. .... 11\r ~ peecable c1eam puff 141-1111
s.leeman. ~ 1 expe-Anliuc" IOU WllTll A ti ~WL" S27.750 PP1eo-e121 ~ ~;.1~ New company looking for good we neecs QOOd peop1e •o HARBOR AREA ApplianCe Dolly ate .. " f·6ii6~2;oo:Oooo~.cc~1ali1il1~1e;..2iu9liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
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port 8eectl lnW19tment firm. 720-1047.
a.l/llTllL U&.11
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comm1•1lon .
714/860.2086
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PLEASANT elq>el'n«:.Maktngappt1. pool dryer 1150. l3MTOO Cleftltlcatlonl or deeler *'91320f;5epd.,IOed· 1019 450SEL. gold, Im-Ill n .. .... Wort< hr• 5-9 PM Mon-, t83-o.4to4 ' edl (1EBC2991 macutale. "' r ... u Fr I , S a' 9 -1 PM . · SAVIN 300 COPIER documentary prepera· 111-1111 S48-87to We have • aood wlec-
AM BITIOUS 662-6644 Wather. clean, work• gd. 7 .-otd,...,...... oond. lion charg•• u"I••• 1--------1 tlon ot NEW & USED se5 0ryw -.c, Cteen ,.. 4l00" atherwlM •pecllled by 208 W. 111, S111t1 An• •ltaa"'ia .. : IHT Chevroi.tal TtUPllm ._ worita od s75 54&-<6.48S MOO 562 t~5 M..f) ttie ldwnlMr. CIOMCt Sunday • iu CONTACT US AT 548--4000 Survey work no exper 3M eopi. & Paperl. Hile .1 a --1 / CHOICE INVENTORY T •t Drive & Prlot
8etw I AM tlftd SPM nee. win tratn'. Santa Ana frtt It TM MU '*"· MUST SEU. e'75 aall wntftl VOLUME SALES Mn ole. Salery. no Mlllng. p I I 651-8377 after 5:30 farts MU &
FM appolntm.nt Ideal for high 1chl 1tu-1 I , ' It t e I I. SMITH CORONA portabte AUTO BODY & PAINT 842-5871 eJlt. 312 dent1, work hrt 5·1 .... llecfrlc ~ter. coe1 Low prieea. He. ar• BetwMn S:30-IPM P .M .. sat 9.1 PM . 5<65-7283 uoo. aa1c1n11 s1 t5. 1111142.01001MM2.21 II I It Lii ii
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THI DRAIBI CDAll CIAIT 1111111
<JllAN<,I C <JlJNIY /U t11>1HJIA /'• C tN I',
Coast shaken by quake
Onofre tremor believed cause of tide spilling onto road
Oranae County polic:e oftlclaJa
received plenty of calD from the
curioua, but there were no
reporU of injury or damage from
yeeterdaY's 4:18 p.m. earthquake.
The moderate undersea
temblor measured 4.4 on the
Richter acale and was felt along
the coaat from Ventura County to
the Mex lean border, offlciall
aaid. The quake'• epicenter was
near San Onofre.
Suit vowed
death • In
of dental
patient, ·13
By JODI CADENHEAD
Mt'-Deltr Not ltaft
Costa Mesa dentist Tony
Protopappas will be the target of
a lawsuit by the family of a
13-year-old girl who died
following treatment in
Protopappas' office, a family
attorney says.
Laguna Hills attorney Dave
Fishman said Patricia Craven's
family will seek unspecified
damages against Protopappas.
The suit Is expected to be filed
this week. 'Spokes disappearing Craven. who died Saturday at
Mission Community Hospital,
A I r ( B ho was the third patient of worker ha u s o f piece o the a l a Pier Protopappas' to die since
F un Zone Ferris wheel which is bein g September. Funeral services are
di I d k ( d scheduled Thursday. smant e to ma e way o r a restaurant an Fishman has alleged that the
o ffice developm ent on Newport Harbor. T he girl. who was brought to the
50 -year-old wheel will be reconstructed a t dentist by her mother Patricia I Craven Russ Feb. 8, was given site when the development is finished. eight different drugs for general
anesthesia purposes during an
1 Laguna park gets scrutiny
Laguna Beach planning
commissioners will review a fire
protection section of a specific
plan for the wooded Thurston
Park community when they meet
tomorrow at 7 p.m. in council
chambers.
A specific p la n f o r the
neighborhood, which is made up
of wood cottages and a small
trailer park, is c urre ntly
undergoing public hearings in
Laguna Beach.
A specific plan is a blueprint
~Crash hurts cycle f!OP
A Laguna Beach motor officer
la resting at home today after he
apparently lost control of his
motorcycle and skidded into a
chain link fence in Costa Mesa
yesterday.
Officer William L ux was
commuting to work from his
Costa Mesa home at about 7 a.m.
·when he lost control of his cycle
on Baker Street. ·
The cycle slid into a fence and
landed on top of the uniformed
o fficer, a L aguna p o lice
spokeswoman said. A pa sse rb y used the
policeman's motorcycle radio to
summon Costa Mesa police, who
responded with paramedics.
Lux was taken to the regional
trauma center at Fountain V.illey
Community Hospital where he
was treated
for development for established
neighborhoods or communities
within a city.
The four-acre area Is unique in
that lots are substandard and
there are no roads into some
parts of the community
And while most of the units in
the park do not comply with
Laguna'• building codes, the city
has an interest in preserving the
neighborhood by upgrading
utilities and offering incentives to
property owners to spruce up
dwelling units.
A step in that direction will
come later this year as the city.
using $.200,000 in federal housing
funas, installs a new aewer
system in the park, replacing old
septic tanks.
The City Council is to consider
the entire specific plan when it
meets March 1.
Riptides mar beach outings
By STEVE MARBLE or-.Dellr ..... • ... Powerful riptides kept Orange
Coaat lifeguards on the move
yest.erday as more than 100,000
visitors headed to local beaches to
soak up the holiday sunshine.
Dozens of people were pulled
from dangerous currents and
choppy four to six-foot waves
that marred an otherwise perfect
ooncluaton to a warm and sunny
three-day weekend.
Daytime temperatures alonf(
tl;ae coast are expected to clip
tl)rough Wednesday with high
clouds settling in. No rain is
foncMt.
About 22,000 beac hgoera
spread out their towels at the
mile-long Huntington Beach dty
s trand . Lifeguards reported
several rescues, including a 1CUba
diver who was bounced off the
sand by a wave and a JIW'fer who
was hit in the face by a wayward
surfboard.
"The crowd was huge. I'm not
sure that it's a record but I
certainly don't recall a February
like th.1a one and rve been here
· 22 yeau," aafd Huntington
lifeguard LL Bill Richard.Ion.
More than 75,000 visited the
atrand in Newport Beach, where
Hunt ia1ion Beach Hi1h
WTetder Bob Gurbu Iott
for the lin t time in 34
outlnga la1l weekend, but
he'• 11iH a top contender
in Saturday'• CIP Mu ten
meet. Pa1e Cl .
a hot August day can bring out
90,000. Newport llfeguardl aaid
yesterday's crowd appean to be a
city record for February.
At Huntington and Bolla Ch.lea
state beaches, a bout 15,000
vtsiton turned out. Llfesuarcb
explained the attendance would
have been larger if moat of Bola
Chica had not been clOMd for
atonn-related repaln and half of
Huntington aealed off for
comt.ruct.ion.
Temperaturell ranaed from 08
degreet In Newport to 72 in
Huntington Betich. In Santa Ana,
the mercwy reached 77 degrees.
' The numerous phone inquiries
to the Orange County Sheriff's
Department were from people
Jutt wantlna to verify the
shaking they felt waa an
earthquake, a spokesman said.
The shifting of the earth's
surface may have caused aome
high tide to wash over the
already sandy stretch of Pacific
Coast Highway near the Bolsa
Chica wetlands in Huntington
Patric~a Cra ven's r a mity to bring suit
eight-hour period. The girl
slipped into a coma and'vdied
Saturday at the Mission iejo
hospital.
Craven and her mother flew
from their Sacramento home to.
Costa Mesa specifically to see
Protopappaa. Fishman Said. Russ
had been a former patient of his
when the family lived in Miqlon
Viejo.
A spokesman for the Orange
(See PATIENT. Pa.re A%)
Beach, a Huntington Beach
poUce officer said.
The al'l)ount of sand whlch
washed onto the roadway was
small, however, and the highway
·was not cloeed thil morning.
On land the nearest point to
the epicenter was San Onofre,
about three miles south of San
Clemente and site of a nucll!ar
power plant, where Southern
California Edison o fficials
Greg Crow jumped from helicopter to reecue
boatwreck su"lvon of( Huntington Beach.
conducted an lnapectlon to make
aure no damage occurred.
"The temblor was felt at the
plant, but there was no damage,"
Edlaon spokesman Charles Seal
said today. adding that neither of
the completed units at the plant
was in operation at the time of
the earthquake.
"That's a pretty small
earthquake," said Jerry Haynes,
(See COAST, Page A%)
Strang·e
sea causes
accidents
By ROBERT BARKER or .. .,..., ,... ,...,
Sunday's boating tragedy off
the coast of Huntington Beach is
being linked to other accidents
along the California coast that
may have been precipitated by
last month's storms.
Lt. Bill Richardaon of the
Huntington Beach Marine Safety
Division said January's storms
changed the shape of the ocean
bottom, apparently cauaing
waves to break farther out to sea
than usual
He said a "bizarre" series of
accidents, including the recen t
capsizing of a whale watch boat
in Morro Bay, may be related to
the changing oonditiona.
In Sunday's accident, Ronald
Bryant, 38, and his wife, Carola,
48, of Garden Grove were killed
when their 27-foot cabin c:ruiller
Angelique was amaahed by
several big waves a half-mile oU
the coast.
Four aona were reecued from
52-degree waters in a daring
million by a Hunti.nltOn Beech
police helicopter pilot and two
lifetuards.
According to Richanlaon. the
Bryanta' newly purchued boat
wu pound~ broadside by wavee
while in the aurfline.
''There's a natural rock reef in
the area," he aaid today. "Last
month's atorma reaJTanaed a lot
of the beach aand and dumped It
on top of the reef."
(See BOATING, Pa1e A%)
I.
I
I ,
1 I
I
f I
I
I •
'
~I * Orange Oout DAIL V P.ILOT /Tueldey, l'ebruary H, 1113
BOATING • •
From Page A1
Ht Hid water 1well1 aro
puahed by wlndl for lho"'llnda
of mJlee before d vtloplna Into 1
wave, u1ually when comln1
.,11nat a lloplna beach.
Bu\ In Sund1y'1 c111,
Rlchudloft bellevee. \he wai..r
hit • "bump" In tho .. nd on top
of the reef and broke into a wave
farther out to IH than nonnal.
"lt (the wave) could have been
a sneaker and p0pped up In front
of them and they were unaware
of lt," he said.
Huntington Beach helicopter
pilot Jon Arnold was In the
proce11 of tracking down a
reckle11 driver when he waa
Informed by radio that a body
had washed ashore ln the Bluffa
area.
He and obaerver Greg Shaner
immediately flew to the acene.
They saw four victims In the
water and asked them to raise
both hands if they needed help.
One of them did.
Arnold radioed ahead for a
lifeguard, set down on a beach
access road, and picked up
lifeguard Greg Crow who was
trying to get to the scene.
Arnold flew his military
surplu s Bell 47 helicopter in
between swells a nd Crow
jumped. Arnold said it was pretty
tricky. ''If water got lnto the tail
rotor or the blade, the ship would
have gone down."
But Crow didn't have enough
flotation equipment to keep all
four survivors afloat.
Arnold flew his copter back to
the landinR spot and picked up
lifeguard l>ave Perry who also
was to jump into the water with
the victims.
The two lifeguards kept the
four survivors afloat until an
Orange County Harbor Patrol
boat arrived.
The cause of \he accident is
under investigation by the U.S.
Coast Guard and Harbor Patrol.
A-ooroner's deputy said today
Jon Arnold aided
rescue eflqrt
Dave Perr y kept
survivors afloat
the cause of death of Ronald and
Carola Bryant hasn • t been
determined officially, but
believes drowning is probable.
Thirteen·year·old David
Bryant, the only member of the
party to be hospitalized, wu
listed in good condition today at
Huntington Intercommunity
Hospital.
COAST QUAKE • • •
From Page A1
manager of nuclear operations
for Edison. "The plant is
designed to wl thstand an
earthquake much larger than
that."
He estimated the design
capacity at "approximately a
PATIENT • • •
From Page A1
County Coroner's office said
today that toxicological tests
continue relating to the
teen-ager's death.
State dental board
investigators, the Coroner's
Offia! and the Costa Mesa police
are also probing the deaths of
Cathryn D. Jones of Costa Mesa,
who died a week ago and Minna
Kim Andreassen, who died last
September.
magnitude 7 earthquake located
fairly near the plant."
Haynes said the plant is
equipped with an alarm system
attached to an instrument that
measures ground motion. The
other "alarm" system is the staff
that is on duty 24 hours a day.
"The operators obViously feel
an earthquake and there is a
written procedure they go
through," he said. "They classify
the magnitude based on their
observation, and depending on
the magnitude. they order
inspections in the plant.
In this case, he said, an
inspection was conducted.
Although inspectors cannot get
to where the nuclear fuel Ls kept,
people are able to check out other
equipment, piping, valves and
supports, he said.
'Fixup'
costly
for pair
in Mesa
llY JODI CADENHEAD or-.~,_,..,.
Llaa and Alan Webber thought
they had found their c:lream
home la1t 1prlng when they
spotted the one-atory fhcer-upper
ln C:O.ta Meu located off a road
overlooklnf the bluff1 on the
west aide o town.
The dream became a
nlahtmare for the Huntinaton
Beach couple, who aay they
demolished halt the houae for
remodeling before discovering
they'd be required to build
sidewalks too.
After spending $40,000 to
enlarge the living room and
bedroom, they say they don't
have the $13,000 it would cost to
put In sidewalks, gutters and
curbs.
Also, Webber contends that a
slab ot concrete ln front of his
houae at 2166 Pacific Ave. will
leave his aidewalklesa neighbors
with flooding problems when It
rains.
The Webbers will ask the City
Cou:ncll tonight for permisaion to
delay construction of the
aidewalk. A similar request was
turned down by the planning
commlaion last month.
The Webbers are not alone. In
the last few years many Costa
Meaa residents have sought
waivers from the sidewalk
requirement when seeking
~rmits to remodel their homes.
'1..arge sections of the ctty on
the east si<le and some of the
older areas on the west side were
built before devel()J>e'rB-weF
required to install sidewalks.
The city now requires
sidewalks be installed whenever
improvements of $2,000 or more
are made to hom es or
apartments.
Assistant city engineer Bob
Brock said it is conceivable that
someone remodeling their
bathroom could be asked to build
a sidewalk ln {ront of the home.
''Thist is the only way to get
sidewalks in short of putting
them in ourselves," said Brock.
Rites conducted
for Serino infant
Services were held today for
Joeeph Daniel Serino, who died
at birth Feb. 15.
Survivors include his Costa
.. Mesa parents, James and Sandra
Serino. Services were held at 11
a .m . under the direction of
Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive
Mortuary.
Cooler days due
21 Ml. rec:cwd of .. degreM ..
Ill• Civic Center, wllll• yeaterdey'e lllglt et lti. nm•
piece wH 81 degr•••· eald
wH111et ~ m.teorol09l1t
C l lec:MIClen 0.. eoo.-. i 0 as ta A I I ". b •• c II .. ' t II. 1~\Aa ~ olflty In tM Conakterab6e lllQll cloudlneu 111g11 709, but tMI -_. to
tonight wttll lows 50 to SS Moetly draw ~ Iliff • llllmofl pecip1e
ctoudy tomorrow 8nd COOier. wtth 10 Ille aand 8nd turbulent ..t. l""9 8e to 70. A etorm front ~ towwd ,• ·'~l••wllere , from P oint CeNfornl• 11 ••peetecl to bflng
Conception lo Ill• Mulcan rllln -rnoet of Nol'lhem n
border end out 50 mllea: ~ntral Celltornl• tonlgl\C and ~--~ 10 lo 20 knoll Wednuday. the N•llonal ... .., oom ... _, -8nd ...i1 7 to w..,_ a.r<Aoe ~
10 ... through tonight -ouier ao.ttered ._,, ..-.. ... walera. Locally llglll nrlable . 9llpected ttW '"°"*'O In tM fw
..,. ttlrouafl lonlgltt, ••oec>t for not1tl wNle Noh _,... ~
moetly -1erly wtnde s to 15 OWi ottw region&.
knOta thl9 en.moon with -terty ' ..... of 3 to 7 fMt. Patehy tog ~
.,., IOwdoudt along tM i-cr-i emperatures IClfllGM and ~ tomorr-.
MATIOell .. Le
Albeny ... 25 =:::que 5e 31 41 37
Alhevllle ... 33
Atlanta ea 51
Atlentle Cit; 41 4Z
Auttln 54 44
Balllmof• 61 31
~ 51 33 • 56
&alman* 47 Zt ... 56 40
Boelon ... 14
8'ownavllle 75 47
llulfllM> ... 2t
Burtlng1on 44 2t Ceeper-42 25 CMttellon. SC ez 50
a-.ton, WV .. 34
et.1otte. NC 13 • g:;ie 55 25
411 II
~· ee 31
CllWllrld to 14
COlumbla. SC .. at
ColulNIUa 87 14
o.FIWorth 541 ...
~on 16 40
'*"" 53 33
0. Motrlel 52 41
DelfOlt 51 12 °"""' M 21
!I '"-c> ., 14 F.,.o 11 2a =:r ... .. ..
52 IO
Hertfotd
Htll9na HonolUIU Houeton ~ .HIC:Uon, M8
~ ~Cit;
LMV9Q119
Utlle Rodi
CoullMle ~ =-........ ~.Pu .....,...
..... ()Mene
N.-Ym
Hotfolk
Nof1tl PletM
OldlflOf-Cit;
On\8N Ottlndo ~ ==r. .... POftllNI. ~
PrcMIMol =-~ ... Loula ... ,...,_,.
... &.-.e Ben MtOfllo It .......
41 25 s-t'8e .. 41
51 21 ==r.: .. II 12 t1 11 • 68 ... Spdl-... u .. • 8yrecue 52 .. • 51 Tot*a 41 u
13 41 TYCllOll n 41 ... 42 Tulle ... ... .. 45 Wllilfllnf'on IO 37 .. 51 WIGHl8 44 " t1 42 CA&JPOMIA 4t 40 .. lA 1' u ......... 70 ...
12 • ~ .. ... 42 33 l..MDMW 70 41
" S6 ~ t1 to 71 47 82 51
" 53 PMo~ 72 ...
51 42 "9d llllff 51 52 11 40 Redwood Cit; 61 51
47 21 ~o 17 tO
52 41 ...,_ ... 41
40 SI 891'1 °"'° 76 ...
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51 32 lenta lerbat• 11 51
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She knows the ropes
Sao Clemente macrame artist Marilyn Armijo
places price tag on one of her rope works at the
Laguna Beach Winter Festival that concluded it.;
run at the Festival of Arts 'lrounds yesterday.
\ •
College
video
courses
backed
• I • • I • ' • ' • I • • ;
J
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' I
BY PHIL INEIDERMAN ~ or .. .._,...._ t
California State Unlvenlty ~
c1mpu1ea 1hould continue to •
accept trander credit• trom 1
1tudenta who have completed 1
Coastline Colle1e televlllon '
counes, a CSU adraln.latrator i.
recommending. ~
In ai report 1cheduled for
preeentatlon tomorrow nJaht to
Cout Community College ~
District trustees, Robert 0 . Beel,.
CSU ...tataht vice chancellor for:
academic affairs, recommend•
"that Coutline t.elecounes not'be •
• questioned further" reaarding :
transfer credit. The t.ruat.ees meet :
at 8 p.m. at di.trict headquarters, ,
1370 Adams Ave., Cos\a Meta.
Bea wu appointed to study
Coastline telecouraes after 67 •
Orange Coast and Golden West !
college teachers signed a Jetter:
last spring cJaimlns the televised '
courses are not equivalent to
clalarooln instruction. •
In a telecoune a student learns
through texts, study guides and ·
televiaed programs but muat take
mid·term and Clnal exams ln a
classroom se~.
• Exceptions mentioned by Bess .
were television coune1 on
applied sketching; Cosmos, a :
soclal science cou~ featuring
astronomer Carl S8gan and Fast:
Forward, a aocial llcience OOW'le ,
focusing on t.echno~
Jack Chappell, a spokesman:
for .CoasUlne, said Be.a' report:
~~~:~o!!1~ ':: t~J;e1:ii
Norm Worthy, 'father
general -education requirements~
needed for a degree but may:
, 1erve as optional or elective•
classes.
·of HB parks,' ·dead Bess recommended that
"Writing for a Reason," an
English composition class, be
studied further by the Cal State
system's English Council, a
faculty group. If that group's
questions are not resolved, Bess
then will decide whether to
recommend that the courae be
challenged regarding transfer
credit.
Services will be held Friday
for Norman L. Worthy, widely
regarded as the father of the
Huntington Beach city park
system.
Worthy, a life-long resident of
Huntington Beach, dled Sunday
night at his home at the age of
58. He had been undergoing
treatment for cancer.
He was director of the park
1ystem for more than 20 years.
He became superintendent for
park development and
acquisition In a department
con10lidaUon several yean ago.
Under his leadership, city
parks won national acclaim for
their excellence and design. It
WU Worthy's idea to place par&u
in each of the city's
neighborhoods.
More than 400 acres have been
developed into city parkland.
Last November, city officials
named a 12-acre park acroa the
1treet from Huntington Beach
High School the Norman L .
Worthy Park.
He i1 aurvived by his wife
Shirley; daughters Ellen Moss,
Becky Smith, Susan Ludo and
Amy Worthy: son, James; a.
brother, Jerry, and six
grandchildren. All live in
Huntington Beach.
Services will be at 2:30 p.m. at
First Christian Church of
Huntington Beach, 1207 Main St.
Burial will follow at Westminster
Me morial Park, 14801 Beach
Blvd., Westminster.
Family members are
suggesting that donations be
made to the Nonnan L . Worthy
Memorial Fund being establlshed
at First Christi.an Church. where
he had been active for many
years.
In the meantime, the Cal State'.
system will continue to acceptJ
television course credit.a when
Coastline students transfer to Cal
State campuses, Chappell said.
Trial opens in slaying
of girl, 12, in forest
The Orange County Superior
Court murder trial of Thomas
Francis Edwards began today
with a prosecutor alleging the
former Costa Mesa resident shot
and killed a 12-year-old girl and
wounded another girl.
Edwards, 39, is facing a
possible death sentence if
convicted for the Sept. 19, 1981,
shootings.
Deputy District Attorney John
Conley, In his open.Ing statement
to juron, said Edwards WU lying
ln wait when he allegedly shot
and killed V aneasa lberri and
•
injured her Criend. Kelly Cartier~
The shootings occurred near a
campground in the Cleveland
National Forest east of San Juan
Capistrano.
Cartier is expected to testify as.·
a prosecution witness.
Both girls, from Lake Elsinore,
were visiting the national forest'
on a camping trip with Iberri's
mother and father.
At a preliminary hearing for .
Edwards last year, the au.rviving
girl said Edwards drove past the.
two, said '1Jfey girlia,',.and.opened
fire on them.
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NATION
House panel begins voting
on Social Security plan
By TH Attoelated Prut
WASHINGTON -The Clrat votea In Conareu on a
blpartlaan Social Security reecue plan are at hand aa tax·wrltera
piece tq(ethft' le,WatJon for the full Howie to conalder ne>et
month.
The House Ways and Means .aubcommlttee on Social
Security wu beglnnlna work today on drafting a measure bued
on the recommendationa of the National Comml81k>n on Socla1
· Security Reform. The full committee then will conlider the
package next week and a vote in the full Houae la expected by
March 10.
Hilton makes $21 million donation
HOUSTON -The Conrad N. Hilton Foundation hu
donated $21 million to the University of Houaton's College of
Hotel and Restaurant Management. The donation waa
announced yesterday by BaJTon Hilton; head of Hilton Hotela
Corp.
... R eagan guarantees Israel security
WASHINGTON -President Reagan says the United
States ls ready to "take all rlecetaarY measures" to guarantee the
security of Israel's northern borders if the Israelia withdraw
their forces from Lebanon. At the.same time, the president ls
urSing Arabs to accept Israel's right to exist and to let Jordan
negotiate the future of the West Bank.
Agents monitor Chicago election
CHICAGO -Under the watchful eyes of more than 1,000
federal and state agents, Democrats voted today on whether to
keep Chicago's first woman mayor, nominate its first black
mayor or restore the Daley name to City Hall. A million voters
were expected to choose among May~r Jane M. Byrne, aeeking
a second term; Cook County State's Attorney Richard M. Daley,
whose father ruled as mayor for a generation; and U.S. Rep.
Harold Washington, the city's first black mayoral candidate
· regarded as having a chance to win.
STATE
New college to be built in desert
JOSHUA TREE -With the help of more than $681,000 in
funds donated by local people, a new $1.2 million community
college is about to bloom in the desert. Groundbreak:ina was
held over the weekend for Copper Mountain College ata time
when numerous community college districts are lighting for
economic survival.
Suspect held in rape, murder try
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The FBI announced the arrest today
of a 28·year.old Imperial Beach man in Monday night's kidnap,
.,. rape and shooting of two teen-age girls, who were left for dead
on a Coronado beach. James Russell Bishop was taken into
custody without incident at his residence early today on a
warrant charging him with kidnap, rape and attempted murder
Veterans finish Death Valley run
LAS VIDAS -Thirteen Vietnam war veterans -the
oldest of them a 60-year.old who began his military career with
Darby's Rangers in World War II -jogged out of Death Valley
yes1er'day after a weeklong, 100.mile run intended to show that
"we can fin1ah what we start."
Famed pool shark Pelkey dies
SAN JOSE -Edward "Fast Eddie" Pelkey, the famed pool
shark portrayed by actor Paul Newman in the movie "'The
Hustler," died of lung cancer yesterday. His age was estimated
• by relatives at 85 to 88.
'· WORLD
• Libya threatens to down A WACS
BEIRUT, Lebanon -Libya has threatened to shoot down
American AW ACS aircraft in Egyptian air space, rejecting
FcYPt'a contention that the spy pr.&nes are only on a training rnla.aon. a Lebanese newspaper reported today.
Queen makes last Mexican stop
LA PAZ, Mexico -Queen Elizabeth II and her husband
Prince Philip arrive today aboard the royal yacht Britannia at
this port city near the tip of the Baja California Peninlula. Frob:l
here Elizabeth will continue her cnme north to San Diego.
Morocco won't accept hijackers
'World '
p a p e r s
backe d
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
private, walled·oU retlrement
community In California failed
today In a Supreme Court
auempt to revive lt1 b•n on
unaoUclted deUverlea of a free
newapapeT.
The court, cltina the leek of a
''1ubatantlal federal queatlon,"
left Intact a ruling that the ban
impo1ed by Roumoor Lelaure
World in Laguna Hilla violated
the newspaper'• rtghta under the
California Conltitutlon.
Leisure World guarantees
eeclusion to ita resldenta through
the UH of hl1h walls and
guarded gatea. Viaitors are
permitted e ntry only when
specifically invited by a resident.
P r operty owneu within
Lel1ure Wo rld promote and
administer the community
through the Golden Rain
Foundation, which In turn
provide1 for publication of a
weekly newspaper called Leisure
World New1. The paper is
dellvered , free of charge, to
residents of the retirement
community.
The Laguna Publishing Co .•
whlch publishes a "giveaway
newspaper" devoted prlmarily to
commercial advertising, sought
penniaaion in 1967 and again in
1973 to enter Leisure Wor~d
distribute copies of its Laguna
Newt· Post.
The Golden Bain Foundation
inf or med. the pu bliahing
company that it could enter the
Leisure World compound only if
individual residents had
subacribed to the newspaper.
Laguna PubUahing aued and
lost In a state court jury trial. .
But a state appea.11 court ruJed •
that the ban lmpermi11ibly
denied "F.qual Aoceu" . . . Its
Nling relied heavily on a portion
of the state court ruling
protecting free speech.
Tough courses
policy vot e
due in Irvin e
New pollcle1 encouraging
Irvine Unified School District
studenta to enroll in difficult
course• are expected to be
approved tomom>w night by the
district'• Board of Trustees.
Tile board meeta at 6 p.m. at
Lakeside Middle School, 3
Lemongra11, to conalder
propoeala to help ltudenta take
the mo.t challenging courses.
Tru1tees gave preliminary
paseage to the plan two weeks
ago.
Among the policie1 ia one ,
aimed at keeping top students ..
enrolled in college preparatory
clasaea by awarding so·caUed
honor points. A grade of B m a
calculus course, for example,
would be recorded u an A on a
student's tnm8Cript.
An A in such cluaes -othet'.11
Include Enallah, European and
U.S. history and Spanish -
would ~o toward improving a
student 1 overall grade·polnt
average.
Other new poUde1 are:
-Limiting 1tudenta to one
year of credit for 11erving as lab
and office ..m.tanta.
-Increa1ing mathematics
requirements from one to two
' yean.
By land and by sea residents enjoy early warning
Washington's Birthday may remain a far cry from July 4th, but
those who dipped in the cool waters a t Corona del Mar State
Beach or simply lolled on the lawn at Northwood Community
Park in Irvine didn't mind a wintertime tease that summer is
. ..
coming.
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Drug crackdo~il stands even
Seizures increase. but narcotics more prevalent
WASHINGTON {AP) -Top
federal drug officials concede
that narcotics traffickers battled
them to a virtual draw during
the first year of the Reagan
admint.tration'a campaign
against drugs.
Even though drug seizures
were up 1harply in 1982, the
Drug Enforcement
Administration 's own figures
show that heroin and cocaine
became slightly more plentiful,
cheaper and purer on U.S. streets
and marijuana prices remained
stable.
In recent interviews, Acting
DEA Administrator Francia
Mullen and As1istant
Administrator for Intellige"ce
Gary Li.mina acknowledged the
effort was a Chaw beau.Ille overall
availability and consumption of
illeeal druas did not decline. "I
caii"i'targue with that jucWnent,"
Mullen said.
"Drug trafficken paid a higher
price to operate in lfNl2," Llm1ng
aald. 0 But the amount available
for consumption remain•
IUffident to meet demand.''
Francis Mullen
reviews drug fight
But Mullen was confident that
the addition of more than 1,000
new ~ta and prosecutors this
year in 12 inter.agency drug task
fCll'CM t the nation will
reduce the lem.
Luning said, "We haven't hurt
them bad _,enough for them to
make m;tlor changes, such as
bringing drugis from Colombia up
the Pacific coa1t rather than
ugh the can~ -1 that .
day will co~."
The DEA measures the supply
of drugs primarily by tracking •.
their street price and purity.
Lower prices and higher purities •.
indicate the supfily II up. -:
In 1982, DEA found the :
average price of cocaine was 62 .:
centa per mill\gram, down from
69 cents m 1981. On average, the
cocaine on the street was 13
percent pure In 1982, up from
11.6 percent In 1981. ::
For heroin, the average cost of •
one milligram fell Crom $2.33 in
1981 to $2.13 in 1982, while •
purity rose from 3.9 percent to 5 ·
percent. .•
The retail price of a pound of ~ ,
Colombian commercial grade :
marijuana remained between ·4
$450 and $600 and the avera,e :
price of high.grade northern i
California marijuana remained in .
the $1,500·$1,900 ran e . '
V ALLE'IT A, Malta -Three Libyan hljackera today
demanded to go to Morocco, but the North Alrican ciountry
refused to accept them. Malta'• Prime Minister Dom MlntoU
Mid he would not refuel the stranded Boeina 727 unUl the
htjacken freed the 162 hostages held aboe.nf since Sunday
night.
-Requlrina tenion to enroll
in at leaat four counee even li lmi11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 .. 111111111111 .................... lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~~~ they need fav(er to lfllduate.
Workers search for more victims
GOA YMAS, Mexico -Police and re9CUe wocicers aeerched
tor more victim.I today after recovering 56 bodie. from the
tWiated wttJCk.aae of a pll8llengel' train that was rammed by a
fttiaht train. authortUee aald. A total of 78 people were injured
in die cruh.
-Increialn1 diploma
requirements from 210 to 220
unJta.
-Providlna special
recognition to 1tudent1 who
complete a colleae preparatory
cowwe of study.
A propOIAI to require ltUdenta
participatin1 tn athlettca and
other extracurricular 9Ctlviti• to
maintain a C average hM been
tabled for a future dlacualon,
perhaps next month, Waldfopl
8dded.
We're
Llstenin9 •••
What do you like about the Dally Pilot? Wbat don't you Hkt!
Call the number at left and your maea,e will be recorded,
tra.nacribed and delivered to the •PSJC'OP"late editar.
842•8086
The same 24·hour an1werina NrVi~ may be llMd to ncord let·
ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox coalributon •• laclude
their name and telepbooe number for verifkatlon. No clreulaUoa
calls. please.
Tell us what's on your mind.
In association with
Via Lido Plaza
I ' l
• * Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/TuMday, F•bfUatY H , 1183
Frances Farmer has
another side TV
By FRED ROTHENBERG .,, ......... .....,
NEW YORK -Televllion remakea many
old ~viee, but It'• rare when a TV production
and a feature film are releued at about the ame
time. Compariaona between "Francee" and CBS'
"Will There Really Be a Morning?'' therefore are
ln order.
What the TV movie bated on the tragic Ufe
of actraa France1 Farmer lacks ln depth of
emQtion II off11et by areat.er attention to detail and
rootlvation. The result la a stronger understanding
of the relationship between Farmer and her
bitter, domineering mother.
Sued on Farmer's 1972 autobiography. "Will
There Really Be a Morning?" a1lo concentrates
more than "Frances" on Farmer's upbringing than
her downfall. Some especially wrenching scenes
that occur lat.e in the theatrical film -notably,
the graphic portrayal of Farmer's treatment in a
mental hospital -are treated in a less sensational
wa'J. ln the CBS movie, channel 2 at 8 tonight.
Susan Blakely plays the starring role on CBS.
Although she doesn't match the soulful depth of
Jessica Lange's performance in "Frances." she is
no slouch, and her Frances is a powerful and
convincing character.
A major theme In Frances' Ufe is the
influence of her mother (Kim Stanley in the
\heJltrical film. Lee Grant in the TV movie). The
CF 3 version focuses more on their love-hate re~tionship, dating to Frances' early childhood.
"She courted the limelight while I hid In the
abadows," Frances says in narration on the TV
movie. Both films establish Lilllam Farmer's
culpability in pushing Frances into a film career
she didn't want and couldn't handle. It's clear that
Lilijan e~joyed Hollywood's trappings more than
Frances.
Lillian Farmer's desire for self-gratification is
clear in both pictures, but the CBS movie
emphubes another motivational facet of her
character -her unwU..lingness to let the child go.
''Hollywood ~closer than New York," sl]e t.ells
~. who argues .for a stage rat~er than mo~
career.
'
Why lhl1 bri&ht and creative youna woman
allowed hel'ICllf to bo dominated In thil way ii not
tot.ally clear ln elthe-r picture. It'• evident from the
CBS vel"lion that her father'• w.ak-kneed
relatlonahlp with hia wife lnfiuenced Farmer'•
own behavior.
"Sht'll humiliate the hell ou& ot you," Jf.mest
Fanner (Royal Dano) tells her daughter in the
CBS movie, "but you'll come bllC.k for more." And
Frances doet, over and over aaaln.
The two films don't vary m~h In plot.
Francet grow1 up In Seattle and saJns national
attention at an early age by winning a conteet
with an essay about the death of God. She
eventually turna to acting, and achieves lmmedlate
success in motion pictures ln the 1930s.
But Frances. a perfectionlat In a Hollywood
community that speclallz.es too oft.en in fast-food
films, rebels against the system. She find.a artistic
happiness for a while on Broadway, starring In
"Golden Boy" and suffering a traumatic affair
with the show's playwright, Clifford Odets.
John Heard is a sarcastic, sadistic Odets, who
exploits Frances' movie fame for his own
purposes. In "Frances," Odets ii treated more
sympathetically.
After she leaves Broadway for Hollywood,
Frances' life deteriorates in alcohol, drop, a failed
marriage, bouts with the law, continuing conflicts
with her mother and a aeries of severe
psychological breakdowns, resulting in
conunitment to mental institutions.
The theatrical movie dwells more on her
drastic treatment and the inhumane conditions.
As is the case in any drama based on reality,
It's hard to know what'• real and what's fiction.
One main character ln "Frances" never turns up
tonight. The man who loves Frances and even
springs her from the hospital on one occasion was
a supportive thread throughout "Frances."
Perhaps it's television's need for neat endings,
or just Farmer's penonal view o.f the truth, but
"Will There Really Be a Morning?" re.ache. a
more hopeful resolution.
Susan Blakely (left) portraya film star Franees Farmer (right) in
"Will There Really Be a Morning?" on KNXT ( 2 ) at 8 100 tonight.
-1~ e (I) MCM1.1..AN l WR ®l:tOYIE
-1:00-••C!J •Cl)MOYIE Ill ENTtRTANefT TONIQKT
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See comple&e llltlap bl TV Loa
CHAtlll LISTINGS
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• KFMB CCBSI
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PUBLIC NOTICE
SUBJECT
PROPOSAL The City of Newport Beach, In conjunction with Callfornla Department of
TranaportatJon (CAL TRANS) and Federal Highway Administration
(FHWA) 11 plannlng to widen Pacific Coast Highway between MacArthur
Boulevard and the Upper Newport Bay Bridge to six travel lanes; and to
restrlpe Pacific Coast Highway between Dover Drive and Newport
Boulevard. Thia work 11 neceuary to provide addltlonal capacity for
motorl1t1 utilizing this coaatal faclllty.
The publlc hearing wlll give you an opportunity to talk about the project
with CAL TRANS and City 1taff1 before the final dealgn le picked. The
tentative schedule for the purchase of land for right of way and for
construction wlll be dlacuued, and CAL TRANS' staff wlll explain
retocatlon ualatance avallabJe for realdente moved by,Jhe project.
From now untll April 15,, 1983, you may see maps, a report of the
anticipated envlronmentar effects or construct1on (Draft EIS), and other
Information on the proposed widening project. You may question
CAL TRANS and City representatives about the project. They wlll be
avallable Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. at two
altea. The flret 11 the Publlc Works Department, Newport Beach City
Hall, 3300 Newport Boulevard, Newport Beach, Callfornla. The second
site 11 at CALTRANS, Project Development B, 120 South Spring Street,
Loa Angetes, Callfornla.
If you can't attend the hearing, you can eend your written comments
untll Aprll 15, 1983, to K.D. Steele, CAL TRANS, Environmental Planning
Branch, 120 South Spring Street, Loa Angeles, CA 90012.
WHEN
& WHERE
The hearing wlll be Wednesday, March 23, 1983 at 7:30 p.m. at the City
Council Chamber, 3300 Newport Boulevard, Newport Beach, Callfornla.
CONTACT For more Information about thl• project, call City or Newport Beach,
Publlo Works Department, at (114) 8-40-2281 or CAL TRANS at (213)
620-3210.
F YOU CARE • • • COME!
Ml.IC NOTICE
~~ ~~~ NO,.:.~IM.9
NOTICI M ADOl'T10N Of' NOTICI OI ADOl'T10N Of' Of' MAL "'°""" Mlot.unoel ~ lifTDT TO Mlot.UT10N M INTtlNT TO AT MVATI IM.9
L.1A11 .-.,ue DtlTNCT L.1A11 ~UI OllTillCT .... A1Mlll MAL fiWIRI y MAL "'°""TY In the Superior CCM1 ol the Statl
•MO. D-10 •NO. D-11 of C1lllornl1, lor th• County ol
NOTICE IS ~y GIVEN THAT NOTICe IS HEREBY GIWN THAT Orenge In the Metter of the &l8te
THE FOUNTAIN VALLEY 8CHOOl Tl1E FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL ol GUY H. PERRY, 0.C-.0. DISTRICT hH declared that th• DISTRICT hH declared thll Ill• Notice I• ller•tly given tlllt the
lollowlnQ l'MI property will not be lollowlnq retl ptoperty wlll not be vncler9IQned Wiii Mii I t Pfflltl ..... neededlor clellfOOl'll ~: needed IO£ e1-oom ~: to the 1'1g11 .. 1 1nd bHI bidder,
ON clMeloom at WAAOlOW Flv• cl111room1 and Core 111bJtct to conllrmetlon of H id
SCHOOl, ioc.teC1 et t111 P~ Room 1t WARDLOW SCHOOL, 8upertoJ COUr1. on or efter the 21th OfM. Huntington leedl. Clllfotnle loceted et t 111 PlonM r Drive, d4IY of F*'*Y tN3 •I the olfloe of
The loer6 of Tru1tMa ol tlle Huntington IMd\, Celltomla. Beker& Ancill, Morr1e. ~. &
Fo11ntaln Valley School Ul11rlct Tiie Board ol Tru1tH1 ol tlll Ftye ... ~~=7' =~~ rMOIYM to IMM the lecflltlel IO Fountain Valley School Dl1trlct Lot ~..::=::' S .... ~ .. :..... .......
lndlc.led ·~ Uftdet the ttn'lll rMOlvel lo llate the lecllll'" IO L.Oe ~..--. t-"' ....,,or,-
•nd condition• llet•d In the lndlcetecl UOv9 11"6ef tlle tenn1 =.'!'r.'o UU.1 ...... lltdt'~~~~ ~ Aeeollltlon of tlle lotrd, Aeeollltloft and condltlone 1111ed In tll• • -::: ... '= "'1nt.._ ... , ,'::'.:', No. 13-11. ~ o1 the loerd, lllilldlltlOn II the rtQht, uu• •--,,. Tll• mlnlm11m montllly 1 .... No. ta-20. the .. tafe of Hid ,_Md hu ~ for the term of the i... Th• minimum montlll)' 1eue 1cq11lred by operation or l•w or
lhell not be 1111 tlllil t 725.00 '* peyrntnt for the t•m Of thl ..... othlfWIM other tllen Of In eddltlon
month per dMerOOl'll Tiie rNnllnum 1t1a11 not be ieee then tt7,50/dey to Ulat of Mid o-uecs. at the time
monthly l••H p1ym•nt tor P9f ot111room and ttto.00 per of dlllh. Jn Ind to 11 the cettMI 111b11q11ent period• may II• montll tor C. ort Room The reel property 1U111ted In lot
edlveted by the Conaumer '11oe mtnirnum montl'll)' ._ ~ for "'*""'°' COUnty o1 Orenge. lttt• ol kldu ennuel ...,.ICl9 reftlc1ed at 111bHquent perlodl mey be Celtomle, ~ deec!ibed II
th• end or the len• period, A ec:11u1ted by tll• Coneumer Price ~L •1~Ti: ..... No 3224 1 the MC:Urlty cMpoalt may Ille required kldu ennuei •-• reflected et ot ""• ,_, · • n
prior to~· tll• end or th• IHll pe riod. A City of Loa Alemltoe. O~nty ol
No oomml11'ii11 111911 be P1lld .,.,., -tty dlpollt may be requited °",. enoe. ''!!! °'in ~ ;.!!! llolnled ,.., _... broller In th6I prior to PCC:UPlflCY. ep reoor--"''" ....-
reo•rd, and 111er• '"'" b• no No oonwi 1111cn .... be ptllCI en; 2t·2t. tnctuel~.:..of M .. ~~~~"ot'• ci.d11ctlon from a11y Pfopo111 In llollwlld r111 e11a11 brotl"'ln thll Otb of the ......,nty ,,_.,.. dllermlnfnt the higMlt reeponeMlile reeerd end t11ere 111atl be no H id Co11nl)', more commonly
blddtr. cledwotion lrom any prOl)OHI In llnown II: 3252 lrlmflllll OtM. Lot
8Mled :.°f°t:':.!:.w'::" ':: :=.,"'**18 the hlOt*t reapontible ~',: ~::--011h In lawllll ~ ~ e1 the f~ ....e. Pt'OOOllle 10 ..... Mid money of the United ltatff on •"-Y ldloot 0t11t1et Edvclllon pt0per1y ,,... 119 rlOlfWed br the 001ifll11iedoft of 1161, or ~ CMt'I
, t7t10 OM..._~ ~led oftloer et '"-,.ountaln lftd betenoe evtdemed by note
11111¥ OeMomla. t21oe, no ...., YM!ey lklf'llol Dletr'IOt td11c1uon llCUtld ty ~or TNIC DMd
1111n t :OO p,m on ~bruery t1, o.e.r. 17110 OM It,_, fountain ~ theof prooertYt •'°to~~~~ tlU. Vlfll¥, Ctllfoml• H 7ot. no lat• _,, emount bid .,.. -
letora ecotptlno 1ny written then 1 :00 p.m. on or b•lora wtlf'I~, ...-.. 1 be In_ Md ropoaale, the d .... ttM om-~ U , tta. -fll .,.,_. o ~·-..
flail cau tor orel C>lddln9. Any .. lore aooeptlng fifty wrllttn ::;:." "°""9d~ t~ -=~
1t1on wllo l'l u hertlotor !lfOOOMtl. tM 6e6efateG on1e11 -~~.,:, :..0,. ,!:. ll\I0'"'"411G e _.... .._, mey "*"" ,,...It cMI tor oret C>lddlng An~ ..---·-·
Ofll bid .......,. br IC -.. per eon w!'lo h 11 11eretotor1 of~.:.. ....... 1,.... .._of,.,......_ (I~)~ tM flltl"" wrftWn ~I wrin.rl Old 1ft11Y tubmlt .,.,.., ,.,.. vm _,, ~-,.
llld. 'n. """"' 1...,cn1'Dll ltlOCler lfl Ol9' bid laOlldlna by 8t ltllt 1"3. H ~ 111111 be ,...Ultecl to UICI.Ill tM l¥e (N} ,.,._.. ttll ....... Mitten • ~
form of "'"· tllOll lormet l'IM * 'n.,...... rttPO 1•11 llldCltr ~ oi
of T,:.. ~ '1 W. = :1 =-:~~ :::: = IM..._ ...... ~.
TM '-II of TNtttll 11111111'11111 ,_ .. OfOle bW1 llPPt'OM lty tlle ..... ==. ~ =-....,,Hlldan • to ......... te IMN of T,,...._ .. _ -...... .. 700 llid ,..._ ""*' etn (-Tila loerCI of TNMeel lfllll "*'• -· -· .,. .,._ ,__,. ol ...._ tM data "*""°" .. '9 ......., to '-Oii :V::,, CA to0t7
nfor111auon oenoernlnt Ille ._. .... ....._ .-.i llfl (101 .. ~= ,.._ Mainll=-~•ll ..................... cleW.,..,,...._..... .... .......
0 NTAIN VALLIY ICHOOL rntormetlon concerning tllt ..... ,.. 1t. 17, n. Ila eta.a
llTllllCT, 11110 Oall ltr"f, ,......... ....... M .... mtd to: CMtte1n V11111¥, C...... n10t ,OUNTAIN VALi.iV ICHOOL 1141141 .... i. ..,......l Ne.mi OllTllllCT, 17110 0111 ltrHt, . '°""""' VllW. Cellfomll H70I, o.f:~I. ,_ ~:a--i, A"""911; Neomi
::="a:>' o.ted: '*'*' J, 1ta ..,.,. o1 r.--,__.O: =-::::n = af ~ ......... ~ 0r....-Cont Diiiy ............ . ,.., .. , ... -Oleftt .... ....
,.. P'Wlllll9' °' ..... c .... Delly ~~--t"°'· , ..... 11, ........ ,,,.
~---.......... ~~-~TI~IC(~~-1
MOTaTOWOM ' ~ IUUt Til'-111'9
( ..... t1t1-4111 U.C.C.)
Notice I• hereby given to
creditor• or th• wllllln named trtnaWOfil) IMt • !Miil .,.,,..., ..
about to be made on peraon•I prOC*tY ,... ....... delcfilled.
The n1me(ll a nd bu1lne11
addra•• ol th • Intended
Ir~•) err.
I KI &, Inc. 1671 Stanton Avenue, Buen• Parll, Cellfornl•
IOl21
The IOQel1on "' ~ of .. chief eMCUIM oftlOe or llftndPlil
bueln•H oftloe of Ill• lnttftded treneferor 11: 8101 Harbor ~ MM ~--. eo.ta Mtel.· Cellfomle IHM.
All other bullMM n-and
eddr-uNd '1 the Intended ,,_,.,Of Wittlin ttw.. .,...,.. ....
pu t 10 tar 11 known to th•
Intended tren1terM are: lure•
King Ae9teul'lnl "™· Tll• n1m1(1) end bu11neH
1 ddrea1 ol Ill• lnunded
tt~l)W« eur., Kint Corpondion, P.O.
loll ~tal .CliMnl .... fidty, Miami, l'lOflCM SS 112.
Tll•t Ill• proptrtr pertinent
llere\0 .. dlloribld In ..,_.. -.. Nmlture. llltwll. .... fN"lt. Md
Inventory Md II IOol'9d It: •n ltenton AHnue. l11ena Perll, c.lfornle toll I.
TM ~ -lllld by IM Mid.,~., et MIO~ 11:
1K1 S. Inc. The t H id blllll trenellf II
Intended to be OOI-111 • It tM ofllOe of: ,_ ............. d,
lult• M. Coel4I ..... ~ nae, on or....,...,. tO. 1-.
Tiiie bull! .,.,..,, .......... '° Celllornl• Unlfor1111 Oo1t11Ht'olll
OOdl leoelllfl ·-• Tiit ~ !Ind ....,.._ et u.e;.
panon wllll ......... IMW_ ..
fllld II J-A • ...,.._...!. ....
BllrQlf K'1 Catpoi ...... .-.u . ._ llO~U..1._~!!'•"I Mall Peollltr,
Mteml. -11111 • .., ... -.. :r:. =.-:·~.:r. :...--:=
b111ln••• f er lllelor• "'• J oon1111t11t11tlon ct1te .... 111-. *""· Dlttd '*'*' 11, ,... ' ~-°"· ... ly: Trltfftan D. Tl-""" u ... (}J ""~ °'~ °°"' Dlltt1 N' Plot. ..... It,,.., ....
* °'•not Coa11 DAILV PILOT/Tue.day, Ptbtu.,Y
..
$7 per barrel oil price
cut likely by OPEC
By Tbe A11octated Pre11
OPEC oil minister• from four Persian Oulf
counU1 .. met privately today In Rfy..:lh, S.udi Arabia,
to con&lder mat.china or undercuu.tna price redue1.lonl
by thrH other nations try1J18 to beat an lntemaUonal
oU alut.
A S1udl ncwapaper re ported the Arab oil
produ<.'t'l'S r.lanned ID slaah their prices by U much N
$7 a barre .
Today's emeraency meeting was supposed to
Include all six members of the Saudi-Jed Gulf
Cooperation-Coyncll states, according to a council
announcement. But only oU mlniatera of Saudi Arabia
Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Qata;
attended. Bahrain and Oman, which are not OPEC
members. did not show up.
The absences sparked predictions of an immediate
price <.'Ut.
AMC loss 11th straight
DETROIT -American Motors Corp. posted lt.s
11th straight quarterly loss in the fourth q\.&arter of
1982. according to officials for AMC.
The No. 4 U.S. automaker lost $2.9 million in the
final quar~r of 1982, bringing los,,es for the year to
$153.5 million or $2.85 per share. the automaker said
yesterday. The 1982 loss is higher than a year earlier
when the autbmaker loet $136.6 million or $2.44 per
share. However . the fourth-quarter loss is down
sharply from the same period a year earlier when the
company lo8t $47 2 million. AMC said.
Experienced workers sought
DETROIT -General Motors Corp. and Toyota
Motor Corp. will be looking for experienced workers
for their joint venture in Fremont. Calif .. but that
doesn't mean they'll all be former UAW employees of
the_plant, GM's cht..innan says. Chairman Roger B.
$rnith said yesterday that negotiations should start
''very shortly". with the United AulD Workers union
on whether the union will r epresent workers
producing a GM-Toyota subcompact. More than 6,000
aulDworkers used to work at Fr-emont. Smith says
about 3.000 will be hired for the GM-Toyota venture.
SD man nominated I or board
"!' ASHIN<?TON -President R eagan bas
nonunated Edwm J . Gray, a San Diego savings and
loan executive, to a seat on the Federal Home Loan
Bank Board, the chief federal regulator of S&La. Gray
will likely become chainnan of the board, succeeding
Richard T: Vratt who, government sources say. plans
ID leave his post by June.
METALS
NEW Y()flK (AP) -Spot noflf81Tout mel .. oricee loellly
c.,.,.., U~-86 4:•ntt • pound, u S
o.tinatlona. L ... 21·23 _,la a pound.
ZiM 40 _,IS a pound. del!Yered.
Till N..5691 Ma1a1s w.-compoeil• It>.
~ 18 '*'"'I POIMICI. N.Y ..._, 133$ 00 119' .....
l'leetn-1470.00-1473 00 mwdl lroy -.NY
GOLD QUOTATIONS
Due to late transmission
today's listing will not
appear In the Dally Pilot.
SILVER
Hendy and Hern11n. SI• 12 .,., --. t; _______________ ... ~
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT '·~
('
Dow Jones Final
DOWN 12.42
CLOllNQ 1,0IOAO
$ 7 per barrel oil price
cut likely by OPEC
By Tbe A11oclated Pre11
OPEC oil ministers from four Peralan G ulf
coun\rlet met privately today In Riyadh, Saudi Arabia,
to oonaider matching or undercuttln• price reductiona
by three other nations trying to beat an lntemadonal
oil glut.
A Saudi newspape r reported the Arab oil
producera planned to slash their prices by as much aa
$7 a barrel.
Today's emergency meeting wu supposed to
include all six members of. the Saudi·led Gulf
Cooperation Council at.ates, according to a council
announcement. But only oil ministers of Saudj Arabia,
Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar
attended. Bahrain and Oman, wruch are not OP~
members, did not show up.
The absences sparked predictions of an immediate
price cut.
Halt sought to PSA plan
FORT WORTH, Texas -The Federal Aviation
Administration and Continental Airlines have asked a
. federal appeals court to stop a plan under which
Pacific Southwest Airlines would uae about 30 idle
Braniff International jets to start a new Texas division.
Meanwhile, U.S . District Judge Eldon Mahon was
expected to rule today on requests that he stay his
order approving the deal, under which PSA plans to
hire up to 2,000 former Braniff. employees. (PSA
serves John Wayne Airport in Orange County. Calif.)
UPS ANO DOWNS
NIW YORI( !AP) -tile fol-Int lilt -· t,_ Hew Y~k ito<ll EIW\efttlt
.. 0( .. --r#tlt .... --.......
lflO -· - -.,. ,,_, --,.rC.Oftl of CllOnlt r-r•n• of ...,,...,.
• T ..... )'. NO MCWlt!<K trodlnt bo-'2 ero IMI·
'*41 ..... -~'-~--.,. "" ••ff-...,_ Ille -vlow CIM!fte ~o o...i tMoY• iism ~·
H-UHi CN Ad.
I w.ri. Alrw s"' • ~ Up 17.1 I GlfWn pfO • ._ • s• Up tu I ,..., Nn JVt + "'> Up IOA
4 G....-.. I~ • Ult UP t.1 S Note.ft pfllo d • • Up t.J
6 """"'~ I I-• I" Up UI 1 EAL WIO •f\ + '-Up e J t GlfWn plC 111 t t Up l.J t fCrMllt19r 1111) • h Up e 1 M lntlHol'Y S ltf>I lfh • I Up 1.J
II i,~ylNA IU• + -. Up 1 I 11 tnWePft lip! Joi + 11• Up 1 I II ErnpOE pfA 4 • ~ Up 11.r
If NV, C. t t "' Up 11.1 U Rltyll .. Tr 1111> + '-Utl 6 4
'6 tAtt-.QI ''-• " Up U 11 ,.,.OE pftl •lo\ • W. Up $.t It Z.l'O(:p :DI<\ • 1116 Up S 1 It ~o~ONg I IA • I Up S It • l"'"" I' 1•111 • 1111 Up s S t i JofCOllP _, 2'111 + I.... Up SA
12 ""'"' Aft1 U.. + ,,,_ Up SA D AMlt ~ ttlt • I~ Up U
M A"1Aet'O J iii • "' Up S.J tj Ro~ Cp ~ t I UP U
...... l.eK CllO P'ct. I WlltlOIN Oii 11' I~ OH Jl.S 2 ~ ,_ -1'9 OH 14.1 I Ool,,.._ Ulo -f'-Off IU
• APL C. S'--" Off IU
J c... """ • .... Off "·' 6 ~ n I -II. Off U.1 1 llOfllO'()lf 6 -._ Off II. I
I TP .. llntl 1~ -" Off 10.t ••• ._. ~ -" Oft lt.t ,. = I t \4 -I Off t• II .... II 1no. -1-. Oii t1 It ~ ._ -Ill Oft U ., ~ u°" -i• °" u 14 t '"--1116 OH t .2 IS HOCloMn9 :t114 -1'-Off t t
It Trlw ~ -" Off u 0 ..... Pf'od tn• -I,,_ OH t.t
II N-1ilh '"" -" Ott U " lleTllroo 21 -t Off 1.r to H-• ~ -s~ OH 1.6 11 l11011UOll I -" Off IA tt s..IM " I,_ -,.. Ott ... JJ .,.__,. I•'--I~ Off U ~ ,._.... 11'-'l -I Off l.S u c.-1~ iN -1~ ott a.s
SYMBOLS
METALS
NEW Y()fU( CAP) -SPOI nonterrOUI metal
ptlCle IOd.y
Copper 82~-H eon1t o pound, U.S.
OMUnatlonL L.-d 21-23 _.. ... pound
ZIBO 40 -.1a o pound. del!Yerod.
"" M 5ee I Meellla W .... CIOrTlPOOilo lb ,........_ 7S C*'tla o pound.Ny
...,_, $336 00 POt n..a..
l'tetl1""" $470 004473 00 mo<ell lror ~.H.Y
GOLD QUOTATIONS
SILVER
Hono1 ono H1r1111n. S 14 12 por lfOy --
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
...