HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-12-05 - Orange Coast PilotA record-breaking Christmas?
Orange Coast n1erchant report ale increasing a t rap id P!lCe
8)' CHRISTINE DECKER has also broken sales recordl forthla aeuon. Of .. o..,._...,. "We've had a very strong beginning. Every yeer
Most area retailers predict the 1983 Christmas we see double-digit Increases in sales. We're very
aeuon will break all records based on sales the past l 0 optimistic we'll have a strong finiah," aaid Karen
day.. Baynard, Robin.110n's public relations director. . "It's been super. Incredible. We've been increas-mc aales at a very f asl pace. We've broken all previous
sales records for a Christmas season. so far." said Sue
Graham, general manager of Bullock's at South
Cout Plaz.a in Costa Mesa.
"For it to be this good, this early we can expect il
to be even busier in the next few weeks," she said
today aa merchants completed their second weekend
since the Christmas shopping season opened Nov. 25.
Robinson's in Newport Beach's Fashion Island
Graham said people are spending more money
this year than last for expensive, quality items such as
crystal and designer clothes. There'1t alao a beuer
selection of gifts for Christ.mas this year beca1.11e
strong sales this spring indicated winter sales would
also be jumping.
''Last year people pyt their money in a lot of sale
items. This year they want quality -gifts that will
(See CHRISTMAS SALES, Pase A!)
THI ORAllil COAST
MONDAY, DECEMBERS, 1983
13 held
oc • ID
nuclear
protest
From staff ud wire reports
Thirteen anti-nuclear demon-
strators were arrested early today
outside the U.S. Naval Weapons
Station in Seal Beach. polke said.
The 13 were among an esti ·
mated 50 protesters W'ho gathered
outside the naval facility to protest
installation of U.S . cruise and
Pershing 2 missiles in Western
Europe, which began last week
with shipments to Britain, West
Germany and Italy.
Protesters had been assembled
I for a half hour when at 8:25 a.m.
t·-.. f·ive .. crossed· over to Navy prop-
erty, and laid down at the foot of
I the station's main gate , according
to Seal Beach Polict! Chief Stacy
Picascia.
After police issued two dis-
persal orders, officers moved in
and arrested the five, charging
diem "'1.&b ~. partid·
paling in an unlawful assembly
and failure to disperse an un-
lawful assembly, Picascia said.
The protesters did not resist,
Picascia said. ..
During the next half-hour. two
other groups of four protesters A little off the to p
•
.,..., .......... tlf Lee ,.,...
Tim ely Santa adOnJI clock &tote at Newport and 17 th in Costa Mesa.
COUNTY IDITIDN
ORAN GE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Weekend crashes . .
kill two, hurt seven
By PHIL SNEJDERMAN
OtlheDeilf ..... llMf
Two people were k.iUed and
seven others were injured in four
weekend traffic accidents.
The first took place at 12:24 a.m.
in fair condition today .at Fountain
Valley with a back injury, cuts and
scrapes. The driver of the Volks-
wagen was not cited, police said. ·
In the third accident, a motor-
cycle carrying two men veered out
of control and crashed early
Sunday near the intersection of
Lake Street and Atlanta Avenue.
A passenger on the motorcycle,
Carey Soulia, 36, of Huntington
Beach, had his left foot amputated
in the accident. He was in critical
condition today at Fountain Val-
ley Community Hospital, with
chest injuries, broken ribs and the
foot injury.
The driver of the motorcycle,
James A. Abraham, 23, of
Anaheim, was treated at Pacifica
Hospital and released.
A fourth accident occurred Fri-
day night in nearby Seal Beach.
(See CRASHES, Pase AZJ
~
Saturday at the intersection of
McFadden Avenue and Edwards
Street. Police said a westbound
Ford Pinto driven by !Atvid C.
Reeves, 18, of Huntington Beach,
failed to stop for a red light and
collided with a southbound Dodge
van driven by Noah Alexander
Jr., 34, of Gardena.
Alexander was pronounced
dead at the scene~ Reeves and a
passenger. Charles Thomas
Gibson. 19, of Huntington Beach.
were treated at Humana Hospital
Weslmin&,ter and released. Police
said Reeves was arrested on
suspicion of felony drunken driv-
Teens' families
aghast at ·charges
ing and vehicular manslaughter. By 8-TEVE MARBLE
In a separate accident at 11:23 0tt11eDe11Jl'ht1te11
p.m., Saturday, two pedestrians Two Huntington Beach families
were struck by a car while expressed shock today that their
· lan A · teen -age sons have been charged crossing At ta venue JUSl east with murder for their involve-of Schooner Lane. Aa:ordina to police, Chrittlna ment in a violent three-car acci-
Marle SrO.iih, 26. of Cost.a Mesa. denl lhat left a woman dead and a
and Breck Cart.on, 30, of Orange, .youth seriously injured.
had just left a party and were "Nobody's talked to us. I
returning to a car when they haven't seen any police reports -
crosaed in front of a 1966 Yolks-I'm just shaken:·. said Elbert
wagen dri ven by Jp hn Crall. whoee 17-year-old son
Christopher Fisher. 18. of Sunset Randy was arrested on suspicion
Beach. of murder following the accident
Police said Chang. riding alone,
was preparing to turn when her
car was crushed.
Roger Kounter, a 15-year -old
student riding in Thomas'
(See FAMILIES. Page AZl
Three sought
afte r Mesan's
boat caps izes
pe.ated.lbe.action...and..also were
arrested, Picascia said. Bail for the
~men and fivt: _women has
Ben Perezlr . p ru nes one of the m~nr palm trees
at the Koll Center Irvine office complex. I f e -.....+•.,.,rbon-wu taken to Fountain--Erida.y.a!temoon A search fot a Costa M
·~·1 it '"J..lpi.,-.\~~,.. ;•
The rest of the .. demonstrators
dispersed at about 9:30 a.m ..
Picascia said.
. Today's demonstration was or ·
ganized after rain apparently put
a damper on a weekend "die-in''
police say drew only abciut
one-fourth the anticipated 1.000
protesters.
The Alliance for Survival's
Orange County chapter organized
both protests.
"We are joining in solidarity
with the European peace move-
ment to say no to the deployment
of these missiles." Alliance
spokesman Jim Carpenter said
(See PROTEST, Page AZ)
~~~*t:-~~~~t:;:.:.~ Valley Community Hospital, Police said Craft and a second fishing boat captain and tw<,>,c;u' ~"~d<.id~lliaM· .. J:!!#IJIL~~~-::;::..:...r ..-·r ~·-·-.arnecs todaytniPdlh lfeaftlnJ~iiiml was reported arag racing on Adams •Avenue waters betwtrel Catalina Isl~nd
when theirspeedingcarsslammed and the Los Angeles Harbor:
I • h • 1 • ' td ' one after the other into a compact entrance. rvlne Os:plta ln Coun Own vehicle being ~ven by Gloria The hunt for the missing trio
Chang of Fountain Valley. was launched Sun8'ay after
, • Officers said the two Hunt-Harold Whitehead's capsized
Sta te health office holds key to long-proposed medical facility ington Beach ~gh .School stu-35-foot vesse1. the Lepsadon. was
By ANDREA ADELSON
Of Ille Del!J Nol II.ti
A 45-day clock is now ticking in
Sacramento. It's a countdown on
the Irvine Medical Center's bid to
build a $62 million hospital in East
Irvine.
Anytime during the six-week
period, the s tate Office of Health
Planning could end years of
. dents were weavtng m and out of spotted about two mUes south of
speculation and issue a certificate And those findings also can be traffic and speeds reaching 70 the harbor entrance.
of need, giving IMC the go-ahead appealed, either to a Superior mph. Whitehead, 56, and Ron Poole
for a long dreamed of 177-bed Court judge or a state Advisory Chang, 48, was killed instantly and Steve Lewis, both of Long
hospital. Council, a 21-member public ln what police said was one of the Beach, had been fishing near
Or the waiting could be panel. most violent collisions they've Catalina Island on Saturday.
prolonged. with health officials' ' In a local forum, IMC's ever seen. Officers said her car Whitehead's daughter, reached at
opinion of the proposal subject to proposed 15-acre site was given was hit so hard it was shoved the family home, said others are
review by a public hearing officer, approval by the Irvine City Coun-about 375 feet from the Newland ~isling in the Coast Guard
and a final ruling by the state cil. However. supporters of a Street intersection before stop-search but declined further com-
director. (See HOSPITAL, Pase A%) ping. ment.
Body language meet gives lawyers all the· right moves
Coa1tance Bem1teln 1ell1 lawyen •..
By JEFF ADLER
Of Ille Del!J ..... Ii.If
When Constance Bernstein gestures. people
listen.
The San Francisco communications consultant
talks with her hands, her eyes and through her
posture. And she shows others not only how to
communicate through body langauge, but how to
read it as well. •
"To listen ls to be 1enaiUve, to have a visual
percepUvenea to what others are saying," Bernstein
explained to a amall lf'OUp of attorney. attending an
Orange County Bar Amoctatlon eeminar on
courtroom body ianguase. The eeminar WM part of
the bar a.odations'1 three-day trade fair and
exposition which concluded ovel"the weekend at the Oranae County Fairgrounds in Coeta Mela.
lncorporatina a slide show. her own expuwive aest.urea and 80me atmple lfOUP exerdles ln a
two-hour preeentation, Bernstein made her a.e. She
showed the attorney. how to Improve thelr cbanca
of w innina by communicatlf\I on a non-verbal level.
She allO explained how non-verbal cluee can be
Wied to reed whether a judge or juror la beinc 1Wayed
by a partk:u1ar argument or wttnell.
But whethel' lt be the COW1room or a bar room,
(See LAWY&ftl GET, P11e Al)
...........................
• .• how lo win their poiatl with facial 1ubtletie1, expan1ive ge1tu.re1.
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, o.c.mt>er 5, 1983
FVcop
'lucky'
cycle
crash
• in
By ROBERT BARKER °' .... Oelly ...........
Delly,...~"' .... ~.,..
...
I CONllNUJD. llORlll I
FAMILIES OUTRAGED ...
From Page A 1
Camaro, wu seriously injured In
the accident, 11uffering internal
injuries and a fractured pelvis. He
la lilted ln aerious condition Wday
at Fountain Valley Community
H06pital.
Hospital officials said they have
received more than 300 calls from
friends and classmates of the
15-year-old. ·
Both Craft and Thomas. who
was treated for a broken leg, have
been released from official police
custody. Because of their ages,
both cases will be handled
through the juvenile court
know who saw what or what to
make of it," Craft'11 father said.
"ThC' whole family is in shock."
Polite. however, said an officer
had been following the two aJ-
legedly speeding vehicles and was
on the scene about 15 seconds after
1t happened. The police officer
was credited with putting out a
fire that erupted in one o( the cars.
Elbert Craft claimed his son's
car, a Chevrolet Nova, was rigged
to look like a high-performant:e
vehicle but "it really wasn't in
good shape. He'd had it about 30
days and had been working on it."
A 29-year-old Fountain Valley
police officer who was catapulted
52 feet through the air after his
motorcyle collided with a car was
listed in fair condition today with
fractured bones in the face, wrist,
knee and ribs.
Class A yachts head out of Newport
Harbor en ro ute to wind y cha llenge.
Gusta of up to 22 knots caused one
boat to nearly overturn.
A District Attorney spokesman,
though, said it is likely there will
be a push to try Craft and T homas
as adults in Orange County Su-
perior Court on the murder
charges.
He also said his son and Thomas
were not friends ~nd "hardly
kflOw each other except to say 'Hi'
between classes." Officer John McDonald under-
went plastic surgery Sunday al
Fountain Valley Community Hos-
pital and reportedly faces more
re<:onstructive surgery.
Another bout of wetness due Craft's father said he 1s
suspicous of allegations that his
son and Thomas were racing in
their late -model cars.
CRASHES ...
But the five-year veteran of the
Fountain Valley force never-
theless was depicted as a "very,
very lucky young man" by Capt.
Bill DiNisi because he apparently
escaped life-threatening injuries
to the br~in and internal organs in
the spectacular collision and ejec-
tion.
Cha n ce o f rainfall o n the coast seen at 20 p er cent o n Tuesday From Page A 1
By tbe Associated Press
After sunny skies and warm
temperatures, Southern Cali-
fornians might get wet again, the
National Weather Service said
today.
Tuesday will be partly cloudy
with a 20 percent chance of
showers by late afternoon, fore-
casters said.
After weekend hi~hs in the ,.
mid-60s, a low-pressure system
was expected to move in "with
enough moisture to make us think
there's a chance of rain." fore-
caste r Stan M~y said.
The rain would hit the coastal
and mountain areas as well as the
inland valleys, according to the
forecast..
The rainy season ha~ already
been twice as wet as usual, with
DiNisi said McDonald was
monitoring traffic conditions at
Newhope Street and Slater Av-
enue that was cordoned off Sun-
day morning for a triathlon event
(swimming, run.nihg and bicycle
riding contest) sponsored by Los
Caballeros Racquet and Sports
Club.
HOSPITAL PLANS ...
McDonald reportedly was rid-
ing his motorcycle west on Slater
when a car driven by Thomas W.
Barnes-of Hermosa Beath' made a
left turn in front of him and
violated McDonald's right of way,
according to a Califomla Highway
Patrol investigator.
The impact spun Barnes' black
Porsche around 180 degrees and
caused serious injuries to his w ife,
Linda C. Barnes.
The motorcyle hit the right
front part of the car while going
about 35 miles an hour and
McDonald was ejected.
The collision occurred 01' the
la$t leg of the triathlon where 200
competjtors were engaged in a 10-mil~ bicycle race.
From Page A 1
campus' nospital proposal vowed
to sue or seek a referendum.
Derek Pogson, spokesman for
health planning agency, said
todlfy IM C's time clock started last
week after the office received
more detailed information about
the scaled-down IMC hospital,
proposed by a coalition of power-
ful business interests and civic
supporters. The proposed medical
center shrank in size, following a
recommendation by cpunty medi-
cal authorities.
The agency. which regulates
expansion of the state's hospitals,
still has questions about a compet-
ing hospital application in Irvine
byChatsworth-baSed HealthWest
corporation, he said.
He could not say what questions
BULLETIN BOARD
Holiday confections
workshop in lrv'in~
health officials intend to ask of ·
Health West. But their application
for a 232-bed, $81.7 million fa-
cility, was declared imcomplet.e
some time ago. P<>g$0n said.
·nealthWest spokesman Rem
Goldberg said in telephone inter-
view from Los Angeles the firm is
still searching for a site In the
great.er-Irvine area.
"We're still hoping we have
something to say on it," Goldberg
said, adding Health West does not
intend to withdraw its application.
Lack of a site has stymied review
of Health West's application by the
state agency, he said.
·HealthWest, backed by a
smaller cadre of local supporters
who· want a UC Irvine affiliated
hospital. lost its promised locati.on
tn September when the UCI
chancellor withdrew his support.
Goldberg said HealthWest's
plan embodies more than a hospi-
tal. and would include an urgent
care cent.er, a mobile health de-
livery system and an occupational
health program.
"I know that our goal 1s to try to
do something innovative for
Irvine," he said .. "l hope that IMC
is interested in doing the same. If
so, w~ won't close the door to a
coope.~ "
6 62 inches pelting Southern Cali-
fornia sint-e July l. Normal would
be 2.63 inches, according to the
weather service.
However, skies should clear up
again Wednesday and Thursday,
with highs possibly reaching the
low 70s by Thursday, forecasters
"For one thing, both of them
were driving in the same lane,"
said the father. "I know Randy
had moved into that lane so he
could make his tum to come home.
Two cars driven by Phyllis Fin-
ney, 55, of Huntington Beach, and
Jeffrey Koza. 18, of L9ng Beach,
coUided head-on on Pacific Coast
Highway.
said. ·
Lows this week should be in the
upper 40s and 50s.
"From what my son told me. the
other car locked its brakes and
Randy tried to stop and then
swerved to avoid the accident,"
said the father.
Finney was listed tn critical
condition today at Fountain Val-
ley Community Hospital, with a
fractured pelvis, broken knees,
scrapes and bruises. Kozawas
listed in serious condition. "The charge is so severe. I don't
CHRISTMAS SALE.S PUSH RECORD ...
From PageA1
last. P~ple must have more money this year," she
•said. ·
Graham said the recent rain and cold
temperatures were responsible for the record crowds
which have flocked to South Coast Plaza in the past
few weeks, because it's an enclosed structure.
Smaller stores report business has been a little
slow -especiall y on the rainy days but merchants
predict sales will zoom by_Chrisun~.
"We had a ~ood ·day Satul'day but a lot of r .. .,,, • . . ' ...
merchants say it's been slow. It's the rain. We think
things will pick up a lot by Christmas,'' said AudreS-
Patterson, owner of Recyclaj Rags. 2731 E. Coast
Highway jn Corona del Mar.
"It's been a good year here at South Coast
Village. I think the rain kept a lot of people inside the
mall across the street (South Coast Plaza) and away
from here but that'll change now that it's cleared.
Most merchants are very optimistic," said Bonnie
Morris, marketin g secretary for the village. . •"'
LA WYERS GET THE RIGHT MOVES ...
From PageA1
body language universally is used by people to
communicate subtle and not-so-subtle messages,
Bernstein acknowledged.
"The way you move is the way you think. The
way you move is the way you {eel." Bernstein said in
explaining the underlying principle. She urged the
lawyers to exude con fide nee, project energy and to be
receptive to the non-verbal signs of others.
Confidence 1s communicated to others In a
variety of ways. said Bernstein, who is president of
her own consulting Cirm, the Synchronics Group. She
said broad gestures away Crom the body and long
s trides communicate both confidence and power.
"The more persona] space you take up. the more
people give you," she said.
To underscore her point. she showed pictures of
President Reagan in powerful poses, gesturing
broadly a nd striding confidently. Bernstein called
him a master at t'Ommunicating through non-verbal.
upright are indicating neutrality and those who lean
forward are interested or are on the attack, Bernstein
explained.
One important tool in projecting energy are the
hands. sbesaid. pointing to emphasize her contention.
To signal you are receptive and want to hear
what another person has to say. Bernstein suggested
such non-verbal behaviors as consciously keeping the
stomach and chest areas uncovered. Men should not
wear vests and people should not fold their arms
across their chests if they want to communicate
receptiveness.
"Meet the world exposing your stomach . That
way you're open and re<-eptive. It tells the world
yoo're not afraid to list.en," s he explained.
Also. a_pcrsqn should always face a person head
on, rather than turning sideways. "It's a subtle way to
turn people off. to give them the cold shoulder.
t---·1---1-/1t.-fld~enmw>10ll'lft9~tntien-en-Mw-co-make.--holiday confections_•'"'"~
simple and easy techniques will be offered at a workshop Tuesday ----..~·· because that.is what you're doing," she said . -
----...ii
· and Dec. 13 at.Northwood Community Park in Irvine, 4531 Bryan
Ave. . '
Heather Bell will conduct the workshops, held betw~n 9:30
and 11:30 a.m. Tuesday and in the evening during the following
session. • ,
Space is limited and registration is r:equiredi-by calling
552-4350. .&
Newport group plans yule party
The Speak Up Newport organization plans a monthly meeting
and Christmas Party Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. at the Villa Nova
Restaurant, 3131 W . Coast Highway.
The meeting will honor the Sheriff's Harbor Patrol.
PROTEST ...
From Page A1
Saturday. "We want to send a
clear message to President Reagan
that the nuclear freeze movemen t
is not the small minority that he
thinks it is."
Seal Beach Police Chief said the
1 'A-hour weekend protest at the
facility drew only 250 demon-
strators. while the aJliance had
told the department Friday to
expect 1,000. "The~ began arriving about
And .she urged women. often programmed to
as,,ume.. postures that comn_lunicate submissiveOesi.
and powerlessness, to wear clothes that don't limit
movement or restrict their ability to stake out
personal space. as tight skirts do.
Avoiding symmetrical postures, such as sitting
straight up. knees together and hands folded in the
lap, is another way. especially for women, to assert
non-verbal power, she said. ,
An asymmetrical posture is "not agressive. it's
assertive." Bernstein added.
It also is important to project energy to an
audience. "Monitor the direction you move in. Move
energy out,'' she advised.
People who stand or lean backward are
indicating they are in retreat. Those who stand or sit
Bernstein also told the lawyers it-is very
imporLant that they Jearn how to "listen" to the
Elon-verbal communications of otheT"S. ('To show'
you're listening. move with your speaker. reflect
their posture. The worst thing you can do is get out of
sync with them," she said.
"By mirroring a person's physical posture.
you're saying. 'I hear you. I know what you're
saying.' You're also eliminating your resistance to
what the other person is saying." she said. "This is the
key to persuasiveness. to be visually listening and
moving with (the speaker)."
Non-verbal communication or body language is
the unconscious language spoken by everyone
everyday. "To bring it to a conscious level, to look at it
and to understand it is to control it," Bernstein said. Sha k esp earean s ho w set to night noon but they cut their plans ..------------------------------------------
•·-
A one-man performance of selected sohlex'luies and scenes from
Shakespeare will be performed free 8 o'clock tonight by visiting
lecturer William Needles.
Needles, a pnncipal a.ct.or with the Stratford Shakespearean
Fesilive of Ontario, Canada, .will perform in the Virginia and
Norman Nixon Theater on the UC Irvine campus. Ticket
information can be obtained by calling 856-6617
Seniors, ha ndicapped sho ppin g set
Senior citizens and handicapped people wiU be able to shop in
comfort at the Target Store on Adams Avenue iri Huntington Beach
Tuesday.
The store will be open exclusively to seniors and the
handicapped for two hours of hassle-free shopping from 9-11 a.m.
Charter buses to and from nursing homes and senior centers
will be provided to bring shoppers to the store. Spedal services
including wheelchairs, cleared aisles and rest stops throughout the
store will alao be provided.
short," Picascia said. "They
planned speeches, but it
pouring rain."
i .,V e xecutive
hang~ himself
A vice president with a food
service company in Santa Ana was
found hanged over the weekend
at his residence in the 16000 block
of Sequoia Street in Fountain
Valley.
Police said the victim was
identified as 40-year-old Yoshimo
Hiroto.
OHicers speculated the ap-
parent suicide was related to
business press~res.
~'re
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ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
CMIJ DoweNbY Rapnond MeclMn Editor end AaMtenT Controller
to the PIJblither
........ •. c.... ~ ........,
Cl•atfted ........... ,.,.,....,.
AM otMt d1,1rttwte ---1
VOL.7',NO.•
~~----~--~1-------------~--------.~'11-~·-------------------...... ~-:;;;;;:;:::;.;:;;;;....--..-...._ _________ ~o-~~ ... ..---~~ ..... .w
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•
. . • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, December 5. 1983
Infant deaths up despite year With s•fe seat law
81 STEVt: MAIUSLt;
Ot ... CNl!y ..........
Nearly a year after a child
aafety seat law took cffe<:t, st.ate
statistics reveal the number of
infants killed in hig hway acci·
dents has actua lly increased, not
declined.
State officials claim the statistic
ahows many Californians are still
disregarding the law despite fines
as high as $100 a nd dramatic
examples of safety seats in action.
"The number of injuries has
gone down by nearly 9 perc.-ent but
the increase in fatalities shows
how Car we still have to go," said
Ken t Milton . a California High-
way P atrol spok~man in Sacra·
men to.
"Three years is about how long
it takes for people to start comply-
ing with a new law," he said.
CHP Commissioner James
Smith said studies of accidents this
year that have claimed the livee of
young children show that, ln
every case but one, the youngster
was not riding in a safety seat.
''Many of these youngsters
would have survived if they had
been properly restrained," Srruth
added.
There have been numerow
nightmarish examples of how
effective the Infant seats are.
ln one Northern California city,
an 6-month-old boy was the only
surviving family member after a
fiery, wrong-way freeway col-
lision . The child was strapped Into
an infant seat.
An 18-month-old boy in an
infant seat came away virtually
unscathed in last June's
chain-reaction crash on the Or-
ange Freeway that left four dead
'Golden Triangle'launched
Work b egin11ingon $6.8 million freeway interchange project
By ANDREA ADELSON
Of ti.. Dellr "'°' ltatt
Highway construction workers.
not a colony of active an ts. are the
source of two mounds or dirt
visible to motorists w ho drive the
Sant.a Ana Frecwav m East Irvine.
What the emba~kments are is
the makings of the long-awaited
$6.8 million Alton Parkway inte r -
change. what the Irvine Co. calls
the key to unlock the "Golden
Triangle."
Within the 480-acre triangle.
formed by the junctions of the
Sant.a Ana. Laguna and San Diego
freeways. th e N ew port
Beach-based developer plans an
office-hotel complex and regional
projects are to be located out of the
triangle. north of interstate S.
ln 20 years. the Golden Triangle
is expected to be the business
home of 200,000 employees. And
many of th ose businesses are
likely to hail from west lrvine. as.
demand ·for office space pushes
out industrial and high tech
tenants along the freeway cor-
ridor near John Wayne Airport.
Kirk West, secretary of the st.ate
Business. Transportation and
Housing Agency. said the inter-
change is one of the largest of the
$60 million worth of highway
construction being financed pri-
vately.
spokesman Martin A. Brower
said.
Irvine Co. President Tom
Nielsen said "the construction of
the Alton interchange and free-
way improvements represent a
continuing commitment by the
Irvine Co. to the development of
Irvine Center and adjacent tech-
nological, biomedical and indus-
trial projects."
However, officer towers and
hotels are more likely to be
constructed at Irvine Center
before a regional parkjng center
takes shape, Brower said. Recent
approval of expansion plans for
the su~ful South Coast Plaza
in Costa Mesa has pushed back
development forecasts, he said.
1---..r+.opping center.
Th e lrvine Co. has "been in the
thick of d evelopment in Orange
County for several decades. and so
have we," West told a crowd oC
about 100 state. county and local
officials. who attend_ed cer-
emonie:s marking the st.art oC
construction last w eek.
''When we will actually st.art or
what form (the shopping center)
will take" is uncertain as there are
no "immediate commitments" by
large department stores.
•.
The six-lane overpass and inter·
change. to be completed in Febru-
ary of 1985. is to pro¥tde access to
two other projects advanced by
the ambitious Irvine Co. These are
a 900-acre industrial center now
under construction and a 357-acre
industrial park for high tech-
nology tenants. The latter two
The cooperative public and
private effort "is the Hrst in
Orange County," Irvine Co.
He :;aid market projections
show eventuaUy population will
swell in the Irvine, El Toro and
Laguna Hill areas. enough to
support a fifth shopping center.
'Punkers' rob Irvine girl of dollar
A 10-year-old Irvine. girl was the
victim of a strong-armed robber)
Sunday, robbed ol a dollar In change
on Culver Drive near Walnut Avenue
She described her mate a1tackers as
two 14-year-old. p~n~ers
A cashmere coal worth S600 was stolen lrom a car in a Main Street
restaurant parking lbt Sunday nigll t aft« thleYe• smashed a rear window
Burglars stole a· radio and 1ewelry
from a Harvard Manor apartment
over the weekend Pohce said 1J11eves
pried open a w1~d?w.
A commercial complex on Red Hill
Avet1ue was the target ol weekend
thieves. A 1e1evis1on and m9':rowave
oven worth $800 was dlscove<ed
missing Sunday, al1er a dOO< was
forced at a sul.te belonging to Amerl·
A 24-foot SkipJaCk boat resting on
a trailer behind the 16300 block ol
De Ariza Clrcle was burglarized some-ttmes during the past three weeks. A screwdriver was apparently use<t to
break down a cabin door. The loss
included fishing rods and reels worth $600, sleeping bags worth $105, a
tarp worth $300 and a VHF radio
worth $400
A black 1978 ChevrOlel one-ton
pickup truck was reporte<I stolen Sunday morning from lhe 800 block
ol Oelawere Street The loss wu
esttmated at ~.000.
A house on lhe 19300 block ot
Weakfish Lane was burglarized and ransacked Sunday. The loss. est•·
mated at $300. included a tripod, binoculars and a television set
Someone stole a tool box valued at $450 from a van In the 8000 block of
La Caslta.
Suspects accosted a pedestrian
near Magnolia Street and Gar1ield Avenue and grabbed her purse
containing $200
Costa Mesa
A 2 l·year·Old Costa Mesa man
was cut on the hand with a razor
blade Friday when he was robbed
white walking down the 700 block of
Center Street In Costa Mesa. The
victim lost $380 and was slashed by
lour suspects during the 7.30 pm.
incident . Jorge L. Ibarra was treated
at Hoag Memorial Hospital tor his
in1ury
and six Injured. T he driver of the
smaU sports car 1n which lhe the
child was riding was killed. .
By year's end, it is estimated
that highway patrol officers will
have cited about 8,000 drive rs
since March for not having Infant
seats for their toddlers. Only
warnings were issued the first two
months of the year.
"And for the most part," said
Milt-On, "the drivers have been
"jjulled over for other violations
when the officers noticed the
child."
The $50 fine for flrst·tlme ..
offenders us w~ived if lhe driver
buys one.of the saJety ae.a_ta and
shows proof of th.e purchase. The
fine for a aecond offenae ii $100.
Police in Irvine, to encourage
the use-ot-theseau, started renting
them to families last winter. The
initial allocation of 5Q 1eata went
so fast police were forced to order
another 25, whict) also were
quickly rented out.
"Hopefully we're creating a
seat belt generation, a generation
that will insist their kids wear seat
belts from day one," said Mike
Weiss, a crime prevention officer
ln Irvine.
The year·ald law reqwres that
children under the age of 4 or
welghjng less than 40 pounds
must ride In a safety seat. which
generally lB strapped In with a
conventional teat belt.
"Officers usua~ly have a pretty
good idea how old the child ls or
how much he welghs," explained
Milton. "If the parent. chooees to
misrepresent how much the child
weighs or h is age, well, we're not
going to make a federal case out
it."
--WI AllllD:-------
'Have you started your Christmas shopping?'
Nan Burka,
Irvine,
aal,a apeclallat
"I haven't even thought
about It yet.'·
Shlrl•J Dean,
CoataMeu,
houHwlf• and voluntMr
mlnlater
"I don't celebrate
Christmas with gifts. I'm
one of Jehovah's Wit·
nesses."
LHhOmer,
CoetaMeu,
Orang• C-ont Colleglat•
"I haven't bought any·
thing as of Friday. But
maybe t.wlll tttls week."
Robin Jones,
Huntington Beach,
hair atyllat
"I haven't started. I don't
even know If I'm going to
do too much shopping. In
our large f8fTlllY we usually
just draw one name. That
makes it a lot easier.'·
Bob Galltnger,
Newport Beach,
retlred
"I don't Christmas shop.
My wife does It aJI."
,
George Margolln, ·
Newport Beach,
Inventor
"I've been looklng. but I
haven't found what I'm
looktng for. It's something
very apeclal for• lady.
friend. I can't tell you what
It rs. She might read this.''
!>Jo Huntington Beach workers laid off
t--~f---4"iin-~muti.a.._.uiuL-~JCe-111[WJ!l....... ..... ~r--tll8!Clie-4'9~7~4~~~4e~r~G~~n¥J-l~l~allioion--.--~-----..-..:.....~:._----,..--,~~-l--..,~---r------r----rJ,.---::-:-"T'~---:-.,-~rr-------,,.-----h--',.,,,w;-----------~ J ' catledtotakeanotherburg1aryrepon wagon parked •n a carport on the • suspec we ing a s1x·1nch u.r oug eac , i orrance emR oyees at the~ locallon this ~~· 6-400 bloc~ol ~mer Avenue was hunting knlle held up the Tlc locker , , •• °+ Lones~ not yet• • bMf\ det . burglarized ~ the weekend. ihe Thrift Shop Fflday moming and .,_., • • · _ ,,. • --r·· $ eeca----'wUh $35 cash · From staff and wire reports th. 1 ff Id be · d led ed to'-I 1 "d
.,
••
•,
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,.
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Thieves stole a 5200 sale contain· toss included tools worth 3.500. .,.,... • '· • · e ayo s wou gm soon an p g ne p a1
Ing about $200 cash tr~m Holman A Santa Ana man suspected 01 .. A McDonnell Douglas Corp. decision to furlough off workers find jobs e lsewhere within· the corpor-
X-Aay of America Saturday, af1er fountain Valley harassing students and teachers at 1,000 workers a t its Long Beach-based Douglas ation or w ith other companies. prying open a door of the office at a a HI h s h 1 11 di t I d 16610 Aston St. Poppa's Wholesale warehouse at 10a~~n J6wn ~he ~c~~o~s e~r~ncrp~l~n Aircraft division will have no impact on -,its The layoff isa "consolidation" stemming from its
Tennis equipment and two purses 18428 Euchd St. withstood a couple the parking lot Friday. William Kap· Huntington Beach facility, a spokesman said. decision not to build two commercial jetliners and is
"were dlecovered missing from an of assalAts from burglars over the pele, of Mission Viejo. told police the Do'uglas spokesman Dave F.astman said the "not directly" related to a lingering strike by the unlocked camper early Saturday, weekend. First burglars tried to get suspect drove his motorcycle ced 1 k Id ff nl U 'led A W k · h par1ted at a business on Dupont Into the building by cutling a hole In 8 layoffs announ ast wee wou a ect o y m uto or ers against t e aerospace giant.
Drive. metaJ roll-up back door. That ploy j~~~g~~,a~I ~~.w~.~~. forced him 10 employees of Douglas plants in Long Beach and Easbnan said.
tailed wtien they ran Into a well on the T Huntington Beach other side. Then they threw a rock orrance. Virtually a ll of the layoffs resulted Crom the through a wlnc;low bul 11 didn't cause Horse tack and teed valued at s9o5 He said the cutback would no t affect e mployees decision o f the board of directors of St. Louis-based A burglary was reported Sunday at b h h 1 f lh t t was reported stolen Saturday from of McDonnell Dc?uglas Ast.ronauu'cs Co .. located 1·n M Do 11 Do 1 h 1 f h . a business on the 7600 block ol a ig enoug 0 e or em 0 en er the Orange County Equestrian c nne ug as to a t any urt er mvestment
Talber1 Avenue. The front door was through Cente< al 88 Fair Drive. Huntington Beach. a nd development of the MD-90 and MD-100 jetliners
pried open toentef. The loss included Suspects entered a car In the Douglas. with a w ork force of 14,900, said that because of lack ol orders.
guns worth $4,035, radio and tete-18000 block of Brookhurst Street A garage on lhe 700 block of
vision equipment wonh $770. and and look writing pens. ladles' Peularlno Avenue was broken Into
mllCeflaneous gOOds valued at sweate<s, sports equipment and Sunday and 1n air compressor
$2, 186. clothes valued at $2 16. valued at $200 was stolen.
Cloudy, chance of showers Tuesday .
Coastal
Extended
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~4 Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 5, 1983
TOP OF IHI lllWI
NATION
Supreme Court to hear
draft registration case
WASHINGTON -The Supreme Court
agreed today to decide whether male college
students applying for federal loans or grants
m~t prove they have registered with Selective
Service. The court will review a ruling by a
federal judge in .Mmnesota that struck down the
government's draft status disclosure rule as
unconstitutional. There is no draft currently, but
registration resumed three years ago. Selective
Service officials say that nearly 11 million young
men, about 96.5 percent of those eligible, have
registered in those three years.
House fire kills six
CINCINNATI -A fire broke out today in a
three-story house that was used as a group home
for the mentally retarded. killing six people, and
critically injuring. two others, authorities said.
Three others escaped the blaze, said Fire Chief
Norm.al Wells. "There were six fatals inside (and)
two alive inside (now) in critical condition at
University Hospital." Wells said.
Economist d etermined
WASHINGTON -Presidential economist
Martin Feldstein today renewed his determina-
tion to stay on the job in the face of a sharp rebuke
from White House officials for his wami.np
about the large federal budget deficits. At a
meeting of the American Enterprise Institute.
Feldstein said, "l plan to stay in the actminis-
tration and to continue to advise the president on
-matters~f economicpolicy." Felcktein, chairman
of the president's Council of F.conomic Advisers,
said he continues to support enthusiastically the
president's economic and budget programs.
STATE
Liver patient 'alert'
SAN DIEGO -A 3-year-old boy who
underwent 91/2 -hour liver transplant surgery
was able to watch a Christmas special 011
television afterward, though his condition re-
mained critical, a hospital spokesman says. The
Los Angeles-area boy, who was not identified at
his parent's request, received a new liver during
an operation that began Friday night and lasted
until early Saturday. "He is awake and alert. In
fact at this moment, he is watch ing a Christmas
special on TV." Vincent Bond. a spokesman for
Children's Hospital. said Sunday evening.
KKK leader, 14 others held
LOS ANGELES -Police have arrested 15
people. including Ku Klux Klan leader Tom
Metzger. after a weekend cross burning and
confrontation between the Klan and irate Jews
during observance of Hanukkah. The KKK
members and supporters. some wearing robes,
were jailed after illegally setting fire to three
15-foot high crosses 'In a residential backyard
Saturday night, pohcesa1d Sunday. Among those
arrested were Metzger. head of the KKK in
t----t~.;oulhem G&lifomia.-.a~tle
'
tional head of a white supremacist group called
-Aryan Nations. said police sergeants Louis Page
. and Richard_ We~. · -.
Gas prices d ecline again
LOS ANGELES -Gasoline prices have
fallen nearly half a cent a gallon in the past two
weeks. continuing a five-month trend, and more
cuts are expected this week. an oil industry
analyst says. Motorists nationwide were paying
an average $1.20.9 on Friday. down 0.49 of a cent
from the last survey two weeks ago. and down
from $1.23.3 last year at the same time, says Dan
Lundberg, publisher of the weekly Lundberg
Letter. Lundberg said Sunday the wholesale
price of gasoline had dropped an average 0.63 of
a cent in the last two weeks. while the average
pump price went down only 0.49 of a cent in his
survey of 17,800 stations Friday.
WORLD
Lusinchi wins election
CARACAS. Ven -
ezuela -Jaime Lusinchi,
a pediatrician who heads
the opposH1on Democratic
Action party, won a land-
slide victory over ll rivals ·
in Venezuela's presiden-
tial elections. He wlU take
office Feb. 2. ending five
years of rule by the Social
Christian Party with a
3 -to-2 edge over his
nearest challenger in Sun-
day's balloting. However,
his promise to revive the
country's economy will be
difficult to keep. More
than 17 percent of the •
work force ls unemployed Lftllacfll
and half of Venezuela's '3~ billion foreign debt
comes due within the next year.
Nicaraguan amnesty told
MANAGUA, Nicaragua -Nicaragua said ll
will welcome back most exiles who Cled the
country since 1979: including rebels fighting the
leftia\ government. It alao promlled to announce
plant next year for 1985 national elections. The
amnesty decree announced Sunday ii the latett
In a wries of concestJons by the government.
wh.lch Ayt it la trying to clear the way for signing
a pr'Ol)Oled resSonal pe~ treaty Dec. 21 .
1'he u-eatyta being drafted by theContadora
pvup -Mexico. Venezuela, Colombia and
Plnama. Dani@! Onep. coordinator of the ruUna
8AndiniN Junta, illued a IK'Ond decree 1ettlnc
Feb. 21 M the date for announcing the el«tion
11Chedule. lt did no\ Ny what type of el«tion ii
plannld Oil' what Mfica wouid be included.
' -----·,-~-
Middle East warlar escalates
Reagan urged
(o_pull troops
Bomb kills 1 O;
8 Marines s_Ja·in_
BEIRtrr, Lebanon (AP) -A powerful car
bomb exploded today in an apartment building
garage, killing at least 10 people and Injuring 84,
and U.S. foru~s tried to determine the source of
shelling that killed eight Marines hours earlier.
There was no immediate claim of responsi-
bility for the explosion. which partially collapsed
the nine-story building In a residential neigh-
borhood of predominantly Moslem west Beirut.
Beirut radio said rescuers ldentifiea 10 victims as
they pulled blood-soaked bodies (rom the rubble.
U.S. jets flew sorties over the Beirut area at
daybreak today, the state radio said, apparently
trying to pinpoint the sources of a 4 ~-hour
artillery assault Sunday night on the Marines'
airport base.
A Western diplomatic source said the eight
Marines apparently were killed by a single
artillery shell.
Earlier Sunday, 28 U.S. warplanes staged a
retaliatory attack against Syrian anti-aircraft
positions that had fired Saturday on two unarmed
U.S. Navy reconnaissance planes flying over
Lebanon. No bombing raids were reported today.
Two of the U.S. planes were downed and one
pilot was rescued after Sunday's raid, while
another flier was captured by Syrian forces.
Syria's defense minister said today a third airman
died of injuries.
The t~o pilots who fell in Syrian-held
territory were identified as Lt. Mark A. Lange, 26,
of Frasier, Mich., and Lt. Robert 0 . Goodman, 27.
of Portsmouth, N.H.
They were classified by the ~avy as missing
but Syria's defense minister. Lt. Gen. Mustafa
Dass, tolcLThe Associated Pres.9 in a telephone
intervie':" that Lange had died and said the body
would be turned over to the U.S. Em~y in
Damascus ''in the course C?f the day."
Regardil\g Goodman, who was captured.
Tla,ss said: "He as in excellent condition. in good
health, suffering no injury of any kind."
He said ·interviews with Goodman would be
allowed "as soon as the investigation is finished."
Asked when Goodman would be freed. Tlass
said: "Like in all wars, when war is over. That is
when the Americans will leave Lebanon."
Two former Israeli air force commanders. in
interviews wnh the Tel Aviv newspaper Yedioth
Ahronoth. criticized the performance of the U.S .
pilots during Sunday's bombing raid.
Plains, Sotith
bear brunt of
winter wrath
By CYNTHIA GREE"'
h eocietM ,., ... Write<
As the Great Plains swallowed another snowy
dose of wmter today, more rain and cresting ravers
threatened cleanup efforts in the South, where
tornadoes and flooding left three people dead, one
ml$mg an ca 'l'Trttttons-ohtollcns in-damage.
A one-day respite from the weekend's storms
was expected toend tonight as severe thunderstonns
move into the lower Mississippi Valley, and the same
weather system was already dropping snow and
freezing rain from the Rocky Mountains to the Great
Lakes early today, the Nationa1 Weather Service
said.
The lat.est in a series of snowstorms in the West
forced the closing of a major highway in Idaho,
caused scores of minor accidents in Utah and left up to
11 inches of new snow in Colorado. officials said
Sunday.
"Since Thanksgiving , everyone's saying
enough's enough," said F.d Honodel of the National
Weather Service in Denver.
In the South, flood warnings remained in effect
today for streams in Alabama. Mississippi and
Louisiana despite Sunday's partly sunny skies. While
hundreds returned home after fleeing over the
weekend as [ierce twister-spawning thunderstorms
dumped several ibehes of rain in a few hours. the
worst flooding was yet to come in some places.
A boat carrying two men dropped more than 100
feet off a dam on the rain-swollen Broad River in
Gaffney, S.C .. on Sunday, authorities said. One man
was reported missing while the other was rescued.
A Utah police dispatcher said Sunday that about
60 or 70 accidents, most of th~m minor. occurred in
Weber and Davis counties, where roads were slick
and visibility low from blowing snow. •
WASHING TON (AP) -Some prominent
poUUciana of both parties, critical of President
Reagan for U.S. '1r strikes agalnat Syrian forces,
are renewing earlier calla for withdrawal of U.S .
· troope from Lebanon.
,,,_...,...
A Le banese soldier watches an
unidentified pl&ne flymg over ruin
of an American plane hit by Syrian
antiaircraft fire in Journieh, Leba-
non.
"The American pilots paid for their lack of
operational experience." Maj. Gen. Benny Peled
said. Added Maj. Gen. Mordechai Hod, "On a
purely military level. the American operation
cannot be called a success."
The car bombing occurred about 8 a.m. today,
and Lebanon's state radio said at least 10 people
were killed and 84 Injured in a blast that set huge
fires in several blocks of the residential district.
\
BAPMAHT no HOCM -..
TEflSlM M 3AP~.QAM f (lt( PA \lll !041 . no ~ t M
Marshal Nikolai V. Oga_.kov, chief of
general staff, points to Soviet version
Their reaction ranged from urging Reagan to
uae the "utmost caution" in responding to any
provocation. to avoiding "approaching war with
Syria."
Syria's ambasaador to the United States, Ra fie
Jouejati, said Sunday that his country would
continue to defend Itself, its positions, !ta indepen-
dence and the sovereignty of Lebanon .
"We are not at war with the United States.
But the escalation is impoeed on US, and what are
we supposed to win by that?" Jouejatl said on
CBS-TV.
U.N. Ambassador Jeane J(jrkpatrlck said the
Syrians have been informed that "we will take
appropriate action" if U.S. planes are fired upon
again.
But Sen . Barry M . Goldwater, R-Ariz.,
chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee
and No. 2 Republican on the Armed Services
Committee, told reporters today, "The president
ought to bring everybody with an American
uniform on back and do it now . because we are
headed for war."
"I'd rather look like a coward than lose
100,000 or 200,000 young men," Goldwater added.
One of the eight Democratic candidates,
former Sen. George McGovern, said the remain-
ing Marines in Lebanon should be brought home
"before they too fall victim to President Reagan's
mishandling of American policy in Hlat region."
McGovern-added that. the-"(US. Marine)
fatality list will grow as strikes and count.er-strikes
escalate. Step by step, the United Stat.es is
approaching war with Syria."
Sen, Alan Cranston of California charac-
terized Reagan's approach to (oreign policy as
"trigger happy and reckless" following the air
strikes. Cranston said, "When we are fired upon. it
may be necessary to strike back, but we should not
be in places where we invite attack."
Sen. John Glenn of Ohlo said he does not
fayor withdrawing the Marines from Beirut, but
he urged the U.S. government to "exerci8e the
utmost caution and meuptt our response to this
extremely dangerous situation very carefully."
,,,.....,._
of U.S. and Russian arms reduction
proposals at press conference.
Soviets won't rejoin arms talks
Missiles in Europe cited; Kremlin bl~mes U.S. for breakdo~n
MOSCOW (AP) -High-ranking Kremlin
officials made clear today the So~1et Union had no
an ten lion of rejoining talks on medium-range nuclear
arms in Europe while NATO's new missiles are
de ployed.
In an unusual news conference for Soviet and
foreign reporters, they blamed the United States for
the negotiations' breakdown and accused the Reagan
administration of seeking to disrupt the parallel talks
on long-range missiles.
Cheers! Cheers! It's been··SO years
Chief Kremlin spokesman Leonid M. Zamyatin
also said President Yuri V. Andropov is "recovering
well" from an illn~ that haa kept him oµt of public
view for 109 days. Andropov "is getting better and is
tackling in full measure party affairs, afCairs of state
and affainof the Council ol Defense," Zamyatinaaid.
He did not elaborate on the illness other than to
cite Andropov's Oct. 29 letter to physicians Yiliting
Moecow. 1n the letter, Andropov said he could not
keep an appointment with the the doctors becau.e he
had a cold.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Drinkers can raise a
glass tonight to toast 50 uninterrupted years of
legal imbibing.
It was Tuesday, Dec. 5, 1933, '¥hen the 21st
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified,
ending 13 years, 10 months and 18 long thirsty
days of Prohibition.
Over much of America. jubilant alcohol
drinkers celebrated repeal of the 18th Amend-
ment, though a New York Tl.mes headline noted
an "at.ence of undue hlla.rity" on that Depretsion
niaht.
FOi' thoee who remember, quiet celebrations
will Qlo mark the golden annlveraary.
Davkl E. Kyvig, a Unlvttaity of Akron hiatory
prof.-x who haa written on Prohibition. uys
he'll raise a toast to Repeal on Monday night when
the Ohio Historical Society commemorates that
state's important role. ·
"I think the Image of Prohibition Is aome
distance from th•freality," Kyvig said. "We have
thal image of Al Capone ~ think the whole
country was Chicago, but lhat wasn't really the
case.
"One of the myths is that prohibition didn'~
work_ at all," Kyvig said. "But there's gdod
evidence It cut drinking at least In half ln the
United Stat.es. Per capita conawnption didn't rile
to pre-Prohibition lev@la until the 1970.. A who~
eeneration ~w up leamJ.na.not to drink ln the
1920.." •
The Soviets aJao denounced the U.S. air attack on
Syrian anti-.alrcra(t pitiona ln Lebanon Sunday.
Zam(atin condemnecf it as an act of aare-ton. qn the dais for the news confettnce at the
Foreigll Ministry ptell center 'A(ere Manha.I Nikolai
V. Ogarkov, ~ lint deputy defen1e minister and
chief of general _,f: 0eorit M, Komienko, the fint
deputy foreign mi.n1*11-. and Zlrnyatin.
In an openina lta~l~t, Ogarkov vowed never
to allow the United Stftes pin military auperlorl\y
and restated Soviet p1aN tali.ate for the s&art of
NATO deployment of new U. . ~and Penhlnl2
millt1ft In Wmem Europe.
873-7726
l
DAILY SPECIALS ~~
Complete dinner served with soup or salad~
potato du jour or rice pllaf. . .
.....,. af'4!0mcl1t a r:;.::n a~...,...._. ~ ...
-"""" ... . ..,
-----· ~-------~·~------------------------'-..;....~
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 5, 1983 ~I
Reagan, Kohl
in joint talk
with shuitle
SPACE CENTER. Houston (AP) -President
Reagan and West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl
told the orbiting Columbia-Space lab astronauts in an
unprecedented conversation today that their inter-
national apace mission symbolizes the close ties
between Europe and the United States.
Reagan, speaking from the White House, called
the European-built Spacelab, carried In Columbia's
bay, a "shining example of international cooperation
at its best."
Kohl, in Athens. Greece. said the presence of
West German physicist Ulf Merbold on the crew
shows how closely Europe and the United States can
work together. "We hope this joint enterprise will
lead to fu ture cooperation between Germany and the
United States in space research," he said.
Spaceship comander John Young agreed. telling
the two leaders: "German-American relations have
never been better than they are aboard Spacelab."
Merbold, a physic1St from Stuttgart, said the
research aboard Spare lab could improve the life of all
people on Earth.
It was the first time the leaders of two countries
have conversed on the same linkup with orbiting
space travelers.
"This is one heck of a conference call," Reagan
said. . .
The 15-minute conversation. plus a 20-minute
news conference involn ng correspondents in six
European countries, required the complex linkup of
five European and American communications satel-
lites.
The journalists asked questions from London,
The H~e. Brussels, Bonn-Cologne. Geneva and
Rome. U.S . correspondents talked with the space
travelers Thursday.
lo--Working with Merbold in Spacelab on two
around-the-clock shifts are Bob Parker, Owen
Garriott and Byron Lichtenberg. Young and pilot
Brewster Shaw alternate at Columbia's controls.
All appeared in the telescast as they took Reagan
and Kohl, who spoke through an interpreter, on a
brief tour of their orbiting home.
IN THE SERVICE
David L. Whan, son of L. D. and Evelyn Whan of
Huntington Beach, has been promoted to staff
sergeant in the Air Force. Whan is' an inventory
management specialist at Hahn Air Base, West
Germany, with the 50th Tactical Fighter Wing.
Army Reserve Pvt. John C. McGrath, son of
John and Alice McGrath of Newport Beach, and Pvt.
Stephen P. Hood, son of Jacqui Saccjetti of Fountain
Valley, have completed basic training at Fort
Jackson. S.c.
Airman David W. Palmblade, son of William and
Eleanor Palmblade of Costa Mesa. has bet-n assigned
to Sheppard Air Force Base. Texas, after completing
buie training. He ts a 1983 gradua te of Costa Mesa High School. .
Airman Richard L. Weston, son of David and
Mary Weston of Fountain Valley. has completed
basic lraining at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. He
ia a 1980 graduate of La Quinta . High School in
Westminster.
PFC Randal J. Golladay, so:.:.n.:,....:.o.:;...f -=..::__:~..::y..~
t---Nnn-n?r-t't:1~"0r-eorona derMar. as romp et a
,
Delly"'°' f'llolM tty l .. l'ey ...
Raye Jones gleefully. accepts candy cane from Santa
Merchants mef-ry
Sidewalk celebrants see Santa, sing songs
'Twas three weeks before Christmas
and in Corona de! Mar many creatures
were stirring at Sunday's annual
merchants' Christmas Open House.
Santa Claus strolled the streets
giving out candy canes to children of all
ages. The sidewalks were decorated
with hundreds of poinsettias. Shop
owners provided refreshmen ts and
snacks and a bus painted to look like a
San Francisco cable car shuttled shop-
pers up and down Pacific Coast
Highway.
Carolers entertained the hundreds of
people who came to share in the fun. A
group from Newport Beach's Junior
Philharmonic took the first prize of
$100 for the best caroling.
"The merchants wanted to make
people aware Corona de! Mar is a
unique shopping area and to give
people a Little Christmas fun . It was so
fun and hectic, I hardly knew my
name." said Audrey Patterson, one of
the organizers and owner of Recycled
Rags on CoaSCHighway.
teletypewriter equipment repair· course at the U.S.
.Army Signa) School in Fort Gordon, Ga. Junior Philharmonic meqihers Dehay entertain sidewalk visitors
Cindy Martin; Amy Larner and Lynn with cheerful.Christmas carols
Clean-up crew Elana Roston and Marel
Doan sweep sjde?'mk afte r festivities
Airman Daniel R. Galaz, son of Raymond Galaz
J r. of Huntington Beach. has been assigned to Keesler
Air Force Base. Miss .. after completing basic training.
He is a 1983 graduate of Huntington Beach High
School.
Army Pvt. David J . Oberg, son of Leonard and
Patricia Oberg of Huntington Beach, has completed
one station unit training at the U.S . Army Infantry
School in Fort Benning, Ga. He is a 1983 graduate of
Huntington Beach High School.
Airman Brian Eslick, son of Harry and Fm
:Eslick of Huntington Beach. has been assigned to
{Awry Air Force Base. Colo .. after completing basic
tgraining. He is a 1983 graduate of Ocean View High
School in Hunlington Beach.
Airman Garrett J . Moffitt, son of Joe W. Moffitt
of Fountain ValJey, has completed basic training at
·Lackland Air Force Base. Texas. He is a 1982
graduate of Marina High School in Huntington
Beach . .,
Airman Kevin Burns, son of Melody Williams of
Costa Mesa. has graduated from the Air Force
aerospace ground equipment mechanic course at
Chanute Ai r Force Base. Ill. He is a 1982 graduate of
Newport Mc-sa Evening High School in Costa Mesa. . ~
·Airman Gary D. Tanner, son of Carolyn Larkin
, of Laguna Beach, has graduated from the Air Force
fuels specialist course at Chanute Air Force Base, ill.
He is a 1981 graduate of Laguna Beach High School.
BIRTHS
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
COfltMUNfTY H08"T AL
....... .--11
Mr. and· Mr1. Michael Conw1y,
HuntlngtOf'I Beactl. twtn1. girt and
boy
NoYemOet20
Mr and Mrt. 01vtd Pierce. Foun·
t1ln V11tey. boy
Mr end Mr1 James G1tdnef,
Fountain Valley, boy Mr and Mr1 Tran Phi, Wnt-
mlnste<. glrl
Noftmber21
M< and Mrs Oerrell PhilUpy,
lrvtne. boy Mr. I nd Mra Rue! Czach. Hunt-
1ngt0f'I Beach, boy .._.,...,22
Mr end Mrs OeV>d Case. Hunt-
1ngl0f'I Beach, boy
Mr and Mrs Jaime Cuarts,
Fountain Valley. girl
Mr. and Mra AuSMll Brankov,,
HuntingtOf'I Beach, boy
Mr and Mrs Michael Sundsledl,
HunllngtOf'I &tech. girl
Nowember n
Mr and Mrs. John Cod•. Hunl·
lnglOf'I Beach, boy
t.d_r end Mra. Forell Ellloll. Hunt·
inGton Beech. girt
Mr, and Mra. Alexander Munoz.
Westminster, glrl •
Mr end Mra. Stephen Zlrzo. Foun·
leln Valley. girl
Mr. and Mrs FlOyd Wengllkowtkl,
CosllMen,glrl
Mr end Mra Ronald C1brer1.
HunllngtOf'l lileec:h. glrl
M'r. end Mr1. St9Ven Cordey,
Founlaln V1lley, girl
Mr. end Mr1. KyYng Chol. lrvlne,
boy ... ,..,..,,.
Mr and Mrs. Donald Tyct1o4l1.
Wastmlntter, girl
Mr Ind Mra. Vlnh Pham. Wast·
mlnller. girl
Nowenober21
Mr. and Mra. W1yne Tlm!>tl, Foun-
tain Valley, boy
WHT'l• fltlDtCAL CINTH ....,_...,,.
Mr end Mra. Adrian Mln'ulo,
1rvtne, boy ...... _,.,._,...,,.__ 11
Mr and Mra C111ot AIVldrez.
N-por1 Beech, boy
Mr and Mrt Rleh1td Oellhef9Q9,
Newpor1 BMcil. boy
Mr. Ind Mrt . .Wry Parker, lrvtne.
girl ......... 11
Herold Pemtteln end Oebor1h
Lucas. C0tt1 Mna, boy ... ,.....,17
Mr end Mrt 01vld F'ell. lrvtne, boy
No•efllbef 11
Mr. ind Mra. JOfln Begin, Wast-
mlnate<, glrl ....,_...,11
Mr end Mra. 01Yld Tomcheck.
Irvine, boy ....,_...,n "
Mr end Mra. Peter Vandefplat ,
Founllln Vllley, boy ...,_...,,.
Mr. and Mra. Brent ~. New-
port 8MCll, boy
Holiday Music At Its Best
Dally On
KDCM 1D!l.1
FMSTERED
HolidaY ,
"Our Music Makes You FEEL GOOD''
I
Seal Beach resident
Marie Forman dies
Funeral services were held in Kimball, S.D.,
Sunday for Marie L. Fonnan who died Wednesday in
Seal Beach. She was 86.
Miss Forman was born Oct. 7, 1897 in Eagle. S.D.
She had lived in the Seal Beach area for about 20
years.
Before retiring. she had been a registered nurse
employed by Boeing Aircraft. She was a member of
the Audubon Society.
She is survived by nieces Bernice I. Frerichs and
Doris Whitney. both or Newport Beach; and Dorothy
Hurd, Coalinga: and nephews Sandford Novak,
Ocoma. S.D.; Marvin Novak, Kimball. S.D.: and
Robert Novak. Spokane, Wash.
She was buried in Eagle Presbyterian Cemetery
in South Dakota .
Good for you!
Daily Pilot
'
c1ass1f1ed ads
phone 642·56 78
..
i\t Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, December 6. 1983
..
MAILBOX
KOCE needs some scrutiny
To the Editor; tory manner, the ~
I ttee no reaaon for Patricia produced to meet the cum
Ham. (11/28/83 letter), a student needs of the distric
at Oranse Coast College. to shed a with those telecouses that were
tear or to harbor fears over the produced with national distribu-
demiae of KOCE-TV. I am sure tion.
that 'the station has enough sup-The district has "moved moun-
porters and users to ensure its tains" In its efforts to promote,
continued existence. mark.et. and distribute telecourses
The issue, I believe. is not but with not much success. AB far
whether the district should or back as 1977. board members had
should not keep KOCE-TV. but predicted that "Coast telecourses
whether KOCE-TV should be would pay their own way in a
kept in the manner to which it's couple of years." Obviously, this
been.accuslomed to all these year.;. has not come about.
Reforms are needed to l~n the San Mateo and San Bernardino
financial burden on the taxpayer. Community C.Ollege Districts each
The recent election confirmed this operate a PBS station which. like
need. Any refonns however, must KOCE-TV, provide quality cul-
also address themselves to the tural and educational program-
w ide~ spectrum o f tele-ming. They spend far fewer
communication activies under-dollars and use less people to
taken by the district and C.OSStline operate their television stations
C.Ollege. which serves not only the com-
Telecou.rse production 1s a very munity but college as well.
costly enterprise. From a The time has come for a review
008t-benefit standpoint. the value by an outside agency to examine
of ielecourses to the people of the Coast's telecommunication ac-
distric.t can aJso, be questioned. tivities. Appropriate finqing$ and
Enrollment figures have never recommendations by this poup
been impressive, and success rates would spur the reforms which are
or completions have been very obviously needed.
low. A recent accreditation team LEFTERUS LA VRAKAS, Ph.D.
was unable to equate. In a satifac-Costa Mesa
· U.S. must rethink its role
To the F.ditor;
Represen ta t i ve Robert
Badham's "~ew Image For Quiet
Grenada" waa misleading in its
appeal to patriotism and suport for
Reagan's policies In the Carib-
bean. Already the euphoria over
the U.S. sneak invasion of a
miniscule Wand of 110,000 people
has begun to subside, and it Is now
possible to reflect on the implica-
tions for the United States and the
world.
First, the invasion violated the
charters of the United Nations and
the Organization of American
States, was undertaken without
declaration of war or con-.
gressional authorization. and ln-
t.erefered with the principle of
non-intervention into the affairs
of other states ..
Second. U.S. invention aJjen-
ated allies and foes altke as the
action was repudiated by nations
throughout Europe and Latin
America and by the U.N. Security
lacked adquate intelligence infor-
mation about the island. The view
that our presence was necessary to
restore democracy does not square
with our reluctance to restore
democ.racy elsewhere in Latin
Ainerica. espeeially tn repreaive
countries like Haiti, Chile, El
Salvador, and GuatemaUi. It is also
apparent that the media dislOrted
reporting, due in part to the
administration's control of the
situation by initially preventing
reporters from accompanying the
invading forces. Finally, it was
known prior to the invasion that
the airfield being constructed on
the island was supported by
multinational financial arrange-
ments and contracts with British
and American firms as well as the
Cuban government; the allegation
that this airfield would serve as a
Soviet or Cuban base does not fit
the facts.
It is now time for a reassesa-
en . lnternationa 1--conf idenee in
Third, the Reagan doctrine our leadership has been under-
reaffinned to the world that U.S .. mined by the actions of the
policies and interests are Mt · Reagan adminisltation. _Ameri-
peaceful and that the balance of cans have rallied to the flag.
power has been tipped in the C.Ongress has approved the largest
direction of International confron-military budget in history. Let us
tation and war. hope that reason will prevail and
In a recent article in the Wall there will be a return to the best
Street Journal. Arthur Schles-traditions of America and that we
inger Jr, reminds us that the will begin to cope peacefully in a
evidence for various pretexts ad-world filled with nuclear
vanced b~ the administration to weapons .
justify the invasion were Indeed R 0 N A L D H . CHILCOTE
flimsy. There was no evidence Laguna Beach
that the American medical stu-(Ronald Chilcote is Professor of
dents In Grenada were in danger Political Science at the University
or being held against their will. of California. Riverside, and after
Further, the argument that the eight and a half years, has just
invasion was necessary to avoid retired from the school board of
chaos was unsubstantiated. and it Laguna Beach Unified School
is now clear that the United States District.)
t M. BDJd !Trendsetter ...
Bear in mind. these weren't
trite when Teddy Roosevelt
coined them: "Clean as a hound's
tooth." "The lunatic fringe."
"Pussyfooting." "Mollycoddle."
"Rubber-stamp Congress."
To say that bird called the
falcon only kills when it's hungry
doesn't say enough. In tact. the
falcon can't always kill when it's
hungry. It misses its prey nine
times out of 10. Pretty slipshod
performance. A man with a bow
and arrow oan do a lot better.
In revamping old Roman law
Into the Napoleonic Code.
Napoleon 8on@parte wanted the
new law to stipulate that only
lawyen who won their cues
would aet paid. However. he
Hitler's Nazis made it infamous.
lnd1ans m the American South-
west had used it as their emblem
for generations.
At each seat In some Tokyo
sushi houses is a keyboard to let
the diner tap out the order. It
flashes on the kitchen computer
screen, there no doubt to amuse
the chef. If it's like those that have
been proposed around here, it also
issues the charge ticket, making it
exceedingly difficult for the hired
help to play tricks with the
company cash.
Rapid reply: ln that matter of
how to say "Caribbean,"
"Cari-BE-an" ls orefen'fd. but "Ca-~" isr{t wrong, con-
tends our Lansuage man.
the code • ., thai w~ "Yuri" ia RUiii.an .for ''Geol'p." cornmmloned1 la~ to write
C9Mty ctoe.n't show in It. Q y kno h ..,._ . . ou wtoee .... ..-worn
Q. What U.S. mU11*y unit Wied by the judgea and barrlaten of
tbtsw..iilL&onit1ahouldereet.ch? England? What are~ m.de on
A. 1be U.S. Anny'1 45th . A.Halr!romthernanesandt.ldll
DIYllkm. A yellow swastika on a of hones. h's lmported from
Nd ...,.. In the 1920.. But the Japan. But the wip are hand
Uth lcrapped It when ,the AdoU made ln England, ·
..
Blame Nixon for 'Oilgate'
WASHINGTON -The watch-. " G. Attempted Arab embargoes in
dog)iof the pre. have leaped from 1956 and 1967 were easily
Koreagate to -Sillyga~ De-~ . thwarted. The last time was just a
bategale in hot pursuit~ a andal-'IC_l_U_l_l_l_l_l_I __ ~~ year before Nixon was elected.
equal to Watergate. Yet all the • ~ Visualize the world's oil re-
while, it was lying right under serves as a va5t, black ocean that
their noses -a scandal that, in covered almost twice as fast as it was cona1antly expanding. The
fact, dwarfs Watergate. 1 call it was being used. crude needed for daily consump-
Oilgate. Demand was NOT oven.aking tion oozed through oilgates that
The villain of the piece ls the supply. Though consumption was regulated the flow.
same black-jowled Richard Nixon rising. there was enough in the The U.S . strategy was to keep
who was caught In the whirlpool cataloged reserves to meet the this daily stream overflowing. All
of Watergate. Yet he escaped anticipated demand far into the that was required was a slight but
judgment for Oilgate, wh..ich was 21st century. constant surplus. which provided
far more disastrous. OPEC was NOT coalescing; enough leverage to hold prices
He abandoned the oil policies of Islam was NOT resurging; the down.
the past and allowed the OPEC Arabs were. NOT uniting. They To maintain the existing oil
cartel to run the price of oil into were. in fac'l, in disarray, having order In the world was a peaceful
the stratosphere. This brought been repeatedly and variously process -a commercial process,
economic distress that staggered defeated by the Israelis, by the oil with an occasional diplomatic
the industrial world and devas-companies and by each other. gesture. All Nixon had to do was
tated the Third World. What happened simply is that occasionally oil a machine tharwas
In this count.ty, for example, Uncle Sam was tied down by already running beautifully and
every dollar that was added to the Lilliputians. And Richard Nixon had been running beautifully for
pri~ of crude stunted economic helped to tie the knots. d~des.
growth by 0.1 percent to 0.2 He inherited an almost im-It was the negative things
percent. Translated into human preghable structure of oil abun-Nixon did. the routine chores he
tenns, this meant misery for dance, oil stability and oil security. neglected -rather than a failure
millions. Then, step by step, he dismantled to take controversial new actions
Yet despite the calamitous con-the machinery that had supported -\hat caused him to le»e control
sequences, Nixon succeeded in the golden age of oil. of the oilgates.
perpetrating the fiction t~t the The United States was the -The oil companies manned <;t debacle was caused by inex-world's greatest oil producer those gates under the watd\ful
orable forces: Nature was running when Nixon was inaugurated. We eye of the U.S . government.
low on oil; demand was over -imported almost no Middle East Together, the industry and the
taking supply; the OPF£ nations oil. and we carefully maintained government had scheduled vari-
were coalescing into an Un-the capacity to export oil tempor-ous domestic oil projects -in
ClSSaiiabl force:~ arily_.10..places where it might be Alask.a.offshoreandelsewhere-
resurgence of Islam could not be needed in time of emergency. t a wo a ~kept the-leverage
represM!d. . This made it futile for the Arabs in U.S . hands. Nixon botched
None of this was true. Nature or anyone else even to dream of the.e domestic options.
was NOT running out of oil. On -seizing oil power by breaking thelr The oil catastrophe could still
the rontrary. oil was being dis-contracts and cutting off supplies. ,have been averted if he had
merely continued the foreign oil
policy of the past. This had meant
helping U.S . oil companies gain
entry around the world and
setting up the machinery for
supplying Europe in the event of
an oil cutoff in the Middle F.aat.
From Harry Truman through
Lyndon Johnson, U.S. presidents
had blocked the oil potentates
from manipulating the oUgates
and had backed the existing oil
order -not with force, but with
moral support. It was understood
in Washington that the oil order
was keeping the oil flowing and
preventing its price from sky-
rocketing.
Nixon reversed all t.his. He
actually h elped the oil states break
up the united front of the oil
companies. After that, it was one
defeat after another for the West-
ern oil structure, as each puny oil
sheikdom demanded and got gains
in prices and power.
Nixon did nothing to defend the
oil order and a lot to undermine it.
Remember that before Nixon.
OPEC was a woefully di~
house of cards. Most of the
important oil sheikdoms-such as
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Libya
-believed in the existing oil
order and opposed the radical _
forces. The balance of power in
the OPEC world was heavily in
favor of continued cooperation
'th-the Wesc.em-oi ·
ment.
Nixon changed this by giving
easy victories to the tattered forces
of expropriation and extortion.
State on a road to rent control
It'scomeaboutinaslow process.
t like watching a tree grow,
ich may explain why most
· ornians don't realize that
well over half the state's populace
now lives in areas covered by rent
control Laws.
Cities like Santa Monica and
Berkeley often attract attention
because of their draconian laws
which prevent landlords from
raising rents even when ~ta
voluntarily move out.
But San Francisco and Los
Angeles also have rent controls,
though they're not so tough. So do
San Jose and smaller cities like
C.Otati . All those laws arrived in
the last four years. Among big
California citles, only Sacrament:(>,
San Diego and Fresno have no
controls at all. .
This suggests that rent control is
here to stay. regardless of the legal
efforts and ballot drives mounted
by landlords and developers.
But the anti-rent control efforts
haven't been totally fruitless.
They're gradually producing a
rent control formula ethat will let
both activista and property own-
ers know how far they can go.
A series of appellate court
decisions, yet to be finalbed by the
state Supreme C.ourt. lndicatet
that rent cont.cola can:
-Seit Umita on umual ln·
Cl"fflel, but can't lcnc>re inllaUon
in •ttlna the yearly hlket.
-S.-rentl on what ownen
paid for property, rather than Its
current market value. •
-They apparently cannot
allow teNnta tO withhold renta
from landlords tw1pected of viol-
at1n1 the controla.
And theN'I no 191 indication
yet whether rent CIOftll'Ol Laws in
the '°"I Nn will prevent ownen
from conwrt&nl their buildlnll '° condomlnJunw or cllmolJlhiJtl
them IO IMM way f« ""' ~
Lawt like s-Rley'a. which
dan't I-' r9l rill au1mnal6allly
..... lnO.*in, haw been .....
down. But eot.tl'• law, wtth
\ I
CllllDRlll fDCUB
increases pegged to inflation,
withstands challenges. And Santa
Monica's firm controls on demo·
lition and condominium coversion
are still being fought over.
The bottom Une. though. is that
in case after case appeals courts
ruling on laws from the Palos
Verdes Peninsula to the Wine
Country have found that cities
and counties do have the right to
set limita on rents, as long as
they're fair.
Rent control advocates estimate
it will take two more years of
cour\l'OOm wrangling to resolve au
the ft.sues raised by their laws.
"But after that. there will be a
road map for any city and county
that wants controls." says Michael
Heuman. lawyer for Santa
Monica's rent control board.
"Then the way will be clear for
anyone to avoid legal delays."
For now, though. the courtroom
battles go on. In Berkeley. where
an apieals court called the lack of
an iMlation allowance "con -
fiscatory," city officials are ap-
pealing to the state Supreme
C.Ourt. In Santa Monica, the local
rent controllers are fighting for
the right to withhold renta they
claim are illegally high.
The The decisions to come won't
decide whether rent controls are
legal -the courts say they are.
Yet to be decided, though. is
whether rent control will be a
sham.
For without demolition controls
and limits on condominium con-
versiQns, rent control wouldnt
ffilltter. The supply of rental units
would dry up.
And a system of allowing an-
nual rent incrases baled on fair
market value probably wouldn't
work either, since the renta them-
selves determine how much apart-
ments are worth.
But the courts have said that
their eventual fonnula will allow
profits for landlords. "In our free
en terprise system," wrote Ap-
pellate Justice Donald King "the
landlord should not be reponaible
for subsidizing re.nts to the extent
that expenses cannot be coverered
and a fair and reaaonable profit
recieved." '
The state Supreme C.Ourt haan't
yet indicated how it will walk the
tightrope between that obviously
correct position and one that
would make controls an empty
gesture.
But some tightrope walking
will be required of the justices. For
the last four years have made
controls a massive reality, but one
that still needs· a lot of careful
tuning.
Dally Piiat
MONDAY, DEC. 5, 1983
STOCKS
TELEVISION
COMICS
84
85
86
Denver'• John Elway
had hia be•t outing
in the NFL Sunday. 82.
/
0 ~
0
Rams had that kind of a day as Eric Dickerson couldn't score, the Eagles did, and John Robinson couldn't believe it .
UW1t ... 1t11
•
Rams can't find the goal line, but Eagles can
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -It wasn't exactly a had been made slick by rain. He also gave credit to the "l had the ball in both hands, but he got it away
good week for Philadelphia Eagles' wide receiver Eagles. from me. He made the play and I didn't," said Irvin.
Tony Woodruff. "They defensed us pretty good and we misfired The Eagles took a 6-0 lead in the first period after
The second-year player from Fresno State had inside the 20," he said, "but we didn't play that weU. Jerry Robinson recovered Ferragarno's fumble.
lost the starting job he'd earned three weeks ago. So, We should have scored more points." Starting from the Los Angeles 30, it took the
it was as a substitute that Woodruff caught a 29-yard Los Angeles running back Eric Dickerson tied a Eagles seven plays to reach the end wne. Hubie
touchdown pass with 21 seconds remaining to give rookie record of nine 100-yard-plus games when he Oliver scored from the 2, but Tony Franklin in.issed
theEaglesa 13-9triumphovertheLosAngelesRams. gained 103 on 28 carries. The record was set by Otis the extra point.
:J'he victory ended a seven-game Eagles' losing Anderson for St. Louis in 1979. and equalled in 1981 The Rams toQk advantage by kicking two field
streak and dropped the Rams into a tie with the San by George Rogers of New Orleans. goals in the second period to forge a 6-6 halftime tie.
francisco 49ers for first place in the National Football Los Angeles and the 49ers each have 8-6 records The Rams later reached the 31, but Lansford was Le.frue'• NaUonal Conference We.t. with two 8ame9 to play. The ~ meet New short and wide on a 48-yard field goal effort. They
Rams' Coach John Robinson was upset with his England away and New Orleans home. while 'San came back to reach the Eagles' six, but Dickerson
team's failure to reach the end wne four times from Francisco closes out with Buffalo and Dallas. fumbled the ball away.
deep in Eagles' territory. The Eagles, winning their first at home in seven Finally, linebacker Jim Collins returned an
games; boosted their record to 5-9. intercepted pass 29 yards to the Eagles' 30. The Rams
· "We've been pretty good at putting the ball ini.o Woodruff, who was demoted because he reached the 11 , where the Eagles again held.
the end woe except for this game," Robinson said. dropped several passes in the previous two games. Lansford booted a go-ahead field goal 28 yards with
Rams quarterback Vince Ferragarno said his beat Rams com erback LeRoy Irvin on the , 1:46 left to play, but Woodruff's hail-Mary catch
Pro football scores
Eagles 13, Rams 9
• Bills 14, Chiefs 9 .. ··-... A • • • • 6 .. -~ ... Packers 31, Bears 28
Dolphins 24, Oilers l 7
Patriots 7, Saints 0
Bengals 23, Steelers l 0
Redskins 3 7, Falcons 21
.Cardinals l 0, Giants 6
Cowboys 35, Seahawks 10
49ers 35, Buccaneers 21
Broncos 27, Browns 6
Jets l 0, Colts 6
..
·,
costly first period fumble happened because the ball game-winning play. negated it.
[. Billy d~t}Sn 't think _Prep tou_rn_e_y_s -===========---C-o_o_p-=e=r=,=S=c=o==tt=h==a=.v=e=. :___j
. tak~ spotlight George will fire him this week their own magic
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -
Billy Martin does not believe the
reporta that he is about to be fired
agafu.
"Newspaper propaganda" is
what he called them in a tele-
phone interview Sunday night.
"I have a contract with George
Steinbrenner and I regard him as
an honorable man," Martin told
the Associated Press.
"When you give loyalty, you
expect to get It in return. That's . " ·-..... ~ .. ~
. ":~~~~
the reason I'm sure that George
would not go back on his word,
He has told me his word is h is
•bond, and I believe him."
Martin, whose two previous
tenures as Yankees manager
since 1975 ended with him being
fired and quitting just before
Steinbrenner lowered the boom,
~ four years left on a five-)'ear
contract he signed last Janua'Y.
That agreement, reportedly for
$500,000 a year, made him one of
bueball'• highest paid manjager.
Martin said Crom hil home near
Oa:k1&nd that he and his lawyer
had met with the Yankees o..tnec...
about a month ago, and, "Gt!orge
never once indicated that he was
Wlhappy with the job I wu
doing. I haven't heard from him
lince then and I know that I
would be the first one he would
taJk to lf he Intended to fire me."
Martin u1d he aaw no clue into
a ppmible firing in the fact he wu
not Invited to the winter meet~
inp, which began here today.
"Sometimes, a manager goes to
thee meettnca but not when the
club ta pretty well .et, the way
OW' club ta now. 1bere wu no
......, foe me '° be theft," he
.ad. Martin Mid he WM amued and
that he would be re-
Tuaday by Yankee <lOllCb
YOll Bern. wbo Mel ~ boCh the v ..... • and the ew
Yark..._
Whm told that Berra w• not at
&he ~ MM1!n llkl. "One
of my coaches is there, Jeff..
Torborg. Maybe If George Is
going to make a change they are
talking about the wrong coach."
"I haven't heard anything,"
Berra told RKO Radio Sports
from his home in New Jersey.
Berra said he and Steinbrenner
last talked on Thursday, and he
said at that time, "Billy was still
the manager. I have to be asked
before I can say I want to be
manager.''
Friction has been reported be-
tween Martin and Torborg, a for-
mer Cleveland Indians manager,
who has criticized Billy in media
interviews.
When Martin signed his con-
tract last January. Steinbrenner
said that to prevent some of the
problems of the past, he and
Martin would deal with each
other directly, eliminating inter-
mediates.
Tournament play and a smat-
tering of non-league basketball
continues this week for area
pre~. beginning with the first
rounds of the Sonora and Santa
Ana tournaments today, capped
by the San Clemente tournament
which begins Wednesday and
highlighted by the Fountain Val-
ley Invitational. which begins
Tuesday...evening and culminates
with a championship showdown
Friday night.
There are also some key
non-league matchups, high-
lighted by Mater Dei's invasion of
St. Bernard Tuesday (7:30).
Mater Dei. the defending CIF
4-A champion and ranked No. 1 in
the nation, is led by Matt
Beeuwsaert and Tom Lewis.
Highly-regarded St. Bern~rct
-awaits with Leonard Taylor. ·
,.,..,......
INGLEWOOD (AP) -The Los
Angeles Lakers went into the
game minus an injured star. The
San Diego Clippers came out of
the contest minus one of their
own.
Los Angeles, which had lost
Earvin "Magic" Johnson to a
hand injury Friday night,
whipped the Clippers 120-99 in a
contest Sunday night in which
San Diego lost center Bill Walton
to a hand injury.
Walton, whose pro career has
been plagued by ch.ron.ic foot
problems, suffered a fractured
bone in the ring finger of his right
hand. His personal physician, Dr.
Tony Daly, said he expects
Walton to be sidelined for approx-
imately two months.
just 47 games over the past five
seasons, hurt the finger when he
hit the backboard in the fint
quarter of the contest against the
Lakers. He went out brie(ly, but
returned to the game and played
most of the third period.
He sat out the. firi.al quarter
after the Lakers, paced by vet-
eran Michael Cooper and rookie
Byron Scott, had built a com-
manding lead.
The ext@t of Walton's injury
was not announced until 10me 30
minutes after the game and the
Clipper center refused comment.
San Diego Coach Jimmy Lynam
and Walton's teammates had left
by that time. ·
Walton. who scored a
team-high 20 points in the loea to
the Lakers, had played in 15 of
the Clipperi' 20 games this
season, averaging 15.9 polnta and
9.7 rebounds per contest.
"George has kept his part of the
bargain and things have worked
out well between us," Martin
said.
Among those entered in the
Sonora Invitational are Irvine
and University, two Sea View
League teams which were idle
last week. Coach Steve Scoggin is
liff PREP, Page 8%)
Laken forward James
Worthy get& set to shoot.
The Lakers' Jqhnson had suf-
fered a dislocated index finger on
his right hand in Friday nJght's
game againat Dallas at the Forum.
and la expected to be out for five
to six weeka.
Walton, whose foot -problems
have allowed him to appear in
The Lakers, meanwhile, with
Cooper and Scott leading the
way. took up the slack left by
Johnson's absence.
A little exercise might prolong your ski season
Yes folks, it's that time of year again to
get out your thermal underwear, sharpen
your poles. wipe the mildew off your
boota and make aure your akil are 1mOOth
•t the bottotn and sharp on the edps.
Although local conditions aren't the
gr"Mtest, llden Oed ln ct.row. to the
mountains this pat weekend to get ln
their tint "runs" of the winter leUOf\.
Snow Summit, off Bia Bear Lake, wu
sold out Saturday and Sunday. Likewile
for the Mountain Kiah-Holiday Hill
retOrt in the WrilhtwooCI area.
Surprialngly, Mammoth, delpite excel-
lent condf Uona, reported a u,A.t turnout .
A WOid of caution, ~. before you
dash to your phone. and call in lick for
work.
Skiina1 like any other sport. II an
lidlvtty that lhoWdn't be tmrn.cl6ately
attempted wit.bout some form of c:on-
di~tdoeln't mMft you haw tona:n
down to your nearest HoUday Heeleh Ss-
and put yourself through a rigorous
workout.
Five-to-ten minutes a day, doing ex-
erciaes ln your own home, will suffice.
Simple things like j\lmping rope, climb-
ing etalrs or Ught jogging combined with a
Jot of leg stretching should make yOU(
initial outing more comfortable.
The leg:s, in particular the call and thiah
areu, are particularly important, u is the
lower back, since thete are the areu that
are under the most streta and tire the
quickest.
Generally, the slopes are not the place
to aet into shape aa there's a tendency to
push younelf, thus makina your body
• more 1u.:epllble to injury. •
Nobody 11 uJc:in1 Y9'.l to be an Olymplan
ln terml of condition1ng. But a few llrnple
exem.. will eurely make the "day•fwr"
more bearable.
l:r For~ who want to Men how to ski
but don't lcnow where to ao. the Newport
(·
SKIING
JOHN
SEVANO
Ski Co. ln Newport Be.ch ta the only
facility in the Oranae Cout are. that
of fen lkJ te.ona.
Priced at •13.00 per half.hour lemon,
the Newport Sid Co. hM • four-lemon
~(which ta the averace amount of 1e.ona. nov1ce lhould take> fOI' '45.
Aft.er one~ a tnUnee can allO 80 tn
and work out on h.11 or her own foe t6 an
hour.
For fl.lrther information, phone
631-3280 OI' 631 ·3144.
* A quick check of eome reeona produced
the followinC information;
........ It -91.8 per cent of ha
white stuff is man-made wlth a aood 12-24
inch hue. The re90rt Is also open1na Ua
new chair -No. 9 -for the flnt time
today.
Although Saturday and Sunda)'. were
sellouta, due to limited ticketdi8tributicn
the average lift-line wait wu 10 minu•
lncldentally, on Wedneeday the ...on,
in conjunction with Oty Sporcsmapm.,
will hold ita fint-ever "Demo ,1>11!.rby,"
whereby the put>Uc can tat out equip-
ment from all the vartoua manuflldW'en.
Anyone interested must repier
throuah a coupon ln the December-. of
Oty Sparta The coupon la aJlo' pd f~ a
$3 dlacount on llft ticket. for that day.
S.Ow Valley -The ....,._tot four
lnchet of "heevy 8'0W" S.tw'dily Oft a
four-lnch hue but WM IUJ.l uMb)e .,
open. • .
Sno\v Valley la hoo6na io·cran1c up"at
JeMt two Ufta" -Ncia. If and 0 (b rt .. ti,
Clee ltXltRCll&.,... II» . ·
·-
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Oeoember S, 1983
Denver quarterback John Elway
had his best day in the NFL as he
SP-ORTS BREAK
Winning 500th game
not that impressive
to NC's Smith
From AP dispalcbes
STANFORD -North Carolina's m
Dean Smith became the 15th win-
ningest major college basketball coach
in history with victory No. 500 over the weekend,
Elway's big day
Broncos' Playoff hopes still alive
Fro~ AP clJ1pateHI
DENVER -Rookie quarterback John Elway
tired touchdown pa11e9 of 39 and 49 yania to roolde
wide receiver Clint Sampeon, keeptna Denves-1
playoff hopes alive with a National Football Leque victory over Cleveland Sunday.
Denver's victory left both teama with 8-6
records. Six teams in the American Conference now
have records of 8-6 or better, with five playoff apots
up for grabs. The loea deprived the Browm of an
opportunity to tie Pittsburgh for the lead in the AFC T'llP
Central Division. . Paeken I 1, Bears 21 Elway, turning in the best perfonnance of hlS
,,,....,....
threw for two touchdowns against
Cleveland Sunday.
Reds acquire Tony Perez
rocky freshman aeaaon, doubled his aeuon touch-
down paaa totai with the two accurate 1triket1 to
Sampeon, who had caught only three pa11e9 prior to
the game. Elae~here in the NFL:
49en 31, a.eeaneen 21
SAN FRANCISCO-Wendell Tyler ran for 102
yards and rookie fullbllCk Roger Craig PoWered his
way to three touchdowns, giving San Franciaco
quarterback Joe Montana welcome supp()rt as the
49ers returned to f.irst place by beating Tampa Bay.
With two weeks remaining in the NFL season,
the 49ers and Rams share the lead in the National
Conference West race with 8-6 records.
Cewlteys II, Sea•awk• le
SEA 1TLE-Tony Donett acored two first-half
touchdowns and Danny White threw for two
touchdowns in the second half as Dallas tuned up for
it.a big rematch with defending Super Bowl champion
Washington by beating Seattle.
Curt Warner, the Seahawks' sensational rookie
runniJll back who went into the game aa the No. 2
NASH\IJLLE. Te -ete.ran • t--= ... --inlhe~u comptetery OOH!ed up by the slugger Tony Perez Is headed back to '---' brillian' d f o.nu ked Seattl the Cincinnati Reds in a deal that may Cow...,,,. t e eme. sac e
have a major impact on free agent Pete quarterbllCk ~ve Krieg elaht ~ for 65 yards.
~The ftianequired Perez fro.m Philadelphia Be•lal.9 21, S&eelen le
today for a player to be named later as baaeball's PITI'SBURGH -Cincinnati turned a pair of
winter meetings officially opened. fint-quarter Pittsburgh turnovers into touchdown
The deal seemed to shrink the options for the runs by Pete JohJ'UIOn and an early 14-0 lead and the
42-year-old Rose, who was released by the Phillies Bengals went on to hand the slumping, turn-
after last season, just 201 hits short of Ty Cobb's over-riddled S~lers a defeat.
aUtime record of 4,191. A return to Cincinnati, Jim Breech added field goals of 19, 27 and 32
where he starred from 1963 to 1978, was yards aa the Steelers, 9-5, loet their third conaecutive
considered a possibility for him. game. Pittsburgh could have clinched a playoff berth
wi1h a victory. ·
Johnson gained 126 yards on 38 carries. Cornett wins state amateur
GREEN BAY, Wia. -Jan Stenerud kicked a
19-yard field goal with three aeconda.lef~ to lift Gree~
Bay to a victory over Chicago. keeping the Packers
playoff hopes alive.
Green Bay remained in contention for the NFC
Central title with a 7-7 ~rd. Chicaao fell to 6-8.
Delpllln8 24, Olien 17
HOUSTON -Tony Nathan ran 5 yards for a
touchdown with 3:51 to play to rally Miami from a
17-7 third-quarter deficit to a victory over Howaton
that clinched the Dolphins' 11th American Con-
ference F..ast championship.
The Dolphins, 10-4, drove 82 yar~ for ~he
game-winning touchdown in an error-filled dnve
that included three Miami fumbles.
Patrlet8 7 ;-saints 0
FOXBORO, Mass. -Tony Collins scored on a
3-yard run after Ricky Smith returned the opening
kickoff 53 yards, and New England overeame anow,
sleet and heavy rain to beat New Orleans.
--The nuty-weatherforced both ~to rely on
their running attacks. The Patriots capita.li.zed on
better field position than the Saints at the ~tart of
many drives.
Redsklaa 17, Faleens 21
WASHINGTON -Joe Theismann passed for
three touchdowns and Mark Moaeley set an NFL
scoring record as Washington beat turnover-prone
Atlanta, setting up Sunday's confrontation with the
Dallas.
Theiamann passed 18 yards to Clint Didier in the
first quarter, 11 to Joe Wasfungton in the second and
lO to Art Monk in ~ third as the Redskins, who at
onetime led 37-0, r~eirrecord to 12-2with two
'.'Winning -500 games only means you've nett of San Franci.8co defeated Kareen
but he isn't impressed with the accomplishment. PEBBLE BEACH -Patricia Cor-l!I
coached a long time," Smith shrugged after the Gibson of Fall River Mill.I 2-1 to win
second-ranked tarheels clobbered Stanford 88-75 the 17th California Women's Amateur
Bills 14, C•tefs 9
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -Mike Kennedy re-
turned an interception 22 yards for a fourth-period
touchdown and Joe Cribbs rushed for a career-high
185 yards to lift Buffalo to a victory over K.amu City.
games to go. ~ _ )
Cartllaals 1 O, Giants •
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . -Neil Lomax
fired a 20-yard touchdown pass to Roy Green, while
rookie Lionel Washington recovered a fumble and
intercepted New York quarterback Scott Brunner
twice to lead St. Louis to a win over the Gianta as an
NFL record was set for no-shows.
in the championship game of Golf Championship Sunday. Cornett, who was the
the Stanford Invitational Sat-1975 champion and runner-up last year, beat Ann
urday night. Walsh of San Jose 2-up in the semifinal round,
"I don't set personal goals, which began Saturday and was completed Sunday
so wiruting 500 games ha.S no morning. Play was suspended Saturday by the
special meaning," Smith said. severe storm. Gibson advanced to the finals by
With quarterback Joe Ferguson completing only
six of 15 passes for 76 yards, Cribbs provided most of
the Buffalo offense with a career-high 36 rushes.
"lt's justanice.win,and l guess downing Sue Tonkin of Australia 3 and l in the Schedu}I•Dg PREP BASKETBALL it means you've kept your job semis.
awhile. But a coach's per-From Page B 1 • • •
~~~~~e ~~mr:;~f !;;:,1
:•mt Nelson, Duesler take title quirk costs in his inaugural with University try to cope without 6-7 Jamel
against Sunny Hills (6:30) Tues-Gamer, who moveo to Alabama ...,,. Using that criterion. LA JOLLA-In an all-California ~ K · day, while Al Herring's Irvine and La Quinta is ranked No. 3 in
Smith .ranks higher than No. 15. ~is .500-153 doublesfinal,JimNelso. nofCoronaDel the ingS Vaqueroe tangled with Magnolia OrangeCountybytheDailyPilot
record m 22-plus seasons at Chapel HiU is a ·766 Mar and Bob Duesler of Newport in today's opener at Sonora High. with Cal State Fullerton-bound winningpe~n~g~ ~o~coaches w~~bh~d~d~e~a~~~JH~~~h~~S~kuw~~~~o~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~M~ffl-~~.~~
--won--000-games;-on+y-Adolph RttpP'"'(.82~+--J Carlsbad and Bob Howe of Irvine 6-1, 6-1 to claim WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) -Valley Invitational Tuesday pits and 6-2 Jerry Wilson aboard.
Wooden (.806) and Phog Allen (.768) have done the doubles crown in th~ National SeQi0c A quirk in tl)e Nat;!onal Hocke.>:, -SeM•-and Le.Ai.mi• ranked Costa Me.a opem ica camP9i&n
better. ffardcourt Championshlpe Sunday. League echedule apparently de-No. 7 and 10 respectiqely in the Wednellday at San Clemente
In men's 45-and-over competition, Leslie signed to save the Winnipeg Jets Daily Pilot preseuon Top 10 for (7:30) against the host Tritons and
Quote of the day
-· Said Washington State first-year
basketball coach Len Stevena: "We were 23-7
lut year and rm praying that I don't tum it
around in one year."
Ballesteros, Palmer win
Seve Ballesteros of Spain putted l!I
with surgical precision Sunday and
finished wjtb a 4-under-par 68 to win
the Million DoUar Challenge by 5
strokes. His first-place priz.e was worth $300,000.
Tied for second lace · Ll.Q....were
ustra an av Graham, Britain's Nick Faldo
arid American Funy Zoeller. Graham ijJ-ed a 70,
FaJdo had a 69 and Zoeller shot a 65. Each earned
$80,000 .... Arnold Palmer fired a final-round 67
and held off a stretch challenge by Billy Casper to
win the $150,000 PGA Senior Classic, his first
tournament victory in 16 months. Palmer, who
won $25.000, finished with a 72-hole total of 271.
17-under-par and three strokes ahead of Casper.
who had a final-round 65, that featured five
birdies on the back nine. Palmer started the final
round of the last tour event on the senior schedule
tied with Gardner Dickinson and five strokes in
front of Casper.
Dodson of Kalamaz.oo. Mich .. defeated Hennan some money has cost the Los Orange County, in the opener, Laguna Beach meets El Toro
Ahlers of Dana Point. 5-7, 6-0, 6-2 for the singles Angeles Kings fourth place ln the followed by Loyola and No. 4 ThU'rsday night (7:30) in the same
title. · NHL's Smythe Division. Ocean View. . tourney. '3 •
On the strength of four-point Servile shocked No. ·2 Fountain The Santa Ana .Invitational at Toilet stop costs win
SACRAMENTO Martti
Killholma of Finland won the first
California International Marathon
shortly after the front-runner made a
toilet stop.
Kilholma, 31, covered the slightly downhilJ 26
miles and 385 yards from a point near Folsom Dam
to the California Capitol in 2: 13:35 Sunday
morning. ·
Only a few blocks from the finish, Harold Schultz.._ .
100 yards, but had to duck into the doorway of a
shop to empty his bladder. Then he got nauseated.
Schultz, 25. the 1981 San Francisco Marathon
champion, told reporters later, "I really thought I
had 1t won. Then I just had to go."
Television, radio
TV: NFL -Minneaota at Detroit, 6 p.m.,
Channel 7. •
RADIO: NFL -Minnesota at Detroit, 6 p.m ..
KNX (1070). College Basketball -American
University at USC, 9 p.m. (delayed), KNX (1070).
outings from Laurie Boechman Valley last week and features Santa Ana High includes Saddle-
and Lucien Deblois, the Jets beat 315-pound center Jaime back and Santa Ana Valley to-
the Kingl 7-5 Sunday night for Cardriche. night at 8, and Westminster and
their third win over Loe Angeles La Mirada at 6:30 on Tuesday.
in less than a week. Loe Alamitos, coached by for-Other non-league games, all at mer Huntington Beach High star El By winning all three games -Steve Brooks. counters with re-7:30, include Mission Viejo at
including shootouts in Los An-turning All-Empire League selec-Toro Tuesday, Lakewood at ~les laat week that ended in lions Keith Kaub (6-4) and 6-1 Marina Wednelday and a pair J>f
identfcal 6-5 margins for Win-guard David Stockwell, in ad-games on Friday -F.d.ison at
nipeg -the Jets climbed out of dltion to 6-6, 6-5 'h players in the Cypr:es8 ~~ Corona del Mar at
the Smythe Division cellar. front line. Mission V1eJ0.
The Kings now find thermelves F ta' v 11 o 1 1·8 · oun 1n a e -
occupying last place after losing . mate e agaihst Es~ranza
th ir last eight games Wedne.day (7:30), following a La e · Quinta-Huntington Beach duel at "I couldn't imagine a sweep," 6.
said Winnipeg coach Barry Long, Esperanza was i 103-46 victim
who took -0ver behind the bench of Mater Dei last week, Fountain
from general manager J"ohn Valley will be at full strength
Ferguson Jut month after with Mike Newton retumina
Ferguson had fired Tom Watt. from the f~tball team. ..
"We hadn'_t played very well Huntingt.On Beach continues to
against them in the past. I knew
~a= ;,:eg0 e:rew ~~Y ~~ Braun leads UCI ..
~~~~~~through ·· ·it was past NAU, 85-54
Kinas' coach Don Pen-y said he Sandy Braun posted a double
IT•wetS-.Mlllll l:lS-lr'llnt n . Maenolle 4:0-Cenyon va. HH wneen
6:»-t.e Hebr• VL S.venne t-lol11a OreNle va. SOnore
IT..-'tetS-•Mlllll l:15-<tlll1tr1no Vlllltv YI. auene Per•
4:0-{)ene ~llt YI. 0r-
6:J0-$4;MV '41111 YI. UnlYenllv
1---erM.Qllnde VI. Le 5erM
S.-Ml llMl9ftellll
(T ....... atS.-MIMlllll
6:1S-9onll1 va. Hunllneton ~" rn«ves
t-SeddltOecll n . Senft Ane Vlllltv (TllalMY II ...... Alie 1411111
6:15-Wealmlnattr YI. L• MlrtOI
t-S.nlt AMI "'· Pacific•
,"'"'9111 VlleV llWtte._..
(T.-w et P_. V .... Hllfll
6-i.t" Afemltot VL SefYltt
Rozier's next goal: National ~itle was worried about the fact hia win ln the 100 and 200-meter
team gave up early goals during breaststroke as the 1JC Irvine ._ a., ........... ,....
its losing s\ttak. The Jets led 2-0 woJnen's 1wim team defeated ,......_ ... ._ ~ M11111
1 JO-'t.OYOll ¥'-Ocean View t..._.w1tP._.....V .... Mtlll)
6-i.1 Qulftte va. Hunllneton a..ctl 1.»-F-1e1n v • ..., n. e-entt
before the two-minute mark Sun-Nott.hem Arimna Univeralty, 6-EI MoRne n . Comoton AP M k Ro · · ed T h • UCI S da 1:30-<oat• ~ ya. $ell Cltmenlt NEW YORK ( ) -i e uer was wom rop y . dar. 85~54. ln a meet at un y. 1'1Mlnillw •• 1e11 a..."""' about --Auating from high school. Now he's worried Rozier, the Nebraska running back who became "That'• 90l1lething we're aolng · Braun won the 100 t>r.at with ......, ... 11111n.1.t11t a.Kl\ w..-
6'""" ba1J d ll ma 1 h f e • 1:»-EI Toro n. ~ 8MCll about winning the national collegiate foot only the secon co ee-te Payer to rus or more to have to90Jve," Perry said. "I've a 1:15.3 clocking and tO(>k the 200
championship. Along the way, he won a Helsman than 2,000 yards in a season in 1983, carried all six got U> shake this club up. My hair with a 2:43.03 mark, more than a ~~
------------------., Hei.sman 1'.rophy regjons ln winning the award is getting greyer by the mln11te. full aecond better than.t.mmate Meter o.t 11"·11et111td (7:>01
Saturday rught. .. I'll tell '°" that. It hun't bttn Luu'ett.e Wnahi. who came in at MIMloll Vlelo ~~~~l~l30I "lneverthoughtl'dcomethlsfar, Rcnlersai1 dat easy. 2:44.". Lakewood 11 MM~<J-.JOI EXERCISE. • •
From Page 81
for low lntermediate and beginning
akilert) -Tuetday.
a news conference after the announce~nt. ~· wu. 'Td Uke to win a few games, The wtn evened UCI'a reoord to 1....., 11 c.,,,,..:.·y;:.AT ~~~to~~t~hl~~~andth~~~tha=~~~th=e~~=~y~c=~=··-·-~~~~~1~.1~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~-~~~~11~Ml~~~~v~·~·~~!,~f to Coffeyville (Junior College in Kanau). I wasn't a 1
very good atudent, but I had tutors and people to help ..... IT'S NOT YET TOO LATEI -ONL v 21 DAVI LE
Ski SariH -A apokeeman laid
~ apent more time deertna U'MS
due to 100 mph wlndt that ripped through
the mountain than it did maklqa mow.
The relOl't la ltil1 a couple of weeks
aw_ay from bet.na operational.
Mtatall BJp·RoUdaJ RW -Con-
d1Uorw w.-'t the palest over the
weekend, but people pecked the hW
Ul>'"Y·
Fur tbt ~t. the r.x1 " NM!na.
,_ftftUftL Ma•·•-&ax incheeof new powder
OWi' the.-.... an a llx-fool a-. The •
r90l't 11 at full ~ty even thouCh the
crowd Wll u,t.t.
me o~~~r sl)ending his freshman year at the Kanaaa e•t ., .... f To Altund All '83 Taicn Wlttlhelcl and AecMf '80·. 12 TIJllS
junJor oollege to improve hia grades. Rozier enroUed ..,,.., lnwstment Tax Crtdtta/Entrgy TIJI Credits
at Nebraska, where he rushed for 4, 780 yarda ln three J:' • 1: 1 • 2: 1 • c· 1 • t : 1 • 10· 1 • LIYtflQt
yean. Thlt put aeuon. Rozier ruahed for 2, 148 yarda, J !JJ •J AUi Estltt -Otvlloomtntal Oil & Gls • No Min/ Mu Investment helplng the undefeated Com.hutkers to a No. 1
national ranlcina and an Orange Bowl berth Jan. 2
agalnat MLunl, tJa.
Only Marcua Allen of Southern Cal ruahed for
more lards ln a IM!MOl'l, 2,342, In 1981.
"Everybody•?'? we're Ow best ln the country,
the best of a1J UJne, I Roder MJd. "J)verybody'I ,Ot ft
In their m1ndt to win the nadonal chmnpkJnlhlp, and
that'• what we're aob-a to do."
Rozier, a lfnior, Mid he Wll thrilled ln wtnninl .
the Heilman, but he tald he hadn't yet felt the f\&11
lmpe(t.
• -
,
NFL
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
West
W L T Pel. PF a 6 0 Sii J21 • 6 0 Sii 367
I I 0 soo 71S
6 a 0 429 l1S
Central
1 6 0 S:ll J07
I 6 0 S38 291
7 7 D soo 390
6 I 0 419 269
2 12 0 1'3 212
East
17 2 0 8S7 4S2
12 2 0 IS7 479
6 I I 462 309 s q 0 JS7 209
J 10 1 250 73J
AMEIUCAN CONFERENCE
Wfll
11 J 0 716 318 • 6 0 .m 76'
7 7 0 500 362 s 9 0 JS7 JOO s 9 0 JS7 JOJ ,.,,., ..
9 s 0 Ml 30. a 6 0 S71 299
6 a 0 c29 JIS
I 13 0 011 7'4
East
•rM1t m1 10 ' 0 114 JH
8ulfoto 8 6 0 Sii 2S9
NY Jell 7 7 0 soom
New E notona , ~ 0 500 2'7
Ball•mo~e 6 I D '" :ns 't ·c11ncn.a 0 1v \•Of"I t1Ue
• ct ncn.a o•ovoll 1POt
Sulldlv'1 S<-
Pn. odelon1a 13, A1m1 9
8uff110 1• Kon\01 C11v 9
C.rHn 8•~ J 1, Chocovo 21
M1am. 2• Hou11on 17
New Enoiona 7 1New O<ttons 0
Cine nna11 23 P•tt1ouron 10
Wa\n1nv1on J7 Allonta 21
St Lou•\ 10 New York G11nts 6
Dallas JS Sea111e 10
San Fra11c11co JS, Tamoa 8av 71 Denver 77 Cleveland 6
New York Jet\ 10, 8al1tmore 6
Tonit tlt'1 G•~
M1nnoo10 41 Oe1ro11 (Cnannet I al
S1turoav•s G1ma1
PA m
166
29• J44
741
J07
co/
267
34~
217
JOO
J91
711
29'1
?90
260
379
309
J94
266
291
773
41)
212
797
263
7S8
313
61
FRIDAY, DEC. 2l
HolldlY Bow!
(at San Diaool
BYU 110·11 ¥\ M11\0urt !7·41 6
om
SATURDAY, DEC. JC
SUll Bowl
(II El Paso)
SMU t 10 11 ¥\ Ataoama 1 I 4 noon
MONDAY DEC 16
AIOf •• J~,.1
(llHonok. •I
P1nn S•ar@ 1 .a \ ., v"JJ\l'\1,.~1on
l ·)t Som
THURSDAY, DEC. 1'
L1bertv Bowl
(al~Pllt\I
80\lon Cone11e 19-71 v\ Notre Dome
lO·SI S 30 pm
PHCll Bowl
111 Aft1nt1J
Nori"! Carolif"la I e )I \I\ F'lor100 S•
16·SI, noon
Gllor Bowl
(al Ja<k\OllVlb l
towa 19·1l v\ F1orioa ti 7 11 6 pm
SATUR DAY, DEC. JI
BIUebOnnel Bowl
111 Hou\lon)
8av1or I l·J· 11 v1 O~lal\oma S•
17·'9, Som
MONDAY, J AN. 1
Conon Bowl
Cal D1M11 I
C.eorg1a \9·1·11 vs Ttxa\ 11·0•
1010 am
Fiesta Bow!
(II Tern~)
On•o St <!·JI vs P1111ourgn •1·2· 11
10 30.,..,
Rose Bowt
(II PnacMN)
tn•nol\ 10·11 YI UCLA <6·4· It 2
om
Ora09t Bowl
(It M11mll
Neoraska < 12·01 •• M1om• 1F•a J
110·1! 5 om
Suoar Bowt
ll l N..., 011Hl\J)
Auourn 110· II vs Mien.gen (9·21,
om
P11t\OurQn ot New YO"· Jets 1C11anne1 NHL
CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Smvn.e Division 'at 9 30 o m I
A11on10 ot M1am1 CCnanntl 1 "' 1J
Sundav'1 G1ma1
New Eno1ana ot Rams
St Louis at Raiders Cnicaoo at M1nnt\ota
Clevetano 01 Houston Son F ranC11CO ot Buffato
Sean f a1 Nf'w Vork Gia nt\
D•tro 1 a t (+nc ,,nat
New Orlettn\ at Pn11•af'toti•a
Kan\as Cit• 01 Son Q,ego
8•lt1IT'IOf'e er Oenv..,-Wa'"'~'°" et 0 ... t Moncllv. O.C. 11
C..'C~"' B•v •' T amoa ea ...
EilsHS 13, R1m\ 9
Scor• bV OUamn
LOI Ange f!I 0 0 0 P11.•aae,on o 6 o o 3-t
7-13
W L T P11 GF GA
Edmonton 20 S J 43 166 I 12
Ca1ga,.., II II 76 97 10S
Vancouver 11 13 2S II• 117 w nn1oeg q 1' 71 110 1JO
IC.nos I 16 19 I IC 136
NOf'rt\ OtVl\IGn
""""t\0'0 ,, 10 3 JI 129 126
Toron•o 11 17 l 2S 112 174
(n.cago 11 1J 7 H 0 109
Ol!trOtl 10 IJ 2 U 19 101
SI L-9 IC l 71 ,. 111
WALES CONFERENCE
Pi1tnck 01V1\1on NY ~0•;••1 16 9 4 16 111
NY l\t\ 11 9 1 JS Ill Ptwaceio~ o IS 9 J ll 117
Wo\111no•on 12 14 7 76 9J
o 1•1our11n 6 ti l tS IC
New Jersl'• C 71 1 9 J7
AOllTll Ot'llS1on
8ufla,o 16 I l JS I 10
Boston • .li ... ...1 7 H 170
107
96
97
IOI
I 1'
124
9S ,.
Ft<sl Qua~
Pn.-Ol1ver 7 '"" 1111.•C'-ta11.o S.COllCI OU1r1tt"
LA-FC. 1..on1lord 77 7 OS
LA-FG L1n\lord 78 I] S7
-~ _ _ _Qu_epec IS 11 l 3) 13' ~...... 11--rTI Js--'Tai 10. nu LA-FG Lonsroro 21 13 14
Pn.-Wooaruff 19 oaf\
Ja .. orv.1 (Franklin luck), IC 39
lll.~7.161
tr om
' TE AM"ST,A TISTICS
LA Ptll
F1r\t dO~M\
Ru•nes·varas
Pau1ng vard\
~eturn vara\
Pane\ Soc•• 8v
Pu~!\
F umOlt\ 10\1
Pina tie\ ¥'.trO\
17 11
3c· 117 7S· 7S
232 711 10 IS
11·33·0 21·J9·3
2· 10 D·O
6·33 6·'3
c·2 3·0
6 0 C-40
Harttoro 11 11 7 74 91
S-y'I S<Of"H Wfnnll>et 7; Ktiin s
B0\1on c. Wa\t11no1on I
Hartford 6. Philaoe111nta S
8u!fal0 6. MonrrHI 7
NY Ran11tr\ 6 Minnt\ota •
New Jtr\ev 6 Oetrot• 0
9S
NV l1tander\ '· Edmonton Todlv's Ga~•
No 11amts scneoultd TuHdlv's Games
Bo\ron a1 P+U\burQh
Har ttoro ot Montreat
Colgarv at Qutl>ec
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, December 5, 1983
SCOREBOARD
All hut e mpty
Mo rt· t hun 5 1 ~000 fans helped
:o.t-t a n NFI. rt•c·ord Sunday a t
(;ian t~ Stadi um
Hut twrford. N .J.
I ll East
by staying
ho m e instead of bra\'ing harsh
winds and a pouring ra in as
t ht• Ginnts nwt t. Louis. The
~t a d i um eu1m<'ity is 76,89 L
< > .
NBA
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Pacolic D1v11-
LO ff I
Porflaf'd
Go•dt" Stott'
~eall•• P,,oertu
Sa n 0 e110
w
I) S
17 7
' 10 9 10
6 ll
0 " M>dwHI Divhlon
Oa1•0• IJ '
l Pel
127
6J7 .,. .,,
)16
JOO
765
HollYWood ~ark
SUNDAY'S AESUL TS
llltl Of >O·OIY lt\oroutl\br..S mtallnvl FIRST RACE. 6 / lvrlQngs
-S.,ai.ro11• Mro c 'nt (J=r nno1
I, IS20 170 620
' , !>usanne ' 8ov IR \IS' 9 IO o CO
' > Lo••v Eao e CFuen1es1 9 70
I , A110 raced Prinotv P•IJO Svoar a PrO\oe<I Decent Davev Sanv Singe•
8a1t1a·1 M1•e
T1mt 1 17 7 S
-'2lnv.cr u1an
Ken\11 Ctrv
HOUSIOll
1.9 8
11 9
SS6 3 > ~. -5ffefHHt.t.« ~ I ...._
Stu dentDo dv Lett ICs•nd J
s.n .t.n1onl0 ·
I 10
1 11
1 13
'" s ) '.119 6 ' 350 7''>
EASTERN CONP'EAENCe.
Aftamtc OM&ion
Ph1todeloh10 1' c
80\lon lJ 6
Naw Yori-IJ 6
Nt'" Jtr\I V 9 9
I ' 1'>
s ' 7
17 00 SIO c 70
NavfrorMn (P;nc~y) S60 ,c.oo
Oaodv Lon11~1 (Qtl"tu\vtl 00
Al\o racea La verne·s 81g Mac.
0 1\lent River Temoe\I Wovl. Snok
Sov. T•ml! To 81r9aln. Flint H>ll\
,Tom'e I U 3 S
U DAILY DOUBLE 11 61 001d
A9360
n l'ICK SIX (6-6-1·t ·1·JI oa1d
\70,247 80 wl!n 2 w.nnlng llCl<fll (\I•
norsesl U Ptck Si• Con1olat1on 0010
" 771 60 Will\ 11 s wtnn1no ltCkel\ <•···
nolst\1
EIGHTH RACE. 1 I I mites on turl
Songue ISnmkr I c 80 J 10 2 '1l Cu11tl~ !McCrrnl ''1l J 80
GeralOine·s !>t0<e IS....,vnl S 00
Atso r aceo l'1r11 Advance 8errv
81.a n LuMmairt Ao\enrta B•r\1d.
L AUr•vart•• Av•Qat1on Time 149 7 S
NINTH RACE. I I 16 mrlts on turf
CM fd IMcCrrn) 480 790 1?0
lf1,11aan IStltersl J 70 7 70
V•I••\ !Toro! 2 80
Al\O rac•d A cow\1lt0n. Onven To
h ers Morrv's Cnamo
Time I Cl 2 S U l:XACTA CC·11 oa•d U SOO
M9ien Oeler Chalenee
C•t Sllft CJTv, Belllwll\atsw-1
214
S 81Jlesluo1, UGO.ODO 69·67·70·61
21t
David Granam. 5'0,0DO
Nickl' 1100, l lll,ODO Fuu v Zoeller, s11J,OOO
211 Rav Ftovo. s11,0DO
JOMnv Miiiar, $71,000
212
Lff Trevino, UO.ODO
214
:r•lo Sl1di.r. U6,0DO
61 11-11·70
70·'7·73·69
7S·71·'7·6S
71-7(1-69·71
7C·l0·6'·61
72·61·72·70
Larrv Nf11on:u 1.o:1 69·11·73·72
Nlclw Prlct , l Sl,ODO 77·61·71·69
Seniors tournament
Cll Bou Ralon, P'la.l
271
Arnotd Potmer, '7S.ODO 6S·69·10·67
114
8lltv Cuoer. "S.000 68·66·7S 65
271
Gardntr Oion1n, "7,0DO 61 69·67 7'
2tO Oouo Sanders, '10,0DO 68·67· 77·70
71 1
Jim Ferree, \I.ODO 69· 71·7' ·67
212
Millar 8aroer. U .Jal .. 7'·77·61
Cll•rtes G1fforo. 1S.3ll 61·72·77·70
Boo To\k•, SS.313 69 73·69·71
2tl
Julius 8oro1, U,400 69·61·71 Jc
214
Jack Fled<, SJ.I SO 61·61·73·7S Don Januorv, '3,IS9 ' 61·61·7l·7S
21S
BtN COllins, '3.133 7•·11 71·69
80b Slone, '3, Ill 70·7' 69·71
Mal McMullen, U, Ill 70·61·7'·73
lU
Gav 8 rewer. 17 .62S 71·72·11-72 J1~1 Hotlltld U .62S 7HS·6117 ,.,
Paul Harne., l7.J2S 7J n 69·73
Geo<ge TnomH , '7.32S 71-1•·69·13
2U
Oen Sikes, \ 1,9SO 77 17·70·69
8ob Erickson, I 1,950 10 /C·71 ·73
Jim Cochron, l l,9SO 68 17·7S·7J ,.,
Mille Ft1cll1Ck, "·600 t.a·n 73·76
Fred Hawkins, l 1.600 7S·68·7l·7J 8frt Weover, 11,600 7'·71-73·71
290 Georoe 8over, 11,coo IC 70·73·73
Women's state am1teur
(II Pttlllila BHChl
Semifinab
PatriClo Cornet• ISan Fronc.\Cot del
AM Wal\n !Son Joul 1 uo IC.orun
G1oson ll'atl River M•ll\I dtl Sue
Tonkin I Au•lral1al, 3 and I
' ChlmoianllllP
Corn•tt det Glb\On, 1 •n<i I
DMP SH fl\t\1"9
DAVEY'S LOCKER lNew-1
a.aclll IS anolers 7S rock coo I
COW COO, 7 11110 COd
W&lh•n1>ton Ctnlr•I Dl:111.:.: THIRD RACE. I I 16 milt\ Women'' 'Wlmmin9 •
Milwaukee 12 6 647 Frencn Comme nder IPdua l COLLEGE Wfflrend trtnHctlon5
Oelroll 10 9 S76 7 > 11 to S )O J co UC lrvlM IS, N~ Arl10N S4 BASEBALL
Allonlo 9 9 500 J Joruinne.~1g ISDlll!) S co J cO (at UC Irvine) A"'-'IUll LHtut C1tvel1na 6 lJ J16 6 , Prtnel! Aoo Lff (Hawlev) s 70 700 mtdl•• rtlav-) UC 1rvl11t . MINNESOTA TWINS-Nam.a o •••
INDIVIDUAL STATl1TICS Cll1CIOO s 11 313 6 Al\O raced Truxlon'\ OouOle, Oen· 2 102, 7 Norlhern Arizona . 2 10 2 Hlllon manao•r ol 1"-v l,H IO 0111$ ol
RUSHING ..... Lo1 Angtlu, O•"tr\On Indiana C 1' 227 I cvn Tim, Caotain Orienl I.ODO lree-1 Mcl(lnnev (UCI), lhe Coltlornla League
8ulfol0 at S• Louis
NV l\lono1r1 at v ancovver
11·103 Ferragamo , ••. Reooen 2·S Jen 7, Kinvs s SulldlV'I SGlf'U Time 1 CS 3 s 11 "'· 7 Ulllf (NAL 12 ll I, 3 Lullrell NEW YORK YANKEES-Stontd
Pn.1adeion.1 Oi1ver · 16·21 Witham\ Score bV Periods L1ker1 120. Son Diego 99 u ·EXACTA (6·SI oa•d 11'7 00 !NA), 13 10 1 Joe Cowi.v, 011cn•r. ond Ktllv Htotrl.
7·31 Ja,.or1" 1· 11 Haddix 1 S LO\ Angt111 1 J o-s Philodeto111a 171. 8ol!on 11' Cot I 200 lrtt-1 Sullon !UCI). 2 Ol.6, 2 inllttoer 10 coo1r1cn wllh COlumbus ol
PASStNC.-LO\ Angetes, Furaoamo Win· PhOen,. 112, San Antonio 106 Pan ln\on (NAI 2 031, J Gtvtr IUCI), tile lnterno11onal League
11 ))·0 132 P1H110elD'!•a Jaworski nooeg J 1 J-1 Todlv'1 Ga~s P'OURTH RACE. I 16 mtlt\ 2 II A"'-'k an Anocllllen 11 J9 ) 771 "'"'Period NO gomf\ IClltduled La Mimo\O ISnml<rl 7 60 '60 3 "° 100 Dat"-1 WttCI< INAI l-o6 4S, 7
lfECEtVING-Los A1>11etes, Farmer I W1nn•oeg. Howercnu1< 9 !Mutlfnl TUHOIV'S Gam.1 Picture 5ride (Pdrzal I CO SDO K1tset CUCll 10909 l Pattin\on CNAI. JtmL~~~~!tL~ana'!;r~~~A~s;::~:~~
' 31 E •ara 3 61 Oftlna rd 3 31 Gumon O 57 2 W1nn1DC!9 8 0\cnman IS Cleveland at New Jeru v Int Oona !Ple<ctl S "° IOI/ 2S contract 2·'8 8a•oe• 1·36 0 Hitt 7· IS 10e8to.1. Arn1et1 115 3 Los Angei.\ Denver at New Yoo <n1 At\O '0''° Known To Win FtH ning 100 DrH\1-1 8r•un IUCll I IS J, 2 c elilwl L 0 C'll'\Of' I 7 Pn1loelfl0tl•a QutCk 7·69 Simmer 17 CO•onnl' Wfl•\I, I ... , PhOen"' at Atlanta (,,I SoDtr, Ntct tv Nattve Ctear A\ Crv\fat L Wright IUCll I IS9 7 Eoan !NA). CAROLI:~ LE-:~JE-Nomf"il
Co"'"·<'at ' SI ""'"'ams •·37 Oliver W1nn1DC!9 Smo•t 9 ,Mc8oln Stttn) 80\lon al Cnocaoo. !nl Tome 1" J S I 17 S JoM HDD'lns i.011ue orinldent tor tl>e
' 19 Hodo • I 16 WOOdrull 1·?9 10 ?9, S LO\ ... n11ete\, O·onne 10 1 Tav· Oollas at Konsu C1tv (n) lS EXACT A I l·7 > oa•O 11'1 SO 200 llv-1 McK1nnev (UCll. 7 16 9S, nu t two vears
MISSED FIELD GOALS-LO\ An >or ~·mmer 1 19 SS P•11ames-Stttn Wasn1no1on II HOUl!On (n/ 7 Petrv (NAI 2 21 ' 3 Uoton (NAI. BASKETBALL 1-~~~~~~---,.g~"-''T'~L_•_"_,_1o_•_d '8 P?11•aa.ton1o::.....:F~r~•~n~k-·~~f~~~~n~f~6~2k~Suiu!I)(I!& .... ~r..._.L~A,._~11~11 ..... ~tft<m.1E~w111&•An~~~~~~igi~~·~~''t.~i~°d~n~~roi~drt'~~~or;S;ttij~'~~·r.~'(~~~l~~~~~~'~·aM~~.!~~!!4~A~A~C;E';;'.~6~1~1u~r-iono_...u1"t~~~~-,7~3~t~6~~1(';r!iFfrlf1r~,c~"~''...JJ'N~~~6t,}.~~~s~A~N~~A~N..;T~O~N~1nonrcScP-U-R~S-~S-•o_n_.a~-ll,.;~~r--~~~~~~~!. S.Cend Peri.cl Tomurf (P1ncavl M WrttJllt cu Jonn Lucu , tJuard
C..... 6 W1nn•"'9. Oe8tol\ 11 !8 oscnmanl"" Laken 120, Cli""'1 " Summers 8rttzr <Oiodltol 14 1 UftitM Statet P:..-.. Lffellt
LATE SATIMDAY SCORE 7 lS, 7 Los Anorle\. O•Onnl! 11 CTovlor SAN DIEGO -8roo"S II, Cum· Al\O r•ctO Pom~vona Im Realty One·mtlfr d1vtno-I Scott CUC!)
01<tanoma 21 Hawau 11 S1mmerl.6'8 I Los Anot!l'I McEwen m1ngs IS Wollon 20. Nlaon 17 Pierce Smolun Mtlllf!s Mtnll Purf Pi1111 21007 PO•nl\. 7 Cllam~rs CUCll,
eowt llMup
!Al llnlfs l'STI SATURDAY
lndt-Cf BaW1 (al ShrtVf-1, La. I
Air Force '9 11 11\ M 1U •\\100• t6 .. SJ
SOI om
SATURDAY, DEC. 17
C111Mr1111 Btwl (al P:rt snt)
Cot S•att Fullerton II Cl "' Norin· ern l111no1s 19 71 I om
FIO.-ldl Citrus Bowt
C 11 Of1111C1t I
Morvtana 11·3) V\ Ttnntl\ff ll ·J).
Som
THURSDAY, DEC. 72
Hal ti Fa~ Bawl
Cat BlnnlfltNm, Ala.I
Wt\I V1ro1n1e <1·31 vs l(fntuciw
Ii·• II S om
I 1EnoD4om NtCllOll\J, 9 7S 1001 9 LOI 1'. Oon•ld\On s Wnltehtod 9. HOd!J'\ Helle!) Get JOMB"\ Girt 179 u. J Oetantv (NA). 17' 97
Angell\, McEwen 2 tEnot>tom, Fo~I 7, Ket•er 7, Mcl(1nnev c. Smith O Total\ T•m• 1 19 1 S 100 Ir-I Frfdric1<1 INAI, S7 S2, 2
11 '1 P..,a1t1es-01onne, LA IJ. S"latl. •O 91 19 J3 99 U EXACTA 19 &I oa10 U l SO GfVtr IUCll S97?. l Wright CUCll.
Win. 7 Cl, Anderson, LA IS S2, Sos LOS ANGELES -W1tlle• IS, I 003.l cnmon, W•n IS S2 wortnv 6 Abdul Jat>oar 20 Scoll 20. SIXTH llACE. 6 , turtono• 200 oaca-1 Weick INAI, 2 2S '6, 2
T!Wd Pffi.cl Coooer 11 McAdoo u Nott• 17 Sa l· I Ro var Orfam I M1e 1 Ktl!lel IUCll 73169, J Lotto (NAUI.
10 w'"n1oeg, LukowtCn 1 IWil•on ~orioos I, Kuocna• c. Garrett o Total\ 39 40 11 oo 160 l OC 2S Manni, l 04. II W1nnioeg , Bosct-man 16 c9·90 1'·37 120 Stano Pat 1P1ncav1 J 10 ) 00 100 ore111-I 8 raun CUCll. 2 tJ.OJ.
tArn1et. Oe8IOI\), c C8 lool. 17 Wm Score bV Ou1rtars Et JeDtl (Piu cel '10 7 L Wrlgllt IUCll. 7 «SJ, 3 Eoan
n1oeg, OeBl01\ 12 C8oscnmon1, 19 JO San 0 1ego 71 21 18 21-99 Al\o rau•d Gro 8oroon an, Flv1no INAI 149 SI
Penatties-><ettv, LA 4 J2. McBe1n. Los Anotte\ JO 30 31 79-120 cn1ck, No Hold\ 8Mred. A .. 1111 l'oc•or SOO frt-1 Pattinson CNAl. S.32 22.
Wtn. 10 36, Simmer, LA m0tor. I& 00, roultO Out-None R•oounds-Son Chulla S1refl 1 Sutton !UCll. S 33 6A. 3 M Wrlont
Mantna Win, malor 11>110 8abvch 01tOO 4' (N11on 91. Loi Angeles '6 Ttmt 117 t S rUCI), 603 S9
Win. 16 ll Nlcno111, LA. aouDlt minor I Nater 9J Au1111-San 01e90 W I Nixon u EXACT A 11-11 Oflld H9 so 100 llv-1 Petrv !NAI, 1112 67. 2
ll JO, Smoll, Wm. aoublt minor. 1a 10. 91, Los Anoett\ l7 ICoooer 171 To1at F•tdrick1 !NAI I DS2S. J Eooteton
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19 cs, Walters, Win, maior, 19 cs. Allendanc-11,SOS 8utt1on !Pdrza1 t 70 460 u o cuc11 ?JJIS 001n11, 2 Scott CUCI),
811ke, LAtt 19 4S, Macl ean. W•n. Mo1estv's Proml\e (Lonm1 I 00 '40 7 II 20. J Ottaiwv (NAI. I~ OS m tnor-gamt misconduct, 19 cs Colleee Matcllpennv CFuentesl 7 40 2001M-I Pttrv INAI. :n111, 7
Snots on Goat-Los AngelH SUNDAY'S SCOAliS Atso raced let ·Frohc, Promt\in11 Braun CUC!). 2·26 S J L Wrlgnt !UC!),
10·9·9-78 Winnioeo 17 9 13_31 c arrllf" Ciani< Tournev Gtrt, A10ll"9. Ofl•nla l Chamo. Sunland 7 3713
Goahes-Loi Angetei Blake Svracuse 10'1, tona 92 (llrstl Succeu . J P ., G•fl 700 frtt retav-1 UC lrviM , 1·'6.13.
La\kO\k• w onnooeg, Soeteert Robert Morr11 60. Ououesne SS Time 1 IO ' S 1 Norlne<n Artrona. I SO 37 Allenoanc.-9,919 lthlrdl \S EXACTA () ,, PO•d U7700
Camel Filters
(1
15 mg. "tar". l.0 mg. nicotine av. per c1gar,11e. FTC Report MAR. '83.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determ ined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
.,.
OK L .AHOMA
OUTLAWS-Announced Ille re11one1ton
ot Sid Giiiman 11 oenerll mane11tt" He
w111 rfma1n w1111 tne IHm el • consult·
ant
HOCKEY
N•llONI Heckn LHeu•
HARTFORD WHALERS-Slontd
A•id 8•11••. dtffnH mon, to a
tree·agenl contract and aulgned n1m 10
81n1Jllomton ot the Am•rlc6n Hockev
LHoue
MONTREA L C AN ·
AOIENS-Aecolll!d Clnude Ltmleua.
lefl wino. from Verdun ol tl\t Ou,oec
Moior Junior Hoc~ttv L~ogue
Orange Coaat OAILV PILOT/Monday, December 6, 1983
Moaday'• l l a.m. (POT) Pnee.
~IP\ H•~
PE !\ch llOw ("9
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTION~
QUOT"~ IHCllJOt TIU.OU OH THf ..CW YOM, MIOWU T. ""Cllic:. P9W, 10t TOh Oil ll()fl #>HO CINC-A Tl lfOOK U()Kl>NOH ANO ~1(0 IY fHt NAIO IHITINll
\41t' N•t S•••• N• P f "'" Ctow C P £ ftO\ CIO'f C
. •
Economic recovery gains;
prices rising moderately
By IM A11oelate4 Pre ..
NEW YORK -The economic recovery gained 1peed we
month aa the job market improved and pricee oonUl\ued to rise
modestly, ecx:ording to a new buaineM 1urvey. A 1eparate
report today by the Conference Board aaid the economy will
~ ~on-free next year and that Inflation will remain
~-ttra~.
Si1Jgle-f amily home sales jump
WASHINGTON -Sales of new lingle.family houaes
jumped 8.2 percent in October while prices slid from
Sept.ember'• record levela. The government reported that
new houses were aold at an annual rate of 660,000 compared
with a revised 610.-000 in Sept.ember. The October rate was
37.2 percent above the year,ago level. The report said the
median home price -the price at which an equal number aold
for more as for less-fell.to $76,-100 from a reoord $80,800 in
Sept.ember.
Higher interest rates lorecast
NEW YORK-The government's report of a $1.6 billion
increase in the money supply for the week ended Nov. 23 has
dampened hopes that interest rates will decline soon. Robert
Schwanz.. senior financial economist at Merrill Lynch, Pierce,
Fenner & Smith Inc .. a New Yorli investment firm, predicted
traders would bid interest rates higher this week.
Gulf reincorporation stalled
PITTSBURGH -The outcome of Gulf Oil C.orp.
shareholders' vote on the company's propoeed reinoorpora··
tion is oot ex~ to be known until mid-December. Gull _,
Chairman James E. Lee urged shareholders to approve the
proposal, which is designed to stymie an investor group's
efforts to force Gulf to spin off aome of i ta domestic oil reterVes
into a royalty trust .
. New ordei-s to factories slowed
WASHINGTON -The growth in new orders to U.S .
factories slowed in October. Total new orders roee 0. 7 percent,
less than half the increaae recorded in September, the
Commerce Department aaid. Orders for durable goods -
it.ems expected to last three years or more -were up 3.1
percent.
Citibank said 'best managed'
NEW YORK -A new survey says bankers consider
Citibank the best managed ln their industry. The aurvey of
more than 2,-000 leading American bankers aaid 27 percent.
rwned Citibank as the best managed, 20 percent named
Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. of New York and 9 percent
picked Wachovia Bank & Trust Co. in Winaton-Salem, N.C.
By deposits, the three banks are ranked nationally No. 2, No ..
5 and No. 39, respectively . .
Dollar rises lo record highs
LONOON -The U.S. dollar rose to record highs against
the French franc and Italian Jira, and neared an all-time peak
against the British pound, in early European foreign
exchange trading today. Gold prices posted moderate gains.
climbing above $400 an ounce. Traders ascribed the dollar's
advance to the flareup of fighting in Lebanon and forecasts
that U.S. interest rates will not be coming down aoon.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
WHAT NYSE DID
Due to late transmission
today's listing will not
appear In the Dally Piiot.
WHAT AMEX DIO
Due to late transmission
today's llstlng wlll not
appear In the Dally Piiot.
'SYMBOLS
DOW JONES AVWGES
NEW YO.X (APl -Flnal Dow•,,_. ;;&!iu tor F rlllev, D•c. 1
ou11111u.~ lO Incl 1214.tO 1211.30 12SU6 IW.t.....,.96
20 Trn •.oo 61>.10 •ou2 ~ H3 IS Ull 1>01 1:16.0I IJJ.ot 13U7-0.73
U Slk il0.S1 Sl:U7 SOUO S07,,._ U> ' '"°"' •. 706,800 T,..n ~ >,m ,ooo U!lll l,024.200 &SS1k • U.Sl0,000
AMERICAN LEADERS
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 6, 1983 Bl
Tlfeaters deckln9°the halls ·
SC R's 'Christmas Carol' heads holiday play lif!eup on Coast
I BJ TOM TITllS
CM--::;-;.:-bts that the holiday season~ lndeed llTIRMlalll
upon ua can be dispelled by a quick look at the ------------------
theatrical openings along the Orange Coast this week Evelyn Dart. Robin de Barros and Brian Nonnand
-three of the four new shows have Christmas head the cast, which lncludes David Chambers,
themes. Beadie Pompa, Bret Tomuik, Kirsten Challman and 1~
Bowm, in Wednetday is South Coast Reper-Richard Crafton. -.. " ..
tory'' fourth annual staging of Charles Dickens' The show will be presented free on a fint come, ~-:'DYkl
claalc "A Christmas Carol" Golden West College !int eeated buia with performances Saturdays and ....,..,.
will put on an original play entitled "A Kitty for Sundays at 2, 3 and 4 p.m. through Dec. 18. The U 'A "It Heppened One Clwlalm11"
Christmas" Friday, while the third annual mounting playhouse is located In the Seacllff Village shoppir\i (19n) Marto Thomla, WWJM Roo-
of th~ children's fantasy ''Visions of Sugar Pluma" center on Main Street at Yorktown Avenue, OMOYIE
takes up residence SatW'day at the Huntington Beach Huntington Beach. • ** ''Tl<*tt To HM*" (191 11 Playhouse. · Three other lOC'al productions wind up their • Nie!! Mancuao, Stu! Rublnei.
The we.ek's lone non-Christmas newcomer is respective runa this weekend with closing per--t:JO-
"The Railroad Women," to be performed Thursday formances of "They're Playing Our Song" at the l~OFCUl.TUAE
through Sunday of this week only by the Orange Laguna Moulton Playhouse, ''The Dickens -"•
Coast College Women's Theater Collective. It's a Christmas Carol Show" at the Fountain Valley QIWNEELOfFORTUNE
character study of three women living out of a Community Theater and "Under Milk Wood" at 6' DOC VAN ml
Pullman car in the Nevada desert. SaddJeback College. -7:00-
Elizabeth. Cameron, 'Mary Ellen Finley and Michael Jon Sims and Lori Sandstrom star in 8CllNEWI
Anne Curran .omprise the case of "The Railroad "They're Playing Our Song," which resumes •1=..v-=YIMWN
Women" under the direction of Jennifer Betson. Tuesday and runs through Saturday at 8 p.m. and !2!,.ANIMARTIN'S~
Curtain time is 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday ends with a 2:30 matinee Sunday. Michael Cody is -""
and 3 p.m. Sunday in the Drama Lab on the OCC directing the musical at the Moulton, 606 Laguna ITHAEE'SCOWNlf
campus. Call 536-0209 for reservations. Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Reservations 494-0743. ~ ~
At South Coast Repertory. ticketa are going fast A cast of 45 youngsters is featured in "The I INSIDE OMHOE COUNTY
for the reprise production of "A Christmas Carol," Dickens Christmas Carol Show" at Los Amigos High 1'.M. MAGAZINE
again directed by John-David Keller and again School.NewhopeandHeilavenues,FountainValley, m~CCMIECTIOH
starring Hal Landon Jr. as Scrooge. Other original with Frank Minano directing. Curtain times-this • ** "Macbeth" 111148) Orton
cast members aboard include John Ellington, Noreen weekend are Saturday at 2:30 and 7:30 and Sunday at w•. JeltleJtt NO!tn.
Henneaey, Howard Shangraw, Anni Long, A.rt 2:30. Reservations 964-5392. _ _,. [~MOYIE ' • *"'"The Chc>len" (1981) .... lml-Koustik, Wayne Alexander, Don Tuche and Ron . ·''Under Milk Wood," Dylan Thomas' last play. -
Michaelson. Martha McFarland and Richard Doyle comple~ its run in Sadd.leback College's Studio ~%)=Roel Sleiget
return from the 1983 staging. Theater with Lynn Wells directing. Final per-• ***. "Jem J1m11" (111311)
"A Christmas Carol" will be presented nightly formances are Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Tyrone Poww, Henry Fonda.
except Mondays at 8 p.m. (7:30 Sundays) through Sunday at 3 p.m. Reservations 831-8656. -7:30-
Dec. 24 with weekend matinees at 2:30 p.m. and Scanning the spotlight around the Coast reveals e 20NTHETOWN
special performances the day before Ghristmas at 1 these shows still on the boards: I ~=I :a a
and 4 p.m. at the SCR theater, 655 Town Center ••'Oklahoma" at Sebastian's West Dinner OOWNlf
Drive, Costa Mesa. Reservations 957-4033. Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente (492-9950), l~s·H
GOiaen West Coll~ge drama tnstructor Charles-on stage Wednesdays through Saturda.ys..at-8--1p,,.._m~--..--l'l0Ptf'SCQURT-
Mitchell has written his 20th original play, "A Kitty and Sundays at land 7 p.m. thro\.lgh Jan. 8. fDWl.DUFEWM
for Christmas," and is directing the production in •"Brigadoon" at the ijarlequin Dinner Play-~ MAKINGOfMANl<INO
I 'Jl MAGAZINE GMATP81 CMWCa ---u. ~: ~·· (1N3) ..... Gllbttt. Mer11n si....
l§.._"11111) .....
C. Scott, Bl Wel*ll. 1r
H ''Tlbte f« FM" (1N3) JoM
VolQlll, Nclllrd CrtMa. CO)lilOYIE
H• "ThrtlllOld" (1911) Donald
SU"*11nd. J9lf Goldblum.
(l)MOVIE
U "V•. Gbglo" ( 1912) l ucllno
PIYlfottl, Kathryn Harrold.
(?)MOYE
"Vol" (1M2)Tri Akan. _.._
• QMAT '9lfOMIANCf.8
-t:16-• TME IDT CHNSTMA8 PNJV«T EY8' -•.»-I~ • ** "lntide ~ aow· 11eee1
Natlllt woocs. Chna1ophlr PUnmer.
• A~YIC8WllO:
IWICING AT TME 1M1< e ~y AT HOUYWOOO PAM
-10:00-
11 =POINT N.A.8. POUCEWOMAN
AlJllE IKI ICHOOL IOLDONES MOVIE
**'h "Sllrduat" (11175) D1vld
Elllx. lMyY Hagman.
OMOVIE * * "Tiit Sallmandet" (Ille 1) Fren-oo Nero, AnlhOny Quinn,
-10:16-
l mONLA.
A TIME TO LM WfTH LEO
llU9CNlUA
.-1Q:30-
• NlEJlfHDENT HETWOAK
NEWI
ID SNEAK l'AEVIEW8
-10:46-GWC's Acton Playbox. The performers, all playing khou.e, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana (979-5511), Cl)TlCTACOOUOH
-cats in the show, are Carolyn Matsuda, Lance running nightly except Mondays at varying curtain !IO FfWiGl1 M>Cf< e N!WI
Walker, Dave Longridge, Shay Ryan, Andy Cheadle times through Feb. 19. ~1f'ORVOIMI -11:00-
-12".20-
(J)MOYIE * U "Stlll Of The Niglll" ( 1912) Roy Scheider. Mtt)1 Streep.
-ttao-D Qt LATE NCIHT wm4 DAVID LETTEMIAN ·~OIEUP CJ) AOW I MART1t8 LAUGH~ e LOYE. MEICAN l1Yl.E
-12:40-IWIJMI()
***'h "Four Friends" (1911) Cflig
Wasson, Jodi Ttiellrl.
-1:00-
• GENE Miff/('(
CJ) THE l'AOTECTOM
• AlUt THE FAMILY
.MOVIE * 0 "Tiit Riling Of Thi Moon"
(11157) Cyril Clalc*. Noel Purcel. ~=8COTT CZl MOYIE • • •Yi "Cries And w1111pen"
( 11172) Harrill Ander11on. Liv
UllmlM-Directed by lngmlf B«g--
man.
-1:to-
~ .. "!Ona Of "" BlllOltl.. ( 197 4)
Olllel1 ~. MollO °""' eaNIWI
-1:36-eMON *** "Tiit M~' (11121
Midloll Pain. Map $mlttl,
-1:1t-'fl~·Awen111r1" (18IO) Mofll.
Cl Vitti. 0.... ""-"'· (l)MCMI * • * "The V•dlc1" ( 1912) PIUI Neiwman. CNrtoltt ""'1f*ng.
-~-.(I) Cl8 liaWI NlllHTWATCH
-t;IO-
-2:40-
(&) MBr8 OYMHAITICI
:_3;00_
CJ) MONINCI ITMTCtf
(Q)MOVIE ••Yi "Sparrow" ( 1t17tl) Randy H«· "*"· Don Gotdon. (Z)MOVIE
• * * * "The 0. Huntet" ( 11178) Aob«I De Niro, Meryl Streep. ~
-3:06-
0 WOYIE • .,,, "Thi Seduction" (1912} Morgan
Fwc:Nld, MlctlMI SarrlJln
-~ i = WB.IY, M.O.
-3:40-
(}f) ST ANDINO AOOU ONl Y
-4:00-
~ TOP O' THE MOfNNO ~i ~ Giorgio" ( 1912) lueilnO
P1v1toltl. Kathryn Harrold .
-4:25-
(t)MOVIE * • * "Tile Kid From Bfoolclyn" ( 194&) Dinny Kaye. Virginia Mayo,
-4:JO--~IUUWN<l.E VIDEO JUKEBOX
MUSIC ON VIDEO
-4:50-
CHANNEL LISTINGS .
Performances will be given Friday, Saturday Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach e (J) 8CAAECAOW AND MRS. GONQIHOW 1J KNXT 1CBS1 Los Angeles
and Dave Murphy. •''Footlight Frenzy" at the Newport Theater -l:GO-1 I Jlx,(J) 0 at NEWS
and Dec. 15-17 at 7:30 p.m. with 3 p.m. matinees (631-0288), playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. ICIG TMEJ&ffMOMS 0 KNBC (NBC1 LOS Angeles
Saturday and Sunday of this week and next. Tickel.S through Dec. 17. I ~AlaYTIES TOP40VIDEOS 9 KTLA 1ino 1 Los Angeies
may be obtained by calling 895-8378. •"Life With Father" at the Newport Harbor ***"The Appllooaa" (ltlMI M•· llMBJOW.V ~ ~~~-z~~~~~nLg~e~~geies
"Visions of Sugar Pluma," a children's Actors Theater, 390 Monte Vista St .. Costa Mesa IOn&ando.An)WletteComer. i=GALLERY G KHJ·TV(lnd 1 Los Anyeles
Christinas musical by Beth Titus, opens a (631-5110),onstageThursdays through Saturdays at ~~Of\NT ** "Search And o.troy" (19lll 9KCST1ABC1 San Doegr.
two-weekend run Saturday under the direction of 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2:30 until Dec. 18. I ~AllllENT TOHIOHT (PerQ)ry Kina. Don Stroud. • KTTV (Ind I Los Angele'> ..,...~ MOYll • KCOP·TV \Ind I Los Angeles 'Ch • ' • •••~ "Cfy Qt The Wiid" (11174) **'h "Rollow(' (1911).Jene Fonda, e K.CET· TV 1PBS1 Los Ange•es . 01ces moving, but not enough =OFMAHl<N> ts!~~Olla.)AooeRan-.-----Ql!>-•_Koc_E·-TV-1P_e_s1_Hu_n_11n_9•-on_Be_a_ch __ _
* * • "Same Time, Next Vear" d ... Christiana Raines. By FRED ROTHENBERG
UT .......... W,..,
NEW YORK (AP) -So many stories have no
business showing up on television that it's a shame
when one story, 90 compelling it cried out for
dramatization, becomes less than the grabber it
should have been.
quickly flees, or she turns away. Jean should be (19781AllnA E (%)MOVIE
h tmST•~~~~tyny. ** .. .....__., ,...., .. (1""") Tommy lig ting up the screen, but Gilbert doesn't have the \m ,.,__.....,.,,......., ""••• ,,_ .....
presence to make it happen. CS) FA.EM TA.LE MA~ St ..... Stanley Bait•.
Filmed In Mexico, scenes have the dust-y despair !?~ .... ':in .. 119771 Chatltl •JOIE~
of a country· tom by civil war. But a pretentious o. L o-.,,onson. ee ._ .. idl. -11:JO-
soundtrack of Joan Baez' melancholy Spanish songs,
0
,_ un .:.!..,'¥J-I (J) ~ E> HART I._••-r.,~ whenever the action returns south of the border, llV'J...__," Qt_,., ..... CNl!Otl
Tonight's NBC !ibn, "Choices of the Heart." will
move viewen, but not far enough. Instead of
justifiable tearr. the bottom-1..1.ne feeling, Nd to say,
will be emotioiial distance.
gives the movie a mopey beat. CJ) LOY! IOA~ 8 SA~Y NIGHT ~•.;.;.;...;.~..----..;llllll;;;o.;;'""';::.:;.;1;.;•~ z,i~IM . . •. • -
rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;========================::;::::;;;;o---:::=============================::---1 SMlllOllldMI )biiiaiid IDlliiClllll ~ * PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES * ~ • ·::d ~=-~-~:: ~
"Choices of the Heart" is a fact-based profile of
Jean Donovan, one of four American churchwomen
murdered in El Salvador three years ago. Five former
Salvadoran national guardsmen have been charged
with homicide but have yet to stand trial.
NBC deserves praise· for treating this tragedy
se.naitively, particularly since its other Monda
movies ve t.iken er roaas, exanurung a
Playboy centerfold-oop, a woman who loved a dead
man and a Japanese pl'OStitution ting.
But poor pacing and the wrong choice of Melissa
Gilbert as the lead character turn a poignant concept
in to a le<lOnd-ra te film.
Gilbert was so taken by the sc.ript that her
production company bought a piece of the action.
Actor-director John Houseman, who was narrator on
a public-TV documentary on Jean Donovan, i5 one of
th.e executive produce.rs.
Gilbert, 19, grew up in America's living rooms.
The alumnus from "Lit1le House on the Prairie," who
gave creditable performances in "Splendor in the
Grus" and "The Diary of Anne Frank," displayed a
perky personality here. but the heavier parts of this
role aeem beyond her dramatic reach.
Notice that whenever Gilbert is required to
register and hold on to any intensity, the camera
NOW PLAYING
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I •I I I
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Otenge COllt DAILY PILOT /Mondey, December 5, 1983
OF 1Me
J.MP1. t'TUOE91
MOtJOft~L ADT'flNG Ji.'4~
A)..IC) ~)J.,j
~"'°'·rrc~
~C..-1 HA\J~ l!'ef:N ~MMf D 1...rro 111
.................. f~-5" ~~ .. ; /)
It '!> TIME YOU EARN VOOR KEEP AROUND HfRf, <:1ARFIELD.
THERE'S A M<VX HOLE AND
'THERE'!> SOME CHEESE. YOU
KNOW WHAT TO DO
15
THE
t 'A'lll\.
CIRCl'S
"In real life Mommy's name is Thel and
Daddy's name is Bill."
:tl .\R~ \Bl Kt; by Brad Anderson
l ' _JtJ ----
''He makes sure he gets comfortable!"
P£.\~l.T8
Tl'118LEW EEDI
Blti GEORGE
by Gus ArrlOll
l rx::Jr bA!tJ ~"R:>tw.R ~~llOJ
Of 'NAA1 "°" ;o,T ~O. -.. .._-.
~N.Jr •
by J~m Davis
'
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"I h1t1 Mond1y1."
DE'\'\IS THt: '9t:,_\('t; Hank.Ketchum
~
12-s
• H£ ONLY WORDS ~Eve~ PAYS ANY
ATTENTION TO~ 'UERE,KITTY1~0 1$CAf'."
I DON.T WA~1 TO HEAR
A LOT OF TALKIN6
AND Gl66LIN6 ~
' .' ~.· , ~\ GOif i 011 lllDGI
BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHAR1F
ANSWERS TO lllOOt: QUIZ
Q.1-As South, vulnerable,
you hold:
•SU O .\KJ71 •• Ut7W
l'arlncr opens the bidding
wilh one club. Whal do you
respond·! -
A. -H you follow poinl count
slavishly . you will probably
come lo the conclusion lhat
your hand is worth a raise lo
three clubs. We feel lhat this
jump would be an underbid.
There an· many minimum
hands your partner could
hold thal would offer u
cellcnl play for slam. To In
vc~t1g11ll' the possibilities
properly, we suggest lh:st
you \lllrl with a jump 11hih or
l wo diamonds. :-.l11turally.
you will \upporl du bs at
your next turn. v11,orously if
nere~~ary
Q.2-Neither vulnerable, as
South you hold:
• AJ6 :i A 10982 1 7 • KJ65
The b1dd1ng has proceeded:
Nord• Ea11t Soutlt
I • 2 • ? Whal action do you take·!
A. -ll is seldom a good idea
.ll.Ofit; P .\RKt:R
lo make a low·lcvel penalty
doubll' whrn your side has
g11ml' goinic values and you
havl' 11 fit for your partncr·s
suil. Therefore, Wl' would
esc:ht·w lht• .dou~I,· of two
dubs in fu vor of gellinl( lo
l(amc. Wl' would s\arl by
responding two hearts. Since
a new suit by responder is
forcing on opener. nothing
more is required of us now.
Q.3-Nt•it her vulnl•rnble. as
South you hold:
•KQI0962 'j1Q84 1 9~ •8
l'arlncr oprns lht· bidd ing
wilh thrcl' no trump. Whal
do you n•spond·! ,
A.-H you and you r purlnt•r
have a way of asking for an·~
over a thn•c no trump open
ing bid. by all m1·ans go
ahl•ad and USl' your ml'thods.
If you do not . we sul(gl·st t hal
•you make lhc value bid of si x
spades. Partner rates lo have
three 11ces but even 1! he docs
not, you might gel away with
the bid if the opponents fai l
to cash their two aces right
away .
d::==:i., RAYMOND 'TOl..O ME iH,A.T MY DAUGHTER INJURED HIRSILJll
AFTER 'TALKING AAE YOU SURI! SHE W"'5
LONG DISTANCE TO eEATEN ? IF SO. WHO
HER SON-IN· LAW. ~UL.0 HAVE r-...::_....-.. SHELA'S MOTMER OONE IT? PHONES Aeeev
SPENCER•
SHOE
OR.-\881.t:
-
t '~tit,
~.OUR
?if.AM l~
1'5 6ROKE.M ~
FOR 8£TTEa oa t·oa •O a Mt:
_JL
~
1l ·S
..
Q.•-lloth vul ncr11blc. !IA
Soulh you hold:
• AKJ <:'QtU 0 AQl"5%
Tht• biddinic hu proceeded:
t:aat S..tll Weet Nertl
1 t DI* % • P ...
1'111 Dble l'UI 2 t
..... ?
Whal lltlion do you lak('.!
A.-You have forct'd partner
to bid, and he has obliged
wiLh whnt could bt• a worth
less hand with only four
sp:1dl•S. Tht•rt'fort•, Lo l'lth1•r
rai~I' sp;sdcs or pass is risky
-1n a spad1· rontrarl p;irtni•r
might lost• fOntrol of tht•
hand if hl· is fom•d lo ruff
club~ with your high trumps.
U1d lhrc1· diamond~ lo sei
holA partn1•r rl'arb . If hl'
passr~. you Jrt· undoubtedly
in lh1• b1•sl spol. If ht• rrbids
spade:.. showing a long suil.
gambit· on ){amt•.
Q.S -A~ South. vulnl'tablr.
you hold:
•6 IV Kl087 OQJ853 •J52
The biddin" has proceeded:
N..U Eaat S..tl w.-
1 • 't Paaa Paaa ow. , ... ?
Whal atllon do you like'/
A .-lhd y.our partner
w~nh·~ you lo bid uncondi·
lion11lly. ht• rould havt bid
fuur no trump instead or
doubling. His dttiaion to
double is primarily ror
pen:illita. Since you have
some• useful defensive 111et1,
you should l>I' quilt conlenl
lo pass.
Q.6-llolb vulnerable, u
South you hold:
+95 ~8' 0 65 •4KQI0871
Thi• b1dd1ng has prO<'eedt•d:
Eaat South We1t N.,tll
I • 2 • P111 2 NT
l'au ?
Whal do you bid now·!
A. -W1• an• l(Oinic to sugl(t'Sl
.1 cou rs1· or :ll'llon that might.
al first, s1·t•m ralht·r bold.
Ha ist• 10 thrt•1• no trump. You
art• bringing partner seven
sure• trirks so. unless your op
ponents can take five fasl
tricks, partner shou ld be a
shoo in for nine lricks al no
lrump.
by Harold Le OOU>C
THE POLICE ARE INVESTIGATING.MRS OLIVER
. ·.euT. IN MY OPINION.
SHE WAS BEATEN 6Y F\.EASE. TELL SHEILA
-SOMEQNE SEVEREL y I I'LL BE TfERE IN ~ MORNING.AeeEY1
by Jeff MacNelly
by Kevin Fagan
by Lynn Johnston
IN I HERE:.
lllllJ Piii
MONDAY. DECEMBER 5, 1983
THI COAST Ill THI caum ANN LANDERS
OBITUARIES
C2
C3
Malls are 'hangouts'
Not everyone goes there to do the s.hopping" n..._ .. _,._
SYRACUS E. N.Y. -Do people go to
shopping malls to shop, or to kill some time?
Jerry Jacobs. a professor of sociology at
Syracuse University who has been studying the
social and eC'Onomic' ltfe of shopping malls. says
people who spend the greatest amount of time
there go to escape the trivia and boredom of
everyday life. ·
"Our social life is 99 percent trivia." he says.
"In large cities, people are confronted with
stimulus overload. They develop a blase attitude
toward all that is happening. In the suburbs. there
are too few stimuli. People get bored.
"To escape the boredom. they read, they
watch television. they take drugs. they go on
vacation -or they visit shopping malls."
The young. the unemployed, retired persons.
housewives -those with a lot of time on their
hands -are like ly to spend theClost time at malls.
. Teen-agers often congrega te there to play
video games, try on clothes or go to record stores.
Jacobs says malls serve as a kind of indoor "street
corner" society. Hanging out at malls may be the
1980s version of "cruising."
''Malls provide people with somewhere to go.
something to do," he notes. "Unfortunately,
nothing out of the way, or interesting. happens at
malls. Malls are designed to (iJter out the verx_
·it's Cbristn1as . .
. Robert Goulet to sing
at Crystal Cathedral
By CHARLENE WHITEHEAD
Oel!J l'tlol CorrMponde<ll
Christmas IS coming to the Crystal Cathedral
and so is Robert Goulet.
The performer's big voice will highlight "The
Glory of Christmas" Dec. 8 through 11 at the
Garden Grove church. singing "Oh, tfoly
Night,"and reciting "One Solitary Life."
In a recent telephone interview. the
49.year-old entertainer talked briefly about his
busy schedule. his interest in music and his present
wife, Vera.
''I can remember singing for the first time
when I was about 4-years-old." Goulet said. ''It
was a French tune." adding he has French
Canadian blood m his veins. His mother. Jeanette,
has been an inspiriaUon thro~h his lile. i.natalling
him in the church choir as l ypungster and later
enrolling him an the Royal Conservatory of Music
in Toronto.
As a ·resul t, Goulet's awards include an Emmy
for the Lerner-Love classic "Brigadoon" and a
Tony Award for .. The Happy Time."
But singing isn't his whole life, Goulet says.
"I've written poetry for many years, and I've just
---,sta.r~ed wr::iting-a-.book ~ anea:lotti. ~l:xml
people that I've known m show business."
His writer and photographer wife confiscated
his poetry from drawers and has sent some of his
writing to publishers.
The couple was married last year in Las
Vegas, and Goulet says he briefly took up oil
painting as a result of the relationship.
"She is a very good artist," he said. ''Vera was
patiently trying to.show me some techniques. I had
on my smock and was dabbing away on the canvas.
PAPARAZZI
things people seek there -namely, something
unusual."
Why. then, do people go to malls?
"They go there and they keep coming back
because the place they are coming from has even
less to offer than the place they are going to. They
go there in self-defense."
Jacobs says some form of time-out activity,
away from the trivia of everyday life, is necessary.
What concerns h!m, is that more and more of the
time-out activities that people are choosing are
ones that isolate them from others.
···Most people spend two-thirds of their lives
either asleep. or engaged in solitary pursuits such
as watching television, going t.o the movies or
visiting video arcades," he says.
Although you can meet friends at the mall, or
take your children there. Jacobs points out that
malls are designed for shopping, not social
in teraction. "While malls put you in the presence
of others, they don't put you in the presence of
those with whom you interact or get to kiaow."
Jacobs, whose observations are based on
first-hand interviews with mall tenants and
customers. has studied large suburban malls in
mid-sized Eastern cities and on the West Coast.
He notes there are about 23,000 shopping
malls in the United States.
"Malls are becoming defined more and more
~he place t.o go," ~says.
Rober~ Goulet in good voice.
' I wasn't pleased with my work and started to wipe
it ofL The blending of the colors waa so striking
that I decided to leave it that way. We framed the
picture and tha t was my first and last attempt to oil
paint," he said, laughing.
Another past time is collecting replicas of
frogs. His collection is priceless, he says, ranging
fmm..a_smaU ashtray made b an admirer to
C05tly scupture.
"We have frogs all over the house, and :my
wife collects (replicas of) cats, ao we're running but ~f room to put things.'' _ '
Goulet and his wife split their time between
their desert home and a 71-foot cruiser called
"Rogo" docked in Marina del Rey.
About the Las Vegas home. the singer says he
Lives about a quarter mile away from Wayne
Newt.on, the best man at.the Goulet's wedding.
Concert due: Robert Merrill stars
----~""'us~er.t &tt" •·A-~'
for a treat on Dec. 14 ..
.Baritone Robert Merrill
will perform with the
Pacific Chorale. under
the direction of John
Al exand e r . in a
Christmas concert at the
South Coast Communi-
ty Church in Irvine. His
appearance is for a High
Hopes (a neurological
recovery program for
traumatically head in-
jured young adulrs and
th ei r familie s )
fund-raiser under the
direction o f Dorl
Herbert. Tickets ($20
and $25 each) may be Robert Merrill
arranged by calling 646-9456.
Salon celebration
Members of the social set of the desert and
Newport Beach were part~g in Palm Oesert
recently at T•I Arml1tead 1 100n-to-open Salon
d'Antoinette on El Paseo (often referred to as the
Rodeo Drive of the desert).
More than 400 were treated to a sumptuous
feast•and veiwed the "living window" vignettes
spotUghted on two stages with models emulating
mannequins pre9ent.ing high fashion from Rodeo
Drive during a Holly Mitchell Production.
Arrtvi.ng guests alighted on a white carpet
runner Clanked by ttandards of emerald green,
white and peaich nbbon and were praented with a
Sonia roee and a gift ln a green utln pouch. Amoni the guesta were Pilar Wayae with
"81 ~1, PHI Barke and hla wife Lyu,
VqtaJa Fleld1 and h~ WUlard Parlier,
Mary Md Cffot'ge Heltlelll, ftll and MarU11
A.at~ony and Or. and Mn. frH T9nlteU.
A.her Tonl (a NB retict.nt) bu the detK'tt
salon ope-atinf i.n January. w wUl •W'l foc.'Ulirll
Night of Lights benefit
What better way to celebrate the true spirit of
the holiday seuon than with a special Holiday
Night of Li~ts benefit for the advancement of
pediatric research.
Beverly Morgu, M.D.. chairman of the
Department of Pediatrics at the California College
of Medicine, UC Irvine, is hosting this festive
event. highlighting the Newport Harbor Festival
of Lights Parade.
While sipping on holiday spirits and snacking
from a sumptuous buffet, guests will be treated to
an incomparable view of the boat parade from Dr.
Morgan's elegant home on Lido Isle.
All proceed8 from the benefit will go towards
pediatric research at UCl's College of Medicine.
For further information. pleaae call (714)
634-6483.
Birthday bash
Known for her fabulous birthday parties at
Tiffany's a few years back, CC Wllttaey •lhered
together a few frienda from the old day. for her
first birthday bash in.five years. (You'll ~ber
her and partner Pam Ayers from their buainest1
"By Invitation Only.")
In apite of the rain (an uninvited v/Mtor),
1t1ests were treated to a 8Cenic view of the a.ck
Bay from the Whitney home while sipping on
champape and snack.inc on hors d'oeuvres and
deaerta, all prepared by CC, of coune.
Among the l~ friends Jotnin2 CC'• blr\hday
celebration wtth hUlband ·a.llft <• N•wpot'f
Be.ch lawyer Md member of rbe board of
~,., ot the Newport H.rbor Actotw ThH~r)
were NucJ Ebtem, s.M_y and Parke ::t~ Boote Tallmu, IU .. and R...a SprtUel.
Emott, MartM and t'nall PIM, Alb Mardak,
Or. Mlellael and Snu Mote1, Ma" llplr and
Terrr lfr111, Dr .... llFM CulNy and J•
ClASSIFllD
Security guards are kept busy controlling 'hangout' traffic.
·shoplifting .
Economic recovery
may rower stealing
By LOUISE COOK .,,,,,, .... ,,....,...
'Tis the season of increased retail theft by
shoplifters and sticky-fingered employees, but the
economic recovery may mean I~ stealing this
year.
"As retailers begin a new holiday shopping
season. they must contend with a problem that
drives up costs and ultimately affects the prices
will all pay," said Errol M. Cook , head of the
national retail group of the accounting and
consulting firm of Arthur Young.
A survey by Young of 180 retail organizations
with 36,000 outlets and sales of nearly $100 billion.
shows pilferage and other shrinkage last year
represented 2.2 percent of sales, up slightly from
1981. That means that $2.20 of every $100 you
spend at a di9COunt, department or specialty store
disappears to theft, loss, etc. (Some 1arvey1 sbow
1011es raaglag up to 7 percent, but Ibey show a
broader raage of outlets, lncladiDg tllillg• like
sapermarkets.)
Stephanie Shem . retail industries director of
acco .Ulfg-llRlil'mltttn.'g for AnhurYt>ong;-satct----
there are several reasons for the increase \n theft at
Christmas time. "Between now and right after the ~
holidays, thei,-e are more customers in the store,"
she said. And more customers make it harder to
watch shoppers. Mrs. Shem said the last quarter of
the year may account for up to 75 percent of sales
and 50 percent of profits for a successful retailer.
Contrary to common belief. the Young survey
said, most shoplifters are not unemployed; 62
percent ot the men and 51 percent of the women
apprehended by retailers reporting to Young had
jobs.
But the recession has had an impact,
nonetheless. "People in 1982 were hurt by the
recession," Shem said. "People were trying to
maintain their economic status. To keep up with
what they'd had, they had to go out and steal
something,"
Richard Hersh, president of the National
Maas Retailing Institute, which commissioned the ,_...-~~t.JJd,Y,,._is ho ul "Thia ear' · n:.!::o~·~c __ _.
upturn could have a positive effect in 90mewhat
lowering the pilferage rate," he said.
Hostess Toni Armistead with salon
party guest Pilar Wayne
Baller and Manlya Pea (parry decoracors who
brought the bouquets of colorful balloom.)
Annlver1ary marked
To ce)fbrate their finrt orpnbadonal an-
niversary, the Wuhinp>n Group met for dinner
at the LA! Premier restaurant. Afterwards, they
liltened u Maveea Reapa, aped.al c:orwult.ant 1o
the Republican National Committee Chairman,
dilculled her role u liUlon between the oommit·
tee and women's cunp&i&n orpnlraUOl\I aero.
the United Statea.
The Wuhlnp>n Group lt comsx-cf of
women active ln the RepubUcan Pariy. Arnone the
area notablee on hand for thJe quarterly diDner
rneetma were A.emblywoman Marta a..., ... ,
AhmUies .. ...,, Jackie 11eat1m,J ... ~.
City Councilwoman R•IMIYI Pl9m .. r, larMra s .... ,,,,.,..,., ol the f!OUp). ~County
Plannlnt ~ Claarlette M .... 1. Lyu
Taner, •nrtJ NHIUMle and Eleuor Faber.
Papanal It f!dlkKI by DeJ.Jt::'r Style &liror
Vlda 0Mn wlch aMUrlbuUOnl GlotU ~.
..
When Hersh talks about pilferage. he doetn't
mean only shoplifters. The problem of employee
theftisevenmoreserious. An estimated 50 percent
of total "shrinkage" or losses is due to employee
stealing. Thirty percent is due to shoplifting, and
the rest is blamed on poor paperwork control.
• Stealing -from Inside or out-not only adds
to shoppers' bills indirectly, it al9o boosts costs by·
requiring stores to spend extra money on security.
Retailers told Young they SRent an amount
~ual to half a percentohalesonaecurity last year,
up 8 percent from 1981. The money may not
always be well-spent, however. According to
You"i, traditionally popular methods of prevent-
ing theft-mirrors and television monitors-"are
amo"i the leut effective means of control."
. ~k said better uae of t!xiating technol<>IY
may be part of the answer. "Both two-'f&Y mirron
and video moniton require follow-up activities,
including continual or random obeervation. which
are not always feuible," he said. Cook said
electronic tap to prevent the removal of an item
Crom the •tore without an alarm, and the Ule of
aecwity guards work better than meet other
approach.es.
There a.re.atcna. me.anwhile,Jhat the reJaUer
may not even ~the typlca1 ahoplllter.
Shem aa.id most retailen expect shoplllt.en to
be female, unemployed and between 20 and 40. In
fact, lbe Mia, when ltore ownera look at the peos>le
they catch, they find the •plit between men and women ii about equal and memben of both leW
are workinc· They find ~ WW-number of
lhopliftera-about~ percent-are ln the YoUnl
adult pwp, 18 to 36; the -..ond-larpet 8l'OUP"
under 18. ~
What.ever the profile, industry la cnddna
down. The retallen' aurvey showed &23,000
apprehenlklrw ln f 982, up 23 peraerlt from tho
~ ,.ar. Sixty-one pel'Clftt of thoet •P-
prehended wen proeecuted, up from 41 '*"*'' tM prevtoul ,..,., and 84 pol'Olnl ol ta..
~wwe~.eom,_... to '1'1 p.rw11 In 1981.
·-
CS Orange Coaat OAIL V PILOT /Monday, December 5, 1M3
Weddings&
__ -.k-.·_E_ng,2gements
The Daily Pilot wants your wedding and
engagement news.
To help you submit the required infor-
maCion, fonns are available at the Dally Pilot
office, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa.
For weddings, only a black and white
photo of the bride is acceptable. Snaps.hots,
Polaroid and color photos can't be used.
The photo must be submitted no later
than three weeks after the wedding, other-
wise it will not be published.
Engagement infonnation is to be sub-
mitted at least seven weeks before the
wedding.
Fonns and photos can be dropped off at
the office or mailed to the Wedding Depart-
ment, Daily Pilot, P . 0. Box 1560, Costa Mesa,
Calif. 92626.
Engagements
Miller-Venturelli
The engagement of Robin Lee Miller of
Laguna Beach to Scott Leonard Venturelli of
Newport Beach has been announced by her
parents, Dr. and Mrs. Barry Todd Miller of Laguna
Beach.
The bride-to-be is a graduate of Corona del
Mar High School and did undergraduate work at
UCLA where she was affiliated with Delta
Gamma sorority, and recieved her master's degree
in pyschology at Pepperdine. She was Student
Teacher of the Year for 1982 in Orange County.
The future bridegroom is the son of Leonard
--and RuttrVenturelltotSttverSpring;"Md. Helsa
graduate of Pa.int Branch High School and the
University of Maryland, where he was a member
of Delta Tau Delta fraternity.
An April 28 wedding is planned at the
Southridge home of her ~ntS fn Palm Springs.
Newland-Robertson
Plans for an August wedding have been
announced by Patricia Lora Newland and Kevin
George Robertson of Newport Beach.
The bride-elect is the daughter of Mrs.
William A. Gothard of Newport Beach and
Edward H. Newland of Costa Mesa. She is a
graduate of Newport Harbor High School and is
currently a student at Fresno State.
The future bridegroom is the son of Mr. and
tyirs. Keith E. Robertson of Newport Beach. He is a
graduate of Newport Harbor High School and UC
Berkeley. He was a member of the 1980 Olympic
Waterpolo Team and is on the 1984 team also.
The wedding will take place in the Newport
Harbor I...uthera.J'l Church.
' ....
•
... .._ ...
.Poe• popular ••• And many identified as the author.
DEAR READERS: Remember thJa ~?It
appeered in my column a few weeka .,o. l'll prin\
just the openJ.na u.ne. to rem.h your memory.
THE MAN IN THE OLASS
When you get what you want ln your •tl'UQle
for eelf.
And the world makes you kina for a day.
Just go to a mirror and look at younelf,
And tee what that man haa to aay.
For it isn't your father or mother or wife,
Whoee judiment upon you must pall,
The fellow whoee verdict counta moet in your
life
Is the one 1taring back in the glue.
The woman who eent the poem uid it wu
written by her brother who died in 1982 --that he
waa 24, had been on hard drugs since h~waa 17 and
finally 1traightened out his life. But lt waa too late.
His body had been ravaged by years of chemical
abuae, alcohol and neglect. She aaked me not to
print his name.
And now, will the real author pleueatand up?
Mrs. A.G B . .of Lafayette, lad., uy1, .. M)'
fatller wrote au& poem lD 1143, wllea I wa1 la llltla
1cllool. I recited It lD a 1tate declamatory
~mpetltloa ud woa fin& place."
D.P . of Dayton, Ohio, wrote: "The woman
who claima her brother wrote 'The Man in the
Glaas' put one over on you. My aunt wrote it when
she taught school in Alexandria, La. She used to
g._ wwa
recite it a_t women'• club meetinp."
Mr. K.L. of WeW..1oa, Ku., writes, "How
dare aomeoee take cre41& for my poem, 'Tiie Mu
la &Ile Gla11'? I wrote It when I wa1 a julor a&
Kaaua Ualvenl&y."
Ma. F.G. from New Yorkaald, "The poem you
ran in your column on Oct.. 5 wu probably
compoeed by someone in the public ·reTitiona
department of Avon Products. I recelved a copy
with a doll I had pure hued."
I Ilea rd from &he director of an alcoholic
treatmea& cea&er la Ma1uch11eu1. Be uld (la a
laJtlll state of dad1eoa), "Wlla& blataa& pla&larl1m!
•ne Man la tlle GJ-11' wa1 wrl&&ea by a patleat
lllere la 1H7. We llave 11e4 I& la oar trailllag
program ever 1lace."
J.P. from Honolulu wrote: "The poem, 'The
Man in the Glass' was written by me in 1970 when
I was recovering from alcoholism. I should have
had it copyrighted. People have been ~tealing it
left and right."
Mlcllael C. Rau from Clllca•o wrote: "I have
Md a framed ctfJ of 'Tlte Mu la dte G1a11' .. my
elflce wall for &ell yean. ne aadlor la Dale
Wlurew."
A Sun-TI.mee reader in ArlJ.naton Helghta, m .. laid, ""The Man ln the Glue' WU part of the
Alc:ohoUct Anonymous orientation procram when
I joined 20 years qo. 1ile author wu a member of
A.A. who came from Pueblo, Colo."
1'1ll1 from New York: "No U·year-old boy .
wrote &Uc poem, Au. It wa1 traa1la&ed from ·
ltallaa aad 61 well kDowa la Cata1ollc clrele1 as ·
'Tiie Prayer of Serealty."'
From Detroit: "Somebody la being fooled.
'The Man in the Glue' wu a song recorded in the
'60a by The Underdoga, written by Buzz Van
Houten. The ntp side was 'Friday at the Hideout,'
which was about a hot spot in the Detroit area."
So, dear readers, you now have an intimate
glimpse into the life of an advice columnist. If I
ever find out who wrote that poem, I'll let you
know. • • •
Don't flunk your chemistry test. Love is more
than one set of glmds calling to another. If you
have trouble making a distinction you need Ann's
booJclet, "Love or Sex and How to Tell the
Difference." Send a Jong, &elf-addressed, stamped
envelope with your request and 50 cents to Ann
Landers. P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, m. 60611.
Cancer fear... Husband is afraid of catching it from wife . l
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: la cancer catch-
ing? I'll come right out with it. Fear of catching my
wife's cancer has interfered with our normal
sexual relationship. My wife ia in her 40s and I'm
52.
Until last year, we had a fine marraige. After
her operation for cancer of the uterus, we have had
intercourse only rarely. I've never confesad to her
that I'm afraid of getting cancer. In fact she thinks
I'm running around with other women -which ·
I'm noLlLyou could convince me thaubere'slittl
danger, I'll try very hard to restore our previous
sexual compatibility. But . I know it will be
difficult.
I admit that there's now a psychological
element that must be overcome. I love my wife,
and for her sa.ke and mine, I hope we can
overcome. Her doctor says she is entirely cured and
there's no danger to me. I wish I could believe him.
Mr.T.
T JOUI HIAlTH
OR. PETER J . STEINCROHN
DEAR MR. T.: If you can't believe him, how
can I help? I can only reiterate that t4ere's no
danger to-y-OU. I knew of no ecientUi<: proof that
cancer can be transmitted aexually. The eooner
you believe this, the more likely your psychologi-
cal "hang-up" will disappear.
Where aexual organs are involved, the mind
and the emotionl often interfere with normal
perfonnance. For example, 10me women become
"disintel'J!Sted" in aex when their husband has
prostate trouble. This may also happen when
women have lost their uterus to fibriods .
. (non-cancerous). Whe~her the underlying fear is
cancer or not, trouble in the uterus, breasts or male
organs may upset the finely tuned balance 9f
sexual activity. • • •
FOR MRS. C.: Be thankful that at last you
realize your husband's alcoholism is a disease that
requires treatment-and not just a bad habit that
requires condemnation. Now that he has agreed to
get help from Alcoholics Anonymous and the .
tam:rry-aoetOr, he-tncreues his clianeei for
recovery and enhances the family's chances for
stability. • • •
Dr. Sceincrohn welcomes qtl8tion8 from
readers. Hec.annot answer all individually but will
include th06e of general interest in his column.
Send your questions to him, In care of the Daily
Pilot. P. 0 . Box 1560, Cosu Mesa, CA 92626.
Free shotguns trigger sewing machine sales RUFFELL'S
U'HOLSTllY, INC. ................... r.£~
LAWI'ON, Okla. (AP) -When sewing
machine sales start to fall off, Bill Brickwedde fires
up businea by sweetening the deal with a free
acce910ry -a shotgun.
The shoot-and-sew biz is booming. Brickwed-
de says. A dozen people took him up on the offer
last month.
"Say for two years now, a woman's ~n
bugging her husband to buy her a sewing machine.
And then, this is the clincher."
The clincher is a choice of a .410, 20 or
12-gauge shotgun that customers can pick up at a
local gun store. 1922 HARBOR Bl VD
COSTA MESA -548.1156
Local, county , state, nationql and international
events come to your doorstep I ·1 p·1at
in the bright, light and lively II J I
ehristO)&S
'i .~~
HdtiDAYt-•
SIMI pleying aueeeino gamee
abOul 'fOJt tnek.-up. '1 Alc:natd
s1_,t 1!!11!1 eta• ma11.-w
technique le aaey 10 laarnl Ifs Jull
~I hal -lhOwed youl So . up Iha ptlOna and cal So.
tom1a·11op makeup anllt,
RICHARD STEVENS
3519 E. Coast Hwy, CdM •
At Andrea's 675-1334
e
~~~~--.&-111--~··
'
,----·t-ti-------. .......
-'
,.... .. -
PRIZE
~ s2500 I
C :ertif icate
• from a neighborhood toy store
· RULES & REGULATIONS
1. Send entrtes to Christmas Tree
Coloring Contett
P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626
2. Entry dea~llne December 16, 1983
...
~---------------------· . I
1. ENTRY Bl»fl< I-~
•• PRIZE: $25.00 Gift Certificate I trom • netghbothc>od toy atore I
II Neme I
I Addr... I
I TelepMM ·~~
I Age Group a 3-8 a M a a-11 1
I . "I I . ----------------------~
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Monday. December 5. 1983 a
MOTICI"' ,,.,.,. ... tALa MOTM:I"' tALa O'TICZ OF Dl:ATH or OTICE OP DEATH OP ......... IN""
Lw-.zo ·-ltll'llOUIA fl'NlllClllM......, AWft,NCE Hl&MAN NA •• DAVU AND or ~~:r'o:-.r..= '~Jil'.,• . '':. TJ:r· BINION AND OP Pm· ETITION TO 4DtPNll-i~ena ucoHouc
.55 jail visitors jailed NllC NOTICE
Deputies seize heroi11, cocaine and weapons -:,.==r-~"f.:r.:': '.=..--:: ~~ Wo~~~':.1'£" a. T~ :'~ ~= :== uJ:.•=~ '::::t
CAST AlC (AP)-S h er iU's d e pu tics
have arrested 5~ people and seiU'd
heroin a nd cocaine. a stolen car and
uaorted w eapons in searching vis1torS
to a Loe Angeles County jail c-amp.
The surpr~ setln:h oC visitors Sun-
day to the the Pe ter J Pitchess H onor
Ranch resulted in the> booking of 23
women. 31 men and a J•1ve111le, depu-
ties said.
"We h ope ac-tions like this point o ut
that visitors are taking a severe risk " by
smuggling drugs or weapons. said
sh eriff's spokesman Mark Thompson.
Lt. Frank Bridges said the search es
of visitors and their cars were con -
ducted to stem the flow of drugs into
the compound, w hich holds 2.700
, ,,,,
inmates.
A bout 40 dt•putit'S sea~hed one out
ot 10 o( the estimated 2.000 \tiaiton,
oHtcials sajd,
Deputy Stephen Lee said the search -
es turned up "quantities of h eroin .
cocaine. PCP, LSD, marijuana.
amphetamin es. four pistols, one shot-
gun, on e r ifle and one s tolen car."
Deputies found hypodermic klta
hidden on o ne couple .
The unusUBI crackdown on visitors
to the facility in the San Gabriel
M ountain s, 40 miles n orth of down-
town Los Ange les. was lega l under a
section of the penal '-ode that allows
su ch examjnations with out a warrant,
officials said.
=nci~"= ~.: :.,,1n aio!':. "~:'r*'....::: To all Min. benetkW'lel. er~lton and conuncent ea:J.~ 11 er; lhtt a tiutk w1u. 811.1. AT "-'IUC AUCTK* !MN, CA. t2T14 ..... M,DUDk red1torw and conUn&*nt eredlton of HANNA 'J'. .,..., Of property and• ro THE HfGHQT 91DOlll flOfll IUC110n .. ~ McltlOn ~7·~ ton of LA WR ENCE DA VlS aka HANNA DA VlS ....... Of .__,, ,, •l>Oul
CASH ANQ/Ofll THE CASHllM Ofll Newport II., 00.la ...... al 7:30 KUMAN ROBINSON and d ' ho be lo be m.-CERTIFIEO CHECKS SPf!CIFllO IH o'ctoQt P.M. on tM 11111 day of 0.. an pel'ION w may Tiie namt(•). 8ocltl S.Cwtty (Of) CIVIL COO£ SECTION 292411 !PaY· ~tw 11111 .eie 1o11ow1no d .. penon1 who may be other· otherwlae Interested in the Flfftll Tu Numti.. ll!d mllllno
et>tt tt tlla time ol Nie 111 ltwflll ter1'*1 l*ton•I pniperty °' to wlae Interested ln the wUl will and/or NtaC.~ addf .... 11'4 ZIP Codt """"'*· ol
Ol \tit U.nlltd a 1 .... 1..u right, trlllOfl ,._., ., Mey M -V nd/or Mia · A peJ.IUoo bu been filed the trtn•=~) 1re: HOUSE OF
title and inter .. • conveyed to _, lo Mll•IV •lien dlle Illa under19*1 A pell lion haa been tu~ by MARY -CARANO In the COAHIO IHC., •Call!. ~ ~t~ht,,:~ri:.~c: ::.r~~=-==•:d~~~:! by HOPE BOSALlE ROS, Superior Court of Orange ~.,8~:.V~.1.sa::,~=a.:...,
tc:rt* 'oOt''* wttll coate Of ~ lNSON In the Superior Court County reque1t1ng that CA. 9212t. \.Ollipttt 11 a.nlctucitcy Ml=~:u>Jt.~~OAOE A. MOllNA. Ind~= Of Mia. f Oranp County requestlJ\I M~RY CARANO be •P-c~·=:= S«uf1ty lO<I
BENEACIAAY: ANAHEIM SAV· Trlln•I lhat HOPE ROSALIE ROS.. poin~ U pel"llOruil repreeen· Ftdetll Tax Niimi>«. and mtlllnQ
INGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION HOU..nold oo<>d• and bOk.. CNSON be appointed u per-tatiwtoadminilteMheestate addl .... and ZIP Codt Nllmbet, Of
RECORDED .11111' 21. 1H2 .. Houlthold oo<>d• Wld box.. 90l\&l repraent.atlve to ad· Of liANNA F. DA VlS (under the t1tlltftrM(t) lte: OAAAMA,
lnatr. No 82·222170 ot Otftclll '*-Owner min.liter the estate of LAW· •h Independent Admln l.a-INC., 1 Ctllf. eotp .. 23111 Hatlltwer. Cotd• In the omc. ol Ille AeeOldar OI WIMlam WOii • e ' . Stnt• An•, CA •
OrlllO' County: 10801 AIOndra Blvd. RENCE HERMAN ROB-trat1on of Eat.ates Act). The Tllat tlle l*IOntl property to 1>a
Mid deed 01 truat dtacitt>ee the C.11toe, CA. lNSON (under the lndepen· petition ii tel for heanna in 1rant1 .. 1ao ts deacrl* 1n ~.,
IOllowlng PfOC>trtv e.ny Witt• dent Adrniniltratlon of r..-Dept No 3 at 700 Civic •• matttlalt. euppllet, merCMndlM. PARCEL A An undivided 50% 4000 Patk ~ '102 . Th ti 1_ ' • tqulpmenl. Ce>t) trad«\ame, !MM. 111t•tettln Patee! 1, 1n 111e City ot NewpOf1 BMctt. CA. tat.es Act). e pe lion 11 tel Center Dr .. West. Sant.a Ana. ltuaMkl lmprovernen1t. 11oc11 1n
Newpor1 8eacll. County of Orange. Mr. Jty Butler for hearing In ~pl. No. 3 at CA 92701 on December 28, 11aci. tl\d coYenant not to~·
Sttt• ot CallfOlnle. eccordlng to 'fo ~ B1t1at 700 Civic C.enter Dr. We9t 1983 at 9·30 A M of • butlMta ouffent~ known u ~~~:.~~~i ~11;:c~ :!:.".'1~ ~:OAn~CA Santa Ana, CA 92701 'on De: fF YOU OBJEC! to the ~~~T~d ~~1~,.;~~ 3~~~!,0:.
offkle of the count~ recorder 01 Mid Amount Due cember 28, 1983 at 9:30 A .M. granting of the peuuon, you Sulla 101. Catt• M .... CA. 112826
county. 5200. 13 lF YOU OBJECT to the •hould either appear at the loOftlle< with the totlowlng IM·
EXCEPT un1111 t 1nd 2 at enown 5478.78 granting of the peiitlon you hearing and state you objec-sertb•d a1co1101tc Davar•Q• and defined In Ille Condominium 11,899 25 d . h ' h . ll~nff(t)· ON SALE BEEA & WINE Plin rec01ded April 21. 11112. u tn·, Oatac:t .,..,, llllh dly ot OeGemti.r. shoul eat er appear at l e lions oMile written objec-LICENSE NO •1•59002 now INUed
1tr11ment No 82·1•290 , Ottlclal Re-1983 hearlng and state you objec-lions with the t'OUrt before '°' .. Id l)femlses. for pteml••
cord•. 1n the ottlc• ot tne COunty Mut .. AllC1ion, V1 Konlou•n lions or file written objec-the heanng. Your appear-10Ca1ac:1 at Cnme ad<lteMI IOf) 3333
Aeeofd« of Mid 1:ounty Secrtltty li ·th the co rt ...._fo be b 8rlllOI. S1111t 101. Cost• M .... CA PARCEL B· Unit t as lhOwn ano Publ•Sheel Orange Coast Dally Ptlot · ons wi · u .,,.. re ance may in person or Y Thi! 111e total cons1~111on IOI
detioe<I on tile Condominium Ptanl Dec 5. t983 the hearing. Your appear-your attorney. Iha tran11 .. of aald bulineu and ol
1acorded Ap<U 27. 1912 ... lnttru· 1375-13 ance may be in person or by IF YOU ARE A CREDI· setd llaenff(•I 11 tlle aum ol
ment No 12· 142~7. Olftc:l•I Re-your attorney. TOR or a conungent credit.or I 180,000 00 tnc;l11d1ng lnven1ory ff· COid•. In tha otflee of the ~ly f'tlll.IC NOTICE lF YOU ARE A C REDI ltmatac:t 81 S 10,000 00. Wflleti con· recorder ~county • of the deceased. you must file sl•t• of the 1ot1owlng· YOU AR OEFAUL T UNDER A flCITTIOUI •u ... H TOR or a contingent credit.or your claim with the court or OHcrlptlon
DEED OF TR T DATED June t7, MAMI tTATllllNf of the deceased, you must file present it to the personal rep-Amount 1982 The following l*'tona '" doing your claim with the court or resenuiuve appointed by the Cuti Pttaontl Check UNLESS VO TAKE ACTIOtof TO butln .. s 11 1500 00 PAOTECT YOUR PROPEA~. IT T A & T sonWARE. 111112 present it to the personal rep-court Wllhln four months Check Demand nota to De rtc>lac:ed
MAY BE SOLO AT A PVBUC SALE. Anaheim Ave . CO.ta M.... CA resent.alive appointed by the from the date of first issuance Miii CUil through MCIOW
ll'YOU NEEOANEXPLAHATIONOF 92827 court within four months of letters., provided in Sec-1211.500.00 ~~ :~.~~~ ~bu~~~~~~OEj~ An= e::,w_d ~~"=: 1~1 from the date of !Int iauance tion 700 of the Probate Code ~~ not" In fivor ot Mlltt
CONTACT A LAWYER 92827 of letters as provided in Sec-of California. The time for $130,000.00
122 43rd St .. Hewpof1 Beech, CA. Kennetn M. Ael\men, 270 v1rg1n1t Lion 700 of the Probate Code filing claims will not expfre Tangtl>ltllnt•nglt>te propeny 92ee3 Pl-. Cotl• ....... CA. 92e27 f California The time for ri ta f ths f th ll30,000.00 .. (11 • atraet ac:tdt ... °' common Htrotd Cltnton T>NttdO'#lkl, 1138 ° . · P or our mon rom. e That It h•• ~ agreed ~
dMlgn•tton OI p1openy 11 enown GalllM, Azu ... CA. 91702 fil~ng claims will not expire date of the hearing noticed Mid trtn•fttee(a) and Mid tran•·
at>c>Ye. no warranty" gtYen M to 111 Tiils bullnesa 11 c.onducted Dy· 1 pnor to four mont hs from the above, lerort•I lh•t contlderttlon tor tti.
complet-°' correctneet)." Tiie ~II ptttnerthlP date of the hearing noticed YOU MA y EXAMINE the iransfer ot "'d bu"'-and ot Mid beneflclaty under Mid Dead of Gettld E TwerdOWlkl bo . 1.ieenM(1I 11 10 1>a paid only an ... Trutt. t>y rMtOn Of• t>rMCh Of de-This 1111emen1 wH llleo Wllh the a ve. hie kept by the court. If you 11an11 ... hu ~ epprowcl Dy 0.-
181111 In tl\e OOl!glitlon1 aecured County Cieri! of Orange County on YOU MAY EXAMINE the are Interested in the estate, plftment of AICOhollc ee-age
. Mretofor'e" ...cvtect trod Nov re; 1983"" ----me kept 6y file oourt. Tr you you may serve uponllleeX· rot, PIJMlll•nt-to..S.C. 24073 et
dellwrac:t to the utlCMrllgnac:t •;wit· fl:IOIU I •-..... th •Rte dm' · MCI· tan Oec:lat111on of Default and 0.-Publltlled Orange Coast Dell)' are n"""rest.CU 10 e es-• ecutor or a llUSlratar, or Tllat '"' heteln deec:flt>ed tran ...
mtnd for Sele. and Mitten notice ot Piiot Nov 2 t, 211. Dec. !I, 12. 111&3. you may serve upon the ex-upon the attorney for the ex-,., .. ,. ,0 be C001U111mtlac:t, aubject
t>rMCh and of etecuon to cauae Iha 61•9-13 ecutor or administrator, or ecutar or administrator. and 10 the above ptovltlon•. at SERVICE
• underllgned to Mii Mid property to upon the attorney fof the ex-file with the court with proof ESCAOW COMPANY. 14282 a.acn
Mlltfy Mid obtlgttlont, and "*• --II' 1111\'N'C dml . tr ·~ and f rvl . BMI .• w .. miin.t .... CA.1126&3 on Ot '"" tlle undetliOned c.uaec1 Mid ,..~ "'"~ ecut.or or a rus a..,r, o se ceo. a written request •lttt ()eQemt>er 21 11113.
nottoe OI t>rMdl and of elec1lor1 to me with the court with proof 9tating that you desire special All otller bu.in.'.~ and eel·
recorded May 111. 11183 u In.tr. '~~:A~• f service. a written request notice of th e filing of an In -df'MMt uled ~ Ille traneNrort .113--2110100IOfllcltlRecofdtln ,,_ .... d · .......tat nd · f #ltllinlhrM~IMtpaet.toft!U office OI the Aeeoro.t of Ottnga The following pereons .,. doing ita .... ,g uwt Y~ ~ •...--. ventory a apprauiement ~ nown 10 11anstarM(1I. tre: SOUTH
nty; bu~ u : lice of the filing of an In-estate assets or of the peu-COAST AESTAURANT & DELI·
Seid sa1aw111 bemllde. butwltllOut EAAL S LANDING. 280J w. Pa-entary and appraiaement of lions or accounts mentioned CATESSAN. INC.
tntorwantnty,expr-orlm-~lc~Htghwiy.~8eadl. tate assets or of the pell-in Section 1200 and 1200.5 of Name and ad<lr-01 eac:tow . regarding title polMMlon, or ~ ned l!Old«; SEAVICE ESCROW COM· encumDrances. topeytlle~nlng Jamee A. Certtt. 121 Royll Otk t1ons or accounts menUo the California Probate Code. PANY. t4282 Beach Bl., w .. 1•
lncipal aum of tti. note(•I MCUted Rol<I. Anaheim. CA. 92807 n Section 1200 and 1200.5 of THOMAS E. ANDREWS mintier, CA. 92683
Dr. Steven Kanor watches Ruthie Carroll play
specialized toy he designed (or handicafped kids
Mid deed of Truat wttn lntereet Gordon Barlenrock, 3000 w. e California Probate Code 1!5$0 Broo~•nl S&reel Oiied' September t• 1913
In 1111<1 not• provkMd, actv,,_., 11 = Fron•. Newport Beacll. CA COLLINS & CROTEAU . Gardea Grove CA HMO Hous·E Of CORNED .BEEF. INC ny, und« tlle twma of Mid Deed OI • • 1 Call!. OOfP ruat,f-.c:tlargea.andeAPeflMlol This bu-I• condue1ad by:• RANK L. CROTEAU (714) •H·58tl BY· Judith Hupe. v Prff
lie Trustee tlld of the truet1 CifMtad tol~t Yent~•car, tt51 Brookll•nl, S•lte l Published Orange Coast TrtneltwOft•I s':t: =~'~:!c, . Monel T:::111~~wu toled wllh tlle lllllba&'OD Bqc~, CA. tHU Daily Pilot Dec. 5, 6, l2, 1983. ~;~Ae_'~j.;! ~!. i;orp
He turns on
gifts for kids
1-----------l~L. ti.f 111. 11113. It c:'oo p.m ·:i ounty Cltlfll ot 0••"9' County on (714) ·~S-tHS 6329-83 Tran•ltwee(•I • DllTH NOTICE ha Cllapman AYenUe arl'tranoe to ov t6, t913 Published Orange Coast HllVICIE HCllOW COWAMV ii ha -Civic: Centtw Bultdtng. 300 Eut P bit-"-" 0 ,... C ',nol700 tty Daily Pilot Dec. 5, 6, 12, 1983. "'-IC W\flC( 14* hec:ll 9cMlle¥enl · ht1>1T11n Ave .. Oren~. CA. 11 ..,..., ran.¥ on • 6330 83 nllK. nu W"lmlMlef, CA. tm3 I•----------At the time ot the lnltltl put>11· llot Nov 21. 211. Dec 5, l2, t983 -Publlllle<I 0 ••"9' Coast Dally Piiot STANTON -I ' 6151-83 IEICfOW No. m7 u. ~ 5 1983 . ·" on 0 11111 notlee. Iha 10111 NOTICE TO ClllEOIT°"I Of 9ULI( ....... • CLIFFORD J E. STANTON ount of Ille unpaid btlanc.a ol Ille ·-ic 1111\TIC[ rmuc NOTICE fRANSflEll ANO Of INTINTK>M
71 d r Em ald bllg1tl0n secure<! t>y the 1bove de-~-. nu ---..;..;-.-.-... ............. ..._ ___ , . a r('SI enl o er . lbed deed 01 trusi and .. omatad MO~M ADCWT10M ro TllAMlflEll ALCOHOLIC
Bay. Laguna Beach Slnct: IS expenses and aovencee ,, .. THIE IUPE'"°" MIOlUTION M HVIEMOE LICIENH(•> (lee•. DolD.l IC Ml\rtre
IY59 MrrM N m 153.'185 9• . COUllT Of THI 11'An TO LEAK 1101 .. 107 u.c.c .. •t\d/Of 24073 ___ ... _-.. __ ""-'-~---
633•·83
..... 297983"' ~way ~ve • The lotll inOeblac:I'*• l>alng an °' CAUfOlllNIA * IUM'lUI IMITlltCT NP) HASTINGS -O N-H U DSON, N.Y. (AP) -....,r • · e serv as a llm1teonwt11Ch ll\eopenong Did Is AMC,,°" THI COUNTY MAL '910NtlTY Nolle. 1s ti.1eby given that• bulk ::e~~ «E>°h~_....__ II h d I d . ed { ( d ·ng Navy Intelligence Lieute n-ompute<I may l>e obtalnac:t by c.i1. Of °"A*-NOTICE IS HEAEBY GIVEN THAT lranster ot petSontl property and ' 700 Ctwlc: Ceftler °'· W"t """""Pfl3 n «: ~ ro a near y es pair 0 in 1 enl Commander and was ng (7 t41 937-0968 the day Delore In the Matter ol IM &late 01 FRANK THE FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL transte< 01 liquor ll<:enM(a) 15 •bout tanl• Ana. CA.12701
toys f her handicapped 3·year-old dau gh ter -Assistant Port Dirt'<'tor of lie .... -WILLIA~~N~~N1::.uec1. DISTRICT,,.. dedtfac:I Illa! the IOI· 10 ~em:.~.). Soc:aat Security (Of) Pet111one1 JIMMV CATON
even the s implest Jack-in-the-box was beyond tbe the Port of Pusan Korea. At Dttac:t Novembef 21. 1983 NOTICE Of IALI ~ •owtng ,.,., prope<ty wltt not 1>a Federal Tl• Number •net malling Rupondent: _LAURA DALE
hild• ' ERV ICE DIMENSIONS IN· ~ lor claSMoom purP<>tM· ' CATON C S scope. lhl' end of the war he was ORPORATEO lllAl PllONll'TY AT Ona Clauroom tnd .lhe addreu. tnd ZIP Code Number. ol CtM No o.218918 But lh""n she d'"""Vered Dr. S teven Kan or •• the I • c 1 . __ ,,. T 1 l'NVAn IAL.IE 111e Tran11«ort11 •re: BREA RES· '<" ""-V n surnnce omm ss1oner • __, "'' .. c Notlee hereby Ivan th I Ille Multl-purpoae Room In Bullcllng c of TAURANT & DELI INC I Caltl IUMMDHI (fA ... Y LAW) special Santa who makes s pecial kids' Chr istmas and organized the Korean y T 0 SERVI E COMPANY. agent una...11g,,::C,, .. AOn!...re1or'ot the Ille Arthlll 0 Nlet>taa School. 11300 c;otp., 3303 Hatl>O< .Blvd .. Sutt• F-6. MOTICIEI You ""' ~ .... .
dreams come true . Insurance Comparues for y Missy Mallone)', Aaaletant Sec:-E.aat• of FRANK WILLIAM SON-!J'denll A--. Fountain V""1f, Coat• ...... CA 112826 ,... -' ...., ltK* ....... ,_
tlary OE Iv tllfomla The ~ I S II Security ( I •Mltoul ,_ ....... ..._., ..-. In his basement workshop crammed with toys, the U.S . Dept Of St.ate. He City Blvd. w .. 1. Or11119'. CA EN. <leoMMcl, Wiit,...., pr •ta The Board ot Tru•t-of 111e . n-• ..,• · oc• °' rou rMPllM wltMft •.,. lleed then ,,. ined the S tarr In-2IMlll sale to tllt lllgNlt and l>eet bklder, ounlaln y--.. Scllool Ol9t1lc:I ,._ Faderll Tax Number. and malllng Ille lftfonMtton beW#. • wires, batteries and switches, Kanor devises m eans 7141135-82811 undarthetwmaandcondltlonthar• 10 .; Ille facllitlee ao In-acldreaa, and ZIP Code Number, of 11 ouwttntoaeektlleac:tvloeotan
b y which even the most severely h andicapped child suranre G roup ~orldwide ubllthac:I Orange Co.t Ollty Piiot on1rttw mentioned. tn<1 aubject to teated at>cwe under Ille '""" and '"' trtnt1-ee(•I 1re: OAAAMA, atto~ney In this metttt, you enoutd
la and founded Manila Adjust-ov. 28, Oec..,5. 12. t9113. oOf'lfirmatlon DY Mid Sul*lof COurt, ondltlonS ttatac:t In the Aeec*itlOn INC .. A Calif. corp .. 2319 Htthaway, do to promptly 90 11111 your wntten can p y. ~ e t Company" Ame rican 6219-83 on o-Tlbet 12, 1983. Otuw.efttt Bott Aeeolotlon No 14-20 Sant• An•. CA. I. II be lllac:I "No m atter what handicap aokid nas. [cap design m n ' . #lthln Ille time allowed D)' ltw, at the f Ille d. . . That Iha peraon1I propeny lo be rffponM, 1 any, may Of'I a toy he.r2n nnPrat.e.." said.theil-veai:-old K.anor~ a-Intema~ional. Underwriters, QL.._l;QWIN a. 1:1~~.J ~l~~~i:-=-=-"~,. delcri.bed ~ 1~":YllOI01tectfTnldo ~
--r-vr Karachi, -Pakistan <Ind oth roo 11~ Avan11e. Suite G. 1 be .._ ttlan 171o OO/Montll tor as materttla, eupptln, men:tlandlM. El 1 lbu leda decldlr -"• Ud. biomedkai-e ng1neer by.training ... I can make a switch international adjustment Aadland•. Callfomla, Ill ng111. title. cr...,oorn & 11 &so OO/Month 1e1111pment. Corl IMM. IMNhol<l Im· WR r..,:.~ •.,.... .-Ud.,..
that ope.rat.es on an eye bhnk, a touch. a sip, a puff," and U'ISurence . companies. ~~:':Of ~Li:M~~ ~ ttie ~ "-". n. ~~11i0••:,.:..:aoeerid CO: .,... ...,. • .,..., L.-111
Kanor hadn't set o ut to become Kris Knftgle-tO He became p;esiden t of CAU'OllMA, '°"THE tlle time Ol 111• oettll. tnc1 1111 rtgM, nimum mon:'roct..._ ~·le. trtOen•me of '"' ~ known ~ ~ ...... ·
the nation's 200.000 to 300,000 handicapped childre n , Underwriters Adjustment COUMT'YMottANGI 11t1e~1nter•1 tt111sakl•t•tehta ~.;.~~.!'~ u .BAEARESTAURAHT&DELl.tnc. "!!"~ 111 ':: ~...!! \ Co -1 h. · In 11\e Mltttw of the Appltc.tlon of ICqulfac:I. by operttlOn of law or v' and ts located It 2f12 Br• Mall, lfl --·-• • •-but now that h e does it regularly. h e s hows an almost mpany unu 15 reure· WILLIAM H. F WARTHEN. Pell· otherwl•. other than. or tn tddltlOO nua1 •verage reflectac:t at'"' end Br••. CA. 112821 together with the .e.Ollld do•~,.., .. tt1M ,_
reliaious zeal. ment in 1964. He attended honer. tor Cll•nge ot Name to. that Of Nld.dececl«lt. at Ille time the "-l*'lod. A MCUrlty ""' tonowlng dHcrlbed 110011011c ~ ,..,.._, " .. ,, _, lie
o· Princeton and Harvard Uni-NO. A110721 of hit OM!h, In and to all ttltt cer1aln I may be ,.quired i><lor to OC· t>everage lic«IM(1f ON SALE BEER Med°" time.
"There are almost n o toys for these kids, but they versitles and. graduated C>Rall TO CAUM ,.., proper'ty. tl1ualed In the County ~ allalt be l>eld ~a WINE LICENSE N0.•1-317711now lo~uaeect~ao11cttar .. tii1=:
Want toys as much as Other kids " he said recently . . Of CCP l1277 of Or..,.,.., Stm of c""°""' more -·• 11111ed tor u td ·praml1H . for ""_..._.."' • • . from the Uruversity Iowa WHEREAS. WIL IAM H.F. WART. part~ clelcrlt>ed .. lollow9: ,.., ...... btolc ... In Ihle preml-located •tCeame llddr ... ) ...._.. "-" ~.
Once a c hild learns how to use 8 switch to make Law School. He was a mem-HEH, petitioner. 11u l1ted • petition Lot 137 o1 Trac1 No. 1112. •per ion"':· and""'= C: ':.C::: (or) 2112 &et MtM. BrM, CllttorntL ~ .. ~.:..-...
a top spin o r a train run, h e "can operate a computer. ber o. f Phi Gamma Delta #Ith tha c1et1t ol thle court '°' • mte> recorded 1n 8ool< 53, P~ 47, tne°'" ~ __..,.. t>lddet Tllat the 10111 c:onelder11ion for _.......,.. w .
h · d be ed , _ _.. H F d 32 d decrM chtnotng petttloner"a name •8 and41olMl~~ln ,_...._ · 11141 tranat .. ol stld butlMM and of • ...,.... • e can communicate an can ucaL«:U. e can raternity an a n from WILLIAM H.F. WAATHEN to rtia omc. of the County Aacotdet of propoaa11 to ..... Mid aald ucanM(al '' the •um of 1-TO THI Ill NT: TM. answ e r phones. He ca n d o anything in his e nviron-degree Mason. In the last FRANK WAATHEH. Mid County. oper'ty rnuet be rec:.tv.O by tlle s11o.ooo.oo tncludlng inventory..,. ,......_.., "-.._. • _...., _.
ment that c.an be controlled by a s witch, and this years he was active in h l4 1T ts OAOEREO that Ill pe<aon• S4lld property commonly known ~=-ic:~==t~~:-tlmatecS 11 110.000.00. Wfllch con· ~,_~"L;:'..:
mak-them a useful human being and have a privat e Investmen ts mteres1ed tn the •bO"' metttt tP-u : 940 Conot ... Str•t Coatt 1 210 Ollk St;eet Fountlln va11ey' 1111• o1111e tottowtng: . dat! ~:f; wmmone ta "'* "''" h h If IMIV tn Department 3 of 11111 c:ourt. Meaa, Ctllfornfa. • 2.00· Oeec:rlptlon Amount __ ... f · " Ka "d toget er wit his w e, located at 700 Civic C4httt °''"' 81de or ott.11 .,.. lnvtted for Mid omla. 927°'· no lattt tllan · c asn Pe<aonal Check on r011. ,_ •-· _, M pro esston, no r sai · G ratia. He ls survived by his W•t, Sant• Ana. Ctllfornt• 112102: oropeny and mutt be In wrttlng tnd .M .. December 1• 11183· IS00.00 M-.ci and tM -1 _, ..._ •
H egottheideafor spe<'iaJtoysaboutlSyearsago wife. Gratia (Pat); his on Oeoeml>at30,tllll3.atll:tSA.M., 111111 1>e t-""<I 11 111e ofllca of :;::. '::'1!:1..~~k = CNcle1DemandNotato bef9Pl-:":"~"=!~i:-'.:=.:
while working for the Nassau County branch of mother Iven Stanton of °' u aoon ,,,_ .. ,..,. u tlle matter EDWIN 8. HALES. attorney tc. Mid call ior oral~ Any I*· with c.u11 tl'lf0U9" escrow _ ............. ~ cNN
• t: · •--l Ce fil} al p ls may be llM<d. and lhOw cause, If atttle, Of may be hlac:I with Ille Clertl ' 1411.500 00 ,... ...,....... .,. ........--::~ ' vm1.CU re r a y. Iowa; his son Stephen S. eny wtiy tlle petlllon for change Of )f Mid Superior COUt1 or dellYenld who l\M hartCOl«• tubmllted • PromtNory "°'"In favor of Miter cfttodf, cMld _ .. attemer
H e w as helping c hildren who couldn't keep their Stanton and granddaughter nttM thollld 11ot begrantac:t. 10111esa1c1 Admln"1ratora1 anyllma :=i:.~~=~S~I ::::: herein(31 1Na,~a:'.:""oo:!'8'r:
heads up learn to sit up. Christin a of Fairbank•. IT IS FURTjlER OAOEAEO that• 1nar nrat publlc;atton of tl\le notice ;. ~'written bid The lltgMat seo.000.00 ~1 °' ...... .-.;.. .,
"Then I thought, w hat if they got something o ut Alaska A memorial service copr 011111' ~.det '0 ~ cauae be 'Jnd before meklnQ Mldlba Mia. Satd Ttng1t>te1tnt1ngot>te property °'....., _.
r---;o\r;marruiki1nnagril'iie>iiv,;mmsm'.,... Tr"T"'lstl'.m~n~il'rriTnAMrw11rbt!"tfe1t:t1n Padtlt"'Vll P"* 01 ll"'f'lll alrculatton Pflnted 1twm1: c .. 11In1awtu1 ~ ot the 0 execute 111e orm ...... IUCh Tii11 1i 1111 t>een agreed bet-"' . 1 INI' -
M I P k Ch I In Or C I C Ill nl once• U ttac:t St t t t 10%) OI Offl\el l\tt lleret0f0t• bMrl llP· and translatte(•I tnd said trant· rMllt. their head or chest and som ething happened when emorta ar ape on •nge oun >'• • Of 1• n • "· en Pt<<*' ov.o Dy'"' Bottd OI Truet.... terort•I thlt conelderetlon tor the o.t.d: Mar 10. 1111.
the child moved, it was worth it." h e said. T1ue5d3• PaMy, 80ec:em1 bet r 6, l983 ~~~!~r!~~!'~;r.:!f~': =:1~0 ~~>'-::.!~':'~·~-=: The Bottd Of Truet-llhall m•k• 1ranater ol Mid ~lneu and ol LH A. MA="MCH, Cleftc
So Kan be d . . al a urta a sea was petition. Tne right I• ·~ to r•ltci any dettnl"llnetlon .. to wnatller to ~M(•l '' to De paid only atftt •r: "'"· or gan a apttng convention toys, private P8<'tfic Memorial Ottac:t· ~bef 11. 11183 tnd •II l>ld• ••aaklfac;t1111etwlthtenCtOld•vs trenaf .. ,, .. bean approvac:t t>y o.. -Y CAT from trucks to m echa mcal bears, SO they could be FRA~MENICHINI DATED No bar 18 11183 Ile< reotlpt ot l>ldt. ptrtment of Alc<>holic 8evertge C/0 WllTlllH LAW Cl~" Park, Direct.ors 01 Ille ROBERT E. sc::'OEEN · lnlormallon conc:arnlng the ConttOI punuanl 10 Sec 24073 at totlt WMtlftlMter Aft~ •1 operated by the smallest gesture of h a nd. head or eye. s ~ c 1 .d 1 1 1 •• f 1..._ E tat 1 roe>OMl Sho<Jld 1>e ac:tdrMMCI to· _, · G.Mdeft o-. CA. t2MI
He sells his cre ations at ('OSl, most between $30 a nd 0,.. J, c:r':"Ea:'" ~ FR~,,."K' :.VirL~M .. SO~o~~N. 'OVNTAIN VALLEY5SCHOOF L o~~.: -Th11 111• herein ""°''bed trani-~ 0 1 $100 MOU C.-.0.&.a,.... ;a,M<I , RICT. 17210 01111 tra,tt. ount .... ters areto be conk!mmlled subject Publlshed o,.nge Coest •lly Pio• . ,ACl'1C VllW Wte 310 ..._... ._... hNftl EDWIN 8. HALES ltlley. Calllornta, 92701, C714) to Ille tt>Ova provttiofl• II SERVICE Nov. 21. 28. Dec. 5, 12, 11183 Some toys he gets who lesale by buying in bulk, mNOIUAL ,AM l..at""8 ._,CA._, ~ttorney for Mid EA••t1 tJ.e's8s 1, At1ant1on. CA AOL ESCROW COMPANY. ;42112 BMch 81'4·83
but mostly he r elies on the kindness of seven or e ight CerMelrY. Mortuary 1714)-..... 10 .. 111. HM.II OUNTAtN VALLeY Bl . w"1m1n11tt, CA. 112883 on or
• part-time "elves" a nd donations fro m strangers. He Chaoel • Cremetory l>uJ>lltl\ed Orange Coa11 Daily Piiot IDw. ._ HAl.H CHOOl DISTRICT after O.Camt>er 23, 11113. •----Nll.--tC-NO_T_IC( ___ _
aupportahirmelfby w o rkingasaconsultant to U nited 3500 Pldftc VltW Oriv9 Nov 21' 2•.0ec:. 5· 12' 1111:·142-83 ~=::i!!:. AAO Of TAOSTEES di:!'.:":.!':':1~:=,:':_:',;1-----------
..
Cerebral Palsy of Westchester and o the r groups. Newpot1 a..ct1 ,.o ... • u!~~ 17' 11183 1n •tir• Y"t•_:-..t.,PM1 t. ~,.C:... •~i:g::,'
"There's little m o ney In this." Kanor said. "So 1 144-2700 ---,,.._--IC-NO_T_IC( ____ ~=· ~J:>!:h..,., Piiot "of tlle Boerd -:0:: .ddr'!e. .,!t escrow COUNTY Of OfllANOI
Imo h h . t.. 1 tan ___________ ,No¥ 21 29 ~ .. ,...... blllfled Orange COMt Olllfy PllOt llOlder SEAVICE ESCROW COM-In '"' Metter of Iha w w y \ e maJOr toyma~ers are r e uc t to g o ftCTITIOUa eutMll ·• · • ..-. "· ...., . 21. 21. o.c s. t"3 PANY, 14212 8eecll Bl .. wast· 4pp11c:ai1on 01
Into the market for only a couple of hundred NA• ITATIMINT 1 185·43 mlnlltt .. CA. 92133 H•IQanooltl Wllltllller
thousand kids while there are 30 mlllion"'others to McCO"MtCK MORTUARY The tOllowlng I*''°" '' doing rta.IC llOTlCE i----,....--IC-NO_ncr ____ ,o.ted: NOwmt>« 21. •1183 lc>f t 11enge,: HA"r:o12e
appeal to." 1115 Laount c'-'1!°" A5d. bu~m:.::; OIL & OAS co .• 4t30 ----------•• --------.. --8AEA A!STAUAANT & DELI. INC OROEA TO StiOW CAUSE \Aguna hacl't, ..,.. 928 1 r,.. ,,,_ --_.., --•• 1 CalH. GOJp, For children like Bernadette CarroU'• daughter. 494~9415 Ciunpu1 Ortw. &Mt• 111. ~ MAMI ITA'-"T 111C ......... --BY: Judllti Hllf)e, v. "'-· FOA CHANGE OF NAME
R thi th . l all h d 'ff . Seadl, CA.12MO The IOlfowlne PltlOllt .,. OOil'O ltAm ITATlmNf Tr......,orte) (Seo. IC*) u e, e spec1a toys can mean t e l erence tn JOhn Partona. 1&00 Perti ....,. t>ualneM •: Tiie loflooMno persone are dolfl9 OAR.AMA, INC .• • ca111. corp, HalganoOlft Wllltllker h• "*' •
the world. port, Newport BNc:tl. CA. t2tlO MASON ENTERPRISES, 2150 Nf· -IY: ...,, E NuMI. Pr-. petlllOrl In tlllt court for 111'1 Ofder Ruthi~ has an undiagnosed condition that Tiiie bu9ll-. .. conclueled by: WI lfty Allt . 9ld9 8-1, Coatt ...... THE PAN< AUTAUAANT. 251$ lliMc9 iacwow CO..ANY llllowtng pethtontt !O Cfltnga her
··--t..ed havoc w1'th the d e velopmen• of her ft ..... ~UwtMll.OUYI ofldMduPll CA.12121 P~.~ Hwy .• ConJnt del ,._.._.., utau•d natN~.!!...~Wllltakttto w~ • "'" Mortuety • Cemetery JOM traont Ftri 0. Monie, 5 No. Lt Sanda. • ....... &-" Wn•lnat• CA._. 419J1 .. ..,.a ......... _.,, motor control. She can hardly use her hands. Crtmal()ty Thi•'''''"""' w .. Ned .wltll"" Soutll l.agulll, CA. 12177 loomla Foooa. Inc:. 2515 E. Pa-P\lbllttled OtMoa eo.1 Delly Plloc IT IS HEMI Y OROEAED ttlet .. "She · .___.... to be so frustra• ....... She wan•-.. to•do 1825 Oltler Ave. ~n~t c~-°' °'~ County on "°'*1 ""°' 8Mttea. 11 Aue Ille: eo.tt Hwy., Coron• del Mar. Dec 5 1~ I*''°"' lnt_...ecl In tr.. ""ti.
WICU .cu ~ N~. -~vii... lffwporl hacll. c~ A. 1212$ . . • 1333.13 •lot...icl IC>P9tt befOfe 11111 COllf1 In thinp but couldn't, and would h ave nothing to do COit• Mete r-......... Tllll ~ '• conduct9d bY-• ~"*'' No. 3 at 700 OMc
th h h 'd 540~5554 Put>lllheO Oranot COMt Dally JoM F. M•tua. 33tl 1 Wind• atlon. Cattier OrM W..t. &ante ~ 0.... wl toysi" e r mol er .sat · llot Nov. 21. 28. o.c. a. 121. tte3. ~ °'"'-· ~ Nftl*, CA. lck c. Loom1a. lacr•tery. Ml.JC NOTICE 1or111a. on o..tlbet $0, tM3, a1
But with tne toys bought t':rom Kanor over the w14M3 mn ,_,,.. t·15o'clock AM .. n!MnaNtTl\efe
...... two y••,.. Ruthie "is get''"" her confidence o.ntlle IE Highland, 25012 Via del Thia atatein«I•"' lllad wltfl 1hll ~"'*" .,,.... "'°" caute, "Mt~ 11e¥e • wtty ..-· ..__..., .... -----....... e T CA ---°""' °' Ortltl09 County on um lfA~ Miid petlllOn tor Cfltnga Of Nn'8 t.ck. When other children come over. the y've neve r PllJICI _,...,.. •-.,. --._, °'0 • · ........... • e. 1N3. The folloMio l*ICIM .. dolfit flflOUld not 11e granted. llU lllOAOWA\' ,.._ ""'-Tiiie ~la OOtlduCtecl by: a P-. """'*' • IT IS FUATHEA of6lract ht a teenlhesw1tche1andcan'tmake theioywork.She llCMITUAJrf D;TmOUl••n•n 11m1tec1~1e11tt1p. ~ 0r.,,.. coam ~ IA8Y CAAi ,_NTALI. tMacocirott111toroertollhowoe1Mbe
can. She has an edge and can do 110meth ing they 110 ltoedway lirAm ITA~ =-::.:.=-111ac1 wtte1 111a New. 21, tt. o.c. 5. 12. 111a SuntMat Lane. HllntlnQion '-di. oublleMd 1n Illa Or-. OOllt o..r can't.'' Mn . Carroll said. Col1• M... Tiie lollOwlnO .,.,..., .. dOll"O OOllMY CIM Of c::. County on .,.,~ CA. t2t4f '· • ~ ol ....., • ...,,2 t •" u: Nov. ft 1"3. ..,_,. L. Ownutle. 1Ma lun· Clr'Olllallon, "*""*9 11'1 tlllt OOllllly
642-5678
Put a few words to work for you
'" th• Daily Pillt
~ • bu T"lTYMl , 74U Mcf'eddtft, Hunt• · ' 1 ,_ Met Lane. HunllnQion laMtl. CA. at i.t onoe • ~ for fOWt oon-
Oll IMcl't, CA. 1"41 Pvblletlecl Or8flll C08ll ~ tlt4f 18C1111¥a .... 1pt10rto1Ncl9y•hald
aAL TZ llROIRON
tflllfTM 6 TUTMM.L
WHTCLWF CHAHL
427 l . 1711\ 81
Cotl•M..a
648·9311
enMtfl':C::~·!.~ ..... ~· Ptlol Nov. 2u•. oec. $. 12. '"'· Classy Autos Jue111u.-ooq. '"°1 ~ .
T...... 11 :::::::....~!::: ""'· _ e 1-.., Clr<tt, """'"OtOfl 9-ltl, CA. t!M Deled Nov. 1t. 1"3 ._ ,__,_ v,. -· Tiiie ~ It ~ tty: a ""'* OOMIMCtilHI
I(_.;, lerry • n••••pen•atv~· Advertised .-==.. ~~ofC::.
TNt 1tttemln4-. t11ec1 wttti IN '(In * IC*'' IN> not tllgfl TNI ........... w fled wtlfl IN I' .._, .. ......_
Clettl of Or-. CGumy on '" pr tee~ flHOft•tt••: ln the . County Qeft .. ~~on .......... L •• • 11. t"3, cfeltif*t .... .. Nov. 11, Itel. -·~-, .... CA. .... Pv~ Or11199 co.t": ~Ising ...,.... ~ C>rMOI COM!--= M ... :.OOlltOellffltlOC
NOY 21, 21. o.o. a. 121. 1"3. Cll.llllled ACl*111fng Pilot No¥. It. It. Olo. I. ''· 1ta.. . n ti, 01o e. 11, 1ta. • wtlM3 '4a-5e7A ,,_. tto.a
..
•
C4 Orange Coast DAILY PtlOT/Monday, Oec4Hnber 5, 1983
,
Telephone Service:
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CLASSIF IED 642-5678
Liii iSLE
Traditional 3 Br, 3 Yi Ba. Bayfront, pier &
float for 65' boat. Priced to 1ell $1,250,000.
lllYllE TEllUCE
1111 hffH TtrrHt1 041 .,.. 1~
Panoram1<.-bay & ocean Vlew from 4 Br. 4 &
pa110. pool home. Prune locauon $775.000.
YllTI •1 UM IAYFlllT
Fabuloua bay & mountain view. 1Bdrm,1 Ba.
condo oo-<>p. Lowest priced at $295,000.
UYlllE PUCE IAYFllllT
Specta<:Ular bayfront dplx. 2 br, 2 ba up: 2 br.
2 ba dn. 2 boat spaces. Redu<.'t'd· $1.500 .000.
PElllllLI lllE ICWFlllT
Ocean & jetty.views. Manne room. 4 bdrm. 3
bath. 3700 sq. fl 4 car pa.rklng. $1.385.000
F&lllUlll UICI llLLTIP
New 4 br. 4 Vi ba. <.-ustom French Normandy
utate 1.2 prime acre hilltop. Now $995,000.
01111111 CHI llYFllllT
Coronado Island cust. baytront lot 85' boat
deck. Plans avail. Now S370.000 wltrade
llllWIUI IOIE
Near new 4 bdrm, 4 bath. lake Vlew 3500 sq.
ft. $440,000. Will tr e or a property. -
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
Jllfloy\ocl•()'" ~.fl t.i',ti161
JUST REDUCED
BY ALMOST $15,000
Two bedroom units duplex in Cor-
ona del Mar is definitely the best
buy in town. Units are in good
condition and owner is very anxious
"to sell. $269,500.
LEASE OPTION -N.B.
t----1._. stocy 4 bdrms, 3 bath, family rm ..
home in gate guarded commuru{y
with tennis couns. pool. and jacuzzi.
Owner moving t.o Texas -and
anxious. $349.500 -5% down or
)ease option for 6 to 12 months.
675-3311 EVES. & Wl<fl>S.
&f Q.,
Q( \jl.J:?0 ~i~J'(~
675-2311
To plac. your rneesege
before the
rNdlng public.
phone
Diiiy Piiot
Clalelneci. 642-58711
•:=--:: .... :=-:...~ ~ ...... ____ _
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I What I Wonderful WOfld
ot Shopping, rlghC.I
your flnger11pt every~
D•lly F>llot Cleullled
Ada. To piece your ed.
Cell &42·5878 Ind let 8 Ciani~ Ad·Vl90f help you.
r I I I I I
i cl I y I I l'lloofJ>IYIC,__...,IOl>I
I I I' 1 .. _ •MCtM"Y ._ ___ ..... -.. - --,oll Nlllf'*'""'-·""" or..-10 -fl.,, -~ G AN CCO )
1 11'1 l ._.... ......... _.. -... - . _:z,.;.:;,:i.=
'· '
• t11n11a ILll
Inverness model. 4 Bdrm,
2 llreplaclt. perfect con·
dlllon. commty tennla.
pool. apa. $349.000
u-.1vur: t1()Mt:I
Atalior1, 875·6000
THE ~EAL s
OllT•ITUTD fhlt ~ hat bMf1 com· • Custom bHctl hOmes
pletety remodeled New 1249.500 a Hunt BMch
kitchen, appllaOCiea, cabl· Agt. Patrick 96$-8000
nett, forced air unit and lll ~LIW lllUO more Alao hll add·on larnlly room w/llreplace Foreclo rt. 481. ocean · view. 11ouse w/pool, 1pa, Only $t t9•900. 831•737o tennis, & termal Won't
TR,\DI T 10\,\1
~L\I n
last 11 1379.900. Cell
Patrick Tenore , agt
760-8702.&31·t2&8
BAYSHOAES 38Al3BA
Corner $345.000 L H ~6·8325. (805)969-2875
BEST BUY $7500 DOWN
l lWNIT aun IEW UITlll 3BA Easlblull Condo
--------Fabulous v1ew o1 grassy IUYllW St60_.ooo_c2t31 s.c~ • ...,._eo_
USTIUfF-Lll LIT
mmaculate and Interest-
ing country deco1 on cul
de sac 101 FOor lhe tamlll
y who wants to be near
shopping. schools and
recreation at a reason-
able price, this 3 bdrm,
one level home 1s Ideal
Owners have bought
anott>er and will nego-
meadow lrom thlS Un· 3uard gale<! community. 3 "our•-IY .....
usual properly, 3 bdrm 3 Bdr on 1 or the largest t 1% hxed rate. 30 yrs
Ba on two levels w•l'1 Iota End 01 cul·de-sac. Monaco wllh 1>es1 GC
creative use of na1Ural Off street parking view 14 Rue Vlllars.
woods and decorator Comm pool. spa & ten· Open Wknds. 640· t538
wallpaper Priced for a n1s Good value al -~ -very quick sale at onry $349 .500 Marilyn OESPEAATE·MustSelll
St27,000 75t•319t Twitchell 759·9t00 Only $25.000 down 3 bd, 2' > t>a condo w/30" t>oa1
sltp Reduced to
$260 .000 wt assum
$200.000 tst TO Own
675·1938 01 85t-8394 11 ate $189 ,500
631-t400
.,,..TllITT
knocks often when you
use result-getting Dilly
Pilot c1111lfled Ad• to
reach the Orange Cou1
m1rkel.
Phone 642·56711
C:SElECT
.... PROPERTIES
TllEIVEll
T ME
IS
MONEY
Use At1llllf Al service
'when placing your ad ... o Dolly
Pilot ad number will appear in
your od ... wt toke messogts 24
hours o day ... you coll in at your
convenience during off ice houn
and get the responses to your od
. . . this service is only SS per
week. For mort information and
to ploct your ad coll 642-5678.
GE 1s9-9100 -----
• .r .. • •••
-·-·
. .
--'•
HOROSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA
..
... ...
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Monday, December 5, 1983 C5
Mftltlllat lltn
$2.17 per day
1ivew1y-P1rklnd Col
Rep11r1-se11coat1ng
S&S Aaphlt 631·4 109l1C
Carratry la!••a!n M!llet lntt Cleulllt fala!!M Puttl W~a Wr~
REMODEL.ING Au phUM -1•1•L•0•wa R .. ,.·TE-s·a·1-·l1111L•TiiiHiiAiiiu•L-1N·o-. ·M·o·v·1MG-..,,.M .... R•. s~PiiA•Ai!iii~Kn"""i~1s----.,.lllill!l"'f•um.!!'!'!'!-----NiWPoNf .bC XIMPbwt li8Ptl'llTVAL ' hEADER•
Also custom cab1ne11 18 llP.i~~'ftll"!~~~~~ Tree trim &, removal, gen. Rental Ci.an Upa. Jon, llllJll,I._ Oy RlcNrd Sinor. Lio. 38&'1 81JCh (cor. Quell) A<MMI' In all ml1tet•.
That'• ALL you pay for
3 tines. 30 d•)'I
yr• 1n area Lie. bonded. clean-up• 554·7017 S.5·81021731·2018 Wl•IWI * UIN11 290644 14 vr• ot h~ 1 1 OFfl with MS. 540-2287 IQ\le, men••· bu._,
All Types Rep4lr. ••url, lna'd 968-3564 anytime H• .. •'ng·. Col. llu'"•ntt I~ local CUltom.tt. CORON'" DEL M'".. eto. 875-240"5/'31·0307 Saal coat (SLURRY MIX) Malnt.-CIMn Up .. TrM ""'" .... 20% OfFI ~tMe. lna'd Thank you, M3-4114 " ""
In the
DAILY
PILOT.
Reoalr-AltetatlOns tct Trlmmlng-Hautlng .. tc. ltuclc ~ BchvlC, d Refs. Fr .... 1. fi.40-.6854 2eOO E. Cout Hwy 'htt
CRomm F Reaid •11 Re," Dools.Wlndoon-Ca1>1ne11 Free ut Pel• &41•10K Than!! you 750-1038 Cort , _ 12 YRS EXP: rm 11na11, (c«. o.Nia) 7to-1822 -J.-.c •• °"TiiRliiEiiE"'s"E,.,l'l,.V"IC"E-ares ree .. ma .. Panel-Plllos-Fencet. 35 ELECTRICIAN: Priced _ ... , My pric.t .,. llNlll , ....... ~/-~5~269 or &45.0032 ffS exp Jerry fi.46-4413 right, frM •tlmate on Tll llUI 11111 . Tlll'I ..... op;; iennll P\ayw offera IS50·S.77 Ron aum Trimming. removal, :t,.arO
AHtra-=-C---large or tmall jot>1. Lie. Lawn-Tree-Shrubln1tall Haulanythlng.S.5-7331 ,..sons allagee 115/t\r tb'i RING clMn~.etc.e.2 • ...,14
SERVICE
DIRECTORY -
:.!.: lf~I St ct 39&621. 673-0350 Tree trim/Removal Kirk WIHs 544:.0344 · ·~~~ ~n Ph .... : Int/ext. N .. t. f~I tt Ottta .... l ....... , cXMFt & llNOLEUM In-RESIO/COMM'L/IND. Lawn malnt./Rototlltlng lt1tiat --AMtuccoe. Est. S.5-8258 t ~i7Word Proc::ing •Clvll/Bualneu LJtlQatlon atallatlon & repairs. .30 20 yra. Do my own work. Free e1t1mata 548-GQ§j 2• U b. aa. lUI IHI!! * STARR 648-4471 * pt=t:r.::: •
•CrlmlnalfDrunk Orlvlng yrs exp. Andy 645-903 t Lie. 278041 AL 646-8126 Furnaces• Pool Heater• -le"R"'lo"Rtifl•!"'IB"L'"'oc""k~•!"tf11111[1"'1E~ 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiii • ....., Al bu• nen, achoo!. Pet·
plu• tt\e IRVINE MIRROR
and lhe HUNTINGTON
BEACHCOMBER every
Wedneaday at
•Per•onallnjury IH ~H 11FIOUEIREDO P'"INTIN01-,.-L.•1•1•·.,.-.-.-•• 1•1•••1• 10nal pro)9Cte'. 851-1041
•Reai Es1ate WeSall Any Brano Carpet Aer•t1 •1 lbeRitAN AXNbvbiN ltalt l1aal11 All 'Y":;·,~::nable. " • -•
•Employment Problems FOR $1 OVER COST -Carp, Glass. Paint, etc. ROBIN'S cLtXNIAd Fire prootlne at\I~. 25 Fauoet• Wllar HHletl ...... Clt1al11
Call tor free lnltl•I con1ul-112-1122 T EEi Ina .. Bonded 847-2367 SERVfCE .• lhoroughly ••Yi•• r~·n:=· ~11t1n1:: ·---_-IT--,..-.-.. --.-.-wAITe wlzXR'o,
rauon With an attorney Ctatlt Ctacrttt fopped/removed. Clean-:lean hOuM. 540-0857 LIW ••ns bonded & insured. frM HJ:ATING: Heatet Sarv~. WINDOW WASHING
no e11tra charge!
CALL TODAY!!
&llFHWlllA
714-751-5270 Concfete· U form. I pour up, new l1wns 751-34711 ~~i:,:i~:::~::;,S::~ OU~KCAREFULS~V 811. Uc C-33 No 290804 Aeplpes Call &42-8989. "The only magic 11
la•--i.ttiat or complere jobs. No Jot> Commerc111/Resldent1al Fencing DON 966-0149 .... 1 • .W./Tiltr9tldi ABC MOVING •T138048 638-6911 Drains eleat from S5/25 QUALITY" 831-2026 !..: -L dscape Matntenance '1ave rel• Becky 7~i.n>5 uc1d day care. 11.,.4yrs. roo small 964-0366 Q~llty Sarvtce, reas . lie. PAINTING-CARPENTRY Class Action Cleaner• 112 ..... 10 Repair lave.II. dlap. etc. State ww Your Daily Piiot
Service DtrectOfY
Represen1a1111e
comp1nlonshlp. tncd Ceraaic Tilt --bonded, 20 yrs In area REPAIRS-Oaty 645·5277 Local home & apl clng -.-l --1-llY--.. -*--QUALITY PAINTING. fair Anyilme M&M 642-9033
...
y11<1 Suzanne 556-30919 Spec '" l<rtchens & Balhl Mc W&eney Landscape PT:::rL____ Rellable. ins. 642-92.114 Sett quallty.25 yr. ••P·. ~~~~~I=. 6-:,t~20';:,'.I ..... "••Ma.11•
H2-lllltd.U2 kkHfi aJ 0 C TILE SETTERS ~5-5124 lat ..... F Mrt HOUSE-APARTMENT Uc T -116,428 730· 135.3 ,,..--,,.-------~od-Repalr·Weter hfts BKKPG BY COMPu fER 646•9873 larH1l11 WMtt• AardwOOd llOOrs lnstalted. :1eanlng or Reno11aung. ·ABC MOVING-Pardat Drain cleaning 24 hrs.
Reas & Reliable Service CL c Mowing. EdgTng Twice a sanded. refin .. cleaned. Free est1male 650-4468 Quick/careful. Low r11... Farthing Interior oeslgn Lie. "203402 650·6248
Acct11tia1 From $25/mo. 675-0305 .u. IH mo $20-$25 645-5737 waxed Ins. lie 847-8888 HOUSECLEANING Lie T138046 552-0410 l/HIS"..N.~lcfNGsc'sotTtR617P3P·l1N5G12 ia t _,..,_"""~-._ ____ CL' M Li --Reliable Widow: Mon-Fri .. .., CPA. high quallty lncome aaaatl la •I Chlld care. It hsewk CdM :1ean Ups•Tree Trimming EXP'O REFS STARVING COLLEGE ~-.1T'::::9•=•
tax work at reas rates •New cabinets. cabinet 10 HB. 548•8349 eves Yard Ma1n1 •Hauling Bea)~ 397-4386 536-8322 STUDENTS MOVING CO e:.:~:.ion~~~~~vC~ng~~~ --S3l""°°8 .
John Brown 631-6483 14cong. bars & lormica C S _MIKE 650-3263 1--•ro""""U,.P"'"J""o .. e .. s""&--1--0-1-1-11-1-&P-,--Lie. T 124-436 Insured ant Alllgnmt, 581_8590 1._-=====~~~
countertops 642·0881 •i•atz WltJ Clean Ups•Tree Trimming SMALL MOVING JOBS Clning. Free est. 720· 1106 641•8427
&ct11tie1J M 15'ENNY·~-Yard Maint •Haullng MIKE 646-1391 WA TCrl us GROW• •HANGING/REMOVAL*
Ctillatl Carra try CHIMNEY SWEEP MIKE 650-3263 -HAUL· .. OllE·RE••ovE Too many moutns to 1eeo ' 1 t + yrs expertence
---•------Expert CarpentA Service $40 & UP t-867 -4876 .., "' Find a home tor your er11-s.tl with EASEi MIKE 851·1800 -l••y •-0111 ~~ , 1 t th Dal"' Furniture. Trasn. Trees le s 1 1 .. 11·1 a BREEZE -_.5 .... Repair-Remod· Odit1ons <>'911 things u WI •1 963•5415 NORM f •n c •••1 •ev
Loo•ono tor a music
reecnei? You'll srroke rhe
roghl chord when ~ou
advert1Se in c1ass1lled
642-5678
St1te law requlrn 1fia1 all
contrectore who perform
work OVI' 1200 fnciudlng
labor and m111er1a11 must
be licensed. Unlicensed
contractors should 10
state In their advert151ng.
Contractors and con·
sumers, contact Mary
Grondle at 558-4086 with
any questions. Contrac·
tor's State License Board, 28 CIVIC Center
Plaza. Room 690. Santi
Ana. CA 9270 I
RE:SPRAYS 847-7901 Doors-etc 548-4980 ClaSSltied Ads ~2-5678 PflOt Want Ada. 642-5678 CIUlified Ada S.2-76457 Want Adi 642-7667
--.----
•• ltatal1 11 Aaataa'"'tat1 3002 •••~ te LtH 4024 ltlt Wut.. Slit ltlt Waat.. Slit ltlt Waat.. Slit _,. .. Sc: h 00 Is a Ins Ir u e I 1· 0 D s Slaert 2tol ATTENTlhlfLEOZ1NGEA 1st Uno TDS. COMM
1
L i Chlld care In my home. lull UIE ••• • .... &1111 .. R 11 I 4bd d le GRADUATES OF 1959 JUMBQ. MCS FUNDING time, Mon-Fri. 8-5·30 N W .., 1_ CNA'i or ex,...tence fl-oom ave · n up 11 looking tor fellow clats 548-5651. ' Ref'• req. Non smOk.; o exp. nee. o ... • ........ , In CdM. No amkrs or pets members who may t>e In S d home anytime/day. De· quired. 7-3, ull time. Ex·
6 8 $228 mo. 840-8488 the Oranna County aree. ••rtg••H pre I. rar't Imme . talle: eend sell addreued oellent benefit•. Npt Bch 6 4 2 5 7 .. -T. .t:I ' 4021 642-7803 stam,.... env-•.vwo to·. PO area. 642-8044 Share 3 Br cr .. t Twnhm, We are working on our """' "'v"" • pool. 1ennls. sp1. 251h reunion C A ii -~!!"!".!!~~"'!!'!~~-Church hiring. low pay Box 19864. Suite 275. pa_n_ -. · 328 $385/mo. S.2-3850 or 951·2551alt6:30PM •tlTllAIO&llt Great Future. Improve lrvlne,CAs2113, -• ,_ ~6-1869 lk for TOITI '!'our home equity or TO while you h1ve a jot>. Call 1---------Earn up to 1400 per G t a . FREE·ALL AGES! (Tlly hold lhe ans-r. Call In peraon 11 1451 Irvine 11A1111911T month. Reur .... House-eo r e X • -. W~ LOOK FOR YOU!. N C.O.MMEBCJAL SEM· bro+let...(61~758-0310. BIVd. Tu.tJln. $!6~_9_1 CouQJe to mJOage sml wifes, College Sludenta.
House/Roommal81 INAR SEE SUNDAY AO. t>ualness Roger John-Need ~noat>le auto 10 Unlimited 832-4134 213-465-4491 Cocker Spaniels. black aon 831•3594 deliver Dally Piiot In .. ~===========~i~~T~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·I .~~ s100 ~.2~tt~~ • ~~~h~~per ltatall Wut.. SCRAM LETS 1;;;:;;;;;;iiiiiiii;;;; male. It.KC .. 1.3 yrs old. Mllure re1POOslble per-day1. WHkdiy, P.M .. 2 bdrm unfurn. home In • 11&.111 &IHllT $125-$175 432·9681 son, wreterlal & book-Weekend•. A.M. Call Mr. Pacific
Travel
.School
'CdM, 2 prof people. Dy ANSWER~ _._ •---•-7.t •--....,~...a keeping. good with Barrow 642-4321, ext 660-6809tev 493.3931 '1-.._.. .. n -....,.,_, people 631-4465 or 343 EOE The ~range Cou1 Dilly 4d1y/~. pplyl"perlOn, 631 -0493. Newport --------
Resp. married cple want loathe· Unity Pilot hu an excellent OP· Tueldey ·Saturday, 9-5. Trophy Co. PllT•Tlm
2·3 br unturnlturn hOUM lcllLu~~ac portunlly for a career A•k tor Elalne. MECHANIC: Erlperlenced, tr•lll ll.lll
,,.on_B_1_1._1s.,,... _vrtY __ s7_3_-6_9_5_3 fhls guy I know wanted to oriented Major Accounl SURF AND SAND HOTEL own tools. apply 7am Very bul)I clrculatlon of-
Alrlfff ltr be a aecretary. He was so Executive with • proven 497•4477 only. Mac Gregor Yachts. flee need• part time help a4 610 £. 111h S1 .. S.nia Ao.,
Ca. 91701
.. a t 1911 bad atthe job that he had track record. Great COUNTER PERSON: FIT 1631 Placentia, C.M ans-Ing heavy phone
10 take a cottee break to potentlal. guaranteed Nwpt Shores Ory Clean-tr1ttlc. We have nice cus------JOLEE MILLER
E/Sld; c.b Lrg Clean IQI unwind from LUNCH drlW agitnst com· 81'1 Wiii train. &46-7621 ..,.. .. IYU tomersl Appljcantl must
gar on p\11 eltey, 1tor1ge · million. Desire tornove Muat be hard worker. t>e nea1. reapontlbte. and
O•ANCE COUNTY~ ONLY P•IVATE
AGC.EDrrED TRAVEL AGENCY SCHOOL
only $75/rno. &73-3600 SPIRl!UAL READINGS Into man~t a plus. ll&JYtlf cteen cut, potlle. S5 /hr to have a pleasanl IN·
--------Adviee 1nallmatter1. LOY9. Send reeume to Need EJctre Income ? Be start. STARVING AC-phone pet'lorlallty. Some Secure 2 car gar. corner ot marriage & business. P. 0 . Box 1560 en Independent carrief TORS MOVING COM-llght office work allO.
L1ket33rd S 100/mo. Also counsetlng 1815 Costa Mesa, 92626 tor THE REGISTER. Mu11 Pit.NY 650-1366 Hour111e Mon . Fri, 9 am
VO\ \l r tt l'll'll. Im flON
Amertcen Airline Sabre ComP\.ller Training Has openings for students of all
ages and levels. Graduate West-
minster Choir College, Princeton,
N.J.
7~-8862. 213-534-1895 So El Camino Real. San EOE have dependable. econ-10 2 pm. 11artlng salary Is
Otllct ltalab l4 Clem. Ltc'd 492-7296 I•--------onw c.ar Irvine, Npt Sch, NTE Is • last growing $lOO.OO per wee«. Apply Coronadel Mar area. Call Tele-Communlcatloll In perlOn, Mon. 'Thurs. 2
11SO aq fi. ottiCes avlll· I.tit I Ft11• 3004 Vicky, 951-7113 before comp1nylocaled lnCapo -4pm.AakforCatherone
able to rent mo-to-mo. 2 Reward· F blk/wht Nhie-UYllTISm 11 am. I/alley. Service Reps. or Eiieen.
spacious ottlces. 2 sec-kers Cockapoo. 'Pllddy', OlllllUTll PotenOal 10 make $2000 • ORANGE COAST
retarial spaces, con-H B. 548-9888, '""3-6856 Th O C t Dall Deltv walking fOules. $4000 a month. XLNT D'"ILY PILOT "" e range oas Y Graal 2nd lob. Close to 1 t b " terence rm C.n 'ncl"'"------- -Piiot has an evcel'-nt ""· s 11 e 5 5 u P" or " 330 W Bav SI existing ph~e sy~. Ai; porlunlty beginnl';;'g home. Pick your hrs. TELE·MKT le;m For In~ Cos1aMesa,CA
MORNING, AFTERNOON, EVENING CLASSES
Cell (714) 543-9495
--....... .__. d19111------p11r1111 space avail mid.January tor 1 career Adults pref. Dan B tervl-. call. C Damato.
754-7017 FOUND ADS Of'lenled Co-op Advertls-631-6300 24hrs. SSS 714-661-8465 Want Adi cau 642-5678
1=3 Ottioe auatas avallable :no Coordinator with a Denlal Receptionist. •
as low as $225/mo. No ARE FREE proven track record E11perienc.d, minimum ot ltlt Wu... Slit ltlt Waat .. Slot
ANr .. nt1, UaJ. &raan11, Uaf. lprtanb, Uaf. ltt•1 2900 lease required Utll & Greal earning potential ·2 yrs FIT. fringe benefits .., le • 2740 2-i11 _________ , 1an1101111I services In-Cal·. Ouaranteeddrawaga1ns1 lrvtne.551-5141 Da1·1y P1·1a1 · ...... . C..ta ..... 2724 Baal. IC lnrprt lud •' SEA & SUN LODGE eluded 1 blk 10 0 c . Air· commllSlon Detlre to domestic help
large Bacn unn upstairs. SUWfll ••••••••• 30~~~ ~o:i ~~ ~~t port& Fwys 5-48-2801 H2·11ll ~:9 ~~d ~ta live In help for elderly, . PART TIME ~~-~:'e~ic".~r?aoO~a~~:~ VILUIE Spacious slngle, one So Lag. nr bch, furn rms. lS ll-W.stcllfl, N B P 0 . Box t560. ~pl~~~.~~~~.~= : .
, k 278-1365 sq tt. Suitable EOECosta Mesa. 92626 strokn, but II mobile. ·. De11·ver Dai}y P1'lot by auto 1n area. S425tmo. 631-6812 New 1 & 2 Bdrm lu11ury & two bedroom apts. Tl/. shr bath. N·sm r tor medlcal or dental. F 0 u n d 01 de r m 1119 ""'
Lo 2br. lba. 4 Plex, patio,
$475 mo. 797 w. Wiison
Sat/Sun 9-5. Mon-Fri
alter 4 (213) 596-3703
PALM MESA APTS.
~~~ 1~5~~.p~a~~r~ ~~~~ S 175·S250 493-3490 Agent 54 t-5032 Dachshund wt collar :r.~ toe'!'~~m:O:''i;~~~ ; Laguna Beach area (2 hours
SS90. Townhouse trom. STEPS TO BEACH-Very 250 aq tt: 779 W. 19th St. Coast Hwy area. NB AIDE tor paralyzed young 642-2000 and 631-5056 per day). Weekdays P.M. _
$735 + pools, tennis, p\11 hse.53N00wpt57J5ec.5g5ar. C.M. See Unll C Utlls 645-6292 women , Mon.-Fri • R R M Earn bo
waterfalls, ponos Gas tor •l~prlv. . •4 1 ll'ICI. S200/mo. 851-8928 Lost: Female Cockef mix 7:30-5. Must drive Bii· o;,~~,~~!n ~:~~~. weekends A. . ~ Ul
cooking & heattng P•ld ltttl1,!tttll 2 •CdM di~ sultn. empt C.M. "MAGIC" $100 re boa Island. 875•5652 Bkkpg exp: type·~ wpm. $400 per mo. Call Mr. Barrow
From San Diego Frwy LXmiNA eE'.XCH pkg $350up, utll pd. 2855 ward. No tags. blk ·-lrM fLIULY-~2-1580 (Mr. Grant) or Mr. Bush 642-4321. 'l:V"\E
I .
1 Br. M601mo 2 Br. $515
Office hrs 9-4. 1561 Mesa ..__..-=Sin • na 91ghli.
714/546-9860.
drl'(e North on Beach to f~li.CA-MOTOR INN. E Cst Hwy. 675-6900 496-2247, 549-1508 . ~-;.r-,_'"!°,, "•""' . Bal~!. i:AJ c1' unn1;:m~vvr-$~&---•QCW..Y-""tl... •fll f'=I 11Lf :.. ___ ----_ -·-------cFadOen to SEAWINO UNrURNISHED. Wkly rates 1 up. ln&al/.,,.. Lost white Samoyed pup, Refer. req. 673-3603 Wiii train~ Bergstrom
; bdrm, stove, retrlg.
$400. Avail lmmed
6-46-03'41 al1. 1 :30pm
SPACIOUS 2br, encl g1r .
321 Monie Vista. C.M.
M7W'640-0105
V I L l A .G E · A.LL UTIUTl£S DaJlylWk~/~~y TV Choice Newport Beach ans-s lo Hall. vie l&th Answering Service oper-Cleaner1, COM 644-4421
(714)893-5tM, ,..c"~IO. H£AlTH Kltc;t\!I avai. • toc:atton on P.clflc Coat St. CM. 64f·8644, llor. 7pm • t18"1. &·•--------heated pool & stee>s to Hwy Harbor •Ide appto• 642-6740. Uk tor Pauli perlenced, Full Time Entry leY8I position for im-CLUBS. TENNIS ocean. 985 N Coast Hwy 1200 II 71._646 7100 0~·1-. 540•1777 blt:ous, mature person,
SWIMMING . plus Laguna Beach, 494-529•. aq · • Ptr1tul1 .6 to learn carpet cteanlng
much more' Sorry. Vicitita BP•f,~~g''. 1~~r=al. patios, CIRCUS OF ARCHITECTURAL t>uainess. Flakes neeo no
no pets Models lt1t11J 290'1 673·1003 llSSllE •""'llT IUIMll apply. 548-9373
~.. . Rf ACH
; : ., l IVING . .. . . ' , ~
• Secu111v Ciam open dai~ 9 lo 6 b p!!l Registered architect with Ftll lllYll large Big Bear ca In. ""' Beautllul N-port Cenler min 5 yrs ex per as pro)9Ct F 11111 e d-'Apnly ln IT &LUii LIL Olltt • Poo• & Aec Room Oakwood table, color TV, 2 frplc, Off~. Reception. Cont 719 NO. HARBOR BLVD manager for oommerclal, u m -·~· .. w.a ttlG Plua • 1 & l 81'1 Pa:oo ~ors Sleel)I 14 (714)5'5-6916 rm. kitchen, aectr'I. malt FULLERTON rnsUtutlonat and 1n0ua-peraon. Tues-Fri, 9•m·l2
Frplc, French windows. 1' • liarcen u nom ouwJ (;.•rckn Ap•rt~ MAMMOTH: Lrg lurn. 3 br, & mHlagt MfVlce avail. llM 112 Ulat projec1s. Knowledge e~si!::y a.::ro:r.i:·
al e, ln·home MC\lrlty. • Oisn .. ·uners & 880 s 2,~ bl condo, spa, sips seperately. 'tall Sally l l&f l Wiii of local coclee and public Beach N ph '
W/D. pvt club wltennis • JoO ro Suen & s~oos Newport B~itd\ So. 10 $800/mo. 499•5304 7141760·0100 A fTRACTIVE process requlreme~ L9guna · 0 one
eta, pooll, Jae, sat1nu, 1700 l61h Strttt 1---------NEWPORT BEACH: 300 MASSEUSSES desirable. Apply to p • calll. pleue.
gym, beaut. clut>houM. I at Dover) sq 11 office, 1vall. Dec. 5. TO SERVE YOU elra, 2418 Mac Arthur .... lftlet I llflll
Jumbo ltudlo, l6001mo 642-5'13 ...__!9!"-.~~"'2HI__ Call M-F 9-5. 642-4&44. E•AA•TS/lllELI Btvd, NB. 6«-0620 Full time combln1t1on r• 3683 Beer St irG SpllCIOUS Quiet 2 Br $516, ,.. ...-n Equal Opportunity tail & MCretatlal In CdM.
6'11Ans-Ad823, 2 Br TwnhM 1585 Walk N~wport Budl No. " he lglnal' OFFICE 350 eq tt, ground Outcalt ONLY 835-9199 Employer $950 per mo. 760-1822 642~ 124 ht1) to beach 980-8656 880 Irvine Avenue IHllll&TI •111111 noor, furnlat\ed. Npt Blvd •--------~ Assemblers. Apply 7AM
STUNNING lrx 1 Br gar-~alk to ..._.c .. 1 Bdrm. (at 16th) Newpot1 Sch 641· 1899 loc. nr freeways. Avall EXOTIC DANCERS M/F only Mac-Oregor Yacti11. 11111 lnLllT ... ..,.... " Jan I $.450 mo. &42-8946 For Bachelor(ette) Parues No cllentele needed den apt. 142 ·pool & rec: crpts. drapas. stove. 645•1104 "The Orlglnal" t I 826 494 t _1_6_3 _1 _Pi_acen.....,._ti_•._C_M_ . .,....,~ companv ~fltl, p'ald arM. 710W.181h.SI. refrlne. S450 tmo . IHM .. •TtFllHll •$320/up. crplsl drps, +srppergrams • l C M , 536 4637 -899 ale, rstrma, 17301 Beach DITIO IAIOlll Attendant. lv•ln. . . vacations. 2 locallons.
a.eANA'OEMENT TAAINEU
U·TOTt·I IWl£TS ---For poflt'°"9 In mlln-
1.1 agement r.v.1. Mua1
\_. alore Mgmt. ex-
perience. Salary com-menaurate Wlttt experience.
Up to S7/hr. For. ln&ervlfw,
apply at U-TOTE·M Matt<et on
PCH & "'9jo In Laguna Beacf'I
at 1390 Norttl PC'H ~
11-12 noon or &-7 PM on
Tt\u'*'•Y· FOi Mil .. CMt (114) 414-1233 ., 537-414t
EOE
Tetrlflc view. touch of -___ Newport Bah 641-1 Blvd. H B. 842•2834. Bachelor/BacheloreUe Auist teacher In wheel Call Debbie 731-3810 ~~1 ~w~.~ W~I~ Hm/MU~ff 4~.2~~~.k1t. -~-~·· 00~&~1~~~~·!~:io;~~~iP~~~J~~i10:;•;o~~~~~~l~~~~i~~:~-----W•~RY~-----~----• f«tm.-~ paC'i009-n,,.,·1rom l'9r. tea. no cpt1t1nJp19S;"" . • • -.--DI:_
No pets 215 I Pacillc. $525 Lakes & 11reams. bit-Ins. pool. carport. no $20 dep. &46-6386 t MO FREE RENT pre u me po . a ary
831-8l07 poo1 & spa. large rec pets. $675 1700 Bed-Be·~htront .. ~·~. 1 Br W/sttor1 term leaM. full 738-8538 558-85319 negotiable. 65()..1367
l/IF.W OF OC~ '"N I t~d •HS 6646 -.. """~ serv sultn 881 Dover Dr -----Bab-•tt~ needed In my u•a1 ll•n••y ~ roo m new y re · v• .,.. -. -avail. $350/mo Balboa. Suite 14 NB 631·3851 PHONE FANTASY •----2 Br. 2'h Ba Twnhs, mlCro decorated. beeutllully Lovely 3 Br 2 Ba. gar .• .., Agl 673•5410 25 Ladles to snare your hOme part-time after· Newport Beach, PIT 2-3
ttalh comp lrptc. Sll.y landscaped, securlly blk bch, no pets. SIOOO -"TIE" Fantasies• 828-7162 noons.-Good pay and dys pr wk. Currenl Calll.
llg.hts. 1795. &42·7803 gates Sorry no pell 650-1706 att 6PM COM. shr 2 stry. hplc EXECUTIVE SUITE f-ran) -301t wporkrng llcoMnOdRINtlloNnGaS Family law lllpetlence. 846-6591 house S350 + 'h utlls tease ca ....,,In Jan '84 540-5400 N t 11 d W t I I 676 5015 . Nwprl Ctr 6'0·~70 111--------ONLY 645-7841 wwv . L It ~ 2741 ewpor s an • er-Ava I Jan • --Two round trip llckets, --------•IMAINTENAN_C_E-Fo-,-em-1n-: meatiB.AIJ 1 Ill~ _, ~~~ °r!:~":~ B4d:;e 2 ba F/21·35 lo stir w/cpl, 2br Air-Cal to Seattle or Require knowledge ol :
Beiutltully landsctaped Charming 1 Br. oceen side • Iba hOUH w/spa. w/d, Portland trom O C Must Babytllter wanted tor 40 gener1I malntenince .:
garden apts. Pool & spa. hwy. patio. many trees VERSAILLES central C.M. 1250+'hutll t>e used before 12115183 hr Wk, 2 well·beh•ved pracedurea. eleclrlaal. ·:
Patios/decks. No pets. i~5g1e or coupt'e 2 Br. Ocean View. $1100 , 548-6125 $175ea 673-1187 chlldren, 3~ & 2'1t. my plumbing, carpentry,::
Bach S~50 '~~4-~~~ ut Is Agent 631~960 Flr~!lge 24·30. shr hOme. 631-6300. e•t 32 painting. mechanlcal & ·:
1 Bdrm. $615 __ _ Spacious apt, 1 ml. from 3t>r •Pl. S250 mo, N.B. l11lan1 Og. 4014 Busy Medleal Olstrlootor supervisory 1kllla. FIT .:
131 e. 181h. ~6-6816 Stu<110 nr. Moss Pt ocean beach, carpets. drapes. area Avail now Daya A lull MtVlce bldg. 14501<1 * AEsfXURXAf * needs 1h11p versatlle days, xlnl 11lary & ben· HSI E. 18th. &42-0866 view range & refrlpe &42•2367 250•0440 557•2428 ev 11. view suite. 4 large prl-llWPllT 11111 person, e.perlenced In eflt1. S..utlfUI WOl'klng
gas/water pd 1s1 • we vate ottlces with l11ge Inventory control and environment. Send r•
Bach $455 $525/mo 497-6287 SPECTACULAR Bay View, F 10 shr wl M&F we4l-loc. eecretarlat area. kllchen Pl• LM&ntl purchasing. Account• wme. 1nc1u01ng 1alary
1 Bdrm $!>15 3BR. tBA, frplc:, micro, N.B. condo. $310/mo t & private IOb~ Sign ClllKcNH Prop 540-4470 pey.t>le helptul Muit be hlitory to Bo• 003, Deity
lllllD 1111111
Now accepting applications
for District Manager to
supervise newspaper car-
riers. Salary commensurate
with experience. Company
benefits plus bonus op-
portunity. Apply in penon,
weekdays, 3 PM to 5 PM at
330 West Bay St., Costa
Mesa. ./
2250 V~ll'd W1y lt!J!rt luc~ 27H o-r $950 mo • utll utll1. 675-9643 1\181 space 1vall on estci1tt. Ull IPPMf..-TY well organlted and able PllOt. P.O Box 1560.
540-211 S 1100. 3 8(, 2Yt ba condo, 675-3666 M/F shr 3br, 2ba Newport :.~:o~.tlon allowance. S..Uty s.lon. 1 8'allons. to work under Pf..-ufl. Cotll ,.._.,CA 92628 ••..••......•.•.•..•.•..•••.••.••••••. • • • Wll1UU YIU.All Newport Crest. All bllns, Su Cltanlt '11 Beach Apt. Next to lt\Opplng <*'let 1ocat1on Benefit•. Salary :· lliiiiiiiim••iiiiiiii ______ ....... iililllliiiiliilililiiiiiiiiw
2 8'.....,., jacuzzJ ,..,.,.. wldhkup,2cargar,pool. 2Br IB•nr ... -f.._._ .. t>eac:h.$280.646-2725 tr 1 In H.B. Doing epptox. llble. Ptione 841·2 5 Newspaper • • _...., • ..--..-spa tennis S..utltul . -.,.. ... .,_.,,, It .h. Hll S100K C o between 10 . 12 ONLY.
avlll., 1nary rm, no pets. 15 GoodwlH Ct pool & 11undry lac. M/F to anr bMut 2 br H.B. atua • rear. an ° • KIDS-EARN QREAJ TRIPS AND PRIZESI c.rport $495/mo 498 .. 2n condo: mHll' br. Clean, 1300 i88 ft mo;; S200t<. 'Wiit take trade of If you're not 1h09p1ng
2 8'. 1'A·ea. 1565-$585 TSL Mgmt 642-1&e3 •-a_· 'I considerate non/1mkr. retaN« ~.~t!n fir, propeftdyown. ca.r °'oJcS.4.20071• cl1Ullfed. you m1y be . -
t55W. 101h. St. 2Br. 2ba, nr l>Hetl. S705 ::at~-! 1360. 548-7018 aft. 5 85' eq 11. 28044 Camino ~,,~27 or 848:2922 '" g:/,.~;18. •00 much. Tl&..... Nl-1122 yrty, 111, lul + ci.p. LO 1M CONDO. Patio, H.B. relleble working F/M ci. Eltrella, Capo Bch.
WllTll.I 557-8985, 1-338-4102 retrlg,pool,t.ennls,MCU1 r· n-imkr. 2br. 2ba, on 493-40111 ltlt WU... 1111 leJt ......
2 Br on Lido. lnot. IP• lty. So. Cit Pla11 675 ~ lac tennis 1385 ---lllt
• ... ~ membership. 1760. 538-0685 or 751-0295 llsO .._: 67s-8J34 ' 1580 Newport Blvd, CM.11 .1 p•iat
• "91" 400 9q "· '375/mo. II J I . . .. . . .. . .. . .. . . . . New 3 8' 1'A • Pl1IO, 673-93lll I.Utt lfat~ Neat, conllderate l)fof. to Agent 541·5032 ••
DIW. btt-lna, kids OK, no $980, Hclu1lva N•pt 1 IC. i5581mo. No MC:Ut· thr 3 br twnhome In Irv-r• • • ~·· kmMlcl. occupancy, Tow. Condo delull 2 Br lty Stec>t to aand New lne. 1320 mo. +-·~ U1Ha. Rent or ..... ""'4Y M75/mo. NO c.Met SI. 2 ba on bey .;oc.81'1 V..W ~pee & pain! IMM Patty 562-1431 .-modeled home with For appl &45-'"4t and tull MC. Dodi ivall. 11oraoe & lerge fenced
..... ..... ..... 873·3~ 875-1570 24th SI. 213/592·2725 NHd female. rellabl• IOt. commerd•I zoning.
••-roommete. Condo ~h adl. 10 Newport 8Nd 1 6' apt in &Ax. P00 Auoaa from Udo Mlflfta, pool, Jae, tennl•. yoAay S.2· 1334 mo.. 1tt, 1Mt & ctaenlng. 1 3 Br. 2 ba, newly dec:ot, bell ' MCurllv gtle ... ,,.,... .. _-,-IOl""'ffl,...leaal......,-1--880=
ml. to beectl 545-~718 fq>lc. "95. 098-Stea 71 .. 552.().... Non· S mkr p r et' cl .... "')l'W • °"" ... ....... 131'1/mo 81'00lctiur9' a aq rt or ie., r .... 1 Br wfttl crsmtdrpe, bu111 At tf'9 bMct1 a 2 Br 2 81 Hamilton: HI. Cell Unda Coate MeN C.2. 54t.724t In atove &, °"'"' refrlg. apt i.. blodc •rom ooean. Furnlat\ed Room near So. NO peta. teo-B75 4 tannl1 court• tcfoei the Coaat Plaza, Female at "3.()2to or &&e.e 100 81
1treet. unfUfn. Onty 1775 Pflflf. 12.60. 55f.113f. ON CHERRY LAKE lnlala H•
._,. 2111 18-1wnh•. ~ ...... Call be-on the bMCtr 1 room ..... N.8. home lo etw, S375 + 1200 n W IZi!! ., ..
trpfcil:tlo, vaulted call· tween 9.5 Mon·Thura kltetlenette 6 bett1 930d ~ utlls. MM535 art. 8 eq. · '".,,,. '
Ing, IM, encl 09'. ltJnt 7141'150.0361 +&200eecdeo 230eW Prof/Fem non atnllr, ltlr ~=t~~mo. =.~~· Hrw. 8=~~~oi: OceanfrontNllt13-4154 fully rurn. N.8. hae, Coate ...... lnduitrlal
to b*1t1 2 er. 2 a.. 2 friJfCa. pooe. iae tenn1a. UM w mTIL =~Jr,'~ INdQ, 3000 eq rt tt1t·up 1n
PllT Tiii •FIOl IUll
Very buly drc:ulaUon offloe needa
part time help answertnc hffvy
phone traffic. ·We have nice CUI•
t.omen! Applicants mU5t be nnt..
responalble, and have a plHMnl
~lephone penonalily. ·Some llght
office work alto. Koun are
Mon-Fri. 9:00 AM to 2i00 PM, Start· in8 salary .. $100.00 per week.
Apply in pereon. Mon-ThW'I, 2:00
~to 4:00 PM. Alk for CaUwrtne or
Eileen. 11ove. dtttwtrw. dedl. 1yr ..... ,~.2t,.,s12 ~~:'i!:r-'~ ctetu••lndultftlll*tC 1n.-
ger.161siMO. 6'Ml37 llG.CANYONCOHOO TV.PTion..iftr:,,..2274 ":::.::.,~= = :rr::, ~~ ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT
Fino Wf'tll &:..=. Ill 2bd+d9ft. Sll751mo. Newoc>ftlMS.~ prtv rm/ti&, oolt. PoOI 1001 •rloao Drive. 330 w ·~y ,, • COSTA MESA. CA tMH •
Daly Piiot en-neueo-1391, IOI e.e.7445 ws • ~., ""'· a..7US e•~ ....•. ~~ ~."'.''.:'. :·: '.~'~.'~.".' '. ~ .' -~~~~·. 7 ....... · !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ===========::l-======---===.J..--=========:.!======-=====:=.J...;:==~~._:=-=;_.L-~~
,.
•
•
a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday. December 5, 1983
TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 XmH caller
6 Swerds
tO Hellcllne
14 Bitter drug
15 W itticism
16 01 a time
period
17 Roman gods
18 USSA 1111er
19 Pastorel
s1alls
20 Anger
22 Book source
24 Of a Great
Lake
26 Sounds
27 Displace
30 We1g11t unit
3 1 Petitions
32 Needful
37 M DT plus
2 hrs
38 Arm bands
40 Succumb
41 Practiced
43 Haven
44 Strong drink
45 FM recell1er
48 Burning
S 1 Mtx.es
2 3
14
20
31
37
41
82
85
52 Give
54 Ape
58 Cover firmly
59 "Othello"
villain
61 Aesop'a
home
62 Maple
63 Egyptian god
64 Excrete
65 Sediment
66 Meshes
67 Faculty
DOWN
1 Coarse corn
2 Winglike
3 Double
negative
4 Boob tubes
5 Separate
6 Blabbers
7 Possessive
8 Indicator
9 Shatter
10 Copy
11 Territories
12 Sierra -
13 Stage fare
21 Toolbox
7
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
23 Blessings 42 Eradicators
25 Squatters 43 Mall cost
27 Utilizer 46 Darken
28 Uncovered 4 7 Eye parts
29 Genesis boy 48 Shock: var.
33 Calming acts '\9 Support
34 Wedding 50 River bank
words 53 Tone down
35 UK river 55 11 ls so
36 Latvian 56 Lob
38 Dressing 57 ltallan town
39 Asra.n tongue 60 Acquired
8 9 10 11 12 13
JtM Wu.-1111 J lat• Waat• IOU At!fl. lapr!!4 A1tn, lapf!• JA•~tel!!l..J!!I!!!!!.__
8@Ri6M eifi11A &Ni 17' Gl11tron, IOOhp Jolln· A;;;t1 = m JOt ... 1112 ...... " ... , titl tll1w F0t the HOllda~. pm ton. Many tKtrb. s.seoo. your venlclt. domtttlC or ..................... __ ....., ...
room l b•tll. OQurmat At~l Jaw.W. WUI Nit 960·1094 fortion 5$1·8295 '~.r..-..n '78 VAN gooo cond. low coolllng. EJcc:.eutnt r~ lntlr• IAOOO cr.cllt for -- - -~YL" 70 24100. brwnlbembOO. mi, 8la1,1pun111, MW Ill•
encl4ll. 642•0732 $2,500 or ponlona for 24tt 8AY PONTOON 8o•t. We buy Ctfl 11111 running. Sil4lt·5-rvlct·l.•ul"" m•tnt record1, gr.at IAOOO 752· 1400 X2848 -2 5 % Cl I I c 0 u n I Ho~ .. boll tl)llt. 2411 s 100. '4 0 0 c •• II ... C!OflO 17500 642•6602 work: ~4-4103 hOme
pe,1 HlO 7W&8M233. __ ~~~!7 1:1,~·;,q~~~~.~;:: !42-1817•213•4~·94s 1 llWYllTll011Ty 'llltl.llllTI ·19 vw· bu1. Bluetwhl. m sld pQOdlft. JlOw BEAUTIFUL OAR ETS for ldnt ent.,lllnment boat. WI HY Navy blu•. •nrf~ AJIOYI. ~l•pkl E11tr11 a.ti otr
quality, $500. 1·887-4870 Chrl1tm111 Your choice 1ea118 for dinner, $8950. OLUI 1111 '* '79 320I; 4 1pd, SIR 72M. S28,500, 533·•242 ove< S3500. 875-5851
Only S8 aa. 840-8688 842-8144 (315Y0Ll SIR 84 30060 lurt>O tlvrlblu 79 Ouo cOi\ve/t, whV II BMgt• pupt. champlan ' a111 Tlllll *'79 320I. 4 99d alrad, pa.pet•. 8 wlll old. ROLEX Uldles Oattjust, 25' Wellereft Nova XL ·73 -(•866621 · S38.000 Jull arrived whl, to mt, ltlarp $8500
$200 each 551·2555 Gold Sttlnltu Steel, Twin Ford 302 V8 Mete· •• 79 320I; 4 spd, AIC lrom Europe 561 ·9606 obo PIP 831·8327
-Diamond Ola.I S 1500 rulMf1, xlnt aond, tan· (~4XEOJ Ask abol.lt th• moriey we 79 vw 2·dr Ott Rtbblt. ~ .~~l=~~l~roup~o: 840·7182 ~em axle trlr, at Ounea *'79 3201. • tpd, $/R cau uve you thru our air. atk, 40 • mpg $4885 ~ .. Otvad. 83 1•1 t&7 WATCHES • Get the pr11&-• 11.000 720-1lO1 (091YPZ) purct111at & te11e ptpns 645-9527 eYH P P
llotoue loo61 for 1 frac11on 26.3' Sea Ray Dancet ·79 *'80 320f: 5 spd. AIC .ltl lllllU co Golden Rel. CllrlatmH of cost Flneet top name 325 hrs, 'SIP• 8. Incl. trailer, (585ZOLI II ·so Rabt>lt nv, wht
PYP•t AKC. OFA, Shots. quality replicas Ptrf In cover. tKtrH. $23.000. *'80 833011 4spd lo1dad PllTI w/blk iop, exit cOMI. 10
en. tine•. $250. 962-7616 every detail and dettgn. S94· 1 I03. eva 991·8592 USED C~S~RUCKS (1BWW2981 N1i~~gu,:~1:~~~ ':i~;:· :n'i: ;::,'· /!11~
Me11y Dogal $10 any alze. S200·S250. 790·7232 26-'SEA RAY '79: twin eng COME IN OR CALL FOR ~;~LT~~O~) S apd. SIR IU-1300 morn 4 eves 646--0430
Grooming 1cnoo11eacher MlactllaaHat ••ta Sl9.600tobo. 752·1034 FIEf AHIAJUL •·s2 528E; Auto, 1oade<l '80 Rabbit converttble, 21 yra e~p. 546·284S • . _ -----Xlmott new S:iul Nor· CALIF 2S. sgl gas. llber· Cormler·OeLlllo 1966853) pu crev1or v. htgh rogo tow mllet, 11lnt cond. 5
SHELTIE PUPPIES weglan Blue Fo• COii glass llybrldge sport· OllYllLn •'S2 52SE. 5 &pd, loaded spd. Must aelll S48-8123
1 wks old. S 100·1200. a111 6 $3850 642-3433 • fisher. Saarlllce S 18,800 18211 BEACH BLVD ( tEU0968) Sales·Servtce-Leestno ·so Setrocco-S, anlrl.
963·0174 --obo 760-8S77. 760-8381 HUNTINGTON BEACH '* '83 320t, All. SIR r13 llZ HD Sl black. exit c;ond S52QO.
a-1! ti lO era11 c;elt fan, oak blades. • .. l ••tlJ ... t-1111 llFM'\'9261 Au10. h111her, 1oade<1 Only 84s.6213 or 540·8338 ,.. a tulip Illas. Coat $290. WANT TO SELL OR BUY A -._ -*'83 3201, 5 spd, SIA 4,200 miles Absolutely
Xut tic TRAIN ENGlNE take $95 552-0796 BOAT? CALL ME FIRST WI pay lW llLW ( IFZP975) M1nt" ILGMJ818) 81 Rabbit convert:"" blk,
BELL Only S500 , CAMBRIDGE _ 510 per 775-8398 fllt••i•a•s •'83 3201. Auto. SI R IH·l1ll 271<. m1, 11t, reca10 Mata.
840·868S can 962-1905 - -(llwu 1891 208 w Isl San la Ana steteo can. Jdnt cond
A 1 Ill d k 1 t ltab Sail 7014 AUil lllMI IH·l1l1 CtoSed Sunday $8300 •~7-3508 n ique ro op es · 11 n -CHRISTMAS GIFTS ' -a•11-a•1 208 W. 191. Santa Ana -.;t; ---cond $1000 673-0700 p vi ,._,_ •-.. 8 78 280SE Chrome '82 RA8tJIT CONVERT · · eru an Liam• wool rugs 2460 Harbor Blvd Closed Sunday ,., 8eaulllul antique dr69$er °!'>'117' wl dl1mono design 44ft Tri 0 .... lnfNr COSTA MESA olloy wheels S 13 500 5 spd. Blaupunkt stereo
w/mlrror, $235. 642·2864 S 125. Well hangings nat. (ctasslc 1960) newly dee. LARGE SELECTION OF tall 2 13 58J·2 I 7 i 0; cass. racing aella. •Int
------brwn SS5. New rabbit fur Interior Call Biii Curtis Ul·4'00141· 1Ul NEW & USED BMW'S' 711•)63· 1440 cond SS2001bo 6"4·0448
Oak. Kii lbl, • WlndSOf jacket $45. 631-0946 (714) 760·1812 WI w·-YHI chrs. S275. Sellars -• • IEIOHH IOO SEC porcetaln top Ible, $96. ELECTRIC 4 passenger OLUI 1111 OUI pu smell.BMW logo IMIEll•YE ELl"E
Library tbl wt drwr, $75. GOLF CART. red & white CATAMAARAN 1sf.-se. see Ronald Oac;a • I ' RY Pie Sele. $395. 540-2056 canopy $500 obo Spray, tight. IHI, S595, Liii IUOll llW Champagne/Palamino 760·8030 trailer opt 898-6745 VOLUME SALES teether Full optioni.. 245 SERVICE & LEASING m1 unreg111 $54,000 Pair Victorian side chairs
82 VW Rabbll Conv
lmmac cono • cake over
tease. O down. 1272/mo
720-0480 or 553·025S
$275 ea Arm chair $325, John Wayne Tennis Club
all new uph04stery Pine t1m11y membership
cupb08fd $375 La~s $900 645-84S3
Coronado 25 kit, $2000 3670 N Cherry Ave E•e/wlmds 714-763-4468 Doug 642·S773 LONG BEACH acrt11ce VW Dune Buggy.
Hotlie' 14 w/Custom tflr. (No Cherry ean-4051 Ptncla1 9 lS7 runs xtnt. much new
exit cono M.ist sell. llH) IH·lltD 67 am/Im cass. •bll eng, Sl500 ObO 536-9904
S900 .2.0.-8093 --frade-lns Welcome new ctu1ch, t>ralt.es. !ires. W Dasher 74 auto, 4 nHI DriYH 9030 Now open Sun 11·4 no rust $5,000 786-5102 am/Im & atr 75,000 Hobie C111 14 xlnl cond . . 642-3665 mllos S 1750 548-7249
lully equipped 1nct '74 Jeep J-10 Truck PI S. D1t1aa 9117 PI S A A h II 70 91 lT Red. looks/runs V-ol" 9175 m11tch1ng c at box . u10. tr, s e '70 ROADSTER rbll S2M LlaUIOATiNG COIN $1850/0bo 646-0523 $3500 673-2912 grt. no rust. low m1 re· i... ,.;.;,.,,.. ____ ... ....,,,. COLLECTION 645-6759or752·2280 cords ss500 67J-.34s 1 71 olvo4 r oodcon Sli~ & Deel• 7022 Tracks H 35 --__ S900/obo. 966-8479 ByAppt.557-3534 '74 260Z. air, stereo. 4 '72914,ctean cond,Web-.------
Lovely Aulumn Haze Mink 8 t §(jp XVXILXele '53 Dodge Plck·UP. tuns s pd, runs g, e 8 1 ber carps Dave 53450 73 Nu pnt11n1r. 6 cyl, a/c.
oak t>ookcase $495. Art Kenmore a.wino machine
OeGo lamp $350 Lttho S75 Guitar Toredo
Abraham Llncoln 1886 brand $75' Orea1
$600. 3 oak 1ee cream c h r 1 9 1 m a s g 1 t t s
chairs $75 ea. Oak and 846-39S6
!Ible S75. 494-7340
A'~iHCH 6011
Stole. Used es Is or make NEWPORT BE.ACH good MOVING MUST $3200/0BO. 924·2706 966·7961 iv msg radio. SOK, $2200 ObO 714675-6023 SELL $500 650-2612 , -559· IS33 or 752· 7946
FREEZER S 50 Jacket $175 673·1202 --76 2SOZ. air. 4 spd, clean 'S2 9t 1sc red lOK ml --llke new · I -ooC'k avail. Ltdo Isle Ideal '76 Toy PU 5 spd. •·bed. $4300 obo 536-7697 evs fmmac c'ond · $26.000. '79 2440L 4 spd. atr. snrf REFRIGERATOR 175. Mot~Bacane moped $1S5 I 000 G 63 88
Ji. 3 Gas stove S10•trade
lex newer model. 20 gal.
water hlr $20. 494· 7340
557-8838 Semi Pro sur1brd S 165, lor approx 35 X 12. ow mi. runs xtnt. new SO 2aozx GCPck~ mi. 54S-9953 Iv msg ~-7·_ reg t-45
t>earn Low proltle sall· tires, slllfeo $2500/0BO • 177 GAS DRYER rebull1 $89 new 1335 631 -0946 boat $250 675,..323 or 662-17 43 bm w/balge Int 8' 11111 ·leyct tffl 1;,.m-."--.. ____ .--...
6-46-6759 or 752-7270 Musi sell due to 111 health 673-6803 79 ToyoiO PU. 57K ml. 4 633•5~ 545·08S4 Buy your sweetie a mao· Come '.n 1 see Newport
GE Washer & electric i nd collection ot 60 yrs Slips Available 35; & 35' spd $2950 642·S717 8l DATSUN 2SOZX 2 •2 nll1<;ent 1977 silver & Beach 5 tinest selacllon ·OlspotJng ol American C 9 5 M F Gd cond .. 1ake over lease. black• Rolls Royce tor ot previously owned
dryer, great cond. S260 Sliver dollars. B.U. S28 ea alt • · on-rl, 'SO FORD 1 TON 1211 no down, or purchase Christmas! Xlnt cond Porsches, Audia and
!or bottl. 786-2668 & s20 to s 1 lotd coins. 842·4644 Steke Bed ss.ooo Vtctor s 11 .500 496-02415 s32,ooo. 873-0700 Volkswagens.
lllYA.Pft.lUIH 9s6o:;oo• s:' 200 ea SlilMI!•• 7W 6-42-5655 -Ferrari 9121 z-....1.mv
LIS 957·S 133 windaurler Rockel 99 64 Courter Ford. Great ~ ..... ,..,.-----.,..-~,..---,-Perago pram/stroller, gd compl. unused. current work truck. Kint runnln~ '84 985121 BOXER· red (O" CA.w£R
Kenmore wllhr & dryr. exit cond. $110. 646-6786 w/Mylar, $900 650-0851 cond. $2300. 673·495S ~flan leather. 1 yr lect. l:vlll.S ~ cond. $100 ea. 544-6488. --warr. Take dellvery t/101 l'\\..A.-·1\.V l~I.:.
LITTON MICROWAVE. p8~ •• a~~.'s1~~·4~:~8=~· lic7clt1 1012 v... 9040 8~ 195K PI P 544.4494 ""!,.;'."' ;.. . '" _, . C<
455 E Coa91 Hwy
Newport Seach
673-0900
Sl25. 6-45-6099 ----·83 Puch blcycle. never 169 Fd bbhp cmpr 15-26 Fill 9123 t>Pt:H suMo,.vs IM
Olde but Goodie Relnger-RAMOS OHANA ARTS ridden $250 540-6439 mpg. sip 2 $2000 obo f, 124 Spt Spyder con· b l tl, Dt•tatic 11~ 175. "'•2·8983 Open house and art sale --9559 •s33 752 79•5 v• .,.. Oeoemt>ar lO-l I, 10 am. Mo1obecane Mens 10 spd ·' or • " ver'I. 5 spd. orig woman I • k 9107
Reing. $175. E..., level 5 pm 323 Coral Reel like new SISO Chlld'• 76Chevyw;ndo.;-Van Sn sr Citizen owner, 49.000 T•yotl 9 169 a ac ,_ $25 A $25 k • -73 Centurion 2 dr hard· elect renge $200. Washer Drive, .r23. Huntington seat. &Ck, r1, pis, pl b, ale, $3500 mi, 100 s .. performs like '70. 4 dr 1900. good cond top. 70K. xtnt cond 1 & dryer, $135 ea. Dish· Beach 536-8933 SS7·1446 ooo. 645-9S57 new. S3SOO 549·2309 $700 obo 536·7897 or
I .I WI.... 51 SI .. washer, S100. 6"6·5848 -------~ S55 8331 8p owner $1200 64•·2496 -..-...-;;;o;.;.;;.;;;o.. _ _.. __ ;i 1 ..... .__..;,;;;,;=.-...;::.:.;:~ Surpnse Her for Christ· SWISS Super MOONIA ·77 Dodge, 68K mi. stereo. '78 124 Spydet. 5-sp, • 12· m
,'RT TllE Salelh w ed w Refrigerators. like new. mas! Beaulltut Tour-CAMPI Equipped, Like aJr. trtr hlcn. good cond cass . absolutely perfect, ·74 Corona 4 dr sooan. 4 CdilllC 930t
• ~~e~~~!~ 1fi~ ~<;.~~~ now~~~ ~:,1~~~ c1ean.1AlmondJ Wh1te, mallne Mink Stroller New$375 646-3957 $5000 Mr Turner dys to m i . S2950tobo . spd Sharp $1575 58 Cadillac all ong1na1,
Start lmrmtd Pay Rate key a muSI. CAii btwn uons (Of a fulltlme sates FF.2dr.S165.S95·7062 $1550 673·1202 _ Ca•ptrl 1014 751 -4420,~63 1·1982 ~S-S45 1 642-0795 eve!.54S·8823 x1n1 condttton Call
$7 50. Musi be HS grad. 9·5.30. 631-4409 position In our reader ad Relrlger11or. runs good SWING SET, cltmbing Cam;;:r Shell i·utl height '83 Dodge Van, 10,000 mt, lta•1 9125 •74 Maril II Corona-stahon 963•5425
US citizen. Need car.. dept Telephone & $1"5 "•6 636S c o FE "y · · 964 2890 (3 6 1 IEINllllLI " . -· bare etc I HIL LI , all w/cargo door g roof lad· lully conver1ed S 1S.OOO '75 CIVIC 4 spd stereo wagon. 6 eye, needs eng 82 EL DORADO 19.000 • • pm counter sates eKp. helpful Whirlpool refrlg, 17 cu ft. wood. needs paint $120 der s300 645_s545 562·69651637-2084 alt 8 runs good, s 1500 OBO' work $800 obo 75 1·7181 m1. MINT CONO Orig
,MAT-••-ERS IETlllLlll PllPlE ,,. but not req'd Apply Pen· 642 8144 P P S 6 0 lorp~t'~':::Ure. neededtoconductlormal nysaver. 1660 Placenue llkenawS325 650-7452 ·-CAMPER . Wiii Fil Small Aati.at1, 650·6619 ·et COROLLA red 2 dr O~Oer Mon-Fri 16:;~,,;
Christ1anThomasGallery & Informal inspections, Ave.C.M c., • ....,.--u11 Tl 5S Calculator wl PC Pick-Up New ln11de Has Cb11ica 9045 'S3 CIVIC 4 dr sedan. 5 sedan.5spd.air.amllm, (John) 863-1200 Alter
650-23 t7 prep1te )Ob orders end Sales 100A p11nter. hardly Jacks, $400. or best offr spd, air, amtlm. 1ape 3 IM $5150 96S-0743 Spm 552·4104
provide various other M••••"ll TIMEX SINCLAIR 1000 used $100 536-3507 l 730.5551 or 544-S155 deck: SK m1. $7300 V lie 9173
--pj:ioTO PRINT~ housekeep.ng monitoring -• Computer w116K adaptor 11. W tt4 -'220 -I 1111C10Y2 II 6-40-6175 or 548-7292 9 IWlfta THE WIEST
No111su exp Snapshot as assigned at com· n I m111 & 3 software !apes. S75 llC. •• ••ttr l i kta 1016 396 auto, Cragera, runs 9 127 61 Bug. good cond Runs SELECTlll
Photo Ask tor Mille mercial nuctelf geMrll· PIT. 25 hours to be ar· 556-8000 $S$S$ PAID 1 s 1 Maxi Moped hke new ' good. clean. S 1200. H.B laa1a great must sett $2100
6-46-2424 1ng station At least a ranged Apply in Person frH .. Yea 6022 G00~4~~gf9~TEMS blue. $500 642-067 t .,, Bill 969-1221 call 962-4904 jot 1a1e modal tow mileage
Picture lramer lull time hlghschoot d1p10ma and KIRM RIMA HARO· FREEtog"""'home1grav • - -iPuch Mullux.nearnew. --'68Bug.rt>lter~.clean1n1 CCad,11tacs,S1n Souther~ · vahd driver's license a 'WARE. 2666 Harbor """ , M 11 I 6224 1 56 vw BUG XI AMfFM stereo nu tire!., all ornia ee us today e7xSp6~r117e5nOced only Call must Mtlltary exper pref. Blvd. Costa Mesa. Netherland Dwarf Rabbit lll CI al • 144m1 .• Klras $4751000 ' bit nRt con,d . $2500 Call 24hrs. Bob 1•1EllS
--
--$10,... hour Some.____ 536-794S alter 6pm Blessing Trumpet flke new 548-339S re· engine, ag. op • .,... '""' ••• R•p•aT Tiii · roof $3100 646·4 148 631-6300 ext 32 ClDILUC PllllR&llMH/ et1ts. Send comp•ete re--.--• Fara1tl re OH $50 obo 557.94~9-. Mttercyelt1/ _ WLYIT SYme with date or birth to ClllSOOI Ill.El ••ROUND o•K T•BLE 2 GUITAR & CASE with ScMl ln 1011 Aatea, l•,.rtt4 '69 Bug, org stocl\ eond Services P 0 Bo• 3307, Earn up 10 $200 a wee!( . ., " " , •lras S75 857-i 44s • - -•Int t1anspr1 S1500
State wide R/E invesi-San Ctemenle Ca 92672 Kevin 548·3416 leafs. 4 chairs $475/obo (3)Kawasakt 90 Dirt Bikes Aa•t 9107 •Ill ltlUll'S 494•45o7• 673•5146
menls. fin services firm, ____ · 673 3025 M t A t G I
2600 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
&•0-1880 ottering challenging pos-RESTAURANT Several •--t ;•-I • aiJ n cous IC ui ar _All 1_0r $ lOO 54S· 1°77 7 I sedan. runs & tool<S SOUTH ·59 Sqbk. good cond. ..vrt 1ry uS It with case. perfect! • "/F•• .. Ilion tor bright lndlVldual temp and perm. PIT poS· Real Eslate mvest~enl 7' Solabed $125. 6' Maple $600 cash 650-8106 77 HONDA XA75, gd good $400 641-8434 cou1n ,.M ,., c.ass. MUSI sell Clam elel
10 wnle and design for 111ons lex deh 1ype sand· c 0 m P iJ n Y s e 111 5 llble $75. 2 Blk legal Ille __ cond $200 675-7272 • 76 Stiller Fox 4 dr S8s0 $1100, call 644·0125
-9 9 0 and 0 E c 11111Ch and salad makers motl¥~vldval wit cabinet $50ea.831-7854 Office .t:lr•i 11'1_ n ~-XRU. gt.eat 631..3395 atl..6pm tllZI '69 sq bk ~n. 2 dr. ret>lt
9313 ~
POP· 11134 Mus1 have 2 EXper pre! Appty 8· 11 gener.81 office skills & dk:· 8' sofa stee;:r ~d ltaa~•nl lftl oond s200 540-8439 --mtr, gOO<l ~ $ lGOO
yrsexperwl COBOLEK· AM & 2·5 PM, M-F taphone uper , 'Kint rthl Ilk c 1 -7SSOOOS toaded. 11wtwtLLlll Weekoays 7am-2pm & 4*1ent~aar OC>POftUn•· Meyernols. 17821 Sky· ea 0"e. e new. os Canon N 200 Copier, very ·79 SUZUKI GS 150' 8200 sunroof, air. au10. low 7 w Sa IS 1y.CellS~-0940 perkCir.A.lrv 261-6178 typing a mutt, varied $400,N11$I00.540-0lS3 olean,WOf11.s uls S500. ml.1(1nttond St400080 mlLei $5800/080. ••111tL1 i:;·~740 1
un f'I
1Ht-Hm211
396 auto. Cragers. runs
good. clean $1200 H.8
eat 169-122 1
.P1e11n11
Retired Couple menage 2 1
units tn Cos1a Mesa.
S55·0665 or 63'1 ·6107
duties 5•9-2988 Arllllcial Reus Benjamine call 549-8846 11 no ans-tv message 556·90S6 Volume Sales. Service
Secretary. N.B. ReHarch trees· quality silk leaves. Piaaft/Orius IW wt call back 432·9016 And Lea.,Jng firm seeks first rate MC· real wood trunks -For _ _ . S P200 lllW 9112 18711 Beach Blvd.
·72 BUG. runs. $700 obo ~68 CORVETTE T. TOP 650-6996 !'lew motor. trans. ttres.
Can you ....
Spare 3 hrs ntghtly?
Are you ..
• ~ell groomed.
dependable
end self mot1va1ed?
Ooyou ...
Enjoy working with kids?
II you can ans-r YES
PhOne 646-702 1
2:~ Mon thrv Frl
·~·
Sales
* * * WUTEl1 PllOI
ITUllEEI
*
rel ary with strong •homeandolfloe. Antique Vlenneae Grand 80 VE PA Runs Hunlln!)tonBeach
stallstlcal skills, salary Beebe & AIS<Xl. 47&-0311 Plano $1500. 5S6-5679 eKcel $1050, 63l·2431 173 2002. good cond, runs (l1•) 1•2-2000 '72 Super Beetle. llery "' "' clean. ~Int running cond
S 1500+ depending on Broyhlll tnple drswr w/mlr. Early upright red oak '8 I Harley Super glide -weu. clean int. caas deck .WOOlobo. Must sell
exper1ence. Please send twin trndt bed 1111/b)l piano SSOO. 760-6267 5 gal 18nks, king/Queen 12900 obo dys 835•6886· J11Hr 129 1145-5374, 642-6189 ~~ Joo~~l~tll~~6~~ S'pnga & man. e111t. $700 Grand plen~led s=o :~~ack b:~.:f>o~ '7e:~:~ ~~~ 6~~·t8cSo3:d 171o7 ·!~J6L,73oc~re, lln klth&r. ·f.4 VW BUG. good cond
Coste Mesa Ca 92627 obo. Pool Cbl, lrvtng Keye, I I I d ---. . -'· too s MUST SEH. -NOW $1800 -----·----tlale top, gd oond, S400 s:~/obo • s~~-0~~ · lflT 1111 • 'll YZ2IO all orig Must see! $4900 drlv sos>"r · Ou1ck sate OBO 662·3S72 Secretary Real Estate firm obo. 557·9499 · ex bfft olte<. 492-7665 S6995 497-23S8 -Metzler tires good cond In CdM needs llvely pe<· BUY DIRECT FROM Uprlghl consote, 5 yrs old, 5550 ' 82c;..5453 ·79 3201. Iberian red. ..=-.-·=------9141 5onallty to help run office, MANUFACTURER hardly used. $750 obo. __ ___ _ __ exit cond. $9800 obo 1!!1-~•p.•---""""'..;;..""""' <fl) * * some typing & light bo<>«· and eave 50 10 75% on new 556-4982 Parting Yamaha Cheap 6-46-6305. Ive msg ·72 R)(.2 Very good cond • tl. Ill MIR keeping required Catt top qu1111y bed sets Twin I tl "--.J 1 •"0 675·3885 John --• ---32K on ,,_ eng IOK on . ~
,/TT .. ~ •-• w11dys 9·1 ex 2-5 30PM $6 9 ~r •I-• -81 3201. 5spd. sn/r1, 11r, new clutch $1100 OBO ~
•T HO~' ••ew-apatpler llllT lllllS 7141760-2583 se1u1'1s 'su7191 959. S5a'vfeulleseve'ns §\JS. S1ra10. 206 CM. j Mtltr Rt•H I020 cass. immac SI 1.900 645-SS97 A . " ..,, "' W di f d II I · · $150, val $450. 786-3519 0""n Road Mint motor· 779-2062 836-5293 subecrlpt1ons (Register). hy not al or o ara n IEWl• IPllAT1111 more on queen and king ;;me. Dodge 2111. 30K -~ ltrct4n lea1 9145 S41order Call Date King our CdM oftlce. We offal': Must Have exper with sets Free delivery sili8iop Br unswick pool 1 Conven1ent1yL ocated 1tP.I!'!'!-._,,..;;..~..;;..._
951-711 1I12:30· 1:30pm) •Highest c~mmlaalons Woman's Swimwear 636·4195 tbl, reg size. newly re· ml. $9,500 51·7181 & Compe1111vely PrtceO '66 230SL. 4 spd, amtfm Miii •IEllatS • Extensive product lines c ec•nt t t h is 11
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil• Photo copy aupplles H B 969·2863 or Iv Contempor11ry Sota, covered. 12 cue sticks, all Trailtrlt & &a~s.' "ooope n du~ o SOUTH
• 6am to 12 noon measage 960-8433 earthtones. Kint cond.. equip, complete $500. TrHtil 1824 re,s, g con · ust
a a hour ''""' "" $80. 552·0408 645· 189 I sell 6800 493'&6284 oou1n t-,---0..~""9~-nM-t.ec:oenU~..Lil:!.WZ!ll'Lll.~~l2!;' ~ 15! UW1'9l111, .;11 COA ~itttt-1'-eGN -
algne<I a contr.ct with a It rtfam I H rt• offe< plenty of money Obie bed S50. Mlrrof:ii5. ' t , I cute! S1250 497-8937 118_.000l obo 537·2862 YOLllWllEI
malor Callfornla Savings ·-e, w/~ll a-plus cash bonueea. fringe DrtsMr $15. 545-3426 t ff 1232 TYV (A R\IER and Loin to sell annuity .... .,.·~., ~1•1-IOl .. /ft••. benefits 10 m11ure per. tfs Tr11l.....,---l"'-11 '71 Ts~E. nu tlreal difl, HWIWILLHT
prodUC1s to their clients .. son In Orange County Obi m111 wl box sprgs & BEAUTIFUL 25" RCA Utility 102' D-" '"' ~ ~ 1-·I~\ I\\ susp rebuilt, much more we are toolung lex sev· II y~ are a Mll·Slarter & area Straight com· frame. almost new. eKtra COior TV. 2 yr wrnty.j _ "'u..: 'l' A very llghl ca Sac IE l•IEISILI" e<a.1 proletstonat satesj f!Ungry for money. call mission bulldlng product firm s 125 786-9482 s 148, Free det Open MET AL eox TRAILER .... : ....... :.:·.. $5000 PI P 54._,l494 r Volume Sales. Service
people wno are wtlling to Mr. Tllornas 6arn-1pm 11 sales Regardleas of e•· ev1/wknds. 955·0623 dys Sun TV Johns 646-1786 5x811 $400. Victor And Leasing
$10.000 CISll. 650·S 106
73 Camaro 307 V-8, auto.
trans, PIS, good cono.
$1450. 968-4223
·fa Caprice, good conif
$'550 675 -9541 ,
631·6300 Ken
73 St Wgn-: new paint.
111es, xtnt $2300 obo
559· 1833 ex 752-79416
SEE IS FlllSTI
We have a good selec:tton
ol NEW & used Cllev·
rolets! See us today!
COHHELL
CHEVROLET
X~ll.11l••r 111,.1
I I ("'\I \ '\.} t ....... \
54'>-1200
Special Edition '79 corvet-
te. 19• options. Faste<
9 t 1sc, very seKy. Best
Looklng/Org Co S 11,250
ObO 494.4490 wortt llard, learn our mar· lll-0111 I pertence. write F 0 Oreut 15' sectlonat Color TV 21 .. great pres-6"2·5655 All SOf'ts of peopt• use1l·7~~ ~:~~ewN:7c:~fn 16711 eeacll Blvd
llellng appro ach and• f Sears, Pres . Box 71 t. Ft. I curved 4 piece $750 An-ent' must sell S t 50. Ctasstlle<i'Ads, your one· ctass1l1ed ads 10 sett all llrea. ,amlfm raalo, 1 Huntington Beacll Dt4 t t 17
possess Life. VanablelSALES BUSINESS OPP YI Worth. TX 7610 I , 11que 6' Lounge Table 559-5022.497-2607 .1_1_op'--shO__;p..;.p_1ng...::..c_1_n_1e_r __ 1 sorts ol things 6•2·5678 owner, $5900. 963.3102 (l14) 142·2000 If
Annuity and NASO Lit· Tete-communications rev· TOP SSS $800 1920 To as _ -178 ~HAL(ENGER· 5 tpd,
enM1. We otter tdeaq otulion Whet is wrong Females Pref Mooers & Butcher Block $995 ·6 ICotor TV, exit cond. S 100 Aat t Lt11ia1 901 AattLt11i•1 9010 i ate l.t11i 901 A1t1 Lt 11ia1 9010 stereo. cass. Od mpg. gd wo~~~n~~M ~~.w~ea~ngS300-~ E~~ ~13)~~19~ Early Am~~n ~nd 9~-1~3 r------------------------------------~~.~600.~~nv S&L branches.nonlg!llSI comm1ssluon per week? s. madewootrugs,Barker6 Teac cass deck $150-r.,.. ...........1
or wtekenda, llmlled New Program. Cell C TIWTitlOllllYll piece bdrm set roman I AM/FM receiver' $200 • THE AUTO STORE'S TALKIN' • ..,,.n prospecting & com-1 Damato lex •PPI IExprd with P.Os Gd driv-wMe S900. E•ec Ofnce 1 760-9031 • ·ee-Mustang. vs. aUiO, pi.
mission income IOj 714·681-S465 ·ing re<(d. G & w Towlng.J des!\ wlchalr $~50 ----. pb. orig owner, sharp!
$40,000 .. tlth11soundslsa1es Bu11neu Oppty l 1321/tduatrlat Wey,CM 549-2447 T.V.~ENTALS$20permo ''WHOLESALE LEASING'' S3000firm 673-5114 .. like the lype ot opportunl·t Video Cass Recorde<a -19 c04or TVs. asaott~ ryyouhavebean-klngl Panasonic s139 N~ lllYFllllTllE I styles 540·3195 '70 Maverick. Sport
& 11 you are av11t1bte lor MLM Beverly 775•5447 PART-TIME. Varied hourt Les 957·S133 Ital CL 1 / 1
1 ,,,.-o••i .. OU lOOfC •.. -·-•WI,_. Edition. runs good $690 Interviewing and trlllning · to Include early A.M. --------I , •Ir tf --,, -•n• _,,., -"" obo 846-3582
In Dec. to begin In Jan . SALES CLERK lex drug weekends. Must h1vede-Like new Hercuton •01•· .... 70101 1.) MBZ 380 SL s62s•·1· Mo. L 11.) T-BltDS s240•/Mo. 71 LT0.ciean:-11r. ~Im than please call Mrl store Cashier. cosmetk:t pend1bla vehtcle (amtll bed, 11l*ge 11rlpe, 1150 1 Ptllllpt on Mon.·T~.· & dellver~ Parllllma. truak ;· van. Station obo. Powder blue tov• IO ILllAIY Y&OIT 2) MBZ 300 DS s450•aa.. I 12) c<JUG•D s2ss•/Mo. 5750 536•
7997
ah. Wed 11(714)627-9048 11tern1te wknd1 only. wagon) to 1ul11 newt-Mii. Kint cond. $100 NEW • DIESEL. For All • fffffl· A • "" ·71 Mustang :...-...-v-,-r-.. -J
Apply II Pon Pharmacy papaf detlaf In tr11lne obo Bdrm Ml, dk walnut, your Holldly En18f1alnlng 3.) MBZ 300 sos s550•/Mo. I 13.) TQP•7 # •150••/Mo. classic. •Kit cond. lo ml. I 3130 w Balboa Blvd, NB area. Must be depen· twin bed wlmatt. & box & Parade ol llQhts. Days ftL ownr 14500. 873-3848
dlble. Contact Oreg sprtng, 3 drwr dreaser. 673-4860, 111• ?;57-3273 4,) BMW '211 *270*/Mo. I 14.) TEMPO '142**/Mo. I ller 5pm. See Set/Sun IUl llTlll H)'de Monday thru Frld•y S 160 obo. 840· 1830 INT Qt 7011 "1
Rtntallutes :' for ec> ULU ~ 8:30 and 10:30 Lov .... 11, wd lldea. cneln ~ atra tb 5.) VOLVO DI. '234* /Mo, : 15.) 'U CORVETTES *525* /Mo. '77 Granada. 4 dr, amlfm,
tlve Balboa I end ofllct, llUUY UftlnllM a.m. on1y. &42·4321 a.ramie tempe, clllna. tbt f1 fl von sport et. 4.!i &.) VOi.VO Gl ,21S•*/Mo, O l6.) CUTLASS '210 .. /Mo, :!'dla~:. e~::O =~\,:i We nave ot>41"•no• '°' The Orange County Diiiy -t1mp1, $ 125. 786-5881 '8 l Jonnton motor, 4 cond. S1H5. 790·8888
two 111~ieno.d. lull time Piiot ,,.. an IK~I op-atata & hanging racl< • llc9ntad agent•. Com· porturnlty b•glnnlno ,...,...,, ........ Scand leather chair. like S3000. 973.9090 7.) CRICAS . •160** /Mo, M 17.) TRANS AM '245** /Mo.
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PfOC*'y to work wtprof. EOE ' Went.ci· 'ull time otflot Y1m:h1 ue>~-, Pl:no •• p..., 11 Npt ICh otc C•U Mr ' • Henne 47._1234 maneger wllll ctertoal new, 112 . 2 bHut \§ ft Bot ton Whaler
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..... 11
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l
I ~
A record-breaking ·C~ristmas ?·
Orange Coast merchants r e por sales increasing'at rapid pace
IJ CHRISTIN E DECKER °' ... .,.., .........
Mott area retailers predict the 1983 Chri.sunas
eeuon will break all records based on sales the past 10
days. .
"It's been super. Incredible. We've been increas-
lngaales at a very fut pace. We've broken all previous
salee records for a Christmas season, so far." said Sue
Graham, general manager of Bullock•• at Soutll
Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa.
"For it to be this good. this early we can expect it
to be even busier in the next few weelu," she said
today u merchants completed their second weekend
since the Christmas shopping season opened Nov. 25.
Robinaon's in Newport Beach's Fashion Island
J
as ai.o broken salee record.a for thia aeuon.
"We've had a very atrong beglnnlng. l:very year
we 1ee double-dlclt lncreues in salee. We're very
optimiatic we'll have a strong finiah, 0 aa1d Katen
Baynard. Robinson's public relations director.
Graham said people are spending more money
this year than last for expensive, quality items auch u .
crystal and designer clothes. There's alao a better
selection of gilts fol' Christmas this year bealu.e
strong sales this sprlna indicated winter aalee would
also be jumping.
"Last year people put their money in a lot of sale
items. Thia year they want quality -gifta that will
(See CHRISTMAS SALES, Pa1e A%)
THI DRlllil CDllT
MONDAY, DECEMBERS. 1983
13 held
oc • IA
nuclear
protest
_Body language meet gives
Conataace• Bern1teia teU. lawyen ...
By JEFF ADLER
Of .... Delly ...........
When Constance Bernstein gestures. people
listen.
The San Francisco communications consultant
talks with her hands, her eyes and through her
posture. And she shows others not only how to
COJTlUl~nJcate througt-i bc;>dy langauge. but how to
read It as welt ·
"To listen is to be sensitive, to have a vt.ual
perceptiveness to what othen are saying," Bematein
explained to a small group of attorneys attendinc an
Oraf\tle County. Bir,. A.-ociation ~ an
courtroom body ~ The seminar wu part of
the bar aMOCiations'a three-day trade fair and
exposition which contluded over the weekend at the
Orange County Fairgrounds ln Costa M ...
Incorporating a slide ahow, her own expansive
gestures and eome simple group e~ in a
two-hour preentation, Bernstein made her~. She
ahowed the attorneys how to improve their ch.anca
of winnlna by communicating on a non-verbel level:.
She al8o explained how non-verbal clue. can be
Wied to read whether a judp or juror la belnc swayed
by a particular argument or witne91.
But whether It be the cour1ltK>m or a bar room.
(See LAWYERS GET, Pa1e Al) .
.., .... ,......,w.,.,..
Timely Santa adorns clock &tore at Newport and 17th in C08ta Mesa.
COAST .fDITIDN
OR ANGE C OUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
---
Weekend crashes
ki.11 two, hurt seven
Teens' families
aghas~ at charges
Police said Chang, riding alone,
was preparing to tum when her
car was crushed.
Roger Kounter. a 1:)-year-old
student riding in Thomas'
(See FAMILIES, Page A!I
Three sought
after Mesan's
boat capsizes
A search for a Costa Mesa
fishing boat captain and two crew
members resumed today in rough
waters between Catalina bland
and· the Los Angeles Harbor
entrance.
The hunt for the missing trio
was launched Sunday after
Harold. Whitehead's capsized
35-foot vesael, the Lepsadon, was
spotted about two miles south of
the harbor entrance.
Whitehead, 56, and Ron Poole
and Steve Lewis, both of Long
Beach, had been fishing near
Catalina .Island on Saturday.
Whitehead's daughter, reached at
the family home, said others are
~isling in the Coast Guant •
sea.tch but declined further com-
menl.
tmoves
..., .......... .,_,. .....
• •. how to win their pointl with facial 1ubtletiea, expansive ge1ture1.
. .~ .
.....
~·.
e
Aa * Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 5, 1983
Parking
hassle
mulled
-in Mesa
By KAREN E. KLEIN
OtlMO.-,l'tMltt ...
~-.
·1 CONTINUID ITORlll I
FAMILIES OUT RAGED ...
From Page A1
Camaro. was krlously Injured ln
the accident, suffering lnterna1
injuries and a fractured pelvis. He
is llsted in serious condition today
at Fountain Valley Community
Hospital.
Hospital officials said they have
received more than 300 calls from
friends and classmates of the
15-year-old.
know who saw what or what to
make of it," Craft's father said.
"The whole family is in shock."
Poli<..>e, however, said an officer
had been following the two al-
legedly speeding vehicles and was
on the scene about 15secondsafter
it happened. The police officer
was credited with putting out a
fire that erupted in one of the cars.
A permitallowingoff-s1te park-
ing by Pacific Amphitheater
patrons at a gas station abutting
residential areas will come before
the Costa Mesa City Council at
tonight's meeting.
The amphitheater parking situ-
ation has drawn complaints from
nearby homeowners who say
patrons park on residential
streets. make noise and leave litter
before and after concerts.
I Class A yachts head out of Newport
Ha rbor e n route to windy challeq~e.
D""1 ...... l'MM llf L .. l'afM
Gusts of up to 22 knots caused one
boat to nt:arly overturn.
Both Craft and Thomas. who
was treated for a broken leg . have
been released Crom 0U1cial police
custody. Because of their ages,
both cases will be handled
through the juvenile c.-ourt.
A District Attorney spokesman,
though, said it is likely there will
be a push to try Craft <And Thomas
as adults m Orange County Su-
perior Court on the murder
charges.
Elbert Craft claimed his son's
car, a Chevrolet Nova, was rigged
to look like a high-performance
vehicle but "1t really wasn't m
good shape. He'd had it about 30
days and had been working on it."
He also said his son and 'rhomas
were not friends and· "hardly
know each other except to say 'Hi'
between classes."
Another bout of wetness due Craft's father said he is
suspirous of allegations that his
son and Thomas were raclng in
their late-model cars.
CRASHES ...
Also on tonight's agenda is a
review of the need for crossing
guards at Bear Street school. The
City Council meets at 6:30 p.m. in
the Council Chambers, 77 Fair
Drive. Testimony from citizens on
both items is expected.
Cha nce of r a infall on the coast seen at 20 pe r cent on Tuesday From Page A1
The amphitheater off -site park-
ing issue has sparked heated
debate at past council sessions. In
October. the council voted to allow
off-site parking at Costa Mesa
High School for the final weekend
of concerts before the end of the ....
By tbe Associated Press
After sunny skies and warm
temperatures. Southern Cali-
fornians might get wet again. the
National Weather Service said
today.
Tuesday will be partly cloudy
with a 20 percent chance of
showe rs by late afternoon, fore-
casters said.
After weekend hiRhs in the
mid-60s. a low-pressure system
was expected to move in "with
enough moisture io make us thlnk
there's a chance of rain," fore-
caster Stan Massey said.
The rain would hit the coastal
and mountain areas as weU as the
inland valleys, according to the
forecast.
The rainy season has already
been twice as wet as usual. with
season.
The approval came over the
strident protests of a group of
homeowners who objected to the
off-site permit primarily because
they feared it would set a prece-
den t for approving similar park-
lng arrangements -lncluding one
pending for the gas station, at 2490
Fairview Ave.
HOSPITAL PL1'NS ...
At the Nov. 14 planning com-
mission meeting. the ~talion's
permit was approved for one year.
with conditions requiring the
station's owner. Jack Botts, to
supply a security guard. clean up
trash the patrons might leave
behind and obtain necessary in-
surance.
The city's planning staff rec-
ommended denial of the permit
primarily because of concerns
about the impact of noise and
fumes on residents and possible
traffic hazards.
Botts' plan allows parking
spaces for 32 cars at the station.
On the crossing guard issue.
representatives of a parents'·. or-
ganization •from Bear Street
School are expected to express
concerns about the safety of school
children crossing such heavily
traveled thoroughfares as
Paularino Avenue. Bristol Street
and Baker Street.
From Page A1
campus hospital proposal vowed
to sue or seek a referendum~
Derek Pogson, spokesman for
health planning agency, said
today IMC's time clock started last
week after the office received
more detailed information about
the scaled-down IMC hospital,
proposed by a coalition of power-
ful business interests and civic
supporters. The proposed medical
cen ter shrank in siz.e, foUowing a
recommendation by county medi-
cal authorities.
The agency. which regulates
expansion of the state's hospitals.
still has questions about a compel·
mg hospital application in Irvine
by Chatsworth-based Health West
corporation. he said.
He couJd not say what questions
health officials intend to ask of
Health West. But their application
for a 232-bed. $81.7 million fa.
ci11ty. was declared imcomplete
some time ago. Pogson said.
HealthWest spokesman Ross
Goldberg said in telephone inter-
view from Los Angeles the tinn 1s
still searching for a site in the
greater-Irvine area.
"We·re stall hoping we have
Holiday confections
workshop. in Irvine .. -
A ·demonstration on how to make holiday confectioJ1S using
simple and easy techniques will be offered at a wor!<Nlop Tuesday
and Dec. 13 at Northwood Community Park ln Irvine, 4531 Bryan
Ave.
Heather Bell wiU conduct the workshops. held between 9:30
and 11:30 a.m. Tuesday and in the evening during the following
session.
Space IS limiied and registrat.ion IS required by calling
552-4350. "
something to say on it," Goldberg
said,~adding HealthWest does not
intend to withdraw its application.
Lack of a site ha8 stymied review
of Health West's application by the
state agency, he said.
HealthWest, backed by a
smaller cadre of local supporters
who want a UC Irvine affiliated
hospital, lost its promised location
in September when the UCI
chancellor withdrew his support.
Goldberg said Health West's
plan embodies more than a hospi-
tal, and would include an urgent
care center, a n:>Obile health de-
livery system and an occupational
health program.
PROTEST ...
From Page A1
Saturday. "We want to send a
clear message to President Reagan
that the nuclear freeze movement
1s not the small minority that he
thinks it is."
Seal Beach Police Chief said the
I 1h -hour weekend protest at the
facility drew only 250 demon-
strators. while the alliance had
told the department Friday to
expect 1.000.
"They began arriving about
noon but they cut their plans
·short," Picascia said. "They
planned .speeches, but it was
pouring rain."
··v executive
hangs himself
A vice president with a food
sl!rvice company in San~ Ana was
found hanged over the weekeosf
al his residence ill the 16000 block
of Sequoia Street ' tn Foilntain
Valley.
Police said the victim was
identified as 40-year-old Yoshirno
Hiroto.
Officers speculated the ap-
parent suicide was related to
business pressures. e--wport group plans yulee--tp:ttatn ¥----l-m..-..-----------1 garage aze
The Speak Up Newport organization plans a monthly meeting
and Christmas Party Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. at the Villa Nova
Restaurant, 3131 W. Coast High way.
The meeting will honor the Sheriff's Harbor Patrol. '
~.ltakespeare.an show set tonig ht
,
-~e-man performance.of selected soliloquies and sc:_e~ from
Shaki?Speare will be ~r{ormecj_free 8 o'cl~!< tonight by vjsiting
lecturer William Needles. --
•.: • Nees;lles, a.principal .actor witfl the Stratfbl'd Shakespieare!n
Fesitive ·of Ontario, Canada, wiU perform in the Virginia and
Norman Nixon Theater on the UC Irvine campus. Ticket
. infonnation can.be obtained by calling 856-6617. •
caused by hot coals
A fire that gutted a Corona del
Mar garage Sunday apparently
was ignited when hot coals from a
fireplace were tossed ln a trash
can. fire authorities said.
The blaze at 302 Heliotrope
Ave. broke out at 6:24 p.m . and.
· caused about $18',l>Oo in damage. A
pickup-iruck parked'in the garage
was de9l(pyed along-with other
contents. •
ft took 14 firefighters to douse
the blaze, which was limited to the
garage.
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a.1w-,. 9"41 ioinOey II ,., 00 "°' i.e.... ,_
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T1ll1..._.. _..... .
=:-~ ..... ='-=-. -·-.. .. Lo..-.... ....
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
H. L. lchw.U Ill
Publiahef
Chay Dowellbw Rarmond MllOl.Mft
Editor Ind Alelat1nf ContrOltef IOthe~ • ..__,,o..ee
Pl~ ........ -..............
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• -
C ......... adw..-..11 7WMIM7I All otMr d1p1rt1Mn .. ..,......,
MAit OPl'ICa :l30 W.. !My II • Cclell ..... CA
...,. -Bo.. 1MO. Colle ....... CA t2tM
Copyrl9fll 1115 OrWIOI CO... ~ ~· No ntw• t lO•IH . llh1ttr11ro11e, 101101lal 111111•1 or ___ _,.,.~-IPICilf
~of~iglll-
6.62 inches pelting Southern Cali-
fornia since July I. Normal \ttould
be 2.63 inches. according to the
weather service.
However. sk ies should clear up
again Wednesday and Thursday.
with highs possibly reaching the
low 70s by Thursday, forecasters
said. ..
"For one thing, both of them
were driving in the same lane,"
said the father. "I know Randy
had moved into that lane so he
could make his turn to come home.
Two cars driven by Phyllis Fin-
ney, 55, of Huntington Beach, and
Jeffrey Koza, 18, of Long Beach,
t'Ollided head-on on Pacific Coast
Highway.
Lows this week should be in the
upper 40s and 50s.
"From what my son told me, the
other car locked its brakes and
Randy tried to stop and then
swerved to avoid the accident,"
said the father.
Finney was listed 1n cnttcal
condition today at Fountain Val-
ley Community Hospital, with a
fractured pelvis. broken knees,
scrapes and bruises. Kozawas
listed in serious condition. ''The charge is so severe. l don't
CHRISTMAS S-ALES -PUSH RECORD ...
From Page A1
wt. People must have more money this year," she
said.
Graham said the recent rain and cold
temperatures were responsible-for the record crowds·
which have flocked to South Coast Plaza in the past
few weeks. because it's an enclosed structure.
Smaller stores report business has been a little
slow -especially on the rainy days but merchants
predict sales will zoom by Christmas.
"We had a good day Saturday but a lot o(
merchants say it's been slo~. It's the rain. We think
things will pick up a lot by Christmas," said Audrey
Patterson, owner ot Recycled Rags. 2731 E. Coast •
Highway in Corona del Mar.
"It's been a good year here at South Coast
Village. I think the raln kept a lot of people inside the
mall across the street (South Coast Plaza) and a way
from here but that'll change now that it's cleared.
Most me~h.ants are very optimistic," said Bonnie
Morris, marketing secretary for the village.
LA WYERS GET THE RIGHT MOVES ...
From Page A1
body language universally is used by people to
communicate subtle and not-so-subtle messages,
Bernstein acknowledged.
"The way you move is the way you think. The
way you move is the way you feel," Bernstein said i'h
explaining the underlying principle. She urged the
lawyers to exude confidence, project energy and to be
receptive to the non-verbal signs of others.
Confidence is communicated to others in a
variety of ways. sa.Jd Bernstein, who is president of
her own consulting finn, the Synchronics Group. She
said broad gestures away" from the body and long
strides communicate both confide nce ·and power.
"The more personal space you take up. the more
people give you," she said.
To underscore her point. she showed pictures of
President Reagan tn powerful poses. &esturing
broadly and striding confidently. Bernstein called
him ~ master at communicating-through non-verbal
cues. ,
upright are indicating neutrality and those who lean
forward are interested or are on the attack, Bernstein
expl~ined. · ·
One important tool in projecting energy are the
hands. she said. pointing to emphasize her contention.
To signal you are receptive and want to hear
what another person has to say, Bernstein suggested
such non-verbal behaviors as consciously keeping the
stomach and chest areas uncovered. Men should not
wear vests and people should not fold their arms
across their chests 1f they want to communicate
receptiveness.
"Meet the world exposing your stomach. That
way you're open and receptive. It tells the world
you're not afraid to listen:· she explained.
Also, a person should always face a person head •
on. rather than turning sideways. "It's a subtle way to
turn people off. to give them the cold shoulder.
because that is what ymrre dotng.''sfit?:saiO. -
And she urged women, often programmed to Bernstein-also told the ·lawyers it is very
assume postures that communicate submissiveness important that they learn how to "listen" to the
and powerlessness. to wear clothes that don't limit non-verbal coillrnunications of others: "Tb show
movement or restrict their ability to stake out you're listening, move with your speaker, reflect
personal space, as tight skirts do. their posture. The worst thing you can do is get out of
Avoiding symmetrical p()stures, such as sitting sync with them," she said.
straight up. knees together. and hands folded in the "By mirroring a per«>n's ~hysical posture.
lap. is another., way. especially for women. to assert you're saying, 'I hear you. I know what you're
non-verbal power. she said. saying.' ·You're also eliminating your r.esistance to
Aii asymmetrical' Posture is "not-agressive. i t's•what theot}ler person is say~" she said. "This is the
assertive," Bernstein added. , key to persuasiveness. to be -visually listening and
It 9lso .. is important tori)roject energy (o an, rooving. with (the speaker)." _ . _
audience. "Monitor the direction you move in. Move Non-verbal communication or body language is ··
energy out." she advised. the unconscious language spoken by everyone
People who stand or lean backward are everyday. "To bring it toa conscious level, to look at it
indicating they are in retreat. Those who st.and or sit and to understand it is to control it," Bernstein said.
:
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, December 6, 1983 * ~I
·infant deaths .up d _es.plte year with safe se-at law
...
•' ,. ·'· •'· ::·
··:
1' . . ,., .. ,~, ,•
··' ..
•I , .. ·•' . '• . :·
: I . .. .
By STEVE MA.KULi!:
Ot!MO.., ...........
Nearly a year after a child
safety seat law took effect. stau-
atatistics reveal the number of
Infants killed in highway acci-
dents has actually increased. not
declined.
State officials claim the statisuc
shows many Californians are still
disregarding the law despite fines
as high as $100 and dr~tic
examples of safety seats in action.
"The number of injuries has
gone down by nearly 9 percent but
the increase in fataliues shows
how far we still have to go," said
Kent Milton, a California High-
way Patrol spokes0'\8n in Sacra-
mento.
"Three years 1s about how long
it takes for people to start comply-
ing with a new law," he said.
CHP Commissioner James
Smith said studies of accidents this
year that have claimed the lives of
young children show that, )n
every case but one, the youngister
was not riding in a safety seat.
"Many of these youngsters
would have survived if they had
been properly restrained," Smith
added.
There have been numero1.i>
nightmarish examples of how
eHective the infant aeats are.
ln one Northern California cit.~.
an 8-month-old boy was the only
surviving family member aft.er a
fiery, wrong-way freeway col-
llsion. The child was strapped into
an infant seat.
An 18-month-old boy in an
infant seat came away virtually
unscathed in last June's
chain-reaction crash on the <Z-
ange Freeway that left four deed
'Golden Triangle'launched
Work beginning on $6.8 million freeway interchange project
By ANDREA ADELSON'
Of llM Dally l'tlol SI•"
Highway coristruct1on workers,
not a colony of active ants, are the
source of two mounds of dirt
visible to motorists who drive the
Santa Ana Freeway in East Irvine.
What the embankments are is
the makings of the long-awaited
$6.8 million Alt.on Parkway inter-
change, what the Irvine Co. calls
the key to unlock the "Golden
Tri,ngle."
Within the 480-acre triangle,
formed by the junctions of the
Santa Ana, Laguna and San Diego
freeways, the Newport
Beach-based developer plans an
Office-hotel complex and regtollal
shopping center.
The six-lane overpass and inter-
change, to be completed in Febru-
ary of 1985, is to provide access to
two other projects advanced by
the ambitious Irvine Co. These are
a 900-acre industrial center now
under construction and a 35 7-acre
industrial park for high tech-
nology tenants. The latter two
projects are to be located out of the
trictngle, north of Interstate 5.
fn 20 years, the Golden Triangle
is expected to be the busin~
home of 200,000 employees. And
many of those businesses are
hkely to hail from west Irvine, as
demand for office space pushes
out industrial and high tech
tenants along the freeway cor-
ridor near John Wayne Airport.
Kirk West. secretary of the state
Business, Transportation and
Housing.Agency, said the inter-
change is one of the largest of the
$60 million worth of highway
construction being financed pri-
vately.
The lrvtne Q:5. has-·~n rn the
thick of development in Orange
County for several decades, and so
have we," West told a crowd of
about 100 state, county and local
officials, who attende9 ' cer-
emonies marking the start of
construction last week.
·The cooperative public and
private effor• "is the first in
<;>range County," Irvine Co.
' spokesman Martin A. Brower
said.
Irvine Co. President Tom
Nielsen said "the construction of
the Alt.on interchange and free·
way improvements. represent a
continuing commitment by the
Irvine Co. to the development of
Irvine Cent.er and adjacent tech-
nological, biomedical and indus-
trial projects."
However, officer towers and
hot.els are more likely to be
constructed at Irvine Center
before a regional parking center
takes shape, Brower said. Recent
approval of expansion plans for
the succesJSlul South.Coast.Plaza
in Costa Mesa has' pushed back
-deve1opment forecasts, t\e said.
"When we will actually start or
what form (the shopping center)
will take" is uncertain as there are
no "immediate commitments'' by
lal'ge department stores.
He said market projections
show eventually population will
swell in the Irvine, El Toro and
Laguna Hill areas. enough lQ
support a fifth shopping center.
Muggers slash Mesa man in robbery
A 21-year-old Costa Mesa man
was cut on the hand with a razor
1>1ac:re Friday when ne was-tobbed
while walking down the 700 block or
Center Street 1n Costa Mesa. The
victim lost $380 and was slashed by
four suspects dunng, the 7.30 p.m
incident Jorge L Ibarra was tr~ated
at Hoag Memonal Hospital tor his
Injury.
A suspect wielding a sue-inch
hunting knlle held up the Tic TQcker
Thrift Shop Fnday morning and
escaped with $35 cash
A Santa Ana man suspected ol
harassing students and teachers at
' Back Bay High School allegedly tned
·to run down the school"s principal 1n
r the parking lot Friday William Kap-
•, pele, of Mlssien Viejo. lold pollce the
suspect drove his motorcycle
straight 81 him and forced him 'to
Jump out of the ~Y·.
Horse tack and teed valued at S905
was reported stolen Saturday from
the Orange County Equestrian
Center at 88 Fair Oriye . . .
A garage on the 700 block or
Paularino AvenU. was broken Into
Sunday and an alr compressor
valued at $200 was stolen
l:.aguna Beach
A0 man jumped off the pclnt at
Crescen1 Bay in Laiiuna Beach In an
attempt to kill himself, police said. He
was treated by paramedics and
firemen and taken to his parents'
home following the 10:30 p.m. Inci-
dent Saturday.
A man called police to report a
-slrunk in his Glenneyre Street home.
Officers arrived and tound the skunk
to be the owner's cat
Siik prints-valued at $350 were
taken by unknown suspects from a
shop In the 1200 block ol North Coast
Highway. The owner suggested the
thief may have had a key to the
business.
A tall man weanng a gray T-lh1rt
and kark shorts eJ(posed himself to a
woman white both were silting In the
public library on Glenneyre Street.
Bui the man wa.s gone~by the lime
otficers arrived at the library.
Huntington Beach
A burglary was reporled Sunday at
a business on lhe 7600 block ol
Talbert Avenue. The lront door wu
pried ~ to"9nte<. The lou Included
guns worth $4.035. radio and tele-
vision equipment worth $770. and
mlsoellan90'!S goodt valued at
$2.166.
A 24-foot SklpJack boat resting on
a trailer behind the 16300 block of
DeAnza Circle was burglarized some-
times during the past three weeks. A
screwdriver was apparently used to
break down a cabin door. ·The toss
included fishing rods and reels worth
S600. sleeping bags worth $1Q5, a
tarp worth $300 and a VHF radlo
"!Qrth $-400.
A black 1976 Chevrolet one-ton
ptekup truck was reported stolen
Sunday morning from the·eoo block
of Delaware Street. The loss was
estimated at $<4,000
A house on 'th~ '19300 block of
Weakfish Lane was burglarized and
ransacked Sunaay. The loss. estl-
maled al $300. Included a tripod.
binoculars and a television sel
A betge 1974 Mercury Slahoo
wagon parked In a carport on the
6400 block of Warner Avenue was
burglarized over lhe weekend. The
loss included tools worth $3.500
Suspects accosted a pedestrian
near Magnolia Street and Garfield
Avenue and grabbed her purse
containing $200.
Irvine
A 10-year-old Irvine girl was the
v1c11m of a strong-armed robbery
Sunday, robbed of a dollar in change
on Culver drive near Walnut Avenue.
She described her male attackers as
two 14-year-old. p~n~ers.
A cashmere coat worth $600 was
stolen from a car In a Main Street
restaurant patklng lot Sunday night
after thieves smashed a rear window.
Fountain Valley
Poppa·s Wholesale Warehouse at
18428 Euclid St. wlthsJood a couple
of assaults from burglars over the
weekend. First burglars tried to get
into the bulldlng by cutting a hole In a
metal roll-up back door. Thil ploy
tahed when they ran Into a wall on the ·
other side. Then they threw a rock w
through a window but It didn't cause
a big etfough hole1or them lo enter
through
Suspects entered a car II'\ the
18000 block or Brookhursl Street
and took writing pens. ladles'
sweaters. sports equipment and
clothes valued at $216.
Cloudy, chance of showers Tuesday
Coastal
Extended
Tempera lures
I l
.Tides
...
28
38 72
5•
&Cl
38 37
45
40 72
45
85
36 47 17 35 . )3
38 35 n oe 641 48
14 .04
~ c::
23 06
SJ 29 2t 10 u n n ea
3e 3i ·~ :~ M 34
" 32 57 33 45 ,.
... «
40 at Ill 37
50 d
82 " IM JI
2S II
5' 41
7 I 52 43 ,. ... «
NallOnal WH"'41• SeMce 0
f'ol()M US ()eol OI C-ce
Fronts: Cold ..., Watm W.
No<lh Pltilte 21 20 ()11..,_,.0tty 62 33 ~ :13 ,7
o.1endo IS 10 Pllll!I~ .. ..
~ 47 ,.
"'-"" '3 IO
1'111= « iM Port ,Mot 2t 23 Porl&MO,Ore 4& 42 Pr~ 40 31 =City IO 11 " It ,. 20 ...,._ 15 iM .,,_
40 :IS
R•in 0 Snow L J
Showers !Iii) Flurries • ::-
Statioruiry • •
St Pet .. Tempe ,. 72
Sell I.Ilk• « 25
SenAnlonlO 77 M
s.noi.eo ... 48
SenFr-...CO .. 43
SI Ste Marie IM 2t ..... 42 37
"":1.:' ri &1
llou~ .... II
Spol(-20 17
SYT-31 '° T°""a :M u ,._ II 35
TulN M 42
WlltfllllllOfl 41 40
Wlcrt44.e a7 "
1111 llPllT
. ,
and six injured. The driver of the
small sports cnr In which the the
child was riding was killed.
By year's end, it is estimated
that highway patrol officers wiU
have cited about 8,000 driven
since March for not h~ving infant
seats for their toddlers. Only
warnings were Issued the first two
months of the year.
"And for the most part," $aid
Milton, "the drivers have been
pulled over for other violations
when the officers noticed the
child."
The $50 fine for first-time
otfendera ii waived if the driver
buys one of the safely 1eata and
shows proof of the purchase, The
Cine for a second offenae la $100.
Police In Irvine, to ,nodtirage
the use of the sea ta, started renting
them to families last winter. The
initial allocation of 50 seats went
so fast police were forced to order
another 2~. which also were
quickly rented out.
"Hopefully we're creating a
seat belt generation, a generation
that will insist their kids wear seat
belts from day one," said Mike
Weiss, a crime prevention officer
In Irvine.
The year-old law reqwrea that
children under the age of 4 or
weighing lea th~n 40 pouncb
must ride In a safety seat, which
generally is st.rapped in with a
convf'ntlonal seat belt.
"Officers UBuall y have a pretty
good Idea how old the child is or
how mucb he weighs," explained
Milt.on. "If the parent chooees to
misrepresent how much the child
weighs or his age, well, we're not
going to make a federal case out
it. ..
--WE AIKID:-------..
'Have you started your Christmas shopping?'
-Nen8urk•,
lrvlne,
ule• apeclellet
"I haven't even thought
about It yet."
Shlrley Deen,
Coat•MH•,
houHwlfe end voluntMr
mlnlater
"I don't celebrate
Christmas with gifts. I'm
one of Jehovah's Wit-
nesses.''
Le•hOmer,
COit•M--;-
Or•ng• Coaat Coll9fllllp
"I haven't bought afi91"
thing as of Friday. But
maybe I will this week."
RoblnJonea,
Huntington Beech,
heir etyllat
"I haven't started. I don't
even know If I'm going to .
do too much shopp_lng. In
our large f amlly we usually
just draw one name. That
pnakes It a lot easier.··
Bob G•mnger,
N9wpdrt .. ech,
retired
"I don't Christmas shop.
My wife does It all.''
George ... rgolln,
Newport Beech,
Inventor
,.
"I've been looking, but I
haven't found what I'm
looking for. It's something
very special for a lady
friend. I can't tell you what
It Is. She might read this.''
No Huntington ~each workers laid·off
·Furlough affects Douglas' Long Beach, Torrance employees
F rom staff and wire reports
A McDonnell Douglas Corp. decision to furlough
1,000 workers at its Long Beach-based Douglas
Aircraft divisi.qp ~ill have no Impact on il.i
Huntington Beach facility, a spokesman said.
Douglas spokesman Dave Eastman said the
.layoffs announced last week would affect only
employees ~ Douglas plants i_n Lpng ,J~ach and
Torrance. ·· ~
He ~W..th..e ~utback would not affect employees oi McDonnell Dougl.is Astronautics Co .• located in
Huntington Beach.
Douglas. with a work force of 14,900, said that
. .,.
h8v1~ e tred1tfonal chnstrre21
the a yo.fCs would begin soon and pledged to help laid
off workers find jobs elsewhere within the corpor-
ation or with other companies.
Thelayo{f isa "consolidation" stemming from Its
decision not to build two commercial jetliners and is
"not directly" related to a lingering strike by the
United Auto Workers against the aerospare giant,
Eastman said. ..
Virtually all of the layofis resulted ·from the'"
decision of the board ofl:ilTecton-qf St. Louis-~
McDonneil Douglas· to halt any .further investmeftt
and development of the MD-90 and MD-100 jetliners
because of lack of orders.
44 Fothlon lalond
Nrwpo,, &och
714/644·5070
JOOJ ~ Blud.
\4Wcul00d VIUoge
113/208-3113
525 Souch lob Aur.
IWoc:feno
2131304·9.W
•
...
-
I I
M NB Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, o.c.tnber 5, 1983
STOOKS
MONO\ ,~s t:LO~ING rRICE~
A A
!Miit• ....
I> l nd~ (10\I l;"O
A Sir 1 t AH l~h ~tt1Llv t All>/IPr • l
Aleoe 1~ lCIU A/Niil , 11 Amuo4 Amtce . AmHel 1.1 l2J I
\41•• .... II ( 1\0\ (lo"' Chq
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Dovv Jonas Final
OUOTA1IONS fHC1.1A>E TMOff OH fHl NIW ~OM. MIOWUt, l'ACll'IC. l'IW. eo.TO... OflN)IT NllO CllllCltlHATI ITOGI< IX~ AHO MPOllT(O av THE NASO IH811N£1 Up 5.29 S•lt\ Ntl
fl f. "°' (lo.. '"'
~tit>\ Nfl Pr ...,, ,,. .. '"' \<1lf\ Ntl
" c "°' ''°"' c~ ~·'"' Ntl
p t ""' (IO\f CllO
l
.......... .. ..
Pl "4" Clo"' Ci.o Cloelng 1.270.13
..
·' .............................................. ' lr.
Economic recovery gai~s;. ·J
prices rising moderately
By lite A1Melated Ptt11
NEW YORK-The eoonomlc recovery gained speed last
month aa the job market improved and prices continued to riJe
modestly, according to a new buaine. survey. A eeparate
report today by the Conference Board said the economy will
be recession-free next year and that inflauon will remain
moderate.
Single-lamily home sales jump
WASHINGTON -Sales of new single-family houses
jumped 8.2 percent in October while prices slid from
September's record levels. The government reported that
new houaes were sold at an annual rate of 660,000 oompared
with a revised 610,-000 ln September. The October rate waa
37 .2 percent above the year-ago ~vel. The report said the
median home price~ the price a\ which an equal number sold
for more as for less-fell to $76,· l 00 from a record $80,800 in
September .
.. Higher interest rates forecast
NEW YORK -The government's report of a $1.6 billion
i.nc.reaae in the money supply for the week ended Nov. 23 has
dampened hopes that interest rates wJll decline soon. Robert
Schwartz, senior financial economist at Merrill Lynch, Pierce,
Fenner & Smith Inc., a New York investment firm, predicted
traders would bi~ interest rat.es higher this week.
Citibank said 'best managed'
NEW YORK -A new survey says bankers consider
Citibank the best managed in their industry. The survey of
mott than 2,-000 leading American bankers said 27 percent
named Citibank as the best managed, 20 percent named
Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. of New York and 9 percent
picked Wachovia Bank & Trust Co. in Winlion-Salem, N.C.
By deposit.a, the three banks are ranked nationally No. 2, No. ,
5 and No. 39, respectively. •
New orders to factories slow_
WASHINGTON -The growth in new orders to U.S.
factoriesslowedinOct.ober. Totalnewordersro&e0.7 percent.
COLD QUOTATIONS DOW JONES AVERAGES
12u n ms • 1 12~ 40 1210 SH s 2'I
603 H tOI 2t S'4 Jl 60UI • 0 O'/ l:U 1l m 0 IJJ '3 ll•.JO-0 SI §0617 SIO .. !0262 loOUH 0 .. 7 .. I 700
J ICM 700 1,1n 100 11.•'3 .00 •
u
-~ 1' NEW VOllK (API -\<Ii...-· etro<t tt 't e•CI ne t <ll•n•~ of t 11• 10 ~ 14 WH·T NYSE DID "'°'' ICll~• Amtf•U " S•oct. [&Cha"" "
•• l\4i: , " _ •. •u.•1.J...,.'~•Cll n!_ n~lfon~~-·~--
IH "'· --:.\ UCO.~ ;r"'l "· .... ~:,,,;t~'f'"C ·~,,.r,·..-..--...,.:
+1a Due to late transmission ~~·~· m:: l~~\ -. -.
d ' II ti Ill t P91to1.ew 1'°'°° 11"' -' to ay s s ng w no rb.a•1rcp ,.,,ooo s.
appear In the Dally Piiot. ~~=: ltI;m ~:; =' .:
ConciuH•Ell 14e,aoo l 't. -...,
WeneL.tOB • l•.200 JJ -'•
WHAT AMEX DID
P NEW VC>ttl( (Al'J -TM IOllO•tl10 k\I
Too1v
jl>dvencfO 21' 0.Clll'fd .. IJ~ 211
Tot el '""" 111
,.v_ lllOw• 1111 N-Y0t' Stock E•c,,•"11« csev230 "ob• •llCI .. .,,.,,,, 11111 ,..., 110M u1>
Jn ,,,. "'°'' •"41 Clown IPlt mo" DtH<I on • • m f:ctfl~:llOt .-.et;<11eu of •ot!'me
134 No M<utll'-s lradll10 t>etow n •rt 11\(1• Newll!O~• 11
New to"'• S -----METALS
l; ·-Hel enCI -CI9nletle CI ... l'On l rt tr.. Cliffe<We betwfff\ ""' orl'Yloln CIO\lf>ll orlet •!'Cl IOdfV'I , p'" orlee Ul"S Nemt Le\I Cllv PCI< I l!>Qulr• • 2J"• + 6', Uo ll.7 NfW VORJ< -SPOI .,.,.,, • .,OU.-··· P<IC9t 1 BanoPunl 2Slot + ,,\ UD ,. ' loday l TICero • 11 ... + ,... UP 12 s ~ • ..,.._73 -.11 • oound U.S ; ~El~ ·~ \ ~ ':J:. U
<Mt.-ttono 6 [AL. w10 )I\ + > UP I 1 ~ -gs 7& ..... -pOunCI. NY c-1 COOi! Unil "• + ... Uo I )
#GI ITI0'\111 GIOMCI Fn I P$NH ISl>I 21 .. + 1~ Up I I ~2WJ-.. e~ f TtlK~ J14o + UP 61
ZIM ·•II cenlf •pound, dell-ad 10 Gen llttrac j t\ + " UP •I Tltll • $41 40711 Wt81t W-toml>C*t• lb 11 Wurlllllll' I~• + ,., UP 6 S ~-It etnl .. POUl'd, NV 12 TOK Cp 0 '4 + 2\>1 UD t I
....,, • $3.30 004340 00 -78 lb lleal<, IJ I( .. , Glau ''" + I UD s 1 ~VOttl 16 S-rOll 141• i 11'1 UP SS
....._.., • $41000-$•12 00 ClomttllC IS Btlllll' Incl 10 + •~ Uo !.l
-""'"' "oV -· N v :t ~r.;11Jc"" , ~~ t n: ~= ! i It TllOm llWI 161' + ~ UP •I SILVER lt l"trllnv " ,,,, + 'It UD H ?0 WOO<S.Ptt 2•' • + I Up 4 l
.._ • M 440 Handy 4 He<Mtn IOt\11'-0ally ~ ~:r:''1f.!'o 33\., ~ \',', i~ H
-'•1 73 l(yocete 7'14 + l UP '1 ...... u 625-ttoyounce NVCom.at.001 2• ll'ltOllH Of ~l\, + I'·· u.. • 1 "'°"'" clcl4ltCI Fri 2S NllFutl(; DI 21 + '• Uo 4 I .... .,.,.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT i ~£:~!~fo
N!W YOtllC (API -s.IK. Monot!¥ .,..IC:t ; !~Of' .~rfl 1 nC1 ne t <ll•ftf4 ol lll• IS • AmS11nd "*' ectlW Ht• Y0t11 Stoet. Eac,...,.. 1 liewJft ' tu uu , lttdlnt n•llone tl• 1 1 I 0 11t<;.,.1 •
OOWNS I.H I C~!I Pel If'• -l 'll Ott ll l
''"' -l~ Ott IS S 2\o -'•OH t S
12 -1'· °" t.l 2 .. -'• 011 I 7 ll'• -1l\ Oil I S Hlo -2'• Oii 11 ll .. _ , .. °" 71
..
• 111tn1 1 • t lla. OlemSllll\ UOS:'OQ ~ -J~ 10 'RlllJOlllt Sit AfNf "ti. T I·..,·· ~ + ,, II Cft!"w l,'°Pf ArMI T& T wl .U2.000 20'-I' MGM·UA Ent
O lo -)I , Oii J J 1w-·.. Of! •• 1 , ... -1 .. Ott .,
., .. -"' Ott 's ,,Am l,lSIMt'" • I~ + ~ "/'llllllto~ \
IBM I. t•• Ill"" t: " 1' HOflflTll l ClwvtMI 1, 9'2,tOO 1t •-t-I IS l tlt .... , -Occ'4!lflt ,.., I, 1 lo.tOO 24'-16 Nk oltllntt
,SICIOll()ll 1.0».'°° 43"" -2~ 11 CnPw *' BaaterTr .. 1 •SJ.JOO tJ-lll '+U• a Efbe'modl t11 • $UPtrOll ftt ,000 Jt' • + I,_ I ANcllt!ff wl FotdMot J • IW~ 41 + II) G9!!1ttl ' iu Otl IJe,tOO ... + "-21 StclOllOll
•tlA\rl t 754,000 ll -I... 21 gMG Inc TE C0t11 7$3.1'0 U lo -_, n -Cp 0.t~ I ~.100 • #" -1-14 l!IKf AMO<
SYMBOLS
11 NVF Co ~
-11'41 -l\ot Oii • > u-. -1h °" u 12" -1.., Oii • 1"' U•• -I Oii 6 1 ' U -I~ S!!J •I m•-'-·~iu I .• 1: ... = ,~ oil U· I _,1, -~ Oii S7 ··~ -'"' Oii s. """' -I Oft U 16:.::: &1 ~t 12-. -tit Off i-.