HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-12-19 - Orange Coast PilotBy JE RY HIRSCH
Ol IM Oellr l'llol Itel!
Helping President Reagan to be re~lected wiJl be the majQr
task of the Orange County Federation of Repu~ Women.
according to the organization's new president, N~wpor\ Beach
resident Lynn Turner.
Turner took charge of the volunteer organization earlier thls
month following its convention in,Costa Mesa.
"One of our major concerns ~ the gender gap and I think our
organization will play a major role in closing the gender gap,"
Turner said.
Turner noted that Reag_an has made ''more significant
(See WOMEN lN GOP, Page AZ> I
-Wlto .
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of lhe Dellr l'llol llMI
Fountain Valley School District principals and
administrators have gone home for a two-week
winter vacation, still puzzled about suspected
tampering with third-grade state test scores -at
were some of the highest scores in the state, will
resume aft.er the vacation period. Today he remained
bewildered·as to who altered the testa and why it was
done.
William T. Newland School. '
Superintendent William Fisher said today that
his investigation of Newland's test results, which
Delight of
.holiday
.spreading
Christmas will be a little
more Joyful for 75 Costa
Mesa youngsters this year
thanks to. the local Rotary
Christmas party, complete
Ith presents and a visit from
Santa.
Howard Kautz, club presi-
dent, said the 60 members
have raised money to-make
Christmas a little merrier for
roupa of school-GhHdren-for
20 years.
The first through third
graders, attended a party at
the Mesa Verde Country
Club where they received
two presents picked es-
pecially for them from Santa,
portrayed by Clarence
Needham, a retired school
principal.
Fisher said he is convinced, however, that an
adult was responsible, not a student.
"It's highly improbable it was a student," he said.
"Since there was no answer key, it would have to
have been a student who knew all the answers, which •
I.
-
COUNTY EDITION
is highly improbable." third-and sixth-grade students last spring. '
Fi.sher a.laosaid he is confident no tampering took
place with tests at any other district school. But he
said the district is already taking steps to tighten
security in connection with future tests and
investigating. sixth-grade results which may have
Last week, school district trustees invwdated 69
third-grade test scores from Newland School aft.er an
investigation turned up possible tampering that
raised the cla&5 average far above the previous year.
Test results released last month showed that
Newland School's third graders had scored better
than 99 percent of all third graders in the state and
(Sff SCHOOL TEST, Page A%)
been~tered. ·
The local probe is focusing on the results of the
~fomia Aaearnent Program tests administered to . . -
By ROGER CARLSON °' .. _., ........
Police identify
woman~s body
dumped in LB
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... Del7 l'llol .....
The s\,J'angulation slaying of a
black woman whose ~f-dressed
body was found early Saturday
morning in Laguna Beach has led
homicide investigators to the Los
Angeles street scene where the
woman allegedly worked as a
prostitute.
Patricia Ann Carpenter, 26, was
last seen alive about midnight--
Friday by a man police described
as her pimp.
Why she was killed and why
her body was dumped in a parking
lot off Laguna Canyon Road are
questions that police were still
trying to untangle this morning.
s~. Alex Jimenez speculated
the woman was killed outside the
city and that her killer d rove to
Laguna looking for an isolated
spot to dump the body. He said the
killer may have int.ended to push
the body in a flood control channel
that runs along the two-lane
roadway but was sca.red off.
The woman's body, clad only in
a Hawaiian shirt. was found at
6:50 a.m. by a newspaper carrier.
A search continued today for
other articles of clothing that
investigators believe may have
been discarded elsewhere in the
beach city.
..,Police said their intial investiga-
tion has bee" slowed becauae the
woman's friends and business
contacts have been reluctant to
discuss Carpenter's alleged life-
style as a prostitute.
Carpenter apparently lived
with her sister in a Los Angeles
hot.el. Police have been told she
was "working the street" Friday
and that a man described as her
pimp was seated in a car, sup-
posedly keeping an eye on her .
Police investigators claimed the
man allegedly fell asleep and
found Carpenter missing when he
awoke. The man,~ police said,
reported Carpenter's disap-
pearance to the woman's sister.
Authorities said the woman was
strangled but that there were no
other signs of violence or marks on
her body.
'Transportation post
given to Nestande .
Orange County Supervisor
Bruce Nestande has been elected
vice chamnan of the California
Transportation Corrunission, put-
ting him in line for the chalr-
manshlp of the powerful panel ln
1985.
Nestande's election to the post
also triggered his resignation as
president of the Southern Cali-
fornia Aa8ociation of Govem-
menta, an important regional
planning agency.
The superviaor said he felt
compelled to resign as president of
SCAG and its executive body
becau.e of the increaain8 demands
of hia workload.
lSee NESTANDE, Pa1e AZ> Bruce Nestande
~1----n.Jl.lUUple of localbijh tchool teems are 8Cheduled to meet two quite
different naaonil powen this week dwine. trip to the nation's capital.
An antidpMed meetln8 with Preeldent Reapn hlchlil)lta a
ambltioua Eutem lwinC for Mater Del and Foun\ain Valley hlah 8chool
t.ketbell tNnw -a IOW' ln which the two will be pitted ap1Nt noted
~en DeMatha (Hyattville, Md.) and Si. John'• (Wuhlncton, D.C.)
htah.choo ...
A party of 54 led by Mater Dei Co.ch Gary McKniaht and 18
travelers from Foun\ain Valley, inoludinl Co.ch Dave Brown, left thJa
weekend for the natlon'acapltal. Mater Del took off Saturday niaht from
Loe Anplee lntemational ted Fountain Valley'• entourap departed
Sunday mom1nC from the 1ame lite.
Mater Del la bMed ln Sant111 Ana and repre9e11ta the only perochia1
))ftp IChool lil the IOUtbem portion of Orance C-ounty.
'lbe bMia fOI' the tour {a a WecSn.Say nicht confrontation on the
t.ketbell Ooor betwten the nation'• top two ranked tel.ml. Mat.er Del lJ
No. 1, O.Matha la No. 2.
But, thin are Flnl to be 10me dJmacUona of note.
"We want to repl'Wllt OW' area. 0 •YI McK.nJaht, "but. it wouldn't
be f&lr If It Wlm't a com~ trip."
'lbat .. camp)nt trip 'lndudel vlllta to molt of the major attracUona
( ... COAIT BAl&BTIAU.. P ... Al) ) ... t
~I
l '
----------
• ..
2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 19, 1983
Fun Zone's owners squeak by foreclosure threat
B~ J ERRY .HIRSCH
Ofthel>elly .........
The oft called.off Balboa Fun
Zone development may be in the
offing.
The property's owners narrow-
ly averted a foreclosure sale today
and are now trymg '°I find a way t.O
start the developrllent of the
valuable Newport Bhy property.
"We reaUy want to go forward
with the development." said Jor-
dan Wank. a L-06 Angeles attorney
who heads Balboa Marana Fun
Zone Ltd., the partnership that
owns the site.
A popular carnival tourist site
Slnce the 1930's, the Fun Zon ha.
fallen on hard limes during the
last decade. Several proposals by
different groups to develop the
site have fallen through. The
amusement rides are gone and the
property now sits vacant. Balboa
residents and merchants have
complained the Fun Zone is an
eyesore and 1s inhabited by tran.si-
~nts.
Wank, however, would. bot
discuss the det.alla behind any
development and aald the prop-
erty owners would still conalder
selling all or part of the parcel.
"We had to get the other
matters resolved first," Wank·
said.
The property was t.o have been
auctioned today, according to
John Brock, a vice president with
Great American Savinp Bank of
San Diego.
The partnership owed $852,000
on the property plua intereat on
monthly payments that had not
been made since March.
Great American obtained the
mortgage following its recent
merger with the original lender,
Laguna Federal Savings and
Loan Association.
"The difficulties between the
borrower and the lendel"S have
been resolved," Brock said.
"The sale wall not take pla<.~
today. They iilill have their prop-
erty and we no longer have a
problem on the loan," Brock said.
Brock would not disclose what
had transpired to take the mort-
gage out of default except to say tt
was negotiated by Wank Wank
also would not dlaclose the details,
saying it was a personal business
matter.
Wank, Toby Wank, Debbie and
Ralph Gray are the majority
shareholders of the partnership.
Forml'r Newport &ach reside
James Salter is a minority ownt
He was brought mt.o the deal
develop 8 Cape Cod-style om
<.'Omplex on the bay front proper1
The project ran into hnanciJ
problems and was never starti
despite acquiring the permi
needed from the state Coast
Commission and the Newp<i
Beach City Council.
Wank's group must begin co·
st.n.Jction before July 26, 198
when the per;P'li~ expire
Horse in
OC split
located
Beckman's laying off 300
County m edical firm cites tough state Medi-Cal rules as r easoJ
By tbe Auoclated Pre11
A woman who was jailed after
r~fusing to teU a divorce court
j(Jdge where a prize breeding
stallion was being kept has been
released because the horse was
found.
Theresia Williams, 45, a horse
trainer, was releaSed Saturday
from Orange County Jail after the
Hanovef"ian stallion, Graf Got-
thard, was taken to Greenspot
Fann, a stable near Redlands.
"When [ caUed where I had my
horse, they said someone had
picked him up and taken him to
Greenspot Farm," Mrs. Williams
said. "I was so upset, that'sal1 [can
remember.
. "I'm going to fight this until the
very end," she said . "I want my
horse back home where he
belongs."
.,......,_
By tle Auoclaled Preti
Beckman Instrument.a, Inc., one
of Orange County's largest indus-
trial employers, says it will
furlough up to 300 workers be-
cause new Medicaid and Medi-Cal
regulations have significantly re·
duced equipment purchases by
hospitals.
The layoffs, most of which wall
come from l,he company's Brea
plant in January, will be the ·
Mesan facing
charges in
teen porn case
A Costa Mesan was scheduled to
be arraigned in Harbor Municipal
Court today on suspicion of child
molestation foUowing his arrest
for allegedly showing porno-
graphic films to young boys, police
said. 1 Harry D. Buckler, 41, who lives
in a trailer park on the 100 block of
F.ast 16th Street, was arrested
Thursday in his home. according
to Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Max
Wilson.
Graf Gotthard. a 12-year-old
stallion valued at $75,000, is the
subject of a bitter divorce battle
between Mrs. Williams and her
husband of 20 years. Walter
Williams, owner of Federal Con-
tracting Corp. in Orange. T heresia Williams with her horse, Graf Gotthard.
A tipster told police Buckler had
been showing pornographic films
to young teen-agers in his trailer.
COAST BASKETBALL TEAMS TRAVEL TOW ASHING TON
From Page A 1
around Washington D.C .. including a private tour of the White House
and Congress.
"The pnvate tour includes many places where most normally don't
get a chance to see, such as getting on the floor of Congress," says Mater
Dei admirustrator John Merino. "It's really an educational tlung for the
kids."
As for meeting with President Reagan, McKnight said. "It's 90
percent sure."
Arrangements were made by DeMatha's basketball coach Morgan.
Wooten and Rep. Jerry Patterson, D-Santa Ana.
''It's on his schedule." says McKnight, "and as we understand it all
is OK with the exception that something could, of course, come up."
Here's Mater Dei's schedule:
•Today -A visit to the FBI and practice at the Uruversity of
Maryland.
•Tuesday -A visit to the various monuments in and around the
Washington MaU.
• Wednesday -A private tour of the White House and Congress
and a scheduled meeting"\vlth President Reagan.
•Thursday-A visit to the national mint. Arlington Cemetery, and
the Air and Space Museum at the Smithsonian Institute.
• Friday -A scheduled visit to Gettysburg, weather permitting,
then practice at Georgetown Unjversity.
•Saturday -Return to Los Angeles International Airport at I 0:30
a.m.
SCHOOL TEST TAMPERING ...
From Page A 1
"We're also going to try to get to Ford's Theater," says McKnight,
"but we don't know.yet where we're going to 9<1ueeie it tn."
Here's Fountain VaUey's schedule:
•Today -A visit to the Washington Mall, including the Air and
Space Museum and Historical Museum at the Smithsonian Institute.
•Tuesday -A visit to Mt. Vernon and Arlington Cemetery.
•Wednesday -The private tour of the White House and Congress
and the scheduled meeting with President Reagan.
•Thursay -An early return visit to the Washington MaU before
returning at 4 p.m. for Los Angeles.
"We've had a hi.story of traveling," says Brown. "In the past our
teams have gone to Lompoc, Arroyo G rande, Santa Maria and San Jose.
But this is one of the big highlights of my ( tt>-year) coaching career at
Fountain Valley.
Funds for the trip were gathered by the stud~nts and boosters'
groups.
Among Mater Dei's 54-person party are learn members Mike
MitcheU, Matt Beeuwsaert, Tom Lewis, Chris Jackson , Mike Fielder,
Steve Gorman, Jim Dwyer, Todd Worhe, Jim Motis, John Mounce, Chris
Patt.on and Pal KeUy.
Among Fount.ain Valley's group are team members Mike Newton,
Drew Brown, Tom Power, Mike Tinney, Rolf Jacobs, Bcenl Mart.in,
Lance Zeno, Scott Motherhead, Brent Han.son, Jeff Moore and Mike
Harvin.
NESTANDE ...
FromPageA1
their reading score was the highest tn Cahfom1a.
Newland is located in Huntington Beach, but lS part
of the Fount.am Valley elementary district.
"The thing l'm having a problem with is the
amount of time it took to do this," Snowden said.
"Somebody went to a tremendous amount of effort."
Nestande was appointed to the
transportation co~on, which
carTies out st.ate-wide transpor-
tation planning, in July 1982 by
former Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
and was reappointed by Gov.
Deukmejian in January.
After invalidating the tests, the district re-
figured its scores causing them drop as much 17
points.
The state test scores are used by a district to
evaluate it.self and individual 9Choofs. No funding is
contingent upon test results.
She added, ''We've talked to all of the teachers
involved in giving the tests, except for one teacher
we've not been able lo reach because she left the
distract."
Snowden said additional interviews wiU take
place after winter vacation, but she added, ''We're
He is the only elected official
ever to serve on the panel.
second ma&S cutback by the medi-
cal products firm in three months,
One-hundred workers got pink
slips in October.
Beckman President Louis Rosso
said S unday that the layoffs were
due in part to new Medicaid and
Medi-Cal repayment procedures
under which hospitals are re1m-
buned at a fixed rate based on the
average cost for indigent patients
at aU state hospitals. Previously,
they have been paid for the actual
cost of an individual patient's care.
As a result, Rosso said, hospitals
have halted equipment expen-
ditures until they determine the
impact of the new rules on their
budgets.
The plant in Brea manufactun
laboratory products used t
analyze body fluid chemistr:
Orders for the products ha\
declined since the regulations too
effect last Oct. l, Rosso said.
Beckman Instruments, a unit<
Philadelphia-based Smith-Kiln
Beckman Corp.. employs 5,00
workers in the county at 7,00
more at plants around the world
F.arlier this year, wages of a
12,000 workers were Crpzen unt
Jan. I because of "a prolonge
period of reduced business," Ross
said.
SmHh-Kline last year report.e
profits of $455 million on revenue
of $2.97 btl4.on
Wontan critically hurt
in Irvine aut~ smashup
A 53-year-old Irvine woman
was clinging to life today after
suffering critical injuries Satur-
day in a violent car crash in which
she was hurled from the vehicle
she was driving.
Shirley Mae McDaniel, a resi -
dent of Irvine's Turtle Rock
community and a mother of two, is
listed In very critical condition at
the Fountain Valley Community
Hospital trauma center.
The woman's four-door Mazda
was broadsided by a 17-year-old
motorist who was driving in the
opposite direction on Ridgeline
Drive near University Dnve when
he reportedly lost control of h
Chevrolet Carnaro, acx:ording
police.
The young driver, who has n•
been cited in the rrushap. a1
parently hit his brakes ar.
skidded into the opposite lane
careening into the woman's ca
Police said McDaniel's Maz.c
rolled over several times befo1
finally coming to a stop on 1ts roo
McDaniel, authorities said,
the wife of a retired U.S . Nav
pilot and has an older son an
daughter and one 'grandchild.
A probe of the crash is contint
mg.
WOMEN IN GOP ...
FromPageA1
appointments of women than other presidents."
"The Republican party should be rather proud of Justice
Sandra Day O'Conner and Secretary of T ransportation Elizabeth
Dole," Turner said.
She pointed out that the only two female U.S . Senat.ors are
Republicans -Nancy Landon Kassenbaum of Kansas and Paula
Hawkins of Florida.
Or)e strategy the federation will use is organize professional
women who have an interest in the Republican's "pro-business"
policies, Turner said.
"Our goal in Orange County is the growth of the federation
next year and that will mean reach ing out and involving the
Republican professional and business woman." Turners said.
The group plans a series of night meetings because working
women cannot attend the traditional daytime meetings of the
federation.
"They are an untapped resource. their voices should be heard,"
Turner said.
On a local level, the women's group wiU work hard to see that
a Republican unseals Rep. Jerry Patterson, D-Sant.a Ana.
"Weare anxious to see a Republican elected in the38th District
against Patterson and we will be helping in whatever way we can,"
Turner said. .
Two ways Turner's organi:r.ation will help is by registering
Republican voters and walking precincts for Republican can-
didates, she said.
Turner is no newcomer to politics. Her father was a state
senator in her native state of Iowa. She be<:arne involved in Orange
C:O.St pollUcs when s he helped Assemblywoman Marian
Berge90n's first campaign in 1976.
But because of her new posit.ion, Turner can't take sides in
races between Republkans so Turner will have to sit on the
sidelines of Bergeson's bid for the 37th District state Senate seat
until after the primary.
School district officials were initially alerted by
the usually high scores produced at Newland At first,
they believed a computer had erred while scoring the
tests.
real~duck~to wheretogoaf~rl~t." ~~~--~~----~------~-~-~~~--~~~~~---~--~--
Cheryl Snowden, a district administrator who
supervi545 testing, flew to Sacramento to check the
Newland1est.s. She ~vered extensive erasures on
the third-grade tests.
She also found evidence of possible tampering on
a smaller number of sixth-grade tests from Newland.
She will recommend that the sixth-grade Newland
scores also be invalidated. . •
Because 30 different versions of the test are used
in the third grade, the tampering was apparently
ume-consuming.
She said the district will, however, tighten
security measures, beginning with proficiency tes-
ting, which will take place in January.
District officials said tampering had never
previously been reported in Fountain Valley. As a
result, the tests had been left In an open workroom
for several days before they were submitted t.o the
district.
S uperintendent Fisher said he remains puzzled.
concerning the motive for tampering.
"I gues the two motives would be to ~ke the
!IChool look good or to make it look bad by sabotaging
the test.a," he said. "Whoever did it went to a lot of
trouble."
We're
Listening •••
~ . -What do you like about the Daily Pilot? Whal don't you lib?
Call the-number al left and your meaage will be rt!OOrded ,
transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
642·6086
.. ::reed
t.IO'IOey·F11(1ty rt ,OU 00
not "••• ;ovr P•Dt• t>y
5 30 p "' , .. -· , p "' end 1ou1 'op, •Ill 0 1 °"""9d
letUfCMlr l 'l<I Sund•y II
.,OU dO llOI '"'-'""' _., 'r , I m ,,.. Otoloft
10 '"' 9l'O ~ ... fJ»t .. De.....-eo
~ Ti ... , .....
The same 2•-hour answering service may be used to record let
ters to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must Include
their name and telephone number ror verification No clrculatlon
ralls . please
Tell us what ·son your mind · ..
OAAHGE COAST Daily Pilat
H. L acttwllltl •
Publllw>
MAIN °"9CI »Cl Ww1 lley It , Coll!• ....... CA ...., ~ 9oJt tseQ. eo.t• ....._ CA tllt2f
eop,.tght 10U o.-. c-l'll!liW*IQ ~. Mo
"""'' 1to•IH , lll111tr111on1. t dltorl•I melt•• or ....,_,..,.NltM....-,"9~wlltlaul ...
t191-0f~~
VOL. 71, NO. -
•
Suspect's sanity still issue
Judge ocders more testing I or housekeeper accused in N 8 slaying
A houst>keeper charged with
slaying a 76-year-old Newport
Beach woman will undergo more
psychiatric examination before
standing mal.
An Orange County Superior
Court judge directed Friday that
two addi lional psychiatrists exam-
ine Jane Irene Moller before she is
certified as being <.'Ompetent to
stand trial.
Moller was returned to Orange
County after doctors at Patton
St.ate Hospital in San Bernardino
Dr::Wil.J.iam Qunney
certified she now iB competent to
stand trial on the murder charge.
Moller was committed to the
hospital in February following
emotional outbursts in court. Her
defense attorney said she was too
incoherent to help prepare her
defense.
Moller, 40. is accused of killing
Helen DeWolf, who was stabbed
and beaten in the bathroom of her
lrvine Avenue home in November
1982. Moller was employed by the
Newport woman as a live-in
hoUM'keeper
Judge Luis Cardenas directed
that Moller be examined by the
t~ docton before a aecond com-
petency hearing ls conducted Jan.
27, said Prosecutor Pat Geary.
If Moller is found to be mentally
competent and~ able to stand
trial, the cue will be transferred
to Orange County Municipal
Court for preUrTilnary hearing.
She ls being held in the Orange
County Jail in lieu of $250,000
bail.
UCI prof Dr. Bunney
on psychiatric panel
Dr. William E. Bunney Jr.,
professor and chairman of UC
Irvine's Department of Psy-
chiatry, has been named to a
presidential cornmjsgon of the
Max Planck Institute in
Munich, West Germany.
Bunney is the only American
asked to sit o n the
eight-member panel, formed to
review-the future of psychiatric
research at the institute and to
plan for the retirement of the
psychiatric institute's chief.
Bunney is the author of more
than 290 scientific papers and is
a leading authority on the
biological causes of mental ill-
ness.
He was asked by the State
Department to help direct the
debriefing o f American
hostages following their flight
from Iran, and has served as a
U.S. representative tc the
World H ealth Organization for
the past eight years.
Multi-named suspect ~eld
A man who police say has so
.many aliases they don't know his
true name is facing charges in
Huntington Beach, Fountain Val-
ley and Costa Mesa on charges of
making fradulent loan appli-
cations.
The 6-8. 285-pound suspect,
tentatively identified as Shirley
Peaches Gregory, was slapped
with four felony charges by the
Orange County district attorney
for allegedly making four phony
loan applications in Huntington
Beach.
Fountain WValley police also
claim that Gregory allegedly
wrote bad checks in the amounts
of $96 and $114 to the Gemco
Department store. Detective Den-
nis Menna said the two checks,
which were marked "return to
maker" were signed by a person
identified as M. Joseph Gregory.
And Costa Mesa detective Matt
Collett said police are investigat-
ing Gregory on charges he bought
a 1980 Lincoln Continental Mark
VI in October with a bad check.
Huntington Beach detectives
began the investigation in June,
Droz said .. The probe resulted in a
search of Gregory's a~t in
Huntington Beach and led to his
eventual arrest in his Inglewood
apartment for charges lodged in
Pomona.
Gregory pleaded guilty last
week to charges of gaining credit
under false pretenses in Pomona,
according to Droz, and is awaiting
sentencing early next month.
Local police say Gregory may
have used as many as 50 aliases.
Bandit robs Huntington gas station
A lone gunman robbed the Jet Gas
station at Bolsa Chica Street and
Warne< Avenue In Huntington Beach
Sunday The robber was described
u Caucu1an. In his early twenties,
wearing a navy blue Jacket with a fur
collar. He fled Wtth about $90
Someone broke Into a 1978 Ian
and blue FOl'd parked on the 8500
block of Whltesalls Clrcle The ve-
hicle apparently wu unlocked. The
lose Included a $5 wallet, a leather
poucil containing ammunition and a
Mt of handcuffs worth $25.
A physician ~t • H~mana Hospital
Huntington Beach reported Saturday
that her white 1982 Audi 5000 waa
burglarlz.ed. A wlndwlng was broken
to enter. The 1011 Included a S 1,000
car atereo syst~m. •
A resident or the 1000 block or
GeorQla Street told police Saturday
that tiCa black 1979 Yamaha motor·
cycle was stolen. The Ion was
estimated at $800.
A home burglary waa reported
Mtly Sunday on thft 8200 block ot
Warne< Avenue. Ent1y was made by
prying open a sliding glass window
The loss Included television equip-
ment worth $1, 100.
A break-in V:u0 r~ed Sunday
stte<noon at a home on the 6900
block of Lydia Drive. Entry wu made
through a rear sliding glass window.
The loss Included $90 In clothing,
S 1.300 In Jewelry and a $500 camera.
fountain Valley
Burglars climbed to a second floor
balcony and slipped Into a residence
In the 10000 block of Slater Avenue
via a sliding glass door and stole a
man's wallet. credit cards. mualc
box. ring and wristwatch valued at
$735. . . .
Thieves stole a woman's coat from
the trunk of her car that was parked In
the Black Angus Restaurant Friday
night.
Someone ent~eci' as residence In
the 6000 block of Rogue River
Avenue and stole a radio and aids
valued at $424.
Thieves fOl'ced their way Into a
-----------------
residence In the 16000 block of Mt.
Harkness St a.nd took a purae. wallel
and Christmas preeents.
Irvine
Two Hollywood punk rocl(era were
arrested tor Investigation ol burglary
in Irvine Sunday, aftef' neighbors saw
two P90Ple knocking on the door and
prying the screen of an Knollglen
apartment. Gary R. Delvalle, 19. wu
booked at county lall and hla ac·
compllce, a 15-year-old girl. taken to
juvenile hall. • • •
Three-year·old Luke Pswlack Is
expected to be releaaed from West-
ern Medical Centef' today atter ac-
cldently being run over by a car
Saturday afternoon. The boy's
lather, Mark, 30, apparently was
hauling a car behind a trectOI' In an
orange grove near Irvine Center
Drive, when the boy tripped and fell
und4"' the wtleela.
An Irvine ma~ r~rted leaving hie
wallet and $669 In cash In a Walnut
Avenue market Saturday. It wu gone wn.n he returned.
Cloudier, cooler along the coastline
Coastal
Extended
Tt ..... ~ ..... ~ 11 41 ... ~ .. 14 ..... ..... J4 ........ , n :.; =u.1.:
11 :t1 ---..... 1 ..,,_ IO M ,.,._.
... II~
11 ..01 T--. n eo ww ...... -..,, 'll'""'O""n
• " WllMA
....
10 " 14 II 1a ·11 ar n ti . ..01 .,.
11 ..01 M 1:t
CM ·11 .. ,
H OI 41 10 OI ...
_.. _________ _
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday. December 19, 1983 A I
-WI AIKID:-------~
'Do you think Callfornla should have tougher laws
for drunken dr~vers?'
Fran Olbeon,
mother,
CoetaMeM
"No, 11hlnk they've already
gotten very strict.''
George UndleJ,
general maintenance,..
palrman,
Coet.MeM
"The laws are OK, but the
enforcement of them should
be more strict. The courts are
so congested; people are able
to plea bargain their way out
of a drunken driving charge.
They should be punished
more by the courts.''
KethJ 8antllly,
flottat,
Coet.Meee
"Yes, the laws should be
more strict. It seems moat
accidents are caused by
drunken drivers. There
should be higher fines and
more Jall time for offenders. I
ride my bike or walk If I've
been drinking."
George Ronald Colemen,
remodeler,
CoeteMeM
''The laws are strict enough
but I think Judges should give
stricter sentences.''
T~Bruno,
C f
Newport Beach
"No, they're strict enough.
You know everybody drinks.
You can be tested and be
considered legally drunk but
can handle It better than
others and be totally In con-
trol and get arrested for
drunken driving."
Barbara Higginbotham,
1peclal educetlon teecher,
NewportBMch
"Yes, I think they should
have their licenses taken
away for a longer time. There
should also be more jell time.
Higher fines wouldn't work
because the people who
could afford the fine would be
able to pay It off and be back
on the streets drunk and
driving."
Whoever's calling is all wet
Mesa water dis trict not making those late night t ele phone calls
A mystery caller who claims to been telephoning Costa Mesa come out and test their tap water.
be an employee of the Mesa residents during evening hours Linda Sanders. information of-
Consolidated Water District has and asking themjf someone can ficer for the district. said ht'r office
has been getting complaints for
the last couple of weeks from
people who wonder why the
water district is calling them at
9:30 p.m.
Desk-wielding giant
threatens salesman
A hulk of a man threatened the
life of a salesman for an Irvine oil
and gas firm, demanding to be
paid a $4,000 d~bt, police said
today.
The bill collector, 6 foot 3 inches
and 260 pounds, picked up an oak
desk "to demonstrate his prowess"
before stalking out of the offices of
Genessa Oil and Gas Co .. 16592
Hale St., Friday, Sgt. Leo Jones
said.
Salesman Charles F. Pribus, 41.
was threatened with physical
injury unless he met the extortion
demands. J ones said. Pribus is
presently facing trial on drug
charges. apparently unrelated to
the attempted extortion plot.
The investigator said the oil and
gas company's owner, J oseph A.
Genitti, told him the firm is in
financial difficulty, and is unable
to pay its debts. However, the
company the collect.or claimed to
represent said it isn't owed any
money. he said. ,
.. hav\~ a tred1t1onal
chr'i~tmas
halcyon day.e
hClnd point.Gd IZ.T"mMl
'cox4& fl-om~
4' Fothfort ltlond
NNlpOft Bcoch
714/644~10
' -••
"Some of (the mysterious calls)
say they'rt' district employees.
some say water employees,"
Sanders said.
No matter what they say,
however, they are not employees
of the Mesa Consolidated Water
District, Sanders said . "When the
district has a reason to contact its
customers, the employees clearly
identify themselves and call only
during normal business hours."
According to customers who
have received the calls, the callers
do not identify themselves and
will not leave a return phone
525 South Lake A.it.
Patodena
2JS/304·933S
{
I
A •t Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, December 19, 1983
TOP OF THE NEWS Two dozen perish in weekend of blazes
NATION
Nancy's Kore an kids
get early Christmas
NEW YORK Nancy Reagan has planned
an early Christmas Cor the two South Korean
children who hit<.•hed a rad<• aboard Air Force One
en route to Life-saving open-heart surgery in the
United States. The first lady was due today at St.
Frands Hospital in Roslyn, Long Island, with
gifts for the• tots. at'l.'Ordang to WhHe House
spokeswoman Barbara Cook Mrs. Reagan was
scheduled to lunch with Ahn Gi Sook, 7, and Lee
Kil Wood. 4, bdorf' tuunng the hospital's
pediatm· ward
Jurubo jet hit truck
( ANCHORAGE. Alaska A Japan Air
Lanes l'argo planl• land ing an fog struck a pickup
truck on the runway al Anchorage International
Airport early toJay, mJurmg a man m the truck,
officials said No one aboard the Boeing 747
jumbo Jet was hurt an the accident. but the lone
0<.'Cupant of the truck was hosp1tal1zed in critical
condition.
Love Ca nal bills probed
NEW YORK Overcharges of up to $5
million have bet>n found by investigators looking
into the cleanup of toxll· wastes at the Love Canal
in Niagara Falls, The New York Times reported
today A two-year state inquiry. now in its final
stages. has in part focused on two payments made
to then-City Manager Donald J . O'Hara by a
subsidiary of Newco Chemical Waste Systems of
Buffalo in 1978.
STATE
Chino fugitive capture d
GORMAN -Fug1t1ve F~Ow~n Hodges.
who escaped from Chino st.all' prison, was
captured without incident Sunday at a motel in
Gorman. authorities said Hodges. 42, who
walked out of the prason·s m1mmum-security
section Wednesday, was arrested about 10 a.m.
with a female companion an thlS rugged
Tehachapi Mount.ams area 50 miles north of Los
Angeles. Hodges, who was serving a three-year
sentence for assaulting a pea<.~ officer. was the
first inmate to escape from the prison smce four
people who Javed nearby were slam last June at a
Chino Hills horse ranch. Kevin Cooper, 25, an
escapee fr9m Chino. 1s charged with the four
murders.
Navy mi ile crash e ~
POINT MUGU A Navy Tomahawk cruise
missile malfunctioned and crashed less than a
minute after being fired from a destroyer
offshore, officials srud The faLlure of the missile
Sunday afternoon came after 12 prev10us
succes.5ful le!>t-finngs from warships, said Ray
Lucasey , spokesman for the Pacific MlSSile Test
Center at Point Mugu.
WORLD
Bomb plo t unveile d
FRANKFURT, West Germany -Four men
were arrested on susp1c1on of plotting explosives
attacks on U.S. Army installations and a railway
yard used for transporting NATO weapons and
ammunition. the Federal Prosecutor's Office
announced today. Components for homemade
bombs and 37 pounds of explosive chemicals
were seized m raid~ that netted four sus pects
Ku wa it trials begin
KUWAIT -The government accUS(.'Ci nine
Iraqis a nd three Lebanese of involvement in last
week's bombings of the U S Embassy and five
other targets. and authorities said preparations
for trying 10 of them would begin today
By Tbe Auoclaced Press
Six elderly men died when fire destroyed an old
Detroit apartment building, a family of hve perished
in Texas as their mobile home burned and two people
were killed in a San Franci8CO hotel as weekend
blaz.es across the nation left ht least 24 dead and 65
injured.
Early today, four children perished and three
other people wert~ Injured when fire burned an old,
two-story farmhouse to the ground southwest of
Columbus, Ohio, in Franklin Gounly's Pleasant
Township.
Other fire victims Included a family of four
killed in Indiana when their Christmas tree lights
caught fire and a 7-year-old Massachusetts girl who
died when her home burned.
Mousek e peering
" In California, a smoky blaze destroyed abo'ut half-"fk. 400-r~. 12-story Cathedral Hall Hotl'I on
Sunday. forcing evacuation of 182 guests. The body
of an unidentlfwd woman was found on the
mezzanine level, when• investigators said the fire
may have begun. The body of a man identified as
Daniel Thompson, J6. of Con<.'Ord, Calif , was found 111
a restroom.
-nont• were requ1n.od under tTw city's bu 11thn~ <.'Odt"
Condon Ba1d.
Th(• caUSt· or the blaze was u11tl('r lllVl'Sllgallun ,
officials said "It looked hkl' an oil fire," one
firC'f1ghter said, noting thick black smoke that rose
200 feet above the hotel
Up to 50 people were hurt, none serious! y, m the
blaze, Fire Chief Emmett Condon said.
Deputy Chief Bob Rose t-stima!Rd damage at $2
miUion, but an asslStant hot.el manager said the hKUrt-
could rise to $10 m11l1on.
"It's horrifying to wake up and see flames
shoo-Ung up the out.side of your window," said
Richard Booker of Los Angeles, who ran Crom his
room with his wife, dressed in nightclothes.
The fire that killed six elderly residents of an
apartment in Detroit on Sunday was like ly caused by
a careless cigarette smoker, an arson investigator said.
The 23-year-old structure, once called the Jack
Tar Hotel, had nospnnklers an rooms or h<tllways. but
''The smoke woke me up, but then the fire
department broke my windows out so 1 could get
out," said Barbara Bellow, 55 "I lost everything -all
my welfare papers and my dothm~ and ull."
Japan's liberal party
suffers election upset
TOK YO (AP) The oppos1t1on
carved away thl' governing Liberal
Democratic Pa rty's parliamentary ma-
jority. final returns showed today. in an
election upset attributed to former
Prime Minister Kakue1 Tanaka's
bribery l'onv1ct1on.
ThC' party's s tunning loss of 35 seats
in the lower house of the Diel. Japan's
Parliament, in the ·
balloting Sunday
far e xceeded
pre-ell'<.'tion fore-
casts and placed the
13-month-old gov-
ernment of-P..r,.imc.-~~~
Minister Yasuh1ro
Nakasone in Jl'OP· ·-
ardy
With the support ,._
of hke-minded an -'\a ka.,urw
depcntl1•nl Dwt members. the l'On-
serval.lve LOP as rertain to maintain
control of the.government it has ruled
the past 28 years. Japan·s close ties i.o
the Uni ted States and the Western
alhanl'C are expected to re main intact
Final but unofficial returns gave the
LOP 4!50 seats an the 51 I-member
lower ho use, down from its
pre-elecuon strength of 285
The Japan Soc1ahst Party gamed 11
scats for a total of 112. while the
centrist Komeito (Clean Government)
party surged from 34 to 58 seats.
Among smaller opposition parll('S,
the Japan Communist Party lost three
seats with 26 winners.
In a televised press conferem:e, a
somber Nakasone acknowledged that
the voting had "radicall y changed the
political situa tion."
"Perhaps we didn't do an adequate
job in explaining our 'position on the
political eth1<.'S question" stemming
from Tanaka's C><:t 12 conviction. he
said.
Nakasone said hl' was willing to
t•ontinue as pnme minister He stressed
that fallout from the election "must not
interrupt the workings of government
even for one day " He ex press<.~ hope
that a new cabinet could be formed bv
the end of treOear. • •
J eff Mo nday. a 16-mo nth-old pa t ient in the pedia tric
ward at . t. Mary's Hospita l in Re no, pet•rs out a t Mickey
Mo use d urinf( a quic k~amc o f hide and ·eek .
However, internal party feuding in
the wake of the setoock, and the need
to aC'commodate the opposition in
future Dael debate. could slow progress
in many programs -including
responses to U.S . requests that Japan
improve its defense capabilities and
hberahze foreign trade policies
Nakasone called cm members of has
party to •·unite so we can carry out our
promises to the people," and asked the
opposition's c:ooperallon.
He said in a telev1s1on interview that
he would "accept with sincertty the
harsh judgment handed down by the
people."
Kidnappers send ear, photo
Italia n je we lry h e ir, his mother , he ld f ot $4.2 million r a n som
ROME(AP) Three forensic experts said today
that a severed ear sent by kidnappers as a warning
"almost certainly" belongs to a 16-year-old Bulgari
jewelry hear. the Italian news agency ANSA
reported.
The forensic team said in a statement that the ear
found in a Lrash can Sunday night "almost certainly
was cut from G1org10 Cahssona with a scalpel or a
razor," ANSA said.
The team from the Insutute of Legal Medicine in
Rome, headed by Dr. AngeHni Rota, said the ear was
taken from Calissona in a "rough manner," the news
agency said.
The kidnappers of Giorgio and his mother, Anna
Israeli guns assail
PLO force in port
Bulgar1 Calisson1, 56, left thc l'ar, a 'photo of the
mother and son and two letters m Lrashcans an Rome
during the wC'eke nd An anonymous caller directed
authont1es to the trash t·ans
The kidnappers said an onl' letter that they
would kill the pair 1f their demands for ransom.
reported by the Italian news agency ANSA at $4.2
million, are not met
The mother and son were abducted Nov. 19 by
three armed bandits from a BuJgan family estate
south of Rome. S he and four cousins are heirs of the
Bulgan jewelry store. with shops m Rome. New
York. Paris. Geneva and Monte Carlo.
The grisly development was reminiscent of the
1973 kidnapping of John Paul Getty 111. grandson of
the American oil billionaire. Getty's ear also was cut
off to convince his family to pay a ransom. He was
freed after $2.8 million was paid.
In one letter left in a trash can. Mrs. Calissoni
asked Pope John Paul II to help, saying."l pray to you
to intercede in a discreet and unofCicial manner with
my family so that they wiU liberate us from this
torment and let us recover our human dignity."
TRIPOLI, Lebanon (AP) -Israeli gunboats
today launched another bombardment on PLO
chairman Vasser Arafat's 4,000 loyalist fighters to
deter their evacuation from this northern port city -
their last Middle East stronghold.
About three hours later, Israeli warplanes made B ., h
bombing and strafing runs over the Syrian-held rJ ons S op
,.,...........,,0
Pola roid snapshot shows Bulgari
heir Giorgio Calissoni, mo ther Anna
Calissoni (gun a t head.)
despite blast central mountains. swooping down on targets around /4 Hush-hush wedding thetownsof Aley and Bhamdoun.about lOmileseast LONDON (AP) -Christmas shoppers pored their Christmas shopping by the Irish Republican
of Beirut. over merchandtse today at Harrods, the city's leading Army bomb attack. which occurred at about l :20 p.m.
MEXICO CITY A me mber of the Rolling The 25-rrunute naval barrage, the second in less department store, as it reopened two days after an when about 20,000 people were in Harrods.
S 'ed b • h edd. than 12hours,settheCypriotcargoship''MyChann" IRA car bomb exploded just outside. killing rive tones got marra . ut it wasn t t e w mg ablaz.e in Tripoli's harbor. Another previously people. "Nothing ts going to stop us walking the streets that everyone expected. The groom was lead f Lo d " S A b th t 54 ·d S d H damaged ship tied to a wharf was sunk. It was the "Today's trade as not very different from an o n on. usan r u no . . sa1 un ay. er guitarist Keith Richards. who kept his marriage 22 Id da h J d to be ·ed t sixth such assault in 10 days. ord1·nary Monday, and the whole store ts trading," -year-o ug t.er, ane. ue marrt nex plans so secret even best man Mick Jagger, who Is th f t 1· tr· k.lled · th rael radio quo!Rd defense sourees as saying the '"''d Aleck Craddock. chaa·rrnan of Harrods. mon ' was one o wo po ace o icers a m e has well-advertised intentions to wed model ..... bl Jerry Hall. didn't know about them. Richards shelling of Tripoli. Lebanon's second-largest city, The IRA acknowleged its "volunteers" planted ast.
tied the knot Sunday with 27-year-old Patricia was designed "to make clear Israel's attitude" to the the bomb, but said they weren't authorized to do so. It "The Germans didn't manage it. Neither will the Hansen.~ model and actress from New York. in planned withdrawal of Arafat's guerrillas aboard apologized for the civilian casualties. Irish," she said, referring to the Nazi aeriaJ bombing
Cabo San Lucas. five Greek ships flying the United Nations flag as a Londoners vowed they would not be deterred in blitz during World War .n. '!=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~guar'.::::a:n~tee==~o~f~sa:.::.:fe~co==n~d:u:c~i.:...._~~~~~~~~~-r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-->~~~~~~~~~~-
SHOCKED! "'' .... \ ............. , . .. . ... ...... . ...
~~J~\~~E
Clll RttMthfW
Non&wottr llltn
'"" »60 bttS
f WDS ICSlltAHCE
GROtlt
441 ow ... .,.,.. ""4 .
....,.., '-di, c..
6Jt-7740
Santa with
real beard
The rcul Suntu I'>
ut Huntington Ccnicr
for visit~ & photw..
...
Tender Top Sirtoin Steak and two large eggs. Served with
hashed brown potatoes and
chok:e of toast.
.. ·--~~-~~~~~--.._.. __________________________________ ....,..._ ____________ ~~~~---------
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. December 19, 1983 i\ 5
How cold is it? 35 towns cite record lows
By Tbr Asso<'lated Pn·~~
With wmll'r still two d.1v~ .1way, ,1 borw rh11ling
preview rl'fus..-d lo bow oul t~li:I) 11\.lhl· Crt':ll Plains.
shatt('ring down~ of rl'\'Unls ,lb tlw nwrnary stuck
below wro 111 "n111• plan•:-.. JV tu W dt·~rrt'S below
from Mmn<.'lM.lla Ill Tt•x<1:> • T ht-a1·1·til' wt•<ittwr w.1~ t')'f.)('\'ll'd to last al least
until madwt't'k as ,1 rng1i.l lront st.1llt<tl over the
t'1lllon's henrtl. nd, bnnglllg snow to 1Hlrthern Texas,
Arkansas, Kansas and Oklahun1a anti ll'Y
temperatures throughout the Midwest, the National
Weather Serv1t-e said.
Thirty-live cities reported record-breaking lows
by midnight Sunday, and by 2 a.m. today the low
po111t had reached 40 below zero m Williston, N.D.
"The only thmg between us and Canada is a few
pi{'ket fent-es," said meteorologist Bill Alexander m
Fort Worth, Texas. "This is the coldest type of air
mass there 1s. This is d mid-winter air mass."
'Sin Citizens' to the rescue
La Vegas turns out to help hapless family through holidays
Tt'mpcraturt>s in some spots were the t'oldest In a
l'cntury. Dubuqu~. lowa. reached W ~low, breaking
a r~'Ord set an 1877 La Crosse, Wis .. hit 25 below,
shattering the mark 11et In 1884 And thermometers an
Waseca, Minn., fell to Ji ~low, IJreaking a rc<.'Ord
from 1916
An 8-year-old girl in Grandview, Texas, dwd in
a hre that began when her mother tnt>d to light the
stove lo keep warm, police said.
Three water mams burst overnight an Amarillo,
Texas, damaging a Levi Strauss plant, a shopping
center and a nur,sing home, but no evacuations were
necessary. There were eight water main breaks in
For t Worth, but a water department spokesman said
that was fewer than feared. A natural gas pipeline
break left many of the 4,500 residents of Premont,
Texas. southwest of Corpus Christi, without heat for
about 12 hours Sunday
LAS VEGAS lAPl Tht-~-year-old son o{ a following pubhcation of the story have brightened There was also the cutting chill of the wind,
couple down on their luck thinks tt'~ "Chr tstmas the O'Malley's outlook. which made it feel twice as cold in some places. In
every day" aftl'r being s~w~n-d wnh gifts from Las Zeffery "thinks it's Christmas every day now" Watford City, N.D., where the wind made 1t feel like
Vegans who read about tfie family's plight because of the generosity, Lori said. "He doesn't see 60 below, police Lt. John Schoenhoff said officers
And. perhaps mure imporwntly. at ll'ast 10 firm why he has to wait until next week." were willing to "shake their fingers" at minor traffic
job offers have been made to 1''1umas O'Malley since Mrs. O'Malley said "quite a few" of the pb offers infractions to avoid getting out of their cruisers.
a story appeared about the family 111 Saturday's Las look promising and said the family now plans to settle "The chief worked last night and he wore two
Vegas Review-Journal. m Las Vegas once her husband decides on one. pair of longjohns and a snowsuit just in case he had to
"There have lx_-e11 pb opportun1tit·s left and The family will be staying a t the Casbah Hotel get out of the car," Schoenhoff said.
right and that's their No 1 priority," said Ralph through the holidays to fulfill a commitment made to With the cold front creeping east, forecasters
Cim1rro, assistant man<1gt-r uf tht' St Vincent's the hotel management. warned the central Gulf states to expect un-Dim~gh~O'~allt'vs _ Thomas, w~ft' Lon. and son Cimirro said the family's good fortune has given seasonable weather by tonight, and New England
hope to other poor families who frequent the soup and the Atlantic Coast to brace for a freeze on
Rare birds?
Who' up RI dawn on Ja11.· l?
If getting up bt.>fon· duwn on Nl·w Yt"tt1"s Day
u:i exchange pl€'a.~1llrn·~ wath your h-atherl'<.I
friends appeal!! lo you, the· lonil Audubon Society
has just th<> tkkC't
They'll be i.endmg h11 d w;.itd1t•rs to ttl(' i.hort',
marshes, str<.~ts and (1t'lds for th1· what the Sea
and Sage Audubon Soc·1ety IJ11l~ ''' 1L' t·oustal
Christmas bird t'ount.
The oount sta1 lS at sunup Nt'W Yt·.ir's and
ends at sundown with a boat lt>avmg Lht' N(•Wport
pier at daybreak to <:ount birds of the open oct•an,
according to Gerry Tolman, chairman of the event.
"We have ont' of the better rount areas in the
United StatC'ti," said Tolman, who noted that the
t'Ount will 1.&ke plat't: in a 15-mile diameter circle
centered on the Mesa Verde Country Club in Costa
Mesa.
Last yt•ar's Orang(• Cou11ty tally nettt'd the
sixth highest number of s pt.'<'it.'S in the· 11at1on
The first Christmas bird count. sponsor~ by
the National Audubon S<x·1t-ty, too~ plal'e on
Christ.mas Day 1900 at 25 IUl'allons m the
northeastern Unitt'<i States and Canada with 27
people participaung S ince then the annual event
has grown to include 1,500 locations from Ala'ika to
Central America with more thm1 35.000 people
involved.
Last year 95 (X'Oplt' took part tn the Sea and
Sage Society's coastal count Anyone who expects
to be up at dawn after New Year's Eve and wishes
to join the count should call the society at 974-8250. Zeffrey -have been eaung at tht> downtown soup kitchen Tuesday or Wednesday.
kitchen and sharing a sm<11l hutd room for about a ·~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii~ji~~ii~~ii~~~ ••••• ~jiililfliiiiiiii~~~-~~·~~·~·~··~···~-month after arriving m Las Vegas searching for a pb I
that never panned out.
Lori O'Malley works as a maid <1t the Casbah
Hotel in exchange for the room, but e fforts by
Thomas to find work in the construcuon industry had
failed.
Christmas was to have been d bleak holiday for
the family, but an outpouring of gifts and. support
IN THE SERVICE
Herman W. Taube III, son of Joan Peterson of
Dana Point, has been promoted to the rank of
specialist fourth class in the Army. Taube is stationed
in Fort Sill. Okla .. with the 6th Training Battalion.
Army Pvt James T. L. Black, son of Jerry and
Judy Black of San Juan Capistrano, has completed
basic trammg at Fort Dix, NJ He 1s a 1983 graduate
of Capistrano Valley High School m Mission Viejo.
Dean 0 . Haggerty, son of David F Haggerty of
Costa Mesa. has been promoted to the rank of staff
sergeant in the Army. He 1s a law enforcement
specialist at lnc1rLik Air Bast>. Turkey
Airman Andrew D. Woodrow, wife of the fonner
Angela Kemp of Fount.a.In Valley, has been named
outstanding airman of the month for the hospital
squadron at Beale Air Force Base, Calif
Pvt Matthew J. Sisler , grandson of Lou Sisler of
Costa Mesa, and Pvt. Kenneth 0 . Stannard, son of
Carolyn Cham-ellor of Costa Mesa. have completed
Army basic trai.nmg at Fort Mt-Clellan. Ala Stannard
iB a 1983 graduate of Costa Mesa I hgh School_.
BIRTHS
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
l>ec.mber 1
Mr •nd Mrs Marcos w9u1la•
Costa Mesa ooy
O.C:....be<.
Mr and Mrs Young Won Wesl m1n11er. ooy
Mr and Mrs Jim Jon" Hunl
1ngton Beach t>oy
Mr and M<S Pele• Leeds Hunl
lngton Belich O"'
Lisa McGlone Hun11ng1on Beacn
ooy
0.c:emberS
Mr and Mrs Oan•CI Muller fle~1
mintier girl
Mr and M•s J11mes Roo1 Fou"· 1a1n Valley. boy
December 8
Susan Clay, Hunt1ng1on Beacr> ll"' Dec.ember 7
Mr and Mrs Stoll G•11ham Hun•
1ng1on Beach boy
Mr a.no Mrs Kennell\ Be•ll Fountain Veney boy
December I
Mr and Mrs Charles t.ooo" Fountain Vali.y girt
Mr and Mrs Woule• Kamoscnuu•
Fountain volley Doy
December t
Mr and M•S James Thomt>eny
•iu<1ton9ton Beacn boy
Mr and Mr~ Ronata G1lfM?le
~ounta•n Vall~ ooy
"'' ano Mrs Rtco looez Cosla
Mes~ ii"'
M• JnO Mr~ Oa•td Hodge Co51a
Mesi gtrl
D.c:ember 10
M• 11nd M•' Sanoy Kow·Felcone
HunhnQlnn Bf'acn girl
WESTERN MEDICAL CENTER
No•ember 2t
Mr and Mr~ Rol>l!rl "'4ar11n Irvine.
!JO~
November 2t
Mr <lnd Mrs Ken Yoshino Laguna
N guet tJOy
December I
Mr and Mr\ Sleonen Venanzi
'"",. Qlfl Mr .tnd "4rs Lee Ph1lllp30n Cor· o"" d!!I Mar Doy
December 5
Mr al"o M•s Joseon Saunders
Foun1a1n Vall~ DOV
Early Bird Dinner
Specials s6. 95
Prime Rib or Fresh Fish
Complece Omner w ith choice of
soup or salad and dessert
°'4 TH~9fN1NSULA
BA!ttOA 801 L BALBOA
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN that a Town Hall meellng will
be held to take public testimony regarding a Draft Binding
A9feement pel'talnlng to Flight Llmltallons at John Wayne
Airport. Coplel ol the dratt agreement are available to the
public upon request.
NOTICE 18 HEREBY FURTHER GIVEN lhal said Town Hall
Meeting wtn be held oo the 4th d9Y of January, 198'4, at the
hOUr o( 7 30 p m . In Ille N-port Beach City H811 Council
Chamber•. 3300 Newport Boulevard. Newport Beech, CA.
928&3
THINGS .
TODO
f
WANDA E ANDERSEN
City~
C11y of Newport 8eecfl
No matter
what you're
doing. your
hometown
newspaper
The.,Plll
Its In.
USDA Glade A. F1oien
ey~
Cal1torn1an Brand
49 l1m•tl 59c Wll1le 4
Supply
Lasls lb
C k d Sh •mp La•ot 00 • r1 Oelrosled PetlM
(Half Ham 10 $1 79) lb. Cure 81 HamHorme1eone1mHa1tH(lm
Safeway Quality Beet
L.a1ge End 1
s17a W' t
Suto/1 lb l•"'
Wainuls
In ~I. Hew Crqp or Cauhflowef Lovely Gllttdea
Peitect For Your Hoh6ily 8ak1no 6~5397 Cauhllower
Heads or Bunch """'-Br occoh ,,.,.,,
Each
V egelcibles
Libby s Natural Pxk •Corn
• Green Beans • Peas
lb
. 39c
Cr ao f1lOfl I
As son~ Hohoay Bevei ages
Pot
-·
Paper Towels
Mr JumbO A1>so111en1
17-oz.
Cans 3 .s
32·02
Bottles
(Plus Oepos11)
75 SQ
Ft Roll s
DI> Ice Cream
Lucerne Our Natural 2 r..i:t!... 5 00
DOlggNog
Lucerne. HohOay P¥1y Favorne "-ff • 11• r.&llOfl
• !!!~,!!tyleBr~~l~ 59c
DI> Cream Cheese t°! 69' Lucerne. Greal For Dips '"•
Maison Blanc
Cha111~agne
Brut • White • Pink • Cold Duck
.ts
750-ml.
Bottles
MCarloRossl
llhlne • Chabllt • lurgundy
IDOGallo ADM• <lflllllla • IMKf'M1
Beringer
Ctilnlll lllnc .
Almaden CNMa • ..,.,,..,. Nllne. Yin ...
mm> Miid CheddarRaooom 1199
OI Monterey Jack Btsl Buy Cheese We•ohl b
mm>Cranberry Juice 11 .• 1 •• Ocran Splay ~.,.
•Biscuits
Mrs Wrlghrs Bottenntlk or Homestyle s"~ • 100
. .
Old Smuggler
Scotch
8611 PtOOI
-l.~~ •9·~
------"!!lfitil!il!!iil~, Kamchatka ·· ,
Vodka
81).Proot
··~···
Mlriscuit
Of Wheat Thins Nah1sco Sndtk (;1,1rke1s
DOCheeseCups
Kaullau11a l(lub
mm>Green Beans 2 •L•''' loo Golden La~e Cul G1een Beans Frozen 11Q•
mm>Coffee Ma-well Housr Automattc 011p
. .
Gilbey's
Gin
80 Proof ,
•1.:~a·· ................
~ Safew:y Will Be Closed ~·\)· ..
Christmas So Our ·
, Employees May Enjoy •
The Holiday With Their Families
lafeway Wiii Be Open
•December 26th.
~ Et'Jlcltl¥t Dec. ··~· 1113 In SoulMrn C.llfornfa (b~I Clta.11111 & Blytht) SllH In AelJlt ~tlllts ()Illy
AMERICA'S FAVORITE FOOD STORE . , ......... °'" ....... .... . ., ..... C:..9' ....... .,, " ........ • H ......... •fY fiiu., ....... l..llfltfl• • l•l'lt• Ana PrHway M '-• ha, ....... ....,.. '}.,................... -... . : 144'1C....Df: ......... ,. ...
~ , . \
1·1
'O
'
i\6 Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT /Monday. December 19. 1983
MAILBOX
A good light rail systeHJ
could solve 1nany cQunty
• transportation woes
To the Editor:
People who criticize the
proposed light rail system for
Orange County are ignoring the
very real advantages provided by
a light rail transportaiton system.
Light rail would help Orange
County solve its tralficcongest1on
problem. its smog problem. and
the John Wayne Airport problem.
Three problems solved for the
pnceofone.
It's a fallacv to thmk that
building more roads and freeways
will solve the traffic congestion
problems that affect Orange
County. Youneedlookno further
than Los Angeles county to see
how freeways ultimately fail to
, satisfy transportation demand-
. Freeways fail because politicians
allow too much development to
occur in the areas served by them,
through the mechanism of the
notorious "General Plan Amend-
ment." These amendments
opange established zoning, almost
always in the direction of in·
creased population density. It's a
fact that population densiti~are
increasing in Orange County, with
or without major transportation
• improvements. Look at the "Gen-
eral Plan Arnendmen ts" recen ti y
approved by thecity"touncilsof
Costa Mesa. Newport Beach,
Huntington Beach and Anaheim.
They are packing the roads even
as they are already overburdened
A light rail, on the other hand,
wiU take cars off the roads. rather
than adding more cars to them.
Thus, the existing freeways be-
come more efficient, reducing the
need for more of them. Freeways
are like a cancer: they grow and
create the need for more. Light
rail is advantageous for Orange
County bec.ause light rail (as
opposed to heavy rail) can serve
lowerdensitiesof population. You
don't need high densities to sup·
port Ugh trail econom1call y. In
fact. light !"3il can't handle ver~
high population densities. That's
why they are building a heavy rail
subway in the Wilshire Corridor
of Los Angeles. It's too dense for
light rail.
Light rail also gives us the best
chance to make progress in reduc-
ing smog. Every car we remove
from the freeways means less air
pollution. Remove 60,000 cars a
day from Orange County free-
ways, as projected for the rail
system, and we'll make a dent in
smog. Add more cars by building
more freeways, then expect more
smog. Remember that smog is a
public health problem, causing
cardiac and respiratory problems,
especially in the elderly and
newborn. Government officials
have a responsibility to consider
this health problem in their land
use and transportation decisions.
To date, they apparently don't, at
least at the local level.
Light rail also solves another
problem, the John Wayne Airport
problem_ Build a light rail, connect
it to LAX and Ontario Inter·
national Airport, and eliminate
big jets from J ohn Wayne. These
two airports are only 35 to 40 miles
away from the residents of Or-
ange County, but crowded free-..,
ways limlt their access. Keep big
jets away from the crowded
coastal zone. Improve access to less
populated Ontario with a Light
rail.
Light rail has too many advan·
tages for the citizens of Orange
County to pass up. Light rail is
emerging across the United States
as the answer to transportation
problems. because roads are simp-
ly notable to do the job. It's time to
break away Crom the tyranny of
the highway lobby. and it's time to
bring Orange County out of the
smog ;rge. Please vote for the light
rail. It's the intelligent solution.
JAN D. VANDERSLOOT MD
Newport Beach
Dally Piiot welcomes
commentary from readers
· The Dally Piiot solicits your views on any matters of Interest to
our communities. If you wish to contribute to these pages with a
letter, or a longer commentary on an Issue, please send your
submission legibly written or typed. Commentary pieces shoued
be no longer than 500 words. Letters should be conslderably
more concise. Shorter letters wtll be considered first. Address
such correspondence to: LETTERS To The EDITOR, Delly Piiot,
Box 1580, Coete Meea, CA., 82128. Please Include your name,
address and telephone number.
If you prefer I you may callln your letter to the W•'r• Ll•t•nlng
special telephone number ... 842-41G18. Be sure to leave your
name, address and telephone number so that we may verify your
comments.
Please do not call in tonger letters or commentaries.
f'
l. M. BDJd /P ersonal touch
Evidently. when we make a
peanut butter and jelly sandwich,
we like to think we personally
created something. Must be. The
packers put peanut butter and
jelly into the same jar. and the
product flopped.
Fie on the sporls(!asters who
repeatedly talk a bout the
cheerleaders' twirling "porn·
porns." Those are anti-aircraft
guns. What the cheerleaders twirl
are "pompons." Wouldn't talk in
this negative nitpicking manner.
if I hadn't been brutaliz.ed years
ago by a cruel copy chief.
Claim is th ree-fourths of the
200 million goldfish grown on
purpose in this country are fed on
purpose to other fish -
Q. Is radar always accurate?
A. Nothing electronic in the
hand.'i of amateurs is always
accurate./I say this as one who
wordprotessed the curious claim
that the late Josef Stalin, the
Georgian, came from the Ukraine
Thia computer should havE>
known better than that. No. not
always accura~. The record
1how1 that police radar in
Madlton. Wis., recently clocked a
parked car at 56 mph.
OAAHOE COAST
Dally Pilat
Q. What's a "Bimmer"?
A. A BMW car.Ownersof same
Stt>m to like that pE"t nam<'
Q. Where'd we get the phrase
"rule of thumb"?
A. Two explanations are of-
fered: l . The distance from the
thumbnail's tip to the first
knuckle was once used as the
ongmal inch measure. 2. British
law long ago stipulated a man
couldn't beat his wife with any rod
thicker than his thumb
Statistical footnotes of yester·
year suggest that Americans two
centt.tri~ ago drank twice as much
liquor per capita annually as they
drink today. 1 don't believe it
Nobody could drink twice as much
as they drink today.
Am asked the name of Frank-
enstein's monster Don't believe
he had a name. C.an tell you his la.at
word. It ~as "Farewell,'' un.
surprisingly. T his same ques-
tioner wants to know if the
woman who dreamed up the
· Frankenstein story ever actually
married the poet Percy Shelley.
Yes. after a two-~ar trial ar-
rangement, Mary Wollstonecraft
Godwin did indeed beromt• Mni.
S helley.
H.L loltW8'11 Ill
~
~~----•QOW...99¥11 ==~-............... .
cW:tO~::>
1b the unemployed
whocan'tputameal
on t)le ~b)e, to senior citizens
eating dog food to survive and to
ghetto children who
g_o _to bed hungry,
this ve~ special
¥uleti<Ie message:
c:
Eclwln
Meese Ill
TMI ready to fire up, maybe
WASHINGTON -The Nu·
clear Regulatory Commission 1s
scheduled to meet behind closed
doors today to consider whether to
start up Three Mile Island Unit 1,
the nuclear reactor that was
unaffecte d by the
near·catastrophic accident in
March 1979.
Evidence gathered by my as-
sociate-John Dillon indicates that
the commission could be courting
disaster if it allows TMl-1 back on
line. The unit was shut down for
routine refueling during the 1979
accident that almost caused a
meltdown in Unit 2.
At the time, the NRC ordered
Unit l toremainshutdown,dting,
among other reasons, "questions
about management capabilities,"
Now the commission is under
tremendous pressure from Gen-
eral Public Utilities. the owner, to
allow Unit l to begin producing
power again . •
Despite the indictment of the
company last month on charges of
falsifying crucial safety data
before the accident, the com·
missioners are reported to be
leaning toward approval of the
start-up plan.
.
G. J.-IC-1-ll-1-111_1_1 -~
There are three main problem
areas the agency sh ould conside r
before it lets TMI start operating
again -management integrity,
questionable supervision by the
NRC and continuing eqwpment
troubles:
-A reactor operator testified
that the company deliberately
falsified measurement data to
make leaks of reactor cooling
water at Unit 2 appear smaller
than they actually were. Now the
NRC's investigators suspect that
management lied about leaks at
both TMI reactors. The agency
' has promised that TMl· l wi11 not
be allowed to resume operation
until the investigation of the
alleged ratsrflcauon on that uru~ ts
completed sometime next month.
Coincidentally, the plant w on't be
able to start un til then anyway.
-As further evidence of
management problems, the NRC
levied a $140,000 fine against GPU
last July for failing to tell the
federal agency that the facility's
supervisor of operations had
cheated on a licensing ex.am.
- 'Both the company and the
NRC knew soon after the 1979
accident that a plant operator had
blown the whistle on the falsified
records. Yet neither saw fit to dig
deeper. The company's investiga-
tion consisted of a consultant's
interview with the whistleblower,
Harold Hartman Jr. -but not
with the company executives who
may have ordered the falsifica-
tion.
After squelching any mention
of Hartman's charges in its two
massive reports on the TMI acci-
dent, the NRC staff finally told
the commission last May -more
than four years later. -that
Hartman's charges were believed
to be true.
-A valve failure triggered the
TMI accident. Yet the same kind
of valve will be used in the
undamaged reactor, despite the
manufacturer's warning that its
use under certain conditions "may
be detrimental to its ability to seal
without leaking, thus contribut-
ing to an increased failure rate."
The warning was deleted from the
NRC's final TMI re port, and was
brought to light by the Union of.
· Concerned Scientists. '
T he valve may not be the only
piece of eqwpment that needs
checking. There have al.so been
problems with the instruments
used to measure the amount of
cooling water available in case of
emergency, according to the com·
pany's own admission.
The first devices installed after
the accident failed miserably.
New meters also proved inac-
curate.
But in a November letter to the
NRC, the company explains that
the inaccuracy of the meters IS not
really critical, because the instru·
ments are more accurate during
high-flow conditions and oper-
ators can use other means to
ascertain the flow levels. Se the
company concluded that every-
thing is hunky-dory
Footnote: A General Public
Utilities spokesman admitted the
valve leaks under low pressure
conditions. But another valve
upstream, he said, should solve
the problem.
Another SS crisi..s looming
ByREP.ROBERTBAOHAM
Once the Social Security crisis
was laid to rest last Spring by a
t'OmprQJnise agreement between
the houses of Congress and the
President, that figured to be the
end of problems for the immedfate
future of Social Security, right?
Wrong.
At the risk of sounding like a
doomsayer, there 1s another Social
Security crisis looming ahead that
could be worse than the one
Congress faced this year. That
involves the Medicare Hospital
Insurance Trust Fund, which is
expected to run out of money as
early as 1987.
The Medicare program was
established in 1965 and is a health
insurance program for those enti-
tled to Social Security benefits
--,
and certain disabled individuals. It
is estimated that more than 30
million people are eligible for
Medicare benefits, 27 million of
I.hem senior citizens and 3 million
disabled people under age 65.
There are two parts to Medi-
care, one pa.rt which provides
hospital care; the other part is a
voluntary program financed by
enrollee premiums and general
revenues for non -hospital medical
treatment. The hospital portion of
the program is financed by a
mandatory 1.3 percent payroll
deduction for employer and em-
ployee alike .
A measure of the scope of the
Medica.re program can be seen
whenone considers that 25 per-
cent of national health spending
for hospital ca.re and more than 17
percent of spend in~ for physician
.~
services are covered under the
Medicare umbrella.
However. for a variety or
reasons, costs of providing these
medic.al services are out·stripping
deductions a nd premium'pay-
ments. The Social Security retire-
ment system projects a deficit of
more than $180 billion over the
next 10 years, $300 billion by 1995
and more than $500 billion over
the next 25 years. in 1983 dollars.
What has caused the financing
problem with Medicare?
There are three basic factors
involved, the experts tell us. First,
there has been a steady increase in
the number of people receiving
care under Medicare, second, tt'ie
volume of use of Medicare services
has increased and third has been
the increase in the price of hos pi taJ
services.
Because of the mcreasmg lon-
gevity of American citizens, the
number of people eligible for the
program has increased steadily,
from about.19 million in 1966 to
some 30 million today.
At the same time, thenumberof
people receiving ca.re has in-
creased, again partly due to lon-
gevity. Those over 75 years who
are beneficiaries has increased
from 37 percent to 41 percen t since
1966.
Third, the cost of inpatient
hospital costs have been rising
substantially for the past decade,
far outpacing the growth in prices
in the ove.rall economy.
What can be done about this
problem?
The Reagan Administration has
a package which includes the
following proposals:
l. Attempt to develop incentives
!or cost savings under Medicare
primarily through some sys~m of
establishing rates for services
provided by hospitals.
2. Establish a program of
catastrophic protection for
long·term Medicare patients
while increasing beneficiary
cost-sharing.
3. tntroduoecompetitive ma.rket
forces in the Medicare program in
part through establishment of a
voucher system.
At prettent hospitals ~ve no
t~ntlve tooontrol eo1ia, because
Medicare pays Its portion of·
whatever amount i. billed. Set-
ting flnn rates forcertain.ervices
would encourage hoepitals to be
more etfldent.
On cataatrophic I Unesaes, the
Administration propou.1 ch.anaea
tht prnenuyatem unde whk:n a
patient receive. the most benefita
for hoepltalstaysof le11than two
months, whlle under the Reaaan
plan unllmlted 00\lerate woufd bt
provided for lhoee hoapltalbed
beyond 60daya.
The voucher sy11em 11 the moat
revolutionary idea. provldl.ng a
btneflciary thecho"1e \0 buyhll
own private health lnaurance plan
b\l'teed with the fundl which he
otherwlle woukl have U9ed few
MedJcare.
&dh.am re~nll cJtt 4Dlh
Congressional DUT
I'
J I
Daily Pilat
MONDAY, DEC 19, 1983
ENTERTAINMENT
TELEVISION
8 5
86
Skiing in the rain
n1ight not b e as bad
as it ... ounds. See 82.
Rams go marchin' into playoffs
NEW ORLEANS (AP) With une swing ot his
leg. Mike Lansford k1ckt."'Cl the• Rams into the pla'yoffs
and turned out the light at tht' end of the National
Football League's longest tunnel
For 17 years, l'ver since their inct'pt1on as an
expansion franchise. tht' N<'w Orleans Saints have
been trying in vain to finish lhe season as winners
with a ticket to the playoffs. They had a shot al both
on Sunday and with a minute and 5 1 S('('ond~ to
play. they owned a 24-23 lead and had the Rams
mired on its 20-yard hne
The Saints' dt'fense hadn't allowed a point in the
preceding 58:09. all the Rams' scoring coming un a
safety, Henry Ellard's 72-yard punt return for a
touchdown and TDs on inten-epl1ons of 31 yards by
Johnnie Johnson and 43 by Nolan Cromwell
as the Rams drovl' lo the Saints' i5-yard line and
Lansford kll'ked th£' 42-yard fu~ld goal with two
st.'l'Onds remainin~ for a 26-24 victory and ext-
inguished New Orleans' dreams once again. In the
dosing minutes, a bomb threat was telephoned to the
Superdome. but there were no untoward incidents.
The Saints fm1shed 8-8 (they'd achieved that
once before. m 1979) and out of the playoffs while the
Rams. 9-7. are in tht•m either as a· National
Conference wild-('ard entry along with Dallas or (if
San Fran<:isro loses to the Cowboys tonight) the NFC
West l'hamp1on
"As far as I'm l'Ont't•rnt'<i. this was the playoff
game for the Rams," said 13-year defensive end Jal'k
Youngblood. whCJSC t•nd-zont• tacklt:' of Ken Stabler,
the Saints' starung quarterback, opened the scoring
for the Rams.
game, he was on the Vt'rgc· of u·ar~.
· "This 1s . " Moo r<' lx·gan 11 is voice broke. He
swallowed hard. "This 1s thl· b1tl<.'rest defeat I've ever
had -I mean the bitterest You say there's justice in
the world? I wor;vfor somellmt·s "
Center John li1ll, who has spent nine of his 12
pro years with the Samts, was almost as distraught.
"The hurt will last through tht• playoffs as you wat.ch
everybody go for the ulumalt• goal -the Super
Bowl." he said. "lt will lc•S.<;(.'n as It goc'S along, but it
will be somethinJ.( this tt•am won't forget
"It will bt:'a posit1vt:.> thing," Hill added but for
today, the pos1t1Vl'S bdong lo the Rams. who only a
year ago, at the end uf a ~tr1kl'·abbrev1att~ season,
were 2-7. the N FC's wurst tt•arn
That l<><l to Ray Malavas1's fmng and John
Robinson's hmng ~s head l'Oal'h and tht:.> selection of
What's mor<'. Vince Ferragamo. the Rams'
quarterback, hadn't completed a pass in th<-• S('(-ond
half.
NOSt' t.ackll• Dl•rland Moore has traveled through
that long. dark tunnel before. He's been a member of
the Saints for 11 of thl•ir 17 years. After Sunday's
halfback Ern: Dickerson from Southern Methodist t-----.i.l:-.:.a---'.;;;:;o......,iiilliiij..-wiilillliiillll
But in that final l :5 1, he <-'Ompleted six of seven
\ ,.
-'-
( ..,,.,. \1 \HCll I\·. 1'11~1· U:!)
Tournament of Roses Queen Ann Marie Colborn
greets University o f Illinois Coach Mike White
41' Delly ....... 1'"4110 br l .. l'erM
(right ) and his players at Long Beach Airport
unday. T he Illini are working out at OCC.
Illinois' OCC practices open to public
.
Greeted by 65-~egree temperatures
after leaving the frigid Midwest. the
University of lllinois' football team arrived
in Southern California Sunday for two
weeks of Rose Bowl preparation .
After deplaning at Long Beach Airport.
ground and the temperature was about 10
degrees," White said at an outdoor press
conference in th~ suQny m ~ng Beach. "It
was one of the great'expen ences -1t was
awfully cold, but there were an awful lot of
people there to see us off."
llinois. which 1s staying at the Newport
Beach Marriott, is scheduled to work out at
Orange Coast College from 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
every day until Sunday when the t.eam will
take a day off to enjoy the Christmas holiday.
Practices at OCC are open to the public.
Coach Mike White told cheering fans that
the tripw California was "a homecoming for
a lot of us."
The Fighting Illini were welcomed by
several hundred fans and a 50-degree
temperature change.
"When w e left Champrugn. there was
three or four inches of new snow on the
The team IS then expected to move its
training quarters next Monday to Citrus
Anteater women
topple Utah State,
face Waves tonight
Andrea Anthony and Jackie
Vander Poel combined to score 34
points to lead the UC Irvine
women's basketball team to an easy 80-70 victory over Utah
State in the first round of the
third annual UCI Christmas
Tournament Sunday.
Othe r first-round encounters
found Texas Tech mauling the
Universlt y of San Francisco.
98-57; Arizona State over -
powering UC Santa Barbara.
.......................... ......
66-41: and Pepperdine edging
Sant.a Clara, 55-54.
Tonight's winner's bracket
matchups have Texas Tech and
ASU meeting at 6 o'clock at
Crawford Hall, with UCI and
~epperdine slated for 8
Anthony, a junior guard, scored
10 of her 17 points in the first half
as the Anteaters. who led from
st.art to finish, took a 40-33 half-
time lead. Vander Poel, a junior
forward. then keyed a sec-
ond-half attack that saw UCI in-
crease its lead to 20 points half-
way through the period before
Coach Dean Andrea decided to
empty his bench.
The Ant.eaters. who improved
lheir record to 6-2, shot 46 percent
from the field, hHtlng 34 of 74
attempts. The winless Aggl~
(0-8) actually outshot their oppo-
nent. connecting on 49 percent of
their field goal tries, but UCl put
up 19 more attempts and that
proved to be the difference.
He's rio saint
College, where workouts will be eonductC'd
in private.
lt is the first time in 20 yC'::irs th<Jt the
Fighting Illini have made· thl' trip to
participate in the Rose Bowl.
The last time it happened, m 1964. Jim
G rabowski led lllinois to a 17 -7 victory over
Washington. ·
Illinois. champion of the Big 10 Con-
ference, will take o n Pac1f1c lOchamp UCLA
in the Rose Bowl on Jan 2
"This is sort of the zenath, the pinnade.
for us," White said.
Besides Anthony and Vandel
Poet, the Anteaters alao got a
16-polnt performance from
10phomore guard Erin Ktguh.i.
and a JO.point showing Crom 6·2
eophomore Cheri Graham, the
team's leading tc0rer , who 11w
limited action due to knH prob-
~. Ora.ham la ~xpect.ed t.o be In
the starting lineup tonight.
Ram plocekicker Mike Lan ford (I ) and Joe
hearin celebrate wlnn lng fi Id goal . undoy.
~ I
Raiders secure
• home field.
await Steelers
•
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Los Angeles Raiders. secure in
the knowledge that they're m the
best position possible ent~ring the
National Football League play-
offs. can begin gearing up for the
Super Bowl tournament.
The Raiders trounced the San
Diego Chargers 30-14 Sunday in a
regular-season finale to assure
themselves the)lome-field advan-
tage throughout the American
Football Conference segment of
the playoffs.
Not only do th e AFC Western
Division champion Raiders know
they'll be playing both conference
playoff games at the Los Angeles
Coliseum, if they're successful in
the first one. that is, they know
they'll first face the Pittsburgh
Steelers either Dec. 31 or Jan. 1.
That development became se-
cure when Seattle whipped New
England 24-6 Sunday to earn the
second AFC wild-card berth. The
Seahawks will entertain Denver,
which had previously clinched
the other berth. Saturday in the
conference's wild-card game.
Both Seattle and Denver are
AFC West teams. and a division
champion can't play the wild card
winner until the conference's
('hamp1onship game if the wild
card team is in the same division
as the champion .
Thus, the Seattle-Denver win -
ner will play at Miami while the
Raiders entertain the Steelers.
The Raiders and Dolphins tied
fo r the best record in the AFC
wnh 12-4 marks. but Los Angeles
gets the home-field advantage by
virtue of its 27-14 victory over
Miami early in the season.
Sunday~s scores
Rama 26. Sain .. 24
Raiden 30, Charaen l4
Seahawkt 24~ Pa1rio .. 6
Chiera 48, Bronco. 17
8rown1 30, Steelers 11
Lion• 23. Buecaneen 20 '.
Cardinals 31. Eqles 7
Bun 23, Packen 21
Coh11 20, Oilers 10
Faleon11 31, Bills 14
Tonight's game
Cowboy• a l 49en (Channel 7 .
•• 6)
"I think we're gradually get;
ting ready for the playoffs," said
Los Angeles running bad~
Marcus Allen. who 9COred two
tou<-·hdowns against the ChargerS.
"We're not quite there yet. but
we're getting there.
"Hopefully, these next coupl~
of games -we'll ta'-e them one
at a time -we'll p~together a
good offensive performance, as
well as defensively."
The Raiders did both against
the Chargers, rolHng up 480 yards
in total offense to 312 for Sao
Diego, which finished its season
with a 6-10 record and missed
qualifying for the playoffs for tM
first time since 1978.
Allen. who Sl'Ored on an 8~yard
run in the first quarter and a
5-yard run in the final period,
gained 72 yards on 16 carries and
caught fi ve passes for 49 yards.
He finished the year with 1,014
yards rushing on 266 carries and
68 receptions for 590 yards.
No identity crisis
for Riley, Lakers
lNGLEWOOD (AP) -Coach
Pat Riley says the Los Angeles
Lakers have been SE>arching for a
new identity since the loss of
All-Star guard F.arvin "Magic"
J ohnson. ,
They may have found it in
Sunday's 122-115 victory over the
Portland Trail Blazers.
"We were trying to find the
right combination. The one we
used tonight worked," said Riley.
Without Johnson to direct the
Lakers' celebrated "Show Time"
offense. the consistency has been
missing.
T hanks to fast-rising James
Worthy's 28 points, a strong lift
from sixth man Michael Cooper
and Calvin Garrett's emergence,
the Lakers are back in first place
in the National Basketball AB-
sociation 's Pacific Division.
Now 16-7, the Lakers wrested
the division lead away from
Portland. 18-9, by percentage
points.
Worlhy matched his career
high. hitting 11 of 16 floor shots u
the Lakers shot a sizzling 57 per-
cent from the field. Cooper added
16th in his sixth man role and
Garrett. the newcomer from the
Houston Rockets, added 15, in-
cluding four in a row during the
decisive fourth quarter.
The victor snapped a five-game
Portla nd winning streak.
"This was a very big win for
us," said Riley. "Portland it a
very physical team. We tried to
play them very physi~al. We ~ere
ready tonlght." '
Cooper's ihree-polnt goal with
6:18 remaining put the Laken
ahead 103-94 and the Trail
Slat.en never got cloeer than four
points.
Davis injured in crash
From AP dJapatcltfl
Former UnJveraity ot Southern
·California and pro football atar
Anthony Davia was injured
sll1htly today when his auto wu
struck by • man w ho has been
booked for Investigation of
drunken driving, police aald.
Poli~ Sgt. Rotrer Scharf uld
Davia' 1983 Corvette WU broad·
aidtd by a car driven by Kenneth
Williama, 25. of Orange.
Wllllam1 allf!l'!(lly ran a red
t11ht and atNclt Davia' vehicle
tbout t •.m .. Scharf uld.
Davta, 31. of Loi An•lte. com·
plAlned of neck paJrw and wu
'I
taken to Mercy Hoapl\al in San-.
Ana, where he wu ~ted and
releued, police uld.
Wlllial1\I WU booked Into the
Orange County Jail, Scharf Mid.
"Hll (Davia') vehlde wa at.Nc!tl
by a vehlcl~ that failed t.o ltOp for
• red light," Sch.arf aid.
Scharf aald no other~
were Involved ln th• aa:ident.
Davia, who once held the
all·Ume USC career ~ N-
COC'd, played with tM Raml, the
KOU110n OUerl, the Tampa SQ
8'.Kuneera and with the Can·
edian and World football t-cu-
dunn1 hlt pro caree.
~
' H:t Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, December 19. 1983
Don't let a .few weather terms ruin your ski trip. I
llu you knnw vou1 storm watchl'l> from your
'''Vt'fl' l'Olds'' Art• yl.)u up to dutt• on yuu1 wmd chills'!
I low fom1har art.• you with the rombmallon o( srww
and ram'
If vou'r(• a skier, c·ham"t.•s 1.1r1• you've spent more
1ha11 u 0t·asual amount of lime hst.cnmg or wau:h1ng
wt•ather reports. Now JUSt may be a guod opportunll-
ty to try and explain what you're listening to.
A<.'l'Ording to the National Ski Areas As5'x:1allun,
which 1s a~oi:ganizauon that re pn-scnts the
nation's ski . kiers shoulJ learn to interpret
some of th anguage used b y forecasters
So. as a public servKoe, the following 1s offered.
whll'h 1 gu~ would l'Ome under the heading of. "
Wt>ather wat.<:h words and what they mean "
Winter Storm Watc b or Warning -The first
means snow 1s possible, the second means it's
probable These rondiuons are also usually more
hazardous to the driver than the skier Let's face at. m
Southern California bliu.ard cond1llons are rare,
meaning the skier is in no imminent danger. The
ctraver. on the other hand, must b{> careful of slick
n.md1 uons.
Severe Cold -Naturally. skung and <'Old
1c•mperatures Ro together like bread a nd peanut
SKIING
JOHN
SEVANO
butter And. if you've been skiing for awhile you
know colder temperatures usually make for better
<.'Ondauons So, in other words, 11evere cold does not
mean head for the nearest lodg~ for a hot buttered
rum. J ust bundle up a little mor<' and t:ontinue to
enjoy yourself
WlndCblll -Midwestern cities llkt-Chkagoand
Mmneapohs have built their frigid reputations on
so-called "wind chill factors." But it should be
remembered that wind chill numbers do not take mtfl
account clothing or sunshine, the latter of which as
often plentiful on clear (and yes cold) days. The only
caution here is that. outside of normal wearing
apparel. you should definitely have something
covering your fkoe.
Rain -When somronl' usually hears this word,
he or she usually follows with a fC'w unprintable
phrases. There are some good rellliOna, howt•ver, not
u:> IOlie all hope:
•&in m c1t1l'll very often means 1moW"lut h1gtwr
Plevatlons. That's obvlOusly something you probably
already know Huw\•ver, weather can C'hange rapidly
with only a shght elevation change And 1t can do so
wllhm JUSt a matter of a few rrules, and wathan a few
hours. In other words, call the resort you plan to visit
•S nowmakmg machines have changed tht•
complexion of skung tremendously. Did you know
machine-made snow is actually denser than the stuff
Mother Nature manufactures? Thus. machine-made
snow can ~tter withstand onslaughts of ram and
warm temperatures
•Today's' snowmaking machinery also ha-; the
capabahty of returning wet or t(·y snow surfaces to the
powdery conditions most sluers pre fer Not onJy that,
rain softens snow and makes 1t much more easier to
maneuver through
Long Range Foreca sts -Take a t'Om and flap lt
m the air. The possibility of it c:ommg up heads or tails
gives you an idea of the cha n<.'l'S a weatherman has for
prt.'dacting an act·urate futt.are forecast. Even Dr.
G<"'"f'" .... h• .. h--c:1 wo11lrl admit daily fort""t:ast:. art•
often timt·s a probltm. So don•t rely on future on~.
Tht• purpose of all this is to make you think twit'\'
before cant-ehng a much-~walled 1k.i date. Exerc:UIC
all your options first and then lf all else fa11B ma~e
youn.elf a peanut tx•ller 6Bndw1ch and wat.t'h a
!!portmi.: c•vent on TV ., .. (
The 25th annual Snow S ummit Youth Ski Camp
for boys and girls (ages 7-17) is echeduled tor Dec.
26-31 at Bag Bear Lake
Thl· Ch n stmas sc.'SSion of fors a l'Omplet.e program
with adult superv1s1on. In<.-luded are: Lift tickets.
all-day ms tr uction from beginner to advanced
abilities, rac:e training, run races for trophies, night
skung. and free ski time. Also included are meals.
lodging and round-trap bus transportation from a
terminal in Newport BeaC'h.
Enrollment is hmted to the first 75 skiers to sign
up. The foe for the entire ski camp 1s $350 The rentaJ
of skis, bouts and polPS for the session 1s available for
$40
fur runht•r information, phone 866-2316 or
H66-5766
SPORTS BRIAK So:i:i~;;,~~~ ~0~::.m~SA Seattle celebrating!
Kovm scored three goals and assisted ~
NFL's Lions re-sign
Sims ... who already
has USFL agreement
on a fourth whale Alexander Mme-... S e ahawks host Broncos in first playoff b erth ht'nkt'v assisted on four goals Sunday
From AP dlspat~es
PONTIAC, Mach. -Detroit Lions
running back Billy Sims signed a new
five-year contract with the Nauonal
night as the Soviet Select Team beat Team USA
6-2 In the final game or their six-game series.
Team USA won the series with three
v1t·tor1es, two losses and one lie.
From AP dlspatcbH •
SEA TILE -Dave Krieg threw two tou<.·hdown
passes and ran for a third Sunday to lead Seattle into
the National Football League playoffs for the first
time '" the club's eight-year history with a 24-6
victory over the New England.
T he Sea hawks finished the season at 9-7 and
earned an American Football Conference w1Jd -card
bert~ will host Denver Saturday.
Seattle·~uefense forced the Patriots into three
turnovers. two by New England rookie quarterback
Football League team despite agreeing w play In
the Urut.ed States FootbaU League because he was
misled by Houston Gamblers owner Jerry
Argovitz, Sims said Sunday.
Kovin scored his first goal on a power play at
7:42 of the first period when he tipped Minc-
henkev's 50-foot shot from the point past Team
USA goaltender Bob Mason. It was the first Soviet
power play goal of the six·game series The Soviets
had previously gone O-for-13 Wllh a man
advantage. Kovin scored his second goal on a
breakaway at 13:34 to make the ~'Ore 2-0 for the
Soviet Selec-ts. Tony Eason. while the Seahawks' offense dad not 'KU~~Y llllUMIAY AHC>ftfW8
Sims signed w ith the Lions on Friday and said
he received a $1 million bonus.
The first year as worth
"$600,000 to $800.000." Sims
said
He said h(' signed with
Houston on Julv I
"I felt I "was not rep-
resented right by Jerry," Sims
said. "(The documen t) had
some numbers m it that
weren't guaranteed, but were
SIMS better. At the ume that l
sagnro with Jerry, it was the best ont' out there."
Sims added that he alread y has fe("e ived a
portion of hlS signing bonus from Houston
Lions General Manager Russ Thomas said he
was pleased that Sims had Signed the agreement
"He s1gnro 1t. I'm happy he signed 1t."
Fa li Time pulls upset
lNGLEWOOD -California-bred
long$hol Fali Time caught Bold T. Jay
m the final 200 yards to win the w orld's
richest thoroughbred race Sunday at
Hollywood Park
Favor1ues in the t•\'c•nt w orth $1 .0411.725
faltered as long$hots took each of the first three
pla<.'eS m the I 1-16 mile test for 2-year-olds.
~rec1s1onist, who went off the 9-5 favorik', led
early but fell back. Filly Althea al.so had a shot in
the No. 1 spot but couldn't maintain the pace and
finished sixth, ahead of Precisionist.
Artichoke. the t hird choke among tht-
est1mated -1 3.869 fans. beat only one in the field or
12 youngsters
Holtz quits a t Arka n sa
FA YETTF.VILLI-:. Ark A1h -
give up a fumble or an interception.
Krieg teamed wit!i Steve Largent on a 46-yard
touchdown pass in the second quar~r. a l6·yard
900ring pass to Dan Doom.ink m the third period and
tallied on a 2-yard bootleg play in the fourth quarter
C•lels 4 8, Brencos J 1
KANSAS CITY. Mo. -Bill Kl'nney. a San
Clt'menete High and Saddlebi\t'k College produl·t.
thrt'w two touchdown passes and raised his season
passlng total to 4.348 yards as Kansas City bombed
playoff-bound Denver before the St.'<.'Ond-smallest
crowd in modem National Football League history.
A wind<hill index of minus-30 degrees helped
hold the crowd to 11.307. There were 26,377
nu-shows as the Chie fs finished their 12th con-
secutive non-pla yoff season with a 6-10 rl-'<.'<lrd
Lien~ 2:1. B•rr•neer s 20
PONTIAC, M1t·h B11l v Sams <;(.'Ort-d Detroit's
first touc·hdown and Eddie Mi:.rrav k1ckl-d thret' field
goals to lift the Lions to the champ1nnsh1p of the
NFC's Ct•ntral l>1v1sum with a Vll'lory O\'l'r Tampa
F aJrens :I J, Bills J 4
ATLANTA -William Andrtws soared over the
2.000-yard mark in rushing and receiving yardage for
a re<.'Ord -tying second time and scored three
touchdowns as Atlanta downed Buffalo
Andre ws scored on runs of 10 and 1 yards and on
a 6·yard pass from Steve BartkowskJ He rushed for
158 yards on 28 carries and caught seven passes for 49
yards. g1vmg him 2, 176 for the year to become the
first NFL player to hat 2.000 yards twice since O.J
Simpson of the Bills did ll in 1973 and 1975
Cardinals 31. Eat1les 1
ST. LOUlS -Ottis Anderson ran for 156 yards
and a touchdown, leading St. Louis to a triumph over
Philadelphia.
Anderson's ~'Oring romp of 12 yards over the"
nghts1de cl1maxed a 63-yard opening St. Louisdn ve.
Roy Gn.'<'n hauled in a TD pass just before the half.
Ten-degree temperatures at the opening kickoff
and a field slickened by light s now made footing
treach<'rous {or both teams. Thomas said after the game "We believe WC' hav(•
th~ only vaLd L'Ontra<.·t he signed I f<'h I ha!:i J
right IA.) sign him." ,
lt-11l' Dtn'C..lur Frank Brnvll'S uf the l'nl\'c•rs1t~ uf Arkansas Sc.vs ht• has
ilH't'pll.-d th1· rt'S1gnauon of
0
ht•ad foot -
Bav Cohs 20. OllPrs I 0 · Sim:-.. "h11 1 u~ht'(I for 5tl Vdrd:. 1m 15 t·arnes to All s1dt~ Jgn1·d the • 1•isuc· v.·111 Ix· dc-c:1dt'CI in
l'OUrt ball mat·h Lou Holtz a nd a St·;m·h for a
rt·pl<tt'C'm<·nt will bt•gm 1mm<'d1alt'ly
"Ht· 1s llrt'<.I anct burm-d out." Broyle-s said
Sunday
fin is h thc•st•ason with t.040 yards, S(:urro on a 3-yard BALTIMORE Kim Anderson scored on a
run m tht• S<'\'Ond quart<'r lO l lC' thl> gamt: 7-7 The 71-yard mtcr('('pt1on rNurn and Baltimore scorro on
game· was twd again a t 13-13 1n thC' fourth when three of its four advam•es into Houston terntory as
Murra v k 11·k<'<i a 38-vard held goa 1 to pu 1 Ot.'lroi t ~th_e_Co_l ts_d_c_{ c_a_t_ed_t_h_e _O_i_le_rs_·. ________ · __
Q uote of the day
Bob Trumpy rurmc·r light l'nd fur tht•
Cmcmnall &>n~als and nuw a radio
talk-show host. on the low rc.>gard for the
sanctity of the contract '" b1g -t1m<' l'Ollege
athletics. "Contracts for college coaches
should be written on the b{>ach at low tide."
Mill er., Nic kla u combo wins
BCX:'A RATON. Fla J ohnny !I
Miller converted thret.• clutch putts on
the {anal three holes Sunday as he and
Jack Nicklaus took a one-stroke vtctory
m the PGA team best ball t.oumament
Peter Osterhu1s and Al G eaberger twice tied
M1ller-N1cklaus on the fmal hol£>S But Maller
regained the lead twll-e and then preserved the
v1l·tory with a 24-foot uphill putt he called "the
longl'St putt I've had for a win s1nl'(' 1973"
Nkklaus. the tour's top career money winner
with more than $4 .2 million, and Malle r. who has
close to $2 m1lhon m tour earnings. split the
$100.000 top pm.e
"Wh<'n I n'l11mmt•ndt-d St·Vt•n yt·ars ago that
Lou bt· h1r<'d to rt'plat'<' me. I <.'Ons1d<'rt'd him tht•
equal of any roach m thf• <"Ountry." Broyles said
"That op1n1on has never changed and remains true•
today He 1s an excellenlt'OaCh He 1sas flnc.•a <.'Oa(:h
and person as 1 have known."
T his year was the first time m Holtz's
seven-year career at Arkansas that the Razorback&
dad not earn a bowl trip. Arkansas was 6-5 this
year Before this season. Holtz's record at
Arkansas was 54-16·2.
In has first year at Arkansas, Holtz guided the
Razorbacks to an 11-1 record a nd a 31 -6 upset of
unbeaten Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl. But he
did not get the Razorbacks the host spot in the
Cott.on Bowl that goes with the Southwest
Conference championship.
T e levision ., radio
TV: NFL
Channel 7.
Dallas at San Fran<:&Sl'O. 6 pm ..
RADIO: NFL -Dallas at San franciSt'O, 6
p.m .. KNX ( 1070). College Baske tball -Howard
Um.versity at UCLA, 8 p.m .. KM PC (710).
Tekulve in no rush
to make a decision
Decision
on Blue
due today f 11r 1 hC' SC'rVll'('S of Tekulvl'. one o f
twCJ lop relievers who b«:aml'
aht·;ul 111 S l.<IV
IJ#aaNi 23. P•~"ers 2 J
CHICAGO Bob Thomas' 22-yard field goal
with 10 St'(·onds remaining gave Chicago a Vll'tory
over Green Bay and spoiled the Packers' playo!f
hopes.
Tht· k1l·k was a wild climax to the nvalrv
b{>\wc-en the two NFC teams, which finished al 8-8.
and capped a 54 -yard d rive following Green Bay's
64-yard march ending with Lynn Dickey's 5-yard
pass to Paul Coffman.
Brewns SO. Ste elers J 7 .
CLEVELAND -Brian S ipe. perhaps leading
· Cleveland for the last time, threw four touchdown
passes including a 64-yarder to Rocky Belk to beat
Pittsburgh. but the Browns were eliminated from the
NFL playoff picture by Seattle's vktory later m the
day
Clt.•wland . 9-7, needed losses by Buffalo and
Seattle to earn a wild-card playoff berth. Buffalo lost
to Atlanta. but Seattle beat New England to grab the
final AFC w ild card berth. #
MARCHIN ' IN ~ ..
FromPa9eB1
with the No. 2 pick In the NFL draft last April
.. We• madE' it thf' hard way." said Robinson 'It's
tx-en a struggle lhl' last few games (three losses In the
pret.'t'dmg four) but WE' managed to put the effort tn it
that wt.• nt.•<'<h-d to win it an the last fE-w 8('('0nds today.
The· Rams art• a football team a lot of people thought
would roll ov<'r and dit'. But l think you saw today
that tht.•rt•'tt no quit hke that In l hOS(• playt•rs."
NEW YORK \AP) -The P11 -
tsburgh Pirates noi only havC' a
"long way lo go" m negot1at1uns
with free-agent p1tc:her K(•nt
Tttkulve, but they also apparently
have "lost ground" over the past
week m efforts to sign th<'
All-Star reliever, a knowledgl'-
<thlt• sourt.'t' savs
d\'ailabk 1n last month's r rt'<'·agent re-entry dra h The
othc•r rC'hef a<.'l' is Ru:h Gossage.
"ho dK-larC'd ha~ free agency
frc>m the New York Yankees.
KANSi\S l'ITY 1t\P1 For YoungblooJ's sentiments t'(.'hot'd has t'OO<•h's
mt•r All-Su.ar Vida Blui·. 411w ol .. This team_ has ag~ me 15 years in JUSt one.• season."
rour rnx:i Kuns:1:. l'll \' Hovals In· ht.• said. "h s amaimg the charac:ter th LS tE'am showt-d
\'olviod m a ft'tlt•rul drug· prubt• out here and through the. past fE'W Wt'eks. NE-vt.•r.
fat't.'t\ a pc~~iblt• •mt· y•••u· ,_111 lt·I m ... t1"f:'r. dtd, chcy say die. Thats a rt>al credit to.~oh11 and
Al lt•ast riv~· othC'r dubs Wl•rt•
known to sl&ll be in \he runninji!
Kings tumble
to Capitals
LANOOVER. Md CAPI
fo'1nit period gools by Larry
Murphy, Bobby C<1rpentt>t, :md
Chris Valentine started th<' Wash
1ngton Qapu.als: on their wa:v to a
5-0 victory uver thl' Los Angel<'lS
Klng11 Sunday night at thP Cap
tlal Centrt"
Al Jrn.~ rt."t'ordt-d his fourth
ahutout. motl in tht· NtHionnl
Hockey Lc-agut' for thl' ~pit.ala.
who raised thetr record to
16 16-2 It it the fl~t llnl(• th111
~n that the Capitals have
reached lM .600 mark. afl('r 108· ins t~lr flnt .-ven g1m~
The K.tnp. who had l('Of'("d HI
:goa~ tn ~ their prt->vlous thrtt
.pmc11. wen-unablf• to Rl'nt'rat<•
"an~ orft•n..-
t f
Among tht• d ub!. c;t1ll showing
apparent inwrest in Tekulve
wer<' the Ch1<.·ago Wh11.e Sox, Ch1-
l·ago Cubs. Philadelphia Phillies.
Toronto Blue Jays and AtJanta
Brav(>!I
Tht• Pirates said Saturday a
rl'prescmt.-t1ve of Tekulve would
ml't.'t with the C'lub Tuesday and
Wednesday. 1't>kulve reportroly
1s seeking $1 miU1on a year over
four years. a figure said t.o be
based on the reported $1 5 mil lion
a Yl'ar being sought by Gossage.
"We~ve come up. and he's cornc
down," Pirates ~neral Manager
.Pete Peterson wid, lndlc3t.ing che
two sides were closing in on an
agrl't'ITl('nl However. th1• SQUrce
said the chances or Tekulve 111gn-
1n" with thf' Ptrate11 appeared w
tX' no tX'tter than ~0-~0
Tt'kulve's sigmnft apparently
haa been dclayro whll~club8 wait
to M't' whe~ G<magt' wmds up.
Yankt"eS Manag r Yogi &-n-a
and other club offldala were ex -
J)l'(tl'd to rly '°San Dltgn eoon lO
ncgoualt' with Couag 's o~mt .
Jt•rrv KJ.J»~IM
I\
today (cir pc~'S.'l1t1n or mt:a1m· ...-fiat hl' s been able to do with lhl'S4.· guys
Blu,., :H. was to tx· ~·l\h'nt'l'<i by
US. Mag1stratt· Judgt· J Milton
Sullivant. who 11h•t•acty has am
post'J thrt>t.•-month j.nil lt'rms on
three or Blue's former wammatc-s
Blue . who was re leasc'Cl an
August with an 0-5 rerurd.
p1eaded guilty in Ol:tober to a
mltdemeanor charge of pog
sealng three grams of l'OC&irw.
The other three players. All-Star
outfielder Wlllil' Wilson. first
baseman Willie Aikem ond out-
fielder Jerry Martin, pleaded
guilty to a mlsdemeanor charge of
attempting to pouea cocaine
Both of lhe charges carry a maxi-
mum .entenct! of one year In
priJon and A $~.000 fine.
UCI men, women
lose to Bulldogs
FRESNO -The UC Irvin e men's and women's
i4Wlm teams came up a relay ~ shon In dropping a
pair of declJion.s to Fresno St.ate here Sunday
The men's squad, leading 46·42 going into the
fll\al tveru of the day. the 400 frttstyle relay, lost the
race by 81 / l OOths of a tee0nd to d rop a 49-48 verdict to
the Bulldogs.
The women, meanwhile. n~ed to win Its lllst
rll<.'t' ali.o -the 200 froc reJ.y -to U(l the Bulldop,
but n<'wr camt• t'IO!W 8JI fhe Ante'aterw droppt.-d lo.t by
a ~9-45 count.
Thi' UCI me-n's unit, now 1-3. wupuet'd by Brain
Hcrbelin. who won the 1.000 frtt. and B11J Anderson,
who took the ~ free even t.
Blue, 34, Is the only player to be
thl' winnlna pltrher for both the
American Ll'qu a nd Nauon•I r -::====:=:-=-i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiii'1 Lc!agur In thl' All-Star p me He ln••••pen•alve•
was the Arm·nt·an vague Most ·11n Ml 14*'' •M not NO" Val~ablt' Play<'r and the> Cy ~':.::,:;:: ;::.nflll•.,1•·
Young Award wlnnt'r with th~ ad'fettillftO _, •
Ookland A'ic In 1971 H~ ('amc to Claulfled A~~lllng
the Royah In 1982 In 1 tradl' with 842..078
&n -Pmnt"1...-o
PACIFIC COAST
AUDIO -VIDEO
(Fu Dese..we .A
9YAMAHA
5o" e-~bo\(1$
IEW ll· 100 TOP-LllE llECEIVEI llll.00
•
For those who want the best. the Yamaha
R-100 Stereo Receiver is truly "State of the
Art"
• 100 Watts/Channe l at 0.01% THO
• Full-Function Wireless Remote Control
• 5 Band Electronic EQuall zer
•S patial Expander, MC Head AMP
• Oig1tal AM/FM Tuner. 10 Pr&-Set Stations
• Stable Down to 2 OHM loadsl
IEWI 1-10 IEIT llY IEOEIVEI 'Ill" r---· ----··-. -. ---~ . --, ~{! ·~ """·o 0 v C \.I c
• 35 Watts/Channel Power Rating.
But Can Deliver up to 85 Watts/Ch
• 10 Preset Digital AM/FM Tuner
•Electronic Mode Selectlng
• Venable Loudness Control
• See The Tremendous Review & Wrlte·Up
In December Stereo Review Magazine
llW! 1· lll AITMMlll OllllTTI llOI
• 3 Function Auto·ReverM System
Tnat Maintains Proper Head Azimuth
Alignment For Distortion Frff Results .
• c0o1by B&C Nola• Reduction Sy1tem1
•Auto Fade Control
• Muslc-Searon System
• Real Time Counter
• Auto Blas & Eq ualization $449.00
YAMAHA
FOR THE MUSIC IN YOU
HFL
NAltONAl CONFERENCE
Wnt
' ~.,,. .. '"" , R•m'
Ntw Onn\
A'.t"'ct
W L T 9 0
9 0 a o
~ 9 0 c .. 11r11
~ 1 0 a s o 8 a o s s o 1 14 0
Pct PF PA
.00 )90 71•
S6J 361 JU soo 319 ll7
08 )10 JH
.. O•ttt..1'
(.,rf'tf' ea-.
"'"''"" '/l+nn•\O'n r~mDd 8dP
S6l l H 716 soo •79 4J9
SOO l 11 JOI
SOO 316 HI
17~ H I 380
• h(t\fW'hJIOf'l 14
• 0 0110; 17
')1 L0 .. 1\ I
Pn.1aoe1o"'A \
N' G dn1' 1
E•U• 7 0
l 0 1 I
II 0
17 I
ITS S• I
800 467 Sll JH
l 13 2JJ
719 767
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
We•I
J J2
l II .,.
322
3•1
v R11CM1rl 17 • 0 7SO /.42 338
)fO'"f 9 1 0 S6J •OJ 397
• Otnvtr 9 1 0 !>63 307 ]71
Sor• 0 f\10 10 0 l 7S l~ 462
l<.O"U• C••v 6 10 0 J 7S 386 361
C.ntral
• P "'0"'11" 10 6 0 62S JSS JOJ
C r.t ••o 9 7 o S6J 3S6 347
C •c nrot I 9 0 0 8 346 307
Ho ... ••o• 7 1' O 17S 2U .&60
Ent
v M O""'• 11 • 0 ISO lt9 ?SO
Nfw E ·~ •"o 8 8 0 SOO 27' 789
Bw•l•"o I I 0 S00 2tJ JS I
B.t.1 mort 1 9 0 'JI 2.. 3S4
lllV Jt l• 1 9 0 OS )13 l l l
c 1n(rtf\l cJ·\"i•O" •11 e
r. ·c '" "e'O Pld\'Oft .\001
Sunday'' ScorH
Ram • 26 Ntw Or u n• 2'
Ra1<Mn JO San O roo u
Kan.a• C i. 44 Denver 17
C"·UQO 23 Grttn Bev 21
S• lo~' 3 I P~·1ooe1or"o 1
(lf'•t·ana 10 P+ttiourgn 11
A• on10 l 1, Buffalo 14
Ball mort 20 Hou"on 10
Su r11r 1• Ne w En111ano 6
Oe•ro • 73 T amoa Bav 70
Ton19fll'• Game
Oa 11a• 01 Sa n Frontl\CO ICnann•l I a l o pm)
Saturdav'• AFC Wld Card Game
Denver a• Stollle Cnonntl •al I om,
Mondlv, Dec 74 NFC W~d Card Game
Ram\ or S•f"I f='r4nc1\CO ., o a11a\
1C~aone1 2 ~• II JO o m 1
R•mi u, S•1nu 24
Scor• bv Ou•~• Rom• 1 1
Ne" O"ean\ 1 0 Ft"I Period
,...,0-G'O'" lt oau •rom
A .. ~,\~"' C'I 9 ti ;.,~ ,~~~--,;~znoe>•ooo 'ac• eo
S.C-Period
L A-f; &"0 1"J 0-'f'll ff'll..itn L •n\ford
Ji
Third PerlOd
L.A-J JO""''IJI' ll n1e,ceo1 ori retu""'
l.4'"'\'"'°C • < 111. ' )1
NO-v N \0,.. • 'U" Arnit rien t,.·C•
07 F Mlr111 P•rlod
NO-F c. Anoe•''" 70 1 II
L.A-C .. omwf •l nff''tto•·on 'f''u'"
L an\•oro • ·C.• ~ 4 l)
NO-,.. Qrlf' tumb1f r~t0"¥f''V ,, end
IOl"lt A"0f't \f'n ~.ci.. 1 I I]
l .A -F G l an\lora •2 U S8
.A 70 , ..
TEAM STATISTICS
LA HO
11 II
20 11 H 1•7
160 11 1 160 S8
~ '"t' O•Jw l"\ Qu\n~\ ~ard\
Paui'lO VbfO\
R:tiurn varcu
Pane\ IS 31 I 11·22·7
Sac•• ov
Pvrit\
~ umOlt\ IO\I
Pena1t1f:\ v.v o\
f ime ot PO\\tn1on
l 70 2·1S
9·48 7·38
J 2 I 0
9-92 7-15
7202 17 S8
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING LO• .AngetH Oltker\on
19 90 Ff" 011amo I I 71 New Ori.an• G
R09"'' l7 174 C.a an • 12. T Wll.on 6· 18 w w i.on 2 l D W11.on I 1 Oucke!f
1 161
PASSI NG lo• A"ll•I•• FerraQomo 15·ll I llS Nt .. Orlo n\ S•aDler 1·14· I.
9S 0 W l\On ] S I 36
RECEIVlN(i -lO• An11e••• Fa rmer
• 1• DtMaro l •O C.uman J-71
D•Ckfr\on ) 16 Baroer I II RtO<Mn l·I
Now Or1ean\ BreMt r l 40 C.ro•~ l ·l S vOOOIO,.. 7 36 !>con 7 11 C. R_r, I·)
MISSED FIELD C.OAlS -none
Ra1oef\ JO, CMf"1'l 14
Score b¥ Oua~• Sae0 e')C 1 0 1 C>-14
lla,llt'\ 1 6 ) 1•-JO
F•nt Period
SD o ... c• 'lilliO''" 40 D•U ''0"' Luft'tft
Be" '\C"lt f' • c• t 6 70
l A A f" a run Bftnr • " 8 1'
S.c-Period
LA-l'G Ba"r 71 I 0'1
l.A FC:, Bnn• 37 14 •S
Tlllf'd P9rl0d
l.A re, B•"' 71 l 4•
!:tO Mu""(•f 7 '""' 8~,. '\Chtt• ,.1Ck f
IH 7
F M!r111 Period
l A Br&ncr 4 oa'' from P1un1i1 e11 Bn~r •ltk I I ll
l A Al't " S run •Ban• •Ck! 1 •I
A SI 375
TEAM STATISTICS
~tr\1 downl
l!v\nu •aro•
Pl \\1no verCS\
Qeturr varrt\
Paut\
Sac-. Bv
Punl•
FumOte• IO\I PtN11t1n vard\
Time ot Pou••~
SD
18
?1 93
779
23
lA
2J 36 15S
J2S
49
JO· l
1-1
l·SO
2·0
0 )6 l 71
1 I
" 50 1 I 1 16
1656
II 11
3304
INDIVIDUAL \TA TISTIC S
WUSH1NC:,-San O•tvo MunC•C!
11 18 B• oo.-l S l 11\ An~• u Allen IO /1 • ,ng 11 lo ............ 1 !S
Bra'"~ n t 10 Pru1ll 1 1
.. :, PA!>~ING ~an D·~IJO Lu Iner :O ~& 1 H o l 0\ Anvf !\ P'v"'l"-f'tf
! Ju I lll
'lf(f v1N (• \on 0 N O M, "< f
... J) h ' ,.., ' .ao JO•"~' l .H t;rQ.J111.\
J H (t l .. ..-. .... 1 .. ...,a \ •ver\ 1 1• LO\
A· i.it~\ l"' \ ..-~ .. 8 '~ 8r•nt.n o 9) A. e > •9 8d• . • 1 ~•
NtS~f (; ~ fl D C:.OAt N >rl'
Bowl 1in.up
IAM ,,.,,., P STI
SA TUR DAY OEC 10
ln<MP<tflCMn<• eowt
(ii SllreY9')0n, la )
A,.r fOfCt 9 M l\\IS\IOD1 )
SATURDAY, DEC. II
Calilornl1 &owl
111 Frt\no)
NorO'lern !U1001\ 70 Cctl Sfale-F ull
erion 1 J
Florida Citna Bowl
lit onan0o1
lenneute JO,' Morvlano 23
THURSDAY, OEC. 11
Hal of Fame Bowl
Iii 8 iMnintham, Ala.I
We.I V ro1n1a !8·J) v• 11,entut kv
••·• 11 S om
FRIDAY, DEC. 23
Hall.s.~ Bowi
Iii Sin D!Hol
BVU 1011 .. M•Uouro 17 41
0"'
SATURDAY, DEC. 74
Sun &OWi
Cat El PuoJ
SMU 10 I v\ A1aoama (/ ·41 noon
MONDAY, DEC. li AAllla .....
lal HOMIUIUI
PeM S•alt II·•· II •• Wa\t11nQlon
11 )1 S o m
THURSDAY, DEC. lt
L.ibert'f 8tWI
I 11 rMmclftl• l
BoS1on Collroe 19·7) " Noire Dame
r&Sl SlO p m
PNcll BoW1
(al Akntal
Norlh Carolina IS J) " Florido SI
6 SI noon
Gator 8owt
1a1 Jack,onY .. )
1owa 19·21 " F1or1da ti 1 II, 6 o m
SATURDAY, DEC. )1
81u~I &owl
(at HM!Uon)
Bavoor Cl l· 11 •• O.,anoma St
!7·• S P m
MOHDAY, JAN 1 Conon Bowt
(al DalaU (ieorQoa •9· 1 11 H Te •6\ II 01
:010......,
·Foe•ta Bowt
Iii Tempel
On·o s1 s~ 1 v\ P,",,Dv'"9"' 1 ' 1
10 30 a m
Rote eowt
(at Pua.,....I ••no • 10·1 _, UCl .. 6 •I
0,.,
o ............
(at Miami)
NeDta.-a c 12·01 v• M1am• 1F1a I
10·11 Som
su .. r &•WI
(at H•w O.W.ft\I
A<JOurn c llr 11 v• Mlc~1Qan 19·21. S
om
RAMS LOG (t.71
16 NY Gian!\
JO New Orieon•
2• GrH n Bov
2• NY Jel•
71 Otlrool
10 Son Francisco
21 11>11an10
JS San Franto\CO
16 M1am1
21 Cn1ca110
)6 Allanta
10 w .. ntnQlon
'1 Bul'alo
9 Pf'l•1ao•1on1e
1 Ne"' Envleno
16 New Orio n•
Team eoff tournament
lat Boca Aa!Otl, ,la.I
ltl
N•c••au•·Mtllt!r '100,000 61·6S·65
ltl
Geooe•Qe• ·Oo\lerM SS7 •00 64·"3·6S
ltl S1mon•·Coll>erl 177 134
Edward•·Edwards, 121,IJ•
MahaHev·Tl'tomP•n. '11.134
lt4
B Wdkn\·L Wdkn\ '14,SOO
S•noer·Reclle", 11',SOO
Ttwell·Ha~J4.SOO Rt10·Hlnl\le
Pt!OO•t •·Halloe Q. '1•.SOO 1,.
Wa•~on-T w111v. 17, 190
Levl·Hal'COO ' " 190 Sander\·Uoe>er. S7,1to
Faxon·Wooo 11.190
FOUQlll·McGowan, 17 190
ltl
Rtnner ·Natlll U .JOO
64 67·67
67·66·6S
64·67 67
6S·64 6S
67 ·"3·64
64·6S-6S
64·6'·6S
63·67·69
SCOREBOARD
-(_ > .
N8A
WESTERN CONFERENCE
P•c1hc 0 1v1\ton
W l Pel GB
La~e" 16 I 696
Por1 •ono 18 9 667
Go<Ot " Stet~ I J IJ U 1 S
Se.nt 11 IJ •SO )
P~oen.. 10 I) •OO I
\a• D•N O 8 19 H6 10
Uta,
0 •11•• Of,,ver
~""'a' (1•v Sen An1on10
HOu\IOf'I
M~dwe1t 01v11ion
16 10
IS 10
17 13
II IJ
II 16
10 IS
015
t>OO
480
4S8
JOI
400
EASTERN CONFERENCE
A"antlc DlvlliOft
Pn.1ed¥lph10 11 S 7S3
80\lon 70 I 141
l ' ' 5 ,
5 '
New Yor• 16 10 6lS l '
New Jeru v 12 12 SOO 6 ,
Woh•noion 12 ll AtO I
M1tw•u~et
Allanla
Oetro1t
Ch>C&llO
Cleveland
1nd •n•
C.nlral D1v1•ion
15 10
12 ll
11 I)
• 1•
• 19
~ 19
SUfldoav'' k .,.,
Laken 122 Pa<tlana 115
O~nvtr tn l\lf W Jtr\ey 111
Golden Slale 99 San 01~ 91
T9dav'' Game\
No gamf\ \C~edult!O
TuHcllv's Ga~
Lakeo a l Sealltt, n
Oalla• al Ot1ro11 n
San Antonio et We\tunolon n
Ne• Je"ev al Allanla, n
O.nver al Ken.a• C1tv, n
Pno•n•• al volCMlrl S1a1e n
)
l ) s , • 9 I
L•k•n 122, Trdbluen 115
P~TLAHD -Carr n Nall 20 W Coootr l. Paoon 11 Valentine 11
l homo\on 22 Norr" 6 l e.er 11 O•t•ltr 7, l •mo O To•al\ '2·97 )0-0
llS
LOS ANGELES W11•e. 20
Worlhv 29 , ADdul JaDbar IS, McGee 4
S<oll •. M Coooer 19 McAooo 11
C.o"'" IS, Naler 0 Total• SO 11 21·28
117
•. Score bv Ouar1ers
Portland 2l lO l7 JO-11 S "'°' An9919• ,. JO 71 l•· 177
T "ree · 001n.t ooa1\-No tt M
Cooe>er I Fouieo OVl-f'>Of't Re
oounO•-Porlland .0 <Corr 111 lO\
"nve•e. l6 I Worlhv AOOu• Joobar 1
4\\1\l\-PorHari<1 77 P aA\0" L~--e-( 6
l o• Ang'"' ll M C.oooe• 91 To1a1 lou •-Port ano 79 Lo• Angr e. 71
A-IJ 000
Cok9e ~coni
100110 aJ Mt •-' 67 :>au•~ Caroi.na as C•IO<le ...
C:,eorvetown 10 Amer.can 67
How tOP '20 ftrtd
How '"" 100 20 Items 1n ll•t Au o<laled Pren' 1913-U coll•oe
o.ukelball 0011 larto 1111• """-I Norlh Carolina ( S-01 Old not olov
1 Ktn•uc-v (S·O) bH I WvornlnQ.
66·•0. t>eal Brigham Youno. 9l·S9 3 Hou•lon (1·1) t>e•I s1e••on,
91· 11, bHI Prlnct•on. 6S·.0
4, DePaul (1·0) t>eal Alaoama.
71·16. beal Tt•8' Tech. 50·47
S Georve1own (I>· I) !>eat Soulll
Carolina SI . 97-67 6. (lie ) Memolll• Slala (S·21 bell
Mlu lu loc>I, 7J·SS, lo•I lo UCLA. 6S·S1 6. Ille) Nori!\ Caroline s1a1e (7·21
10" 10 Loul\vllle. 13·79 I Bo•lon Colleot 11·01 beat Rllode
l•land. 13·7', 1>ea1 Holv Cron . 87·15
9 Ma r vla no 15· I ) otet
Mu viand· E u 1ern Sr.ore, 104-69.
10 Lou.,lena Slole 14· ll did nol olav
11 Purdue 17·0) but You11Qstown
Slele. l>S·S4
12 Georole (6· 11 bHI VaklOSla
Sta te 18·'9 13 SI JoM'\ <6·01 beal Manhaltan,
"7·3'. D .. I Wagner. '9·60
" Oreoon Slalt 14-11 be•I UC•ll.
67·'9. Deal POrlland l>S·'9 IS UCL.A 14 II beal MtmP'I•• Slale
4S·S1 16 Lou1w <11• (4·21 oea• 1no1ana
Slale IOS 69 oeal Norri! CarOlina
Slalt 8J 19
II M>enloan Slalt IS-11 DU I
C141•eland s1a1e 11·62. oeat Broo-1vn
Colleo•. IS·72 , II Iowa 13-21 d•d not Olav 19 Wal\t FO<H I (S·Ol did not Pin
10 r .. u ·EI Pa•o 16·01 oeat SI
Marv'• l oo•. 64 57
COLLEGE WOMEN
UC Irvine IO, Ut•h St. 70
(UCI CllrlUmH TM!rnamenf)
UTAH STATE -Cne 7. Vincenl 4,
Jtn'fn 10. Searle I>. Hare 11, Ca1ne11 17. Haiti\ 70 lo1al• 11 16·28 70
UC IRVINE AnlMnv 17
Rouu tov 3. Gomsz 0, H10Hr10 IS,
Ba•er •. Oehn 2. Harre 2. Wallon l, Slmo~n I, \lander Poe• 11. C.r111am 10
Torai. 3• 12·12 80
H1!11lmt UC Irvine •O·JJ
Tola! foul• Ulall S111e 10. UC Irvine
30
Otller T Mime,,_. Sores
TU H TKh 91, Unlv•"ily ot San
Frar\C(\CO S7
"
Arllo"9 Slalt 't· UC Sanla Baroara
Pto1>tralr1• SS San1a Clara S4
Swimm1no
MEN
c ~iturdiv'\ re\ulh 1
use 11. uc 1"'""' n 100 Doc• I Peve11p U\e )\ 71 7
S1tuno~~' 1 US( t ~9 II ] '/V,1 1d m!t
U(I> 10113 '°" orea\I HPrGt--ltf"I U(l I 01 69 7 ndm•ilo• U\( 1 01 lJ I
N«no••or UC I 01 8\
100 l•v I S•Pt• use SI SI l
Carron !US(> S4 78 J A d'o~ t U\C SJ 91
1 000 Ire I Non' •USC 1 9 JJ 79
1 (•••II use 9 S8 1) l\UMU
USC I 10 16 7ll
100 lree-1 CruOtlpy 'use I I 48 41
7 .,nat••on •use 1SO79 J L•uohi.n
USC I I 50 4J
SO trf-1 W1mmP• U~C t } I 99 7
Fucn• 1UCll 2136 3 AllOel\on 1ue11
21 •S
7001M-I Pavettt• I US( 1 I 59 10 1 Alarao !USC I 59 70 l Mr(ar1n,
CUSCI 2 07 0
700 hv-1 sa .. not•' use 1 59 01
1 L•lJQhl.n I u~c I 7 0) 40 J c arron
c USCI 2 04 0'1
100 lrte-1 S1o•i use •9 l• 1
Fuell• IUCl 1 4941 l Cro •O use
SOOJ
200 oac•-1 C• -'"''h use 1 11 96
2 Barrera UCll 7156) l ~f•''"ll
IUSCI. 1 11 59
SOOtr-1 Norr• US( 4Jl 9J 2
Pa vtlfe <USC I 4 4S 14 J Jot•\on
IUSCI. SOI IO
700 b•U >l-1 N (~ \O~ UCI
2 IJ 49 1 Heroe '" •U(I 11, )1 l
Too.n IUSCI 2 IS 16 200 l•tt retav-1 uc , • t I 79 89 use 1 3221
(Sunday'\ re>1llhl
Fl'flftO Stai. 4t, UC INIM 4'
.CO m.afev r-4a-.-I UC lr¥1nfl
l d 11, 7 Fre.no Slale .,,., .:"''J"' ·••t o 1.000 lrtt-1 Ht•Deln 1UCI
10 21 '9, 1 Over>trte• 1 F SI 10 29 59 J
Hu••• (F SI 10 7ll S8
700 Ire-I Bro"'r FS1 I ~ 46 1
Burot n FS 1'>0 19 ) To1pr •UCll
1 SI 78
SO lree-1 8 Anaer\o•· tU(I• 71 41
7 Fucn• UCll 72 51 l D•ePt f\IOOI
IFSI 21 S• 7001M-I De11ar 1 F S1 7 OS 91
Hu;nrn U(I) 106 •O l N«nOl\O~
•UCll.706 J8 700 Iv I Ov~r .. r•~t f S• 7 011) 7
Barr•ro U(l1 7 05 )9 J Ht rl>fl•n
•UCll 7 0817
100 "tt'-1 l'u~r\ U(t •90 7
O•ePf'\IOI FS J906 l i<f"•tOv r s
J7 ?0
700 oar• 1 BurQeU ~ S 7 0• 61 1
Hu••' <F S 7089) ] ""''"' UCI
110 19
S00 trtt-I Brow~ F 5 S 00 II 1
BKnlei •UCI S 06 \1 1 "'orl)a6''' re s S0691
200 or•n •-t N e~"''• \JC•
1 1l 77 1 ><•• i:.e u( / J •O J ,..,,,, FS 17099
400 tr-f'e "f' av ' rf\t"I) ~'blf'
l 1600 7 UC "•·"t &81
WOMEN
FreM>O Slate St, UC INIM 4S
700 meo tv rt•••-I F rt\M S•••• I S9 SI 1 UC l•••"e I 5961
I 000 lr-1 l u,ne• CFSI 10 SI ,.
2 Sulton IUCll. 11 II 48 3 Hun< CFS
ll 07 19
700 lrtt-1 Ha11oolen !FSI 10391,
2 Sulton IUCll 1 O• 01 l Ntw11na
cFSI. 2-07 JI
SO lrtt-1 Wal\on !UCI) 2S 7S, 1
Ravnor (FSI 75 71, l K1e•t1 IUCll
77 OS
4001M-1 Turner CF S). 441"9, 1
Mt Klnnev !UCll 4 S7 •9 J L Wr•ulll
!UCll, 5 7S Ol
100 l1v-t Ravnor (FS). I 01 16, 2
Bell (I'S) IO? IJ, l Braun (UCIJ l·OS 39
100 lree-1 H111001an IFS! SI)• 7
M WflOhl !UCI>. S' 16 l Be11 !FSI
I 02 60 100 bock-I Wal•OM IUCll lOSll
2 Kie.el (UC IL I Ot 7S l Gernardt
(FSI. 10960
S00 Ir-I McK1rnev tUCI). S?t O,
1 Eov1e1on (UC 11 6 JSJ9 l Coooer
(FS). 639 ..
D!YlnQ Cont m•••r I 1 C11amw1
IUCll. 114 6 oo•nh 1 Bu ••• (FSI.
11• •S. l Sco11 !UC 1 166 as
100 CHH••-1 C.e•hatd• tFSI.
I 12 IS 7 Braun CUC ti I 14 n l Hunl
(!'SI 116 71
200 lret •t lav-1 Frf)no Slalt
I •I 67 1 UC lrvone, I 41 OS
New Souttl w ... s Ooen
(al Sv-Y, Aus,.aNa)
SINGLES "NAL
Joak1m Nv"rom ISweo•n> dtl M•l\t
Bouer (US>. 7·6, 6·3, 6 1 (Nv.irom ,~·~• no,0001
DOUBLES FINAL Bouer·Ca.~ (AU\lralla) otl Broe
Dvke•ROO Frawley (Au•tralla), 7 6, 6·• Men's toumarMnt
(al Nor111 Miami ... di, "•·> SINGLES H!Mll"INAlS
Ivan Lendt def Jlmrnv Aria\ 6 l
6·•. Connor\ IU S I d•f JOH lul\ Cltrc
CArgen11na), l>·l . 6·7
Women's to1Jrnemet1t
lal Walt! .... , Hawalll
SINGLES FIHAL. S11aron Wal\11 IU S ) oet K•rrv Rt10
IU S) 6·7. 6·4
DOU8LIS "HAL
Wal\ll·BIK• J H n Klno IU s I oel
Ro\le Cual\ (US 1-FrancO•H Durr
«Franc.t i 6·1. 6·4
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, December 19, 1983 8:1
NHL
CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Smvntt Div'"°"
IN l T Pl\ GF G A
l omon•un 11 1 J 49 19~ 137
Vanco..v~r 14 I& l ll IJO IJ/
Ca Vb'• 12 IJ S 79 t II Ill
w ,nn.oe11 II 10 • 7o 111 1w
l(lf111\ 10 18 16 14 I 160
Norri' OiV1\foft
M ,nnt\Old
CM•COUO
IS 12 J JJ 1•1 118
1' 11 1 JO 11 a 17S
~' lou1\ Toro,,10
Otlt01f
IJ I~ J JO 110 IJ7
12 IS S 19 l)J ISi
10 18 4 7• 109 1)7
WALES CONFERENCE
Ptlrlck DIYl\ion
NVl~I~\ 77 9 I 46 150 117
PMadelohiO 18 10 5 " 146 117
NY RtnQe•• 11 17 4 38 133 IJO
Waih•no1on 16 16 7 l4 116 171
Pill•buryt-1 71 5 19 107 116
Ntw Jef\e. I 1J I 16 93 l4S
B .. 11010
Bou on
Oue«>e<
Mon•rta'
"1erttord
ACS.mi 01vn1on
10 10 J H
11 7091 41
11 14 Jl
I) 16 J7
11 16 ?S
SunOav'• Score•
ha•" nylon S K"'ll• 0 p,lf,t>urvn 3 Toronto J
Dt tto·• l Pn •ollf 'P" a 3
BullalO l Vall{Ou•tr 7
Ton<vllt'\ Game
N ,.,.. o~y a 1 C aioarv
Capitals s. KtOIU 0
Score bv Ptriocu
F1nt Per1od
1)4 110
143 96
155 121
"' 176 108 l?J
0 C>-0
0 7-5
I Wcn ninolon ~u"O"'v 6 tJar'¥'1\> l SI 1 wav11no,o,,, C•roeriff'r 9 (Ha"Nortru
14 04 l Wa•h·noton, Volen11ne 6
fHewortn Co•oenler 16 21 Penal·
l1f\-AnOt f\\Of'\, W.uh1no1on lO 16
McEwrn l A U 10
~econd Period
Nont Ptne111e\-Valen11nt w~v1·
1nvron 9 CM Howonn Wash1noton
I) S7 Ru\li.Ow \k, LO\ Ar1oelto\ ma1or
19 09 Sft!Vtr'I\ w~nn1nOIO" m a1or
19 09
Third P•rlod
Wav1moton C hri\l1an 10
jla1'Q\fllt'aV J.tf '¥t\t 17/ S W~:nn1ng!On
Ca'Pf'ntt' 10 LaJU"••nt 1'. ~1 Penal·
1•f\-S1mm@r l A. 1 l7 Hard v L A
11 O• McAdam Wo•n·noton 11 04
S1>eno Wo•n•nv•on. I~ JS
ShOI\ on C.011-L A 6 9 S-70
.Va.n.no•on-12 12 · 17-36
Goa e\-L A La\•O\• 8 a•••
Na•" Jt n•e' A-9 4JS
~
Ski conditlom
SO\ITHERN CAllFOANIA
MOUNTAIN HIGH -11·14 •nche. <"•''' ooerat1no SHOW SUMMIT -10·2• nc~ ..
Ill" ooerallng
SHOW VAllEY -6·11 1nche•
llft\ OPfr&l1nQ
GOLDMINE 11 ·7C 1nt nf\ 7
ch•lrs o~rat1no
SIERRA·NEVAOA RANGE
JUNE MOUNTAIN -•2 oncne.
cn••n o~retino
MAMMOTH -1' 1ncne. IS cnaor,,
2 IX>"dOlu and ) \urtace 1111, ooerahnQ
DODGE RIDGE -47·~ 1nche. Full
ooerallon MT. llEBA -19 96 1ncnt\ 6 1111\
ooeratlng l(lttKWOOD -I• 110 1ncllH Full
ooe<•l•on
HEAVENLY VALLEY -36 in<"-•
FuM oe>er a11on F•l&Y·!.unoav
TAHOE SKI &OWL -36·1• 1ncnf\
Full -allOn
SKI INCLINE -14· 36 •ncllH <"-•''' C>Pfor•••nQ SQUAW VALLEY -II 108 •ncne•
I ce~ <•' 11 cn••n OOf''&''"O MT. ROSE -44 IOI ncn.-Fol
OOPf'•ltOf\
DOHHER SKI RANCH -8• 10! inc~\ ) "''' ooeraft1"19 ALl"INE MEADOWS SS-11C 1ncntl 10 lift' OO@ra hng
SUGAR &OWL -11 16 lttt 5 1.11,
ootrat1nv
BO.EAL -9·11 Itel c"a•r\
ooeratlnQ
HOMEWOOD -1 I let< S 111"
ooera11n11
Dffo ,.. fl"'lf19
ART'S LANOIHG (NtwllOrt 8•ecll)
17 1no1eo 6S bOn•to 7 oau II
ma~~ere1 1 roe-l"h. 14 \CUIPln. 7
snteOhHO I \0 ..
DAVEY'S LOCKER CHewMrl
8Hdl) -ll anQl<!f• 111 rock cod, I
co"' coo 16 oon110 IJ bau, 11' mack a< ti
H041YWood Park
SUNDAY'S RESUl TS
12Slt> ol lO dav lt>orouOl\bred mHhf111 I FIRST RACE I I 16 m .,
F' '-"'•<JI·• li>c,,vo '; p,, ., b &O .a 00 J 10
JfH ' ,,,,. 'Htt .,,..iev 6 10 ~ lO
1oaro') H {-. 1M•'<.•CJ0 ~ 60
A~\O 'O(t'O So" o• A '-dD Re~111nv ftir~~ 800\ l 4r 8tdu Vttl~''' n• lt'w
T ·" e I 44 7 S
SECOND RACE I I""''~\
M010' 81'1 (J ![H.l'' J'l 70 18 80 I t>O
Go1den (1f1 r 1r11.,,u1.1el4r 1\ 00 11 60
Kt"ll11•00,, 1Mrt4rf'rJ, 1 J 70
.\l\O rau.•o 04,,,.f!, \ 8 ,.u
Pr.nt(! Roo Lee PA 1~ \ c,r .. v
lover Q.,n~,,,1e10 Ot"ih.i
Marnie ~ Danter
I •m~ I 71 ) S
KC11'\1
l.J1\tlfl(I
Cute 1,,.
\1 DAil Y DOUBLE t I 81 t>d·d Sl6S 10
THIRD RACE I I 1rlOMU\
01e .A C nil I Or lif I 11 •O U O 6 60
Nevd 04 ~avti ll. IO"llfHf ~ ao ~ 00
lol•• Foore 'De11i-O•llo1 ) 70
Al\o •acea A1a~anet Cn '4 Bio\I Et
P•n(h0 Anveo ScH\'f' S "'Jt'' \u\4'0r1(> \
Bov B•t•erst•H l •,,.e I 7l
\S EXACTA 71 µo~\7S4 00
FOURTH RACE 6 '"' O"V'
h unao s.ew p "•o• 170 7 60 1 40
Bloom•"O h r ant O< •fQo • 40 l .0 ~rea1 0.6' 1~rr..n JOO
A \ raceo E"O""' "'-' P•oNJ"' Dce14l'I0°
E J.Dff'\\ C•t•OOt 8 0'111•Q
T·me 1 09 2 S
SS EXACT A ~ l Pa•d \)9 '>O
FIFTH RACE 6 1,;r!OnQ\
So•O Wnnot r Olov•••• IJ 10 6 00 4 •O
Pro Pone• 1~oro10 4 00 J •O
Rotner "'ooa t DlnH•I' S 60
Al\O rtllt"O Adoeo r .... , .. ,,.. AfdDf'Y
H10ero1co 01vrrO•C Garreo\ Ac c:. o.rner \
Print~
l 1rnt-I 09
lS EXACTA 7 81 t>ft•r.l 111/ '>0
SI)( TH RACE. 6 •vrionu>
Pe••n111e Lov tDlnHve> 4 60 2 10 7 60
NI E vn A Cr<l IMt rrnl JOO lOO
Awkwora Age 1P1ercel Sao
Al~O roc~o v •llor~. 5nh -....,. , PflnCtu
Sotc1al Orphan T amurei Arc'-O• LO\lt!
(haflerlv Ptr\1&n Pltddv
Ttme I 10 I S
lS EXACT A ! 5·6 lla•<I •H 00
SEVENTH RACE. 1 I II> ,. ""' Scull (Snoem ...-er I 160 4 •O 1 SO
Btoulotul Dawn IP1ncovl 7SOl10
Dorv• I Ped• OU I l 00
At\O ral~O t<.a1f'r no '11r (,re•I
Nortnf'''" G1ow P ne. ~•'·' M\ Nat•"t
Pr in(f"\\. Soi~ Qt(),., o ~\in JJ ,rr .a. O,
Con
T mt> I 4) I ~
UEXACTA 101 Ob 0 \S100
\1 PICK SIX a 1 s 7 \ 10 1>4 a
\ 16 S'' 00 w 1H" q w rn,no < -.e•\ \ •
l"WJ'\f'\. \1 Pc.• \1• Co"'''° dhon Pa •d \.849 "O <N1fh 116 w 1nn1no r1r kf~S 1f.vf
noru ·\J
, EIGHTH RACE. I I 16 m1·t •
F•ll l ime «Hawlf'v• 7J40 940 100
8014 T Jav IO•ozl 1060 1'0
U lt\ MaQ•C t(oroerol S 10
Al!IO rocra Sn VaQut , Counirv Manor
Althea Prft1\~on•\t Negur\lt.. Secret
Pr1nct 8~dOu1n Artlcholilt Sorinv I 00\~
Tome 141 l S
NINTH RA CE I J I molH
01\Clalm !Tirol 0 00 1310 110
Grtal C.rand\on IMcCorronl J ?O J 00
Perrv Cabin 10l•••re'1 910
Also rocto hen.el, Amraoour. Orlen1a1
W&v, ADlanlln, Piro" Mon, cu1elM 11
Aturt nme" Tabre Torch l/orlauler Time 7 16 3 S
U EXACTA 110 7) POIO U IS SO Alttnaanct o 869
Wffkend tranuictloni
BASE&ALl
Amerkan lH9U•
OE TROil TIC.E RS-S1oneo Dorrt!O Evans rit t'df ' l'J o mull• vtor con
lt4'Ct
N11ioNI lM-
Pll TSBURGH PIRATE S-Nameo
8111 ScriPlure manager ol Nu"u• In tne
Ea.tern L .. Qut Named Tomm v Sandi
manaotr ol Hewa11 1n lne Poc111c Co<n l
Lt&Quf
FDOT&ALL
National Footti.• LHllU•
ClEVELANO BROWNS-Sogntd
Paul McOona10, auerltroac~. 10 a
•trl•• 01 lour ont v~ar con1r.,c1s
HOCKEY
NallOtlll HOCll•V LHClll•
WINNIPEG JETS-Rtcallt a Murrav
Eave\ ccn1er lrom Shcrbrookt' ol lhr
American Hoc l\ev lUQu•
Camel Lights
9 mg. "tar". 0.8 mg. n1co11ne av. per cigarette by FTC method.
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigerene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.~·
, " I
r------
Daily Pilat
MONDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1983
•
ANN LA@ERS
THI CUil IND THI COUNTY ~~~~~,1~MENT
~Zits' zapP-ed
Irvine doctor gives hope
to many acne sufferers
By KAREN ZA.PPE
o.iiy ,.._. c-.,.••nt
~
l .. J
at do 80 percent of
ra n ge County's
een-agers and young
dults have in
mmon?
with acnt• and desp.•r:ttt'ly w:int to hf'
frl'<' of 11
For other palll'nts, Cangt:losi
pn•scnbt'~ V1wmin A at'ld, wh1eh
works inside tht• porc·s to allow dead
L'ells to lw released on the skin surface,
and &·nzoyl Pc·roxid(', whil'h d(•stroys
Acrording to Dr. Joseph Cangelosi, bacteria and dries up the acne
that percentage of young people will Traditional tn•atments for acne such
fall prey to acne or. as that age group as sun lamps and Tetral'ycline are not
calls it, zits. used Cangl'los1 said sun lamps can
Described by Webster's as "a skin makt• thl' condition wur:>t' lx'<.'ause tht:y
disorder usually causing pimples on the dry out the skin The glands under the
face," acnl! is one of those diseases that skm automat1eall y S<.'<.Tl'll' 011 tu lubn-
many people hav~ but few do anything cate th<> damagl'd skin. wh1l·h plugs the·
about. Cangelosi said a very small por<'S. he said.
percentage of acne sufferers seek I TNracvclme can also be bad. he !><ud
medical help. Instead they believe they "Peopie ~Oml' immune to 1t so 1t
wil~ ev~ntually gt<>w out of it and bide can't be used for something more
thetr ttme avo1dmg chocolate and import.ant," Cangelosi s~ud
French fries. ~":Jbbing with abrasive Abras ive dean.st-rs can actually ir-
cleansers and s1ttmg under sun lamps. m a te the skin, he said . They can't do
None o~ this he~ps. Cangelosi said, all much more than soap bet:ause the
are es~1ally flit1le for the 20 percent glands are two to three millimeters
that will never outgrow acne or those beneath the skin. Neither the scrub-
who suffer from cystic acne. bings nor soap can reach below that
For these people. the Villa Park layer
general practitioner uses a new drug.. Although diet, as long as it's bal-
Aecutane. at his new office in Irvine's anced. has nothing to du with acne,
Woodbridge Shopping Center. Cangelosi said. caffei ne and nicotine
Cangelosi said small doses of the drug do. Choc.-olatc. he said. docs l'Ontam
dry up the' glands that cause the large caffeine Both substances stimulate the
blemishes typical of cystic acne. nervous system. which triggers
"It's very hard to treat," he said, hormones.
because several glands are involved. Changes in the body's hormones are
But his patients usually notice a ma.JOr eauses of acne. he said . A
difference in their condition in four to hormone change usually oet·urs dunng
six weeks, he said. puberty but can also result when
Cangelosi said he prescribes only women stop taking birth control pills
srriall amounts of A<X'utane because of Cangelosi said he has seen many
the its possible side effects. These women in their 30s wnh cases of acne
ineludedrynessand peeling of the skin for this reason. The pill. he said,
and pain in the joints. contains the hormone estrogen. which
85
86
86
Dick Van Dyke, id Caesar
comics in search ol' a script
in TV nJovie tonight. 86.
DoHy Pllol "'°lo bf LM PorM
Tots studied
Medical school views
child learning traits
By the Anoclated Press
NEW BRUNSWICK. N.J. -Rutgers Medical
School is setting up a program to screen babies and
toddlers for advanced learning traits.
"We feel strongly about identifying children
early so they can get the kind of nurturing at home
and in school early and not be wasted." said James
Alvino, editor of Gifted Child Newsletter in Sewell,
N.J.
Alvino said he was not aware of any program in
the country where researl·hers are trying to identify
gifted chlidn·n so early.
The program, which the college hopes will draw
children from New York lo the north and Philadel-
phia to the south, w11l S<.'fet:'n children up to age 3
Special flooring aids workers
DALLAS -A podiatrist said.l'Ys research team
came up with a special flooring that helps workers
stand longer.·
"The reason people wh0 have to do standing
work -like neurosurgeons or machinists or
homemakers or teachers or clerks at cash registers -
become fatigued 1s that they have to continually
move their legs to stimulate circulation," said Dr.
Charles Brantingham, a podiatrist and assistant
professor of medicine at the University of Southern
California.
"Standing still 1s very tiring,'' ht: said.
"We have designed a surface with some ribs
underneath that can be placed under carpet and a mat
for the wurk plaee that cause the foot to move
slightly," Brantingham sa1d. "The muscle activity
produ~ed reduces venous pressure, the study shows,
and can even help prevent varicose veins."
A mile of the surface -designed with a
continuous series of 4-inch elevated triangles -was
installed at the Resorts International hotel-casino in
Atlantic City, N.J . and profits went up because the
gamblers could stand longer and lose more money. he
said.
Thermography inadequate Jn tests But cystic acne left untreated can helps thP wonwn mntrol acne But
cause big and emotionally crippling when the women stop taking the pill,
scars, he said. Some of his patients the body misses the extra estrogen and
dl.Jrini the seven years he has special-the skm breaks uut
Dr. Joseph Cangelosi treats pa tient for acne. CHICAGO -The-American College of Radio-
logy, which favors X-rays for detection of breast
cancer. says a nother widely used test, thermography.
ized irl1acne treatment had inferiority Hefl•d1tv 1s anothl·r cause of acne.
COJnplexes caused by acne sea.rs. "You 1~ her i t a tl·ndelll'V to acne."
"Some patients look terrible." Cangelosi said ·
cases cleat up whe n they are on a
relaxing vaeation.
Cangelosi suggesLc; that complex-
1on-eonS<.·1us people eat a balanced diet
and avoid stress. cafft•me and smoking.
Cangelosi said he became interested
1s ineffective. ...
('
cangelosi said. "But in three months But a caust· that Cangelosi
there's a big difference_" emphasm.>S 1s stre>ss. Prople> who are
_C~n elosi said he also uses Accutane under pressure. don't eat t'Orrt'<.·tly or
for people who have sufferedtrom Ja1.·k proper amounL-; of sleep are
acne for a long time. possibly 10 to 15 targets for breakouts. He· illustrates
y~. These people are ty~icatly fed up this by ixnnting oul that m~t patients'
Cangelosi said many of his patients
are high school football players or
wrestlers Both sports are vl•r y .
stressful because of pressurt-to win. 111 ·acne because he want~ to do
Young women, he said, re<.-eive more ~met~mg d1ffe:ent _and cap1t.all2e on
supporrfronrtheir-familic.-s:-However.-1lis background m.rcsearch...
he said he sc•es equal amounts ot both "l knew 1t would be a l·hallenge." he
The radiology school reported at the annual
meeting of the Radiological Society of North Amenca
that thermography. which uses heat sensors instead
of radiation, was "inadequate as a pre-screeni~g
procedure."
---Many ptrySTC'lansir.NC'<ldvocated--thern 1og1 ap
over lhe X-ray te<.·hniqu<.' known as mammography
because the latter exposes the patient to radiation. S(•XeS. said
Pat and Bill Waxman, left, c ha t with hosts Achille and Anita Haddad.
PAPARAZZI ~-1
~ ---. ... .. . . -.. ~ ... _ .. --..._. ._ --.::.J. . -•
Festive •ood
200 guests treated ,
to a holiday party
Strolling violinists had the 200 good looking
black-tie attired guests of Achille and Anita
Haddad (she was stunning in a black velvet gown
trimmed with black fox at the hipline) in a festive
holiday mood at the Terrace Room at th~
Newporter Resort. . /
The Harbor Ridge couple's annual party
featured a steak and lobster dinner (during th<'
soeia.J l'Jlmrthere WIIS7tibbling of impoFtffi-.eheE'SeS
and sipping of wines) and dancing to the music of
Barry Cole and the Sounds of Music.
Achille's cousin, Michel Kial and his wife,
Dlue, flew iri from England for the affair. "evln
Dobson (Knott's Landing) and. his wife were there
along with a number of Beverly Hills residents and
the William Slmpsons, Dr. HaroJd and E llen
Katzman, Ida Britten. the Houston Klen (he's
Valencia Bank VP). Sarab Jane and Mickey
HartllD1, Vicki and David Novic k and Pat a nd Bill
Waxmu (Apropos).
.• , Bulldert open homes for tour
J
ltadlryD Thompson (A&C Properr.ilw). Peter 0 Oc•• (l'iekbton~ Development). Richa rd Smilb
(AMWeirt), David Stein (Ste/n.Brief) and Michael
:: Jun (M.D. Janes Co.) opent'd their homes to a
>.double-decker busload (55) of folk.I out to see the
., attnCtlve homes and to raise funds for the
"' Arthritlr FoundaUon.
The black.,Ue group gathered at Faah1on
Ialand IO board tht fOn tranaportoUon provided by
Taylor· Woodrow Hornet.
• •I
As the group progressed on the tour they
dined -at Steins' home they were served hors
d'O<'uvrcs with wine and sparkling water and at
the Ochs residence they had pates and cheeses.
Salads were served at the Janes' home and
then it was on to the Smiths for the entree (ham.
turkey and beef).
When they reached Thompson's home it was
dessert and chcX'olate time -orange Grand
Marnier truffles, light chocolat-e mousse in white
chocolate cups. hot chocolate fondue and gourmet
<.'Offee topped with shaved chocolate and whipped
cream.
Richard Hopcra ft was chairman of the event
spons0red by the Building Industr y Association
for the Arthritis Foundation. "BIA also partici-
pates and is a big help in our annual telethon -the
next one will be March 4 on Channel 5," said
Sharon R. Johnson, director of special projects for
AF. (BIA will presenr the tour proceeds. almosr
$.5.000, during the telethon).
Among those boarding the bus were Niia and
Alan Trider, Herb and Libby Tobin, Doug and
Terry Snyder, Erle and Susan Shield, the Keith
Novalts, Mickey and Jan Williams, Connie and
Richard Bowden, Debbie Hattoy, Vlr&inla Gar·
cla , Julie Edwards (she handled reservations) and
Don and Barbara Brinke rhoff.
Alliance cele brates
Celebreting the arts and the holiday season.
th<' Laguna Beach Arts Commission Alll11nce
rec<'ntly held its annual holiday party at Heming·
way's Tavern by The Sea in Laguna Beach.
David Stein. Alliance president. hosted the
party in t'Onjunction with the tavern (he's one of
the owner.9). 'vice President Fausta Vitali (party
co-organizer) enthusiastically revealed the Al-
liance's plans for a March 3 Mardi Gras.
The Alliance ralsea fund• and plans events as
a support group to the Laguna Beach Arts
Ccmmi ion, appointed by the Laguna Beoch Ci ty
Council to promote the arts in Laguna Beach:
Among thr 7!\ art aficionodos vfsltln~ over
er a= g
a
Debbi'e Hattoy pins mistletoe on
Richard Hopcraft's lapel.
delicious hors d'oeuvres were city Councilwoman
Bobbi Minkin and Arts Commissioners Jerrold
Bloch (chairman). Leah Vasquez, Stuart Kati and
Doris Shields. Alliance officers attending incluqed
Dr. Stan Lowenberg (treasurer). Bobble Douglas
(membership chairman). Jack Weston and Carol
Laidlaw. Also present were Denny Freidenricb
(director of development for the Newport Harbor
Art Museum) and Mary Ann and Len Miller.
Art enthusiasts interested in information
about the alliance can cont.act Chris Townsend at
859-6995. .
C hristmas tea goes Victorian
Decked out in their Victorian best, Charles
Dickens. Mr. Pickwick, Tiny Tim and a host of
other Dickens /riends from the Pick~ick Club
entertained g uests at a Christmas H igh Tea one
recent Sunday a fternoon at the Corona del Mar
home of Jeannine and Jerry Harrington.
Setting the Victorian tone as guests arrived. a
London Bobbie (romplet.e with call hat and night
srick) patrolled the sidewalk. while an official
greeter loudly announced each guest's arrival at
ihe front door.
The HarringtOns hosted the festive tea as a
special thanks to donors of the Orange County
Chapter of the Los Angeles Orthopedic Hospital
Foundation.
Against a background of harp music and later
the festive Christmas songs of the Piekwfek
Carolers, guests were treatt'd to an array of finger
sandwiches, sweets (Which ov~n made Scl'OOfle
smile), sweet bread.1. Yorkshire pudding, English
trifle, ports. sherries and delicious English teas.
Among the 60 gut'Sts Attending thP yuletide
pijrty _were Dr. Geor1e and Sl11y Sbarp, Bob Hey1
nnd Ulla Klrllck, Bob and Cleva Howard, Te4 and
Je11 Robinson, 8111 and Barbara Roberti, AJ Taft,
Gerry and Jeck DwH, Dtckand Marjarle Newell,
Jo Ann Clark and Jack and Paula Vu Edee. •
:•cuw
J,•
J
J
--
I I •
• • \.-.
•
(J
Paparani is t'<1irttl by ~11.y PJ'Jot Scyle Ediror Kathryn Thompson welcomed a
Vld9 DNn with rontributioM from Glc>rl• Zlincr. bu load of 1ue1t1.
-
i
----------------------------------------------------------------------~'---------:----------------------o_r_ar-1q~e __ c _o_as_1_o_A_1_1_v_P_1_to __ r _1M __ o_nd_a~y~,-o_e~c~em....:.b~er __ 19~·-1~9~8:3 __ __:a::a ,
Pantyhose proble_ma~ic: Letter writer stretches reason for infections
DEAR READERS: l apologlie to my male
audience today, but tbe first lett~r Is trl('tly for
women. Skip to the second letter, then KO directly to
tbe sport11 section.
UEAR ANN 1 rt'ad ,1 h·ttt-r in .1 magaw\t•
ra't'ntly written by a wum..in "ho ~ud , "P~ntyhoi.t·
are bad, bad. bad!" She had been hospttahwd for two
weeks with an acute infCl:.'ttQn HN dnctorda1mc<l tht•
infecuon was caused by pantyhOS<'
The woman went on to exphun that pantyh<>.Sl'
du not permit all parts of tht• body to "breathe" She
said her phys1c1un ra'Ommende<l thut she go back lo
hosiery and garters.
My wife often gets yc•ast inft>(.'lluns. S hC' wean.
pantyhose. Could this be the ca~·? She also has
trouble in the winter ~:ause ht•r ll'gs 1tl·h and become scaly.
When I showed her lht• letter in the magazine
she got angry and 1yelled. "Pantyhose are com-
fortable! I wouldn t go back to stO(·kings for
anything." She at'(:used ml' of looking at too many
racy magazines With photos 11( t>1rl.; wl.'a n111?
ANN LANDERS
gartc•rbelts. and scud only prostitutes go for that sort
11( th111g.
Whal a bout this. Ann'>
COR~ESPONDENT
OIL COUNTHY
DEAR OIL: Women ban been getting yt>a11t
loh.•ctions for hundreds of years. When pantyhose
first made their de but, some physicians blamed
pantyhose. Most of the women wbo went back to
stoc kings a nd garters continued to get yeasl
Infections anyway, so they returned to paotybose.
Conclusion: Females who are prone to yeast
Infections will get the m whethe r tht>y wear
pantyhose or not.
I assume the women who read this have sense
enough not to sleep in pantyhose. In other words.
they should not be worn 24 hours a day. Also, I
How to be a happy hypochondriac
DE AR OR. STEINCROH~ Yuu wouldn"t th111k
It to look at him. but my big. strong. hl•althy-lookmg
husband 1s a hyr:xx·hondrtal· I think he's a happy
hypochondriac brt·ausc· ht'!> not ic.ha med to admit he
ts one
JOUI HfAlTH
OR PETER J STEINCROHN
usKu111e panlyhost: wt•arcn buthc or shower t-vt:ry
day and was h their pantyho•e after ~aeb wearing.
As for ltg ·tha t hcb and become scaly In winter.
o dally application of c ream or lotion wlll almost
ulw11y11 solve the problem. The Itching and scaling l1J
<>aused by dry skin.
P .S. I wonder bow many ftillu read this lo spite
of my caveat? I • • • DEAR ANN LANDEHS I um a w oman in my
law 60s. Vt•ry n1uch alone. althl>ugh 1 havt• a son who
1s a sut.'Ct'ssCul atlorney and a very attractive
daughter Both are married, hvml( 111 :mother c·1ty and
havt> fam1l1c•s of tht.>ir own.
When my <:hildrt'n werl' growing up. I gave them
everything. They we nt to the btc>st schools and ·wore
expensive clothes. l iww to 1t that they had the same
luxuries their affluent friends enjoyed. although we
were far from wealthy. (I worked part-time to give
them the kx-s.t while I wore bc.irgam-basement dresses
and spent very little on myself )
My fancy daughter never inviws me to spend the
holidays with her and neither does my professional
son although they know I am alone I am bitter and
resentful Where did I go wrong? A MOTHER. IN
MAINE
DEAR MOTHE R: The answer is found lo your
letter: "I gave my children everything -while J
wore bargain-basement dresses." Such sacrifices
a re se1dom appreciated. They Invariably produce
selfish. spoiled, inconsiderate childre n -and that's
what you have.
LUXURY THEATRES
1st 2 Matinee Showings Only $2. 75 Unless Noted
"If you l.'all a person whu wc1nL' to live as long as
he can a hypochondriac. thc.•n I'm It Why shouldn't I
take care of every lmlt• ache and patn I get" It's my S life." But the t rouble 1s that he takes ··too much care." l'x.1m1n<At1on Th1!> ~-t'allt'd ··imaginary lump turn.
Every little cough he thinks may turn out to bl• cant·er ~d nut to bl· a malignancy. Early d1a~nos1s and breast
113t.B•r•l11tl6)61-4 2553/~i!,)
or tuben:'ulosis. A pain in the right side may be removal savt>d him from early (•xum·uon
appendicitis. A headache? Possible brain tumor Brcaslc:am:c.•r in lhe male? Although ifs true that
FOR Fun I EXCITE
As a resu:t of his chrome fear about his health. dOSt' tu 100.000 wome n b<-come Vlt'llms of breast
II '--~-....1 l h BARBRA "'111m ~•h "''"" our medicine cabinet is stoc•ked full of all kinds of l·ant'<'r eat.·h yea r. many w1 IA' surpn"""' to Parn t at .... 1. ~
I t 700 ... ., · f h d STREJ;:)l'l.,o , 1;10 2:05 liquids. powders and pills. Instead of the c:ommon a t eas or mort' rnen V<.'<-'Omc v1ct1ms o t e isease YENTL 4:40 7:20
9l'n.se visit to our doctor once or twice a year for a yearly m io:oo
routine checkup. my husband sees our doctor at least l\IOkAL Hvpoc:hum.lrtdl'S .i n· nut always 'ta;
4 to 6 times a month. For a while. he's reassured. and health~ ~·ople who 1maginc they an· s1c·k . They may (~. :~J t~~ e:. ~~ 'I~
then finds something else to worry about. be mOrt' often right than we rt>tilizc. As the 7:40 t :SS CAl\..IU..,,~ Im
My children and I try to be patient We don't hy~hond nac wrutl' for his grav<.'Stone insc:npt1on: (!) 12:00 J :>o s:oo 7:30 10:00
ridicule him. For that reason. at least, ne's what you '"Perhaps now you'll believe me'" '111£ KEEP CJ 'far :;J{r111 )/fit, CJ
might call a happy hypochondriac. What do you think • • • r/rJ:!!{/(wl(fll
of people who are always running to the doctor and DEAR OR. STEJNCROHN. l have• a t n end who 1:10 3 :20 5 ,30 7 :4 0 t :so 1,20 3,30 5 ,40 7,>0 10,00
taking aU kinds of medications? MRS. H. has becn having a terrible t1mt.· w11h potassium -:n1"11a~f?~•2 l6'1 .. 255'1 /~ .... _.....,"\
defi<:i ency S he's always c•xhaustcd. It began when ~::?~~.-~ • .!.:!:_ _ ~"' ~ ..,..1.NGf )
DEAR MRS. H.: I'm glad your entire family she was taking large doses of u1urt•t1<'S to bring down Al CINO
treats him kindly and with sympathetic under-her pressure. Now my 72-yc>ar-old moth«r 1s on a SCAR I GORKY PARK
standing. Healthy hypochondiracs can be more diuretic I'm wornC'd about ht.•r potassium. MRS L FACE 1!J a
miserable than others who are really sick But DEAR MRS. L. I'm surl' that h~r d<x:tor 15 aware snowu1 7:oo & 1o:15 s11ow111 5 :45 • 15 10·111
sometimes hypochondriacs save their own lives of the potential danger. Her doses of d1urct1c:s may li{;je][IJ11t.Jll:J$6J639 8770/~tl'O.l:')
I recall one who told his wife he thought he felt not be large enough to produce potassium loss I'm .... _ •••••• •••• ••• •--.
a lump in his breast. Might it be cancer. he thought? sure he's monitoring her blood levels. It's not SUP£RciNHiSou<>ODl••<110'1ovttorRcxM0•9'1"Q&otl•ryPo,,oblt>
His wife called 1t a ridiculo us fear. "Men don't get inevitable that ev~ry patient who 1s on d1urell('s ~~;:;i-'l Bl Lo~~u,'01 SCAlAPACRFAINO(E
breast cancer," she said. Nevertheless. he came m for suffer from abnormal potassium loss. C · "· ,.~ Ohci pttn• ~ ----------------------....-----------------------!-~_, IRI Ptu l "'•t"tm1••1 (RI __
--NOW PLAYING ----·-----...... "'°"'°'""'.., (---~'-f ~ """'Cl> 1-c-.-12' Ol(I. 61• JI01 !t.11)4'11)• 1111111$
•cmti ... 11--. .... .,..,.~,..,,., , ... ...,.,_ 1-s---~ CD--
~· ... Ill -... ,no
W><l""!OJTl<UON~Y'51T ~ •lo.~~ ---
--,,... .. ~ .... ~ '"11' '°10 est•-c11o-•-c.. T~t 4tl'
SfARFACE
NOWPt.AYING
I Al'TIOl'I "lc..-1--..
an 1ntrnw l\hn both 1n
'"'-"' lancv...r• and ~ .. ,
~w.
Ml&lf'.W\matur.
auditnca
a,_ ---(-~ , __ c-.. ~°'""
111-... -wino
IA----~·-~• ,_,..,_ 1-C-..-... OUJ W 1'>11 191 ..
lo. "9 ~· I.A -.,. j,.. .I~ "-• J9'f~'· \41\ •-,uttO'.(Hlt~
I 1 1 0 I/.~ f tJi l"i ' t¥'il\ t " ~ft f P-f, i .. I
~ .. ...,..c-n• ·Q;-......... a,,....i•oe~ I '1t,~r. oL,,•••~>tt•.._,,.,,.._. ......... .
MAY OUR STARS LIGHT UP
YOUR HOLIDAYS
"More OuM.oud a..u,hl TMn Nrf
Odtcr C01aecty In A Lons_~!"
-r 41. V;~~ MUM /#fJ -0 A "'r"' STNtP SI LK\ \ '()( lD
-...... _.............. ~ la\ 0 . -·.:-..... _ 6
MllA UA Movte9 4
C08TA•aA !dwatdt Town Center
IL TORO
Ectwerdt Saddlebadc
~
Edwerdt WOOdt)(ldge
()MW
A¥C Otange Mell
UA City Center
SY\/P/ ltadlum 0 I. .. ..,....."" UA W.emlnti• Miii
990·4022
75t-4184
&81·5880
551--0655
837~
83-4·3911 f 3 .. 7880
"3.o64e
-A UA MOY!et 4 coau 111u
Ectwerde So Coat1 P1ua
LAHAMA
990·•022
546-27 t t
AMC Ftlhlon
Squere 1213189 t-0633 •atM>N VIEJO
Edwardt Viejo Twin OAANGI
UA City t.ntet
AMC Otange Man nar-.Tn
UA w .. 1mlntl4lf Twin
uo.em
034-3911
637·03•0
~9 1 1
MU
UA McMel 4 9904022
COSTA•U
EdW81dt Htrbof Twin e31·3501
~ SouthCoHt 540·0594
I VIHe
EdwWdt WOOdbrldge
Mtl810ttVllJO
551·0655
Edward• M Viejo Mall ORANOI
~95-8220
UA O&C.nter 634·391 1
AMC •wM•ll 837-0340
WHTMIN TIR
UA w .. 1rnln1t« Twin 893-~8
' I .
Wltn Prlul• Scllool (RI
9<)RKY PARK
Plus &rutlllcn (RI
Plut Vac~llo" IA) ano
TnOlftt Pll CU (A)
Ot1vt·ln5 Open 6·30 WHke11d1/6 45 WffkntthU
Children Under 12 fret Unless Noted
"Ttl KECP" (R)
I '11• tOO 'l .cJ • I"
" TO BC OR NOl TO BC" (lie)
l.'~\ l Ill H • H•:O 1\
"TOMS ~ CllJUMOT" (K )
II JO 10\ S 60 &10 100\
"Tll MAM MtO lOV£D w<MN" (R)
A J ·~ • • •) ~
"TWO Of A KM>" (PG)
l~tJ •• I'' I ..
"UNCIMOC VAlOR" (R)
"'' 'lu \" ~I ,,
"TOMS ~ OllCmEfl" 1'1ll
11 )I) l ~ ~ 4\ I \ I~\\
"YIJITL" ('1;)
srl CIAI I '1.AGt W ~ r l I
'"11£ KECP" (R)
~ I \' • • I • . ..
CiifiR!!}~J
"GORXY PARK" (R)
,, I It \ ' •
"IJtCOIM>N VALOR" (R)
,._,n~~•...,•\ ~
"Ill MA" MtO lOVlD W<MN"
111 ''l ' '\l • •~ to 10
* PACIFIC DRIVE -IN THEATRES *
"lJlllCOfMllf VAlQa" (R) ,,
'11€ DUO ZIX" (RI
··t11 Krl'" (R) ,,,,
· 11£YOfll 111 lMI' (RI
' "SCMIJACl" (RI
MS ··llliH11WID" lR) ... .,,
"0,C. CM" (R)
l'IUS "SOtll Mii> ,, IOO" (Rl
I .llM'JJil.
"COlllT PMI{" (I)
"'' "mt aOOO" <1>
"CMlflll" CR)
l'\US "lll HO•Ulr Cl•)
·Ttlfll:s ,, 011uibr "'>
1'1'4 ..... ,,rm MID A ClNRCWK' (•>
1UllDOl •ACf" (R)
""' "fll OOT11DS" (PC)
•
!M1uGr2
"lJlllCOfMllf VAl<la" (R\
1111\
"Ill DUO lM " (R)
''SlllCQ •ACT" (R)
l'IUS "Tll OU1SI01" (~)
' Ill lliM __, LOWD WIJilllf (R)
fl\US ~ ~
Wht.1t ;in• th1• cfo\ .m e/ cf1111 'L' of rc·~JC'hmg your
1111/c/ ..1Lx>ut tlw bmf,., 11ml rlw bec-s" Lt-t Ann Landers'
m·w l><Jciklt•/, •JJow. Wh,11, ;11111 When Lu T1•1J Yuur
Cl11/cl Ab(lut St'X, .. g ive you tht• ground rules. For
,v11u1 ~·opy "·11<1 50 c~·n1. .. e1long with a /011g. stamped,
sd ( mlrlrc•ssc-d envelop<' lo Ann Landc•t'S, P.O. &x
J J 995. ('turn go. IJJ. 606 JI
----~---~~---~--
•
\
•
'Stop the World' top show
Best of Coast 's '8 3 community theater attractions honored
ll) TOM TIT\ l~
01 .... o.n, lfllol ''•"
t'l'hb ''tilt• tlurd 111 .i "4'"''' 111
/l\'t' n•/1111111:-II'\ It'\\ Ill~ t/H' \t'J/'
1911.'I tn lht'<ll<'r <.1/1111g the Ot.HlJ.:t'
Coast)
Ano\ht•r vt·.11· 1s 111 tht• :.('nlP-
books fo1 t'Oll11llUnJIV tlwatt•l'S
.tlong tht• 01·angt• Coast and. for
tht• Hhh tmw. ''bit of l'Valuauon 1s
Ill Pl dt•I
It wa". 111 rt•lruspt'('t. ,1 yt•;ar ul
-.plt·mhd bJl,11wt• Jmung \ht· 10
non-profoss1ona I play houSt-s n•-
v1ewt'Cf in thest> pages as seven of
th<'m plat't'd at least one pro-
dut.'lltln m th rs mlumn's lineup of
Ill top -.how~ of l\.llU The n•lallvt•
nwnts of thl• IrvlrH.' Community
l'hl'llll'f must bt· ldt to otlw1=s
s1net• this columnist doublt•s as
(('T's managing dire<.'tor
Now crnn<.•s tht• moment of truth
tht• unwof assessing thequahty
111 1 tw :rn t•hg11Jle produu1uns and
\nm1ng up with 10 whu .. ·h ~tand
abovt• tht• rest It's not an easv
.issrgnmt.>nt. but there Wl..'re 1n"-
dl'<'<i 10 sut.·h "b1gg1es" along the
l )1 ange Coast dunng a year wh1t.·h
,Jw the· musrl'<il beconw mon'
µn·v<ilent four of thl' top 10
.;how~ mdudl'<i singing and dant.··
111g .
INTIRMISSIDN
At.·Wrs Theater, d1re<.·t<.'<l by Dt>-
borah LaViiie. ''LaVine's cast is
superbly chosen and attacks the
show in waves of realistic fervor."
4. "GODSPELL," M1ss1on V1eJ0
Play,llhouse. d1re<:t<.-'d by Eileen
F'1shbach. "This alternately
poignant and hilarious rock must·
cal -packed wtth equal parts of
the Nt.>w Testament and Saturday
Night Live -bubbles over with
t'nergy. imagination anq excep-
uonal young talent."
5. "THE GIN GAME," Laguna
Moulton Playhouse. directed by
Joan McGillis. David and Betsy
Paul brmg a special sort of snap
and l'rack le to the pru-
d uc 11 0 n .. their 1nterac 11on
a mph fies their chara<'ters, both of
whom are deceptively <.'Omplex."
6. "PICNIC," Hunttngton
Beach Playhouse, directed by Phil
de Barros. ··The int1mac·y of the
Seacl1ff Village theater is advan-
tagl:'dus to a play so dependent on
subtle characterization. and some
bt>aut1ful performances emerge."
Wt:stm111stcr Community
Thealt'r. d1rf.'Cted by Richarti
Morrill "There's <.1n esprit de
l'orps that sp1lb uvt·r into tht'
seats ... a show thut c·ra<.·kles with
raucous humor "
10. "CAROUSEL," Huntington
&•ach Playhouse. directed by
Robert Conrad. "A c·aptlvating
produc·uon ... a glittering revival of
a musit.·al which rcwins its charm
grac·efully "
Not far bt•hind the t.-ream of this
year's crop wert' 10 other 1m·
pn-ssive lcx·al produt.·ttons which
also provided cn)Oyable evenings
of theater·
11. "TALLEY'S !<~OLLY,"
Newport Harbor Actors Theater,
directed by BridgN Christian.sen.
12. "INHERIT THE WlND," '
W l's l m i n st e r Co m m u n i t y
Theater. d1re<:ted by Dohn Shaw.
13 "FUNNY G IRL," Laguna
Moult.on Playhouse. dtr~·ted by
John Ferzal'l'a.
14. "DEAR LIAR." Newport
Harbor A<:tors Tht•att'r, directed
by Bonnie Ebsen
15. "YOU CAN'T TAKE IT
WITH YOU," Showcase Pro-
du<'tions. d1re<:ted by Alex Koba
16. "LIFE WITH FATHER,"
Newport Harbor A<'tors Theater.
directed by Kevin Hoggard.
17 "PATIO" and "PORCH,''
llt•ll'. tht•n . rs the Daily Pilot's
111p Ill crnnmunny tht'<tlc•r pro·
dut ttwl::-ot lYH:i. wnh Jn l'M:t .. pt
f • or11 our fl'\'l<'W of eat·h 7. "FOOTLJGHT FRENZY," Costa Mesa C1v1c Playhouse.
1. .. "TOP THE WORLD. I
WANT TO GET OFF . Newport
Theatt'r Arts Center. directed by
Kt.>nt J ohnson "Johnson 1s stop-
ping thl' \~ orld dgam, SC'n-
,.,,11101wlly 11·~ the• highlight of an
rmµn·sst\'t' yt•Jr .llnng the Orangr
Coast "
Newport Theater Arts Center, directed bv St.an Wlas1ck.
directed .by Kent Johnson "A 18. "PR.IV ATE: LIVES," New-
superbly energetic cast offers one port Theater Arts Center. directed
of the funniest. and most exhaust-by Patricia Terry
mg. evenings you'll ever spend m 19. "TRIBUTE.'' Huntington
any theater It's comedy with all -Beal'h Playhouse. dire<.·ted by Ken
the stops out." Karp ·
2. ''A FAR COL11':TRY," CO!\ta
J\lc>~ l'l\1l' Pla\'houS!'. dtr('('tl'd bv
P ... 11 Tambl'lhn1 "An outst.andmg
pro<lul Iron Dlffll ult pldys sut.·h <is
t I 11s ont' hrrng OU t l ht> bt.'St In thl'I r
t.·asL'>, and the C1v1c Playhouse
11fft•rs somt• su1>erb exampi'es ...
8. "THEY'RE PLAYING OUR
SONG," Laguna Moulton Play-
house. directed by Michael 'Cody
"The Laguna production is a
visual delight. high on glmer and
techmcaJ garnishment. Michael
Jon Sims and Lon Sandstrom
bring warmth and empathy W
their interpretations ..
20. "CH.APTER TWO ," Laguna
Moulton Playhouse, dirt'<.:ted by
Marthella Randall
F'rom these splendid pro·
ducuons. some excellent individ-
ual performan<'CS emerged. and
th(' next column m this yearend
series will cast the spotlight on
those. Then Friday the Daily Pilot
will honor its l'hOll'l'S for the 198:~
man and woman of the year in
:l. "Nl1TS," Nl'wpurt Harbor 9. "MISTER ROBERTS." th<'at<'r
Van Dyke, Caesar in 'Money':
Comics seeking a good script
li~ f'REO RUTHE:\BERG
AP T• .. Wltlo" Wtlte•
NEW YORK (AP) Combining the t.alents of
D1ek Van D~ke and Sid Cap.-;ar was a good idea But
aftt•r tonight's NBC movie. "found Money," Van
Dykl· illld Cal.'sar remain two c'Omed>: legends in
search of J funny script.
Cal.osar pton~rcd TV sketch humor on "Your
Show of Shows" and Van Dyke provided sophist1-
c·ated ('Omedv from the suburb'\ on "The Dick Van
Dyke Show •·But even thl'Sf' 'two troupers can't coax
many laughs from "found Money," wh1eh <'Oncernsa
frustrating St-<1fl'h for sclfll·~-. d()·gooders in New
York Cny. '
At it!. worst, the film is <in c·xasperatingly simple.
heavy-handed carn:citure of man and the computer
age Occas1onally poking through the cracks, though.
1s a good-natured parable about mankind and its
mt.-<:ht.1nic·al and human defects
Van Dyk<' plays Max Sh<>pherd. a dedkated
L-OmpUtl'r c•xpert at a Manhattan bank Despite the
assuran<'es of his phony. back-slapping boss (Wilham
Prrnc.·t•). l\fox 1s tx.·ing phased out rn a corporate
ml·rgt·r
Cal-sar 1s Sam Grt'i'n, a security guard who's just
been dumped from h1~ job at the bank. one week
before hts pension was Lu bt>t'Ome vested Although
upsC'l. ht.'!> t.aken the rnrporatt.• disloyalty 111 stride.
His philosophy 1s "thmgl' you ca11 do something
about. vou do Things you ean·1. you can't."
Max. however. considers the bank's callousness
a moral crime and decides to do something about rt.
HC' rigs tht .. computer to print out a $10,000 check to
Sam from the> bank's dormantac'Counts. which would
e\'l•ntually revNt to the· state The anonymous
\)(.>nefactor I!> c<illt'l.I ·Tht• lnv1s1bl<.' Friend."
In thC' mov1r's funt11l'Sl sc<-nc. Sam and Max go to
a bank to cash tht· C'heck. W11l 11 bC' treated as reaJ or
Monopoly money? Caesar. whose forte ts reacting to
life's absurdrtrf"' Pven as he· t'fl.'ates them, gets to be
sill y. hkt' he did m the· Hl50:.
I It!> fac(• got•.., 1 uuUt.·1 y anti his ey<.-s oulge as he
lravc•ls from trl'mbles to triumph, when the bank
falls for the· Sl'am. But Sam dC<·1de>s against accepting
the handout. He's too hon<-st HC' and Max then hit on
the idea of g1vmg the $10.000 away. 1f they can find a
good Samaritan.
At this point, the 5'.-r1pt falls mw conventional
cltches. for example. the stranger on the street.
offrrrng to take a family picture, who runs away with
the camera Sam even fakes a heart attack and lies
down on the s1dC'walk t.o smoke out benevolence.
People merely step nvPr hrm, and one guy tries to pick
his pocket. .
, Finally. they find a good man and, anonymously.
give him $10.000. They ~njoy the gift o ( giving so
much thtu tbey keep dtspensing the checks.
MeanwhjJe. the publicity for "The lnvtsible Friend"
builds. and the whole <.11y begins !lowing with the
milk of hum3n kindness
Shelly H9':k plays the station's anchorwoman,
who becomes romantically involved with Max and
)las t.o make personal and professional choices leadl
RUFFELL'S
UPHOlST8¥, INC . .......... ~ .....
tn2 HAlllOl &VD •
COSTA ft\ISA -..._,IS.
IJ'
H«JDAYI··
Sdl p6lylftQ ~ ,.,_
lboUI 'f(:Alt ~·' ~ .......,. --. alllllC ~
tedftQul11elfy to.,,,. .........
FD,_.., ftM9d )'Olli
lo ~ ... phone..,., Cflll lo ornlo 109 ,,..,., .,,.,
RICHARD STEVENS
35 19 E. Coett Hwy, CdM
At AndrM'a 615-
Shell y Hack, Dick Van Dyke and Sid
Caesar in "Found Money" tonight at
9 on NBC, Channel 4.
w a schmaltzy, tie-up-ever y-end ending. Hack's
acting has improved since she played one of
"Charlie's Angels" and spoofed herself as a
self -acknowledged vacuous beauty in Woody Allen's
"Annie Hall.''
What's vacuous tonight 1s the script.
'l'aa BJ1m•1• a11urr ...................
··""'°~-Im® c-:-.:6
--• .: .. ::r-.=o IX\11:..dJ
EXCLU8lVE ENGAG"'MENT
GENERAL AOMllllON ts.GO
MATINEEI Sl.00 'TIL l:OO PM
DAILY 1111, 4:41, WO ------erlwar ds M£S A CIN EMA
..,~. ,. 1 •··• C:Al' c..02c.
•· \:·. ~:~:· U't 1 J J
TONIGHT'S TV
EVENING
-•:00-
l 1=TAOl III NA. FOOTBAU D FANTASY fal.AHD
Cf) 8All/TE
I THREE'S COMPANY
HAWAllFM-4
MACNQ. I Lf.HREA
HF#SHOUR
CD OCfAHUS
(J)C88NEW8
(H)N8CNEWS
6) DIOI< VAN DYKE fH) DARYL HALL & JOHN OA 1"E8 IN COHCERT
-•:30-
ID AUC£
'11) FACES Of CULTURE
Cf) NEWS
(HJ WHEEL Of FORTUNE
m~ANDYKE
) • • ·~ "MIQhlY Joe Young I 1949) T trry Moote, Rot>en Armstrono
Klinger s' Christma
Ct·l t·hralin ~ 1twir fir!'>t !'>la te~itlt·
( :h ri!'>l t11 a!'> lo~.wt tw r art• l\.lin~t·r
(Jami•· ... arr ) a nJ hi~ wift• Soou l.t•t•
( lto~ulind Chao ) on ""Aflt·rMASll""
loni~ht a t <Jon c:BS. (:han nt·I 2 .
' TOPS IN POPS
By The Associated Press
-U5-
CLl CHARLES CHAMPLIN T Al.KS
WITl4
-7'.!1J-
tJ C88 NEWS
U N8CNEWS D HAPPY DAYS AGAIN D ROWAN I MARTIN'S LAUGtt4N
(!)NEWS ID THREE'S COMPAHY e JOl<fR'S WILD fll BUSINESS REPORT m IHSIOE ORANGE COUHTY
Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE
(HJ LOVE COHNECTIOH
mMOVtE
H "Oh. S\isanrni (19501 Rod
Cameron, FOfrest Tucker
<l JMOVIE
t • 'h "Arruza' ( 19n) Documentary
Narrated by Anihony Oumn
-7:30-IJ 2 ON THE TOWN 1J Q! FAMILY FEUD D RIKKI TlKKt TAV1
O SOAP
•M'A'S'H e PEOPLE'S COORT SI WllOUFE SAFARI m MAKING Of MANKIND
The• following are Billboard's hot rt'<:urd hits for ~~~LE~
this wc~k as thl'Y ~~pear in the• currl'nt issue of _8;00_
Billboard magciztne. Copyright IY8:3. B11Jbo<ird IJ(l)SCARECROWANDMRS
Publications. Inc Reprinted with p<.•rm1ss1on. -KING D ~THE 808 HOPE
HOT SINGLES
I "Say Say Say"
Jackson 1Columb1a I
CHRISTMAS SttOW
DMOV1E
Paul Mt<..:artnl'Y & Michael • ** "Tov111ch' t 1937t c1au0e11e
Colbe<t. Charles Boyer
O LOUGRAHT 2 "Say h Isn't So" Daryl Hall & John Oates
(RCA)
3 "Union of the Snake" Duran Duran (Cciprtol)
4 "Owner of a Lonely Heart" Yes (Att.·o) '
5 "All Night Long" Lionel R1ch1e lMotown)
ti "Uptown Girl'' Billy Joel (Columbtd)
7 "Love l'> a Battlefield" Pat &ma tar !Chrysalis)
8."Tw1st or Fate" Olivia Newton-John (MCA)
9.'·Underc.'over of the Night'' Rolling Stones
(Rolling St.ones)
10 "Break My Stride" Matthew Wilder (Private
I)
11 "I Gu~ That's Why They Call It thl· Blues"
Elton John (Geffen)
12 ''Talking m Your Slt'<'p" Th<' Romantics
(Nemperor)
l:i ·'Churt'h of th., Poison Mind" Culture Club
(Virgin-Epic)
H "Major Tum Cummg Honw" 1-'<"ll•r Sch11lrng
(Elt•ktra)
I 5 "Cum Oq, F'<'{'I ttw No1w" l,lUtt>t Hrot
( Pasha-Assoc·1t.1 tt"d)
16 "SYnchroninty LI " Tht• PohC"<' (A&M)
17 "Karma Chameleon" Cultun· Club (V1r-
g111-Ep1c)
18 "Islands in the Stream" Kenny Rogers with
Dolly Parton (RCA>
19."Why Me?" Irene Cara (Geffen-Network)
20."ln a Big Country" Big Country (Ml'rcury)
TOP LPS
I ."Thriller" Michael Jackson (Epic)
2 "Can't Slow Down" Lionel Richie (Motwn)
3.''What's New" Linda Ronstadt (Asylum)
4 "Synchronidty" The Pohce tA&M)
5 "Undercover" Rolling Stones (Holltng Stones!
6."Metal Health" Quiet Riot (Pasha-CBS)
7 "90125" Yes (Atc'O)
8 "An Innocent Man" 81llv Jot.'I (Columbia)
9."Colour Bv Numbers"-Culture Club (V11'-
g111-Ep1c) •
10 "Rcx•k'N'Soul,' Part I" Daryl Hall & John
Oates (RCA)
11.'Eyes That See In the Dark" Kf'nny Rogers
(RCA)
t 2 "Sc·ven and tht' Ragged T1gt•r" Duran Duran
<Capitol)
i ~ AINMENT TONIGKT
II) MOVIE
t * • "The Other Side Of The
Mouotam •• Part II" ( 1978) Matily!\
Hassett, Timothy Bottoms
&ii MAKlffG Of MANKINO
(C)MOVIE
• • '" "II Happeoed One Chns1mas"
( 1971t Marlo Ttiomas. Waynt Rog-
ers
<H}MOV1E
t •·~ • Sh&rky s Machme' ( 19811
Burt Reynokls. Rachel Ward
, SJ FAERIE T A1..E THEATRE
@MOVIE
• "VKVS ( 1982) Glenn FOfd, ChllCk
Coonots
-8:30-
(f) TWILIGHT ZOH£ ID P.M. MAGAZINE m GREAT PERFORMANCES roi MOVtE • * •i, · Creepsnow" (19821 Hal Ho4· •
blOOll. Adneooo Barbeau
ZlMOVIE "'* *'" ·Freedom Road" (1979)
"\cuhammed Ah. Kras Knstotl8™>0
-9:00-
11 AFTERMASH
U CltMOVIE
"FounO Mooey (PremN!fe) OICk Van
~~C18$8r
ID VEGAS SI A CHRISTMAS SPECIAL WITl4 LUCIANO PAVAROTTI
9 00HCORYEU
~DRAGNET
<S)MOVIE
• • • "Christmas Lilies Of Tiit
Fietd ' ( t979) BUly 0ee Willlams,
Mafia Schetl
-9:15-
D THA rs INCREDl8LE
-9:30-
IJ ()) NEWHART
(!)MOVIE • ** rne s1orr Of Ruth·· (19601
SIU6r1 W111tman, Tom Tryoo m A CHAISTMAS SPECIAL WITl4
LUCIANO PAVAROTTI " ®l PEOPLE'S COURT m TOOAY AT HOU YWOOO PARK
-10:00-IJ (I) EMERALD POINT HAS
•u:,.-1 ~T PEAf-OAMAHCE8 EHTEAT AIHMEH1' TONIGHT
IOU>ONE.8
MOVIE • • "FNI Co .. (1979) John S....on.
WlllMlm Sm4th (HJ OH lOCA TlOH
0 MOVIE
•• ·Teble F°' Five" (19831 John
VO!Qhl, Rictllfd Crll\lla
-!0:15-
D EYEOHLA.
-t0:30-
ll) IHO£PEHOEHT NETWORI<
NEWS '11> SHEAX PREVIEWS
[Q) BARNEY Mill.El' !'DJ ROCt< OH TV
-10:46-
D NEWS
.>-1t:OO-. ea()) o a NEWS
D TAXI
D GOHOSHOW
... 'OtE JEFFtRSONS e ~S Of SAH FfWDSCO fD JACl<lE GLEASOH G ISAAEU DIARY ~ NIGHT GAU.ERV
<BJMOVIE • • *'"' "O.va·· (1981) W1lhelmtnla
Wiggins Fernandez. Frederic Andf•
(O}MOVIE • * "Twice A Woman" (1980) &bl
AndefSSOl'I. AntllOny Pentlna
(.$)MOVIE
• t t Don 1 Cry, H's Only Tlluoc*"
( 1982) OenM Cnnst°"'*, ~
Saint James
-1t:30-IJ (I) HART TO HART IJ (HJ BEST Of CARSON D SATUADAY NIGHT D ~~NEWS NIGKTUNE 0 Ill SEARCH Of ... a» THICl(E Of THE NIGHT
fll UNDERST AHOIHG HUMAH
BEHAVIOR ~ BRADSHAW OH THE OOHT
STAGES Of MAH m 700CLU8
-11:35-
C1MOVIE * "·~ ·The NeAt Man" ( 197&) Sean
C-OMery. Comeha Sllarpe
-12:00-D LA. 1'00AY
O MOVIE t t'l1 The T 1Q81 And file Pussycat"
11967) V1ttono Gasaman. Elewlor
P11ker
Cf) INOEPEHOEHT NETWORI<
NEWS
(I) LOVE, AMEJllCAH STYLE
~MOVIE ••• ., Moon Of The Wolf (1972)
David Jansseo. Bat bar a Ruth
0MOVIE
U "Lootin To Get Ouf' ( 1982) Jon
Vooghl. Anrt-M11gret
(Z)MOV1E
t ••.;"The Nigllt PMer" (1974) Olrk
Booat de. Cllarlotte Rempling
-12:30-
D a LA TE NIGHT WITl4 DAVID
L.ETTERMAH 8 ALFAE0 HrTCHCOa<
PRESEHTS II HOU YWOOO CLOSEUP
Cf) ROW~ & MARTIN'S lAUQK..lj e LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE (OJMOVIE
• t ·~ · Migllly Joe Young" I 1949)
Terry Moo,e. AoOert Atmstrong
-12:40-
IJ (() COlWBO
-12:50-
1 $)RANDY NEWMAN AT THE
OOEOH
-1:00-
" ETHIOPIA REPORTS G BEST Of LA. TODAY
Cf) THE ~TECTORS ID AU IN THE FAMll Y
.MOVIE • * • 'Ii "One Foot lo Hll'len"
( 194 I) Fredric Mlfcll. M¥l.lla Scott
e:\)GEHE SCOTT
-t;05-
CID MOVIE u •.t "Things A.re Tough All OYer"
( 1982) Rlc:hard "Cheecll" Mario,
Tommy Chong
-1:15-
cc:>MOVIE
H ··e1ay PlgeOn" (1971) Telly
Stvllas. Robel1 v.q.n.
-t:30-
I MARY TYL.E1' MOOAE •aNEW& Cf) MOVIE
"South Of Montttey" I 1947) Gilber1
Ao4and
-1:5G-
lS) OEHNY JOtMTOH • SB.l.OVT
0MOVIE
• "Zapped!" (1982) Scott Blio, Wil-
lie Aamel,
13."Gencsis" Genesis (Atlanlll')
14."Yentl" Barbra Streisand (Columbia)
15 "Uh-Huh'' John Cougar Mellencamp (Riva)
16.''Eliminator" ZZ Top (Warner Bros)
"ONE BRUISING BLOCKBUSTER
OF A MOTION PICTURE:'
17 "Pyromania" Def Leppard (Mercury)
,18."'The Big Chill' Soundtrack" (Motown)
19."Ptpesof Peace" Paul McCartney (Columbia)
20."lnfidcls" Bob Dylan (Columbia)
1\ JIC 1-!t Y'S
--
STAR80 --I
-NEW YORK POST
--CHRL~'nl~'-; CAROL l-l!!~!!!!!!!!~~~-==-...1 .. .._. ... .,__ .. ..__ .. .. ·-.. ··-. _.._ -.:: t9 -.Qi01"9 IQ) ·---....
---NOW PLAYING ---1
llM•f DMlll AllAMflM
.,..~., ..
772.1441
COITA MIU
UA Clfltf1ll
640 OH4
(Mrd1 WMdbt .. te
551·086$
Ytlle r .. k
t H·OOH
W111'•1•1m1
UA CIMIM
IU.0$41
COITA MllA JOU.TAI• VAlllY lAIUltA Milli
Eilwefft CintN fal!Mly ,_ U..M Holla Melt
C«rtt1 Ut-4141 913-1307 711HI1
NOW PLAYING ---l--~ CC.....lillllt .., ... --=er-l!e!t..
-P'ldle'l -....i ..... m..
....--~ ..... ,.....y.
C....411 .,., ,,.._ ........... I ,.. ........... ..
. IPGJ I\ 1l'I R 1' Mt.A IN r l'IC'T\JfU'.
._.... ·~··--, -~ ....
NOWPIAYING
lllWPDRl llAQI rowwaa Nt-oon ~~oreo
OllAllll
~Ulm3
---
*'MW ~._
STOCKS
Munday'• 11 a.m. (PDT) PriCfl
'witt' H"; ...... ... ..
P ( l'\O'-\ fO'\• C. hoQ P ( fllO'\ I Ii)..... f f'WJ
----------
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTION
OVOTAlll)NS IHClUOf fRJl()t6 OH I Hl HfW YORI\ MIOWHI l'AClf IC PllW llO&l()+I Of lllOll AHO C1HCIMOAll JIOC:K fXC.U.NCltl AHO llEPOfHtO I Y IH[ HAaO IH911Hl I
\•I_., Hr'
P ( "Ot (IO'# CllQ
N•t
l "9 \~I"" N•I \•I•'\ N•J
" ~ ~Ol (. IOV t ~ "" • no' t 10-w ("Q
Money supply up sharply;
overall growth 'sluggish'
By the Auoctated Preu
NEW YORK -Analysts expect little fallout Crom the
$5.5 bi Won jump in the money supply in early December. even
th~h it was the sharpest rise in five months. Analysts
pointed out that even with the latest spurt, money supply
growth has remained sluggish. ln financial markets, interest
rates edged only slightly higher aCt.er the figures were
released
Mobil settles $1. 7 billion suit
AUSTIN, Texas -Mobil Corp. has agreed to pay the
state of Texas and South Texas rancher Clinton Manges more
than $500 million as part of an out-of-court settlement
reached in a $1 7 btWon lawsuit. "The settlement was
arranged to avoid continuing costly Uugauon," said a joint
statement issued on behalf of Attorney General Jim Mattox,
Land Commissioner Garry Mauro. Manges and Mobil. The
statement ~de no mention of the total amount of the
settlement.
Wholesale prices how decline
WASHINGTON -Helped by declinjng food a.rid energy
prices, the government's measure of wholesale prices dropped
0.2 percent last month, all but ensuring the lowest inflation
year in two decades. The Labor Department's report on its
Producer Price Index showed that wholesale prices for the
first 11 months of this year rose at an annual rate of 0.3
percent. If that rate holds one more month, 1983 would have
the lowest increase sinc,-e prices actually declined 0.2 percent in
1963.
Citicorp to purchase ailing S&L
WASHINGTON -Citicorp, the $130 qillion New York
bank-holding company, has won government permission to
buy an ailing savings and loan association in Maarru. The
Federal Home Loan Bank Board approved C1ticorp's
application to buy New Biscayne Federal Savings & Loan
As9ociation of Miami. Biscayne is the sixth largest savings
association in Florida, with assets of $1 .8 billion and 34 offices.
GE to sell housewares business
NEW YORK -General Electric Co. is selling its
small-appliance business to Black & Decker M~ufacturing
Co. for $300 million in cash and notes. In announcing the
transaction. GE said it had ''made a strategic decision to
concen tra t.e its consumer-products resources m the large-scale
consumer businesses, where it can apply substanual
technological and financial strengths." The housewares urut
makes such items as toasters, toast.er-ovens, coffeemakers.
food processors. irons and hair dryers . ..
Indus try opera tin~ rate rises
WASHINGTON -U.S . industrial plants o~rated at
79.2 percent of capacity last month, the highest in more than
two year.;. The operating rate for factories, nunes and utl]Jties
was up 0.5 percentage point in November from the month
before, the Federal Reserve Board reported.
GOLD OUO.TATIONS
Select..S wOrlO QOIO l)<ICM IOOey
L-"""nlnG nalllQ SJ78 es. Oii IO eo ~ llft .. noon llalng S375 00, Oii 12 25 ~...-a1ttom00n n•ing $317 •11. oil $2 •• ,,....,fW1 li>IJ'Q $371 52, otf 15 48
lllttcft i.1• llt .. noon blCI 137• 90 Oii $ 1 U
'37540-eo
-, A -(only dolly quot•I l!l75 OQ, o" a2 2s ,,.....,... looly Cllil't Quot•I 1375 •O. o" S22S ,.........., f1b<oe.eteo tonry OIOlly quol•)
$JU t7 0111236
NYC-• gold .oot mon•h ~" 1372 eo. oH 1100
WHAT NYSE DID
NEW YORK (AP\ OK 16
Aova...:ea
OectiMCI Unctwt-
T 011lltW.l
Hr<w ~~ Htw~wt
Toes ..
'°' 769 .s• 1031 71 ..
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW YORK IAPI DK "
METALS
Today
26'
)07 2~
l10 ' "
Prtv
CllY SOI 1114 ,,,
10)1
It "
PrtV OIY 201
)19 m ,,,
' 11
.... • M 640 MW>dy & ....,.,,_ (Onty dally ...-. ..... •MI 10-tr07-. HYC-.• t004
-dOeeCI ""'
STOCKS IN THE SPOnlGHT
SYMBOLS
,~
DOW JONES AVERAGES
10 Trn tSUll
6S$1k
lr>Ou• Ttan
U!llt 0$1k
113191 12 .. 17 1731.40 1242 l7+S.ll 517.26 St• 17 SIJ.4J SfO ls+ •.Jt 13111 m.ae 130 u 11102-II.SJ
4'S 00 '" 5' "1 06 496 M+ l C11 9.679,SOO 21614,300 1.m .100
IUl6.5o00
AMERICAN LEADERS
...
('J Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, December 19, 1983
GORDO
'fl.4fi:tf!
1Hf 1W~L."f SfrZIP~
l. JV&'f PL.oTTED
AIZE ee tlJel
T~~~\tlTEO
VIA
eA"ffL.LITE
10 IHE
c;..ii-.101c.:A1C1:;
(\JMPl.JTEI<
f\?RA
Prlll-JTOU'f f
IZ-l~tt-" It;. /J
•• \K•·n :1.u
by Gus Amota
by Jim Davis
I•\ ' I ' '•' •'.. " " ,, Tl.4 !olMf4f, ... I .. ''""' 8·1 ' .. , ,, !f A111 Wi.11111 • 111 1,.,J ; ... tf l1lf•I "' t I 11
II f •I . t.l.•lt 11•1• ,, . :; ft r ., ¥1i.I '·" t J, j r .. •I • •1 I thr.1 ... , ·1ttll. 1 • ,,, "'I" I I
t I I • I "'
'• ,, '
_.. ........... '--__..
pt---' ._._'_"·-··...--... .
~ !
THE
J'\'91L\'
('IRCLS
by 8 11 Keane
Swaddling clothes ore diapers and boot ies -
stuff like that."
by Brad Anderson
'100' '1 l 1.1.1 'S
SHO~T OF BROTH ...
Pt:.\'l TS
HERE'S THE LINE I ~AVE
TO 5~' IN TME CHRISTMAS
FL A°' SEE IF I CAN
6ET IT RIG~T
{ ~ y
( '
COMING 1N10 IOWl\I FOR -rnE
HOt-WAV51 MOU~ -r:v'E?
..
•ll•'"'' .. j lrof
Bl(; (;•~ORGE
/
.f
)~
I f!'/I
/ '
by Virgil Partch (VI P)
4; •
"I ha te Mondays."
~ Tl-05£ AAE Pf.AR 'TREES,
Cft.JNtS."
fl , ••
Hank.Ke tchum
~
f'-; -\,
I .).·['
r ~
'lS niERE A P~RJ06E
IN ONE Cf 'EM ~"
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
by CharlesM Schulz
11\IE ALWAYS WONDERED
HOW ACTO~S REMEMBER
ALL TMOSE LINES ..
by Tom K Ryan
.
GOif II ON BRIDGE
BY CHARLES H ·GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF
\NSWl:RS TO BRIOG•: ~U ll
q.1 -Nt·1th1·r vuln1•ro1hlt'. II\
South you hold
J72 K !0953 + Aq762
Tht· h1dd1nl( ha' pro1•1·1·1l1•1I.
South Wot North •: .. 1 t>... f>a11N I 1~ f>H•
?
WhJ t 1111 .Hiii h11I llllW I
A. -Ev1·11 thouKh yuo .ir1· ,1
PJ''l'd hand Jnd partnrr
11111·m·d only 11n1· t11JOllind.
)'llU l'flUld l'J\11) hJVl' J 'IJlll
\'uu mu'l flJI( IJJrlnl'f , .1nd
tho· only lurnnic 11111 ) uu hJ Yt•
J' Jil11hl1· '' .i JU mp lO t hn·1·
d uh' A1n <1tht'r hid 1111 Jfl'
hJl'k tu tht· huuk' lur \1111
H1·1:Jrtllt" of v. h.11 p,1nn1·r
tl •ll'\ Ill ~I, \ llU \\ 11f li1ll<I\\
"11 h ,11um11 111 fl\' 1li.1m11ntl •
ij.2 -\, ..,11111h. 'uln1·r,1hlt
\IJU hold
·+Kiil AijlU AK!l +KJll7
rh1· t.1dd1111( h • .-11r111 < 1·1lo·d
~outh \\ e~l \orth t:a~t
I + Pa~b l'a" ~ +
?
\\'hJI oll t11on do IOU l.1k1·'
A -\ "" "" 11 h.ilr the• p11111t'
Jl D{;J: P \RkJ:R
lllAllll
~~·" t-..C AT T H!7
HQSP1"A.~ SHCJ:;I" - '
A~TER Ht$ '10..-,..EP
IN· 1...AW Ii $1""5
5Hf LA RA'T 'I :)N O
BPACE PEA~ ZE<;:,
ThA"'" s.-.e :s
$HX,-E:l Sv HE P :)AJ6H..,.ER S
! _,._,p =s
Ill lh1• p111·ll. yl'l th1•rt• "
n11t h1111( that you 1'.ttl do'
l'art111•r 1' ~o W1',1k that h1•
1•1111liln't 1•v1·n k1•1•p lht-hid
tl1r11< up1·n uvt·r your on1· rlul>
h11I. 'II how l'.111 you pu."1hly
1•x111·1·t t u rnuk1· ,1nyth1nic al
th1· thro•t• lt•v1•I, l'\pt·c•1,1lly
w h ,. n 1 o 11 r <11' t re h 111111 n
lt•a\1'' ,, l(rt•at 1h•al 1•1 h1·
d1°\lrt'd ,.,,,,
q.3 J\, South, 'uln1•r.il1IL'.
1·1111 h11hl
·+Al07 .o\JI065 KJ65'+8
·1111' b1ddin!( hJ' pn1t'l'l·th·d
:\or th •;Ht South
I • 2 I ?
\\ h,1t Jrllllll tfo I O U IJko•'
A. le I' 11 mpt1n1< lu t1·.1rh
Lt't .1 l1·"11n tor huttmic 1n ,11
th" 11·~1 1. hue lo"'lt•11·l
cluuhl•·' .tr1• wlllum .uh ,,,1hl1·
"ht•JI I HU hJ \I' ,1 hl for J1.&rl
no·r ' 'u1t, '''l'l'l'JJ lly .1t thl\
111ln•·ro1hil 11~ ll1•rt'. 111 u
.ilni"'' 1·1•rlJ111 I~ h,1\t' a
l(otnlt'. JH1''1hl.1 .1 ,l,1m "'
111ur ro·turn lrorn ,1 duuhlc ~111(hl It•· 1n,11 (f1•·11'11I 11111.
I
(-'
··. • . I I ' .WW \~
t wu h1•.tr1' I l 1' l11rn111e 1111
pJ rtno·r
q .4 -llulh vul111•r.1hl1'. ·''
South yuu hold + Aq763 6 •) Kql!74 +!IS
Th~· h1dd1n1e IHI\ µr11c•1·1•cl1·d:
North Eht South Wnt
I : JJH• I + l'ue
2 + V1u 2 / l'HM
2 ' f>1u '
Wh,1\ tlco 11111 lt11J r111v.'
A.-\\'1• kno-. .ill .1hout 1111•
1h1·11ry ch.11 .111 11111·n1nl( h11I
l.1r1111( .10 op1·nmic l11d 'huuld
pr111lt11·1• )(olllll', hut l hi' h.ind
'' ,10 1·\11·11t111n, h1•1·,1uw ul
1h1 uh'""" rn1,f11 111'1uul111
I he· .1111l111n "11111-\lllJ ,1rt· .it .1
,,lit II'\ 1•1 J',I', \\ h1•rt• lfll
11111 ,,,.,, ....... 1.1k1· lrllk' .11
n11 crum p'
Q.5 -llolh \\1l1wr.1hlt'. ·''
"0111 h \ 1111 hold
,. AJ 1002 .o\Q6 .o\5 + Kiil
·1 h1· h11ltlinK h.1, pr1>r1·1•d1•1l
'-outh Wht :'\orth t:ut
I • P•~~ 2 l'us
.1 'ff l'n• 4 \ T l'as"
Wh .1t ,1rl111n du you t1tlt1•!
A. -F1nt. Wl' 11r1·,um1· that
you n·,tl111• that purtn1•r\
four nu trum11 hid dl>t'~ not
.1~k for ...,,., you hav1• not
y1·t .11(r1·1·d un .1 trump bUll. II
" ;1 1111;1nt1t.1l1v1• raist' 1n nlJ
trump. 11,k ml( you Lo bid a
,1,m1 11 you huvt' m;iKimum
vJlu1·' for your 1ump. You
don't, \0 jl.I\'
Q.6 -A' South. vulru•rJlile •
you hull!
+113 9 • 74 +KQ1096542
l'.irt 1wr opt·n'> t h1• h1ddinl(
with 11n1• n11 trump Wh11l do
~ lllJ fl'\J.lOntl I
.o\.-Wt> .ir1· .1hou1 to ,hJttl'r
.ill t h1• 11fu,1un' of t ho)e ,.,ho
rnun11·d pu1nh .ind dt-r1ded
lo h11I '11nw numbtr of dubs
\\ ,. 1fouht th.it p.1rtnl'r rJn
h.l\t' 1•n1111ich runtrob lo
m.1k•· 11 cr11k' """'hi•· .it
11\t duh' lfo,.1·q•r.11ur dub -
'111t ,h1111lcl 11rod1u 1• ,ufflru•nl
trwk' 111 1(1\1' p.1rtn1·r ,1 >hotP
.11 111111• tr1rk' on an\ h.1nd
)(111111 1·1111111(h tu 0111·n 11nl' 1111
lr1m111, '"our dw11·1· '' thn·1·
1111 I r11111p
by Harold Le Ooux
~ D10N"'" HAVE TO i ELL ME I IT~·
,\;AS 'OU RA-YM('1'.0' THATS W~
YOU PHONED L AST NIGHT AND • :·
A$1".EC' ME TO LIE :N CASE I :
\/\AS 0UE$TIOUEO B'o THE !
POLICE ~ f
: • • I
I
I J I ••
by Jeff MacNEif~
--~_..;;......--~~~~--..-...-~~--r----a( ~ ~
~ ~~
fOR BETTER OR t'OR "URSE
:., " \
01 "1E.Ar TO
BP~Y 1Hf-Ar ~i:.L, t1F\vvY ! 11 WAS
Art ACCICA:NI
J'l '" \ "l'\Kt:RBt:A '\
1 OON'i MINO ('(IOONU(,Hi1NG
AND 5€.UJN() CHR1517YlAS
TREE.? ..
Dll.S'90Ck
-.
C.1_,, (;'; --1.. .,L /~ ?
f '../ir ... ...t.ll'.l ll: 11 ilWt'W I
11 SAi~,
•· uRuE.tn 1
OPf.N
\YiME.OIAfE.L. i ~,,
by Kevin F a~n
61 ... £
Mt
51~Et4&fll
~ by Lynn Johns*'1
' ....... --~ •• PtEA3E DONT B~ MAD ;:.
AT ME, DADDY l'M ~
$AD ENQJGH ~· AL~C1fl ·'
~ ~f(;UlDN1i ! 1HIS
IV'OF<'~ING ON Tu I A kACi.>
'>'\I() 1wrr HA1~ WEPE
COMIN& 8Atr IN ! ·-,,,J) ,,, r. ~~-
~ ..
. -· •' W 1/b;;ia.W;.~
-------,---------------------------------------~~---
Beat th~ 'Holiday
Shopping Hassle •••
Have fun ~Save
Money •••
••• at the SWAP MEET!
...
variety of gift
posslbllltles.
some that can
be found only
at the O range
County Fair-
grounds Swap
Meet Enjoy after
Christmas P.rlces
before Christmas
this year, when
you do your
shopplf'!g at the
ORANGE COUNTY
FAIRGROUNDS
SWAP MEET.A
It's all there .•. everythlng ••• und er the sunl ~
N~pars.
When the name of the game Is frequency
When you need higher advertising frequency. newspapers (jfer advantages
over less flexible media. It's easy to trade off ad size fa more frequency In
newspapers. Smaller space con generate big impact If your aeatlve Is good.
/i.r'td your creative is good. right? For more. call Mac Morris. vice president.
National Soles. New-spoper Advertising Bureau. (212) 557-1865 Or call your local
n6YJSPOper representative.
• '
II
'
Orange Coast DAILY PILO r /Mond y, Oeceml)er 1~ 1983
DIATH NOTICIS PtJBllC NOTfCE MllC NOTICE NSl.IC NOTICE
l(-Ol7M NOTICI Of INTINDID T"ANl,.11 'ICTtflOUI eu .... H
Motive of .... of 0, "' T All AL COH 0 LIC wa.-IT"Tl•NT WA Ol.t:U< ti "Ml l'r~rtJ et HYl .. AQI UCfNll UMOI" llC• TM I~ ~tO<U ere O<MQ
J I' W/\DLFICll 1'111 llllfl, ll'rlw•t• le'9 TIONI ~ AND MOP•. CAU-~111,_. M
ll-'"-""I .iwuy Ill SJll l>ll'KU, NO A 1()9951 '~ eUllNlll AHO ""'0· SIMON 0AV10 TRADING 11 1"'" In 1"-Sul*IOt Court or ,,,. Slllt 'l!HIONI COD9 Co.Kt. ~ BMctl. CA 112MO I )\,~·rnho·1 I h, I !m:l Ht•llrt'tl or c.lllomta. '"' 0111 County ol Or· ~a ~11 JONlhllll C•aig fhOmN. 11 Ar MM
,1w111·1 ol J l' W,1,llt•lj(h ••'9• SERAN SAlES CO Coutt ~ S.ach CA 92&60
Tru< kml( l'unir>Juy .il II Vt' 111 1ne meu., 01 11\t e1111e of Soc1eJ Secu11ty Numl>el wmiam Eatt Sm1tn Jr 171192 Bot·
I I DEATRICE LA VERNE WATTS ake 95·2000&82 i.t Irvine CA 11271S
Ill tlh' lru1·ktnj( tm lL'lrv UI BEA I RtCE S THOMAS. eke M1lf1ng AOOreu Thia bullnffl 11 1<onOueled oy a
:10 '''<lfl> lit• I' ,u1v1v1-cl by BEATAICE STEWART . ak• 222$E Co111 Hioow•y C0tOll•O<ll ~•IP•llMtlhlp
Im. "1h Vt'IJ W.idlt•1j(h BEATRICE s WATTS, 0.CHMO Mat. C>. 112825 . Jont1n1n TllOmH
<l•IUl(hlt•r V.ilui 11, J uym •i Notiu II ne1tby g1-..n tnat the lntlN\Oed Tr1111l1Hee'1 N•meC•I 11111 llllement w9I hied with toe
•1 1d 111~ l'111tl11·r [)(>nJltJ N unoenlgll4NI will NII •t P11vatt aele, EOWARO L VINCENT COUllty Ci.tk ol Orenge CQ<mty on ~ ~ • lo the nig11t11 11110 bell blOO.,, 1410· RONE PRESTA O.C n 11183 W~11.llt'11-(h 111 01 q(1111. hll> f;IC110 conllrtnetlon ot aalO SuperlOt Social Se<:ur ry Numoertal • ,222510
MUI Ill l:i" Sdiuvlt•i l' J oy l..ourl on 01 a ll., 1ne 23r0 01y ot 546-38· 1027 Publllhe<I Oretio• COHI Dally
u ();;(;embef 198:1. •I tne ottlc• of 535·24·461 I Pilot ~ 111 28. 19&3, J en 2, 9 n1·r ,uul h1i. th11·1· Klolll VANOENBEAG. NOTI CONWAY & AOdreas 1984
l0 hlld1t•1t. Skv. Muhnd and NEWELL 11 Golden Sho1e Ortve, 31506 Blull Onvw, Souin llguna,
Sam:inth:i J uvr1t•r vi (.'ui.ta Suna 400 Long Beach, CA 90802 CA 92877 6648-83
I I f fl Counly ol l Ot Angele., S1111w of Cell· KIND OF LICENSE(S) INTENOEO
Mt•SJ n u•u II llWl'1 '· torn1a. •II rlghl. •Ille ano Interest OI TO BE TRANSFERAEO 21.0394112 PUBllC NOTICE
dw1..it111n::. m.1y tw mudt· hi 1010 de<:ea1e<1 at tno 11me ol death Retail Package Olfule Gene111 -------------
Un1\/t'I sllV ol (\1lifnrni11 Sun and all 1he ngni, lllle and 1n1ere11 PREMISES AOORESS(ES) TO "CTITIOUI eUllNlll
I) M I I l . 11181 1118 •918ht of said dec .. Mld has WHICM THE LICENSE(S) HAS NA• ITATIMINT lt•go N It'll l'll\l'I &CQUlltO by operallon ot lew or (HAVE) BEEN ISSUED Tilt lollowlng peraon It doing
P ul rn11narv l{loh.1hil1 tat11m o1herw111e otner thi n or 1n 1ddl11on to 2229 E Cou1 Highway, Corona del bualnesa U ST A T
l'roj(IJ fll. in (<Ill' 111 [)r An 111&1 ol said decHMd, at tne 11me ol Mar CA 9262!> CHINA COAAL RE AU AN
Jn•y. Hll"'" 125 l>ll'kt'l"'llll ~t. deatn, In and 10 all the ctr1a1n real, NAME ,l,NO ADDRESS OF 1940 Herbor Blvd . Cotll Motl. C,l,
S;on l>tt·uo ~:.! IU:I l'.anlll' property sltuahtd In Ina County ol ESCROW HOLDER OR GUAAAN· 92827 S ,... Or1noe. Slit• 01 ca1110tn1a. pert1()U· TOR Ou n C Ko, 00 Bernard ' V ww M111 IUJI Y, I )ll'l'l h>I' tally described as tollowa. to-wit Grover ESC1ow C0<p 23600 ROCli· Cott• MOS&. CA 92827
llo u AuO PARCEL NO I Un1mpro..O rHI held Blvd Ste 2N El T0to CA Thia business 11 conOucteO by an
" n properly localeel on BOlaa Cn1ca ESCROW NO 6..A 198·35 lnOlvldual ESTELLA MA r: I !OW AH U Huntington Beecn. CA 1S1tus Pend· To1e1 consiOerauon to t>e paid for 0Hn C Ko
''"''" ,1w ,a \ Ot-< i·mha·r •no) ctesc1108d n IOllows tne business ano h<:enM 110 lncluO• Tn11 a111emen1 was hied with 1ne 1'11. 1 ~u·i <.!., 1 ['·· h Sh. Lots 44 45 46 47 and 46 ot Tract 1n11en1ory wnether ac1ueJ coal etll· County Clttk ol Orang• County on
" • '" 111 .,,. •1 ,,..ii • 1 t87 Se<:hon 20 Townsn1p !> Soutn mated cost 01 a noH~•ceeO Dec 16 1983 wa~ tht· l1t·l11\'l•d 111oth1•1 111 Range 11 wes1 ol Olhc1al Records amoun1)1onven1ory value $40 000 00 '233039
Fn·cl I lo\\ .11 ti ul ( 'olunibu, 01 Orange County. Cllilornta onctude<J) Publosneo O••no• Cout Daily ( >tu u l'h rh•.., l lu" .ird Si uf (Auessor s Parcel Numbe r Cash on <1epo~11 into escrow Pilot Dec t9 26 1983 J en 2 9
• . -~ • 118·2'2·04) s 10,000 00 198'1
South f,ut 1111. l lh111 Jt1d PARCEL NO 2 unimproved real Demand no1e 10 oecas/\ f8placed oy 1-~ll':Jllt•r 1\1 lluw.11 t.l ul properly at 767 1 Clay S11ee1. Hunl· cash Pr>O< to close S 140 000 00
6!>43-83
I lulltlll!(llll) (X-..it h \htl'I uf 1ng1on Beacn. Calllotnla more par· Promissory Noles 1n lavOt ot Miller
I 11 I I .1 1 li<:ulatty desc11oed as tolluw1 S50 000 00 PUBLIC NOTICE
vu ('I ffiJll 0 llultlll,IJ.IU 1'· LOI 16 OI Traci 285 as pet map IMenlOl"f S40 000 00 f"ICTtTIOUI .Ul*Ell
ln<l1.1nd. IY l(S.l11t.Jd11ld1t•n rec;or<Jed on Book 14, Page 15 Of TOlAL AMOUNT $240,00000 NAME tT'ATU.tENT
.111d :!4 g1 •·..it g1 Jllclt t11ldn·11 M1scet1aneou .. Map• records ol O<· The par11et agree tnll Int !<Oil· The tOllowing person " 00tno ~ht• \\,a:, .a lilt llll't1llJ1.•r. anoe County Callforn1a ~derat1on t0t Iha transr., or Int t>utineta u
• . W EXCEPT an undivided ' •In 1n1erest business anO tne llctnM(1) II lo ~ PERFUMES OF UDO 3412 Via
l ~ r, s MJI .th<& .i~h111gton In all Oil gas 81'\d mineral r1on11 8S paid only allef lhe Oep1r1ment ol Oporto. Ntwpor1 Beach, CA 92663
( h d pll'I , S;,aginaw. M ll'h rese1118<1 by Jotin Kno~ end Mollle Alcoholic Beverage Cont1ot has ap. Maureen Anne Oowney. 1619
1gart V1s1La1111n will ht· M on Kno• husband and wife, in 0960 proved Iha propoMO tr1n1ter The Bonntt Coone l 8fre1<e. Corona oe1
1. l.>t . 'mtx•r HI IYll'l 5 y recorded Maren 16. 1939, In OOOk pa111es also agree ano hefeln dlree1 Mar CA 92625 1 ay. 'll '· • · ' • 982. page 537 01 Olh1<1a1 Rec0tOS the abova·named 99Crow hotOer to lhia 1Nslnet1 os conducted by an
P M • Rt• 11 B 1 u ad "' a Y EXCEPl an undlVIOed ''•th Interest make payment or dlSlrlbutlon within lndlVldueJ
M o rtuary Funt·1 al M'I \ ltt·!. 1n all 011 QB! and mineral rights as a reasonable lime allet lhe oomplt· Maureen A Downey
will bt.· hl'h.I "flll'l.dav. L.11: re&eMKI by J H Stout In deeO re-lion ot the transler ot the ll1<enM 91 Tnla atalement was filed with ine '·· .11 I" '! 1 1 ·PM corded November 10. 1948. In Book provloed 1n Section 24074 of tile County Clerk ol Oreng• county on 1 t:m.,..•r ~I ::18. J .it 1727 Page 329 of Offlo111 Recoraa Calllo<nla Business a11d ProleaalOlll Oec 12 1983
},ll'lt''' B111thl0I '> At·ll Br11,1d-tAsseuor s Parcel Number Code · f232515
w :iv ChJIJl•I. l'J!>tl·r t;ury 1, 1· 190· 131 BY SERAN SALES co PubllShe<I Orange Coast Dally
( 'lt'T11i•11tl> 111 llu111111gt1111 ,~:!fE;.:.~,t!, ~~improveo real ~~a.;,~~~rts'viNCENT ~~~~ Oec 19 26, 1983 Ja11 2 9. V.,111·~ &µui.t Church, 11f Lo11~o!Tr1ct285.1A the County RONE PRESTA 11!>51·83
t 1nat111g lr1ll•r11w11\ P,1\ 1111 I Orange. Staie ol C1hlorn1a H per Transte1~s)
V1t·w Mt·morial Park Pwtl" ap re<:0tde<11n Book 14, Page 15 Published Orangll Coast OaHy Pilot ----PtJBl--IC_Ml'l_J_IC_E __ _
B . h 0 .11 B 1 DI M1scell1neous Maps. recoros 01 Dec 19, 1983 m.r 10 1 11r!. 0<.' rn.11 w.1v IH•<I Orange County 6547·83 ------------
M ortUJrv. ti l:l \I I :111 tLoca11on tClay Street Hunt· FICTITIOUI .UllNEll . lnoton Beec:n CA) NAME ITATEMEN~ ESCALA1'TE (Assessor's Parce l Number PUBLIC NOTICE Tne f0llow1no penOt1s are 00"'0
E V A N G 1:: L I N J\ L 111 t90· t41 ou11neaa as
ESl. -'LANTE I , t I PARCEL NO 4 lmptOved real NOTICE 0' WESTLEE FINANCIAL GROUP , " · '1 rt...,ll l n 11 ,ropeny known as 12()5 Seat Way, PUDOE I .ALE · tea E 17tll St . Ste IA. C0911 Mese
Costd Mt'Sd, p.is.~'<.I JW<IY Seal 8Hch Calll0tn11 more p1r11c:u· RE Loan c32o76435 CA 921127 ~"mber I ti I YK:i l:klov1-d 1111y aeK11bed as rotiO-NJ~eu ~':.~IN 8~cf ~~ ~0:1~ si!h~.~c!,.L:~~~E 9~~~7 St
mo thl•r u ( liluna F~Jl.Hlll' lot l6 Block "F' Tract. 1009• as MENT DAT£D ·~vet 1lttl 1112.. Jlmet G Wett. 168 E 17th St
o f Cost.a Mt'l><I. Mai\ l..,.Ju1~ ~ 0~:f.~~~:!~n = 1~3,:.8g1~ UNL£88 YOO TAU ACTION TO Ste IA, Coate Mesa. CA 92627
Jamt"'-"f Hunung tun !:Wadi flee of the Count" Rec:oroer ot saJd PflOT£CT YOU" "'~"TY, rT Thi• t>ulineu 19 conoucted by a ~ ' ' MAY BE IOLD AT A ll'UellC IAU. I ah s1slt'r o( AniJn<l.i Mm Jlc'S c)f County IF YOU NEED AN EXP\.ANATIOH 0-1 ptr1ner IP
Lung &•;uh .utd Al1Jc1 tu EXCEPTING THEREFROM lhal OF THE NA TU"I! 0, THE ~~:"a~1!n'e: wu hied W1tn 1ne LolL~l<IUOdU of £urnpa (.'A ~~'O::o0'~ •;.~el~:~ r::o-::i~n;=l~l~ PROCEEOtHO AQAINIT YOU, YOU County Cterl( of Orengo County on
Mrs E..-;cal:Jlltt• \\ dl> a nwm ean SHOULD CONTACT A L.AWYE... Dec 12. 1983 • . ON DECEMBER 271h, 11183, AT 'm513 bcr of S t J u,J4u11ns <..:athulil (Assessor 5 Parcel Numoe r 10·00 AM WESTERN THRln & "" c o 1 • • 43-052·201 · Publlllled "'ange 0111 e1 y Chure h and ~.I Club L.1 PAACEL NO !> Unimproved ILOAN ASSOCIATION. PLEOOEE Piiot Dec 19 26 1983. Jan 2 g
Pum1ma o f L•1:. A11~~·it-:. areal ol reel proper1y known as ~~~L ~1~~~~j~~6~:~~~rA~~ 1984 62411•83 Mas..' of l'hnstw11 ._Buril'I 111555 Coast H1gnwey Sunsel OR CASHIER'S CHECI{ (payable at
will ht: L.,·)r·bratt·d on T11t'S each, Celllornia. more parhcularly time of sale In lawlul money ol the
tluv. IJt..'\.'!'mht.·r :.W.l!IH:I ,,t 7 esctlbe<J as Unned States) AT 1111 EAST LOI 3, Block t22 ol Sunsel Be11cn l{ATELLA AVENUE, ORANGE,
l'M di St Joo4um1i. Cdthulll' s pet map recorde<I on Book 3, CALIFORNIA All RIGHT Tlll.E
('huith C.:ost<.1 Mt'l><l lnll'r •o• 39 and 40 of Miscellaneous ANO INTERE0ST IN THAT C0ERTAIN
MllC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BU81N£88
NAME STATEMENT
rllt'llt "'Ill lit• W1•dnt'l><idY, BPi, records of Orange County, NOTE ANO TAUST DEED OATEO
M. ehlorrua Au ust 13in, 1982 EXECUTED BY
The IOllowlng person is doing
but1ness 11 l:>t-c.'l'lllbl•r <!1.IY8:J .it Ill A (Assessors Parcel Number ORQ DENNIS R FRATT IN f AVOA
111 (.;ood Shl•pht•rd C:t•lll 178·516·03~ OF JOHN A MUSCH LIDO IMPORTS AN O CON-
VERSIONS. 1580 E Edinger Sulle
'R', Santa Ana. CA 92705 ctt•ry H unungton ~·.it h PAACEL NO 6 Unimproveo Said""' will be made, t>ut w11hotll
F rwnu' 111JV. t all ,at Plt'rt·1· ••eel 01 real ptoperly 81 16561 coveoant 0t warr1n1y expreat 0t 1m· Henry A Bryan. 1580 E Edlngttt
Suite 'A • S•n11 Anl CA 9270S
Thia ou11nee1 IS conoucte<I Oy an
lndMOual
oasl Hoghway Sunsel Beacn Call-0 Ille ' Ion Orolht·r~ Bt•ll Hro:itfY. ·" ornta m0te part1cu11r1y Ofl<:•loed =.::.~o~~g :0 P~~npe~
M o rtuan• on M omJ;1\' !.>..· s lbalanc;e o• 1he Nole sec:11tt0 by the 1:~:mh,.1 ·1!1 l!IH.i 1 •i PM sL°de? !~",~!~:Ju~se~~ Sec:urily Agreemen t 10 wit
Plt'rt'I' Rrotht•rs 84.'ll Brwd· Pege 39 and 40 of M•tceuaneous S24,!>46 49 1nclud1ng, U ptovideO In
Henry A 8ry111
lh•• e1a1emen1 w11 flied w11n 1he
County Cwlt ol Orange Counry on
Dec 12. 1983 M " ·1 "I "I ,..,. c I sa10 Note aovanoea. 11 any. f .... "JY m tuary ,,.L " "l •P• rec:ords of "'8"0" ovnty. 1<harges and expenHt ot the ell!Otnaa pledgee IMEL (Assessor ~ Perc:el Number WESTERN THRIFl ANO LOAN AS· MAREL. A 11\IEL. ,1 n•'>ith nt 178·516.04) SOCIATION
"23251•
Puollalled Or•llQt Cou1 Dally
Pllol Dec 19, 28 11183 Jan 2. 9
1118.<4 ctf C11runu clel M.ar, J.ld~'CI PARCEL NO 7 Unimproved BY 0 l VANOSDEL
J way Ot'\.t•rnl)l.•r I i l!IH:I arc.et ol reel prOl)8fly II 111585 ASSISTANT MANAGEA 6553·63 oa.sl Hogllwey Sunsel Beac:ft Call· RET All BANK.ING
She w as a member u1 Tht: 0tn1a mofJl p,rti<;ulerty dff(;flbe<I Put11csneoi>raT199 Coast oany Pllol
Plymouth Cangn•g<l!wmtl Lot 1 8locl< 122 01 Sunset Beach Dec t7 18 t9. 20. 21. 1983 Pllll.IC NOTICE
Church of Newport Beath I* map rec0<0fld In eooi.. 3. 11546-83 ,ICTTTIOUI 9UllN£18
Sht' IS surv1\'C'(l hv hl'r Pege 39 ano 40 of MllCetlaneoua -------------i NAME STATEMENT d au g h I e r s. Th l I m J Mapa rec;oroa of Otange County. PtJBllC NOTICE 1 The tollowfng petton 15 Oolng
H ood . d M & I , 1lll0tnta 1>u1ln•.s as arw an dry l l V, (Auuaor's Parcel Number FICmlOUl•UllNlll DAILY PLAN-IT LANDSCAPE
son J OS(.'ph A lnwl 11( San 178·!>16-05) NAME ITATIMENT SUPER GAAOENS. 2949 H Rat\.
D1t•).(u. lhr('(' grandr h1 ldren. T.,ma ol aa1e (;6Sl'l In lawiYil money The 1onowlng pet son 11 001ng dOlph St., Coat• MeN, CA 92626
ftVl' great wandt·hildrl•n : l=:~n~edp:~al~!.~ :: 1~':1= t>ul~~~I~~ DESIGNS UNLIMITED. CIJ.•::::o~ ~~~~ ~~.31122~Blrd
a nd four great. gn•at gi and ev1oenceo by note sec:urect by Mort· 2132 Ooean 01110 B1lbo1, CA lhlt bullneu 11 oonOucted by en
l'htldnm. Cravt•Sltk S('l'Vl('{'l> eoe or Trutl Deed on tile ptoperly 92661 lndlvldual
.viii bc he ld M onuav. ()(>. IO aolO Ten per 1<ent ot emou"' bid Oeore Ann Bodlnua. 2132 Oetln Jamee W HlnH 111 10 be dt()OSlted With bid Blvd . Ball>OJI. CA 92661 Thll 1ta1emen1 wae filed wllh tne
l l'mbcr 19. I 98:! :1 PM .it Pa Bids 0t otlera 10 be In 'writing Md This busln81s 11 conduc:ted by. 111 County Clerk ol Orange Counly on
c1flc View M emorial Park wlll be r~ve<I at 1ne aloresald of· individual Dec. 16, 1983.
In lwu uf fluwt•r... fam1lv rt" fl(;& al any time •It., the llrsl pybll· Debra Boo1nus fn.303I
Quests don ations tcr ·Tht· ceuon hereof and before Oata of This statement was tiled with Ille Pubtlahed O<enge Coaat Dally
Mia County Clerk ol Orano• Covnty on Piiot De<: t9. 26. 1983. J111 2. 9. P ly muuth Congr<•1<tflt1<Jl)JI Oiled 1n11 6111 day 01 Decemt>e< Dec 12. 1983 1118'4
<..:hurl·h uf Nt'WptJrt Bt>al·h 1983 65-42·83 '"2m1t S··nl'E'S \tnder th(' dlrl!l'lllln LORIE 0 WATTS end SUS,l,N L
11{ Balt1 &-1 g1•r<m·Sm1th & ~~~~!':r~t0ta 011nt Esta•• ol
Publlsned Orange Coast Dally------------
P1101 Oec 19 26 19113, Jan 2, II, Pllll.IC NOTICE
uth1ll W t>Std1H Chafl(!I. Id o.a.o.n1 1984
8551·83 ,ICTITIOUt 90 ... U
NA• ITATEMENT 646 -9371 ANOIENU"O· NOTI. CONWAY •
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery • Mortuary
Chapel • Crematory
3500 Pac1hc View Drive
Newport Beach
644.2700
McCORMICK MORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyon Rd.
LagunaBeach.Ca.92851
•9•·9415
HAAa°" LAWN·MT. OUW
Monuary • Ceme tery
Crem 11 ory 1625 Glaler Ave.
Costa Mua
S40·SSS4
PllRCI aAOTHIRI
HLL MOADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway
CoetaMeta
642·9150
I AL TZ al ROD ON
IMITH I TUTHIU.
WllTCLI,., CHUIL
•21 e. 111h s1
Coell MIH
6•6-9371
642-5678
u..
""• -~ left« •Ide 1 Qetdell IMfw °"" ong 9"ch, CA. IOI02
7t71
ttor~t) IOt Admlnltlretora
ubllthed Otange Coatt Dally Ptlol
12. 13, 19 1963 11477.83
Pta.IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS .UllNEH
NAMI ITATl!•NT
The lottowlng peraont ere ~ng
11neu as
CAllFOANIA FOREIGN PAATS.
775 w 17th Street. Cos1a Meae, CA.
2621 Celil0tn11 Coventry ltd . 775 W.
D11n1 C NOT CC The following 1>9'80tlt •re ctocng ___ ,._VDL_l __ l ____ l t>u:~ae ~~~PEA FAMILY VEN-
flCTITIOUI eUllNlll TURES 270 So Brlttot StrMI Sulla NAME ITATEMENT ' ' Tnt loflowl"" pereon II Cl"""' 201. Cott• M .... CA 112826 .... ~... Aanney E Otapet. 22 No La
l>uslnesa •• Send• South Laguna CA 112677 MARCUS CONSULTANTS. 3857 Priaelll• A Oteper, TruatM ol tne
Bf•Ch St . Ste 323. Newport BMch. Otape< Chlldren'I lrual, 22 No La
CA 92860 Sande. South Laguna. CA 92677 CeciHe M Downer, 1800 Park Till• bullneaa 11 (;()110ucte<I by 8 Newport •215. Newport Beec;h, CA llmltecl per1netlhlp 92~ butlneu 11 conducted by an Renney E Otape<, a-a.1 Part·
1ndMdual ~hll etatement w• flleO with tile Cecille M Downer c~ t O C Thia statement was filed with Ille County ,.. " O tlllQt ounty on
County Clerk of Ot11"19• County on Dec t2· 1983 Ftm1I
Dec. 12, 1983 Publlthed Orange Cout 01~
PubllShtO Orenge Cou~ ~~g~ Dec 111. 26, 1983, Jan. 2. II.
Pilot Dec 111, 28. 1983, Jan. 2, ~. 8555-83
1118'1
17th StrMI, Cott• Mell, CA 92627
Charles WllnltWSkl, Pr811dent
Tllll 1111emenl was tiled with Iha oonty Clttk of Or•noe County on __________ 8_5_57_·_831------------
12. 11183 Pllll.IC f«JTICE NSl.IC NOTICE
nm12 -----------l'ICTITIOU9 eu ... •• Pubilahed O<enge Coetl o.tly flCTITIOUI IU ... H NAm ITATIMIWT
llol Dec 18 28. 11183. J111 2. II. NA• ITATl•NT Tile fOllOwl"O l*80tl la Ootng 11184
8552·83 bu~~o:-'ng Petton la doi' buf~ ~APER CHAl'lll ABLE
RIGHT LINE RECORDS. 20711 TRUST ESTABLISHED NOVEMBER Plll.IC NOTICE W•tmlnttw Ave. Coate M .... CA. 26, 11113. Ranney E Orac>w. TruatM.
1------------192827 270 So BrltlOI Street. Suite 201.
ll'UMJC NOTICI T8try Linden ~''*· 20711 w .. 1. Cot1a Mela, CA 82829 •vmNO IC)I mwm., A,.. • Coe.. Meel. CA ~nney E Orepet, 22 No La
SMl8d IMda may be receMld 11t 92827 Sanda. SOuth l.flOlll\I, CA 92tn
lie off!C9 o4 tile City Cl«ll, 3300 Thia bu~I II c;ondUCled by Ill Th .. ~le CondUC"ted by Ml
8oulevttd. ~ 8Mcti. lndlvldual. lndlvldual
A 92te3. untR 10 00 AM. on Iha Terry Ratllllt ~ E. °'If*· TNllM
IOlh dty ol JllllUary. 1884, at wflloh Till• •••tement WU filed wttll ,,,. Thia M•latnanl .... filed with Int
1rne ano ~ well bid• enaM be CounfY CIWtc ot Or•nee Coul\ty on County c..-ot Orange COunty on
anG te.d IOr Dec 12, 1883 O.C. 12, 1983.
MIPtCW.. flOUCI ,_M '2111111
P\ltllllh9d oranoe eo..1 Dally
Piiot Dee. 19. 2t. 11113. Jen 2. 8. , .. TOW llNCI( MJMCH Publltlhed Orenge C-1 Otlty '°" A 2-ftAll ll'llMOO Pilot Dec t9, 29, 1983, Jen. 2, II,
For "'"'* lnlormellon.i._* Iha 19&4 ry Oleflt•a Otna. 11 84().226 l. 9$'°""
ANDA E ANDERSEN, CITY ClEAK1.-----------------"""!'_. __________________ ~
City ol N9wPOtt 8Mcti
bflttlled Or"Mg9 Cout 0.ffy PllOt
10, IMS
'5t1·83
NOTICE OF
-NONDtleRIMINATORY POLICY
Al TO ITUDI NTI
Put a few wor<U to work for you
Hilltop Parent Partlclpallon NW'lel')' School. 1259
VictorlA SL. Coina Me., CA. 92627 ad.o\lw awdcn-. of any r&C't, color, national and ethnic ortctn to all the
rlihta. pdv1lt'p, pl"Qlramt, and activities ~n raUy
~ or made available to atuden\a at the ac:hool. h
dow not dL'ltTlmlnatt" on w buls of r....-., color, nat.lona.1
anct tlhnk orl!Pn In admlniatr1tlon Qf ha ech.allonal
policieta, admlMIOl\I, polldes. tcholarahlp and ao.n ~
gnma, and at.h1-llc and other echool admin~
P">fll"ml.
In the Daily Plal
••
•
I ~
•
-~-----~-~-------------------.,----.------·--------
('a Oranga Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday. December 19, 1983
Telephone Service:
Monday-Fr iday
8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
Business Counter:
Monday-Friday
8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
DEADLINE
PUBLICATION DEADLINE
~londav
Tuesdav
Wednescla'
Thursda'
Frida,
~dtur<Ja,
Sunda ,.
at.
Mon.
Tue:..
Wrd
Thur,,.
h1
h 1.
CA '.\CELLATION
CO RR ECTION
11 :30 a.111 .
4:30 p.111.
1:30 '""' ·l:'W p.111
-l<W I'·"'·
3:00 fl Ill
J :OO p.rn.
&
Cancellations and c.:>r re ct ions ma
be made on sa me deadlines as
above. Please ask for a cancellat ion
number when cancelling yo ur ad.
ERRORS:
Check your ad daily and report
errors immediatel y. The DAILY
PILOT assumes liabilit y for the fir5.I
incorrect ir.sertion cnly.
CLASSIFIED 642-5678
-.-:---..----.....__1 ...... ler a.It ...... Vafpa!aW •· ..... UafuaW... Aautaell, Vat. ~---....... -~~' lMI L11au .... ~ 1041 ...... 2102 Imm• 2244 c.... ..... ~
INI lllT 1fU. 1 Br, yrty, 5550 3 Br 2'"1 Ba Oeerll•ld H50/mo. 2 Bi 2
lelllll VIEW Mt•EI
SHt,IOO
Newpon Beaon country
as1a1e11 Almost 11111 acre
surrounded by gorgeous
mature trees. Poot, Spa,
GuebOI • Brs. 2'~Baa.
t>eaullfully deeOf'ated An
incredible p1operty
144-tOtO
WEFIHT Shall be lllled 1horlly 2 Br w/frpl, 1blk10 bell twnhm, avail. mid Jan Townhouee. pool, SHO 000 Oc.anfront hm Walk to S650 S9001mo. Inga, egt No oover9d patklng.
' town. R-2 101 $700,000. Ell.c condo. Npt Creal, fee 788-7898 288 E. 18th St . The best buy on PIC· I 3 B s 1200 turesque Cherry Lak•I $525K aasum, owner will I mmac. r HOME FOR RENT TIL ls•t HJ-11
Rambling ra11ch llyla fin l'45K Call Farrell •••tr I Wleftr ltvlne 3 Bdrm $825 Gar·
nome wllh graas rolling 7l'4-973·1191• •941-8709 ltef1l1 age and fenced yard 1~~ ~~.2 ~;6s171e:
down 10 the w111er A4 l!Wftrl ltacll t JAOOlllUln Kldundpet10K.Ag1 no 5,.6•8985,831•8117 Bdrma & lamlly rm _ I 1o1a•Ut tee 863.0755.
lantasuc value. SH,000 Pl P -l•flT
per year Income from 714/Ul·tlU
tlleH true pride of own-WESTCLIFF 3br, den, wl d,
erahlp unlta N-root. refrlg . gardener $1100
bullt-lne, lrplc Seller mo reler's req 675-3008 take 1 lookl 759-1501
CLEAN/5 yre old 3 e
2ba $895. DIW.
Pa11o $695 Agt 5-46-~
Cozy 2 Br 1 Ba, Wat•r
11ove & DIW Incl
Dogs. ~9().$510, .+ I lalMI 648-8752, 10-8PM Ml~•ll Ptaia1al1 2207 Eaatstde 1 Br amalt
3 Br 2 Be, 113 e. Balboa IE 11 H OllllTll&S cozy wllh Iota 01 nat
.. ~ .. ~ ........ B t S 1 3 5 O I mo . Brighi. a tr•y. 3 bd wood $395 851-952
---1-879-5991 townhoute, n-carpet, East-Side townhouM Ddebout 2 Ct1t1 •na 2224 ~ pamt, Iota of e11tru bd, 1 ba. patio. c111 Bay~ Beach 5 IEDROOMS &UILm ITW.JI 2 6d. 1 ba, carpo11. dean s JJ95 ag1 • S600 631-7900 Red Estate $111,100 Newpon Crest model per-$600/mo 351 Bay St. IU-IH4 • E aide 2 Br, DIW, ga
Mesa Verde least eK-feel 3 Br 2'1\ Ba condo 64'4·7269 ~oodbrldga. buut1ful cpl, paJnl ale No CAMEO MHiMUIDS pensive• Newly painted wlwel oar. lorm11 dining Ktds & Pet lovln'4 + bonvs l•k• front. 5 Br 3 Ba 3 car S• 75/mo. 111 & I
Cheerful "U" shaped lour and newly carpa1•d I rm & lrplc Naalled in rm upgrades galore great garage, 2 lrplc1, elr cond MC & cleaning 5-48~
bedrooms Bulll around a Huge 5 bedrooms. 3 qulellocallon near pool & area ullls PAIO $395 ~ Sl700lmo 551•2645 E aide clean quiet 1enn11 Owner mu11 move --· · · delightful custom pool baths large IMng room. now PrlOe redUC'KI from $50 security lee La~HI leac~ 241 2br houte, gar, ~
Huge living room with country kitchen over-1179 900 10 $l '49 900 537-5027 AR H BEACH HEIGHTS· share pool $650 mo, cozy loreplaoe The decor looks tamlly area and · . · 1 -----· pets mgr 2'453-B Ort ts In restful muled tones rear yard Tile best buy 1nl wl terms Won t last Pr n EASTSIDE Area's finest 3 BDRM, 3ba, $I 1001mo. · ~
JUST REDUCED $21.000 Mesa Verde Call now only Call Patrick Tenore s Pac Io us 4 • 2 '494-9453 Owner Frpl pool prvt Pl
NOW 13'49 000 5'46-23 l3 760-8702 Agl largecountry kitchen O dahwahr X-lg 2 Br
· Back Bay fi;er upper. by breakfast nook custom La1aa1 Billa 5 East11de $610 557-21 131-1300 ownr 3 Br 2 ba decor workshop garage HOME FOR RENT ---
S 132.000, s,'.na11 dn' gardener & ullls PAID Laguna Hiiia •Bdrm. 2flt IUTAITlll
, 621-7103 or 6"6-'4631 S5'45 ~ $50 security lee Ba. & 1000. Fenc.d yard 1 Br. 1 Bii all bit-Ina. It 00 •• ,,.Y Cllll• 537-5027 & garage. Kids & peta t .. _ '" BEST BUY SSOOO DOWN welcoma. 883 -07~5 rm, car por ' nr .,..,ac B~:'!!1~n~a~~ZJ 11e;:;,:. IEW LllTlllll 3BR Eastblutt Condo s;~~. c~:_ Ccat.!1~~s 2~~ Agent. no lee. ahop1'31~5~~~· St.
THE REAL
ESTATILRS
crackling fireplace tn a P&nlhouse unit Golf S 155•000 (21315•1·•4160 Hrs. fncd yd, uaed brick, L Ii I 4 5 Tll • f 142 11
lovely Huntington Beacn course. mountain and Ill OUYll·IY IWIEI garage, gdnr. 2218-A l(•H 1at A I• •
nelghbornood Pr teed City lights views from all 11.;. ll!led rate 30 yrs Pl11cenll11. 6'45-2566 2911 2ba cond o lg •PHLllH art
right 81 $139 .900 rooms. 2 Br and den M~naco with .best GC Eslde charm 2 Br 1 Ba. 07ar5~op97n9r7,lrf}2c:8S88i°almo, 1 Br, lrg rma. crpts/d
751-3191 Many. many upgrades view 1'4 Rue Vlllars "-51 loc. Aua·11. •"""Imo. 6 . -renge. No pell S3E $205.000 Ask for Marilyn """ • ..,..,, 73 68291"•2 731 C:::.SELECT Bulkley6'44-7020 OpenWknds 8-40-1538 No pets. 751-3898 •i11ita Vi&t . 7 Agl 1· -•
.... PROPERTIES u•t IE&L ESTATE 11-UW llflt E.llde. clean. quiet & coay HOMES ~R RENT "LIKE BRAND N
0. U .. lllE 21>f. gar. yard. snared Minton Viejo 3 & • Bedrm. Spanlllng 1 Bdrm I
1022 1 $650 o no pets $800-$850. Gar-oat and $445. 2 Bdrm from ~ FOii TIE C.rtH ••I Jllar Enjoy Lido Isles private poo 2'45l-B "hr'ange Ave. fenced yards. Kids & pets u1111 pd. pool. garag1 ln1t1 ftr Salt j• ..... ltr Salt liiiimiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiii t>eacn.a. ciubnouse and mgr OK Ag1 No tee pe11 1.;;:;.;:;~-....-------WH flllll J M ,,.. •-Ni tennis wJ\lle living Jn tbla • TINY HIDEAWAY • 863-0755 30 1 Avocado. 6"2·9 C..eral 1112 Gneral 1112 Juat reduced 10 a tow .,....,., versallle home. Bright for quiet single. 1 bdrm, _ Uf 241 w Wiiton 631 :::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iii S 137 .9001 A specious 2 PflHCT LIOITill and airy with remodeled den. stove. trig. No P•ta. l~rt ltac~ 2-
LI .. ISLE story, • Bdrm, 2'" batll lt4Ht4 ft S41t,OOO kitchen and baths and 1"91111 paint. carpel, drapes. 21)(.2 ba duplex. WI O. lrg 2 Br, 1 b• Wlslde
home with formal dln1r19 5 Bdrma, 3 batns. Includes bay view lrom living rm,• All utllltles pd. ~50/mo. frplc. huge patio Sl9J>l IO lndry rm Avall 11
Traditional 3 Br, 3Yl Ba. Bayfront, pier &
float for 65' boat. Priced to .ell $1,250,000.
lllVllE TEllLUCE
Op1:n 1-5. 1833 Galatea Terra<.'('
Panoram1<." bay & Ol't'an vie w fro!11 ~ Br. 4 Ba
pauu. pool home Prune loc:auon. $775.000
VISTA Ill Ull IAYFllO
:Fabulous bay & mountain view. 1 Bdrm, 1 Ba.
condo co-op. Lowest priced at $295,000.
IAYSllE PUCE IAYFlllO
Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 br. 2 ba up; 2 br.
2 ba dn. 2 boat spares.'Reduced-$1,500,000.
PElllllU llME ICWFllllT ! OcoeCVl & jetty views Mannt> room. 4 bdnn. 3
1 bath. :r;oo :.q ft -I car parkinR $1,285,000
FllllWIS UICI llLL TIP
New 4 br, 4 ~ ba, custom French Nonna.ndy
Est.ate 1.2 prime acre hilltop. Now $995.000
ClllOUll CAYS IAffllllT
Coronado Island cust. bayfront lot. 85' boat
deek. P~avaih-Now '370,000 w /trade.
UlllWIW .. E
Near new 4 bdnn. 4 bath. lake view. 3500 aq.
fl. $440,000. Will trade for a local property.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Boy"cl"D''"' ~~ K 61', 6161
Oteo~·o ........ , o• .....
tCNr Ktct•b'-d _,,d, bl o---o • ., .. fOYf' ..... o~ ...0-01 I FIHTOY I I I I' I I THAC H I
.... ••••
I ( A Y U S I • N••VhOO• 111•1n9 to other I .... ·_._1 __.l__.l_1
.... 1 .......... : :=:. =-~ =;
......-------, 111 .. - -
1 1 ._ _l.._H_.El._'o .... lo_, o ..... l_r .... l _.I 0 .;7.".'.; ::-...:~!..":v O:::
--• -- -~ f0.. ci. ... lclcl ....... •.o ..... > t:..-~-
Use A1tllllf Ad lervlct
when plocing your Qd ... o Qoily
Pilot ad number will appear In
your ad ... we take messoves 2-'
hours o day ... yo\J coll in at your
convenience during office hours
and get the response• to your ad
. . . this service is only SS per
week. For more Information and
to place your od coll 6'2-5678.
& separ91e famlty room. master suite and large Br Include very specious • • 1111111 be OpeA Sunday bell. So406 Neptune $900 S5251mo 6"5·6625
Great Costa Mesa lo-fam ily room and separate guHI suit•. 2111EUe1 141-1111 962-4163,(213)379-5015 Lrg 3 Br 2 Be u cation In excellent ne~h-off-street parking tor up 1535.000 or fOf leate et ,..---=-~--=-=--::-:-:-:----------l>Of'll<>Od Hurry on this 10 7 cars Only 4 doors S 18001mo. Barbara Aune l uJC Condo, 2 Br. 2'n ba. 3-'4 Br, 2'n ba, 2 bloGkS to enclsd garage, MH
one 6"6-7171 lrom the entrance 10 6"'4-&200 frptc, ale, pV1 yd. dbl at· t>eaeh, cl<>M to pool & Mar area $5851mo
Main a.aon. tach gar $900. 643-2289 t9"nl1 962-e683 pets 751-9905 Iv m
THE REAL
ESTATILRS
1'4-1211 NEAR occ. beaut Mesa N-port Shor• NEWL y DECORA T
det Ma.r 5 Br. 3 be, 2 atty. UIOmYI lllPLE 2 Br w/ger. crpts, ~~~!Iii•• $1200/mo. 851-9020 paid 636-4120 1-
• • 1. ·-~·. W · W&ITTI LUSE t567' A"Orange ~• m .Ti'film Nr SC Plaza 3 Br 2 Ba, tiome on bayfront or ------'""'"-t I LWl/IPTlll formal din. good cond. nearby, prefer 3 Br, 2 Ba, Nice 1 Br close to
Gorgeo..i• remodeled 3 Br I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiUiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 2-llry •Br 3ba. lam rm $985/mo. 5'45-• 731 dbl gar. Reaponalble. No ping. no pets S• 2Ba pool home with 11 t -lld t 6'46-68"2 A••t•• tEL M&• -• home. ga • ouardeo Grab this quality 3 Bdrm 2 ch ren. no P• •· gourmet kitchen and apa -" --111"WI T I I ,. oo 759 ""37 ----Assume 10.75% loan. 2 Twobdrmunlladuple11ln comm enn *· poo · Ba dbl gar newer kltch 851-v'4 • ·v• PALM MESA APT
ASlllng $252.000 Owner Corona del Mar dplJC. Is Jacunl. $3'49.500 w/5"1. kids pets $685 details UIOITIYE OllPll 1 Br $4601mo 01110 moU~ted. make an otter deflnltely the best buy In dn or S l800lmo · 16 10 12 539-6190 BEST lee 9-• 1561 Mesa Or mos IN opt) Want IOIMMhomeln N.B A n a H. I g,, 631· 370 CdM Un11s1ngoodcond •t1E•s•UL.n $450 2 Bdrm family spot or CdM. No chlldr9" or 71,.15,.6•9860 & owner is very anxious " " " n-ly painted crpts wlw pets 760-12'48
TJUDITIO\,\L
RL\l.TY
TllTUHOl llllE
Upgraded executi ve
condo 2 Bdrm 2'h Ba &
sludy Marble ltreplace.
Ille entry. m1n1 blinds.
comm pool. 1enn1s
Close 10 beaches
M o tTva iecr-se-11e
$167,500 Call Fred
Poolan. 75M100
GE 1s9~9100
~ . . . . . ..
losell $269,500 171-2111 11urry' 539-6190 BEST ----S11ntaAnaHgta 1 Br IHEIS llUl n 675-3311 Evl Wknds lee Have 23 renllls avail Pell 2 Br 2 Ba $600 No
OK From $800-$2500 5•5-•855 171-2111 PRICE GOING UP• Westside SEE THIS ONEt Call 760-8702. agl 675-3311 EveslWknds soon to include land Pres-2 Br 1 Ba enclS<l gar. wld -----LUX CONDO l•--------1 llglOus Sea-nd • Bdrm room. rrpll dr~ patlO LWE/IPTlll Walk 10 SC PlaZa
Now only $239 500 no pets S5501mo • sec 2 stry •BR 3ba. l1mtly rm FrplC, ale. MCUrlty, ICW I JETTY VIEW GOLDEN PROPERTIES 5•8-54"2, 770-5829 tiome Gate guarded PYI club wllennls
200 Blk '40' tot 3Br • den. 752-1589 community T9nnls, pool, pools. 1ac. saunas.
3ba yard, compl relurb QUICK SALE Would you ralhef nave a jacuzzi $3'49,500 wl5% 1 Br studio. s
$'4'49,900 217 Jasmine house? Check lllls dn or $1800/mo (6 to 12 675-'4063 Open Sal/Sun t-5 Versailles Condo appro11 charm n 1 Bdrm wl mlero 1 / )
0wnr1ag1 673-5551 S6.000 down Price wave crpts utlls pd $375 mos 99 opt STUNNING lrg 1 Br
s1a.ooo c au s..2-1183 539-6190 BEST tee IMEll IUln den apt S•25 poo1
Ct1t1 lltu 1024 S IEWAll I Dua Peiat 2 75~~~i~Uknds.. area. 710 w 18th
1 r uppet near rn., 11ome 1s the t>es1 t:n.ty * * each House nr Plllll"'
S.C Plaza. pool, tennis Nwpl Bell" Largest • Br Harbor 3 Br 2 a. bit-Ina LIDO ISLAND 4 brl3ba nr Lrg 1 Br wl lo'1,
Cal Vets assume 8'/• mOdel with ocean "'9W, S · 99-sOS6 · beach. avail Jen. S 1800. Jae. ulil rm. pv1 21312t5-055t pool spa. tennis. Priced gar, 750· 4 107 Via Koron. 873-5386 bltns. lrplc $750
28r 2,J\o Ba Townllouse. over $70.000 below mar-3 Br. 2 ba coodo, Pl NEWPORT CREST pets 2 15 I Pa
ket Al only $359,000 (I Niguel Pool. tennis. Incl ,. Br. 2,J\o Ba, lam rm, din 63 1-6107, 8~5.066
pool. spa, outd1 oor bbq recently sold the smalMlsl wl d. frig. $775. '492-6700 rm, pool, tennis & lee THE GABLES 2Br Financing le!l lb le model witll NO .,_ for
2 642-81 5 7 $360.000I) Ttlra absolute El Ttrt I 11251mo. 875-5788 w/gar $585 crpll d
llSOUTE STULll bargain plus a gorgeous 2 bd. 1'h ba deMe condo IEWPllT 1111m b1tlns4~i·~cf.~1:!i~a
Newpor1 Crest model per-home certainly will not wl pool. S650l mo dayt 2 bd. 2 ba. newly decor· 636·'4120 call 1-5P
feet 3 Br 2'h Ba condo last. To ... call Petrick 786-527", 5'4'4-3856 eves ated. trplc. g1r909, utlls
wlwel bar formal dining Tenore 760•8702 Agl. F t • Included. $9001mo. No VIEW OF. OCEA
rm & frpic Nestled In Sharp & Clean 3000 aq f1 ••v•1•1••
2
... u pets. 759-919'4 2 Br. 2'>\o Ba Twn1111. r(
le I II I& 5 d 3b I t I -...,... Iraan comp lrplc. qu 1 oca on near poo b . a. gm rm w poo -;z Yearly 2 Bre on the beach lights $795 s..2.78( tennis Ownet mull move lbl. 2 lrpl. aee the 60 3 Br. 2 ba Condo. Cover8d enclsd gar kids/pets __ · __ _
now Price reduced from Klras, under price $200K enclosed pallO & garage. $600 many others Nwprt
TlllREIMl ILEI $179.900 10 $149.900 Lltlmbeer Ally 549-2330 $6251mo 963-8805 rentals 539-6190 BEST ..,..~Bii
lnverneu model, • Bdrm. w/terms Won't last Prtn WE-Oliff AllU StyllSh 3 Br 2 Ba muttl levet Riiy lae ~-u pert only Call PatrlCk Tenore •• llome dbl ger $700 kids BHulllully 1andsc1
2 llreplaces. ect con-760-8702 Agt .. BDRM, 2BA. Spa RV pets . o thers avall ...... Uafaral1L.. garden apta. POOi & dltlon. commty tennis. --PRICE REDUCED TO • • p to I k N
pool.spa $3'49000 HIWIHS11t,t00 $21 4.000 119Vo1st TD ~39-6190BESTRltyfee lalMI B:~h•dec I 0
U,._,l()UI: t1() ... l.:S College Pk. cul de sac. 4 1100 Essex l ane (Nr 17111 Jump tor Joy! Bach lllad,..-HM 1 Bdrm
Realiora. 675-6000 ~·/y ~;:~~~f:6?*' & Dover) 5'48-90'43 bungalow 1295 fr .. u1111 BAVFRONT Smail StUdlo 131 E 18th 646-
-------• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--faceat frtJ--llH 53M190 BEST Alty fae ullls pd Quiet. empl sgl 161 E 18th 842-
WAJEllfllOIT WTSIH 11 ""' ••••• lffcll WI $4501mo yrly 673-3800 WllTWE YILLM
Su.SET YIEWSI Prime Npt Ben r•ntal 2 Bdrm hM wl gerage. ta •na 24 2 Br pool, apa, o• 1 t•• HnllE property located near Downtown H.B. Lge ywd, avail lndry rm. no S.autttul lakefront condo G11·r909 & Alley Access OoverlWellclln Whlnd gr ea 1 1 or I em II y. •Studio nr SC Plaza SA car por1
with over-the-lake wood 117,IOO wutclifl shopping S5751mo Agt 536-3347. t91lnle pool spa M95 No 2 Br 1'1• Ba $555-S
deck Bui Woodbridge I I C .alt IM.. center S 1,600,000 RENT Till YOURS! pets. 752-5822 lllnt decor Tll •1.. 141• location. Professionally •J 0 tr• • "' •
dacorlled 2 Bdrm. 2 bath 141· 7721 ~·:~ss av~la ~ou~=~ ~~ Gki~~ ~~a;t i::'a~ l*u139t.51lemoa.cla9ach, 12Br40& WESTSllE
with formal dining. TlllS IPY1u•• w•-6'45 6646 "' d • ..... ~ tiome 11 1mmacuta1e1 -· 1' • dining des'Vner ecor unlurn, jac. 18992 Florida • _,.
Prlc9d at only $265.0001 Beaut 5 bdrm home In •·Pie• on Lynn SI. HB 5 thruoul large master 842.2834I or 8'42-3172 New 3 Br 1'"1 .
6'46-717 t Spyglass. $530,000 Can yr s n ew S 3 1 O K suite solar heated pool & OIW. bit-Ina. kids O
move In w/mlnlmum dn Ownr/blt.r 963-2'422 spa Very El terms $515 pets, 1mm9d. occupj
THE REAL
ESTATERS
pymt. Wiii carry note • SSO MC:Urlty IM $8751mo 880 Centi I favorable way lmmed 537-5027 For appt 645-8646
escrow 8341-t 157 Denise B 9 2 f ~--I lllTS 3 yr~.2 D8Jw. C:.~r ~=: 673-6336-642-9666 RHt. laac~
1040 Super elghtplex. Heh with cut-de-sac Maonoll• a 3 Br condo. Ne: paint Sell things fNI with Dally Baat. laacll 3 Bdrm, 2,J\o ba, doul>Mi Garfield, (avall. ltt4/&4). Separate Bacn.1or unit. off new drapes, poo1. s
Piiot Want Ade. VtUAOE CT CONDO garage Copulld tit con-$7501mo. 963-5706 pool. par1 of 'flrlv real-11va11 now. 786-8881
For Ad Action
Cal a
Daiy Plot
AD·VISOR
642-5678
"'-·-·-. ..111 II I dent• In Harbor IJI-- ---wltennl• • r•cquet ball dos vw.-.., nenoe a HA~ Av•ll now. ldHI S.aut 2Br 1Ba 1 courts 2Br. 2 '>\o be. 12h% Super 1n11Ht-1575 '48drmkldalpetsotc ....... n 1 ,_ 1..,.
$129 900 Bk ,..., 8377 merit. Uklng $725,000 rare abOCS. wont last am l0r etudent. 759-0530 frpc. pet..,, vau '""
' r ,,.,... CALL BILL COTE lee 539-&190 BEST Ally -Ing. bltlns, •ncl gar
I I L--a..2 A,.rlatat1, Val. erea nr Hunt H •••• .,_., -HOMES FOR RENT S&25, 8'46-0738
H~t:~~~ t~~-l9~0· .,... • •• ., 1111 CIOM to bUCh 2 Bf. "II LOllY Fenced yards a oar-. 2 bd. 2 61. &n. trpiC. 2 car atov•. detiwlhr. d 80 ft on Main Channel __.... 1575/ 536-41 Two llOfY celling In IMng Kld9 & pell ...-coma. gar. atep1 to bHch, A11all gar mo.
room,3.bedrooml. 2',., 8$3-()768. A,gent. no.... rmm•dl $I 2001mo o.luH 3 BR 2"' BA
t>ath1. Muter bedroom ~25 pkll tlouM r«ltll 851-8767 new lrptc WO hkup
hH l.CUZZI. NUna and 1--------·1 OCMtl ctoM IOOlt klda 3BR 28A Ue>oer Out*•. try bltnl encl gar lg llrepfao. Calltorappt. ,..mll... peta can ~100 BEST 11tnt loc .. 11200. Chrla. etc H75 545-3~
,.. ________ ,11•300•000· 40 unit apt. complex ... 85t-10'44 OI' 976-8345 IMMEO CUPANC
.._ IULn 1111/land a P"""ft• to bulld c1ro1t thll a ca11 1aa1 flat ta a 2 IA unite. l30C>-
"I NW If
·~·· 0.11, "''°'· ..
I ttt.i•~ •1111 rallo
tk Ont 4•1 .. c1 .. tct
It th• ·-" 4•1 ,., 111~ ptk• f •••ttd. I
Weaa41etlie
Rtt»tn ht ••I el
., tall. t• .. .,_
ti.. o.n, r1i.t.
111·1• eddltlonal 35 uniu for a M10 t8k• 2 Bdrm. avell Fully draped/q>t'd,
total ol 75 ~•. NMr 1· 1 othefe rMdy now. t •· 1 Ba, 1920 Wlltace, Ory hlu.191, ~ ~h eo.t1 PINa. ~ 53M 190 BEST tee ~.quiet, Cl9en M20. For detllla ~47
prov.d by the Gtty of 8 1., r a Mg mt Co IUWI• COiia MtM. Print. onty I 641-132'4 DEllE n.-d c.11 644-7424 Bkr. 1 to S il&me UfA\208. -11-=--k . 1-Ba..-. pe_,.tlo-.~,.,,.&,.,...mo-. YILUll
••
Olis Leh .am lnclch utile. Ag•nt New 1 & 2 1ctrm 1u H ~ -~ "'5·*3 apt• In 14 plane. t • • Bdrm .• 3 ba Kentlnoton BMik Bey IOI, ~ ownr. a sor 1 Br. ts. pool, apa. o•r-ff'Ol'I\ '575. 2 Bdfm fl
MOdel Lovely upgredft. 7.000IQft,leO. caah. alty 8QLNo oeta. Call bfr e. MTS. Towntioute fl wood decfclng. nloiil land-&2MI03 Of'94Mt3., &4s.MT1 $739 + poola, t :C::'ngpo~~" t~n~~ D.'JI~ ii.II 788-1172 1 Ir w/poo1, "400tmo. ::i::"i'::.~
• 1237,500 Prlva11r;;;;"MM1101M; JffO ctep. 142·1101, From tan ""' .r.n · 3 bd flCln'll "' NOi W.ftH Cklw NOl'O\ on
I .-, He+Qht1. lo11IO,OOO. Mo i if; .. llWIO ,_.1o ~'edden and a 1or 1 .... ,.... ... 2-1121 MIO~Drtw ~no.-•""'"'° ~,edd«I 10 8
eolty I .... JI Mwllfl .::. '* s a • ,211 or ~.1..,. ~,~,J,_;,.: o
786-1172 "'°"'1';Pum.18flll00 la~ pool/ .. fnUCfl patio, no pete, lndry lhidlo .,c, lt<M & I ow 4 • Maoo.17S-14" morw Jtll muet ... '*'°"' lllall. CtPtll<kP9. W.ter a 53M tlO IUT..,.... U4 kMtd Ml-4I06 .-.13HIMo. M0-1 HaW"e ~ rMd t04ey'e --Ci11.mN Aelt? If ftCM, New 2 bt, I b&. dtlte oer. I Ir, 1 ba, uy>tltalra, t W• to IMedl ,_..,. ........ _. 1rS*-NM\ to UCI, MIO t4IO/f'l'O 54.._.Ut Of 400 all ullla In .....,. ~....,. mo..._........, 21s-&M.,S2tt IM-4637
"
•
--·-._....... -it.
Ornnge Coast OAtLV PILOT/Monday. December 19, 1983 U~
""rtiaia1 l1tt1 Acoutiul C11r•try £Joc1rlc1l Ga1•eal11
Ctilia11 1 ·E·.-p .. e_11_c_a ... ,-pen-t-,y-s_e_r_v-1c-• El ECTA 1c1 AN P1 Iced 1--1-,-Lo_w .. R_A_TI:_s_ss __
laaUa1
LT HAULING -MOVING
Chrlatmu and Applla~
dellve<te• Jon $45-81112
1 .... CltHi•1 1.•-•-'•-'-''·'-----"!'• .. •• ... clll!•l,.1 ... ~ .. lI..J,..'•-W,..1• .. ~ ... 1 .. T,.r.,r..,l•.•""'' ... • .. •• ... 'P"'u __ _ HouHcleanlng, l/actt'll 12 YRS EXP rm emlll, NEWPORT.& XiRPOAf TyplngtWord P1ouulng
$2.17 Pef day 1--,.-0-ll•D•a•y·s·P-E_C_t_•_L_'"_ Aep.111 Aemod Addll1<>ns right flee es11m1le on Tree tilm & removal, gen
" • • Doors etc 548-4960 large or small lobs Lie clean-ups 564-7017 Apia EJip'd. !Mpendtble My prK:es ere emalll 3857 Blrch (cor Quall) All butlt'lCIH, !IGhOOI & pet·
Own Ilana 850-3263 650-64 77 Ron 11 OFF wtlh ed 549-2287 10n11.I 11w1ec11 85 1 10• I
Tnat s ALL you pay for
3 line&. JO 1.hly~
RESPRAYS 847·7901 396621 673·0359
a L 1 REMODELING Allphll!MIS YARD MAIN. CLEAN·UP nil•• I Also cus1om cab111e1s 18 ELECTRICIAN 20 yrs ••P Tree Trim & Hauling
Hauling Col 11uden1, trg
1ruc1c Reas Bch vie, CdM
Thank you 759-1936 Corl
111 .... ,, CORONA DEL MAR Widow Clt1ala1
-e""R"1c•k" ... •e"'toc-"'R-··fl'l'1L"!EI""" FIGUEIREDO PAINTING 2600 e Coaat Hwy WAITf WIZARD 1n rne
DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
Dlhlewev -Pa11<lng Lois yrs 1n area Lie bonded, TOP QUALITY WORK AT C Leo 847·2•57
Repairs Sealcoaling 111s d 968 3564 anytime REAS RA fES 646-7602 LIGHT HAULING
All types Rusonable fire prooflt'lO thlnglea, 25 (COi Oahllllj 760· 1822 WINDOW WASHING
63 3 .. yrs exl)ef, fnt/exl, spec Pl t t: • Th 1 S&S Asphall 63 1 4 199 L•c
All Types Repair. Resurl. CtmtDt Coacrett
RESID/COMM'LllND
20 yrs Oo my own work
Lit; 2780• 1 AL 646-8126
TIE GRASS CUTTER T 1ash. lurnllurt, e1c
MA TT 6•5·5089
1·2 4" In natural wOOd flnllhea. II tr lf!ll " e on X magic 15
bonded & lnl4lred, lrte PCX§ R ~TCHlNG QUALITY 831·2026
Seal coo1 \SLURRY MIXI Concrele 0 form, I pour
Comm Resod Reas or complete Jobs No 100
L1otit Hauling
Cleanups
Reasonable
Free Estimates
PAUL'S HAULING
Moviat esl Lie C-33 No. 290804 Ra1tucc:o1 1n11ex1 30 yra
• Aile MOVING ... 63&-6911 Nea1 PAUL 5•6·2977 Stale Law
Aa1es Free esllmates 100 smAll 964·0368 Gu•eaia1 12· stakew/llM & 8' pickup
646·0792 anyllme Qulcktcerelul Low rales --------• ED'S PLASTERING "s1•a'!"1e..,.ta·w·r-e"!"qu""ll"""re~s~1~ha"""1~a'.'!!h
Lie T139046 552-0• lO QUALITY PAINTING· tali All Phases. ln1/ext Nea1 contraclors who perform 645 .. n69 or 645-0032 ----.T•R_,E .. ES __ _
I "' • • Cllild Cart (714) 970 8792 hflllha1 I Topped/removed Clean· • Ht1tia1 *A·1 llllOYlll* prices Free eal. Call R11tucco1 Es1 645·8258 work over 1200 lncludtno
Bes1 quallty 25 yr exp. John anytime, 631-2050 Pla•~la1 ~:~~c~~1~:c;a1~~~~~~~ plus 11'18 IAlllNE MIRROR
and the HUNTINGTON
BEACHCOMBER every
Wednesday a!
BABYSITTING MY HOME Lic d ChrisUan molher ,ull up new lawns 751.3475 or par11t1me core, e•P d' · ~
Nr V1ctot1a, Cos1a Mesa ElslcJe C M 646-5482 Crean IJps• Tree T11mm1ng Haa•1•••
N1ghl5 & PIT 642 8•82 Verd Malnt •Hauling *•*HOME REPAIR
Hhr H• Hl-7121
Furnaces• Pool Hea1ers Uc T-116.•28 730· 1353 Parri•t H ~r Elf 141_7121 contrac1ori 5hould so
ST AfNING COLLEGE-Farthing lnt~l0t Oe•.,,ft stale 1n lhe11 advet11aing
IHkkeeri•J ClliaDtI S.etJ MIKE 650-3263 Elee·Plumb-Carpen1ry
a• -V" Faucets• Waler Heate11 c d STUDENTS MOVING CO HANGING/STRIPPING ont1actors an con no e• IH! chergt11
CALL TODAY ll PAOF SKKPli' compulert • 6ENNY1~-Comm11cial/Res1denllal RemOOel Keim 646-4672 A6e1N's cte NING
SERVICE a thoroughly
Uc T 124·436 1nsu1ed lllSA·MC Scon 673· IS 12 Drains cleat from $5125 sumers contact Mary 64ll-8427 Repair faucets d1sp. elc Grond1e at 558·4086 with
ISi FOii SHIU manuel Moderate rees CHIMNEY SWEEP Landscape Maintenance 11epe11 fix 0t bulk:I ANY· clean house 540-0857
WAlCH US GROWi •HANGfNG/REMOl/AL* Anytime M&M 642·11<>33 any quesuons Con1fac· 11 • yrs e.11pe<lence tor s Slate License Your Dally Piiot
Service 011ec101y
Representa11ve
Free counsel 642 7047 $40 & UP 1-867-4876 Quality Sl!fvlce reas lie THING Reasonable
C1~iaet N1kia1 Cont11cton
bonded. 20 yrs in ates rates Dave 960-2165 , • · MIKE 851·1800 ... fiat Board 28 C1v1<: Center Br1ll$fl Houseciean1ng Ser· 11ataa1 -Plaza Room 690 San1a
vice Quallty & ~pen· --,-,. .. ('"'p·11-m_,..-.~.--farr lt•Hll ---oranoe coae1 Ana CA 92701 Mc Weeney Landscape
U2-432 1 ut. 30I -•""N"'"ew-·c-ab·,·ne-1·s -ca·b-1n·e·t Gt Dtrll 645-5124 AMERICAN HANDYMAN Carp. Glass. Palt'lt, etc dab'.~·" 6~"-0189 ~ roo"no •3•••• -~" av by Richard Sinor Uc * llEMOYAL * ~I 63t-40oe'" lacing bars 5 lorm1ca ""R-em-od_et..,.i A""e•p•a-,1-5 -com--m
countenops 6•2·0881 & re$id Lie d bonded.
Acc01aatia1 Carratry ins For est 552-9142
CPA high quallly income c"' .. h .. ,. .. ,-11-a .. n~Cf"a_r_p_e_n_1e_r_ Remodele1 needs work
lax work al reas rales A<Jd11 remdls rprs wotl• now• REF s Save SSS
Jonn Brown 631-6483 gua1 Gary 963·4181 Lets lalk 851-0149
lar•Hla1 Waa1o• Ins . Bon<Jed 647-2367
Mowing, EdgTng Twice a
mo S20·S25 645-5737 HHliaJ
LANDSCAPE MAINT __ o .... Ui""llA""P-J"'o""e"'s .. 1--
Ctean up~ Reas ra1es SllAALL MOl/lNG JOBS
KEN 692·5830 MIKE 646-1391
HOUSE-APARTMENT 2806'4 14 y1s OI happy Call us firsll 760-0328 Cleaning or Renovallng locel cus1ome15
Free estimate 650-4468 Thank you 963-41 14
HOUSECLEANING QUALITY PAINTERS
EXP'D REFS PROMPT, NEAT PRO·
897 ... 386 536-8322 FESSIONALS 636-7149
The las1111 drew In the
Weet. .a Dally Piiot Clualfled Ad. Call Today
642-5878.
Clanlfled Ad• a1e tna
anawer to a 1ucce11ful
garage or yard .. 1e1 11'1 •
better way 10 tell more
peoplel
M0t• families are getllng
the camping "bug" this
yeu If you nave e
campe< lhal'1 no1 gelling
uaed, sell 11 now Wlth a
Claulfled Ad
• A .Sch ools & Instructions ltlr WutH 9100 ltlJ Wut.. 9100 Belt W1att4 SlOCI
HOROSCOPE CllEllT SIPHYlllR JANITOR, PIT. M11s1on Manage1 exclusive re1a1I
E.11perlence person 10 l/ltJo. Irvine, El Toro shop in SC Ptaza Call
dlrec1 credit lt'llervlewers areas 1·997·0780 blwn for appl 540-2265 . . .
BY SIDNEY OMARA 642-432 ·1 1n handling credit appll· 9 30AM & 3 30 PM 11Aechan1c1Ma1n1enance cations from au10 deal· -LANDSCAPE ers Greal tu1u1e wllh
progru11ve company.
FIT pos1llon working on 40
II dsl sporl llsher & varl•
ous foreign cars Send
leller wte.<per & rels
5163 G S1 Chino, 91710
Or call Cathy at 628·5574
Tuesday, December 20 Lois ext. 309 Locallot'l near John Gooo pos111ons e1e avail·
Wayne Airport able now 1n our land· ARIES (Mart'h 21-April lY)· You'll be "re<:allt-d" to answer
questions, to sign terms. to agree on a property settlement' Focus
on security, basic issues. willingness to "let go" when project has
been exhausted Libra and another Aries play important rul~.
Nell Watson LGIC scape se1v1ce depart·
955-7060 menl
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~============~~DE~~~E INRRIOM IOHU ·~PPU • Flair 101 design? PIT, FIT FOllEPHSi• Ch11s11en Thomas Gallery
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Remain flexible. display
versat1hly, reahie that lime 1s on your sidx;'ou 're due to make Pacific
Travel
School
career. arl·consul1an1. no Su11erv1s1ng a small crew 650·2317
Forfurther information
regarding adverti8ing
placement in ~the
Schools & ln8tructiom
Directory -call
e.J{per nee 775-54•7 scheduling tasks Ch&C.k OT EA s E PEA ong company p1ope111es M H H L
n e w start. to meet faS<:m aung membQ.r opµosite sex who lfll ll&IUIER 1ssu1ng un1lorms and Babys11t1ng hte hskppg
Hot & cold food exper nee equ1pmen1 w111 be iusl pan ume lle~1ble Need
Harold 495 E 171h S1. CM some of your du11es You owt'l car 675-3277 encourages your e ndeavors. Debt wall repan.i. re<.•tml
investment will show a profit
GEMINl (May 2 1-June 20) Follo w through on hunch -
mtu1tion ts on t.arget, especially where money 1s eoneemed
Diversify, reaC'hout fo r new wntact.s. friendships You a re dut:> to
··soften" personal image Sense of dir~t1on will be restored,
Del1119f}' Driver. Recen1 e•· musl be knowledgable in •OW Mllll•I plan1. pesl disease al'd pe<lence .. Clearl driving weed ldenlllteelto'4 Mull p 11snore Oil Of1ll1ng Ovet·
record Leading Hard-be able 10 !rouble shoo! eeas and Domestic Will
ware Co Mlf EOE imgauon sysiems and train. S35 000 • $50.000 549·967 I pe<foim repa1ts Part 01 plus poss Call Petroleum
610 E. 17th S1 .. San1• Ana.
reality will cease to be a s tranger
Ca. 92101
OtANGE COUNTY~ ONI .. Y Pi/V ATE
ACCttEomo TJfAVEL AGENCY SCHOOL
Delivery person wan1ed tor your !Ob will be hands-on S e ' v 1 c. e 1 a 1
Cos1a Mesa company gardening/ "11get1on 312-920-9675 ex1 2239
CANCER (June 21-Jul~· 22). Family member ... pruv1des
valuable mformauon you'll be capable of sutx:essfully
utilizing it. Stress md1v1duahty, creativity and reach beyond
current eXJ>l'('tat1ons Gemini. Sagittarius persons figure m
Lois
3-4 hrs/day Must have 1asks l\Aust be bl-llngual Also open evenings
own car 751-1155 Span1sn/ Engllsh Npl Bch Firm see~s fast.
Amencan AJrtlM Sabf• Computet Training DrlvMs. e.Jtperlenced or accurale typist capable 1talnees. can make PESTIOllE of handling heavy phones
unusual, exciung scenario 642-432 l "-..
ex t309~':
MOANIMG, AFTERNOON, EVENING Cl.ASSES
$8-$14 per hr, slartlng TtOl•ICIA• and misc oHlce dulles
pay FIT & PIT positions .Appllca1or's Cert1flca1e re-lmmed1a1e opening
avall. Call 543·2808 lor quired In addition 10 per-1720-0941 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Look behmd scenes, visit tnJ1v1dual
confined to home o r hospital You'll r evive a ··secret method"
you'll delve !nto mysteries and others will be ras~:mated by your
knowledge of the "oc-cult " Aquarius. Scorpio individuals play
Cell {714) 543-9495 app1. National C.H G lorm1ng usual pes11c1de
1
ovem1ghl work. a$~•st
-apphcat1on duties. you woman 1n wheelchair 1.2
Mt .. ..---.~---,........-
ESCAIOAWY ESCROW will be 1es11ng and analyt· limes/wk C M 645-2357 1ng results ol new and ex· per1men1a1 pes11c1 de PBX Operators EK·
products or 1echniques perienced prel but will
and preparing formal re· train Mature1rel1able pons only neeo apply Day/PM
significant roles. has 1mmed openll\Q tor a
VIRGO (Aug 23-~pt. i2J: ~ready ~rl.'hangt', ~avel,l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~d ~~;~~~ variety. grater e m o tional fulfillment Moon pos1 t1on highlights I~ son Benefits Sa111y
profit Crum career or business enterprise member of v pposite Ollice ltalala 2914 Auoaact•Hll 3002 Heir WHIH 5100 Belr WaalH 5100 neoo•. Lynn 5•7-5625
sex is in awe and will lt't yuu know tl Gl0mm1, Saglli.an~ and Bayt1on1 Olllces pa11os. ATlENTION LEUZINGER liii=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Babysilter •• ,, hr:. d&Jly Elleeutlve Secre1ary. ottiGe
another V 1rgo play key ro les parking 1ani1011a1 GRADUATES OF 1959 •• ... •--11 Malure. English speaking 0 f 1 he Pre 91 den1
673 1003 1 f 11 1 _,,_ .._ Financtal serv1c-es · firm LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22). Missio n Will be· ('Omplt•tt-d. yr;u'll . Looking or e ow c ass mcmYE pe<son 650-0946 needs top knotch e•ee
wm your way through d1plo mal v lhl're will bt• ldlk o f dom(.'St!C Corner Jamboiee 81 r;:e~t>ers w~ may~ In The Orange Coast Dally BABYSITTER lull/time in sec'y for very busy,
I · S MacAr1nur approx 2900 1 e range ounlyarea. P1101hasenexoellentop-C M Reis 1eq To StOO challenging poslllon adj'ustment whic h t'ould me ude change o f residence upenor ..,, 11 gi~·nd level 811• We are working on our 1 ,,.2 7803 -"' ~ 25 h CAii porlunlly Ot a career wk lo slarl ~ • S 11 on o exp 1 n flash--green hght for progress Funding will'--made avatl'-'ble ecullve ot11c;e suite Ex 1 reunion "J V\.' ... 951 2551 It 6 30p•• orlet'lled Ma1or Account OTE 1yp1ng/Shor1nand s111111 a
SCORPIO Oc •>3 N [)('f I l ceoenl Parking Landlord · a m H L ( t ~ • O\I ~I) tnt' tt•rm~. ay out p ans oesperate 'I 09 sq fl es FREE·ALL AGES• ~.~1":e~·:d a ~~;!'; ULUl "' Clll c~~~53~n.,-~mkrs pis
which could involve .JOUrney Open ltnt'S u ( t'O!llmuflical1on. is Call Keren 752-54•4 Tl/ COMMERCIAL SEM· poient1al. guatanleed Freet hit Clorti
become "aware of mternauonal law. al'l·ent spiritual values INAR SEE SUNDAY AD draw aga1n11 corn· Holel gues1 regtslrauon,
Young person 1s perplexed by re<:ent ev1•nl, will seek your 550 ~~~f !i!!~!1~~~~ plfl 213-'65-4491 mission Delira 1omo..,. 1u1111me 1nctud1ng w11n<11
counsel P1St.-es plays key role ba S4001mo 642-4623 SCRIM LETS 1n10 managemen1 a plus CRT up preferred,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22-Dec :!I ): Al'l-ent on produc uo n. Newport Bueti nee.I 640 n. • Sendpr~:;:x1~560 ~!;~~:,?= good
promotion, abtlrty to handle added respons1b1lny You could be sq fl office, 011 PCH & ANSLMrRS Cotta M .... 92626 1
put in c harge of assets, money belonging to o the rs. You will Newport bath. kitchen-nL EOE PleaM call tor an app1
l T C C e lle S•80/mo Avail Nollly . Match btwn 9-5PM, Mon-Fn at affect and he p shape policy. aurus, ancer. apncorn persons 12t8• 650-757" Saucy· Hoofed 6•$-5000 ext 521
figure pron:une ntly • ' I ., CAST OFF ACOHmH OUlll BealJllClanwanted PIT ex
CAPRICORN (Oct-. 22-Jan. I 9 ). Finish what you start -De~u~e :3-c:J sir,~! ~11 Neighbor lall\lng to ot~ Orange Coal! S & L haa an FIT Oood P.Y New
C'hecksrv>Mal nghtsand rv>rm1ss1ons Youl.'oulddoseadeal.sign 2omces• 1go ...... Taiea · neighbor "I could kick opening for an ._. Salon NptBch 67°5-2787 r--· r -,..v mysell lor taking up perlenced Accounting __ _
a contract. initiate a publll' relations program, You'll be rid of AIC & Exec E11tras kara1e . 111 could get this Clerk Typing and 10·k•Y IHPll/Ul'l llflCE
unnecessary burden, you'll reach wider audience. some very 6:Ce~~~e. ~~~~e'~,~~g CAST OFF · skllla a must Accoun11 Growing 111m 1n the fashion
important people will seek your opinion SPIRITUAL READINGS Payable e.11perJence ie-Industry SC Plaza erea
AQUARIUS(J 20 F b 18) Y '11 f Rlclltllltylll·llll Advlce lnallmatters Love, quired Call llAlchele Call Mary 663-3059. an. • e . . ou gain cooperation rom Cappa. 754-1801 ·
those who shar" your work and ideals. Don't negl""'t routine. marriage 5 buslt'leas. 00 S & L Bookkeeper, PIT posiiiOn ". ~,,. SAVE Also counseling. 1815 avallable Costa Mesa maintain steady pal'e. keep resolutions conceming die t. So El Camino Real. San 1700 Adams C 11A Clem. Llc'd 492-7296 EOE Morlgage Company nutrition Yo u 'll receive good news concerning recent health New owner In new luxury 751 -1155 Brent
c heckup. Leo and another Aquanan figure prominently alrcondllloned Santa Ana AllE·FIR ELHllLY OPl Cnnstmu help, n1ring 1m.
P ISCES (fcb 19-Marc h 20): Spotlight on creauvity, ab1ltty Building All new carpels Leal. r.... 3004 Live-In 6 days wt! Balboa medlataly, many PO•· and wall covMlnQ' '";iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim Reier req. 673-3603 aw II 1 $6/h c Id to imprint style, d ealings with young persons and part1cipat1o n 1n •No 1st and tut • A 1 DE PA RT T 1 ME ~::,:an~nl '· ou
speculative venture Inlu1t1o n serves as reliable guide You'll •NoSecuitty fOlJND ADS SAT/SUN llpm.7 30 am 71'1220-1520
b h . Good ( h ds h •FreeuHolcopier E s learn y teac mg news t'Omes rom one w o a1 w ere Hth St end Santa Ana Active rellremenl home mployment er vice
investments are con cerned. freeway ARE FREE 393 Hoapital Rd.NB ~,,.,~an employ·
Fl.HI PllllllEL
tlUltnllHHC21
H R. Mc Goo's offering the
most 1n food' run· en10<-
1a1nment' ~· SMt·
ing for 600. Call 752-6955
or apply al 2722 N. Main.
SA Nellt 10 Town &
Country Shopping Cen1er
Full Charge Bookkeeper
lmmed opet'llng, FIT
Compytor exper helpful.
Non·smkr Please call for
appt. I/RI 714-492-6801
Fill TI•EPU
PAIT·TllE Wllll Opportunities available
wllh lhe Los Angeles
Times Circulation De·
pa11men1 In our
door-lo-door newspaper
sales p1og1am Guaran·
teed tiourfy wage plus commlsalon Hours 9AM
• 2PM, or •PM • 9PllA
Training Is provided
Potential to earn $300
plus per weal\ F0t an In·
lervlew. Calf. (714)
951.2361. u• 120• Aert•eala, Ual. Arart•eata, UaJ. Ito•• 2900 543-7369 Cal·. AIP. AJA, mature, exper OUUIF_ll_I __
-only Caleulator by loueh ttTStlE SALIS Gate guatd, relief stllf1, pvl
Baal. ltacll 2740 l!!J!rl lffcll 2769 ,~~ !kSuUpN ~~~iv 142.Hll • lyplng Compu1er The Orange COaat Dally cornmunlly •9•·8571
PTS ellper for lnduttrlal and Piiot has an excellent op-call between 9.5
WIMUIE a llERSAILLES CONDOS 3026 w Coul Hwy, Np! ll~iill:ll con11rue11on supply bull· por1Ut'llty IOf a ClaSSlfled General ----
Spacious 1 & 2 Br from S700 to SI IOO SO LAGUNA Near beach.I l neas Call 6•5• 7811· Oulllde Sales person Min Packanlnn, some huv
'525 Lakes & s1reams Agent 631 4960 new tum. with or without £ ) j \zj FOUND M med. 9l dog. 9AM·•PM with a proV91\ tract r• llttl"", h.::'h ·~hi dlpl~~
pool & spa large tee kllchen TV, pOOI, share 1216, collar. Mollett cord Grea1 earning req·• MJ'st be btlght. room , newly re· bal .. Empt non1smo11~ • It GI I School HB 964 3213 --1 I I t d d al d be. l'I 11 1• -• ••iarit• •-nleo po ent e • guaran ee -nellc. hard working. ecor e · u ' u Y S265 0t $295. 493.3490 -•, -aSioo " landscaped. aecu11ty 1450 sq fl v1ew 1ulte Found whl Samoyed on Pll1me. Musi know frHh & dtaw ag11nt comml responslble Good pay,
gates S0try no pet• leatala to Dec 14, vie Warner & matlne meln1enance Re-Send iesume 10 P 0 Bo• good benefits, good ru-
8415-6591 S"'-rt 2_. Four lrg private office• Slater, HB 846-4048 liable trene Appl)' btwn 15&0. Costa Mesa. Ca ture. Irvine Call Mt. .. ,,_ wllh lrg aecretarlal area. -8 9 wkdY• •351L t7th St 92626 EOE Kleinman. 714-979-6080
1 .... 1•11 27.a4 Singles 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart· kllchen end private Losi Female Cock0< mix • .. "
n " menls & Townhouses 2c;:::S'o axf~i I~~ ~~ lobby S~n apace avail· C.M "MAGIC" S100 re-Coale Mesa. Cocktail pereon, PTT IOI MUIYIAI
Studio $450. Ref, patio. from S660 (Ask about ' able Oil eatclllf ward No tans. blk ARCHITECTURAL private club No tips Permanent polltlon to I I A ii J 1 close, W/O, 2 car oar, • Stra1ghl hrly satarv Neat 1enn s. poo va an furnished apts complete '300/mo 540•7859 Tom Redec0tatlon allowance 496-2247. 549-1508 DRAFTSMAN ·' mainlain office comple11 642-9837 lee11e msg with TV. linens & utenslls, M/F e11nar'd 91>ace plan-appearance No calla. In· in Orange Co S 1•.400 ,.,.. tervlew Wed -S un L ....... acll 2741 may be 1en1ed tor shor1 Fem rmmte needed, Plfl &•1·1101 I II It ner/draflaman lor E pet year. (714) 558-0278 _ term or IOngM No tease Rm&. Ba. 73 tlSeU.lloro. ,. hat P.t•lt. flt I 11' comm· I pro 1ecI1. gAM·5PM •P· 8 must. btwn 2Pm & •;;K>pm onty.
Smalt 261 OCEAN VIEW. req'd) On Jamboree Rd NB $350/mo. 546-7839 w/case(moontrghterlJ 261·&040 now 9ayAw, Balboa
No doga. $585 mo UHi al Sen Joequ1n Hills Rd Fe 10 Stir 2 Br. 1,,.,, ba CM HWAll Allemblers. Apply 7 arn CHITUL IUYHS ltaTIOILTtll
Incl. 494"1
2"62 _ l?S 144-1100 Twnhs. non-smkr. 25·35 l111i
1
•.•1•1•11 2911 H 1·104I only. MacGregor Yachta. IPlllll .... •• 1~~;:11~~:~~' P;:~l~i~:
L113aa1 itHI 2 p 1 1 1 2B ,. .. 1225 ' 'It ulll 5•8·4484 1631Placentia,C 11A CHEERS AESTAURANT ex,_ req. ~dable - -81'". ra tg r. snv&cn. .--· ..,....... ..
1 rm Con~. Comm new c1pts/drp1 & palnl ,F 10 shr w/M&F weU-loc Newport Nr poet omc. . Auembler•. experten09d Enteflatnment and danc· "8hlcle 952-8111
pool CIOH to bue, Yr1y IM. 1750 552-0653 NB COt'ldo, S310/mo + App. 18:}4 aq fl atore or PtrHHJa 3012 or trlllnMS Can make ~~· W~al~oc~~~I~ m'nll/•T
•hope $500. •92+e700 Spactoua apt. 1 ml l1om u111s 675·9643 8\rea 1332 eq ft. 646-2947 CIRCUS Of :~: iir ~ pff ~t~ denll OK fuU, pit. Beech IUll tn11• •t 21
•=•t ... 1c• 00 beech. carpets. d1ape• Leg Bch tiae Pv1 room. C..atrelal tvsllable. Cell 543•2808 & Warner Can bef noon H R ..,_ Goo'• ,....__.00 -642·2357 bath & entrance $350, I t-•--11 S ~E 7c2 61155 &47 9988 pm '""' • .,,,.., -" 1 rm. 1 balh A11allable 1,1 5 1851 497•4391 ta ua •• MIS &. Nallonal CHG " ·· • · the rnoet In food' f\Jt'l
now S650/mo yaarly Steps to beach 2 Br Iba 1260 aq. 11 etorage or ? 719 NO HARBOR BLVD. Atlendant. L~lt'l c M OfllTAIL lllYIU ellterta1nment' dandt'lg'.
673-3355 Btlgh1 & airy $695/mo llA/F shr Npt ShOres very On Newport Blvd. M•k• FULLERTON ASSISI teec.her In wtleel-• tnn111 •• 21 Seating for 600. Call
I-bd-r-m-. •=rftft~/mo-. utile ..,. yrly 963_·82_63 ___ nlOe apt, 1 blk beech otter 673· 1943 .... 1 PIT h •-R • 752·9955 or apply a1• ~ "" 1275 548-8371 IJO-t 112 ""8 r 11 nwx m '" H R Mc Goo'e offering lhe 2722 N. Main, $A .. Next The Tropics, 2421 E 16th IH c1...... 2776 1580 Newport 81\rd. CM 7 ••y & Wiil bd I 1250 mo Pr•fer moat In food' f\Jn' ent•-to lhe Town a Cout'ltry SI. Nwpt Hgle 645·5109 M prof 25-35. tltalght, •OO aq fl 1375/mo -• fem 645·2357 1alnmtnl' dlt'lCI';\' Seal· Shnn I C-t-. FIT ---------2 81 I Ba nr bu1 & t>aach. n/smkr. lo ettr 2 bf, 21/t 54 5032 ATTRACTIVE 7 2 -.>P ng -· -I blk to beaetl, 1 blk to pool 4 laundty lac ba condo, C M 631-•391 Agent 1• . MASSEUSSES AudlO Production Aull· Ing for 800 c.11 ·e96S PIT Studenll °"" 18 o61. Oly 1 bdrm, pntg $450 1475/mo '198·6277 Npt Bllld, C.M Only 75c. TO SER\IE YOU. tan1 Wiii train. h· or IOPiY at 2722 N Main, HOTEL mo Jan 1 850·2•90 ___ Prof lam Chfllll1111 25 • N fflce/ etall MC p«renc. w/CUMll.. a S A Next 10 the TO'M\ &
-281 ck>Mlobeach$475 yu10Shr38r.wtd.p1110. 7~h.64~S EIOllTl/lllELS plut $4/ht aner month Count1y Shopping IAUUIAYll.N 2 Br, 2 Ba Condo. golf 223 La Paloma. Cell for wllltt to beacil. 1250/mo trlal. Full time A~~ ~let We !rain FIT Pff. . FRONT DESK CLERK ft-•rH ,,.__ • ftA>t dbl n:=---..:.aa-...-.... OutcaH ONLY 835-9199 ~ .,.._ 0 .,... appt 637-7918 675-0052 or 832·1631 ""'rl or ...,_ ,.....,..., re-BOOKS ON 'fAPE, CollectlOna Ex.periauoed Hotel gveet ~rat'°'1 ~~in! 12~~~:~~: .... .-we L~FOR YOUI ~g,~•d, r.;;· ~ F~~~,~~~:. ~~~5~M . Alll IOf 81" PIT F'lt'lanClal•lll* ~ ~:~c•;.:r:~· ~ M~•b &.«· So GIO. ext1a nice, kit lao, :n::~~~~': IOt, commerclll .tOt'llng. 1 ttr191* gram• 8~1141 . tut. PIMM c .. I 541• 711 40 wpm & OOOd baalo
38A 18A Yrfy Nt OCMl'I, pOOI. Mr beach, amplOyed -----::~-1~~4 Newport 81vd. PHONE 'ANTASY e U•T11mt 0111 math al(llls.
iw apt/paint 1825 mo. n·amkr 1295. 493-3400 Garat" IN -· 25 LAtdlft to lhare your Matu,. r~tlonltt wllh OIMet oe>e*. 3. "'* M• ..........
11111 lnc1. ::tt7 33td St. N.8 841droom w/l)tl\r bA . turn, •••• n12 Shopa/OlllOH/ttor•o• Fantu ... 182&-71~ x:,;: ~-i:.:·t~ petlenOI. Good •tlftlnO a full lllM poeltlona. day
(upe1elr1). 83&-28«. l300tmo • 125 cteanlnO i!8. §lnQ' garage 731 c::.~!~rc~a5;r.;249 Ptr ange 'county. !'.!1!! pr;. P8:i..~ !nypet10n..... ~i:!~~~t bt'#n
Acroa from Lido Marilla. chrge 850-4300 Wast 18th St. Costa ltnttn Jtl•• vat• aohOOI. ...,N r.-•--9-5 Mon thtu Fri at
3 er 2 ea, frPl1 MWty dee· Fviniihed Room t'leat So. Meaa. 873-7787 1 • -' 1 "" aume 10; Or. TllOmN 400 So Cout HllfY ~5000 •lll 521 Oteled SHS. 1-991-5888 Coas1 Plaza Fem•I• G t Nft. ...... , ... b -·· u::;;:a Muauer for out NHI, Prelld9nt, C1tl• Laoune BMd\. c~ -·i-•f pr•I., 1250 &°S6-1737 ~·S.:.,'':9o~o Call !I . ..-call maNaQ• Men a tomi. Coaat u~. Ideal tor~ and
-·-...,,..,_ ...__...._.. walk 10 ~ :;-.. ••2..... · Ui8 eq rt. 5118 lilfOh. women. Mf-.6127 700 No. Malt'l, &enta Ma unta M'9I Mu"9t Mt on• Stvdetlta. Good d'lanoe 2 Bf. 1 Be. nu opt/dr81Pt1. ................ ,,,_.,, .,..., •uv NS 1 1330 M'A conltlQ 112101. No pflOnt c.iea Twlfet. a1ono 0111'1• • to mele• mra lncofM. ~.Ina. pool75.' car1700Pol'1.;~ uPtOOll"" ·.~!"!'!._,1!6_!) .~~~ ofilH atlll 14 A~I &41·50S2 llenwM"' p1eue,e ac>i4* and reed ln,the 3·&hf'a/deyatlutl0fltl~. ....,., M75. ...., •• """~""" .. ..., .... .,.... ,,_.. T ,1 r.. flU Oally Piiot Ciani led Mon..J'.rl, Mndwlcfl "'--
ford. 84& 864e ...... -18 0 w .. tcliif. N.i . Cotta Mau lnduatrtal ~I To~ 'f04ll =--.c1lon ~ Miii Mwf. lt'lQ Call 8"d'I 8ub
L.Oll9fy 2 If 2 11. 2 gar __ .. --·u. 21e.13u aq "· Sultable 8IOg 3000 eq" 1111-up 1" wlb&W Alt aa tor tB11 -beficn ~~ "''• r""" _, ~" a.--.5231 __,,, ,... ....L ...... no Wllty rentett now evall f0t medleel or dent• dtlu•• tnd\ltfTlll park. ~ 110,000 up. No credit __ ......, ror "·"· You cen 1111
•-·•· ,. ""' ""'" 116.50/Wtt & up C°'<>t Agen1 $41-SOG2 c!Udel 119PfOIC eoo n ot Chlctl, no ~-Aleo ·-• .,.._ Yl>Vf twftwt and tot• ot Have Jou read today'• P9tl '800 e50-H08'9YI TV Pttonel in room. 2274 Offkl• 47c ptr " gro11 lend on & bilY TD'a pNf'9 ou1er tlllno• 1hrow111 o .. nM Ad•? If not,
Hawi IOfNftllnQ to Mii? ~Bllld CM. 1005 9rtoeo Drive !10~000 up to Juft'ltloe a.:=:.,,. Del~ ,Hot Cle .. lflid }IOU',.~ IM belt Claeelfled..,. do"..,. 641-744& a....1m u.nieonAMoo.t7a.nu llflM. Mt, c.1..a...,1 ...... .,, tomnl
TllHPHHll You will be 1espons1ble lor
pruning lrees and ma•n
ta1n1ng pruning eQu•P·
men1 We require "J yeor~
of e.per1ence pruning
Full and Part 11me A per· manen1 pos111on Nol
Christmas 1ob Ca ll
645-2550 or apply 155
Rocnas1er St Costa
Mesa
trees and an tyPM of P • Tl growtn lh• ••
llllUHTIOI
TEOHIOIJI
EVHIHS
WEEIHIS
You will be programming Newport Beach Marketing
conlrollers designing l1rm t>as several openings
ano 1epa111ng 1mga11on tor 1811ponsible and in·
sys1ems Musi be able to dusinoua people A gOOd
read and lollow plans and speajcl.ng votee a MUS fl
specll1cat1ons. able to A giea1 way lo increase
communicate bo1h orally vour budgel dollars we
and 1n wr111ng With sup· pay for your 1ralnlng For
pervlSors anq p101t'CI Interview appt, call Mr
manager Bleemer 5•5-5776
II you are looking for a '"ITHRAPHERS steble yel growing com pany 1o work lor please 101 prolil & exposure
apply at· Chrls11an Thomas Ganery . 650·23•7
THE IRYlllE
COIPAIY
Human Resources Dept
PHOTO UI needs recept1onlsl dark-
1oomlphotog1aphy exp
Garden Grove. 89 1-6373
J16 PllOIAlllH/ 107 I Cemelbacll Slreet &HUST .
Newpo11 Beach CA 92660 Stale Wide R/E invest·
Equal Opl)ly Employe1 men11. fin Mrvlees lirm,
offe11ng challenging pos-llton for btlghl Individual
to wnte and design tor
Tl -990 at'ld DEC
POP· 11/34 Mull have 2
yrs exper w/COBOL u -
cellenl career oppor1unl·
ty Call 553-09•0
UUL SECRn&RY
WHI PlllCHSIR
for HuntlngtOt'l Beech law
office MUST haw 2 yrs
Cell! law & 1 yt+ on IBM
display wrller at 111 pk
level 4 or 6 Call 8•7-6041
Maintenance
IPPLlllCE
REPAIR
Challenging poslllon avall·
able fOt 109-nolch ap-
pll11nce repair persot'l
with 2·3 years 8.Jt·
perlence. You will be
working for our propetty
PllHUllH/
HlUST
Slate wide RIE lnvesl·
ments. flt'\ ser111ces firm.
olle11ng challenging pos-
ition IOI bright lndlvtduel
to w1ile end design for
Tt -990 and DEC POP-11134 Must have 2
y11 expet w/COBOL Ex·
cellent ca1ee1 opportunl·
ty Call 553 0940 service• deparlment1.., _______ _
using a company truck to
go from one proJec:t to
another All properllea
llrt In lrvlM or Newport
Beach We provide a
good 111ary, exceUet'lt
benellta, unllorma and
moat tools I/~ neat ap·
peerat'lQe requited. Ex·
perlenc. dHllng with the
public an ueet. Plffae
tPl>IY al
THE IRYlllE
COIPAIY
Hvmari Reeourcet Oec>t
J,11
1071 Camelbec:k Str•t ~Beech, CA 92MO
Equal ()ps)ty EmploY9'
"V.IN-r
l'Vh/6-tlon•
~·•m,nu """'"" ..
I p•I th., ed In 1hr
0.0y Piiot .. c1 101
• .... , t•ll• wuh thrtt
to four q..aliflnl
Pffpl~
CM.-71 Ntt1'."
., .... ,..,.. ... r~
MAHAOfMIHT TAAINEU
U·TOTt·l IAllETS --,Olf polllUona In m_,,.
eoemertl lewl. Mum
heve oonvonlenct
otore Mgmt. H •
~. Satety oom-
meneurete wttfl ...,.,...,_,
Up to IMv. '°' Int••-· tlPPfY at U-TOTE-M Mne4 on
Pet<' Vlefo "' ~ 9MOft ettno~ ~
t Ma noon or • N _on
Thuradey,ftl .... CIU.:
(114) •M IW • Uf-4MI
IOI
J ' .
c• Orange Coast DAILY PILOi /Monday, D~mber 19. 1983
ltll Wu... II• faraitart IOU Ml...U1aH11 1211 a.,,,1au 7014 Vtt1 t040 ''"'' la)!!t.. Aattt, lt1!!1!4
S.aretary ""4td 9-5. 4d SI••• Top Pool 1&11 WTI Ii' peel. P211. wllr£. 'b 6600! VAN 20k ml ••re........ • .•• v.1....... tl73
Min wage, lull time ttblll~ "425. 411 rd from tti. Fat EM! "°' rMdy 10 go Mutt NII '7000 220· 1653 _
S31·7270 POii..-llbll "45 2 en-awt Mtrtln 6'&-42U nowl 52500 '42·7251 •-'82 300 Turbo DSL, 13,000 .. _~ s Ion ---. tlque Cll"lllt9 '46ee °"<= ' · UTllll}H -t att, ml. '"'• n.w 126,800
TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS 5-4 Otherwise
1 Temp. scale 58 0 1 stllps
4 Throb abbr
9 Misbehave 60 Honshu bay
14 Be In hock 61 lnunda11on
15 Glrf's name 62 Chaplain
16 Contract 64 Auto
17 Tenting spots 66 A sian noble
19 For11fied 67 Jacket and
20 Districts collar
21 Exclamation 68 Flowed
22 Ler·s reelm 69 -
23 Impart Warbucks
24 Conditions 70 Force units
26 Barren 7 1 Bitter vetch
29 Patriotic gp
31 Gormandize
32 ltallan resort
33 Clio's sister
36 Lackluster
38 Concession
39 Earmark
4 1 Hand Joint
43 High 1n pitch
44 Courage
46 Elegant •
47 Farm sounds
49 Follower iO Wood
51 Daze
52 Ahghls
2 3
17
20
23
311
43
47
51
89
DOWN
1 Pivotal
2 Cognizant
3 Vtrlle guys
o4 Bridge bid
5 Single· pref
6 Supple
7 Guided
8 Pigeon
9 Sad word
10 Oat or rye
11 Desert trees
12 Function
13 Foot.Sufi
18 Scull
5 6
PREVIOUS
PU~IOLV!O
~-pd 111!!..., 9A~~. dsentt•-cmalr• '46M. .,..,., 111e Sl•t• bd bmpr PoOI 1t>11 ----Ct -1--..as IOA ........,, ·-• e I new 12195 1 Uled 18116 11051 m Newpon BC/I 72o-1704
lion, 1711"1 & lrvlne, NB cabinet "4& 645•1691 ~10~,=~ ~~c::' 880-4745 1626 F'0td Roadtter Pia-'83 Me 2•00 wtth etlcil
Sl"lop helper &-body men 7 pee Beige tlonll. 944.5779 up. 5t1,500 ooo. 1947 11"1111, 1.ooo ml . loaded n--'--' Ph 931•7270 ~ COl\dlllon 1325 C\.letom4811 C&C tu•del Croeley Conv1rllbl1. 122 000 171,1640•2837 ~.-. 2$3 -Sold rttAll llOfl. have ... ••lllng aloop In mint $1800, 18" I Ptckard I 10 '
R.S Carr•• IOrtld cordllH 1111· COM, tl(I~ '°' loeal or Sedan, S2000; 1935 Ford Alllt •boul ,,... money -
ITllT, .. •11•10 BetuttM 7 po Scandln•· pl"IOMI CoCrt U~ long dlelence CNlelng Pickup, 12800 obo. can 11ve you thru our -vlan dlllgn Hctlonal S30·S 10o. 941.6.68 ' Complete lllc1ronlct l 548-4480 ... purcnue & ..... plal\1 llWI eole, 12300 new MUST NII lnYWttory + tone --•t11L•--1 Tiii PennyuY9t 11 ace.pt· SACRIFICE $760 &nnd Solid Mel"logeny 1l'llp m0te Aeeomod•I•• 8 ·29 Ford Ro"' P/U rune • 1_.,-.-
ing eppffoetlont fOf , lull SMly Poeterpe<lle mat· model. wN J 1"50. eeo. wllu•urlQ\ie new Int 2 13500. '28 2 dr Mdan I r.w Tl lime Readw Ad ooneult• tr"e/bO• 1prlng I SO l600. 2'n' long, 22 brue head a & lhowtt Prttti..t body nice I 1400/0BO 1301 Quell StrMt
ent. II you enjOy wOtklng 780·8278Of48i·11178 cannon•. OUllll.ndl~ln telling yecl"ll In Npl Har. 075-3175 NEWPORT BEACH
wtth tl"I• publlc In s>e'ton Cuetom mid•, 11· ~la, In-otttoe & l"lome 802"2 3 1219.000. term• 1v1ll '50 FORO Very Cleen. IH·llOO
1nd on the pllon•. come eluding s· bend. Ju•t SIS Admlrll 21· cu. 11. 075-2311 dye. 675-3311 Mecl"lanloally Perfect. Ell· Beaut 6.8 Mtrc.c:IH, ·79,
... ut Apply In pereon, re.-upl"lol111tl0 In llght S215. Admiral 25" TV, evee & wlmd1 ceptlonal tl"lruout. Mov· S28 ooo 0, S2000 and
1660 Pl1cen111 Ave, Mt11"1·tones. Like new ¥10rk1 good S100. Zenith Hobie 16, Teq SunrlM, Ing MUST SELL S3200 TO/pymti ol S700/mo
Co1t1 MHa. herdly ulMld. Orig 13000: 20" TV $50. King Ille triller, C$t box. cover, 080 645-8733 deye 731·521 1. 731-3501
Telephone SalH S700 obo. 845·6879. gold tufted l"ldbrd, 160. Newp0f1 Wlllrlront ttor •99·2752 evetwknd
The lergett end oldNI 6am-t2 noon, 548-3365 1p1c e. Many Mtru. '57 T·BIRO MCIOElll IOOIEO
pot1alt 1tudlo Jutt oPl'l· I UY HllfTlll S1.1rtbo11d 511 1 tin. CAAL I 1800. 645-2037 evu White $16,500 lllUllTI llUYHY
eel. new office In Coll• L.. 957·8133 HAYWARO (Tl"lru1ter), LASER No 103400 546-5591 957-8177 Champegne/Ptlemlno
MNI. We are looking tor c1e1r S 150. 802~868 Al moll new ei1eellent MG .52 TO Full Option. 450 ml
MllE •IHll'I ·
SOUTH
COUNTY
VOLllW&IEI
"WlwtU•T
11 lllflllll" VOl1Jm1 Sllel, Service
And Le11lnsi
18711 Beach Blvd
Huntington Beacti
(l 14) 142-2000
'80 RABBIT DIESEL 4 'Pd
elr, ate<eo, S3 150 0130
631-3016 entl"llUlllJtlC, outgoing Kng-ue bed frame, mat-...... cond s 1600 ·646-51211 le • dahow7 Rear For 149.900 or $850 •mo lndlvld1.1111 l or our treas, boll 19rlng1. GooQ -•5• · ' 11 or tra e ealored eve/wknd• 7141788-4468
24 Tot'! 42 Ruminants advenlalng dtpattmenl Cond .. 1100 642·3555 A1lpl"l'1 #854 atamp l~li I "--Jr1 7122 orig. S14.000. 6«.0214 ~ ------.,.,-,,..,. '81 Rabbit convert .. 261<
PIT eve l"lfl end Sat , 9&2· 1523 -ll'ft •I 9107 MG 4 25 Postures 45 Stupidity Morn Hlrln Now Mull Miii 12 2 ~ MC· for r«il nr Lido I 1 ml, 5·1Pd. fully equipped, 27 Celebrities 48 Trappe<l 631-3339 g • tlontl off Wl"llt•. gd COfld Wlleelchal.r, AMIGO, .i.e. lllend. Powe< boat up to '72 Audi dOOd cond Re· 79 MG Midget 2 t ,000 ml, lmmec . AIC. Ol'lg owner,
28
Stupefied
53
Fiend 1200/0BO 641 •. 8360 Ilk• ~. 1g60. Menull 30. S l7Stmo 558.()1133 built eng new cart> must Wl"ll, em/Im Stereo, xlnt AM/FM c111 , bronze
THE RECYCLED RAGS MUS"T SELL IOlld Olk chair. $75. 873-265-4 ' 1 e I I Imm 8 d 1 a I e I y cond . $3200 673·9020 wt wl"lt top S8"00
30 ~·!~ ~~ ~~e;;r~sr~~r =~~if1~ie ~. ~o~: st bed w/men1 I'll~~ Muical la1t. 1224 8~~~1Av:J~~~le ~~n~/~;. ll400/obo. 5•3--0277 tracll_t __ 97 5
"
8
.()
585
33 Conveyances 57 Paradises aales position Call IOf cl"lelt, 9 drwr dretter 2 eunay etalloet1. 1158 l 6"2~64• '75 100LS. Excel cond Lo '75 Catrert. lndle r:d, blk •i". 9177
34 Slave 59 Awfully IPC)tm Mon-Thur 10.... =rror, !3~!~~7~tand• s 175/offert. 546·6839 WANTEO· Side lie or ml. run~reat I 1200. Call lthr. anrl, 11tn1 cond Come In & aee NeWPOf1
35 Surprised 61 Bustle Atk for Sue 675·5553 neg. mooring wanted lor 45 11 646-51 . S 18,500 645·4369 Beacl"l's finest Mltlcilon
37 England's 62 Cushion TOP m 0 111 Dini~ rm Mt wttl"I Ctauleal gullar w/cage M bolt Np• Bcl"I. 631 ·3536. lltt1 l•••rft411 -·n 9t1s, xlnt cond, meny ol prevlousty owned
John _
63
Cl"lallce FemelesPrel Modela& S<:hra St 648·l236 SU!ural, 18711. S1e11ftc.. wkctyw 548-9569 IJIW' 9112 extras, real beauty, must Porscl"les, Audi• and
40 Involved 65 Pronoun Etc0f11 (213)688-t964 Oc~~i~lng~~ ta~~~l4 Bes1 Otter 648-8376 Sal r•• 702I 175 2002. showroom cond, -1 $161< firm 969-2928 Volk1wageoa ...,.--r-~..---.--r---. Clfculetlon 1385 646-5606 . Wfndaurler ci1UIC W9l1 redll•n Int. Musi •• u i!lhitzc• 91 I ...... 10 11 12 13 tll TllAY · M~ Ham~l.n ConllOle In malnt. ssoo. 497.4e9a '4200. 644-91t1, e•t 234
PIT motor route drivers Ou11n elze waterbed · like new condition. or •95·5903 ---+--t--+--+---' needed now In Cotta lrame.1." poater $100. Obi S1~·0bo. 975.g103 Afrcr1fl 1010 .79 3201-0----n-•CV"'tv' 455 E. Cout Hwy
Mua & Huntlngtori m1ttta25. 951-1987 Otflct fuailart/ Vespa, Wtiite P260E, grNt xtraa. AtC. f,~coo~o: l"-....11 Cl\RVER Newpon BMch
BelCl"I. AM delivery to Single bed Ml w/l"ldbrd ~ • t 12"a cond. 2600 ml'". S1200. 760-1393 ~IC_~ 673-0900
hOmes Must l"leve good S100 Aecllnercl"lrw/l"leat &IJatl -640-078• ------l'IJl....L&J l"-....11\.....L. car • proof ol lnaurancie. padt~lbr s 100 754..&369 OnFthe .nd of the 'IM' Ii '79 320l, Sapphire Blue. 4 , . ..,, ,,.,,. •Al" "'¥Ii> ~ '''"'' Aatn Deatttlc Nowllndsorl"lolldtyt.No . ' 'only )'Ol.I can get lower CJCIH 1012 spd, mags, air, Blau '<l'M""'"'"'" '"' • .., •.w 1;;;.;=;;.i«~=--=---
collecllona or billing. Call Sleeper Sofa: Xlnt cond. thlfl ever prlcM on uMd Boyt bike l.Nlahlkl" c11om $7900tobo 64'-8693 OPEN MJHOA,vs IM laic• 1307
554-7338, 9·2PM M·F. Asking $150. 673·2257 factory cond!Jloned 10 spd S50 487-5664 '793201 xlnt cond 10-ml I~ '65 si....i .. t XEROX I I ' · " · H• I S "''""· rune Jrea •
i-....-+ ...... +-~~ .... PAAT·TIME. Varied l"lourt wi!~E=~1~0:~~:.": lere. G~lx~o~:~: l;d~~ ~n~~:1~f~~~~ ~~st'~ ~~8f:pr!1.~~!: 175 99L. Rune great BOdy
145010
bo
549
•
24
10 Include early A.M. l"leadboard. MUST SELL ~ltrs lrom $209~, & 4x). All xlnt 631•0946 Great Cl"lrlstme.a present clean S 1350 842·604 t C .. Ullc t3ot
weelcenda. Mull h•ve de-S375 OBO 6-46-9229 109 coplet• rom S9000tobo. 751-8517 -78 cdV d•e1-Xu pend1ble velllcle (1m111 $695. All mecl"llnee come Men• Columbia 27" t2ap laura 9 7 ......,lllOI.
truck, Yin. ltlllon Bt11tltt1' wltl"l llmlled 30 dey war-Nd1wt1'50tlrm841·5660 CoConvenlenllyLocated '799r11•X4 11ereo snug bpol•~S,6SL50o ~J~n1.691tg1 nt
) I
...i 1 ., __ .. _ ~2 rlt'lly & 1r1 lllglble for & mpetltlvely Priced 11 .. _11 . .._ •1 • wv • '""'-
wegon o • ~ _. • 12 Xetox Mrv~ pl1n1 .so Motot>ecane, llke new, 27" & I'"" . ru .. a looks grell
peper Malet In lrvlne E J• all L ; 0 .... lutl FOf mOfe Info 10 99d Pd S269. asillnt1 $3600 6-of2· 1666 THE URIEIT "" MYl1 be depen-X • qu ty ee I crpt. 1 x -· • -~ dabie. Cont1e1 Greg m~ bound, ott wl"llte, like call 635-2268 collect. S 125 846-5165 Te~ll tl SELECTIOM
Hyde Mondey tlvu Frldey new $150. as 1· 1012 3 m11chlng deelle, ,._ SCHWINN 3 WHEEL Sales·Servlce-Lea!ing '69£orona. nu radla, caN. or late model. low mlleege
between 11:30 end 10·30 eond . 8ry metal, cnrome XLNT, S150 845-4765 reblt $750 786-6064 Cadllleca In Southern
1.m. onz-642~21 Jtwtl'L •214 ~·· 01111 tops S90 .._ Schwinn crulH r 165 IO' CAR\fER .74 Corone, 4 dr , epd, Ca1tlorn111 See us todayl
225p1i;;!i1iallt d&m<>nde, 5-7506 m()9«1 1275 5•8-2•29 ' ~l.J...S ~·RM\\ 1mllm, 64.000 ml, 11lnt llllllS
Video Production Train· IPPf'. at S1800, Mii S700 3 UMd SECRETARIAL Caat;;• 14 ..... ....., .. , , ,,... ... c-0nd . $1950 6-of4-4259 ClllLUC
"'· Ill ~. up to or 1385 M Fr" '"I( ruby DESK with left r9lurn1 ~,... • '"" • ,,. ·• .... ,., S 13/l"lr •Int ground noor w t Pu r c l"l a• e JI m . S50 NCl"I 494-0404 171Sp0f1amoblfe P09 ~ ~---R 77 Toyote Ing bed 2600 Herbor Blvd
opponunlty 213-592-4163,SJM198 TopC.mper New motor ~1JIL. wtcmpr, "1K ml S3500 COSTA MESA
71<&1220-1520 Beaut Elke ri ng• Piun~tttl IUI & brlk•. AC/DC Frig 646-5779 540 1860
Employment Service wtdl1monda 1 150 $500 \6()6 Q hi, gOOd cond Very c~un '3 tOO Sale .. Servie.Leulng ·60 Corolle Ulbc1' Xlnl ,.,..,...--.,...-·--~-~ m-+-~~-1 Center. not an empl-Oy· Ans Ad 596 • ce1i S325. 75 8Se7 · 673·183• URIEST cond $5200/obo, Hm Clttntltt 9313
mentegenc;. 842·~30024hra.' ·11 Y1m1l"I• orgen. Mtterlilrn 01& llVEITOllY 720•197Swk 54o-S060
Wlfttr/Waltrttl Game Show Pm•. gift toaded.1850. 5"S-750e 2 CQu111 V1P mOdel defelu •·19 3201: ~ spd. AIC Cor ·79 Mint cond SAS, 1111 C&ll&ll
P/Ume S.m-7:30pm Mon cerllflcate, Ven CIMI & Antique Vlet'lnete Grind Mo·Peda. 2 tpd like new . (994XEO) stereo(S500)39mpgl"lwy, Jeguer red, blac:ti vinyl
7 8
-.Jo.-~--' & Tue• & 4·7·30 pm Wed Arpet Jtweltrt. Wiii NII Pleno ll500 sae-5579 $350 ..cl"I. 673-4007 • 78 3201; • apd, SIR S spd 111 ~•ras $4100 top N-paint. bra.lies. ---------+---------4---------& Fri Active re11remettl lntlre 14000 credit tor · · --(091YPZ) like new 846·7171 carboralor, fuet pump,
ltlt WutH 9100 ltlt WHt.. 5111 Belt Wut.. 11• hm. 393 Hoepltal Ad. N,B, 12.500 or portions for Conn 2 men. 32 peel. AGO, Vs:'J ~!31xlnt cond. •·79 3201; 4 spd, SIA Triaa_ ~k--9171 / b~ttery & starlet. Ask lor ;;:;;;;;;;iiiiiiii;i;; Restaurant Warehouae no e)l,perlenoe 2 5 v, d I 1 c o u n ' . old church model. Ideal • (385YPY) Lerry. 770•8966
PllDIOTIOM COOWS SAUIOAllO required C1nm1keup10 7141597-2233. for ttudent S750 v .. pa Scooter xlnt cond •·ao 3201: 5 spd, AIC ·68 TR 56 Abll eng. n---------
" Major natlonal co. aeelts $10/hr. FIT & PIT ivall· WATCHES ·Geltl"lepr .... 760-8668 111 ecces perfect (565Z0l) 1op, runs gr e11
Can you. e..perlenced In Contlnen-locally establlllhed lndl· •ble. Call 543-2808 IOf tlglou1 look for• fraction UJ)figl"ll Pleno lor Sell. Cl"lrll Im II Presen t. * '61 3201; 5 spd. SIA $2400/obo. Pl"I 645-233• '77~.~A~9i~ P;·1g~ ~ ~~~~l"lrsnlghtly? tel Cuisine Muet be 1111 vldual. college back· eppt. Nlllonal C.H.O. of cost. Flneet top name 1450. 760-1248 $975/0BO 962-1713 ~!;2u~rei>. Auto, loaded Vtllr1w11ea 1173 otter 5•5·9269
and prolesslontlly train· ground prel Salaried ~ S qulllly repllc.u Pert In M t l / -----Wiii groomed, ed lunch and Olnne, floor and unlimited ln·I S l every detlll end d"lgn Y1m1h1 Baby Grand • ercyc H 11166653) '81 Rabbit Conv Alr 7• Vega. redlo. 11r . .-OK
dependat>le 511111 open For Inter;-come c111ilng with op· A Cl"lil"luehuu, Ing fiatr $250. 760-7232 ' Plano. PolllhedWalnut.2 ScNltn !!11 •;~~~~~I. 5 spd, SIR stereo cass, clean, 48K ml, ull trans $750 obo ~dy:' mollY&ted? Cell Sigrid Holland, ~ PO•lunlty 10 build equll, & 11"10'11"11lr need1 lovlng yr• old. $5500 758--0646 170 HONDA sd58 good ~ '83 32d1. auto. ml, $7300 pp 493.7495 786-1311 eves
Enioy working wnh ktds7 PREMIER. Costa Mesa Tl"llt>ault & Co. 754•70t l"lome S 1ooiup 548.0471 •n lat't ' 1' l~rtlat c.M1 cond . & runa ~I. 1450 (1FMY925) SIA 1972 vw t>us. new engine, ·79 CAMARO 1 ownr Xlnt
11 you cen answer YES 751·6100 • ••• rrs ~KC Lat> Puppies, yellow BRIOO'PORTMILL 8ftscot1 SurtbOAfdi, soft, o, otter 545-S.-OS *'63 320i. 5 spd, SI A dual cerbs good cond cond Extru Bteu $3800
Phone 646-7021 Aeat1uran1 -Reedy for Chrl1tm11 ~~:-C1~c!~85~~r round pintail. New & uMd '80 KX· l25 bougl"ltn;;-ln (002357) S2.000 or beat otler obo. 760-6828
2 30·6pm Mon ltlru Fn WllTER /WllTRESS lllPUY llYHTillll 6"2-0695 5"1--0535 . $SO-S95 673-8373 '62 good cond ldNI for * '83 3201. auto SI A 957-8165 84 ~et11. See thru
Ei1perieoced on Conllnen· Tiie O<ange County Dally AMERICAN ESKIMO • Just In Time IOf Cl"lrlttmu. beQlnn« $400 6.S-0490 ( !~ 189) ·54 VW BUQ. cleen, In good root loeded, 3500 m1,
Pu<ChUlng Agent ror In· ial CuiSine MuSI t>e last Pilot haa an eJtcellent 09· Femele Pupe. 3 mo , wMI, Mi1Ctl111.... & 11 Used once. Spalding 150 •60 YAMAHA 650 ~2!n.~~:1• 5 SOd. 10 mi sl"la.pe S3000 847-0059 S23.000 lob Denver
1er1or Design Reis EX· and neal In apP9rll1Ce porturnity bfeglnnlng lurry, Ul<C reg, all ahOll 2 Meter Mobil xc::tlVer ' ski• lootl binding• Tomlc 1900 Rtndy 548· 1263 ··,1-• 111 57 Reg Top. stocil l600 303
•
756
-
6354
penenced C111 lo< "PPI Lunch or Olnner sl"lltt mid-January or Cll"f $300 5•5·8'144 d1y1 1(01( mobll mlk• toot polee S 150 494~546 • • 1 1 ... Bl " k SEE IS flllSTI 754.()241 open For lnteNtew. Call onenled display lldvenl1· Peut 978-3211 eves awltcl"I Larten Kolrod ·a 1 Burg VESPA P200E 208 W 111, 58.nll Ane s ngie po... aupt .. un · ing sales reps wltl"I • ' ant 11icond S 195 casll RARE A41mlng1on Mdl t 1, 9KI. mint cond . l"lu 111 Closect Sundty VOO gagu, new rldlela, we l"lave 1 good MlectlOt\o
Real Esttte Siles Person ~~~l~A C~s~:YM~e proven tri ck record Beeutllul Ll"l1H Apto onty 6"4•6966 Browning peltnl. dlacon· i1tr1J Incl alarm s.otS-3609 , •AGE SELECTION OF good pilnt , no rust ol NEW & used Chev·
Aep1dly growing NewQOrl Grell earning potentlel femele Pl.IPP.Y w/papert Unued 19•8, mint cond . '-"' S 1400 Dan 5•s.3 "7 rolelll s .. us tod1yl branch of Hewa11 Co 75t·6100 guar-antee<I draw analn1i $325 caU 7511-1070 2 M11draptt, blwn l rull, 1350/obo 675-9235 81 V"PI 100, lo ml, exit NEW 4 USEO BMW'S! '62 cJISllc Bun coo;--, nu
..,_,, ..,..,,~rntllfestecnn Ri f -. · cond 1850 759-8233 & " -.-.. I a ales comm1111on Detlre lo BOSTON TEARIER PUPS SU ea ltra.draperod. SW"~lt. t.al'IO~ l'A . _ r.-dpatnl,wl"lttop.0<1.nu
botl"I locales Call Menna EllcluSive Lad let Boutique move into management 1 Cl"lrlatmu Spectll S 10. Two 5 ft aotu. lit(e Mena UMd twice. 1175 83 YllT\lllt Rive, Vespe crpt, rebll eng, aiereo,
720-1105 opening 1n Funion Island plus Send rMOme to· '350. 1581.9330 nu, $350 ea. 19 Cypf-Sl"llme Incl. 5-4ll.OS90 type 1,700 miles, •Int good llrea, e•ll cond.
RECEPTIONIST requires 111pe~1enced . P. 0 Box 1560. tr-. $10 ee. Hondo 90 cond Wor11"1 S 1800, Mii llH WOl IMW $3700 675-0166
Newpon Beach 1a .... firm prohtsstonel retell sales Coste Mesa. 92628 C•W OMW-NllllEI mtrcycle 1175. 760-8360 Sttndard 8' POOi table tor S 1000 5'48· 1256 VOLUME SALES .63 Bale. reblt eng . lrana.
seeks lull time recep· peopte Cell lor Appl EOE Red, 1350 662-3438 eYlol 200 Gel. Aquarium 1200. Mallogany w/lltte bed + f .n SEAVtCE & LEASING front end. 12V. S 1200.
t1onlt tlle¥11 secrellry 213-274-5018 845-7541 code •706 II IC ... 1900 r ... en, 3670 N Cllerry Ave. MUST SELL 642-7579
I II .. I fill --CHRISTMAS PUPPIES Utlll_. t: ..... LONG BEACH --------Clt~tr r n YP ng, ng. Sel9' Sales help. lntereetlng Bull Coctcer Spenlel1 :!. -(N Cl"ler 1 -405) ,......., _____ _.,.
pl"lonet, good front office * * * Ioctl aoent for nation AKC $250, ceu 557.5577 "Xe Utlllty trailer w/6 pac $ol. ) rye• t '6" B•I• Bug. $500. '83 doba, Wflt w/blu
appeeranoe/manner r• WIMTEI PROS wide oorp nee<11 "'" 1232 ah• II 'o P S 1o5 o 14 IH·lllO 642-0638 ca beret tor· 4 mot new. quired Salary S1 ,ooo : l'lelp lor membewrlhlpe, DOG TRAINING: Group or 544.2252 rad&-inaWetcome :SSBug,rblteng,cleanlnl, 71< ml, lul power, Take
Please complete 1ppll· I TUllEES some travel. par1 time In· prlvall Blhtvlor prob· L r1 orenn rec, a .. H20 Now open Sun 11·4 AM/FM stereo. nu tlrea. over leeae payment
cations between 9-S. come s7541501wk. lull lams solved. 63t-1167 Bennett Tl"lerapy Unit Mdl duet tu 1. Santut In· nltel ut D $2500. can 241"1rs. Bob ~s_2_90_._15_._9_&_2._1_84_3 __
M·F.•t.4000MacArtl"lur * * * $300+.Noexper nee.we Mesay0og•l lt0anyllz•. AP5 breathing mecttlne tergretedlyt,lllpl"l,18')9 HIGHEST cXSA ibUeb ..... 9117 631·6300ext32 Fer• t 1
Blvd. tulle •50. NB Ill IOIEY wlll train. Call Mr. B. Grooming tcl"IOOl t•Kl"ler 1250, 642·11570 days. deck. rec'• & •mp, turn (or yOOt Vlhlcle, dometltC 7 1 240Z. 0flg owner. Kint
HRPTIMllT/TTPIST SllORT MOIRS T2P"·~-mSPa'~.· Mon-Fri (21yreexp.)546-2848 Boie '""rlnn, melt/tr·-. lbl & wood & glQa door or lorelgn. 551-8285 cond • new paint, ale, '68 VW Sqbk run• good. '73 Thunderbird. Xlnt run· .., .., .... ... _ • ..., cat>. Call •11 5 731-3055 radio, $3800 760--0142 $800/obo 673~007 nlng cond. $800, Home
PIT l0am-4pm Mon-Fri. Wl"ly not dltl 10< dollar• In 7141261-1639 Min. Plntcl"lef pup1, AKC. l"leedboard, bedaprHd BEAUTIFUL 25.. RCA WE llY .76 260z. 4 .,..d, good •69 Bug, completely r• 720-1975, Wk 640-5060
General olflce dut111 our CdM olfloe We otter Klmbefly-Oordon e wka, red & blk/ttn. $115, Wurlitzer Organ .... S800 mo Call Susan • Hlghelt commllllOn• _ $300 213--331·6t85 S300. radio contole S25. SColOf TV, 2 'I' wmty, CLEAi COS cond $3950 494·38t8 'p~~~\:;.J..~1fi1~1~~: '76 EHie. Estele Sale. Xlnt 8~pm (714)4 76-0272 • Extensive product llnea Secretary tor conetructlon 540-8419 148. Free def. Open Ill TllOll '78 B·210 GX Htcl"lbk. 4 ber, tlr••, b~k~. com~nt, cond S 1600 obo p company l"lra 8·2 Leave POODLES ARE PEOPLE Sun TV JoM'a 8"&-17N ..., 962 9657 IHt,tiffilt •
6
1"1oto CC>PY
2
supplla n 8 m 1 & n u m be r Pups 1250 & up. 5"6-2848 8'ua celling ten wllullpa. · • tpd, xtnt cond. S3000 l"letdllner & am/Im u . · .-.-=-,,.----Type. CRT. smell mntg. • am to 1 noon 631 2345 Olk b1ede6. never UMd, Lrg 44' TV Pf'O~ed by I 1175-6595 Have ell reoelptt S2800 '76 GRANADA: 55.000 ml,
lnttreallng work op-• Trelneftt111116/~our • Scotttee, 2 male, t temlle, S100. 552-1609 13" Zenith GOid St11. •=1~.-.~.~1-----9~1~2-5 556-1091or 642·3607 1 owner, nonlsmol<er. 4
p0f1unlly Ask tor •• , ... ,.. a .. ,.. Secretary AKCS300.8S6-12t51ft6 l6001obo 642-7578 ---------dr, V8, air. atereo CatS.
Shtnnon 979-7660 atnt, w/,.ttltlat tt Get'leret .cretlrlal b<>c*· Shelflea M/F, 1200-$250. 0111111 PATOl llLU T v RENTALS s20 per mo. '17 Cvcc. Xtc. good con· ·~91~~;~:0 c:t~•lnl pwr wndws & IOckl. ~
IE
••--... tlrl •• .. 11000/wt keeping, some pl"lonel. 6-42-4m all 6 & wtinde F• UL.I, Mf·tltl 19" color TV•. auorted Olllon Hatcl"lback S 1500 tires S 1995 631-2683 ...ui 1 •
11
r
1811
& WOfO proceuing ellper p UM ttylet. 540-3195 e.«-6047 '69 VW, eulo, nu r1dlal1, ,79 C 1 C perf
PROP MGMT firm Mitts you ere 1 ·•tener req'd. real estate orlen· tt1 WI llY '79 Accord. 4 dr euto, air. AM/FM 111190• 251< on s2$o'bo ':!s.=1 • c:plo c to ,mlnlO!.. 38 .~mt ~,.~!~.~pm~ led co Cati Tom L .. e;by PtrUl..U for S•'· CABBAGE PATCH KIDS ..... , tr/ USEOCARS& TRUCKS stereo, good' cond eno. good trans & Int --------. IP com,,....11 ... 1111 6-ot2·1603 Rtre/l"IMlll"ly AH col«t 11111 In bo• S200 H . or Int 7111 COMEINORCALLFOR 14550.,94_3816 SllOO 673-7769 '711FIESTA50Krnl .. brtnd
beexprd lnallmllnt & 173·0111 S51up.call64M5l7 · bnlotter642·1107 •• 1 ::z=. z:::t!J on --•-•.... .71 Bus duel rvvt tn/r1 n-tires, 1400 eleteo ore duties & l"leve own -""'-.......,... r111S& ~ ·a 1 Accord 2 dr "'""' • """" •"•te MINT CONO -----People lljfl() tlMd peocile H·-"' t--' •• FIREWOOD: 1pllt. well parllde route .._,,.... ,,..~_...._. "'-·-ltm mini cond 55 500-·' S2500 obo 676·24"7 or ' m, · trenN>Ort•tlon & 10011 Mori ttmlllle .,.. .-unn lflould llweyw cheQ the .... ..., blby molueean • ,....,._,.....,. """"-.._....., _.. $2700 OBO 631-3016
Selary • IPI. benelill For 1..._ ~ .. ___.~ ..... ~·,.:.;! Service Olrectory In 1,... Coe_ klloo. peed\, ealmon IMIOlltd. Pine, '*'ar. Bcll"I. $2Spr pereon-lnc. MftlLIT 646-5755 650-8689 ' 673•11783
interview call 536-3347 ~ ... ,-r· l.,...t'V "::"' '"• DAILY PILOT crell S180o. 852-105f. mli1. $l50 o«d. 842-8345 l"IOra-deorvff. coctttalla 182I1 BEACH BLVD 7 '7 I l/W Bug Yellow. Greet '79 Wl"ll Mulling sunroof , . you .. e ve • 1631 Orcherd SA Htn1 F II lenglllh ••1 k Co I or Ofg&nlH own party. HUNT OTO C ... I lck 1 eulo power perfectly
The IHl"I draw In the ~ thlll'I riot getting HE A T ' z •R (12)$1500. ~~ Coel( ~Ol Call dyt 87Mt30, -IN N BEA H ;·1::· c':l"lg ~-2~3 II mntndlcared for by 1
Well .• 1 Dally Piiot ._,, NII It now with 1 ,. \ L HY II E 8 A Sl50 MOl"ltgtny dining 1116. 650..&828 147-llllf Mt-1111 owner $4000 "63-71175
Cleellfled Ad. 8"2·5678 Clualtled Ad. ...,,., ......... ~. FINC~~~17~·~~M P•lr. Mt s:Cso. 642-7347 IO' ILi"·-,._ WI"' TIP llUJI '72 Sqbck, IO ml, rtbll eng. ·so Ftlrmonl wegon, •Int ~ ,, it•"• -• -• S2500 obo 49•-7875, elt cond. 53800. 557•8388
I al.IJ Pl.Ill"' · · ·· .............. ··.. , ... ,• PARROT/ M1tr .... conur• HANO MADE swEATER. NEW • 01EseL. For All '" nn 1111 8 PM '~' -..., PHOTO ALBUM 135 u . your Hollday Entertllnlng \ w/cege 5100. 645-8358 All kinda ot /i'.,... 120 & Parede of l'f"· Dirt AUii IAl•I '72 l/W BUG. •lick ahlll, OllllTllAI SAU : PART TIME : "1601 Aatipn l lor 111. (71") 51·5119 673~. tvt 57-3273 ~j~I ~~2~~·9~~;33~4000 ·~~:~n~~e~~rm-.•nu~~i~~
· · inmeodo4u !411 rouiid oak M. 3 JOHN WAYNE TENNIS ........ ,.,... COSTA MESA ml wtaa'I -----__.__ X-<iond. low ml 12200 • Deliver Daily Pilot by auto in : rH11tr .. " leav ... empire ~111. CLUB Famlty Mtmbef· SEAPEACE. cuatom 85' Mt-'J•Mt-1417 SOUTH .,si.~:"s~. i~2~11
OBO ~·W·F Catl"ly Laguna Beach area (2 hours : l"•e tnfd the $350.1179·45« ltllp 18119. 759..0740 ltetdl. S125 hr 3 hr min. 545.171 ) eve 11&8-19'7
per day). Weekdays P .M. -. :. R~l•ltr end Time• Cl"lefry oolOfed Maple. 4 Like new Wl"llrlpe>OI trlll"I °l;7S-505f. 2t3/379 .... 21 4 WIWAITY• cou1n :~;:: =~r~='. Llaetla ba1 I alway• u~ '"~ drwr1. ovet mirror. orig COfTIPK!er, uMd 2 mo. .... rt..,._ Lo.&... Oll.UI 1111 UI! s2500 842•3379 1017iii9,...fown.....,_C_ou_Pt_."'4..;lk..-m;;;l. weekends A.M. F.am about Oa1ly Pilot for l"lrdwar•. dllld 1tOf. s100. Scl"lwln 6 •Pd ~J 1 G ~-bt S..RonetdDeoe lllZI orig 9wner 1 10,500 r'frwitment. J300. 8711-4~ tandem bike. uled 1 · o "' · roupe .,_ -1 •T '76 SCIAOOCO all 0<lgln11. • ..... 2 • ., $400 per mo. Call Mr. Barrow eummer, 1200. 566-1877 30. 115 Pf' Ptf•on. in"""" I al f .,.._ " ...,
642_4321. EOE k•••t o.w. I l"l1ve • few Getman & (714)873-2338 II ... Ull ~~:o~(joa..:.:e~oo
....................... , ............. • ,, .. ,.." &.•• ~o!,~~~~~~O: l~~~~8Mr~1~5~s:; Ptwtt IMtt 7111 VOIT~·Strvicl 76 vw Conven. Cl"lamp •iilliiiiiiiiliiiiiiiililliiillliiiiiiiiiiiiiliim.J.:=======:tl 111ct to Mii before Ct\fltl· 1299: E~enll, S250: i21 i! &tury LJIC*rll\1. 1871~ e!:?iVd. ltdlt Wl"ll on wht, IO ml New9paper mN. $45/up. 83&-3932 S O m I N A 0 . Nlee, 215 h.p, VHF. Ctn-Huntinvton 8MCf1 "300, 780· 1"89 IV meg
Wood burning 110¥9 pipe, 71"·241-<!3t5 va. S4&00 efa-3951 (l14)) 142-2000 '711 BUO CONVERTIBLE KIDS EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZESI ptrlor h .. tlnf etovt. LL.am• Wool Ru(fll 6'117' 22· w/Lldo mooring 4 ........... 1131 Beaullf\11 baby bl\lt xlnt 'llltrtlauS.,rt•t • • ---~rca 1150. good cond. ln 185 Rtbblt Jdet 136. $4500. 873-7444 tv m19.' 112 JtiP CJ& rm Rll:d .... ,. ... ALI-ll •2 Cl"lrlttmll Gitt 22K ml .. Brovgl"lam, very etHn. 1111nowltm 72().()216 turq. rlnge 125. 631-0M6 top ,_.., uted MUST .... • tmmec. $53115 846-8633 toa6ed, etereo.13500. &-11·--. Ull MAQIC ISLAND GOLD 2~,~ w~F Hew• ~~ &ELL noo~.:.0..1e2 '15 &Glcon..,.,, xGit. ;;a, . 843·1061 831-5248 .. ..--CARD 1750 Bill tw n ord ml ~Int 14450. 241'"90 81 vw Rtbbit Conv. fUfO '78 n..o ............... _ .. · · MtrcrulMrt. tandtm trtr, -_,, OTI eonv.rtton, Centnl, ..,..,., Cl-•"'•"'.,,.. .. I"' aPPL.WI 7119-1268, ~nd-. tlel"I & ekl. 111 000 Pe stereo bleck black Mutl Sell $3700 obo.
1.91 967-8133 MAQIC ISLAND GOLD 72C)..1101h9meg ' . Tl'\ldlwlc:amper ., ......... 1149 b j I e k ·. Wk d y Jtromut844·260'1 K~wlhr&«'t'_.111nt CARD 1600-0ESPER· 28'8AJA,f~ctll.Tower, :-:'~':',;=~'l; '16 D8Sil. X-1 cona. 213/853-78110. Wkl'\d '79REQENCYCPE.Moon
COf\d.$100•&44·6'88. ATE. B11n Trtnt· ptantc. f1tt1 box. 2 vtita rlmeltlf-. good colfd. r9bll ~"" 9"rY· 7l4/$44.()714 root, Landau. ltethef, dk
IWr ("' d terred·Ouet Paid thtu !Mier i mo+"•. UtK 12500. art 8c>m. MC).. 752$ ll"llng. · 24' 1-ettO '82 Rabbit convst ~1 brfl, dltMI 22 + mpg, lllnl ':or) 2 rr,:u-.:... June 84. 131-3811 Aflw6 call 813•1080 ... k '70 MEACEOES 280SL ~.Take OYW •..._ ... COf'ld . II.It'll grMI $4290. ' Megnovoi1n....-2 • DodQe pie up"' Ion, loml Otlg & euperbl 1272/mo, nothlnO down Art, d•Y• 173-UH 11Ptport.•aat1tt•d'Y9' .. ~ ............. ._,_, 792011 loston WMler au10.Sf260.&4e-1sn 11etoc) · at.1106 720-048015~259 • ew1w11nd87'-3111
1130 ICllf both. 131..0212 ,..,.,,. ...,_, 99IM• ~. Ou111qe • w/115 tip . --·.,....,,...,...· .,...--.,.--------------1~.:r--.....,.,.-·---....~
1 i ~ 11111 11'1 c1r1or1, $'6 JoflMon E*Y avllll oP-17 l<lnO l<ab 0.tMI PU 'Tl• LI ml1'1 '82 Ra.bbll LX lruch Dtl ~••I ~·r~~~w--648-t7Hin.epm llon. '"°'nu Wld lrtr. ·~cror. ~.~o~O:. Hew blue, anrf elloyt, 40~pg.01Pd1 13~ m1'.l~11"SV,.,,.ie11~~;iiiien~lii-.1111;:;Q1"11"11 .. eng ...... new ..
& dryet. 1135-. ~ M1n1 &Ill Jaok•t l 18,&009t>0.4M·tS55 944.22b '2 ... 128,500.~~2 '8td lln•r. llkt new. Interior a J*nl. CIMTI .
....-. ltOO '*'5148 ~~=-new o;g· 60iion Wtleier. t5·, lllrlt '71 ,Ofd Cou!'let 8"'9 4 '7t 300 SD Turbo. '8500, 97t.~18 1495 obO. 942.71117
Wfllfpool tf• froettr". 141-f~ .tar;e. . =a ~ .. To:.~· apd, long tiff. only Anthr1clte, Perfect. 'Ml8'Mt1Nttrt, '78Voi.rt.WQl'\,io.dtd,IO I 175, 8&0·'1452 • 81.000 ml. looltunchuna S 1tf<l ot>o. t65·t3H or 5 ape!, tPof1 ...,._ elloy ml, 12900. 84().411Q ~Mar~ minil,.. e.n t _. or•I .._,,,,ly Pllnttd 7 ..... 708 Wl"letlt. 5 ~r unMml1ed - -r• tt !! Wfllblt Jack•t.l"d IHOO IN!!, -7 t.. n100 ~"°2.tea1 ' 'to 30050 nt _.,, ... 1o guar •• 1300 m1, a1a.aoo. Ptatial IHI
,,... cut;Ttbr m.. w111 1ak1 13000 "'"'· "" 123 .00 41w248 111.se11 au."™ 1A iii con• wi r;ao-
84•-'U7 or li0-12.. TIM7H ~,.:: :-= = ~; ~· :;:a.::· ~ 111· · CH~ISTMAS ittlCIAL •eo r111on. t9d •l'wtl• top, ti& HOrMr ICCOfdllll 20 llOOI tel* • IA 1W'I 17'9. C.. few ,...... IUOOobo."2·1120M ... 11111.1 Rabbit Con*1 Mint IOw Int MUil ... Atducedtc
b ... 7 ~ .. '"" •••••· 1400/obo. 0....1·211-Uf.M17 Wl\t/bhi "'" alloya ml ~Mlt......,,23 '4"5.17S-011e • • ._.. 14-1641 · '93 OMC ltS auto Oto ' ' · 7&4-l400eJ.40e • w1111H'•b0tt"'"""9 elr, Ina bed •• 111: AM/FM .... "°"1 1 v~-w---.D'""e-atl·-.-,-.,,-.-.-u-10-. 'ti Flrttllrd """'DOOd 'll~I:~ ...... !!!! Pro-11'1• twin eurt~~· "" "°"' ._ a. fl/I ., Ma·t07t ,.., ~ 9'lff. '*" 1n11tm a air ra.ooo .i:•.,..1
... ooo_ot>o....,.,,. ..... ~----i•• •nH m I -!11~1 COtld It . tlOf'll M1411281¥mect "*Plll•'..., -9 mllee 11450 '41·'1249 • flndPtlx I ~ .. ,...... _..." _,,., .,...,... A1kln9 I HO. Qreat WAHT ACTIONT ~• I I tvity '------=-~------------------.!.::Old='=t2IO==no-t40f==-CNllCrw Qlft. 542·780t Wlf\t Ade ~~ ... rt Qwlllad Adi .. 1.-.11 ... ti~-I'~~&:...=. 1
" :3f11"'~ ~ '::
iimi~ s '16 e dXR xR7 H50
8711-S330 Of 557-4521
oiu .. Mlt Hft
(714) 548-7058 ·
l
• .
W 01n en 's GOP chief
targe ts _'gender g~p '
By J ERRY HIRSCH
Of .... 0.-, ..... llall
Helping President Reagan to be re-elected will be the major
task of the Orange County Federation of Republican Women,
according to the organization's new president, Newport Beach
resident Lynn Turner.
Turner took charge of the volunteer organization earlier this
month following its convention in Costa Mesa.
"One of our major concerns is the gender gap and 1 think our
organization will play a major role in closing the gender gap,"
Turner said.
Turner noted that Reagan has made "more significant
(See WOMEN IN GOP. Page At)
THI DRAIGI COAST
MONDAY DECEMBER 19. 1983
.,. -·· . .._..
COAST IDITIDN
ORANGE COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Bal Fun Zone foreclosure avoided
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of Ille Oe11J "-' It.II
The oft called-off Balboa Fun Z.Ohe development
may be in the offing.
The property's owners narrowly averted a
forecl05ure sale today and are now trying to find a
way to start the development of the valuable
Newport Bay property.
"We really want to go forward with the
Delight of
holiday
spreading
Christmas will be a little
more joyful for 75 Costa
Mesa youngsters this year
thanks to the local Rotary
Club which treated them to a
Christmas party, complete
with presents and a visit from
Santa.
Howard Kautz. club presi-
dent, saJd the 60 members
. have raised money to make
Christmas a little merrier for
groups of school children for
20 years.
.,, The first through third
graders, attended a party at
the Mesa Verde Country
Club where they received
two presents picked es-
pecially for them from Santa,
portrayed by Clarence
Needham, a retired school
principal.
0.., ..... -~ ........ lt--
a
C4-t .-Cl· a
M • Cl
M • •
development," said J orda n Wank, a Los Angeles
attorney who heads Balboa Marina Fun Z.One Ltd.,
the partnership that owns the site.
A popular carnival tourist site since the 1930's,
the Fun Z.On has fallen on hard times during the last
decade. Several proposals by different groups to
develop the site have fallen through. The amusement
rides are gone and the property now sits vacant.
Balboa residents and merchants have complained the
•
Fun Z.One is an eyesore and is inhabited by transients.
Wank, however, would not d~ the details
behind any development and said the property
owners would still consider selling all or part of the
pareel.
American Savings Bank of San Diego.
The partnership owed $852,000 on the property
plus interest on monthly payments that had not been
made since March.
"We had to get the other matters resolved first,"
Wank said.
The property was to have been auctioned today,
according to John Brock, a vice president with Great
Great American obtained the mortgage follc;>w-
ing its recent merger with the original lender:
Laguna Federal Savings and Loan Association.
(See FUN ZONE, Page AZ)
Police identify
woman's body
dumped in LB
By STEVE MARBLE
OlhO.., ..... lt.lllt
The strangulation slaying of a
black woman whaie half-dressed
body was found early Saturday
. morning in Laguna Beach has led
homicide investigators to the Los
Angeles street scene where the
woman allegedly worked a.s a
prostitute.
Patricia Ann Car~nter, 26, was
last seen alive about midnight
Friday by a man police described
as her pimp.
Why she was killed and why
her body was dumped in a parking
lot off baguna-€.anyon Road are
questions that police were still
trying to untangle this morning.
Sgt. Alex Jimene% speculated
the woman was killed outside the
city and that her killer drove to
Laguna looking for an isolated
spot to dump the body. He said the
killer may have intended to push
the body in a flood control channel
that runs along the two-lane
roadway but was scared off.
The woman's body, clad only in
a Hawaiian shirt, was found at
6:50 a .m. by a newspaper carrier.
A search continued today for
other articles of clothing that
investigators believe may have
been discarded elsewhere in the
beacb city.
Police said their intial investiga-
tion has been slowed because the
woman's friends and business
contacts have been reluctant to
discuss Carpenter's alleged Ufe-
style as a prostitute.
Carpenter apparently lived
with her sister in a Los Angeles
hotel. PQlice have been told she
was "working the street" Friday
an ffiat arnan described as her
pimp was seated in a car, '!lup-
posedly keeping an eye on her .
Police investigators claimed the
man allegedly fell asleep and
found Carpenter missing when he
awoke. The man. police said,
reported Carpenter's disap-
pearance to the woman's sister.
Authorities said the woman was
strangled but that there were no
other signs of violence or marks on
her body.
Transportation post
given to Nestande 1
Orange County Supervisor
Bruce Nestande has been elected
vice chainnan of the California
Transportation Commission, put-
ting him in line for the chair-
man.ship of the powerful panel in
1985.
Nestande's election to the poet
also triggered his resignation as
president of the Southern Cali-
fornia Aleociation of Govern-
ments, an' important regional
planning agency.
The supenrisor said he felt
compelled to resign as president of
SCAG and its executive body
becawie ol the increuing demands
of his workload.
(See NESTANDE, Pa1e AO Bruce Nestande
By ROGER CARLSON
ot .... O.., .........
A couple of local high echool teama are echeduled to meet two quite
different national powen th1a week during a trip to the nation'• capital.
An antieipated meeUng with President .ftealan higb.liahm a
ambitious r..tem lwinl f« Mater Del and Fountain Valley hlah IChool
buketball teams -a tour in which the two will be pitted apinat noted
J>O'!era DeM.atha (HyattvUle, Md.) ancf St. John'• (WuhlnCton, D.C.)
hiCh IChoola.
A party of 64 led by Mater Del c.o.ch Gary McKnJabt and 18
travelen from 'Fountain Valley, lncludinc Co.ch Dave Brown, left thla
weekend f« the nation'acapltal. Mater OM took off Saturday nllbt frun
Lal Anpi. International and l'Owltaln Valley'• -entounae clepaned
Sunday momlnl from the Mme lite.
Mat.er OM II t-d In s.nta Ana and reprw11m the only paroch1a1
pl!'ep IChool in the IOUthem pOC'Uon of 0ranp County. ~ '!be ~ for the tow' II a Wectn.day niaht oonfrontaUon on the
~floor between the nation'• top two ranked teaml. Mater Del II
No. 1, DeMatha II No. 2 .
But. U.... are IOinc to be aome c1JittnctioN of note.
.. We want to r.-11 mt our....._ .. aaya McKnlaht. "but. lt wouldn't
be fUl' lf ,, w .... ,. ~trip. ..
Thllt •-oomplete trip lndudel vt.lta to molt of the major attcacUona
cae. COAIT LUU1?A.LL. .... Al)
·'
/
aryMcKnipt
1
...
'
.•
AZ * Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Oeoember 19, 1983
Who cheated on schOol's testscoPes,-aBd-why-f.-
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN the st.ate, wlli resume after the no tampering took place with teats land School alter an investigation lnltiaUy alerted by the usually "Th hi 1, ha .
0t1Mo.ii,,....t1M1 vacation period. Today he re-at any other district school. But he turned up poeaible tampering that high acores produt'ed at Newland 1 f ~ ng m vang a pro
Fountain Valley School District mained bewildered as to who said the district la already takil"l8 ral.aed the clasa average far above At first, they believed a compute; emk wt d LS te ~.rn5unt of time altered the tests and why it was steps to Ugh ten security in connec-the previous year. had erred while scoring the tests ~ to 0 t ts, nowden aal
principals and administrators done. uon with future teet. and in-State test results, which are Cheryl Snowden a district ad~ mebody went.~ a tremendo
have gone home for a two-week Fisher said he is convinced, veetigating alxth-grade results used for evaluation only, showed minlstrator who s~pervises tes-amount of effort
winter vacation, still puuled however, that an adult was re-which may have been altered. that Newland School's third ting, flew to Sacramento to check She added, "We've talked to 1
about suspected tampering with sponsible, not a student. The local probe is focusing on graders had 9COred better than 99 the Newland tests and discovered of the teachers involved in givh
third-grade state test scores at "It's highly improbable It was a the results of the California percent of all third graden in the extensive erasures on the the tests. except for one teach
William T. Newland School. student," he said. "Since there Assessment Program tests admin-state and their reading score was third-grade tests She also found we've not been able to reai
Superintendent Willi~ Fisher
said today that his invesUgation of
Newland's test results, which
·were some of the highest scores in
was no answer key, it would have istered to third-. and sixth-grade the hi~hest ~ California. New-evidence of possible tampering on because she left the district."
to have been a student who knew students last sprmg. land is lJl Huntington Beach, but is a smaller number of sixth-grade District officials said the 1.et
all the answers, which iS highly Last week, school district part of the Fountain Valley tests from Newland. She will had been left in an open wor
improbable." t rustees in v st 1 ida ted 69 elementary district. recommend the sixth-grade New-room for several days before th•
Fisher also said he is oonfident third-grade test scores from New-School district officials were land acores also be invalidated. were submitted to the district.
Horse in
OC split
wrangle
located
LB plan excludes housing
Laguna pan el mulls Village Entran ce -sans units for elder/~
By lbe Anociated Preu
A woman who was jailed after
refusing to tell a divorce court
jµdge where a prize breeding
stallion was being kept has been
released because the horse was
found.
~ Theresia Williams, 45, a horse
tnµner, was released Saturday
from Orange County Jail after the
Hanoverian 'stallion, Graf Got-
thard. was taken to Greenspot
Farm, a stable near Redlands.
.,.....,.,...
By L.P. BENET
Ofh~ ...... ·-Once again, low-income elderly
housing will be a hot topic of
debate for the Laguna Beach City
Council.
The council meets at 6 p.m.
Tuesday in council chambers, 505
Forest Ave .. to consider a staff
recommendation to adopn-tan~
planning Cirm's proposal to ex-
clude senior housing from a plan
that wiU transform the Village
En try parcel from a utility site in to
$9 million plaza.
The firm. the Irvine-based
FORMA company, stated in its
report that incorporating a hous~
ing development into the plan
would be too t'OStly. The firm
suggested the city could develop
the Village Entry site for higher
profit uses and use the money to
buil~ elderly residential units
eLSewhere.
"When I called where I had my
horse. t.Oey said · SO!Jleone had
picked him up and taken 'him to
Greenspot Farm," Mrs. Williams
said. ''I was so upset, that's all I can
remember. I'm going to fight this
until the very end. I want my
horse back home where he
belongs."
Theresia Williams with her horse\ Graf Gotthard.
City manager Ken Frank said
his recommendation to council
members includes the passibility
of purchasing a small pri-
vately-owned parcel on Laguna
CanyonRoadnexttothepropo&ed
plaza where 12 to 14 low-income
units could be buUt.
Graf Gotthard. a 12-year-old
stallion valued at $75.000, 1s the
subject of a bitter divorce battle
between Mrs. Williams and het
husband of 20 years, Walter
Williams, owner of Federal Con-
tractmg Corp. in Orange.
Judge Myron Brown had or-
dered the stallion moved to
Greenspot Farms pending a Jan.
21 divon-e hearing and had barred
the couple from seeing the animal
until then.
But Mrs. Williams tlad refused
to tell Brown where the horse was
being boarded She was jailed
Wednesday-after persisting in her
refusal.
The city hired FORMA several
_ ~nths ago to create a design that
would replace the aging sewer
treatment facility and a city
COAST BASKETBALL TEAMS TBA VEL TOW ASHING TON ,. '
From Page A 1
around Washington D.C .. includmg a pnvate tour of the White House
and Congress.
"The pnvate tour includes many places where most normaUy don't
get a chance to see, such as getting on the floor of Congreios," says Mat.er
Dei administrator John Merino. "It's really an educational thing for the
kids.''
As for meeting with President Reagan, McKnight said, "It's 90
percent sure."
Arrangements were made by DeMatha's basketball coach Morgan
Wooten and Rep. Jerry Pattenon. D-Santa Ana..
"It's on his schedule," says McKnight. "and as we understand 1t all
is OK with the exception that something could. of course. come up."
WOMEN IN GOP ...
FromPage A 1
appointments of women than other presidents."
"The Republican party should be rather proud of Justice
Sandra Day O'Conner and Secretary of Transportation Elizabeth
Dole," Turner said.
She pointed out that the only two female U.S. Senators are
Republicans -Nancy Landon K.assenbaum of Kansas and Paula
Hawkins of F1orida.
One strategy the federation will use LS organize professional
women who have an interest in the Republican's "pro-business"
policies, Tum~r said.
·•Our goal in Orange County is the growth of the federation
next year and that will mean reaching out and involving the
Republican professional and bw;iness woman," Turners said.
The group plans a series of night meetings because working
women cannot attend the trailitional daytime meetings of the
federation.
"They arean untapped resource. theirvoicesshould be heard,"
Turner said.
On a local level, the women's group will work hard to see that
a Republican unseats Rep. Jerry Patterson. D-Santa Ana.
"We are anxious to see a Republican elected in the 38th District
again.st Patterson and we will be helping in whatever way we can,"
Turner said.
Two ways Turner's organization will help is by registering
Republican voters and walking precincts for Republican can-
didates, she said.
Turner is no newcomer to politics. Her father was a slate
senator in her native state of Iowa. She became involved in Orange
Gout politics when she helped ~blywoman Marian
8erg"HOn'S flnt campaign in 1976.
But because of her new position. Turner cAn't take sides In
races between Republicans ao Turner will have to sit on the
sidelines of Berge90n's bid for the 37th District state Senate seat
until aft.er the primary.
Here's Mater Dei's schedule:
•Today -A visit lO the FBI and pracuce at the Uruversity of
Maryland. __
•Tuesday -A visit lO the various monuments in and around the
Washington Mall.
•Wednesday -A private tour of the White House and Congress
and a scheduled meeting with President Reagan.
•Thursday -A visit to the national mint, ArlingtonCemetery,and
the Afr and Space Museum at the Smithsonian Institute.
• Friday -A ~hedu~_vilU to Ge~fffr-W.eather penmtting,
then practice at Georgetown University.
•Saturday -Return to Los Angeles International Airport at 10:30
a.m.
"We're also going to try to get to Ford's Theater," says McKnight,
"but we don't know yet where we're going to squeez.e it in."
Here's Fountain Valley's schedule:
•Today -A visit to the Washington Mall, including the Afr and
Space Museum and Historical Museum at the Smithsonian Institute.
•Tuesday -A visit to Mt. Vernon and Arlington Cemetery.
•Wednesday -The private tour of the White House and Congress
and the scheduled meeting with President Reagan.
•Thursay -An early return visit to the Washington Mall before
returning at 4 p.m. for Los Angeles.
"We've had a history of traveling," says Brown. "In the past our
teams have gone to Lompoc, Arroyo Grande, Santa Maria and San Joee.
But this is one of the big highlights of my (15-year) coaching career at
Fountain Valley.
Funds for the trip were gathered by the students and boosters'
groups.
Among Mater Dei's 54-person party are team members Mike
Mitchell, Matt Beeuwsaert, Tom Lewis, Chris Jackson, Mike Fielder,
St.eve Gorman, Jim Dwyer, Todd Worhe, Jim Matis. John Mounce, Chris
Patton and Pat Kelly.
Among Fountain Valley's group are team members Mike Newton,
Drew Brown, Tom Power, Mike Tinney, Rqlf Jacobs, Brent Martin,
Lance Zeno, Scott Motherhead, Brent Hanson, Jeff Moore and Mike
Harvin.
NESTANDE ...
From Page A1
Nestande was appointed to the
transportation commi88ion, which
carries out state-wide traNpor-
t.ation planning, In July 1982 by
former Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
and was reappointed by Gov.
Deukmejian in January.
He is the only elected official
ever to serve on the panel.
We're
Listening •••
What do you like about the Dally Pilot? Whal don't you li ke?
Call the number at left and your ~ge will be recorded,
transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24·hour answerinc service may be used to record let·
ters to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors muat include
their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation
r.842•6086 rails. please. ·
Tell us what ·s on your mind
.. 5 .. ...,.,lldlly " '°" 00 !!Gt .... , 1°"' P.P!' lly
l<IOpm Oll'9be 1 P"' •"Cl 10111 oopy wm O• .........
....... Md~" '°" .. !IOI ........ "°"' Of!!1f"7''"" .,,......,.. 10 ~"' -~ GClllr .. ..........
Cll t I I I
T I Jll I I
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
H. L 8°"W.tl II
Publehet
Chay Dow.alw RarntOftd Meo&..-n
Edtor Ind AtMtent COntroler
to the Publlher
........ ,.c-... ~ ........
,
Ql1M11~ Cfg • f ...... tJQ ?MJM._.__..~,.M
Al ...... , ' JRll-..,
MAIN Ol'fllCa
))I) W... e.y 81 . c.te ~ CA Mel..._ 9011 16'0. O.a ....... CA 12t2t
~ 1.., °' ..... COlllll ~ ~ No newt llO•IH . llllll lltllOllt , t •l101l•I llltllt • Of tcMrl..._ • ..._IM\'lle~~ .... ~ OI CCIOl'f'ON -
VOL 11, NO. -
parking Jot both located on part of
10 acres of municipal properly
(five of which can be developed)
adjacent to city hall near the
mouth o( Laguna Canyon Road.
Council members instructed
FORMA to study the possJbility of
locating a community cent.er and
sorely-needed senior housing
J,.&J\WLQIUhtliJ&._ --
FORMA's proposal includes
two multi-million do llar,
three-level parking garages ·
which would accommodate 420
vehicles. The plaza plan also
includes a restaurant, banquet
facilities, lush trees and land-
sea ping.
To make room for one 235-spac
parking garage, the dormar
sewer plant would be demolishe<
Another 185-space lot would b
located on the site of a etty park.in
lot next to city hall. Both garage
would be built onl y two level
above grade.
hanksaid.1hecity.wou.ld like~-
explore the possibility of buildinj
one garage with help from th•
Festival of the Arts, which un
veiled a master plan earlier thi
year to build a garage on a si t.e noY
occupied by city tennis court
adjacent to the Festival's grounds
Beck1naµ lnstruinent~
to lay of_fJ300 people
I'
By &be Auocla&ed Pren
Beckman lnatruments, Inc .. one
of Orange County's largest indus-
trial employers, says it will
furlough up to 300 workers be.'
cause new Medicaid and Medi·Cal
regulations have significantly re-
duced equipment purchases by
hospitala.
The layoffs, most of which will
come from the company's Brea
plant in January, will be the
second mass cutback by the medi-
cal products firm in three months.
One hundred workers got pink
slipe in October.
Beckman President Louis Rosso
F UNZilNE ..
FromPageA 1
"The difficulties between the
borrower and the lenders have
been resolved," Brock said.
"Th~re WiH'" ~ take place
today. They still have their prop-
erty and we no longer have a
problem on the loan," Brock said.
Brock would not disclose what
had transpired to take the mort-
• gage out of default except to say it
was negotiated by Wank. Wank
also would not disclose the details,
saying it was a personal business
matt.er.
Wank, Toby Wank, Debbie and
Ralph Gray are the majority
shareholders of the partnership.
Former Newport Beach resident
James Salter is a minority owner.
He was brought into the deal to
develop a Cape Cod-style office
complex on the bayfront property.
The project ran into financing
problems and was never started
..pite llCqu.iring the permita
needed from the state Coastal
~n and , \he Newport rltach dtty C.ouncll.
Wank's group must begin con-
struction before July 26. 1984,
when the pennita expire.
said Sunday that the layoffs wer
due in part to new Medicaid an
Medi-Cal repayment procedun
under which hospitals are reirr
bursed at a fixed ra t.e based on th
average cost for indigent patient
at all state hospitals. Previous!~
they have been paid for the actw
cost of an individual patient'scan
As a result, Rosso said. hospital
have halted equipment expen
ditures until they determine th
impact of the new rules on thel
budgets.
Tbe plant in Brea manufacture
laboratory products ·used tr
analyze body fluid chemistr)
Orders for the products hav
declined since the regulations tool
effect last Oct. l. Rosso said. ---
~~~.-u~n-~-4
Philadelphia-based Smith-Kiln
Beckman Corp.. employs 5,00
workers in the county at 7,00
more at plants around the world.
Mesan to face
• • arra1gnment in
teen porn ca se
A Costa Mesan was scheduled tt
bt> arraigned in Harbor Municipa
Court today on suspicion of chil<
molestation following his arres
for allegedly showing porno
graphic films to young boys. polia
said.
Harry D. Buckler, 41. wa:
arrested Thursday in a trailei
park on the 100 block of F.ast 16t}
Street, according to Costa Mesi
Police Sgt. Max Wilson.
A tipster told police Buckler b.ac
been showing pornographic filmt
to yowrg teen-agers in his trailer
Wilson said.
The-;' detectives said the)
enten!d the trailer and saw tw<
boys, both from Costa Mesa
watching the movies with
Buckler.
Oren9e Coas\ DAILY PILOT /Monday, December 19, 1983 * ~I
_Sus.peel~ s sanity_stil.l issue ..... t-WI AllllD:----------. ..
'Do ·you thirtk-Cantarnis Sh1Juld 'have toughflr-fa'lis~ ----
..
Judge orders more testing for housekeeper ilccused in NB slaying tor drunken drivers?'
A housekeeper charged with
slaying a 76-year-old Newport
Beach woman will undergo more
psychfatric examination before
standing trial.
An Orange County Superior
Court judge directed Friday that
two additional psychiatrists exam-
ine Jane Irene Moller before she is
certified as being competent to
stand trial.
Moller was returned to Orange
County after doctors at Patton
State Hospital in San Bernardino
certified she now la competent to
stand trial on the murder charge.
Moller was committed to the
h06pital in February following
emotional outbursts in court. Her
defense attorney said she was too
incoherent to help prepare her
defense.
Moller, 40, is accused of killing
Helen DeWolf, who was stabbed
and beaten in the bathroom of her
Irvine Avenue home in November
1982. Moller was employed by the
Newport woman as a live-in
housekeeper.
Judge Luis Cardenaa directed
that Moller be examined by the
two doctors before a second com-
petency hearing is conducted Jan.
27. said Proeecutor Pat Geary.
If Moller is found to be mentally
competent and ia able to stand
trial, the case will be tranaferred
to Orange County Municipal
Court for preliminary hearing.
She is being held in the Orange
County Jail in lieu of $250.000 baiC
UCI prof Dr. Bu_nney
on psychiatrif panel
Dr. William E." Bunney Jr.,
professor and c hairman of UC
Irvine's Deparunent of Psy-
chiatry, has been named to a·
presidential commission of the
Max Planck Institute in
Munich, West Germany.
Bunney is the author of more
than 290 8Cientific papers and is
a leading authority on the
·biological causes o~ mental ill-
ness.
Fr•n Olbaon,
mother,
Coete .....
"No, I think they've already
•
0 ·-awmey IS.the oruy Ainencan
. ..H,!_~~ked. bY, the State gotten very strict."
l>epartrnent to fielp ~t;..-th~e -t--
Dr. William Bunney
asked to sit on the
eight-member panel. fonned to
review the future of psychiatric
research at 'the institute and to
plan for the retirement of the
psychiatric institute's chief.
de briefing of American
hostages following their flight
from Iran, and has served as a
U.S. representative to the
World Health Organization for
the past eight ye.an.
Kethr aantllty,
flortet,
CoeteMHe
"Yea, the laws should be
more strict. It seems moat
accidents are caused by
drunken drivers. There
should be higher fines and
more jall time for offenders. I
ride my bike or walk If I've
been drlnkln~."
TonrBruno,
clerk,
Newport Beech
"No, they're strict enough.
You know everybody drinks.
You can be tested and be
considered legally drunk but
can handle It better than
others and be totally In con-
trol and get arrested for
drunken driving.•·
Multi-named suspect held
A man who police ..say has so
many aliases they don't know his
true name is facing charges in
Huntington Beach. Fountain Val-
ley and Costa Mesa on charges of
making fradulent loan appli-
cations.
The 6-8. 285-pound suspect.
tentatively identified as Shirley
Peaches Gregory, was slapped
with four felony charges by the
Orange County district attorney
for allegedly making four phony
loan applications in Huntington
Beach.
Appliances valued at between
$700 and S800 were SIOlen during a
com~cial burglary at a store on
North Coast Highway. Laouna BNch
police reported.
A caller told ~I~ ~ve;al elib)ects
were ch nga.sii non on tfte ~
at the end of Mountain Road late Sunday night . Officers arrived to find
no auapecU. but a mother sea llon
giving birth to a.J>l!P·.
Burglars netted a color teleY1slon
Mt during a break-In of a home in the 500 bloctc of South Coast Highway. • • • 1 A motorist returned to his car
parked at Parle Avenue and Glen·
neyre Street to find a S 125 caasette
raeorde< mlsslng from the vehicle.
Costa Mesa
A .25 cahbef handgun was stOlen
from a table at the Orange Co~mty
Fairgrounds. where a gun collectofs'
Show was going on, Sunday The gun.
valued at S tOO. was taken ott a
crowded display table between 2:50 and 3 p.m.
Fountain Valley police also
claim that Greg9JY allegedly
wrote bad checks in the amounts
of $96 and $114 to the Gemco
Department store. Detective Den-
nis Menna said the two checks,
which were marked "return to
maker" were signed by a person
identified as M . Joseph Gregory.
And Costa Mesa detective Matt
Collett said police ~ investigat-
ing Gregory on charges he bought
a 1980 Lincoln Continental Mark
V1 in October with a bad check.
Huntington Beach detectives
began the-Jnvestigad.on in June,
Droz said .. The probe resulted in a
search of Gregory's apartment in
Huntington Beach and led to his
eventual arrest in his Inglewood
apartment for charges lodged in
Pomona.
Gregory pleaded guilty last
week to charges of gaining credit
under false pretenses in Pomona,
according to Droz, and is awaiting
sentencing early next month.
Local police say Gregory may
have used as many as 50 aliases.
George Undlef,
generel melntenanc. ,._
palnnen,
CoeteMHe
"The laws are OK, but the
enforcement of them should
be more strict. The courts are
so congested; people are able
to plea bargain their way out
of a drunken driving charge.
They should be punished
more by the courts.''
George Roneld Coleman,
remodeler,
CoeteMHe
''The laws are strict 'nough
but I think judges should give
stricter eentencea.''
S.rber• Hlgolnbotham,
apeca.I educetlon teecher,
Newport.Juch
''Yea, I think they should
have their licenses taken
away for a longer time. There
should also be more Jail time.
Higher fines wouldn't work
because the people who
could afford the fine would be
able to pay It off and be back
on the streets drunk and
driving."
_Wh-oev~r's calling_ is--al~-we-t
suspicion of commercial burglary corder and various other houaehold
Saturday at Sui Fltth Avenue in 1tem1 valued at S244 from his home In
South Coast Plaza. The man. Marlo the 100 block of Baywood Sunday.
M41sslmeo. 35. allegedly uMd • A retired ~ Beach man "booster box" -a box made up lllce ·--"""· • Chrtttmaa present but with a false reported the tbett of $8,400 In jewelry
bOllom _ to steal J 162 worth of from hit ho~ In the 700 block of
elothee from erect(. -==::__Jaamlne SalulCI~ ___ _
A resident ;f i~ 600 block of A Newport Beech man reported Balcer Street found evidence that the theft of clothing valued at $1.207
someone had tn.d to Ignite hie car's from hi• home In the 2100 block of
gas tank sometime early Saturday t6th Street Sat~r~a~.
morning. The man told police he A Cost• M~ man reported the found burned matcheS and black-theft of S 15.400 of jewelry trom his
ened eGraps of paper Inside hie gas car parked at 3601 Jambo<ee Road cap. Saturday morning. . . . .
Mesa water district not making those late night telephone calls
A mystery caller who claims to been telephoning Costa Mesa come out and test their tap water.
be an employee of the Mesa resideq_ts during evening hours Linda Sanders. information of-
ConsoUdated Water District has and asking them if someone can ficer for the district, said her office
has been getting complaints for T\ -. 1... • 1 _] ! • t-the last couple of weeks frpm ~SK~Wle--i'U-IIl~l80-: _pe<>ple .who ~and~wlly-1he. e e water district lS calling them at
threatens Salesman 9:~?~~~of (th~ m_ysteriouscalls)
say they're district employees,
some say water employees," was threatened with physical s d ·d
A hulk Of a man threatened the . un1 h h an ers sa1 . injury ess e met t e extortion N h h life of a salesman for an Irvine oil demands. Jones said. Pribus is 0 matt.er w at t ey say. A video cassette recorder, Argen-
tine sliver tea serviee and telephone answering machine were among the
Items reported stolen Sunday from a
home on the 1000 block of Mlulon
Oflve. Thieves app81ently pried open
a llldlng glass door In the home to
gain aoceu to the sa. 156 worth of
valuablea.
d d however, they are not employees Huntington Beach 8f.l gas flrm, emanding to be presently facing trial on drug of the Mesa Consolidated Water paid a $4,000 debt, police said charges, apparently unrelated to Dis A ph~lclan at Humana Hoapltat today. · trict, Sanders said. "When the the attempted extortion plot. d' · has Huntington Beach reported Saturday The bill collector, 6 foot 3 '""hes Th istnct a reason to contact its that her white 1982 Audi 5000 was ...... e investigator said the oil and customers. the employees clearly
burgl81tzed. A wtndwtng was broken and 260 pounds, picked up an oak gas company's owner. Joseph A. 'd ·c h 1 d call nl
to ente<. The loss Included a St,000 desk "to demonstrate his prowess" Genitti. told him the firm is in 1 enu Y t emse ves an ° Y
car atereo aystem. before stalking out of the off1'oes of c· ·ai d ' u· uJ d · bl during normal business hours." • • • • manc:t 1 1c ty. an is una e According to customers who
" r .. ldent of the 1000 block of Genessa Oil and Gas Co.. 16592 to pay its debts. However, the have received the calls. the callers Georgia Street told poll~ Saturday Hale St Friday Sgt Y --J th 11 ia· ed that hie black 1979 Yamaha motor-·· · · J..A:V ones company e co ector c im to do not identify themselves and Newport Beach
-•
A Newport Beach accountant re-
ACostaM~J!l!..n~sar eatedon _ ported.the~..!>L• c~e r~ _ cycle waa atOlen. The loaa was said. represent said it isn't owed any will not leave a return phone •Umat~t-'800:-_ .. :::--.:-_'.:'.Sal~esman.~~::Char~~l~e&~~::_-P~·~M~~~·24~l ·:.._~mo~ne~y,~. ~fl~e!w~·~d:.:_. _____ ___.:=-m1mt~==---=~--==-==-=:---t
Cloudier, cooler along the coastline.
Coastal
Extended
?7 OS 21 10
St 31 M 07 ,. ,.
22 01
18 01
-03 -1• 21 00 15 .17 ., 20
17 -41 ·14 .,.
44 n
.07 -·· ,,. 28
02 ~
82 72
$1 JO
17~ l!I ~ 13 .. 15 oe 02 ·11 eo 31 sa 13 t7 61 J1 OI
11 II !II II to 72 .01 ·11 ·11 49 ... 11
67 ... 17 .,
90 40 00 _,,
II .01 "°' .,. ., J1
..
.... 111 .. 14 .,
1t .,,
It • 41 11 .07 41 = .07
04 .:c
• 41 •• = .:
lllf IEP.111 "' •• t-
...
,
...,,
\.
... having a traditional
chri~tma5
~cyonday.e
hand pemtRd UlM\CZ.\
~ftom~
oval S1Znt\mcz.t'IL 1:nc
· col tact.ors ~'I\ ~9
· tmy t.okenb:lx. country pm ~h\00
"1983" cnrn~~ hmitJzd. qd,~
!
·@J~c{~@)~@
.
" Fothfon /eland JOOJ WaNood Blud. 52~ South Lake Aut.
Naoport 8eodt '4ac.oood VUfQge Aulodma
7J4/64f..MTJO %13/208-3213 21j/J04-933)
' '
F ? -a
.................. a ...................................... ------------------~----~~~~ .......... ~----
r !I' ....
W1,.., Nrt
P ( nO'\ C 10\1 \ nq
NYSE C-OMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OVOlAftOHll tNC~UO. lAA0E8 UN Hit NliW 'rOllK. "4t0Wl!8t, PllCt'IC P9W. llC>!llON Otrl\Olf ANO CINCINNATI lll0C" UCHAHCll& A"IO
RV'Ol'TtO ev THE Nll80 lldTINfl
~., .. , ,...,,
" [ ...... c ....... (f\Q
-.t
S•t•\ ~*' P E "°~ C•o,... C"9
~,.. N~t
P [ "°' (IO"' ("@
•
'•I•\ Nrt ._. t nth l ht\# < "V
. •
... , . ""
Dow Jones Final
... ... ,,,_..._ Vfil &. • ..,..
Cloalng 1~.81
m1m111&1
Money supply up sharply;
overall growth 'sluggish'
By tbe Associated Pre11
NEW YORK -Analysts e)(pect little falloul from the
$5.5 billion jump in the money supply in early December, even
though It was the sharpest rise in five months. Analy sta
pointed out that even with the latest spurt, money supply
growth has remained sluggish. In financial markets, interest
rates edged only slightly higher a fter the figures were
released.
Mobil settles $1. 7 billion suit
AUSTIN. Texas -Mobil Corp. has agreed to pay the
state of Texas and South Texas rancher Clinton Manges more
than $500 million as part of an out-of-eourt settlement
reached In a $1 7 billion 'lawsuit. "The settlement was
arranged to avoid continuing costly litigation," said a joint
statement is.sued on behalf of Attorney General Jim Mattox,
LaAG--Commiss•oneU:Jucy...Mau.t0.MB.Oi,eS and.J'~.1-®il. The
statement made no mention of the total amount of the
settlement.
Wholesale prices sl1ow d ecline
WAS HING TON -Helped by declining food and energy
pnces, the government's measure of wholesale prices dropped
0 .2 percent last month, all but ensuring the lowest inflation
year in two decades. The Labor ~ent's.:.~rt on its
Producer Pric..-e Index showed th.atwnoT'eSale pnoes or the
first 11 months of thlS year rose at an annual rate of 0.3
percent. If that rate holds one more month, 1983 would have
the lowest increase since prices actually declined 0.2 percent in
1963.
Industry operating rate rises
WASHINGTON -U S. industrial plants operated at
79.2 percent of capacity.last month, the highest in more than
two years. The operating rate for factories, mines and utilities
was up 0.5 percentage point in November from the month
before, the Federal Reserve Board reported.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
-wRAr NYSt DID
NEW YORK tAPI OK It
Adval!CeCI Oedl.-Vn<N-TOlat lu un Now l1IQIU ~--·
Tooo 743 ... •» 20iJ 79 .,
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW YORIC (API 09(. It
METALS
TOOtY
1SS 30 us Ill IS ..
p, ...
dn IOS 16'
•51 1QJ2 11 ..
Pr•• clay 16'
)01
70 110 ' ,,
NEW in)RIC (AP) -SC>Cll l>Olll"'1'0..I maul!
l)<IOM t0/1ay. c-. &9 .... 72 -.10 • pound, us dealltlal-• c....-. &•es_, .. -oouno NV Com.• aoot ..-111 cioMd TIN
LeM. 74.77 _,, •• pound ZJnc • 49 ...... pound _..,
n. -6 ~Jee Melala w--..c>oolte 14> A .......... • 11 cen1a t poynd. N V ~ • '320 00-U~ 00 I* 76 10 -· -Y~ .
.....,,_, • M04 00 OomMtlc merct\anl lrQy
-,N Y
Sil-VER
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
SYMBOLS
' ' ..
DOW JONES AVERAGE S
Due to late transmission
t oday's listing wlll not
appear In the Dally Piiot.
AMERIC·AH LEADERS
flEW YORK IAPI-Sain, 4 D m orle.e ana not cru ne• ot '"'' ,.,, "'°'t •c""' AINt'IUn ~ ~ n.-• u •,, lr•d l ng n t H oneH v a l
mor a t t'o •n •I
H0tnHar ' l07,IOO ""' -I ',t Oo<ctntGa• lit 000 10•11 -,
OomePTr1 101'.iOii H ·16 -H•
O.taPra' 11f.!Oo "" + 1 Pt!rot.aw 160,)00 11" + lo MlcNEne IJl,.IOO 11'-
HovOl!Tr 111,000 t -Vlllmetu llt ,JOO IS -.; Cvor ... Cp IOS,)00 1 .. Wtnol.•08' 101,900 l1 ..
Oue to late transmission
today's list ing wlll no t
appear In the Dally Piiot.
,,